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Knife of Dreams - Wheel of Time 11
Knife of Dreams
Wheel of Time Book 11
by
Robert Jordan
The
sweetness of victory and the bitterness of defeat are alike a knife of
dreams.
-
From Fog and Steel by Madoc Comadrin
Prologue
Embers
Falling on Dry Grass
The
sun, climbing toward midmorning, stretched Galad's shadow and those of
his
three armored companions ahead of them as they trotted their mounts
down the
road that ran straight through the forest, dense with oak and
leatherleaf, pine
and sourgum, most showing the red of spring growth. He tried to keep
his mind
empty, still, but small things kept intruding. The day was silent save
for the
thud of their horses' hooves.
No
bird sang on a branch, no squirrel chittered. Too quiet for the time of
year,
as though the forest held its breath. This had been a major trade route
once,
long before Amadicia and Tarabon came into being, and bits of ancient
paving
stone sometimes studded the hard-packed surface of yellowish clay. A
single
farm cart far ahead behind a plodding ox was the only sign of human
life now
besides themselves. Trade had shifted far north, farms and villages in
the
region dwindled, and the fabled lost mines of Aelgar remained lost in
the
tangled mountain ranges that began only a few miles to the south. Dark
clouds
massing in that direction promised rain by afternoon if their slow
advance
continued. A red-winged hawk quartered back and forth along the border
of the
trees, hunting the fringes. As he himself was hunting. But at the
heart, not on
the fringes.
The
manor house that the Seanchan had given Eamon Valda came into view, and
he drew
rein, wishing he had a helmet strap to tighten for excuse.
Instead
he had to be content with re-buckling his sword belt, pretending that
it had
been sitting wrong. There had been no point to wearing armor. If the
morning
went as he hoped, he would have had to remove breastplate and mail in
any case,
and if it went badly, armor would have provided little more protection
than his
white coat.
Formerly
a deep-country lodge of the King of Amadicia, the building was a huge,
blue-roofed structure studded with red-painted balconies, a wooden
palace with
wooden spires at the corners atop a stone foundation like a low,
steep-sided
hill. The outbuildings, stables and barns, workmen's small houses and
craftsfolks' workshops, all hugged the ground in the wide clearing that
surrounded the main house, but they were nearly as resplendent in their
blue-and-red
paint. A handful of men and women moved around them, tiny figures yet
at this
distance, and children were playing under their elders' eyes. An image
of
normality where nothing was normal. His companions sat their saddles in
their
burnished helmets and breastplates, watching him without expression.
Their
mounts stamped impatiently, the animals' morning freshness not yet worn
off by
the short ride from the camp.
"It's
understandable if you're having second thoughts, Damodred," Trom said
after a time. "It's a harsh accusation, bitter as gall, but-"
"No
second thoughts for me," Galad broke in. His intentions had been fixed
since yesterday. He was grateful, though. Trom had given him the
opening he needed.
They had simply appeared as he rode out, falling in with him without a
word
spoken. There had seemed no place for words, then. "But what about you
three? You're taking a risk coming here with me. A risk you have no
need to
take. However the day runs, there will be marks against you. This is my
business, and I give you leave to go about yours." Too stiffly said,
but
he could not find words this morning, or loosen his throat.
The
stocky man shook his head. "The law is the law. And I might as well
make
use of my new rank." The three golden star-shaped knots of a captain
sat
beneath the flaring sunburst on the breast of his white cloak. There
had been
more than a few dead at Jeramel, including no fewer than three of the
Lords
Captain. They had been fighting the Seanchan then, not allied with them.
"I've
done dark things in service to the Light," gaunt-faced Byar said
grimly,
his deep-set eyes glittering as though at a personal insult, "dark as
moonless midnight, and likely I will again, but some things are too
dark to be
allowed." He looked as if he might spit.
"That's
right," young Bornhald muttered, scrubbing a gauntleted hand across his
mouth. Galad always thought of him as young, though the man lacked only
a few
years on him. Dain's eyes were bloodshot; he had been at the brandy
again last
night. "If you've done what's wrong, even in service to the Light, then
you have to do what's right to balance it."
Byar
grunted sourly. Likely that was not the point he had been making.
"Very
well," Galad said, "but there's no fault to any man who turns back.
My business here is mine alone."
Still,
when he heeled his bay gelding to a canter, he was pleased to have them
gallop
to catch him and fall in alongside, white cloaks billowing behind. He
would
have gone on alone, of course, yet their presence might keep him from
being
arrested and hanged out of hand. Not that he expected to survive in any
case.
What had to be done, had to be done, no matter the price.
The
horses' hooves clattered loudly on the stone ramp that climbed to the
manor
house, so every man in the broad central courtyard turned to watch as
they rode
in: fifty of the Children in gleaming plate-and-mail and conical
helmets, most
mounted, with cringing, dark-coated Amadician grooms holding animals
for the
rest. The inner balconies were empty except for a few servants who
appeared to
be watching while pretending to sweep. Six Questioners, big men with
the
scarlet shepherd's crook upright behind the sunflare on their cloaks,
stood
close around Rhadam Asunawa like a bodyguard, away from the others. The
Hand of
the Light always stood apart from the rest of the Children, a choice
the rest
of the Children approved. Gray-haired Asunawa, his sorrowful face
making Byar
look fully fleshed, was the only Child present not in armor, and his
snowy
cloak carried just the brilliant red crook, another way of standing
apart. But
aside from marking who was present, Galad had eyes for only one man in
the
courtyard. Asunawa might have been involved in some way-that remained
unclear-yet only the Lord Captain Commander could call the High
Inquisitor to
account.
Eamon
Valda was not a large man, yet his dark, hard face had the look of one
who
expected obedience as his due. As the very least he was due.
Standing
with his booted feet apart and his head high, command in every inch of
him, he
wore the white-and-gold tabard of the Lord Captain Commander over his
gilded
breast- and backplates, a silk tabard more richly embroidered than any
Pedron
Niall had worn. His white cloak, the flaring sun large on either breast
in
thread-of-gold, was silk as well, and his gold-embroidered white coat.
The
helmet beneath his arm was gilded and worked with the flaring sun on
the brow,
and a heavy gold ring on his left hand, worn outside his steel-backed
gauntlet,
held a large yellow sapphire carved with the sunburst. Another mark of
favor
received from the Seanchan.
Valda
frowned slightly as Galad and his companions dismounted and offered
their
salutes, arm across the chest. Obsequious grooms came running to take
their
reins.
"Why
aren't you on your way to Nassad, Trom?" Disapproval colored Valda's
words. "The other Lords Captain will be halfway there by now."
He
himself always arrived late when meeting the Seanchan, perhaps to
assert that
some shred of independence remained to the Children-finding him already
preparing to depart was a surprise; this meeting must be very
important-but he
always made sure the other high-ranking officers arrived on time even
when that
required setting out before dawn.
Apparently
it was best not to press their new masters too far. Distrust of the
Children
was always strong in the Seanchan.
Trom
displayed none of the uncertainty that might have been expected from a
man who
had held his present rank barely a month. "An urgent matter, my Lord
Captain Commander," he said smoothly, making a very precise bow,
neither a
hair deeper nor higher than protocol demanded. "A Child of my command
charges another of the Children with abusing a female relative of his,
and claims
the right of Trial Beneath the Light, which by law you must grant or
deny."
"A
strange request, my son," Asunawa said, tilting his head quizzically
above
clasped hands, before Valda could speak. Even the High Inquisitor's
voice was doleful;
he sounded pained at Trom's ignorance.
His
eyes seemed dark hot coals in a brazier. "It was usually the accused
who
asked to give the judgment to swords, and I believe usually when he
knew the
evidence would convict him. In any case, Trial Beneath the Light has
not been
invoked for nearly four hundred years. Give me the accused's name, and
I will
deal with the matter quietly." His tone turned chill as a sunless
cavern
in winter, though his eyes still burned. "We are among strangers, and
we
cannot allow them to know that one of the Children is capable of such a
thing."
"The
request was directed to me, Asunawa," Valda snapped. His glare might as
well have been open hatred. Perhaps it was just dislike of the other
man's
breaking in. Flipping one side of his cloak over his shoulder to bare
his
ring-quilloned sword, he rested his hand on the long hilt and drew
himself up.
Always one for the grand gesture, Valda raised his voice so that even
people
inside probably heard him, and declaimed rather than merely spoke.
"I
believe many of our old ways should be revived, and that law still
stands. It
will always stand, as written of old. The Light grants justice because
the
Light is justice. Inform your man he may issue his challenge, Trom, and
face
the one he accuses sword-to-sword. If that one tries to refuse, I
declare that
he has acknowledged his guilt and order him hanged on the spot, his
belongings
and rank forfeit to his accuser as the law states. I have spoken." That
with another scowl for the High Inquisitor. Maybe there really was
hatred
there.
Trom
bowed formally once more. "You have informed him yourself, my Lord
Captain
Commander. Damodred?"
Galad
felt cold. Not the cold of fear, but of emptiness. When Dain drunkenly
let slip
the confused rumors that had come to his ears, when Byar reluctantly
confirmed
they were more than rumors, rage had filled Galad, a bone-burning fire
that
nearly drove him insane. He had been sure his head would explode if his
heart
did not burst first. Now he was ice, drained of any emotion. He also
bowed
formally. Much of what he had to say was set in the law, yet he chose
the rest
with care, to spare as much shame as possible to a memory he held dear.
"Eamon
Valda, Child of the Light, I call you to Trial Beneath the Light for
unlawful
assault on the person of Morgase Trakand, Queen of Andor, and for her
murder." No one had been able to confirm that the woman he regarded as
his
mother was dead, yet it must be so. A dozen men were certain she had
vanished
from the Fortress of the Light before it fell to the Seanchan, and as
many
testified she had not been free to leave of her own will.
Valda
displayed no shock at the charge. His smile might have been intended to
show
regret over Galad's folly in making such a claim, yet contempt was
mingled in
it. He opened his mouth, but Asunawa cut in once more.
"This
is ridiculous," he said in tones more of sorrow than of anger.
"Take
the fool, and we'll find out what Darkfriend plot to discredit the
Children he
is part of." He motioned, and two of the hulking Questioners took a
step
toward Galad, one with a cruel grin, the other blank-faced, a workman
about his
work.
Only
one step, though. A soft rasp repeated around the courtyard as Children
eased
their swords in their scabbards. At least a dozen men drew entirely,
letting
their blades hang by their sides. The Amadician grooms hunched in on
themselves, trying to become invisible. Likely they would have run, had
they
dared. Asunawa stared around him, thick eyebrows climbing up his
forehead in
disbelief, knotted fists gripping his cloak. Strangely, even Valda
appeared
startled for an instant.
Surely
he had not expected the Children to allow an arrest after his own
proclamation.
If he had, he recovered quickly.
"You
see, Asunawa," he said almost cheerfully, "the Children follow my
orders, and the law, not a Questioner's whims." He held out his helmet
to
one side for someone to take. "I deny your preposterous charge, young
Galad, and throw your foul lie in your teeth. For it is a lie, or at
best a mad
acceptance of some malignant rumor started by Darkfriends or others who
wish
the Children ill. Either way, you have defamed me in the vilest manner,
so I
accept your challenge to Trial Beneath the Light, where I will kill
you."
That barely squeezed into the ritual, but he had denied the charge and
accepted
the challenge; it would suffice.
Realizing
that he still held the helmet in an outstretched hand, Valda frowned at
one of
the dismounted Children, a lean Saldaean named Kashgar, until the man
stepped
forward to relieve him of it. Kashgar was only an under-lieutenant,
almost
boyish despite a great hooked nose and thick mustaches like inverted
horns, yet
he moved with open reluctance, and Valda's voice was darker and acrid
as he
went on, unbuckling his sword belt and handing that over, too.
"Take
a care with that, Kashgar. It's a heron-mark blade." Unpinning his silk
cloak, he let it fall to the paving stones, followed by his tabard, and
his hands
moved to the buckles of his armor. It seemed that he was unwilling to
see if
others would be reluctant to help him. His face was calm enough, except
that
angry eyes promised retribution to more than Galad. "Your sister wants
to
become Aes Sedai, I understand, Damodred.
Perhaps
I understand precisely where this originated. There was a time I would
have
regretted your death, but not today. I may send your head to the WhiteTower
so the witches can see the fruit of their scheme."
Worry
creasing his face, Dain took Galad's cloak and sword belt, and stood
shifting
his feet as though uncertain he was doing the right thing. Well, he had
been
given his chance, and it was too late to change his mind, now. Byar put
a
gauntleted hand on Galad's shoulder and leaned close.
"He
likes to strike at the arms and legs," he said in a low voice, casting
glances over his shoulder at Valda. From the way he glared, some matter
stood
between them. Of course, that scowl differed little from his normal
expression.
"He likes to bleed an opponent until the man can't take a step or raise
his sword before he moves for the kill. He's quicker than a viper, too,
but
he'll strike at your left most often and expect it from you."
Galad
nodded. Many right-handed men found it easier to strike so, but it
seemed an
odd weakness in a blademaster. Gareth Bryne and Henre Haslin had made
him
practice alternating which hand was uppermost on the hilt so he would
not fall
into that. Strange that Valda wanted to prolong a fight, too. He
himself had
been taught to end matters as quickly and cleanly as possible.
"My
thanks," he said, and the hollow-cheeked man made a dour grimace.
Byar
was far from likable, and he himself seemed to like no one save young
Bornhald.
Of the three, his presence was the biggest surprise, but he was there,
and that
counted in his favor.
Standing
in the middle of the courtyard in his gold-worked white coat with his
fists on
his hips, Valda turned in a tight circle. "Everyone move back against
the
walls," he commanded loudly. Horseshoes rang on the paving stones as
the
Children and the grooms obeyed. Asunawa and his Questioners snatched
their
animals' reins, the High Inquisitor wearing a face of cold fury. "Keep
the
middle clear. Young Damodred and I will meet here-"
"Forgive
me, my Lord Captain Commander," Trom said with a slight bow, "but
since you are a participant in the Trial, you cannot be Arbiter.
Aside
from the High Inquisitor, who by law may not take part, I hold the
highest rank
here after you, so with your permission…?" Valda glared at him, then
stalked over to stand beside Kashgar, arms folded across his chest.
Ostentatiously he tapped his foot, impatient for matters to proceed.
Galad
sighed. If the day went against him, as seemed all but certain, his
friend would
have the most powerful man in the Children as his enemy. Likely Trom
would have
had in any event, but more so now. "Keep an eye on them," he told
Bornhald, nodding toward the Questioners clustered on their horses near
the
gate. Asunawa's underlings still ringed him like bodyguards, every man
with a
hand on his sword hilt.
"Why?
Even Asunawa can't interfere now. That would be against the law."
It
was very hard not to sigh again. Young Dain had been a Child far longer
than
he, and his father had served his entire life, but the man seemed to
know less
of the Children than he himself had learned. To Questioners, the law
was what
they said it was. "Just watch them."
Trom
stood in the center of the courtyard with his bared sword raised
overhead,
blade parallel to the ground, and unlike Valda, he spoke the words
exactly as
they were written. "Under the Light, we are gathered to witness Trial
Beneath the Light, a sacred right of any Child of the Light. The Light
shines
on truth, and here the Light shall illuminate justice. Let no man speak
save he
who has legal right, and let any who seek to intervene be cut down
summarily.
Here, justice will be found under the Light by a man who pledges his
life
beneath the Light, by the force of his arm and the will of the Light.
The
combatants will meet unarmed where I now stand," he continued, lowering
the sword to his side, "and speak privately, for their own ears alone.
May
the Light help them find words to end this short of bloodshed, for if
they do
not, one of the Children must die this day, his name stricken from our
rolls
and anathema declared on his memory. Under the Light, it will be so."
As
Trom strode to the side of the courtyard, Valda moved toward the center
in the
walking stance called Cat Crosses the Courtyard, an arrogant saunter.
He knew
there were no words to stop blood being shed.
To
him, the fight had already begun. Galad merely walked out to meet him.
He was
nearly a head taller than Valda, but the other man held himself as
though he were
the larger, and confident of victory.
His
smile was all contempt, this time. "Nothing to say, boy? Small wonder
considering that a blademaster is going to cut your head off in about
one
minute. I want one thing straight in your mind before I kill you,
though. The
wench was hale the last I saw her, and if she's dead now, I'll regret
it."
That smile deepened, both in humor and disdain.
"She
was the best ride I ever had, and I hope to ride her again one day."
Red-hot,
searing fury fountained inside Galad, but with an effort he managed to
turn his
back on Valda and walk away, already feeding his rage into an imagined
flame as
his two teachers had taught him. A man who fought in a rage, died in a
rage. By
the time he reached young Bornhald, he had achieved what Gareth and
Henre had
called the oneness.
Floating
in emptiness, he drew his sword from the scabbard Bornhald proffered,
and the
slightly curved blade became a part of him.
"What
did he say?" Dain asked. "For a moment there, your face was murderous."
Byar
gripped Dain's arm. "Don't distract him," he muttered.
Galad
was not distracted. Every creak of saddle leather was clear and
distinct, every
ringing stamp of hoof on paving stone. He could hear flies buzzing ten
feet
away as though they were at his ear. He almost thought he could see the
movements of their wings. He was one with the flies, with the
courtyard, with
the two men. They were all part of him, and he could not be distracted
by
himself.
Valda
waited until he turned before drawing his own weapon on the other side
of the
courtyard, a flashy move, the sword blurring as it spun in his left
hand,
leaping to his right hand to make another blurred wheel in the air
before
settling, upright and rock-steady before him, in both hands. He started
forward,
once more in Cat Crosses the Courtyard.
Raising
his own sword, Galad moved to meet him, without thought assuming a
walking
stance perhaps influenced by his state of mind. Emptiness, it was
called, and
only a trained eye would know that he was not simply walking. Only a
trained
eye would see that he was in perfect balance every heartbeat. Valda had
not
gained that heron-mark sword by favoritism. Five blademasters had sat
in
judgment of his skills and voted unanimously to grant him the title.
The vote always
had to be unanimous. The only other way was to kill the bearer of a
heron-mark
blade in fair combat, one on one. Valda had been younger then than
Galad was
now. It did not matter. He was not focused on Valda's death. He focused
on
nothing. But he intended Valda's death if he had to Sheathe the Sword,
willingly welcoming that heron-mark blade in his flesh, to achieve it.
He
accepted that it might come to that.
Valda
wasted no time with maneuvering. The instant he was within range,
Plucking the
Low-hanging Apple flashed toward Galad's neck like lightning, as though
the man
truly did intend to have his head in the first minute. There were
several
possible responses, all made instinct by hard training, but Byar's
warnings
floated in the dim recesses of his mind, and also the fact that Valda
had
warned him of this very thing.
Warned
him twice. Without conscious thought, he chose another way, stepping
sideways
and forward just as Plucking the Low-hanging Apple became the Leopard's
Caress.
Valda's eyes widened in surprise as his stroke missed Galad's left
thigh by
inches, widened more as Parting the Silk laid a gash down his right
forearm,
but he immediately launched into the Dove Takes Flight, so fast that
Galad had
to dance back before his blade could bite deeply, barely fending off
the attack
with Kingfisher Circles the Pond.
Back
and forth they danced the forms, gliding this way then that across the
stone
paving. Lizard in the Thorn-bush met Lightning of Three Prongs. Leaf on
the
Breeze countered Eel Among the Lily Pads, and Two Hares Leaping met the
Hummingbird Kisses the Honeyrose. Back and forth as smoothly as a
demonstration
of the forms. Galad tried attack after attack, but Valda was as fast as
a
viper. The Wood Grouse Dances cost him a shallow gash on his left
shoulder, and
the Red Hawk Takes a Dove another on the left arm, slightly deeper. River of Light might have taken the arm
completely had he not met the draw-cut with a desperately quick Rain in
High
Wind. Back and forth, blades flashing continuously, filling the air
with the
clash of steel on steel.
How
long they fought, he could not have said. There was no time, only the
moment.
It seemed that he and Valda moved like men under water, their motions
slowed by
the drag of the sea. Sweat appeared on Valda's face, but he smiled with
self-assurance, seemingly untroubled by the slash on his forearm, still
the
only injury he had taken. Galad could feel the sweat rolling down his
own face,
too, stinging his eyes. And the blood trickling down his arm. Those
wounds
would slow him eventually, perhaps already had, but he had taken two on
his
left thigh, and both were more serious. His foot was wet in his boot
from
those, and he could not avoid a slight limp that would grow worse with
time. If
Valda was to die, it must be soon.
Deliberately,
he drew a deep breath, then another, through his mouth, another. Let
Valda
think him becoming winded. His blade lanced out in Threading the
Needle, aimed at
Valda's left shoulder and not quite as fast it could have been. The
other man
countered easily with the Swallow Takes Flight, sliding immediately
into the
Lion Springs. That took a third bite in his thigh; he dared not be
faster in
defense than in attack.
Again
he launched Threading the Needle at Valda's shoulder, and again, again,
all the
while gulping air through his mouth. Only luck kept him from taking
more wounds
in those exchanges. Or perhaps the Light really did shine on this fight.
Valda's
smile widened; the man believed him on the edge of his strength,
exhausted and
fixated. As Galad began Threading the Needle, too slowly, for the fifth
time,
the other man's sword started the Swallow Takes Flight in an almost
perfunctory
manner. Summoning all the quickness that remained to him, Galad altered
his
stroke, and Reaping the Barley sliced across Valda just beneath his rib
cage.
For
a moment it seemed that the man was unaware he had been hit. He took a
step,
began what might have been Stones Falling from the Cliff. Then his eyes
widened, and he staggered, the sword falling from his grip to clatter
on the
paving stones as he sank to his knees. His hands went to the huge gash
across
his body as though trying to hold his insides within him, and his mouth
opened,
glassy eyes fixed on Galad's face.
Whatever
he intended to say, it was blood that poured out over his chin.
He
toppled onto his face and lay still.
Automatically,
Galad gave his blade a rapid twist to shake off the blood staining its
last
inch, then bent slowly to wipe the last drops onto Valda's white coat.
The pain
he had ignored now flared. His left shoulder and arm burned; his thigh
seemed
to be on fire. Straightening took effort. Perhaps he was nearer
exhaustion than
he had thought. How long had they fought? He had thought he would feel
satisfaction that his mother had been avenged, but all he felt was
emptiness.
Valda's death was not enough. Nothing except Morgase Trakand alive
again could
be enough.
Suddenly
he became aware of a rhythmic clapping and looked up to see the
Children, each
man slapping his own armored shoulder in approval. Every man. Except
Asunawa
and the Questioners. They were nowhere to be seen.
Byar
hurried up carrying a small leather sack and carefully parted the
slashes in
Galad's coatsleeve. "Those will need sewing," he muttered, "but
they can wait." Kneeling beside Galad, he took rolled bandages from the
sack and began winding them around the gashes in his thigh. "These need
sewing, too, but this will keep you from bleeding to death before you
can get
it." Others began gathering around, offering congratulations, men afoot
in
front, those still mounted behind. None gave the corpse a glance except
for
Kashgar, who cleaned Valda's sword on that already bloodstained coat
before
sheathing it.
"Where
did Asunawa go?" Galad asked.
"He
left as soon as you cut Valda the last time," Dain replied uneasily.
"He'll
be heading for the camp to bring back Questioners."
"He
rode the other way, toward the border," someone put in. Nassad lay just
over the border.
"The
Lords Captain," Galad said, and Trom nodded.
"No
Child would let the Questioners arrest you for what happened here,
Damodred.
Unless his Captain ordered it. Some of them would order it, I think."
Angry muttering began, men denying they would stand for such a thing,
but Trom
quieted them, somewhat, with raised hands. "You know it's true," he
said loudly. "Anything else would be mutiny." That brought dead
silence. There had never been a mutiny in the Children. It was possible
that
nothing before had come as close as their own earlier display. "I'll
write
out your release from the Children, Galad. Someone may still order your
arrest,
but they'll have to find you, and you'll have a good start. It will
take half
the day for Asunawa to catch the other Lords Captain, and whoever falls
in with
him can't be back before nightfall."
Galad
shook his head angrily. Trom was right, but it was all wrong. Too much
was
wrong. "Will you write releases for these other men? You know Asunawa
will
find a way to accuse them, too. Will you write releases for the
Children who
don't want to help the Seanchan take our lands in the name of a man
dead more
than a thousand years?" Several Taraboners exchanged glances and
nodded,
and so did other men, not all of them Amadician. "What about the men
who
defended the Fortress of the Light?
Will
any release get their chains struck off or make the Seanchan stop
working them
like animals?" More angry growls; those prisoners were a sore point to
all
of the Children.
Arms
folded across his chest, Trom studied him as though seeing him for the
first
time. "What would you do, then?"
"Have
the Children find someone, anyone, who is fighting the Seanchan and
ally with
them. Make sure that the Children of the Light ride in the Last Battle
instead
of helping the Seanchan hunt Aiel and steal our nations."
"Anyone?"
a Cairhienin named Doirellin said in a high-pitched voice. No one ever
made fun
of Doirellin's voice. Though short, he was nearly as wide as he was
tall, there
was barely an ounce of fat on him, and he could put walnuts between all
of his
fingers and crack them by clenching his fists. "That could mean Aes
Sedai."
"If
you intend to be at Tarmon Gai'don, then you will have to fight
alongside Aes
Sedai," Galad said quietly. Young Bornhald grimaced in strong distaste,
and he was not the only one. Byar half-straightened before bending back
to his
task. But no one voiced dissent. Doirellin nodded slowly, as if he had
never
before considered the matter.
"I
don't hold with the witches any more than any other man," Byar said
finally, without raising his head from his work. Blood was seeping
through the
bandages even as he wrapped. "But the Precepts say, to fight the raven,
you may make alliance with the serpent until the battle is done." A
ripple
of nods ran through the men. The raven meant the Shadow, but everyone
knew it
was also the Seanchan Imperial sigil.
"I'll
fight beside the witches," a lanky Taraboner said, "or even these
Asha'man we keep hearing about, if they fight the Seanchan. Or at the
Last Battle.
And I'll fight
any man who says I'm wrong." He glared as though ready to begin then
and
there.
"It
seems matters will play out as you wish, my Lord Captain Commander."
Trom
said, making a much deeper bow than he had for Valda. "To a degree, at
least. Who can say what the next hour will bring, much less tomorrow?"
Galad
surprised himself by laughing. Since yesterday, he had been sure he
would never
laugh again. "That's a poor joke, Trom."
"It
is how the law is written. And Valda did make his proclamation.
Besides,
you had the courage to say what many have thought while holding their
tongues,
myself among them. Yours is a better plan for the Children than any
I've heard
since Pedron Niall died."
"It's
still a poor joke." Whatever the law said, that part had been ignored
since the end of the War of the Hundred Years.
"We'll
see what the Children have to say on the matter," Trom replied,
grinning widely,
"when you ask them to follow us to Tarmon Gai'don to fight alongside
the
witches."
Men
began slapping their shoulders again, harder than they had for his
victory. At
first it was only a few, then more joined in, until every man including
Trom
was signaling approval. Every man but Kashgar, that was. Making a deep
bow, the
Saldaean held out the scabbarded heron-mark blade with both hands.
"This
is yours, now, my Lord Captain Commander."
Galad
sighed. He hoped this nonsense would fade away before they reached the
camp.
Returning there was foolish enough without adding in a claim of that
sort. Most
likely they would be pulled down and thrown in chains if not beaten to
death
even without it. But he had to go. It was the right thing to do.
Daylight
began to grow on this cool spring morning, though the sun had yet to
show even
a sliver above the horizon, and Rodel Ituralde raised his gold-banded
looking
glass to study the village below the hill where he sat his roan
gelding, deep
in the heart of Tarabon. He did hate waiting for enough light to see.
Careful
of a glint off the lens, he held the end of the long tube on his thumb
and
shaded it with a cupped hand. At this hour, sentries were at their
least
watchful, relieved that the darkness where an enemy might sneak close
was
departing, yet since crossing from Almoth Plain he had heard tales of
Aiel
raids inside Tarabon. Were he a sentry with Aiel perhaps about, he
would grow
extra eyes. Peculiar that the country was not milling like a kicked
antheap
over those Aiel. Peculiar, and perhaps ominous. There were plenty of
armed men
to be found, Seanchan and Taraboners sworn to them, and hordes of
Seanchan
building farms and even villages, but reaching this far had been almost
too
easy. Today, the easiness ended.
Behind
him among the trees, horses stamped impatiently. The hundred Domani
with him
were quiet, except for an occasional creak of saddle leather as a man
shifted
his seat, but he could feel their tension. He wished he had twice as
many. Five
times. In the beginning, it had seemed a gesture of good faith that he
himself
would ride with a force mainly composed of Taraboners. He was no longer
certain
that had been the right decision. It was too late for recriminations,
in any
event.
Halfway
between Elmora and the Amadician border, Serana sat in a flat grassy
valley
among forested hills, with at least a mile to the trees in any
direction save
his, and a small, reed-fringed lake fed by two wide streams lay between
him and
the village. Not a place that could be surprised by daylight. It had
been
sizable before the Seanchan came, a stopping point for the merchant
trains
heading east, with over a dozen inns and nearly as many streets.
Village folk
were already getting about their day's tasks, women balancing baskets
on their
heads as they glided down the village streets and others starting the
fires
under laundry kettles behind their houses, men striding along toward
their
work-places, sometimes pausing to exchange a few words. A normal
morning, with
children already running and playing, rolling hoops and tossing
beanbags among
the throng. The clang of a smithy rose, dim with the distance. The
smoke from
breakfast fires was fading at the chimneys.
As
far as he could see, no one in Serana gave a second glance to the three
pairs
of sentries with bright stripes painted across their breastplates,
walking
their horses back and forth perhaps a quarter of a mile out. The lake,
considerably wider than the village, shielded the fourth side
effectively. It
seemed the sentries were an accepted matter of every day, and so was
the
Seanchan camp that had swollen Serana to more than twice its former
size.
Ituralde
shook his head slightly. He would not have placed the camp
cheek-by-jowl with
the village that way. The rooftops of Serana were all tile, red or
green or
blue, but the buildings themselves were wooden; a fire in the town
could spread
all too easily into the camp, where canvas store-tents the size of
large houses
far outnumbered the smaller tents where men slept, and great stacks of
barrels
and casks and crates covered twice as much ground as all the tents
combined.
Keeping lightfingered villagers out would be all but impossible. Every
town had
a few tickbirds who picked up anything they thought they could get away
with, and
even somewhat more honest men might be tempted by the proximity. The
location
did mean a shorter distance to haul water from the lake, and a shorter
distance
for soldiers to walk to reach the ale and wine in the village when
off-duty,
but it suggested a commander who kept slack discipline.
Slack
discipline or not, there was activity in the camp, too. Soldiers' hours
made
farmers' hours seem restful. Men were checking the animals on the long
horselines, bannermen checking soldiers standing in ranks, hundreds of
laborers
loading or unloading wagons, grooms harnessing teams. Every day, trains
of
wagons came down the road into this camp from east and west, and others
departed. He admired the Seanchan efficiency at making sure their
soldiers had
what they needed when and where it was needed. Dragonsworn here in
Tarabon,
most sour-faced men who believed their dream snuffed out by the
Seanchan, had
been willing to tell what they knew if not to ride with him. That camp
contained everything from boots to swords, arrows to horseshoes to
water-flasks, enough to outfit thousands of men from the ground up.
They would
feel its loss.
He
lowered the looking glass to brush a buzzing green fly away from his
face. Two
replaced it almost at once. Tarabon teemed with flies. Did they always
come so
early here? They would just have begun hatching at home by the time he
reached
Arad Doman again. If he did. No; no ill thoughts. When he did. Tamsin
would be
displeased, otherwise, and it was seldom wise to displease her too far.
Most
of the men down there were hired workmen, not soldiers, and only a
hundred or
so of those Seanchan. Still, a company of three hundred Taraboners in
stripe-painted armor had ridden in at noon the day before, more than
doubling
their numbers and requiring him to change his plans.
Another
party of Taraboners, as large, had entered the camp at sunset, just in
time to
eat and bed down wherever they could lay their blankets.
Candles
and lamp oil were luxuries for soldiers. There was one of those leashed
women,
a damane, in the camp, too. He wished he could have waited until she
left-they
must have been taking her elsewhere; what use for a damane at a supply
camp?-but today was the appointed day, and he could not afford to give
the
Taraboners reason to claim he was holding back. Some would snatch at
any reason
to go their own way. He knew they would not follow him much longer, yet
he
needed to hold as many as he could for a few days more.
Shifting
his gaze to the west, he did not bother with the looking glass.
"Now,"
he whispered, and as though at his command, two hundred men with mail
veils
across their faces galloped out of the trees. And immediately halted,
cavorting
and jockeying for place, brandishing steel-tipped lances while their
leader
raced up and down before them gesturing wildly in an obvious effort to
establish some semblance of order.
At
this distance, Ituralde could not have made out faces even with the
glass, but
he could imagine the fury on Tornay Lanasiet's features at playing out
this
charade. The stocky Dragonsworn burned to close with Seanchan. Any
Seanchan. It
had been difficult to dissuade him from striking the day they crossed
the
border. Yesterday he had been visibly overjoyed finally to scrape the
hated
stripes indicating loyalty to the Seanchan from his breastplate. No
matter; so
far he was obeying his orders to the letter.
As
the sentries nearest Lanasiet turned their mounts to speed toward the
village
and the Seanchan camp, Ituralde swung his attention there and raised
his
looking glass once more. The sentries would find their warning
superfluous.
Motion had ceased. Some men were pointing toward the horsemen on the
other side
of the village, while the rest seemed to be staring, soldiers and
workmen
alike. The last thing they expected was raiders. Aiel raids or no Aiel
raids,
the Seanchan considered Tarabon theirs, and safely so. A quick glance
at the
village showed people standing in the streets staring toward the
strange
riders. They had not expected raiders, either. He thought the Seanchan
were
right, an opinion he would not share with any Taraboner in the
foreseeable
future.
With
well-trained men shock could last only so long, however. In the camp,
soldiers
began racing toward their horses, many still unsaddled, though grooms
had started
working as fast as they could. Eighty-odd Seanchan footmen, archers,
formed
into ranks and set off running through Serana. At that evidence that
there
truly was a threat, people began snatching up the smaller children and
herding
the older toward the hoped-for safety of the houses. In moments, the
streets
were empty save for the hurrying archers in their lacquered armor and
peculiar
helmets.
Ituralde
turned the glass toward Lanasiet and found the man galloping his line
of
horsemen forward. "Wait for it," he growled. "Wait for it."
Again
it seemed the Taraboner heard his command, finally raising a hand to
halt his
men. At least they were still a half-mile or more from the village. The
hotheaded fool was supposed to be near a mile away, on the edge of the
trees
and still in seeming disorder and easily swept away, but half would
have to
suffice. He suppressed the urge to finger the ruby in his left ear. The
battle
had begun, now, and in battle you had to make those following you
believe that
you were utterly cool, completely unaffected. Not wanting to knock down
a
putative ally.
Emotion
seemed to leak from a commander into his men, and angry men behaved
stupidly,
getting themselves killed and losing battles.
Touching
the half-moon-shaped beauty patch on his cheek-a man should look his
best on a
day like today-he took slow measured breaths until certain that he was
as cool
inside as his outward display, then returned his attention to the camp.
Most of
the Taraboners there were mounted, now, but they waited for twenty or
so
Seanchan led by a tall fellow with a single thin plume on his curious
helmet to
gallop into the village before falling in behind, yesterday's
late-comers
trailing at the rear.
Ituralde
studied the figure leading the column, viewing him through the gaps
between
houses. A single plume would mark a lieutenant or maybe an
under-lieutenant.
Which might mean a beardless boy on his first command or a grizzled
veteran who
could take your head if you made one mistake.
Strangely,
the damane, marked by the shining silvery leash that connected her to a
woman
on a another horse, galloped her animal as hard as anyone. Everything
he had
heard said damane were prisoners, yet she appeared as eager as the
other woman,
the sul'dam. Perhaps-
Abruptly
his breath caught in his throat and all thought of damane fled.
There
were people still in the street, seven or eight men and women, walking
in a
cluster and right ahead of the racing column that they seemed not to
hear
thundering up behind them. There was no time for the Seanchan to stop
if they
wanted to, and good reason not to try with an enemy ahead, but it
looked as
though the tall fellow's hand never twitched on his reins as he and the
rest
rode the people down. A veteran, then. Murmuring a prayer for the dead,
Ituralde lowered the glass. What came next was best seen without it.
Two
hundred paces beyond the village, the officer started forming his
command where
the archers had already stopped and were waiting with nocked arrows.
Waving
directions to the Taraboners behind, he turned to peer at Lanasiet
through a
looking glass. Sunlight glinted off the tube's banding. The sun was
rising,
now. The Taraboners began dividing smoothly, lance heads glittering and
all
slanted at the same angle, disciplined men falling into ordered ranks
to either
side of the archers.
The
officer leaned over to converse with the sul'dam. If he turned her and
the
damane loose now, this could still turn into a disaster. Of course, it
could if
he did not, too. The last of the Taraboners, those who had arrived
late, began
stretching out in a line fifty paces behind the others, driving their
lances
point-down into the ground and pulling their horse-bows from the cases
fastened
behind their saddles. Lanasiet, curse the man, was galloping his men
forward.
Turning
his head for a moment, Ituralde spoke loudly enough for the men behind
him to
hear. "Be ready." Saddle leather creaked as men gathered their reins.
Then he murmured another prayer for the dead and whispered, "Now."
As
one man the three hundred Taraboners in the long line, his Taraboners,
raised
their bows and loosed. He did not need the looking glass to see the
sul'dam and
damane and the officer suddenly sprout arrows. They were all but swept
from
their saddles by near a dozen striking each of them at once. Ordering
that had
given him a pang, but the women were the most dangerous people on that
field.
The rest of that volley cut down most of the archers and cleared
saddles, and
even as men struck the ground, a second volley lanced out, knocking
down the
last archers and emptying more saddles.
Caught
by surprise, the Seanchan-loyal Taraboners tried to fight. Among those
still
mounted, some wheeled about and lowered lances to charge their
attackers.
Others, perhaps seized by the irrationality that could take men in
battle,
dropped their lances and tried to uncase their own horse-bows. But a
third
volley lashed them, pile-headed arrows driving through breastplates at
that
range, and suddenly the survivors seemed to realize that they were
survivors.
Most of their fellows lay still on the ground or struggled to stand
though
pierced by two or three shafts.
Those
still mounted were now outnumbered by their opponents. A few men reined
their
horses around, and in a flash the lot of them were running south
pursued by one
final rain of bowshot that toppled more.
"Hold,"
Ituralde murmured. "Hold where you are."
A
handful of the mounted archers fired again, but the rest wisely
refrained. They
could kill a few more before the enemy was beyond range, but this group
was
beaten, and before long they would be counting every arrow. Best of
all, none
of them went racing in pursuit.
The
same could not be said of Lanasiet. Cloaks streaming, he and his two
hundred
raced after the fleeing men. Ituralde imagined he could hear them
yelping,
hunters on the trail of running prey.
"I
think we've seen the last of Lanasiet, my Lord," Jaalam said, reining
his
gray up beside Ituralde, who shrugged slightly.
"Perhaps,
my young friend. He may come to his senses. In any case, I never
thought the
Taraboners would return to Arad Doman with us. Did you?"
"No,
my Lord," the taller man replied, "but I thought his honor would hold
through the first fight."
Ituralde
lifted his glass to look at Lanasiet, still galloping hard. The man was
gone,
and unlikely to come to senses he did not possess. A third of his force
gone as
surely as if that damane had killed them. He had counted on a few more
days. He
would need to change plans again, perhaps change his next target.
Dismissing
Lanasiet from his thoughts, he swung the glass to glance at where those
people
had been ridden down, and grunted in surprise. There were no trampled
bodies.
Friends and neighbors must have come out to carry them away, though
with a
battle on the edge of the village that seemed about as likely as them
getting
up and walking away after the horses passed.
"It's
time to go burn all those lovely Seanchan stores," he said.
Shoving
the looking glass into the leather case tied to his saddle, he donned
his
helmet and heeled Steady down the hill, followed by Jaalam and the
others in a
column of twos. Ruts from farm wagons and broken-down banks indicated a
ford in
the eastern stream. "And, Jaalam, tell a few men to warn the villagers
to
start moving what they want to save. Tell them to begin with the houses
nearest
the camp." Where fire could spread one way, it could the other, too,
and
likely would.
In
truth, he had already set the important blaze. Breathed on the first
embers, at
least. If the Light shone on him, if no one had been overcome by
eagerness or
given in to despair at the hold the Seanchan had on Tarabon, if no one
had
fallen afoul of the mishaps that could ruin the best-laid plan, then
all across
Tarabon, above twenty thousand men had struck blows like this, or would
before
the day was out. And tomorrow they would do it again. Now all he had to
do was
raid his way back across better than four hundred miles of Tarabon,
shedding
Taraboner Dragonsworn and gathering in his own men, then re-cross
Almoth Plain.
If the Light shone on him, that blaze would singe the Seanchan enough
to bring
them chasing after him full of fury. A great deal of fury, he hoped.
That way,
they would run headlong into the trap he had laid before they ever knew
it was
there. If they failed to follow, then at least he had rid his homeland
of the
Taraboners and bound the Domani Dragonsworn to fight for the King
instead of
against him. And if they saw the trap…
Riding
down the hillside, Ituralde smiled. If they saw the trap, then he had
another
plan already laid, and another behind that. He always looked ahead, and
always
planned for every eventuality he could imagine, short of the Dragon
Reborn
himself suddenly appearing in front of him. He thought the plans he had
would
suffice for the moment.
The
High Lady Suroth Sabelle Meldarath lay awake on her bed, staring up at
the
ceiling. The moon was down, and the triple-arched windows that
overlooked a
palace garden were dark, but her eyes had adjusted so that she could
make out
at least the outlines of the ornate, painted plasterwork. Dawn was no
more than
an hour or two off, yet she had not slept. She had lain awake most
nights since
Tuon vanished, sleeping only when exhaustion closed her eyes however
hard she
tried to keep them open. Sleep brought nightmares she wished she could
forget.
Ebou Dar was never truly cold, but the night held a little coolness,
enough to
help keep her awake, lying beneath only a thin silk sheet. The question
that
tainted her dreams was simple and stark. Was Tuon alive, or dead?
The
escape of the Atha'an Miere damane and Queen Tylin's murder spoke in
favor of
her death. Three events of that magnitude happening on one night by
chance was
pressing coincidence too far, and the first two were horrifying enough
in
themselves to indicate the worst for Tuon. Someone was trying to sow
fear among
the Rhyagelle, Those Who Come Home, perhaps to disrupt the entire
Return. How
better to achieve that than to assassinate Tuon? Worse, it had to be
one of
their own. Because she had landed under the veil, no local knew who
Tuon was.
Tylin had surely been killed with the One Power, by a sul'dam and her
damane.
Suroth had leaped at the suggestion that Aes Sedai were to blame, yet
eventually someone who mattered would question how one of those women
could
enter a palace full of damane in a city full of damane and escape
detection. At
least one sul'dam had been necessary to uncollar the Sea Folk damane.
And
two of her own sul'dam had disappeared at almost the same time.
In
any case, they had been noticed as missing two days later, and no one
had seen
them since the night Tuon vanished. She did not believe they were
involved,
though they had been in the kennels. For one thing, she could not
imagine Renna
or Seta uncollaring a damane. They certainly had reasons enough to
sneak away
and seek employment far off, with someone ignorant of their filthy
secret,
someone like this Egeanin Tamarath who had stolen a pair of a damane.
Strange
that, for one newly raised to the Blood. Strange, but unimportant; she
could
see no way to tie it to the rest. Likely the woman had found the
stresses and
complexities of nobility too much for a simple sailor. Well, she would
be found
and arrested eventually.
The
important fact, the potentially deadly fact, was that Renna and Seta
were gone,
and no one could say exactly when they had left. If the wrong person
noted
their departure so close to the critical time and made the wrong
calculation… She pressed the heels of her hands against her eyes and
exhaled
softly, very near to a groan.
Even
should she escape suspicion of murdering Tuon, if the woman was dead,
then she
herself would be required to apologize to the Empress, might she live
forever.
For the death of the acknowledged heir to the Crystal Throne, her
apology would
be protracted, and as painful as it was humiliating; it might end with
her
execution, or much worse, with being sent to the block as property. Not
that it
would actually come to that, though in her nightmares it often did. Her
hand
slid beneath the pillows to touch the unsheathed dagger there. The
blade was
little longer than her hand, yet more than sharp enough to open her
veins,
preferably in a warm bath. If time came for an apology, she would not
live to
reach Seandar. The dishonor to her name might even be lessened a little
if
enough people believed the act was itself an apology. She would leave a
letter
explaining it so. That might help.
Still,
there was a chance Tuon remained alive, and Suroth clung to it.
Killing
her and spiriting the body away might be a deep move ordered from
Seanchan by
one of her surviving sisters who coveted the throne, yet Tuon had
arranged her
own disappearance more than once. In support of the notion, Tuon's
der'sul'dam
had taken all of her sul'dam and damane into the country for exercise
nine days
ago, and they had not been seen since. Exercising damane did not
require nine
days. And just today-no; yesterday, now, by a good few hours-Suroth had
learned
that the Captain of Tuon's bodyguard also had left the city nine days
ago with
a sizable contingent of his men and not returned. That was too much for
coincidence, and very nearly proof. Near enough for hope, at least.
Each
of those previous disappearances, however, had been part of Tuon's
campaign to
win the approval of the Empress, might she live forever, and be named
heir.
Each time, some competitor among her sisters had been forced or
emboldened to
acts that lowered her when Tuon reappeared. What need had she of such
stratagems now, here? Rack her brains how she would, Suroth could not
find a
worthy target outside Seanchan. She had considered the possibility that
she
herself was the mark, but only briefly and only because she could think
of no
one else. Tuon could have stripped her of her position in the Return
with three
words. All she needed to do was remove the veil; here, the Daughter of
the Nine
Moons, in command of the Return, spoke with the voice of the Empire.
Bare
suspicion that Suroth was Atha'an Shadar, what those this side of the
Aryth
Ocean called a Darkfriend, might have been enough for Tuon to have
handed her
over to the Seekers for questioning. No, Tuon was aiming at someone
else, or
something else. If she did still live. But she had to.
Suroth
did not want to die. She fingered the blade.
Who
or what else did not matter, except as a clue to where Tuon might be,
but that
was very important. Immensely so. Already, despite the announcement of
an
extended inspection trip, whispers floated among the Blood that she was
dead.
The longer she remained missing, the more those whispers would grow,
and with
them the pressure for Suroth to return to Seandar and make that
apology. She
could only resist so long before she would be adjudged sei'mosiev so
deeply
that only her own servants and property would obey her. Her eyes would
be
ground into the dirt. Low Blood as well as High, perhaps even
commoners, would
refuse to speak to her. Soon after that, she would find herself on a
ship
whatever her wishes.
Without
doubt Tuon would be displeased at being found, yet it seemed unlikely
her
displeasure would extend so far as Suroth being dishonored and forced
to slit
her wrists; therefore Tuon must be found. Every Seeker in Altara was
searching
for her-those Suroth knew of, at least.
Tuon's
own Seekers were not among the known, yet they must be hunting twice as
hard as
any others. Unless they had been taken into her confidence. But in
seventeen
days, all that had been uncovered was that ridiculous story of Tuon
extorting
jewelry from goldsmiths, and that was known to every common soldier.
Perhaps…
The
arched door to the anteroom began to open slowly, and Suroth snapped
her right
eye shut to protect her night vision against the light of the outer
room. As
soon as the gap was wide enough, a pale-haired woman in the diaphanous
robes of
a da'covale slipped into the bedchamber and softly closed the door
behind her,
plunging the room into pitch blackness. Until Suroth opened her eye
again, and
made out a shadowy form creeping toward her bed. And another shadow,
huge,
suddenly looming in a corner of the room as Almandaragal rose
noiselessly to
his feet.
The
lopar could cross the room and snap the fool woman's neck in a
heartbeat, but
Suroth still gripped the hilt of her dagger. It was wise to have a
second line
of defense even when the first seemed impregnable.
A
pace short of the bed, the da'covale stopped. Her anxious breathing
sounded
loud in the silence.
"Working
up your courage, Liandrin?" Suroth said harshly. That honey-colored
hair,
worked in thin braids, had been enough to name her.
With
a squeak, the da'covale dropped to her knees and bent to press her face
to the
carpet. She had learned that much, at least. "I would not harm you,
High
Lady," she lied. "You know I would not." Her voice was rushed,
in a breathy panic. Learning when to speak and when not seemed as far
beyond
her as learning how to speak with proper respect. "We are both bound to
serve the Great Lord, High Lady. Have I not proven I can be useful? I
removed
Alwhin for you, yes? You said you wished her dead, High Lady, and I
removed
her."
Suroth
grimaced and sat up in the dark, the sheet sliding down to her lap. It
was so
easy to forget da'covale were there, even this da'covale, and then you
let slip
things you should not have. Alwhin had not been dangerous, merely a
nuisance,
awkward in her place as Suroth's Voice.
She
had achieved all she had ever wanted in reaching that, and the
likelihood of
her risking it by so much as the smallest betrayal had been tiny. True,
had she
broken her neck falling down a flight of stairs, Suroth would have felt
some
small relief from an irritant, but poison that left the woman with
bulging eyes
and a blue face was another matter. Even with the search for Tuon, that
had
brought the Seekers' eyes to Suroth's household. She had been forced to
insist
on it, for the murder of her Voice. That there were Listeners in her
household,
she accepted; every household had its share of Listeners. Seekers did
more than
listen, though, and they might uncover what must remain hidden.
Masking
her anger required surprising effort, and her tone was colder than she
wanted.
"I hope you did not wake me merely to plead again, Liandrin."
"No,
no!" The fool raised her head and actually looked straight at her!
"An
officer came from General Galgan, High Lady. He is waiting to take you
to the
general."
Suroth's
head throbbed with irritation. The woman delayed delivering a message
from
Galgan and looked her in the eyes? In the dark, to be sure, yet an urge
swept
over her to strangle Liandrin with her bare hands. A second death hard
on the
heels of the first would intensify the Seekers' interest in her
household, if
they learned of it, but Elbar could dispose of the body easily; he was
clever
in such tasks.
Except,
she enjoyed owning the former Aes Sedai who once had been so haughty
with her.
Making her a perfect da'covale in every way would be a great pleasure.
It was
time to have the woman collared, however. Already irritating rumors
buzzed of
an uncollared marath'damane among her servants. It would be a
twelve-day wonder
when the sul'dam discovered she was shielded in some way so she could
not
channel, yet that would help answer the question of why she had not
been
leashed before. Elbar would need to find some Atha'an Shadar among the
sul'dam,
though. That was never an easy task-relatively few sul'dam turned to
the Great
Lord, oddly-and she no longer really trusted any sul'dam, but perhaps
Atha'an
Shadar could be trusted more than the rest.
"Light
two lamps, then bring me a robe and slippers," she said, swinging her
legs
over the side of the bed.
Liandrin
scrambled to the table that held the lidded sand bowl on its gilded
tripod and
hissed when she found it with a careless hand, but she quickly used the
tongs
to lift out a hot coal, puffed it to a glow, and lit two of the
silvered lamps,
adjusting the wicks so the flames held steady and did not smoke. Her
tongue
might suggest that she felt herself Suroth's equal rather than a
possession, yet
the strap had taught her to obey commands with alacrity.
Turning
with one of the lamps in her hand, she gave a start and a choked cry at
the
sight of Almandaragal looming in the corner, his dark, ridge-ringed
eyes
focused on her. You would think she had never seen him before! Yet he
was a
fearsome sight, ten feet tall and near two thousand pounds, his
hairless skin
like reddish brown leather, flexing his six toed forepaws so his claws
extended
and retracted, extended and retracted.
"Be
at ease," Suroth told the lopar, a familiar command, but he stretched
his
mouth wide, showing sharp teeth before settling back to the floor and
resting
his huge round head on his paws like a hound. He did not close his eyes
again,
either. Lopar were quite intelligent, and plainly he trusted Liandrin
no more
than she did.
Despite
fearful glances at Almandaragal, the da'covale was quick enough to
fetch blue
velvet slippers and a white silk robe intricately embroidered in green,
red and
blue from the tall, carved wardrobe, and she held the robe for Suroth
to thrust
her arms into the sleeves, but Suroth had to tie the long sash herself,
and to
thrust out a foot before the woman remembered to kneel and fit the
slippers on.
Her eyes, but the woman was incompetent!
By
the dim light, Suroth examined herself in the gilded stand-mirror
against the
wall. Her eyes were hollow and shadowed with weariness, the tail of her
crest
hung down her back in a loose braid for sleeping, and doubtless her
scalp
required a razor. Very well. Galgan's messenger would think her
grief-stricken
over Tuon, and that was true enough.
Before
learning the general's message, though, she had one small matter to
take care
of.
"Run
to Rosala and beg her to beat you soundly, Liandrin," she said.
The
da'covale's tight little mouth dropped open and her eyes widened in
shock.
"But why?" she whined. "Me, I have done nothing!"
Suroth
busied her hands with knotting the sash tighter to keep from striking
the
woman. Her eyes would be lowered for a month if it was learned that she
had
struck a da'covale herself. She certainly owed no explanations to
property, yet
once Liandrin did become completely trained, she would miss these
opportunities
to grind the woman's face in how far she had fallen.
"Because
you delayed telling me of the general's messenger. Because you still
call
yourself 'I' rather than Liandrin. Because you meet my eyes."
She
could not help hissing that. Liandrin had huddled in on herself with
every
word, and now she directed her eyes to the floor, as if that would
mitigate her
offense. "Because you questioned my orders instead of obeying. And
last-last, but most importantly to you-because I wish you beaten. Now,
run, and
tell Rosala each of these reasons so she will beat you well."
"Liandrin
hears and obeys, High Lady," the da'covale whimpered, at last getting
something right, and flung herself at the door so fast that she lost
one of her
white slippers. Too terrified to turn back for it, or perhaps even to
notice-and well for her that she was-she clawed the door open and ran.
Sending
property for discipline should not bring a sense of satisfaction, but
it did.
Oh, yes, it did.
Suroth
took a moment to control her breathing. To appear to be grieving was
one thing,
to appear to be agitated quite another. She was filled with annoyance
at
Liandrin, jolting memories of her nightmares, fears for Tuon's fate and
even
more so her own, but not until the face in the mirror displayed utter
calm did
she follow the da'covale.
The
anteroom to her bedchamber was decorated in the garish Ebou Dari
fashion, a
cloud-painted blue ceiling, yellow walls and green and yellow floor
tiles. Even
replacing the furnishings with her own tall screens, all save two
painted by
the finest artists with birds or flowers, did little to relieve the
gaudiness.
She growled faintly in her throat at sight of the outer door,
apparently left
open by Liandrin in her flight, but she dismissed the da'covale from
her mind
for the moment and concentrated on the man who stood there examining
the screen
that held the image of a kori, a huge spotted cat from the Sen T'jore.
Lanky
and graying, in armor striped blue-and-yellow, he pivoted smoothly at
the soft
sound of her footsteps and went to one knee, though he was a commoner.
The
helmet beneath his arm bore three slender blue plumes, so the message
must be
important. Of course, it must be important to disturb her at this hour.
She
would give him dispensation. This once.
"Banner-General
Mikhel Najirah, High Lady. Captain-General Galgan's compliments, and he
has
received communications from Tarabon."
Suroth's
eyebrows climbed in spite of herself. Tarabon? Tarabon was as secure as
Seandar. Automatically her fingers twitched, but she had not yet found
a
replacement for Alwhin. She must speak to the man herself.
Irritation
over that hardened her voice, and she made no effort to soften it.
Kneeling
instead of prostrate! "What communications? If I have been wakened for
news of Aiel, I will not be pleased, Banner-General."
Her
tone failed to intimidate the man. He even raised his eyes almost to
meet hers.
"Not Aiel, High Lady," he said calmly. "Captain-General Galgan
wishes to tell you himself, so you can hear every detail correctly."
Suroth's
breath caught for an instant. Whether Najirah was just reluctant to
tell her
the contents of these communications or had been ordered not to, this
sounded
ill. "Lead on," she commanded, then swept out of the room without
waiting for him, ignoring as best she could the pair of Deathwatch
Guards
standing like statues in the hallway to either side of the door. The
"honor" of being guarded by those men in red-and-green armor made her
skin crawl. Since Tuon's disappearance, she tried not to see them at
all.
The
corridor, lined with gilded stand-lamps whose flames flickered in
errant drafts
that stirred tapestries of ships and the sea, was empty except for a
few
liveried palace servants, scurrying on early tasks, who thought deep
bows and
curtsies sufficient. And they always looked right at her! Perhaps a
word with
Beslan? No; the new King of Tarabon was her equal, now, in law at any
rate, and
she doubted that he would make his servants behave properly. She stared
straight ahead as she walked. That way, she did not have to see the
servants'
insults.
Najirah
caught up to her quickly, his boots ringing on the too-bright blue
floor tiles,
and fell in at her side. In truth, she needed no guide. She knew where
Galgan
must be.
The
room had begun as a chamber for dancing, a square thirty paces on a
side, its
ceiling painted with fanciful fish and birds frolicking in often
confusing
fashion among clouds and waves. Only the ceiling remained to recall the
room's
beginnings. Now mirrored stand-lamps and shelves full of filed reports
in
leather folders lined the pale red walls. Brown-coated clerks scurried
along
the aisles between the long, map-strewn tables that covered the
green-tiled
dancing-floor. A young officer, an under-lieutenant with no plume on
her
red-and-yellow helmet, raced past Suroth without so much as a move to
prostrate
herself. Clerks merely squeezed themselves out of her path. Galgan gave
his
people too much leeway. He claimed that what he called excessive
ceremony at
"the wrong time" hindered efficiency; she called it effrontery.
Lunal
Galgan, a tall man in a red robe richly worked with bright-feathered
birds, the
hair of his crest snow white and its tail plaited in a tight but untidy
queue
that hung to his shoulders, stood at a table near the center of the
room with a
knot of other high-ranking officers, some in breastplates, others in
robes and
nearly as disheveled as she. It seemed she was not the first to whom he
had
sent a messenger.
She
struggled to keep anger from her face. Galgan had come with Tuon and
the
Return, and thus she knew little of him beyond that his ancestors had
been
among the first to throw their support to Luthair Paendrag and that he
owned a
high reputation as a soldier and a general. Well, reputation and truth
were
sometimes the same. She disliked him entirely for himself.
He
turned at her approach and formally laid his hands on her shoulders,
kissing
her on either cheek, so she was forced to return the greeting while
trying not
to wrinkle her nose at the strong, musky scent he favored. Galgan's
face was as
smooth as his creases would allow, but she thought she detected a hint
of worry
in his blue eyes. A number of the men and women behind him, mainly low
Blood
and commoners, wore open frowns.
The
large map of Tarabon spread out on the table in front of her and held
flat by
four lamps gave reason enough for worry. Markers covered it, red wedges
for
Seanchan forces on the move and red stars for forces holding in place,
each
supporting a small paper banner inked with their numbers and
composition.
Scattered across the map, across the entire map, lay black discs
marking
engagements, and even more white discs for enemy forces, many of those
without
the banners. How could there be any enemies in Tarabon? It was as
secure as…
"What
happened?" she demanded.
"Raken
began arriving with reports from Lieutenant-General Turan about three
hours
ago," Galgan began in conversational tones. Pointedly not making a
report
himself. He studied the map as he talked, never glancing in her
direction.
"They aren't complete-each new one adds to the lists, and I expect that
won't change for a while-but what I've seen runs this way. Since dawn
yesterday, seven major supply camps overrun and burned, along with more
than
two dozen smaller camps. Twenty supply trains attacked, the wagons and
their
contents put to the torch. Seventeen small outposts have been wiped
out, eleven
patrols have failed to report in, and there have been an additional
fifteen
skirmishes. Also a few attacks against our settlers. Only a handful of
fatalities, mostly men who tried to defend their belongings, but a good
many
wagons and stores burned along with some half-built houses, and the
same
message delivered everywhere. Leave Tarabon. All this was done by bands
of
between two and perhaps five hundred men. Estimates are a minimum of
ten
thousand and perhaps twice that, nearly all Taraboners. Oh, yes," he
finished casually, "and most of them are wearing armor painted with
stripes."
She
wanted to grind her teeth. Galgan commanded the soldiers of the Return,
yet she
commanded the Corenne, the Forerunners, and as such, she possessed the
higher
rank in spite of his crest and red-lacquered fingernails. She suspected
the
only reason he did not claim that the Forerunners had been absorbed
into the
Return by its very arrival was that supplanting her meant assuming
responsibility for Tuon's safety.
And
for that apology, should it become necessary. "Dislike" was too mild
a word. She loathed Galgan.
"A
mutiny?" she said, proud of the coolness of her voice. Inside, she had
begun to burn.
Galgan's
white queue swung slowly as he shook his head. "No. All reports say our
Taraboners have fought well, and we've had a few successes, taken a few
prisoners. Not one of them can be found on the rosters of loyal
Taraboners. Several
have been identified as Dragonsworn believed to be up in Arad Doman.
And the
name Rodel Ituralde has been mentioned a number of times as the brain
behind it
all, and the leader. A Domani.
He's
supposed to be one of the best generals this side of the ocean, and if
he
planned and carried out all this," he swept a hand over the map,
"then I believe it." The fool sounded admiring! "Not a mutiny. A
raid on a grand scale. But he won't get out with nearly as many men as
he
brought in."
Dragonsworn.
The word was like a fist clutching Suroth's throat. "Are there
Asha'man?"
"Those
fellows who can channel?" Galgan grimaced and made a sign against evil,
apparently unconscious of doing so. "There was no mention of them,"
he said dryly, "and I rather think there would have been."
Red-hot
anger needed to erupt at Galgan, but screaming at another of the High
Blood
would lower her eyes. And, as bad, gain nothing. Still, it had to be
directed
somewhere. It had to come out. She was proud of what she had done in
Tarabon,
and now the country appeared to be halfway back to the chaos she found
when she
first landed there. And one man was to blame. "This Ituralde." Her
tone was ice. "I want his head!"
"Never
fear," Galgan murmured, folding his hands behind his back and bending
to
examine some of the small banners. "It won't be long before Turan
chases
him back to Arad Doman with his tail between his legs, and with luck,
he'll be
with one of the bands we snap up."
"Luck?"
she snapped. "I don't trust to luck!" Her anger was open, now, and
she did not consider trying to suppress it again. Her eyes scanned the
map as
though she could find Ituralde that way. "If Turan is hunting a hundred
bands, as you suggest, he'll need more scouts to run them down, and I
want them
run down. Every last one of them. Especially Ituralde. General Yulan, I
want
four in every five-no, nine in every ten-raken in Altara and Amadicia
moved to
Tarabon. If Turan can't find them all with that, then he can see if his
own
head will appease me."
Yulan,
a dark little man in a blue robe embroidered with black-crested eagles,
must
have dressed in too great a hurry to apply the gum that normally held
his wig
in place, because he was constantly touching the thing to make sure it
was
straight. He was Captain of the Air for the Forerunners, but the
Return's
Captain of the Air was only a Banner-General, a more senior man having
died on
the voyage. Yulan would have no trouble with him.
"A
wise move, High Lady," he said, frowning at the map, "but may I
suggest leaving the raken in Amadicia and those assigned to
Banner-General
Khirgan. Raken are the best way we have to locate Aiel, and in two days
we
still haven't found those Whitecloaks. That will still give General
Turan-"
"The
Aiel are less of a problem every day," she told him firmly, "and a
few deserters are nothing." He inclined his head in assent, one hand
keeping his wig in place. He was only low Blood, after all.
"I
hardly call seven thousand men a few deserters," Galgan murmured dryly.
"It
shall be as I command!" she snapped. Curse those so-called Children of
the
Light! She still had not decided whether to make Asunawa and the few
thousand
who had remained da'covale. They had remained, yet how long before they
offered
betrayal, too? And Asunawa seemed to hate damane, of all things. The
man was
unbalanced!
Galgan
shrugged, utterly unperturbed. A red-lacquered fingernail traced lines
on the
map as though he were planning movements of soldiers. "So long as you
don't want the to'raken, too, I raise no objections. That plan must go
forward.
Altara is falling into our hands with barely a struggle, I'm not ready
to move
on Illian yet, and we need to pacify Tarabon again quickly. The people
will
turn against us if we can't give them safety."
Suroth
began to regret letting her anger show. He would raise no objections?
He was
not ready for Illian yet? He was all but saying that he did not have to
follow
her orders, only not openly, not so he had to take her responsibility
along
with her authority.
"I
expect this message to be sent to Turan, General Galgan." Her voice was
steady, kept so by will alone. "He is to send me Rodel Ituralde's head
if
he has to hound the man across Arad Doman and into the Blight.
And
if he fails to send me that head, I will take his."
Galgan's
mouth tightened briefly, and he frowned down at the map. "Turan
sometimes
needs a fire lit under him," he muttered, "and Arad Doman has always
been next for him. Very well. Your message will be sent, Suroth."
She
could stay no longer in the same room with him. Without a word, she
left. Had
she spoken, she would have screamed. She stalked all the way back to
her rooms
without bothering to mask her fury. The Deathwatch Guards took no
notice, of
course; they might as well have been carved of stone. Which made her
slam the
anteroom door behind her with a crash.
Perhaps
they noticed that!
Padding
toward her bed, she kicked off her slippers, let the robe and sash fall
to the
floor. She must find Tuon. She had to. If only she could puzzle out
Tuon's
target, puzzle out where she was. If only-
Suddenly
the walls of her bedchamber, the ceiling, even the floor, began to glow
with a
silvery light. Those surfaces seemed to have become light. Gaping in
shock, she
turned slowly, staring at the box of light that surrounded her, and
found
herself looking at a woman made of roiling flames, clothed in roiling
flames.
Almandaragal was on his feet, awaiting his owner's command to attack.
"I
am Semirhage," the woman of fire said in a voice like a tolling funeral
gong.
"Belly,
Almandaragal!" That command, taught as a child because it amused her to
have the lopar prostrate himself before her, ended with a grunt because
she
obeyed it herself even as she gave it. Kissing the
red-and-green-patterned
carpet, she said, "I live to serve and obey, Great Mistress." There
was no doubt in her mind that this woman was who she said. Who would
dare claim
that name falsely? Or could appear as living fire?
"I
think you would also like to rule." The tolling gong sounded faintly
amused, but then it hardened. "Look at me! I dislike the way you
Seanchan
avoid meeting my eyes. It makes me believe you are hiding something.
You don't
want to try hiding anything from me, Suroth."
"Of
course, not, Great Mistress," Suroth said, pushing herself up to sit on
her heels. "Never, Great Mistress." She raised her gaze as far as the
other woman's mouth, but she could not make herself raise it higher.
Surely
that would be enough.
"Better,"
Semirhage murmured. "Now. How would you like to rule in these lands? A
handful of deaths-Galgan and a few others-and you could manage to name
yourself
Empress, with my help. It's hardly important, but circumstances provide
the
opportunity, and you would certainly be more amenable than the current
Empress has
been so far."
Suroth's
stomach clenched. She feared she might vomit. "Great Mistress," she
said dully, "the penalty for that is to be taken before the true
Empress,
may she live forever, and have your entire skin removed, great care
being taken
to keep you alive. After that-"
"Inventive,
if primitive," Semirhage broke in wryly. "But of no account.
The
Empress Radhanan is dead. Remarkable how much blood there is in a human
body. Enough
to cover the whole Crystal Throne. Take the offer, Suroth. I will not
make it
again. You will make certain matters slightly more convenient, but not
enough
for me to put myself out a second time."
Suroth
had to make herself breathe. "Then Tuon is the Empress, may she
live…" Tuon would take a new name, rarely to be spoken outside the
Imperial family. The Empress was the Empress, might she live forever.
Wrapping
her arms around herself, Suroth began to sob, shaking beyond her
ability to
stop. Almandaragal lifted his head and whined at her interrogatively.
Semirhage
laughed, the music of deep gongs. "Grief for Radhanan, Suroth, or is
your
dislike of Tuon becoming Empress so deep?"
Haltingly,
in spurts of three or four words broken by unmanageable weeping, Suroth
explained. As the proclaimed heir, Tuon had become Empress the moment
her
mother died. Except, if her mother had been assassinated, then it must
have
been arranged by one of her sisters, which meant that Tuon herself was
surely
dead. And none of that made the slightest difference. The forms would
be
carried out. She would have to return to Seandar and apologize for
Tuon's
death, for the death of an Empress, now, to the very woman who had
arranged it.
Who would, of course, not take the throne until Tuon's death was
announced. She
could not bring herself to admit that she would kill herself first; it
was too
shaming to say aloud. Words died as howling sobs racked her. She did
not want
to die. She had been promised she would live forever!
This
time, Semirhage's laughter was so shocking that it shut off Suroth's
tears.
That head of fire was thrown back, emitting great peals of mirth. At
last she
regained control, wiping away tears of flame with fiery fingers. "I see
I
didn't make myself clear. Radhanan is dead, and her daughters, and her
sons,
and half the Imperial Court, as well. There is no Imperial family
except for
Tuon. There is no Empire. Seandar is in the hands of rioters and
looters, and
so are a dozen other cities. At least fifty nobles are contending for
the
throne, with armies in the field. There is war from the Aldael
Mountains to
Salaking. Which is why you will be perfectly safe in disposing of Tuon
and
proclaiming yourself Empress. I've even arranged for a ship, which
should
arrive soon, to bring word of the disaster." She laughed again, and
said
something strange. "Let the lord of chaos rule."
Suroth
gaped at the other woman in spite of herself. The Empire…destroyed?
Semirhage
had killed the…? Assassination was not unknown among the Blood, High or
low,
nor within the Imperial family, yet for anyone else to reach inside the
Imperial family in that way was horrifying, unthinkable. Even one of
the
Da'concion, the Chosen Ones.
But
to become Empress herself, even here. She felt dizzy, with a hysterical
desire
to laugh. She could complete the cycle, conquering these lands, and
then send
armies to reclaim Seanchan. With an effort, she managed to regain
possession of
herself.
"Great
Mistress, if Tuon really is alive, then…then killing her will be
difficult." She had to force those words out. To kill the Empress… Even
thinking it was difficult. To become Empress. Her head felt as if it
might
float off her shoulders. "She will have her sul'dam and damane with
her,
and some of her Deathwatch Guards." Difficult? Killing her would be
impossible in those circumstances. Unless Semirhage could be induced to
do it
herself. Six damane might well be dangerous even to her. Besides, there
was a
saying among commoners. The mighty tell the lesser to dig in the mud
and keep
their own hands clean. She had heard it by chance, and punished the man
who
spoke it, but it was true.
"Think,
Suroth!" The gongs rang strong, imperative. "Captain Musenge and the
others would have gone the same night Tuon and her maid left if they
had had
any inkling of what she was about. They are looking for her. You must
put every
effort into finding her first, but if that fails, her Deathwatch Guards
will be
less protection than they seem. Every soldier in your army has heard
that at
least some of the Guards are involved with an impostor. The general
feeling
seems to be that the impostor and anyone connected to her should be
torn apart
bodily and the pieces buried in a dungheap. Quietly." Lips of fire
curled
in a small, amused smile. "To avoid the shame to the Empire."
It
might be possible. A party of Deathwatch Guards would be easy to
locate. She
would need to find out exactly how many Musenge had taken with him, and
send
Elbar with fifty for every one. No, a hundred, to account for the
damane. And
then… "Great Mistress, you understand I am reluctant to proclaim
anything until I am certain Tuon is dead?"
"Of
course," Semirhage said. The gongs were amused once more. "But
remember, if Tuon manages to return safely, it will matter little to
me, so
don't dally."
"I
will not, Great Mistress. I intend to become Empress, and for that I
must kill
the Empress." This time, saying it was not very hard at all.
In
Pevara's estimation, Tsutama Rath's rooms were flamboyant beyond the
point of
extravagance, and her own beginnings as a butcher's daughter played no
part in
her opinion. The sitting room simply put her on edge.
Beneath
a cornice carved with swallows in flight and gilded, the walls held two
large silk
tapestries, one displaying bright red bloodroses, the other a calma
bush
covered in scarlet blossoms larger than her two hands together. The
tables and
chairs were delicate pieces, if you ignored sufficient carving and
gilding for
any throne. The stand-lamps were heavily gilded, too, and the mantel,
worked
with running horses, above the red-streaked marble fireplace. Several
of the
tables held red Sea Folk porcelain, the rarest, four vases and six
bowls, a
small fortune in themselves, as well as any number of jade or ivory
carvings,
none small, and one figure of a dancing woman, a hand tall, that
appeared be
carved from a ruby. A gratuitous display of wealth, and she knew for a
fact
that aside from the gilded barrel-clock on the mantel, there was
another in
Tsutama's bedroom and even one in her dressing room. Three clocks! That
went
far beyond flamboyant, never mind gilding or rubies.
And
yet, the room suited the woman seated across from her and Javindhra.
"Flamboyant"
was exactly the word for her appearance. Tsutama was a strikingly
beautiful
woman, her hair caught in a fine golden net, with firedrops thick at
her throat
and ears and dressed as always in crimson silk that molded her full
bosom,
today with golden scrollwork embroidery to increase the emphasis. You
might
almost think she wanted to attract men, if you did not know her.
Tsutama had
made her dislike of men well known long before being sent into exile;
she would
have given mercy to a rabid dog before a man.
Back
then, she had been hammer-hard, yet many had thought her a broken reed
when she
returned to the Tower. For a while, they had. Then everyone who spent
any time
near her realized that those shifting eyes were far from nervous. Exile
had
changed her, only not toward softness.
Those
eyes belonged on a hunting cat, searching for enemies or prey. The rest
of
Tsutama's face was not so much serene as it was still, an unreadable
mask.
Unless you pushed her to open anger, at least. Even then her voice
would remain
as calm as smooth ice, though. An unnerving combination.
"I
heard disturbing rumors this morning about the battle at Dumai's
Wells,"
she said abruptly. "Bloody disturbing." She had the habits now of
long silences, no small talk, and sudden, unexpected statements.
Exile
had coarsened her language, too. The isolated farm she had been
confined to
must have been…vivid. "Including that three of the dead sisters were
from our Ajah. Mother's milk in a cup!" All delivered in the most even
tones. But her eyes stabbed at them accusingly.
Pevara
took that gaze in stride. Any direct look from Tsutama seemed accusing,
and on
edge or not, Pevara knew better than to let the Highest see it. The
woman
swooped on weakness like a falcon. "I can't see why Katerine would
disobey
your orders to keep her knowledge to herself, and you cannot believe
Tarna is
likely to put discredit on Elaida." Not publicly, at any rate. Tarna
guarded her feelings on Elaida as carefully as a cat guarded a
mousehole.
"But sisters do get reports from their eyes-and-ears. We can't stop
them
learning what happened. I'm surprised it's taken this long."
"That's
so," Javindhra added, smoothing her skirts. The angular woman wore no
jewelry aside from the Great Serpent ring, and her dress was unadorned,
and a
red deep enough to appear near black. "Sooner or later, the facts will
all
come out if we work till our fingers bleed." Her mouth was so tight she
seemed to be biting something, yet she sounded almost satisfied. Odd,
that. She
was Elaida's lapdog.
Tsutama's
stare focused on her, and after a moment a flush grew on Javindhra's
cheeks.
Perhaps as an excuse to break eye contact, she took a long drink of her
tea.
From a cup of beaten gold worked with leopards and deer, of course,
Tsutama
being as she now was. The Highest continued to stare silently, but
whether at
Javindhra or something beyond her, Pevara could no longer say.
When
Katerine brought word that Galina was among the dead at Dumai's Wells,
Tsutama
had been raised to replace her by near acclamation. She had possessed a
very good
reputation as a Sitter, at least before her involvement in the
disgusting
events that led to her downfall, and many in the Red believed the times
called
for as hard a Highest as could be found. Galina's death had lifted a
great
weight from Pevara's shoulders-the Highest, a Darkfriend; oh, that had
been
agony!-yet she was uncertain about Tsutama. There was
something…wild…about
her, now.
Something
unpredictable. Was she entirely sane? But then, the same question could
be
asked regarding the whole White Tower. How many of the sisters were
entirely
sane, now?
As
if sensing her thoughts, Tsutama shifted that unblinking gaze to her.
It
did not make Pevara color or start, as it did so many besides
Javindhra, but
she did find herself wishing Duhara were there, just to give the
Highest a
third Sitter to stare at, just to share them out. She wished she knew
where the
woman had gone and why, with a rebel army camped outside Tar Valon.
Over a week
ago, Duhara had simply taken ship without a word to anyone, so far as
Pevara
was aware, and no one seemed to know whether she had gone north or
south. These
days, Pevara was suspicious of everyone and nearly everything.
"Did
you call us here because of something in that letter, Highest?" she
said
at last. She met that unsettling stare levelly, yet she was beginning
to want a
long pull from her own ornate cup, and she wished it held wine rather
than tea.
Deliberately she rested the cup on the narrow arm of her chair. The
other
woman's gaze made her feel as though spiders were crawling on her skin.
After
a very long moment, Tsutama's eyes dropped to the folded letter in her
lap.
Only her hand held it from rolling up into a little cylinder.
It
was on the very thin paper used for messages sent by pigeon, and the
small inked
letters clearly visible through the page appeared to cover it densely.
"This
is from Sashalle Anderly," she said, bringing a wince of pity from
Pevara
and a grunt that might have been anything from Javindhra. Poor
Sashalle.
Tsutama continued without any outward sign of sympathy, though. "The
bloody woman believes Galina escaped, because it is addressed to her.
Much of
what she writes merely confirms what we already know from other
sources,
including Toveine. But, without naming them, she bloody well says that
she is
'in charge of most of the sisters in the city of Cairhien.'"
"How
can Sashalle be in charge of any sisters?" Javindhra shook her head,
her
expression denying the possibility. "Could she have gone insane?"
Pevara
held her silence. Tsutama gave answers when she wished, rarely when you
asked.
Toveine's earlier letter, also addressed to Galina, had not mentioned
Sashalle
at all, or the other two, but of course, she would have found the
entire
subject beyond distasteful. Even thinking of it was like eating rotten
plums.
Most of her words had been devoted to laying the whole blame for events
at
Elaida's feet, however indirectly.
Tsutama's
eyes flickered toward Javindhra like dagger thrusts, but she went on
without
pausing. "Sashalle recounts Toveine's bloody visit to Cairhien with the
other sisters and the flaming Asha'man, though she clearly doesn't know
about
the bloody bonding. She found it all very strange, sisters mingling
with those
goat-kissing men on 'tense yet often friendly' terms. Blood and bloody
ashes!
That is how she puts it, burn me." Tsutama's tone, suitable for
discussing
the price of lace, in strong contrast to the intensity of her eyes, and
her
language, gave no hint of what she felt on the subject. "Sashalle says
that
when they left, they took flaming Warders belonging to sisters she
believes are
with the boy, so it seems bloody certain they were looking for him and
likely
have found him by now. She has no idea why. But she confirms what
Toveine
claimed concerning Logain. Apparently, the goat-spawned man is no
longer
gentled."
"Impossible,"
Javindhra muttered into her teacup, but softly. Tsutama disliked having
her
statements challenged. Pevara kept her opinions to herself and sipped
from her
own cup. So far, there seemed nothing in the letter worthy of
discussion except
how Sashalle could be "in charge" of anything, and she would rather
think of anything other than Sashalle's fate. The tea tasted of
blueberries.
How had Tsutama obtained blueberries this early in the spring? Perhaps
they had
been dried.
"I
will read the rest to you," Tsutama said, unfolding the page and
scanning
almost to the bottom before beginning. Apparently Sashalle had been
very
detailed. What was the Highest not sharing? So many suspicions.
I
have been so long without communicating because I could not work out
how to say
what I must, but now I see that simply telling the facts is the only
way. Along
with a number of other sisters, who I will leave to decide for
themselves
whether to reveal what I am about to, I have sworn an oath of fealty to
the
Dragon Reborn which is to last until Tarmon Gai'don has been fought.
Javindhra
gasped loudly, her eyes popping, but Pevara merely whispered,
"Ta'veren." It must be that. Ta'veren had always been her explanation
for most of the disturbing rumors out of Cairhien.
Tsutama
read on right over them.
What
I do, I do for the good of the Red Ajah and the good of the Tower.
Should
you disagree, I will surrender myself for your discipline. After Tarmon
Gai'don. As you may have heard, Irgain Fatamed, Ronaille Vevanios and I
were
all stilled when the Dragon Reborn escaped at Dumai's Wells.
We
have been Healed, however, by a man named Damer Flinn, one of the
Asha'man, and
we all seem to be restored fully. Unlikely as this seems, I swear
beneath the
Light and by my hope of salvation and rebirth that it is true. I look
forward
to my eventual return to the Tower, where I will retake the Three Oaths
to
reaffirm my dedication to my Ajah and to the Tower.
Folding
the letter again, she gave her head a small shake. "There's more, but
it's
all more bloody pleading that what she's doing is for the Ajah and the
Tower." A glitter in her eyes suggested that Sashalle might come to
regret
surviving the Last Battle.
"If
Sashalle truly has been Healed," Pevara began, and could not go on.
She
wet her lips with tea, then raised the cup again and took a mouthful.
The
possibility seemed too wonderful to hope for, a snowflake that might
melt at a
touch.
"This
is impossible," Javindhra growled, though not very strongly. Even so,
she
directed the comment to Pevara lest the Highest think it meant for her.
A deep
scowl made her face harsher. "Gentling cannot be Healed.
Stilling
cannot be Healed. Sheep will fly first! Sashalle must be delusional."
"Toveine
might be mistaken," Tsutama said, in a very strong voice, "though if
she is, I can't see why these flaming Asha'man would let Logain be one
of them,
much less command, but I hardly think Sashalle could be bloody mistaken
about
herself. And she doesn't write like a woman having flaming delusions.
Sometimes
what is bloody impossible is only bloody impossible until the first
woman does
it. So. Stilling has been Healed. By a man. Those toad-spawned Seanchan
locusts
are chaining every woman they find who can channel, apparently
including a
number of sisters. Twelve days past… Well, you know what happened as
bloody
well as I. The world has become a more dangerous place than at any time
since
the Trolloc Wars, perhaps since the Breaking itself. Therefore I've
decided we
will move forward with your scheme for these flaming Asha'man, Pevara.
Distasteful and hazardous, yet burn me, there is no bloody choice. You
and
Javindhra will arrange it together."
Pevara
winced. Not for the Seanchan. They were human, whatever strange
ter'angreal
they possessed, and they would be defeated eventually.
Mention
of what the Forsaken had done twelve days ago brought a grimace,
though,
despite her efforts at keeping a smooth face. So much of the Power
wielded in
one place could have been no one else. To the extent she could, she
avoided
thinking about that or what they might have been trying to accomplish.
Or
worse, what they might have accomplished. A second wince came at
hearing the
proposal to bond Asha'man named as hers. But that had been inevitable
from the
moment she presented Tarna's suggestion to Tsutama, while holding her
breath
against the eruption she was sure would come. She had even used the
argument of
increasing the size of linked circles by including men, against that
monstrous
display of the Power. Surprisingly, there had been no eruption, and
small
reaction of any kind. Tsutama merely said she would think on it, and
insisted
on having the relevant papers about men and circles delivered to her
from the
Library. The third wince, the largest, was for having to work with
Javindhra,
for being saddled with the job at all. She had more than enough on her
plate at
the moment, besides which, working with Javindhra was always painful.
The woman
argued against anything put forward by anyone save herself. Nearly
anything.
Javindhra
had been vehemently against bonding Asha'man, horrified at the notion
of Red
sisters bonding anyone almost as much as at bonding men who could
channel, yet
now that the Highest had commanded it, she was stymied. Still, she
found a way
to argue against. "Elaida will never allow it," she muttered.
Tsutama's
glittering eyes caught her gaze and held it. The bony woman swallowed
audibly.
"Elaida
will not know until it is too late, Javindhra. I hide her secrets-the
disaster
against the Black Tower, Dumai's Wells-as best I can because she was
raised
from the Red, but she is the Amyrlin Seat, of all Ajahs and none. That
means
she is no longer Red, and this is Ajah business, not hers." A dangerous
tone entered her voice. And she had not cursed once. That meant she was
on the
edge of open fury. "Do you disagree with me on this? Do you intend to
inform Elaida despite my express wishes?"
"No,
Highest," Javindhra replied quickly, then buried her face in her cup.
Strangely, she seemed to be hiding a smile.
Pevara
contented herself with shaking her head. If it had to be done, and she
was
certain it must, then clearly Elaida had to be kept in the dark. What
did
Javindhra have to smile about? Too many suspicions.
"I'm
very glad that you both agree with me," Tsutama said dryly, leaning
back
in her chair. "Now, leave me."
They
paused only to set down their cups and curtsy. In the Red, when the
Highest
spoke, everyone obeyed, including Sitters. The sole exception, by Ajah
law, was
voting in the Hall, though some women who held the title had managed to
ensure
that any vote near to their hearts went as they wished. Pevara was
certain
Tsutama intended to be one such. The struggle was going to be
distinctly
unpleasant. She only hoped she could give as good as she got.
In
the corridor outside, Javindhra muttered something about correspondence
and
rushed off down the white floor tiles marked with the red Flame of Tar
Valon before
Pevara could say a word. Not that she had intended to say anything, but
surely
as peaches were poison, the woman was going to drag her heels in this
and leave
the whole matter in her lap. Light, but this was the last thing she
needed, at
the worst possible time.
Pausing
at her own rooms only long enough to gather her long-fringed shawl and
check
the hour-a quarter of an hour to noon; she was almost disappointed that
her one
clock agreed with Tsutama's; clocks frequently did not-she left the Red
quarters
and hurried deeper into the Tower, down into the common areas below the
quarters. The wide hallways were well lighted with mirrored stand-lamps
but
almost empty of people, which made them seem cavernous and the
frieze-banded
white walls stark. The occasional rippling of a bright tapestry in a
draft had
an eerie feel, as though the silk or wool had taken on life. The few
people she
saw were serving men and women with the Flame of Tar Valon on their
chests,
scurrying along about their chores and barely pausing long enough to
offer
hurried courtesies. They kept their eyes lowered. With the Ajahs
separated into
all but warring camps, fetid tension and antagonism filled the Tower,
and the
mood had infected the servants. Frightened them, at least.
She
could not be sure, but she thought fewer than two hundred sisters
remained in
the Tower, most keeping to their Ajah quarters except for necessity, so
she
really did not expect to see another sister strolling.
When
Adelorna Bastine glided up the short stairs from a crossing corridor
almost
right in front of her, she was so surprised she gave a start. Adelorna,
who
made slimness appear stately despite her lack of height, walked on
without
acknowledging Pevara in any way. The Saldaean woman wore her shawl,
too-no sister
was seen outside her Ajah quarters without her shawl, now-and was
followed by
her three Warders. Short and tall, wide and lean, they wore their
swords, and
their eyes never ceased moving. Warders wearing swords and plainly
guarding
their Aes Sedai's back, in the Tower. That was all too common, yet
Pevara could
have wept at it. Only, there were too many reasons for weeping to
settle on
one; instead she set about solving what she could.
Tsutama
could command Reds to bond Asha'man, command them not to go running to
Elaida,
but it seemed best to begin with sisters who might be willing to
entertain the
notion without being ordered, especially with rumors spreading of three
Red
sisters dead at Asha'man hands. Tarna Feir had already entertained it,
so a very
private conversation with her was in order. She might know others of a
like
mind. The greatest difficulty would be approaching the Asha'man with
the idea.
They were very unlikely to agree just because they themselves had
already
bonded fifty-one sisters. Light of the world, fifty-one! Broaching the
subject
would require a sister who possessed diplomacy and a way with words.
And iron
nerve. She was still mulling over names when she saw the woman she had
come to
meet, already at the appointed place, apparently studying a tall
tapestry.
Tiny
and willowy, and regal in her pale silver silk with a slightly darker
lace at
her neck and wrists, Yukiri appeared throughly engrossed in the
tapestry and
quite at her ease. Pevara could only recall seeing her the slightest
bit
flustered on one occasion, and putting Talene to the question had been
nerve-racking for everyone there. Yukiri was alone, of course, though
of late
she had been heard to say she was thinking of taking a Warder again.
Doubtless
that was equal parts the current times and their own present situation.
Pevara
could have done with a Warder or two herself.
"Is
there any truth in this, or is it all the weaver's fancy?" she asked,
joining the smaller woman. The tapestry showed a long-ago battle
against Trollocs,
or was purported to. Most such things were made long after the fact,
and the
weavers usually went by hearsay. This one was old enough to need the
protection
of a warding to keep it from falling apart.
"I
know as much about tapestries as a pig knows about blacksmithing,
Pevara."
For all her elegance, Yukiri seldom let long pass without revealing her
country
origins. The silvery gray fringe of her shawl swung as she gathered it
around
her. "You're late, so let's be brief. I feel like a hen being watched
by a
fox. Marris broke this morning, and I gave her the oath of obedience
myself,
but as with the others, her 'one other' is out of the Tower. With the
rebels, I
think." She fell silent as a pair of serving women approached up the
hallway carrying a large wicker laundry basket with neatly folded bed
linens
bulging from the top.
Pevara
sighed. It had seemed so encouraging, at the start. Terrifying and
nearly
overwhelming, too, yet they had appeared to be making a good beginning.
Talene
had only known the name of one other Black sister actually in the Tower
at
present, but once Atuan had been kidnapped-Pevara would have liked to
think of
it as an arrest, yet she could not when they seemed to be violating
half of
Tower Law and a good many strong customs besides-once Atuan was safely
in hand,
she had soon been induced to surrender the names of her heart: Karale
Sanghir,
a Domani Gray, and Marris Thornhill, an Andoran Brown. Only Karale
among them
had a Warder, though he had turned out to be a Darkfriend, too.
Luckily,
soon after learning that his Aes Sedai had betrayed him, he had managed
to take
poison in the basement room where he had been confined while Karale was
questioned. Strange to think of that as lucky, but the Oath Rod only
worked on
those who could channel, and they were too few to guard and tend
prisoners.
It
had been such a bright beginning, however fraught, and now they were at
an
impasse unless one of the others returned to the Tower, back to
searching for
discrepancies between what sisters claimed to have done and what it
could be
proven they actually had, something made harder by the inclination of
most
sisters to be oblique in nearly everything. Of course, Talene and the
other
three would pass along whatever they knew, whatever came into their
hands-the
oath of obedience took care of that-but any message very much more
important
than "take this and put it in that place" would be in a cipher known
only to the woman who sent it and the woman it was directed to. Some
were
protected by a weave that made the ink vanish if the wrong hand broke
the seal;
that could be done with so little of the Power it might go unnoticed
unless you
were looking for it, and there appeared to be no way to circumvent the
ward.
If
they were not at an impasse, then their flow of success was reduced to
a
creeping trickle. And always there was the danger that the hunted would
learn
of them and become the hunters. Invisible hunters, for all practical
purposes,
just as they now seemed invisible prey.
Still,
they had four names plus four sisters in hand who would admit they were
Darkfriends, though likely Marris would be as quick as the other three
to claim
she now rejected the Shadow, repented of her sins, and embraced the
Light once
more. Enough to convince anyone. Supposedly, the Black Ajah knew
everything
that passed in Elaida's study, yet it might be worth the risk. Pevara
refused
to believe Talene's claim that Elaida was a Darkfriend. After all, she
had
initiated the hunt. The Amyrlin Seat could rouse the entire Tower.
Perhaps a
revelation that the Black Ajah truly existed might do what the
appearance of
the rebels with an army had failed to, stop the Ajahs from hissing at
one
another like strange cats and bind them back together. The Tower's
wounds
called for desperate remedies.
The
serving women passed beyond earshot, and Pevara was about to bring up
the
suggestion when Yukiri spoke again.
"Last
night, Talene received an order to appear tonight before their 'Supreme
Council.'" Her mouth twisted around the words in distaste. "It seems
that happens only if you're being honored or given a very, very
important
assignment. Or if you're to be put to the question." Her lips almost
writhed. What they had learned about the Black Ajah's means of putting
someone
to the question was as nauseating as it was incredible.
Forcing
a woman into a circle against her will? Guiding a circle to inflict
pain?
Pevara felt her stomach writhing. "Talene doesn't think she's to be
honored or given an assignment," Yukiri went on, "so she begged to be
hidden away. Saerin put her in a room in the lowest basement. Talene
may be
wrong, but I agree with Saerin. Risking it would be letting a dog into
the
chicken yard and hoping for the best."
Pevara
stared up at the tapestry stretching well above their heads.
Armored
men swung swords and axes, stabbed spears and halberds at huge,
man-like shapes
with boars' snouts and wolves' snouts, with goats' horns and rams'
horns. The
weaver had seen Trollocs. Or accurate drawings. Men fought alongside
the
Trollocs, too. Darkfriends. Sometimes, fighting the Shadow required
spilling
blood. And desperate remedies.
"Let
Talene go to this meeting," she said. "We'll all go. They won't
expect us. We can kill or capture them and decapitate the Black at a
stroke.
This Supreme Council must know the names of all of them. We can destroy
the
whole Black Ajah."
Lifting
an edge of the fringe on Pevara's shawl with a slim hand, Yukiri
frowned at it
ostentatiously. "Yes, red. I thought it might have turned green when I
wasn't looking. There will be thirteen of them, you know.
Even
if some of this 'Council' are out of the Tower, the rest will bring in
sisters
to make up the number."
"I
know," Pevara replied impatiently. Talene had been a fount of
information,
most of it useless and much of it horrifying, almost more than they
could take
in. "We take everyone. We can order Zerah and the others to fight
alongside us, and even Talene and that lot. They'll do as they're
told."
In the beginning, she had been uneasy about that oath of obedience, but
over
time you could become accustomed to anything.
"So,
nineteen of us against thirteen of them," Yukiri mused, sounding much
too
patient. Even the way she adjusted her shawl radiated patience.
"Plus
whoever they have watching to make sure their meeting isn't disturbed.
Thieves
are always the most careful of their purses." That had the irritating
sound of an old saying. "Best to call the numbers even at best, and
probably favoring them. How many of us die in return for killing or
capturing
how many of them? More importantly, how many of them escape? Remember,
they
meet hooded. If just one escapes, then we won't know who she is, but
she'll
know us, and soon enough, the whole Black Ajah will know, too. It
sounds to me
less like chopping off a chicken's head than like trying to wrestle a
leopard
in the dark."
Pevara
opened her mouth, then closed it without speaking. Yukiri was right.
She should
have tallied the numbers and reached the same conclusion herself. But
she
wanted to strike out, at something, at anything, and small wonder. The
head of
her Ajah might be insane; she was tasked with arranging for Reds, who
by
ancient custom bonded no one, to bond not just any men, but Asha'man;
and the
hunt for Darkfriends in the Tower had reached a stone wall. Strike out?
She
wanted to bite holes through bricks.
She
thought their meeting was at an end-she had come only to learn how
matters
progressed with Marris, and a bitter harvest that had turned out-but
Yukiri touched
her arm. "Walk with me awhile. We've been here too long, and I want to
ask
you something." Nowadays, Sitters of different Ajahs standing together
too
long made rumors of plots sprout like mushrooms after rain. For some
reason,
talking while walking seemed to cause many fewer. It made no sense, but
there
it was.
Yukiri
took her time getting to her question. The floor tiles turned from
green-and-blue to yellow-and-brown as they walked along one of the main
corridors that spiraled gently through the Tower, down five floors
without
seeing anyone else, before she spoke. "Has the Red heard from anyone
who
went with Toveine?"
Pevara
almost tripped over her own slippers. She should have expected it,
though.
Toveine would not have been the only one to write from Cairhien. "From
Toveine herself," she said, and told almost everything that had been in
Toveine's letter. Under the circumstances, there was nothing else she
could do.
She did hold back the accusations against Elaida, and also how long ago
the
letter had arrived. The one was still Ajah business, she hoped, while
the other
might require awkward explanations.
"We
heard from Akoure Vayet." Yukiri walked a few paces in silence, then
muttered, "Blood and bloody ashes!"
Pevara's
eyebrows rose in shock. Yukiri was often earthy, but never vulgar
before this.
She noted that the other woman had not said when Akoure's letter
arrived,
either. Had the Gray received other letters from Cairhien, from sisters
who had
sworn to the Dragon Reborn? She could not ask. They trusted one another
with
their lives in this hunt, and still, Ajah business was Ajah business.
"What do you intend doing with the information?"
"We
will keep silent for the good of the Tower. Only the Sitters and the
head of our
Ajah know. Evanellein is for pulling Elaida down because of this, but
that
can't be allowed now. With the Tower to mend and the Seanchan and
Asha'man to
be dealt with, perhaps never." She did not sound happy over that.
Pevara
stifled her irritation. She could not like Elaida, yet you did not have
to like
the Amyrlin Seat. Any number of very unlikeable women had worn the
stole and
done well for the Tower. But could sending fifty-one sisters into
captivity be
called doing well? Could Dumai's Wells, with four sisters dead and more
than
twenty delivered into another sort of captivity, to a ta'veren? No
matter.
Elaida was Red-had been Red-and far too long had passed since a Red
gained the
stole and staff. All the rash actions and ill-considered decisions
seemed
things of the past since the rebels appeared, and saving the Tower from
the
Black Ajah would redeem her failures.
That
was not how she put it, of course. "She began the hunt, Yukiri; she
deserves to finish it. Light, everything we've uncovered so far has
come by
chance, and we are at a full stop. We need the authority of the Amyrlin
Seat
behind us if we're to get any further."
"I
don't know," the other woman said, wavering. "All four of them say
the Black knows everything that happens in Elaida's study." She bit at
her
lip and shrugged uncomfortably. "Perhaps if we can meet her alone, away
from her study-"
"There
you are. I've been looking everywhere."
Pevara
turned calmly at the sudden voice behind them, but Yukiri gave a start
and
muttered something pungent almost under her breath. If she kept this
up, she
would be as bad as Doesine. Or Tsutama.
Seaine
hurried down to them with the fringe of her shawl swinging and her
thick black
eyebrows rising in surprise at Yukiri's glare. How like a White,
logical in
everything and often blind to the world around them.
Half
the time, Seaine seemed unaware they were in any danger at all.
"You
were looking for us?" Yukiri almost growled, planting her fists on her
hips. Despite her diminutive size, she gave a good impression of fierce
looming. Doubtless part of that was for being startled, but she still
believed
Seaine should be guarded closely for her own protection, no matter what
Saerin
had decided, and here the woman was, out and about alone.
"For
you, for Saerin, for anyone," Seaine replied calmly. Her earlier fears,
that the Black Ajah might know what work Elaida had assigned her, were
quite
gone. Her blue eyes held warmth, yet otherwise she was back to being
the
prototypical White, a woman of icy serenity. "I have urgent news,"
she said as though it were anything but. "The lesser is this.
This
morning I saw a letter from Ayako Norsoni that arrived several days
ago. From
Cairhien. She and Toveine and all the others have been captured by the
Asha'man
and…" Tilting her head to one side, she studied them in turn. "You
aren't surprised in the slightest. Of course.
You've
seen letters, too. Well, there's nothing to be done about it now,
anyway."
Pevara
exchanged looks with Yukiri, then said, "This is the less urgent,
Seaine?"
The
White Sitter's composure faded into worry, tightening her mouth and
creasing
the corners of her eyes. Her hands tightened into fists gripping her
shawl.
"For us, it is. I've just come from answering a summons to Elaida. She
wanted
to know how I was getting on." Seaine took a deep breath. "With
discovering proof that Alviarin entered a treasonous correspondence
with the
Dragon Reborn. Really, she was so circumspect in the beginning, so
indirect,
it's no wonder I misunderstood what she wanted."
"I
think that fox is walking on my grave," Yukiri murmured.
Pevara
nodded. The notion of approaching Elaida had vanished like summer dew.
Their
one assurance that Elaida was not herself Black Ajah had been that she
instigated the hunt for them, but since she had done no such thing… At
least
the Black Ajah remained in ignorance of them. At least they had that,
still.
But for how much longer?
"On
mine, too," she said softly.
Alviarin
glided along the corridors of the lower Tower with an outward air of
serenity
that she held on to hard. Night seemed to cling to the walls despite
the
mirrored stand-lamps, the ghosts of shadows dancing where none should
be.
Imagination, surely, yet they danced on the edges of vision. The
hallways were
very nearly empty, though the second sitting of supper had just ended.
Most
sisters preferred to have food brought up to their rooms, these days,
but the
hardier and the more defiant ventured to the dining halls from time to
time,
and a handful still took many of their meals below. She would not risk
sisters
seeing her appear flustered or hurried; she refused to let them believe
she was
scuttling about furtively. In truth, she disliked anyone looking at her
at all.
Outwardly calm, she seethed inside.
Abruptly
she realized that she was fingering the spot on her forehead where
Shaidar
Haran had touched her. Where the Great Lord himself had marked her as
his.
Hysteria bubbled almost to the surface with that thought, but she
maintained a
smooth face by sheer will and gathered her white silk skirts slightly.
That
should keep her hands occupied. The Great Lord had marked her. Best not
to
think on that. But how to avoid it? The Great Lord… On the outside she
displayed absolute composure, but within was a swirling tangle of
mortification
and hatred and very near to gibbering terror. The external calm was
what
mattered, though.
And
there was a seed of hope. That mattered, too. An odd thing to think of
as
hopeful, yet she would hang on to anything that might keep her alive.
Stopping
in front of a tapestry that showed a woman wearing an elaborate crown
kneeling
to some long-ago Amyrlin, she pretended to examine it while glancing
quickly to
left and right. Aside from her, the corridor remained as barren of life
as an
abandoned tomb. Her hand darted behind the edge of the tapestry, and in
an
instant she was walking on again, clutching a folded message. A miracle
that it
had reached her so quickly. The paper seemed to burn her palm, but she
could
not read it here. At a measured pace, she climbed reluctantly to the
White Ajah
quarters. Calm and unfazed by anything, on the outside. The Great Lord
had
marked her. Other sisters were going to look at her.
The
White was the smallest of the Ajahs, and barely more than twenty of its
sisters
were in the Tower at present, yet it seemed that nearly all of them
were out in
the main hallway. The walk along the plain white floor tiles seemed
like
running a gauntlet.
Seaine
and Ferane were heading out despite the hour, shawls draped along their
arms,
and Seaine gave her a small smile of commiseration, which made her want
to kill
the Sitter, always thrusting her sharp nose in where it was unwanted.
Ferane
held no sympathy. She scowled with more open fury than any sister
should have
allowed herself to show. All Alviarin could do was try to ignore the
copper-skinned woman without being obvious. Short and stout, with her
usually
mild round face and an ink smudge on her nose, Ferane was no one's
image of a
Domani, but the First Reasoner possessed a fierce Domani temper. She
was quite
capable of handing down a penance for any slight, especially to a
sister who
had "disgraced" both herself and the White.
The
Ajah felt keenly the shame of her having been stripped of the Keeper's
stole.
Most felt anger at the loss of influence, as well. There were far too
many
glares, some from sisters who stood far enough below her that they
should leap
to obey if she gave a command. Others deliberately turned their backs.
She
made her way through those frowns and snubs at a steady pace,
unhurried, yet
she felt her cheeks beginning to heat. She tried to immerse herself in
the
soothing nature of the White quarters. The plain white walls, lined
with
silvered stand-mirrors, held only a few simple tapestries, images of
snowcapped
mountains, shady forests, stands of bamboo with sunlight slanting
through them.
Ever since attaining the shawl she had used those images to help her
find
serenity in times of stress. The Great Lord had marked her. She
clutched her
skirts in fists to hold her hands at her sides. The message seemed to
burn her
hand. A steady, measured pace.
Two
of the sisters she passed ignored her simply because they did not see
her.
Astrelle and Tesan were discussing food spoilage. Arguing, rather,
faces smooth
but eyes heated and voices on the brink of heat.
They
were arithmetists, of all things, as if logic could be reduced to
numbers, and
they seemed to be disagreeing on how those numbers were used.
"Calculating
with Radun's Standard of Deviation, the rate is eleven times what it
should
be," Astrelle said in tight tones. "Furthermore, this must indicate
the intervention of the Shadow-"
Tesan
cut her off, beaded braids clicking as she shook her head. "The Shadow,
yes,
but Radun's Standard, it is outdated. You must use Covanen's First Rule
of
Medians, and calculate separately for rotting meat or rotten. The
correct
answers, as I said, are thirteen and nine. I have not yet applied it to
the
flour or the beans and the lentils, but it seems intuitively obvious-"
Astrelle
swelled up, and since she was a plump woman with a formidable bosom,
she could
swell impressively. "Covanen's First Rule?" she practically
spluttered, breaking in. "That hasn't been properly proven yet. Correct
and proven methods are always preferable to slipshod…"
Alviarin
very nearly smiled as she moved on. So someone had finally noticed that
the
Great Lord had laid his hand on the Tower. But knowing would not help
them
change matters. Perhaps she had smiled, but if so, she crushed it as
someone
spoke.
"You'd
grimace too, Ramesa, if you were being strapped every morning before
breakfast," Norine said, much too loudly and plainly meaning for
Alviarin
to hear. Ramesa, a tall slender woman with silver bells sewn down the
sleeves
of her white-embroidered dress, looked startled at being addressed, and
likely
she was. Norine had few friends, perhaps none. She went on, cutting her
eyes
toward Alviarin to see whether she had noticed. "It is irrational to
call
a penance private and pretend nothing is happening when the Amyrlin
Seat has
imposed it. But then, her rationality has always been overrated, in my
opinion."
Fortunately,
Alviarin had only a short way further to reach her rooms.
Carefully
she closed the outer door and latched the latch. Not that anyone would
disturb
her, but she had not survived by taking chances except where she had
to. The
lamps were lit, and a small fire burned on the white marble hearth
against the
cool of an early spring evening. At least the servants still performed
their
duties. But even the servants knew.
Silent
tears of humiliation began to stream down her cheeks. She wanted to
kill
Silviana, yet that would only mean a new Mistress of Novices laying the
strap
across her every morning until Elaida relented. Except that Elaida
would never
relent. Killing her would be more to the point, yet such killings had
to be
carefully rationed. Too many unexpected deaths would cause questions,
perhaps
dangerous questions.
Still,
she had done what she could against Elaida. Katerine's news of this
battle was
spreading through the Black Ajah, and beyond it already.
She
had overheard sisters who were not Black talking of Dumai's Wells in
detail,
and if the details had grown in the telling, so much the better.
Soon,
the news from the Black Tower would have diffused through the White
Tower, too,
likely expanding in the same way. A pity that neither would be
sufficient to
see Elaida disgraced and deposed, with those cursed rebels practically
on the
bridges, yet Dumai's Wells and the disaster in Andor hanging over her
head
would keep her from undoing what Alviarin had done. Break the White
Tower from
within, she had been ordered. Plant discord and chaos in every corner
of the
Tower. Part of her had felt pain at that command, a part of her still
did, yet
her greater loyalty was to the Great Lord. Elaida herself had made the
first
break in the Tower, but she had shattered half of it beyond mending.
Abruptly
she realized that she was touching her forehead again and snatched her
hand
down. There was no mark there, nothing to feel or see.
Every
time she glanced into a mirror, she checked in spite of herself.
And
yet, sometimes she thought people were looking at her forehead, seeing
something that escaped her own eyes. That was impossible, irrational,
yet the
thought crept in no matter how often she chased it away. Dashing tears
from her
face with the hand holding the message from the tapestry, she pulled
the other
two she had retrieved out of her belt pouch and went to the writing
table,
standing against the wall.
It
was a plain table, and unadorned like all of her furnishings, some of
which she
suspected might be of indifferent workmanship. A trivial matter; so
long as
furniture did what it was supposed to do, nothing more mattered.
Dropping the
three messages on the table beside a small, beaten copper bowl, she
produced a
key from her pouch, unlocked a brass-banded chest sitting on the floor
beside
the table, and sorted through the small leatherbound books inside until
she
found the three she needed, each protected so that the ink on the pages
would
vanish if any hand but hers touched them. There were far too many
ciphers in
use for her to keep them in memory. Losing these books would be a
painful trial,
replacing them arduous, hence the stout chest and the lock. A very good
lock.
Good locks were not trivialities.
Quickly
she stripped off the thin strips of paper wrapping the message
recovered from behind
the tapestry, held them to a lamp flame and dropped them into the bowl
to burn.
They were only directions as to where the message was to be left, one
meant for
each woman in the chain, the extra strips merely a way of disguising
how many
links the message had to go through to reach its recipient. Too many
precautions were an impossibility. Even the sisters of her own heart
believed
her no more than they. Only three on the Supreme Council knew who she
was, and
she would have avoided that had it been possible. There could never be
too many
precautions, especially now.
The
message, once she worked it out, bending to write on another sheet, was
much as
she had expected since the previous night when Talene failed to appear.
The
woman had left the Green quarters early yesterday carrying fat
saddlebags and a
small chest. Not having a servant carry them; she had performed the
task
herself. No one seemed to know where she had gone. The question was,
had she
panicked on receiving her summons to the Supreme Council, or was there
something more? Something more, Alviarin decided. Talene had looked to
Yukiri
and Doesine as though seeking…guidance, perhaps. She was sure she had
not
imagined it.
Could
she have? A very small seed of hope. There must be something more.
She
needed a threat to the Black, or the Great Lord would withdraw his
protection.
Angrily,
she pulled her hand away from her forehead.
She
never considered using the small ter'angreal she had hidden away to
call
Mesaana. For one thing, one very important thing, the woman surely
intended to
kill her, very likely despite the Great Lord's protection.
On
the instant, if that protection were lost. She had seen Mesaana's face,
knew of
her humiliation. No woman would let that pass, especially not one of
the
Chosen. Every night she dreamed of killing Mesaana, often daydreamed of
how to
manage it successfully, yet that must wait on finding her without the
woman
knowing herself found. In the meanwhile, she needed more proof. It was
possible
that neither Mesaana nor Shaidar Haran would see Talene as verification
of
anything. Sisters had panicked and run in the past, if rarely, and
assuming
Mesaana and the Great Lord were ignorant of that would be dangerous.
In
turn she touched the ciphered message and the clear copy to the lamp
flame and
held each by a corner until they had burned nearly to her fingers
before
dropping them atop the ashes in the bowl. With a smooth black stone
that she
kept as a paperweight, she crushed the ashes and stirred them about.
She doubted
that anyone could reconstitute words from ash, but even so…
Still
standing, she deciphered the other two messages and learned that Yukiri
and
Doesine both slept in rooms warded against intrusion. That was
unsurprising-hardly a sister in the Tower slept without warding these
days-but
it meant kidnapping either would be difficult. That was always easiest
when
carried out in the depths of the night by sisters of the woman's own
Ajah. It
might yet turn out those glances were happenstance, or imagination. She
needed
to consider the possibility.
With
a sigh, she gathered more of the small books from the chest and gently
eased
herself onto the goose-down cushion on the chair at the writing table.
Not
gently enough to stop a wince as her weight settled, though. She barely
stifled
a whimper. At first, she had thought the humiliation of Silviana's
strap far
worse than the pain, but the pain no longer really faded. Her bottom
was a mass
of bruises. And tomorrow, the Mistress of Novices would add to them.
And the
day after that, and the day after… A bleak vision of endless days
howling
under Silviana's strap, of fighting to meet the eyes of sisters who
knew all
about the visits to Silviana's study.
Trying
to chase those thoughts away, she dipped a good steel-nibbed pen and
began to
write out ciphered orders on thin sheets of paper. Talene must be found
and
brought back, of course. For punishment and execution, if she had
simply
panicked, and if she had not, if she had somehow found a way to betray
her
oaths… Alviarin clung to that hope while she commanded a close watch
put on
Yukiri and Doesine. A way had to be found to take them. And if they
were caught
up in chance and imagination, something could still be manufactured
from
whatever they said. She would guide the flows in the circle. Something
could be
made.
She
wrote furiously, unaware that her free hand had risen to her forehead,
searching for the mark.
Afternoon
sunlight slanted through the tall trees on the ridge above the vast
Shaido
encampment, dappling the air, and songbirds trilled on the branches
overhead.
Redbirds and bluejays flashed by, slashes of color, and Galina smiled.
Heavy
rain had fallen in the morning, and the air still held a touch of
coolness
beneath sparse, slowly drifting white clouds. Likely her gray mare,
with its
arched neck and lively step, had been the property of a noblewoman, or
at the
least a wealthy merchant.
No
one else but a sister could have afforded such a fine animal. She
enjoyed these
rides on the horse she had named Swift, because one day it would carry
her
swiftly to freedom; just as she enjoyed this time alone to dwell on
what she
would do once she had her freedom. She had plans for repaying those who
had
failed her, beginning with Elaida. Thinking about those plans, about
their
eventual fruition, was most enjoyable.
At
least, she enjoyed her rides so long as she managed to forget that the
privilege was as much a mark of how thoroughly Therava owned her as
were the
thick white silk robe she wore and her firedrop-studded belt and
collar. Her
smile faded into a grimace. Adornments for a pet that was allowed to
amuse
itself when not required to amuse its owner. And she could not remove
those
jeweled markers, even out here. Someone might see. She rode here to get
away from
the Aiel, yet they could be encountered in the forest, too. Therava
might learn
of it. Difficult as it was to admit to herself, she feared the
hawk-eyed Wise
One to her bones. Therava filled her dreams, and they were never
pleasant.
Often she woke sweat-soaked and weeping. Waking from those nightmares
was
always a relief, whether or not she managed to get any sleep for the
rest of
the night.
There
was never any order against escape on these rides, an order she would
have had to
obey, and that lack produced its own bitterness.
Therava
knew she would return, no matter how she was mistreated, in the hope
that some
day the Wise One might remove that cursed oath of obedience. She would
be able
to channel again, when and as she wished.
Sevanna
sometimes made her channel to perform menial tasks, or just to
demonstrate that
she could command it, but that occurred so seldom that she hungered for
even
that chance to embrace saidar. Therava refused to let her so much as
touch the
Power unless she begged and groveled, but then refused her permission
to
channel a thread. And she had groveled, abased herself completely, just
to be
granted that scrap. She realized that she was grinding her teeth, and
forced
herself to stop.
Perhaps
the Oath Rod in the Tower could lift that oath from her as well as the
nearly
identical rod in Therava's possession, yet she could not be sure. The
two were
not identical. It was only a difference in marking, yet what if that
indicated
that an oath sworn on one was particular to that rod? She dared not
leave
without Therava's rod. The Wise One often left it lying in the open in
her
tent, but you will never pick that up, she had said.
Oh,
Galina could touch that wrist-thick white rod, stroke its smooth
surface, yet
however hard she strained, she could not make her hand close on it. Not
unless
someone handed it to her. At least, she hoped that would not count as
picking
the thing up. It had to be so. Just the thought that it might not be
filled her
with bleakness. The yearning in her eyes when she gazed at the rod
brought
Therava's rare smiles.
Does
my little Lina want to be free of her oath? she would say mockingly.
Then Lina
must be a very good pet, because the only way I will consider freeing
you is
for you to convince me that you will remain my pet even then.
A
lifetime of being Therava's plaything and the target for her temper? A
surrogate to be beaten whenever Therava raged against Sevanna?
Bleakness was
not strong enough to describe her feelings on that. Horror was more
like it.
She feared she might go mad if that happened. And equally, she feared
there
might be no escape into madness.
Mood
thoroughly soured, she shaded her eyes to check the height of the sun.
Therava
had merely said that she would like her back before dark, and a good
two hours
of daylight remained, but she sighed with regret and immediately turned
Swift
downslope through the trees toward the camp. The Wise One enjoyed
finding ways
to enforce obedience without direct commands. A thousand ways to make
her
crawl. For safety, the woman's slightest suggestion must be taken as a
command.
Being a few minutes late brought punishments that made Galina cringe at
the
memories. Cringe and heel the mare to a faster pace through the trees.
Therava
accepted no excuses.
Abruptly
an Aielman stepped out in front of her from behind a thick tree, a very
tall
man in cadin'sor with his spears thrust through the harness that held
his
bowcase on his back and his veil hanging on his chest. Without
speaking, he
seized her bridle.
For
an instant, she gaped at him, then drew herself up indignantly.
"Fool!"
she snapped. "You must know me by now. Release my horse, or Sevanna and
Therava will take turns removing your skin!"
These
Aiel usually showed little on their faces, yet she thought his green
eyes
widened slightly. And then she screamed as he seized the front of her
robe in a
huge fist and jerked her from the saddle.
"Be
silent, gai'shain," he said, but as though he cared nothing for whether
she obeyed.
At
one time she would have had to, but once they realized that she obeyed
any
order from anyone, there had been too many who enjoyed sending her on
foolish
errands that kept her occupied when Therava or Sevanna wanted her. Now,
she
need obey only certain Wise Ones and Sevanna, so she kicked and flailed
and
screamed in desperate hope of attracting someone who knew she belonged
to
Therava. If only she were allowed to carry a knife. Even that would
have been a
help. How could this man not recognize her, or at least know what her
jeweled
belt and collar meant? The encampment was immense, as filled with
people as
many large cities, yet it seemed that everyone could point out
Therava's pet
wetlander. The woman would have this fellow skinned, and Galina meant
to enjoy
every minute of watching.
All
too quickly it became apparent that a knife would have been no use at
all.
Despite her struggles, the brute handled her easily, pulling her cowl
down over
her head, blinding her, then stuffing as much of it as he could into
her mouth
before binding it there. Then he flipped her face down and bound her
wrists and
ankles tightly. As easily as if she had been a child! She still
thrashed, but
it was wasted effort.
"He
wanted some gai'shain that aren't Aiel, Gaul, but a gai'shain in silk
and
jewels, and out riding?" a man said, and Therava stiffened.
That
was no Aielman. Those were the accents of Murandy! "Sure and that's
none
of your ways, is it?"
"Shaido."
The word was spat out like a curse.
"Well,
we still need to find a few more if he's to learn anything useful.
Maybe more
than a few. There are tens of thousands of folks in white down there,
and she
could be anywhere among them."
"I
think maybe this one can tell Perrin Aybara what he needs to know,
Fager
Neald."
If
she had stiffened before, now she froze. Ice seemed to form in her
stomach, and
in her heart. Perrin Aybara had sent these men? If he attacked the
Shaido
trying to rescue his wife, he would be killed, destroying her leverage
with
Faile. The woman would not care what was revealed, with her man dead,
and the
others had no secrets they feared having known. In horror, Galina saw
her hopes
of obtaining the rod melting away. She had to stop him. But how?
"And
why would be you thinking that, Gaul?"
"She
is Aes Sedai. And a friend of Sevanna, it seems."
"Is
she, now?" the Murandian said in a thoughtful tone. "Is she
that?"
Strangely,
neither man sounded the least uneasy over laying hands on an Aes Sedai.
And the
Aielman apparently had done so fully aware of what she was. Even if he
was a
renegade Shaido, he had to be ignorant of the fact that she could not
channel
without permission. Only Sevanna and a handful of the Wise Ones knew
that. This
was all growing more confusing by the moment.
Suddenly
she was lifted into the air and laid on her belly. Across her own
saddle, she
realized, and the next moment she was bouncing on the hard leather, one
of the
men using a hand to keep her from falling as the mare began to trot.
"Let
us go to where you can make us one of your holes, Fager Neald."
"Just
the other side of the slope, Gaul. Why, I've been here so often, I can
make a
gateway nearly anywhere at all. Do you Aiel run everywhere?"
A
gateway? What was the man blathering about? Dismissing his nonsense,
she considered
her options, and found none good. Bound like a lamb for market, gagged
so she
would not be heard ten paces away if she shrieked her lungs out, her
chances of
escape were nonexistent unless some of the Shaido sentries intercepted
her
captors. But did she want them to?
Unless
she reached Aybara, she had no way to stop him from ruining everything.
On the
other hand, how many days off did his camp lie? He could not be very
near, or
the Shaido would have found him by now. She knew scouts had been making
sweeps
as far as ten miles from the camp.
However
many days were required to reach him, it would take as many to return.
Not
merely minutes late, but days late.
Therava
would not kill her for it. Just make her wish she were dead. She could
explain.
A tale of being captured by brigands. No, just a pair; it was hard
enough to
believe two men had gotten this near the encampment, much less a band
of
brigands. Unable to channel, she had needed time to escape. She could
make the
tale convincing. It might persuade Therava.
If
she said… It was useless. The first time Therava had punished her for
being
late, it had been because her cinch broke and she had had to walk back
leading
her horse. The woman had not accepted that excuse, and she would not
accept being
kidnapped, either. Galina wanted to weep. In fact, she realized that
she was
weeping, hopeless tears she was helpless to stop.
The
horse halted, and before she could think, she convulsed wildly, trying
to fling
herself off the saddle, screaming as loudly as her gag permitted. They
had to
be trying to avoid sentries. Surely Therava would understand if the
sentries
returned with her and her captors, even if she was late. Surely she
could find
a way to handle Faile even with her husband dead.
A
hard hand smacked her rudely. "Be silent," the Aielman said, and they
began to trot again.
Her
tears began again, too, and the silk cowl covering her face grew damp.
Therava
was going to make her howl. But even while she wept, she began to work
on what
she would say to Aybara. At least she could salvage her chances of
obtaining
the rod. Therava was going to… No. No!
She
needed to concentrate on what she could do. Images of the cruel-eyed
Wise One
holding a switch or a strap or binding cords reared in her mind, but
every time
she forced them down while she went over every question Aybara might
ask and
what answers she would give him. On what she would say to make him
leave his
wife's safety in her hands.
In
none of her calculations had she expected to be lifted down and stood
upright
no more than an hour after being captured.
"Unsaddle
her horse, Noren, and picket it with the others," the Murandian said.
"Right
away, Master Neald," came a reply. In a Cairhienin accent.
The
bonds around her ankles fell away, a knife blade slid between her
wrists,
severing those cords, and then whatever held her gag in place was
untied. She
spat out silk sodden with her own saliva and jerked the cowl back.
A
short man in a dark coat was leading Swift away through a straggle of
large,
patched brown tents and small, crude huts that seemed made from tree
branches,
including pine boughs with brown needles. How long for pine to turn
brown?
Days, surely, perhaps weeks. The sixty or seventy men tending cookfires
or
sitting on wooden stools looked like farmers in their rough coats, but
some
were sharpening swords, and spears and halberds and other polearms
stood
stacked in a dozen places. Through the gaps between the tents and huts,
she
could see more men moving about to either side, a number of them in
helmets and
breastplates, mounted and carrying long, streamered lances. Soldiers,
riding
out on patrol. How many more lay beyond her sight? No matter. What was
in front
of her eyes was impossible! The Shaido had sentries further from their
camp
than this. She was certain they did!
"If
the face wasn't enough," Neald murmured, "that cool, calculating
study would convince me. Like she's examining worms under a rock she's
turned
over." A weedy fellow in a black coat, he knuckled his waxed mustaches
in
an amused way, careful not to spoil the points. He wore a sword, but he
certainly had no look of soldier or armsman about him.
"Well,
come along then, Aes Sedai," he said, clasping her upper arm.
"Lord
Perrin will be wanting to ask you some questions." She jerked free, and
he
calmly took a firmer grip. "None of that, now."
The
huge Aielman, Gaul, took her other arm, and she could go with them or
be
dragged. She walked with her head high, pretending they were merely an
escort,
but anyone who saw how they held her arms would know differently.
Staring
straight ahead, she was still aware of armed farmboys-most were
young-staring
at her. Not gaping in astonishment, just watching, considering. How
could they
be so high-handed with an Aes Sedai? Some of the Wise Ones who were
unaware of
the oath holding her had begun expressing doubt that she was Aes Sedai
because
she obeyed so readily and truckled so for Therava, but these two knew
what she
was.
And
did not care. She suspected those farmers knew, too, and yet none
displayed any
surprise at how she was being treated. It made the back of her neck
prickle.
As
they approached a large red-and-white striped tent with the doorflaps
tied
back, she overheard voices from inside.
"…said
he was ready to come right now," a man was saying.
"I
can't afford to feed one more mouth when I don't know for how long,"
another man replied. "Blood and ashes! How long does it take to arrange
a
meeting with these people?"
Gaul
had to duck into the tent, but Galina strode in as though entering her
own
rooms in the Tower. A prisoner she might be, yet she was Aes Sedai, and
that
simple fact was a powerful tool. And weapon. Who was he trying to
arrange a
meeting with? Not Sevanna, surely. Let it be anyone but Sevanna.
In
stark contrast to the ramshackle camp outside, there was a good
flowered carpet
for a floor here, and two silk hangings embroidered with flowers and
birds in a
Cairhienin fashion hung from the roof poles. She focused on a tall,
broad-shouldered man in his shirtsleeves with his back to her, leaning
on his
fists against a slender-legged table that was decorated with lines of
gilding
and covered with maps and sheets of paper. She had only glimpsed Aybara
at a
distance in Cairhien, yet she was sure this was the farmboy from Rand
al'Thor's
home village in spite of the silk shirt and well-polished boots. Even
the
turndowns were polished. If nothing else, everyone in the tent seemed
to be
looking to him.
As
she walked into the tent, a tall woman in high-necked green silk with
small
touches of lace at her throat and wrists, black hair falling in waves
to her
shoulders, laid a hand on Aybara's arm in a familiar manner. Galina
recognized
her. "She seems cautious, Perrin," Berelain said.
"Wary
of a trap, in my estimation, Lord Perrin," put in a graying,
hard-bitten
man in an ornate breastplate worn over a scarlet coat. A
Ghealdanin,
Galina thought. At least he and Berelain explained the presence of
soldiers, if
not how they could be where they could not possibly be.
Galina
was very glad she had not encountered the woman in Cairhien. That would
have
made matters now more than merely awkward. She wished her hands were
free to
wipe the residue of tears from her face, but the two men held onto her
arms
firmly. There was nothing to be done about it.
She
was Aes Sedai. That was all that mattered. That was all she would allow
to
matter. She opened her mouth to take command of the situation…
Aybara
suddenly looked over his shoulder at her, as though he had sensed her
presence
in some way, and his golden eyes froze her tongue. She had dismissed
tales that
the man had a wolf's eyes, but he did. A wolf's hard eyes in a
stone-hard face.
He made the Ghealdanin look almost soft.
A
sad face behind that close-cropped beard, as well. Over his wife, no
doubt. She
could make use of that.
"An
Aes Sedai wearing gai'shain white," he said flatly, turning to face
her.
He was a large man, if not nearly so large as the Aielman, and he
loomed just
by standing there, those golden eyes taking in everything.
"And
a prisoner, it seems. She didn't want to come?"
"She
thrashed like a trout on the riverbank while Gaul was tying her up, my
Lord," Neald replied. "Myself, I had nothing to do but stand and
watch."
A
strange thing to say, and in such a significant tone. What could he
have…?
Abruptly she became aware of another man in a black coat, a stocky,
weathered
fellow with a silver pin in the shape of a sword fastened to his high
collar.
And she remembered where she had last seen men in black coats. Leaping
out of
holes in the air just before everything turned to utter disaster at
Dumai's
Wells. Neald and his holes, his gateways. These men could channel.
It
took everything she could summon not to try jerking free of the
Murandian's
clasp, not to edge away. Just being this close to him made her stomach
writhe.
Being touched by him… She wanted to whimper, and that surprised her.
Surely
she was tougher than that! She concentrated on maintaining an
appearance of
calm while trying to work moisture back into her suddenly dry mouth.
"She
claims friendship with Sevanna," Gaul added.
"A
friend of Sevanna," Aybara said, frowning. "But wearing a gai'shain
robe. A silk robe, and jewels, but still… You didn't want to come, but
you
didn't channel to try stopping Gaul and Neald from bringing you. And
you're
terrified." He shook his head. How did he know she was afraid?
"I'm
surprised to see an Aes Sedai with the Shaido after Dumai's Wells.
Or
don't you know about that? Let her go, let her go. I doubt she'll take
off
running since she let you bring her this far."
"Dumai's
Wells does not matter," she said coldly as the men's hands fell away.
The
pair remained on either side of her like guards, though, and she was
proud of
the steadiness of her voice. A man who could channel.
Two
of them, and she was alone. Alone, and unable to channel a thread.
She
stood straight, head erect. She was Aes Sedai, and they must see her
every inch
an Aes Sedai. How could he know she was afraid? Not a shred of fear
tinged her
words. Her face might as well been carved of stone for all she let
show.
"The White Tower has purposes none but Aes Sedai can know or
understand. I
am about White Tower business, and you are interfering. An unwise
choice for
any man." The Ghealdanin nodded ruefully, as though he had learned that
lesson personally; Aybara merely looked at her, expressionless.
"Hearing
your name was the only reason I didn't do something drastic to these
two,"
she continued. If the Murandian or the Aielmen brought up how long that
had
taken, she was ready to claim that she had been stunned at first, but
they held
silent, and she spoke quickly and forcefully. "Your wife Faile is under
my
protection, as well as Queen Alliandre, and when my business with
Sevanna is
done, I will take them to safety with me and help them reach wherever
they wish
to go. In the meanwhile, however, your presence here endangers my
business,
White Tower business, which I cannot allow. It also endangers you, and
your
wife, and Alliandre. There are tens of thousands of Aiel in that camp.
Many
tens of thousands. If they descend on you, and their scouts will find
you soon
if they haven't already, they will wipe all of you from the face of the
earth.
They may harm your wife and Alliandre for it, as well. I may not be
able to
stop Sevanna. She is a harsh woman, and many of her Wise Ones can
channel,
nearly four hundred of them, all willing to use the Power to do
violence, while
I am one Aes Sedai, and constrained by my Oaths. If you wish to protect
your
wife and the Queen, turn away from their camp and ride as hard as you
can. They
may not attack you if you are obviously retreating. That is the only
hope you
or your wife have." There. If only a few of the seeds she had planted
took
root, they should be enough to turn him back.
"If
Alliandre is in danger, Lord Perrin," the Ghealdanin began, but Aybara
stopped him with a raised hand. That was all it took. The soldier's jaw
tightened till she thought she might hear it creak, yet he remained
silent.
"You've
seen Faile?" the young man said, excitement touching his voice.
"She's
well? She hasn't been harmed?" The fool seemed not to have a word she
said
beyond mention of his wife.
"Well,
and under my protection, Lord Perrin." If this jumped-up country boy
wanted to call himself a lord, she would tolerate it for the moment.
"She
and Alliandre, both." The soldier glowered at Aybara, but he did not
take
the opportunity to speak. "You must listen to me. The Shaido will kill
you-"
"Come
here and look at this," Aybara broke in, turning to the table and
drawing
a large page toward him.
"You
must forgive his lack of manners, Aes Sedai," Berelain murmured,
handing
her a worked silver cup of dark wine. "He is under considerable strain,
as
you might understand in the circumstances. I haven't introduced myself.
I am
Berelain, the First of Mayene."
"I
know. You may call me Alyse."
The
other woman smiled as though she knew that was a false name, yet
accepting it.
The First of Mayene was far from unsophisticated. A pity she had to
deal with
the boy instead; sophisticated people who thought they could dance with
Aes
Sedai were easily led. Country folk could prove stubborn out of
ignorance. But
the fellow should know something of Aes Sedai by now. Perhaps ignoring
him
would give him reason to think on who and what she was.
The
wine tasted like flowers on her tongue. "This is very good," she said
with genuine gratitude. She had not tasted decent wine for weeks.
Therava
would not permit her a pleasure the Wise One denied herself. If the
woman
learned that she had found several barrels in Malden, she would not
even have
mediocre wine. And surely would be beaten as well.
"There
are other sisters in the camp, Alyse Sedai. Masuri Sokawa and Seonid
Traighan,
and my own advisor, Annoura Larisen. Would you like to speak to them
after you
finish with Perrin?"
With
feigned casualness, Galina drew up her cowl till her face was shadowed
and took
another swallow of wine for time to think. Annoura's presence was
understandable, given Berelain's, but what were the other two doing
there? They
had been among those who fled the Tower after Siuan was deposed and
Elaida
raised. True, none of them would know of her involvement in kidnapping
the
al'Thor boy for Elaida, but still…
"I
think not," she murmured. "Their business is theirs, and mine is
mine." She would have given a great deal to know their business, but
not
at the cost of being recognized. Any friend of the Dragon Reborn might
have…notions…about a Red. "Help me convince Aybara, Berelain. Your
Winged Guards are no match for what the Shaido will send against them.
Whatever
Ghealdanin you have with you won't make a difference. An army will make
no
difference. The Shaido are too many, and they have hundreds of Wise
Ones ready
to use the One Power as a weapon. I have seen them do it. You may die,
too, and
even if you are captured, I can't promise I can make Sevanna release
you when I
leave."
Berelain
laughed as though thousands of Shaido and hundreds of Wise Ones who
could
channel were of no account. "Oh, have no fear they will find us. Their
camp
lies a good three-day ride from here, perhaps four. The terrain turns
rough not
far from where we are."
Three
days, perhaps four. Galina shivered. She should have put it together
before
this. Three or four days of ground covered in less than an hour.
Through a hole
in the air created with the male half of the Power. She had been near
enough
for saidin to touch her. She kept her voice steady, though. "Even so,
you
must help me convince him not to attack. It would be disastrous, for
him, for
his wife, for everyone involved. Beyond that, what I am doing is
important to
the Tower. You have always been a strong supporter of the Tower."
Flattery, for the ruler of a single city and a few hides of land, but
flattery
oiled the insignificant as well as it did the mighty.
"Perrin
is stubborn, Alyse Sedai. I doubt you'll change his mind. That isn't
easy to do
once he has it set." For some reason, the young woman smiled a smile
mysterious enough to credit a sister.
"Berelain,
could you have your talk later?" Aybara said impatiently, and it was
not a
suggestion. He tapped the sheet of paper with a thick finger. "Alyse,
would you look at this?" That was not a suggestion, either. Who did the
man think he was, ordering an Aes Sedai?
Still,
moving to the table took her a little way from Neald. It brought her
nearer the
other one, who was studying her intently, but he was on the other side
of the
table. A feeble barrier, yet she could ignore him by looking at the
sheet of
paper under Aybara's finger. Keeping her eyebrows from rising was
difficult.
The town of Malden was outlined there, complete with the aqueduct that
brought
water from a lake five miles away, and also a rough outline of the
Shaido camp
surrounding the city. The real surprise was that markings seemed to
indicate
the arrival of septs since the Shaido reached Malden, and the number of
those
meant his men had been observing the camp for some time. Another map,
roughly
sketched, seemed to show the city itself in some detail.
"I
see you have learned how large their camp is," she said. "You must
know rescuing her is hopeless. Even if you have a hundred of those
men,"
speaking of them was not easy, and she could not entirely keep the
contempt
from her voice, "it isn't enough. Those Wise Ones will fight back.
Hundreds
of them. It would be a slaughter, thousands dead, your wife perhaps
among them.
I have told you, she and Alliandre are under my protection. When my
business is
finished, I will take them to safety.
You
have heard me say it, so by the Three Oaths you know it is true.
Don't
make the mistake of thinking that your connection to Rand al'Thor will
protect
you if you interfere in what the White Tower is doing. Yes, I know who
you are.
Did you think your wife wouldn't tell me? She trusts me, and if you
want to keep
her safe, you must trust me, too."
The
idiot looked at her as though her words had flown over his head without
touching his ears. Those eyes were truly unsettling. "Where does she
sleep? Her, and everyone else who was captured with her. Show me."
"I
cannot," she replied levelly. "Gai'shain seldom sleep in the same
place two nights running." With that lie vanished the last chance that
she
could leave Faile and the others alive. Oh, she had never intended to
increase
the risk of her own escape by aiding them, but that could always have
been
explained later by some change in circumstances. She could not hazard
the
possibility that they might actually escape one day and uncover her
direct lie,
however.
"I
will get her free," he growled, almost too softly for her to hear.
"Whatever
it takes."
Her
thoughts raced. There seemed no way to divert him from it, but perhaps
she
could delay him. She had to do at least that. "Will you at least hold
off
your attack? I may be able to conclude my affairs in a few more days,
perhaps a
week." A deadline should sharpen Faile's efforts. Before, it would have
been dangerous; a threat not carried out lost all force, and the chance
had
been too great that the woman might be unable to get the rod in time.
Now, the
chance became necessary. "If I can do that, and bring your wife and
others
out, there will be no reason for you to die needlessly. One week."
Frustration
painting his face, Aybara thumped his fist on the table hard enough to
make it
bounce. "You can have a few days," he growled, "maybe even a
week or more, if-" He bit off whatever he had been about to say.
Those
strange eyes centered on her face. "But I can't promise how many
days," he went on. "If I had my druthers, I'd be attacking now. I
won't leave Faile a prisoner a day longer than I have to while I wait
on Aes
Sedai schemes for the Shaido to bear fruit. You say she's under your
protection, but how great a protection can you really give, wearing
that robe?
There are signs of drunkenness in the camp. Even some of their sentries
drink.
Are the Wise Ones given to it as well?"
The
sudden shift nearly made her blink. "The Wise Ones drink only water, so
you needn't think you can find them all in a stupor," she told him
dryly.
And quite truthfully. It always amused her when the truth served her
purposes.
Not that the Wise Ones' example was bearing much fruit.
Drunkenness
was rife among the Shaido. Every raid brought back all the wine that
could be
found. Dozens and dozens of small stills produced vile brews from
grains, and
every time the Wise Ones destroyed a still, two sprang up in its place.
Letting
him know that would only encourage him, though. "As for the others, I
have
been with armies before this and seen more drinking than I have among
the
Shaido. If a hundred are drunk among tens of thousands, what gain is
there for
you? Really, it will be better if you promise me a week. Two would be
better
still."
His
eyes flashed to the map, and his right hand made a fist again, but
there was no
anger in his voice. "Do the Shaido go inside the town walls very
often?"
She
set the winecup down on the table and drew herself up. Meeting that
yellow-eyed
gaze required effort, yet she managed without a falter. "I think it's
past
time you showed proper respect. I am an Aes Sedai, not a servant."
"Do
the Shaido go inside the town walls very often?" he repeated in exactly
the same even tone. She wanted to grind her teeth.
"No,"
she snapped. "They've looted everything worth stealing and some things
that aren't." She regretted the words as soon as they left her tongue.
They had seemed safe, until she remembered men who could leap through
holes in
the air. "That isn't to say they never enter. Most days, a few go in.
There
might be twenty or thirty at any time, more on occasion, in groups of
two or
three." Did he have the wit to see what that would mean? Best to make
sure
he saw. "You could not secure them all. Inevitably, some will escape to
warn the camp."
Aybara
only nodded. "When you see Faile, tell her that on the day she sees fog
on
the ridges and hears wolves howl by daylight, she and the others must
go to
Lady Cairen's fortress at the north end of the city and hide there.
Tell her I
love her. Tell her I'm coming for her."
Wolves?
Was the man demented? How could he ensure that wolves would…?
Suddenly,
with those wolf's eyes on her, she was not sure she wanted to know.
"I
will tell her," she lied. Perhaps he only meant to use the men in black
coats to grab his wife? But why wait at all, in that case? Those yellow
eyes
hid secrets she wished she knew. Who was he trying to meet?
Clearly
not Sevanna. She would have thanked the Light for that if she had not
abandoned
that foolishness long since. Who was ready to come to him right away?
One man
had been mentioned, but that might mean a king with an army. Or al'Thor
himself? Him, she prayed never to see again.
Her
promise seemed to release something in the young man. He exhaled
slowly, and a
tension she had not noticed left his face. "The trouble with a
blacksmith's puzzle," he said softly, tapping the outline of Malden,
"is always getting the key piece into place. Well, that's done.
Or
soon will be."
"Will
you stay for supper?" Berelain asked. "The hour is near."
The
light was dimming in the open doorway. A lean serving woman in dark
wool, her
white hair in a bun on the back of her head, entered and began lighting
the
lamps.
"Will
you promise me at least a week?" Galina demanded, but Aybara shook his
head. "In that case, every hour is important." She had never intended
staying a moment longer than necessary, but she had to force her next
words
out. "Will you have one of your…men…take me back to as near the camp
as possible?"
"Do
it, Neald," Aybara commanded. "And at least try to be polite."
He said that!
She
drew a deep breath and pushed her cowl back. "I want you to hit me,
here." She touched her cheek. "Hard enough to bruise."
Finally
she had said something that got through to the man. Those yellow eyes
widened,
and he tucked his thumbs behind his belt as though securing his hands.
"I
will not," he said, sounding as though she were insane.
The
Ghealdanin's mouth hung open, and the serving woman was staring at her,
the
burning taper in her hand hanging dangerously near her skirts.
"I
require it," Galina said firmly. She would need every scrap of
verisimilitude she could find with Therava. "Do it!"
"I
don't believe he will," Berelain said, gliding forward with her skirts
gathered. "He has very country ways. If you will permit me?"
Galina
nodded impatiently. There was nothing for it, though the woman likely
would not
leave a very convincing… Her vision went dark, and when she could see
again,
she was swaying slightly. She could taste blood. Her hand went to her
cheek,
and she winced.
"Too
hard?" Berelain inquired anxiously.
"No,"
Galina mumbled, fighting to keep her face smooth. Had she been able to
channel,
she would have torn the woman's head off! Of course, if she could have
channeled, none of this would be necessary. "Now, the other cheek. And
have someone fetch my horse."
She
rode into the forest with the Murandian, to a place where several of
the huge
trees lay toppled and oddly slashed, sure it would be difficult for her
to use
his hole in the air, but when the man produced a vertical silver-blue
slash
that widened into a view of steeply climbing land, she did not think of
tainted
saidin at all as she heeled Swift through the opening. Never a thought
except
of Therava.
She
almost howled when she realized she was on the opposite side of the
ridge from
the encampment. Frantically she raced the sinking sun. And lost.
She
had been right, unfortunately. Therava did not accept excuses. She was
particularly upset over the bruises. She herself never marred Galina's
face.
What followed easily equaled her nightmares. And it lasted much longer.
At
times, when she was screaming her loudest, she almost forgot her
desperate need
to get the rod. But she clung to that.
Obtain
the rod, kill Faile and her friends, and she would be free.
Egwene
regained awareness slowly, and muzzy as she was, barely had the
presence of
mind to keep her eyes closed. Pretending still to be unconscious was
all too
easy. Her head lay slumped on a woman's shoulder, and she could not
have lifted
it had she tried. An Aes Sedai's shoulder; she could sense the woman's
ability.
Her brain felt stuffed with wool, her thoughts were slow and veering,
her limbs
all but numb.
Her
wool riding dress and cloak were dry, she realized, despite the soaking
she had
received in the river. Well, that was easily managed with the Power.
Small
chance they had channeled the water from her garments for her comfort,
though.
She was seated, wedged in between two sisters, one of whom wore a
flowery
perfume, each using a hand to keep her more or less upright. They were
in a
coach by the way they all swayed and the clatter of a trotting team's
horseshoes on paving stones.
Carefully,
she opened her eyes to narrow slits.
The
coach's side curtains were tied back, though the stink of rotting
garbage made
her think it would have been better to pull them shut.
Garbage,
rotting! How could Tar Valon have come to that? Such neglect of the
city was
reason enough by itself for Elaida to be removed. The windows let in
enough
moonlight for her to dimly make out three Aes Sedai seated facing her,
in the
rear of the coach. Even had she not known they could channel, their
fringed
shawls would have made it certain. In Tar Valon, wearing a shawl with
fringe could
result in unpleasantness for a woman who was not Aes Sedai. Oddly, the
sister
on the left appeared to be huddling against the side of the coach, away
from
the other two, and if they were not exactly huddling, at least they
were
sitting very close together, as though avoiding contact with the third
Aes
Sedai. Very odd.
Abruptly
it came to her that she was not shielded. Muddled she might be, but
that made
no sense at all. They could feel her strength, as she could theirs, and
while
none was weak, she thought she could overcome all five if she were
quick
enough. The True Source was a vast sun just beyond the edge of sight,
calling
to her. The first question was, did she dare try yet? In the state her
head
was, thought wading through knee-deep mud, whether she could actually
embrace
saidar was uncertain, and succeed or fail, they would know once she
tried. Best
to try recovering a little beforehand. The second question was, how
long did
she dare wait? They would not let her go unshielded forever.
Experimentally,
she tried wiggling her toes inside her stout leather shoes, and was
delighted
when they moved obediently. Life seemed to be returning slowly to her
arms and
legs. She thought she might be able to raise her head now, if
unsteadily.
Whatever they had given her was wearing off. How long?
Events
were taken out of her hands by the dark-haired sister sitting in the
middle of
the rear seat, who leaned forward and slapped her so hard that she
toppled onto
the lap of the woman she had been leaning against.
Her
hand went to her stinging cheek on its own volition. So much for
pretending
unconsciousness.
"There
was no need for that, Katerine," a raspy voice said above her as its
owner
lifted her upright again. She could hold her head up, just, it turned
out. Katerine.
That would be Katerine Alruddin, a Red. It seemed important to identify
her
captors for some reason, though she knew nothing of Katerine beyond her
name
and Ajah. The sister she had fallen onto was yellow-haired, but her
moon-shadowed face belonged to a stranger. "I think you gave her too
much
of the forkroot," the woman went on.
A
chill flashed through her. So that was what she had been fed! She
racked her
brain for everything Nynaeve had told her about that vile tea, but her
thoughts
were still slow. Better, though, it seemed. She was sure Nynaeve had
said the
effects took some time to go away completely.
"I
gave her the exact dose, Felaana," the sister who had slapped her
replied
dryly, "and as you can see, it is leaving her precisely as it should. I
want her able to walk by the time we reach the Tower. I certainly don't
intend
to help carry her again," she finished with a glare for the sister
seated
to Egwene's left, who shook her head, beaded braids clicking faintly.
That was
Pritalle Nerbaijan, a Yellow who had done her best to avoid teaching
novices or
Accepted and made little secret of her dislike for the task when forced
to it.
"To
have my Harril carry her, it would have been improper, yes?" she said
coldly. In fact, icily. "Myself, I will be glad if she can walk, but if
not, so be it. In any case, I look forward to handing her over to
others. If
you do not want to carry her again, Katerine, I do not want to stand
guard over
her half the night in the cells." Katerine gave a dismissive toss of
her
head.
The
cells. Of course; she was bound for one of those small, dark rooms on
the first
level of the Tower's basement. Elaida would charge her with falsely
claiming to
be the Amyrlin Seat. The penalty for that was death.
Strangely,
that brought no fear. Perhaps it was the herb working on her.
Would
Romanda or Lelaine give way, agreeing to raise Amyrlin after she was
dead? Or
would they continue to struggle with one another until the entire
rebellion
faltered and failed, and the sisters straggled back to Elaida? A sad
thought,
that. Bone-deep sad. But if she could feel sorrow, the forkroot was not
quenching her emotions, so why was she not afraid? She thumbed her
Great
Serpent ring. At least, she tried to, and discovered it gone. Anger
flared,
white-hot. They might kill her, but they would not deny she was Aes
Sedai.
"Who
betrayed me?" she asked, pleased that her tone was even and cool.
"It
can't hurt to tell me, since I'm your prisoner." The sisters stared at
her
as though surprised she had a voice.
Katerine
leaned forward casually, raising her hand. The Red's eyes tightened
when
pale-haired Felaana lunged to catch the slap before it could land on
Egwene.
"She
will no doubt be executed," the raspy-voiced woman said firmly, "but
she is an initiate of the Tower, and none of us has the right to beat
her."
"Take
your hand off me, Brown," Katerine snarled, and shockingly, the light
of
saidar enveloped her.
In
an instant the glow surrounded every woman in the coach except Egwene.
They eyed
one another like strange cats on the brink of hissing, on the brink of
lashing
out with claws. No, not everyone; Katerine and the taller sister seated
against
her flank never glanced at one another.
But
they had glares aplenty for the rest. What under the Light was going
on? The
mutual hostility was so thick in the air, she could have sliced it like
bread.
After
a moment, Felaana released Katerine's wrist and leaned back, yet no one
released the Source. Egwene suddenly suspected that no one was willing
to be
the first. Their faces were all serene in the pale moonlight, but the
Brown's
hands were knotted in her shawl, and the sister leaning away from
Katerine was
smoothing her skirts repeatedly.
"About
time for this, I think," Katerine said, weaving a shield. "We
wouldn't want you to try anything…futile." Her smile was vicious.
Egwene
merely sighed as the weave settled on her; she doubted she could have
embraced
saidar yet in any case, and against five already full of the Power,
success would
have lasted moments at most. Her mild reaction appeared to disappoint
the Red.
"This may be your last night in the world," she went on. "It
wouldn't surprise me in the slightest if Elaida had you stilled and
beheaded
tomorrow."
"Or
even tonight," her lanky companion added, nodding. "I think Elaida
may be that eager to see the end of you." Unlike Katerine, she was
merely
stating a fact, but she was surely another Red. And watching the other
sisters,
as though she suspected one of them might try something.
This
was very strange!
Egwene
held on to her composure, denying them the response they wanted.
The
response Katerine wanted, at least. She was determined to maintain her
dignity
right to the headsman's block. Whether or not she had managed to do
well as
Amyrlin, she would die in a manner fitting for the Amyrlin Seat.
The
woman huddling away from the two Reds spoke, and her voice, full of
Arafel,
allowed Egwene to put a name to the hard, narrow face, dimly seen by
moonlight.
Berisha Terakuni, a Gray with a reputation for the strictest, and often
harshest, interpretation of the law. Always to the letter, of course,
but never
with any sense of mercy. "Not tonight or tomorrow, Barasine, not unless
Elaida is willing to summon the Sitters in the middle of the night, and
they're
willing to answer. This requires a High Court, no thing of minutes or
even
hours, and the Hall seems less eager to please Elaida than she might
wish,
small wonder. The girl will be tried, but the Hall will sit in the
matter when
they choose, I think."
"The
Hall will come when Elaida calls or she'll hand them all penances that
will
make them wish they had," Katerine sneered. "The way Jala and Merym
galloped off when we saw who we'd caught, she knows by now, and I'll
wager that
for this one, Elaida will drag Sitters from their beds with her own
hands if
she must." Her voice grew smug, and cutting at the same time.
"Perhaps she will name you to the Chair of Pardon. Would you enjoy
that?"
Berisha
drew herself up indignantly, shifting her shawl on her arms. In some
instances,
the Chair of Pardon faced the same penalty as the one she defended.
Perhaps
this charge required it; despite Siuan's best efforts to complete her
education, Egwene did not know.
"What
I want to hear," the Gray said after a moment, ostentatiously ignoring
the
women on the seat with her, "is what did you do to the harbor chain?
How
can it be undone?"
"It
can't be undone," Egwene replied. "You must know that it's
cuendillar, now. Even the Power won't break it, only strengthen it. I
suppose
you could sell it if you tear down enough of the harbor wall to remove
it. If
anyone can afford a piece of cuendillar that big. Or would want such a
thing."
This
time, no one tried to stop Katerine from slapping her, and very hard,
too.
"Hold your tongue!" the Red snapped.
That
seemed good advice unless she wanted to be slapped silly. She could
taste blood
in her mouth already. So Egwene held her tongue, and silence descended
on the
rolling coach, the others all glowing with saidar and watching each
other
suspiciously. It was incredible! Why had Elaida ever chosen women who
clearly
detested one another for tonight's task? As a demonstration of her
power, just
because she could? No matter. If Elaida allowed her to live through the
night,
at least she could let Siuan know what had happened to her-and likely
to Leane,
as well. She could let Siuan know they had been betrayed. And pray that
Siuan
could track down the betrayer. Pray that the rebellion would not
collapse. She
offered a small prayer for that on the spot. It was much more important
than
the other.
By
the time the coachman reined in the team, she had recovered enough to
follow
Katerine and Pritalle from the coach unaided, though her head still
felt a
trifle thick. She could stand, but she doubted she had the strength to
run far,
not that trying would achieve anything beyond being halted after a few
steps.
So she stood calmly beside the dark-lacquered coach and waited as
patiently as
the four-horse team in their harness.
After
all, she was harnessed, too, in a manner of speaking. The White Tower
loomed
over them, a thick pale shaft rearing into the night. Few of its
windows were
alight, but some of those were near the very top, perhaps in the rooms
Elaida
occupied. It was very strange. She was a prisoner and unlikely to live
much
longer, yet she felt she had come home. The Tower seemed to renew her
vigor.
Two
Tower-liveried backriders, the Flame of Tar Valon on their chests, had
dismounted from the rear of the coach to unfold the steps, and they
stood
offering a white-gloved hand to each woman who dismounted, but only
Berisha
availed herself, and only because it let her reach the paving stones
quickly
while eyeing the other sisters, Egwene suspected.
Barasine
gave the fellows such looks that one gulped audibly and the other's
face grew
pale. Felaana, busy trying to watch the others, merely waved the men
away
irritably. All five still held saidar, even here.
They
were at the main rear entrance, stone-railed marble stairs descending
from the
second level beneath four massive bronze lanterns that cast a wide pool
of
flickering light, and to her surprise, a single novice stood alone at
the foot
of the stairs, clutching her white cloak against a slight chill in the
air. She
had more than half-expected Elaida to meet them in person, to gloat
over her
capture with a retinue of sycophants. That the novice was Nicola
Treehill was a
second surprise. The last place she would have thought to find the
runaway was
inside the White Tower itself.
By
the way Nicola's eyes widened when Egwene emerged from the coach, the
novice
was more startled than herself, but she dropped a neat if hasty curtsey
to the
sisters. "The Amyrlin says she…she is to be handed over to the Mistress
of Novices, Katerine Sedai. She says that Silviana Sedai has her
instructions."
"So,
it seems you'll be birched tonight, at least," Katerine murmured with a
smile. Egwene wondered whether the woman hated her personally, or for
what she
represented, or simply hated everyone. Birched. She had never seen it
done, but
she had heard a description. It sounded extremely painful. She met
Katerine's
gaze levelly, and after a moment the smile faded. The woman looked
about to
strike her again. The Aiel had a way of dealing with pain. They
embraced it,
gave themselves over to it without fighting or even trying to hold back
screams. Perhaps that would help. The Wise Ones said that way the pain
could be
cast off without keeping its hold on you.
"If
Elaida means to drag this out unnecessarily, I'll have no more part in
it
tonight," Felaana announced, frowning at everyone in sight including
Nicola. "If the girl is to be stilled and executed, that should be
sufficient." Gathering her skirts, the yellow-haired sister darted past
Nicola up the stairs. Actually running! The glow of saidar still
surrounded her
as she vanished inside.
"I
agree," Pritalle said coolly. "Harril, I think I'll walk with you
while you stable Bloodlance." A dark, stocky man, who had come out of
the
darkness leading a tall bay, bowed to her. Stone-faced, he wore a
Warder's
chameleon cloak that made most of him seem not to be there when he
stood still
and rippled with colors when he moved. Silently he followed Pritalle
off into
the night, but watching over his shoulder, guarding Pritalle's back.
The light
remained around her, too. There was something here that Egwene was
missing.
Suddenly,
Nicola spread her skirts in another curtsy, deeper this time, and words
burst
out of her in a rush. "I'm sorry I ran away, Mother. I thought they'd
let
me go faster here. Areina and I thought-"
"Don't
call her that!" Katerine barked, and a switch of Air caught the novice
across the bottom hard enough to make her squeal and jump. "If you're
attending the Amyrlin Seat tonight, child, get back to her and tell her
I said
her orders will be carried out. Now, run!"
With
one last, frantic glance at Egwene, Nicola gathered her cloak and her
skirts
and went scrambling up the stairs so fast that twice she stumbled and
nearly
fell. Poor Nicola. Her hopes had surely been disappointed, and if the
Tower
discovered her age… She must have lied about that to betaken in; lying
was
one of her several bad habits.
Egwene
dismissed the girl from her mind. Nicola was no longer her concern.
"There
was no need to frighten the child out of her wits," Berisha said,
surprisingly. "Novices need to be guided, not bludgeoned." A far cry
from her views on the law.
Katerine
and Barasine rounded on the Gray together, staring at her intently.
Only two
cats, now, but rather than another cat, they saw a mouse.
"Do
you mean to come with us to Silviana alone?" Katerine asked with a
decidedly unpleasant smile twisting her lips.
"Aren't
you afraid, Gray?" Barasine said, a touch of mockery in her voice. For
some reason, she swung one arm a little so the long fringe of her shawl
swayed.
"Just the one of you, and two of us?"
The
two backriders stood like statues, like men who desired heartily to be
anywhere
else and hoped to remain unnoticed if sufficiently still.
Berisha
was no taller than Egwene, but she drew herself up and clutched her
shawl
around her "Threats are specifically prohibited by Tower-"
"Did
Barasine threaten you?" Katerine cut in softly. Softly, yet with sharp
steel wrapped in it. "She just asked whether you are afraid.
Should
you be?"
Berisha
licked her lips uneasily. Her face was bloodless, and her eyes grew
wider and
wider, as though she saw things she had no wish to see.
"I…I
think I will take a walk in the grounds," she said at last, in a
strangled
voice, and sidled away without ever taking her eyes from the two Reds.
Katerine
gave a small, satisfied laugh.
This
was absolute madness! Even sisters who hated one another to the
toenails did
not behave in this fashion. No woman who gave in to fear as easily as
Berisha
had could ever have become Aes Sedai in the first place. Something was
wrong in
the Tower. Very wrong.
"Bring
her," Katerine said, starting up the stairs.
At
last releasing saidar, Barasine gripped Egwene's arm tightly and
followed.
There was no choice save to gather her divided skirts and go along
without a
struggle. Yet her spirits were oddly buoyant.
Entering
the Tower truly did feel like returning home. The white walls with
their
friezes and tapestries, the brightly colored floor tiles, seemed as
familiar as
her mother's kitchen. More so, in a way; it had been far longer since
she saw
her mother's kitchen than these hallways.
She
took in the strength of home with every breath. But there was
strangeness, too.
The stand-lamps were all alight, and the hour could not be all that
late, yet
she saw no one. There were always a few sisters gliding along the
corridors,
even in the dead of night. She remembered that vividly, catching sight
of some
sister while running on an errand in the small hours and despairing
that she
would ever be so graceful, so queenly. Aes Sedai kept their own hours,
and some
Browns hardly liked being awake during daylight at all. Night held
fewer
distractions from their studies, fewer interruptions to their reading.
But
there was no one. Neither Katerine nor Barasine made any comment as
they walked
along hallways lifeless except for the three of them.
Apparently
this silent emptiness was a matter of course, now.
As
they reached pale stone stairs set in an alcove, another sister finally
appeared, climbing from below. A plump woman in a red-slashed riding
dress,
with a mouth that looked ready to smile, she wore her shawl, edged with
long
red silk fringe, draped along her arms. Katerine and the others might
well have
worn theirs to mark them out clearly at the docks-no one in Tar Valon
would
bother a woman wearing a fringed shawl, and most kept clear, if they
could,
particularly men-but why here?
The
newcomer's thick black eyebrows raised over bright blue eyes at the
sight of
Egwene, and she planted her fists on ample hips, letting her shawl
slide to her
elbows. Egwene did not think she had ever seen the woman before, but
apparently, the reverse was not true. "Why, that's the al'Vere girl.
They
sent her to Southharbor? Elaida will give you a pretty for this night's
work;
yes, she will. But look at her. Look at how she stands so. You'd think
the pair
of you were an honor guard for escort. I'd have thought she'd be
weeping and
wailing for mercy."
"I
believe the herb is still dulling her senses," Katerine muttered with a
sidelong scowl for Egwene. "She doesn't seem to realize her
situation." Barasine, still holding Egwene's arm, gave her a vigorous
shake, but after a small stagger she managed to catch her balance and
kept her
face smooth, ignoring the taller woman's glares.
"In
shock," the plump Red said, nodding. She did not sound exactly
sympathetic, but after Katerine, she was near enough. "I've seen that
before."
"How
did matters go at Northharbor, Melare?" Barasine asked.
"Not
so well as with you, it seems. With everyone else squealing to
themselves like
shoats caught under a fence over there being two of us, I was afraid
we'd scare
off who we were trying to catch. It's a good thing there were two of us
who
would talk to one another. As it was, all we caught was a wilder, and
not
before she turned half the harbor chain to cuendillar. We ended up near
killing
the coach-horses by galloping back like, well, like we'd caught your
prize.
Zanica insisted. Even put her Warder up in place of the coachman."
"A
wilder," Katerine said contemptuously.
"Only
half?" Relief stood out clearly in Barasine's voice. "Then
Northharbor isn't blocked."
Melare's
eyebrows climbed again as the implications sank in. "We'll see how
clear
it is in the morning," she said slowly, "when they let down the half
that's still iron. The rest of it stands out stiff like, well, like a
bar of
cuendillar. Myself, I doubt any but smaller vessels will be able to
cross." She shook her head with a puzzled expression. "There was
something strange, though. More than strange. We couldn't find the
wilder, at
first. We couldn't feel her channeling. There was no glow around her,
and we
couldn't see her weaves. The chain just started turning white. If
Arebis's
Warder hadn't spotted the boat, she might have finished and gotten
away."
"Clever
Leane," Egwene murmured. For an instant, she squeezed her eyes shut.
Leane
had prepared everything in advance, before coming in sight of the
harbor, all
inverted and her ability masked. If she herself had been as clever, she
likely
would have escaped cleanly. But then, hindsight always saw furthest.
"That's
the name she gave," Melare said, frowning. The woman's eyebrows, like
dark
caterpillars, were very expressive. "Leane Sharif. Of the Green Ajah.
Two
very stupid lies. Desala is striping her from top to bottom down there,
but she
won't budge. I had to come up for a breath. I never liked flogging,
even for
one like that. Do you know this trick of hers, child? How to hide your
weaves?"
Oh,
Light! They thought Leane was a wilder pretending to be Aes Sedai.
"She's
telling the truth. Stilling cost her the ageless look and made her
appear
younger. She was Healed by Nynaeve al'Meara, and since she was no
longer of the
Blue, she chose a new Ajah. Ask her questions only Leane Sharif could
know the
answers-" Speech ended for her as a ball of Air filled her mouth,
forcing
her jaws wide till they creaked.
"We
don't have to listen to this nonsense," Katerine growled.
Melare
stared into Egwene's eyes, though. "It sounds senseless, to be sure,"
she said after a moment, "but I suppose it wouldn't hurt to ask a few
questions besides, 'What is your name?' At worse, it'll cut the tedium
of the
woman's answers. Shall we take her down to the cells, Katerine? I don't
dare
leave Desala alone with the other one for long.
She
despises wilders, and she purely hates women who claim to be Aes Sedai."
"She's
not going to the cells, yet," Katerine replied. "Elaida wants her
taken to Silviana."
"Well,
as long as I learn that trick from this child or the other one."
Hitching
her shawl up onto her shoulders, Melare took a deep breath and headed
back down
the stairs, a woman with labor ahead of her she was not looking forward
to. She
gave Egwene hope for Leane, though. Leane was "the other one," now,
no longer "the wilder."
Katerine
set off down the corridor walking quickly, and in silence, but Barasine
pushed
Egwene ahead of her after the other Red, muttering half under her
breath about
how ridiculous it was to think that a sister could learn anything from
a
wilder, or from a jumped-up Accepted who told outlandish lies.
Maintaining some
shreds of dignity was difficult, to say the least, while being shoved
down a
hallway by a long-legged woman with your mouth gaping open as wide as
it would
go and drool leaking down your chin, but she managed as best she could.
In
truth, she hardly thought about it. Melare had given her too much to
think on.
Melare
added to the sisters in the coach. It could hardly mean what it seemed
to, but
if it did…
Soon
the blue-and-white floor tiles became red-and-green, and they
approached an
unmarked wooden door between two tapestries of flowered trees and
stout-beaked
birds so colorful they seemed unlikely to be real. Unmarked, but bright
with
polish and known to every initiate of the Tower. Katerine rapped on the
door
with what might almost have been a display of diffidence, and when a
strong
voice inside called, "Come," she drew a deep breath before pushing
the door open. Did she have bad memories of entering here as novice or
Accepted, or was it the woman who awaited them who made her hesitant?
The
study of the Mistress of Novices was exactly as Egwene recalled, a
small,
dark-paneled room with plain, sturdy furnishings. A narrow table by the
doorway
was lightly carved in a peculiar pattern, and bits of gilt clung to the
carved
frame of the mirror on one wall, but nothing else was decorated in any
way. The
stand-lamps and the pair of lamps on the writing table were unadorned
brass,
though of six different patterns. The woman who held the office usually
changed
when a new Amyrlin was raised, yet Egwene was ready to wager that a
woman who
had come to this room as a novice two hundred years ago would recognize
nearly
every stick and perhaps everything.
The
current Mistress of Novices-in the Tower, at least-was on her feet when
they
entered, a stocky woman nearly as tall as Barasine, with a dark bun on
the back
of her head and a square, determined chin. There was an air of brooking
no
nonsense about Silviana Brehon. She was a Red, and her charcoal-colored
skirts
had discreet red slashes, but her shawl lay draped across the back of
the chair
behind the writing table. Her large eyes were unsettling, however. They
seemed
to take in everything about Egwene in a glance, as though the woman not
only
knew every thought in her head, but also what she would think tomorrow.
"Leave
her with me and wait outside," Silviana said in a low, firm voice.
"Leave
her?" Katerine said incredulously.
"Which
words did you not understand, Katerine? Need I repeat myself?"
Apparently
she did not. Katerine flushed, but she said no more. The glow of saidar
surrounded
Silviana, and she took over the shield smoothly, without giving any
opening
when Egwene might have embraced the Power herself. She was certain that
she
could, now. Except that Silviana was far from weak; there was no hope
she could
break the woman's shield. The gag of Air disappeared at the same time,
and she
contented herself with digging a handkerchief from her belt pouch and
calmly
wiping her chin.
The
pouch had been searched-she always kept the handkerchief on top, not
beneath
everything else-but learning whether anything besides her ring had been
taken
would have to wait. There had not been anything of much use to a
prisoner in
any case. A comb, a packet of needles, some small scissors, odds and
ends. The
Amyrlin's stole. What sort of dignity she could maintain while being
birched
was beyond her, but that was the future; this was now.
Silviana
studied her, arms folded beneath her breasts, until the door closed
behind the
other two Reds. "You aren't hysterical, at least," she said then.
"That makes matters easier, but why aren't you hysterical?"
"Would
it do any good?" Egwene replied, returning the handkerchief to her
pouch.
"I can't see how."
Silviana
strode to the writing table and stood reading from a sheet of paper
there,
occasionally glancing up. Her expression was a perfect mask of Aes
Sedai
serenity, unreadable. Egwene waited patiently, hands folded at her
waist. Even
upside down she could recognize Elaida's distinctive hand on that page,
if not
read what it said. The woman need not think she would grow nervous at
waiting.
Patience was one of the few weapons left to her, at present.
"It
seems the Amyrlin has been mulling over what to do about you for some
time," Silviana said finally. If she had expected Egwene to begin
shifting
her feet or wringing her hands, she gave no sign of disappointment.
"She
has a very complete plan ready. She doesn't want the Tower to lose you.
Nor do
I. Elaida has decided that you have been used as a dupe by others and
should
not be held accountable. So you will not be charged with claiming to be
Amyrlin. She has stricken your name from the roll of the Accepted and
entered
it in the novice book again. I agree with that decision, frankly,
though it's
never been done before.
Whatever
your ability with the Power, you missed almost everything else you
should have
learned as a novice. You needn't fear that you'll have to take the test
again,
though. I wouldn't force anyone to go through that twice."
"I
am Aes Sedai by virtue of having been raised to the Amyrlin Seat."
Egwene
replied calmly. There was no incongruity in fighting for a title when
claiming
it might still lead to her death. Acquiescence would be as sharp a blow
to the
rebellion as her execution. Maybe sharper. A novice again? That was
laughable!
"I can cite the relevant passages in the law, if you wish."
Silviana
arched an eyebrow and sat down to open a large leather bound book. The
punishments book. Dipping her pen in the simple glass ink jar, she made
a
notation. "You've just earned your first visit to me. I'll give you the
night to think about it rather than putting you over my knee now. Let's
hope
contemplation increases the salubrious effect."
"Do
you think you can make me deny who I am with a spanking?" Egwene was
hard put
to keep incredulity from her voice. She was not sure she succeeded.
"There
are spankings and spankings," the other woman replied. Wiping the nib
clean on a scrap, she replaced the pen in its glass holder and
considered
Egwene. "You're accustomed to Sheriam Bayanar as Mistress of
Novices." Silviana shook her head disparagingly. "I've browsed her
punishments book. She let the girls get away with too much, and was far
too
lenient with her favorites. As a result, she was forced to deal out
correction
much more often that she should have had to. I record a third of the
punishments in a month that Sheriam did, because I make sure that
everyone I
punish leaves here wishing above all things never to be sent to me
again."
"Whatever
you do, you'll never make me deny who I am," Egwene said firmly. "How
can you possibly think you can make this work? Am I to be escorted to
classes,
shielded all the while?"
Silviana
leaned back against her shawl, resting her hands on the edge of the
table.
"You mean to resist as long as you can, do you?"
"I
will do what I must."
"And
I will do what I must. During the day, you will not be shielded at all.
But
every hour you will be given a mild tincture of forkroot."
Silviana's
mouth twisted on the word. She picked up the sheet that contained
Elaida's
notes as if to read, then let it drop back onto the tabletop, rubbing
her
fingertips as though something noxious clung to them. "I cannot like
the
stuff. It seems aimed directly at Aes Sedai.
Someone
who cannot channel can drink five times the amount that makes a sister
pass out
and barely grow dizzy from it. A disgusting brew. Yet useful, it seems.
Perhaps
it can be used on those Asha'man. The tincture won't make you dizzy,
but you
won't be able to channel enough to cause any problems. Only trickles.
Refuse to
drink, and it will be poured down your throat anyway. You'll be closely
watched
as well, so you don't try to slip away afoot. At night, you will be
shielded,
since giving you enough forkroot to make you sleep through the night
would
leave you doubled up with stomach cramps the next day.
"You
are a novice, Egwene, and you will be a novice. Many sisters still
consider you
a runaway, no matter what orders Siuan Sanche gave, and others
doubtless will
think Elaida wrong not to have you beheaded.
They'll
watch for every infraction, every fault. You may sneer at a spanking
now,
before you've received it, but when you're being sent to me for five,
six,
seven every day? We'll see how long it takes you to change your mind."
Egwene
surprised herself by giving a small laugh, and Silviana's eyebrows shot
up. Her
hand twitched as though to reach for her pen.
"Did
I say something funny, child?"
"Not
at all," Egwene replied truthfully. It had occurred to her that she
could
deal with the pain by embracing it in the Aiel manner. She hoped it
worked, but
there went all hope for dignity. While she was being punished, at
least. For
the rest, she could only do what she could.
Silviana
glanced at her pen, but finally stood without touching it.
"Then
I am done with you. For tonight. I will see you before breakfast,
however. Come
with me."
She
started for the door, confident that Egwene would follow, and Egwene
did.
Attacking the other woman physically would achieve no more than another
entry in
the book. Forkroot. Well, she would find a way around that somehow. If
not…
She refused to think about that.
Katerine
and Barasine were startled to say the least at hearing Elaida's plans
for
Egwene, and not best pleased to learn that they would be watching her
and
shielding her while she slept, although Silviana told them she would
arrange
for other sisters to come after an hour or two.
"Why
both of us?" Katerine wanted to know, which earned her a wry glance
from
Barasine. If only one were sent, it surely would not be Katerine, who
stood
higher.
"Firstly,
because I said so." Silviana waited until the other two Reds nodded in
acceptance. They did so with obvious reluctance, but not enough to make
her
wait long. She had not put on her shawl to come into the hallway, and
in some
odd fashion, she seemed the one out of place.
"And
secondly, because this child is tricky, I think. I want her watched
carefully
awake or asleep. Which of you has her ring?"
After
a moment, Barasine produced the circle of gold from her belt pouch,
muttering,
"I only thought to keep it as a memento. Of the rebels being brought to
heel. They're finished, now, for sure." A memento? It was stealing was
what it was!
Egwene
reached for the ring, but Silviana's hand got there first, and it was
into her
pouch that the ring went. "I'll keep this until you have the right to
wear
it again, child. Now take her to the novice quarters and settle her in.
A room
should have been prepared by now."
Katerine
resumed the shield, and Barasine reached for Egwene's arm again, but
Egwene
stretched out a hand toward Silviana. "Wait. There's something I must
tell
you." She had agonized over this. It would be all too easy to reveal
far
more than she wanted. But she had to do it. "I have the Talent of
Dreaming.
I've learned to tell the true dreams, and to interpret some of them. I
dreamt
of a glass lamp that burned with a white flame. Two ravens flew out of
mist,
struck the lamp, and flew on.
The
lamp wobbled, flinging off droplets of flaming oil. Some of those
burned up in
midair, other landed scattered about, and the lamp still wobbled on the
edge of
falling. It means the Seanchan will attack the White Tower and do great
harm."
Barasine
sniffed. Katerine gave a derisive snort.
"A
Dreamer," Silviana said flatly. "Is there anyone who can back up your
claim? And if there is, how can be sure your dream means the Seanchan?
Ravens
would indicate the Shadow, to me."
"I'm
a Dreamer, and when a Dreamer knows, she knows. Not the Shadow. The
Seanchan.
As for who knows what I can do…" Egwene shrugged. "The only one
you can reach is Leane Sharif, who's being held in the cells below."
She
saw no way to bring the Wise Ones into this, not without revealing
entirely too
much.
"That
woman is a wilder, not B," Katerine began angrily, but her mouth
snapped
shut when Silviana raised a peremptory hand.
The
Mistress of Novices studied Egwene carefully, her face still an
unreadable mask
of calmness. "You truly believe you are what you say," she said
finally. "I do hope your Dreaming won't cause as many problems as young
Nicola's Foretelling. If you truly can Dream. Well, I will pass along
your
warning. I can't see how the Seanchan could strike at us here in Tar
Valon, but
watchfulness never hurts. And I'll question this woman being held
below.
Carefully. And if she fails to back up your tale, then your visit to me
in the
morning will be even more memorable for you."
She
waved her hand at Katerine. "Take her away before she hands me another
nugget and keeps me from getting any sleep at all tonight."
This
time, Katerine muttered as much as Barasine. But they both waited until
they
were beyond earshot of Silviana. That woman was going to be a
formidable
opponent. Egwene hoped embracing pain worked as well as the Wise Ones
claimed.
Otherwise… Otherwise did not bear thinking about.
A
lean, gray-haired serving woman gave them directions to the room she
had just
finished making up, on the third gallery of the novice quarters, and
hurried on
after brief curtsies to the two Reds. She never so much as glanced at
Egwene.
What was another novice to her? It tightened Egwene's jaw. She was
going to
have to make people not see her as just another novice.
"Look
at her face," Barasine said. "I think it's finally settling in on
her."
"I
am who I am," Egwene replied calmly. Barasine pushed her toward the
stairs
that rose through the hollow column of railed galleries, lit by the
fat, waning
moon. A breeze sighed through, the only sound. It all seemed so
peaceful. There
was no light showing around any door. The novices would be asleep by
now,
except for those who had late chores or tasks. It was peaceful for
them. Not
for Egwene, though.
The
tiny, windowless room might almost have been the one she had occupied
when she
first came to the Tower, with its narrow bed built against the wall and
a small
fire burning on the little brick hearth.
The
lamp on the small table was lit, but it lighted little more than the
tabletop,
and the oil must have gone bad, because it gave off a faint, unpleasant
stink.
A washstand completed the furnishings, except for a three-legged stool,
onto
which Katerine promptly lowered herself, adjusting her skirts as
through on a
throne. Realizing there was nowhere for her to sit, Barasine crossed
her arms beneath
her breasts and frowned at Egwene.
The
room was quite crowded with three women in it, but Egwene pretended the
other
two did not exist as she readied herself for bed, hanging her cloak and
belt
and dress on three of the pegs set along one rough-plastered white
wall. She
did not ask for help with her buttons.
By
the time she laid her neatly rolled stockings atop her shoes, Barasine
had
settled herself cross-legged on the floor and was immersed in a small,
leatherbound
book that she must have carried in her belt pouch. Katerine kept her
eyes on
Egwene as though she expected her to make a break for the door.
Crawling
beneath the light woolen blanket in her shift, Egwene settled her head
on the
small pillow-not a goose-down pillow, that was for sure!-and went
through the
exercises, relaxing her body one part at a time, that would put her to
sleep.
She had done that so often that it seemed no sooner had she begun, than
she was
asleep…
…and
floating, formless, in a darkness that lay between the waking world and
Tel'aran'rhiod, the narrow gap between dream and reality, a vast void
filled
with a myriad of twinkling specks of light that were all the dreams of
all the
sleepers in the world. They floated around her, in this place with no
up or
down, as far as the eye could see, flickering out as a dream ended,
springing
alight as one began. She could recognize some at sight, put a name to
the
dreamer, but she did not see the one she sought.
It
was to Siuan she needed to speak, Siuan who likely knew by now that
disaster
had struck, who might be unable to sleep until exhaustion took her
under. She
settled herself to wait. There was no sense of time here; she would not
grow
bored with waiting. But she had to work out what to say. So much had
changed
since she wakened. She had learned so much.
Then,
she had been sure she would die soon, sure the sisters inside the Tower
were a
solid army behind Elaida. Now… Elaida thought her safely imprisoned. No
matter this talk of making her a novice again; even if Elaida really
believed
it, Egwene al'Vere did not. She did not consider herself a prisoner,
either.
She was carrying the battle into the heart of the Tower itself. If she
had had
lips there, she would have smiled.
CHAPTER ONE
When Last Sounds
The
Wheel of Time turns, and Ages come and pass, leaving memories that
become
legend. Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the
Age that
gave it birth comes again. In one Age, called the Third Age by some, an
Age yet
to come, an Age long past, a wind rose above the broken mountain named
Dragonmount. The wind was not the beginning. There are neither
beginnings nor
endings to the turning of the Wheel of Time. But it was a beginning.
Born
beneath the glow of a fat, sinking moon, at an altitude where men could
not
breathe, born among writhing currents heated by the fires inside the
ragged
peak, the wind was a zephyr in the beginning, yet it gained in strength
as it
rushed down the steep, rugged slope. Carrying ash and the stench of
burning
sulfur from the heights, the wind roared across the sudden, snowy hills
that
reared from the plain surrounding the impossible height of Dragonmount,
roared
and tossed trees in the night.
Eastward
out of the hills the wind howled, across a large pasture encampment, a
considerable village of tents and wooden walkways lining streets of
frozen
ruts. Soon enough the ruts would melt and the last of the snow vanish,
replaced
by spring rains and mud. If the encampment remained that long. Despite
the
hour, many among the AesSedai were awake, gathered in small groups
warded
against eavesdropping, discussing what had transpired this night. No
few of
those discussions were quite animated, little short of argument, and
some held
undeniable heat. Fists might have been shaken or worse had they not
belonged to
Aes Sedai. What to do next was the question. Every sister knew the news
from
the riverbank by now, if the details remained sketchy. The Amyrlin
herself had
gone in secret to seal Northharbor, and her boat had been found
overturned and
caught in the reeds. Survival in the swift, icy currents of the Erinin
was
unlikely, and hour by hour it had become more so, until certainty
hardened. The
Amyrlin Seat was dead. Every sister in the camp knew that her future
and
perhaps her life hung by a thread, not to mention the future of the WhiteTower
itself. What to do now? Yet voices fell silent and heads came up as the
fierce
blast struck the camp, fluttering tent canvas like flags, pelting it
with clods
of snow. The sudden stink of burning sulphur hung heavy in the air,
announcing
where that wind had come from, and more than one Aes Sedai offered a
silent
prayer against evil. In moments, though, the wind had passed, and the
sisters
bent back to their deliberations on a future bleak enough to fit the
sharp,
fading stench left behind.
On
the wind roared toward Tar Valon, gaining strength as it went,
shrieking over
military camps near the river where soldiers and camp followers
sleeping on the
ground suddenly had their blankets stripped off and those in tents
awoke to
canvas jerking and sometimes whipping away into the darkness as tent
pegs gave
way or guy ropes snapped. Laden wagons rocked and toppled, and banners
stood
out stiff before they were uprooted, their hurtling staffs now spears
that
pierced whatever lay in their path. Leaning against the gale, men
struggled to
the horselines to calm animals that reared and screamed in fear. None
knew what
the Aes Sedai knew, yet the biting, sulphurous smell that filled the
chill
night air seemed an ill omen, and hardened men offered their prayers
aloud as
fervently as the beardless boys. Camp followers added their own, and
loudly,
armorers and farriers and fletchers, wives and laundresses and
seamstresses,
all clutched by the sudden fear that something darker than blackness
stalked
the night.
The
fierce flutter of canvas overhead, near to ripping, the babble of
voices and
the screams of horses, loud enough to cut through the wailing wind,
helped
Siuan Sanche struggle awake for the second time.
The
abrupt stink of burning sulphur made her eyes water, and she was
grateful for
it. Egwene might be able to don and doff sleep like a pair of
stockings, but
the same was not true for her. Sleep had been hard enough to come by
after she
finally made herself lie down. Once the news had reached her from the
riverbank, she had been sure she never would sleep short of utter
exhaustion.
She had offered prayers for Leane, but all of their hopes rested on
Egwene's
shoulders, and all of their hopes seemed gutted and hung up to dry.
Well, she
had exhausted herself with nerves and worry and pacing. Now there was
hope
again, and she did not dare let her leaden eyelids close for fear she
would
sink back into slumber and not wake till midday, if then. The ferocious
wind
abated, but people's shouts and horses' cries did not.
Wearily,
she tossed aside her blankets and stood up unsteadily. Her bedding was
hardly
comfortable, laid out on the canvas ground-cloth in a corner of the
not-very-large square tent, yet she had come here, though it meant
riding. Of
course, she had been near falling down by then, and likely not in her
right
mind from grief. She touched the twisted ring ter'angreal hanging from
a
leather cord around her neck. Her first waking, every bit as hard as
this one,
had been to fetch that from her belt pouch. Well, the grief was
vanquished now,
and that was adequate to keep her moving. A sudden yawn made her jaws
creak
like rusty oarlocks. Barely adequate. You would have thought Egwene's
message,
the fact that Egwene was alive to send a message, would be enough to
banish
bone-weariness. Not so, it appeared.
Channeling
a globe of light long enough to see the box-lantern on the main tent
pole, she lit
it with a thread of Fire. The single flame gave a very pale, flickering
illumination. There were other lamps and lanterns, but Gareth went on
so about
how little lamp oil there was in stock. The brazier, she left unlit;
Gareth was
not so parsimonious with charcoal as oil-charcoal was easier to come
by-but she
was barely aware of the frigid air. She frowned at his bedding, still
lying
untouched on the other side of the tent. He surely was aware of the
boat's
discovery and who it had carried. The sisters did their best to keep
secrets
from him, but somehow, they succeeded less often than most believed.
More than
once he had startled her with what he knew. Was he out there in the
night
organizing his soldiers for whatever the Hall decided? Or had he
already
departed, leaving a lost cause? No longer lost, yet he must be unaware
of that.
"No,"
she muttered, feeling an odd sense of… treachery… that she had cast
doubt on the man, even in her own mind. He would still be there at
sunrise, and
for every sunrise until the Hall commanded him to leave. Maybe longer.
She did
not believe he would abandon Egwene whatever the Hall commanded. He was
too
stubborn, proud. No; it was not that. Gareth Bryne's word was his
honor. Once
given, he would not take it back unless released, whatever the cost to
himself.
And maybe, just maybe, he had other reasons to stay. She refused to
think of
that.
Putting
Gareth out of her mind-why had she come to his tent? It would have been
so much
easier to lie down in her own in the sisters' camp, cramped as it was,
or even
to have kept the weeping Chesa company, though on second thought, that
last
might have been beyond her. She could not abide weeping, and Egwene's
maid
would not stop- putting Gareth firmly out of her head, she ran a hasty
brush
through her hair, changed her shift for a fresh one, and dressed as
quickly as
she could in the dim light. Her plain blue wool riding dress was
rumpled, and
spotted with mud on the hem besides-she had gone down to see the boat
for
herself-but she did not take the time to clean and press it with the
Power. She
had to hurry.
The
tent was far from the spacious affair you would have expected of a
general, so
hurrying meant bumping her hip against a corner of the writing table
hard
enough that one of the legs almost folded before she could catch it,
nearly
tripping over the camp stool, the only thing approaching a chair, and
barking
her shins on the brass-bound chests that lay scattered about. That
brought a
curse that would have singed any listener's ears. The things served
double
duty, seats as well as storage, and one with a flat top did for a
makeshift
washstand with a white pitcher and bowl. In truth, they were arrayed in
a neat
enough fashion, but one peculiar to him. He could find his way through
that
maze in pitch dark. Anyone else would break a leg trying to reach his
bedding.
She supposed he must have a concern for assassins, though he had never
voiced
it.
Gathering
her dark cloak from atop one of the chests and folding it over her arm,
she
paused on the point of snuffing the lantern with a flow of Air. For a
moment
she stared at Gareth's second pair of boots, standing at the foot of
his
bedding. Channeling another small sphere of light, she moved it close
to the
boots. As she had thought. Freshly blacked. The bloody man insisted she
work
off her debt, then sneaked in behind her back-or worse, under her nose
while
she slept-and blacked his own bloody boots! Gareth bloody Bryne treated
her
like a maidservant, never so much as tried to kiss her… !
She
jerked upright, her mouth going taut as a mooring rope. Now where had
that
thought come from? No matter what Egwene claimed, she was not in love
with
Gareth bloody Bryne! She was not! She had too much work in front of her
to get
caught in that kind of foolishness. That's why you stopped wearing
embroidery,
I suppose, a small voice whispered in the back of her head. All those
pretty
things, stuffed into chests because you're afraid. Afraid? Burn her if
she was
afraid of him or any man!
Carefully
channeling Earth, Fire and Air just so, she laid the weave on the
boots. Every
last bit of the blacking, and most of the dye as well, came away and
formed
into a neat, glistening sphere that floated in the air, leaving the
leather
decidedly gray. For a moment she contemplated depositing the ball among
his
blankets. That would be a suitable surprise for him when he finally lay
down!
With
a sigh, she pushed open the doorflap and took the ball outside into the
darkness to let it splash onto the ground. The man had a short and
extremely
disrespectful way when she let her temper carry her too far, as she had
discovered the first time she hit him over the head with the boots she
was
cleaning. And when he made her so angry she put salt in his tea. Quite
a lot of
salt, but it had not been her fault he was hurried enough to drain the
cup in a
gulp. To try to, at any rate. Oh, he never seemed to mind when she
shouted, and
sometimes he shouted back-sometimes he just smiled, which was purely
infuriating!-yet he had his limits. She could have stopped him with a
simple
weave of Air, of course, but she had her honor as much as he had his,
burn him!
Anyway, she had to stay close to him. Min said so, and the girl seemed
infallible. That was the only reason she had not stuffed a fistful of
gold down
Gareth Bryne's throat and told him he was paid and be burned. The only
reason!
Besides her own honor, of course.
Yawning,
she left the dark puddle shining in the cold moonlight. If he stepped
in it
before it dried and tracked the mess inside, the blame would be his own
and
none of hers. At least the sulphur smell had faded a little. Her eyes
had
stopped overflowing, though what she could see was turmoil.
This
sprawling, night-shrouded camp had never had much order. The rutted
streets
were straight enough, true, and wide for moving soldiers, but for the
rest it
had always seemed a haphazard array of tents and rough shelters and
stone-lined
pits for cook fires. Now, it looked much as if it had been under
attack.
Collapsed tents lay everywhere, some tossed atop others that still
stood,
though a good many of those stood askew, and dozens of wagons and carts
lay on
their sides or upside down. Voices on every side called for help with
the
injured, of whom there appeared to be a fair number. Men limped along
the
street in front of Gareth's tent supported by other men, while several
small
groups hurried by carrying blankets being used as stretchers. Farther
away she
could see four blanket-covered shapes on the ground, three attended by
kneeling
women who rocked back and forth as they keened.
She
could do nothing for the dead, but she could offer her ability with
Healing to
the others. That was hardly her greatest skill, not very strong at all,
though
it seemed to have returned to her fully when Ny-naeve Healed her, yet
she
doubted there was another sister anywhere in the camp. They did avoid
the
soldiers, most of them. Her ability would be better than none. She
could,
except for the news she carried. It was urgent that it reach the right
people
as soon as possible. So she closed her ears to the groans and the keens
alike,
ignored dangling arms and rags clutched to bleeding heads, and hurried
to the
horselines on the edge of the camp, where the oddly sweet smell of
horse dung
was beginning to win over the sulphur. A rawboned, unshaven fellow with
a
haggard glare on his dark face tried to rush past her, but she caught
his rough
coatsleeve.
"Saddle
me the mildest horse you can find," she told him, "and do it right
now." Bela would have done nicely, but she had no notion where among
all
those animals the stout mare was tied and no intention of waiting for
her to be
found.
"You
want to go riding?" he said incredulously, jerking his sleeve free.
"If you own a horse, then saddle it yourself, if you're fool enough to.
Me, I've the rest of the night ahead of me in the cold tending the ones
what's
hurt themselves, and lucky if at least one don't die."
Siuan
ground her teeth. The imbecile took her for one of the seamstresses. Or
one of
the wives! For some reason, that seemed worse. She stuck her right fist
in
front of his face so quickly that he stepped back with a curse, but she
shoved
her hand close enough to his nose that her Great Serpent ring had to be
only
thing he could see. His eyes crossed, staring at it. "The mildest mount
you can find," she said in a flat voice. "But quickly."
The
ring did the trick. He swallowed, then scratched his head and stared
along the
horselines, where every animal seemed be either stamping or shivering.
"Mild," he muttered. "I'll see what I can do, Aes Sedai.
Mild." Touching a knuckle to his forehead, he hurried off down the rows
of
horses still muttering to himself.
Siuan
did a little muttering herself as she paced, three strides this way and
three that.
Snow trampled to slush and frozen again crunched under her stout shoes.
From
what she could see, it might take him hours to find anything that would
not
pitch her off if it heard a grunter jump. Swinging her cloak around her
shoulders, she shoved the small silver circle pin in place with an
impatient
jab, nearly stabbing her own thumb. Afraid, was she? She would show
Gareth
bloody, bloody Bryne! Back and forth, back and forth. Perhaps she
should walk
the whole long way. It would be unpleasant, but better than being
dumped from
the saddle and maybe breaking bones in the bargain. She never mounted a
horse,
including Bela, without thinking of broken bones. But the fellow
returned with
a dark mare bearing a high-cantled saddle.
"She's
mild?" Siuan demanded skeptically. The animal was stepping as though
ready
to dance, and looked sleek. That was supposed to indicate speed.
"Nightlily
here's meek as milk-water, Aes Sedai. Belongs to my wife, and Nemaris
is on the
delicate side. She don't like a mount what gets frisky."
"If
you say so," she replied, and sniffed. Horses were seldom meek in her
experience. But there was nothing for it.
Taking
the reins, she clambered awkwardly into the saddle, then had to shift
so she
was not sitting on her cloak and half-strangling herself every time she
moved.
The mare did dance, however she sawed the reins. She had been sure it
would.
Trying to break her bones already. A boat now-with one oar or two, a
boat went
where you wanted and stopped when you wanted, unless you were a
complete fool
about tides and currents and winds. But horses possessed brains,
however small,
and that meant they might take it into their minds to ignore bridle and
reins
and what the rider wanted. That had to be considered when you had to
straddle a
bloody horse.
"One
thing, Aes Sedai," the man said as she was trying to find a comfortable
seat. Why did saddles always seem harder than wood? "I'd keep her to a
walk tonight, was I you. That wind, you know, and all that stink, well,
she
might be just a touch-"
"No
time," Siuan said, and dug her heels in. Meek-as-milk-water Nightlily
leaped ahead so fast that she nearly pitched backward over the cantle.
Only a
quick grab at the pommel kept her in the saddle. She thought the fellow
shouted
something after her, but she could not be certain. What in the Light
did this
Nemaris consider a frisky horse? The mare sped out of the camp as
though trying
to win a race, sped toward the falling moon and Dragonmount, a dark
spike
rising against the starry sky.
Cloak
billowing behind, Siuan made no effort to slow her, rather digging in
her heels
again and slapping the mare's neck with the reins as she had seen
others do to
urge speed. She had to reach the sisters before anybody did something
irretrievable. All too many possibilities came to mind. The mare
galloped past
small thickets and tiny hamlets and sprawling farms with their
stone-walled
pastures and fields. Snug beneath snow-covered slate roofs, behind
walls of
stone or brick, the inhabitants had not been roused by that fierce
wind; every
building lay dark and still. Even the bloody cows and sheep were
probably
enjoying a good nights sleep. Farmers always had cows and sheep. And
pigs.
Bouncing
around on the hard leather of the saddle, she tried leaning forward
over the
mare's neck. That was how it was done; she had seen it. Almost
immediately she
lost the left stirrup and nearly slid off on that side, barely clawing
her way
back to get her foot back in place. The only thing to do was sit bolt
upright,
one hand clutching the pommel in a deathgrip, the other tighter still
on the
reins. Her flailing cloak tugged uncomfortably against her throat, and
she
jounced up and down so hard that her teeth clicked if she opened her
mouth at
the wrong time, but she hung on, and even heeled the animal once more.
Ah,
Light, but she was going to be bruised within an inch of her life come
sunrise.
On through the night, smacking the saddle with the mare's every
bounding
stride. At least her clenched teeth kept her from yawning.
At
last the horselines and rows of wagons that ringed the Aes Sedai camp
appeared
out of the darkness though a thin rim of trees, and with a sigh of
relief, she
hauled back on the reins as hard as she could. For a horse moving this
fast,
surely it required hard hauling to stop. Nightlily did stop, so
abruptly that
she would have hurdled over its head if the mare had not reared at the
same
time. Wide-eyed, she clung to the animal's neck until it finally
settled all
four hooves to the ground again. And for some little time after, as
well.
Nightlily
was breathing hard, too, she realized. Panting, really. She felt no
sympathy.
The fool animal had tried to kill her, just the way horses would!
Recovering
herself took a moment, but then she pulled her cloak straight, gathered
the
reins and rode past the wagons and the long lines of horses at a sedate
walk.
Shadowy men moved in the darkness along the horselines, doubtless
grooms and
farriers seeing to the visibly unsettled animals. The mare seemed more
biddable, now. Really, this was not too bad at all.
As
she entered the camp proper, she hesitated only a moment before
embracing
saidar. Strange to think of a camp full of Aes Sedai as dangerous, yet
two
sisters had been murdered here. Considering the circumstances of their
deaths,
it seemed unlikely that holding the Power would be enough to save her
if she
was the next target, but saidar at least gave an illusion of safety. So
long as
she remembered it was only illusion. After a moment, she wove the flows
of
Spirit that would hide her ability and the glow of the Power. There was
no need
to advertise, after all.
Even
at this hour, with the moon low in the west, there were a few people
out on the
wooden walkways, serving women and workmen scurrying about late tasks.
Or
perhaps early would be a better word now. Most of the tents, in nearly
every
size and shape imaginable, were dark, but a number of the larger ones
glowed
with the light of lamps or candles. Unsurprising under the
circumstances. Every
lit tent had men around it, or gathered in front. Warders. No one else
could
stand so still they seemed to fade into the night, especially not in
this icy
night. With the Power filling her, she could make out others, their
Warders'
cloaks making them vanish in the shadows. Between the murdered sisters
and what
their bonds to their Aes Sedai must be carrying to them, not surprising
at all.
She suspected more than one sister was ready to tear her own hair, or
someone
else's. They took note of her, heads swiveling to follow her passage as
she
rode slowly along the frozen ruts, searching.
The
Hall had to be informed, of course, but others needed to hear first. In
her
estimation, they were much more likely to do something… precipitate.
And
quite possibly disastrous. Oaths held them, but oaths given under
duress, to a
woman they now believed dead. For the Hall, for most of the Hall, they
had
nailed their flag to the mast in accepting a seat. None oithem would be
jumping
until they were very, very sure where they would land.
Sheriam's
tent was too small for what she was sure she would find, and dark
besides, she
noted in passing. She very much doubted the woman was asleep inside,
though.
Morvrin's, big enough to sleep four comfortably, would have done if
there was
room among all the books the Brown had managed to acquire on the march,
but
that was dark as well. Her third choice provided a catch, though, and
she
reined in Nightlily well short of it.
Myrelle
had two peaked tents in the camp, one for herself and one for her three
Warders-the three she dared acknowledge-and her own shone brightly, the
shadows
of women moving on the patched canvas walls. Three dissimilar men stood
on the
walkway in front of the tent-their stillness marked them Warders-but
she
ignored them for the moment. What exactly were they talking about
inside?
Certain that it was useless effort, she wove Air with just a hint of
Fire; her
weave touched the tent and struck a barrier against eavesdropping.
Inverted, of
course, and so invisible to her. She had only made the attempt on the
chance
they were being careless. Small possibility of that with the secrets
they had
to hide. The shadows against the canvas were still, now. So they knew
someone
had tried. She rode the rest of the way wondering what they had been
talking about.
As
she dismounted-well, at least she managed to turn half-falling off into
something akin to jumping down-one of the Warders, Sheriam's Arinvar, a
lean
Cairhienin little taller than she, stepped forward to reach for the
reins with
a small bow, but she waved him away. Releasing saidar, she tied the
mare to one
of the wooden slats of the walkway using a knot that would have held a
sizable
boat against heavy wind and a strong current. None of those casual
loops that
others used, not for her. She might dislike riding, but when she tied a
horse,
she wanted it there when she came back. Arinvar's eyebrows climbed as
he
watched her finish the knot, but he would not be the one who had to pay
for the
bloody animal if it got loose and lost itself.
Only
one of the other two Warders belonged to Myrelle, Avar Hachami, a
Saldaean with
a nose like an eagle's beak and thick, gray-streaked mustaches. After
sparing
her one glance and a slight inclination of his head, he returned to
watching
the night. Morvrin's Jori, short and bald and nearly as wide as he was
tall,
did not acknowledge her at all. His eyes studied the darkness, and his
hand
rested lightly on his long sword hilt. Supposedly he was among the best
of the
Warders with a blade. Where were the others? She could not ask, of
course, any
more than she could ask who was within. The men would have been shocked
to
their bones. None of them tried to stop her from entering. At least
matters had
not gotten that bad.
Inside,
where two braziers gave off the scent of roses and made the air almost
toasty
compared to the night, she found almost everyone she had hoped for, and
all
watching to see who entered.
Myrelle
herself, sitting on a sturdy straight-chair in a silk robe covered with
red and
yellow flowers, her arms folded beneath her breasts, wore such a
perfect
expression of calm on her olive face that it only pointed up the heat
in her
dark eyes. The light of the Power shone around her. It was her tent,
after all;
she would be the one to weave a ward here. Sheriam, seated on one end
of
Myrelle's cot with a straight back, pretended to be adjusting her
blue-slashed
skirts; her expression was as fiery as her hair, and it grew hotter
when she
saw Siuan. She was not wearing the Keeper's stole, a bad sign.
"I
might have expected it would be you," Carlinya said coldly, fists on
her
hips. She was never a warm woman, but now the ringlets that stopped
well short
of her shoulders framed a face that seemed carved from ice nearly as
pale as
her dress. "I will not have you trying to listen in on my private
conversations, Siuan." Oh, yes; they thought everything was at an end.
Round-faced
Morvrin, for once not appearing at all absentminded or sleepy-eyed
despite the
creases in her brown wool skirt, walked around the small table where a
tall
silver pitcher and five silver cups sat on a lacquered tray. It seemed
no one
felt like tea; the cups were all dry. Dipping into her belt pouch, the
graying
sister thrust a carved horn comb into Siuan's hand. "You are all
windblown, woman. Fix your hair before some lout takes you for a tavern
trull
instead of an Aes Sedai and tries to dandle you on his knee."
"Egwene
and Leane are alive and prisoners inside the Tower," Siuan announced,
more
calmly than she felt. A tavern trull? Touching her hair, she discovered
that
the other woman was right and began working the comb through the
tangles. If
you wanted to be taken seriously, you could not look as though you had
been
tussling in an alley. She had enough difficulty with that as it was,
now, and
would have until some years after she could lay hands on the Oath Rod
again.
"Egwene spoke to me in my dreams. They succeeded in blocking the
harbors,
near enough, but they were captured. Where are Beonin and Nisao? One of
you go
fetch them. I don't want to scale the same fish twice."
There.
If they thought themselves free of their oaths, and free of Eg-wene's
orders to
obey her, that should disabuse them. Except that no one moved to obey.
"Beonin
wanted her bed," Morvrin said slowly, studying Siuan. A very intense
study. A sharp mind hid behind that placid face. "She was too tired to
talk any more. And why would we have asked Nisao to join us?" That
earned
a small frown from Myrelle, who was Nisao's friend, but the other two
nodded
agreement. They and Beonin thought of Nisao as apart from themselves in
spite
of the oaths of fealty they shared. In Siuan's opinion, these women had
never
stopped believing they might still guide events somehow, even after the
rudder
had long since been taken from their hands.
Sheriam
rose from the cot as though about to rush off, even gathering her
skirts, but
that had nothing to do with Siuan's command. Anger had vanished,
replaced by
shining eagerness. "We dont need them for the moment in any case.
'Prisoners' means the deep cells until the Hall convenes for a trial.
We can
Travel there and free them before Elaida knows what is happening."
Myrelle
gave a sharp nod and stood, reaching to undo the sash of her robe.
"Best
if we leave the Warders behind, I think. They won't be needed in this."
She drew more deeply on the Source, already anticipating.
"No!"
Siuan said sharply, and winced as the comb caught in her hair.
Sometimes she
thought of cutting it shorter than Carlinya's, for convenience, but
Gareth had
complimented her, saying how much he liked the way it brushed her
shoulders.
Light, could she not escape the man even here? "Egwene isn't to be
tried,
and she isn't in the deep cells. She wouldn't tell me where she is
being held
except to say that she is guarded constantly. And she orders that there
be no
attempt to rescue her that involves sisters."
The
other women stared at her in shocked silence. In truth, she herself had
argued
the point with Egwene, to no avail. It had been an order, delivered by
the
Amyrlin Seat in full fig.
"What
you're saying is irrational," Carlinya said finally. Her tone was still
cool, her face serene, but her hands smoothed her embroidered white
skirts
unnecessarily. "If we capture Elaida, we will try her and very likely
still her." If. Their doubts and fears were not put to rest yet.
"Since she has Egwene, surely she will do the same. I don't need Beonin
to
tell me what the law says in that regard."
"We
must rescue her, whatever she wants!" Sheriam's voice was hot as
Carlinya's was chill, and her green eyes sparkled. Her hands had turned
to
fists gripping her skirts. "She cannot realize the danger she is in.
She
must be in shock. Did she give you any hints where she's held?"
"Don't
try to hide things from us, Siuan," Myrelle said firmly. Her eyes
seemed
almost on fire, and she jerked the silk sash tighter for emphasis. "Why
would she hide where she's being held?"
"For
fear of what you and Sheriam suggest." Giving up on the wind-whipped
tangles, Siuan tossed the comb down on the table. She could not stand
there
combing her hair and expect them to pay attention. Tousled would have
to do.
"She is guarded, Myrelle. By sisters. And they won't give her up
easily.
If we try a rescue, Aes Sedai will die at the hands of Aes Sedai, sure
as
silverpike spawn in the reeds. It's happened once, but it must not
happen
again, or all hope dies of reuniting the Tower peacefully. We cannot
allow it
to happen again. So there is to be no rescue. As to why Elaida has
decided not
to try her, I can't say." Egwene had been vague on that, as if she did
not
understand either. But she had been definite on the facts, and it was
not a
claim she would make unless she was sure.
"Peacefully,"
Sheriam muttered, sinking back onto the cot. She imbued the word with a
world
of bitterness. "Was there ever any chance of that, from the beginning?
Elaida has abolished the Blue Ajah! What chance of peace is there?"
"Elaida
cannot simply do away with an Ajah," Morvrin murmured, as though that
had
anything to do with anything. She patted Sheriam's shoulder, but the
fire-haired woman sullenly shrugged off her plump hand.
"There
is always a chance," Carlinya said. "The harbors are blocked,
strengthening our position. The negotiators meet every morning…"
Trailing off with a troubled look in her eyes, she poured a cup of tea
and
drank half of it down in one go without adding honey. Blocking the
harbors
likely would have put an end to the negotiations by itself, not that
they had
seemed to be going anywhere. Would Elaida let them continue with Egwene
in her
hands besides?
"I
do not comprehend why Elaida would not have Egwene put on trial,"
Morvrin
said, "since conviction would be sure and certain, but the fact remains
that she is a prisoner." She displayed none of Sheriam or Myrelle's
heat
and none of Carlinya's coldness. She was simply presenting the facts,
with only
a slight tightness of her mouth. "If she is not to be tried, then
without
any doubt she is to be broken. She has proven to be a stronger woman
than I
took her for at first, but no one is strong enough to resist the White
Tower
when it decides to break her. We must consider the consequences if we
don't get
her out before it can."
Siuan
shook her head. "She isn't even going to be birched, Morvrin. I don't
understand why either, but she'd hardly tell us to leave her if she
thought
they were going to torture-"
She
broke off as the tentflap was pushed open and Lelaine Akashi stepped
in,
blue-fringed shawl draped along her arms. Sheriam stood, though she
need not
have; Lelaine was a Sitter, but Sheriam was the Keeper. Then again,
Lelaine was
imposing in blue-slashed velvet despite her slenderness, dignity made
flesh,
with an air of authority that seemed greater than ever tonight. Every
hair in
place, she might have been entering the Hall after a sound night's
sleep.
Smoothly
Siuan turned to the table and picked up the pitcher as if in
anticipation. That
normally would have been her role in this company, to pour tea and
speak when
her opinion was sought. Perhaps if she remained quiet, Lelaine would be
about
her business with the others and leave quickly without giving her a
second
glance. The woman seldom did give her that much.
"I
thought that horse outside was the same I saw you ride in on, Siuan."
Lelaine's gaze ran over the other sisters, each of them absolutely
smooth-faced
now. "Am I interrupting?"
"Siuan
says Egwene is alive," Sheriam said as though relating the price of
delta
perch on the dockhead. "And Leane. Egwene spoke to Siuan's dreams. She
refuses any attempt at a rescue." Myrelle gave her a sidelong glance,
unreadable, but Siuan could have boxed her ears! Likely Lelaine would
have been
the next she sought out, but to tell her in her own way, not spilled
out on the
wharf like this. Of late, Sheriam had become as flighty as a novice!
Pursing
her lips, Lelaine directed a look like twin awls at Siuan. "Did she,
now?
You really should be wearing your stole, Sheriam. You are the Keeper.
Will you
walk with me, Siuan? It's been far too long since we had a conversation
alone." With one hand, she drew back the doorflap, shifting that
penetrating gaze to the other sisters. Sheriam blushed as only a
redhead could,
brilliantly, and fumbled the narrow blue stole from her belt pouch to
lay it
across her shoulders, but Myrelle and Carlinya met Lelaine's study with
level
eyes. Morvrin had begun tapping her round chin with a fingertip as
though
unaware of anyone else. She might well have been. Morvrin was like that.
Had
Egwene's orders sunk in? Siuan had no chance even for a firm look while
putting
the pitcher down. A suggestion from a sister of Lelaine's standing,
Sitter or
not, was a command to one of Siuan's standing. Gathering her cloak and
skirts,
she went out, murmuring thanks to Lelaine for holding the flap for her.
Light,
she hoped those fools had listened to what she said.
Four
Warders stood outside now, but one of them was Lelaine's Burin, a
copper-skinned stump of a Domani wrapped in a Warder cloak that made
most of
him seem not there, and Avar had been replaced by another of Myrelle's,
Nuhel
Dromand, a tall, burly man with an Illianer beard that left his upper
lip bare.
The man was so still you might have thought him a statue if not for the
wisps
of mist in front of his nostrils. Arinvar bowed to Lelaine, a quick
courtesy,
though formal. Nuhel and Jori did not let their vigilance slacken. Nor
did
Burin, for that matter.
The
knot that secured Nightlily took as long to undo as it had to tie, but
Lelaine
waited patiently until Siuan straightened with the reins in her hands,
then set
off at a slow pace along the wooden walkway past dark tents.
Moonshadows masked
her face. She did not embrace the Power, so Siuan could not either.
Trailed by
Burin, Siuan walked beside Lelaine leading the mare, holding her
silence. It
was the Sitter's place to begin, and not only because she was a Sitter.
Siuan
fought the urge to bend her neck and so lose the extra inch she had on
the
other woman. She seldom thought any longer of the time when she had
been
Amyrlin. She had been embraced as Aes Sedai once more, and part of
being Aes
Sedai meant fitting into your niche among the sisters instinctively.
The bloody
horse nuzzled at her hand as though it thought itself a pet, and she
shifted
the reins to her other hand long enough to wipe her fingers on her
cloak. Filthy
slobbering beast. Lelaine eyed her sideways, and she felt her cheeks
heating.
Instinct.
"Strange
friends you have, Siuan. I believe some of them were in favor of
sending you
away when you first appeared in Salidar. Sheriam, I might comprehend,
though
I'd think the fact that she stands so much higher than you now would
make for
awkwardness. That was the major reason I avoided you myself, to avoid
awkwardness."
Siuan
nearly gaped in astonishment. That came very near to talking about what
was
never to be talked about, very near, a transgression she would never
had
expected from this woman. From herself, perhaps-she had fitted herself
into her
niche, yet she was who she was-but never from Lelaine!
"I
hope you and I can become friends again, Siuan, though I can understand
if that
proves impossible. This meeting tonight confirms what Faolain told me."
Lelaine gave a small laugh and folded her hands at her waist. "Oh,
don't
grimace so, Siuan. She didn't betray you, at least not intentionally.
She made
one slip too many, and I decided to press her, rather hard. Not the way
to
treat another sister, but then, she's really just an Accepted until she
can be
tested and passes. Faolain will make a fine Aes Sedai. She was very
reluctant
to surrender everything she gave. Just bits and pieces, really, and a
few
names, but put together with you in that gathering, it gives me a
complete
picture, I think. I suppose I can let her free of confinement now. She
certainly won't think of spying on me again. You and your friends have
been
very faithful to Egwene, Siuan. Can you be as faithful to me?"
So
that was why Faolain had seemed to go into hiding. How many "bits and
pieces" had she revealed while being "pressed hard"? Faolain did
not know everything, yet it would be best to assume that Lelaine did.
But
assume while revealing nothing unless she herself was pressed hard.
Siuan
stopped dead, drawing herself up. Lelaine halted, too, clearly waiting
for her
to speak. Even with her face half in shadow that was clear. Siuan had
to steel
herself to confront this woman. Some instincts were buried in the bone
for Aes
Sedai. "I'm faithful to you as a Sitter for my Ajah, but Egwene al'Vere
is
the Amyrlin Seat."
"So
she is." Lelaine's expression remained unruffled, as much as Siuan
could
make out. "She spoke in your dreams? Tell me what you know of her
situation, Siuan." Siuan glanced over her shoulder at the stocky
Warder.
"Don't mind him," the Sitter said. "I haven't kept a secret from
Burin in twenty years."
"In
my dreams," Siuan agreed. She certainly did not intend to admit that
had
been only to summon her to Salidar in Tel'aran'rhiod. She was not
supposed to
have that ring in her possession. The Hall would take it away if they
learned
of it. Calmly-outwardly calm, at least- she related what she had told
Myrelle
and the others, and more. But not everything. Not the certainty of
betrayal.
That had to have come from the Hall itself-no one else had known of the
plan to
block the harbor, except the women involved-though whoever was
accountable
could not have known they were betraying Egwene. Only helping Elaida,
which was
mystery enough. Why would any among them want to help Elaida? There had
been
talk of Elaida's secret adherents from the start, yet she herself had
long
since dismissed the notion. Most assuredly every Blue fervently wanted
Elaida
pulled down, but until she knew who was responsible, no Sitter, not
even a
Blue, would learn everything. "She's called a sitting of the Hall for
tomorrow… no, it would be tonight, now, when Last sounds," she
finished. "Inside the Tower, in the Hall of the Tower."
Lelaine
laughed so hard that she had to brush a tear from her eye. "Oh, that is
priceless. The Hall to sit right under Elaida's nose, as it were. I
almost wish
I could let her know just to see her face." Just as abruptly, she
turned
serious again. Lelaine had always had a ready laugh, when she chose to
let it
out, but the core of her was always serious. "So Egwene thinks the
Ajahs
may be turning on one another. That hardly seems possible. She's only
seen a
handful of sisters, you say. Still, it bears looking into the next time
in
Tel'aran'rhiod. Perhaps someone can see what they can find in the Ajah
quarters
instead of concentrating on Elaida's study."
Siuan
barely suppressed a wince. She planned to do a little searching in
Tel'aran'rhiod herself. Whenever she went to the Tower in the World of
Dreams,
she was a different woman in a different dress every time she turned a
corner,
but she would have to be even more cautious than usual.
"Refusing
rescue is understandable, I suppose, even laudable-no one wants any
more dead
sisters-but very risky," Lelaine went on. "No trial, and not even a
birching? What can Elaida be playing at? Can she think to make her take
up as
Accepted again? That hardly seems likely." But she gave a small nod, as
though considering it.
This
was heading in a dangerous direction. If sisters convinced themselves
they knew
where Egwene might be, the chance increased that someone would try to
bring her
out, Aes Sedai guards or no. Trying at the wrong place could be as
risky as at
the right one, if not more so. Worse, Lelaine was ignoring something.
"Egwene
has called the Hall to sit," Siuan asked acidly. "Will you go?"
Reproving silence answered her, and her cheeks grew hot again. Some
things were
buried in the bone.
"Of
course, I will go," Lelaine said at last. A direct statement, yet there
had been a pause. "The entire Hall will go. Egwene ai'Vere is the
Amyrlin Seat,
and we have more than sufficient dream tefangreal. Perhaps she will
explain how
she believes she can hold out if Elaida orders her broken. I would very
much
like to hear that."
"Then
what are you asking me to be faithful to you about?"
Instead
of answering, Lelaine resumed her slow walk through the moonlight,
carefully
adjusting her shawl. Burin followed her, a half-invisible lion in the
night.
Siuan hurried to catch up, tugging Nightlily after her, fending off the
fool
mare's attempts to nuzzle her hand again.
"Egwene
al'Vere is the lawful Amyrlin Seat," Lelaine said finally. "Until she
dies. Or is stilled. Should either happen, we would be back to Romanda
trying
for the staff and the stole and me forestalling her." She snorted.
"That woman would be a disaster as bad as Elaida. Unfortunately, she
had
enough support to forestall me, as well. We'd be back to that, except
that if
Egwene dies or is stilled, you and your friends will be as faithful to
me as
you've been to Egwene. And you will help me gain the Amyrlin Seat in
spite of
Romanda."
Siuan
felt as though her stomach had turned to ice. No Blue would have been
behind
the first betrayal, but one Blue, at least, had reason to betray Egwene
now.
CHAPTER TWO
The Dark One's Touch
Beonin
woke at first light, as was her habit, though little of the dawn
trickled into
her tent past the closed doorflap. Habits were good when they were the
right
habits. She had taught herself a number over the years. The air inside
the tent
held a touch of the night's chill, but she left the brazier unlit. She
did not
intend to remain long. Channeling briefly, she lit a brass lamp, then
heated
the water in the white-glazed pitcher and washed her face at the
rickety
washstand with its bubbled mirror. Nearly everything in the small round
tent
was unsteady, from the tiny table to her narrow camp cot, and the only
sturdy
piece, a low-backed chair, was rude enough to have come from the
poorest farm
kitchen. She was accustomed to making do, though. Not all of the
judgments she
had been called on to make had been given in palaces. The meanest
hamlet also
deserved justice. She had slept in barns and even hovels to make it so.
Moving
deliberately, she put on the best riding dress she had with her, a
plain gray
silk that was very well cut, and snug boots that came to her knees,
then began
brushing her dark golden hair with an ivory-backed hairbrush that had
belonged
to her mother. Her reflection in the mirror was slightly distorted. For
some
reason, that irritated her this morning.
Someone
scratched at the tentflap, and a man called cheerily in a Murandian
accent,
"Breakfast, Aes Sedai, if it pleases you." She lowered the brush and
opened herself to the Source.
She
had not acquired a personal serving woman, and it often seemed a new
face
brought every meal, yet she remembered the stout, graying man with a
permanent
smile who entered at her command carrying a tray covered with a white
cloth.
"Leave
it on the table, please, Ehvin," she said, releasing saidar, and was
rewarded with a widening of his smile, a deep bow over the tray, and
another
before he left. Too many sisters forgot the small courtesies to those
beneath
them. Small courtesies were the lubricant of daily life.
Eyeing
the tray without enthusiasm, she resumed her brushing, a twice-a-day
ritual
that she always found soothing. Rather than finding comfort in the
brush
sliding through her hair this morning, however, she had to make herself
complete the full one hundred strokes before laying the brush on the
washstand
beside the matching comb and hand mirror. Once, she could have taught
the hills
patience, yet that had become harder and harder since Salidar. And
nearly
impossible since Murandy. So she schooled herself to it, as she had
schooled
herself to go to the White Tower against her mother's stern wishes,
schooled
herself to accept the Tower's discipline along with its teaching. As a
girl,
she had been headstrong, always aspiring to more. The Tower had taught
her that
you could achieve much if you could control yourself. She prided
herself on
that ability.
Self-control
or no self-control, lingering over her breakfast of stewed prunes and
bread
proved as difficult as completing her ritual with the hairbrush. The
prunes had
been dried, and perhaps too old to begin with; they had been stewed to
mush,
and she was sure she had missed a few of the black flecks that
decorated the
crusty bread. She tried to convince herself that anything that crunched
between
her teeth was a barley grain or a rye seed. This was not the first time
she had
eaten bread containing weevils, yet it was hardly a thing to enjoy. The
tea had
a strange aftertaste, too, as though that also was beginning to spoil.
When
she finally replaced the linen cloth over the carved wooden tray, she
very nearly
sighed. How long before nothing edible remained in the camp? Was the
same
happening inside Tar Valon? It must be so. The Dark One was touching
the world,
a thought as bleak as a field of jagged stones. But victory would come.
She
refused to entertain any other possibility. Young al'Thor had a great
deal to
answer for, a very great deal, yet he would-must!-achieve that somehow.
Somehow. But the Dragon Reborn lay beyond her purview; all she could do
was
watch events unfold from afar. She had never liked sitting to one side
and
watching.
All
this bitter musing was useless. It was time to be moving. She stood up
so
quickly that her chair toppled over backward, but she left it lying
there on
the canvas ground-cloth.
Putting
her head out at the doorflap, she found Tervail on a stool on the
walkway, his
dark cloak thrown back, leaning on the scabbarded sword propped between
his
boots. The sun stood on the horizon, two-thirds of a bright golden
ball, yet
dark clouds in the other direction, massing around Dragonmount,
suggested more
snow before long. Or perhaps rain. The sun felt close to warm after the
previous night. Either way, with luck she could be snug indoors soon.
Tervail
gave a small nod to acknowledge her without stopping what appeared to
be an
idle study of everyone who moved in his sight. There were none but
laborers at
the moment, men in rough woolens carrying baskets on their backs, men
and women
just as roughly clad driving high-wheeled carts, laden with bound
firewood and
sacks of charcoal and water barrels, that clattered along the rutted
street. At
least, his scrutiny would have seemed idle to someone lacking the
Warder bond
with him. Her Tervail, he was focused as a drawn arrow. It was only the
men he
studied, and his gaze lingered on those he did not know personally.
With two
sisters and a Warder dead at the hands of a man who could channel-it
seemed
beyond possibility there could be two murderers of that sort-everyone
was leery
of strange men. Everyone who knew, at least. The news had hardly been
shouted
abroad.
How
he thought he might recognize the killer was beyond her unless the man
carried
a banner, but she would not upbraid or belittle him for trying to
perform his
duty. Whipcord lean, with a strong nose and a thick scar along his jaw
earned
in her sendee, he had been little more than a boy when she found him,
cat-quick
and already one of the finest swordsmen in her native Tarabon, and for
all the
years since there had never been a moment when he did less. At least
twenty
times he had saved her life. Quite aside from brigands and footpads too
ignorant to recognize an Aes Sedai, the law could be dangerous when one
side or
the other became desperate not to have the judgment go against them,
and often
he had spotted the peril before she herself.
"Saddle
Winterfinch for me and bring your own horse," she told him. "We are
going for the little ride."
Tervail
raised one eyebrow slightly, half-glancing in her direction, then
attached the
scabbard to the right side of his belt and set off down the wooden
walkway
toward the horselines, walking very quickly. He never asked unnecessary
questions. Perhaps she was more agitated within than she believed.
Ducking
back inside, she carefully wrapped the hand mirror in a silk scarf
woven in a
black-and-white Tairen maze and tucked it into one of the two large
pockets
sewn inside her good gray cloak, along with the hairbrush and comb. Her
neatly
folded shawl and a small box of intricately carved blackwood went into
the
other. The box contained a few pieces of jewelry, some that had come
down from
her mother and the rest from her maternal grandmother. She herself
seldom wore
jewelry aside from her Great Serpent ring, yet she always took the box
and the
brush, comb and mirror with her when she journeyed, reminders of the
women
whose memories she loved and honored, and of what they had taught her.
Her
grandmother, a noted advocate in Tanchico, had infused her with a love
for the
intricacies of the law, while her mother had demonstrated that it was
always
possible to better yourself. Advocates rarely became wealthy, though
Collaris
certainly had been more than comfortable, yet despite her disapproval,
her
daughter Aeldrine had become a merchant and amassed a tidy fortune
buying and
selling dyes. Yes, it was always possible to better yourself, if you
seized the
moment when it appeared, as she had when Elaida aRoihan deposed Siuan
Sanche.
Matters since had not gone anywhere near as she had foreseen, of
course.
Matters seldom did. That was why a wise woman always planned
alternative paths.
She
considered waiting inside for Tervail to return-he could not fetch two
horses
in mere minutes-but now that the time had actually arrived, her last
stores of
patience seemed to flee. Settling the cloak around her shoulders, she
snuffed
the lamp with an air of finality. Outside, however, she forced herself
to stand
in one place rather than pacing along the walkway's rough planks.
Pacing would
attract eyes, and perhaps some sister who thought she was fearful of
being
alone. In all truth, she was afraid, a little. When a man could kill
you,
unseen, undetected, it was most reasonable to be afraid. She did not
want
company, though. She pulled up her cowl, signaling a desire for
privacy, and
drew the cloak around her.
A
gray cat, notch-eared and lean, began stropping himself against her
ankles.
There were cats all over the camp; they appeared anywhere that Aes
Sedai
gathered, tame as house pets however feral they had been before. After
a few
moments without having his ears scratched, the cat strolled away, as
proud as a
king, in search of someone who would see to them. He had plenty of
candidates.
Just
moments earlier there had been only roughly garbed laborers and cart
drivers in
view, but now the camp began to bustle. Clusters of white-clad novices,
the
so-called "families," scurried along the walkways to reach their
classes, held in any tent large enough to accommodate them, or even in
the
open. Those who hurried by her ceased their childish prattle to offer
perfect
curtsies in passing. The sight never ceased to amaze her. Or to produce
anger.
A fair number of those "children" were well into their middle years
or older-no few had at least some gray in their hair, and some were
grandmothers!-yet they were bending to the ancient routines as well as
any girl
she had ever seen come to the Tower. And so many. A seemingly endless
flood
pouring down the streets. How much had the Tower lost through its focus
on
bringing in girls born with the spark and those already on the brink of
channeling through their own fumbling while leaving the rest to find
their way
to Tar Valon as they would or could? How much lost through insisting no
girl
above eighteen could submit to the discipline? Change was nothing she
had ever
sought-law and custom ruled an Aes Sedai's life, a bedrock of
stability-and
some changes, such as these novice families, seemed too radical to go
on, but
how much had the Tower lost?
Sisters
glided along the walkways, too, usually in pairs or even threes,
usually
trailed by their Warders. The flow of novices parted around them in
ripples of
curtsies, ripples made jagged by the stares directed at the sisters,
who
pretended not to notice. Very few of the Aes Sedai lacked the glow of
the Power
around them. Beonin came close to clicking her tongue in irritation.
The
novices knew that Anaiya and Kairen were dead-there had been no thought
of
hiding the funeral pyres-but telling them how the two sisters had died
would
simply have frightened them. The newest, added to the novice book in
Mu-randy, had
worn white long enough to be aware that sisters walking about filled
with
saidar was beyond unusual, though. Eventually that alone would frighten
them,
and to no purpose. The killer seemed unlikely to strike in public, with
dozens
of sisters about.
Five
mounted sisters riding slowly eastward, none carrying the light of
saidar,
caught her eye. Each was followed by a small entourage, generally a
secretary,
a serving woman, perhaps a serving man as well in case of heavy
lifting, and
some Warders. All rode with their hoods up, but she had no difficulty
making
out who was who. Varilin, of her own Gray, would have been tall as a
man, while
Takima, the Brown, was a tiny thing. Saroiya's cloak was flamboyant
with white
embroidery- she must use saidar to keep it so sparkling bright-and a
pair of
Warders trailing Faiselle marked her as clearly as her brilliant green
cloak.
Which made the last, wrapped in dark gray, Magla, the Yellow. What
would they
find when they reached Darein? Surely not negotiators from the Tower,
not now.
Perhaps they thought they must go through the motions anyway. People
frequently
continued to go on as they had been after all purpose in it had been
lost. That
seldom lasted long with Aes Sedai, however.
"They
hardly seem to be together at all, do they, Beonin? You might think
they just
happened to be riding in the same direction."
So
much for the cowl providing a modicum of privacy. Luckily, she was
practiced at
suppressing sighs, or anything else that might give away more than she
wished. The
two sisters who had stopped beside her were much of a height, both
small-boned,
dark-haired and brown-eyed, but there resemblance ended. Ashmanaille's
narrow
face, with its pointed nose, seldom displayed any emotion at all. Her
silk
dress, slashed with silver, might have come from a tirewoman's hands
only
moments before, and silver scrollwork decorated the edges of her
fur-lined
cloak and cowl. Phaedrine's dark wool bore a number of creases, not to
mention
several stains, her woolen cloak was unadorned and needed darning, and
she
frowned much too often, as she was doing right then. She might have
been pretty
without that. An odd pair of friends, the usually unkempt Brown and the
Gray
who paid as much attention to her clothes as to anything else.
Beonin
glanced at the departing Sitters. They did appear to be riding in the
same
direction by chance more than riding together. It was a measure of her
upset
this morning that she had failed to note that. "Perhaps," she said
turning to face her unwanted visitors, "they are contemplating the
consequences of last night, yes, Ashmanaille?" Unwelcome or not,
courtesy
must be observed.
"At
least the Amyrlin is alive," the other Gray replied, "and by what
I've been told, she will remain alive and… healthy. Her and Leane
both." Not even Nynaeve's Healing of Siuan and Leane could make anyone
speak of stilling with ease.
"Alive
and a captive, it is better than being beheaded, I suppose. But not a
great
deal better." When Morvrin woke her to tell her the news, it had been
hard
to share the Brown's excitement. Excitement for Morvrin, at least. The
woman
had worn a small grin. Beonin had never considered altering her plans,
though.
Facts, they must be faced. Egwene was a prisoner, and that was that.
"Do
you not agree, Phaedrine?"
"Of
course," the Brown replied curtly. Curtly! But that was Phaedrine,
always
so immersed in whatever had caught her attention that she forgot how
she should
behave. And she was not done. "But that is not why we sought you.
Ashmanaille says you have considerable acquaintance with murders." A
sudden gust of wind snatched at their cloaks, but Beonin and
Ashmanaille caught
theirs smoothly. Phaedrine let hers swirl behind her, eyes intent on
Beonin.
"Perhaps
you have had some thoughts on our murders, Beonin," Ashmanaille said
smoothly. "Will you share them with us? Phaedrine and I have been
putting
our heads together, but we are getting nowhere. My own experience is
more with
civil matters. I know that you have gotten to the bottom of a number of
unnatural
deaths."
Of
course she had thought on the murders. Was there a sister in the camp
who had
not? She herself could not have avoided it had she tried. Finding a
murderer
was a joy, far more satisfying than settling a boundary dispute. It was
the
most heinous of crimes, the theft of what could never be recovered, all
the
years that would never be lived, all that might have been done in them.
And
these were the deaths of Aes Sedai, which surely made it personal for
every
sister in the camp. She waited for a last covey of white-clad women,
two with
gray hair, to make their curtsies and hurry on. The number of novices
on the
walkways was finally beginning to thin out. The cats seemed to be
following
them. Novices were more free with petting than most sisters.
"The
man who stabs from greed," she said once the novices were beyond
hearing,
"the woman who poisons from jealousy, they are one thing. This is quite
another altogether. There are two killings, surely by the same man, but
well
over a week apart. That implies both the patience and the planning. The
motive
is unclear, yet it seems very unlikely that he chose his victims by
chance.
Knowing no more of him than the fact that he can channel, you must
begin by
looking at what ties the victims together. In this case, Anaiya and
Kairen,
they were both Blue Ajah. So I ask myself, what connection has the Blue
Ajah
with a man who can channel? The answer comes back, Moiraine Damodred
and Rand
al'Thor. And Kairen, she also had contact with him, yes?"
Phaedrine's
frown deepened to near a scowl. "You cannot be suggesting be is the
killer." Really, she was getting much too far above herself.
"No,"
Beonin said coolly. "I am saying you must follow the connection. Which
leads to the Asha'man. Men who can channel. Men who can channel, who
know how
to Travel. Men who have some reason to fear Aes Sedai, perhaps
particular Aes
Sedai more than others. A connection is not the proof," she admitted
reluctantly, "but it is suggestive, yes?"
"Why
would an Asha'man come here twice and each time kill one sister? That
sounds as
though the killer wanted those two and no others." Ashmanaille shook
her
head. "How could he know when Anaiya and Kairen would be alone? You
cannot
think he is lurking about disguised as a workman. From all I hear,
these
Asha'man are far too arrogant for that. To me, it seems more likely we
have an
actual workman who can channel and bears a grudge of some sort."
Beonin
sniffed dismissively. She could feel Tervail approaching. He must have
run to
be back so soon. "And why would he have waited until now? The last
workmen, they were taken on in Murandy, more than a month ago."
Ashmanaille
opened her mouth, but Phaedrine darted in, quick as a sparrow snatching
a
crumb. "He might have only just learned how. A male wilder, as it were.
I've overheard workmen talking. As many admire the Asha'man as fear
them. I've
even heard some say they wish they had the nerve to go to the Black
Tower
themselves."
The
other Gray's left eyebrow twitched, as much as both shooting to her
hairline in
another woman. The two were friends, yet she could not be pleased with
Phaedrine plucking the words from her mouth in that way. All she said,
though,
was "An Asha'man could find him, I'm sure."
Beonin
let herself feel Tervail, waiting only a few paces behind her, now. The
bond
carried a steady flow of unwavering calm and patience as strong as the
mountains. How she wished she could draw on that as she could on his
physical
strength. "That is most unlikely to happen,
I'm
sure you will agree." she said thinly. Romanda and the others might
have
stood in favor of this nonsensical "alliance" with the Black Tower,
but from that moment on they had fought like drunken cart drivers over
how to
implement it, how to word the agreement, how to present it, every
single detail
corn apart, put back together and torn apart again. The thing was
doomed, thank
the Light.
"I
must go," she told them, and turned to take Winterfinch's reins from
Tervail. His tall bay gelding was sleek and powerful and fast, a
trained
warhorse. Her brown mare was stocky, and not fast, yet she had always
preferred
endurance to speed. Winterfinch could keep going long after taller,
supposedly
more powerful animals gave up. Putting a foot in the stirrup, she
paused with
her hands on tall pommel and can-tie. "Two sisters dead. Ashmanaille,
and
both Blues. Find sisters who knew them and learn what else they had in
common.
To locate the murderer, you must follow the connections."
"I
doubt very much they will lead to Asha'man. Beonin."
"The
important thing is that the killer is found," she replied, pulling
herself
into the saddle, and turned Winterfinch away before the other woman
could go
on. An abrupt ending, and discourteous, but she had no more wisdom to
offer,
and time seemed to press down on her, now. The sun was clear of the
horizon and
climbing. After so long, time pressed very hard indeed.
The
ride to the Traveling ground used for departures was short. but near a
dozen
Aes Sedai were waiting in a line outside the call canvas wall, some
leading
horses, some cloakless as if they expected to be indoors before long,
and one
or two wearing their shawls for some reason. About half were
accompanied by
Warders, several of whom wore their color-shifting cloaks. The one
thing the
sisters shared was that each shone with the glow of the Power. Tervail
expressed no surprise at their destination, of course, but more than
that, the
Warder bond continued to carry steady calm. He trusted her. A silvery
flash
appeared inside che walls, and after sufficient time to count slowly to
thirty,
a pair of Greens who could not make a gateway alone entered together
with four
Warders leading horses. The custom of privacy already had attached
itself to
Traveling. Unless someone allowed you to see her weave a gateway,
trying to
learn where she was going was accounted akin to asking direct questions
about
her business. Beonin waited patiently on Winterfinch, with Tervail
towering
over her on Hammer. At least the sisters here respected her raised
cowl. Or
perhaps they had their own reasons for silence. Either way, she did not
have to
talk with anyone. At this moment, that would have been insupportable.
The
line in front of her dwindled quickly, and soon enough she and Tervail
were
dismounting at the head of a much shorter line, only three sisters. He
held
aside the heavy canvas flap for her to enter first. Hung between tall
poles,
the wall enclosed a space of nearly twenty paces by twenty where frozen
slush
covered the ground, an uneven surface marked by footprints and
hooiprints atop
one another and scored in the middle by a razor-straight line. Everyone
used
the middle. The ground glistened faintly, perhaps the beginning of
another thaw
that would turn it all to slush that might well freeze again. Spring
came later
here than in Tarabon, but it was on the brink.
As
soon as Tervail let the canvas fall, she embraced saidarand wove Spirit
almost
caressingly. This weave fascinated her. a rediscovery of something
thought lost
forever and surely the greatest of Egwene al'-Veres discoveries. Every
time she
wove it she felt a sense of wonder, so familiar as novice and even
Accepted,
that had not come to her since she attained the shawl. Something new
and
marvelous. The vertical silvery line appeared in front of her, right
atop the
scoring on the ground. and suddenly became a gap that widened, the view
through
appearing to rotate until she was faced by a square hole in the air,
more than
two paces by two, that showed snow-draped oaks with heavy spreading
limbs. A
light breeze blew through the gateway, rippling her cloak. She had
often
enjoyed walking in that grove, or sitting on one of the low branches
for hours
reading, though never in snow.
Tervail
did not recognize it, and darted through, sword in hand. tugging Hammer
behind
him, the warhorse's hooves kicking up puffs of snow on the other side.
She
followed a little more slowly and let the weave dissipate almost
reluctantly.
It truly was wondrous.
She
found Tervail looking at what rose above the treetops in the near
distance, a
thick pale shaft rearing against the sky. The White Tower. His face was
very
still, and the bond seemed filled with stillness, too. "I think me you
are
planning something dangerous. Beonin." He still held his blade bared,
though lowered now.
She
laid a hand on his left arm. That should be enough to reassure him: she
would
never have impeded his sword arm if there was any real danger. "No more
dangerous than is ne…"
The
words trailed off as she saw a woman some thirty paces away walking
slowly
toward her through the grove of massive trees. She must have been
behind a tree
before. An Aes Sedai in a dress of old-fashioned cut, with straight
white hair
held back by a pearl-studded cap of silver wire and falling to her
waist. It
could not be. That strong face with its dark, tilted eyes and hooked
nose was
unmistakable, though. Unmistakable, but Turanine Merdagon had died when
Beonin
was Accepted. In midstep, the woman vanished.
"What
is it?" Tervail spun, his sword coming up, to stare in the direction
she
had been looking. "What frightened you?"
"The
Dark One, he is touching the world," she said softly. It was
impossible!
Impossible, but she was not given to delusions or fancies. She had seen
what
she had seen. Her shiver had nothing to with standing ankle-deep in
snow.
Silently, she prayed. May the Light illumine me all of my days, and may
I
shelter in the Creator's hand in the sure and certain hope of salvation
and
rebirth.
When
she told him about seeing a sister more than forty years dead, he did
not try
to dismiss it as hallucination, merely muttered his own prayer half
under his
breath. She felt no fear in him, though. Plenty in herself, but none in
him.
The dead could not frighten a man who took each day as his last. He was
not so
sanguine when she revealed what she intended. Part of it, anyway. She
did so
looking into the hand mirror and weaving very carefully. She was not as
adept
with Illusion as she would have liked. The face in the mirror changed
as the
weave settled on her. It was not a great change, but the face was no
longer an
Aes Sedai's face, no longer Beonin Marinye's face, just that of a woman
who
looked vaguely like her, though with much paler hair.
"Why
do you want to reach Elaida?" he demanded suspiciously. Abruptly the
bond carried
an edge. "You mean to get close to her then lower the Illusion, yes?
She
will attack you, and- No, Beonin. If it must be done, let me go. There
are too
many Warders in the Tower for her to know them all, and she will never
expect a
Warder to attack her. I can put a dagger in her heart before she knows
what is
happening.'' He demonstrated, a short blade appearing in his right hand
quick
as lightning.
"What
I do, I must do myself, Tervail." Inverting the Illusion and tying it
off,
she prepared several other weaves just in case matters went too far
awry,
inverting them also, then began another, a very complex weave that she
laid on
herself. That would hide her ability to channel. She had always
wondered why
some weaves, such as Illusion, could be placed on yourself while it was
impossible to make others, such as Healing, touch your own body. When
she had
asked that question as Accepted. Turanine had said in that memorable
deep
voice, "As well ask why water is wet and sand dry. child. Put your mind
on
what is possible rather than why some things are not." Good advice, yet
she never had been able to accept the second part. The dead were
walking. May
the Light illumine me all the days of… She tied off the last weave and
removed her Great Serpent ring, tucking it into her belt pouch. Now she
could
stand beside any Aes Sedai unrecognized for what she was. "You have
always
trusted me to know what is best." she went on. "Do you still?"
His
face remained as smooth as a sister's, yet the bond brought an instant
of
shock. "But of course, Beonin."
"Then
take Winterfinch and go into the city. Hire a room at an inn until I
come for
you." He opened his mouth, but she raised an admonitory hand. "Go,
Tervail."
She
watched him disappear through the trees, leading both horses, then
turned to
face the Tower. The dead were walking. But all that mattered was that
she reach
Elaida. Only that.
Gusts
of wind rattled the casements set in the windows. The fire on the white
marble
hearth had warmed the air to the point that moisture condensed on the
glass
panes and trickled down like raindrops. Seated behind her gilded
writing table
with her hands calmly folded on the tabletop, Elaida do Avriny
a'Roihan, the
Watcher of the Seals, the Flame of Tar Valon, the Amyrlin Seat, kept a
smooth
face while she listened to the man in front of her rant, shoulders
hunched and
shaking his fist.
"…
did be kept bound and gagged for most of the voyage, confined day and
night to
a cabin better called a cupboard! For that, I demand the captain of
that vessel
be punished, Elaida. More, I do demand an apology from you and from the
White
Tower. Fortune stab me, the Amyrlin Seat does no have the right to
kidnap kings
any longer! The White Tower does no have that right! I do demand…"
He
was repeating himself again. The man barely paused for breath. It was
difficult
to keep her attention on him. Her eyes wandered to the bright
tapestries on the
walls, the neatly arrayed red roses on white plinths in the corners.
Tiresome,
maintaining outward calm while enduring this tirade. She wanted to
stand up and
slap him. The audacity of the man! To speak so to the Amyrlin Seat! But
enduring calmly served her purpose better. She would let him exhaust
himself.
Mattin
Stepaneos den Balgar was muscular, and he might have been good-looking
when
young, but the years had proven unkind. The white beard that left his
upper lip
bare was neatly trimmed, but the hair had retreated from most of his
scalp, his
nose had been broken more than once, and his scowl deepened creases on
his
flushed face that needed no deepening. His green silk coat, embroidered
on the
sleeves with the Golden Bees of Illian. had been brushed and cleaned
well,
short of a sister channeling to do the work, yet it had been his only
coat for
the voyage, and not all the stains had come out. The ship carrying him
had been
slow, arriving late the day before, but for once, she was not
displeased with
someone else's slowness. The Light only knew what a mess Alviarin would
have
made of matters had he arrived in a timely fashion. The woman deserved
to go to
the headsman for the mire she had driven the Tower into, a mire Elaida
now had
to dig out of, much less for daring to blackmail the Amyrlin Seat.
Mattin
Stepaneos cut off abruptly, taking half a step back on the patterned
Taraboner
carpet. Elaida wiped the frown from her face. Thinking of Alviarin
always made
her glare unless she was careful.
"Your
rooms are comfortable enough for you?" she said into the silence.
"The serving men are suitable?"
He
blinked at the sudden change of direction. "The rooms do be comfortable
and the serving men suitable," he replied in a much milder tone,
perhaps
remembering her frown. "Even so, I-"
"You
should be grateful to the Tower. Mattin Stepaneos, and to me. Rand
al'Thor took
Illian only days after you departed the city. He took the Laurel Crown,
as
well. The Crown of Swords, he named it. Can you believe he would have
faltered
in cutting off your head to take it? I knew you would not leave
voluntarily. I
saved your life." There. He should believe it had been done with his
best
interests at heart, now.
The
fool had the temerity to snort and fold his arms across his chest. "I
am
no a toothless old hound yet, Mother. I did face death defending Illian
many
times. Do you believe I fear dying so much I would rather be your
guest' for
the rest of my life?" Still, that was the first time he had given her
her
proper title since entering the room.
The
ornate gilded case clock standing against the wall chimed, small
figures of
gold and silver and enamel moving on three levels. On the highest,
above the
clockface, a king and queen knelt to an Amyrlin Seat. Unlike the wide
stole
resting on Elaida's shoulders, that Amyr-lin's stole still had seven
stripes.
She had not yet gotten around to bringing in an enameler. There was so
much to
be done that was so much more important.
Adjusting
her stole on the bright red silk of her dress, she leaned back so the
Flame of Tar
Valon. picked out in moonstones on the tall gilded chairback, would
stand
directly above her head. She intended to make the man take in every
symbol of
who she was and what she represented. Had the Flame-topped staff been
at hand,
she would have held it under his crooked nose. "A dead man can reclaim
nothing, my son. From here, with my help, it may be that you can
reclaim your
crown and your nation."
Mattin
Stepaneos' mouth opened a crack and he inhaled deeply, like a man
scenting a
home he had never thought to see again. "And how would you arrange
that.
Mother? I understand the City do be held by these… Asha'man," he
fumbled the cursed name slightly, "and Aiel who follow the Dragon
Reborn." Someone had been talking to him, telling him too much. His
news
of events was to be strictly rationed. It seemed his serving man would
have to
be replaced. But hope had washed the anger from his voice, and that was
to the
good.
"Regaining
your crown will require planning, and time," she told him, since at the
moment
she had no idea of how it could be accomplished. She certainly intended
to find
a way, however. Kidnapping the King of Illian had been meant to
demonstrate her
power, but restoring him to a stolen throne would demonstrate it even
further.
She would rebuild the full glory of the White Tower at its highest, the
days
when thrones trembled if the Amyrlin Seat frowned.
"I
am sure you are still weary from your journey." she said, standing.
Just
as if he had undertaken it of his own free will. She hoped he was
intelligent
enough to make that pretense, too. It would serve them both far better
than the
truth in the days to come. "We will dine together at midday and discuss
what might be done. Cariandre, escort His Majesty to his rooms and see
to
fetching a tailor. He will need new clothes made. A gift from me." The
plump Ghealdanin Red who had been standing still as a mouse beside the
door to
the anteroom glided forward to touch his arm. He hesitated, reluctant
to go,
but Elaida continued as though he were already leaving. "Tell Tarna to
come in to me, Cariandre. I have a great deal of work today," she added
for his benefit.
At
last Mattin Stepaneos let himself be turned, and she sat down again
before he
reached the door. Three lacquered boxes were arranged just so on the
tabletop,
one her correspondence box, where she kept recently received letters
and
reports from the Ajahs. The Red shared whatever their eyes-and-ears
learned-she
thought they did-but the other Ajahs still provided only dribbles,
though they had
produced a number of unwelcome pieces of information in the last week
or so.
Unwelcome in part because they indicated contact with the rebels that
must go
beyond those farcical negotiations. It was the fat, gold-embossed
leather
folder in front of her that she opened, however. The Tower itself
generated
enough reports to have buried the table had she tried to read them all
herself,
and Tar Valon produced ten times as many. Clerks handled the vast
majority,
selecting only the most important for her to read. They still made a
thick
stack.
"You
wanted me. Mother?" Tarna said coolly, shutting the door behind her.
There
was no disrespect in it; the yellow-haired woman was cold by nature,
her blue
eyes icy. Elaida did not mind that. What irritated her was that the
bright red
Keeper's stole around Tarna's neck was little more than a wide ribbon.
Her pale
gray dress was slashed with enough red to display her pride in her
Ajah, so why
was her stole so narrow? But Elaida had a great deal of trust in the
woman, and
of late that was a rare commodity.
"What
news from the harbor, Tarna?" There was no need to say which.
Southharbor
alone had any hope of remaining functional without massive repairs.
"Only
riverships of the shallowest draft can enter," Tarna said, crossing the
carpet to stand in front of the writing table. She might have been
discussing
the possibility of rain. Nothing fazed her. "But the rest are taking
turns
tying up to the part of the chain that's cuendil-lar so they can
off-load into
barges. The ship captains complain, and it takes considerably longer,
yet for
the time being, we can make do."
Elaida's
mouth compressed, and she drummed her fingers on the tabletop. For the
time
being. She could not begin to repair the harbors until the rebels
finally collapsed.
So far, they had not launched an assault, thank the Light. That might
begin
with soldiers only, yet sisters certainly would be drawn into it,
something
they must want to evade as much as she did. But razing the harbor
towers, as
repairs would require, laying the harbors open and defenseless, might
lead them
to desperate acts. Light! Fighting must be avoided, if at all possible.
She
intended to fold their army into the Tower Guard once they realized
they were
finished and returned to the Tower. Part of her already thought as if
Gareth
Bryne were commanding the Tower Guard for her. An infinitely better man
for
High Captain than Jimar Chubain. The world would know the White Tower's
influence then! She did not want her soldiers killing one another, any
more
than she wanted the Tower weakened by her Aes Sedai killing one
another. The
rebels were hers as much as those inside the Tower, and she meant to
make them
acknowledge it.
Picking
up the top sheet from the stack of reports, she scanned it rapidly.
"Apparently,
despite my express order, the streets are still not being cleaned. Why?"
An
uneasy light appeared in Tarna's eyes, the first time Elaida had ever
seen her
look troubled. "People are frightened. Mother. They don't leave their
homes except at need, and with great reluctance even then. They say
they have
seen the dead walking in the streets."
"This
has been confirmed?" Elaida asked quietly. Her blood suddenly seemed
chill. "Have any sisters seen them?"
"None
in the Red, that I know of." The others would speak with her as Keeper,
yet not freely, not to share confidences. How under the Light was that
to be
mended? "But people in the city are adamant. They have seen what
they've
seen."
Slowly,
Elaida set the page down to one side. She wanted to shiver. So. She had
read
everything she could find concerning the Last Battle, even studies and
Foretellings so old they had never been translated out of the Old
Tongue and
had lain covered in dust in the darkest corners of the library. The
al'Thor boy
had been a harbinger, but now it seemed that Tarmon Gai'don would come
sooner
than anyone had thought. Several of those ancient Foretellings, from
the
earliest days of the Tower, said the dead appearing was the first sign,
a
thinning of reality as the Dark One gathered himself. There would be
worse
before long.
"Have
the Tower Guards drag able-bodied men out of their houses, if need be,"
she said calmly. "I want those streets clean, and I want to hear that a
start was made today. Today!"
The
other woman's pale eyebrows lifted in surprise-she bad lost her usual
frigid
self-control!-but all she said, of course, was. "As you command.
Mother."
Elaida
projected serenity, but it was a charade. What would come, would come.
And she
still had secured no hold on the al'Thor boy. To think she had once had
him
right under her hand! If only she had known then. Curse Alviarin and
that
triply cursed proclamation calling anathema on anyone who approached
him save
through the Tower. She would have recalled it, except That would seem
weakness,
and in any case, the damage had been done beyond simple mending. Still,
soon
she would have Elayne back in hand, and the Royal House of An-dor was
the key
to winning Tarmon Gai'don. That, she had Foretold long ago. And news of
rebellion against the Seanchan sweeping across Tarabon had been very
pleasant
reading. Not everything was a tangle of briars stabbing her from every
side.
Scanning
the second report, she grimaced. No one liked sewers, yet they were
one-third
of the life's blood of a city, the other two being trade and clean
water.
Without the sewers, Tar Valon would become prey to a dozen diseases,
overwhelming anything the sisters could do, not to mention even more
malodorous
than the rotting garbage must have made the streets already. Though
trade was
cut to a trickle for the moment, the water still came in at the upriver
end of
the island and was distributed to watertowers throughout the city, then
to
fountains, ornamental and plain, that anyone was free to use, but now
it seemed
the sewer outlets on the downriver end of the island were nearly
clogged.
Dipping her pen in the ink jar, she scrawled I WANT THESE CLEARED BY
TOMORROW
across the top of the page and signed her name below. If the clerks had
any
sense, the work was already underway, but she never accused clerks of
having
much sense.
The
next report made her own eyebrows rise. "Rats inside the Tower?" That
was beyond serious! This should have been on top! "Have someone check
the
Wards, Tarna." Those Wardings had held since the Tower was built, but
perhaps they could have weakened after three thousand years. How many
of those
rats were the Dark One's spies?
A
rap came at the door, followed an instant later by a plump Accepted
named
Anemara, who spread her striped skirts in a deep curtsy. "If it pleases
you, Mother, Felaana Sedai and Negaine Sedai have brought a woman to
you they
found wandering in the Tower. They say she wants to present a petition
to the
Amyrlin Seat.''
"Tell
her to wait and offer her tea, Anemara." Tarna said briskly. "The
Mother is busy-"
"No,
no," Elaida broke in. "Send them in, child. Send them in." It
had been too long since anyone had come to present her with a petition.
She was
of a mind to grant whatever it was. if it was not too ridiculous.
Perhaps that
would restart the flow. It was far too long since any sisters had come
to her
without being summoned, too. Perhaps the two Browns would end that
drought, as
well.
But
only one woman entered the room, carefully closing the door behind her.
By her
silk riding dress and good cloak, she appeared to be a noblewoman or a
prosperous merchant, a supposition supported by her confident manner.
Elaida
was sure she had never met the woman before, yet there seemed something
vaguely
familiar about that face framed by hair even fairer than Tarna's.
Elaida
stood and started around the table, hands outstretched and an
unaccustomed
smile on her face. She tried to make it seem welcoming. "I understand
that
you have a petition for me, my daughter. Tarna, pour her some tea." The
silver pot sitting on a silver tray atop the side table must still be
at least
warm.
"The
petition, it was something I let them believe in order to reach you
unbruised,
Mother," the woman replied in Taraboner accents, curtsying, and halfway
through that, her face was suddenly that of Beonin Marinye.
Embracing
saidar, Tarna wove a shield on the woman, but Elaida contented herself
with
planting her fists on her hips.
"To
say that I'm surprised you dare show me your face would be an
understatement,
Beonin."
"I
managed to become part of what you might call the ruling council in
Salidar," the Gray said calmly. "I made sure they sat there and did
nothing, and I put the rumors about that many among them were in truth
your
secret adherents. The sisters, they were looking at one another with so
much
suspicion. I think me most might have returned to the Tower soon at
that point,
but then other Sitters beside the Blues appeared. The next 1 knew, they
had
chosen their own Hall of the Tower, and the ruling council, it was
done. Still,
I continued to do what 1 could. I know that you commanded me to remain
with
them until they were all ready to return, but that must happen within
days,
now. If I may say, Mother, it was the most excellent decision not to
try
Egwene. For one thing, she has the genius for discovering new weaves,
even
better than Elayne Trakand or Nynaeve al'Meara. For another, before
they raised
her. Lelaine and Romanda struggled with one another to be named
Amyrlin. With
Egwene alive, they will struggle again, but neither can succeed, yes?
Me. I
think very soon now sisters will begin following behind me. In a week
or two,
Lelaine and Romanda will find themselves alone with the remainder of
their
so-called Hall."
"How
did you know the al'Vere girl wasn't to be tried?" Elaida demanded.
"How did you know she's even alive? Unshield her, Tarna!"
Tarna
complied, and Beonin gave her a nod as if in gratitude. A small
gratitude. Those
large blue-gray eyes might make Beonin appear constantly startled, but
she was
a very composed woman. Combine composure with a wholehearted dedication
to the
law and also ambition, which she possessed in as great a measure, and
Elaida
had known immediately that Beonin was the one to send off after the
sisters
fleeing the Tower. And the woman had failed utterly! Oh, she had
apparently
sowed a little dissension, but really, she had achieved nothing of what
Elaida
had expected from her. Nothing! She would find her rewards commensurate
with
her failure.
"Egwene,
she can enter Tel'aran'rhiod simply by going to sleep, Mother. 1 myself
have
been there and seen her, but I must use a ter'augreal. I could not
acquire any
of those the rebels have to bring with me. In any event, she spoke to
Siuan
Sanche, in her dreams, it is claimed, though I think more likely in the
World
of Dreams. Apparently, she said that she is a prisoner, but she would
not tell
where, and she forbade any rescue attempt. May I pour myself that tea?"
Elaida
was so stunned she could not speak. She motioned Beonin to the side
table, and
the Gray curtsied again before going over to feel the silver pitcher
cautiously
with the back of her hand. The girl could enter Tel'aran'rhiod? And
there were
ter'augreal that allowed the same thing? The World of Dreams was almost
a
legend. And according to those troubling scraps the Ajahs had deigned
to share
with her, the girl had rediscovered the weave for Traveling and made
any number
of other discoveries as well. They had been the determining factor in
her
decision to preserve the girl for the Tower, but this on top of it?
"If
Egwene can do this, Mother, perhaps she really is a Dreamer," Tarna
said.
"The warning she gave Silviana-"
"Is
useless, Tarna. The Seanchan are still deep in Altara and barely
touching
Illian." At least the Ajahs were willing to pass on everything they
learned of the Seanchan. Or rather, she hoped they passed on
everything. The
thought roughened her voice. "Unless they learn to Travel, can you
think
of any precaution I need to take beyond what is already in place?" She
could not, of course. The girl had forbidden a rescue. That was good on
the
face of it, but it indicated she still thought of herself as Amyrlin.
Well,
Silviana would remove that nonsense from her head soon enough if the
sisters
teaching her classes failed. "Can she be fed enough of that potion to
keep
her out of Te/'aran'rhiod?"
Tarna
grimaced slightly-no one liked that vile brew, even the Browns who had
brought
themselves to test it-and shook her head. "We can make her sleep
through
the night, but she would be useless for anything the next day, and who
can say
whether it would affect this ability of hers."
"May
I pour for you, Mother?" Beonin said, balancing a thin white teacup on
her
fingertips. "Tarna? The most important news i have-"
"I
don't care for any tea." Elaida said harshly. "Did you bring back
anything to save your skin from your miserable failure? Do you know the
weave
for Traveling, or this Skimming, or…" There were so many. Perhaps
they were all Talents and skills that had been lost, but apparently
most had
not been named yet.
The
Gray peered at her across the teacup, her face very still. "Yes." she
said at last. "I cannot make cuendillar, but I can make the new Healing
weaves work as well as most sisters, and I know them all." An edge of
excitement crept into her voice. "The most marvelous is Traveling."
Without asking permission, she embraced the Source and wove Spirit. A
vertical
line of silver appeared against one wall and widened into a view of
snow-covered oaks. A cold breeze blew into the room. making the flames
dance in
the fireplace. "That is called a gateway. It can only be used to reach
a
place you know well, but you learn a place by making a gateway there,
and to go
somewhere you do not know well, you use Skimming." She altered the
weave,
and the opening dwindled into that silvery line once more then widened
again.
The oaks were replaced by blackness, and a gray-painted barge, railed
and gated,
that floated on nothing against the opening.
"Release
the weave," Elaida said. She had the feeling that if she walked over to
that barge, the darkness would extend as far as she could see in any
direction.
That she could fall in it forever. It made her queasy. The opening-the
gateway-vanished. The memory remained, however.
Resuming
her seat behind the table, she opened the largest of the lacquered
boxes,
decorated with red roses and golden scrollwork. From the top tray, she
picked
up a small ivory carving, a fork-tailed swallow dark yellow with years,
and
stroked her thumb along the curved wings. "You will not teach these
things
to anyone without receiving my permission."
"But… why ever not, Mother?"
"Some
of the Ajahs oppose the Mother almost as strongly as those sisters
beyond the
river," Tarna said.
Elaida
shot a dark look at her Keeper, but that cool visage absorbed it
without
changing a hair. "I will decide who is… reliable enough… to be
taught, Beonin. I want your promise. No. I want your oath.'
"On
my way here, I saw sisters of different Ajahs glaring at one another.
Glaring.
What has happened in the Tower, Mother?"
"Your
oath, Beonin."
The
woman stood peering into her teacup long enough that Elaida was
beginning to think
she would refuse. But ambition won out. She had tied herself to
Elaida's skirts
in the hope of preferment, and she would not abandon that now. "Under
the
Light and by my hope of salvation and rebirth, I swear that I will
teach the
weaves I learned among the rebels to no one without the permission of
the
Amyrlin Seat." She paused, taking a sip from the cup. "Some sisters
in the Tower, they are perhaps less reliable than you think. I tried to
stop
it, but that 'ruling council' sent ten sisters to return to the Tower
and
spread the tale of the Red Ajah and Logain." Elaida recognized few of
the
names she reeled off, until the last. That one made her sit bolt
upright.
"Shall
I have them arrested. Mother?" Tarna asked, still as chill as ice.
"No.
Have them watched. Watch whoever they associate with." So there uas a
conduit between the Ajahs inside the Tower and the rebels. How deeply
had the
rot spread? However deep, she would clean it out!
"That
may be difficult as matters stand, Mother."
Elaida
slapped the table with her free hand, a sharp crack. "I didn't ask
whether
it would be difficult. I said do it! And inform Meidani that I invite
her to
dinner this evening." The woman had been persistent in trying to resume
a
friendship that had ended many years before. Now she knew why. "Go and
do
that now." A shadow crossed Tarna's face as she curtsied. "Don't
worry," Elaida said. "Beonin can feel free to teach you every weave
she knows." She did trust Tarna. after all, and it certainly made her
expression brighter, if not warmer.
As
the door closed behind her Keeper. Elaida pushed the leather folder to
one side
and leaned her elbows on the table, focusing on Beonin. "Now. Show me
everything."
CHAPTER THREE
At the Gardens
A
ran'gar arrived in answer to Moridin's summons, spoken into her furious
dreams,
to find him not yet there. That was hardly surprising; he liked to make
an
entrance. Eleven tall armchairs, carved and gilded, sat in a circle in
the
middle of the striped wooden floor, but they were empty. Semirhage. all
in
black as usual, looked around to see who had entered, then returned to
her
huddled conversation with Demandred and Mesaana in one corner of the
room.
Deman-dred's hook-nosed face carried an expression of anger that only
made him
more striking. Not enough to attract her, of course. He was far too
dangerous
for that. That well-fitted coat of bronze silk, with falls of snowy
lace at
neck and wrists, suited him, however. Mesaana also wore the style of
this Age,
a darker, pattern-embroidered bronze. She appeared wan and subdued, for
some
reason, almost as if she had taken ill. Well, that was possible. This
Age had a
number of nasty diseases. and it seemed unlikely even she would trust
Semirhage
for Healing. Graendal, the only other human present, stood in the
corner
opposite cradling a delicate crystal goblet filled with dark wine, but
watching
the trio rather than drinking. Only idiots ignored being studied by
Graendal,
yet the three went on with their fierce murmurs.
The
chairs jarred with the rest of their surroundings. The room appeared to
have
view-walls, though the stone arch of a doorway destroyed the illusion.
The
chairs could have been anything, here in Tel'aran'rhiod, so why not
something
to suit the room, and why eleven when that was surely two more than
needed?
Asmodean and Sammael must be as dead as Be'lal and Rahvin. Why not the
usual
dilating door of a view-room? The display made the floor seem to be
surrounded
by the AnsalineGardens, with
Cormalinde Masoon's
immense sculptures of stylized humans and animals towering over low
buildings
themselves like delicate sculptures in spinglass. At the Gardens only
the
finest wines had been served, the finest dishes, and it almost always
had been
possible to impress a beautiful woman with large winnings at the chinje
wheels,
though cheating enough to win consistently had been difficult.
Difficult, but
necessary for a scholar who lacked wealth. All gone, in ruins by the
third year
of the war.
A
golden-haired, ever-smiling zomara in a flowing white blouse and tight
breeches
bowed fluidly and offered Aran'gar a crystal goblet of wine on a silver
tray.
Graceful and beautifully androgynous, apparently human despite those
dead black
eyes, the creatures had been one of Aginor's less inspired creations.
Still,
even in their own Age, when Moridin had been called Ishamael-there was
no
longer any doubt in her mind of who he was-he had trusted the creatures
above
any human servant, despite their uselessness for every other task.
Somewhere he
must have found a stasis box stuffed with the tilings. He had dozens,
although
he seldom brought them out. Yet ten more stood waiting, graceful while
standing
still. He must consider this meeting more important than most.
Taking
the goblet, she waved the zomara away, though it was already turning
before she
gestured. She hated the creatures' ability to know what was in her
head. At
least it could not communicate what it learned to anyone. Memories of
anything
but commands faded in minutes. Even Aginor possessed sense enough to
see the
need for that. Would he appear today? Osan'gar had missed every meeting
since
the failure at Shadar Logoth. The true question was, was he among the
dead or
was lie moving in secret, perhaps at the Great Lord's direction? Either
way,
his absences presented delicious opportunities, but the latter
presented as
many dangers. Dangers had been much on her mind lately.
Casually,
she strolled over to Graendal. "Who do you think arrived first,
Graendal? The
Shadow take me, whoever it was chose a depressing setting." Lanfear had
preferred meetings that floated in endless night, yet this was worse in
its own
way, like meeting in a cemetery.
Graendal
smiled thinly. At least, she attempted a thin smile, but no amount of
effort
would make those lips thin. Lush was the word for all of Graendal, lush
and
ripe and beautiful, and barely concealed by the gray mist of her
streith gown.
Though perhaps she should not have worn quite so many rings, all but
one adorned
with gems. The coronet encrusted with rubies clashed with her sun-gold
hair,
too. The emerald necklace Delana had provided went much better with her
own
green satin silks. Of course, while the emeralds were real, her silks
were a
product of the World of Dreams. She would have attracted too much
notice in the
waking world with a dress cut so low, if it would even stay up, there.
And
there was the slit that bared her left leg to the hip. Her legs were
better
than Graendal's. She had considered two slits. Her abilities here were
not as
large as some-she could not find Egwene's dreams without the girl right
beside
her-but she could manage the clothes she wanted. She enjoyed having her
body
admired, and the more she flaunted it, the more the others took her for
inconsequential.
"I
arrived first," Graendal said, frowning slightly into her wine. "I
have fond memories of the Gardens."
Aran'gar
managed a laugh. "So do I, so do I." The woman was a fool like the
rest, living in the past among the tatters of what was lost. "We'll
never
see the Gardens again, but we'll see their like." She herself was the
only
one of them suited to rule in this Age. She was the only one who
understood
primitive cultures. They had been her specialty before the war. Still,
Graendal
had useful skills, and a wider range of contacts among the Friends of
the Dark
than she herself had, though the other woman would certainly disapprove
of how
Aran'gar meant to use them should she learn. "Has it occurred to you
that
all of the others have alliances, while you and I stand alone?" And
Osan'gar, if he was alive, but there was no need to bring him into this.
Graendal's
gown turned a darker gray, regrettably obscuring the view. It was real
streith.
Aran'gar had found a pair of stasis-boxes herself. but filled with the
most
appalling rubbish for the most part. "Has it occurred to you that this
room must have ears? The zomaran were here when I arrived."
"Graendal."
She purred the name. "If Moridin is listening, he'll assume I'm trying
to
get into your bed. He knows I never made alliances with anyone." In
truth,
she had made several, but her allies always seemed to suffer fatal
misfortunes
once their usefulness ended, and they took all knowledge of the
affiliations to
their graves. Those who found graves.
The
streith went black as midnight in Larcheen. and spots of color appeared
on
Graendal's creamy cheeks. Her eyes became blue ice. But her words were
at odds
with her face, and her gown faded to near transparency as she spoke,
slowly,
sounding thoughtful. "An intriguing notion. One I've never before
considered. I might do so now. Perhaps. You will have to… convince me,
though." Good. The other woman was as quick-witted as ever. It was a
reminder that she must be careful. She meant to use Graendal and
dispose of
her, not be caught in one of her traps.
"I
am very good at convincing beautiful women." She stretched out a hand
to
caress Graendal's cheek. Now was not too soon to begin convincing the
others.
Besides, something more than an alliance might come of it. She had
always
fancied Graendal. She no longer really remembered having been a man. In
her
memories, she wore the body she did now, which did make for a few
oddities, yet
that body's influence had not changed everything. Her appetites had not
altered,
only broadened. She would like very much to have that streith gown. And
anything else useful that Graendal might possess, of course, but she
dreamed of
wearing that dress sometimes. The only reason she was not wearing one
now was
that she would not have the other woman thinking she had imitated her.
The
streith remained barely opaque, but Graendal stepped away from the
caress
looking past Aran'gar, who turned to find Mesaana approaching, flanked
by
Demandred and Semirhage. He still appeared angry, and Semirhage coolly
amused.
Mesaana was still pale, but no longer subdued. No. not subdued at all.
She was
a hissing coreer. spitting venom.
"Why
did you let her go. Aran'gar? You were supposed to be controlling her!
Were you
so busy playing your little dream-games with her that you forgot to
learn what
she was thinking? The rebellion will fall apart without her for a
figurehead.
All my careful planning ruined because you couldn't keep a grasp on one
ignorant girl!"
Aran'gar
held on to her temper firmly. She could hold it, when she was willing
to make
the effort. Instead of snarling, she smiled. Could Mesaana actually
have based
herself inside the WhiteTower? How
wonderful it
would be if she could find a way to split that threesome apart. "I
listened in on a sitting of the rebels' Hall last night. In the World
of
Dreams, so they could meet inside the WhiteTower,
with Egwene leading it. She's not the figurehead you believe. I've
tried
telling you before, but you never listened." That came out too hard.
With an
effort, and it required effort, she moderated her tone. "Egwene told
them
all about the situation inside the Tower, the Ajahs at one another's
throats.
She convinced them it's the Tower that is about to fall apart, and that
she
might be able to help it along from where she is. Were I you, I'd worry
whether
the Tower can hold together long enough to keep this conflict going."
"They're
determined to hold on?" Mesaana murmured, half under her breath. She
nodded. "Good. Good. Then everything is proceeding according to plan. I
had been thinking I would need to stage some sort of'rescue,' but
perhaps I can
wait until Elaida has broken her. Her return should create even more
confusion,
then. You need to sow more dissension, Aran'gar. Before I'm done, I
want these
so-called Aes Sedai hating each other in their blood."
Kzomara
appeared, bowing gracefully as it offered a tray with three goblets.
Mesaana
and her companions took the wine without a glance at the creature, and
it bowed
again before flowing away.
"Dissension
was always something she was good at." Semirhage said. Demandred
laughed.
Aran'gar
forced her anger down. Sipping her own wine-it was quite good, with a
heady
aroma, if nowhere near the vintages served at the Gardens-she laid her
free
hand on Graendal's shoulder and toyed with one of those sun-colored
curls. The
other woman never flinched, and the streith remained a bare mist.
Either she
was enjoying this, or she had better control of herself than seemed
possible.
Semirhage's smile grew more amused. She. too, took her pleasures where
she
found them, though Semirhage's pleasures had never attracted Aran'gar.
"If
you're going to fondle one another." Demandred growled, "do it in
private."
"Jealous?"
Aran'gar murmured, and laughed lightly at his scowl. "Where is the girl
kept. Mesaana? She didn't say."
Mesaana's
big blue eyes narrowed. They were her best feature, yet only ordinary
when she
frowned. "Why do you want to know? So you can 'rescue' her yourself? I
won't tell you."
Graendal
hissed, and Aran'gar realized that her hand had become a fist in that
golden
hair, bending Graendal's head back. The other woman's face remained
tranquil,
but her gown was a red mist and rapidly growing darker, more opaque.
Aran'gar
loosened her grip, holding on lightly. One of the first steps was
making your
quarry accustomed to your touch. She did nothing to keep the anger from
her
voice this time, however. Her bared teeth were an undisguised snarl. "I
want the girl, Mesaana. Without her, I have much weaker tools to work
with."
Mesaana
sipped wine calmly before responding. Calmly! "By your own account, you
don't need her at all. It has been my plan from the start, Aran'gar. I
will
adapt it according to need, but it is mine. And I will decide when and
where
the girl is set free."
"No,
Mesaana, I will decide when and where, or whether, she is freed,"
Moridin
announced, striding through the stone arch. So he had set ears in
place. He was
in unrelieved black this time, a black somehow darker than what
Semirhage wore.
As usual. Moghedien and Cyn-dane followed him, both attired in
identical
red-and-black that suited neither. What hold did he have on them?
Moghedien, at
least, had never willingly followed anyone. As for that beautiful,
bosomy
little pale-haired doll Cyndane… Aran'gar had approached her, just to
see
what might be learned, and the girl had coldly threatened to rip her
heart out
if Aran'gar touched her again. Hardly the words of someone who
submitted
easily.
"Sammael
appears to have resurfaced," Moridin announced, crossing the floor to
take
a seat. He was a big man, and he made the ornate high-backed chair seem
a
throne. Moghedien and Cyndane sat down to either side of him, but
interestingly, not until he had. Zomaran in snowy white were there
instantly
with wine, yet Moridin received his first. Whatever was at work there,
the
zomaran sensed it.
"That
hardly seems possible," Graendal said as they all moved to take chairs.
Her gown was dark gray now, concealing everything. "He must be dead."
No one moved quickly, though. Moridin was Nae'blis. yet no one except
Moghedien
and Cyndane was willing to display any hint of subservience. Aran'gar
certainly
was not.
She
took a seat across from Moridin, where she could watch him without
seeming to.
And Moghedien and Cyndane. Moghedien was so still she would have faded
into the
chair except for her bright dress. Cyndane was a queen, her face
chiseled from
ice. Trying to pull down the Nae'blis was dangerous, yet those two
might hold
the key. If she could figure out how to turn it. Graendal sat down
beside her,
and the chair was suddenly closer. Aran'gar could have laid her hand on
the
other woman's wrist but refrained from anything more than a slow smile.
It was
best to keep her mind centered right then.
"He
could never have borne staying hidden this long,' Demandred put in,
lounging
into his chair between Semirhage and Mesaana, legs crossed as though
perfectly
at ease. That seemed doubtful. He was another who was unreconciled, she
was
sure. "Sammael needed to have every eye directed at him."
"Nevertheless,
Sammael, or someone disguised as him, gave orders to Myrddraal, and
they
obeyed, so it was one of the Chosen." Moridin scanned around the chairs
as
though he could detect who it had been. Black saa trickled across his
blue eyes
in a continuous stream. She had no regrets that the True Power was
limited to
his use alone, now. The price was much too high. Ishamael had certainly
been at
least half insane, and he still was as Moridin. How long before she
could
remove him?
"Are
you going to tell us what these orders were?' Semirhage's tone was
cool, and
she sipped her wine calmly, watching Moridin over the goblet's rim. She
sat
very erect, but she always did. She too appeared completely at ease,
yet that was
unlikely.
Moridin's
jaw tightened. "I don't know.'' he said at last, reluctantly. He never
liked saying that. "But they sent a hundred Myrddraal and thousands of
Trollocs into the Ways."
"That
sounds like Sammael," Demandred said thoughtfully, twisting his goblet
and
studying the swirling wine. "Perhaps I was mistaken." A remarkable
admission, coming from him. Or an attempt to hide being the one who had
worn
Sammael as a disguise. She would like very much to know who had begun
playing
her own game. Or whether Sammael really was alive.
Moridin
grunted sourly. "Pass orders to your Friends of the Dark. Any report of
Trollocs or Myrddraal outside the Blight is to be handed to me as soon
as you receive
it. The Time of Return is coming soon. No one is allowed to go
adventuring on
their own any longer." He studied them again, each in turn save for
Moghedien and Cyndane. With a smile even more languorous than
Graendal's,
Aran'gar met his gaze. Mesaana shrank back from it.
"As
you learned to your sorrow," he told Mesaana, and impossible as it
seemed,
her face went paler still. She took a long drink from her goblet, her
teeth
clicking on the crystal. Semirhage and Demandred avoided looking at her.
Aran'gar
exchanged looks with Graendal. Something had been done to punish
Mesaana's
failure to appear at Shadar Logoth. but what? Once, dereliction on that
scale
would have meant death. They were too few for that. now. Cyndane and
Moghedien
appeared as curious as she was, so they did not know either.
"We
can see the signs as clearly as you, Moridin," Demandred said
irritably.
"The Time is near. We need to find the rest of the seals on the Great
Lord's prison. I've had my followers searching everywhere, but they've
found
nothing.''
"Ah,
yes. The seals. Indeed, they must be found." Moridin's smile was almost
complacent. "Only three remain, all in al'Thor's possession. though I
doubt he has them with him. They're too susceptible to breaking, now.
He will
have hidden them. Direct your people to places he has been. Search them
yourselves."
"The
easiest way is to kidnap Lews Therin." In strong contrast to her
ice-maiden appearance, Cyndane's voice was breathy and sultry, a voice
made for
lying on soft pillows wearing very little. There was considerable heat
in those
big blue eyes, now. A searing heat. "I can make him tell where the
seals
are."
"No!"
Moridin snapped, fixing her with a steady stare. "You would
'accidentally'
kill him. The time and manner of al'Thor's death will be at my
choosing. No one
else." Strangely, he put his free hand to the breast of his coat, and
Cyndane flinched. Moghedien shivered. "No one else," he repeated, in
a hard voice.
"No
one else," Cyndane said. When he lowered his hand, she exhaled softly
then
took a swallow of wine. Sweat glistened on her forehead.
Aran'gar
found the exchange illuminating. It seemed that once she had disposed
of
Moridin, she would have Moghedien and the girl on leashes. Very good,
indeed.
Moridin
straightened himself in his chair, directing that stare at the rest of
them.
"That goes for all of you. Al'Thor is mine. You will not harm him in
any
way!" Cyndane bent her head over her goblet, sipping, but the hatred in
her eyes was plain. Graendal had said she was not Lanfear. that she was
weaker
in the One Power, but she surely was fixated on al'Thor. and she called
him by
the same name Lanfear had always used.
"If
you want to kill someone," he went on. "kill these two!"
Suddenly the semblances of two young men in rough country clothes stood
in the
center of the circle, turning so that everyone could get a good look at
their
faces. One was tall and wide, with yellow eyes, of all things, while
the other
was not quite slender and wore a cheeky grin. Creations of Tel
aran'driod they
moved stiffly and their expressions never altered. "Perrin Aybara and
Mat
Cauthon are ta'veren, easily found. Find them, and kill them."
Graendal
laughed, a mirthless sound. "Finding ta'veren was never as simple as
you
made out, and now it's harder than ever. The whole Pattern is in flux,
full of
shifts and spikes."
"Perrin
Aybara and Mat Cauthon," Semirhage murmured, inspecting the two shapes.
"So that is what they look like. Who knows, Moridin. If you had shared
this with us before now. they might already have been dead."
Moridin's
fist came down hard on the arm of his chair. "Find them! Make doubly
sure
that your followers know their faces. Find Aybara and Cauthon and kill
them!
The Time is coming, and they must be dead!"
Aran'gar
took a sip of her wine. She had no objections to killing these two if
she
happened to come across them, but Moridin was going to be terribly
disappointed
over Rand al'Thor.
CHAPTER FOUR
A Deal
Perrin
sat Stepper's saddle a little back from the edge of the trees and
watched the
large meadow where red and blue wildflowers were beginning to poke
through the
winter-brown grass that the now vanished snows had flattened into a
mat. This
stand was mainly leatherleaf that kept its broad dark foliage through
the
winter, but only a few small pale leaves decorated the branches of the
sweet-gums among them. The dun stallion stamped a hoof with an
impatience
Perrin shared, though he let none of it show. The sun stood almost
overhead; he
had been waiting there nearly an hour. A stiff, steady breeze blew out
of the
west, down the meadow toward him. That was good.
Every
so often his gauntleted hand stroked a nearly straight branch hacked
from an
oak. thicker than his forearm and more than twice as long, that lay
across the
saddle in front of him. For half its length he had shaved two sides
flat and
smooth. The meadow, ringed by huge oaks and leatherleaf, towering pine
and
shorter sweetgum, was less than six hundred paces wide, though longer
than
that. The branch should be broad enough. He had planned for every
possibility
he could imagine. The branch fit more than one.
"My
Lady First, you should return to the camp," Gallenne said, not for the
first time, rubbing irritably at his red eyepatch. His crimson plumed
helmet
hung from the pommel of his saddle, leaving his shoulder-length gray
hair
uncovered. He had been heard to say. in Berelain's hearing, that most
of those
gray hairs were presents from her. His black warhorse tried to take a
nip at
Stepper, and he reined the heavy-chested gelding sharply without taking
his
attention from Bere-lain. He had counseled against her coming in the
first
place. "Grady can take you back and return while the rest of us wait a
while
longer to see whether the Seanchan are going to show up."
"I
will remain. Captain. I will remain." Berelain's tone was firm and
calm,
yet beneath her usual smell of patience lay an edge of concern. She was
not so
certain as she made herself sound. She had taken to wearing a light
perfume
that smelled of flowers. Perrin sometimes found himself trying to
puzzle out
which flowers, but he was too focused for idle thoughts today.
Vexation
spiked in Annouras scent, though her ageless Aes Sedai face, framed by
dozens
of thin braids, remained as smooth as ever. But then, the beak-nosed
Gray
sister had smelled vexed ever since the rift between her and Berelain.
It was
her own fault, visiting Masema behind Berelain's back. She also had
counseled
Berelain to stay behind. Annoura edged her brown mare closer to the
First of
Mayene, and Berelain moved her white mare just that far away without so
much as
a glance in her advisor's direction. Vexation spiked again.
Berelain's
red silk dress, heavily embroidered in golden scrollwork, displayed
more bosom
than she had in some time, though a wide necklace of firedrops and
opals
provided a degree of modesty. A wide matching belt, supporting a
jeweled
dagger, cinched her waist. The narrow crown of Mayene resting on her
black
hair, holding a golden hawk in flight above her brows, appeared
ordinary beside
the belt and necklace. She was a beautiful woman, the more so, it
seemed to
him, since she had stopped chasing him. though still not a patch on
Faile, of
course.
Annoura
wore an unadorned gray riding dress, but most of them were in their
best. For
Perrin, that was a dark green silk coat with silver embroidery covering
the
sleeves and shoulders. He was not much for fancy clothes-Faile had
chivvied him
into buying what little he had; well, she had chivvied him gently-but
today he
needed to impress. If the wide, plain leather belt fastened over the
coat
spoiled the impression a little, so be it.
"She
must come," Arganda muttered. A short stocky man, Alliandre's First
Captain had not removed his silvered helmet with its three short white
plumes,
and he sat his saddle, easing his sword in its scabbard, as though
awaiting a
charge. His breastplate was silver-plated, too. He would be visible for
miles
out in the sunlight. "She must!"
"The
Prophet says they won't." Aram
put in, and not softly, heeling his leggy gray up beside Stepper. The
brass
wolfhead pommel of his sword stuck up over the shoulder of his
green-striped
coat. Once. he had seemed too good looking for a man, but now his face
grew
grimmer every day. There was a haggardness about him, his eyes sunken
and his
mouth tight. "The Prophet says either that, or it's a trap. He says we
shouldn't trust the Seanchan."
Perrin
held his silence, but felt his own spike of irritation, as much with
himself as
with the onetime Tinker. Balwer had informed him that Aram
had begun
spending time with Masema. yet it had seemed unnecessary to tell the
man not to
let Masema know everything Perrin was doing. There was no putting the
egg back
into the shell, but he would know better in the future. A workman
should know
his tools, and not use them to breaking. The same went for people. As
for
Masema, no doubt he was afraid they would meet someone who knew he
himself was
dealing with the Seanchan.
They
were a large party, though most would remain right there among the
trees. Fifty
of Berelain's Winged Guards in rimmed red helmets and red breastplates,
scarlet
streamers floating from their slender steel-tipped lances, were mounted
behind
the golden hawk on blue of Mayene, rippling on the breeze. Beside them
fifty
Ghealdanin in burnished breastplates and dark green conical helmets sat
their
horses behind Ghealdan's three silver stars on red. The streamers on
their
lances were green. They made a brave show, yet all of them together
were far
less deadly than Jur Grady, with his weathered farmer's face, even if
they made
him appear drab in his plain black coat with a silver sword pin on the
high
collar. He knew it. whether or not they did. and he stood beside his
bay
gelding with the ease of a man resting before the day's labor.
In
contrast, Leof Torfinn and Tod al'Caar, the only other Two Rivers men
present,
were still all but bouncing in their saddles with excitement despite
the long
wait. It might have taken some of their pleasure away had they known
they had
been chosen in large part because they came nearest fitting their
borrowed
coats of dark, finely woven green wool. Leof carried Perrin's own Red
Wolfhead
banner. Tod the Red Eagle of Manetheren, both rippling on staffs a
little
longer than the lances. They had almost come to blows over who was to
carry
which. Perrin hoped it was not because neither wanted to carry the
red-bordered
Wolfhead. Leof looked happy enough. Tod looked ecstatic. Of course, he
did not know
why Perrin had brought the thing along. In any trade, you needed to
make the
other fellow think he was getting something extra, as Mat's father
often said.
Colors swirled in Perrin's head, and for a brief instant he thought he
saw Mat
talking to a small dark woman. He shook off the image. Here and now
today, were
all that mattered. Faile was all that mattered.
"They
will come," Arganda snapped in answer to Aram, though he glared
through the
face-bars of his helmet as if expecting a challenge.
"What
if they don't?" Gallenne demanded, his one eye scowling as fiercely as
Arganda's pair. His red-lacquered breastplate was not much better than
Arganda's silvered one. Small chance they could be talked into painting
them
something dull. "What if it is a trap?" Arganda growled, almost a
wolf's guttural growl. The man was near the end of his tether.
The
breeze brought the scent of horses only moments before Perrin's ears
caught the
first bluetits' trills, too distant for anyone else to hear. They came
from the
trees flanking the meadow. Large parties of men. perhaps unfriendly,
were
entering the woods. More trills sounded, closer.
"They're
here," he said, which earned him looks from Arganda and Gallenne. He
tried
to avoid revealing the acuteness of his hearing, or his sense of smell,
yet
that pair had been on the point of coming to blows. The relayed trills
grew
nearer, and everyone could hear them. The two men's looks grew odd.
"I
can't risk the Lady First if there's any chance of a trap." Gallenne
said,
buckling on his helmet. They all knew what the signal meant.
"The
choice is mine. Captain." Berelain replied before Perrin could open his
mouth.
"And
your safety is my responsibility, my Lady First."
Berelain
drew breath, her face darkening, but Perrin got there first. "I told
you
how we're going to spring that trap, if that's what it is. You know how
suspicious the Seanchan are. Likely they're worried about us ambushing
them." Gallenne harrumphed loudly. The patience in Bere-lain's smell
flickered, then settled in again rock steady.
"You
should listen to him, Captain." she said with a smile for Perrin. "He
knows what he is doing."
A
party of riders appeared at the far end of the meadow and drew rein.
Tallanvor
was easy to pick out. In a dark coat and mounted on a good dappled
gray, he was
the only man not wearing armor vividly striped in red and yellow and
blue. The
other pair unarmored were women, one in blue with red on her skirts and
breast,
the other in gray. The sun reflected off something connecting them. So.
A
sul'dam and damane. There had been no mention of that in all the
negotiations
carried out through Tallanvor, but Perrin had counted on it.
"It's
time," he said, gathering Stepper's reins one-handed. "Before she
decides we're not coming."
Annoura
managed to get close enough to lay a hand on Berelain's arm for a
moment before
the other woman could move her mare away. "You should let me come with
you. Berelain. You may need my counsel, yes? This sort of negotiation,
it is my
specialty."
"I
suspect the Seanchan know an Aes Sedai face by now. don't you. Annoura?
I
hardly think they'd negotiate with you. Besides," Berelain added, in a
too
sweet voice, "you must remain here to assist Master Grady."
Spots
of color appeared briefly on the Aes Sedai's cheeks, and her wide mouth
tightened. It had taken the Wise Ones to make her agree to take orders
from
Grady today, though Perrin was just as glad he did not know how they
had done
it, and she had been trying to wiggle out ever since leaving the camp.
"You
stay, too," Perrin said when Aram made to ride forward.
"You've been hotheaded lately, and I won't risk you saying or doing the
wrong thing out there. I won't risk Faile on it." That was true. No
need
to say he would not risk the man carrying what was said out there back
to
Masema. "You understand?"
Bubbles
of disappointment filled Aram's
scent, but he nodded, however reluctantly, and rested his hands on the
pommel
of his saddle. He might come close to worshiping Masema, but he would
give his
life a hundred times over rather than risk Faile's. On purpose, anyway.
What he
did without thinking was another matter.
Perrin
rode out of the trees flanked by Arganda on one side and Berelain and
Gallenne
on the other. The banners followed behind, and ten Mayeners and ten
Ghealdanin
in a column of twos. As they walked their mounts forward, the Seanchan
started
toward them, also in column, with Tallanvor riding beside the leaders,
one on a
roan, the other a bay. The horses' hooves made no sound on the thick
mat of dead
grass. The forest had gone silent, even to Perrin's ears.
While
the Mayeners and Ghealdanin spread out in a line, and most of the
Seanchan in
their brightly painted armor did the same, Perrin and Berelain advanced
toward
Tallanvor and two of the armored Seanchan, one with three thin blue
plumes on
that lacquered helmet that was so like an insect's head, the other with
two.
The sul'dam and damane came, too. They met in the middle of the meadow,
surrounded by wildflowers and silence, with six paces between them.
As
Tallanvor positioned himself to one side between the two groups, the
armored
Seanchan removed their helmets with hands in steel-backed gauntlets
that were
striped like the rest of their armor. The two-plumed helmet revealed a
yellow-haired man with half a dozen scars seaming his square face. He
was a
hard-bitten man who smelled of amusement, strangely, but it was the
other who
interested Perrin. Mounted on the bay, a trained warhorse if he had
ever seen
one, she was tall and broad-shouldered for a woman, though lean
otherwise, and
not young. Gray marked the temples of her close-cut, tightly curled
black hair.
As dark as good topsoil, she displayed only two scars, one slanting
across her
left cheek. The other, on her forehead, had taken part of her right
eyebrow.
Some people thought scars a sign of toughness. It seemed to Perrin that
fewer
scars meant that you knew what you were doing. Confidence filled the
scent of
her in the breeze.
Her
gaze flickered across the fluttering banners. He thought she paused
slightly on
Manetheren's Red Eagle, and again on Mayene's Golden Hawk, yet she
quickly
settled to studying him. Her expression never altered a whit, but when
she
noticed his yellow eyes, something unidentifiable entered her scent,
something
sharp and hard. When she saw the heavy blacksmith's hammer in its loop
on his
belt, the strange scent grew.
"I
give you Perrin't'Bashere Aybara, Lord of the Two Rivers, Liege Lord to
Queen
Alliandre of Ghealdan," Tallanvor announced, raising a hand toward
Perrin.
He claimed the Seanchan were sticklers for formality, but Perrin had no
idea
whether this was a Seanchan ceremony or something from Andor. Tallanvor
could
have made it up for all of him. "I give you Berelain sur Paendrag
Paeron,
First of Mayene, Blessed of the Light, Defender of the Waves, High Seat
of
House Paeron." With a bow to the pair of them, he shifted his reins and
raised the other hand toward the Seanchan. "I give you Banner-General
Tylee Khirgan of the Ever Victorious Army, in service to the Empress of
Seanchan. I give you Captain Bakayar Mishima of the Ever Victorious
Army, in
service to the Empress of Seanchan." Another bow, and Tal-lanvor turned
his gray to ride back to a place beside the banners. His face was as
grim as Aram's,
but he
smelled of hope.
"I'm
glad he didn't name you the Wolf King, my Lord," the Banner-General
drawled. The way she slurred her words, Perrin had to listen hard to
make out
what she was saying. "Otherwise, I'd think Tarmon Gai'don was on us.
You
know the Prophecies of the Dragon? 'When the Wolf King carries the
hammer, thus
are the final days known. When the fox marries the raven, and the
trumpets of
battle are blown.' I never understood that second line, myself. And
you. my
Lady. Sur Paendrag. That would mean from Paendrag?"
"My
family is descended from Artur Paendrag Tanreall," Berelain replied,
holding her head high. An eddy in the breeze brought a whiff of pride
among the
patience and perfume. They had agreed that Perrin was to do all of the
talking-she was there to dazzle the Seanchan with a beautiful young
ruler, or
at least to lend weight to Perrin with it- but he supposed she had to
answer a
direct question.
Tylee
nodded as though that were exactly the answer she expected. "That makes
you a distant cousin of the Imperial family, my Lady. No doubt the
Empress, may
she live forever, will honor you. So long as you make no claims to
Hawkwing's
empire yourself, anyway."
"The
only claim I make is to Mayene," Berelain said proudly. "And that I
will defend to my last breath."
"I
didn't come here to talk about the Prophecies or Hawkwing or your
Empress," Perrin said irritably. For the second time in a matter of
moments those colors tried to coalesce in his head only to be
dispelled. He had
no time. The Wolf King? Hopper would come as near to laughing as a wolf
could
over that. Any wolf would. Still, he felt a chill. He had not realized
that he
was mentioned in the Prophecies. And his hammer was a harbinger of the
Last
Battle? But nothing mattered except Faile. Only her. And whatever it
took to
free her. "The agreement for this meeting was no more than thirty in
either party. but you have men in the woods on both sides of us. A lot
of
men."
"So
do you." Mishima said with grin distorted by a white scar that met the
corner of his mouth, "or you wouldn't know about ours." His drawl was
worse than hers.
Perrin
kept his eyes on the Banner-General. "As long as they both remain,
there's
the chance of accidents. I don't want any accidents. I want my wife
back from
the Shaido."
"And
how do you propose we avoid accidents?" Mishima said, idly flipping his
reins. He sounded as though the question was not urgent. It seemed
Tylee was
content to let him do the talking while she observed Perrin's
reactions.
"Are we supposed to trust you if we send our men out first, or you to
trust us if we ask you to withdraw first? 'On the heights, the paths
are paved
with daggers.' There isn't much room for trust. I suppose we could both
order
our men to pull back at the same time, but one side might cheat."
Perrin
shook his head. "You're going to have to trust me. Banner-General. I
have
no reason to want to attack you or capture you, and every reason not
to. I
can't be sure of the same about you. You might think capturing the
First of
Mayene worth a little betrayal." Berelain laughed softly. It was time
tor
the branch. Not just to force the Sean-chan out of the woods first, but
to
convince them that they needed what he could offer. He stood the branch
upright
on the saddle in front of him. "I expect your men are probably good
soldiers. My men aren't soldiers, though they've fought Trollocs and
Shaido and
done well against both." Gripping the branch at its base, he held it
high
overhead, the shaved sides uppermost and facing either side. "But
they're
used to hunting lions and leopards and ridgecats come down out of the
mountains
after our flocks, and wild boar and bear, animals that hunt back, in
forests
not much different from this."
The
branch tried to twist violently in his gauntleted fist as twin impacts
not a
heartbeat apart shivered down his arm. He lowered the branch to display
two
pile arrows, their chisel-shaped heads driven clear of the tough wood
on either
side. Three hundred paces was a long range for that target, but he had
chosen Jondyn
Barran and Jori Congar to makes the shots. They were the best he had.
"If
it comes down to it, your men won't even see who's killing them, and
that armor
won't do much good against a Two Rivers longbow. I hope it doesn't come
to
that." With all of his strength, he heaved the branch up into the air.
"My
eyes!" Mishima growled, a hand going to his sword even as he tried to
rein
the roan back and watch Perrin and the branch all at the same time. His
helmet
toppled from his saddle to the grass.
The
Banner-General made no move toward her sword, though she also tried
watching
Perrin and the branch. At first she did. Then her gaze followed only
the branch
as it continued to climb until it hung centered between them a hundred
feet in
the air. Abruptly a ball of flame enveloped the branch, so fierce that
Perrin
felt the heat as from an open furnace. Berelain put up a hand to shield
her
face. Tylee merely watched thoughtfully.
The
fire lasted just moments, yet that was enough to leave only ash
drifting on the
breeze when it vanished. Ash and two plummeting specks that fell into
the dry
grass. Small flames shot up immediately and began growing, spreading.
Even the
warhorses snorted in fear. Berelain's mare danced in an attempt to
fight her
reins and flee.
Perrin
muttered a curse-he should have thought of the arrowheads-and started
to
dismount to stamp out the fire, but before he could swing his leg over
the
saddle, the flames vanished, leaving only thin tendrils of smoke rising
from a
patch of blackened grass.
"Good
Norie," the sul'dam murmured, patting the damane. "Norie is a
wonderful damane." The gray-clad woman smiled shyly at the praise.
Despite
her words, the sul'dam looked worried.
"So,"
Tylee said, "you have a marath-" She paused, pursing her lips.
"You have an Aes Sedai with you. More than one? No matter. I can't say
the
Aes Sedai I've seen have impressed me very much."
"Not
marath'damane, my general." the sul'dam said quietly.
Tylee
sat very still, studying Perrin intently. "Asha'man," she said at last,
not a question. "You begin to interest me, my Lord."
"Then
maybe one last thing will convince you," Perrin said. "Tod. roll that
banner around the staff and bring it here." Hearing nothing behind him,
he
looked over his shoulder. Tod was staring at him with a stricken look.
"Tod."
Giving
himself a shake, Tod began winding the Red Eagle around its staff. He
still
looked unhappy when he rode forward and handed it to Perrin, though. He
sat
there with his hand still stretched out as though hoping the staff
might be
returned to him.
Heeling
Stepper toward the Seanchan, Perrin held the banner in front of him in
his
fist, parallel to the ground. "The Two Rivers was the heart of
Manetheren.
Banner-General. The last King of Manetheren died in a battle right
where
Emond's Field, the village I was born in. grew up. Manetheren is in our
blood.
But the Shaido have my wife prisoner. To free her, I'll give up any
claim to
reviving Manetheren, sign any sort of oath on it you want. That claim
would be
a field of brambles for you Seanchan. You could be the one who cleared
that
field without a drop of blood shed." Behind him, someone groaned
miserably. He thought it was Tod.
Suddenly,
the breeze was a gale howling in the opposite direction, pelting them
with
grit, blowing so hard that he had to cling to his saddle to kept from
being
knocked out of it. His coat seemed on the point of being ripped from
his body.
Where had the grit come from? The forest was carpeted inches deep with
dead
leaves. The tempest stank of burned sulphur, too. sharp enough to burn
Perrin's
nose. The horses tossed their heads, mouths open, but the roar of the
wind
buried their frightened whinnies.
Only
moments the ferocious wind lasted, and then as suddenly as it came, it
was gone,
leaving only the breeze blowing the other way The horses stood
shivering,
snorting and tossing their heads and rolling their eyes. Perrin patted
Stepper's neck and murmured soothing sounds, yet it had little effect.
The
Banner-General made a strange gesture and muttered, "Avert the Shadow.
Where under the Light did that come from? I've heard tales of strange
things
happening. Or was it more 'convincing' on your part, my Lord?''
"No,"
Perrin said truthfully. Neald possessed abilities with weather, it had
turned
out, but not Grady. "What does it matter where it came from?"
Tylee
looked at him thoughtfully, then nodded. "What does it matter?" she
said, sounding as if she did not necessarily agree with him. "We have
stories about Manetheren. That would be brambles underfoot and no
boots. Half
of Amadicia is buzzing with talk of you and that banner, come to bring
Manetheren alive again and 'save' Amadicia from us. Mishima, sound
withdrawal." Without hesitation, the yellow-haired man raised a small,
straight horn that was hanging by a red cord around his neck. Blowing
four
shrill notes, he repeated the sequence twice before letting the horn
fall to
swing against his chest. "My part is done," Tylee said.
Perrin
put back his head and shouted as loudly and distinctly as he could.
"Dannü! Tell! When the last Seanchan moves below the end of the meadow,
gather everyone and join Grady!"
The
Banner-General stuck her little finger into her ear and wiggled it
about in
spite of her gauntlet. "You have a strong voice," she said dryly.
Only then did she reach out to take the banner-staff, laying it
carefully
across the saddle in front of her. She did not look at it again,
but one hand stroked the banner itself,
perhaps unconsciously. "Now what do you have that can aid my plan, my
Lord?" Mishima hooked an ankle behind the tall pommel of his saddle and
lowered himself to catch up his helmet. The wind had rolled it across
the
beaten-down grass halfway back to the line of Seanchan soldiers. Brom
the trees
came a brief snatch of larksong, then another, another. The Seanchan
were
withdrawing. Had they felt the wind, too? No matter.
"Not
near as many men as you already have," Perrin admitted, "not that are
trained soldiers, at least, but 1 have Asha'man and Aes Sedai and Wise
Ones who
can channel, and you'll need every one of them." She opened her mouth,
and
he raised a hand. "I'll want your word that you won't try putting
collars
on them." He glanced pointedly at the sid'dam and damane. The sul'dam
was
keeping her eyes on Tylee. awaiting orders, but at the same time she
was idly
stroking the other woman's hair the way you might stroke a cat to
soothe it.
And Norie looked to be almost purring! Light! "Your word that they're
safe
from you, them and anyone in the camp wearing a white robe. Most of
those
aren't Shaido anyway, and the only Aiel among them I know about are
friends of
mine."
Tylee
shook her head. "You have strange friends, my Lord. In any case, we've
found people from Cairhien and Amadicia with bands of Shaido and let
them go,
though most of the Cairhienin seem too disoriented to know what to do
with
themselves. The only ones in white we keep are the Aiel. These
gai'shain make
marvelous da'covale, unlike the rest. Still, I'll agree to letting your
friends
go free. And your Aes Sedai and Asha'man. Putting an end to this
gathering is
very important. Tell me where they are, and 1 can start incorporating
you into
my plans."
Perrin
rubbed the side of his nose with a finger. It seemed unlikely many of
those
gai'sbain were Shaido, but he was not about to tell her that. Let them
have
their chance at freedom when their year and a day was up. "It'll have
to
be my plan, I'm afraid. Sevanna will be a tough nut to crack, but I've
worked
out how. For one thing, she has maybe a hundred thousand Shaido with
her. and
she's gathering in more. Not every one is alga/'d'siswai, but any adult
will
pick up a spear if they need to."
"Sevanna."
Tylee gave a pleased smile. "We've heard that name. I would dearly love
to
present Sevanna of the Jumai Shaido to the Captain-General." Her smile
faded. "A hundred thousand is many more than I expected, but not more
than
I can handle. We've fought these Aiel before, in Amadicia. Eh, Mishima?"
Riding
back to join them, Mishima laughed, but it was a harsh sound, no
amusement in
it. "That we have. Banner-General. They're fierce fighters, disciplined
and crafty, but they can be handled. You surround one of their bands,
their
septs, with three or four damane and pound them till they give up. It's
a nasty
business. They have their families with them. But they surrender the
sooner for
it."
"I
understand you have a dozen or so damane" Perrin said, "but is that
enough to face three or four hundred Wise Ones channeling?"
The
Banner-General frowned. "You mentioned that before, Wise Ones
channeling.
Every band we've caught had its Wise Ones, but not one of them could
channel."
"That's
because all the Shaido have are with Sevanna," Perrin replied. "At
least three hundred and maybe four. The Wise Ones with me are sure of
it."
Tylee
and Mishima exchanged a look, and the Banner-General sighed. Mishima
looked
glum. "Well," she said, "orders or no orders, that puts an end
to finishing this quietly. The Daughter of the Nine Moons will have to
be
disturbed if I must apologize for it to the Empress, may she live
forever.
Likely I will." The Daughter of the Nine Moons? Some high-ranking
Seanchan, apparently. But how was she supposed to be disturbed by any
of this?
Mishima
grimaced, a fearsome sight with all those scars crisscrossing his face.
"I
read there were four hundred damane on each side at Semalaren, and that
was a
slaughterhouse. Half the Imperial army on the field dead and better
than three
out of four among the rebels."
"Nevertheless,
Mishima, we have it to do. Or rather, someone else does. You might
escape an
apology, but I won't." What under the Light was so upsetting about an
apology? The woman smelled… resigned. "Unfortunately, it will take
weeks if not months to gather enough soldiers and damane to prick this
boil. I
thank you for your offer of help, my Lord. It will be remembered."
Tylee
held out the banner. "You'll want this back since I can't deliver my
side
of the bargain, but a piece of advice. The Ever Victorious Army may
have other
tasks in front of it for the nonce, but we won't let anyone take
momentary
advantage of the situation to set himself up as a king. We mean to
reclaim this
land, not divide it into parcels."
"And
we mean to keep our lands," Berelain said fiercely, making her mare
lunge
across the few paces of dead grass between her and the Seanchan. The
mare was
eager to lunge, eager to run, away from that wind, and she had trouble
reining
the animal in. Even her scent was fierce. No patience now. She smelled
like a
she-wolf defending her injured mate. "I've heard that your Ever
Victorious
Army is misnamed. I've heard the Dragon Reborn defeated you soundly to
the
south. Don't you ever think that Perrin Aybara can't do the same.''
Light, and
he had been worried over Aram's hotheadedness!
"I
don't want to defeat anybody except the Shaido," Perrin said firmly,
fighting off the image that tried to form in his mind. He folded his
hands on
the pommel of his saddle. Stepper seemed to be settling down, at least.
The
stallion still gave small shivers now and then, but he had stopped
rolling his
eyes. "There's a way to do that and still keep everything quiet so you
don't need to apologize." If that was important to her, he was ready to
use it. "The Daughter of the Nine Moons can rest easy. I told you I had
this planned out. Tallanvor told me you have some kind of tea that
makes a
woman who can channel go wobbly in the knees."
After
a moment, Tylee lowered the banner back to her saddle and sat studying
him.
"A woman or a man." she drawled at last. "I've heard of several
men being caught that way. But just how do you propose feeding it to
these four
hundred women when they're surrounded by a hundred thousand Aiel?"
"By
feeding it to all of them without letting them know they're drinking
it. I'll
need as much as I can get, though. Wagonloads. probably. There's no way
to heat
the water, you see, so it'll be thin tea."
Tylee
laughed softly. "A bold plan, my Lord. I suppose they might have
cartloads
at the manufactory where the tea's made, but that's a long way from
here, in
Amadicia almost to Tarabon, and the only way I could get more than a
few pounds
at once would be to tell someone of higher rank why I wanted it. And
there's
the end of keeping it quiet all over again."
"The
Asha'man know a thing called Traveling," Perrin told her, "a way to
cross hundred of miles in a step. And as for getting the tea, maybe
this will
help." From his left gauntlet he pulled a folded, grease-stained piece
of
paper.
Tylee's
eyebrows rose as she read it. Perrin had the short text by heart. THE
BEARER OF
THIS STANDS UNDER MY PERSONAL PROTECTION. IN THE NAME OF THE EMPRESS,
MAY SHE
LIVE FOREVER. GIVE HIM WHAT EVER AID HE REQUIRES IN SERVICE TO THE
EMPIRE AND
SPEAK OF IT TO NONE BUT ME. He had no idea who Suroth Sabelle Meldarath
was,
but if she signed her name to something like that, she had to be
important.
Maybe she was this Daughter of the Nine Moons.
Handing
the paper to Mishima, the Banner-General stared at Per-rin. That sharp,
hard
scent was back, stronger than ever. "Aes Sedai, Asha'man, Aiel, your
eyes,
that hammer, now this! Who are you?"
Mishima
whistled through his teeth. "Suroth herself," he murmured.
"I'm
a man who wants his wife back," Perrin said, "and I'll deal with the
Dark One to get her." He avoided looking at the sul'dam and damane. He
was
not far short of making a deal with the Dark One. "Do we have a
bargain?"
Tylee
looked at his outstretched hand, then took it. She had a firm grip. A
deal with
the Dark One. But he would do whatever it took to get Faile free.
CHAPTER FIVE
Something… Strange
The
drumbeat of rain on the tent roof that had lasted through most of the
night
faded to something softer as Faile approached Sevanna's chair, a
heavily carved
and gilded throne placed in the center of the bright, layered carpets
that made
up the tent's floor, with her eyes carefully lowered, to avoid offense.
Spring
had arrived in a rush, but the braziers were unlit, and the morning air
held a
touch of chill. Curtsying deeply, she presented the ropework silver
tray. The
Aiel woman took the golden goblet of wine and drank without so much as
a glance
in her direction, but she gave another deep curtsy before backing away
and
setting the tray down on the brass-bound blue chest that already held a
tall-necked silver wine pitcher and three more goblets, then returned
to her
place with the other eleven gai'shain present, standing between the
mirrored
stand-lamps along the red silk tent wall. It was a spacious tent, and
tall. No
low Aiel tent for Sevanna.
Often
it was hard to see her as Aiel at all. This morning, she lounged in a
red
brocaded silk robe, tied so it gaped nearly to her waist and exposed
half her
considerable bosom, though she wore enough jeweled necklaces, emeralds
and
firedrops and opals, ropes of fat pearls, that she came near to being
decent.
The Aiel did not wear rings, yet Sevanna had at least one be-gemmed
ring on
every finger. The thick band of gold and firedrops worn over the folded
blue
silk scarf that held back her waist-long yellow hair had taken on the
aspect of
a coronet if not a crown. There was nothing Aiel in that.
Faile
and the others, six women and five men, had been wakened in the night
to stand
beside Sevanna's bed-a pair of feather mattresses laid one atop the
other-in
case the woman woke and wanted something. Was any ruler in the world
attended
by a dozen servants while she slept? She fought the urge to yawn. Many
things
might earn punishment. but yawning surely would. Gai'shain were
supposed to be
meek and eager to please, and it seemed that that meant obsequious to
the point
of groveling. Bain and Chiad, fierce as they were otherwise, seemed to
find it
easy. Faile did not. In the near month since she was stripped and tied
up like
a blacksmith's puzzle for hiding a knife, she had been switched nine
times for
trivial offenses that were serious in Sevanna's eyes. Her last set of
welts had
not faded completely yet, and she had no intention of earning another
set
through carelessness.
She
hoped that Sevanna thought her tamed by that night trussed up in the
cold. Only
Rolan and his braziers had saved her life. She hoped that she was not
being
tamed. Pretend something too long, and it could become truth. She had
been a
prisoner less than two months, yet she could no longer recall exactly
how many
days ago she was captured. At times it seemed she had been in white
robes for a
year or more. Sometimes the wide belt and collar of flat golden links
felt
natural. That frightened her. She clung hard to hope. She would escape
soon.
She had to. Before Perrin caught up and tried to rescue her. Why had he
not
caught up yet? The Shaido had been camped at Maiden for a long time.
now. He
would not have abandoned her. Her wolf would be coming to rescue her.
She had
to escape before he got himself killed in the attempt. Before she was
no longer
pretending.
"How
long are you going to keep punishing Galina Sedai, Therava?" Sevanna
demanded, frowning at the Aes Sedai. Therava was seated cross-legged in
front
of her on a tasseled blue cushion, straight-backed and stern. "Last
night,
she made my bath water coo hot, and she is so welted, I had to order
the soles
of her feet beaten. That is not very effective when she must be left
able to
walk."
Faile
had been avoiding looking at Galina ever since Therava brought her into
the
tent, but her eyes went to the woman of their own accord at mention of
her
name. Galina was kneeling erect halfway between the two Aiel women and
slightly
to one side, mottled brown bruises on her cheeks, her skin damp and
slick from
the heavy rain she had been walked through to get there, her feet and
ankles
muddy. She wore only her firedrop-studded golden collar and belt, and
seemed
more naked than naked. Just a stubble remained of her hair and
eyebrows. Every
hair from head to toe had been singed from her with the One Power.
Faile had
heard it described, along with how the Aes Sedai had been hung from her
ankles
for her first beating. That had been half the talk among the gai'shain
for
days. Only the handful who recognized her ageless face for what it was
still
believed that she was Aes Sedai, and some of those had the same doubts
that had
plagued Faile on finding an Aes Sedai among the gai'shain. After all,
she
possessed the face, and the ring, but why would an Aes Sedai let
Therava treat
her so? Faile asked herself that question often without arriving at any
answer.
She kept telling herself that Aes Sedai often did what they did for
reasons no
one else could understand, but that was not very satisfying.
Whatever
her reasons for tolerating such abuse. Galina's eyes were wide and
frightened,
now, and fixed on Therava. She was panting so hard that her breasts
heaved. She
had reason for fear. Anyone passing Therava's tent was likely to hear
Galina
howling for mercy inside. For more than half a week Faile had gotten
glimpses
of the Aes Sedai on some errand, hairless and garbed as she was now and
running
as hard as she could with panic painting her face, and every day
Therava added
to the bands of welts that striped Galina from her shoulders to the
backs of
her knees. Whenever one band began to heal, Therava refreshed it. Faile
had
heard Shaido mutter that Galina was being treated too harshly, but no
one was
about to interfere with a Wise One.
Therava,
nearly as tall as most Aiel men, adjusted her dark shawl in a rattle of
gold
and ivory bracelets and regarded Galina like a blue-eyed eagle
regarding a
mouse. Her necklaces, also gold and ivory, seemed plain compared to
Sevanna's
opulence, her dark woolen skirts and white algode blouse drab, yet of
the two
women, Faile feared Therava far more than she did Sevanna. Sevanna
might have
her punished for a stumble, but Therava could kill her or crush her for
a whim.
She surely would if Faile attempted escape and failed. "So long as the
faintest bruise remains on her face, the rest of her will be bruised as
well. I
have left the front of her unmarked so she can be punished for other
misdeeds." Galina began trembling. Silent tears leaked down her cheeks.
Faile
averted her gaze. It was painful to watch. Even if she managed to get
the rod
from Therava's tent, could the Aes Sedai still be of help in escape?
She gave
every sign of being completely broken. That was a harsh thought, but a
prisoner
needed to be practical above all else. Would Galina betray her to try
buying
her way out of the beatings? She had threatened to betray her, if Faile
failed
to obtain the rod. It was Sevanna who would be interested in Perrin
Aybara's
wife, yet Galina looked desperate enough to try anything. Faile prayed
for the
woman to find strength to hold out. Of course she was planning an
escape on her
own, in case Galina could not keep her promise to take them with her
when she
left, but it would be so much easier, so much safer for everyone, if
she could
do it. Oh. Light, why had Perrin not caught up yet? No! She had to keep
her
focus.
"She
is not very impressive like that," Sevanna muttered, frowning into her
goblet, now. "Even that ring cannot make her look like an Aes Sedai."
She shook her head irritably. For some reason Faile did not understand,
it was
very important to Sevanna that everyone know that Galina was a sister.
She had
even taken to giving her the honorific. "Why are you here so early,
Therava? I have not even eaten, yet. Will you take some wine?"
"Water,"
Therava said firmly. "As for it being early, the sun is almost over the
horizon. I broke fast before it rose. You grow as indolent as a
wetlander,
Sevanna."
Lusara.
a buxom Domani gai'shain, quickly filled a goblet from the silver water
pitcher. Sevanna seemed amused by the Wise Ones' insistence on drinking
only
water, yet she provided it for them. Anything else would have been an
insult
even she would want to avoid. The copper-skinned Domani had been a
merchant,
and well into her middle years, but a few white hairs among the black
falling
below her shoulders had not been enough to save her. She was stunningly
beautiful, and Sevanna gathered the rich, the powerful and the
beautiful,
simply taking them if they were gai'shain to someone else. There were
so many
gai'shain that few complained at having one taken. Lusara curtsied
gracefully
and bowed to present her tray to Therava on her cushion, all very
proper, but
on the way back to her place against the wall, she smiled at Faile.
Worse, it
was a conspiratorial smile.
Faile
suppressed a sigh. Her last switching had been for a sigh at the wrong
moment.
Lusara was one of those who had sworn fealty to her in the past two
weeks.
After Aravine, Faile had tried to choose carefully, but rejecting
someone who
asked to swear was creating a possible betrayer, so she had far too
many
adherents, a good number of whom she was unsure of. She was beginning
to
believe that Lusara was trustworthy, or at least that she would not
intentionally betray her, but the woman treated their escape plans like
a
child's game, without cost if they lost. It seemed she had treated
merchanting
in the same way, making and losing several fortunes, but Faile would
have no
chance to start over if they lost. Nor would Alliandre or Maighdin. Or
Lusara.
Among Sevanna's gai'shain, those who actually attempted escape were
kept
chained when not serving her or performing tasks.
Therava
took a swallow of water, then set the goblet down on the flowered
carpet beside
her and fixed Sevanna with a steely gaze. "The Wise Ones believe it is
past time for us to move north and east. We can find easily defended
valleys in
the mountains there, and we can reach them in less than two weeks even
slowed
as we are by the gai'shain. This place is open on every side, and our
raids to
find food must go further and further."
Sevanna's
green eyes met that stare without blinking, which Faile doubted she
herself
could have done. It nettled Sevanna when the other Wise Ones met
without her,
and frequently she took it out on her gai'shain. but she smiled and
took a sip
of wine before replying in patient tones, as though explaining to
someone not
quite bright enough to understand. "Here, there is good soil for
planting,
and we have their seed to add to our own. Who knows what the soil is
like in
the mountains? Our raids bring in cattle and sheep and goats, too.
Here, there
are good pastures. What pasturage do you know of in these mountains,
Therava?
Here, we have more water than any clan has ever had. Do you know where
the
water is in the mountains? As to defending ourselves, who will come
against us?
These wetlanders run from our spears."
"Not
all run," Therava said drily. "Some are even good at dancing the
spears. And what if Rand al'Thor
sends one of
the other clans against us? We would never know until the horns closed
in on
us." Suddenly she smiled, too, a smile that never reached her eyes.
"Some say your plan is to be captured and made gai'shain to Rand al'Thor so you can induce him to marry you.
An
amusing idea, you agree?"
Despite
herself. Faile flinched. Sevanna's mad intention to marry al'Thor-she
had to be
mad to think she could!-was what put Faile in danger from Galina. If
the Aiel
woman did not know that Perrin was linked to al'Thor, Galina could tell
her.
Would tell her if she could not get her hands on that cursed rod.
Sevanna would
take no chances on losing her then. She would be chained as certainly
as if
caught trying to escape.
Sevanna
looked anything except amused. Eyes glittering, she leaned forward, her
robe
gaping to expose her bosom completely. "Who says this? Who?" Therava
picked up her goblet and took another swallow of water. Realizing she
would get
no answer. Sevanna leaned back, and rearranged her robe. Her eyes still
glittered like polished emeralds, though, and there was nothing casual
in her
words. They came out as hard as her eyes. "1 will marry Rand
al'Thor, Therava. I almost had him, until you and the other Wise Ones
failed
me. I will marry him, unite the clans, and conquer all of the wetlands!"
Therava
sneered over her goblet. "Couladin was the Car'a'carn, Sevanna. I have
not
found the Wise Ones who gave him permission to go to Rhuidean, but I
will. Rand al'Thor is a creature of
the Aes Sedai. They told
him what to say at Alcair Dal. and a black day it was when he revealed
secrets
few are strong enough to know. Be grateful that most believe he lied.
But I
forget. You have never gone to Rhuidean. You believed his secrets lies
yourself."
Gai'shain
began entering past the tentflap, their white robes rain-damp. holding
their
hems knee-high until they were inside. Each wore the golden collar and
belt.
Their soft white laced boots left muddy-marks on the carpets. Later,
when those
had dried, they would have to clean them away, but getting visible mud
on your
robes was a sure path to the switch. Sevanna wanted her gai'shain
spotless when
they were around her. Neither Aiel woman paid the slightest attention
to the
arrivals.
Sevanna
seemed taken aback by what Therava had said. "Why do you care who gave
Couladin permission? No matter," she said, waving a hand as though
brushing away a fly, when she got no reply. "Couladin is dead. Rand al'Thor has the markings, however he got
them. I
will marry him, and I will make use of him. If the Aes Sedai could
control him,
and I saw them handling him like a babe, then I can. With a little help
from
you. And you will help. You agree that uniting the clans is worth doing
no
matter how it is done? You did once." Somehow, there was more than a
hint
of threat in that. "We Shaido will become the most powerful of the
clans
in one leap."
Lowering
their cowls, the new gai'shain filed wordlessly along the tent walls,
nine men
and three women, one of them Maighdin. The sun-haired woman wore a grim
expression that had been on her face since the day Therava had
discovered her
in the Wise One's tent. Whatever Therava had done, all Maighdin would
say of it
was that she wanted to kill the other woman. Sometimes she whimpered in
her
sleep, though.
Therava
kept whatever she thought about uniting the clans to herself. "There is
much feeling against staying here. Many of the sept chiefs press the
red disc
on their nar'baha every morning. I advise you to heed the Wise Ones."
Nar'baha.
That would mean 'box of fools.' or something very near. But what could
this be?
Bain and Chiad were still teaching her about Aiel ways, when they could
find
time, and chey had never mentioned any such thing. Maighdin stopped
beside
Lusara. A slender Cairhienin nobleman named Doirmanes stopped beside
Faile. He
was young and very pretty, but he bit his lip nervously. If he learned
about
the oaths of fealty, he would have to be killed. She was certain he
would run
to Sevanna in a heartbeat.
"We
remain here," Sevanna said angrily, flinging her goblet to the carpets
in
a spray of wine. "I speak for the clan chief, and I have spoken!"
"You
have spoken," Therava agreed calmly. "Bendhuin, sept chief of the
Green Salts, has received permission to go to Rhuidean. He left five
days ago with
twenty of his algai'd'siswai and four Wise Ones to stand witness."
Not
until one of the new gaishain stood beside each of those already there
did
Faile and the others raise their cowls and begin filing along the walls
toward
the doorflap. already gathering their robes to the knee. She had become
quite
sanguine about exposing her legs so.
"He
seeks to replace me, and I was not even informed?"
"Not
you, Sevanna. Couladin. As his widow, you speak for the clan chief
until a new chief
returns from Rhuidean, but you are not the clan chief."
Faile
stepped out into the cold, gray morning drizzle, and the tent-flap cut
off
whatever Sevanna said to that. What was going on between the two women?
Sometimes, as this morning, they seemed antagonists, but at others they
seemed
reluctant conspirators bound together by something that gave neither
any
comfort. Or perhaps it was the being bound together itself that made
them
uncomfortable. Well, she could not see how knowing would help her
escape, so it
did not really matter. But the puzzle nagged at her.
Six
Maidens stood clustered in front of the tent, veils hanging down onto
their
chests, spears thrust up through the harness of the bow cases on their
backs.
Bain and Chiad were contemptuous of Sevanna for using Maidens of the
Spear for
her guard of honor though she herself had never been a Maiden, and for
having
her tent always guarded, but there were never fewer than six, night or
day.
Those two were contemptuous of the Shaido Maidens for allowing it, too.
Neither
being a clan chief nor speaking for one gave you as much power as most
nobles
possessed. These Maidens' hands were flashing in a rapid conversation.
She
caught the sign for Car'a'carn several times, but not sufficient else
to make out
what they were saying, or whether about al'Thor or Couladin.
Standing
there long enough to find out, if she could find out, was beyond the
question.
With the others already hurrying away down the muddy street, the
Maidens would
become suspicious, for one thing, and then they might switch her
themselves, or
worse, use her own bootlaces. She had had a hard dose of that from some
Maidens, for having "insolent eyes," and she did not want another.
Especially when it meant baring herself in public. Being Sevanna's
gai'shain
gave no protection. Any Shaido could discipline any gai'shain they
thought was
behaving improperly. Even a child could, if the child was set to watch
you
carry out a chore. For another thing, the cold rain, light as it was,
was going
to soak through her woolen robes soon enough. She had only a short walk
back to
her tent, no more than a quarter of a mile, but she would not complete
it
without being stopped for a time.
A
yawn cracked her jaw as she turned from the large red tent. She very
much
wanted her blankets and a few more hours sleep. There would be more
chores come
afternoon. What they might be, she did not know. Matters would be much
simpler
if Sevanna settled on who she wanted to do what when, but she seemed to
choose
names at random, and always at the last minute. It made planning
anything, much
less the escape, very difficult.
All
sorts of tents surrounded Sevanna's, low, dark Aiel tents, peaked
tents, walled
tents, tents of every sort and size in every color imaginable,
separated by a
tangle of dirt streets that were now rivers of mud. Lacking enough of
their
own, the Shaido snatched up every tent they could find. Fourteen septs
were
camped in a sprawl around Maiden now, a hundred thousand Shaido and as
many
gai'shain, and rumor said two more septs, the Morai and the White
Cliff, would
arrive within days. Aside from small children splashing through the mud
with
romping dogs, most of the people she could see as she walked wore
mud-stained
white and were carrying baskets or bulging sacks.
Most
of the women did not hurry; they ran. Except for the blacksmiths, the
Shaido
seldom did any work themselves, and generally only out of boredom, she
suspected. With so many gai'sbain, finding chores for them all was
itself a
chore. Sevanna was no longer the only Shaido to actually sit in a
bathtub with
a gai'sbain scrubbing her back. None of the Wise Ones had gone that far
yet.
but some of the others would not stir themselves two paces to pick
something up
when they could tell a gai'sbain to fetch it.
She
was almost to the gai'sbain portion of the camp, hard against the gray
stone
walls of Maiden, when she saw a Wise One striding toward her with her
dark
shawl wrapped around her head against the rain. Faile did not stop, but
she
bent her knees a little. Meira was not so frightening as Therava, but
the
grim-faced woman was hard enough, and shorter than Faile. Her narrow
mouth
always grew even tighter when she was confronted with a woman taller
than she.
Faile would have thought that learning her own sept, the White Cliff,
would be
there soon, would brighten the woman's mood, but the news had had no
dis-cernable effect at all.
"So
you were just lagging," Meira said as she came close. Her eyes were as
hard as the sapphires they resembled. "I left Rhiale listening to the
others because I feared some drunken fool had pulled you into a tent."
She
glared around her as though looking for a drunken fool about to do just
that.
"No
one accosted me, Wise One," Faile said quickly. Several had in the last
few weeks, some drunk and some not, but Rolan always appeared in the
nick of
time. Twice the big Mera'din had had to fight to save her. and once he
had
killed the other man. She had expected nine kinds of uproar and
trouble, but
the Wise Ones judged it a fair fight, and Rolan said her name had never
been
mentioned. For all that Bain and Chiad insisted it went against all
custom,
assault was a constant danger for gai'shain women here. She was sure
that
Alliandre had been assaulted once, before she and Maighdin also
acquired
Mera'din shadows. Rolan denied having asked them to help her people. He
said
they were just bored and looking for something to do. "I'm very sorry I
was slow."
"Do
not cringe. I am not Therava. I will not beat you for the pleasure of
it."
Words said in tones hard enough for a headsman. Meira might not beat
people for
pleasure, but Faile knew for a fact that she had a strong arm swinging
a
switch. "Now tell me what Sevanna said and did. This water falling from
the sky may be a wondrous thing, but it is miserable to walk around in."
Obeying
the command was easy. Sevanna had not wakened during the night, and
once she
did rise, all her talk had been of what clothes and jewels she would
wear,
especially the jewels. Her jewelry chest had been made to hold
clothing, and it
was filled to the top with more gems than most queens possessed. Before
putting
on any garment at all, Sevanna had spent time trying on different
combinations
of necklaces and rings and studying herself in the gilt-framed
stand-mirror. It
had been very embarrassing. For Faile.
She
had just reached Therava's arrival with Galina when everything in front
of her
eyes rippled. She rippled! It was not imagination. Meira's blue eyes
widened as
far as they could go; she had felt it, too. Again everything rippled,
including
herself, harder than before. In shock, Faile stood up straight and let
go of
her robe. A third time the world rippled, harder still, and as it
passed
through her. she felt as if she might blow away in a breeze, or simply
dissipate
in a mist.
Breathing
hard, she waited for the fourth ripple, the one she knew would destroy
her and
everything else. When it did not come, she expelled every bit of air in
her
lungs from relief. "What just happened, Wise One? What was that?"
Meira
touched her own arm and looked faintly surprised that her hand did not
pass
through flesh and bone. "I… do not know," she said slowly.
Giving herself a shake, she added, "Go on about your business, girl."
She gathered her skirts and strode past Faile at little short of a
trot,
splashing mud as she went.
The
children had vanished from the street, but Faile could hear them
wailing inside
the tents. Abandoned dogs shivered and whined, tails tucked between
their legs.
People in the street were touching themselves, touching each other,
Shaido and
gai'shain alike. Faile clasped her hands together. Of course she was
solid. She
had only felt as though she were turning to mist. Of course. Hoisting
her robes
to avoid any more washing than she absolutely had to do. she began to
walk. And
then to run, careless of how much mud she splashed onto herself or
anyone else.
She knew there could be no running from another of those ripples. But
she ran
anyway, as fast as her legs could carry her.
The
gai'shain tents made a broad ring around Maiden's high granite walls,
and they
were as varied as the tents in the outer part of the encampment, though
most
were small. Her own peaked tent could have slept two uncomfortably; it
housed
herself and three others, Alliandre. Maighdin and a former Cairhienin
noblewoman named Dairaine. one of those who curried favor with Sevanna
by
carrying tales about the other garshain. That complicated matters, but
there
was no mending it short of killing the woman, and Faile would not
countenance that.
Not unless Dairaine became a real threat. They slept huddled together
like
puppies of necessity, glad of the shared body warmth on cold nights.
The
interior of the low tent was dim when she ducked inside. Lamp oil and
candles
were in short supply, and not wasted on gai'shain. Only Alliandre was
there,
lying facedown on her blankets in her collar with a damp cloth, dipped
in an
herbal infusion, over her bruised bottom. At least the Wise Ones were
as
willing to give their healing herbs to gai'shain as to Shaido.
Alliandre had
done nothing wrong, but had been named as one of the five who had
pleased
Sevanna least yesterday. Unlike some, she had done quite well while
being
punished- Doirmanes had begun weeping even before he was bent over the
chest-but she seemed to be among those chosen out every three or four
days.
Being a queen did not teach you how to serve a queen. But then,
Maighdin was
picked nearly as often, and she was a lady's maid, if not a very
skilled one.
Faile herself had only been chosen once.
It
was a measure of how Alliandre's spirits had fallen that she made no
move to
cover herself, only raised up on her elbows. Still, she had combed her
long
hair. If she failed to do that, Faile would know the woman had reached
bottom.
"Did anything… strange… happen to you just now. my Lady?"
she asked, fear strong in her unsteady voice.
"It
did." Faile said, standing crouched under the ridgepole. "I don't
know what it was. Meira doesn't know what it was. I doubt any of the
Wise Ones
do. But it didn't harm us." Of course it had not harmed them. Of course
not. "And it changes nothing in our plans.-' Yawning, she unfastened
the
wide golden belt and dropped it on her blankets, then grasped her outer
robe to
pull it over her head.
Alliandre
put her head down on her hands and began weeping quietly. "We'll never
escape. I'm going to be beaten again tonight. I know it. I'm going to
be beaten
every day for the rest of my life."
With
a sigh. Faile left her outer robe where it was and knelt to stroke her
liege
woman's hair. There were as many responsibilities down as up. "I have
those same fears now and then," she admitted softly. "But I refuse to
let them take control. I will escape. We will escape. You have to keep
your
courage, Alliandre. I know you're brave. I know you've dealt with
Masema and
kept your nerve. You can keep it now, if you try."
Aravine
put her head in at the tentflap. She was a plain, plump woman, a noble
Faile
was sure, though she never claimed it, and despite the dimness Faile
could see
that she was beaming. She wore Sevanna's belt and collar, too. "My
Lady,
Alvon and his son have something for you."
"It
will have to wait a few minutes," Faile said. Alliandre had stopped
crying, but she was just lying there, silent and still.
"My
Lady, you won't want to wait for this."
Faile's
breath caught. Could it be possible? It seemed too much to hope for.
"I
can keep my nerve," Alliandre said, raising her head to gaze at
Aravine.
"If what Alvon has is what I hope it is, I'll keep my nerve if Sevanna
has
me put to the question."
Snatching
up her belt-being seen outside without belt and collar both meant
punishment
almost as severe as for trying to run away- Faile hurried out of the
tent. The
drizzle had slackened to a misting rain, but she pulled up her cowl
anyway. The
rain was still cold.
Alvon
was a stocky man, overtopped by his son Theril, a lanky boy. Both wore
mud-stained, almost-white robes made of tentcloth. Theril, Alvon's
eldest, was only
fourteen, but the Shaido had not believed it because of his height, as
much as
most men in Amadicia. Faile had been ready to trust Alvon from the
start. He
and his son were something of legends among the gai'shain. Three times
they had
run away, and each time it had taken the Shaido longer to bring them
back. And
despite increasingly fierce punishment, on the day they swore fealty
they had
been planning a fourth attempt to return to the rest of their family.
Neither
ever smiled that Faile had seen, but today, smiles wreathed Alvon's
weathered
face and Theril's skinny one alike.
"What
do you have for me?" Faile asked, hastily fastening her belt around her
waist. She thought her heart was going to pound its way out of her
chest.
"It
was my Theril, my Lady," Alvon said. A woodcutter, he spoke with a
coarse
accent that made him barely intelligible. "He was just walking by, see,
and there was nobody around, nobody at all, so he ducked in quick like,
and… Show the Lady, Theril."
Shyly.
Theril reached into his wide sleeve-the robes usually had pockets sewn
in
there-and drew out a smooth white rod that looked like ivory, about a
foot long
and as slim as her wrist.
Looking
around to see if anyone was watching-the street was empty save for
them, for
the moment at least-Faile took it quickly and pushed it up her own
sleeve to
tuck into the pocket there. The pocket was just deep enough to keep it
from
falling out, but now that she had the thing in hand, she did not want
to let go
of it. It felt like glass, and was distinctly cool to the touch, cooler
than
the morning air. Perhaps it was an angreal or a ter'angreal. That would
explain
why Galina wanted it. if not why she had not taken it herself. Hand
buried in
her sleeve, Faile gripped the rod hard. Galina was no longer a threat.
Now she
was salvation.
"You
understand, Alvon, that Galina may be unable to take you and your son
with her
when she leaves," she said. "She has only promised that to me and
those captured with me. But I promise you that I will find a way to
free you
and everyone who has sworn to me. All the rest, too, if I can, but
those above
all. Under the Light and by my hope of salvation and rebirth. I swear
it."
How. she had no idea short of calling on her father for an army, but
she would do
it.
The
woodcutter made as if to spit then glanced at her. and his face
colored. He
swallowed, instead. "That Galina ain't going to help nobody, my Lady.
Says
she's Aes Sedai and all, but she's that Therava's plaything if you ask
me, and
that Therava ain't never going to let her go. Anyways, I know if we can
get you
free, you'll come back for the rest of us. No need for you to swear and
all
that. You said you wanted the rod if anybody could lay hands on it
without
getting caught, and Theril got it for you. that's all."
"I
want to be free," Theril said suddenly, "but if we get anybody free,
then we've beaten them." He looked surprised that he had spoken, and
blushed deep red. His father frowned at him. then nodded thoughtfully.
"Very
well said," Faile told the boy gently, "but I made my oath. and I
stand by it. You and your father-" She cut off as Aravine, looking past
her shoulder, laid a hand on her arm. The woman's smile had been
replaced by
fright.
Turning
her head, Faile saw Rolan standing beside her tent. A good two hands
taller
than Perrin. he wore his shoi/fa coiled around his neck with the black
veil
hanging down his broad chest. Rain slicked his face and made his short
red hair
cling to his scalp in curls. How long had he been there? Not long, or
Aravine
would have noticed him before. The tiny tent offered little
concealment. Alvon
and his son had their shoulders hunched, as if they were thinking about
attacking the tall Mera'din. That was a very bad idea. Mice attacking a
cat was
not in it, as Perrin would have said.
"Go
on about your duties. Alvon." she said quickly. "You, too, Aravine.
Go on, now."
Aravine
and Alvon had sense enough not to offer courtesies before leaving with
final
worried glances at Rolan, but Theril half raised a hand toward
knuckling his
forehead before catching himself. Blushing, he scurried away after his
father.
Rolan
came out from beside the tent to stand in front of her. Oddly, he had a
small
bunch of blue and yellow wildflowers in one hand. She was very
conscious of the
rod she was holding in her sleeve. Where was she to hide it? Once
Therava
discovered it missing, she likely would turn the camp upside down.
"You
must be careful, Faile Bashere," Rolan said, smiling down at her.
Alliandre called him not quite pretty, but Faile had decided she was
wrong.
Those blue eyes and that smile made him very nearly beautiful. "What
you
are about is dangerous, and I may not be here to pro-tect you much
longer."
"Dangerous?"
She felt a chill in her middle. "What do you mean? Where are you
going?" The thought of losing his protection made her stomach lurch.
Few
of the wetlander women had escaped the attentions of Shaido men.
Without him…
"Some
of us are thinking of returning to the Three-foldLand."
Mis smile faded. "We cannot follow a false Car'a'cani, and a wetlander
at
that, but perhaps we will be allowed to live out our lives in our own
holds. We
think on it. We have been a long time from home, and these Shaido
sicken
us."
She
would find a way to deal with it once he was gone. She would have to.
Somehow.
"And what am I doing that is dangerous?" She tried to make her voice
light, but it was difficult. Light, what would happen to her without
him?
"These
Shaido are blind even when they are not drunk. Faile Bashere." he
replied
calmly. Pushing her cowl back, he tucked one of the wildflowers into
her hair
above her left ear. "We Mera'din use our eyes." Another wildflower
went into her hair, on the other side. "You have made many new
friends lately, and you
are planning to escape with them. A bold plan, but dangerous."
"And
will you tell the Wise Ones, or Sevanna?" She was startled when that
came
out in an even tone. Her stomach was trying to tie itself into knots.
"Why
would I do that?" he asked, adding another flower to her decorations.
"Jhoradin thinks he will take Lacile Aldorwin back to the Three-fold
Land
with him even if she is a Treekiller. He believes he may convince her
to make a
bridal wreath to lay at his feet." Lacile had found her own protector
by
climbing into the blankets of the Mera'din who had made her gai'shain.
and
Arrela had done the same with one of the Maidens who had captured her,
but
Faile doubted that Jhoradin would attain his wish. Both women were
focused on
escape like arrows aimed at a target. "And now that I think on it, I
may
take you with me if we go."
Faile
stared up at him. The rain was beginning to soak through her hair. "To
the
Waste? Rolan. I love my husband. I've told you that, and it is true."
"I
know," he said, continuing to add flowers. "But for the moment. you
still wear white, and what happens while you wear white is forgotten
when you
put it off. Your husband cannot hold it against you. Besides, if we go,
when we
come near to a wetlander town, I will let you go. I should never have
made you
gai'shain in the first place. That collar and belt hold enough gold to
get you
safely back to your husband."
Her
mouth fell open in shock. It surprised her when her fist struck his
wide chest.
Gai'shain were never allowed to offer violence, but the man just
grinned at
her. "You-!" She struck him again, harder. She beat at him.
"You-! I can't think of a word bad enough. You let me think you were
going
to abandon me to these Shaido while all along you were meaning to help
me escape?"
Finally
he caught her fist and held it easily with a hand that enveloped hers
completely. "If we go, Faile Bashere," he laughed. The man laughed!
"It is not decided. Anyway, a man cannot let a woman think he is too
eager."
Again
she surprised herself, this time by beginning to laugh and cry at the
same
time, so hard that she had to lean against him or fall down. That
bloody Aiel
sense of humor!
"You
are very beautiful with flowers in your hair, Faile Bashere," he
murmured,
tucking in another blossom. "Or without them. And for the moment, you
still wear white."
Light!
She had the rod, leaning against her arm so coolly, but there was no
way to
give it to Galina until Therava let her walk around freely again, no
way to be
sure that the woman would not betray her before then out of
desperation. Rolan
offered her escape, if the Mera'din decided to leave, but he would
continue to
try to inveigle her into his blankets so long as she wore white. And if
the
Alera'din decided not to go, would one of them betray her escape plans?
If
Rolan could be believed, they all knew! Hope and danger, all tied
together
inextricably. What a tangle.
She
turned out to have been exactly right about Therava's reaction. Just
before
midday all of the gai'shain were herded into the open and made to strip
to
their skins. Covering herself as best she could with her hands, Faile
huddled
together with other women wearing Sevanna's belt and collar-they had
been made
to put those on again straightaway-huddled for a scrap of decency while
Shaido
rummaged through the gai'shain tents, tossing everything out into the
mud. All
Faile could do was think about her hiding place inside the town and
pray. Hope
and danger, and no way to untangle them.
CHAPTER SIX
A Stave and a Razor
Mat
had never really expected Luca to leave Jurador after only one day-the
stone-walled salt town was wealthy, and Luca did like to see coin stick
to his
hands-so he was not exactly disappointed when the man told him that
Valan
Luca's Grand Traveling Show and Magnificent Display of Marvels and
Wonders
would remain there at least two more days. Not exactly disappointed,
yet he had
hoped that his luck might hold good, or his being ta'veren. But then,
being
ta'veren had never brought anything other than bad that he could see.
"The
lines at the entrance are already as long as they were at their best,
yesterday," Luca said, gesturing expansively. They were inside Luca's
huge
gaudy wagon, early in the morning after Renna's death, and the tall man
sat in
the gilded chair at the narrow table-a real table, with stools tucked
under for
guests; most other wagons had an affair rigged on ropes from the
ceiling, and
people sat on the beds to eat. Luca had not yet donned one of his
flamboyant
coats, but he made up for it with gestures. Latelle, his wife, was
cooking the
breakfast porridge on a small, iron-topped brick stove built into a
corner of
the win-dowless wagon, and the air was sharp with spices. The
harsh-faced woman
put so many spices into everything she prepared that it was all
inedible, in
Mat's estimation, yet Luca always gobbled down whatever she set in
front of him
as if it were a feast. He must have a leather tongue. "I expect twice
as
many visitors today, maybe three times as many, and tomorrow as well.
People can't
see everything in one visit, and here they can afford to come twice.
Word of
mouth, Cauthon. Word of mouth. That brings as many as Aludra's
nightflowers. I
feel almost like a ta'veren, the way things are falling out. Large
audiences
and the prospect of more. A warrant of protection from the High Lady."
Luca cut off abruptly, looking faintly embarrassed, as if he had just
remembered that Mat's name was on that warrant as being excluded from
protection.
"You
might not like it if you really were ta'veren," Mat muttered, which
made
the other man give him an odd look. He put a finger behind the black
silk scarf
that hid his hanging scar and tugged at it. For a moment, the thing had
felt
too tight. He had spent a night of bleak dreams about corpses floating
downstream
and woken to the dice spinning in his head, always a bad sign, and now
they
seemed to be bouncing off the inside of his skull harder than before.
"I
can pay you as much as you'll make for every show you give between here
and
Lugard, no matter how many people attend. That's on top of what I
promised for
carrying us to Lugard." If the show was not stopping all the time, they
could cut the time to reach Lugard by three quarters at the least.
More, if he
could convince Luca to spend whole days on the road instead of half
days, the
way they did now.
Luca
seemed taken with the idea, nodding thoughtfully, but then he shook his
head
with a sadness that was plainly feigned and spread his hands. "And what
will that look like, a traveling show that never stops to give shows?
It will
look suspicious, that's what. I have the warrant, and the High Lady
will speak
up for me besides, but you certainly don't want to pull the Seanchan
down on
us. No, it's safer for you this way." The man was not thinking of Mat
Cauthon's
bloody safety, he was thinking that his bloody shows might earn him
more than
Mat paid. That, plus making himself as much the center of attention as
any of
the performers was nearly as important to him as gold. Some of the
showfolk
talked of what they would do when they retired. Not Luca. He intended
to keep
on until he fell over dead in the middle of a show. And he would
arrange it so
he had the largest audience possible when he did.
"It's
ready, Valan," Latelle said affectionately as she lifted the iron pot
from
the stove with a cloth protecting her hands and set it down on a thick
woven
mat on the table. Two places had already been set. with white-glazed
plates and
silver spoons. Luca would have silver spoons when everyone else settled
for tin
or pot metal or even horn or wood. Stern-eyed, with a hard set to her
mouth,
the bear trainer looked quite odd wearing a long white apron over her
spangled
blue dress. Her bears probably wished they had trees to climb when she
frowned
at them. Strangely, though, she jumped to ensure her husband's
comforts.
"Will you be eating with us, Master Cauthon?" There was no welcome in
that; in tact, just the opposite, and she showed no sign of turning to
the
cupboard where the plates were stored.
Mat
gave her a bow that soured her face further. He had never been less
than civil
to the woman, but she refused to like him. "I thank you for the kind
invitation, Mistress Luca, but no." She grunted. So much for being
courteous. He put on his flat-brimmed hat and left, the dice rattling
away.
Luca's
big wagon, glittering in red and blue and covered with golden stars and
comets,
not to mention the phases of the moon in silver, stood in the middle of
the
show, as far as possible from the animals' smelly cages and the
horselines. It
was surrounded by smaller wagons, little houses on wheels, most
windowless and
most painted just a single color with none of Luca's extra decorations,
and by
wall-tents the size of small houses in blue or green or red. sometimes
striped.
The sun stood nearly its own height above the horizon in a sky where a
sprinkling of white clouds drifted slowly, and children ran playing
with hoops
and balls while the showfolk were limbering up for their morning
performances,
men and women twisting and stretching, many with glittering, colorful
spangles
on their coats or dresses. Four contortionists. in filmy trousers tied
at the
ankle and blouses thin enough to leave little to the imagination, made
him
wince. Two were sitting on their own heads atop blankets spread on the
ground
beside their red tent, while the others had twisted themselves into a
pair of
knots that looked beyond untying. Their backbones must have been made
of
spring-wire! Petra,
the strongman, stood bare-chested beside the green wagon he shared with
his
wife, warming up by lifting weights with either hand that Mat was not
sure he
could have lifted with both. The man had arms thicker than Mat's legs,
and he
was not sweating at all. Clarine's small dogs stood in a line at the
steps of
the wagon wagging their tails and eagerly waiting on their trainer.
Unlike
Latelle's bears, Mat figured the plump woman's dogs performed so they
could
make her smile.
He
was always tempted to just sit quietly somewhere when the dice were
clicking in
his head, some place nothing seemed likely to happen, waiting for the
dice to
stop, and though he would have enjoyed watching some of the female
acrobats, a
number of whom wore as little as the contortionists, he set out to walk
the
half mile to Jurador, eyeing everyone on the wide, hard-packed clay
road
closely. There was a purchase he hoped to make.
People
were coming to join the long line waiting behind a stout rope stretched
along
the show's tall canvas wall, only a handful with more than a touch of
embroidery on the women's dresses or the men's short coats, and a few
farmers'
high-wheeled carts lumbering behind a horse or an ox. Figures moved
among the
small forest of windmills that pumped the salt wells on the low hills
behind
the town, and around the long evaporation pans. A merchant's train of
canvas-covered wagons, twenty of them behind six-horse teams, rumbled
out of
the town gates as he approached, the merchant herself in a bright green
cloak
seated beside the driver of the first wagon. A flock of crows cawed
past overhead,
giving him a chill, but no one vanished before his eyes, and everybody
cast a
long shadow so far as he could make out. There were no dead people's
shades
walking the road today, although he was convinced that was what he had
seen the
day before.
The
dead walking surely could mean nothing good. Very likely it had
something to
with Tarmon Gai'don and Rand. Colors whirled in his brain, and for an
instant,
in his head, he saw Rand and Min
standing
beside a large bed, kissing. He stumbled and nearly tripped over his
own boots.
They had not been wearing any clothes! He would have to be careful
thinking
about Rand… The colors swirled and
resolved for a moment, and he stumbled again. There were worse things
to spy on
than kissing. Very careful what he thought. Light!
The
pair of guards leaning on their halberds at the iron-studded gates,
hard-faced
men in white breastplates and conical white helmets with horsetail
crests, eyed
him suspiciously. They probably thought he was drunk. A reassuring nod
failed to
change their expressions by a hair. He could have used a stiff drink
right
then. The guards did not try to stop him entering, though, just watched
him
pass. Drunks caused trouble, especially a man who was drunk this early
in the
day, but a drunk in a good coat-plain, but well-cut and good silk-a man
with a
little lace at his wrists was an altogether different matter.
The
stone-paved streets of Jurador were noisy even at this hour, with
hawkers
carrying trays or standing behind barrows crying their wares, and
shopkeepers
beside narrow tables in front of their shops bellowing the fineness of
their
goods, and coopers hammering hoops onto barrels for shipping salt. The
clatter
of rugmakers' looms nearly drowned out the ringing of the occasional
blacksmith's hammer, not to mention the music of flutes and drums and
dulcimers
drifting from inns and taverns. It was a jumble of a town, with shops
and
houses and inns cheek by jowl with taverns and stables, all of stone
and roofed
with reddish tiles. A solid town. Jurador. And one accustomed to
thievery. Most
windows on the lower floors were covered with stout screens of wrought
iron.
The upper windows as well on the homes of the wealthy, most of whom
were no
doubt salt merchants. The music of the inns and taverns pulled at him.
Likely
there would be dice games going on in most of them. He could almost
feel those
dice spinning across a table. It had been too long since he had rattled
a set
of dice in his hands instead of inside his head, but he was not there
for gambling
this morning.
He
had had no breakfast yet, so he approached a wrinkled woman with a tray
hung
from a strap around her neck who shouted "meat pies, made from the
finest
beef to be found in Altara." He took her word for it and handed over
the
coppers she demanded. He had seen no cattle at any farms near Jurador,
only
sheep and goats, but it was best not to inquire too closely what was in
a pie
bought in the streets of any town. There could be cows on nearby farms.
There
could be. In any case, the meat pie was tasty, and still hot for a
wonder, and
he walked on along the crowded street juggling the pie and wiping
greasy juice
from his chin.
He
was careful not to bump into anyone in the throng. Altarans were a
touchy lot, by
and large. In this town, you could tell somebody's station to within a
whisker
by the amount of embroidery on coat or dress or cloak, the more the
higher,
long before you were close enough to tell wool from silk, though the
richer
women covered their olive-skinned faces with transparent veils hung
from ornate
combs stuck into their tightly coiled braids, but men and women alike,
whether
salt merchants or ribbon hawkers, wore long belt knives with curved
blades and
sometimes fondled the hilts as though looking for a fight. He always
tried to
avoid fighting, though his luck seldom did him much good there.
Ta'veren took
over with that, it seemed. The dice had never before signaled a
fight-battles,
yes, but never a dust-up in the street-yet he walked very carefully
indeed. Not
that that would help, of course. When the dice stopped, they stopped,
and that
was that. But he saw no reason to take chances. He hated taking
chances. Except
with gambling, of course, and that was hardly taking a chance for him.
He
spotted a barrel full of thick quarterstaffs and walking staffs in
front of a
shop displaying swords and daggers under the watchful eye of a bulky
fellow
with sunken knuckles, a nose that had been broken more than once, and a
thick
truncheon hanging at his belt beside the inevitable dagger. The man
announced
in a rough voice that all the blades on display were Andoran made, but
anybody
who did not make his own blades always claimed they were Andoran or
else from
the Borderlands. Or Tairen, sometimes. Tear made good steel.
To
Mat's surprise and delight, a slim stave of what appeared to be black
yew, more
than a foot taller than he was, stood upright in the barrel. Pulling
the stave
out, he checked the fine, almost braided grain. It was black yew. all
right.
That braided grain was what gave bows made from it such power, twice
what any
other wood could give. You could never be sure until you started
slicing away
the excess, but the stave looked perfect. How in the Light had black
yew come
to be in southern Altara? He was sure it only grew in the Two Rivers.
When
the proprietor, a sleek woman with bright-feathered birds embroidered
to below
her bosom, came out and began extolling the virtues of her blades, he
said.
"How much for this black stick, Mistress?"
She
blinked, startled that a man in silk and lace wanted a
quarterstaff-slim as it
was, she bloody well thought the bloody thing was a quarterstaff!-and
named a
price that he paid without bargaining. Which made her blink again, and
frown as
if she thought she should have asked for more. He would have paid more
for the
makings of a Two Rivers bow. With the raw bowstave over his shoulder,
he walked
on, wolfing down the last of the meat pie and wiping his hand on his
coat. But
he had not come for breakfast or a bowstave any more than for gambling.
It was
the stables that interested him.
Livery
stables always had a horse or three for sale, and if the price
was right, they would usually sell one that
had not been for sale. At least, they did when the Seanchan had not
snapped
them up already. Luckily, the Seanchan presence in Jurador had been
fleeting so
far. He wandered from stable to stable examining bays and roans, blue
roans and
piebalds, duns, sorrels, blacks, whites, grays and dapples, all mares
or
geldings. A stallion would not serve his purposes. Not every animal he
looked
at had a shallow girth or long cannons, yet none matched what he had in
mind.
Until he entered a narrow stable jammed between a large stone inn
called The
Twelve Salt Wells and a rugmaker's shop.
He
would have thought the racketing looms would have bothered the horses,
but they
were all quiet, apparently accustomed to the noise. Stalls stretched
farther
into the block than he had expected, but lanterns hanging from the
stall posts
gave a fair light away from the doors. The air. speckled with dust from
the
loft above, smelled of hay and oats and horse dung, but not old dung.
Three men
with shovels were mucking out stalls. The owner kept his place clean.
That
meant less chance of disease. Some stables he had walked out of after
getting
one whiff.
The
black-and-white mare was out of her stall on a rope halter while a
groom put
down fresh straw, and she stood squarely, and with her ears perked
forward,
showing alertness. About fifteen hands tall, she was long in front,
with a deep
girth that promised endurance, and her legs were perfectly
proportioned, with
short cannons and a good angle to her fetlocks. Her shoulders were well
sloped,
and her croup dead level with her whithers. She had lines as good as
Pips', or
even better. More than that, she was a breed he had heard tell of but
never
thought to see, a razor, from Arad Doman. No other breed would have
that
distinctive coloring. In her coat, black met white in straight lines
that could
have been sliced by a razor, hence the name. Her presence here was as
mystifying as the black yew. He had always heard no Do-mani would sell
a razor
to any outlander. He let his eyes sweep past her without lingering,
studying
the other animals in their stalls. Had the dice inside his skull
slowed? No, it
was his imagination. He was sure they were spinning as hard as they had
in
Luca's wagon.
A
wiry man with only a fringe of gray hair remaining came forward.
ducking his
head over folded hands. "Toke Fearnim. my Lord," he introduced
himself in rough accents, eyeing the bowstave on Mat's shoulder
dubiously. Men
who wore silk coats and gold signet rings rarely carried such things.
"How
can I be of service? My Lord wishes to
rent a horse? Or to buy?" Embroidery, small bright flowers, covered
the shoulders of the vest he wore over a shirt that might have been
white once.
Mat avoided looking at the flowers at all. The fellow had one of those
curved
knives at his belt and two long white scars on his leathery face. Old
scars. Any
fighting he had done lately had not marked him where it showed.
"Buy,
Master Fearnim, if you have anything for sale. If I can find one that's
halfway
decent. I've had more spavined gluebaits offered to me as six-year-olds
when
they were eighteen if a day than I can shake a stick at." He hefted the
bowstave slightly with a grin. His Da claimed bargaining went better if
you
could make the other fellow start grinning.
"I
have three for sale, my Lord, none of them spavined," the wiry man
replied
with another bow, and no hint of a grin. Fearnim gestured. "One is out
of
her stall there. Five years old and prime horseflesh, my Lord. And a
steal at
ten crowns. Gold," he added blandly.
Mat
let his jaw drop. "For a pkbalcfi I know the Seanchan have driven
prices
up, but that's ridiculous!"
"Oh,
she's not your common piebald, my Lord. A razor is what she is. Domani
bloodborn ride razors."
Blood
and bloody ashes! So much for catching a bargain. "So you say, so you
say," Mat muttered, lowering one end of the bowstave to the stone floor
so
he could lean on it. His hip seldom bothered him any longer except when
he did
a lot of walking, but he had done so this morning, and he felt twinges.
Well,
bargain or no, he had to play out the game. There were rules to horse
trading.
Break them, and you were asking to have your purse emptied out. "I've
never heard of any horse called a razor myself. What else do you have?
Only
geldings or mares, mind."
"Geldings
are all I have for sale except the razor, my Lord," Fearnim said,
emphasizing
the word razor a little. Turning toward the back of the stable, he
shouted,
"Adela, bring out that big bay what's for sale."
A
lanky young woman with a pimply face, in breeches and a plain dark
vest, came
darting out of the back of the stable to obey. Fearnim had Adela walk
the bay
and then a dappled gray on rope leads in the good light near the doors.
Mat had
to hand him that. Their conformation was not bad at all, but the bay
was too
big, better than seventeen hands, and the gray kept his ears half laid
back and
tried to bite Adela's hand twice. She was deft with the animals,
though, easily
evading the bad-tempered gray's lunges. Rejecting the pair of them
would have
been easy even if he had not had his mind set on the razor.
A
lean, gray-striped tomcat, like a ridgecat in miniature, appeared and
sat at
Fearnim's feet to lick a bloody gash on his shoulder. "Rats are worse
this
year than I ever recall," the stablekeeper muttered, frowning down at
the
cat. "They fight back more, too. I'm going to have to get another cat,
or
maybe two." He brought himself back to the business at hand. "Will my
Lord take a look at my prize, since the others don't suit?"
"I
suppose I could look at the piebald, Master Fearnim," Mat said
doubtfully.
"But not for any ten crowns."
"In
gold," Fearnim said. "Hurd, walk the razor for the Lord here."
He emphasized the breed again. Working the man down would be difficult.
Unless
he got some help for a change from being ta'veren. His luck never
helped with
anything as straightforward as dickering.
Hurd
was the fellow refreshing the straw in the razor's stall, a squat man
who had
about three white hairs left on his head and no teeth in his mouth at
all. That
was evident when he grinned, which he did while he led the mare in a
circle. He
clearly liked the animal, and well he should.
She
walked well, but Mat still inspected her closely. Her teeth said
Fearnim had
been honest enough about her age-only a fool lied very far about a
horse's age
unless the buyer was a fool himself, though it was surprising how many
sellers
thought buyers were all just that- and her ears pricked toward him when
he
stroked her nose while checking her eyes. They were clear and bright,
free of
rheum. He felt along her legs without finding any heat or swelling.
There was
never a hint of a lesion or sore, or of ringworm, anywhere on her. He
could get
his fist easily between her rib cage and her elbow-she would have a
long
stride-and was barely able to fit his flat hand between her last rib
and the
point of her hip. She would be hardy, unlikely to strain a tendon if
run fast.
"My
Lord knows his horseflesh, I see."
"That
I do, Master Faernim. And ten crowns gold is too much, especially for a
piebald. Some say they're bad luck, you know. Not that I believe it.
not as
such, or I wouldn't offer at all."
"Bad
luck? I never heard that, my Lord. What do you offer?"
"1
could get Tairen bloodstock for ten crowns gold. Not the best, true,
but still
Tairen. I'll give you ten crowns. In silver."
Fearnim
threw back his head, laughing uproariously, and when he stopped, they
settled
down to the dickering. In the end. Mat handed over five crowns in gold
along
with four marks gold and three crowns silver, all stamped in Ebou Dar.
There
were coins from many countries in the chest under his bed. but foreign
coin
usually meant finding a banker or money changer to weigh them and work
out what
they were worth locally. Aside from attracting more notice than he
wanted, he
would have ended paying more for the animal, maybe even the full ten
crowns
gold. Money changers' scales always seemed to work that way. He had not
expected to get the man down that far, but from Fearnims expression,
grinning
at last, he had never expected to receive so much. It was the best way
for
horse trading to end, with both sides thinking they had come out ahead.
All in
all, the day had begun very well, dice or no bloody dice. He should
have known
it would not last.
When
he got back to the show at midday, riding the razor bareback because of
his
aching hip and with the dice rattling in his head, the line of people
was
longer than when he had left, waiting to pass beneath the big blue
banner,
stretched between two tall poles, that carried the show's name in big
red
letters. As people dropped their coins into the clear glass pitcher
held by a
heavy-set horse handler in a rough woolen coat, to be poured from there
into an
iron-bound chest under the watchful eyes of another horse handler who
was even
larger, more people joined the line, so it never seemed to grow
shorter. The
thing stretched beyond the end of the rope and around the corner. For a
small
wonder, no one was pushing or shoving. There were obvious farmers in
the line,
wearing rough woolens and with dirt ingrained in their hands, though
the
children's faces and those of the farmwives at least had been scrubbed
clean.
Luca was getting his hoped-for crowd, unfortunately. No chance of
convincing
him to leave tomorrow now. The dice said something was going to happen,
something fateful to Mat bloody Cauthon. but what? There had been times
when
the dice stopped and he still had no idea what happened.
Just
inside the canvas wall, with people streaming past to enjoy the
performers
lining both sides of the main street. Aludra was taking delivery of two
wagonloads of barrels in various sizes. Of more than the barrels, it
seemed.
"I will show you where to park the wagons," the slender woman told
the driver of the lead wagon, a lean man with a jutting jaw. Aludra's
waist-long beaded braids swung as her eyes followed Mat for a moment,
but she
quickly turned back to the wagon driver. "The horses, you will take to
the
horselines afterward, yes?"
Now.
what had she bought in such quantity? Something for her fireworks,
certainly.
Every night, soon after dark so she would catch everyone before they
went to
bed. she launched her nightflowers, two or three for a town the size of
Jurador
or if there were several villages close together. He had had some
thoughts on
why she wanted a bellfounder. but the only one that seemed to make any
sense
actually made no sense at all that he could see.
He
hid the mare on the horselines. Well, you could not really hide a
razor, but a
horse was noticed less among other horses, and the time was not right,
yet. The
bowstave he left in the wagon he shared with Egeanin and Domon. neither
of whom
was there, then headed for Tuon's faded purple wagon. That was parked
not far
from Luca's wagon, now, though Mat wished it had been left near the
storage
wagons. Only Luca and his wife knew that Tuon was a High Lady rather
than a
servant who had been about to expose Mat and Egeanin to her supposed
husband as
lovers, but many among the showfolk were already wondering why Mat
spent more
time with Tuon than with Egeanin. Wondering and disapproving. They were
an
oddly prim lot for the most part, even the contortionists. Running off
with the
wife of a cruel lord was romantic. Canoodling with the lady's maid was
sordid.
Giving Tuon's wagon this favored spot, among the people who had been
with Luca
for years and were his most prized performers, was going to cause more
talk.
In
truth, he hesitated about going to Tuon at all with the dice drumming
in his
head. They had stopped too often in her presence. and he still did not
know the
why for a single one of those times. Not for certain. Maybe the first
time, it
had just been meeting her. Thinking of it made the hair on the back of
his neck
want to stand up. Still, with women, you always had to take chances.
With a
woman like Tuon, ten chances a day, and nevet knowing the odds until it
was too
late. Sometimes he wondered why his luck failed to help him more with
women.
Women were certainly as unpredictable as any honest dice ever made.
None
of the Redarms was on guard outside the wagon-they were beyond that,
now-so he
trotted up the short flight of steps at the back of the wagon and
rapped once
before pulling the door open and entering. After all, he paid the rent
for the
thing, and they were hardly likely to be lying around unclothed at this
time of
day. Anyway, the door had a latch if they needed to keep people out.
Mistress
Anan was off somewhere, but the interior was still crowded. The narrow
table
had been let down on ropes from the ceiling, with mismatched plates of
bread
and olives and cheese laid out on it along with one of Luca's tall
silver wine
pitchers, a squat red-striped pitcher and flower-painted cups. Tuon. a
month's
growth of tightly curled black hair on her head, sat on the wagon's
sole stool
at the far end of the table, with Selucia sitting on one of the beds at
her
side, and Noal and Olver on the other bed, elbows on the table. Today,
Selucia
was in the dark blue Ebou Dari dress that displayed her memorable bosom
so
well, with a flowered scarf tied around her head, but Tuon wore a red
dress
that seemed to be made entirely of tiny pleats. Light, he had only
bought her
the silk yesterday! How had she convinced the show's seamstresses to
complete a
dress already? He was pretty certain that usually took longer than a
day. With liberal
promises of his gold, he suspected. Well, if you bought a woman silk,
you had
to expect to pay to have it sewn. He had heard that saying as a boy,
when he
never expected to be able to afford silk, but it was the Light's own
truth.
"… only the women are ever seen outside their villages," Noal was
saying, but the gnarled, white-haired old man cut off when Mat entered
the
wagon, pulling the door shut behind him. The scraps of lace at Noal's
wrists
had seen better days, as had his well-cut coat of fine gray wool, but
both were
clean and neat, though in truth they looked odd with his crooked
fingers and
battered face. Those belonged on an aging tavern tough, one who had
gone on
fighting long past his prime. Olver, in the good blue coat Mat had had
made for
him, grinned as widely as an Ogier. Light, he was a good boy, but he
would
never be handsome with those big ears and that wide mouth. His manner
with
women needed vast improvement if he was ever to have any luck there at
all. Mat
had been trying to spend more time with Olver, to get him away from the
influence of his "uncles." Vanin and Harnan and the other Redarms,
and the boy seemed to enjoy that. Just not as much as he enjoyed
playing Snakes
and Foxes or stones with Tuon and staring at Selucia's bosom. It was
all very
well for those fellows to teach Olver how to shoot a bow and use a
sword and
the like, but if Mat ever learned who was teaching him to leer…
"Manners.
Toy," Tuon drawled like honey sliding out of a dish. Hard honey. Around
him, unless they were playing stones, her expression was usually severe
enough
for a judge handing down a death sentence, and her tone matched it.
"You
knock, then wait for permission to enter. Unless you are property or a
servant.
Then you do not knock. You also have grease on your coat. I expect you
to keep
yourself clean." Olver's grin faded at hearing Mat admonished. Noal
raked
bent fingers through his long hair and sighed, then began studying the
green
plate in front of him as if he might find an emerald among the olives.
Grim
tone or no grim tone, Mat enjoyed looking at the dark little woman who
was to
be his wife. Who was halfway his wife already. Light, all she had to do
was say
three sentences and the thing was done! Burn him but she was beautiful.
Once,
he had mistaken her for a child, but that had been because of her size,
and her
face had been obscured by a transparent veil. Without that veil, it was
plain
that that heart-shaped face belonged to a woman. Her big eyes were dark
pools a
man could spend a lifetime swimming in. Her rare smiles could be
mysterious or
mischievous, and he prized them. He enjoyed making her laugh, too. At
least,
when she was not laughing at him. True, she was a little slimmer than
he had
always preferred, but if he could ever get an arm around her without
Selucia
there, he believed she would feel just right. And he might convince her
to give
him a few kisses with those full lips. Light, he dreamed about that
sometimes!
Never mind that she called him down as if they were already married.
Well,
almost never mind. Burn him if he could see what a little grease
mattered.
Lopin and Nerim, the two serving men he was saddled with, would fight
over
which one got to clean the coat. They had little enough to do that they
really
would if he did not name who received the task. He did not say that to
her.
Women liked nothing better than making you defend yourself, and once
you
started, she had won.
"I'll
try to remember that. Precious," he said with his best smile, sliding
in
beside Selucia and putting his hat down on the other side from her. The
blanket
scrunched up between them, and they were a foot apart to boot, yet you
would
have thought he had pressed himself against her hip. Her eyes were
blue, but
the furious look she gave him was hot enough his coat should have been
singed.
"I hope there's more water than wine in that cup in front of Olver."
"It's
goat's milk," the boy said indignantly. Ah. Well, maybe Olver was still
a
little too young even for well-watered wine.
Tuon
sat up very straight, though she was still shorter than Selucia, who
was a
short woman herself. "What did you call me?" she said, as close to
crisply as her accent allowed.
"Precious.
You have a pet name for me. so I thought I should have one for you.
Precious." Pie thought Selucia's eyes were going to pop right out of
her
head.
"I
see," Tuon murmured, pursing her lips in thought. The fingers of her
right
hand waggled, as though idly, and Selucia immediately slid off the bed
and went
to one of the cupboards. She still took time to glare at him over
Tuon's head.
"Very well," Tuon said after a moment. "It will be interesting
to see who wins this game. Toy."
Mat's
smile slipped. Game? He was just trying to regain a little balance. But
she saw
a game, and that meant he could lose. Was likely to, since he had no
idea what
the game was. Why did women always make things so… complicated?
Selucia
resumed her place and slid a chipped cup in front of him, and a
blue-glazed
plate that held half a loaf of crusty bread, six varieties of pickled
olives
mounded up. and three sorts of cheese. That perked his spirits again.
He had
hoped for this, if not expected it. Once you got a woman feeding you,
she had a
hard time finding it in herself to stop you from putting your feet
under her
table again.
"The
thing of it is," Noal said, resuming his tale, "in those Ayyad
villages, you can see woman of any age. but no men much above twenty if
that.
Not a one." Olver's eyes grew even wider. The boy practically inhaled
Noal's
tales, about the countries he had seen, even the lands beyond the Aiel
Waste,
swallowed them whole without butter.
"Are
you any relation to Jain Charin. Noal?" Mat chewed an olive and
discreetly
spat the pit into his palm. The thing tasted not far from spoiling. So
did the
next one. But he was hungry, so he gobbled them down and followed with
some
crumbly white goat cheese while ignoring the frowns Tuon directed at
him.
The
old man's face went still as stone, and Mat had torn off a piece of
bread and
eaten that as well before Noal answered. "A cousin," he said at last,
grudgingly. "He was my cousin."
"You're
related to Jain Farstrider?" Olver said excitedly. His favorite book
was
The Travels of Jain Farstrider, which he would have sat up reading by
lamplight
long past his bedtime had Juilin and Thera allowed. He said he intended
to see
everything Farstrider had. when he grew up, all that and more.
"Who
is this man with two names?" Tuon asked. 'Only great men are spoken of
so,
and you speak as if everyone should know him."
"He
was a fool," Noal said grimly before Mat could open his mouth, though
Olver did get his open, and left it gaping while the old man continued.
"He went gallivanting about the world and left a good and loving wife
to
die of a fever without him there to hold her hand while she died. He
let
himself be made into a tool by-" Abruptly Noal's face went blank.
Staring
through Mat, he rubbed at his forehead as though attempting to recall
something.
"Jain
Farstrider was a great man," Olver said fiercely. His hands curled into
small fists, as though he was ready to fight for his hero. "He fought
Trollocs and Myrddraal, and he had more adventures than anyone else in
the
whole world! Even Mat! He captured Cowin Gemallan after Gemallan
betrayed
Malkier to the Shadow!"
Noal
came to himself with a start and patted Olver's shoulder. "He did that,
boy. That much is to his credit. But what adventure is worth leaving
your wife
to die alone?" He sounded sad enough to die on the spot himself.
Olver
had no answer to that, and his face fell. If Noal had put the boy off
his
favorite book, Mat was going to have words with the old man. Reading
was
important-he read himself; sometimes, he did- and he had made sure
Olver had
books he enjoyed.
Standing,
Tuon leaned across the table to rest a hand on Noal's arm. The stern
look had
vanished from her face, replaced by tenderness. A wide belt of dark
yellow
tooled leather cinched her waist, emphasizing her slim curves. More of
his coin
spent. Well, coin was always easy to come by for him, and if she did
not spend
it, likely he would throw it away on some other woman. "You have a good
heart, Master Charin." She gave everybody their bloody names except for
Mat Cauthon!
"Do
I, my Lady?" Noal said, sounding as though he really wanted to hear an
answer. "Sometimes I think-" Whatever he thought sometimes, they were
not to learn it now.
The
door swung open and Juilin put his head into the wagon. The Tairen
thief-catcher's conical red cap was at its usual jaunty angle, but his
dark
face was worried. "Seanchan soldiers are setting up across the road.
I'm
going to Thera. She'll take a fright if she hears it from anybody
else."
And as quickly as that he was gone again, leaving the door swinging.
CHAPTER SEVEN
A Cold Medallion
Seanchan
soldiers. Blood and bloody ashes! That was all Mat needed, with the
dice
spinning his head. "Noal, find Egeanin and warn her. Olver. you warn
the
Aes Sedai. and Bethamin and Seta." Those five would all be together or
at
least close by one another. The two former sul'dam shadowed the sisters
whenever they left the wagon they all shared. Light, he hoped none of
them had
gone into the town again. That could put a weasel in the chicken yard
for sure!
"I'll go down to the entrance and try to see whether we're in any
trouble."
"She
won't answer to that name." Noal muttered, sliding out from the table.
He
moved spryly for a fellow who looked to have had half the bones in his
body
broken one time or another. "You know she won't."
"You
know who I mean." Mat told him sharply, frowning at Tuon and Selucia.
This
name foolishness was their fault. Selucia had told Egeanin that her
name was
now Leilwin Shipless, and that was the name Egeanin was using. Well, he
was not
about to put up with that sort of thing, not for himself and not for
her. She
had to come to her senses, soon or late.
"I'm
just saying," Noal said. "Come on, Olver."
Mat
slid out after them, but before he reached the door, Tuon spoke.
"No
warnings for us to remain inside, Toy? No one left to guard us?"
The
dice said he should find Hainan or
one of the
other Redarms and plant him outside just to guard against accidents,
but he did
not hesitate. "You gave your word." he said, settling his hat on his
head. The smile he got in reply was worth the risk. Burn him, but it
lit up her
face. Women were always a gamble, but sometimes a smile could be win
enough.
He
saw from the entrance that Jurador's days without a Seanchan presence
had come
to an end. Directly across the road from the show, several hundred men
were
taking off armor, unloading wagons, setting up tents in ordered rows,
establishing horselines. All very efficiently done. He saw Taraboners
with mail
veils hanging from their helmets and bars of blue, yellow and green
painted
across their breastplates, and men who were clearly infantry, stacking
long
pikes and racking bows much shorter than a Two Rivers bow. in armor
painted the
same. He thought those must be Amadicians. Neither Tarabon nor Altara
ran much
to foot, and Altarans in service to the Seanchan had their armor marked
differently for some reason. There were actual Seanchan, of course,
perhaps
twenty or thirty that he could see. There was no mistaking that painted
armor of
over-lapping plates or those strange, in-sectile helmets.
Three
of the soldiers came ambling across the road. lean, hardbitten men.
Their blue
coats, with the collars striped green-and-yellow. were plain enough
despite the
colors and showed the wear of armor use, but no signs of rank. Not
officers,
then, but still maybe as dangerous as red adders. Two of the fellows
could have
been from An-dor or Murandy or even the Two Rivers, but the third had
eyes
tilted like a Saldaean's, and his skin was the color of honey. Without
slowing,
they started into the show.
One
of the horse handlers at the entrance gave a shrill three-note whistle
that
began to echo through the show while the other, a squint-eyed fellow
named
Bollin, pushed the glass pitcher in front of the three. "Price is a
silver
penny each, Captain," he said with deceptive mildness. Mat had heard
the
big man speak in the same tone a heartbeat before he thumped another
horse
handler over the head with a stool. "Children is five coppers if they's
more than waist-high on me, and three if they's shorter, but only
children as
has to be carried gets in free."
The
honey-skinned Seanchan raised a hand as if to push Bollin out of his
way, then
hesitated, his face growing harder, if that was possible.
The
other two squared up beside him. fists clenched, as pounding boots
announced
the arrival of every man in the show, it seemed, performers in their
flashy
garb and horse handlers in coarse wool. Every man had a club of some
sort in
his hand, including Luca. in a brilliant red coat embroidered with
golden stars
to his turned-down boot-tops, and even the bare-chested Petra, who
possessed the mildest nature of
any man Mat had ever met. Petra's
face was a thunderhead now, though.
Light,
this had the makings of a massacre, with these fellows' companions not
a
hundred paces away and all their weapons to hand. It was a good place
for Mat
Cauthon to take himself out of. Surreptitiously he touched the throwing
knives
hidden up his sleeves and shrugged just to feel the one hanging down
behind the
back of his neck. No way to check those under his coat or in his boots
without
being noticed, though. The dice seemed like continuous thunder. He
began to
plan how to get Tuon and the others away. He had to hang onto her a
while longer,
yet.
Before
disaster could open the door, another Seanchan appeared, in
blue-green-and-yellow striped armor but carrying her helmet on her
right hip.
She had the tilted eyes and honey-colored skin, and there was a
scattering of white
in her close-cropped black hair. She was near a foot shorter than any
of the
other three, and there were no plumes on her helmet, just a small crest
like a
bronze arrowhead at the front, but the three soldiers stood up very
straight
when they saw her. "Now why am I not surprised to find you here at what
looks to be the fine beginnings of a riot. Murel?" Her slurred accent
had
a twang in it. "What's this all about then?"
"We
paid our money, Standardbearer," the honey-skinned man replied in the
same
twangy accents, "then they said we had to pay more on account of us
being
soldiers of the Empire."
Bollin
opened his mouth, but she silenced him with a raised hand. She had that
kind of
presence. Running her eyes over the men gathered in a thick semicircle
with
their clubs, and pausing a moment to shake her head over Luca, she
settled on
Mat. "Did you see what happened?"
"I
did," Mat replied, "and they tried to walk in without paying."
"That's
good for you, Murel," she said, getting a surprised blink from the man.
"Good for all three of you. Means you won't be out your coin. Because
you're all confined to camp for ten days, and I doubt this show will be
here
that long. You're all docked ten days' pay, as well.
You're
supposed to be unloading wagons so the homefolks don't get the idea we
think
we're better than they are. Or do you want a charge of causing
dissension in
the ranks?" The three men paled visibly. Apparently that was a serious
charge. "I didn't think so. Now get out of my sight and get to work
before
I make it a full month instead of a week."
"Yes.
Standardbearer," they snapped out as one, then ran back across the road
as
hard as they could go while tugging off their coats. Hard men. yet the
Standardbearer was harder.
She
was not finished, however. Luca stepped forward, bowing with a grand
flourish,
but she cut off whatever thanks he was about to offer. "I don't much
like
fellows threatening my men with cudgels," she drawled, resting her free
hand on her sword hilt, "not even Murel, not at these odds. Still,
shows
you have backbone. Any of you fine fellows want a life of glory and
adventure?
Step across the road with me, and I'll sign you up. You there in that
fancy red
coat. You have the look of a born lancer, to me. I'll wager I can whip
you into
a proper hero in no time." A ripple of head-shaking ran through the
assembled men, and some, seeing that no trouble was likely now, began
slipping
away. Pe-tra was one of those. Luca looked as though he had been
poleaxed. A
number of others appeared almost as stunned by the offer. Performing
paid
better than soldiering, and you avoided the risk of people sticking
swords into
you. "Well, as long as you're standing here, maybe I can convince you.
Not
likely you'll get rich, but the pay is usually on time, and there
always the
chance of loot if the order is given. Happens now and then. The food
varies,
but it's usually hot, and there's usually enough to fill your belly.
The days
are long, but that just means you're tired enough to get a good night's
sleep. When
you don't have to work the night, too. Anyone interested yet?"
Luca
gave himself a shake. "Thank you, Captain, but no," he said, sounding
half-strangled. Some fools thought soldiers were flattered by someone
thinking
they had a higher rank than they did. Some fool soldiers were. "Excuse
me,
if you please. We have a show to put on. And people who aren't going to
be
pleased if they have to wait much longer to see it.'' With a last, wary
look at
the woman, as if he feared she might try to drag him off by his collar,
he
rounded on the men behind him. "All of you get back to your stands.
What
are you doing lounging around here? I have everything well in hand. Get
back to
your stands before people start demanding their money back." That would
have been a disaster in his book. Given the choice between handing back
coin
and having a riot, Luca would have been unable to decide which was
worse.
With
the showfolk dispersing and Luca hurrying away while shooting glances
at her
over his shoulder, the woman turned to Mat, the only man remaining
aside from
the two horse handlers. "And what about you? From the look of you, you
might be made an officer and get to give me orders." She sounded amused
by
the notion.
He
knew what she was doing. The people in the line had seen three Seanchan
soldiers sent running, and who could say for sure why they had run. but
now
they had seen her disperse a much larger crowd by herself. He would
have given
her a place in the Band as a Bannerman in a breath. "I'd make a
terrible
soldier, Standardbearer." he said, tipping his hat, and she laughed.
As
he turned away, he heard Bollin saying, mildly. "You didn't hear what I
told that man? It's a silver penny for you and another for your
goodwife."
Coins clinked into the pitcher. "Thank you." Things were back to
normal. And the dice were still racketing in his head.
Making
his way through the show, where acrobats were again tumbling for the
crowds on
their wooden platforms and jugglers juggling and Clarine's dogs running
atop
large wooden balls and Miyora's leopards standing on their hind legs
inside a
cage that looked barely strong enough to hold them, he decided to check
on the
Aes Sedai. The leopards brought them to mind. The common soldiers might
spend
the day working, yet he would have laid coin on at least some of the
officers
coming for a look before long. He trusted Tuon, strangely enough, and
Egeanin
had enough sense to stay out of sight when there might be other
Seanchan
around, but common sense seemed in short supply among Aes Sedai. Even
Teslyn
and Edesina, who had spent time as damane, took foolish chances.
Joline, who
had not, seemed to think herself invulnerable.
Everybody
in the show knew the three women were Aes Sedai now, but their large
wagon,
covered with rain-streaked whitewash, still stood near the
canvas-topped
storage wagons, not far from the horse-lines. Luca had been willing to
rearrange his show for a High Lady who gave him a warrant of
protection, but
not for Aes Sedai who put him at risk with their presence and were
practically
penniless besides. The women among the showfolk were sympathetic to the
sisters
for the most part, the men wary to one degree or another-it was almost
always
so with Aes Sedai-but Luca likely would have turned them out to make
their own
way without Mat's gold. Aes Sedai were more threat than anything else
so long
as they were in lands controlled by the Sean-chan. Mat Cauthon got no
thanks
for it. not that he was looking for any. He would have settled for a
touch of
respect, unlikely as that was. Aes Sedai were Aes Sedai, after all.
Joline's
Warders. Blaeric and Fen. were nowhere to be seen, so there was no need
to talk
his way past them to get inside, but as he approached the dirt-streaked
steps at
the back of the wagon, the foxhead medallion hanging beneath his shirt
went icy
cold against his chest, then colder still. For a moment, he froze like
a
statue. Those fool women were channeling in there! Coming to himself,
he
pounded up the steps and banged the door open.
The
women he expected to see were all present, Joline, a Green sister,
slender and
pretty and big-eyed, and Teslyn. a narrow-shouldered Red who looked as
though
she chewed rocks, and Edesina, a Yellow. handsome rather than pretty,
with
waves of black hair spilling to her waist. He had saved all three from
the
Seanchan. had gotten Teslyn and Edesina out of the damam kennels
themselves,
yet their gratitude was variable to say the best. Bethamin, as dark as
Tuon but
tall and nicely rounded, and yellow-haired Seta had been suldam before
they
were forced into helping rescue the three Aes Sedai. The five of them
shared
this wagon, the Aes Sedai to keep an eye on the former suldam, the
former
suldam to keep an eye on the Aes Sedai. None realized their task, but
mutual
distrust made them carry it out assiduously. The one woman he had not
expected
to see was Setalle Anan, who had kept the Wandering Woman in Ebou Dar
before
she decided to make herself part of that rescue for some reason. But
then, Setalle
had a way of pushing herself in. Of meddling, in fact. She meddled
between him
and Tuon incessantly. What they were doing was completely unexpected,
though.
In
the middle of the wagon, Bethamin and Seta were standing rigid as fence
posts,
jammed shoulder-to-shoulder between the two beds that could not be
raised
against the walls, and Joline was slapping Bethamin's face again and
again,
first with one hand then the other. Silent tears trickled down the tall
woman's
cheeks, and Seta looked afraid that she would be next. Edesina and
Teslyn, arms
folded beneath their breasts, were watching with no expression
whatsoever while
Mistress Anan frowned her disapproval over Teslyn's shoulder. Whether
disapproval of the slapping or of what Bethamin had done to earn it, he
could
not have said and did not care.
Crossing
the floor in one stride, he seized Joline's upraised arm and spun her
around.
"What in the Light are you-?" That was as far as he got before she
used her other hand to catch him a buffet so hard that his ears rang.
"Now.
that killed the goat," he said, and, spots still floating in his
vision,
he dropped down onto the nearest bed and pulled a surprised Joline
across his
lap. His right hand landed on her bottom with a loud smack that pulled
a startled
squawk from her. The medallion went colder still, and Edesina gasped
when
nothing happened, but he tried to keep one eye on the other two sisters
and one
on the open door for Joline's Warders while he held her in place and
whacked as
fast and as hard as he could. With no idea how many shifts or
petticoats she
was wearing under that worn blue wool, he wanted to make sure he left
an
impression. It seemed his hand was beating time for the dice spinning
in his
head. Struggling and kicking, Joline began cursing like a wagon driver
as the
medallion seemed to turn to ice, and then to grow so cold he wondered
if it
would give him frostbite, but he soon added wordless yelps to her
pungent
vocabulary. His arm might not match Petra's,
but he was far from weak. Practice with bow and quarterstaff gave you
strong
arms.
Edesina
and Teslyn seemed as frozen in place as the two wide-eyed former
ml'dam-well,
Bethamin was grinning, yet she appeared as amazed as Seta-but just as
he began
to think Joline's yelps were outnumbering her curses, Mistress Anan
tried to
push past the two Aes Sedai. Astonishingly. Teslyn made a peremptory
gesture
for her to remain where she was! Very few women, or men. argued with an
Aes
Sedai's commands, but Mistress Anan gave the Red sister a frosty look
and
squeezed between the two Aes Sedai muttering something that made both
of them
eye her curiously. She still had to force her way between Bethamin and
Seta,
and he took advantage of that to land a final flurry of hard smacks,
then
rolled the Green sister off his lap. His hand had begun to sting
anyway. Joline
landed with a thump and let out a gasped "Oh!"
Planting
herself in front of him, close enough that she interfered with Joline's
hasty
scramble to her feet. Mistress Anan studied him with her arms folded
beneath
her breasts in a way that increased the generous cleavage displayed by
her
plunging neckline. Despite the dress, she was not Ebou Dari, not with
those
hazel eyes, but she had large golden hoops in her ears, a marriage
knife, the
hilt marked with red and white stones for her sons and daughters,
dangling from
a wide silver collar around her neck, and a curved dagger thrust behind
her
belt. Her dark green skirts were sewn up on the left side to show red
petticoats. With touches of gray in her hair, she was every inch the
stately
Ebou Dari innkeeper, sure of herself and accustomed to giving orders.
He
expected her to upbraid him-she was as good as an Aes Sedai when it
came to
upbraiding!-so he was surprised when she spoke, sounding very
thoughtful.
"Joline
must have tried to stop you. and Teslyn and Edesina as well, but
whatever they
did failed. I think that means you possess a ter'angreal that can
disrupt flows
of the Power. I've heard of such things-Cadsuane Melaidhrin supposedly
had one,
or so rumor said- but I've never seen the like. I would very much like
to. I
won't try to take it away from you, but I would appreciate seeing it."
"How
do you know Cadsuane?" Joline demanded, attempting to brush off the
seat
of her skirt. The first brush of her hand brought a wince, and she gave
over
with a glare for Mat just to show him she still had him in mind. Tears
glistened in her big brown eyes and on her cheeks, but if he had to pay
for
them, it was worth the price.
"She
said something about the test for the shawl," Edesina said.
"She
did say, 'How could you have passed the test for the shawl if you
freeze at
moments like this?' " Teslyn added.
Mistress
Anan's mouth tightened for a moment, but if she was discomposed, she
regained
her poise in a breath. "You may recall that I owned an inn," she said
dryly. "Many people visited The Wandering Woman, and many of them
talked,
perhaps more than they should have."
"No
Aes Sedai would," Joline began, then turned hurriedly. Blaeric and Fen
were starting up the steps. Borderlanders both, they were big men. and
Mat
quickly got to his feet, ready to use his knives if necessary. They
might drub
him, but not without bleeding for it.
Surprisingly,
Joline darted to the door and shut it right in Fen's face, then
fastened the
latch. The Saldaean made no effort to open the door, but Mat had no
doubt the
pair of them would be waiting when he left. When she turned around, her
eyes
were blazing hot, tears and all. and she seemed to have forgotten
Mistress Anan
for the moment. "If you ever even think of…" she began, shaking a
finger at him.
He
stepped forward and stuck a finger of his own to her nose, so fast that
she
jumped back and bumped into the door. From which she rebounded with a
squeak,
spots of red blooming in her cheeks. He cared not a whisker whether
that was
anger or embarrassment. She opened her mouth, but he refused to let her
get a
word in edgewise.
"Except
for me, you'd be wearing a damane collar around your neck, and so would
Edesina
and Teslyn," he said, as much heat in his voice as there was in her
eyes.
"In return, you all try to bully me. You go your own way and endanger
all
of us. You bloody well channeled when you know there are Seanchan right
across
the road! They could have a damane with them, or a dozen, for all you
know." He doubted there was even one, but doubt was not certainty, and
in
any case, he was not about to share his doubts with her, not now.
"Well, I
might have to put up with some of that, though you'd better know I'm
getting close
to my edge, but I won't put up with you hitting me. You do that again,
and I
vow I'll pepper your hide twice as hard and twice as hot. My word on
it!"
"And
I won't try to stop him next time if you do." Mistress Anan said.
"Nor
I." Teslyn added, echoed after a long moment by Edesina.
Joline
looked as though she had been hit between the eyes with a hammer. Very
satisfactory. As long as he could figure out how to avoid having his
bones
broken by Blaeric and Fen.
"Now
would someone like to tell me why you bloody decided to start
channeling like
it was the Last Battle? Do you have to keep holding them like that,
Edesina?" He nodded at Seta and Bethamin. It was only an educated
guess,
but Edesina's eyes widened for a moment as if she thought his
ter'angreal let
him see flows of the Power as well as stop them. In any case, an
instant later
both women were standing normally. Bethamin calmly began drying her
tears with
a white linen handkerchief. Seta sat down on the nearest bed, hugging
herself
and shivering; she looked more shaken than Bethamin.
None
of the Aes Sedai seemed to want to answer, so Mistress Anan did it for
them.
"There was an argument. Joline wanted to go see these Seanchan for
herself, and she wouldn't be argued out of it. Bethamin decided to
discipline
her, just as if she had no clue what would happen." The innkeeper shook
her head in disgust. "She tried to pull Joline across her lap, with
Seta
helping her, and Edesina wrapped them up in flows of air. I'm
assuming,"
she said when the Aes Sedai all looked at her sharply. "I may not be
able
to channel, but I do use my eyes."
"That
doesn't account for what I felt," Mat said. "There was a lot of
channeling going on in here."
Mistress
Anan and the three Aes Sedai studied him speculatively, long stares
that seemed
to probe for the medallion. They were not going to forget about his
ter'angreal. that was for sure.
Joline
took up the story. "Bethamin channeled. I've never before seen the
weave
she used, but for a few moments, until she lost the Source, she had
sparks
dancing all over the three of us. I think she may have used as much of
the
Power as she could draw."
Sobs
suddenly racked Bethamin. She sagged, halfway to falling to the floor.
"I
didn't mean to," she wept, shoulders shaking, face contorted. "I
thought you were going to kill me. but I didn't mean to. I didn't."
Seta
began rocking back and forth, staring at her friend in horror. Or
perhaps her
former friend. They both knew a'dam could hold them, and maybe any
sul'dam, but
they might well have denied the full import. Any woman who could use an
a'dam
could learn to channel. Likely they had tried as hard as they could to
deny
that hard fact, to forget it. Actually channeling altered everything,
however.
Burn
him, this was all he needed on top of everything else. "What are you
going
to do about it?" Only an Aes Sedai could handle this. "Now she's
started, she can't just stop. I know that much."
"Let
her die," Teslyn said harshly. "We can keep her shielded until we can
be rid of her, then she can die."
"We
can't do that," Edesina said, sounding shocked. Though not, apparently,
at
the thought of Bethamin dying. "Once we let her go, she'll be a danger
to
everyone around her."
"I
won't do it again," Bethamin wept, almost pleading. "I won't!"
Pushing
past Mat as if he were a coatrack, Joline confronted Bethamin, staring
up at
the taller woman with her fists on her hips. "You won't stop. You
can't,
once you begin. Oh, you may be able to go months between attempts to
channel,
but you will try again, and again. and every time, your danger will
increase." With a sigh, she lowered her hands. "You are much too old
for the novice book, but there's nothing for it. We will have to teach
you.
Enough to make you safe, at least."
"Teach
her?" Teslyn screeched, planting her fists on her hips. "I do say let
her die! Do you have any idea how these sul'dam did treat me when they
did have
me prisoner?"
"No,
since you've never gone into detail beyond moaning over how horrible it
was." Joline replied dryly, then added in very firm tones. "But I
will not leave any woman to die when I can stop it."
That
did not end things, of course. When a woman wanted to argue, she could
keep it
going if she was by herself, and they all wanted to argue. Edesina
joined in on
joline's side, and so did Mistress Anan, just as if she had as much
right to
speak as the Aes Sedai. Of all things. Bethamin and Seta took Teslyn's
part,
denying any wish to learn to channel, waving their hands and arguing as
loudly
as anyone. Wisely, Mat took the opportunity to slip out of the wagon
and pull
the door shut behind him softly. No need to remind them of him. The Aes
Sedai,
at least, would remember soon enough. At least he could stop worrying
about
where the bloody a'dam were and whether the sul'dam would try using
them again.
That was well and truly finished, now.
He
had been right about Blaeric and Fen. They were waiting at the loot of
the
steps, and stormclouds were not in it for their faces. Without any
doubt, they
knew exactly what had happened to Joline. But not who was to blame, it
turned
out.
"What
went on in there, Cauthon?" Blaeric demanded, his blue eyes sharp
enough
to poke holes. Slightly the taller of the two. he had shaved his
Shienaran
topknot and was not best pleased by the growth of short hair covering
his
scalp.
"Were
you involved?" Fen asked coldly.
"How
could I have been?" Mat replied, trotting down the steps as if he had
not
a care in the world. "She's Aes Sedai, in case you hadn't noticed. If
you
want to know what happened, I suggest you ask her. I'm not woolheaded
enough to
talk about it. I'll tell you that. Only. I wouldn't ask her right now.
They're
all still arguing in there. I took the chance to slip out while my hide
was
still intact."
Not
the best choice of words, perhaps. The two Warders' faces grew darker
still,
impossible as that seemed. But they let him go on his way without
having to
resort to his knives. There was that. Neither seemed very eager to
enter the
wagon, either. Instead, they settled on the wagon's steps to wait, more
fools
they. He doubted Joline would be very forthcoming with them, but she
might well
take out some of her temper on them because they knew. Had he been
them, he
would have found tasks to keep him clear of that wagon for… oh. say, a
month
or two. That might help. Some. Women had long memories for some things.
He was
going to need to watch over his shoulder for Joline himself from now
on. But it
had still been worth it.
With
Seanchan camped across the road and Aes Sedai arguing and women
channeling as
if they had never heard of the Seanchan and the dice spinning in his
head, not
even winning two games of stones from Tuon that night could make him
feel
anything but wary. He went to sleep-on the floor, since it was Domon's
turn to
use the second bed; Egeanin always got the other-with the dice bouncing
off the
insides of his skull, but he was sure that tomorrow had to be better
than
today. Well, he had never claimed to always be right. He just wished he
was not
quite so wrong so often.
CHAPTER EIGHT
Dragons' Eggs
Luca
had the showfolk breaking camp, taking down the big canvas wall and
packing
everything into the wagons, while the sky was still dark the next
morning. It
was the clatter and banging of it. the shouting, that woke Mat, groggy
and
stiff from sleeping on the floor. As much as he could sleep, for the
bloody
dice. Those things gave a man dreams that slaughtered sleep. Luca was
rushing
about in his shirtsleeves with a lantern, giving orders and likely
impeding
matters as much as speeding them, but Petra, wide enough to seem squat
though
he was not all that much shorter than Mat, paused in hitching the
four-horse
team to his and Clarine's wagon to explain. With the waning moon low on
the
horizon and half-hidden by trees, a lantern on the driver's seat gave
all the
light they had, a flickering pool of yellow that was repeated a hundred
times
and more through the camp. Clar-ine was off walking the dogs, since
they would
be spending most of the day inside the wagon.
"Yesterday…" The strongman shook his head and patted the nearest
animal,
patiently waiting for the last straps to be buckled, as if the horse
had showed
signs of nerves. Maybe he felt edgy himself. The night was only cool,
not
really cold, yet he was bundled up in a dark coat and had on a knitted
cap. His
wife worried about him falling sick from drafts or the cold, and took
care that
he would not. "Well, we're strangers everywhere, you see, and a lot of
people think they can take advantage of strangers. But if we let one
man get
away with it, ten more will try, if not a hundred. Sometimes the local
magistrate, or what passes for one, will uphold the law for us, too,
but only
sometimes. Because we're strangers, and tomorrow or the next day. we'll
be
gone, and anyway, everybody knows strangers are usually up to no good.
So we
have to stand up for ourselves, fight for what's ours if need be. Once
you do
that, though, it's time to move along. Same now as when there were only
a few
dozen of us with Luca, counting the horse handlers, though in those
days, we'd
have been gone as soon as those soldiers left. In those days, there
weren't so
many coins to be lost by leaving in a hurry," he said dryly, and shook
his
head, perhaps for Luca's greed or perhaps for how large the show had
grown,
before going on.
"Those
three Seanchan have friends, or at least companions who won't like
their own
being faced down. That Standard bearer did it, but you can be sure
they'll lay it
to us, because they think they can hit at us, and they can't at her.
Maybe
their officers will uphold the law, or their rules or whatever, like
she did,
but we can't be sure of that. What is certain sure, though, is that
those
fellows will cause trouble if we stay another day. No point to staying
when it
means fights with soldiers, and maybe people hurt so they can't
perform, and
sure trouble with the law one way or another." It was the longest
speech
Mat had ever heard from Petra,
and the man cleared his throat as though embarrassed by saying so much.
"Well," he muttered, bending back to the harness, "Luca will
want to be on the road soon. You'll want to be seeing to your own
horses."
Mat
wanted no such thing. The most wonderful thing about having coin was
not what
you could buy, but that you could pay others to do the work. As soon as
he
realized the show was preparing to move, he had rousted the four
Redarms from
the tent they shared with Chel Vanin to hitch the teams for his wagon
and
Tuon's. do as he instructed with the razor and saddle Pips. The stout
horsethief-he had not stolen a horse since Mat had known him, but that
was what
he was- had roused himself long enough to say that he would get up when
the
others returned, then rolled over in his blankets and was snoring again
before
Harnan and the others had their boots half on. Vanin's skills were such
that no
one voiced any complaint beyond the usual grumbling about the hour, and
all but
Harnan would have grumbled if allowed to sleep till noon. When those
skills
were needed, he would repay them tenfold, and they knew it. even
Fergin. The
skinny Redarm was none too bright except when it came to soldiering,
but he was
plenty smart enough there. Well, smart enough.
The
show left Jurador before the sun broke the horizon, a long snake of
wagons
rolling along the wide road through the darkness with Luca's lurid
monstrosity
pulled by six horses at its head. Tuon's wagon came just behind with
Gorderan
driving, almost wide-shouldered enough to seem a strongman himself, and
Tuon
and Selucia, well-cloaked and hooded, squeezed in on either side of
him. The
storage wagons and animal cages and spare horses brought up the tail.
Sentries
at the Seanchan camp watched them depart, silent armored figures in the
night marching
the camp's perimeter. Not that the camp itself was quiet. Shadowy forms
stood
in rigid lines among the tents while loud voices bellowed the rollcall
at a
steady pace and others answered. Mat all but held his breath until
those
regular shouts faded away behind him. Discipline was a wonderful thing.
For
other men, anyway.
He
rode Pips alongside the Aes Sedai wagon, near the middle of the long
line,
flinching a little every time the foxhead went cool against his chest,
which it
began to do before they had gone much more than a mile. It seemed that
Joline
was wasting no time. Fergin, handling the reins, chattered away about
horses
and women with Metwyn. Both were as happy as pigs in clover, but then,
neither
had any idea what was going on inside the wagon. At least the medallion
only
turned cool, and barely that. They were using small amounts of the
Power.
Still, he disliked being so near any channeling at all. In his
experience, Aes
Sedai carried trouble in their belt pouches and seldom were shy about
scattering
it, never mind who might be in the way. No, with the dice bouncing
inside his
head, he could have done without Aes Sedai within ten miles.
He
would have ridden up beside Tuon, for the chance to talk with her, no
matter
that Selucia and Gorderan would hear every word, but you never wanted a
woman
thinking you were too eager. Do that, and she either took advantage or
else
skittered away like a water drop on a hot greased griddle. Tuon found
enough
ways to take advantage already, and he had too little time for very
much in the
way of chasing. Sooner or later she would speak the words that
completed the
marriage ceremony, sure as water was wet, but that only made it more
urgent for
him to find out what she was like, which had hardly been easy so far.
That
little woman made a blacksmith's puzzle seem simple. But how could a
man be
married to a woman if he did not know her? Worse, he had to make her
see him as
something more than Toy. Marriage to a woman with no respect for him
would be
like wearing a shirt of black-wasp nettles day and night. Worse still,
he had
to make her care for him, or he would find himself forced to hide from
his own
wife to keep her from making him da'covale. And to cap it off, he had
to do all
of that in whatever time remained before he had to send her back to
Ebou Dar. A
fine stew, and doubtless a tasty meal for some hero out of legend, a
little
something to occupy his idle time before he rushed off to perform some
great
deed, only Mat bloody Cauthon was no bloody hero. He still had it to
do,
though, and no time or room for missteps.
It
was the earliest start they had made yet, but his hopes that the
Seanchan had
frightened Luca into moving faster were soon dashed. As the sun
climbed, they
passed stone farm buildings clinging to hillsides and occasionally a
tiny tile-
or thatch-roofed village nestled beside the road in a surround of
stone-walled
fields carved out of the forest, where men and women stood gaping as
the show
streamed past and children ran alongside until their parents called
them back,
but in the mid-afternoon, the show reached something larger. Runnien
Crossing,
near a so-called river that could have been waded in fewer than twenty
paces
without going more than waist-deep despite the stone bridge across it,
was never
a patch on Jurador, but it possessed four inns, each three stories of
stone
roofed in green or blue tiles, and near half a mile of hard-packed dirt
between
the village and the river where merchants could park their wagons for
the
night. Farms with their walled fields and orchards and pastures made a
quilt of
the countryside for a good league along the road and maybe more beyond
the
hills to either side of it. They certainly covered the hillsides Mat
could see.
That was enough for Luca.
Ordering
the canvas wall erected in the clearing, near to the river to make
watering the
animals easier, the man strutted into the village wearing coat and
cloak red
enough to make Mat's eyes hurt and so embroidered with golden stars and
comets
that a Tinker would have wept for the shame of donning the garments.
The huge
blue-and-red banner was stretched across the entrance, each wagon in
its place,
the performing platforms unloaded and the wall nearly all up by the
time he
returned escorting three men and three women. The village was not all
that far
from Ebou Dar, yet their clothing might have come from another country
altogether. The men wore short wool coats in bright colors embroidered
with
angular scrollwork along the shoulders and sleeves, and dark, baggy
trousers
stuffed into knee boots. The women, their hair in a sort of coiled bun
atop
their heads, wore dresses nearly as colorful as Luca's garments, their
narrow
skirts resplendent with flowers from hem to hips. They did all carry
long belt
knives, though with straight blades for the most part, and caressed the
hilts
whenever anybody looked at them: that much was the same. Altara was
Altara when
it came to touchiness. These were the village Mayor, the four
innkeepers. and a
lean, leathery, white-haired woman in red: the others addressed her
respectfully as Mother. Since the round-bellied Mayor was as
white-haired as
she, not to mention mostly bald, and none of the innkeepers lacked at
least a
little gray hair. Mat decided she must be the village Wisdom. He smiled
and tipped
his hat to her as she passed, and she gave him a sharp look and sniffed
in near
perfect imitation of Nynaeve. Oh, yes, a Wisdom all right.
Luca
showed them around with wide smiles and expansive gestures, elaborate
bows and
flourishes of his cloak, stopping here and there to make a juggler or a
team of
acrobats perform a little for his guests, but his smile turned to a
sour
grimace once they were safely back on their way and out of sight. "Free
admission for them and their husbands and wives and all the children,"
he
growled to Mat. "and I'm supposed to pack up if a merchant comes down
the
road. They weren't that blunt, but they were clear enough, especially
that
Mother Dar-vale. As if this flyspeck ever attracted enough merchants to
fill
this field. Thieves and scoundrels, Cauthon. Country folk are all
thieves and
scoundrels, and an honest man like me is at their mercy."
Soon
enough he was toting up what he might earn there despite the
complimentary
admissions, but he never did give over complaining entirely, even when
the line
at the entrance stretched nearly as far as it had in Jurador. He just
added
complaining about how much he would have taken in with another three or
four
days at the salt town. It was three or four more days. now. and likely
he would
have lingered until the crowds had dwindled to nothing. Maybe those
three
Sean-chan had been ta'veren work. Not likely, but it was a pleasant way
to
think of it. Now that it was all in the past, it was.
That
was how they progressed. At best a mere two leagues or perhaps three at
an
unhurried pace, and usually Luca would find a small town or a cluster
of
villages that he felt called for a halt. Or better to say that he felt
their
silver calling to him. Even if they passed nothing but flyspecks not
worth the
labor of erecting the wall, they never made as much as four leagues
before Luca
called a halt. He was not about to risk having to camp strung out along
the
road. If there was not to be a show, Luca liked to find a clearing
where the
wagons could be parked without too much crowding, though if driven to
it, he
would dicker with a farmer for the right to stop in an unused pasture.
And
mutter over the expense the whole next day if it cost no more than a
silver
penny. He was tight with his purse strings, Luca was.
Trains
of merchants' wagons passed them in both directions, making good speed
and
managing to raise small clouds of dust from the hard-packed road.
Merchants
wanted to get their goods to market as quickly as possible. Now and
then they
saw a caravan of Tinkers, too, their boxy wagons as bright as anything
in the
show except for Luca's wagon. All of them were headed toward Ebou Dar,
oddly
enough, but then, they moved as slowly as Luca. Not likely any coming
the other
way would overtake the show. Two or three leagues a day, and the dice
rattled
away so that Mat was always wondering what lay beyond the next bend in
the road
or what was catching him up from behind. It was enough to give a man
hives.
The
very first night, outside Runnien Crossing, he approached Aludra. Near
her
bright blue wagon she had set up a small canvas enclosure, eight feet
tall, for
launching her nightflowers, and she straightened with a glare when he
pulled
back a flap and ducked in. A closed lantern sitting on the ground near
the wall
gave enough light for him to see that she was holding a dark ball the
size of a
large melon. Runnien Crossing was only big enough to merit a single
nightflower. She opened her mouth, all set to chivvy him out. Not even
Luca was
allowed in here.
"Lofting
tubes." he said quickly, gesturing to the metal-bound wooden tube, as
tall
as he was and near enough a foot across, sitting upright in front of
her on a
broad wooden base. "That's why you want a bellfounder. To make lofting
tubes from bronze. It's the why I can't puzzle out." It seemed a
ridiculous idea-with a little effort, two men could lift one of her
wooden
lofting tubes into the wagon that carried them and her other supplies;
a bronze
lofting tube would require a derrick-but it was the only thing that had
occurred to him.
With
the lantern behind her, shadows hid her expression, but she was silent
for a
long moment. "Such a clever young man," she said finally. Her beaded
braids clicked softly as she shook her head. Her laugh was low and
throaty.
"Me, I should watch my tongue. I always get into the trouble when I
make
promises to clever young men. Never think I will tell you the secrets
that
would make you blush, though, not now. You are already juggling two
women, it
seems, and me, I will not be juggled."
"Then
I'm right?" He was barely able to keep the incredulity from his voice.
"You
are," she said. And casually tossed the nightflower at him!
He
caught it with a startled oath, and only dared to breathe when he was
sure he had
a good grip. The covering seemed to be stiff leather, with a tiny stub
of fuse
sticking out of one side. He had a little familiarity with smaller
fireworks,
and supposedly those only exploded from fire or if you let air touch
what was
inside-though he had cut one open once without it going off-yet who
could say
what might make a nightflower erupt? The firework he had opened had
been small
enough to hold in one hand. Something the size of this nightflower
would likely
blow him and Aludra to scraps.
Abruptly
he felt foolish. She was not very likely to go throwing the thing if
dropping
it was dangerous. He began tossing the ball from hand to hand. Not to
make up
for gasping and all that. Just for something to do.
"How
will casting lofting tubes from bronze make them a better weapon?" That
was what she wanted, weapons to use against the Sean-chan, to repay
them for
destroying the Guild of Illuminators. "They seem fearsome enough to me
already."
Aludra
snatched the nightflower back muttering about clumsy oafs and turning
the ball
over in her hands to examine the leather surface. Maybe it was not so
safe as
he had assumed. "A proper lofting tube." she said once she was sure
he had not damaged the thing, "it will send this close to three hundred
paces straight up into the sky with the right charge, and a longer
distance
across the ground if the tube is tilted at an angle. But not far enough
for
what I have in mind. A lofting charge big enough to send it further
would burst
the tube. With a bronze tube, I could use a charge that would send
something a
little smaller close to two miles. Making the slow-match slower, to let
it
travel that far, is easy enough. Smaller but heavier, made of iron, and
there
would be nothing for pretty colors, only the bursting charge."
Mat
whistled through his teeth, seeing it in his head, explosions erupting
among
the enemy before they were near enough to see you clearly. A nasty
thing to be
receiving. Now that would be as good as having Aes Sedai on your side,
or some
of those Asha'man. Better. Aes Sedai had to be in danger to use the
Power as a
weapon, and while he had heard rumors about hundreds of Asha'man,
rumors grew
with every telling. Besides, if Asha'man were anything like Aes Sedai,
they
would start deciding where they were needed and then take over the
whole fight.
He began envisioning how to use Aludra's bronze tubes, and right away
he
spotted a glaring problem. All your advantage was gone if the enemy
came from
the wrong direction, or got behind you, and if you needed derricks to
move
these things… "These bronze lofting tubes-'
"Dragons,"
she broke in. "Lofting tubes are for making the night-flowers bloom.
For
delighting the eye. I will call them dragons, and the Seanchan will
howl when
my dragons bite." Her tone was grim as sharp stone.
"These
dragons, then. Whatever you call them, they'll be heavy and hard to
move. Can
you mount them on wheels? Like a wagon or cart? Would they be too heavy
for
horses to pull?"
She
laughed again. "It's good to see you are more than the pretty face."
Climbing a three-step folding ladder that put her waist nearly level
with the
top of the lofting tube, she set the nightflower into the tube with the
fuse
down. It slid in a little way and stopped, a dome above the top of the
tube.
"Hand me that," she told him, gesturing to a pole as long and thick
as a quarterstaff. When he handed it up to her, she held it upright and
used a
leather cap on one end to push the nightflower deeper. That appeared to
take
little effort. "I have already drawn plans for the dragoncarts. Four
horses could draw one easily, along with a second cart to hold the
eggs. Not
nightflowers. Dragons' eggs. You see, I have thought long and hard
about how to
use my dragons, not just how to make them.' Pulling the capped rod from
the
tube, she climbed down and picked up the lantern. "Come. I must make
the
sky bloom a little, then I want my supper and my bed."
Just
outside the canvas enclosure stood a wooden rack filled with more
peculiar
implements, a forked stick, tongs as long as Mat was tall, other things
just as
odd and all made of wood. Setting the lantern on the ground, she placed
the
capped pole in the rack and took a square wooden box from a shelf. "I
suppose now you want to learn how to make the secret powders, yes?
Well. 1 did
promise. I am the Guild, now," she added bitterly, removing the box's
lid.
It was an odd box. a solid piece of wood drilled with holes, each of
which held
a thin stick. She plucked out one and replaced the lid. "I can decide
what
is secret."
"Better
than that, I want you to come with me. I know somebody who'll be happy
to pay
for making as many of your dragons as you want. He can make every
bellfounder
from Andor to Tear stop casting bells and start casting dragons."
Avoiding
Rand's name did not stop the colors
from
whirling inside his head and resolving for an instant into Rand-fully
clothed,
thank the Light-talking with Loial by lamplight in a wood-paneled room.
There
were other people, but the image focused on Rand,
and it vanished too quickly for Mat to make out who they were. He was
pretty
sure that what he saw was what was actually happening right that
moment,
impossible as that seemed. It would be good to see Loial again, but
burn him.
there had to be some way to keep those things out of his head! "And if
he
isn't interested." again the colors came, but he resisted, and they
melted
away. "I can pay to have hundreds cast myself. A lot of them,
anyway."
The
Band was going to end up fighting Seanchan, and most likely Trollocs as
well.
And he would be there when it happened. There was no getting around the
fact.
Try to avoid it how he would, that bloody ta'veren twisting would put
him right
in the bloody middle. So he was ready to pour out gold like water if it
gave
him a way to kill his enemies before they got close enough to poke
holes in his
hide.
Aludra
tilted her head to one side, pursing her rosebud lips. "Who is this man
with such power?"
"It'll
have to be a secret between us. Thorn and Juilin know, and Egeanin and
Domon, and
the Aes Sedai, Teslyn and Joline at least, and Van in and the Redarms,
but
nobody else, and I want to keep it that way." Blood and bloody ashes,
far
too many people knew already. He waited for her curt nod before saying,
"The Dragon Reborn." The colors swirled and despite his fighting them
again became Rand and Loial for a moment. This was not going to be as
easy as
it had seemed.
"You
know the Dragon Reborn." she said doubtfully.
"We
grew up in the same village," he growled, already fighting the colors.
This time, they nearly coalesced before vanishing. "If you don't
believe
me. ask Teslyn and Joline. Ask Thorn. But don't do it around anyone
else. A
secret, remember."
"The
Guild has been my life since I was a girl." She scraped one of the
sticks
quickly down the side of the box, and the thing sputtered into flame!
It
smelled of sulphur. "The dragons, they are my life now. The dragons,
and
revenge on the Seanchan." Bending, she touched the flame to a dark
length
of fuse that ran under the canvas. As soon as the fuse caught, she
shook the
stick until the fire went out, then dropped it. With a crackling hiss
the flame
sped along the fuse. "I think me I believe you." She held out her
free hand. "When you leave, 1 will go with you. And you will help me
make
many dragons."
For
a moment, as he shook her hand, he was sure the dice had stopped, but a
heartbeat later they were rattling again. It must have been
imagination. After
all, this agreement with Aludra might help the Band, and incidentally
Mat
Cauthon. stay alive, yet it could hardly be called fateful. He would
still have
to fight those battles, and however you planned, however well-trained
your men
were, luck played its part, too. bad as well as good, even for him.
These
dragons would not change that. But were the dice bouncing as loudly? He
thought
not, yet how could he be sure? Never before had they slowed without
stopping.
It had to be his imagination.
A
hollow thump came from inside the enclosure, and acrid smoke billowed
over the
canvas wall. Moments later the nightflower bloomed in the darkness
above
Runnien Crossing, a great ball of red and green streaks. It bloomed
again and
again in his dreams that night and for many nights after, but there it
bloomed
among charging horsemen and massed pikes, rending flesh as he had once
seen
stone rent by fireworks. In his dreams, he tried to catch the things
with his
hands, tried to stop them, yet they rained down in unending streams on
a
hundred battlefields. In his dreams, he wept for the death and
destruction. And
somehow it seemed that the rattling of the dice in his head sounded
like
laughter. Not his laughter. The Dark One's laughter.
The
next morning, with the sun just rising toward a cloudless sky, he was
sitting
on the steps of his green wagon, carefully scraping at the bowstave
with a
sharp knife-you had to be careful, almost delicate: a careless slice
could ruin
all your work-when Egeanin and Domon came out. Strangely, they seemed
to have
dressed with special care, in their best, such as it was. He was not
the only
one to have bought cloth in Jurador, but without promises of Mat's gold
to
speed them, the seamstresses were still sewing for Domon and Egeanin.
The
blue-eyed Seanchan woman wore a bright green dress heavily embroidered
with
tiny white and yellow flowers on the high neck and all down the
sleeves. A
flowered scarf held her long black wig in place. Domon, looking
decidedly odd
with a head of very short hair and that Illianer beard that left his
upper lip
bare, had brushed his worn brown coat till it actually had some
semblance of
neatness. They squeezed past Mat and hurried off without a word, and he
thought
no more of it until they returned an hour or so later to announce that
they had
been into the village and gotten Mother Darvale to marry them.
He
could not stop himself from gaping. Egeanin's stern face and sharp eyes
gave
good indications of her character. What could have brought Domon to
marry the
woman? As soon marry a bear. Realizing the Illianer was beginning to
glare at
him, he hastily got to his feet and made a presentable bow over the
bowstave.
"Congratulations, Master Domon. Congratulations. Mistress Domon. The
Light
shine on you both." What else was he to say?
Domon
kept glaring as if he had heard Mat's thoughts, though, and Egeanin
snorted.
"My name is Leilwin Shipless, Cauthon," she drawled. "That's the
name I was given and the name I'll die with. And a good name it is,
since it
helped me reach a decision I should have made weeks ago." Frowning, she
looked sideways at Domon. "You do understand why I could not take your
name, don't you, Bayle?"
"No,
lass," Domon replied gently, resting a thick hand on her shoulder,
"but I will take you with any name you do care to use so long as you be
my
wife. I told you that." She smiled and laid her hand atop his, and he
began smiling, too. Light, but the pair of them were sickening. If
marriage
made a man start smiling like dreamy syrup… Well, not Mat Cauthon. He
might be as good as wed, but Mat Cauthon was never going to start
carrying on like
a loon.
And
that was how he ended up in a green-striped wall-tent, not very large,
that
belonged to a pair of lean Domani brothers who ate fire and swallowed
swords.
Even Thom admitted that Balat and Abar were good, and they were popular
with
the other performers, so finding them places to stay was easy, but that
tent
cost as much as the wagon had! Everybody knew he had gold to fling
about, and
that pair just sighed over giving up their snug home when he tried to
bargain
them down. Well, a new bride and groom needed privacy, and he was more
than
glad to give it to them if it meant he did not have to watch them go
moon-eyed
at each other. Besides, he was tired of taking his turn sleeping on the
floor.
In the tent, at least he had his own cot every night-narrow and hard it
might
be, yet it was softer than floorboards-and with only him, he had more
room than
in the wagon even after the rest of his clothes were moved in and
stowed in a
pair of brass-bound chests. He had a washstand of his very own, a
ladder-back
chair that was not too unsteady, a sturdy stool, and a table big enough
to hold
a plate and cup and a pair of decent brass lamps. The chest of gold he
left in
the green wagon. Only a blind fool would try robbing Domon. Only a
madman would
try robbing Egeanin. Leilwin. if she insisted, though he was still
certain she
would regain her senses eventually. After the first night, spent close
by the
Aes Sedai wagon, with the foxhead cool for half the night, he had the
tent set
up facing Tuon's wagon by dint of making sure that the Redarms started
raising
it before anyone else could claim the space.
"Are
you placing yourself as my guard now?" Tuon said coolly when she saw
the
tent for the first time.
"No,"
he replied. "I'm just hoping for more glimpses of you." That was the
Light's own truth-well, getting away from the Aes Sedai was part of it,
but the
other was true, too-yet the woman waggled her fingers at Selucia, and
the pair
of them launched into gales of giggles before recovering themselves and
reentering
the faded purple wagon with all the dignity of a royal procession.
Women!
He
was not often alone in the tent. He had taken on Lopin as his
bodyservant after
Nalesean's death, and the stout Tairen, with his blocky face and a
beard that
nearly reached his chest, was always popping in to bow his balding head
and ask
what "my Lord" would enjoy for his next meal or inquire whether
"my Lord" had any need of wine or tea or would care for a plate of
candied dried figs he had vaguely acquired somewhere. Lopin was vain
over his
ability to find delicacies where it seemed there could be none. That,
or he was
rifling through the clothes chests to see whether anything needed
repair or
cleaning or ironing. Something always did, in his estimation, though it
all
looked fine to Mat. Nerim. Talmanes' melancholy bodyservant, frequently
accompanied him, largely because the skinny, gray-haired Cairhienin was
bored.
Mat could not understand how anyone could get bored with not having any
work to
do, but Nerim was full of dolorous comments on how poorly Talmanes must
be
faring without him, mournfully sighing about five times a day that
Talmanes
must have given his place to another by now, and he was ready to
wrestle Lopin
if need be for a share of the cleaning and mending. He even wanted his
turn
blacking Mat's boots!
Noal
dropped by to spin his tall tales, and Olver to play stones or Snakes
and
Foxes, when he was not playing with Tuon instead. Thorn came to play
stones,
too, and to share rumors he picked up in the towns and villages,
knuckling his
long white mustache over the choicer bits. Juilin brought his own
reports, but
he always brought Amathera. as well. The former Panarch of Tarabon was
pretty
enough for Mat to understand why the thief-catcher was interested, with
a rosebud
mouth just made for kissing, and she clung to Juilin's arm as if she
might
return some of his feelings, but her big eyes always gazed fearfully
toward
Tuon's wagon, even when they were all inside Mat's tent, and it was
still all
Juilin could do to keep her from dropping to her knees and putting her
face to
the ground whenever she glimpsed Tuon or Selucia. She did the same with
Egeanin. and with Bethamin and Seta, besides. Considering that Amathera
had
been da'covale for just a matter of months, it fair made Mat's skin
crawl. Tuon
could not really mean to make him da'covale when she was going to marry
him.
Could she?
He
soon told them to stop bringing him rumors about Rand.
Fighting the colors in his head was too much effort, and he lost that
fight as often
as he won. Sometimes it was all right, but sometimes he caught glimpses
of Rand and Min, and it seemed those
two were carrying on
something awful. Anyway, the rumors were all the same, really. The
Dragon
Reborn was dead, killed by Aes Sedai, by Asha'man, by the Seanchan, by
a dozen
other assassins. No, he was in hiding, he was massing a secret army, he
was
doing some fool thing or other that varied village by village and
usually inn
by inn. The one thing that was clear was that Rand
was no longer in Cairhien, and nobody had any idea where he was. The
Dragon
Reborn had vanished.
It
was odd how many of these Altaran farmers and villagers and townsfolk
seemed
worried by that, as worried as the merchants passing through and the
men and
women who worked for them. Not one of those people knew any more of the
Dragon
Reborn than the tales they carried, yet his disappearance frightened
them.
Thorn and Juilin were clear on that, until he made them stop. If the
Dragon
Reborn was dead, what was the world to do? That was the question that
people
asked over breakfast in the morning and ale in the evening and likely
on going
to bed. Mat could have told them Rand
was
alive-those bloody visions made him sure of that-but explaining how he
knew was
another matter. Even Thom and Juilin seemed uncertain about the colors.
The
merchants and the others would have thought him a mad man. And if they
believed, that would only scatter rumors about him, not to mention
likely
setting the Seanchan to hunting for him. All he wanted was the bloody
colors
out of his head.
Moving
into the tent made the showfolk eye him very oddly, and small wonder.
First he
had been running off with Egearrin-Leilwin, if she insisted on it-and
Domon
supposedly was her servant, but now she was married to Domon, and Mat
was out
of the wagon entirely. Some of the showfolk seemed to think it no more
than he
deserved for trailing after Tuon. yet a surprising number offered him
sympathy.
Several men commiserated over the fickleness of women-at least they did
when
they there were no women around-and some of the unmarried women,
contortionists
and acrobats and seamstresses, began eyeing him much too warmly. He
might have
enjoyed that if they had not been so willing to give him smoky looks
right in
front of Tuon. The first time that happened, he was so startled that
his eyes
nearly popped. Tuon seemed to find it amusing, of all things! She
seemed to.
But only a fool thought he knew what was in a woman's head just because
she had
a smile on her face.
He
continued to dine with her every midday, if they were halted, and began
arriving for his nightly games of stones early, so she had to feed him
then,
too. Light's truth, if you got a woman to feed you on a regular basis,
she was
halfway won. At least, he dined with her when she would let him into
the wagon.
One night he found the latch down, and no amount of talking would make
her or
Selucia open the door. It seemed a bird had managed to get inside
during the
day, an extremely bad omen apparently, and the pair of them had to
spend the
night in prayer and contemplation to avert some evil or other. They
seemed to
run half their lives according to strange superstitions. Tuon or
Selucia either
one would make odd signs with their hands if they saw a torn spiderweb
with the
spider in it. and Tuon explained to him, just as serious as if she were
making
sense, that the sure result of clearing away a spiderweb before shooing
the
spider out of it was the death of someone close to you within the
month. They
would see a flight of birds circle more than once and predict a storm,
or draw
a finger through a line of marching ants, count how long it took for
the ants
to rejoin their line, and predict how many days of fair weather lay
ahead, and
never mind that it did not work out that way. Oh, there was rain three
days
after the birds-crows, disturbingly enough-but it was nowhere near a
storm,
just a gray, drizzling day.
"Obviously,
Selucia miscounted with the ants," Tuon said, placing a white stone on
the
board with that oddly graceful arching of her fingers. Selucia,
watching over
her shoulder in a white blouse and divided brown skirts, nodded. As
usual, she
wore a head scarf over her short golden hair even indoors, a length of
red-and-gold silk that day. Tuon was all in brocaded blue silk, a coat
of odd
cut that covered her hips and divided skirts so narrow they seemed to
be wide
trousers. She spent considerable time giving the seamstresses detailed
instructions on what she wanted sewn, and little of it was much like
anything
he had ever seen before. It was all in Seanchan styles, he suspected,
though
she had had a few riding dresses sewn that would not draw comment, for
when she
went outside. Rain pattered softly on the roof of the wagon.
"Obviously,
what the birds told us was modified by the ants. It is never simple,
Toy. You
must learn these things. I will not have you ignorant."
Mat
nodded as if that made sense and placed his black stone. And she called
his
uneasiness about crows and ravens superstition! Knowing when to keep
your mouth
shut was a useful skill around women. Around men, too, but more so
around
women. You could be pretty certain what would set a man's eyes on fire.
Talking
with her could be dangerous in other ways, too. "What do you know of
the
Dragon Reborn?" she asked him another evening.
He
choked on a mouthful of wine, and the whirling colors in his brain
dissipated
in a fit of coughing. The wine was near enough vinegar; but even Nerim
had a
hard time finding good wine these days. "Well, he's the Dragon
Reborn," he said when he could speak, wiping wine from his chin with
one
hand. For a moment, he saw Rand
eating at a
large dark table. "What else is there to know?" Selucia refilled his
cup smoothly.
"A
great deal, Toy. For one thing, he must kneel to the Crystal Throne
before
Tarmon Gai'don. The Prophecies are clear on that, but I haven't even
been able
to learn where he is. It becomes still more urgent if he is the one who
sounded
the Horn of Valere, as I suspect."
"The
Horn of Valere?" he said weakly. The Prophecies said what} "It's been
found, then?"
"It
must have been, mustn't it, if it was sounded?" she drawled dryly.
"The reports I've seen from the place where it was blown, a place
called
Falme, are very disturbing. Very disturbing. Securing whoever blew the
Horn,
man or woman, may be as important as securing the Dragon Reborn
himself. Are
you going to play a stone or not, Toy?"
He
played his stone, but he was so shaken that the colors whirled and
faded
without forming any image. In fact, he was barely able to eke out a
draw from
what had seemed a clear winning position.
"You
played very poorly toward the end." Tuon murmured, frowning
thoughtfully
at the board, now divided evenly between the control of black stones
and white.
He could all but see her start trying to work out what they had been
talking
about when his poor play began. Talking with her was like walking a
crumbling
ledge across the face of a cliff. One misstep, and Mat Cauthon would be
as dead
as last year's mutton. Only, he had to walk that ledge. He had no
bloody
choice. Oh, he enjoyed it. In a way. The longer he spent with her, the
more
opportunity to memorize that heart-shaped face, to get it down so he
could see
her just by closing his eyes. But there was always that misstep waiting
ahead.
He could almost see that, too.
For
several days after giving her the little bunch of silk flowers, he
brought her
no presents, and he thought he was beginning to detect hints of
disappointment
when he appeared empty-handed. Then, four days out of Jurador, just as
the sun
was peeking over the horizon into a nearly cloudless sky, he got her
and
Selucia out of the purple wagon. Well, he just wanted Tuon, but Selucia
might
as well have been her shadow when it came to trying to separate them.
He had
commented on that once, making a joke, and both women went on talking
as if he
had not spoken. It was a good thing he knew Tuon could laugh at a joke,
because
sometimes she seemed to have no sense of humor at all. Selucia, wrapped
in a
green wool cloak with the cowl all but hiding her red headscarf, eyed
him
suspiciously, but then, she nearly always did. Tuon never bothered with
a
scarf, yet the shortness of her black hair was not so apparent with the
hood of
her blue cloak up.
"Cover
your eyes, Precious," he said. "I have a surprise for you."
"I
like surprises," she replied, placing her hands over her big eyes. For
an
instant, she smiled in anticipation, but only for an instant. "Some
surprises, Toy." That had the sound of a warning. Selucia stood hard by
her shoulder, and though the bosomy woman appeared completely at her
ease,
something told him she was as tense as a cat ready to leap. He
suspected she
did not like surprises.
"Wait
right there," he said, and ducked around the side of the purple wagon.
When he returned, he was leading Pips and the razor, both saddled and
bridled.
The mare stepped lively, frisking at the prospect of an outing. 'You
can look
now. I thought you might like a ride." They had hours; the show might
as
well have been deserted for all the evidence of life among the wagons.
Only a
handful had smoke rising from their metal chimneys. "She's yours!' he
added, and stiffened as the words nearly froze in his throat.
There
was no doubt this time. He had said the horse was hers, and suddenly
the dice
were not beating so loudly in his head. It was not that they had
slowed: he was
sure of that. There had been more than one set rattling away. One had
stopped
when he made his agreement with Aludra, and another when he told Tuon
the horse
was hers. That was odd in itself-how could giving her a horse be
fateful for
him?- but Light, it had been bad enough when he had to worry about one
set of
dice giving warning at a time. How many sets were still bouncing off
the inside
of his skull? How many more fateful moments were waiting to crash down
on him?
Tuon
went immediately to the razor, all smiles as she examined the animal as
thoroughly as he had himself. She did train horses for fun, after all.
Horses
and damane, the Light help him. Selucia was studying him, he realized,
her face
an expressionless mask. Because of the horse, or because he had gone
stiff as a
post?
"She's
a razor," he said, patting Pips' blunt nose. The gelding had been
getting
plenty of exercise, but the razor's eagerness seemed to have infected
him.
"Domani bloodborn favor razors, and it's not likely you'll ever see
another one outside of Arad Doman. What will you name her?"
"It
is bad luck to name a horse before riding it," Tuon replied, taking the
reins. She was still beaming. Her big eyes shone. "She's a very-fine
animal. Toy. A wonderful gift. Either you have a good eye. or you were
very
lucky."
"I
have a good eye, Precious," he said warily. She seemed more delighted
than
even the razor called for.
"If
you say so. Where is Selucia's mount?"
Oh,
well. It had been worth a try. A smart man hedged his bets, though, so
a sharp
whistle brought Metwyn at a trot leading a saddled dapple. Mat ignored
the wide
grin that split the man's pale face. The Cairhienin Redarm had been
sure he
would not get away with leaving Selucia behind, but there was no need
to smirk
over it. Mat judged the dapple gelding, ten years old, to be gentle
enough for
Seiucia-in his memory, ladies's maids seldom were more than tolerable
riders-but the woman gave the animal a going over as complete as
Tuon's. And
when she was done, she directed a look at Mat that said she would ride
the
horse so as not to make a bother, but she found it decidedly lacking.
Women
could compress a great deal into one look.
Once
clear of the field where the show was camped, Tuon walked the razor
along the
road for a time, then took her to a trot, and then a canter. The
surface was
hard-packed yellow clay here, studded with edges of old paving stones.
No
trouble for a well-shod horse, though, and he had made sure of the
razor's
shoes. Mat kept Pips even with Tuon as much for the pleasure of
watching her
smile as anything else. When Tuon was enjoying herself, che stern judge
was
forgotten and pure delight shone on her face. Not that watching her was
easy,
since Seiucia held the dapple between them. The yellow-haired woman was
a
formidable chaperone, and by the sidelong glances she gave him, her
small
smiles, she very much enjoyed the job of frustrating him.
At
the start they had the road to themselves except for a few farm carts,
but
after a while a Tinker caravan appeared ahead of them, a line of
garishly
painted and lacquered wagons rolling slowly southward down the other
side of
the road with massive dogs trotting alongside. Those dogs were the only
real
protection Tinkers had. The driver of the lead wagon, a thing as red as
Lucas
coats, trimmed in yellow and with violent green-and-yellow wheels to
boot,
half-stood to peer toward Mat. then sat back down and said something to
the
woman beside him, doubtless reassured by the presence of the two women
with
Mat. Tinkers were a cautious lot, of necessity. That whole caravan
would whip
up their horses and flee a single man they thought meant harm.
Mat
nodded to the fellow as the wagons began to pass. The lean, gray-haired
man's
high-collared coat was as green as his wagon's wheels, and his wife's
dress was
striped in shades of blue, most bright enough to suit any of the show's
performers. The gray-haired man raised his hand in a wave…
And
Tuon suddenly turned the razor and galloped into the trees, cloak
streaming out
behind her. In a flash, Seiucia had the dapple darting after her.
Snatching his
hat off so as not to lose it. Mat wheeled Pips and followed. Shouts
rose from
the wagons, but he paid them no mind. His attention was all on Tuon. He
wished
he knew what she was up to. Not escape, he was sure. Likely she was
just trying
to make him tear out his hair. If so, she was in a fair way for
succeeding.
Pips
quickly reeled in the dapple and left a scowling Selucia behind
flailing her
mount with the reins, bur Tuon and the razor kept their lead as the
rolling
land climbed toward hills. Startled flights of birds sprang up from
beneath
both animals' hooves, coveys of gray dove and of brown-speckled quail,
sometimes
ruffed brown grouse. All disaster needed was for the mare to be
frightened by
one of those. The best-trained mount could rear and fall when a bird
burst up
under hoof. Worse, Tuon rode like a madwoman, never slowing, only
swerving from
her line where the underbrush lay dense, leaping trees toppled by old
storms as
if she had a clue what lay on the other side. Well, he had to ride like
a
madman himself to keep up, though he winced every time he set Pips to
jump a
tree trunk. Some were near as thick as he was tall. He dug his
bootheels into
the gelding's flanks, urging more speed though he knew Pips was running
as hard
as he ever had. He had chosen too well in that bloody razor. Up and up
they
raced through the forest.
As
abruptly as she had begun her mad dash, Tuon reined in, well over a
mile from
the road. The trees were old here and widely spaced, black pines forty
paces
tall and wide-spreading oaks with branches that arched down to touch
the ground
before rising again and could have been sliced crosswise into tables to
seat a
dozen in comfort. Thick creepers shrouded half-buried boulders and
stone
outcrops, but aside from that only a few weeds pushed through the
mulch. Oaks
that size killed off any lesser undergrowth beneath them.
"Your
animal is better than he looks," the fool woman said, patting her
mount's
neck, when he reached her. Oh, she was all innocence, just out for a
pleasant
ride. "Maybe you do have a good eye." With the cowl of her cloak
fallen down her back, her cap of short hair was visible, glistening
like black
silk. He suppressed a desire to stroke it.
"Burn
how good my eye is," he growled, clapping his hat on. He knew he should
speak smoothly, but he could not have taken the roughness from his
voice with a
file. "Do you always ride like a moon-blinded idiot? You could have
broken
that mare's neck before she even got a name. Worse, you could have
broken your
own. I promised to get you home safely, and I mean to do just that. If
you're
going to risk killing yourself every time you go riding, then I won't
let you
ride." He wished he had those last words back as soon as they left his
tongue.
A
man might laugh off a threat like that as a joke, maybe, if you were
lucky, but
a woman… Now all he could do was wait for the explosion. He expected
Aludra's nightflowers to pale by comparison.
She
raised the hood of her cloak, settling it just so. She studied him,
tilting her
head first one way then the other. Finally, she nodded to herself. "I
name
her Akein. That means 'swallow.' "
Mat
blinked. That was it? No eruption? "I know. A good name. It suits
her." What was she about now? The woman almost never did or said what
he
expected.
"What
is this place, Toy?" she said, frowning at the trees. "Or should 1
say, what was it? Do you know?"
What
did she mean, what was this place? It was a bloody forest was what it
was. But
suddenly what had seemed a large boulder right in front of him, nearly
obscured
by thick vines, resolved into a huge stone head, slightly tilted to one
side. A
woman's head, he thought; those smooth roundels were probably meant for
jewels
in her hair. The statue it sat on must have been immense. A full span
of the
thing showed, yet only her eyes and the top of her head were out of the
ground.
And that long white stone outcrop with an oak tree's roots growing over
it was
piece of a spiral column. All around them now he could make out bits of
columns
and large worked stones that plainly had been part of some grand
structure and
what had to be a stone sword two spans long, all half buried. Still,
ruins of
cities and monuments could be found in many places, and few even among
Aes
Sedai had any idea what they had been. Opening his mouth to say that he
did not
know, he caught sight through the trees of three tall hills in a row,
perhaps
another mile on. The middle hill had a cleft top, like a wedge cut
cleanly out,
while the hill on the'left had two. And he knew. There could hardly be
three
hills exactly like that anywhere else.
Those
hills had been called The Dancers when this place had been Londaren
Cor, the
capital city of Eharon.
The road behind them had been paved then and ran through the heart of
the city,
which had sprawled for miles. People had said that the artistry in
stone that
the Ogier had practiced in Tar Valon. they had perfected in Londaren
Cor. Of
course, the people of every Ogier-built city had claimed their own
outdid Tar
Valon, confirming Tar Valon as the touchstone. He had a number of
memories of
the city-dancing at a ball in the Palace of the Moon, carousing in
soldiers'
taverns where veiled dancers writhed, watching the Procession of Flutes
during
the Blessing of the Swords-but oddly, he had another memory of those
hills,
from near enough five hundred years after the Trollocs left no stone
standing
in Londaren Cor and Eharon died in blood and fire. Why it had been
necessary
for Nerevan and Esandara to invade Shiota, as the land was then, he did
not
know. Those old memories were fragments however long a time any one
covered,
and full of gaps. He had no idea why those hills had been called The
Dancers,
either, or what the Blessing of the Swords was. But he remembered being
an
Esandaran lord in a battle fought among these ruins, and he remembered
having
those hills in view when he took an arrow through his throat. He must
have
fallen no more than half a mile from the very spot where he sat Pips,
drowning
in his own blood.
Light.
I hate to remember dying, he thought, and the thought turned to a coal
burning
in his brain. A coal that burned hotter and hotter. He remembered those
men's
deaths, not just one but dozens of them. He-remembered-dying.
"Toy,
are you ill?" Tuon brought the mare close and peered up into his face.
Concern filled her big eyes. "You've gone pale as the moon."
"I'm
right as spring water," he muttered. She was close enough for him to
kiss
if he bent his head, but he did not move. He could not. He was thinking
so
furiously he had nothing left for motion. Somehow only the Light knew,
the
Eelfinn had gathered the memories they had planted in his head, but how
could
they harvest memory from a corpse? A corpse in the world of men, at
that. He
was certain they never came to this side of that twisted doorframe
ter'angreal
for longer than minutes at a time. A way occurred to him, one he did
not like,
not a scrap. Maybe they created some sort of link to any human who
visited
them, a link that allowed them to copy all of a man's memories after
that right
up to the moment he died. In some of those memories from other men he
was white-haired,
in some only a few years older than he really was, and everything in
between,
but there were none of childhood or growing up. What were the odds of
that, if
they had just stuffed him with random bits and pieces, likely things
they
considered rubbish or had done with? What did they do with memories,
anyway?
They had to have some reason for gathering them beyond giving them away
again.
No, he was just trying to avoid where this led. Burn him, the bloody
foxes were
inside his head right then! They had to be. It was the only explanation
that
made sense.
"Well,
you look as if you're about to vomit," Tuon said, backing the razor
away
with a grimace. "Who in the show would have herbs? I have some
knowledge
there."
"I'm
all right, I tell you." In truth, he did want to sick up. Having those
foxes in his head was a thousand times worse than the dice however hard
the
dice rattled. Could the Eelfinn see through his eyes? Light, what was
he going
to do? He doubted any Aes Sedai could Heal him of this, not that he
would trust
them to, not when it meant leaving off the foxhead. There was nothing
to be
done. He would just have to live with it. He groaned at the thought.
Cantering
up to them, Selucia gave him and Tuon each a quick look, as if
considering what
they might have been up to in their time alone. But then, she had taken
her
time in catching up. giving them that time. That was hopeful. "Next
time,
you can ride this gentle creature and I will ride your gelding," she
told
Mat. "High Lady, people from those wagons are following us with dogs.
They're afoot, but they will be here soon. The dogs don't bark."
"Trained
guard dogs, then," Tuon said, gathering her reins. "Mounted, we can
avoid them easily enough."
"No
need to try, and no use," Mat told her. He should have expected this.
"Those people are Tinkers, Tuatha'an, and they're no danger to anybody.
They couldn't be violent if their lives depended on it. That's no
exaggeration,
just simple truth. But they saw you two go haring off, trying to get
away from
me as it must have seemed, and me chasing after. Now that those dogs
have a
scent trail, the Tinkers will follow us all the way back to the show if
need be
to make sure you two haven't been kidnapped or harmed. We'll go meet
them to
save the time and trouble." It was not the Tinkers' time he cared
about.
Luca probably would not care one way or the other if a bunch of Tinkers
getting
in the way delayed the show setting out. but Mat certainly would.
Selucia
scowled at him indignantly, and her fingers flew, but Tuon laughed.
"Toy
wishes to be commanding today, Selucia. I will let him command and see
how he
does." Bloody kind of her.
They
trotted back the way they had come-riding around the fallen trees this
time,
though now and then Tuon would gather her reins as if she meant to jump
one,
then give Mat a mischievous grin- and it was not long before the
Tinkers came
into sight running through the trees behind their huge mastiffs like a
flight
of butterflies, fifty or so men and women in bright colors, often in
jarring
combinations. A man might be wearing a red-and-blue striped coat and
baggy
yellow trousers tucked into knee boots, or a violet-colored coat above
red
trousers, or worse. Some women wore dresses striped in as many colors
as there
were colors and even colors Mat had no name for, while others wore
skirts and
blouses as varied in hue and as clashing as the men's coats and
trousers. A
fair number had shawls, as well, to add more colors to the
eye-scrambling
blend. Except for the gray-haired man who had been driving the lead
wagon, they
all appeared to be short of their middle years. He must be the Seeker,
the
leader of the caravan. Mat dismounted, and after a moment, Tuon and
Selucia
did, too.
The
Tinkers stopped at that, calling their clogs to heel. The big animals
slumped
to the ground, tongues lolling out, and the people came on more slowly.
None
carried so much as a stick, and though Mat wore no weapons that showed,
they
eyed him warily. The men clustered in front of him, while the women
gathered around
Tuon and Selucia. There was no threat in it, but as easily as that,
Tuon and
Selucia were separated from him, off where the Tinker women could make
inquiries. Suddenly it occurred to him that Tuon might think it a fine
game to
claim he was trying to bother her. She and Selucia could ride off while
he was
trying to contend with Tinkers crowding around him and Pips so he could
not
climb into the saddle. That was all they would do, but unless he was
willing to
fight his way clear, they might keep him here for hours, maybe, to give
that
pair time to "escape."
The
gray-haired man bowed with his hands pressed to his chest. "Peace be on
you and yours, my Lord. Forgiveness if we intrude, but we feared our
dogs had
frightened the ladies' horses."
Mat
responded with a bow in the same fashion. "Peace be on you always.
Seeker,
and on all the People. The ladies' horses weren't frightened. The
ladies are… impetuous at times." What were the women saying? He tried
to
eavesdrop, but their voices were low murmurs.
"You
know something of the People, my Lord?" The Seeker sounded surprised
and
had a right to. The Tuatha'an kept away from anywhere larger than a
moderate-sized village. They would seldom encounter anyone in a silk
coat.
"Only
a little," Mat replied. A very little. He had memories of meeting
Tinkers,
but he himself had never spoken to one before. What were those bloody
women
saying? "Will you answer me a question? I've seen a number of your
caravans the past few days, more than I'd have expected to, and all
heading
toward Ebou Dar. Is there a reason?"
The
man hesitated, darting a glance toward the women. They were still
murmuring
away, and he had to be wondering why their conversation was lasting so
long.
After all, it only needed a moment to say yes, I need help, or the
opposite.
"It is the people called Seanchan, my Lord," he said finally.
"Word is spreading among the People that there is safety where the
Seanchan rule, and equal justice for all. Elsewhere… You understand, my
Lord?"
Mat
did. Like the showfolk, Tinkers were strangers wherever they went, and
worse,
strangers with an undeserved reputation for thievery-well, they stole
no more
often than anyone else-and a deserved one for trying to entice young
people
into joining them. And on top of it, for Tinkers there was no question
of
fighting back if anybody tried to rob them or chase them away. "Take a
care. Seeker. Their safety comes at a price, and some of their laws are
harsh.
You know what they do with women who can channel?"
"Thank
you for your concern, my Lord," the man said calmly, "but few of our
women ever begin channeling, and if one does, we will do as we always
do and
take her to Tar Valon."
Abruptly,
the women began laughing, great gales and peals. The Seeker relaxed
visibly. If
the women were laughing, Mat was not the kind of man who would strike
them down
or kill them for getting in his way. For Mat's part, he scowled. There
was
nothing in that laughter that he liked.
The
Tinkers made their departure with more apologies from the Seeker for
having
bothered them, but the women kept looking back and laughing behind
cupped
hands. Some of the men leaned close as they walked, plainly asking
questions,
but the women just shook their heads. And looked back again, laughing.
"What
did you tell them?" Mat asked sourly.
"Oh.
that's none of your business, now is it, Toy?" Tuon replied, and
Selucia
laughed. Oh, she bloody cackled, she did. He decided he was better off
not
knowing. Women just purely enjoyed planting needles in a man.
CHAPTER NINE
A Short Path
Tuon
and Selucia were not the only women who caused Mat trouble, of course.
Sometimes it seemed that most of the trouble in his life came from
women, which
he could not understand at all since he always tried to treat them
well. Even
Egeanin gave her share of grief, though it was the smallest share.
"I
was right. You do think you can marry her," she drawled when he asked
her
for help with Tuon. She and Domon were seated on the steps of their
wagon, with
their arms around each other. A trickle of smoke rose from Domon's
pipe. It was
midmorning on a fine day. though gathering clouds threatened rain for
later,
and the performers were putting on their acts for the inhabitants of
four small
villages that, combined, perhaps equaled Runnien Crossing in size. Mat
had no
desire to go watch. Oh, he still enjoyed watching the contortionists.
and
better still the female acrobats and tumblers, but when you saw
jugglers and
fire-eaters and the like every day just about, even Miyora and her
leopards
became, well, less interesting if not exactly ordinary. "Never you mind
what I think. Egeanin. Will you tell me what you know of her? Trying to
find
out from her is like fishing blindfolded and bare-handed in a briar
patch
trying to catch a rabbit."
"My
name is Leilwin. Cauthon. Don't forget it again." she said in tones
suitable for giving orders on a ship's deck. Her eyes tried to drive
the
command home like blue hammers. "Why should I help you? You aim too
high
above yourself, a mole yearning for the sun. You could face execution
for
simply saying you want to marry her. It's disgusting. Besides. I've
left all
that behind me. Or it's left me," she added bitterly. Domon gave her a
one-armed hug.
"If
you've left all that behind you. what do you care how disgusting my
wanting to
marry her is?" There. It was out in the open. Partly, at least.
Domon
removed the pipe from his mouth long enough to blow a smoke-ring aimed
at Mat's
face. "If she does no want to help you. then give over." He gave it
that same ship's deck voice of command.
Egeanin
muttered under her breath. She appeared to be arguing with herself.
Finally,
she shook her head. "No, Bayle. He's right. If I'm cast adrift, then I
have to find a new ship and a new course. I can never return to
Seanchan, so I
might as well cut the cable and be done with it."
What
she knew of Tuon was mainly rumor-it seemed the Imperial family lived
their
lives behind walls even when in plain sight, and only whispers of what
went on
behind those walls escaped-yet those were sufficient to make the hair
on the
back of Mat's neck stand up. His wife-to-be had had a brother and a
sister
assassinated? After they tried to have her killed, true, but still!
What kind
of family went around killing one another? The Seanchan Blood and the
Imperial
family, for starters. Half of her siblings were dead, assassinated,
most of
them, and maybe the others, too. Some of what Egeanin-Leilwin- had to
tell was
generally known among Seanchan, and hardly more comforting. Tuon would
have
been schooled in intrigue from infancy, schooled in weapons and
fighting with
her bare hands, heavily guarded yet expected to be her own last line of
defense. All of those born to the Blood were taught to dissemble, to
disguise
their intentions and ambitions. Power shifted constantly among the
Blood, some
climbing higher, others slipping down, and the dance was only faster
and more
dangerous in the Imperial family. The Empress-she started to add, 'May
she live
forever," and half-choked in swallowing the words, then closed her eyes
tor a long moment before continuing-the Empress had borne many
children, as
every Empress did, so that among those who survived there would be one
fit to
rule after her. It would not do to have someone who was stupid or a
fool ascend
the Crystal Throne. Tuon was accounted very far from either. Light! The
woman
he was to marry was as bad as Warder and Aes Sedai wrapped into one.
And maybe
as dangerous.
He
had several conversations with Egeanin-he was careful to name her
Leilwin to
her face lest she go for him with her dagger, yet he thought of her as
Egeanin-trying to learn more, but her knowledge of the Blood was
largely from
the outside looking in, and her knowledge of the Imperial Court, by her
own
admission, little better than that of a street urchin in Seandar. The
day he
gave Tuon the mare, he had ridden alongside Egeanin's wagon having one
of those
fruitless conversations. He had accompanied Tuon and Selucia for a
time, but
they kept looking at him sideways, then exchanging glances and
giggling. Over
what they had told the Tinker women, without a sliver of doubt. A man
could
only take so much of that sort of thing.
"A
clever gift, that mare," Egeanin said, leaning out from the driver's
seat
to look up the line of wagons. Domon was handling the reins. She took
her turn
sometimes, but handling a team was not among the skills she had learned
on
ships. "How did you know?"
"Know
what?" he asked.
She
straightened and adjusted her wig. He did not know why she continued to
wear the
thing. Her own black hair was short, but no shorter than Selucia's.
"About
courting gifts. Among the Blood, when you are courting someone higher
than you.
a traditional gift is something exotic or rare. Best of all is if you
can
connect the gift somehow to one of the recipient's pleasures, and it's
well
known the High Lady loves horses. It's good you've acknowledged that
you don't
expect to be her equal, too. Not that this is going to work, you
understand. I
don't have a clue why she's still here, now you've stopped guarding
her, but
you can't believe she'll actually say the words. When she marries, it
will be
for the good of the Empire, not because some layabout like you gave her
a horse
or made her smile."
Mat
ground his teeth to keep from shouting a curse. He had acknowledged
what} No
wonder a set of bloody dice had stopped. Tuon would let him forget this
when it
snowed on Sunday. He was certain sure of that.
If
Leilwin bloody Shipless gave him small griefs, the Aes Sedai managed
larger.
Aes Sedai liked nothing better. He was resigned to them traipsing about
every
village and town they stopped at, asking questions and doing the Light
knew
what else. He had no choice but resignation, with no way to stop them.
They
claimed to be taking care-at least, Teslyn and Edesina did: Joline
snapped that
he was a fool for worrying-yet an Aes Sedai taking care was still
clearly a
woman of consequence whether or not anybody recognized what she was.
Lacking
the coin for silks, they had purchased bolts of fine wool in Jurador,
and the
seamstresses worked as hard for Aes Sedai as they did for Mat's gold,
so they
strolled about dressed like wealthy merchants and as sure of themselves
as any
noble ever born. Nobody saw one of them walk five strides without
knowing that
she expected the world to conform itself to her. Three women like that,
with a
traveling show at that, were sure to cause talk. At least Joline left
her Great
Serpent ring in her belt pouch. The other two had lost theirs to the
Seanchan.
If Mat had seen Joline with the thing actually on her finger, he
thought he
would have wept.
He
got no more reports on their activities from the former suldam. Joline
had
Bethamin firmly in hand; the tall dark woman ran when Joline said run
and
jumped when she said toad. Edesina was giving her lessons, too, but
Joline
considered Bethamin a personal project for some reason. She was never
harsh
that Mat saw. not after the face slapping, but you might have thought
she was
getting Bethamin ready to go to the Tower, and Bethamin returned a sort
of
gratitude that made it clear her loyalties had shifted. As for Seta,
the
yellow-haired woman was so frightened of the sisters that she did not
dare
follow them any longer. She actually shivered when he suggested it.
Strange as
it seemed, Seta and Bethamin had been so accustomed to how Seanchan
women who
could channel saw themselves that they had really believed Aes Sedai
could not
be much different. They were dangerous when off the leash, yet
dangerous dogs
could be handled by someone who knew how, and they were experts with
that
particular sort of dangerous dog. Now they knew that Aes Sedai were not
dogs of
any kind. They were wolves. Seta would have found another place to
sleep had
that been possible, and he learned from Mistress Anan that the Seanchan
woman
put her hands over her eyes whenever Joline or Edesina was teaching
Bethamin in
the wagon.
"I'm
certain she can see the weaves." Setalle said. He would have said she
sounded envious except that he doubted she envied anyone. "She's
halfway
to admitting it, or she wouldn't hide her eyes. Soon or late, she'll
come
around and want to learn, too." Maybe she did sound envious at that.
He
could have wished for Seta to come around soon rather than late.
Another
student would have left the Aes Sedai less time to trouble him. If the
show was
halted, he could hardly turn around without seeing Joline or Edesina
peering
around the corner of a tent or wagon at him. Usually, the foxhead
cooled on his
chest. He could not prove they were actually channeling at him, yet he
was
certain of it. He was unsure which of them found the loophole in his
protection
that Ade-leas and Vandene had, that something thrown with the Power
would hit
him, but after that, he could barely leave his tent without getting hit
by a
rock, and later, by other things, burning sparks like a shower from a
forge
fire, stinging sparks that made him leap and his hair try to stand on
end. He
was positive that Joline was behind it. If for no other reason, he
never saw
her without Blaeric or Fen or both nearby for protection. And she
smiled at him
like a cat smiling at a mouse.
He
was planning how to get her alone-it was that or spend his time hiding
from
her-when she and Teslyn got into a shouting match that cleared Edesina
out of
the whitewashed wagon almost as quickly as Bethamin and Seta, and those
two ran
out and stood gaping at the wagon. The Yellow sister calmly went back
to
brushing her long black hair, lifting it up with one hand and sweeping
the
wooden hairbrush down it with the other. Seeing Mat, she smiled at him
without
ceasing the motions of her brush. The medallion went cold, and the
shouting
vanished as though cut off by a knife.
He
never learned what was said behind that Power-woven shield. Teslyn
favored him
somewhat, yet when he asked her. she gave him one of those looks and
silence.
It was Aes Sedai business and none of his. Whatever had gone on in
there,
though, the rocks stopped, and the sparks. He tried thanking Teslyn,
but she
was having none of it.
"When
something be no to be spoken of, it be no to be spoken of," she told
him
firmly. "It would be well for you to learn that lesson if you are to be
around sisters, and I think your life be tied to Aes Sedai. now if it
was no
before." Bloody thing for her to say.
She
never cracked her teeth about his ter'angreal, but the same could not
be said
of Joline and Edesina, even after the argument. They tried to bully him
into
handing it over every single day, Edesina cornering him by herself,
Joline with
her Warders glowering over her shoulders at him. Ter'angreal were
rightfully
the property of the WhiteTower. Ter'angreal
needed
proper study, particularly one with the odd properties this one
possessed.
Ter'angreal were potentially dangerous. too much so to be left in the
hands of
the uninitiated. Neither said especially a man's hands, but Joline came
close.
He began to worry that the Green would have Blaeric and Fen simply take
it from
him. That pair still suspected he had been involved in what had
happened to
her, and the dark looks they gave him said they wanted any excuse to
beat him
like a drum.
"That
would be stealing," Mistress Anan told him in a lecturing tone,
gathering
her cloak around her. The sunlight was beginning to fade, and coolness
already
setting in. They were standing outside Tuon's wagon, and he was hoping
to get
inside in time to be fed. Noal and Olver were already inside. Setalle
was
apparently off to visit the Aes Sedai, something she did frequently.
"Tower law is quite clear on that. There might be considerable…
discussion… over whether it had to be given back to you-1 rather think
it
would not be, in the end-but Joline would face a fairly harsh penance
for theft
all the same."
"Maybe
she'd think it worth a penance." he muttered. His stomach rumbled. The
potted finches and creamed onions that Lopin had presented proudly for
his
midday meal had both turned out to be spoiling, to the Tairen's extreme
mortification, which meant Mat had had a heel of bread since breakfast
and no
more. "You know an awful lot about the WhiteTower."
"What
I know. Lord Mat, is that you've made just about every misstep a man
can make
with Aes Sedai, short of trying to kill one. The reason I came with you
in the
first place instead of going with my husband. half the reason I'm still
here,
is to try to keep you from making too many missteps. Truth to tell. I
don't
know why I should care, but I do, and that's that. If you had let
yourself be
guided by me, you'd not be in trouble with them now. I can't say how
much I can
recover for you, not now, but I am still willing to try."
Mat
shook his head. There were only two ways to deal with Aes Sedai without
getting
burned, let them walk all over you or stay away from them. He would not
do the
first and could not do the second, so he had to find a third way, and
he
doubted it could come from following Setalle's advice. Women's advice
about Aes
Sedai generally was to follow the first path, though they never worded
it that
way. They talked of accommodation, but it was never the Aes Sedai who
was
expected to do any accommodating. "Half the reason? What's the other…
?" He grunted as though he had been punched in the stomach. "Tuon?
You think I can't be trusted with Tuon?"
Mistress
Anan laughed at him. a fine rich laugh. "You are a rogue. my Lord. Now.
some rogues make fine husbands, once they've been tamed a little around
the
edges-my Jasfer was a rogue when I met him-but you still think you can
nibble a
pastry here, nibble a pastry there, then dance off to the next."
"There's
no dancing away from this one." Mat said frowning up at the wagon door.
The dice clicked away in his head. "Not for me." He was not sure he
really wanted to dance away anymore, but want and wish as he might, he
was well
and truly caught.
"Like
that, is it?" she murmured. "Oh. you've chosen a fine one to break
your heart."
"That's
as may be, Mistress Anan, but I have my reasons. I'd better get inside
before
they eat everything." He turned toward the steps at the back of the
wagon,
and she laid a hand on his arm.
"Could
I see it? Just to see?"
There
was no doubt what she meant. He hesitated, then fished in the neck of
his shirt
for the leather cord that held the medallion. He could not have said
why. He
had refused Joline and Edesina even a glimpse. It was a fine piece of
work, a
silver foxhead nearly as big as his palm. Only one eye showed, and
enough
daylight remained to see, if you looked close, that the pupil was half
shaded
to form the ancient symbol of Aes Sedai. Her hand trembled slightly as
she
traced a finger around that eye. She had said she only wanted to see
it. but he
allowed the touching. She breathed out a long sigh.
"You
were Aes Sedai, once,'' he said quietly, and her hand froze.
She
recovered herself so quickly that he might have imagined it. She was
stately
Setalle Anan, the innkeeper from Ebou Dar with the big golden hoops in
her ears
and the marriage knife dangling hilt-down into her round cleavage,
about as far
from an Aes Sedai as could be. "The sisters think I'm lying about never
having been to the Tower. They think I was a servant there as a young
woman and
listened where I shouldn't have."
"They
haven't seen you looking at this." He bounced the foxhead once on his
hand
before tucking it safely back under his shirt. She pretended not to
care, and
he pretended not to know she was pretending.
Her
lips twitched into a brief, rueful smile, as if she knew what he was
thinking.
"The sisters would see it if they could let themselves," she said, as
simply as if she were discussing the chances of rain, "but Aes Sedai
expect that when… certain things… happen, the woman
A
SHORT PATH
will go away decently and die soon after. I went away, but Jasfer
found me half
starved and sick on the streets of Ebou Dar and took me to his mother."
She chuckled, just a woman telling how she met her husband. "He used to
take in stray kittens, too. Now, you know some of my secrets, and I
know some
of yours. Shall we keep them to ourselves?"
"What
secrets of mine do you know?" he demanded, instantly wary. Some of his
secrets were dangerous to have known, and if too many knew of them,
they were
not really secrets anymore.
Mistress
Anan glanced at the wagon, frowning. "That girl is playing a game with
you
as surely as you are playing one with her. Not the same game that you
are.
She's more like a general plotting a battle than a woman being courted.
If she
learns you're moonstruck with her, though, she'll still gain the
advantage. I
am willing to let you have an even chance. Or as near to one as any man
has
with a woman of any brains. Do we have an agreement?"
"We
do," he replied fervently. "That we do." He would not have been
surprised if the dice stopped then, but they went on bouncing.
Had
the sisters' fixation on his medallion been the only problem they gave
him, had
they contented themselves with creating rumors everywhere the show
stopped, he
could have said those days were no more than tolerably bad for
traveling with
Aes Sedai. Unfortunately, by the time the show departed Jurador they
had
learned who Tuon was. Not that she was the Daughter of the Nine Moons,
but that
she was a Seanchan High Lady, someone of rank and influence.
"Do
you take me for a fool?" Luca protested when Mat accused him of telling
them. He squared up beside his wagon, fists on his hips, a tall man
full of
indignation and ready to fight over it by his glare. "That's a secret I
want buried deep until… well… until she says I can use that warrant
of protection. That won't be much use if she revokes it because I told
something she wants hidden." But his voice was a shade too earnest, and
his eyes shifted a hair from meeting Mat's directly. The truth of it
was, Luca
liked to boast nearly as much as he liked gold. He must have thought it
was
safe-safe!-to tell the sisters and only realized the snarl he had
created after
the words were out of his mouth.
A
snarl it was, as tangled as a pit full of snakes. The High Lady Tuon,
readily
at hand, presented an opportunity no Aes Sedai could have resisted.
Teslyn was
every bit as bad as Joline and Edesina. The three of them visited Tuon
in her
wagon daily, and descended on her when she went out for a walk. They
talked of
truces and treaties and negotiations, tried to learn what connection
she had to
the leaders of the invasion, attempted to convince her to help arrange
talks to
end the fighting. They even offered to help her leave the show and
return home!
Unfortunately
for them. Tuon did not see three Aes Sedai. representatives of the WhiteTower,
perhaps the greatest power on earth, not even after the seamstresses
began
delivering their riding dresses and they could change out of the ragbag
leavings Mat had been able to find for them. She saw two escaped damane
and a
mantttidamam. and she had no use for either until they were decently
collared.
Her phrase, that. When they came to her wagon, she latched the door,
and if
they managed to get inside before she could, she left. When they
cornered her.
or tried to, she walked around them the same as walking around a stump.
They
all but talked themselves hoarse. And she refused to listen.
Any
Aes Sedai could teach a stone patience if she had reason, yet they were
unaccustomed to flat being ignored. Mat could see the frustration
growing, the
tight eyes and tighter mouths that took longer and longer to relax, the
hands
gripping skirts in fists to keep them from grabbing Tuon and shaking
her. It
all came to a head sooner than he expected, and not at all in the way
he had
imagined.
The
night after he gave Tuon the mare, he ate his supper with her and
Selucia. And
with Noal and Olver. of course. That pair managed as much time with
Tuon as he
did. Lopin and Nerim, as formal as if they were in a palace instead of
squeezed
for room to move, served a typical early-spring meal, stringy mutton
with peas
that had been dried and turnips that had sat too long in somebody's
cellar. It
was too early yet for anything to be near harvesting. Still. Lopin had
made a
pepper sauce for the mutton, Nerim had found pine nuts for the peas,
there was
plenty to go around, and nothing tasted off, so it was as fine a meal
as could
be managed. Olver left once supper was done, having already had his
games with
Tuon, and Mat changed places with Selucia to play stones. Noal remained
too,
despite any number of telling looks, rambling on about the SevenTowers
in dead Malkier, which apparently had overtopped anything in Cairhien.
and Shol
Arbela. the City of Ten Thousand Bells, in Arafel, and all manner of
Borderland
wonders, strange spires made of crystal harder than steel and a metal
bowl a
hundred paces across set into a hillside and the like. Sometimes he
interjected
comments on Mat's play, that he was exposing himself on the left, that
he was
setting a fine trap on the right, and just when Tuon looked ready to
fall into
it. That sort of thing. Mat kept his mouth shut except for chatting
with Tuon,
though it took gritting his teeth more than once to accomplish. Tuon
found
Noal's natter entertaining.
He
was studying the board, wondering whether he might have a small chance
of
gaining a draw, when Joline led Teslyn and Edesina into the wagon like
haughty
on a pedestal, smooth-faced Aes Sedai to their toenails. Joline was
wearing her
Great Serpent ring. Squeezing by Selucia, giving her very cold looks
when she
was slow to move aside, they arrayed themselves at the foot of the
narrow
table. Noal went very still, eyeing the sisters sideways, one hand
beneath his
coat as if the fool thought his knives would do any good here.
"There
must be an end to this. High Lady," Joline said, very pointedly
ignoring
Mat. She was telling, not pleading, announcing what would be because it
had to
be. "Your people have brought a war to these lands such as we have not
seen since the War of the Hundred Years, perhaps not since the Trolloc
Wars.
Tarmon Gai'don is approaching, and this war must end before it comes
lest it
bring disaster to the whole world. It threatens no less than that. So
there
will be an end to your petulance. You will carry our offer to whoever
commands
among you. There can be peace until you return to your own lands across
the
sea. or you can face the full might of the WhiteTower followed by every throne
from
the Borderlands to the Sea
of Storms. The
Amyrlin
Seat has likely summoned them against you already. I have heard of vast
Borderland armies already in the south, and other armies moving. Better
to end
this without more bloodshed, though. So avert your people's destruction
and
help bring peace."
Mat
could not see Edesina's reaction, but Teslyn simply blinked. For an Aes
Sedai,
that was as good as a gasp. Maybe this was not exactly what she had
expected
Joline to say. For his part, he groaned under his breath. Joline was no
Gray,
as deft as a skilled juggler in negotiations, that was for sure, but
neither
was he. and he still figured she had found a short path to putting
Tuon's back
up.
But
Tuon folded her hands in her lap beneath the table and sat very
straight,
looking right through the Aes Sedai. Her face was as stern as it had
ever been
for him. "Selucia," she said quietly.
Moving
up behind Teslyn, the yellow-haired woman bent long enough to take
something
from beneath the blanket Mat was sitting on. As she straightened,
everything
seem to happen all at once. There was a click, and Teslyn screamed,
clapping
her hands to her throat. The foxhead turned to ice against Mat's chest,
and
Joline's head whipped around with an incredulous stare for the Red.
Edesina
turned and ran for the door, which swung half open, then slammed shut.
Slammed
against Blaeric or Fen, by the sound of men falling down the wagon's
steps.
Edesina jerked to a halt and stood very stiffly, arms at her sides and
divided
skirts pressed against her legs by invisible cords. All that in
moments, and
Selucia had not stayed still. She bent briefly to the bed Noal was
sitting on,
then snapped the silver collar of another adam around Joline's neck.
Mat could
see that was what Teslyn was gripping with both hands. She was not
trying to
take it off, just holding on to it, but her knuckles were white. The
Red's
narrow face was an image of despair, her eyes staring and haunted.
Joline had
regained the utter calm of an Aes Sedai, but she did touch the
segmented collar
encircling her neck.
"If
you think that you can," she began, then cut off abruptly, her mouth
going
tight. An angry light shone in her eyes.
"You
see, the a'dam can be used to punish, though that is seldom done." Tuon
stood, and she had the bracelet of an a'dam on each wrist. the gleaming
leashes
snaking away under the blankets on the beds. How in the Light had she
managed
to get her hands on those?
"No,"
Mat said. "Your promised not to harm my followers. Precious." Maybe
not the wisest thing to use that name now. but it was too late to call
it back.
"You've kept your promises so far. Don't go back on one now."
"I
promised not to cause dissension among your followers. Toy," she said
snippily, "and in any case, it is very clear that these three are not
your
followers." The small sliding door used to talk to whoever was driving
or
pass out food slid open with a loud bang. She glanced over her
shoulder, and it
slid shut with a louder. A man cursed outside and began beating at the
door.
"The
a'dam can also be used to give pleasure, as a great reward," Tuon told
Joline, ignoring the hammering fist behind her.
Joline's
lips parted, and her eyes grew very wide. She swayed, and the
rope-suspended
table swung as she caught herself with both hands to keep from falling.
If she
was impressed, though, she hid it well. She did smooth her dark gray
skirts
once after she was upright again, but that might have meant nothing.
Her face
was all Aes Sedai composure. Edesina. looking over her shoulder,
matched that
calm gaze, although she now wore the third a'dam around her neck-and
come to
it, her face was paler than usual-but Teslyn had begun weeping
silently,
shoulders shaking, tears leaking down her cheeks.
Noal
was tensed, a man ready to do something stupid. Mat kicked him under
the table
and, when the man glared at him. shook his head. Noal's scowl deepened,
but he
took his hand out of his coat and leaned back against the wall. Still
glaring.
Well, let him. Knives were no use here, but maybe words could be. Much
better
if this could be ended with words.
"Listen,"
Mat said to Tuon. "If you think, you'll see a hundred reasons this
won't
work. Light, you can learn to channel yourself. Doesn't knowing that
change
anything? You're not far different from them." He might as well have
turned to smoke and blown away for all the attention she paid.
"Try
to embrace saiclar," she drawled, stern eyes steady on Joline. Her
voice
was quite mild in comparison to her gaze, yet plainly she expected
obedience.
Obedience? She looked a bloody leopard staring at three tethered goats.
And
strangely, more beautiful than ever. A beautiful leopard who might rake
him
with her claws as soon as the goats. Well, he had faced a leopard a few
times
before this, and those were his own memories. There was an odd sort of
exhilaration
that came with confronting a leopard. "Go ahead," she went on.
"You know the shield is gone." Joline gave a small grunt of surprise,
and Tuon nodded. "Good. You've obeyed for the first time. And learned
that
you cannot touch the Power while you wear the adam unless I wish it.
But now, I
wish you to hold the Power, and you do. though you didn't try to
embrace
it." Joline's eyes widened slightly, a small crack in her calm. "And
now," Tuon went on, "I wish you not to be holding the Power, and it is
gone from you. Your first lessons." Joline drew a deep breath. She was
beginning to look… not afraid, but uneasy.
"Blood
and bloody ashes, woman," Mat growled, "do you think you can parade
them around on those leashes without anyone noticing?" A heavy thump
came
from the door. A second produced the sound of cracking wood. Whoever
was
beating at the wooden window was still at it, too. Somehow, that caused
no
sense of urgency. If the Warders got in, what could they do?
"I
will house them in the wagon they are using and exercise them at
night."
she snapped irritably. "I am nothing like these women, Toy. Nothing
like
them. Perhaps I could learn, but I choose not to, just as I choose not
to steal
or commit murder. That makes all the difference."
Recovering
herself with visible effort, she sat down with her hands on the table,
focused
on the Aes Sedai once again. "I've had considerable success with one
woman
like you.'' Edesina gasped, murmured a name too low to be caught.
"Yes." Tuon said. "You must have met my Mylen in the kennels or
at exercise. I will train you all as well as she is. You have been
cursed with
a dark taint, but I will reach you to have pride in the service you
give the
Empire."
"I
didn't bring these three out of Ebou Dar so you could take them back."
Mat
said firmly, sliding himself along the bed. The foxhead grew colder
still, and
Tuon made a startled sound.
"How
did you… do that, Toy? The weave… melted… when it touched
you."
"It's
a gift, Precious."
As
he stood up, Selucia started toward him, crouching, her hands
outstretched in
pleading. Fear painted her face. "You must not." she began.
"No!"
Tuon said sharply.
Selucia
straightened and backed away, though she kept her eyes on him.
Strangely, the
fear vanished from her expression. He shook his head in wonder. He knew
the
bosomy woman obeyed Tuon instantly- she was so'jhiv, after all, as much
owned
as Tuon's horse, and she actually thought that right and good-but how
obedient
did you need to be to lose your fear at an order?
"They
have annoyed me, Toy," Tuon said as he put his hands on Teslyn's
collar.
Still trembling, tears still streaming down her cheeks. the Red looked
as
though she could not believe he would actually remove the thing.
"They
annoy me. too." Placing his fingers just so. he pressed, and the collar
clicked open.
Teslyn
seized his hands and began kissing them. "Thank you," she wept over
and over. "Thank you. Thank you."
Mat
cleared his throat. "You're welcome, but there's' no need for… Would
you stop that? Teslyn?" Reclaiming his hands took some effort.
"I
want them to stop annoying me. Toy," Tuon said as he turned to Joline.
From anyone else, that might have been petulant. The dark little woman
made it
a demand.
"I
think they'll agree to that after this," he said dryly. But Joline was
looking up at him with a stubborn set to her jaw. "You will agree,
won't
you?" The Green said nothing.
"I
do agree," Teslyn said quickly. "We do all agree."
"Yes.
we all agree," Edesina added.
Joline
stared at him silently, stubbornly, and Mat sighed.
"1
could let Precious keep you for a few days, until you change your
mind."
Joline's collar clicked open in his hands. "But I won't."
Still
staring into his eyes, she touched her throat as though to confirm the
collar
was gone. "Would you like to be one of my Warders?" she asked, then
laughed softly. "No need to look like that. Even if I would bond you
against your will, I couldn't so long as you have that ter'angreal. I
agree.
Master Cauthon. It may cost our best chance to stop the Seanchan, but I
will no
longer bother… Precious."
Tuon
hissed like a doused cat, and he sighed again. What you gained on the
swings,
you lost on the roundabouts.
He
spent part of that night doing what he liked least in the world.
Working.
Digging a deep hole to bury the three adam. He did the job himself
because,
surprisingly, Joline wanted them. They were ter'angreal, after all, and
the WhiteTower
needed to study them. That might well have been so, but the Tower would
just
have to find their a'dam elsewhere. He was fairly certain that none of
the
Redarms would have handed them over if he told them to bury the things,
yet he
was taking no chances that they would reappear to cause more trouble.
It
started raining before the hole was knee-deep, a cold driving rain, and
by the
time he was done, he was soaked to the skin and mud to his waist. A
fine end to
a fine night, with the dice bouncing around his skull.
CHAPTER TEN
A Village in Shiota
The
following day brought a respite, or so it seemed. Tuon, in a blue silk
riding
dress and her wide tooled-leather belt, not only rode beside him as the
show
rolled slowly north, she waggled her fingers at Selucia when the woman
tried to
put her dun between them. Selucia had acquired her own mount, somehow,
a
compact gelding that could not match Pips or Akein but still surpassed
the
dapple by a fair margin. The blue-eyed woman, with a green head scarf
beneath
her cowl today, fell in on Tuon's other side, and her face would have
done an
Aes Sedai proud when it came to giving notüing away. Mat could not help
grinning. Let her hide frustration for a change. Lacking horses, the
real Aes
Sedai were confined to their wagon; Metwyn was too far away, on the
driver's seat
of the purple wagon, to overhear what he said to Tuon: only a few thin
clouds
remained in the sky from the night's rain: and all seemed right in the
world.
Even the dice bouncing in his head could steal nothing from that. Well,
there
were bad moments, but only moments.
Early
on, a flight of ravens winged overhead, a dozen or more big black
birds. They
flew swiftly, never deviating from their line, but he eyed them anyway
until
they dwindled to specks and vanished. Nothing to spoil the day there.
Not for
him, at least. Maybe for someone farther north.
"Did
you see some omen in them, Toy?" Tuon asked. She was as graceful in the
saddle as she was in everything else she did. He could not recall
seeing her be
awkward about anything. "Most omens I know concerning ravens
specifically
have to do with them perching on someone's rooftop or cawing at dawn or
dusk."
"They
can be spies for the Dark One," he told her. "Sometimes. Crows, too.
And rats. But they didn't stop to look at us. so we don't need to
worry."
Running
a green-gloved hand across the top of her head, she sighed. "Toy,
Toy," she murmured, resettling the cowl of her cloak. "How many
children's tales do you believe? Do you believe that if you sleep on
Old Hob's
Hill under a full moon, the snakes will give you true answers to three
questions, or that foxes steal people's skins and take the nourishment
from
food so you can starve to death while eating your fill?"
Putting
on a smile took effort. "I don't think I ever heard either one of
those." Making his voice amused required effort, too. What were the
odds
of her mentioning snakes giving true answers, which the Aelfinn did
after a
fashion, in the same breath with foxes stealing skins? He was pretty
sure that
the Eelfinn did. and made leather from it. But it was Old Hob that
nearly made
him flinch. The other was likely just ta'veren twisting at the world.
She
certainly knew nothing about him and the snakes or the foxes. In
Shandalle, the
land where Artur Hawkwing had been born, though, Old Hob. Caisen Hob,
had been
another name for the Dark One. The Aelfinn and the Eelfinn both surely
deserved
to be connected to the Dark One, yet that was hardly anything he wanted
to
think on when he had his own connection to the bloody foxes. And to the
snakes,
too? That possibility was enough to sour his stomach.
Still,
it was a pleasant ride, with the day warming as the sun rose, though it
never
could be called warm. He juggled six colored wooden balls, and Tuon
laughed and
clapped her hands, as well she should. That feat had impressed the
juggler he
bought the balls from, and it was harder while riding. He told several
jokes
that made her laugh, and one that made her roll her eyes and exchange
finger-twitchings with Selucia. Maybe she did not like jokes about
common room
serving maids. It had not been the least off-color. He was no fool. He
did wish
she had laughed, though. She had a marvelous laugh, rich and warm and
free.
They talked of horses and argued over training methods with stubborn
animals.
That pretty head held a few odd notions, such as that you could calm a
fractious horse by biting its ear! That sounded more likely to send it
up like
a haystack fire. And she had never heard of humming under your breath
to soothe
a horse, and would not believe his father had taught him such a skill
shy of
demonstration.
"Well,
I can hardly do that without a horse that needs soothing, can I?" he
said.
She rolled her eyes again. Selucia rolled hers, too.
There
was no heat in the argument, though, no anger, just spirit. Tuon had so
much
spirit it seemed impossible it could fit into such a tiny woman. It was
her
silences that put a small damper on the day, more so than snakes or
foxes. They
were far away, and there was nothing to be done. She was right there
beside
him. and he had a great deal to do concerning her. She never alluded to
what
had happened with the three Aes Sedai. or to the sisters themselves
either. She
never mentioned his ter'angreaL or the fact that whatever she had made
Teslyn
or Joline weave against him had failed. The night before might as well
have
been a dream.
She
was like a general planning a battle, Setalle had said. Trained at
intrigue and
dissembling from infancy, according to Egeanin. And it was all aimed
straight
at him. But to what end? Surely it could not be some Seanchan Blood
form of
courting. Egeanin knew little of that, but surely not. He had known
Tuon a
matter of weeks and kidnapped her, she called him Toy. had tried to buy
him,
and only a vain fool could twist that into a woman falling in love.
Which left
anything from some elaborate scheme for revenge to… to the Light alone
knew
what. She had threatened to make him a cupbearer. That meant
da'co-vale,
according to Egeanin. though she had scoffed at the notion. Cupbearers
were
chosen for their beauty, and in Egeanin's estimation, he fell far
short. Well,
in his own as well, truth to tell, not that he was likely to admit it
to
anybody. Any number of women had admired his face. Nothing said Tuon
could not
complete the marriage ceremony just to make him think himself home free
and
safe, then have him executed. Women were never simple, but Tuon made
the rest
look like children's games.
For
a long while they saw not so much as a farm, but perhaps two hours
after the
sun passed its zenith, they came on a sizable village. The ring of a
blacksmith's hammer on an anvil sounded dimly. The buildings, some of
three
stories, were all heavy timber framing with whitish plaster between and
had
high-peaked roofs of thatch and tall
stone chimneys. Something about them tugged at Mat's memory, but he
could not say what. There was not a farm to be seen anywhere in the
unbroken
forest. But villages were always tied to farms, supporting them and
living off
them. They must all be further in from the road, back in the trees.
Oddly,
the people he could see ignored the approaching train of show wagons. A
fellow
in his shirtsleeves, right beside the road, glanced up from the hatchet
he was
sharpening on a grindstone worked by a footpedal, then bent to his work
again
as though he had seen nothing. A cluster of children came hurtling
around a
corner and darted into another street without more than a glance in the
show's
direction. Very odd. Most village children would stop to stare at a
passing
merchant's train, speculating on the strange places the merchant had
been, and
the show had more wagons than any number of merchants' trains. A
peddler was
coming from the north behind six horses, his wagon's high canvas cover
almost
hidden by clusters of pots and pans and kettles. That should have
caused
interest, too. Even a large village on a well-traveled road depended on
peddlers for most things the people bought. But no one pointed or
shouted that
a peddler had come. They just went on about their business.
Perhaps
three hundred paces short of the village, Luca stood up on his driver's
seat
and looked back over the roof of his wagon. "We'll turn in here," he
bellowed, gesturing toward a large meadow where wild-flowers. cat
daisies and
jumpups and something that might have been loversknots, dotted spring
grasses
already a foot high. Sitting back down, he suited his own words, and
the other
wagons began following, their wheels rutting the rain-sodden ground.
As
Mat turned Pips toward the meadow, he heard the shoes of the peddler's
horses
ringing on paving stones. The sound jerked him upright. That road had
not been
paved since… He pulled the gelding back around. The canvas-topped wagon
was
rolling over level gray paving stones that stretched just the width of
the
village. The peddler himself, a rotund fellow in a wide hat. was
peering at the
pavement and shaking his head, peering at the village and shaking his
head.
Peddlers followed fixed routes. He must have been this way a hundred
times. He
had to know. The peddler halted his team and tied the reins to the
brake
handle.
Mat
cupped both hands around his mouth. "Keep going, man!" he shouted at
the top of his lungs. "As fast as you can! Keep going!"
The
peddler glanced in his direction, then hopped up on his seat quite
spryly for
such a stout man. Gesturing as grandly as Luca, he began to declaim.
Mat could
not make out the words, but he knew what they would be. News of the
world that
he had picked up along the way interspersed with lists of his goods and
claims
for their vast superiority. Nobody in the village stopped to listen or
even
paused.
"Keep
going!" Mat bellowed. "They're dead! Keep going!" Behind him,
somebody gasped, Tuon or Selucia. Maybe both.
Suddenly
the peddler's horses screamed, tossing their heads madly. They screamed
like
animals beyond the ragged edge of terror and kept screaming.
Pips
jerked in fear, and Mat had his hands full; the gelding danced in
circles,
wanting to run, in any direction so long as it was away from here.
Every horse
belonging to the show heard those screams and began whinnying
fearfully. The
lions and bears began roaring, and the leopards joined in. That set
some of the
show's horses to screaming, too, and rearing in their harnesses. The
tumult
built on itself in moments. As Mat swung round, struggling to control
Pips,
every one he could see handling reins was fighting to keep a wild-eyed
team
from racing off or injuring themselves. Tuon's mare was dancing, too,
and Selucia's
dun. He had a moment of fear for Tuon. but she seemed to be handling
Akein as
well as she had in her race into the forest. Even Selucia seemed sure
of her
seat, if not of her mount. He caught glimpses of the peddler, as well,
pulling
off his hat, peering toward the show. At last, Mat got Pips under
control.
Blowing hard, as if he had been run too hard for too long, but no
longer trying
to race away. It was too late. Likely, it had always been too late. Hat
in
hand, the round peddler leaped down to see what was the matter with his
horses.
Landing,
he lurched awkwardly and looked down toward his feet. His hat fell from
his
hand, landing on the hardpacked road. That was when he began screaming.
The
paving stones were gone, and he was ankle-deep in the road, just like
his
shrieking horses. Ankle-deep and sinking into rock-hard clay as if into
a bog,
just like his horses and his wagon. And the village, houses and people
melting
slowly into the ground. The people never stopped what they were doing.
Women walked
along carrying baskets, a line of men carried a large timber on their
shoulders, children darted about, the fellow at the grindstone
continued
sharpening his hatchet, all of them nearly knee-deep in the ground by
this
time.
Tuon
caught Mat's coat from one side, Selucia from the other. That was the
first he
realized he had moved Pips. Toward the peddler. Light!
"What
do you think you can do?" Tuon demanded fiercely.
"Nothing,"
he replied. His bow was done, the horn nocks fitted, the linen
bowstrings braided
and waxed, but he had not fitted one arrowhead to its ash shaft yet,
and with
all the rain they had been having, the glue holding the goose-feather
fletchings was still tacky. That was all he could think of, the mercy
of an
arrow in the peddler's heart before he was pulled under completely.
Would the
man die, or was he being carried to wherever those dead Shiotans were
going?
That was what had caught him about those buildings. That was how
country people
had built in Shiota for near enough three hundred years.
He
could not tear his eyes away. The sinking peddler shrieked loudly
enough to be
heard over the screaming of his team.
"Help
meeee!" he cried, waving his arms. He seemed to be looking straight at
Mat. "Help meeee!" Over and over.
Mat
kept waiting for him to die, hoping for him to die-surely that was
better than
the other-but the man kept on screaming as he sank to his waist, to his
chest.
Desperately, he tipped back his head like a man being pulled under
water,
sucking for one last breath. Then his head vanished, and just his arms
remained, frantically waving until they, too, were gone. Only his hat
lying on
the road said there had ever been a man there.
When
the last of the thatched rooftops and tall chimneys melted away. Mat
let out a
long breath. Where the village had been was another meadow decked out
in cat
daisies and jumpups where red and yellow butterflies fluttered from
blossom to
blossom. So peaceful. He wished he could believe the peddler was dead.
Except
for the few that had followed Luca into the meadow, the show's wagons
stood
strung out along the road, and everybody was down on the ground, women
comforting crying children, men trying to quiet trembling horses,
everyone
talking fearfully, and loudly, to be heard over the bears and the lions
and the
leopards. Well, everyone except the three Aes Sedai. They glided
hurriedly up
the road, Joline heeled by Blaeric and Fen. By their expressions, Aes
Sedai and
Warders alike, you might have thought villages sinking into the ground
were as
common as house cats. Pausing beside the peddler's wide hat, the three
of them
stared down it. Teslyn picked it up and turned over in her hands, then
let it
drop. Moving into the meadow where the village had stood, the sisters
walked
about talking, peering at this and that as if they could learn
something from
wildflowers and grasses. None had taken the time to don a cloak, but
for once
Mat could not find it in him to upbraid them. They might have
channeled, but if
so they did not use enough of the Power to make the foxhead turn
chilly. He
would not have taken them to task if they had. Not today, not after
what he had
just seen.
The
arguing started right away. No one wanted to cross that patch of
hard-packed
clay that seemingly had been paved with stone. They shouted over one
another,
including the horse handlers and the seamstresses, all telling Luca
what had to
be done, and right now. Some wanted to turn back far enough to find a
country
road and use those narrower ways to find their way to Lugard. Others
were for
forgetting Lugard altogether, for striking out for Illian by those
country
roads, or even going all the way back to Ebou Dar and beyond. There was
always
Amadicia, and Tarabon. Ghealdan, too, for that matter. Plenty of towns
and
cities there, and far from this Shadow-cursed spot.
Mat
sat Pips' saddle, idly playing with his reins, and held his peace
through all
the shouting and arm-waving. The gelding gave a shiver now and then,
but he was
no longer attempting to bolt. Thorn came striding through the crowd and
laid a
hand on Pips' neck. Juilin and Amathera were close behind, she clinging
to him
and eyeing the show-folk fearfully, and then Noal and Olver. The boy
looked as
though he would have liked to cling to someone for comfort, to anyone,
but he
was old enough not to want it seen if he did. Noal appeared troubled,
too,
shaking his head and muttering under his breath. He kept peering up the
road
toward the Aes Sedai. Doubtless by that night he would be claiming to
have seen
something very like this before, only on a much grander scale.
"I
think we'll be going on alone from here," Thorn said quietly. Juilin
nodded grimly.
"If
we must," Mat replied. Small parties would stand out for those who were
hunting for Tuon. for the kidnapped heir to the Seanchan Empire, else
he would
have left the show long since. Making their way to safety without the
show to
hide in would be much more dangerous, but it could be done. What he
could not
do was turn these people's minds. One glance into any of those
frightened faces
told him he did not have enough gold for that. There might not have
been enough
gold in the world.
Luca
listened in silence, a bright red cloak wrapped around him, until most
of the
showfolk's energy was spent. When their shouts began to trickle away,
he flung
back the cloak and walked among them. There were no grand gestures,
now. Here
he clapped a man on the shoulder, there peered earnestly into a woman's
eyes.
The country roads? They would be half mud, more streams than roads,
from the
spring rains. It would take twice as long to reach Lugard that way,
three
times, maybe longer. Mat almost choked to hear Luca invoke speed, but
the man
was hardly warming up. He talked of the labor of freeing wagons that
bogged
down, made his listeners all but see themselves straining to help the
teams
pull them through mud nearly hub-deep on the wagon wheels. Not even a
country
road would get that bad, but he made them see it. At least, he made Mat
see it.
Towns of any size would be few and far between along those back roads,
the
villages tiny for the most part. Few places to perform, and food for so
many
hard to come by. He said that while smiling sadly at a little girl of
six or so
who was peering up at him from the shelter of her mother's skirts, and
you just
knew he was envisioning her hungry and crying for food. More than one
woman
pulled her children close around her.
As
for Amadicia and Tarabon, and yes. Ghealdan, they would be fine places
to
perform. Valan Lucas Grand Traveling Show and Magnificent Display of
Marvels
and Wonders would visit those lands and draw immense crowds. One day.
To reach
any of them now. they must first return to Ebou Dar, covering the same
ground
they had crossed these past weeks, passing the same towns, where people
were
unlikely to lay out coin to see again what they had seen so short a
time
before. A long way, with everyone's purses growing lighter and their
bellies
tighter by the day. Or, they could press on to Lugard.
Here
his voice began to take on energy. He gestured, but simply. He still
moved
among them, but stepping more quickly. Lugard was a grand city. Ebou
Dar was a
shadow beside Lugard. Lugard truly was one of the great cities, so
populous
they might perform there all spring and always have new crowds. Mat had
never
been to Lugard. but he had heard it was half a ruin, with a king who
could not
afford to keep the streets clean, yet Luca made it sound akin to
Caemlyn.
Surely some of these people had seen the place, but they listened with
rapt
faces as he described palaces that made the Tarasin Palace in Ebou Dar
seem a
hovel, talked of the silk-clad nobles by the score who would come to
see them
perform or even commission private performances. Surely King Roedran
would want
such. Had any of them ever performed before a king before? They would.
They
would. From Lugard, to Caemlyn, a city that made Lugard look an
imitation of a
city. Caemlyn, one of the largest and wealthiest cities in the world,
where
they might perform the whole summer to never-ending throngs.
"I
should like to see these cities," Tuon said, moving Akein nearer to
Pips.
"Will you show them to me, Toy?" Selucia kept the dun at Tuon's hip.
The woman looked composed enough, but doubtless she was shaken by what
she had
seen.
"Lugard,
maybe. From there 1 can find a way to send you back to Ebou Dar." With
a
well-guarded merchant's train and as many reliable bodyguards as he
could hire.
Tuon might be as capable and dangerous as Egeanin made out, but two
women alone
would be seen as easy prey by too many, and not just brigands. "Maybe
Caemlyn." He might need more time than from here to Lugard, after all.
"We
shall see what we shall see," Tuon replied cryptically, then began
exchanging finger-wriggles with Selucia.
Talking
about me behind my back, only doing it right under my nose. He hated it
when
they did that. "Luca's as good as a gleeman, Thom. but I don't think
he's
going to sway them."
Thom
snorted derisively and knuckled his long white mustaches. "He's not
bad,
I'll grant him that, but he's no gleeman. Still, he's caught them. I'd
say. A
wager on it. my boy? Say one gold crown?"
Mat
surprised himself by laughing. He had been sure he would not be able to
laugh
again until he could rid his head of the image of that peddler sinking
into the
road. And the horses. He could almost hear them screaming still, loudly
enough
that it came near to drowning out the dice. "You want to wager with we?
Very well. Done."
"I
wouldn't play at dice with you," Thom said dryly, "but I know a man
turning a crowd's head with words when I see it. I've done as much
myself."
Finishing
with Caemlyn, Luca gathered himself with a spark of his usual
grandiosity. The
man strutted. "And from there," he announced. "to Tar Valon
itself. I will hire ships to carry us all." Mat did choke at that. Luca
would hire ships} Luca. who was tight enough to render mice for tallow?
"Such crowds will come in Tar Valon that we could spend the rest of our
lives in that vast city's splendor, where Ogier-built shops seem like
palaces
and palaces are beyond description. Rulers seeing Tar Valon for the
first time
weep that their cities are villages and their own palaces no more than
peasant's huts. The WhiteTower itself is in
Tar
Valon, remember, the greatest structure in the world. The Amyrlin Seat
herself
will ask us to perform before her. We have given shelter to three Aes
Sedai in
need. Who can believe they will do other than speak for us with the
Amyrlin
Seat?"
Mat
looked over his shoulder, and found the three sisters no longer
wandering about
the meadow where the village had vanished. Instead, they stood side by
side in
the road watching him. perfect images of Aes Sedai serenity. No, they
were not
watching him. he realized. They were studying Tuon. The three had
agreed not to
bother her anymore, and being Aes Sedai, were bound by that, but how
far did an
Aes Sedai's word ever go? They found ways around the Oath against lying
all the
time. So Tuon would not get to see Caemlyn, and perhaps not Lugard.
Chances
were, there would be Aes Sedai in both cities. What easier for Joline
and the
others than to inform those Aes Sedai that Tuon was a Seanchan High
Lady? In
all likelihood, Tuon would be on her way to Tar Valon before he could
blink. As
a "guest." of course, to help stop the fighting. No doubt many would
say that would be for the good, that he should hand her over himself
and tell
them who she really was, but he had given his word. He began to
calculate how
near to Lugard he dared wait before finding her passage back to Ebou
Dar.
Luca
had had a difficult time making Tar Valon sound greater than Caemlyn
after his
spiel on that city, and if they ever reached Tar Valon, some might
actually be
disappointed comparing his mad descriptions- the WhiteTower
a thousand paces high? Ogier-built palaces the size of small mountains?
he
claimed there was an Ogier stedding actually inside the city!-but
finally he
called for a show of hands in favor of pressing on. Every hand shot up,
even
the children's hands, and they had no vote.
Mat
pulled a purse from his coat pocket and handed over an Ebou Dari crown.
"I
never enjoyed losing more. Thorn." Well, he never enjoyed losing, but
in
this instance it was better than winning.
Thom
accepted with a small bow. "I think I'll keep this as a memento," he
said, rolling the fat gold coin across the back of his fingers. "To
remind
me that even the luckiest man in the world can lose."
For
all of the show of hands, there was a shadow of reluctance to cross
that patch
of road ahead. After Luca got his wagon back onto the road, he sat
staring,
with Latelle clinging to his arm as hard as Am-athera ever clung to
Juilin.
Finally, he muttered something that might have been an oath and whipped
his
team up with the reins. By the time they reached the fatal stretch,
they were at
a gallop, and Luca kept them there until well beyond where the paving
stones
had been. It was the same with every wagon. A pause, waiting until the
wagon
ahead was clear, then a flailing of reins and a hard gallop. Mat
himself drew a
deep breath before heeling Pips forward. At a walk, not a gallop, but
it was
hard not to dig his heels in, especially when passing the peddler's
hat. Tuon's
dark face and Selucia's pale displayed no more emotion than Aes Sedai's
faces
did.
"I
will see Tar Valon one day," Tuon said calmly in the middle of that.
"I shall probably make it my capital. I shall have you show me the
city,
Toy. You have been there?"
Light!
She was a tough little woman. Gorgeous, but definitely tough as nails.
After
slowing from his gallop. Luca set the pace at a fast walk rather than
the
show's usual amble. The sun slid lower, and they passed several
roadside
meadows sufficiently large to hold the show, but Luca pressed on until
their
shadows stretched long ahead of them and the sun was a fat red ball on
the
horizon. Even then he sat holding the reins and peering at a grassy
expanse
beside the road.
"It's
just a field," he said at last, too loudly, and turned his team toward
it.
Mat
accompanied Tuon and Selucia to the purple wagon once the horses had
been
handed over to Metwyn, but there was to be no meal or games of stones
with her
that night.
"This
is a night for prayer," she told him before going in with her maid.
"Do you know nothing, Toy? The dead walking is a sign that Tarmon
Gai'don
is near." He did not take this for one of her superstitions; after all,
he
had thought something very like that himself. He was not much for
praying, yet
he offered a small one then and there. Sometimes there was nothing else
to do.
No
one wanted to sleep, so lamps burned late throughout the camp. No one
wanted to
be alone, either. Mat ate by himself in his tent, with little appetite
and the
dice in his head sounding louder than ever, but Thorn came to play
stones just
as he finished, and Noal soon after. Lopin and Nerim popped in every
few
minutes, bowing and inquiring whether Mat or the others wanted
anything, but
once they fetched wine and cups-Lopin carried the tall pottery jar and
broke
the wax seal; Nerim carried the cups on a wooden tray-Mat told them to
find
Harnan and the other soldiers.
"I
don't doubt they're getting drunk, which seems a good notion to me," he
said. "That's an order. You tell them I said to share."
Lopin
bowed gravely over his round belly. "I have assisted the file leader
now and
again by procuring a few items for him. my Lord. I expect he will be
generous
with the brandy. Come along, Nerim. Lord Mat wants us to get drunk, and
you are
getting drunk with me if I have to sit on you and pour brandy down your
throat." The abstemious Cairhienin's narrow face grew pinched with
disapproval, but he bowed and followed the Tairen out with alacrity.
Mat did
not think Lopin would need to sit on the man, not tonight.
Juilin
came with Amathera and Olver. so games of Snakes and Foxes, played
sprawled on
the ground-cloth, were added to stones played at the small table.
Amathera
proved an adequate player at stones, unsurprising given that she had
been a
ruler once, but her mouth became even more pouty when she and Olver
lost at
Snakes and Foxes, although nobody ever won that game. Then again. Mat
suspected
she had not been a very good ruler. Whoever was not playing sat on the
cot. Mat
watched the games when it was his turn there, as did Juilin if Amathera
was
playing. He seldom took his eyes from her except when it was his turn
at a
game. Noal nattered on with his stories-but then, he spun those tales
even
while playing, and talking seemed to have no effect on his skill at
stones-and
Thorn sat reading the letter Mat had brought him what seemed a very
long time
ago. The page was heavily creased from being carried in Thorn's coat
pocket and
much smudged from being read and re-read. He had said it was from a
dead woman.
It
was a surprise when Domon and Egeanin ducked through the entry flaps.
They had
not precisely been avoiding Mat since he moved out of the green wagon,
but
neither had they gone out of their way to seek him out. Like everyone
else,
they were in bettet clothes than they had worn for disguises in the
beginning.
Egeanin's divided skirts and high-collared coat, both of blue wool and
embroidered in a yellow near to gold on the hem and cuffs, had
something of a
uniform about them, while Domon, in a well-cut brown coat and baggy
trousers
stuffed into turned-down boots just below his knees, looked every inch
the
prosperous, if not exactly wealthy, Illianer merchant.
As
soon as Egeanin entered, Amathera, who was on the ground-cloth with
Olver,
curled herself into a ball on her knees. Juilin sighed and got up from
the
stool across the table from Mat, but Egeanin reached the other woman
first.
"There's
no need for that, with me or anyone else," she drawled, bending to take
Amathera by the shoulders and draw her to her feet. Amathera rose
slowly,
hesitantly, and kept her eyes down until Egeanin put a hand beneath her
chin
and raised her head gently. "You look me in the eyes. You look everyone
in
the eyes." The Taraboner woman touched her tongue to her lips
nervously,
but she did keep looking straight at Egeanin's face when the hand was
removed
from her chin. On the other hand, her eyes were very wide.
"This
is a change," Juilin said suspiciously. And with a touch of anger. He
stood stiff as a statue carved from dark wood. He disliked any
Seanchan, for
what they had done to Amathera. "You've called me a thief for freeing
her." There was more than a touch of anger in that. He hated thieves.
And
smugglers, which Domon was.
"All
things change given time," Domon said jovially, smiling to head off
more
heated words. "Why, you do be looking at an honest man, Master
Thief-catcher. Leilwin did make me promise to give up smuggling before
she
would agree to marry me. Fortune prick me, who did ever hear of a woman
refusing to marry a man unless he did give up a lucrative trade?" He
laughed as though that were the funniest joke in the world.
Egeanin
fisted him in the ribs hard enough to change his laughter to a grunt.
Married
to her, his ribs must be a mass of bruises. "I expect you to keep that
promise, Bayle. I am changing, and so must you." Eyeing Amathera
briefly-perhaps
to make sure she was still obeying; Egeanin was big on others doing as
she told
them-she stuck out a hand toward Juilin. "I am changing. Master Sandar.
Will you?"
Juilin
hesitated, then clasped her hand. "I'll make a try at it." He sounded
doubtful.
"An
honest try is all I ask." Frowning around the tent, she shook her head.
"I've seen orlop decks less crowded than this. We have some decent wine
in
our wagon, Master Sandar. Will you and your lady join us in a cup or
two?"
Again
Juilin hesitated. "He has this game all but won," he said finally.
"No point in playing it out." Clapping his conical red hat on his
head, he adjusted his dark, flaring Tairen coat unnecessarily, and
offered his
arm to Amathera formally. She clasped it tightly, and though her eyes
were
still on Egeanin's face, she trembled visibly. "I expect Olver will
want
to stay here and play his game, but my lady and I will be pleased to
share wine
with you and your husband, Mistress Shipless." There was a hint of
challenge
in his gaze. It was clear that to him, Egeanin had further to go to
prove she
no longer saw Amathera as stolen property.
Egeanin
nodded as if she understood perfectly. "The Light shine on you tonight,
and for as many days and nights as we have remaining," she said by way
of
farewell to those staying. Cheerful of her.
No
sooner had the four departed than thunder boomed overhead. Another loud
peal,
and rain began pattering on the tent roof, quickly growing to a
downpour that
drummed the green-striped canvas. Unless Juilin and the others had run,
they
would do their drinking wet.
Noal
settled on the other side of the red cloth from Olver and took up
Amathera's
part of the game, rolling the dice for the snakes and the foxes. The
black
discs that now represented Olver and him were nearly to the edge of the
web-marked cloth, but it was evident to any eye that they would not
make it. To
any eye but Olver's, at least. He groaned loudly when a pale disc inked
with a
wavy line, a snake, touched his piece, and again when a disc marked
with a
triangle touched Noal's.
Noal
took up the tale he had left off when Egeanin and Domon appeared, as
well, a
story of some supposed voyage on a Sea Folk raker. "Atha'an Miere women
are the most graceful in the world," he said, moving the black discs
back
to the circle in the center of the board. "even more so than Domani,
and
you know that's saying something. And when they're out of sight of
land-"
He cut off abruptly and cleared his throat, eyeing Olver, who was
stacking the
snakes and foxes on the board's corners.
"What
do they do then?" Olver asked.
"Why…" Noal rubbed his nose with a gnarled finger. "Why, they
scramble about the rigging so nimbly you'd think they had hands where
their
feet should be. That's what they do." Olver oohed, and Noal gave a soft
sigh of relief.
Mat
began removing the black and white stones from the board on the table,
placing
them in two carved wooden boxes. The dice in his head bounced and
rattled even
when the thunder was loudest. "Another game. Thom?"
The
white-haired man looked up from his letter. "I think not, Mat. My
mind's
in a maze, tonight."
"If
you don't mind my asking, Thorn, why do you read that letter the way
you do? I
mean, sometimes your face looks like you're trying to puzzle out what
it
means." Olver yelped with glee at a good toss of the dice.
"That's
because I am. In a way. Here." He held out the letter, but Mat shook
his
head.
"It's
no business of mine, Thorn. It's your letter, and I'm no good with
puzzles."
"Oh,
it's your business, too. Moiraine wrote it just before… Well, anyway,
she
wrote it."
Mat
stared at him for a long moment before taking the creased page, and
when his
eyes fell on the smudged ink, he blinked. Small, precise writing
covered the
sheet, but it began. "My dearest Thorn." Who would have thought
Moiraine, of all people, would address old Thorn Merrilin so? "Thorn,
this
is personal. I don't think I should-"
"Read."
Thorn cut in. "You'll see."
Mat
drew a deep breath. A letter from a dead Aes Sedai that was a puzzle
and
concerned him in some way? Suddenly, he wanted nothing less than to
read the
thing. But he began anyway. It was near enough to make his hair stand
on end.
My
dearest Thom, There are many words I would like to write to you, words
from my
heart, but I have put this off because I knew that I must, and now
there is
little time. There are many things I cannot tell you lest I bring
disaster, but
what I can, I will. Heed carefully what I say. In a short while I will
go down
to the docks, and there I will confront Lanfear. How can I know that?
That
secret belongs to others. Suffice it that I know, and let that
foreknowledge
stand as proof for the rest of what I say.
When
you receive this, you will be told that I am dead. All will believe
that. I am
not dead, and it may be that I shall live to my appointed years. It
also may be
that you and Mat Cau-thon and another, a man I do not know, will try to
rescue
me. May, I say because it may be that you will not or cannot, or
because Mat
may refuse. He does not hold me in the affection you seem to. and he
has his
reasons which he no doubt thinks are good. If you try, it must be only
you and
Mat and one other. More will mean death for all. Fewer will mean death
for all.
Even if you come only with Mat and one other, death also may come. I
have seen
you try and die, one or two or all three. I have seen myself die in the
attempt. I have seen all of us live and die as captives. Should you
decide to
make the attempt anyway, young Mat knows the way to find me, yet you
must not
show him this letter until he asks about it. That is of the utmost
importance.
He must know nothing that is in this letter until he asks. Events must
play out
in certain ways, whatever the costs.
If
you see Lan again, tell him that all of this is for the best. His
destiny
follows a different path from mine. I wish him all happiness with
Nynaeve.
A
final point. Remember what you know about the game of Snakes and Foxes.
Remember, and heed.
It
is time, and I must do what must be done.
May
the Light illumine you and give you joy, my dearest Thom. whether or
not we
ever see one another again.
Moiraine
Thunder boomed as he finished. Fitting, that. Shaking his head, he
handed the
letter back. "Thom," he said gently, "Lan's bond to her was broken.
It takes death to do that. He said she was dead."
"And
her letter says everyone would believe that. She knew. Mat. She knew it
all in
advance."
"That's
as may be, but Moiraine and Lanfear went into that doorframe
terangreal, and it
melted. The thing was redstone, or looked to be, stone, Thom, yet it
melted
like wax. I saw it. She went to wherever the Eelfinn are, and even if
she is
alive, there's no way for us to get there anymore."
"The
Tower of Ghenjei," Olver piped up, and
all
three adults turned their heads to stare at him. "Birgitte told me,"
he said defensively. "The Tower
of Ghenjei is the
way to
the lands of the Aelfinn and the Eelfinn." He made the gesture that
began
a game of Snakes and Foxes, a triangle drawn in the air and then a wavy
line
through it. "She knows even more stories than you, Master Charin."
"That
wouldn't be Birgitte Silverbow, would it?" Noal said wryly.
The
boy gave him a level look. "I'm not an infant, Master Charin. But she
is
very good with a bow, so maybe she is. Birgitte born again, I mean."
"I
don't think there's any chance of that," Mat said. "I've talked with
her. too, you know, and the last thing she wants is to be any kind of
hero." He kept his promises, and Birgitte's secrets were safe with him.
"In any case, knowing about this tower doesn't help much unless she
told
you where it is." Olver shook his head sadly, and Mat bent to ruffle
his
hair. "Not your fault, boy. Without you, we wouldn't even know it
exists." That did not seem to help much. Olver stared at the red cloth
game board dejectedly.
"The
Tower of Ghenjei." Noal said, sitting up
cross-legged and tugging his coat straight. "Not many know that tale
anymore. Jain always said he'd go looking for it one day. Somewhere
along the ShadowCoast,
he said."
"That's
still a lot of ground to search." Mat fitted the lid on one of the
boxes.
"It could take years." Years they did not have if Tuon was right, and
he was sure that she was.
Thorn
shook his head. "She says you know, Mat. 'Mat knows the way to find
me.' I
doubt very much she'd have written that on a whim."
"Well,
I can't help what she says, now can I? I never heard of any Tower of Ghenjei
until tonight."
"A
pity," Noal sighed. "I'd like to have seen it, something Jain bloody
Farstrider never did. You might as well give over," he added when Thom
opened his mouth. "He wouldn't forget seeing it, and even if he never
heard the name, he'd have to think of it when he heard of a strange
tower that
lets people into other lands. The thing gleams like burnished steel.
I'm told,
two hundred feet high and forty thick, and there's not an opening to be
found
in it. Who could forget seeing that?"
Mat
went very still. His black scarf felt too tight against his hanging
scar. The
scar itself suddenly felt fresh and hot. It was hard for him to draw
breath.
"If
there's no opening, how do we get in?" Thom wanted to know.
Noal
shrugged, but Olver spoke up once more. "Birgitte says you make the
sign
on the side of it anywhere with a bronze knife." He made the sign that
started
the game. "She says it has to be a bronze knife. Make the sign, and a
door
opens."
"What
else did she tell you about-" Thom began, then cut off with a frown.
"What ails you. Mat? You look about to sick up."
What
ailed him was his memory, and not the other men's memories for once.
Those had
been stuffed into him to fill holes in his own memories, which they did
and
more, or so it seemed. He certainly remembered many more days than he
had
lived. But whole stretches of his own life were lost to him, and others
were
like moth-riddled blankets or shadowy and dim. He had only spotty
memories of
fleeing Shadar Logoth, and very vague recollections of escaping on
Domon's
rivership, but one thing seen on that voyage stood out. A tower shining
like
burnished steel. Sick up? His stomach wanted to empty itself.
"I
think I know where that tower is, Thorn. Rather, Domon knows. But I
can't go
with you. The Eelfinn will know I'm coming, maybe the Aelfinn, too.
Burn me,
they might already know about this letter, because I read it. They
might know
every word we've said. You can't trust them. They'll take advantage if
they
can, and if they know you're coming, they'll be planning to do just
that.
They'll skin you and make harnesses for themselves from your hide.' His
memories
of them were all his own, but they were more than enough to support the
judgment.
They
stared at him as if he were mad, even Olver. There was nothing for it
but to
tell them about his encounters with the Aelfinn and the Eelfinn. As
much as was
needful, at least. Not about his answers from the Eelfinn, certainly,
or his
two gifts from the Aelfinn. But the other men's memories were necessary
to
explain what he had reasoned out about the Eelfinn and Aelfinn having
links to
him, now. And the pale leather harnesses the Eelfinn wore; those seemed
important. And how they had tried to kill him. That was very important.
He had
said he wanted to leave and failed to say alive, so they took him
outside and
hanged him. He even removed the scarf to show his scar for extra
weight, and he
seldom let anybody see that. The three of them listened in silence,
Thom and
Noal intently, Olver's mouth slowly dropping open in wonder. The rain
beating
on the tent roof was the only sound aside from his voice.
"That
all has to stay inside this tent," he finished. "Aes Sedai have
enough reasons already to want to put their hands on me. If they find
out about
those memories, I'll never be free of them." Would he ever be entirely
free of them? He was beginning to think not, yet there was no reason to
give
them fresh reasons to meddle in his life.
"Are
you any relation to Jain?" Noal raised his hands in a placating
gesture.
"Peace, man. I believe you. It's just, that tops anything I ever did.
Anything Jain ever did, too. Would you mind if I made the third? I can
be handy
in tight spots, you know."
"Burn
me, did everything I said pass in one ear and out the other? They'll
know I'm
coming. They may already know everything!''
"And
it doesn't matter," Thom put in, "not to me. I'll go by myself, if
necessary. But if I read this correctly," he began folding the letter
up,
almost tenderly, "the only hope of success is if you are one of the
three." He sat there on the cot, silent now. looking Mat in the eye.
Mat
wanted to look away, and could not. Bloody Aes Sedai! The woman almost
certainly was dead, and yet she still tried coercing him into being a
hero.
Well, heroes got patted on the head and pushed out of the way until the
next
time a hero was needed, if they survived being a hero in the first
place. Very
often heroes did not. He had never really trusted Moiraine, or liked
her
either. Only fools trusted Aes Sedai. But then, if not for her, he
would be
back in the Two Rivers mucking out the barn and tending his da's cows.
Or he
would be dead. And there old Thom sat, saying nothing, just staring at
him.
That was the rub. He liked Thom. Oh, blood and bloody ashes.
"Burn
me for a fool," he muttered. "I'll go."
Thunder
crashed deafeningly right atop a flash of lightning so bright it shone
through
the tent canvas. When the rumbling booms faded, there was dead silence
in his
head. The last set of dice had stopped. He could have wept.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
A Hell in Maderin
Despite
the late hours kept by everyone that night, the show made a very early
start
the next morning. Grainy-eyed and groggy, Mat trudged out of his tent
while the
sky was still dark to find men and women with lanterns trotting to get
ready
when they were not running, and nearly everyone shouting for somebody
or other
to move faster. Many had the unsteady step of people who had not slept.
Everyone seemed to feel that the farther they could get from where that
village
had vanished in front ot their eyes, the better. Luca's great gaudy
wagon took to
the road before the sun had cleared the horizon, and once again he set
a goodly
pace. Two merchants' trains of twenty or so wagons each passed them
heading
south, and a slow caravan of Tinkers, but nothing going the other way.
The
farther, the better.
Mat
rode with Tuon, and Selucia made no attempt to put the dun between
them, yet
there was no conversation however much he tried to start one. Save for
an
occasional unreadable glance when he made a sally or told a joke, Tuon
rode
looking straight ahead, the cowl of her blue cloak hiding her face.
Even
juggling failed to catch her attention. There was something broody
about her
silence, and it worried him. When a woman went silent on you. there
usually was
trouble in the offing. When she brooded, you could forget about
usually. He
doubted it was the village of the dead that had her fretting. She was
too tough
for that. No, there was trouble ahead.
Little
more than an hour after they set out, a farm on rolling ground hove
into sight,
with dozens of black-faced goats cropping grass in a wide pasture and a
large
olive grove. Boys weeding among the rows of dark-leaved olive trees
dropped
their hoes and rushed down to the stone fences to watch the show pass,
shouting
with excitement to know who they were and where they were going and
where
coming from. Men and women came out of the sprawling tile-roofed
farmhouse and
two big thatch-roofed barns, shading their eyes to watch. Mat was
relieved to
see it. The dead paid no mind to the living.
As
the show rolled onward, farms and olive groves grew thicker on the
ground until
they ran side by side, pushing the forest back a mile or more on either
side of
the road, and well short of midmorning they reached a prosperous town
somewhat
larger than Jurador. A merchant's long train of canvas-topped wagons
was
turning in at the main gates, where half a dozen men in polished
conical
helmets and leather coats sewn with steel discs stood guard with
halberds. More
men, cradling crossbows, kept watch atop the two gate towers. But if
the Lord
of Maderin, one Nathin Sarmain Vendare, expected trouble, the guards
were the
only sign of it. Farms and olive groves reached right to the stone
walls of
Maderin, an unsound practice, and right costly should the town ever
need to be
defended. Luca had to bargain with a farmer for the right to set up the
show in
an unused pasture and came back muttering that he had just bought the
scoundrel
a new flock of goats or maybe two. But the canvas wall was soon rising,
with
Luca chivvying everyone for speed. They were to perform today and leave
early
in the morning. Very early. Nobody complained, or much said an unneeded
word.
The farther, the better.
"And
tell no one what you saw," Luca cautioned more than once. "We saw
nothing out of the ordinary. We wouldn't want to frighten the patrons
away." People looked at him as if he were insane. No one wanted to
think
of that melting village or the peddler, much less speak of them.
Mat
was sitting in his tent in his shirtsleeves, waiting for Thorn and
Juilin to return
from their trip into the town to learn whether there was a Seanchan
presence.
He was idly tossing a set of dice on his small table. After an early
run of
mostly high numbers, five single pips stared up at him ten times in a
row; most
men thought the Dark One's eyes an unlucky toss.
Selucia
pulled back the entry flap and strode in. Despite her plain brown
divided
skirts and white blouse, she managed to seem a queen entering a stable.
A
filthy stable, by the expression on her face, though Lopin and Nerim
could have
satisfied his mother when it came to cleaning.
"She
wants you," she drawled peremptorily, touching her flowered scarf to
make
sure her short yellow hair was covered. "Come."
"What's
she want with me, then?" he said, and leaned his elbows on the table.
He
even stretched out his legs and crossed his ankles. Once you let a
woman think
you would jump whenever she called, you never got out from under again.
"She'll
tell you. You are wasting time, Toy. She won't be pleased."
"If
Precious expects me to come running when she crooks a finger, she
better learn
to like being displeased."
Grimacing-if
her mistress tolerated the name, Selucia took it for a personal
affront-she
folded her arms beneath that impressive bosom.
It
was clear as good glass that she intended to wait there until he went
with her,
and he was of a mind to make it a long wait. He tossed the dice. The
Dark One's
Eyes. Expecting him to jump when Tuon said toad. Hah! Another toss,
spinning
across the table, one die nearly going over the edge. The Dark One's
Eyes.
Still, he had nothing else to do at the moment.
Even
so, he took his time donning his coat, a good bronze-colored silk. By
the time
he picked up his hat, he could hear her foot tapping impatiently.
"Well, what
are you waiting for?" he asked. She hissed at him. She held the entry
flap
open, but she purely hissed like a cat.
Setalle
and Tuon were sitting on one of the beds talking when he entered the
purple
wagon, but they cut off the instant he stepped through the door and
gave him
brief but appraising looks. Which told him the subject of their talk
had been
Mat Cauthon. It made his hackles rise. Plainly, whatever Tuon wanted
was
something they thought he would disapprove of. And just as plainly, she
meant to
have it anyway. The table was snug against the ceiling, and Selucia
brushed
past him to take a place behind Tuon as the tiny woman sat down on the
stool,
her face stern and those beautiful big eyes steady. Hang all the
prisoners
immediately.
"I
wish to visit the common room of an inn," she announced. "Or a
tavern. I have never seen the inside of either. You will take me to one
in this
town, Toy."
He
let himself breathe again. "That's easy enough. Just as soon as Thorn
or
Juilin lets me know it's safe."
"It
must be a low place. What is called a hell."
His
mouth fell open. Low? Hells were the lowest of the low. dirty and dimly
lit,
where the ale and wine were cheap and still not worth half what you
paid, the
food was worse, and any woman who sat on your lap was trying to pick
your
pocket or cut your purse or else had two men waiting upstairs to crack
you over
the head as soon as you walked into her room. At any hour of the day or
night
you would find dice rolling in a dozen games, sometimes for surprising
stakes
given the surroundings. Not gold-only a stone fool displayed gold in a
hell-but
silver often crossed the tables. Few of the gamblers would have come by
their
coin by any means even halfway honest, and those few would be as
hard-eyed as
the headcrackers and knife-men who preyed on drunks in the night. Hells
always
had two or three strong-arms with cudgels about to break up fights, and
most
days they worked hard for their pay. They usually stopped the patrons
from
killing one another, but when they failed, the corpse was dragged out
the back
and left in an alley somewhere or on a rubbish heap. And while they
were
dragging, the drinking never slowed, or the gambling either. That was a
hell.
How had she even heard of such places?
"Did
you plant this fool notion in her head?" he demanded of Setalle.
"Why.
what in the Light makes you think that?'' she replied, going all
wide-eyed the
way women did when pretending to be innocent. Or when they wanted you
to think
they were pretending, just to confuse you. He could not see why they
bothered.
Women confused him all the time without trying.
"It's
out of the question. Precious. I walk into a hell with a woman like
you, and
I'll be in six knife fights inside the hour, if I survive that long."
Tuon
gave a pleased smile. Just a flicker, but definitely pleased. "Do you
really think so?"
"I
know so for a fact." Which produced another brief smile of delight.
Delight! The bloody woman wanted to see him in a knife fight!
"Even
so. Toy, you promised."
They
were arguing over whether he had made a promise-well, he was calmly
presenting
the logic that saying something was easy was no promise; Tuon just
stubbornly
insisted he had promised, while Setalle took up her embroidery hoop and
Selucia
watched him with the amused air of
someone watching a man try to defend the indefensible: and he did not
shout, no
matter what Tuon said-when a knock came at the door.
Tuon
paused. "You see, Toy," she said after a moment, "that is how it
is done. You knock and then wait." She made a simple gesture over one
shoulder at her maid.
"You
may enter the presence," Selucia called, drawing herself up regally.
She
probably expected whoever came in to prostrate themselves!
It
was Thom, in a dark blue coat and dark gray cloak that would make him
unremarked in any common room or tavern, neither well-to-do nor poor. A
man who
could afford to pay for his own drink while listening to the gossip, or
buy
another man a cup of wine to pay for hearing his news and the latest
rumors. He
did not prostrate himself. but he did make an elegant bow despite his
bad right
leg. "My Lady," he murmured to Tuon before turning his attention to
Mat. "Harnan said he saw you strolling this way. I trust I'm not
interrupting? I heard… voices."
Mat
scowled. He had not been shouting. "You're not interrupting. What did
you
find out?"
"That
there may be Seanchan in the town from time to time. No soldiers, but
it seems
they're building two farm villages a few miles to the north of the road
and
three more a few miles south. The villagers come to town to buy things
now and
then."
Mat
managed to keep from smiling as he spoke over his shoulder. He even got
a
smattering of regret into his voice. "I'm afraid there's no jaunt into
Maderin for you, Precious. Too dangerous."
Tuon
folded her arms, emphasizing her bosom. There were more curves to her
than he
once had thought. Not like Selucia, certainly, but nice curves.
"Farmers,
Toy," she drawled dismissively. "No farmer has ever seen my face. You
promised me a tavern or a common room, and you won't escape on this
puny
excuse."
"A
common room should present no difficulties," Thom said. "It's a pair
of scissors or a new pot these farmers are after, not drink. They make
their
own ale, it seems, and don't much like the local brew."
"Thank
you, Thorn," Mat said through gritted teeth. 'She wants to see a
hell."
The
white-haired man gave a wheezing cough and knuckled his mustache
vigorously.
"A hell." he muttered.
"A
hell. Do you know a hell in this town where I might take her without
starting a
riot?" He intended the question for sarcasm, but Thorn surprised him by
nodding.
"I
might just know a place at that," the man said slowly. "The White
Ring. I intend to go there anyway, to see what news I can pick up."
Mat
blinked. However unremarked Thom might be elsewhere, he would be looked
at
askance in a hell wearing that coat. More than askance. The usual garb
there
was coarse dirty wool and stained linen. Besides, asking questions in a
hell
was a good way to have a knife planted in your back. But maybe Thom
meant that
this White Ring was not a hell at all. Tuon might not know the
difference if
the place were only a little rougher than the usual. "Should I get
Harnan
and the others?" he asked, testing.
"Oh,
I think you and I should be protection enough for the Lady," Thom said
with what might have been the ghost of a smile, and knots loosened in
Mat's
shoulders.
He
still cautioned the two women-there was no question of Selu-cia staying
behind,
of course; Mistress Anan refused Tuon's invitation to accompany them,
saying
she had already seen as many hells as she had any wish to-about keeping
their
hoods well up. Tuon might believe no farmer had ever seen her face, but
if a cat
could gaze on a king. as the old saying said, then a farmer might have
gazed on
Tuon some time or other, and it would be just their luck to have one or
two of
them turn up in Maderin. Being ta'veren usually seemed to twist the
Pattern for
the worst in his experience.
"Toy,"
Tuon said gently as Selucia settled the blue cloak on her slim
shoulders,
"I have met many farmers while visiting the country. but they very
properly kept their eyes on the ground even if I allowed them to stand.
Believe
me. they never saw my face."
Oh.
He went to fetch his own cloak. White clouds nearly obscured the sun,
still
short of its midday peak, and it was a brisk day for spring. with a
strong
breeze to boot.
People
from the town crowded the main street of the show, men in rough woolens
or
sober coats of finer stuff with just a touch of embroidery on the
cuffs: women,
many wearing lace caps, in somber, collared dresses beneath long white
aprons
or dark, high-necked dresses with embroidery curling across the bosom;
children
darting everywhere, escaping their parents and being chased down, all
of them
oohing and aahing at Miyora's leopards or Latelle's bears, at the
jugglers or
Balat and Abar eating fire, the lean brothers moving in unison. Not
pausing for
so much as a glimpse of the female acrobats, Mat threaded through the
throng
with Tuon on his arm, which he assured by placing her hand on his left
wrist.
She hesitated a moment, then nodded slightly, a queen giving assent to
a
peasant. Thorn had offered his arm to Selucia, but she stayed at her
mistress's
left shoulder. At least she did not try to crowd between.
Luca,
in scarlet coat and cloak, was beneath the big banner at the entrance
watching
coins clink into the glass pitcher, clink again as they were dropped
into the
strongbox. He wore a smile on his face. The line waiting to get in
stretched
near a hundred paces along the canvas wall, and more people were
trickling out
of the town and heading toward che show. "I could take in a fine bit
here
over two or three days," he told Mat. "After all, this place is
solid, and we're far enough from." His smile flickered out like a
snuffed
candle. "You think we're far enough, don't you?"
Mat
sighed. Gold would defeat fear every time in Valan Luca.
He
could not hold his cloak closed with Tuon on his arm, so it flared
behind him
in the stiff breeze, yet that was to the good. The gate guards,
slouching in a
ragged line, eyed them curiously, and one made a sketchy bow. Silk and
lace had
that effect, with country armsmen, at least, and that was what these
men were
no matter how brightly they had burnished their helmets and coin-armor
coats.
Most leaned on their halberds like farmers leaning on shovels. But
Thorn
stopped, and Mat was forced to halt too, a few paces into the town.
After all,
he had no idea where The White Ring lay.
"A
heavy guard, Captain," Thom said, worry touching his voice. "Are
there brigands in the area?"
"No
outlaws around here," a grizzled guard said gruffly. A puckered white
scar
slanting across his square face combined with a squint to give him a
villainous
appearance. He was not one of the leaners, and he held his halberd as
if he
might know how to use it. "The Seanchan cleaned out the few we hadn't
caught.
Move along, now, old fellow. You re blocking the way.'' There was not a
wagon
or cart in sight, and the few people leaving the town afoot had plenty
of room.
The gate arch was wide enough for two wagons abreast, though it might
be a
squeeze.
"The
Seanchan said we didn't set enough guards," a stocky fellow about Mat's
age put in cheerfully, "and Lord Nathin listens close when the Seanchan
talk."
The
grizzled man clouted him with a gauntleted hand on the back of his
helmet hard
enough to stagger him. "You watch your mouth with people from off,
Keilar," the older man growled, "else you'll be back behind a plow
before you can blink. My Lord." he added to Mat. raising his voice,
"you want to call your servant before he gets himself in trouble."
"My
apologies. Captain," Thom said humbly, ducking his white head, the very
image of a chastened serving man. "No offense meant. My apologies."
"He
would have thumped you, too, if I hadn't been here," Mat told him when
he
caught up. Thorn was limping noticeably. He must have been tired for it
to show
that much. "He almost did anyway. And what did you learn that was worth
risking that?"
"I
wouldn't have asked without you, in that coat." Thorn chuckled as they
walked deeper into the town. "The first lesson is what questions to
ask.
The second, and just as important, is when and how to ask. I learned
there
aren't any brigands, which is always good to know. though I've heard of
very
few bands big enough to attack something as large as the show. I
learned Nathin
is under the Seanchan thumb. Either he's obeying a command with those
extra
guards, or he takes their suggestions as commands. And most important,
I
learned that Nathin's armsmen don't resent the Seanchan."
Mat
quirked an eyebrow at him.
"They
didn't spit when they said the name, Mat. They didn't grimace or growl.
They
won't fight the Seanchan, not unless Nathin tells them to, and he
won't."
Thorn exhaled heavily. "It's very strange. I've found the same
everywhere
from Ebou Dar to here. These outlanders come, take charge, impose their
laws,
snatch up women who can channel. and if the nobles resent them, very
few among
the common people seem to. Unless they've had wife or relation
collared,
anyway. Very strange, and it bodes ill for getting them out again. But
then. Altara
is Altara. I'll wager they're finding a colder reception in Amadicia
and
Tarabon." He shook his head. "We had best hope they are, else…" He did
not say what else, but it was easy to imagine.
Mat
glanced at Tuon. How did she feel hearing Thom talk about her people
so? She
said nothing, only walked at his side peering curiously at everything
from the
shelter of her cowl.
Tile-roofed
buildings three and four stories tall, most of brick. lined the wide,
stone-paved
main street of Maderin. shops and inns with signs that swung in the
stiff
breeze crowded in beside stables and rich people's homes with large
lamps above
the arched doorways and humbler structures that housed poorer folk, by
the
laundry hanging from nearly every window. Horse carts and hand-barrows
laden
with bales or crates or barrels slowly made their way through a
moderately
thick throng, men and women with brisk strides, full of that storied
southern
industry, children dashing about in games of catch. Tuon studied it all
with
equal interest. A fellow pushing a wheeled grindstone and crying that
he
sharpened scissors or knives till they could cut wishes caught her
attention as
much as a lean, hard-faced woman in leather trousers with two swords
strapped
to her back. Doubtless a merchant's guard or perhaps a Hunter for the
Horn, but
a rarity either way. A buxom Domani in a clinging red dress that fell
just
short of transparent with a pair of bulky bodyguards in scale-armor
jerkins at
her back got neither more nor less study than a lanky one-eyed fellow
in frayed
wool hawking pins, needles and ribbons from a tray. He had not noticed
this
sort of curiosity from her in Jurador, but she had been intent on
finding silk
in Jurador. Here, she seemed to be trying to memorize all she saw.
Thorn
soon led them off into a maze of twisting streets, most of which
deserved the
name only because they were paved with rough stone blocks the size of a
man's
two fists. Buildings as big as those on the main street, some housing
shops on
the ground floor, loomed over them, almost shutting out the sky. Many
of those
ways were too narrow for horse carts-in some Mat would not have had to
extend
his arms fully to touch the walls on either side-and more than once he
had to press
Tuon against the front of a building to let a heavy-loaded hand-barrow
rumble
past over the uneven paving stones, the barrow-man calling apologies
for the
inconvenience without slowing. Porters trudged through that cramped
warren,
too, men walking bent nearly parallel to the ground, each with a bale
or crate
on his back held level by a padded leather roll strapped to his hips.
Just the
sight of them made Mat's own back ache. They reminded him how much he
hated
work.
He
was on the point of asking Thorn how far they had to go- Maderin was
not that
big a town-when they reached The White Ring, on one of those winding
streets
where his arms could more than compass the width of the pavement, a
brick
building of three floors across from a cutler's shop. The painted sign
hanging
over the inn's red door, a frilly white circle of lace, made the knots
return
to his shoulders. Ring, it might be
called, but that was a woman's garter if ever he had seen one. It might
not be
a hell, but inns with signs like that usually were rowdy enough in
their own
right. He eased the knives up his coatsleeves, and those in his boot
tops, as
well, felt the blades under his coat, shrugged just to get the feel of
the one
hanging behind his neck. Though if it went that far… Tuon nodded
approvingly. The bloody woman was dying to see him get into a knife
fight!
Selucia had the sense to frown.
"Ah,
yes," Thom said. "A wise precaution." And he checked his own
knives, tightening those knots in Mat's shoulders a little more. Thom
carried
almost as many blades as he did, up his sleeves, beneath his coat.
Selucia
writhed her fingers at Tuon, and suddenly they were in a silent
argument,
fingers flashing. Of course, it could not be that- Tuon bloody well
owned
Selucia the same as owning a dog and you did not argue with your
dog-but an
argument it seemed, both women with their jaws set stubbornly. Finally,
Selucia
folded her hands and bowed her head in acquiescence. A reluctant
submission.
"It
will be well." Tuon told her in a jollying tone. "You will see. It
will be well."
Mat
wished he was sure of that. Taking a deep breath, he extended his wrist
for her
hand again and followed Thom.
The
spacious, wood-paneled common room of The White Ring held better than
two dozen
men and women, nearly half obvious out-landers, at square tables
beneath a
thick-beamed ceiling. All neatly dressed in finely woven wool with
little by
way of ornamentation, most were talking quietly over their wine in
pairs,
cloaks draped over their low-backed chairs, though three men and a
woman with
long beaded braids were tossing bright red dice from a winecup at one
table.
Pleasant smells drifted from the kitchen, including meat roasting.
Goat, most
likely. Beside the wide stone fireplace, where a parsimonious fire
burned and a
polished brass barrel-clock sat on the mantel, a saucy-eyed young woman
who
rivaled Selucia-and with her blouse unlaced nearly to her waist to
prove
it-swayed her hips and sang, accompanied by a hammered dulcimer and a
flute, a
song about a woman juggling all of her lovers. She sang in a suitably
bawdy
voice. None of the patrons appeared to be listening.
"As
I walked out one fine spring day, I met young Jac who was pitching hay,
his
hair so fair, and his eyes were. too.
Well.
I gave him a kiss; oh, what could I do?
We
snuggled and we tickled while the sun rose high. and I won't say how
often he
made me sigh."
Lowering
her hood, Tuon stopped just inside the door and frowned around the
room.
"Are you certain this is a hell. Master Merrilin?" she asked. In a
low voice, thank the Light. Some places, a question of that sort could
get you
thrown out and roughly, silk coat or no. In others, the prices just
doubled.
"I
assure you, you won't find a bigger collection of thieves and rascals
anywhere
in Maderin at this hour," Thorn murmured, stroking his mustaches.
"Nowjac
gels an hour when the sky is clear, and Willi gets an hour when my
father's not
near. It's the hayloft with MoriI. for he shows no fear, and
Keilin
comes at midday: he's oh so bold! Lord Brelan gets an evening when the
night is
cold. Master Andril gets a morning, but he's very old. Oh. what, oh.
what is a
poor girl to do? My loves are so many and the hours so few."
Tuon
looked doubtful, but with Selucia at her shoulder, she walked over to
stand in
front of the singer, who faltered a moment at Tuon's intense scrutiny
before
catching the song up again. She sang over the top of Tuon's head,
plainly
attempting to ignore her. It seemed that with every other verse, the
woman in
the song added a new lover to her list. The male musician, playing the
dulcimer, smiled at Selucia and got a frosty stare back. The two women
got
other looks as well, the one so small and with very short black hair,
the other
rivaling the singer and with her head wrapped in a scarf, but no more
than
glances. The patrons were intent on their own business.
"It
isn't a hell." Mat said softly, "but what is it? Why would so many
people be here in the middle of the day?" It was mornings and evenings
when common rooms filled up like this.
"The
locals are selling olive oil, lacquerware or lace," Thom replied just
as
quietly, "and the outlanders are buying. It seems local custom is to
begin
with a few hours of drink and conversation. And if you have no head for
it," he added dryly, "you sober up to find you've made much less of a
bargain than you thought in your wine."
"Light,
Thorn, she'll never believe this place is a hell. I thought you were
taking us
somewhere merchants' guards drink, or apprentices. At least she might
believe
that."
"Trust
me. Mat. I think you'll find she has lived a very sheltered life in
some
ways."
Sheltered?
When her own brothers and sisters tried to kill her? "You wouldn't care
to
wager a crown on it. would you?"
Thorn
chuckled. "Always glad to take your coin."
Tuon
and Selucia came gliding back, faces expressionless. "I expected
rougher
garb on the patrons," Tuon said quietly, "and perhaps a fight or two,
but the song is too salacious for a respectable inn. Though she is much
too
covered to sing it properly, in my opinion. What is that for?" she
added
in tones of suspicion as Mat handed Thorn a coin.
"Oh,"
Thorn said, slipping the crown into his coat pocket. "I thought you
might
be disappointed that only the more successful blackguards were
present-they
aren't always so colorful as the poorer sort-but Mat said you'd never
notice."
She
leveled a look at Mat, who opened his mouth indignantly. And closed it
again.
What was there to say? He was already in the pickling kettle. No need
to stoke
the fire.
As
the innkeeper approached, a round woman with suspiciously black hair
beneath a
white lace cap and stuffed into a gray dress embroidered in red and
green
across her more than ample bosom, Thorn slipped away with a bow and a
murmured.
"By your leave, my Lord, my Lady." Murmured, but loud enough for
Mistress Heilin to hear.
The
innkeeper had a flinty smile, yet she exercised it for a lord and lady,
curtsying so deeply that she grunted straightening back up, and she
seemed only
a little disappointed that Mat wanted wine and perhaps food, not rooms.
Her
best wine. Even so. when he paid, he let her see that he had gold in
his purse
as well as silver. A silk coat was all very well, but gold wearing rags
got
better service than copper wearing silk.
"Ale."
Tuon drawled. "I've never tasted ale. Tell me, good mistress, is it
likely
any of these people will start a fight any time soon?" Mat nearly
swallowed his tongue.
Mistress
Heilin blinked and gave her head a small shake, as if uncertain she
really had
heard what she thought she had. "No need to worry, my Lady," she
said. "It happens time to time, if they get too far in their cups, but
I'll settle them down hard if it does."
"Not
on my account." Tuon told her. "They should have their sport."
The
innkeeper's smile went crooked and barely held, but she managed another
curtsy
then scurried away clutching Mat's coin and calling, "Jera, wine for
the
lord and lady, a pitcher of the Kiranaille. And a mug of ale."
"You
mustn't ask questions like that. Precious," Mat said quietly as he
escorted Tuon and Selucia to an empty table. Selucia refused a chair,
taking
Tuon's cloak and draping it over the chair she held for Tuon, then
standing
behind it. "It isn't polite. Besides, it lowers your eyes." Thank the
Light for those talks with Egeanin, whatever name she wanted to go by.
Seanchan
would do any fool thing or refuse to do what was sensible to avoid
having their
eyes lowered.
Tuon
nodded thoughtfully. "Your customs are often very peculiar, Toy. You
will
have to teach me about them. I have learned some, but I must know the
customs
of the people I will rule in the name of the Empress, may she live
forever."
"I'll
be glad to teach you what I can," Mat said, unpinning his cloak and
letting it fall carelessly over the low back of his chair. "It will be
good for you to know our ways even if you end up ruling a sight less
than you
expect to." He set his hat on the table.
Tuon
and Selucia gasped as one, hands darting for the hat. Tuon's reached it
first,
and she quickly put it on the chair next to her. "That is very bad
luck.
Toy. Never put a hat on a table." She made one of those odd gestures
for
warding off evil, folding under the middle two fingers and extending
the other
two stiffly. Selucia did the same.
"I'll
remember that,' he said dryly. Perhaps too dryly. Tuon gave him a level
look.
Very level.
"I
have decided you will not do for a cupbearer, Toy. Not until you learn
meekness, which I almost despair of teaching you. Perhaps I will make
you a
running groom, instead. You are good with horses. Would you like
trotting at my
stirrup when I ride? The robes are much the same as for a cupbearer,
but I will
have yours decorated with ribbons. Pink ribbons."
He
managed to maintain a smooth face, but he felt his cheeks growing hot.
There
was only one way she could know pink ribbons had any special
significance to
him. Tylin had told her. It had to be. Burn him, women would talk about
anything'.
The
arrival of the serving maid with their drink saved him from having to
make any
response. Jera was a smiling young woman with nearly as many curves as
the
singer, not so well displayed yet not really concealed by the white
apron she
wore tied snugly. Her dark woolen dress fit quite snugly, too. Not that
he gave
her more than a glance, of course. He was with his wife-to-be. Anyway,
only a
complete woolhead looked at a woman while with another.
Jera
placed a tall pewter wine pitcher and two polished pewter cups on the
table and
handed a thick mug of ale to Selucia, then blinked in confusion when
Selucia
transferred the mug to Tuon and took a cup of wine in return. He handed
her a
silver penny to settle her discomposure, and she gave him a beaming
smile with
her curtsy before darting off to another call from the innkeeper. It
was
unlikely she received much in the way of silver.
"You
could have smiled back at her. Toy," Tuon said, holding the mug up for
a
sniff and wrinkling her nose. "She is very pretty. You were so
stone-faced, you probably frightened her." She took a sip, and her eyes
widened in surprise. "This actually is quite good."
Mat
sighed and took a long swallow of dark wine that smelled faintly of
flowers. In
none of his memories, his own or those other men's, could he recall
having
understood women. Oh, one or two things here and there, but never
anywhere near
completely.
Sipping
her ale steadily-he was not about to tell her ale was taken in
swallows, not
sips: she might get herself drunk deliberately, just to experience a
hell
fully; he was not ready to put anything past her today. Or any
day-taking sips
between every sentence, the maddening little woman questioned him on
customs.
Telling her how to behave in a hell was easy enough. Keep to yourself,
ask no
questions, and sit with your back to a wall if you could and near to a
door in
case of a need to leave suddenly. Better not to go at all, but if you
had to… Yet she quickly passed on to courts and palaces, and got few
answers there.
He could have told her more of customs in the courts of Eharon or
Shiota or a
dozen other dead nations than in those of any nation that still lived.
Scraps
of how things were done in Caemlyn and Tear were all he really knew,
and bits from
Fal Dara, in Shienar. Well, that and Ebou Dar. but she already knew
those ways.
"So
you have traveled widely and been in other palaces than the Tarasin,"
she
said finally, and took the last bit of ale in her mug. He had not
finished half
his wine yet; he thought Selucia had not taken above two small swallows
of
hers. "But you are not nobly born, it seems. I thought you must not
be."
"That
I am not," he told her firmly. "Nobles…" He trailed off, clearing
his throat. He could hardly tell her nobles were fools with their noses
so high
in the air they could not see where they were stepping. She was who and
what
she was, after all.
Expressionless,
Tuon studied him while pushing her empty mug to one side. Still
studying, she
flickered the fingers of her left hand over her shoulder, and Selucia
clapped
her own hands together loudly. Several of the other patrons looked at
them in
surprise. "You called yourself a gambler," Tuon said, "and
Master Merrilin named you the luckiest man in the world."
Jera
came running, and Selucia handed her the mug. "Another, quickly," she
commanded, though not in an unkindly way. Still, she had a regal manner
to her.
Jera dropped a hasty curtsy and scurried off again as though she had
been
shouted at.
"I
have luck sometimes," Mat said cautiously.
"Let's
see whether you have any today, Toy." Tuon looked toward the table
where
the dice were rattling on the tabletop.
He
could see no harm in it. It was a certainty he would win more than he
lost, yet
he thought it unlikely one of the merchants would pull a knife however
much his
luck was in. He had not noticed anyone carrying one of those long belt
knives
that everybody wore farther south. Standing, he offered Tuon his arm,
and she
rested her hand lightly on his wrist. Selucia left her wine on the
table and
stayed close to her mistress.
Two
of the Altaran men, one lean and bald except for a dark fringe, the
other
round-faced above three chins, scowled when he asked whether a stranger
might
join the game, and the third, a graying, stocky fellow with a pendulous
lower
lip, went stiff as a fence post. The Taraboner woman was not so
unfriendly.
"Of
course, of course. Why not?" she said, her speech slightly slurred. Her
face was flushed, and the smile she directed at him had a slackness
about it.
Apparently she was one of those with no head for wine. It seemed the
locals
wanted to keep her happy because the scowls vanished, though the
graying man
remained wooden-faced. Mat fetched chairs from a nearby table for
himself and
Tuon. Selucia chose to remain standing behind Tuon. which was just as
well. Six
people crowded the table.
Jera
arrived to curtsy and proffer a refilled mug to Tuon with both hands
and a
murmured "My Lady." and another serving woman, graying and nearly as
stout as Mistress Heilin, replaced the wine pitcher on the gambler's
table.
Smiling, the bald man filled the Taraboner's cup to the brim. They
wanted her
happy and drunk. She drained half the cup and with a laugh wiped her
lips
delicately with a lace-edged handkerchief. Getting it back up her
sleeve
required two tries. She would come away with no good bargains this day.
Mat
watched a little play and soon recognized the game. It used four dice
rather
than two, but without a doubt it was a version of Phi, Match, a game
that had
been popular for a thousand years before Artur Hawkwing began his rise.
Small
piles of silver admixed with a few gold coins lay in front of each of
the
players, and it was a silver mark that he laid in the middle of the
table to
buy the dice while the stout man was gathering his winnings from the
last toss.
He expected no trouble from merchants, but trouble was less likely if
they lost
silver rather than gold.
The
lean man matched the wager, and Mat rattled the crimson dice in the
pewter cup,
then spun them out onto the table. They came to rest showing four fives.
"Is
that a winning toss?" Tuon asked.
"Not
unless I match it," Mat replied, scooping the dice back into the cup,
"without tossing a fourteen or the Dark One's eyes first." The dice
clattered in the cup, clattered across the table. Four fives. His luck
was in,
for sure. He slid one coin over in front of himself and left the other.
Abruptly,
the graying fellow scraped back his chair and stood up. "I've had
enough." he muttered, and began fumbling the coins in front of him into
his coat pockets. The other two Altarans stared at him incredulously.
"You're
leaving, Vane?" the lean man said. "Now?"
"I
said I've had enough. Camrin." the graying man growled and went
stumping
out into the street pursued by Camrin's scowl at his back.
The
Taraboner woman leaned over unsteadily, her beaded braids clicking on
the
tabletop, to pat the fat man's wrist. "Just means I'll buy my
lacquerware
from you, Master Kostelle," she said fuzzily. "You and Master
Camrin."
Kostelle's
triple chins wobbled as he chuckled. "So it does. Mistress Alstaing. So
it
does. Doesn't it, Camrin?"
"I
suppose," the bald man replied grumpily. "I suppose." He shoved
a mark out to match Mat's.
Once
again the dice spun across the table. This time, they came up totaling
fourteen.
"Oh,"
Tuon said, sounding disappointed. "You lost."
"I
won, Precious. That's a winning toss if it's your first." He left his
original bet in the middle of the table. "Another?" he said with a
grin.
His
luck was in. all right, as strong as it had ever been. The bright red
dice
rolled across the table, bounced across the table, ricocheted off the
wagered
coins sometimes, and toss after toss they came to rest showing fourteen
white
pips. He made fourteen every way it could be made. Even at one coin to
a wager,
the silver in front of him grew to a tidy sum. Half the people in the
common
room came to stand around the table and watch. He grinned at Tuon, who
gave him
a slight nod. He had missed this, dice in a common room or tavern, coin
on the
table, wondering how long his luck would hold. And a pretty woman at
his side
while he gambled. He wanted to laugh with pleasure.
As
he was shaking the dice in the cup again, the Taraboner merchant
glanced at
him, and for an instant, she did not look drunk at all. Suddenly, he no
longer
felt like laughing. Her face slackened immediately, and her eyes became
a tad
unfocused once more, but for that instant they had been awls. She had a
much
better head for wine than he had supposed. It seemed Camrin and
Kostelle would
not get away with fobbing off shoddy work at top prices or whatever
their
scheme had been. What concerned him, though, was that the woman was
suspicious
of him. Come to think, she herself had not risked a coin against him.
The two
Altarans were frowning at him. but just the way men who were losing
frowned
over their bad luck. She thought he had found some way to cheat. Never
mind
that he was using their dice, or more likely the inn's dice; an
accusation of
cheating could get a man a drubbing even in a merchants' inn. Men
seldom waited
on proof of that charge.
"One
last toss." he said, "and I think I'll call it done. Mistress
Heilin?" The innkeeper was among the onlookers. He handed her a small
handful of his new-won silver coins. "To celebrate my good fortune,
serve
everybody what they want to drink until those run out." That brought
appreciative murmurs, and someone behind him clapped him on the back. A
man
drinking your wine was less likely to believe you had bought it with
cheated
coin. Or at least they might hesitate long enough to give him a chance
to get
Tuon out.
"He
can't keep this run going forever," Camrin muttered, scrubbing a hand
through the hair he no longer possessed. "What say you, Kostelle?
Halves?" Fingering a gold crown free of the coins piled in front of
him,
he slid it over beside Mat's silver mark. "If there's only to be one
more
toss, let's make a real wager on it. Bad luck has to follow this much
good." Kostelle hesitated, rubbing his chins in thought, then nodded
and
added a gold crown of his own.
Mat
sighed. He could refuse the bet, but walking away now might well
trigger
Mistress Alstaing's charge. So could winning this toss. Reluctantly he
pushed
out silver marks to match their gold. That left only two in front of
him. He
gave the cup an extra heavy shake before spilling the dice onto the
table. He
did not expect that to alter anything. He was just venting his feelings.
The
red dice tumbled across the tabletop, hit the piled coins and bounced
back,
spinning before they fell to a stop. Each showing a single pip. The
Dark One's
Eyes.
Laughing
just as if it were not just their own coin won back, Camrin and
Kostelle began
dividing their winnings. The watchers started drifting away, calling
congratulations to the two merchants, murmuring words of commiseration
to Mat.
some lifting the cup he was paying for in his direction. Mistress
Alstaing took
a long pull at her winecup, studying him over the rim, to all outward
appearance as drunk as a goose. He doubted she thought he had been
cheating any
longer, not when he was walking away with only one mark more than he
sat down
with. Sometimes bad luck could turn out to be good.
"So
your luck is not endless, Toy," Tuon said as he escorted her back to
their
table. "Or is it that you are lucky only in small things?'
"Nobody
has endless luck, Precious. Myself, I think that last toss was one of
the
luckiest I've ever made." He explained about the Taraboner woman's
suspicions, and why he had bought wine for the whole common room.
At
the table, he held her chair for her, but she remained standing,
looking at
him. "You may do very well in Seandar," she said finally, thrusting
her nearly empty mug at him. "Guard this until I return."
He
straightened in alarm. "Where are you going?" He trusted her not to
run away, but not to stay out of trouble without him there to pull her
out of
it.
She
put on a long-suffering face. Even that was beautiful. "If you must
know,
I am going to the necessary, Toy."
"Oh.
The innkeeper can tell you where it is. Or one of the serving women."
"Thank
you, Toy," she said sweetly. "I'd never have thought to ask."
She waggled her fingers at Selucia, and the two of them walked toward
the back
of the common room having one of their silent talks and giggling.
Sitting
down, he scowled into his winecup. Women seemed to enjoy finding ways
to make
you feel a fool. And he was half-married to this one.
"Where
are the women?" Thom asked, dropping down into the chair beside Mat and
setting a nearly full winecup on the table. He grunted when Mat
explained, and
went on in a low voice, leaning his elbows on the table to put his head
close.
"We have trouble behind and ahead. Far enough ahead that it may not
bother
us here, but best we leave as soon as they return."
Mat
sat up straight. "What kind of trouble?"
"Some
of those merchant trains that passed us the last few days brought news
of a
murder in Jurador about the time we left. Maybe a day or two later;
it's hard
to be sure. A man was found in his own bed with his throat ripped, only
there
wasn't enough blood." He had no need to say more.
Mat
took a long pull at his wine. The bloody gholam was still following
him. How
had it found out he was with Luca's show? But if it was still a day or
two
behind at the pace the show was making, likely it would not catch up to
him
soon. He fingered the silver foxhead through his coat. At least he had
a way to
fight it if it did appear. The thing carried a scar he had given it.
"And
the trouble ahead?"
"There's
a Seanchan army on the border of Murandy. How they assembled it without
my
learning about it before this…" He puffed out his mustaches,
offended by his failure. "Well, no matter. Everybody who passes through
they make drink a cup of some herbal tea."
"Tea?"
Mat said in disbelief. "Where's the trouble in tea?"
"Every
so often, this tea makes a woman go unsteady in her legs, and then the
sul'dam
come and collar her. But that's not the worst. They're looking very
hard for a
slight, dark young Seanchan woman."
"Well,
of course they are. Did you expect they wouldn't be? This solves my
biggest
problem. Thorn. When we get closer, we can leave the show, take to the
forest.
Tuon and Selucia can travel on with Luca. Luca will like being the hero
who
returned their Daughter of the Nine Moons to them."
Thom
shook his head gravely. "They're looking for an impostor, Mat. Somebody
claiming to be the Daughter of the Nine Moons. Except the description
fits her
too closely. They don't talk about it openly, but there are always men
who
drink too much, and some always talk too much as well when they do.
They mean
to kill her when they find her. Something about blotting out the shame
she
caused."
"Light!"
Mat breathed. "How could that be, Thom? Whatever general commands that
army must know her face, wouldn't he? And other officers, too, I'd
think. There
must be nobles who know her."
"Won't
do her much good if they do. Even the lowest soldier will slit her
throat or
bash in her head as soon as she's found. I had that from three
different
merchants, Mat. Even if they're all wrong, are you willing to take the
chance?"
Mat
was not, and over their wine they began planning. Not that they did
much drinking.
Thom seldom did anymore for all his visits to common rooms and taverns,
and Mat
wanted a clear head.
"Luca
will scream over letting us have enough horses to mount everyone
whatever you
pay him," Thom said at one point. "And there are packhorses for
supplies
if we're taking to the forest."
"Then
I'll start buying, Thom. By the time we have to go, we'll have as many
as we
need. I'll wager I can find a few good animals right here. Vanin has a
good
eye, too. Don't worry. I'll make sure he pays for them." Thom nodded
doubtfully. He was not so certain how reformed Vanin was.
"Aludra's
coming with us?" the white-haired man said in surprise a little later.
"She'll want to take all of her paraphernalia. That'll mean more
packhorses."
"We
have time, Thom. The border of Murandy is a long way, yet. I mean to
head north
into Andor, or east if Vanin knows a way through the mountains. Better
east." Any way Vanin knew would be a smuggler's path, a horsethief's
escape route. There would be much less chance of unfortunate encounters
along
something like that. The Sean-chan could be almost anywhere in Altara.
and the
way north took him nearer that army than he liked.
Tuon
and Selucia appeared from the back of the common room, and he stood,
taking up
Tuon's cloak from her chair. Thorn rose, too, lifting Selucia's cloak.
"We're leaving." Mat said, trying to place the cloak around Tuon.
Selucia snatched it out of his hands.
"I
haven't seen even one fight yet." Tuon protested, too loudly. Any
number
of people turned to stare, merchants and serving women.
"I'll
explain outside," he told her quietly. "Away from prying ears."
Tuon
stared up at him, expressionless. He knew she was tough, but she was so
tiny,
like a pretty doll, that it was easy to believe she would break if
handled
roughly. He was going to do whatever was necessary to make sure she was
not put
in danger of being broken. Whatever it took. Finally she nodded and let
Selucia
place the blue cloak on her shoulders. Thorn attempted to do the same
for the
yellow-haired woman, but she took it away from him and donned it
herself. Mat
could not recall ever seeing her let anyone help her with her cloak.
The
crooked street outside was empty of human life. A slat-ribbed brown dog
eyed
them warily, then trotted away around the nearest bend. Mat moved
nearly as
quickly in the other direction, explaining as they went. If he had
expected
shock or dismay, he would have been disappointed.
"It
could be Ravashi or Chimal." the little woman said thoughtfully, as if
having
an entire Seanchan army out to kill her were no more than an idle
distraction.
"My two nearest sisters in age. Aurana is too young, I think, only
eight.
Fourteen, you would say. Chimal is quiet in her ambition, but Ravashi
has
always believed she should have been named just because she is older.
She might
well have sent someone to plant rumors should I disappear for a time.
It is
really quite clever of her. If she is the one." Just as coolly as
talking
about whether it might rain.
"This
plot could be dealt with easily if the High Lady were in the TarasinPalace
where she belongs," Selucia said, and coolness vanished from Tuon.
Oh,
her face became as chill as that of an executioner, but she rounded on
her
maid, fingers flashing so furiously they should have been striking
sparks.
Selucia's face went pale, and she sank to her knees, head down and
huddling.
Her fingers gestured briefly, and Tuon let her own hands fall, stood
looking
down at the scarf-covered top of Selucia's head, breathing heavily.
After a
moment, she bent and lifted the other woman to her feet. Standing very
close,
she said something very short in that finger-talk. Selucia replied
silently,
Tuon made the same gestures again, and they exchanged tremulous smiles.
Tears
glistened in their eyes. Tears!
"Will
you tell me what that was all about?'' Mat demanded. They turned their
heads to
study him.
"What
are your plans, Toy?" Tuon asked at last.
"Not
Ebou Dar, if that's what you're thinking. Precious. If one army is out
to kill
you, then they probably all are, and there are too many soldiers
between here
and Ebou Dar. But don't worry: I'll find some way to get you back
safely."
"So
you always…" Her eyes went past him, widening, and he looked over his
shoulder to see seven or eight men round the last bend in the street.
Every man
had an unsheathed sword in his hand. Their steps quickened at sight of
him.
"Run,
Tuon!" he shouted, spinning to face their attackers. "Thom get her
away from here!" A knife came into either hand from his sleeves, and he
threw them almost as one. The left-hand blade took a graying man in the
eye,
the right-hand a skinny fellow in the throat. They dropped as if their
bones
had melted, but before their swords clattered on the paving stones, he
had
already snatched another pair of knives from his boot tops and was
sprinting
toward them.
It
took them by surprise, losing two of their number so quickly, and him
closing
the distance instead of trying to flee. But with him so close so
quickly, and
them jamming against one another on that narrow street, they lost most
of the
advantage that swords gave them over his knives. Not all,
unfortunately. His
blades could deflect a sword, but he only bothered when someone drew
back for a
thrust. In short order he had a fine collection of gashes, across his
ribs, on
his left thigh, along the right side of his jaw, a cut that would have
laid
open his throat had he not jerked aside in time. But had he tried to
flee, they
would have run him through from behind. Alive and bleeding was better
than
dead.
His
hands moved as fast as ever they had, short moves, almost delicate.
Flamboyance
would have killed him. One knife slipped into a fat man's heart
and out again before the fellow's
knees began to crumple. He sliced inside the elbow of a man built like
a
blacksmith, who dropped his sword and awkwardly drew his belt knife
with his
left hand. Mat ignored him; the fellow was already staggering from
blood loss
before his blade cleared the scabbard. A square-faced man gasped as Mat
sliced
open the side of his neck. He clapped a hand to the wound, but he only
managed
to totter back two steps before he fell. As men died, the others gained
room,
but Mat moved faster still, dancing so that a falling man shielded him
from
another's sword while he closed inside the sword-arc of a third. To
him, the
world consisted of his two knives and the men crowding each other to
get at
him, and his knives sought the places where men bleed most heavily.
Some of
those ancient memories came from men who had not been very nice at all.
And
then, miracle of miracles, bleeding profusely, but his blood too hot to
let him
feel the full pain yet, he was facing the last, one he had not noticed
before.
She was young and slim in a ragged dress, and she might have been
pretty had
her face been clean, had her teeth not been showing in a rictus snarl.
The
dagger she was tossing from hand to hand had a double-edged blade twice
the
length of his hand.
"You
can't hope to finish alone what the others failed in together," he told
her. "Run. I'll let you go unharmed.''
With
a cry like a feral cat, she rushed at him slashing and stabbing wildly.
All he
could do was dance backwards awkwardly, trying to fend her off. His
boot slid
in a patch of blood, and as he staggered, he knew he was about to die.
Abruptly
Tuon was there, left hand seizing the young woman's wrist-not the wrist
of her
knife hand, worse luck-twisting so the arm went stiff and the girl was
forced
to double over. And then it mattered not at all which hand held her
knife, because
Tuon's right hand swept across, bladed like an axe, and struck her
throat so
hard that he heard the cartilage cracking. Choking, she clutched her
ruined
throat and sagged to her knees, then fell over still sucking hoarsely
for
breath.
"I
told you to run," Mat said, not sure which of the two he was addressing.
"You
very nearly let her kill you, Toy," Tuon said severely. "Why?"
"I
promised myself I'd never kill another woman," he said wearily. His
blood
was beginning to cool, and Light, he hurt! "Looks like I've ruined this
coat," he muttered, fingering one of the blood-soaked slashes. The
motion
brought a wince. When had he been gashed on the left arm?
Her
gaze seemed to bore into his skull, and she nodded as if she-had come
to some
conclusion.
Thorn
and Selucia were standing a little down the street, in front of the
reason Tuon
was still there, better than half a dozen bodies sprawled on the paving
stones.
Thorn had a knife in either hand and was allowing Selucia to examine a
wound on
his ribs through the rent in his coat. Oddly, by evidence of the dark
glistening patches on his coat, he seemed to have fewer injuries than
Mat. Mat
wondered whether Tuon had taken part there, too, but he could not see a
spot of
blood on her anywhere. Selucia had a bloody gash down her left arm,
though it
appeared not to hinder her.
"I'm
an old man," Thorn said suddenly, "and sometimes I imagine I see
things that can't be, but luckily, I always forget them."
Selucia
paused to look up at him coolly. Lady's maid she might be, but blood
seemed not
to faze her at all. "And what might you be trying to forget?"
"I
can't recall," Thorn replied. Selucia nodded and went back to examining
his wounds.
Mat
shook his head. Sometimes he was not entirely sure Thorn still had all
his
wits. For that matter, Selucia seemed a shovel shy of a full load now
and then,
too.
"This
one can't live to be put to the question." Tuon drawled, frowning at
the
woman choking and twitching at her feet, "and she can't talk if she
somehow managed to.' Bending fluidly, she scooped up the woman's knife
and
drove it hard beneath the woman's breastbone. That rasping fight for
air went
silent; glazing eyes stared up at the narrow strip of sky overhead. "A
mercy she did not deserve, but I see no point to needless suffering. I
won.
Toy."
"You
won? What are you talking about?"
"You
used my name before I used yours, so I won."
Mat
whistled faintly through his teeth. Whenever he thought he knew how
tough she
was, she found a way to show him he did not know the half. If anybody
happened
to be looking out a window, that stabbing might raise questions with
the local
magistrate, probably Lord Nathin himself. But there were no faces at
any window
he could see. People avoided getting embroiled in this sort of thing if
they
could. For all he knew, any number of porters or barrow-men might have
come
along during the fight. For a certainty, they would have turned right
around
again as quickly as they could. Whether any might have gone for Lord
Nathin's
guards was another question. Still. he had no fear of Nathin or his
magistrate.
A pair of men escorting two women did not decide to attack more than a
dozen
carrying swords. Likely these fellows, and the unfortunate young woman,
were
well known to the guards.
Limping
to retrieve his thrown knives, he paused in the act of pulling the
blade from
the graying man's eye. He had not really taken in that face, before.
Everything
had happened too quickly for more than general impressions. Carefully
wiping
the knife on the man's coat, he tucked it away up his sleeve as he
straightened. "Our plans have changed. Thorn. We're leaving Maderin as
fast as we can, and we're leaving the show as fast as we can. Luca will
want to
be rid of us so much that he'll let us have all the horses we need."
"This
must be reported, Toy," Tuon said severely. "Failure to do so is as
lawless as what they did."
"You
know that fellow?" Thorn said.
Mat
nodded. "His name is Vane, and I don't think anybody in this town will
believe
a respectable merchant attacked us in the street. Luca will give us
horses to
be rid of this." It was very strange. The man had not lost a coin to
him.
had not wagered a coin. So, why? Very strange indeed. And reason enough
to be
gone quickly.
CHAPTER TWELVE
A Manufactory
The
midday Amadician sun was warm on Perrin's head as he rode Stayer toward
the
roofs of Almizar beneath high, scudding white clouds, a hundred miles
southwest
of Amador. Impatient, he kept the bay at a trot. Farms stretched as far
as he
could see in any direction on both sides of the road, thatch-roofed
stone
houses with gray smoke rising from the chimneys and chickens scratching
in
front of the barns. Fat-tailed sheep and spotted black cattle grazed in
stonewalled pastures, and men and boys were plowing the fields or
sowing those
already plowed. It seemed to be laundry day; he could see large kettles
sitting
over fires behind houses, and women and girls hanging shirts and
blouses and
bed linens on long lines to dry. There was little of wildness, only
scattered
thickets, and most of those neatly coppiced to provide firewood.
He
reached out with his mind to find wolves, and found nothing.
Unsurprising.
Wolves stayed clear of this many people, this much tameness. The breeze
stiffened, and he gathered his cloak around him. Despite the need to
make a
show, it was plain brown wool. The only silk cloak he had was lined
with fur,
and too hot for the day. His green silk coat worked in silver would
have to do.
That and his cloak pin. two wolves' heads in silver-and-gold. A gift
from
Faile. it had always seemed too ornate to wear, but he had dug it out
of the
bottom of a chest that morning. A little something to make up for the
plain
cloak.
What
was surprising were the Tinker caravans camped in fields scattered
around the
town, five of them within his sight. According to Elyas, there was
always
feasting when two caravans encountered one another, and a meeting of
three
caused days of celebration, but larger gatherings seldom occurred
except in the
summer, at Sunday, when they had their meeting places. He almost wished
he had
brought Aram,
despite the risk of Masema learning too much. Maybe if the man could
spend a
little time among his own people, he might decide to put down his
sword. That
was the best solution Perrin could think of to a thorny problem,
although not
likely to work. Aram
liked the sword, perhaps too well. But he could not send the man away.
He had
as good as put that sword in Aram's
hand, and now Aram
and the sword were his responsibility. The Light only knew what would
become of
the man if he truly went over to Masema.
"You
study the Tuatha'an and frown, my Lord," General Khirgan drawled. He
could
understand her speech a little better, now that they had spent time
together.
"You've had problems with them in your lands? We have nothing like them
at
home, but the only trouble connected to them I know of has been locals
trying
to drive them away. Apparently, they're supposed to be great thieves.''
She
and Mishima were ornate today in blue cloaks trimmed with red and
yellow, and
red coats with blue cuffs and lapels edged in yellow. Three small
vertical blue
bars, shaped like the thin plumes of a Seanchan helmet, on the left
breast of
her coat indicated her rank, as two did for Mishima. The dozen soldiers
riding
behind wore their striped armor and painted helmets, however, and
carried
steel-tipped lances held at precisely the same angle. The cluster of
Faile's
hangers-on following the Seanchan, also twelve in number, made a brave
display
in Tairen coats with puffy satin-striped sleeves and dark Cairhienin
coats with
stripes of House colors across the chests, yet in spite of their swords
they
looked much less dangerous than the soldiers and seemed to know it.
Whenever
the breeze gusted from behind, it carried traces of irritation that
Perrin
doubted came from the Seanchan. The soldiers' scent was of stillness,
waiting,
like wolves who knew teeth might be needed soon, but not now. Not yet.
"Ah,
they steal a chicken now and then. General," Neald said with a laugh,
giving one of his thin waxed mustaches a twist, "but I'd not be calling
them great thieves." He had enjoyed the Seanchan astonishment at the
gateway that had brought them all here, and he was still posing over
it, somehow
managing to strut while sitting his saddle. It was difficult to
remember that
had he not earned that black coat, he would still be working his
father's farm
and perhaps wondering about marriage to a neighbor girl in a year or
two.
"Great theft requires courage, and Tinkers have not a bit of it."
Huddled
in his dark cloak, Balwer grimaced, or perhaps smiled. Sometimes it was
hard to
tell the difference with the desiccated little man unless Perrin could
catch
his scent. The pair of them accompanied Perrin in much the same way as
a
gray-haired sul'dam linked to a cool-eyed damane with touches of gray
in her
own dark hair accompanied Khirgan and Mishima, supposedly to balance
the
numbers. To the Seanchan, sul'dam and damane counted as one when
connected by
the segmented metal leash. He would have been satisfied to come with
Neald
alone, or Neald and Balwer at least, but Tallanvor had been right about
Seanchan and protocol. The talks had dragged on for three days, and
while some
time had been spent on whether to follow Per-rin's plan or make it a
part of
something Tylee would come up with- with her yielding at the end only
because
she could find nothing better-a good part had been wasted on how many
each side
was to bring here. It had to be the same number for each, and the
Banner-General had wanted to bring a hundred of her soldiers and a pair
of
damane. For honor's sake. She had been astounded that he was willing to
come
with less, and was only willing to accept it after he pointed out that
everyone
among Faile's people was noble in his or her own lands. He had the
feeling she
thought she had been cheated because she could not match his escorts'
rank with
her own. Strange folk, these Seanchan. Oh, there were sides, to be
sure. This
alliance was purely temporary, not to mention delicate, and the
Banner-General
was just as aware of that as he.
"Twice
they offered me shelter when I needed it, me and my friends, and asked
nothing
in return," Perrin said quietly. "Yet what I remember best about them
was when Trollocs surrounded Emond's Field. The Tuatha'an stood on the
green
with children strapped to their backs, the few of their own that
survived and
ours. They would not fight-it isn't their way-but if the Trollocs
overran us,
they were ready to try to carry the children to safety. Carrying our
children
would have hampered them, made escape even less likely than it already
was. but
they asked for the task." Neald gave an embarrassed cough and looked
away.
A flush tinged his cheek. For all he had seen and done, he was young
yet. just
seventeen. This time, there was no doubt about Balwer's thin smile.
"I
think your life might make a story," the general said, her expression
inviting him to tell as much of it as he would.
"I'd
rather my life were ordinary," he told her. Stories were no place for a
man who wanted peace.
"One
day. I'd very much like to see some of these Trollocs I keep hearing
about." Mishima said when the silence began to stretch. Amusement
tinged
his smell, yet he stroked his sword hilt, perhaps without knowing it.
"No
you wouldn't," Perrin told him. "You'll get your chance soon or late,
but you won't like it." After a moment, the scarred man nodded solemnly
in
understanding, amusement melting. At last he must be beginning to
believe that
Trollocs and Myrddraal were more than travelers' fanciful tales. If any
doubts
remained to him, the time was coming that would erase doubt forever.
Heading
into Almizar, as they turned their horses toward the north end of the
town
along a narrow cart lane, Balwer slipped away. Medore went with him, a
tall
woman nearly as dark as Tylee but with deep blue eyes, in dark breeches
and a
man's coat with puffy red-striped sleeves, a sword at her hip. Balwer
rode with
his shoulders hunched, a bird perched precariously on his saddle,
Medore
straight-backed and proud, every inch a High Lord's daughter and leader
of
Faile's people, though she followed Balwer rather than riding beside.
Surprisingly, Failes hangers-on seemed to have accepted taking
direction from
the fussy little man. It made them much less bother than they once had
been; it
actually made them useful in some ways, which Perrin would have thought
impossible. The Banner-General offered no objection to them leaving,
though she
gazed after them thoughtfully.
"Kind
of the Lady to visit a servant's friend," she mused. That was the tale
Balwer had given, that he used to know a woman who lived in Almizar and
Medore
wanted to meet her if she was still alive.
"Medore's
a kind woman," Perrin replied. "It's our way, being kind to
servants." Tylee gave him one glance, only that, yet he reminded
himself
not to take her for a fool. It was too bad he knew nothing of Seanchan
ways to
speak of, or they might have come up with a better story. But then,
Baiwer had
been in a frenzy-a dry, dusty frenzy, yet still a frenzy-to seize this
chance
to gather information on what was happening in Amadicia under the
Seanchan. For
himself, Perrin could barely make himself care. Only Faile mattered,
now. Later
he could worry about other matters.
Just
north of Almizar, the stone walls dividing seven or eight fields had
been
removed to make a long stretch of bare earth that appeared thoroughly
turned by
the harrow, the dirt all scored and scuffed. A large odd creature with
a pair
of hooded people crouched on its back was running awkwardly along that
stretch
on two legs that seemed spindly for its size. In fact, "odd" barely
began to encompass it. Leathery and gray, the thing was larger than a
horse
without counting a long, snake-like neck and a thin, even longer tail
that it
held stretched out stiffly behind. As it ran. it beat wings ribbed like
those
of a bat, stretching as long as most riverships. He had seen animals
like this
before, but in the air, and at a distance. Tylee had told him they were
called
raken. Slowly the creature lumbered into the air, barely clearing the
treetops
of a coppiced thicket at the end of the field. His head swiveled to
follow as
the raken climbed slowly toward the sky, awkwardness vanishing in
flight. Now,
that would be a thing, to fly on one of those. He crushed the thought,
ashamed
and angered that he could let himself be diverted.
The
Banner-General slowed her bay and frowned at the field. At the far end,
men
were feeding four more of the peculiar animals, holding up large
baskets for
them to eat from, horned snouts darting and horny mouths gulping.
Perrin hated
to think what a creature that looked like that might eat. "They should
have more raken than this here." she muttered. "If this is all there
are…"
"We
take what we can get and go on," he said. "None, if it comes to that.
We already know where the Shaido are."
"I
like to know if anything is coming up behind me." she told him dryly, picking up
the
pace again.
At
a nearby farm that appeared to have been taken over by the Seanchan, a
dozen or
so soldiers were dicing at tables set up haphazardly in front of the
thatch-roofed house. More were passing in and out of the stone barn,
though he
saw no sign of horses except for a team hitched to a wagon that was
being
unloaded of its crates and barrels and jute sacks by a pair of men in
rough
woolens. At least, Perrin assumed the others were soldiers. Nearly half
were
women, the men as short as the women for
the most part and thin if taller, and none carried a sword, but they
all wore
close-fitting coats of sky-blue and each had a pair of knives in
scabbards sewn
to their snug boots. Uniforms implied soldiers.
Mat
would be right at home with this lot, he thought, watching them laugh
over good
tosses and groan over bad. Those colors spun in his head, and for an
instant he
glimpsed Mat riding off a road into forest followed by a line of
mounted folk
and packhorses. An instant only, because he dashed the image aside
without so
much as a thought to why Mat was going into the woods or who was with
him. Only
Faile mattered. That morning he had tied a fifty-first knot in the
leather cord
he carried in his pocket. Fifty-one days she had been a prisoner. He
hoped she
had been a prisoner that long. It would mean she was still alive to be
rescued.
If she was dead… His hand tightened on the head of the hammer hanging
at
his belt, tightened until his knuckles hurt.
The
Banner-General and Mishima were watching him, he realized. Mishima
warily, with
a hand hovering near his sword hilt, Tylee thoughtfully. A delicate
alliance,
and little trust on either side. "For a moment, I thought you might be
ready to kill the fliers," she said quietly. "You have my word. We
will free your wife. Or avenge her."
Perrin
drew a shuddering breath and released his hold on the hammer. Faile had
to be
alive. Alyse had said she was under her protection. But how much
protection
could the Aes Sedai give when she wore gai'shain white herself? "Let's
be
done here. Time is wasting." How many more knots would he need to tie
in
that cord? The Light send not many.
Dismounting,
he handed Stayer's reins to Carlon Belcelona, a clean-shaven Tairen
with a long
nose and an unfortunately narrow chin. Carlon had a habit of fingering
that
chin as if wondering where his beard had gone, or running a hand over
his hair
as though wondering why it was tied with a ribbon at the nape of his
neck,
making a tail that just reached his shoulders. But he gave no more sign
of
giving up his fool pretense that he was following Aiel ways than the
others
did. Balwer had given them their instructions, and at least they obeyed
those.
Most of them were already drifting over to the tables, leaving their
mounts in
the care of the rest, some producing coin, others offering leather
flasks of
wine. Which the soldiers were rejecting, strangely, though it seemed
anyone
with silver was welcome in their games.
Without
more than glancing in their direction, Perrin tucked his gauntlets
behind his
thick belt and followed the two Seanchan inside, tossing back his cloak
so his
silk coat showed. By the time he came out, Faile's people-his people,
he
supposed-would have learned a great deal of what those men and women
knew. One
thing he had learned from Balwer. Knowledge could be very useful, and
you never
knew which scrap would turn out worth more than gold. For the moment,
though,
the only knowledge he was interested in would not come from this place.
The
front room of the farmhouse was filled with tables facing the door,
where clerks
sat poring over papers or writing. The only sound was the scritching of
pen on
paper and a man's dry persistent cough. The men wore coats and breeches
of dark
brown, the women dresses in the exact same shade. Some wore pins, in
silver or
brass, in the shape of a quill pen. The Seanchan had uniforms for
everything,
it seemed. A round-cheeked fellow at the back of the room who wore two
silver
pens on his chest stood and bowed deeply, belly straining his coat, as
soon as
Tylee entered. Their boots were loud on the wooden floor as they walked
back to
him between the tables. He did not straighten until they reached his
table.
"Tylee
Khirgan." she said curtly. "I would speak with whoever is in command
here."
"As
the Banner-General commands," the fellow replied obsequiously, made
another deep bow. and hurried through a door behind him.
The
clerk who was coughing, a smooth-faced fellow younger than Perrin who,
by his
face, might have come from the Two Rivers, began hacking more roughly,
and
covered his mouth with a hand. He cleared his throat loudly, but the
harsh
cough returned.
Mishima
frowned at him. "Fellow shouldn't be here if he's ill," he muttered.
"What if it's catching? You hear about all sorts of strange sicknesses
these days. Man's hale at sunrise, and by sunfall, he's a corpse and
swollen to
half again his size, with no one knowing what he died of. I heard of a
woman
who went mad in the space of an hour, and everybody who touched her
went mad,
too. In three days, she and her whole village were dead, those who
hadn't
fled." He made a peculiar gesture, forming an arc with thumb and
forefinger, the others curled tightly.
"You
know better than to believe rumors, or repeat them.'' the
Banner-General said
sharply, making the same gesture. She seemed unaware she had done so.
The
stout clerk reappeared, holding the door for a graying, lean-faced man
with a
black leather patch hiding the spot where his right eye had been. A
puckered
white scar ran down his forehead, behind the patch and onto his cheek.
As short
as the men outside, he wore a coat of darker blue, with two small white
bars on
his chest, though he had the same sheaths sewn to his boots. "Blasic
Faloun, Banner-General," he said with a bow as the clerk hurried back
to
his table. "How may I serve you?"
"Captain
Faloun, we need to speak in-" Tylee cut off when the man who was
coughing
surged to his reet. his stool toppling with a clatter.
Clutching
his middle, the young man doubled over and vomited a dark stream that
hit the
floor and broke up into tiny black beetles that went scurrying in every
direction. Someone cursed, shockingly loud in what was otherwise dead
silence.
The young man stared at the beetles in horror, shaking his head to deny
them.
Wild-eyed, he looked around the room still shaking his head and opened
his
mouth as if to speak. Instead, he bent over and spewed another black
stream,
longer, that broke into beetles darting across the floor. The skin of
his face
began writhing, as though more beetles were crawling on the outside of
his
skull. A woman screamed, a long shriek of dread, and suddenly clerks
were
shouting and leaping up. knocking over stools and even tables in their
haste,
frantically dodging the flitting black shapes. Again and again the man
vomited,
sinking to his knees, then falling over, twitching disjointedly as he
spewed
out more and more beetles in a steady stream. He seemed somehow to be
getting… flatter. Deflating. His jerking ceased, but black beetles
continued to pour
from his gaping mouth and spread across the floor. At last-it seemed to
have
gone on for an hour, but could not have been more than a minute or
two-at last,
the torrent of insects dwindled and died. What remained of the fellow
was a
pale flat thing inside his clothes, like a wineskin that had been
emptied. The
shouting went on. of course. Half the clerks were up on the tables that
remained upright, men as well as women, cursing or praying or sometimes
alternating both at the tops of their lungs. The other half had fled
outside.
Small black beetles scuttled all across the floor. The room stank of
terror.
"I
heard a rumor," Faloun said hoarsely. Sweat beaded on his forehead. He
smelled of fear. Not terror, but definitely fear. "From east of here.
Only
that was centipedes. Little black centipedes." Some of the beetles
scurried toward him, and he backed away with a curse, making the same
odd
gesture that Tylee and Mishima had.
Perrin
crushed the beetles under his boot. They made the hair on the back of
his neck
want to stand, but nothing mattered except Faile. Nothing! "They're
just
borer beetles. You can find them almost anywhere there's old fallen
timber."
The
man jerked, lifted his gaze and jerked again when he saw Per-rin's
eyes.
Catching sight of the hammer at Perrin's belt, he darted a quick,
startled
glance at the Banner-General. "These beetles came from no log. They're
Soulblinder's work!"
"That's
as may be," Perrin replied calmly. He supposed Soulblinder was a name
for
the Dark One. "It makes no difference." He moved his foot, revealing
the crushed carcasses of seven or eight of the insects. "They can be
killed. And I have no time to waste on beetles I can crush underfoot."
"We
do need to talk in private, Captain," Tylee added. Her scent was full
of
fear, too, yet tightly controlled. Mishima's hand was locked in that
same
strange gesture. His fear was almost as well controlled as hers.
Faloun
gathered himself visibly, the fear smell fading. It did not go away,
yet he had
mastery of himself, now. He avoided looking at the beetles, however.
"As
you say, Banner-General. Atal. get down off that table and have these…
these things swept out of here. And see that Mehtan is laid out
properly for
the rites. However he died, he died in service." The stout clerk bowed
before climbing down, gingerly, and again when he was on the floor, but
the
captain was already turning away. "Will you follow me,
Banner-General?"
His
study might have been a bedroom originally, but now it held a writing
table
with flat boxes full of papers and another table, larger, that was
covered with
maps weighted down by inkwells, stones and small brass figures. A
wooden rack
against one wall held rolls that appeared to be more maps. The gray
stone
fireplace was cold. Faloun gestured them to half a dozen mismatched
chairs that
stood on the bare floor in front of the writing table and offered to
send for
wine. He seemed disappointed when Tylee refused both. Perhaps he wanted
a drink
to steady his nerves. A small scent of fright still clung to him.
Tylee
began. "I need to replace six raken, Captain, and eighteen morat'raken.
And a full company of groundlings. The one I had is somewhere in
Amadicia
heading west, and beyond finding."
Faloun
winced. "Banner-General, if you lost raken, you know everything has
been
stripped to the bone because of…" His one eye flickered to Perrin.
and he cleared his throat before going on. "You ask for three-quarters
of
the animals I have left. If you can possibly do with fewer, perhaps
only one or
two?"
"Four,"
Tylee said firmly, "and twelve fliers. I'll settle for that." She
could make that slurred Seanchan accent sound crisp when she wanted to.
"This region is as stable as Seandar by all I hear, but I'll leave you
four."
"As
you say, Banner-General," Faloun sighed. "May 1 see the order,
please? Everything has to be recorded. Since I lost the ability to fly
myself,
I spend all my time pushing a pen like a clerk."
"Lord
Perrin?" Tylee said, and he produced the document signed by Suroth from
his coat pocket.
That
made Faloun's eyebrows climb higher and higher as he read, and he
fingered the
wax seal lightly, but he did not question it any more than the
Banner-General
had. It appeared the Seanchan were accustomed to such things. He
appeared
relieved to hand it back, though, and wiped his hands on his coat
unconsciously. Accustomed to them, but not comfortably so. He studied
Perrin,
trying to be surreptitious, and Perrin could all but see on his face
the
question the Banner-General had asked. Who was he, to have such a thing?
"I
need a map of Altara, Captain, if you have such a thing," Tylee said.
"I can manage if you don't, but better if you do. The northwestern
quarter
of the country is what I'm interested in."
"You're
favored by the Light. Banner-General," the man said. bending to pull a
roll from the lowest level of the rack. "I have the very thing you
want.
By accident, it was in with the Amadician maps I was issued. I'd
forgotten I
had the thing until you mentioned it. Uncommon luck for you, I'd say."
Perrin shook his head slightly. Accident, not ta'veren work. Even Rand was not ta'veren enough to make this
happen. The
colors whirled, and he splintered them unformed.
Once
Faloun had the map spread out on the map table, the corners held down
by brass
weights in the form of raken. the Banner-General studied it until she
had her
landmarks fixed. It was large enough to cover the table and showed
exactly what
she had asked for, along with narrow strips of Amadicia and Ghealdan,
the
terrain rendered in great detail, with the names of towns and villages,
rivers
and streams, in very small letters. Perrin knew he was looking at a
fine
example of the map-maker's art, far better than most maps. Could it be
ta'veren
work? No. No, that was impossible.
"They'll
find my soldiers here." she drawled, marking a point with her finger.
"They're to leave immediately. One flier to a raken, and no personal
items. They fly light, and as fast as possible. I want them there
before
tomorrow night. The other morat'raken will travel with the groundlings.
I hope
to be leaving in a few hours. Have them assembled and ready.''
"Carts,"
Perrin said. Neald could not make a gateway large enough to accommodate
a
wagon. "Whatever they bring has to be in carts, not wagons." Faloun
mouthed the word incredulously.
"Carts,"
Tylee agreed. "See to it. Captain."
Perrin
could smell an eagerness in the man that he interpreted as a desire to
ask
questions, but all Faloun said, bowing, was. "As you command,
Banner-General, so shall it be done."
The
outer room was in a different sort of turmoil when they left the
captain.
Clerks darted everywhere, sweeping frantically or beating at the
remaining
beetles with their brooms. Some of the women wept as they wielded their
brooms,
some of the men looked as though they wanted to. and the room was still
rank
with terror. There was no sign of the dead man, but Perrin noticed that
the
clerks moved around the place where he had lain, refusing to let a foot
touch
it. They tried not to step on any beetles, either, which made for
considerable
dancing about on their toes. When Perrin crunched his way toward the
outer
door, they stopped to stare at him.
Outside,
the mood was calmer, but not by much. Tylee's soldiers still stood by
their
horses in a row. and Neald was affecting an air of casual indifference,
even to
yawning and patting his mouth, but the suldam was petting the trembling
damane
and murmuring soothingly, and the blue-coated soldiers, many more than
had been
there before, stood in a large cluster talking worriedly. The
Cairhienin and
Tairens rushed to surround Perrin, leading their horses and all talking
at
once.
"Is
it true, my Lord?" Camaille asked, her pale face twisted with worry,
and
her brother Barmanes said uneasily. "Four men carried out something in
a
blanket, but they averted their eyes from whatever it was."
All
of them atop one another, all smelling of near panic. "They said he
spewed
beetles," and "They said the beetles chewed their way out of
him," and "The Light help us, they're sweeping beetles out of the
door; we'll be killed," and "Burn my soul, it's the Dark One breaking
free," and more that made less sense.
"Be
quiet," Perrin said, and for a wonder, they fell silent. Usually, they
were very prickly with him. insisting that they served Faile, not him.
Now they
stood staring at him. waiting for him to put their fears to rest. "A
man
did spew up beetles and die, but they're ordinary beetles you can find
in dead
timber anywhere. Give you a nasty pinch if you sit on one, but nothing
worse.
Likely it was the Dark One's work somehow, true enough, but it has
nothing to
do with freeing the Lady Faile, and that means it has nothing to do
with us. So
calm yourselves, and let's get on about our business."
Strangely,
it worked. More than one cheek reddened, and the smell of fear was
replaced-or
at least suppressed-by the scent of shame at letting themselves come so
near to
panic. They looked abashed. As they began mounting, their own natures
reasserted themselves, though. First one then another offered boasts of
the
deeds they would do in rescuing Faile. each wilder than the next. They
knew
them for wild, because each boast brought laughter from the others, yet
the
next always tried to make his more outrageous still.
The
Banner-General was watching him again, he realized as he took Stayer's
reins
from Carlon. What did she see? What did she think she might learn?
"What
sent all the raken away?" he asked.
"We
should have come here second or third," she replied, swinging up into
her
saddle. "I still have to acquire a'dam. I wanted to keep believing I
had a
chance as long as I could, but we might as well get to the heart. That
piece of
paper faces a real test now. and if it fails, there's no point to going
after
a'dam." A frail alliance, and small trust.
"Why
should it fail? It worked here."
"Faloun's
a soldier, my Lord. Now we must talk with an Imperial functionary." She
imbued that last word with a wealth of scorn. She turned her bay. and
he had no
choice but to mount and follow.
Almizar
was a considerable town, and prosperous, with six tall watchtowers
around its
edge but no wall. Elyas said Amadician law forbade walls anywhere save
Amador,
a law made at the behest of the Whitecloaks and enforced by them as
much as by
whoever held the throne. Balwer would no doubt learn who that might be
now,
with Ailron dead. The streets were paved with granice blocks, and lined
with
solid buildings of brick or stone, some gray, some black, many three or
four
stories high and most roofed in dark slate, the rest in thatch. People
filled
the streets, dodging between wagons and horse carts and handcarts,
hawkers
crying their wares, women in deep bonnets that hid their faces carrying
shopping baskets, men in knee-length coats striding along
self-importantly,
apprentices in aprons or vests running errands. As many soldiers walked
the
streets as locals, men and women, with skin as dark as any Tairen, skin
the
color of honey, men as pale as Cairhienin but fair-haired and tall, all
in
brightly colored Seanchan uniforms. Most wore no more than a belt knife
or
dagger, but he saw some with swords. They walked in pairs, watchful of
everyone
around them, and had truncheons at their belts, too. A town Watch, he
supposed,
but a lot of them for a place the size of Almizar. He never had fewer
than two
of those pairs in his sight.
Two
men and a woman came out of a tall, slate-roofed inn and mounted horses
held by
grooms. He knew her for a woman only by the way her long, split-tailed
coat fit
over her bosom because her hair was cut shorter than the men's and she
wore
men's clothing and a sword, just like the other two. Her face was
certainly as
hard as theirs. As the three cantered off west down the street, Mishima
grunted
sourly.
"Hunters
for the Horn," he muttered. "My eyes if they're not. Those fine
fellows cause trouble everywhere they go, getting in fights, sticking
their
noses where they don't belong. I've heard the Horn of Valere has
already been
found. What do you think, my Lord?''
"I've
heard it's been found, too," Perrin replied cautiously. "There are
all sorts of rumors floating about."
Neither
one so much as glanced at him, and in the middle of a crowded street,
catching
their scents was well-nigh impossible, yet for some reason he thought
they were
mulling over his answer as if it had hidden depths. Light, could they
think be
was tied up with the Horn? He knew where it was. Moiraine had carried
it off to
the WhiteTower. He was not
about to tell them,
though. Small trust worked both ways.
The
local people gave the soldiers no more heed than they did each other,
nor the
Banner-General and her armored followers, but Perrin was another
matter. At
least, when they noticed his golden eyes. He could tell instantly when
someone
did. The quick jerk of a woman's head, her mouth falling open as she
stared.
The man who froze, gaping at him. One fellow actually tripped over his
own
boots and stumbled to his knees. That one stared, then scrambled to his
feet
and ran, pushing people from his path, as though fearful Perrin might
pursue
him.
"I
suppose he never saw yellow eyes on a man before,'' Perrin said wryly.
"Are
they common where you come from?" the Banner-General asked.
"Not
common, I wouldn't say that, but I'll introduce you to another man who
has
them."
She
and Mishima exchanged glances. Light, he hoped there was nothing in the
Prophecies about two men with yellow eyes. Those colors whirled, and he
dashed
them.
The
Banner-General knew exactly where she was going, a stone stable on the
southern
edge of the town, but when she dismounted in the empty stableyard. no
groom
came rushing out. A stone-fenced paddock stood next to the stable, but
it held
no horses. She handed her reins to one of her soldiers and stood
staring at the
stable doors, only one of which was open. By her scent. Perrin thought
she was
steeling herself.
"Follow
my lead, my Lord," she said finally, "and don't say anything you
don't have to. It might be the wrong thing. If you must speak, speak to
me.
Make it clear you're speaking to me."
That
sounded ominous, but he nodded. And began planning how to steal the
forkroot if
things went wrong. He would need to learn whether the place was guarded
at
night. Balwer might already know. The little man seemed to pick up
information
like that without trying. When he followed her inside, Mishima remained
with
the horses, and looking relieved not to accompany them. What did that
mean? Or
did it mean anything? Seanchan. In just a few days they had him seeing
hidden
meanings in everything.
The
place had been a stable once, obviously, but now it was something else.
The
stone floor had been swept clean enough to satisfy any farmwife, there
were no
horses, and a thick smell like mint would have overwhelmed the
remaining scent
of horse and hay to any nose but his or Elyas'. The stalls at the front
were
filled with stacked wooden crates, and in the back, the stalls had been
removed
except for the uprights that supported the loft. Now men and women were
working
back there, some using mortats and pestles or sieves at tables, others
carefully tending flat pans sitting on metal legs above charcoal
braziers,
using tongs to turn what appeared to be roots.
A
lean young man in his shirtsleeves put a plump jute bag into one of the
crates,
then bowed to Tylee as deeply as the clerk had, body parallel to the
floor. He
did not straighten until she spoke.
"Banner-General
Khirgan. I wish to speak with whoever is in charge, if I may." Her tone
was much different than it had been with the clerk, not peremptory at
all.
"As
you command," the lean fellow replied in what sounded an Amadician
accent.
At least, if he was Seanchan, he spoke at a proper speed and without
chewing
his words.
Bowing
again, just as deeply, he hurried to where six stalls had been walled
in,
halfway down the left-hand row, and tapped diffidently at a door, then
awaited
permission before going in. When he came out, he went to the back of
the
building without so much as a glance toward Perrin and Tylee. After a
few
minutes, Perrin opened his mouth, but Tylee grimaced and shook her
head, so he
closed it again and waited. A good quarter of an hour he waited,
growing more
impatient by the heartbeat. The Banner-General smelled solidly of
patience.
At
last a sleekly plump woman in a deep yellow dress of odd cut came out
of the
small room, but she paused to study the work going on in the back of
the
building, ignoring Tylee and him. Half of her scalp had been shaved
bald! Her
remaining hair was in a thick, graying braid that hung to her shoulder.
Finally
she nodded in satisfaction and made her unhurried way to them. An oval
blue
panel on her bosom was embroidered with three golden hands. Tylee bowed
as
deeply as Faloun had for her, and remembering her admonition. Perrin
did the
same. The sleek woman inclined her head. Slightly. She smelled of pride.
"You
wish to speak with me. Banner-General?" She had a smooth voice, as
sleek
as she herself. And not welcoming. She was a busy woman being bothered.
A busy
woman well aware of her own importance.
"Yes.
Honorable," Tylee said respectfully. A spike of irritation appeared
among
her smell of patience, then was swallowed again. Her face remained
expressionless. "Will you tell me how much prepared forkroot you have
on
hand?"
"An
odd request," the other woman said as though considering whether to
grant
it. She tilted her head in thought. "Very well," she said after a
moment. "As of the midmorning accounting, I have four thousand eight
hundred seventy-three pounds nine ounces. A remarkable achievement, if
I do say
it myself, considering how much I have shipped off and how hard it is
getting
to find the plant in the wild without
sending diggers unreasonable distances." Impossible as it seemed, the
pride in her scent deepened. "I've solved that problem. however, by
inducing the local farmers to plant some of their fields in forkroot.
By this
summer I will need to build something bigger to house this manufactory.
I'll
confide in you, I will not be surprised if I am offered a new name for
this.
Though of course, I may not accept." Smiling a small, sleek smile, she
touched the oval panel lightly, but it was near a caress.
"The
Light will surely favor you. Honorable," Tylee murmured. "My Lord,
will you do me the favor of showing your document to the Honorable?"
That
with a bow to Perrin markedly lower than the one she had offered the
Honorable.
The sleek woman's eyebrows twitched.
Reaching
out to take the paper from his hand, she froze, staring at his face.
She had
finally noticed his eyes. Giving hersell a small shake, she read
without any
outward expression of surprise, then folded the paper up again and
stood
tapping it against her free hand. "It seems you walk the heights.
Banner-General. And with a very strange companion. What aid do you-or
he-ask of
me?"
"Forkroot,
Honorable," Tylee said mildly. "All that you have. Loaded into carts
as soon as possible. And you must provide the carts and drivers as
well, I
fear."
"Impossible!"
the sleek woman snapped, drawing herself up haughtily. "I have
established
strict schedules as to how many pounds of prepared forkroot are shipped
every
week, which I have adhered to rigidly, and I'll not see that record
sullied.
The harm to the Empire would be immense. The sul'dam are snapping up
marattidamane on every hand."
"Forgiveness.
Honorable," Tylee said, bowing again. "If you could see your way
clear to let us have-"
"Banner-General,"
Perrin cut in. Plainly this was a touchy encounter, and he tried to
keep his
face smooth, but he could not avoid a frown. He could not be certain
that even
near five tons of the stuff would be sufficient, and she was trying to
negotiate some lesser weight! His mind raced, trying to find a way.
Fast
thought was shoddy thought, in his estimation-it led to mistakes and
accidents-but he had no choice. "This may not interest the Honorable,
of
course, but Suroth promised death and worse if there was any hindrance
to her
plans. I don't suppose her anger will go beyond you and me, but she did
say to
take it all."
"Of
course, the Honorable will not be touched by the High Lady's anger."
Tylee
sounded as though she was not so sure of that.
The
sleek woman was breathing hard, the blue oval with the golden hands
heaving.
She bowed to Perrin as deeply as Tylee had. "I'll need most of the day
to
gather enough carts and load them. Will that suffice, my Lord?"
"It
will have to, won't it," Perrin said, plucking the note from her hand.
She
let go reluctantly and watched hungrily as he tucked it into his coat
pocket.
Outside,
the Banner-General shook her head as she swung into the saddle.
"Dealing
with the Lesser Hands is always difficult. None of them see anything
lesser in
themselves. I thought this would be in the charge of someone of the
Fourth or
Fifth Rank, and that would have been hard enough. When I saw that she
was of
the Third Rank-only two steps below a Hand to the Empress herself, may
she live
forever- I was sure we wouldn't get away with more than a few hundred
pounds if
that. But you handled it beautifully. A risk taken, but still,
beautifully
masked."
"Well,
nobody wants to chance death," Perrin said as they started out of the
stableyard into the town with everyone strung out behind them. Now they
had to
wait for the carts, perhaps find an inn. Impatience burned in him. The
Light
send they did not need to spend the night.
"You
didn't know," the dark woman breathed. 'That woman knew she stood in
the
shadow of death as soon as she read Suroth's words, but she was ready
to risk
it to do her duty to the Empire. A Lesser Hand of the Third Rank has
standing
enough that she might well escape death on the plea of duty done. But
you used
Suroth's name. That's all right most of the time, except when
addressing the
High Lady herself, of course, but with a Lesser Hand, using her name
without
her title meant you were either an ignorant local or an intimate of
Suroth
herself. The Light favored you, and she decided you were an intimate."
Perrin
barked a mirthless laugh. Seanchan. And maybe ta'veren, too.
"Tell
me, if the question does not offend, did your Lady bring powerful
connections,
or perhaps great lands?"
That
surprised him so much that he twisted in his saddle to stare at her.
Something
hit his chest hard, sliced a line of fire across his chest, punched his
arm.
Behind him, a horse squealed in pain. Stunned, he stared down at the
arrow
sticking through his left arm.
"Mishima,"
the Banner-Genetal snapped, pointing, "that four-story building with
the
thatched roof, between two slate roofs. I saw movement on the rooftop."
Shouting
a command to follow, Mishima galloped off down the crowded street with
six of
the Seanchan lancers, horseshoes ringing on the paving stones. People
leapt out
of their way. Others stared. No one in the street seemed to realize
what had
happened. Two of the other lancers were out of their saddles, tending
the
trembling mount of one that had an arrow jutting from its shoulder.
Perrin
fingered a broken button hanging by a thread. The silk of his coat was
slashed
from the button across his chest. Blood oozed, dampening his shirt,
trickled
down his arm. Had he not twisted just at that moment, that arrow would
have
been through his heart instead of his arm. Maybe the other would have
hit him
as well, but the one would have done the job. A Two Rivers shaft would
not have
been deflected so easily.
Cairhienin
and Tairens crowded around him as he dismounted, all of them trying to
help
him, which he did not need. He drew his belt knife, but Camaille took
it from
him and deftly scored the shaft so she could break it cleanly just
above his
arm. That sent a jolt of pain down his arm. She did not seem to mind
getting
blood on her fingers, just plucking a lace-edge handkerchief Irom her
sleeve, a
paler green than usual for Cairhienin, and wiping them, then examined
the end
of the shaft sticking out of his arm to make sure there were no
splinters.
The
Banner-General was down off her bay, too, and frowning. "My eyes are
lowered that you have been injured, my Lord. I'd heard that there has
been an
increase in crime of late, arsons, robbers killing when there was no
need,
murders done for no reason anyone knows. I should have protected you
better."
"Grit
your teeth, my Lord," Barmanes said, tying a length of leather cord
just
above the arrowhead. "Are you ready, my Lord?" Perrin tightened his
jaw and nodded, and Barmanes jerked the bloodstained shaft free. Perrin
stifled
a groan.
"Your
eyes aren't lowered." he said hoarsely. Whatever that meant. It did not
sound good, the way she said it. "Nobody asked you to wrap me in
swaddling. I certainly never did." Neald pushed through the crowd
surrounding Perrin, his hands already raised, but Perrin waved him
away.
"Not here, man. People can see." Folk in the street had finally
noticed and were gathering to watch, murmuring excitedly to one
another.
"He can Heal this so you'd never know I was hurt," he explained,
flexing his arm experimentally. He winced. That had been a bad idea.
"You'd
let him use the One Power on you?" Tylee said disbeliev-ingly.
"To
be rid of a hole in my arm and a slice across my chest? As soon as
we're
somewhere half the town isn't staring at us. Wouldn't you?"
She
shivered and made that peculiar gesture again. He was going to have to
ask her
what that meant.
Mishima
joined them, leading his horse and looking grave. "Two men fell from
that
roof with bows and quivers," he said quietly, "but it wasn't that
fall that killed them. They hit the pavement hard, yet there was hardly
any
blood. I think they took poison when they saw they'd failed to kill
you."
"That
doesn't make any sense." Perrin muttered.
"If
men will kill themselves rather than report failure," Tylee said
gravely,
"it means you have a powerful enemy."
A
powerful enemy? Very likely Masema would like to see him dead, but
there was no
way Masema's reach could extend this far. "Any enemies I have are far
away
and don't know where I am." Tylee and Mishima agreed that he must know
about that, but they looked doubtful. Then again, there were always the
Forsaken. Some of them had tried to kill him before. Others had tried
to use
him. He did not think he was going to bring the Forsaken into the
discussion.
His arm was throbbing. The cut on his chest, too. "Let's find an inn
where
I can hire a room." Fifty-one knots. How many more? Light, how many
more?
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Siege
"Push
them!" Elayne shouted. Fireheart tried to dance, impatient at being
crowded in a narrow cobblestone street with other horses and women
afoot, but
she steadied the black gelding with a firm hand. Birgitte had insisted
she
remain well back. Insisted! As if she were a brainless fool! "Push
them,
burn you!"
None
of the hundreds of men on the wide guardwalk atop the city wall,
white-streaked
gray stone rearing fifty feet, paid her any heed, of course. It was
doubtful
they heard her. Amid shouts of their own, curses and screams, the clash
of
steel rang over the broad street that ran alongside the wall beneath
the
noonday sun suspended in a rare cloudless sky as those men sweated and
killed
one another with sword or spear or halberd. The melee spanned two
hundred paces
of the wall, enveloping three of the high round towers where the White
Lion of
Andor flew and threatening two more, though all still seemed secure,
thank the
Light. Men stabbed and hacked and thrust, no one giving ground or
quarter that
she could see. Red-coated crossbowmen atop the towers did their share
of
killing, but once fired, a crossbow required time to ready for another
shot,
and they were too few to turn the tide in any case. They were the only
Guardsmen up there. The rest were mercenaries. Save Birgitte. This
near, the
bond let Elayne's eye find her Warder easily, intricate golden braid
swaying as
she shouted encouragement to her soldiers, pointing her bow to where
reinforcement was needed. In her short white-collared red coat and wide
sky-blue trousers tucked into her boots, she alone atop the wall wore
no armor
of any sort. She had insisted Elayne don plain gray in the hope of
avoiding
notice, and any effort to capture or kill her-some of the men up there
had
crossbows or shortbows slung on their backs, and for those not in the
forefront
and engaged, fifty paces made an easy shot-but the four golden knots of
rank on
her own shoulder would make Birgitte the target of any of Arymilla's
men with
eyes. At least she was not actually mingling in the press. At least she…
Elayne's
breath caught as a wiry fellow in breastplate and conical steel cap
lunged at
Birgitte with a sword, but the golden-haired woman dodged the thrust
calmly-the
bond said she might have been out for a hard ride, no more!-and a
backhand blow
with her bow caught the fellow on the side of his head, knocking him
from the
rampart. He had time to scream before he hit the paving stones with a
sickening
splat. His was not the only corpse decorating the street. Birgitte said
men
would not follow you unless they knew you were ready to face the same
dangers
and hardships they did. but if she got herself killed with this
man-foolishness…
Elayne
did not realize she had heeled Fireheart forward until Ca-seille seized
her
bridle. 'I am not an idiot, Guardswoman Lieutenant," she said frigidly.
"I have no intention of going closer until it is… safe."
The
Arafellin woman jerked her hand back, her face becoming very still
behind the
face-bars of her burnished conical helmet. Instantly. Elayne felt sorry
for the
outburst-Caseille was just doing her job- but she still felt coldly
angry, too.
She would not apologize. Shame surged as she recognized the sulkiness
of her
own thoughts. Blood and bloody ashes, but there were times she wanted
to slap Rand for planting these babes
in her. These days, she
could not be certain from one moment to the next which way her emotions
would
leap. Leap they did, however.
"If
this is what happens to you when you get with child," Aviendha said,
adjusting the dark shawl looped over her arms. "I think I will never
have
any." The high-cantled saddle of her dun pushed her bulky Aiel skirts
high
enough to bare her stockinged legs to the knee, but she showed no
discomfort at
the display. With the mare standing still, she looked quite at home on
a horse.
But then, Mageen, Daisy in the Old Tongue, was a gentle, placid animal
tending
to stoutness. Luckily, Aviendha was too ignorant of horses to realize
that.
Muffled
laughter pulled Elayne's head around. The women of her bodyguard, all
twenty-one of them assigned this morning counting Caseille. in polished
helmets
and breastplates, wore smooth faces- much too smooth, in fact; without
doubt
they were laughing inside- but the four Kinswomen standing behind them
had
hands over their mouths and their heads together. AJise, a
pleasant-faced woman
normally, with touches of gray in her hair, saw her looking-well,
glaring-and
rolled her eyes ostentatiously, which set the others off in another
round of
laughter. Caiden, aplumply pretty Domani, laughed so hard she had to
hold on to
Kumiko, though the stout graying woman seemed to be having her own
difficulties. Irritation stabbed at Elayne. Not at the laughter-all
right, a
little at the laughter-and certainly not at the Kinswomen. Not very
much, at
least. They were invaluable.
This
fight on the wall was not Arymilla's first assault in recent weeks by
far. In
truth, the frequency was increasing, with three or four attacks coming
some
days, now. She knew very well that Elayne had insufficient soldiers to
hold six
leagues of wall. Burn her, Elayne was all too aware that she could not
even
spare trained hands to fit hoardings to all those miles of wall and
towers.
Untrained hands would only bungle the work. All Arymilla needed was to
get
enough men across to seize a gate. Then she could bring the battle into
the
city, where Elayne would be badly outnumbered. The population might
rise in her
favor, no certain thing, yet that only meant adding to the slaughter,
apprentices and grooms and shopkeepers fighting trained armsmen and
mercenaries. Whoever sat on the Lion Throne then-and very likely that
would not
be Elayne Trakand-it would be stained red with the blood of Caemlyn. So
apart
from holding the gates and leaving watchmen on the towers, she had
pulled all
of her soldiers back into the Inner City, close to the Royal Palace,
and
stationed men with looking glasses in the tallest spires of the palace.
Whenever a watchman signaled an attack forming, linked Kinswomen made
gateways
to carry soldiers to the spot. They took no part in the fighting, of
course.
She would not have allowed them to use the Power as a weapon even had
they been
willing.
So
far it had worked, though often by a hair. Low Caemlyn, outside the
walls, was
a warren of houses, shops, inns and warehouses that allowed men to
close before
they were seen. Three times her soldiers had been forced to fight on
the ground
inside the wall and to retake at least one wall tower. Bloody work,
that. She
would have burned Low Caemlyn to the ground to deny Arymilla's people
cover,
except that the fire might easily spread inside the walls and spawn a
conflagration, spring rains or no spring rains. As it was. every night
saw
arsons inside the city, and containing chose was difficult enough.
Besides,
people lived in those houses despite the siege, and she did not want to
be
remembered as the one who had destroyed their homes and livelihoods.
No, what
nettled her was that she had not thought of using the Kin that way
earlier. If
she had, she would not be saddled with Sea Folk still, not to mention a
bargain
that gave up a square mile of Andor. Light, a square mile! Her mother
had never
given up one inch of Andor. Burn her, this siege hardly gave her time
to mourn
her mother. Or Lini, her old nursemaid. Rahvin had murdered her mother,
and
likely Lini had died trying to protect her. White-haired and thin with
age,
Lini would not have backed down even for one of the Forsaken. But
thinking of
Lini made her hear the woman's reedy voice. You can't put honey back in
the comb,
child. What was done, was done, and she had to live with it.
"That's
it. then." Caseille said. "They're making for the ladders." It
was true. All along the wall Elayne's soldiers were pushing forward,
Arymilla's
falling back, climbing through the crenels where their ladders were
propped.
Men still died on the rampart, but the fight was ending.
Elayne
surprised herself by digging her heels into Fireheart's flanks. No one
was
quick enough to catch her this time. Pursued by shouts, she galloped
across the
street and flung herself out of the saddle at the base of the nearest
tower
before the gelding was fully halted. Pushing open the heavy door, she
gathered
her divided skirts and raced up the widdershins spiraling stairs, past
large
niches where clusters of armored men stared in amazement as she darted
by.
These towers were made to be defended against attackers trying to make
their
way down and into the city. At last the stairs opened into a large room
where stairs
on the other side spiraled upward in the opposite direction. Twenty men
in
mismatched helmets and breastplates were taking their ease, tossing
dice,
sitting against the wall, calking and laughing as if there were no dead
men
beyond the room's two iron-strapped doors.
Whatever
they were doing, they stopped to gape when she appeared.
"Uh,
my Lady, I wouldn't do that," a rough voice said as she laid hands on
the
iron bar across one of the doors. Ignoring the man. she turned the bar
on its
pivot pin and pushed the door open. A hand caught at her skirt, but she
pulled
free.
None
of Arymilla's men remained on the wall. None standing, at least. Dozens
of men
lay on the blood-streaked guardwalk, some still, others groaning. Any
number of
those might belong to Arymilla, but the ringing of steel had vanished.
Most of
the mercenaries were tending the wounded, or just squatting on their
heels to
catch their breath.
"Shake
them off and pull up the bloody ladders!" Birgitte shouted. Loosing an
arrow into the mass of men trying to flee down the dirt-paved Low
Caemlyn
street below the wall, she nocked another and fired again. "Make them
build more if they want to come again!" Some of the mercenaries leaned
through crenels to obey, but only a handful. "I knew I shouldn't have
let
you come along today," she went on, still loosing shafts as fast as she
could nock and draw. Crossbow bolts from the towertops struck down men
below as
well, but tile-roofed warehouses offered shelter here for any who could
get
inside.
It
took a moment for Elayne to realize that last comment had been directed
at her,
and her face heated. "And how would you have stopped me?" she
demanded, drawing herself up.
Quiver
empty, Birgitte lowered her bow and turned with a scowl. "By tying you
up
and having her sit on you," she said, nodding toward Aviendha, who was
striding out of the tower. The glow of saidar surrounded her. yet her
horn-hilted belt knife was in her fist. Caseille and the rest of the
Guardswomen spilled out behind her. swords in hand and faces grim.
Seeing
Elayne unharmed changed their expressions not a whit. Those bloody
women were
insufferable when it came to treating her like a blown glass vase that
might
break at the rap of a knuckle. They would be worse than ever after
this. And she
would have to suffer it.
"I
would have caught you," Aviendha muttered, rubbing her hip, "except
that fool horse tossed me off." That was highly unlikely with such a
placid mare. Aviendha had simply managed to fall off. Seeing the
situation, she
slipped her knife back into its sheath quickly, trying to pretend she
had never
had it out. The light of saidar vanished, too.
"I
was quite safe." Elayne tried to remove the acerbic touch from her
voice,
without much success. "Min said I will bear my babes, sister. Until
they're born, no harm can come to me."
Aviendha
nodded slowly, thoughtfully, but Birgitte growled, "I'd just as soon
you
didn't put her visions to the test. Take too many chances, and you
might prove
her wrong." That was foolish. Min was never wrong. Surely not.
"That
was Aldin Miheres' company," a tall mercenary said in a lilting if
rough
Murandian accent as he removed his helmet to reveal a lean, sweaty face
with
gray-streaked mustaches waxed to spikes. Rhys a'Balaman, as he called
himself,
had eyes like stones and a thin-lipped smile that always seemed a leer.
He had
been listening to their conversation, and he kept darting sideways
glances at
Elayne while he talked to Birgitte. "I recognized him, I did. Good man.
Miheres. I fought alongside him more times than I can number, I have.
He'd
almost made it to that warehouse door when your arrow took him in the
neck,
Captain-General. A shame, that."
Elayne
frowned. "He made his choice as you did. Captain. You may regret the
death
of a friend, but I hope you aren't regretting your choice." Most of the
mercenaries she had put out of the city, maybe all, had signed on with
Arymilla. Her greatest fear at present was that the woman would succeed
in
bribing companies still inside the walls. None of the mercenary
captains had
reported anything, but Mistress Harfor said approaches had been made.
Including
an approach to a'Balaman.
The
Murandian favored her with his leer and a formal bow, flourishing a
cloak he
was not wearing. "Oh, 1 fought against him as often as with, my Lady.
I'd
have killed him, or he'd have killed me. had we come face to face this
fine
day. More acquaintance than friend, you see. And I'd much rather take
gold to
defend a wall like this than to attack it."
"I
notice some of your men have crossbows on their backs. Captain, but I
didn't
see any using them."
"Not
the mercenary way," Birgitte said dryly. Irritation floated in the
bond,
though whether with a'Balaman or Elayne there was no way to know. The
sensation
vanished quickly. Birgitte had learned to master her emotions once they
discovered how she and Elayne mirrored one another through the bond.
Very
likely she wished Elayne could do the same, but then, so did Elayne.
A'Balaman
rested his helmet on his hip. "You see, my Lady, the way of it is. if
you
press a man too hard when he's trying to get off the field, attempting
to ride
him down and the like, well, the next time it's you trying to get off
the
field, he might return the favor. After all, if a man's leaving the
field, then
he's out of the fight, now isn't he?"
"Until
he comes back tomorrow." Elayne snapped. "The next time, I want to
see those crossbows put to work!"
"As
you say, my Lady," a'Balaman said stiffly, making an equally stiff bow.
"If you'll pardon me, I must be seeing to my men." He stalked off
without waiting on her pardon, shouting to his men to stir their lazy
stumps.
"How
far can he be trusted?" Elayne asked softly.
"As
far as any mercenary," Birgitte replied, just as quietly. "If someone
offers him enough gold, it becomes a toss of the dice, and not even Mat
Cauthon
could say how they'll land."
That
was a very odd remark. She wished she knew how Mat was. And dear Thom.
And poor
little Olver. Every night she offered prayers that they had escaped the
Seanchan safely. There was nothing she could do to help them, though.
She had
enough on her plate trying to help herself at the moment. "Will he obey
me? About the crossbows?"
Birgitte
shook her head, and Elayne sighed. It was bad to give orders that would
not be
obeyed. It put people in the habit of disobeying.
Moving
close, she spoke in a near whisper. "You look tired, Birgitte." This
was nothing for anyone else's ears. Birgitte's face was tight, her eyes
haggard. Anyone could see that, but the bond said she was bone-weary,
as it had
for clays now. But then, Elayne felt that same dragging tiredness, as
though
her limbs were made of lead. Their bond mirrored more than emotions.
"You
don't have to lead every counterattack yourself."
"And
who else is there?" For a moment weariness larded Birgitte's voice,
too,
and her shoulders actually slumped, but she straightened quickly and
strengthened her tone. It was pure willpower. Elayne could feel it,
stone hard
in the bond, so hard she wanted to weep. "My officers are inexperienced
boys," Birgitte went on, "or else men who came out of retirement and
should still be warming their bones in front of their grandchildren's
fireplace. Except for the mercenary captains, anyway, and there isn't
one I'd
trust without someone looking over his shoulder. Which brings us back
to: Who
else but me?"
Elayne
opened her mouth to argue. Not about the mercenaries. Birgitte had
explained
about them, bitterly and at great length. At times, mercenaries would
fight as
hard as any Guardsman, but other times, they pulled back rather than
take too
many casualties. Fewer men meant less gold for their next hire unless
they
could be replaced with men as good. Battles that could have been won
had been
lost instead because mercenaries left the field to preserve their
numbers. They
disliked doing it if anybody except their own kind was watching,
though. That
spoiled their reputation and lowered their hire price. But there had to
be
someone else. She could not afford Birgitte falling over from
exhaustion.
Light, she wished Gareth Bryne were there. Egwene needed him, but so
did she.
She opened her mouth, and suddenly rumbling booms crashed from the city
behind
her. She turned, and her mouth stayed open, gaping in astonishment, now.
Where
moments before there had been clear sky over the Inner City, a huge
mass of
black clouds loomed like sheer-sided mountains, forked lightning
slashing down
through a gray wall of rain that seemed as solid as the city walls. The
gilded
domes of the RoyalPalace that should
have
been glittering in the sun were invisible behind that wall. That
torrent fell
only over the Inner City. Everywhere else the sky remained bright and
cloudless. There was nothing natural in that. Amazement lasted only
moments,
though. That silver-blue lightning. three-tined, five-tined, was
striking
inside Caemlyn, causing damage and maybe deaths. How had those clouds
come to
be? She reached to embrace saiciar, to disperse them. The True Source
slipped
away from her, and then again. It was like trying to grasp a bead
buried in a
pot of grease. Just when she thought she had it, it squirted away. It
was like
this far too often, now.
"Aviendha.
will you deal with that, please?"
"Of
course," Aviendha replied, embracing saidar easily. Elayne stifled a
surge
of jealousy. Her difficulty was Rand's
bloody
fault, not her sister's. "And thank you. I need the practice."
That
was untrue, an attempt to spare her feelings. Aviendha began weaving
Air, Fire,
Water and Earth in complex patterns, and doing so nearly as smoothly as
she
herself could have, if much more slowly. Her sister lacked her skill
with
weather, but then, she had not had the advantage of Sea Folk teaching.
The
clouds did not simply vanish, of course. First the lightnings became
single
bolts, dwindled in number, then ceased. That was the hardest part.
Calling
lightning was twirling a feather between your fingers compared to
stopping it.
That was more like picking up a blacksmith's anvil in your hands. Then
the
clouds began to spread out. to thin and grow paler. Thar was slow. too.
Doing
too much too fast with weather could cause effecrs that rippled across
the
countryside for leagues, and you never knew what the effects might be.
Raging
storms and flash floods were as likely as balmy days and gentle
breezes. By the
time the clouds had spread far enough to reach the outer walls of
Caemlyn. they
were gray and dropping a steady, soaking downpour that quickly slicked
Elayne's
curls to her scalp.
"Is
that enough?" Smiling, Aviendha turned her face up to let the rain run
down her cheeks. "I love to watch water falling from rhe sky." Light,
you would think she had had enough of rain. It had rained nearly every
bloody
day since spring came!
"It's
time to be getting back to the palace, Elayne," Birgitte said, tucking
her
bowstring into her coat pocket. She had begun unstringing her bow as
soon as
the clouds began moving toward them. "Some of these men need a sister's
attention. And my breakfast seems two days past."
Elayne
scowled. The bond carried a wariness that told her all she needed to
know. They
must return to the palace to get Elayne, in her delicate condition, out
of the
rain. As if she might melt! Abruptly she became aware of the groans
from the
wounded, and her face grew hot. Those men did need a sister's
attention. Even
if she could hold on to saidar, the least of their injuries were beyond
her
modest abilities, and Aviendha was no better at Healing.
"Yes.
it is time," she said. If only she could get her emotions back under
control! Birgitte would be pleased at that, too. Spots of color
decorated her
cheeks, too, echoes of Elayne's shame. They looked very odd with the
frown she
wore as she hurried Elayne into the tower.
Fireheart
and Mageen and the other horses were all standing patiently where their
reins
had been dropped, as Elayne expected. Even Mageen was well trained.
They had
the wall street utterly to themselves until Alise and the other Kin
walked out
of the narrower way. There was not a cart or wagon to be seen. Every
door in
sight was tightly shut, every window curtained, though there might well
be no
one behind any of them. Most people had had sense enough to leave as
soon they
caught a glimmering that hundreds of men were about to start swinging
swords in
their vicinity. One curtain twitched; a woman's face showed for a
moment, then
vanished. Some others took ghoulish delight in watching.
Talking
quietly among themselves, the four Kinswomen took their places where
they had
opened their gateway some hours earlier. They eyed the corpses in the
street
and shook their heads, but these were not the first dead men they had
seen. Not
one would have been allowed to test for Accepted, yet they were calm,
sure of
themselves, as dignified as sisters despite the rain soaking their hair
and
dresses. Learning Eg-wene's plans for the Kin. to be associated with
the Tower
and a place for Aes Sedai to retire, had lessened their fears over
their
future, especially once they found out that their Rule would remain in
place
and the former Aes Sedai would have to follow it, too. Not all
believed- over
the last month, seven of their number had run away without leaving so
much as a
note-yet most did, and took strength from belief. Having work to do had
restored their pride. Elayne had not realized that had been dented
until they
stopped seeing themselves as refugees wholly dependent on her. They
held
themselves straighter, now. Worry had vanished from their faces. And
they were
not so quick to bend their necks for a sister, unfortunately. Though
that part
of it really had begun earlier. They once had considered Aes Sedai
superior to
mortal flesh, but had learned to their dismay that the shawl did not
make a
woman more than she was without it.
Alise
eyed Elayne, compressing her lips for a moment and adjusting her brown
skirts
unnecessarily. She had argued against Elayne being allowed-allowed!-to
come
here. And Birgitte had almost given way! Alise was a forceful woman.
"Are
you ready for us. Captain-General?" she said.
"We
are," Elayne said, but Alise waited until Birgitte nodded before
linking
with the other three Kinswomen. She ignored Elayne after that one
glance.
Really, Nynaeve should never have begun trying to "put some backbone
into
them," as she had put it. When she could lay hands on Nynaeve again,
she
was going to have words with the woman.
The
familiar vertical slash appeared and seemed to rotate into a view of
the main
stableyard in the palace, a hole in the air nearly four paces by four,
but the
view through the opening, of the tall arched doors of one of the white
marble
stables, was a little off-center from what she expected. When she rode
onto the
rain-drenched flagstones of the stableyard. she saw why. There was
another
gateway, slightly smaller, open. If you tried to open a gateway where
one
already existed, yours was displaced just enough that the two did not
touch,
though the gap between was thinner than a razor's edge. From that other
gateway
a twinned column of men seemed to be riding out of the stable-yard's
outer
wall, curving away to exit the stableyard through the open
iron-strapped gates.
Some wore burnished helmets and breastplates or plate-and-mail, but
every man
had on the white-collared red coat of the Queen's Guard. A tall,
broad-shouldered man with two golden knots on the left shoulder of his
red coat
stood in the rain watching them, helmet balanced on his hip.
"That's
a sight to soothe sore eyes," Birgitte murmured. Small groups of
Kinswomen
were scouring the countryside for anyone trying to come to Elayne's
support,
but it was a chancy business. Thus far, the Kinswomen had brought word
of
dozens and dozens of groups trying to find a way into the city, yet
they had
only managed to locate five bands totaling fewer than a thousand. Word
had
spread of how many men Arymilla had around the city, and men supporting
Trakand
were skittish about being found. About who might do the finding.
As
soon as Elayne and the others appeared, red-clad grooms with the White
Lion on
their left shoulders came running. A scrawny, gap-toothed fellow with a
fringe
of white hair took Fireheart's bridle while a lean, graying woman held
Elayne's
stirrup for her to dismount. Ignoring the downpour, she strode toward
the tall
man, splashing water with every step. His hair hung every which way
over his
face, clinging wetly, but she could see he was young, well short of his
middle
years.
"The
Light shine on you, Lieutenant," she said. "Your name? How many did
you bring? And from where?" Through that smaller opening she could see
a
line of horsemen extending out of sight among tall trees. Whenever a
pair rode
through, another appeared at the far end of the column. She would not
have
believed that many of the Guards remained anywhere.
"Charlz
Guybon, my Queen," he replied, sinking to one knee and pressing a
gauntleted fist to the flagstones. "Captain Kindlin in Aringill gave me
permission to try reaching Caemlyn. That was after we learned Lady
Naean and
the others had escaped."
Elayne
laughed. "Stand, man. Stand. I'm not Queen yet." Aringill? There had
never been so many of the Guards there.
"As
you say, my Lady," he said as he regained his feet and made a bow that
was
more proper for the Daughter-Heir.
"Can
we continue this inside?" Birgitte put in irritably. Guybon took in her
coat
with its gold stripes on the cuffs and knots of rank, and offered a
salute that
she returned with a quick arm across her chest. If he was surprised to
see a
woman as Captain-General, he was wise enough not to show it. "I'm
soaked
to the skin, and so are you. Elayne." Aviendha was right behind her.
shawl
wrapped around her head and not looking so pleased with rain now that
her white
blouse clung wetly and her dark skirts hung with water. The Guardswomen
were
leading their horses toward one of the stables, except for the eight
who would
remain with Elayne until their replacements arrived. Guybon made no
comment on
them, either. A very wise man.
Elayne
allowed herself to be hustled as far as the simple colonnade that
offered
entrance to the palace itself. Even here the Guardswomen surrounded
her, four
ahead and four behind, so she felt a prisoner. Once out of the rain,
though,
she balked. She wanted to know. She tried again to embrace
saidar-removing the
moisture from her clothes would be a simple matter with the Power-but
the
Source skittered away once more. Aviendha did not know the weave, so
they had
to stand there dripping. The plain iron stand-lamps along the wall were
still
unlit, and with the rain, the space was dim. Guybon raked his hair into
a semblance
of order with his fingers. Light, he was little short of beautiful! His
greenish hazel eyes were tired, but his face seemed suited to smiling.
He
looked as if he had not smiled in too long.
"Captain
Kindlin said I could try to find men who d been discharged by Gaebril,
my Lady,
and they started flocking in as soon as I put out the call. You'd be
surprised
how many tucked their uniforms into a chest against the day they might
be
wanted again. A good many carried off their armor, too. which they
shouldn't
have done, strictly speaking, but I'm glad they did. I feared I'd
waited too
long when I heard of the siege. I was considering trying to fight my
way to one
of the city gates when Mistress Zigane and the others found me." A
puzzled
look came over his face. "She became very upset when I called her Aes
Sedai. but that has to be the One Power that brought us here.''
"It
was, and she isn't," Elayne said impatiently. "How many, man?"
"Four
thousand seven hundred and sixty-two of the Guards, my Lady. And I
encountered
a number of lords and ladies who were trying to reach Caemlyn with
their
armsmen. Be content. I made sure they were loyal to you before I let
them join
me. There are none from the great Houses, but they bring the total near
to ten
thousand, my Lady." He said that as if it were of no moment at all.
There
are forty horses fit for riding in the stable. I have brought you ten
thousand
soldiers.
Elayne
laughed and clapped her hands in delight. "Wonderful, Captain Guybon!
Wonderful!" Arymilla still had her outnumbered. but not so badly as
before.
"Guardsman
Lieutenant, my Lady. I am a Lieutenant."
"From
this moment, you are Captain Guybon."
"And
my second." Birgitte added, "at least for the present. You've shown
resourcefulness, you're old enough to have experience, and I need both."
Guybon
seemed overwhelmed, bowing and murmuring stammered thanks. Well, a man
of his
age would normally expect to serve at least ten or fifteen more years
before
being considered for captain, much less second to the Captain-General,
however
temporary.
"And
now it's past time for us to be getting into dry clothes," Birgitte
continued. "Especially you, Elayne." The Warder bond carried an
implacable firmness that suggested she might try dragging Elayne if she
dallied.
Temper
flared, hot and sharp, but Elayne fought it down. She had nearly
doubled the
number of her soldiers, and she would not let anything spoil this day.
Besides,
she wanted dry clothes, too.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
Wet Things
Inside,
the gilded stand-lamps were lit, since daylight never penetrated far
into the
palace, flames flickering on the lamps that lacked glass mantles. The
lamps'
mirrors provided a good light in the bustling corridor, though, and
bustling it
was, with liveried servants scurrying in every direction, or sweeping
or
mopping. Serving men with the White Lion on the left breast of their
red coats
were up on tall ladders taking down the winter tapestries, mainly
flowers and
scenes of summer, and putting up the spring tapestries, many displaying
the
colorful foliage of fall. Always two seasons ahead for the majority of
the
hangings was the custom, to provide a touch of relief from winter's
cold or
summer's heat, to remind while spring's new growth was on all the trees
that
the branches would grow bare and the snows come again, to remind when
dead
leaves were falling and the first snows, too, and days grew ever
colder, that
there would be a spring. There were a few battles among them, showing
days of
particular glory for Andor, but Elayne did not enjoy looking at those
as much
as she had as a girl. Still, they had their place now. as well, tokens
of what
battle actually was. The difference between how a child looked at
things and a
woman did. Glory was always bought with blood. Glory aside, necessary
things
were often paid for with battle and blood.
There
were too few servants to carry out such tasks in a timely manner, and a
fair
number were white-haired pensioners with bent backs who seldom moved
quickly in
any case. However slow they were, she was glad they had willingly come
out of
retirement, to train those newly hired and take up the slack left by
those who
had fled while Gaebril reigned or after Rand
took Caemlyn, else the palace would have taken on the aspect of a barn
by this
time. A dirty barn. At least all of the winter runners were up off the
floors.
She left a damp trail behind her on the red-and-white floor tiles, and
with all
the spring rains, wet runners would have been sprouting mildew before
nightfall.
Servants
in red-and-white hurrying about their duties looked aghast as they
bowed or
curtsied, which did nothing for her temper. They did not appear upset
to see
Aviendha or Birgitte drenched and dripping, or the Guardswomen either.
Burn
her, if everyone did not stop expecting her to be mollycoddled all the
day
long… ! Her scowl was such that the servants began making their
courtesies
quickly and scurrying on. Her temper was becoming the stuff of evening
stories
in front of the fireplace, though she tried not to unleash it on
servants. On
anyone, really, but more so with servants. They lacked the luxury of
shouting
back.
She
intended to go straight to her apartments and change, but intentions or
no, she
turned aside when she saw Reanne Corly walking in a crossing corridor
where the
floor tiles were all red. The servants' reactions had nothing to do
with it.
She was not being stubborn. She was wet, and she wanted dry clothing
and a warm
towel in the worst way, but seeing the Kinswoman was a surprise, and
the two
women with Reanne also caught her eye. Birgitte muttered a curse before
following her. swishing her bowstave sideways through the air as though
thinking of striking someone. The bond carried a blend of
long-suffering and
irritability, soon stifled. Aviendha never left Elayne's side, though
busily
trying to wring water out of her shawl. Despite all the rain she had
seen, all
the rivers since crossing the Spine of the World and the great cisterns
beneath
the city, Aviendha winced at the waste, the water splashing uselessly
on the
floor. The eight Guardswomen. left behind by her sudden swerve, hurried
to
catch up, stolid and silent except for the stamp of their boots on the
floor
tiles. Give anyone a sword and boots, and they began stamping.
One
of the women with Reanne was Kara Defane, who had been the wise woman,
or
Healer, of a fishing village on Toman Head before the Seanchan collared
her.
Plump and merry-eyed in brown wool with embroidered blue and white
flowers at
her cuffs, Kara appeared little older than Elayne. though she was
nearly fifty.
The other was named Jillari. a former damane from Seanchan. Despite
everything,
the sight of her made Elayne's flesh feel cold. Whatever else could be
said of
her, the woman was Seanchan. after all.
Not
even Jillari herself knew how old she was, though she appeared just
into her
middle years. Slight of build, with long, fiery red hair and eyes as
green as
Aviendha's. she and Marille, the other Seanchan-born damane who
remained in the
palace, persisted in maintaining that they still were damane. that they
needed
to be collared because of what they could do. Daily walks were one way
the Kin
were trying to accustom them to freedom. Carefully supervised walks, of
course.
They were always closely watched, day and night. Either might try to
free the
suldam, otherwise. For that matter, Kara herself was not trusted alone
with any
of the sul'dam. nor was Lemore, a young Taraboner noble collared when
Tanchico
fell. The notion would not come to them on its own, yet there was no
saying
what either would do if a suldam ordered her to help the woman escape.
The
habit of obedience remained strong in Kara and Lemore both.
Jillari's
eyes widened at the sight of Elayne. and she immediately fell to her
knees with
a thud. She tried to fold herself into a bundle on the floor, but Kara
caught
her shoulders and gently urged her back to her feet. Elayne tried not
to let
her distaste show. And hoped that if it did. everyone would take it for
the
kneeling and crouching. Some of it was. How could anyone want to be
collared?
She heard Lini's voice again, and shivered. You can't know another
woman's
reasons until you've worn her dress for a year. Burn her if she had any
desire
to do that!
"No
need for all that," Kara said. "This is what we do." She
curtsied, not very gracefully. She had never seen a town larger than a
few
hundred people before the Seanchan took her. After a moment, the
red-haired
woman spread her own dark blue skirts more awkwardly still. She almost
fell
over, in fact, and blushed a bright crimson.
"Jillari
is sorry," she almost whispered, folding her hands at her waist. Her
eyes,
she kept meekly directed at the floor. "Jillari will try to
remember."
"
'I.' " Kara said. "Remember what I
told you? I call you Jillari, but you call yourself'l' or 'me.' Try it.
And
look at me. You can do it." She sounded as though she were encouraging
a
child.
The
Seanchan woman wet her lips, giving Kara a sidelong look.
"I." she said softly. And promptly
began weeping,
tears rolling down her cheeks faster than she could wipe them away with
her
fingers. Kara enveloped her in a hug and made soothing noises. She
seemed about
to cry, too. Aviendha shifted uncomfortably. It was not the tears-men
or women,
Aiel wept unashamed when they felt the need-but for them, touching
hands was a
great display in public.
"Why
don't you two walk on alone for a while," Reanne told the pair with a
comforting smile that deepened the fine lines at the corners of her
blue eyes.
Her voice was high and lovely, suitable for singing. "I'll catch you
up,
and we can eat together." They offered her curtsies, too. Jillari still
weeping, and turned away with Kara's arm around the smaller woman's
shoulders.
"If you care to, my Lady," Reanne said before they had gone two
steps, "we could talk on the way to your apartments."
The
woman's face was calm, and her tone put no special freight on the
words, yet
Elayne's jaw tightened. She forced it to relax. There was no point in
being stubborn
stupid. She was wet. And beginning to shiver, though the day could
hardly be
called cold. "An excellent suggestion." she said, gathering her
sodden gray skirts. "Come."
"We
could walk a little faster." Birgitte muttered, not quite far enough
under
her breath.
"We
could run," Aviendha said, without trying to keep her voice low at all.
"We might get dry from the exertion."
Elayne
ignored them and glided at a suitable pace. In her mother, it would
have been
called regal. She was not sure she managed that, but she was not about
to run
through the palace. Or even hurry. The sight of her rushing would start
a dozen
rumors if not a hundred, each one of some dire event worse than the one
before.
Too many rumors floated on every breath of air as it was. The worst was
that
the city was about to fall, that she planned to flee before it did. No,
she
would be seen to be utterly unruffled. Everyone had to believe her
completely
confident. Even if that was a false facade. Anything else, and she
might as
well yield to Arymilla. Fear of defeat had lost as many battles as
weakness
had, and she could not afford to lose a single one. "I thought the
Captain-General had you out scouting, Reanne."
Birgitte
had been using two of the Kin for scouts, women who could not make a
gateway
large enough to admit a horse cart, but with circles of Kinswomen
available to
make gateways, for trade as well as moving soldiers, she had coopted
the
remaining six who could Travel on their own. An encircling army was no
impediment to them. Yet Re-anne's well-cut, fine blue wool, though
unadorned
save for a red-enameled circle pin on the high neck, was decidedly
unsuited for
skulking about the countryside.
"The
Captain-General believes her scouts need rest. Unlike herself," Reanne
added blandly, raising an eyebrow at Birgitte. The bond carried a brief
flash
of annoyance. Aviendha laughed for some reason: Elayne still did not
understand
Aiel humor. "Tomorrow, I go out again. It takes me back to the days
long
ago when I was a pack-peddler with one mule." The Kin all followed many
crafts during their long lives, always changing location and craft
before
anyone took note of how slowly they aged. The oldest among them had
mastered
half a dozen crafts or more, shifting from one to another easily. "I
decided to use my freeday helping Jillari settle on a surname." Reanne
grimaced. "It's custom in Seanchan to strike a girl's name from her
family's rolls when she's collared, and the poor woman feels she has no
right
to the name she was born with. Jillari was given with the collar, but
she wants
to keep that."
"There
are more reasons to hate the Seanchan than I can count," Elayne said
heatedly. Then, belatedly, she caught up to the import of it all.
Learning to
curtsy. Choosing a new surname. Burn her. if pregnancy was making her
slow-witted on top of everything else… ! "When did Jillari change her
mind about the collar?" There was no reason to let everyone know she
was
being dense today.
The
other woman's expression did not alter a whit, but she hesitated just
long
enough to let Elayne know her deception had failed. "Just this morning,
after you and the Captain-General left, or you'd have been informed."
Reanne hurried on so the point had no time to fester. "And there's
other
news as good. At least, it's somewhat good. One of the suldam, Marli
Noichin-you recall her?-has admitted seeing the weaves."
"Oh.
that is good news," Elayne murmured. "Very good. Twenty-eight more to
go, but they might be easier now that one of them has broken." She had
watched an attempt to convince Marli that she could learn to channel,
that she
could already see weaves of the Power. The plump Seanchan woman had
been
stubbornly defiant even after she began crying.
"Somewhat
good, I said." Reanne sighed. "In Marli's opinion, she might as well
have admitted she kills children. Now she insists that she must be
collared.
She begs for the a'dam. It makes my skin creep. I don't know what to do
with
her."
"Send
her back to the Seanchan as soon as we can," Elayne replied.
Reanne
stopped dead in shock, her eyebrows climbing. Birgitte cleared her
throat
loudly-impatience filled the bond before being stifled-and the
Kinswoman gave a
start, then began walking again, at a faster pace than before. "But
they'll make her a damane. I can't condemn any woman to that."
Elayne
gave her Warder a look that slid off like a dagger sliding off good
armor.
Birgitte's expression was… bland. To the golden-haired woman, being a
Warder contained strong elements of older sister. And worse, sometimes
mother.
"/
can," she said emphatically, lengthening her own stride. Well, it would
not hurt to get dry a little sooner rather than later. "She helped hold
enough others prisoner that she deserves a taste of it herself, Reanne.
But
that's not why I mean to send her back. If any of the others wants to
stay and
learn, and make up for what she's done, I certainly won't hand her to
the
Seanchan, but Light's truth, I hope they all feel like Marli. They'll
put an
a'dam on her, Reanne, but they won't be able to keep secret who she
was. Every
one-time sul'dam I can send the Seanchan to collar will be a mattock
digging at
their roots."
"A
harsh decision," Reanne said sadly. She plucked at her skirts in an
agitated manner, smoothed them, then plucked at them again. "Perhaps
you
might consider thinking on it for a few days? Surely it isn't anything
that has
to be done immediately."
Elayne
gritted her teeth. The woman had as much as implied that she had
reached this decision
in one of her swinging moods! But had she? It seemed reasonable and
logical.
They could not keep the sul'dam imprisoned forever. Sending those who
did not
want to be free back to the Seanchan was a way to be rid of them and
strike a
blow at the Seanchan at the same time. It was more than hatred of any
Seanchan.
Of course, it was. Burn her. but she bloody well hated being unsure
whether her
own decisions were sound! She could not afford to make unsound
decisions.
Still, there was no hurry. Better to send back a group, if possible, in
any
event. There was less chance of someone arranging an "accident," that
way. She did not put that sort of thing past the Seanchan. "I will
think
on it, Reanne, but I doubt I'll change my mind."
Reanne
sighed again, deeply. Eager for her promised return to the WhiteTower
and novice white-she had been heard to say she envied Kirstian and
Zarya-she
wanted very much to enter the Green Ajah, but Elayne had her doubts.
Reanne was
kindhearted. softhearted in fact, and Elayne had never met any Green
who could
be called soft. Even those who seemed frilly or frail on the surface
were cold
steel inside.
Ahead
of them, Vandene glided from a crossing corridor, slender, white-haired
and
graceful in dark gray wool with deep brown trim, and turned in the same
direction they were going, apparently without noticing them. She was
Green, and
as hard as a hammerhead. Jaem, her Warder, walked beside her, head bent
in
close conversation, now and then raking a hand through his thinning
gray hair.
Gnarled and lean, his dark green coat hanging loose on him. he was old,
but
every scrap as hard as she. an old root that could dull axes. Kirstian
and
Zarya, both in plain novice white, followed meekly with their hands
folded at
their waists, the one pale as a Cairhienin, the other short and
slim-hipped.
For runaways who had succeeded in what so few did. remaining free of
the WhiteTower
for years, over three hundred years in Kirstian's case, they had
resettled into
their places as novices with remarkable ease. But then, the Kin's Rule
was a
blending of the rules that governed novices and those that Accepted
lived by.
Perhaps, to them, the white woolen dresses and the loss of freedom to
come and
go as they chose were the only real change, though the Kin regulated
that last
to some extent.
"I'm
very glad she has those two to occupy her," Reanne murmured in tones of
sympathy. Pained caring shone in her eyes. "It's good that she mourns
her
sister, but I fear she'd be obsessed with Adeleas' death without
Kirstian and
Zarya. She may be anyway. I believe that dress she's wearing belonged
to
Adeleas. I've tried offering solace-I have experience helping people
overcome
grief; I've been a village Wise Woman as well as wearing the red belt
in Ebou
Dar many years ago- but she won't give me two words."
In
fact, Vandene wore only her dead sister's clothing, now, and Adeleas'
flowery
perfume, as well. At times. Elayne thought Vandene was trying to become
Adeleas, to offer up herself in order to bring her sister back to life.
But
could you fault someone for being obsessed with finding who had
murdered her
sister? Not that more than a handful of people knew that was what she
was
doing. Everyone else believed as Reanne did, that she was absorbed with
teaching Kirstian and Zarya. that and beginning their punishment for
running
away. Vandene was doing both, of course, and with a will, yet it was
really
just a cover for her true purpose.
Elayne
reached out without looking, and found Aviendha's hand waiting to take
hers, a
comforting grip. She squeezed back, unable to imagine the grief of
losing
Aviendha. They shared a quick glance, and Aviendha's eyes mirrored her
own
feelings. Had she really once thought Aiel faces impassive and
unreadable?
"As
you say. Reanne. she has Kirstian and Zarya to occupy her." Reanne was
not
among the handful who knew the truth. "We all mourn in our own way.
Vandene will find solace along her own path."
When
she found Adeleas' murderer, it was to be hoped. If that failed to at
least
begin assuaging the pain… Well, that was to be faced when it must be.
For
now, she must allow Vandene her head. Especially since she had no doubt
the
Green would ignore any attempt to rein her in. That was more than
irritating;
it was infuriating. She had to watch Vandene perhaps destroying
herself, and
worse, make use of it. Having no alternative made that no less
unpalatable.
As
Vandene and her companions turned aside down another hallway, Reene
Harfor
appeared out of a side corridor right in front of Elayne, a stout,
quiet woman
with a graying bun atop her head and an air of regal dignity, her
formal
scarlet tabard with the White Lion of Andor as always looking freshly
ironed.
Elayne had never seen her with a hair out of place or looking even
slightly the
worse for a long day spent overseeing the workings of the palace. And
more
besides. Her round face appeared puzzled for some reason, but it took
on a look
of concern at the sight of Elayne. "Why, my Lady, you're drenched."
she said, sounding shocked, as she made her curtsy. "You need to get
out
of those wet things right away."
"Thank
you, Mistress Harfor," Elayne said through her teeth. "1 hadn't
noticed."
She
regretted the outburst instantly-the First Maid had been as faithful to
her as
to her mother-but what made matters worse was that Mistress Harfor took
her
flare-up in stride, never so much as blinking. Elayne Trakand's moods
were no
longer anything to be surprised at.
"I
will walk with you if I may, my Lady," she said calmly, falling in at
Elayne's side. A freckled young serving woman carrying a basket of
folded bed
linens began to offer her courtesies, only a hair more directed at
Elayne than
the First Maid, but Reene made a quick gesture
that sent the girl scurrying before she completed bending her knees.
Perhaps it was just to keep her from overhearing. Reene did not stop
talking.
"Three of the mercenary captains are demanding to meet with you. I put
them in the Blue Reception Room, and told the servants to keep watch so
no
small valuables accidentally fall into their pockets. Not that I had
to, as it
turned out. Careane Sedai and Sareitha Sedai appeared soon after and
settled in
to keep the captains company. Captain Mellar is with them, too."
Elayne
frowned. Mellar. She was trying to keep him too busy for mischief, yet
he had a
way of turning up where and when she least wanted him. For that matter,
so did
Careane and Sareitha. One of them had to be the Black Ajah killer.
Unless it
was Merilille, and she was beyond reach, it seemed. Reene knew about
that.
Keeping her in the dark would have been criminal. She had eyes
everywhere, and
they might notice a vital clue. "What do the mercenaries want. Mistress
Harfor?"
"More
money, is my guess," Birgitte growled, and swung her unstrung bow like
a
club.
"Most
likely," Reene agreed, "but they refused to tell me." Her mouth
tightened slightly. No more than that, yet it seemed these mercenaries
had
managed to offend her. If they were stupid enough not to see that she
was more
than a superior serving woman, then they were very dense indeed.
"Has
Dyelin returned?" Elayne asked, and when the First Maid said not,
added,
"Then I will see these mercenaries as soon as I've changed clothes."
She might as well get them out of the way.
Rounding
a corner, she found herself face-to-face with two of the Windfinders
and barely
suppressed a sigh. The Sea Folk were the last people on earth she
wanted to
confront right then. Lean and dark and barefoot in red brocaded silk
trousers
and a blue brocaded silk blouse with a green sash tied in an elaborate
knot.
Chanelle din Seran White Shark was aptly named. Elayne had no idea what
a white
shark looked like-it might well have been a little thing-but Chanelle's
big
eyes were hard enough to belong on a fierce predator, especially when
she took
in Aviendha. There was bad blood, there. A tattooed hand raised the
gold
piercework scent box hanging on a chain about Chanelle's neck, and she
inhaled
the sharp, spicy scent deeply, as though covering some foul odor.
Aviendha
laughed out loud, which made Chanelle's full lips grow thin. Thinner,
at least.
Thin was beyond them.
The
other was Renaile din Calon. once Windfinder to the Mistress of the
Ships, in
blue linen trousers and a red blouse sashed with blue, tied in a much
less
intricate knot. Both women wore the long white mourning stoles for
Nesta din
Reas, yet Renaile must have felt Nesta's death most keenly. She was
carrying a
carved wooden writing box with a capped ink jar set in one corner and a
sheet
of paper with a few scrawled lines clipped to its top. Wings of white
in her
black hair hid the six gold earrings in her ears, much thinner rings
than the
eight she had worn before learning of Nesta's fate, and the gold honor
chain
crossing her dark left cheek looked stark supporting only the medallion
that
named her clan. After Sea Folk custom, Nesta's death had meant starting
over
for Renaile, with no more rank than a woman raised from apprentice on
the day
she herself had put off her honors. Her face still held dignity, though
much
subdued now that she was acting as Chanelle's secretary.
"I
am on my way-" Elayne began, but Chanelle cut her off imperiously.
"What
news do you have of Talaan? And of Merilille. Are you even trying to
find
them?"
Elayne
took a deep breath. Shouting at Chanelle never did any good. The woman
was more
than willing to shout back and seldom willing to listen to reason. She
would
not engage in another screaming match. Servants slipping by to either
side did
not pause to offer bows or curtsies-they could sense the mood here-but
they
shot grim looks at the Sea Folk women. That was pleasing, though it
should not
have been. However upsetting they were, the Windfinders were guests. In
a way.
they were, bargain or no bargain. Chanelle had complained more than
once of
slow-footed servants and tepid bathwater. And that was pleasing, too.
Still,
she would maintain her dignity, and civility.
"The
news is the same as yesterday," she replied in tones of moderation.
Well,
she attempted tones of moderation. If traces of sharpness remained, the
Windfinder would have to live with them. "The same as last week, and
the
week before that. Inquiries have been made at every inn in Caemlyn.
Your
apprentice is not to be found. Merilille is not to be found. It seems
they must
have managed to leave the city." The gate guards had been warned to
watch
for a Sea Folk woman with tattooed hands, but they would not have tried
to stop
an Aes Sedai leaving, or taking anyone with her that she wanted. For
that
matter, the mercenaries would let anyone at all pass who offered a few
coins.
"And now, if you will excuse me, I am on my way-"
"That
is not good enough." Chanelle's voice was hot enough to singe leather.
"You Aes Sedai stick together as tightly as oysters. Merilille
kidnapped
Talaan, and I think you are hiding her. We will search for them, and I
assure
you, when we find them, Merilille will be punished sharply before she
is sent
to the ships to fulfill her part of the bargain."
"You
seem to be forgetting yourself." Birgitte said. Her voice was mild, her
face calm, but the bond quivered with anger. She held her bowstave
propped in
front of her with both hands as if to keep them from making fists.
"You'll
withdraw your accusations, or you'll suffer for it." Perhaps she was
not
as self-controlled as she seemed. This was no way to go on with
Windfinders.
They were women of power among their own people, and accustomed to
wielding it.
But Birgitte did not hesitate. "By the bargain Zaida made, you're under
the Lady Elayne's authority. You're under my authority. Any searching
you do
will be when you aren't needed. And unless I misremember badly, you're
supposed
to be in Tear right now to bring back wagonloads of grain and salt
beef. I
strongly suggest you Travel there immediately, or you might learn a
little about
punishment yourself." Oh, that was entirely the wrong way with
Windfinders.
"No,"
Elayne said as hotly as Chanelle, surprising herself. "Search if you
wish,
Chanelle, you and all of the Windfinders. Search Caemlyn from end to
end. And
when you can't find Talaan or Merilille, you will apologize for calling
me a
liar.'' Well, the woman had. As good as, anyway. She felt a strong
desire to
slap Chanelle. She wanted to… Light, her anger and Birgitte's were
feeding each other! Frantically she tried to soothe her fury before it
burst
into open rage, but the only result was a sudden longing to weep that
she had
to fight just as wildly.
Chanelle
drew herself up, scowling. "You would claim we had reneged on the
bargain.
We have labored like bilge girls this past month and more. You will not
cast us
off without meeting your side of the bargain. Renaile, the Aes Sedai at
The
Silver Swan are to be told- told, mind!-that they must produce
Merilille and
Talaan or else pay what the White Tower owes themselves. They cannot
pay all,
but they can make a start."
Renaile
began unscrewing the silver cap of the ink jar.
"Not
a note," Chanelle snapped. "Go yourself and tell them. Now."
Tightening
the cap, Renaile bowed almost parallel to the floor, quickly touching
fingertips
to her heart. "As you command,'' she murmured, her face a dark mask.
She
did not delay in obeying, setting out at a trot the way she had come
with the
writing box tucked under her arm.
Still
fighting the desire to strike Chanelle and weep at the same time,
Elayne
winced. This was not the first time the Sea Folk had gone to The Silver
Swan,
nor even the second or third, but always before they had gone asking,
not
demanding. There were nine sisters resident at the inn at present-the
number
kept changing as sisters entered the city or left, and rumor said there
were
other Aes Sedai in the city, too-and it worried her that none had
appeared at
the palace. She had stayed clear of the Swan-she knew how much Elaida
wanted to
lay hands on her, but not who the sisters at the Swan supported, or
whether
they supported anyone; they had been closemouthed as mussels with
Sareitha and
Careane-yet she had expected some of them to come to the palace if only
to learn
what was behind the Sea Folk's claim. Why were so many Aes Sedai in
Caemlyn
when Tar Valon itself was under siege? She herself was the first answer
that
came to mind, and that made her more determined to avoid any sister she
did not
personally know to be a supporter of Egwene. But that would not stop
word of
the bargain made for aid in using the Bowl of the Winds from spreading,
and of
the price the Tower had been committed to pay for that help. Burn her,
but that
news would be a bloody wagonload of fireworks going off at once when it
became
general knowledge among Aes Sedai. Worse. Ten wagonloads.
Watching
Renaile trot away, she fought to steady her emotions. And tried to
bring the
tone back to something approaching civility. "She handles her change in
circumstances very well, I think."
Chanelle
gave a dismissive puff. "And well she should. Every Windfinder knows
she
will rise and fall many times before her body is given back to the
salt.'' She
twisted to gaze after the other Sea Folk woman, and a touch of malice
entered
her voice. She seemed to be speaking to herself. "She fell from a
greater
height than most, and she should not have been surprised to find her
landing
hard after so many fingers she trod on while she was-" Her mouth
snapped
shut, and she jerked her head around to glare at Elayne, at Birgitte,
at
Aviendha and Reene, even at the Guardswomen, daring them to comment.
Elayne
prudently kept her mouth closed, and, the Light be thanked, so did
everyone
else. For her pan, she thought she almost had her temper smoothed, the
desire
to cry suppressed, and she did not want
to say anything that might start Chanelle shouting and undo all her
work. For
that matter, she could not think of anything to say after hearing that.
She
doubted it was part of Atha'an Miere custom to take revenge on someone
you
believed had misused their position above you. It was very human,
though.
The
Windfinder stared her up and down, frowning. "You're wet," she said
as though just noticing. "It is very bad to be wet for long in your
condition. You should change your clothes right away."
Elayne
threw back her head and screamed as loudly as she could, a howl of pure
outrage
and fury. She screamed until her lungs were empty, leaving her panting.
In
the silence that followed, everyone stared at her in amazement. Almost
everyone. Aviendha began laughing so hard she had to lean against a
tapestry of
mounted hunters confronting a leopard that had turned. She had one arm
pressed
across the middle as if her ribs hurt. The bond carried amusement,
too-amusement!-though Birgitte's face remained as smooth as a sister's.
"I
must Travel to Tear." Chanelle said breathily after a moment, and she
turned away without another word or any gesture toward a courtesy.
Reene and
Reanne offered curtsies, neither quite meeting Elayne's eye, and pled
duties
before hurrying off.
Elayne
stared at Birgitte and Aviendha in turn. "If one of you says a single
word," she said warningly.
Birgitte
put on such an expression of innocence that it was palpably false, and
the bond
carried such mirth that Elayne found herself fighting the urge to
laugh.
Aviendha only laughed the harder.
Gathering
her skirts and such dignity as she could summon. Elayne set out for her
apartments. If she walked faster than before, well, she want to get out
of
these damp clothes. That was the only reason. The only reason.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
A Different Skill
To
Elayne's fury, a quiet, simmering fury that clenched her jaw, she got
lost on
the way to her apartments. Those rooms had been hers since she left the
nursery, yet twice she took a turn only to find that it did not lead
where she
expected. And a sweeping flight of marble-railed stairs took her in
entirely
the wrong direction. Burn her, now being with child was fuzzing her
wits completely!
She could feel puzzlement, and increasing concern, through the bond as
she
retraced her way, climbed a different set of stairs. Some of the
Guardswomen
murmured uneasily, not quite loudly enough for her to make out the
words, until
the Bannerwoman in charge, a slim, cool-eyed Saldaean named Devore
Zarbayan,
silenced them with a sharp word. Even Aviendha began looking at her
doubtfully.
Well, she was not about to have getting lost-in the palace!-flung in
her face.
"Not
a word from anybody," she said grimly. "Not one!" she added when
Birgitte opened her mouth anyway.
The
golden-haired woman snapped her jaws shut and gave a tug at her thick
braid,
almost the way Nynaeve did. She did not bother to keep disapproval from
her
face, and the bond still carried puzzlement, and worry. Enough that
Elayne
began to feel worried herself. She struggled to fight that off before
she found
herself wringing her hands and apologizing. It was that strong.
"I
think I'll try to find my rooms, if I can have just a few words."
Birgitte
said in a tight voice. "I want to get dry before I wear out my boots.
We
need to talk of this later. I fear there's nothing to be done, but…"
With a stiff nod. barely bending her neck, she stalked off slashing her
unstrung bow from side to side.
Elayne
almost called her back. She wanted to. But Birgitte had as much need of
dry
clothing as she. Besides, her mood had swung to grumpy and stubborn.
She was
not going to talk about losing her way in the very halls where she had
grown up,
not now or later. Nothing to be done? What did that mean? If Birgitte
was
suggesting that her wits were too befuddled to be set straight… ! Her
jaw
tightened all over again.
At
last, after yet another unexpected turn, she found the tall,
lion-carved doors
of her apartments and heaved a small sigh of relief. She had begun to
think her
memories of the palace really were completely jumbled. A pair of
Guardswomen.
resplendent in broad-brimmed hats with white plumes and lace-edged
sashes
embroidered with the White Lion slanting across their burnished
breastplates
and more pale lace at their cuffs and necks, stiffened on either side
of the
doors at her approach. She intended them to have red-lacquered
breastplates to
match their silk coats and breeches when she had time to spend on that
sort of
thing. If they were to be so pretty that any assailant would discount
them
until it was too late, she would make them positively gaudy. None of
the
Guardswomen seemed to mind. In fact, they were eagerly looking forward
to the
lacquered breastplates.
She
had overheard some who were unaware she was near disparage the
Guardswomen-mostly women, but including Doilin Mellar. their own
commander-yet
she had full confidence in their ability to protect her. They were
brave and
determined, or they would not have been there. Yurith Azeri and others
who had
been merchants' guards, a rare trade for women, gave daily lessons in
the
sword, and one or another of the Warders gave a second lesson every
day, too.
Sareitha's Ned Yarman and Vandene's Jaem were quite laudatory about how
quickly
they learned. Jaem said it was because they did not think they already
knew
something of how to use a blade, which seemed silly. How could you
believe you
already knew something if you needed lessons in it?
Despite
the guards already there, Devore told off two of those who accompanied
her. and
they drew their swords and went inside while Elayne waited in the
corridor with
Aviendha and the rest, tapping her foot impatiently. Everyone avoided
looking at
her. The search was not a slur on the women guarding the doors-she
supposed it
was possible for someone to scale the side of the palace; there
certainly was
carving enough to provide handholds-yet she felt irritation at being
made to
wait on it. Only when they came out and reported to Devore that there
were no
assassins waiting within, no Aes Sedai waiting to whisk Elayne back to
Elaida
and the Tower, were she and Aviendha allowed to enter, with the
Guardswomen
forming upon either side of the doors with the others. She was not sure
they
would have physically prevented her from entering sooner, but so far
she had
been unwilling to put it to the test. Being restrained by her own
bodyguards
would have been beyond insufferable, no matter that they were just
doing their
jobs. Better to avoid the possibility altogether.
A
small fire burned on the white marble hearth of the anteroom, but it
seemed to
give little warmth. The carpets had been taken up for spring, and the
floor
tiles felt cold beneath the soles of her shoes, stout as they were.
Essande.
her maid, spread red-trimmed gray skirts with still surprising grace,
though
the slim, white-haired woman suffered from painful joints, which she
denied and
refused Healing for. She would have refused any suggestion that she
return to
her retirement as vehemently. Elayne's Golden Lily was embroidered
large on her
breast, and proudly worn. Two younger women flanked her a pace back in
similar
livery but with smaller lilies, stocky square-faced sisters named
Sephanie and Naris.
Shy-eyed yet quite well trained by Essande. they made deep curtsies,
settling
nearly to the floor.
Slow-moving
and frail Essande might be, but she never wasted time in idle chitchat
or
stating the obvious. There were no exclamations over how wet Elayne and
Aviendha were, though doubtless the Guardswomen had alerted her. "We'll
get you both warm and dry, my Lady, and right into something suitable
for
meeting mercenaries. The red silk with firedrops on the neck should
impress
them suitably. It's past time you ate, too. Don't bother telling me you
have,
my Lady. Naris. go fetch meals from the kitchens for the Lady Elayne
and the
Lady Aviendha." Aviendha gave a snort of laughter, yet she had long
since
ceased objecting to being called Lady. And a good thing, since she
would never
stop Essande. With servants, there were things you commanded and things
you
simply had to tolerate.
Naris
grimaced and took a deep breath for some reason, but dropped another
deep
curtsy, this to Essande, and one only slightly deeper to Elayne-she and
her
sister were every bit as much in awe of the elderly woman as they were
of the
Daughter-Heir of Andor- before gathering her skirts and darting into
the
corridor.
Elayne
grimaced, too. The Guardswomen also had told Essande about the
mercenaries,
apparently. And that she had not eaten. She hated people talking about
her
behind her back. But how much of that was her shifting moods? She could
not
recall being upset before because a maid knew what dress to lay out in
advance,
or because someone knew she was hungry and sent for a meal without
being asked.
Servants talked among themselves - gossiped constantly, in truth; that
was a
given-and passed along anything that might help their mistress be
served
better, if they were good at their jobs. Essande was very good at hers.
Still,
it rankled, and rankled the worse for her knowing that it was
irrational.
She
let Essande lead her and Aviendha into the dressing room, with Sephanie
bringing up the rear. She was feeling very miserable by this time, damp
and
shivering, not to mention angry with Birgitte for stalking off,
frightened by
losing her way in the place where she had grown up, and sullen over her
bodyguards gossiping about her. In truth, she felt absolutely wretched.
Soon
enough, though, Essande had her out of her wet things and wrapped in a
large
white towel that had been hanging on a warming rack in front of the
wide marble
fireplace at the end of the room. That had a soothing effect. This fire
was not
at all small, and the room seemed not far short of hot, a welcome heat
that
soaked into the flesh and banished shivers. Essande toweled Elayne's
hair dry
while Sephanie performed the same office for Aviendha, which chagrined
Aviendha
still, though this was hardly the first time. She and Elayne frequently
brushed
each other's hair at night, yet accepting this simple service from a
lady's
maid put spots of color in Aviendha's sun-dark cheeks.
When
Sephanie opened one of the wardrobes lining one wall, Aviendha sighed
deeply.
She held one towel loosely draped around her-another woman drying her
hair
might be embarrassing, but near nudity presented no difficulties-and a
second,
smaller, was wrapped around her hair. "Do you think I should wear
wetlander clothes. Elayne, since we are going to meet these
mercenaries?"
she asked in tones of great reluctance. Essande smiled. She enjoyed
dressing
Aviendha in silks.
Elayne
hid a smile of her own, no easy task since she wanted to laugh. Her
sister pretended
to disdain silks, but she seldom missed an opportunity to wear them.
"If
you can bear it, Aviendha." she said gravely, adjusting her own robing
towel carefully. Essande saw her in her skin every day, and Sephanie.
too, but
it was nothing to let happen without reason. "For best effect, we
should
both over-awe them. You won't mind too much, will you?"
But
Aviendha was already at the wardrobe, her towel gaping carelessly as
she
fingered dresses. Several sets of Aiel garb hung in another of the
wardrobes,
but Tylin had given her chests of finely cut silks and woolens before
they left
Ebou Dar, enough to fill nearly a quarter of the carved cabinets.
That
brief burst of amusement left Elayne no longer feeling as if she had to
argue
over everything, so without demurral she let Essande get her into the
red silk
with firedrops the size of a finger joint sewn in a band around the
high neck.
The garment would impress, for sure, with no need for other jewels,
though in
truth the Great Serpent ring on her right hand was jewel enough for
anyone. The
white-haired woman had a delicate touch, but Elayne still winced as she
began
doing up the rows of tiny buttons down her back, tightening the bodice
across
her tender bosom. Opinions varied on how long that would last, yet all
agreed
that she could expect more swelling.
Oh,
how she wished Rand were near enough
to share
the full effect of her bond with him. That would teach him to get her
with
child so carelessly. Of course, she could have drunk the heartleaf tea
before
lying with him-she pushed that thought away firmly. This was all Rand's fault, and that was that.
Aviendha
chose blue, which she often did, with rows of tiny pearls edging the
bodice.
The silk was not so deeply cut as Ebou Dari fashions. yet still would
display a
little cleavage; few dresses sewn in Ebou Dar failed to do that. As
Sephanie
began fastening her buttons, Aviendha fondled something she had
retrieved from
her belt pouch, a small dagger with a rough hilt of deerhorn wrapped in
gold
wire. It was also a ter'angreal, though Elayne had not been able to
puzzle out
what it did before pregnancy forced a halt to such studies. She had not
known
her sister was carrying the thing. Aviendha's eyes were almost dreamy
as she
stared at it.
"Why
does that fascinate you so?" Elayne asked. This was not the first time
she
had seen the other woman absorbed in that knife.
Aviendha
gave a start and blinked at the dagger in her hands. The iron blade-it
looked
like iron, at least, and felt almost like iron-had never been sharpened
so far
as Elayne could tell and was little longer than her palm, though wide
in
proportion. Even the point was too blunt for stabbing. "I thought to
give
it to you, but you never said anything about it, so I thought I might
be wrong,
and then we would believe you were safe, from some dangers at least,
when you
were not. So I decided to keep it. That way. if I am right, at least 1
could
protect you, and if I am wrong, it does no harm."
Elayne
shook her towel-wrapped head in confusion. "Right about what? What are
you
talking about?"
"This,"
Aviendha said, holding up the dagger. "I think that if you have this in
your possession, the Shadow cannot see you. Not the Eyeless or the
Shadowtwisted, maybe not even Leafblighter. Except that I must be wrong
if you
did not see it."
Sephanie
gasped, her hands going still until Essande murmured a soft admonition.
Essande
had lived too long to be shaken by mere mention of the Shadow. Or much
else,
for that matter.
Elayne
stared. She had tried teaching Aviendha to make ter'angreal, but her
sister
possessed not a scrap of facility there. Yet perhaps she had a
different skill,
maybe even one that could be called a Talent. "Come with me," she
said, and taking Aviendha's arm, she almost pulled her out of the
dressing
room. Essande followed with a torrent of protest, and Sephanie,
attempting to
continue buttoning up Aviendha's dress on the fly.
In
the larger of the apartment's two sitting rooms, goodly fires blazed in
both of
the fireplaces, and if the air was not so warm as in the dressing room,
it was
still comfortable. The scroll-edged table bordered with low-backed
chairs in
the middle of the white-tiled floor was where she and Aviendha took
most of
their meals. Several leather-bound books from the palace library sat in
a stack
on one end of the table, histories of Andor and books of tales. The
mirrored
stand-lamps gave a good light, and they often read here of an evening.
More
important, a long side table against one dark-paneled wall was covered
with
ter'angreal from the cache the Kin had kept hidden in Ebou Dar, cups
and bowls,
statuettes and figurines, jewelry, all manner of things. Most looked
commonplace, aside from perhaps a strangeness of design, yet even the
most
fragile-seeming could not be broken, and some were much lighter or
heavier than
they appeared. She could no longer safely study them in any meaningful
way-she
had Min's assurance her babes could not be harmed, but with her control
of the
Power so slippery, damaging herself was more a possibility than
ever-yet she
changed what was on the table every day, picking out pieces at random
from the
panniers kept in the apartment's boxroom, just so she could look at
them and
speculate on what she had learned before getting with child. Not that
she had learned
very much-well, nothing, really- but she could think on them. There was
no
worry of anything being stolen. Reene had rooted out most, if not all.
of the
dishonest among the servants, and the constant guard at the entrance
saw to the
rest.
Mouth
tight with disapproval-dressing was done in the dressing room,
decently, not
out where anyone at all might walk in-Essande resumed her task with
Elayne's
buttons. Sephanie, likely as agitated by the older woman's displeasure
as
anything else, breathed hard as she worked on Aviendha's.
"Pick
out something and tell me what you think it does." Elayne said. Looking
and speculating had done no good, and she had not expected it to. Yet
if
Aviendha could somehow tell what a tev'angreal did just by holding it…
Jealousy
surged up in her, hot and bitter, but she knocked it down, then for
good
measure jumped up and down on it until it vanished. She would not be
jealous of
Aviendha!
"I
am not sure that I can, Elayne. I only think this knife makes a kind of
warding.
And I must be wrong or you would know it. You know more of these things
than
anyone."
Elayne's
cheeks heated with embarrassment. "I don't know nearly as much as you
seem
to think. Try, Aviendha. I've never heard of anyone being able to… to
read'
tev'angreal, but if you can, even a little, don't you see how wonderful
that
would be?"
Aviendha
nodded, but her face held doubt. Hesitantly, she touched a slim black
rod, a
pace long and so flexible it could be bent into a circle and spring
back, lying
in the middle of the table. Touched it and jerked her hand back
swiftly, wiping
her fingers unconsciously on her skirt. "This causes pain."
"Nynaeve
told us that," Elayne said impatiently, and Aviendha gave her a level
look.
"Nynaeve
al'Meara did not say you can change how much pain each blow gives."
Uncertainty overcame her again at once, though, and her voice became
tentative.
"At least, I think that can be done. I think one blow can feel like
one,
or a hundred. But I am only guessing, Elayne. It is only what I think."
"Keep
going," Elayne told her encouragingly. "Maybe we'll find something
that makes it certain. What about this?" She picked up an oddly shaped
metal cap. Covered with strange, angular patterns of what seemed to be
the most
minute engraving, it was much too thin to be of use as a helmet, though
it was
twice as heavy as it appeared. The metal felt slick, too, not simply
smooth, as
if it were oiled.
Aviendha
put down the dagger reluctantly and turned the cap over once in her
hands
before setting it back on the table and taking up the dagger again. "I
think that allows you to direct a… a device of some sort. A machine."
She shook her towel-wrapped head. "But I do not know how, or what kind
of
machine. You see? I am only guessing again."
Elayne
would not let her stop, though. Ter'angreal after ter'angreal Aviendha
touched
or sometimes held for a moment, and every time she had an answer.
Delivered
hesitantly and with cautions that it was only a surmise, but always an
answer.
She thought a small hinged box, apparently ivory and covered with
rippling red
and green stripes, held music, hundreds of tunes, perhaps thousands.
With a
ter'angreal, that might be possible. After all, a fine music box might
have
cylinders for as many as a hundred tunes and some could play quite long
pieces
on one cylinder after another without changing them. A flatfish white
bowl
almost a pace across was for looking at things that were far away. she
thought,
and a tall vase worked with vines in green and blue- blue vines!-would
gather
water out of the air. That sounded useless. but Aviendha almost
caressed it,
and after consideration, Elayne realized it would be very useful indeed
in the
Waste. If it worked as Aviendha believed. And someone figured out how
to make
it work. A black-and-white figurine of a bird with long wings spread in
flight
was for talking to people a long way off, she said. So was a blue
figure of a
woman, small enough to fit in the palm of her hand, in an oddly cut
skirt and
coat. And five earrings, six finger-rings and three bracelets.
Elayne
began to think that Aviendha was giving up, offering the same answer
every time
in hopes that she would stop asking, but then she realized that her
sister's
voice was becoming more confident rather than less, that the protests
that she
was only guessing had dwindled. And her "guesses" were growing in
detail. A bent, featureless rod of dull black, as wide as her wrist-it
seemed
metal, yet one end accommodated itself to any hand that gripped it-made
her
think of cutting, either metal or stone if they were not too thick.
Nothing
that could catch fire, though. The apparently glass figure of a man, a
foot
tall, with his hand raised as if to signal stop, would chase away
vermin, which
would certainly have been useful, given Caemlyn's plague of rats and
flies. A
stone carving the size of her hand, all deep blue curves-it felt like
stone, at
least, though somehow it did not really look carved- was for growing
something.
Not plants. It made her think of holes, only they were not exactly
holes. And
she did not believe anyone had to channel to make it work. Only sing
the right
song! Some ter'angreal did not require channeling, but really! Singing?
Done
with Aviendha's dress, Sephanie had grown enthralled with the
recitation, her
eyes getting wider and wider. Essande listened with interest too, her
head
tilted to one side, murmuring small exclamations at each new
revelation, but
she was not bouncing on her toes the way Sephanie was. "What about that
one, my Lady?" the younger woman blurted when Aviendha paused. She
pointed
to the statuette of a stout, bearded man with a merry smile, holding a
book.
Two feet tall, it appeared to be age-darkened bronze and was certainly
heavy
enough to be. "Looking at him always makes me want to smile, too, my
Lady."
"Me
as well, Sephanie Pelden," Aviendha said, stroking the bronze man's
head.
"He holds more than the book you see. He holds thousands and thousands
of
books." Abruptly the light of saidar enveloped her, and she touched
thin
flows of Fire and Earth to the bronze figure.
Sephanie
squeaked as two words in the Old Tongue appeared in the air above the
statuette, as black as if printed with good ink. Some of the letters
were
shaped a little oddly, but the words were quite clear. Ansoen and
Imsoen,
floating on nothing. Aviendha looked nearly as startled as the maid.
"I
think we have proof at last," Elayne said more calmly than she felt.
Her
heart was in her throat, and pounding. Lies and Truth, the two words
might be
translated. Or in context, perhaps Fiction and Not Fiction would be
better. It
was proof enough for her. She marked where the flows touched the
figure, for
when she could return to her studies. "But you shouldn't have done
that.
It isn't safe."
The
glow around Aviendha vanished. "Oh, Light," she exclaimed, flinging
her arms around Elayne, "I never thought! I have great't'oh to you! I
never meant to endanger you or your babes! Never!"
"My
babes and I are safe." Elayne laughed, hugging back. "Min's
viewing?" Her babes were safe, at least. Until they were born. So many
babies died in their first year. Min had said nothing beyond them being
born
healthy. Min had said nothing about her not being burned out. either.
but she
had no intention of bringing that up with her sister already feeling
guilty.
"You have no toh to me. It was you I was thinking of. You could have
died,
or burned yourself out."
Aviendha
pulled back enough to look into Elayne's eyes. What she saw there
reassured
her, for a small smile curved her lips. "I did make it work, though.
Perhaps 1 can take over the study of them. With you to guide me, it
should be
perfectly safe. We have months before you can do it yourself."
"You
have no time at all, Aviendha," a woman's voice said from the doorway.
"We are leaving. I hope you have not grown too used to wearing silk. I
see
you, Elayne."
Aviendha
leaped away from the embrace, flushing furiously, as two Aiel women
entered the
room, and not just any two Aiel. Pale-haired Nadere, as tall as most
men and wide
with it, was a Wise One of considerable authority among the Goshien.
and
Dorindha, her long red hair touched with white, was the wife of Bael,
clan
chief of the Goshien, though her true prominence came from being
Roofmistress
of Smoke Springs Hold, the clan's largest hold. It was she who had
spoken.
"I
see you. Dorindha." Elayne said. "I see you, Nadere. Why are you
taking Aviendha away?"
"You
said I could stay with Elayne. to help guard her back," Aviendha
protested.
"You
did. Dorindha." Elayne took her sister's hand in a firm grip. and
Aviendha
squeezed back. "You and the Wise Ones, too."
Gold
and ivory bracelets clattered as Dorindha shifted her dark shawl. "How
many do you need to guard your back, Elayne?" she asked dryly. "You
have perhaps a hundred or more dedicated to nothing else. and as hard
as Far
Dareis Alai." A smile deepened the creases at the corners of her eyes.
"I think those women outside wanted us to give up our belt knives
before
letting us in."
Nadere
touched the horn hilt of her knife, her green eyes holding a fierce
light,
though it was unlikely the guards had shown any such desire. Even
Birgitte,
suspicious of everyone when it came to Elayne's safety, could see no
danger
from the Aiel, and Elayne had accepted certain obligations when she and
Aviendha adopted each other. Wise Ones who had taken part in that
ceremony, as
Nadere had. could go wherever they wished in the palace whenever they
wished:
that was one of the obligations. As for Dorindha, her presence was so
commanding, if in a quiet way, that it seemed inconceivable anyone
would
attempt to bar her way.
"Your
training has been in abeyance too long, Aviendha," Nadere said firmly.
"Go and change into proper clothing."
"But
I am learning so much from Elayne. Nadere. Weaves even you do not know.
I think
I can make it rain in the Three-fold Land! And just now we learned that
I
can-"
"Whatever
you may have learned," Nadere cut in sharply, "it seems you have
forgotten as much. Such as the fact that you are an apprentice still.
The Power
is the least of what a Wise One must know, else only those who can
channel
would be Wise Ones. Now go and change, and count your luck that I do
not make
you return in your skin to face a strapping. The tents are being struck
as we
speak, and if the clan's departure is delayed, you will face the strap."
Without
another word, Aviendha dropped Elayne's hand and ran from the room,
bumping
into Naris. who staggered and almost dropped the large, cloth-covered
tray she
was carrying. At a quick gesture from Essande, Sephanie hurried after
Aviendha.
Naris' eyes went wide at the sight of the Aiel women, but Essande
admonished
her for taking so long and directed her to lay out the meal on the
table,
setting the young maid into hurried motion while muttering apologies
under her
breath.
Elayne
wanted to run after Aviendha, too, to grasp every moment with her, but
Nadere's
words held her. "You're leaving Caemlyn, Dorindha? Where are you
going?" As much as Elayne liked the Aiel, she did not want them
wandering
about the countryside. With the situation as unstable as it was. they
were
problem enough simply venturing out of their camp to hunt or trade.
"We
are leaving Andor, Elayne. In a few hours, we will be far beyond your
borders.
As to where, you must ask the Car a'cam."
Nadere
had walked over to study what Naris was laying out. and Naris began to
tremble
so that she nearly dropped more than one dish. "This looks good, but 1
do
not recognize some of these herbs," the Wise One said. "Your midwife
has
approved all of this, Elayne?"
"I'll
summon a midwife when my time is near. Nadere. Dorindha, you can't
think Rand
would want your destination kept from me. What did he say?"
Dorindha
gave a small shrug. "He sent a messenger, one of the black coats, with
a
letter for Bael. Bael let me read it. of course"-her tone said there
had
never been any question of her not reading it- "but the Cava'cam asked
Bael not to tell anyone, so I cannot tell you."
"No
midwife?" Nadere said incredulously. "Who tells you what to eat and
drink? Who gives you the proper herbs? Stop looking daggers at me,
woman.
Melaine's temper is worse than yours could ever be, but she has sense
enough to
let Monaelle govern her in these things."
"Every
woman in the palace governs what I eat," Elayne replied bitterly.
"Sometimes I think every woman in Caemlyn does. Dorindha, can't you at
least-"
"My
Lady, your food is getting cold." Essande said mildly, but with just
the
touch of firmness that an elderly retainer was allowed.
Gritting
her teeth. Elayne glided to the chair Essande stood behind. She did not
flounce, much as she wanted to. She glided. Essande produced an
ivory-backed
hairbrush and, removing the towel from Elayne's head, began brushing
her hair
while she ate. She ate largely because not eating only meant someone
would be
told to fetch more hot food, because Essande and her own bodyguards
between
them might well keep her there until she did, but except for some dried
apple
that had not gone bad, the meal was decidedly unappetizing. The bread
was
crusty but flecked with weevils, and the soaked dried beans. since all
of the
preserved beans had spoiled, were tough and tasteless. The apple was
mixed in a
bowl of herbs-sliced burdock root, black haw, cramp bark, dandelion,
nettle leaf-with
a touch of oil, and for meat she had a piece of kid simmered in bland
broth.
With next to no salt, as far as she could tell. She would have killed
for salty
beef dripping with fat! Avkndba's plate had sliced beef, though it
looked
tough. She could as well ask for wine. To drink, she had her choice of
water or
goat's milk. She wanted tea almost as much as she did fatty meat, but
even the
weakest tea sent her running to make water, and she had quite enough
difficulties with that as it was. So she ate methodically,
mechanically. trying
to think of anything but the tastes in her mouth. Except for the apple,
at
least.
She
tried to pry some news of Rand out of the two Aiel women, but it seemed
they
knew less than she. As far as they would admit, anyway. They could be
closemouthed when they wanted to be. She at least knew that he was
somewhere
far to the southeast. Somewhere in Tear, she suspected, though he could
as
easily have been on the Plains of Maredo or in the Spine of the World.
Beyond
that, she knew he was alive and not a
whit more. She tried keeping the conversation on Rand in the hope they
might
let something slip, yet she might as well have tried dressing bricks
with her
fingers. Dorindha and Nadere had their own goal, convincing her to
acquire a midwife
right away. They went on and on about how she might be endangering
herself and
her babes, and not even Min's viewing would dissuade them.
"Very
well," she said at last, slapping down her knife and fork. "I will
start looking for one today." And if she failed to find one, well, they
would never know.
"I
have a niece who's a midwife, my Lady," Essande said. "Melfane
dispenses herbs and ointments from a shop on Candle Street in the New
City, and
I believe she is quite knowledgeable." She patted a few last curls into
place and stepped back with a pleased smile. "You do so remind me of
your
mother, my Lady."
Elayne
sighed. It seemed she was to have a midwife whether she wanted one or
not.
Someone else to see that her meals were wretched. Well, perhaps the
midwife
could suggest a remedy for those backaches at night, and the tender
bosom.
Thank the Light she had been spared the desire to sick up. Women who
could
channel never suffered that part of pregnancy.
When
Aviendha returned, she was in Aiel garb again, with her still-damp
shawl draped
over her arms, a dark scarf tied around her temples to hold back her
hair, and
a bundle on her back. Unlike the multitudes of bracelets and necklaces
Dorindha
and Nadere wore, she had a single silver necklace, intricately worked
discs in
a complex pattern, and one ivory bracelet densely carved with roses and
thorns.
She handed Elayne the blunt dagger. "You must keep this, so you will be
safe. I will try to visit you as often as I can."
"There
may be time for an occasional visit," Nadere said severely, "but you
have fallen behind and must work hard to catch up. Strange," she mused,
shaking her head, "to speak casually of visiting from so far. To cover
leagues, hundreds of leagues, in a step. Strange things we have learned
in the
wetlands."
"Come,
Aviendha, we must go," Dorindha said.
"Wait,"
Elayne told them. "Please wait, just a moment." Clutching the dagger,
she raced to her dressing room. Sephanie paused in hanging up
Aviendha's blue
dress to curtsy, but Elayne ignored her and opened the carved lid of
her ivory
jewelry chest. Sitting atop the necklaces and bracelets and pins in
their
compartments were a brooch in the shape of a turtle that appeared to be
amber
and a seated woman, wrapped in her own hair, apparently carved from
age-darkened ivory. Both were angreal. Placing the antler-hilted dagger
in the
chest, she picked up the turtle, and then, impulsively, snatched up the
twisted
stone dream ring, all red and blue and brown. It seemed to be useless
to her
since she became pregnant, and if she could manage to weave Spirit, she
still
had the silver ring, worked in braided spirals, that had been recovered
from
Ispan.
Hurrying
back to the sitting room, she found Dorindha and Nadere arguing, or at
least
having an animated discussion, while Essande pretended to be checking
for dust,
running her fingers under the edge of the table. From the angle of her
head,
she was listening avidly, though. Naris, putting Elayne's dishes back
on the
tray, was gaping at the Aiel women openly.
"I
told her she would feel the strap if we delayed the departure," Nadere
was
saying with some heat as Elayne entered the room. "It is hardly fair if
she is not the cause, but I said what I said."
"You
will do as you must," Dorindha replied calmly, but with a tightness to
her
eyes that suggested these were not the first words they had exchanged.
"Perhaps we will not delay anything. And perhaps Aviendha will pay the
price gladly to say farewell to her sister."
Elayne
did not bother with trying to argue for Aviendha. It would have done no
good.
Aviendha herself displayed an equanimity that would have credited an
Aes Sedai.
as if whether she was to be beaten for another's fault were of no
matter at
all.
"These
are for you," Elayne said, pressing the ring and the brooch into her
sister's hand. "Not as gifts. I'm afraid. The White Tower will want
them
back. But to use as you need."
Aviendha
looked at the things and gasped. "Even the loan of these is a great
gift.
You shame me, sister. I have no farewell gift to give in return."
"You
give me your friendship. You gave me a sister." Elayne felt a tear
slide
down her cheek. She essayed a laugh, but it was a weak, tremulous
thing.
"How can you say you have nothing to give? You've given me
everything."
Tears
glistened in Aviendha's eyes, too. Despite the others watching, she put
her
arms around Elayne and hugged her hard. "I will miss you, sister,"
she whispered. "My heart is as cold as night."
"And
mine, sister," Elayne whispered, hugging back equally hard.
"I
will miss you, too. But you will be allowed to visit me sometimes. This
isn't
forever."
"No.
not forever. But I will still miss you."
They
might have begun weeping next, only Dorindha laid her hands on their
shoulders.
"It is time. Aviendha. We must go if you are to have any hope of
avoiding
the strap."
Aviendha
straightened with a sigh, scrubbing at her eyes. "May you always find
water and shade, sister."
"May
you always find water and shade, sister," Elayne replied. The Aiel way
had
a finality about it, so she added. "Until I see your face again."
And
as quickly as that, they were gone. As quickly as that, she felt very
alone.
Aviendha's presence had become a certainty, a sister to talk to. laugh
with, share
her hopes and fears with, but that comfort was gone.
Essande
had slipped from the room while she and Aviendha were hugging, and now
she
returned to set the coronet of the Daughter-Heir on Elayne's head, a
simple
circlet of gold supporting a single golden rose on her forehead. "So
these
mercenaries won't forget who they're talking to, my Lady."
Elayne
did not realize her shoulders had slumped until she straightened them.
Her
sister was gone, yet she had a city to defend and a throne to gain.
Duty would
have to sustain her, now.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
The New Follower
The
Blue Reception Room, named for its arched ceiling, painted to display
the sky
and white clouds, and its blue floor tiles, was the smallest reception
room in
the palace, less than ten paces square. The arched windows that made up
the far
wall, overlooking a courtyard and still filled with glassed casements
against
the spring weather, gave a fair light even with the rain falling
outside, but
despite two large fireplaces with carved marble mantels, a cornice of
plaster
lions and a pair of tapestries bearing the White Lion that flanked the
doors, a
delegation of Caemlyn's merchants would have been insulted to be
received in
the Blue Room, a delegation of bankers livid. Likely that was why
Mistress Harfor
had put the mercenaries there, although they would not know they were
being
insulted. She herself was present "overseeing" the pair of liveried
young maids who were keeping the winecups full from tall silver
pitchers
standing on a tray atop a plainly carved sideboard, but she had the
embossed
leather folder used to carry her reports pressed to her bosom, as if in
anticipation of the mercenaries being dealt with quickly. Halwin Norry.
the
wisps of white hair behind his ears as always looking like feathers,
was
standing in a corner, also with his leather folder clutched to his
narrow
chest. Their reports were a daily fixture, and seldom much in them to
cheer the
heart of late. Quite the opposite.
Warned
by the pair of Guards women who had checked the room ahead of her,
everyone was
on their feet when Elayne entered with another pair at her back. Deni
Colford,
in charge of the Guardswomen who had replaced Devore and the others,
had simply
ignored her order for them all to remain outside. Ignored her! She
supposed
they made a good show, swaggering proudly as they did, yet she could
not stop
grinding her teeth.
Careane
and Sareitha, formal in their fringed shawls, bowed their heads
slightly in
respect, but Mellar swept off his plumed hat in a flourishing bow. one
hand
laid over the lace-edged sash slanting across his burnished
breastplate. The
six golden knots brazed to that breastplate, three on each shoulder,
rankled
her, yet she had let them pass so far. His hatchet face offered her a
smile
that was much too warm, too. but then, however cold she was to him, he
thought
he had some chance with her because she had not denied the rumor her
babes were
his. Her reasons for not countering that filthy tale had changed-she no
longer
had need to protect her babes, Rand's
babes-yet she let it stand. Give the man time, and he would braid a
rope for
his own neck. And if he failed to, she would braid one for him.
The
mercenaries, all well into their middle years, were only a heartbeat
behind
Mellar, though not so elaborate in their courtesies. Evard Cordwyn, a
tall,
square-jawed Andoran, wore a large ruby in his left ear, and Aldred
Gomaisen,
short and slender, the front of his head shaved, had horizontal stripes
of red
and green and blue covering half his chest, far more than it seemed at
all
likely he was entitled to in his native Cairhien. Hafeen Bakuvun,
graying, was
ornamented with a thick gold hoop in his left ear and a jeweled ring on
every
finger. The Domani was very stout, but the way he moved spoke of solid
muscle
beneath the fat.
"Don't
you have duties. Captain Mellar?" Elayne said coolly, taking one of the
room's few chairs. There were only five, arms and high backs simply
carved with
vines and leaves and lacking even a hint of gilt. Standing in a widely
spaced
row in front of the windows, the chairs put the light behind whoever
sat in
them. On a bright day, those given audience here squinted in the glare.
Unfortunately, that advantage was lost today. The two Guardswomen took
up
positions behind her and to either side, each with a hand resting on
her sword
hilt, watching the mercenaries with fierce expressions that made
Bakuvun smile
and Gomaisen rub his chin to half-hide a sly grin. The women gave no
sign of
being offended; they knew the point of their uniforms. Elayne knew they
would
wipe away any smiles very quickly if they needed to draw their blades.
"My
first duty above all is to protect you. my Lady." Easing his sword,
Mellar
eyed the mercenaries as though he expected them to attack her. or
perhaps him. Gomaisen
looked bitterly amused, and Baku-vun laughed aloud. All three men had
empty
scabbards, Cordwyn a pair on his back; no mercenary was allowed to
enter the
palace carrying so much as a dagger.
"I
know you have other duties." she said levelly, "because I assigned
them to you. Captain. Training the men I brought in from the
countryside. You
are not spending as much time with them as I expect. You have a company
of men
to train, Captain." A company of old men and boys, and surely enough to
occupy his hours. He spent few enough with her bodyguards in spite of
commanding them. That was just as well, really. He liked to pinch
bottoms.
"I suggest you see to them. Now."
Rage
flashed across Mellar's narrow face-he actually quivered!- but he
mastered
himself instantly. It was all gone so fast that she might have imagined
it. But
she knew she had not. "As you command, my Lady," he said smoothly.
His smile had an oily smoothness, too. "My honor is to serve you
well." With another flamboyant bow, he started for the door, as near to
strutting as made no difference. Little could dent Doilin Mellar's
demeanor for
long.
Bakuvun
laughed again, throwing his head back. "Man wears so much lace now, I
vow.
I keep expecting him to offer to teach us to dance, and now he does
dance." The Cairhienin laughed, too, a nasty, guttural sound.
Mellar's
back stiffened and his step hesitated, then quickened, so much so that
he
bumped into Birgitte at the doorway. He hurried on without stopping to
ask pardon,
and she frowned after him-the bond carried anger, quickly suppressed,
and
impatience, which was not- before shutting the door behind her and
moving to
stand beside Elayne's chair with one hand resting on the chairback. Her
thick
braid was not so neatly done as usual after having been undone for
drying, but
the uniform of the Captain-General suited her. Taller than Gomaisen in
her
heeled boots. Birgitte had a commanding presence when she wanted to.
The
mercenaries offered her small bows, respectful though not deferential.
Whatever
misgivings of her they might have entertained in the beginning, few who
had
seen her use her bow.or expose herself to the enemy, had any remaining.
"You
speak as if you know Captain Mellar, Captain Bakuvun." Elayne put just
a
hint of question in that, but kept her tone casual. Birgitte was
attempting to
project confidence along the bond to equal her expression, yet wariness
and
worry kept intruding. And the ever-present weariness. Elayne tightened
her jaw
to fight a yawn. Birgitte had to get some rest.
"I've
seen him once or twice before, my Lady," the Domani replied cautiously.
"Not above thrice at most, I'd say. Yes. no more than that." He
tilted his head, eyeing her almost sideways. "You know he's followed my
trade in the past?"
"He
did not try to hide the fact. Captain," she said, as if tired of the
subject. Had he let anything interesting slip, she might have arranged
to
question him alone, but pressing was not worth the risk of Mellar
discovering
that questions were being asked. He might run then, before she could
learn what
she wanted to know.
"Do
we really have need of the Aes Sedai, my Lady?" Bakuvun asked. "The
other Aes Sedai," he added, glancing at her Great Serpent ring. He held
out his silver cup, and one of the maids darted to fill it. They were
both
pretty women, perhaps not the best choices, but Reene had not much to
choose
from; most of the maids were either young or else aged and not so spry
as they
once had been. "All they've done the whole time we've been here is try
to
put us in awe of the White Tower's might and reach. I respect Aes Sedai
as much
as any man, yes, I do indeed, but if you'll forgive me, it gets
tiresome when
they turn to trying to browbeat a man. I vow it does, my Lady."
"A
wise man always stands in awe of the Tower," Sareitha said calmly,
shifting her brown-fringed shawl, perhaps to draw attention to it. Her
dark,
square face lacked the ageless look as yet, and she admitted yearning
for it.
"Only
fools fail to stand in awe of the Tower." Careane said on Sarei-tha's
heels. A bulky woman, as wide in the shoulders as most men, the Green
had no
need for gestures. Her coppery face proclaimed what she was to anyone
who knew
what to look for as loudly as did the ring on her right forefinger.
"The
word I hear," Gomaisen said darkly, "is that Tar Valon is besieged. I
hear the White Tower is split, with two Amyrlins. I even hear the Tower
itself
is held by the Black Ajah." A brave man, to mention that rumor to Aes
Sedai, but he still flinched saying it. Flinched and went right on.
"Who
is it you want us to be in awe of?"
"Do
not believe everything you hear. Captain Gomaisen." Sarei-tha's voice
was
serene, a woman stating indisputable fact. "Truth has more shadings
than
you might think, and distance often distorts truth into something very
different from the facts. Lies about Darkfriend sisters are dangerous
to
repeat, however."
"What
you had best believe," Careane added, just as calmly, "is that the
White Tower is the White Tower, now and always. And you stand before
three Aes
Sedai. You should have a care with your words, Captain."
Gomaisen
scrubbed the back of a hand across his mouth, but his dark eyes held
defiance.
A hunted defiance. "I am just saying what can be heard on any
street," he muttered.
"Are
we here to talk about the White Tower?" Cordwyn said, scowling. He
emptied
his winecup before going on. as if this talk made him uneasy. How much
had he
already consumed? He seemed a trifle unsteady on his feet, and there
was a
touch of slur in his words. "The Tower is hundreds of leagues from
here,
and what happens there is no business of ours."
"True,
friend," Bakuvun said. "True. Our business is swords, swords and
blood. Which, my Lady, brings us to the sordid matter of…"-he waggled
thick, be-gemmed fingers-"gold. Every day, we lose men, day after day
with
no end in sight, and there are very few suitable replacements to be
found in
the city."
"None
at all that I've found." Cordwyn muttered, eyeing the young maid
filling
his cup. She blushed at his scrutiny and finished her task quickly,
spilling
wine on the floor tiles and making Mistress Har-for frown. "Those that
might have been are all signing up for the Queen's Guards." That was
true
enough; enlistments seemed to increase by the day. The Queen's Guards
would be
a formidable force. Eventually. Unfortunately, the vast majority of
those men
were months from being able to handle a sword without stabbing
themselves in
the foot, and further from being of any use in battle.
"As
you say, friend," Bakuvun murmured. "As you say." He directed a
wide smile at Elayne. Perhaps he meant to seem friendly, or maybe
reasonable,
but it minded her of a man trying to sell her a pig in a sack. "Even
after
we're done here, finding new men won't be easy, my Lady. Suitable men
aren't
found under cabbage leaves, no they're not. Fewer men means fewer coins
for our
next hires. An inescapable fact of the world. We think it's only just
that we
receive compensation."
Anger
surged in Elayne. They thought she was desperate to hold on to them was
what
they thought! Worse, they were right. These three men represented
better than a
thousand more between them. Even with what Guybon had brought her, that
would
be a grievous loss. Especially if it started other mercenaries thinking
her
cause was lost. Mercenaries disliked being on the losing side. They
would run
like rats fleeing fire to avoid that. Her anger surged, but she held it
in
rein. By a hair's breadth. She could not keep the scorn from her voice,
though.
"Did you think you would take no casualties? Did you expect to mount
guard
and take gold for it without baring your swords?"
'You
signed for so much gold each day," Birgitte put in. She did not say how
much because every company had bargained for its own agreement. The
last thing
they needed was for the mercenary companies to grow jealous of one
another. As
it was, it seemed that half the common room fights the Guards broke up
were
between men of different companies. "A fixed amount. To put it cruelly,
the
more men you lose, the greater your profit."
"Ah.
Captain-General," the stout man said blandly, "but you forget the
death-money that has to be paid to the widows and orphans." Go-maisen
made
a choking noise, and Cordwyn stared at Bakuvun incredulously then tried
to
cover it by draining his winecup again.
Elayne
trembled, her hands tightening to fists on the arms of her chair. She
would not
give way to anger. She would not't "I intend to hold you to your
agreements," she said coldly. Well, at least she was not raging.
"You'll be paid what you signed for, including the usual victory gold
after I gain the throne, but not a penny more. If you try to back out.
I'll
assume you are turning coat and going over to Arymilla, in which case,
I'll
have you and your companies arrested and put outside the gates without
swords
or horses." The maid refilling Cordwyn's winecup yet again suddenly
squealed and danced away from him rubbing her hip. The anger Elayne had
been
holding down fountained white hot. "And if one of you ever again dares
fondle one of my women, he and his company will be put out without
swords,
horses, or bootsl Do I make myself clear?"
"Very
clear, my Lady." Bakuvun's voice held a distinct chill, and his wide
mouth
was tight. "Very clear indeed. And now. since our… discussion…
seems concluded, may we withdraw?"
"Think
carefully." Sareitha said suddenly. "Will the White Tower choose to
see an Aes Sedai on the Lion Throne, or a fool like Arymilla Marne?"
"Count
the Aes Sedai in this palace." Careane added. "Count the Aes Sedai
inside Caemlyn. There are none in Arymilla's camps. Count and decide
where the
White Tower's favor lies."
"Count,"
Sareitha said, "and remember that the White Tower's displeasure can be
fatal."
It
was very hard to believe that one of them must be Black Ajah. yet it
must be
so. Unless it was Merilille, of course. Elayne hoped that was not so.
She liked
Merilille. But then, she liked Careane and Sareitha, too. Not as much
as she
did Merilille. yet still a liking. Any way she looked at it, a woman
she liked
was a Darkfriend, and already under penalty of death.
When
the mercenaries had departed, making their courtesies hurriedly, and
Mistress
Harfor had sent the maids away with the remnants of the wine, Elayne
leaned
back in her chair and sighed. "I handled that very badly, didn't I?"
"Mercenaries
require a strong hand on the reins," Birgitte replied, but there was
doubt
in the bond. Doubt and worry.
"If
I may say, my Lady." Norry said in his dry voice, "I cannot see
anything else you could have done. Mildness would only have emboldened
them to
make further demands.' He had been so still that Elayne had almost
forgotten he
was there. Blinking at the world, he seemed a wading bird wondering
where the
water had gone. In contrast to Mistress Harfor's neatness, ink stains
marked
his tabard, and his fingers. She eyed the leather folder in his hands
with
distinct distaste.
"Will
you leave us, please, Sareitha, Careane?' she said. They hesitated
slightly,
but there was nothing they could do save bow their heads and glide from
the
room like swans. "And you two as well," she added over her shoulder
to the Guardswomen. They did not so much as twitch!
"Outside!"
Birgitte snapped with a jerk of her head that set her braid swaying.
"Now!"
Oh, the pair jumped for her, they did! They headed for the doors so
fast they
might as well have trotted!
Elayne
scowled as the door closed behind them. "Burn me, I don't want to hear
any
bloody bad news, not today. I don't want to hear how much of the food
brought
in from Illian and Tear is already spoiled when it arrives. I don't
want to
hear about arson, or flour black with weevils, or sewers breeding rats
faster
than they can be killed, or flies so thick you'd think Caemlyn was a
filthy
stable. I want to hear some bloody good news for a change." Burn her,
she
sounded petulanti Truth be told, she felt petulant. Oh, how that
grated! She
was trying to gain a throne, and behaving like a child in the nursery!
Master
Norry and Mistress Harfor exchanged glances, which only made matters
worse. He
fondled his folder with a sigh of regret. The man enjoyed droning his
numbers,
even when they were dire. At least they no longer balked at giving
their
reports in company. Well, not very far. Jealous of their own
responsibilities,
each was wary of the other straying and quick to point out where some
imagined
boundary had been crossed. Still, they managed to run the palace and
the city
efficiently. with few barked knuckles.
"Are
we private, my Lady?" Reene asked.
Elayne
drew a deep breath and performed novice exercises that seemed to have
no
calming effect whatsoever, then attempted to embrace the Source. To her
surprise, saidar came to her easily, filling her with the sweetness of
life and
joy. And soothing her moods, too. It was always that way. Anger or
sorrow or
just being with child might interfere with embracing the Power in the
first
place, yet once it filled her, her emotions stopped jumping about.
Deftly she
wove Fire and Air, just so, with traces of Water, but when she was
done, she
did not release the Source. The feel of being filled with the Power was
wondrous, yet not that much more so than knowing she would not be
wanting to
weep for no reason or shout for as little in the next moment. After
all, she
was not foolish enough to draw too deeply.
"We
are private." she said. Saidar touched her ward and was gone. Someone
had
tried to listen in. not the first time that had happened. With so many
women
who could channel gathered in the palace, it would have been surprising
if no
one attempted to snoop, but she wished she knew how to trace whoever
was making
those attempts. As it was, she hardly dared say anything of substance
without a
ward in place.
"Then
I have a little good news," Mistress Harfor said, shifting her folder
but
not opening it, "from Jon Skellit." The barber had been most
assiduous about carrying his reports, approved beforehand by Reene, out
to
Arymilla and bringing back what he could learn in the camps outside the
city.
He was in the employ of Naean Arawn, but Naean, supporting Arymilla's
claim,
would surely share Skellit's reports with Arymilla. Unfortunately, what
he had
been able to learn so far had not been much of use. "He says that
Arymilla
and the High Seats supporting her intend to be in the first party to
ride into
Caem-lyn. She boasts of it constantly, it seems."
Elayne
sighed. Arymilla and the others stayed together, moving from camp to
camp
according to no pattern she could see, and for some time great effort
had gone
into trying to learn where they would be ahead of time. A simple matter
then to
send soldiers through a gateway to seize all of them at once and
decapitate her
opposition. As simple as such things could be, anyway. Men would die
under the
best of circumstances, some of the High Seats might well escape, yet if
only
Arymilla herself could be taken, there would be an end to it. Elenia
and Naean
had made public renunciation of their own claims, which was
irreversible. That
pair might go on supporting Arymilla if they remained free-they had
tied
themselves to her tightly-but with Arymilla in hand, all Elayne really
would
have to contend with was gaining the support of at least four more of
the great
Houses. As if it were easy. So far, efforts in that direction had
proven
futile. Perhaps today would bring good news on that front, though. But
this
news was useless. If Arymilla and the others were riding into Caemlyn
it would
mean the city was beyond the brink of falling. Worse, if Arymilla was
boasting.
she must believe it would happen soon. The woman was a fool in many
ways, but
it would be a mistake to underestimate her completely. She had not
carried her
claim this far by being an absolute fool.
"This
is your good news?" Birgitte said. She saw the implications, too. "A
hint of when might help."
Reene
spread her hands. "Arymilla gave Skellit a gold crown with her own
hands
once, my Lady. He turned it over to me as proof that he's reformed."
Her
lips compressed for a moment; Skellit had saved himself from hanging,
yet he
would never regain trust. "That's the only time the man's been within
ten
paces of her. He has to go by what he can pick up gossiping with the
other
men." She hesitated. "He's very afraid, my Lady. The men in those
camps are certain they'll take the city in a matter of days."
"Afraid
enough to turn his coat a third time?" Elayne asked quietly. There was
nothing to say to the other matter.
"No,
my Lady. If Naean, or Arymilla, learns what he's done, he's a dead man,
and he
knows it. But he's afraid if the city falls, they will learn. I think
he may
bolt soon."
Elayne
nodded grimly. Mercenaries were not the only rats to flee fire. "Do you
have any good news, Master Norry?"
The
First Clerk had been standing quietly, fingering his embossed leather
folder
and trying to appear as if he were not listening to Reene. "I think I
can
better Mistress Harfor, my Lady." There might have been a touch of
triumph
in his smile. Of late, it was rare for him to have better news than
she.
"I have a man 1 believe can follow Mellar successfully. May I have him
brought in?"
Now,
that was excellent news. Five men had died trying to follow Doilin
Mellar when
he went out into the city at night, and the "coincidence" seemed
strained. The first time, it had appeared the fellow fell afoul of a
footpad,
and she thought nothing of it beyond settling a pension on the man's
widow. The
Guards managed to keep crime under some control-except for arson, at
least-yet
robbers used darkness as a cloak to hide in. The other four had seemed
the
same, killed with a single knife thrust, their purses emptied, but
however
dangerous the streets at night, coincidence hardly seemed credible.
When
she nodded, the spindly old man hurried to the doors and opened one to
put his
head out. She could not hear what he said-the ward worked both ways-but
in a
few minutes a burly Guardsman entered pushing ahead of him a shuffling
man with
fetters on his wrists and ankles. Everything about the prisoner seemed…
average. He was neither fat nor thin, tall nor short. His hair was
brown, of no
particular shade she could name, and his eyes as well. His face was so
ordinary
she doubted she could describe him. No feature stood out at all. His
clothing
was just as unremarkable, a plain brown coat and breeches of neither
the best
wool nor the worst, somewhat rumpled and beginning to show dirt, a
lightly
embossed belt with a simple metal buckle that might have ten thousand
twins in
Caemlyn. In short, he was eminently forgettable. Birgitte motioned the
Guardsman to stop the fellow well short of the chairs and told him to
wait
outside.
"A
reliable man," Norry said, watching the Guardsman leave. "Afrim
Hansard. He served your mother faithfully, and knows how to keep his
mouth
shut."
"Chains?'
Elayne said.
"This
is Samwil Hark, my Lady," Norry said, eyeing the man with the sort of
curiosity he might have shown toward an unfamiliar and oddly shaped
animal,
"a remarkably successful cutpurse. The Guards only caught him because
another ruffian… um… 'turned the cat on him.' as they say in the
streets, hoping to lessen his own sentence for a third offense of
strongarm
robbery." A thief would be eager for that. Not only was the flogging
longer, the thief-mark branded on his forehead would be much harder to
disguise
or hide than the mark on his thumb for his second offense. "Anyone who
has
managed to keep from being caught for as long as Master Hark should be
able to
carry out the task I have in mind for him."
"I'm
innocent, I am, my Lady." Hark knuckled his forehead, the iron chains
of
his fetters clinking, and put on an ingratiating smile. He talked very
quickly.
"It's all lies and happenstances, it is. I'm a good Queen's man, I am.
I
wore your mother's colors in the riots, my Lady. Not that I took part
in the
rioting, you understand. I'm a clerk when I have work, which I'm out of
at the
moment. But I wore her colors on my cap for all to see, 1 did." The
bond
was full of Birgitte's skepticism.
"Master
Hark's rooms contained chests full of neatly cut purses," the First
Clerk
went on. "There are thousands of them, my Lady. Quite literally
thousands.
I suppose he may regret keeping… urn… trophies. Most cutpurses have
sense enough to get rid of the purse as soon as possible."
"1
picks them up when I sees one, I does, my Lady." Hark spread his hands
as
far as his chains allowed and shrugged, the very image of injured
innocence.
"Maybe it were foolish, but I never saw no harm. Just a harmless sort
of
amusement, my Lady."
Mistress
Harfor sniffed loudly, disapproval clear on her face. Hark managed to
look even
more hurt.
"His
rooms also contained coins to the value of over one hundred twenty gold
crowns,
secreted under the floorboards, in cubbyholes in the walls, in the
rafters,
everywhere. His excuse for that," Norry raised his voice as Hark opened
his mouth again, "is that he distrusts bankers. He claims the money is
an
inheritance from an aged aunt in Four Kings. I myself very much doubt
the
magistrates in Four Kings will have registered such an inheritance,
though. The
magistrate judging his case says he seemed surprised to learn that
inheritances
are registered.' Indeed, Hark's smile laded somewhat at being reminded.
"He says that he worked for Wilbin Saems, a merchant, until Saems'
death
four months ago, but Master Saems' daughter maintains the business, and
neither
she nor any of the other clerks recall any Samwil Hark."
"They
hates me, they does, my Lady," Hark said in a sullen voice. His hands
gripped the chain between them in fists. "I was gathering evidence of
how
they was stealing from the good master-his own daughter, mind!-only he
died
afore I could give it to him. and I was turned out in the streets
without a
reference or a penny, I was. They burned what I'd gathered, gave me a
drubbing
and threw me out."
Elayne
tapped her chin thoughtfully. "A clerk, you say. Most clerks are better
spoken than you. Master Hark, but I'll offer you a chance to give
evidence for
your claim. Would you send for a lapdesk. Master Norry?"
Norry
gave a thin smile. How could the man make a smile seem dry? "No need,
my
Lady. The magistrate in the case had the same idea." For the first time
that she had ever seen, he took a sheet of paper from the folder
clutched to
his chest. She thought trumpets should sound! Hark's smile faded away
completely as his eyes followed that page from Norry's hand to hers.
One
glance was all that was needed. A few uneven lines covered less than
half the
sheet, the letters cramped and awkward. No more than half a dozen words
were
actually legible, and those barely.
"Hardly
the hand of a clerk." she murmured. Returning the page to Norry, she
tried
to make her face stern. She had seen her mother passing judgment.
Morgase had
been able to make herself appear implacable. "I fear. Master Hark, that
you will sit in a cell until the magistrates in Four Kings can be
queried, and
soon after that you will hang." Hark's lips writhed, and he put a hand
to
his throat as if he could already feel the noose. "Unless, of course,
you
agree to follow a man for me. A dangerous man who doesn't like to be
followed.
If you can tell me where he goes at night, instead of hanging, you will
be
exiled to Baerlon. Where you would be well advised to find a new line
of work.
The governor will be informed of you."
Suddenly
Hark's smile was back. "Of course, my Lady. I'm innocent. but I can see
how things look dark against me, I can. I'll follow any man you want me
to. I
was your mother's man, I was. and I'm your man. too. Loyal is what I
am, my
Lady, loyal if I suffers for it."
Birgitte
snorted derisively.
"Arrange
for Master Hark to see Mellar's face without being seen, Birgitte." The
man
was unmemorable, but there was no point in taking chances. "Then turn
him
loose." Hark looked ready to dance, iron chains or no iron chains.
"But first… You see this. Master Hark?" She held up her right
hand so he could not miss the Great Serpent ring. "You may have heard
that
1 am Aes Sedai." With the Power already in her, it was a simple matter
to
weave Spirit. "It is true." The weave she laid on Hark's belt buckle,
his boots, his coat and breeches, was somewhat akin to that for the
Warder
bond, though much less complex. It would fade from the clothing and
boots in a
few weeks, or months at best, but metal would hold a Finder forever.
"I've
laid a weave on you. Master Hark. Now you can be found wherever you
are."
In truth, only she would be able to find him-a Finder was attuned to
the one
who wove it-but there was no reason to tell him that. "Just to be sure
that you are indeed loyal."
Hark's
smile seemed frozen in place. Sweat beaded on his forehead. When
Birgitte went
to the door and called in Hansard, giving him instructions to take Hark
away
and keep him safe from prying eyes, Hark staggered and would have
fallen if the
husky Guardsman had not held him up on the way out of the room.
"I
fear I may just have given Mellar a sixth victim," Elayne muttered.
"He hardly seems capable of following his own shadow without tripping
over
his boots." It was not so much Hark's death she regretted. The man
would
have hanged for sure. "I want whoever put that bloody man in my palace.
I
want them so badly my teeth ache!" The palace was riddled with
spies-Reene
had uncovered above a dozen beyond Skellit, though she believed that
was all of
them-but whether Mellar had been set to spy or to facilitate kidnapping
her, he
was worse than the others. He had arranged for men to die, or he had
killed
them, in order to gain his place. That those men had thought they were
to kill
her made no difference. Murder was murder.
"Trust
me, my Lady," Norry said, laying a finger alongside his long nose.
"Cutpurses are… um… stealthy by nature, yet they seldom last
long. Sooner or later they cut the purse of someone faster afoot than
they,
someone who doesn't wait for the Guards." He made a quick gesture as if
stabbing someone. "Hark has lasted at least twenty years. A number of
the
purses in his… um… collection were embroidered with prayers of thanks
for the end of the Aiel War. Those went out of fashion very quickly, as
I
recall."
Birgitte
sat down on the arm of the next chair and folded her arms beneath her
breasts.
"I could arrest Mellar," she said quietly, "and have him put to
the question. You'd have no need of Hark then."
"A
poor joke, my Lady, if I may say so," Mistress Harfor said stiffly. at
the
same time that Master Norry said, "That would be… um… against
the law, my Lady."
Birgitte
bounded to her feet, outrage flooding the bond. "Blood and bloody
ashes!
We know the man's as rotten as last month's fish.''
"No."
Elayne sighed, fighting not to feel outraged as well. "We have
suspicions,
not proof. Those five men might have fallen afoul of footpads. The law
is quite
clear on when someone may be put to the question, and suspicions are
not reason
enough. Solid evidence is needed. My mother often said, 'The Queen must
obey
the law she makes, or there is no law." I will not begin by breaking
the
law." The bond carried something… stubborn. She fixed Birgitte with a
steady look. "Neither will you. Do you understand me. Birgitte
Trahelion?
Neither will you."
To
her surprise, the stubbornness lasted only moments longer before
dwindling away
to be replaced by chagrin. "It was only a suggestion," Birgitte
muttered weakly.
Elayne
was wondering how she had done that and how to do it again-sometimes
there
seemed doubt in Birgitte's mind over which of them was in charge-when
Deni
Coiford slipped into the room and cleared her throat to draw attention
to
herself. A long, brass-studded cudgel balanced the sword hanging at the
heavyset woman's waist, looking out of place. Deni was getting better
with the
sword but still preferred the cudgel she had used keeping order in a
wagon
drivers' tavern. "A servant came to say that the Lady Dyelin has
arrived,
my Lady, and will be at your service as soon as she's freshened
herself."
"Send
the Lady Dyelin word that she's to meet me in the Map Room." Elayne
felt a
surge of hope. At last, perhaps, she might hear some good news.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
A Bronze Bear
Leaving
Mistress Harfor and Master Norry, Elayne started eagerly toward the Map
Room still
holding saidar. Eagerly, but not hurriedly. Deni and three Guardswomen
strode
ahead of her, heads swiveling in constant search of threats, and the
other four
stamped along behind. She doubted that Dyelin would take long over her
ablutions. good news or bad. The Light send that it was good. Birgitte.
hands
clasped behind her back and wearing a frown, seemed sunk in silence as
they
walked, though she studied every crossing corridor as if expecting an
attack
from it. The bond still carried worry. And tiredness. A yawn cracked
Elayne's
jaws before she could stop herself.
An
unwillingness to start rumors was not the only reason she maintained a
stately
pace. There were more than servants in the hallways, now. Courtesy had
required
her to offer rooms in the palace to the nobles who managed to reach the
city
with armsmen-counting armsmen loosely; some were well-trained and
carried a
sword every day. others had been guiding a plow before being called to
follow
their lord or lady-and a fair number had accepted. Mainly those who had
no
dwelling in Caemlyn or. she suspected, felt pinched for coin. Farmers
or
laborers might think all nobles wealthy, and certainly most were. if
only in
comparison, but the expenses required by their positions and duties
left many counting
coins as carefully as any farmwife. What she was to do for the newest
arrivals
she did not know. Nobles already were sleeping three and four to a bed
wherever
the beds were large enough; all but the narrowest could take at least
two, and
did. Many Kinswomen had been reduced to pallets on the floor in the
servants'
quarters, and thank the Light spring had made that possible.
It
seemed the whole lot of her noble guests were out strolling, and when
they
offered her courtesies, she had to stop and pass at least a few words.
Sergase
Gilbearn, small and slim in a green riding dress, her dark hair lightly
touched
with white, who had brought all twenty of the armsmen in her service,
and
vinegary old Kelwin Janevor, wiry in his discreetly darned blue wool
coat, who
had brought ten, received as gracious an exchange as did lanky Barel
Layden and
stout Anthelle Sharplyn. though they were High Seats, if of minor
Houses. All
had ridden to her support with whatever they could gather, and none had
turned
back on learning the odds. Many looked uneasy today, though. No one
said
anything of it-they were all full of good wishes and hopes for a speedy
coronation and how honored they were to follow her-but worry was
written on
their faces. Arilinde Branstrom, normally so ebullient you might think
she
believed her fifty armsmen could turn the tide for Elayne by
themselves, was
not the only woman chewing her lip, and Laerid Traehand, stocky and
taciturn
and usually as stolid as stone, was not the only man with a furrowed
brow. Even
news of Guybon and the aid he had brought caused only brief smiles,
quickly
swallowed in ill ease.
"Do
you think they've heard of Arymilla's confidence?" she asked in one of
the
brief intervals when she was not responding to bows and curtsies. "No,
that
wouldn't be enough to upset Arilinde or Laerid." Arymilla inside the
walls
with thirty thousand men likely would fail to upset that pair.
"It
wouldn't," Birgitte agreed. She glanced around as if to see who besides
the Guardswomen might hear before going on. "Maybe they're worried over
what's been worrying me. You didn't get lost when we got back. Or
rather, you
had help."
Elayne
paused to offer a few hurried words to a gray-haired couple in woolens
that
would have suited prosperous farmers. Brannin and El-vaine Martan's
manor house
was much like a large farmhouse, sprawling and housing generations. A
third of
their armsmen were their sons and grandsons, nephews and great-nephews.
Only
those too young or too old to ride had been left behind to see to
planting. She
hoped the smiling pair did not reel they were getting short shrift, but
she was
walking on almost as soon as she stopped. "What do you mean. I had
help?" she demanded.
"The
palace is… changed." For a moment, there was confusion in the bond.
Birgitte grimaced. "It sounds mad, I know, but it's as if the whole
thing
had been built to a slightly different plan." One of the Guardswomen
ahead
missed a step, caught herself. "I have a good memory…" Birgitte
hesitated, the bond filled with a jumble of emotions hastily pushed
down. Most
of her memories of past lives had vanished as surely as the winter's
snow.
Nothing remained before the founding of the White Tower, and the four
lives she
had lived between then and the end of the Trolloc Wars were beginning
to
fragment. Little seemed to frighten her, yet she feared losing the
rest,
especially her memories of Gaidal Cain. "I don't forget a path once
I've
followed it," she went on. "and some of these hallways aren't the
same as they were. Some of the corridors have been… shifted. Others
aren't
there anymore, and there are some new. Nobody is talking about it that
I could
find out, but I think the old people are keeping quiet because they're
afraid
their wits are going, and the younger are afraid they'll lose their
positions."
"That's-"
Elayne shut her mouth. Clearly it was not impossible. Birgitte did not
suffer
from sudden fancies. Naris' reluctance to leave her apartments suddenly
made
sense, and perhaps Reene's earlier puzzlement, too. She almost wished
being
with child really had befuddled her. But how? "Not the Forsaken," she
said firmly. "If they could do something like this, they'd have done it
long since, and worse than… A good day to you, too, Lord Aubrem."
Lean
and craggy and bald save for a thin white fringe, Aubrem Pensenor
should have
been dandling his grandchildren's children on his knee, but his back
was
straight, his eyes clear. He had been among the first to reach Caemlyn.
with
near to a hundred men and the first news that it was Arymilla Marne
marching
against the city, with Naean and Elenia supporting her. He began
reminiscing
about riding for her mother in the Succession, until Birgitte murmured
that
Lady Dyelin would be waiting for her.
"Oh.
in that case, don't let me delay you, my Lady," the old man said
heartily.
"Please give my regards to Lady Dyelin. She's been so busy, I've not
exchanged two words with her since reaching Caemlyn. My very best
regards, if
you will." House Pensenor had been allied to Dyelin's Taravin since
time
out of mind.
"Not
the Forsaken," Birgitte said once Aubrem was out of earshot. "But
what caused it is only the first question. Will it happen again? If it
does,
will the changes always be benign? Or might you wake up and find
yourself in a
room without doors or windows? What happens if you're sleeping in a
room that
disappears? If a corridor can go. so can a room. And what if it's more
than the
palace? We need to find out if all the streets still lead where they
did. What
if the next time, part of the city wall isn't there anymore?"
"You
do think dark thoughts," Elayne said bleakly. Even with the Power in
her,
the possibilities were enough to give her a sour stomach.
Birgitte
fingered the four golden knots on the shoulder of her white-collared
red coat.
"They came with these." Strangely, the worry carried by the bond was
less now that she had shared her concerns. Elayne hoped the woman did
not think
she had answers. No, that really was impossible. Birgitte knew her too
well for
that.
"Does
this frighten you, Deni?" she asked. "I'll admit it does me."
"No
more than needful, my Lady," the blocky woman answered without stopping
her careful scan of what lay ahead. Where the others walked with a hand
on their
sword hilts, her hand rested on her long cudgel. Her voice was as
placid, and
as matter-of-fact, as her face. "One time a big wagon man named Eldrin
Hackly came near breaking my neck. Not usually a rough man, but he was
drunk
beyond drunk that night. I couldn't get the angle right, and my cudgel
seemed
to bounce off his skull without making a dent. That frightened me more,
because
I knew certain sure I was about to die. This is just maybe, and any day
you
wake up, maybe you die."
Any
day you wake up, maybe you die. There were worse ways to look at life,
Elayne
supposed. Still, she shivered. She was safe, at least till her babes
were born,
but no one else was.
The
two guards at the wide, lion-carved doors to the Map Room were
experienced
Guardsmen, one short and the next thing to scrawny, the other wide
enough to
appear squat though he was of average height. Nothing visible picked
them out
from any other men in the Guards, but only good swordsmen, trusted men,
got
this duty. The short man nodded to Deni, then straightened his back
stiffly at
a disapproving frown from Birgitte. Deni smiled at him shyly-Deni!
shyly!-while
a pair of Guardswomen went through the inevitable routine. Birgitte
opened her
mouth, but Elayne laid a hand on her arm, and the other woman looked at
her.
then shook her head, thick golden braid swaying slowly.
"It's
not good when they're on duty, Elayne. They should be seeing to their
duties,
not mooning over each other." She did not raise her voice, yet color
appeared in Deni's round cheeks, and she stopped smiling and started
watching
the corridor again. It was better that way. perhaps, yet still a pity.
Somebody
ought to have a little pleasure in their lives.
The
Map Room was the second-largest ballroom in the palace, and spacious,
with four
red-streaked marble fireplaces where small fires burned beneath the
carved
mantels, a domed ceiling worked with gilt and supported by widely
spaced
columns two spans from white marble walls that had been stripped of
tapestries,
and sufficient mirrored stand-lamps to light the room as well as if it
had
windows. The greatest part of its tile floor was a detailed mosaic map
of
Caemlyn, originally laid down more than a thousand years ago, after the
New
City had been completed though before Low Caemlyn began growing. Long
before
there was an Andor. before even Artur Hawk wing. It had been redone
several
times since, as tiles faded or became worn, so every street was
exact-at least,
they had been until today; the Light send they still were-and despite
many
buildings replaced over the years, even some of the alleys were
unchanged from
what the huge map showed.
There
would be no dancing in the Map Room for the foreseeable future,
however. Long
tables between the columns held more maps. some large enough to spill
over the
edges, and shelves along the walls held stacks of reports, those not so
sensitive they needed to be locked away or else committed to memory and
burned.
Birgitte's wide writing table, nearly covered with baskets, most full
of
papers, stood at the far end of the room. As Captain-General, she had
her own
study, but as soon as she discovered the Map Room, she had decided the
map in
the floor made it too good not to use.
A
small wooden disc, painted red, marked the spot on the outer wall where
the
assault had just been beaten back. Birgitte scooped it up in passing
and tossed
it into a round basket full of the things on her writing table. Elayne
shook
her head. It was a small basket, but if there were enough attacks at
once to
need that many markers…
"My
Lady Birgitte, I have that report on available fodder you asked for," a
graying woman said, holding out a page covered with neat lines. The
White Lion
was worked small on the breast of her neat brown dress. Five other
clerks went
on with their work, pens skritching. They were among Master Norry's
most
trusted, and Mistress Harfor had personally screened the half dozen
messengers
in red-and-white livery. swift young men-boys really-who stood against
the wall
behind the clerks' small writing tables. One, a pretty youth, began a
bow
before cutting it short with a blush. Birgitte had settled the question
of
courtesies, to her or other nobles, with very few words. Work came
first, and
any noble who disliked that could just avoid the Map Room.
"Thank
you, Mistress Anford. I'll look at it later. If you and the others will
wait
outside, please?"
Mistress
Anford quickly gathered up the messengers and the other clerks, giving
them
only time to stopper their ink jars and blot their work. No one showed
a
glimmer of surprise. They were accustomed to the need for privacy at
times.
Elayne had heard people call the Map Room the Secrets Room, though
nothing very
secret was kept there. All of that was locked away in her apartments.
While
the clerks and messengers were filing out, Elayne strode to one of the
long
tables where a map showed Caemlyn and its surroundings for at least
fifty miles
in each direction. Even the Black Tower had been inked in. a square
sitting
less than two leagues south of the city. A growth on Andor. and no way
to be
rid of it. She still sent parties of Guardsman to inspect some days,
via
gateways, but the place was large enough that the Asha'man could have
been up
to anything without her learning of it. Pins with enameled heads marked
Arymilla's
eight camps around the city, and small metal figures various other
camps. A
falcon, finely wrought in gold and no taller than her little finger,
showed
where the Goshien were. Or had been. Were they gone yet? She slipped
the falcon
into her belt pouch. Aviendha was very much a falcon. On the other side
of the
table. Birgitte raised a questioning eyebrow.
"They're
gone, or going." Elayne told her. There would be visits. Aviendha was
not
gone forever. "Sent somewhere by Rand. Where, I don't know, burn
him."
"I
wondered why Aviendha wasn't with you."
Elayne
laid one finger atop a bronze horseman less than a hand tall, standing
a few
leagues west of the city. "Someone needs to take a look at Davram
Bashere's camp. Find out whether the Saldaeans are leaving, too. And
the Legion
of the Dragon." It did not matter if they were, really. They had not
interfered in matters, thank the Light, and the time when fear that
they might
restrained Arymilla was long past. But she disliked things happening in
Andor without
her knowledge. "Send Guardsmen to the Black Tower tomorrow, as well.
Tell
them to count how many Asha'man they see."
"So
he's planning a big battle. Another big battle. Against the Seanchan, I
suppose." Folding her arms beneath her breasts, Birgitte frowned at the
map. "I'd wonder where and when, except we have enough in front of us
to
be going on with."
The
map displayed the reasons Arymilla was pressing so hard. For one, to
the
northeast of Caemlyn. almost off the map. lay the bronze image of a
sleeping
bear, curled up with its paws over its nose. Two hundred thousand men,
near
enough, almost as many trained men as all of Andor could field. Four
Borderland
rulers, accompanied by perhaps a dozen Aes Sedai they tried to keep
hidden,
searching for Rand, their reasons unstated. Borderlanders had no cause
to turn
against Rand that she could see-though the simple fact was, he had not
bound
them to him as he had other lands-but Aes Sedai were another matter,
especially
with their allegiance uncertain, and twelve approached a dangerous
number even
for him. Well, the four rulers had in part deciphered her motives for
asking
them into Andor, yet she had managed to mislead them concerning Rand's
whereabouts. Unfortunately, the Borderlanders had belied every tale of
how
swiftly they could move as they crept south, and now they sat in place,
trying
to find a way to avoid coming near a city under siege. That was
understandable,
even laudable. Outland armies in close proximity to Andoran armsmen, on
Andoran
soil, would make for a touchy situation. There were always at least a
few
hotheads. Bloodshed, and maybe war, could start all too easily under
those
circumstances. Even so, bypassing Caemlyn was going to be difficult:
the narrow
country roads had been turned to bogs by the rains, giving hard passage
to an
army that large. Elayne could have wished they had marched another
twenty or
thirty miles toward Caemlyn, though. She had hoped their presence would
have
had a different effect by now. It might still.
More
important, certainly to Arymilla and possibly to herself, a few leagues
below
the Black Tower stood a tiny silver swordsman with his blade upright in
front
of him and a silver halberdier, plainly by the same silversmith's hand,
one to
the west of the black square, the other to the east. Luan. Ellorien and
Abelle,
Aemlyn, Arathelle and Pelivar had close to sixty thousand men between
them in
those two camps. Their estates and those of the nobles tied to them
must have been
stripped near the bone. Those two camps were where Dyelin had been
these past
three days, trying to learn their intentions.
The
spindly Guardsman opened one of the doors and held it for an elderly
serving
woman carrying a rope-work silver tray with two tall golden wine
picchers and a
circle of goblets made of blue Sea Folk porcelain. Reene must have been
uncertain how many would be present. The frail woman moved slowly,
careful not
to tilt the heavy tray and drop anything. Elayne channeled flows of Air
to take
the tray, then let them dissipate unused. Implying that the woman could
not do
her job would only be hurtful. She was effusive in her thanks, though.
The old
woman smiled broadly, clearly delighted, and offered her a deep curtsy
once
unburdened of the tray.
Dyelin
arrived almost right behind the maid, an image of vigor, and shooed her
out
before grimacing over the contents of one pitcher-Elayne sighed;
doubtless it
held goat's milk-and filling a goblet from the other. Plainly Dyelin
had
confined her freshening to washing her face and brushing her hair,
golden
flecked with gray, because her dark gray riding dress, with a large
round
silver pin worked with Taravin's Owl and Oak on the high neck, had
spots of
half-dried mud on the skirts.
"There's
something seriously amiss," she said, swirling the wine in her goblet
without drinking. A frown deepened the fine lines at the corners of her
eyes.
"I've been in this palace more times than I can remember. and today I
got
lost twice."
"We
know about that," Elayne told her, and quickly explained what little
they
had puzzled out, what she intended to do. Belatedly, she wove a ward
against
eavesdropping and was unsurprised to feel it slice through saidar. At
least
whoever had been listening in would get a jolt from that. A small jolt,
since
so little of the power was involved that she had not sensed it. Maybe
there was
a way to make it a bard jolt next time, though. Maybe that would begin
to
discourage eavesdroppers.
"So
it might happen again," Dyelin said when Elayne was done. Her tone was
calm, but she licked her lips and took a swallow of wine, as if her
mouth was
suddenly dry. "Well. Well, then. If you don't know what caused it, and
you
don't know whether it will happen again, what are we to do?"
Elayne
stared. Again someone seemed to think she had answers she did not. But
then,
that was what it meant to be queen. You were always expected to have an
answer,
to find one. That was what it meant to be Aes Sedai. "We can't stop it,
so
we'll live with it, Dyelin, and try to keep people from growing too
afraid.
I'll announce what happened. as much as we know, and have the other
sisters do
the same. That way, people will know that Aes Sedai are aware, and that
should
provide some comfort. A little. They'll still be frightened, of course,
but not
as much as they'll be if we say nothing and it does happen again."
That
seemed a feeble effort to her, but surprisingly Dyelin agreed without
hesitation. "1 myself can suggest nothing else to be done. Most people
think you Aes Sedai can handle anything. It should suffice, in the
circumstances."
And
when they realized that Aes Sedai could not handle anything, that she
could
not? Well, that was a river that she would cross when she reached it.
"Is
the news good, or bad?"
Before
Dyelin could answer, the door opened again.
"I
heard that Lady Dyelin had returned. You should have sent for us,
Elayne. You
aren't queen yet, and I dislike you keeping secrets from me. Where is
Aviendha?" Catalyn Haevin. a cool-eyed, ungovernable young woman-a girl
in
truth, still long months short of her majority, though her guardian had
abandoned her to go her own way-was pride to her toenails, her plump
chin held
high. Of course, that might have been because of the large enameled pin
of
Haevin's Blue Bear that decorated the high neck of her blue riding
dress. She
had begun showing Dyelin respect, and a certain wariness, shortly after
she
started sharing a bed with her and Sergase. but with Elayne she
insisted on
every perquisite of a High Seat.
"We
all heard," Conail Northan said. Lean and tall in a red silk coat, with
laughing eyes and an eagle's beak of a nose, he was of age, just, a few
months
past his sixteenth name day. He swaggered and caressed the hilt of his
sword
much too fondly, but there seemed no harm in him. Only boyishness, an
unfortunate trait in a High Seat. "And none of us could wait to hear
when
Luan and the others will join us. This pair would have run the whole
way."
He ruffled the hair of the two younger boys with him, Perival Mantear
and
Branlet Gilyard, who gave him a dark look and raked fingers through his
hair to
straighten it. Perival blushed. Quite short but already pretty, he was
the
youngest at twelve, yet Branlet had only a year on him.
Elayne
sighed, but she could not ask them to leave. Children most of them
might
be-perhaps all, considering Conail's behavior-yet they were the High
Seats of
their Houses, and along with Dyelin, her most important allies. She did
wish
she knew how they had learned the purpose of Dyelin's journey. That had
been
intended to be a secret until she knew what news Dyelin brought.
Another task
for Reene. Gossip unchecked, the wrong gossip, could be as dangerous as
spies.
"Where
is Aviendha? ' Catalyn demanded. Strangely, she had become quite taken
with
Aviendha. Fascinated might have been a better word. Of all things, she
had
persisted in trying to make Aviendha teach her to use a spear!
"So,
my Lady," Conail said, strolling over to fill a blue goblet with wine,
"when are they joining us?"
"The
bad news is that they aren't," Dyelin said calmly. "The good news is
that they've each rejected an invitation to join Arymilla." She cleared
her throat loudly as Branlet reached for the wine pitcher. His cheeks
reddened,
and he picked up the other pitcher as if he had really meant to all
along. The
High Seat of House Gilyard, yet still a boy for all of the sword on his
hip.
Perival also wore a sword, one that dragged on the floor tiles and
looked too
big for him. but he had already taken goat's milk. Pouring her own
wine,
Catalyn smirked at the younger boys, a superior smile that vanished
when she
noticed Dyelin looking at her.
"That's
small turnips to call good news," Birgitte said. "Burn me, if it
isn't. You bring back a bloody half-starved squirrel and call it a side
of
beef."
"Pungent
as always," Dyelin said dryly. The two women glared at each other,
Birgitte's hands balling into fists, Dyelin fingering the dagger at her
belt.
"No
arguing." Elayne said, making her voice sharp. The anger in the bond
helped. At times she feared the pair might come to blows. "I won't put
up
with your bickering today."
"Where
is Aviendha?"
"Gone,
Catalyn. What else did you learn, Dyelin?"
"Gone
where?"
"Gone
away," Elayne said calmly. Saidar or no saidai she wanted to slap the
girl's face. "Dyelin?"
The
older woman took a sip of wine to cover breaking off her staring match
with
Birgitte. Coming to stand beside Elayne, she picked up the silver
swordsman,
turned him over, set him down again. "Aem-lyn, Arathelle and Pelivar
tried
to convince me to announce a claim to the throne, but they were less
adamant
than when I spoke with them last. I believe I've almost convinced them
I won't
do it."
"Almost?"
Birgitte put a hundredweight of derision in the word. Dyelin ignored
her
pointedly. Elayne frowned at Birgitte, who shifted uncomfortably and
stalked
off long enough to get herself a goblet of wine. Very satisfying.
Whatever she
was doing right, she hoped it continued to work.
"My
Lady," Perival said with a bow, extending one of two goblets he held to
Elayne. She managed a smile and a curtsy before taking the offering.
Goat's
milk. Light, but she was beginning to revile the stuff!
"Luan
and Abelle were… noncommittal," Dyelin continued, frowning at the
halberdier. "They may be swaying toward you." She hardly sounded as
though she believed it, however. "I reminded Luan that he helped me
arrest
Naean and Elenia. back in the beginning, but that may have done no more
good
than it did with Pelivar."
"So
they may all be waiting for Arymilla to win," Birgitte said grimly.
"If you survive, they'll declare for you against her. If you don't, one
of
them will make her own claim. Ellorien has the next best right after
you,
doesn't she?" Dyelin scowled, but she offered no denials.
"And
Ellorien?" Elayne asked quietly. She was sure she knew the answer there
already. Her mother had had Ellorien flogged. That had been under
Rahvin's
influence, but few seemed to believe that. Few seemed to believe
Gaebril had
even been Rahvin.
Dyelin
grimaced. "The woman's head is stone! She'd announce a claim in my name
if
she thought it would do any good. At least she has enough sense to see
it
won't." Elayne noted that she made no mention of any claims in
Ellorien's
own name. "In any case. I left Keraille Sur-tovni and Julanya Fote to
watch them. I doubt they'll move, but if they do. we'll know
straightaway."
Three Kinswomen who needed to form a circle to Travel were watching the
Borderlanders for the same reason.
No
good news at all, then, no matter what face Dyelin tried to put on it.
Elayne
had hoped the threat of the Borderlanders would drive some of the
Houses to support
her. At least one reason I let them cross An-clor still holds, she
thought
grimly. Even if she failed to gain the throne, she had done that
service for
Andor. Unless whoever did take the throne bungled matters completely.
She could
see Arymilla doing just that. Well, Arymilla was not going to wear the
Rose
Crown, and that was that. One way or another, she had to be stopped.
"So
it's six, six and six," Catalyn said, frowning and thumbing the long
signet ring on her left hand. She looked thoughtful, unusual for her.
Her usual
style was to speak her mind with no consideration whatsoever. "Even if
Candraed joins us, we are short often." Was she wondering whether she
had
tied Haevin to a hopeless cause? Unfortunately, she had not tied her
House so
tightly the knots could not be undone.
"I
was certain Luan would join us," Conail muttered. "And Abelle and
Pelivar." He took a deep swallow of wine. "Once we beat Arymilla,
they'll come. You mark me on it."
"But
what are they thinking?" Branlet demanded. "Are they trying to start
a war with three sides?" His voice went from treble to bass halfway
through that, and his face flooded with red. He buried his face in his
goblet,
but grimaced. Apparently he liked goat's milk as little as she did.
"It's
the Borderlanders." Perival's voice was a boy's piping, but he sounded
sure of himself. "They're holding back because whoever wins here, the
Borderlanders still have to be dealt with." He picked up the bear,
hefting
it as if its weight would give him answers. "What I don't understand is
why they're invading us in the first place. We're so far from the
Borderlands.
And why haven't they marched on and attacked Caemlyn? They could sweep
Arymilla
aside, and I doubt we could keep them out as easily as we do her. So
why are they
here?"
Smiling,
Conail clapped him on the shoulder. "Now that will be a battle to see,
when we face the Borderlanders. Northan's Eagles and Mantear's Anvil
will do
Andor proud that day, eh?" Perival nodded, but he did not look happy at
the prospect. Conail certainly did.
Elayne
exchanged glances with Dyelin and Birgitte, both of whom looked amazed.
Elayne
felt astonished herself. The other two women knew, of course, but
little
Perival had come near touching a secret that had to be kept. Others
might puzzle
out eventually that the Borderlanders had been meant to push Houses
into
joining her, but it must not be confirmed.
"Luan
and the others sent to Arymilla asking for a truce until the
Borderlanders were
turned back," Dyelin said after a moment. "She asked time to
consider. As near as I can calculate, it was then that she began
increasing her
efforts at the walls. She tells them she's still considering."
"Aside
from anything else," Catalyn said heatedly, "that shows why Arymilla
doesn't deserve the throne. She puts her own ambition above Andor's
safety.
Luan and the others must be fools not to see it."
"Not
fools." Dyelin replied. "Just men and women who think they see the
future better than they do."
What
if she and Dyelin were the ones who were not seeing the future clearly.
Elayne
wondered. To save Andor, she would have thrown her support to Dyelin.
Not
gladly, but to save Andor's blood, she would have. Dyelin would have
the
support of ten Houses, more than ten. Even Danine Candraed might
finally decide
to stir herself in support of Dyelin. Except that Dyelin did not want
to be
queen. She believed that Elayne was the one to wear the Rose Crown. So
did
Elayne. But what if they were wrong? Not the first time that question
had come
to her, but now, staring at the map with all of its ill tidings, she
could not
shake free of it.
That
evening, after a dinner memorable only for the surprise of tiny
strawberries,
she sat in the large sitting room of her apartments. reading. Trying to
read.
The leather-bound book was a history of Andor, as was most of her
reading of
late. It was necessary to read as many as possible to gain any real
version of
truth, cross-checking one against another. For one thing, a book first
published during any monarch's reign never mentioned any of her
missteps, or
those of her immediate predecessors if they were of her own House. You
had to
read books written while Trakand held the throne to learn of Mantear's
mistakes, and books written under Mantear to learn of Norwelyn's
errors. Others'
mistakes could teach her how not to make the same herself. Her mother
had made
that almost her first lesson.
She
could not concentrate, however. She often found herself staring at a
page without
seeing a word, thinking of her sister, or starting to say something to
Aviendha
before remembering that she was not there. She felt very lonely, which
was
ridiculous. Sephanie stood in a corner against the possibility she
wanted
anything. Eight Guardswomen were standing outside the door to the
apartments,
and one of them. Yurith Azeri, was an excellent conversationalist, an
educated
woman though silent on her past. But none of them was Aviendha.
When
Vandene glided into the room followed by Kirstian and Zarya. it seemed
a
relief. The two white-clad women stopped by the doorway, expressions
meek.
Untouched by the Oath Rod, pale Kirstian, hands folded at her waist,
appeared
just into her middle years; Zarya, with her tilted eyes and hooked
nose, well short
of them. She held something wrapped in white toweling.
"Forgive
me if I'm interrupting." Vandene began, then frowned. The white-haired
Green's face somehow gave an impression of age despite her Aes Sedai
features.
Those could have been twenty, or forty, or anything in between: that
seemed to
change at every blink. Perhaps it was her dark eyes, luminous and deep
and
pained, which had seen so much. There was an air of tiredness about
her, too.
Her back was straight, but she still looked weary. "It is none of my
business, of course," she said delicately, "but is there a reason you
are holding so much of the Power? I thought you must be weaving
something very
complex when I felt you in the corridor."
With
a start, Elayne realized that she held nearly as much ofsaidar as she
could
contain safely. How had that happened? She did not recall drawing any
deeper.
Hastily, she released the Source, regret filling her as the Power
drained away
and the world became… ordinary again. On the instant, her mood bounced
sideways.
"You
aren't interrupting anything," she said peevishly, setting her book
down
on the table in front of her. She had not finished three pages of the
thing
anyway.
"May
I make us private, then?"
Elayne
gave a curt nod-it was none of the woman's bloody business how much of
the
Power she held; she knew the protocols as well as Elayne. or better-and
told
Sephanie to wait in the anteroom while Vandene wove a ward against
eavesdropping.
Ward
or no ward, Vandene waited until the door closed behind the maid before
speaking. "Reanne Corly is dead, Elayne."
"Oh,
Light, no." Temper vanished into sobs, and she hastily snatched a
lace-edged handkerchief from her sleeve to blot the tears suddenly
streaming
down her cheeks. Her cursed shifting moods at work, yet Reanne surely
deserved
tears. She had so wanted to become a Green. "How?" Burn her. she
wished she could stop blubbering!
There
were no tears from Vandene. Perhaps there were no more tears in her.
"She
was smothered with the Power. Whoever did it used much more than was
needed.
The residues of saidar were thick on her and in the room where she was
found.
The murderer wanted to be sure no one would miss seeing how she died."
"That
makes no sense, Vandene."
"Perhaps
it does. Zarya?"
The
Saldaean woman laid her small bundle on rhe table and unwrapped it to
reveal an
articulated wooden doll. It was very old. the simple dress threadbare,
the
painted face flaking and missing an eye, half of its long dark hair
gone.
"This
belonged to Mirane Larinen," Zarya said. "Derys Nermala found it
behind a cupboard."
"I
don't see what Mirane leaving a doll behind has to do with Re-anne's
death," Elayne said, wiping her eyes. Mirane was one of the Kinswomen
who
had run away.
"Only
this," Vandene answered. "When Mirane went to the Tower, she hid this
doll outside because she had heard that everything she owned would be
burned.
After she was put out, she retrieved it and always carried it with her.
Always.
She had a quirk, though. Wherever she stopped for a time, she hid the
doll
again. Do not ask me why. But she would not have run away and abandoned
it."
Still
dabbing at her eyes, Elayne leaned back in her chair. Her weeping had
dwindled
to sniffles, but her eyes still leaked tears. "So Mirane didn't run
away.
She was murdered and… disposed of." A grisly way to put it. "The
others, too, you think? All of them?"
Vandene
nodded, and for a moment her slender shoulders slumped. "I very much
fear
so," she said, straightening. "I expect clues were left among the
things they left behind, treasured keepsakes like this doll, a favorite
piece
of jewelry. The murderer wanted us to think she was being clever at
hiding her
crimes but not clever enough, only we weren't clever enough to find
those
clues, so she decided to become more blatant."
"To
frighten the Kinswomen into fleeing," Elayne muttered. That would not
cripple her, but it would throw her back on the mercies of the
Windfinders, and
those seemed to be growing mingy. "How many of them know of this?"
"All,
by now. I should think." Vandene said dryly. "Zarya told Derys to
keep quiet, but that woman likes the sound of her own voice."
"This
seems aimed at me, at helping Arymilla gain the throne, but why would a
Black
sister have any interest in that? I can't think we have two murderers
among us.
At least this settles the question of Merilille. Speak with Sumeko and
Alise.
Vandene. They can make sure the rest don't panic." Sumeko ranked next
after Reanne, as the Kin ordered their hierarchy, and while Alise stood
much
lower, she was a woman of great influence. "From now on, none of them
is
to be alone, not ever. Always at least two together, and three or four
would be
better. And warn them to be careful of Careane and Sareitha."
"I'd
advise against that," Vandene said quickly. "They should be safe in
groups, and word would reach Careane and Sareitha. Warned against Aes
Sedai?
The Kin would give themselves away in a minute." Kirstian and Zarya
nodded
solemnly.
After
a moment, Elayne reluctantly agreed to the continued secrecy. The Kin
should be
safe in groups. "Let Chanelle know about Reanne and the others. I can't
imagine the Windfinders are in any danger-losing them wouldn't hurt me
the way
losing the Kin would-but wouldn't it be wonderful if they did decide to
leave?"
She
did not expect that they would-Chanelle feared returning to the Sea
Folk with
the bargain unfulfilled-yet it would be a bright spot in an otherwise
miserable
day if they did. At least it seemed unlikely anything could darken the
day
further. The thought sent a chill through her. The Light send nothing
would
darken it more.
Arymilla
pushed her plate of stew away with a grimace. She had been offered her
choice
of beds for the night-Arlene, her maid, was making the choice now; the
woman
knew what she liked-and the least she had expected was a decent meal,
but the
mutton was fatty, and definitely beginning to go rancid besides. There
had been
too much of that lately. This time the cook was going to be flogged!
She was
unsure which of the nobles in this camp employed him, just that he was
supposed
to be the best at hand-the best!-but that did not matter. He would be
flogged
to make an example. And then sent away, of course. You could never
trust a cook
after he had been punished.
The
mood in the tent was far from lively. Several of the nobles in the camp
had
hoped for invitations to dine with her, but none stood high enough. She
was
beginning to regret not asking one or two, even some of Naean's or
Elenia's
people. They might have been entertaining. Her closest allies at table
together, and you might have thought they sat over funeral meats. Oh,
scrawny
old Nasin, his thinning white hair uncombed, was eating away heartily,
apparently not noticing that the meat was nearly rotten, and giving her
fatherly pats on the hand. She met his smiles like a dutiful daughter.
The fool
was wearing one of his flower-embroidered coats tonight. The thing
could have
passed for a woman's dressing robe! Happily, his leers were all
directed down
the table at Elenia; the honey-haired woman flinched, her foxlike face
paling
whenever she glanced at him. She controlled House Sarand as if she were
the
High Seat instead of her husband, yet she feared that Arymilla would
still let
Nasin have his way with her. That threat was unneeded, now, but it was
well to
have it to hand just in case. Yes, Nasin was happy enough in his futile
pursuit
of Elenia. but the others were sunk in gloom. Their plates were
abandoned
barely touched, and they kept her two serving men trotting to refill
wine cups.
She never liked trusting others' servants. At least the wine had not
turned.
"I
still say we should make a heavier push." Lir grumbled drunk-enly into
his
cup. A whip of a man. his red coat showing the wear of armor straps,
the High
Seat of Baryn was ever eager to strike. Subtlety was simply beyond him.
"My eyes-and-ears report more armsmen entering the city every day
through
these 'gateways.' " He shook his head and muttered something under his
breath. The man actually believed those rumors of dozens of Aes Sedai
in the
Royal Palace. "All these pinprick attacks do is lose men."
"I
agree," Karind said, fiddling with a large golden pin, enameled with
the
running Red Fox of Anshar, that was fastened to her bosom. She was not
much
less intoxicated than Lir. Her square face had a slackness about it.
"We
need to press home instead of throwing men away. Once we're over the
walls, our
advantage in numbers will pay off."
Arymilla's
mouth tightened. They might at least show her the respect due a woman
who was soon
to be Queen of Andor, rather than disagreeing with her all the time.
Unfortunately, Baryn and Anshar were not bound to her so tightly as
Sarand and
Arawn. Unlike Jarid and Naean. Lir and Karind had announced their
support of
her without publishing it in writing. Neither had Nasin, but she had no
fear of
losing him. Him, she had wound around her wrist for a bracelet.
Forcing
a smile, she made her voice jovial. "We lose mercenaries. What else are
mercenaries
good for if not dying in place of our arms-men?" She held up her
winecup
and a lean man in her silver-trimmed blue hastened to fill it. In fact,
he was
so hasty that he spilled a drop on her hand. Her scowl made him snatch
a
handkerchief from his pocket to blot up the drop before she could pull
her hand
away. His handkerchief! The Light only knew where that filthy thing had
been,
and he had touched her with it! His mouth writhed with fear as he
retreated,
bowing and mumbling apologies. Let him serve out the meal. He could be
dismissed after. "We will need all of our armsmen when I ride against
the
Borderlanders. Don't you agree, Naean?"
Naean
twitched as though stuck with a pin. Slim and pale in yellow silk
worked with
silver patterns of Arawn's Triple Keys on the breast, she had begun
looking
haggard in recent weeks, her blue eyes drawn and tired. All of her
supercilious
airs were quite gone. "Of course. Arymilla," she said meekly and
drained her cup. Good. She and Elenia were definitely tamed, but
Arymilla liked
to check now and then to make sure neither was growing a new backbone.
"If
Luan and the others will not support you, what good will taking Caemlyn
do?" Sylvase, Nasin's granddaughter and heir, spoke so seldom that the
question came as a shock. Sturdy and not quite pretty, she usually had
a vapid
gaze, but her blue eyes appeared quite sharp at the moment. Everyone
stared at
her. That seemed not to faze her a bit. She toyed with a winecup, but
Arymilla
thought it no more than her second. "If we must fight the
Borderlanders,
why not accept Luan's truce so Andor can field its full strength
unhindered by
divisions?"
Arymilla
smiled. She wanted to slap the silly woman. Nasin would be angered by
that,
however. He wanted her kept as Arymilla's "guest" to prevent his
removal as High Seat-part of him seemed aware that his wits were gone;
all of
him intended holding on as High Seat until he died-but he did love her.
"Ellorien and some of the others will come to me yet. child," she said
smoothly. Smoothness required some effort. Who did the chit think she
was?
"Aemlyn, Arathelle, Pelivar. They have grievances against Trakand."
Surely they would come once Elayne and Dyelin were out of the way.
Those two
would not survive Caem-lyn's fall. "Once I have the city, they will be
mine in any event. Three of Elayne's supporters are children, and
Conail
Northan is little more than a child. I trust I can convince them to
publish
their support of me easily enough." And if she could not. Master
Lounalt
surely could. A pity if children had to be handed over to him and his
cords.
"I will be queen by sunset of the day Caemlyn falls to me. Isn't that
right, father?"
Nasin
laughed, spraying gobbets of half-chewed stew across the table. "Yes,
yes," he said, patting Arymilla's hand. "You listen to your aunt,
Sylvase. Do as she tells you. She'll be Queen of Andor soon." His smile
faded, and an odd note entered his voice. It might almost have been…
pleading. "Remember, you will be High Seat of Caeren after I'm gone.
After
I'm gone. You will be High Seat."
"As
you say, Grandfather," Sylvase murmured, inclining her head briefly.
When
she straightened, her gaze was as insipid as ever. The sharpness must
have been
a trick of the light. Of course.
Nasin
grunted and went happily back to wolfing down the stew. "Best I've had
in
days. I think I'll have another plate. More wine here. man. Can't you
see my
cup's dry?"
The
silence around the table stretched in discomfort. Nasin's more open
displays of
senility had a way of causing that.
"I
still say," Lir began finally, only to cut off as a stocky armsman with
Marne's four Silver Moons on his chest entered the tent.
Bowing
respectfully, the fellow made his way around the table and bent to
whisper in
Arymilla's ear. "Master Hernvil asks a word in private. my Lady."
Everyone
but Nasin and his granddaughter pretended to concentrate on their wine,
certainly not attempting to eavesdrop. He went on eating. She watched
Arymilla,
bland-faced. That sharpness must have been a trick of the light.
"I'll
be but a few moments," Arymilla said, rising. She waved a hand,
indicating
the food and wine. "Enjoy yourselves until I return. Enjoy." Lir
called for more wine.
Outside,
she did not bother raising her skirts to keep them clear of the mud.
Arlene
would already have to clean them, so what did a little more mud matter?
Light
showed in some tents, but by and large the camp was dark beneath a half
moon.
Jakob Hernvil, her secretary, waited a little away from the tent in a
plain
coat, holding a lantern that made a yellow pool around him. He was a
little
man, and lean, as if all the fat had been boiled from him. Discretion
was bred
in his bones, and she ensured his loyalty by paying him enough that
only the
largest bribes could be of interest, far more than anyone would offer a
scrivener.
"Forgive
me for interrupting your meal, my Lady." he said with a bow, "but I
was sure you would want to hear right away." It was always a surprise,
hearing such a deep voice from such a tiny man. "They have agreed. But
they want the whole amount of gold first."
Her
lips compressed of their own accord. The whole amount. She had hoped to
get off
with paying only the first half. After all, who would dare dun her once
she was
queen? "Draw up a letter to Mistress Andscale. I'll sign and seal it
first
thing in the morning." Transferring that much gold would require days.
And
how long to have the arms-men ready? She had never really paid
attention to
that sort of thing. Lir could tell her, but she hated showing weakness.
"Tell them a week from tomorrow, to the day." That should be enough.
In a week. Caem-lyn would be hers. The throne would be hers. Arymilla,
by the
Grace of the Light, Queen of Andor, Defender of the Realm, Protector of
the
People, High Seat of House Marne. Smiling, she went back inside to tell
the
others the wonderful news.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
News for the Dragon
"Enough,
Loial," Rand said firmly, thumbing
tabac
into his short-stemmed pipe from a goatskin pouch. It was Tairen leaf,
with a
slightly oily taste from the curing, but that was all that was to be
had.
Thunder rolled overhead, slow and ponderous. "You'll talk me hoarse
with
all these questions."
They
were seated at a long table in one of the larger rooms in Lord
Algarin's manor
house, the remains of the midday meal pushed down to one end. The
servants were
old. for the most part, and slower moving than ever since Algarin left
for the BlackTower.
The rain pouring down outside seemed to be slackening, though strong
gusts of
wind still pelted the windows with raindrops hard enough to rattle the
glass in
the six yellow-painted casements. Many of those panes held bubbles;
some
distorted what lay outside almost beyond recognition. The table and
chairs were
simply carved, no more elaborate than might be found in many
farmhouses, and
the yellow cornices beneath the high, beamed ceiling little more so.
The two
fireplaces, at either end of the room, were broad and tall but of plain
stone,
the andirons and firetools sturdy wrought iron and simple. Lord or no,
Algarin
was far from wealthy.
Tucking
the tabac pouch into his pocket. Rand
strolled
to one of the fireplaces and used small brass tongs from the mantel to
lift a
burning sliver of oak for lighting his pipe. He hoped no one thought
that
strange. He avoided channeling any more than absolutely necessary,
especially
if anyone else was present-the dizziness that hit him when he did was
difficult
to conceal-but no one had mentioned it so far. A gust of wind brought a
squeaking as though tree branches had scraped across the windowpanes.
Imagination. The nearest trees were beyond the fields, more than half a
mile
away.
Loial
had brought down a vine-carved chair from the Ogier rooms that put his
knees
level with the tabletop, so he had to lean forward sharply to write in
his
leather-bound notebook. The volume was small for him, little enough to
fit
neatly into one of his capacious coat pockets, but still as large as
most human
books Rand had seen. Fine hair
decorated
Loial's upper lip and a patch beneath his chin; he was attempting a
beard and
mustaches, though with only a few weeks' growth, it did not seem a very
successful attempt so far.
"But
you've told me almost nothing really useful," the Ogier rumbled, a drum
booming its disappointment. His tufted ears drooped. Even so, he began
wiping
the steel nib of his polished wooden pen. Fatter than Rand's
thumb and long enough to seem slender, it fitted Loial's thick fingers
perfectly. "You never mention heroics, except by somebody else. You
make
it all sound so everyday. To hear you tell it, the fall of IIlian was
as
exciting as watching a weaver repair her loom. And cleansing the True
Source?
You and Nynaeve linked, then you sat and channeled while everybody else
was off
fighting Forsaken. Even Nynaeve told me more than that, and she claims
to
remember almost nothing."
Nynaeve,
wearing all of her jeweled ter'angreal and her strange
bracelet-and-rings
angreal, shifted in her chair in front of the other fireplace, then
went back
to watching Alivia. Every so often she glanced toward the windows and
tugged at
her thick braid, but for the most part she focused on the yellow-haired
Seanchan woman. Standing beside the doorway like a guard, Alivia gave a
small,
brief smile of amusement. The former damane knew Nynaeve's display was
meant
for her. The intensity never left her hawkish blue eyes, though. It
seldom had,
ever since her collar had been removed in Caemlyn. The two Maidens
squatting on
their heels near her playing cat's cradle, Harilin of the Iron Mountain
Taardad
and Enaila of the Jarra Chareen, were making their own display. Shoufa
wrapped
around their heads and black veils hanging down their chests, each had
three or
four spears stuck through the harness holding her bow case on her back
and a
bull-hide buckler lying on the floor. There were fifty Maidens in the
manor
house, several of them Shaido, and they all went about ready to dance
the
spears in a heartbeat. Perhaps with him. They seemed torn between
delight at
providing a guard for him again and displeasure over how long he had
avoided
them.
As
for himself, he could not look at any of them without the litany of
women who
had died for him, women he had killed, starting up in his head.
Moiraine
Damodred. Her above all. Her name was written inside his skull in fire.
Liah of
the Cosaida Chareen, Sendara of the Iron Mountain Taardad. Lamelle of
the Smoke
Water Miagoma, Andhilin of the Red Salt Goshien, Desora of the Musara
Reyn…
So many names. Sometimes he woke in the middle of the night muttering
that
list, with Min holding him and murmuring to him as if soothing a child.
He
always told her he was all right and wanted to go back to sleep, yet
after he
closed his eyes, he did not sleep until the list had been completed.
Sometimes
Lews Therin chanted it with him.
Min
looked up from the volume she had open on the table, one of Herid Fel's
books.
She devoured those, and used the note he had sent Rand before his
murder, the
one where he said she was a distraction because she was so pretty, as a
bookmark. Her short blue coat, embroidered with white flowers on the
sleeves
and lapels, was cut to fit snugly over her bosom, where her creamy silk
blouse
showed a touch of cleavage, and her big dark eyes, framed by dark
ringlets to
her shoulders, held a pleased light. He could feel her pleasure through
the
bond. She liked him looking at her. Without a doubt the bond told her
how much
he liked looking. Oddly enough, it said she liked looking at him, too.
Pretty?
He hummed, thumbing his earlobe. She was beautiful. And tied to him
tighter
than ever. She and Elayne and Aviendha. How was he to keep them safe
now? He
forced himself to smile back at her around his pipestem. unsure how
well the
deception was working. A touch of irritation had entered the bond from
her end,
though why she should become irritable whenever she thought he was
worrying
about her was beyond him. Light, she wanted to protect him't
"Rand
isn't very talkative, Loial," she said, no longer smiling. Her low,
almost
musical voice held no anger, but the bond told another story. "In fact,
sometimes he's about as talkative as a mussel." The look she directed
at
Rand made him sigh. It seemed there would be a great deal of talking
once they
were alone together. "I can't tell you much, myself, but I'm sure
Cadsuane
and Venn will tell you anything you want to know. Others will, too. Ask
them if
you want more than yes and no and two words besides.''
Stout
little Verin. knitting in a chair beside Nynaeve, appeared startled to
hear her
name mentioned. She blinked vaguely, as though wondering why it had
been.
Cadsuane, at the far end of the table with her sewing basket open
beside her,
only took her attention away from her embroidery hoop long enough to
glance at
Loial. Golden ornaments swayed, dangling from the iron-gray bun atop
her head.
It was only that, a glance, not a frown, yet Loial's ears twitched. Aes
Sedai
always impressed him, and Cadsuane more than any other.
"Oh,
I will, Min. I will," he said. "But Rand is central to my book."
With no sand jar at hand, he began blowing gently on the page of his
notebook
to dry the ink, but Loial being Loial, he still talked between puffs.
"You
never give enough detail. Rand. You make me drag everything out of you.
Why,
you never even mentioned being imprisoned in Far Madding until Min did.
Never
mentioned it! What did the Council of Nine say when they offered you
the Laurel
Crown? And when you renamed it? I can't think they liked that. What was
the
coronation like? Was there feasting, a festival, parades? How many
Forsaken
came against you at Shadar Logoth? Which ones? What did it look like at
the
end? What did he feel like? My book won't be very good without the
details. I
hope Mat and Perrin give me better answers.'' He frowned, long eyebrows
grazing
his cheeks. "I hope they're all right."
Colors
spun in Rand's head, twin rainbows swirled in water. He knew how to
suppress
them, now, but this time he did not try. One resolved into a brief
image of Mat
riding through forest at the head of a line of mounted folk. He seemed
to be
arguing with a small, dark woman who rode beside him, taking his hat
off and
peering into it, then cramming it back onto his head. That lasted only
moments,
then was replaced by Perrin sitting over winecups in a common room or
tavern
with a man and a woman who wore identical red coats ornately trimmed
with blue
and yellow. Odd garments. Perrin looked grim as death, his companions
wary. Of
him?
"They're
well." he said, calmly ignoring a piercing look from Cadsuane. She did
not
know everything, and he intended to keep it that way. Calm on the
surface,
content, blowing smoke rings. Inside was another matter. Where are
they? he
thought angrily, pushing down another
appearance of the colors. That was as easy as breathing, now. I need
them, and
they're off for a day at the Ansaline Gardens'.
Abruptly
another image was floating his head, a man's face, and his breath
caught. For
the first time, it came without any dizziness. For the first time, he
could see
it clearly in the moments before it vanished. A blue-eyed man with a
square
chin, perhaps a few years older than himself. Or rather, he saw it
clearly for
the first time in a long while. It was the face of the stranger who had
saved his
life in Shadar Logoth when he fought Sammael. Worse…
He
was aware of me, Lews Therin said. He sounded sane for a change.
Sometimes he
did, but the madness always returned eventually. How can a face
appearing in my
mind be aware of me?
If
you don't know, how do yon expect me to? Rand thought. But I was aware
of him,
as well. It had been a strange sensation, as if he were… touching…
the other man somehow. Only not physically. A residue hung on. It
seemed he
only had to move a hair's breadth, in any direction. to touch him
again. I
think he saw my face, too.
Talking
to a voice in his head no longer seemed peculiar. In truth, it had not
for
quite a long time. And now… ? Now, he could see Mat and Perrin by
thinking
of them or hearing their names, and he had this other face coming to
him
unbidden. More than a face, apparently. What was holding conversations
inside
his own skull alongside that? But the man had been aware, and Rand of
him.
When
our streams of balefire touched in Shadar Logoth, it must have created
some
sort of link between us. I can't think of any other explanation. That
was the
only time we ever met. He was using their so-called True Power. It had
to be
that. I felt nothing, saw nothing except his stream of balefire. Having
bits of
knowledge seem his when he knew they came from Lews Therin no longer
seemed
odd, either. He could remember the Ansaline Gardens, destroyed in the
War of
the Shadow, as well as he did his father's farm. Knowledge drifted the
other
way, too. Lews Therin sometimes spoke of Emond's Field as if he had
grown up
there. Does that make any sense to you?
Oh.
Light, why do I have this voice in my head? Lews Therin moaned. Why can
I not
die? Oh, Ilyena, my precious Ilyena, I want to join you. He trailed off
into
weeping. He often did when he spoke of the wife he had murdered in his
madness.
It
did not matter. Rand suppressed the sound of the man crying. pushed it
down to
a faint noise on the edge of hearing. He was certain that he was right.
But who
was the fellow? A Darkfriend, for sure, but not one of the Forsaken.
Lews
Therin knew their faces as well as he knew his own, and now Rand did,
too. A
sudden thought made him grimace. How aware of him was the other man?
Ta'veren
could be found by their effect on the Pattern, though only the Forsaken
knew
how. Lews Therin certainly had never mentioned knowing-their
"conversations" were always brief, and the man seldom gave
information willingly-and nothing had drifted across from him on the
subject.
At least, Lanfear and Ishamael had known how. but no one had found him
that way
since they had died. Could this link be used in the same fashion? They
could
all be in danger. More danger than usual, as if the usual were not
enough.
"Are
you well, Rand?" Loial asked worriedly, screwing the leaf-engraved
silver
cap onto his ink jar. The glass of that was so thick it could have
survived
anything short of being hurled against stone, but Loial handled it as
though it
were fragile. In his huge hands, it looked fragile. "I thought the
cheese
tasted off, but you ate a good bit of it."
"I'm
fine," Rand said, but of course. Nynaeve paid him no heed. She was out
of
her chair and gliding down the room in a flash, blue skirts swirling.
Goose
bumps popped out on his skin as she embraced saidar and stretched to
lay her
hands on his head. An instant later, a chill rippled through him. The
woman
never askedl Sometimes she behaved as if she were still the Wisdom in
Emond's
Field and he would be heading back to the farm come morning.
"You're
not ill," she said in tones of relief. Spoiled food was causing all
sorts
of sickness among the servants, some of it serious. People would have
died
except for the presence of Asha'man and Aes Sedai to give Healing.
Reluctant to
cost their lord scarce money by throwing food out. despite all the
admonitions
Cadsuane and Nynaeve and the other Aes Sedai gave them, they fed
themselves
things that should have been tossed on the midden heap. A different
tingling
centered briefly around the double wound in his left side.
"That
wound is no better," she said with a frown. She had tried Healing it,
succeeding no better than Flinn had. That did not sit well with her.
Nynaeve
took failure as a personal insult. "How can you even stand up? You must
be
in agony."
"He
ignores it," Min said flatly. Oh. yes, there would be words.
"It
hurts no worse standing than sitting," he told Nynaeve, gently taking
her
hands from his head. Simple truth. So was what Min had said. He could
not
afford to let pain make him a prisoner.
One
of the twinned doors creaked open to admit a white-haired man in a worn
yellow
coat trimmed with red and blue that hung loosely on his bony frame. His
bow was
halting, a fault of his joints rather than disrespect. "My Lord
Dragon," he said in a voice nearly as creaky as the hinges, "Lord
Logain has returned."
Logain
did not wait on invitations, entering practically on the serving man's
heels. A
tall man with dark hair curling to his shoulders, and dark for a
Ghealdanin,
women likely thought him handsome, yet there was a streak of darkness
inside
him as well. He wore his black coat with the Sword and the Dragon on
the high
collar, and a long-hiked sword on his hip, but he had made an addition,
a round
enameled pin on his shoulder showing three golden crowns in u field of
blue.
Had the man adopted a sigil? The old man's hairy eye-brows shot up in
surprise,
and he looked to Rand as if inquiring whether he wanted Logain removed.
"The
news from Andor is fair enough, I suppose," Logain said. tucking black
gauntlets behind his sword belt. He offered Rand a minimal bow, the
slightest
bending of his back. "Elayne still holds Caem-lyn, and Arymilla still
holds her siege, but Elayne has the advantage since Arymilla can't even
stop
food getting in. much less reinforcements. No need to scowl. I kept out
of the
city. Black coats aren't exactly welcome there, in any case. The
Borderlanders
are still in the same place. You were wise to stay clear of them, it
seems.
Rumor says there are thirteen Aes Sedai with them. Rumor says they're
looking
for you. Has Bashere gotten back yet?" Nynaeve gave him a scowl and
moved
away from Rand gripping her braid tightly. Aes Sedai bonding Asha'man
was all
very well in her book, but not the reverse.
Thirteen
and looking for him? He had stayed clear of the Border-landers because
Elayne
did not welcome his help-interference, she called it, and he had begun
to see
that she had the right of it; the Lion Throne was hers to gain, not his
to
give-but perhaps it was as well that he had. The Borderland rulers all
had ties
to the White Tower, and no doubt Elaida was still eager to get her
hands on
him. Her and that mad proclamation about no one approaching him except
through
her. If she believed that would force him to come to her, she was a
fool.
"Thank
you, that will be all, Ethin. Lord Logain?" he asked as the serving man
bowed himself out with a last disgruntled glance at Logain. Rand
thought the
man would have tried had he told him to haul Logain out.
"The
title is his by birth," Cadsuane said without looking up from her
embroidery. She would know; she had helped capture him back when he was
calling
himself the Dragon Reborn, him and Taim both. Her hair ornaments bobbed
as she
nodded to herself. "Phaw! A minor lordling with a scrap of land in the
mountains,
most of it all but straight up and down. But King Johanin and the Crown
High
Council stripped him of his lands and title after he became a false
Dragon."
Small
spots of color appeared in Logain's cheeks, yet his voice was cool and
composed. "They could take my estate, but they could not take away who
I
am."
Still
seemingly intent on her embroidery needle. Cadsuane laughed softly.
Verin's
knitting needles had stopped. She was studying Logain, a plump sparrow
studying
an insect. Alivia had shifted her intense gaze to the man, too, and
Harilin and
Enaila seemed to be just going through the motions of their game. Min
appeared
to be reading still, but each hand rested near the opposite cuff of her
coatsleeves. She kept some of her knives hidden there. None of them
trusted
him.
Rand
frowned. The man could call himself whatever he wanted so long as he
did what
he was supposed to. but Cadsuane prodded him and anyone else in a black
coat
nearly as much as she did Rand himself. He was unsure how far to trust
Logain
either, yet he had to work with the tools he had to hand. "Is it
done?" With Logain here, Loial was uncapping his ink jar again.
"More
than half the Black Tower is in Arad Doman and Illian. I sent all the
men with
bonded Aes Sedai except those here, as you ordered." Logain walked to
the
table while he talked, found a blue-glazed pitcher that still held wine
among
the plates and scraps, and filled a green-glazed cup. There was very
little
silver in the house. "You should have let me bring more men here. The
numbers tilt too much to Aes Sedai for my liking."
Rand
grunted. "Since part of that is your doing, you can live with it.
Others
will have to, as well. Go on."
"Dobraine
and Rhuarc will send a Soldier with a message as soon as they find
anyone in
charge of more than a village. The Council of Merchants claim King
Alsalam
still reigns, but they wouldn't or couldn't produce him or say where he
is,
they seem to be at one another's throats themselves, and Bandar Eban is
more
than half deserted and given over to the mob." Logain grimaced into his
winecup. "Gangs of strongarms provide what little order there is, and
they
extort food and coin from the people they claim to protect and take
whatever
else they want, including women." The bond suddenly held white-hot
rage,
and Nynaeve growled in her throat. "Rhuarc has set about putting an end
to
that, but it was already turning into a battle when I left," Logain
finished.
"Strongarms
won't hold out long against Aiel. If Dobraine can't find anyone in
charge, then
he will have to be, for the time being." If Alsalam was dead, as seemed
likely, he would have to appoint a Steward for the Lord Dragon in Arad
Doman.
But who? It would have to be someone the Domani would accept.
The
other man took a long swallow of wine. "Taim wasn't pleased at me
taking
so many men out of the Tower and not telling him where they were going.
I
thought he was going to rip up your order. He tried every trick to
learn where
you are. Oh, he burns to know that. His eyes were practically on fire.
I
wouldn't put it past him to have had me put to the question if I'd been
fool
enough to meet him without company. One thing pleased him, though: that
I
didn't take any of his cronies. That was plain on his face." He smiled,
a
dark smile, not amused. "There are forty-one of those now, by the way.
He's given over a dozen men the Dragon pin in the past few days, and he
has
above fifty more in his 'special' classes, most of them men recruited
just
lately. He's planning something, and I doubt you'll like it."
I
told you to kill him when you had the chance. Lews Therin cackled in
mad mirth.
I told you. And now it's too late. Too late.
Rand
angrily expelled a stream of blue-gray smoke. "Give over," he said,
meaning it for both Logain and Lews Therin. "Taim built the Black Tower
till it nearly matches the White Tower for numbers, and it grows every
day. If
he's a Darkfriend the way you claim, why would he do that?"
Logain
met his stare levelly. "Because he couldn't stop it. From what I've
heard,
even in the beginning there were men who could Travel who weren't his
toad-eaters, and he had no excuse to do all the recruiting himself. But
he's
made a Tower of his own hidden inside the Black Tower, and the men in
it are
loyal to him, not you. He amended the deserters' list and sends his
apologies
for an 'honest mistake.' but you can wager all you own it was no
mistake."
And
how loyal was Logain? If one false Dragon chafed at following the
Dragon
Reborn, why not another? He might think he had cause. He had been far
more
famous as a false Dragon than Taim, more successful, gathering an army
that
swept out of Ghealdan and nearly reached Lugard on its way to Tear.
Half the
known world had trembled at the name Logain. Yet Mazrim Taim commanded
the
Black Tower while Logain Ablar was only another Asha'man. Min still saw
an aura
of glory around him. Just how that glory was to be achieved was beyond
her
viewing, however.
He
took the pipe from his mouth, and the bowl was hot against the heron
branded
into his palm. He must have been puffing away furiously without being
aware of
it. The trouble was, Taim and Logain were lesser problems. They had to
wait.
The tools at hand. He made an effort to keep his voice even. "Taim took
their names off the list. That's the important thing. If he's showing
favoritism, I'll put an end to it when I have time. But the Seanchan
have to
come first. And maybe Tarmon Gai'don, too."
"If?"
Logain growled, slamming his cup down on the table so hard that it
broke. Wine
spread across the tabletop and dripped over the edge. Scowling, he
wiped his
damp hand on his coat. "Do you think I'm imagining things?" His tone
grew more heated by the word. "Or making them up? Do you think this is
jealousy, al'Thor? Is that what you think?"
"You
listen to me," Rand began, raising his voice against a peal of thunder.
"I
told you I expected you and your friends in black coats to be civil to
me, my
friends and my guests," Cadsuane said sternly, "but I've decided that
must be expanded to include each other." Her head was still bent over
her
embroidery hoop, but she spoke as if she were shaking a finger under
their
noses. "At least when I am present. That means if you continue
squabbling,
I may have to spank both of you." Harilin and Enaila began laughing so
hard they got the string of their game in a snarl. Nynaeve laughed,
too, though
she tried to hide it behind her hand. Light, even Min smiled!
Logain
bristled, jaw tightening until Rand thought he should hear the man's
teeth
grating. He was trying hard not to bristle himself. Cadsuane and her
bloody
rules. Her conditions for becoming his advisor. She pretended that he
had
askedTor them, and every so often she added another to her list. The
rules were
not precisely onerous, though their
existence was, but her way of presenting them was always like a poke
with a sharp stick. He opened his mouth to tell her he was finished
with her
rules, and with her, too, if need be.
"Taim
very likely will have to wait on the Last Battle, whatever he's about,"
Verin said suddenly. Her knitting, a shapeless lump that might have
been
anything, sat in her lap. "It will come soon. According to everything
I've
read on the subject, the signs are quite clear. Half the servants have
recognized dead people in the halls, people they knew alive. It's
happened
often enough that they aren't frightened by it any longer. And a dozen
men
moving the cattle to spring pasture watched a considerable town melt
into mist
just a few miles to the north."
Cadsuane
had raised her head and was staring at the stout Brown sister. "Thank
you
for repeating what you told us yesterday, Verin," she said dryly. Verin
blinked, then took up her knitting again, frowning at it as though she,
too,
were unsure what it was going to be.
Min
caught Rand's eyes, shaking her head slowly, and he sighed. The bond
held
irritation and wariness, the last a deliberate warning to him, he
suspected. At
times, she seemed able to read his mind. Well, if he needed Cadsuane.
and Min
said he did, then he needed her. He just wished he knew what she was
supposed
to teach him aside from how to grind his teeth.
"Advise
me, Cadsuane. What do you think of my plan?"
"At
last the boy asks." she murmured, setting her embroidery down beside
her
sewing basket. "All his schemes in motion, some I've not been made
privy
to, and now he asks. Very well. Your peace with the Seanchan will be
unpopular."
"A
truce," he broke in. "And a truce with the Dragon Reborn will last only
as long as the Dragon Reborn. When I die, everyone will be free to go
to war
with the Seanchan again if they wish."
Min
slammed her book shut and folded her arms beneath her breasts. "Don't
you
talk that way!'' she said, red-faced with anger. The bond also carried
fear.
"The
Prophecies, Min,'' he said sadly. Not sad for himself, but for her. He
wanted
to protect her, her and Elayne and Aviendha, but he would hurt them in
the end.
"I
said don't you talk that way! The Prophecies don't say you have to die!
I'm not
going to let you die, Rand al'Thor! Elayne and Aviendha and I won't let
you!" She glared at Alivia, who her viewing had said would help Rand
die.
and her hands slid down her arms toward her cuffs.
"Behave,
Min," he said. Her hands shot away from her cuffs, but she set her jaw.
and the bond suddenly was flooded with stubbornness. Light, was he
going to
have to worry about Min trying to kill Alivia? Not that she was likely
to
succeed-as well try throwing a knife at an Aes Sedai as at the Seanchan
woman-but she might get herself injured. He was not sure Alivia knew
any weaves
but those for weapons.
"Unpopular,
as I say," Cadsuane said firmly, raising her voice. She favored Min
with a
brief frown before turning her attention back to Rand. Her face was
smooth,
composed, an Aes Sedai's face. Her dark eyes were hard, like polished
black
stones. "Especially in Tarabon, Amadicia and Altara, but also
elsewhere,
if you agree to allow the Seanchan to keep what they've already taken,
what
lands will you give away next? That is how most rulers will see
matters."
Rand
dropped back into his chair, stretching his legs in front of him and
crossing
his ankles. "It doesn't matter how unpopular it is. I went through that
doorframe ter'angreal in Tear, Cadsuane. You know about that?" Golden
ornaments bobbled as she nodded impatiently. "One of my questions for
the
Aelfinn was 'How can I win the Last Battle?'"
"A
dangerous question to pose." she said quietly, "touching on the
Shadow as it does. Supposedly, the results can be quite unpleasant.
What was
the answer?"
"
'The north and the east must be as one. The west and the south must be
as one.
The two must be as one.'" He blew a smoke ring, put another in the
middle
of it as it expanded. That was not the whole of it. He had asked how to
win and
survive. The last part of his answet had been 'To live, you must die.'
Not
something he was going to bring up in front of Min anytime soon. In
front of
anyone except Alivia, for that matter. Now he just had to figure out
how to live
by dying. "At first, I thought it meant I had to conquer everywhere,
but
that wasn't what they said. What if it means the Seanchan hold the west
and
south, as you could say they already do, and there's an alliance to
fight the
Last Battle, the Seanchan with everybody else?"
"It's
possible," she allowed. "But if you're going to make this… truce… why
are you moving what seems to be a considerable army to Arad Doman and
reinforcing what is already in Illian?"
"Because
Tarmon Gai'don is coming, Cadsuane, and I can't fight the Shadow and
the
Seanchan at the same time. I'll have a truce, or I'll crush them
whatever the
cost. The Prophecies say I have to bind the nine moons to me. I only
understood
what that meant a few days ago. As soon as Bashere returns, I'll know
when and
where I'm to meet the Daughter of the Nine Moons. The only question now
is how
do I bind her, and she'll have to answer that.''
He
spoke matter-of-factly, now and then blowing a smoke ring for
punctuation.
Reactions varied. Loial just wrote very fast, trying to capture every
word,
while Harilin and Enaila went on with their game. If the spears had to
be
danced, they were ready. Alivia nodded fiercely, doubtless hoping it
would come
to crushing those who had kept her wearing an a dam for five hundred
years.
Logain had found another winecup and filled it with the last of what
was in the
pitcher, but he merely held the cup rather than drinking, his
expression
unreadable. Now it was Rand whom Verin studied intently. But then, she
had
always been curious about him. But why in the Light would Min feel
bone-deep
sadness? And Cadsuane…
"Stone
cracks from a hard enough blow," she said, her face an Aes Sedai mask
of
calm. "Steel shatters. The oak fights the wind and breaks. The willow
bends where it must and survives."
"A
willow won't win Tarmon Gai'don," he told her.
The
door creaked open again, and Ethin tottered in. "My Lord Dragon, three
Ogier have arrived. They were most pleased to learn that Master Loial
is here. One
of them is his mother."
"My
mother?" Loial squeaked, and even that sounded like a hollow wind
gusting
in caverns. He leaped up so fast that his chair fell over backward,
wringing
his hands, ears wilting. His head swung from side to side as if he were
hunting
for a way out besides the door. "What am I going to do, Rand? The other
two must be Elder Haman and Erith. What am I going to do?"
"Mistress
Covril said she was most anxious to speak with you, Master Loial,"
Ethin
said in that creaky voice. "Most anxious. They are all damp from the
rain,
but she said they will wait for you in the Ogier sitting room upstairs."
"What
am I going to do, Rand?"
"You
said you want to marry Erith," Rand said as gently as he could.
Gentleness
was difficult except with Min.
"But
my book! My notes aren't complete, and I'll never find out what happens
next.
Erith will take me back to Stedding Tsofu with her."
"Phaw!"
Cadsuane picked up her embroidery again and began working the needle
delicately. She was making the ancient symbol of Aes Sedai. the
Dragon's Fang
and the Flame of Tar Valon melded into a disc, black and white
separated by a
sinuous line. "Go to your mother, Loial. If she's CovriL daughter of
Ella
daughter ofSoong, you don't want to keep her waiting. As I expect you
know."
Loial
seemed to take Cadsuane's words as a command. He began wiping his pen
nib
again, capping his ink jar. But he did everything very slowly, with his
ears
drooping. Every so often he moaned sadly, half under his breath, "My
book!'
"Well,"
Verin said, holding up her knitting for inspection, "I believe I have
done
all that I can here. I think I'll go find Tomas. The rain makes his
knee ache,
though he denies it even to me." She glanced at the window. "It does
seem to be slowing."
"And
I think I'll go find Lan," Nynaeve said, gathering her skirts. "The
company is better where he is." That with a sharp tug on her braid and
a
glare divided between Alivia and Logain. "The wind tells me a storm is
coming. Rand. And you know I don't mean rain."
"The
Last Battle?" Rand asked. "How soon?" When it came to weather,
listening to the wind could sometimes tell her when the rains would
come to the
hour.
"It
may be, and I don't know. Just remember. A storm is coming. A terrible
storm." Overhead, thunder rolled.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
Vows
Uneasy.
Loial watched Nynaeve glide off down the lamp-lit corridor in one
direction and
Verin in the other. Neither was much taller than his waist, but they
were Aes Sedai.
The fact knotted his tongue sufficiently that by the time he had worked
up his
nerve to ask one of them to accompany him. both were out of sight
around sharp
corners. The manor house was a rambling place, added to over many years
with no
real overall plan that he could discern, and hallways frequently met at
odd
angles. He really wished he had an Aes Sedai for company when he faced
his
mother. Even Cadsuane, although she made him very nervous with how she
was
always pinching at Rand. Sooner or
later. Rand was going to explode. He
was not the same man Loial
first met in Caemlyn or even the man he had left in Cairhien. The mood
around Rand was dark and stony now, a
dense patch of lion's claw
and treacherous ground underfoot. The whole house felt that way with Rand in it.
A
lean, gray-haired serving woman carrying a basket of folded towels gave
a
start, then shook her head and muttered something under her breath
before
offering him a brief curtsy and walking on. She made a small side-step
as
though she was moving around something. Or someone. He stared at the
spot and
scratched behind his ear. Maybe he could only see Ogier dead. Not that
he
actually wanted to. It was sad enough just knowing that human dead
could no
longer rest. Having the same confirmed for Ogier would be enough to
break his
heart. Most likely they would appear only inside stedding, in any case.
He
would very much like to see a town vanish, though. Not a real town, but
a town
that was as dead as those spirits the humans claimed to see. You might
be able
to walk its streets before it melted and see what people were like
before the
War of the Hundred Years, or even the Trolloc Wars. So Verin said, and
she
seemed to know a very great deal about it. That would certainly be
worth a
mention in his book. It was going to be a fine book. Scratching his
beard with
two fingers-the thing itched!-he sighed. It would have been a fine book.
Standing
there in the corridor was only putting off the inevitable. Put off
clearing the
brush and you always find chokevine in it, so the old saying went. Only
he felt
as though the chokevine was tight around him instead of a tree.
Breathing hard,
he followed the serving woman all the way to the wide stairs that led
up to the
Ogier rooms. The staircase had two sturdy bannisters, shoulder-high on
the
gray-haired woman and stout enough to give a decent handhold. He was
often
afraid just to brush against stair rails made for humans for fear he
might
break them. One ran down the middle, with the steps along the
wood-paneled wall
pitched for human feet: those on the outside for Ogier.
The
woman was old as humans counted years, yet she climbed more quickly
than he and
was scurrying down the corridor by the time he reached the top.
Doubtless she
was taking the towels to his mother's room, and to Elder Hainan's and
Erith's.
Surely they would prefer to get dry before talking. He would suggest
that. It
would gain him time to think. His thoughts seemed as sluggish as his
feet, and
his feet felt like millstones.
There
were six bedrooms built for Ogier along the corridor, which itself was
properly
scaled for them-his up-stretched hands would have come a pace short of
touching
the ceiling beams-along with a storeroom, a bathing room with a large
copper
tub, and the sitting room. This was the oldest part of the house,
dating back
nearly five hundred years. A lifetime for a very old Ogier, but many
lifetimes
for humans. They lived such brief lives, except for Aes Sedai; that had
to be
why they flitted about like hummingbirds. But even Aes Sedai could be
nearly as
precipitous as the rest. That was a puzzlement.
The
sitting room door was carved with a Great Tree, not Ogier work, yet
finely
detailed and instantly recognizable. He stopped, tugging his coat
straight,
combing his hair with his fingers, wishing he had time to black his
boots.
There was an ink stain on his cuff. No time to do anything about that,
either.
Cadsuane was right. His mother was not a woman to be kept waiting.
Strange that
Cadsuane knew of her. Perhaps knew her. by the way she had spoken.
Covril,
daughter of Ella daughter of Soong, was a famous Speaker, but he had
not
realized she was known Outside. Light, he was all but panting with
anxiety.
Trying
to control his breathing, he went in. Even here the hinges creaked. The
servants had been aghast when he asked after some oil to put on
them-that was
their task; he was a guest-but they still had not gotten around to it
themselves.
The
high-ceilinged room was quite spacious, with dark polished wallpapers
and
vine-carved chairs and small vine-carved tables and wrought-iron
stand-lamps of
a proper size, their mirrored flames dancing above his head. Except for
a shelf
of books, all old enough that the leather bindings were flaking and all
of
which he had read before, only a small bowl of sung wood was Ogier
made. A nice
piece; he wished he knew who had sung it, but it was aged enough that
singing
to it had failed to raise so much as an echo. Yet everything had been
made by
someone who at least had been to a stedding. The pieces would have
looked at
home in any dwelling. Of course, the room looked nothing like a room in
a
stedding, but Lord Algarin's ancestor had made an effort to have his
visitors
feel comfortable.
His
mother was standing in front of one of the brick fireplaces, a
strong-faced
woman with her vine-embroidered skirts spread to let the flames dry
them. He
heaved a sigh of relief at seeing she was not as wet as he had
expected,
although it put paid to suggesting they take the time to get dry. Their
raincloaks must have developed leaks. They did that after a time, as
the anseed
oil wore off. Maybe her temper would not be as bad as he feared,
either.
White-haired Elder Haman, his flaring coat dark with damp in several
large
patches, was examining one of the axes from the wall, shaking his head
over it.
Its haft was as long as he was tall. Made during the Trolloc Wars or
even
before, there were a pair of those, the long axe heads inlaid with gold
and
silver, and a pair of ornate pointed pruning knives with long shafts,
as well.
Of course. pruning knives, sharp on one side and sawtoothed on the
other,
always had long handles, but the inlays and long red tassels indicated
that
these had been made for weapons, too. Not the most felicitous choices
for
hanging in a room meant for reading or conversation or the quiet
contemplation
of stillness.
But
Loial's eyes swept past his mother and Elder Haman to the other
fireplace,
where Erith, small and almost fragile appearing, was drying her own
skirts. Her
mouth was straight, her nose short and well-rounded, her eyes the exact
color
of a silverbell's ripe seedpod. In short, she was beautiful! And her
ears,
sticking up through the glossy black hair that hung down her back…
Curving and plump, tipped with fine tufts that looked as soft as
dandelion
down, they were the most gorgeous ears he had ever seen. Not that he
would be
crude enough to say so. She smiled at him, a very mysterious smile, and
his own
ears quivered with embarrassment. Surely she could not know what he had
been
thinking. Could she? Rand said women could sometimes, but that was
human women.
"So,
here you are." his mother said, planting her fists on her hips. There
were
no smiles from her. Her brows were drawn down, her jaw set. If this was
her
better temper, she might as well have been drenched. "I must say,
you've
led me a merry chase, but I have you in hand now. and 1 do not mean to
let you
run- What is that on your lip? And your chin! Well, you can shave those
right
off again. Don't you grimace at me, Son Loial."
Fingering
the growth on his upper lip uneasily, he tried to smooth his face-when
your
mother named you Son, she was in no mood to trifle with-but it was
hard. He
wanted Wis beard and mustaches. Some might think it pretentious, as
young as he
was. but just the same…
"A
merry chase indeed," Elder Haman said dryly, hanging the axe back on
its
hooks. He had long white mustaches that fell past his chin and a long
narrow
beard that hung to his chest. True, he was well above three hundred
years old,
but it still seemed unfair. "A very merry chase. First we walked to
Cairhien, having heard you were there, only you had gone. After a stop
at
Stedding Tsofu. we walked to Caem-lyn, where young al'Thor informed us
you were
in the Two Rivers and took us there. But you were gone again. To
Caemlyn, it
seemed!" His eyebrows rose almost to his hairline. "I began to think
we were playing ring-in-the-dell."
"The
people in Emond's Field told us how heroic you were." Erith said, her
high
voice like music. Clutching her skirts with both hands, ears fluttering
with
excitement, she seemed about to bounce up and down. "They told us all
about you fighting Trollocs and Myrddraal, and going out among them by
yourself
to seal the Manetheren Way-gate so no more could come."
"I
wasn't by myself," Loial protested, waving his hands. He thought his
ears
might fly from his head, they were twitching so with embarrassment.
"Gaul
was with me. We did it together. I'd never have reached the Waygate
without
Gaul." She wrinkled her delicate nose at him, dismissing Gaul's
participation.
His
mother sniffed. Her ears were rigid with distaste. "Foolishness.
Fighting
in battles. Putting yourself in danger. Gambling. All of it. Pure
foolishness,
and there will be no more of it."
Elder
Haman harrumphed, ears twitching irritably, and folded his hands behind
his
back. He disliked being interrupted. "So we returned to Caemlyn. to
find
you gone, and then to Cairhien once more, to find you gone yet again."
"And
you put yourself in danger again in Cairhien," Loial's mother broke in,
shaking a finger at him. "Have you no sense at all?"
"The
Aiel said you were very brave at Dumai's Wells,'' Erith murmured,
looking at
him through her long eyelashes. He swallowed hard. Her gaze made his
throat feel
tight. He knew he should look away, but how could he be demure when she
was
looking at him?
"In
Cairhien your mother decided she couldn't stay away from the Great
Stump any
longer, though why I cannot say, since they aren't likely to reach any
sort of decision
for another year or two, so we set out to return to Stedding Shangtai
in the
hope we could find you later." Elder Haman said all of that very fast,
glaring at the two women as if he thought they might break in on him
again. His
beard and mustaches seemed to bristle.
Loial's
mother gave another sniff, sharper. "I expect to bring a decision very
quickly, in a month or two, or I'd never have given over the search for
Loial
even temporarily. Now that I've found him, we can finish matters and be
on our
way without any more delay." She took in Elder Haman, who was frowning,
his ears slanted back, and amended her tone. He was an Elder, after
all.
"Forgive me, Elder Haman. I meant to say, if it pleases you, will you
perform the ceremony?''
"I
believe that it does please me, Covril," he said mildly. Much too
mildly.
When Loial heard that tone from his teacher, with ears back, he had
always
known that he had put a foot very badly wrong. Elder Haman had been
known to
throw a piece of chalk at a pupil when he used that tone. "Since I
abandoned my students, not to mention speaking to the Great Stump, to
follow
you on this wild chase for that very reason, I believe it does please
me
indeed. Erith, you are very young."
"She's
past eighty, old enough to marry," Loial's mother said sharply, folding
her arms across her chest. Her ears twitched with impatience. "Her
mother
and I reached agreement. You yourself witnessed us signing the
betrothal and
Loial's dowry."
Elder
Haman's ears tilted back a little further, and his shoulders hunched as
if he
was gripping his hands together very hard behind his back. His eyes
never left
Erith. "I know you want to marry Loial. but are you sure you are ready?
Taking a husband is a grave responsibility."
Loial
wished someone would ask him that question, but that was not the way.
His
mother and Erith's had reached their agreement, and only Erith could
stop it
now. If she wanted to. Did he want her to? He could not stop thinking
of his
book. He could not stop thinking of Erith.
She
certainly looked grave. "My weaving sells well, and I am ready to buy
another loom and take an apprentice. But that may not be what you mean.
I am
ready to tend a husband." Suddenly, she grinned, a lovely grin that
divided her face in two. "Especially one with such beautiful long
eyebrows."
Loial's
ears quivered, and so did Elder Haman's, if not so much. Women were
very free
in their talk among themselves, so he had heard, but usually they tried
not to
embarrass men with it. Usually. His mother's ears actually trembled
with
amusement!
The
older man cleared his throat. "This is serious, Erith. Come now. If you
are sure, take his hands."
Without
hesitation, she came to stand in front of Loial, smiling up at him as
she took
his hands in hers. Her small hands felt very warm. His felt numb and
cold. He
swallowed. It really was going to happen.
"Erith,
daughter of Iva daughter of Alar," Elder Haman said, holding one hand
palm
down over each of their heads, "will you take Loial, son of Arent son
of Halan,
as husband and vow under the Light and by the Tree to treasure, esteem
and love
him so long as he lives, to care for him and tend him. and to guide his
feet on
the path they should follow?"
"Under
the Light and by the Tree, I so vow." Erith's voice was firm and clear,
and her smile seemed to have grown wider than her face
"Loial,
son of Arent son of Halan, will you accept Erith, daughter of Iva
daughter of
Alar, as wife and vow under the Light and by the Tree to treasure,
esteem and
love her so long as she lives, to care for her and to heed her
guidance?"
Loial
took a deep breath. His ears trembled. He wanted to marry her. He did.
Just not
yet. "Under the Light and by the Tree, I so vow," he said hoarsely.
"Then
under the Light and by the Tree, I declare you wed. May the blessings
of the
Light and the Tree be upon you always."
Loial
looked down at his wife. His wife. She raised a hand and stroked
slender
fingers along his mustaches. The beginnings of mustaches. anyway.
"You
are very handsome, and I think mustaches will be beautiful on you. A
beard,
too."
"Nonsense."
his mother said. Surprisingly, she was dabbing at her eyes with a small
lace
handkerchief. She was never emotional. "He's much too young for that
sort
of thing."
For
a moment, he thought Erith's ears began to slant back. That had to be
his
imagination. He had had a number of long talks with her-she was a
wonderful
conversationalist; though come to think of it, for the most part she
listened,
but what little she did say was always very cogent-and he was sure she
possessed no sort of temper at all. He had no time to think on it, in
any
event. Resting her hands on his arms, she rose on tiptoes, and he bent
to rub
his nose against hers. In truth, they nosed for longer than they should
have
with Elder Haman and his mother present, but others faded from his
thoughts as
he inhaled his wife's scent and she his. And the feel of her nose on
his! Pure
bliss! Lie cupped the back of her head and barely had the presence of
mind not
to finger her ear. She tugged the tuft on one of his! After a while, a
very
long while it seemed, voices intruded.
"It
is still raining, Covril. You cannot seriously be suggesting we set out
again
when we have a sound roof over our heads and proper beds to sleep in
for a change.
No, I say. No! I will not sleep on the ground tonight, or in a barn, or
worst
of all, in a house where my feet and knees hang over the end of the
largest bed
available. There have been times I've seriously thought of refusing
hospitality, and to the Pit with rudeness."
"If
you insist," his mother said grudgingly, "but I want an early start
come morning. I refuse to waste an hour more than I must. The Book of
Translation must be opened as soon as possible."
Loial
jerked erect, aghast. "That's what the Great Stump is discussing? They
can't do that, not now!"
"We
must leave this world eventually, so we can come to it when the Wheel
turns." his mother said, striding to the nearest fireplace to spread
her
skirts again. "That is written. Now is exactly the right time, and the
sooner the better."
"Is
that what you think, Elder Haman?" Loial asked worriedly.
"No,
my boy, not at all. Before we left, I gave a speech of three hours that
I think
swayed a few minds in the right direction." Elder Haman picked up a
tall
yellow pitcher and filled a blue cup. but rather than drink, he frowned
into
the tea. "Your mother has swayed more, I fear. She may even get her
decision in months, as she says."
Erith
filled a cup for his mother, then two more, bringing one to him. His
ears
quivered with embarrassment yet again. He should have done that. He had
a great
deal to learn about being a husband, but he knew that much.
"I
wish I could address the Stump," he said bitterly.
"You
sound eager, Husband." Husband. That meant Erith was very serious. It
was
almost as bad as being called Son Loial. "What would you say to the
Stump?"
"I
won't have him embarrassed, Erith," his mother said before he could
open
his mouth. "Loial writes well, and Elder Haman says he may have the
makings of a scholar about him. but he gets tongue-tied before even a
hundred.
Besides, he is only a boy."
Elder
Hainan had said that? Loial wondered when his ears would stop quivering.
"Any
married man may address the Stump," Erith said firmly. There was no
doubt
this time. Her ears definitely slanted back. "Will you allow me to tend
my
own husband. Mother Covril?" His mother's mouth moved, but no sound
came
out, and her eyebrows were halfway up her forehead. He did not think he
had
ever seen her so taken aback, though she must have expected this. A
wife always
took precedence with her husband over his mother. "Well, Husband, what
would you say?''
He
was not eager, he was desperate. He took a long swallow of the
spice-scented
tea, but his mouth felt just as dry afterward. His mother was right;
the more
people were listening, the more he tended to forget what he intended to
say and
go off on tangents. In truth, he had to admit that sometimes he rambled
a bit
with only a few listeners. Just a bit. Now and then. He knew the
forms-a child
of fifty knew the forms-yet he could not make the words come. The few
listening
to him now were not just any few. His mother was a famous Speaker,
Elder Haman
a noted one, not to mention being an Elder. And there was Erith. A man
wanted
to stand well in his wife's eyes.
Turning
his back on them, he strode to the nearest window and stood rolling the
teacup
between his palms. The window was sized decently, though the panes set
in the
carved casement were no larger than those in the rooms below. The rain
had
dwindled to a drizzle falling from a gray sky, and despite bubbles in
the glass
he could make out the trees beyond the fields, pine and sourgum and the
occasional oak, all full of new growth. Algarin's people tended their
forest
well, clearing out the deadfall to rob wildfire of its tinder. Fire had
to be
used carefully.
The
words came more easily now that he could not see the others watching
him.
Should he begin with the Longing? Could they dare leave if they would
begin
dying in a handful of years? No, that question would have been
addressed first
thing and suitable answers found, else the Stump would have finished
inside a
year. Light, if he did address the Stump… For a moment, he saw the
crowds
standing all around him, hundreds and hundreds of men and women waiting
to hear
his words, perhaps several thousand. His tongue tried to cling to the
roof of
his mouth. He blinked, and there was only the bubbled glass before him,
and the
trees. He had to do it. He was not particularly brave, whatever Erith
thought,
but he had learned about bravery watching humans, watching them hang on
no
matter how strong the winds grew, fight when they had no hope, fight
and win
because they fought with desperate courage. Suddenly, he knew what to
say.
"In
the War of the Shadow, we did not huddle in our stedding, hoping no
Trollocs or
Myrddraal would be driven to enter. We did not open the Book of
Translation and
flee. We marched alongside the humans and fought the Shadow. In the
Trolloc
Wars, we neither hid in the stedding nor opened the Book of
Translation. We
marched with the humans and fought the Shadow. In the darkest years,
when hope
seemed gone, we fought the Shadow."
"And
by the War of the Hundred Years we had learned not to get ourselves
tangled in
human affairs." his mother put in. That was allowed. Speaking could
turn
into a debate unless the pure beauty of your words held the listeners.
She had
once spoken from sunrise to sunset in favor of a very unpopular
position
without a single interruption, and the next day, no one had risen to
Speak
against her. He could not form beautiful sentences. He could only say
what he
believed. He did not turn from the window.
"The
War of the Hundred Years was a human affair, and none of ours. The
Shadow is
our affair. When it is the Shadow that must be fought, our axes have
always
grown long handles. Perhaps in a year, or five, or ten, we will open
the Book
of Translation, but if we do it now, we cannot run away with any real
hope of
safety. Tarmon Gai'don is coming, and on that hangs the fate not only
of this
world, but of any world we might flee to. When fire threatens the
trees, we do
not run away and hope that the flames will not follow us. We fight. Now
the
Shadow is coming like wildfire, and we dare not run from it." Something
was moving among the trees, all along the line he could see. A herd of
cattle?
A very big herd, if so.
"That
isn't bad," his mother said. "Much too plainspoken to carry any
weight at a stedding Stump much less the Great Stump, of course, but
not bad.
Go on."
"Trollocs,"
he breathed. That was what it was, thousands of Trol-locs in black,
spiked mail
spilling out of the trees at a run with scythe-curved swords raised,
shaking
their spiked spears, some carrying torches. Trollocs as far as he could
see to
left and right. Not thousands. Tens of thousands.
Erith
pushed in beside him at the window and gasped. "So many! Are we going
to
die, Loial?" She did not sound afraid. She sounded… excited!
"Not
if I can warn Rand and the others." He was already starting for the
door.
Only Aes Sedai and Asha'man could save them now.
"Here,
my boy, I think we may need these."
He
turned just in time to catch the long-handled axe that Elder Haman
tossed him.
The other man's ears were back all the way, laid flat against his
skull. Loial
realized his own were, too.
"Here,
Erith," his mother said calmly, lifting down one of the pruning knives.
"If they get inside, we will try to hold them at the stairs."
"You
are my hero, Husband," Erith said as she took the knife's shaft in
hand,
"but if you get yourself killed, I will be very angry with you." She
sounded as if she meant it.
And
then he and Elder Haman were running down the corridor together.
pounding down
the stairs, bellowing at the tops of their lungs a warning, and a
battle cry
that had not been heard in over two thousand years. "Trollocs coming!
Up
axes and clear the field! Trollocs coming!"
"… so I will take care of Tear, Logain. while you-" Abruptly Rand
wrinkled his nose. It was not that he actually smelled a rotting midden
heap
suddenly, but he felt as if he did, and the feeling was getting
stronger.
"Shadowspawn,"
Cadsuane said quietly, putting down her embroidery and rising. His skin
tingled
as she embraced the Source. Or maybe it was Alivia, walking briskly
toward the
windows after the Green sister. Min stood, drawing a pair of throwing
knives
from her coatsleeves.
At
the same instant, through the thick walls, he faintly heard Ogier
shouting.
There was no mistaking those deep, drumlike voices. "Trollocs coming!
Up
axes and clear the field!"
With
an oath, he leaped to his feet and ran to a window. Trollocs in the
thousands
came running through the light rain across the newly planted fields,
Trollocs
as tall as Ogier and taller. Trollocs with rams' horns and goats'
horns,
wolves' snouts, boars' snouts, Trollocs with eagles' beaks and crests
of
feathers, muddy earth splashing beneath boots and hooves and paws.
Silent as
death they ran. Black-clad Myrddraal galloped behind them, cloaks
hanging as if
they were standing still. He could see thirty or forty. How many more
on other
sides of the house?
Others
had heard the Ogier's cries, or maybe just looked out a window.
Lightning began
to fall among the charging Trollocs, silvery bolts that struck with a
roar and
hurled huge bodies in every direction. In other places, the ground
erupted in
flames, fountaining dirt and parts of Trollocs, heads, arms, legs
wheeling
through the air. Balls of fire struck them and exploded, each killing
dozens.
But on they ran, as fast as horses if not faster. Rand could not see
the weaves
that drew some of those lightning bolts. Now that they were discovered,
the
Trollocs began to shout, a wordless roar of rage. In the thatch-roofed
outbuildings, large sturdy barns and stables, some of Bashere's
Sal-daeans
stuck their heads out and quickly pulled them back again. drawing the
doors
shut behind them.
"You
told your Aes Sedai they could channel to defend themselves?" he said
calmly.
"Do
I look fool enough not to?" Logain snarled. At another window, he
already
held saidin, nearly as much as Rand could draw. He was weaving as fast
as he
could. "Do you intend to help or just watch. my Lord Dragon?" There
was entirely too much sarcasm in that, but now was not the time to
bring it up.
Drawing
a deep breath. Rand gripped the casement on either side of the window
against
the dizziness that would come-the Dragons' golden-maned heads on the
backs of
his hands seemed to writhe-and reached out to seize the Power. His head
spun as
saidin flooded into him, icy flames and crumbling mountains, a chaos
trying to
pull him under. But blessedly clean. He still felt the wonder of that.
His head
spun and his stomach wanted to empty itself, the odd illness that
should have
gone with the taint, yet that was not why he clung to the casement even
harder.
The One Power filled him-but in that moment of dizziness, Lews Therin
had
seized it away from him. Numb with horror, he stared at the Trollocs
and
Myrddraal racing toward the outbuildings. With the Power in him, he
could make
out the pins fastened to massive mailed shoulders. The silver whirlwind
of the
Ahf'frait band and the blood-red trident of the Ko'bal. The forked
lightning of
the Ghraem'lan and the hooked axe of the Al'ghol. The iron fist of the
Dhai'mon
and the red, bloodstained fist of the Kno'-mon. And there were skulls.
The
horned skull of the Dha'vol and the piled human skulls of the
Ghar'ghael and
the skull cloven by a scythe-curved sword of the Dhjin'nen and the
dagger-pierced skull of the Bhan'sheen. Trollocs liked skulls, if they
could be
said to like anything. It seemed the twelve principal bands might all
be
involved, and some of the lesser. He saw pins he did not recognize.
What seemed
a staring eye. a dagger-pierced hand, a man-shape wrapped in flames.
They
neared the outbuildings, where swords were beginning to thrust through
the
thatch as the Saldaeans tried to cut ways onto the roofs. Thatch was
tough.
They would need to work desperately hard. Odd, the thoughts that came
when a
madman who wanted to die might well kill you in the next heartbeat.
Flows
of Air pushed the casement in front of him out in a shower of shattered
glass and
fragmented wood. My hands. Lews Therin panted. Why can't I move my
hands? 1
need to raise my hands! Earth, Air and Fire went into a weave Rand did
not
know, six of them at once. Except that as soon as he saw the spinning,
he did
know. Blossom of Fire. Six vertical red shafts appeared among the
Trollocs, ten
feet tall and thinner than Rand's forearm. The nearest Trollocs would
be
hearing their shrill whine, but unless memories had been passed down
from the
War of the Shadow, they would not realize they were hearing death. Lews
Therin
spun the last thread of Air, and fire blossomed. With a roar that shook
the
manor house, each red shaft expanded in a heartbeat to a disc of flame
thirty
feet across. Horned heads and snouted heads flew into the air, and
pinwheeling
arms, booted legs and legs that ended in paws or hooves. Trollocs a
hundred
paces and more away from the explosions went down, and only some got up
again.
Even as he was spinning those webs. Lews Therin spun six others, Spirit
touched
with Fire, the weave for a gateway, but then he added touches of Earth,
so, and
so. The familiar silvery-blue vertical streaks appeared, spaced out not
far
from the manor house, ground Rand knew well, rotating into-not
openings, but
the misty back of a gateway, four paces by four. Rather than remaining
open,
they rotated shut again, opening and shutting continuously. And rather
than
remaining fixed, they sped toward the Trollocs. Gateways and yet not.
Deathgates. As soon as the Deathgates began to move, Lews Therin
knotted the
webs, a loose knotting that would hold only for minutes before allowing
the
whole weave to dissipate, and began spinning again. More Deathgates,
more
Blossoms of Fire, rattling the walls of the house, blowing Trollocs
apart,
flinging them down. The first of the speeding Deathgates struck the
Trollocs
and carved through them. It was not just the slicing edge of the
constantly
opening and closing gateways. Where a Deathgate passed. there simply
were no
Trollocs remaining. My hands! the madman howled. My hands!
Slowly
Rand raised his hands, stuck them through the opening. Immediately Lews
Therin
wove Fire and Earth in intricate combination, and red filaments flashed
from
Rand's fingertips, ten from each. fanning out. Arrows of Fire. this. He
knew.
As soon as those vanished. more appeared, so fast that they seemed to
flicker
rather than actually go away. Trollocs struck by the filaments jerked
as flesh
and blood. heated in a flash beyond boiling, erupted, jerked and fell,
holes
blown entirely through their thick bodies. Often, two or three behind
fell
victim as well before a filament died. He spread his fingers and moved
his
hands slowly from side to side, spreading death across the whole line.
Blossoms
of Fire appeared that were not his weaving, and Death-gates, slightly
smaller
than Lews Therin's, and Arrows of Fire that must have been Logains. The
other
Asha'man were paying attention, but few would be where they could see
those
last two webs spun.
Trollocs
fell by the hundreds, the thousands, riven by lightning bolts and balls
of
fire. Blossoms of Fire and Deathgates and Arrows of Fire, the earth
itself
exploding beneath their feet, yet on they raced. roaring and waving
their
weapons, Myrddraal riding close behind, black-bladed swords in hand. As
they reached
the outbuildings, some of the Trollocs surrounded them, pounding on the
doors
with their fists, prying at the boards or the walls with their swords
and
spears, tossing flaming torches onto the thatched roofs. Saldaeans up
there,
working their horsebows as fast they could, kicked the torches back
down, but
some hung up on the edges of the roof, and flames began catching even
on damp
thatch.
The
fires. Rand thought at Lews Therin. The Saldaeans will burn! Do
something!
Lews
Therin made no reply, only wove death as fast as he could and hurled it
at the
Trollocs, Deathgates and Arrows of Fire. A Myrddraal, riddled by half a
dozen
red filaments, was flung from its saddle, then another. A third lost
its head
to an Arrow of Fire in an explosion of boiled blood and flesh, but that
one
rode on, waving its sword, as if it did not know it was dead. Rand was
seeking
them out. If the Myrddraal were all killed, the Trollocs might well
turn and
run.
Deathgates
and Arrows of Fire only, Lews Therin spun now. The mass of Trollocs was
too
close to the manor house for Blossoms of Fire. Some of the Asha'man
apparently
did not realize that right away. The room shook to great booms, the
whole manor
house shook, as if struck by huge sledgehammers, shook as though about
to shake
apart, and then there were no more explosions, except where a fireball
erupted
or the ground itself exploded to throw Trollocs like broken toys. The
sky
seemed to rain lightning. Silver-blue bolts struck continuously so
close to the
house that the hair on Rand's arms and chest tried to lift, the hair on
his
head.
Some
of the Trollocs succeeded in forcing open the doors to one of the barns
and
began flooding inside. He shifted his hands, cutting down those still
outside
with flickering red filaments that blew holes in them. Some had managed
to get
inside, but those the Saldaeans would have to deal with themselves. On
another
barn and a stable. flames were beginning to ripple up the thatch, men
coughing
from the acrid smoke as they shot their bows.
Listen
to me, Lews Therin. The fire. You must do something!
Lews
Therin said nothing, just spun his webs to kill Trollocs and Myrddraal.
"Logain,"
Rand shouted. "The fires! Put them out!"
The
other man did not answer either, but Rand saw the weaves that pulled
the heat
from the flames, killing them. They just vanished. leaving behind cold
blackened thatch where not even tendrils of smoke rose. Death walked
among the
Trollocs, but they were so close that even the explosions of fireballs
rattled
the house, now.
Suddenly
there was a Myrddraal afoot beside the window, pale eyeless face as
calm as an
Aes Sedai's, black sword already stabbing toward him. Two thrown Aiel
spears
took it in the chest, and a throwing knife blossomed in its throat, but
it only
staggered before resuming the thrust. Rand bunched his fingers
together, and
just before the blade reached him, a hundred Arrows of Fire ripped
through the
Myrddraal. flinging it back twenty paces to lie riddled and leaking
black blood
onto the ground. Myrddraal seldom died right away, but this one never
twitched.
Hurriedly,
Rand searched for more targets, but he realized that Lews Therin had
stopped
channeling. He could still feel the goose bumps that told him Cadsuane
and
Alivia held the Power, still feel saidin in Logain. but the other man
was
weaving no more webs either. Outside, the ground lay carpeted with
bodies and
parts of bodies from the fields almost to the manor house walls. Within
paces
of them. A few horses belonging to Myrddraal still stood, one holding
up a
foreleg as if it were broken. A headless Myrddraal staggered about,
flailing
wildly with its sword, and here and there a Trolloc jerked or tried to
lift
itself and failed, but nothing else moved.
It's
done, he thought. It's done. Lews Therin. You can release saidin now.
Harilin
and Enaila were standing on the table, veiled and spears in hand. Min
stood
beside them, her face grim, a throwing knife in either hand. The bond
was full
of fear, and not for herself, he suspected. They had saved his life,
but he had
to save it himself, now.
"A
close run thing," Logain muttered. "If this had happened before I
arrived… A close-run thing." He gave himself a shake and released the
Source, turning away from his glassless window. "Did you intend keeping
these
new weaves for your favorites, like Taim? Those gateways. Where did we
send
those Trollocs? I just copied your weave exactly."
"It
doesn't matter where they went," Rand said absently. His attention was
focused on Lews Therin. The madman, the bloody voice in his head, drew
a little
deeper on the Power. Let go. man. "Shadowspawn can't survive passing
through a gateway."
I
want to die, Lews Therin said. I want to join llyena.
If
you really wanted to die, why did you kill Trollocs? Rand thought. Why
kill
that Myrddraal? People will find groups of dead Trollocs and maybe
Myrddraal
without a mark on them," he said aloud.
I
seem to remember dying. Lews Therin murmured. I remember how I did it.
He drew
deeper still, and small pains grew in Rand's temples.
"Not
too many in any one place, though. The destination shifts every time a
Deathgate opens." Rand rubbed at his temples. That pain was a warning.
He
was close to the amount of saidin he could hold without dying or being
burnt
out. You can't die yet, he told Lews Therin. We have to reach Tarmon
Gai'don or
the world dies.
"A
Deathgate," Logain said, his voice tinged with distaste. "Why are you
still holding the Power?'- he asked suddenly. "And so much. If you're
trying to show me that you're stronger than I am, I already know it. I
saw how
large your… your Deathgates were compared to mine. And I'd say you're
holding every drop of saidin that you can safely."
That
certainly caught everyone's attention. Min tucked her knives away and
leapt
down from the table, the bond suddenly so full of fear it seemed to
throb with
it. Harilin and Enaila exchanged worried glances, then went back to
staring out
the windows. They did not trust Trollocs to be dead until the corpses
were
three days buried. Alivia took a step toward him, frowning, but he
shook his
head slightly, and she turned back to her window, though her frown
remained.
Cadsuane
glided down the room, her smooth face sternly composed. "What does he
feel?" she demanded of Min. "Don't toy with me, girl. You know the
cost of that. I know that he bonded you, and you know I know. Is he
afraid?"
"He's
never afraid," Min said. "Except for me or…" She set her
jaw stubbornly and folded her arms beneath her breasts, fixing Cadsuane
with a
glare that dared the Green sister to do her worst. By the tangled mix
of
emotions ranging from fear to shame that she tried to keep out of the
bond and
failed, she had some idea of what Cadsuane's worst could be.
"I'm
standing under your nose." Rand said. "If you want to know how I
feel, ask me." Lews Therin? he thought. There was no answer. and the
saidin filling him did not slacken. His temples began to throb.
"Well?"
Cadsuane said impatiently.
"I
feel right as well water." Lews Therin? "But I have a rule for you.
Cadsuane. Don't threaten Min again. In fact, leave her alone
altogether."
"Well.
well. The boy shows some teeth." Golden birds and fish, stars and
moons,
swayed as she shook her head. "Just don't show too many. And you might
ask
the young woman whether she wants your protection." Strangely. Min had
shifted her frown to him, and the bond was threaded with irritation.
Light, it
was bad enough that she did not like him worrying about her. Now she
seemed to
want to take on Cadsuane single-handed, something he would not be eager
to do
himself.
We
can die at Tarmon Gai'don, Lews Therin said, and suddenly, the Power
drained
out of him.
"He
released," Logain said, as if he were suddenly on Cadsuane's side.
"I
know." she told him. He whipped his head around in surprise.
"Min
can deal with you in your own way if she wishes," Rand said starting
for
the door. "But don't threaten her." Yes, he thought. We can die at
Tarmon Gai'don.
CHAPTER TWENTY
The Golden Crane
The
wind had died away as the rain diminished, but gray clouds still hid
the sun.
The fine drizzle was enough to dampen Rand's
hair, however, and begin soaking into his gold-embroidered black coat
as he
walked through the dead Trollocs. Logain had spun a shield of Air so
that
raindrops bounced from it or apparently slid down nothing to cascade
around
him, but Rand refused to risk Lews
Therin
seizing saidin again. The man had said he could wait until the Last
Battle to
die. but how far could you trust a madman on anything?
Madman?
Lews Therin whispered. Am I any madder than you? He cackled with wild
laughter.
Now
and then Nandera looked over her shoulder at Rand.
A tall. sinewy woman, her graying hair hidden beneath her brown shoufa,
she led
the Maidens, those on this side of the Dragonwall, at least, but she
had chosen
to lead his bodyguard of Maidens personally. Her green eyes, all he
could see
of her sun-dark face above her black veil, carried little expression,
yet he
was sure she was worried over him not protecting himself from the rain.
Maidens
noticed what seemed out of the ordinary. He hoped she would keep quiet.
You
have to trust me. Lews Therin said. Trust me. Oh, Light, I'm pleading
with a
voice in my head! I must be mad.
Nandera
and the rest of the fifty veiled Maidens made a large ring around Rand, almost shoulder-to-shoulder, prodding
their spears
into every Trolloc and Myrddraal they passed, casually stepping over
huge
severed arms and legs, severed heads bearing horns or tusks or sharp
teeth.
Occasionally a Trolloc groaned or feebly tried to crawl away-or to
lunge at
them, snarling-but not for long. War with Trollocs was like war with
rabid
dogs. You killed them, or they killed you. There was no parley, no
surrender,
no middle ground.
Rain
had kept the vultures away so far, yet crows and ravens flapped
everywhere,
black feathers glistening wetly, and if any were the Dark One's eyes,
it did
not stop them alighting to pluck out Trollocs' eyes or see whether they
could
wrench loose some other gobbet. Enough of the Trollocs had been torn
apart that
the birds had rich feasting. None went near any dead Myrddraal, though,
and
they shunned Trollocs too near a Myrddraal. That indicated nothing
beyond
caution. Very likely the Myrddraal smelled wrong to the birds. A
Myrddraal's
blood would etch steel if left on it very long. To ravens and crows, it
must
have smelled like poison.
The
surviving Saldaeans shot the birds with arrows or skewered them on
their
sinuously curved swords or simply bludgeoned them with shovels or hoes
or
rakes, anything that could make a handy club)-in the Borderlands,
leaving a
crow or raven alive was unthinkable; there, they were all too often the
Dark
One's eyes-yet there were too many. Hundreds of black-feathered shapes
lay
crumpled among the Trollocs, and for every corpse there seemed to be
hundreds
more squabbling loudly over the softer bits, including pieces of their
dead
fellows. The Asha'man and Aes Sedai had long since given up trying to
kill them
all.
"I
don't like my men tiring themselves this way," Logain said. His men.
"Or the sisters, for that matter. Gabrelle and Toveine will be near
exhaustion by nightfall." He had bonded the two Aes Sedai, so he should
know. "What if there's another attack?"
All
around the manor house and outbuildings brief fires flared, so hot that
people
shielded their eyes against them, as Aes Sedai and Asha'man incinerated
Trolloc
and Myrddraal dead where they lay. There were too many to afford the
labor of
gathering them into heaps. With fewer than twenty Aes Sedai. fewer than
a dozen
Asha'man. and maybe a hundred thousand Trollocs. it was going to be a
long job.
Very likely, before it was done the stench of decay would be added to
the
already foul odors in the air. the fetid, coppery smell of Shadowspawn
THE
GOLDEN CRANE
i7
blood, the stink of whatever had been in the Trollocs' intestines when
they
were ripped open. Best not to think too closely on that. There might
not be a
farmer or villager left alive between the manor house and the Spine of
the
World. That had to be where the Trollocs had come from, the Waygate
outside
Stedding Shangtai. At least Loial's home itself was safe. Neither
Trollocs nor
Myrddraal would enter a stedding unless driven, and it required
considerable
driving.
"Would
you rather let them rot where they are?" Cadsuane inquired, sounding as
if
she herself had no preference in the matter. She held her green skirts
up so
the silk did not trail in the blood-soaked mud or the offal that
littered the
ground, yet she stepped over legs and around heads as casually as did
the
Maidens. She also had woven a parasol against the rain, as had Alivia,
although
not until she saw the Green do so. Rand had tried to make the sisters
sworn to
him teach the Seanchan woman more about the Power, but to their minds,
that had
nothing to do with their oaths of fealty. She was safe to herself and
seemed
safe to others, and they were content to leave matters as they were.
Nynaeve
had refused, too, because of Min's viewing. Cadsuane had coolly
informed him
that she was not in the business of instructing wilders.
"This
truly would be a charnel house then," Min said. Her walk had a fetching
sway to it, though she was plainly trying not to think of what lay
underfoot
while avoiding planting a heeled blue boot on any of it at the same
time, and
that made her stumble now and again. She was getting wet, too. her
ringlets
beginning to cling to her head, though the bond carried no hint of
vexation.
Only anger, and that seemed directed at Logain from the sharp stare she
was
giving him. "Where would the servants go, and the people who work the
fields and stables and barns? How would they live?"
"There
won't be another attack." Rand said. "Not until whoever sent this one
learns it failed, and maybe not then. This is all they sent. The
Myrddraal wouldn't
have attacked piecemeal." Logain grunted, but he could not argue with
that.
Rand
looked back toward the manor house. In some places, dead Trollocs lay
right at
the foundations. None had made it inside, but… Logain was right, he
thought, surveying the carnage. It had been a close-run thing. Minus
the
Asha'man and Aes Sedai Logain had brought, the end might well have been
different. A very close-run thing. And if there was another attack,
later…
? Plainly someone knew Ishamaei's trick. Or that blue-eyed man in his
head
really could locate him. Another attack would be larger. That, or come
from
some unexpected direction. Perhaps he should let Logain bring a few
more
Asha'man.
Yon
should have killed them, Lews Therin wept. Too late. now. Too late.
The
Source is clean now, fool. Rand thought.
Yes,
Lews Therin replied. But are they? Am I?
Rand
had wondered that about himself. Half of the double wound in his side
had come
from Ishamael, the other half from Padan Fain's dagger that carried the
taint
of Shadar Logoth. They often throbbed, and when they did. they seemed
alive.
The
circle of Maidens parted slightly to let through a white-haired serving
man
with a long sharp nose who looked even frailer than Ethin. He was
trying to
shelter beneath a two-tiered Sea Folk parasol missing half its fringe,
of all
things, but the aged blue silk had several ragged holes worn in it, so
small
rivulets fell on his yellow coat and one on his head. His thinning hair
clung
to his skull and dripped. He seemed wetter than if he had gone without.
Doubtless one of Algarin's forebears had obtained the thing somehow as
a
memento, but the obtaining must have been a story in itself. Rand
doubted the
Sea Folk gave up a clan Wavemistress's parasol lightly.
"My
Lord Dragon," the old man said with a bow that spilled more water down
his
back, "Verin Sedai instructed me to give this to you straightaway."
From beneath his coat, he produced a paper, folded and sealed.
Rand
hastily stuffed it into a pocket of his own coat against the rain. Ink
ran
easily. "Thank you, but it could have waited till I returned to the
house.
Best you get back inside before you're soaked through completely."
"She
did say straightaway, my Lord Dragon." The fellow sounded offended.
"She is Aes Sedai."
At
Rand's nod, he bowed again and started slowly back toward the manor
house, his
back stiff with pride, the parasol showering him with streams of water.
She was
Aes Sedai. Everyone hopped for Aes Sedai, even in Tear, where they were
not much
liked. What did Verin have to say that she needed to put in a letter?
Thumbing
the seal, Rand walked on.
His
destination was one of the barns, its thatched roof partially
blackened. This
was the barn the Trollocs had gotten into. A burly fellow in a rough
brown coat
and muddy boots, leaning against a jamb in the open doors, straightened
and for
some reason hastily looked inside over his shoulder as Rand approached,
the
Maidens spreading out to surround the barn.
He
stopped dead in the doorway. Min and the others halting beside him.
Logain
growled an oath. A pair of lanterns hanging from uprights that
supported the
loft gave a dim light, enough to see that every single surface was
thick with
crawling flies, even the straw-covered dirt floor. As many more buzzed
around
in the air, it seemed.
"Where
did they come from?" Rand asked. Algarin might not be wealthy, yet his
barns and stables were kept as clean as such places could be. The burly
man
gave a guilty start. He was younger than most of the servants in the
house, but
his head was bald halfway back, and creases bracketed his wide mouth,
fanned
out from his eyes.
"Don't
know, my Lord,'' he muttered, knuckling his forehead with a grimy hand.
He
focused on Rand so hard that it was plain he did not want to look into
the
barn. "I stepped to the door for a breath of fresh, and when I turned
around, they was all over everything. I thought… I thought maybe they's
dead flies."
Rand
shook his head in disgust. These flies were all too alive. Not every
Saldaean
defending this barn had died, but all of the Saldaean dead had been
gathered
here. Saldaeans disliked burials in rain. None of them could say why.
but you
just did not bury people while it was raining. Nineteen men lay in a
neat row
on the floor, as neat as it could be when some were missing limbs or
had their
heads split open. But they had been laid out carefully by their friends
and
companions, their faces washed, their eyes closed. They were why he had
come
there. Not to say goodbye or anything sentimental; he had not known any
of
these men more than to recognize a face here and there. He had come to
remind
himself that even what seemed a complete victory had its cost in blood.
Still,
they deserved better than to be crawling with flies.
I
need no reminders, Lews Therin growled.
I'm
not you. Rand thought. I have to harden myself. "Logain, get rid of
these
bloody things!" he said aloud.
You're
harder than I ever was, Lews Therin said. Suddenly he giggled. If
you're not
me, then who are you?
"Now
I'm a flaming fly-whisk?" Logain muttered.
Rand
rounded on him angrily, but Alivia spoke in that slurred drawl before
he could
get a word out.
"Let
me try, my Lord." She asked, in a manner of speaking, but like an Aes
Sedai, she did not await permission. His skin tingled with goose bumps
as she
embraced saidar and channeled.
Flies
always took shelter from even the lightest rain because one raindrop
was enough
to put a fly on the ground, easy prey until its wings dried off, yet
suddenly
the doorway was billowing with buzzing flies as if the rain were far
preferable
to the barn. The air seemed solid with them. Rand batted flies away
from his
face, and Min covered her face with her hands, the bond heavy with
distaste,
but they were interested only in flight. In moments, they were all
gone. The
balding man, staring at Alivia with his mouth hanging open, suddenly
coughed
and spat out two flies onto his hand. Cadsuane gave him a look that
snapped his
mouth shut and sent his rough knuckle flying to his forehead. Just a
look, yet
she was who she was.
"So
you watch," she said to Alivia. Her dark eyes were fixed on the
Seanchan
woman's face, but Alivia did not start or stammer. She was much less
impressed
by Aes Scdai than most people.
"And
remember what I see. I must learn somehow if I am to help the Lord
Dragon. I
have learned more than you are aware of." Min made a sound in her
throat,
very nearly a growl, and the bond swelled with anger, but the
yellow-haired
woman ignored her. "You are not angry with me?" she asked Rand, her
voice anxious.
"I'm
not angry. Learn as much as you can. You're doing very well."
She
blushed and dropped her eyes like a girl startled by an unexpected
compliment.
Fine lines decorated the corners of her eyes, but sometimes it was hard
to
remember that she was a hundred years older than any living Aes Sedai,
rather
than half a dozen years younger than himself. He had to find someone to
teach
her more.
"Rand
al'Thor," Min said angrily, folding her arms beneath her breasts,
"you are not going to let that woman-"
"Your
viewings are never wrong," he broke in. "What you see always happens.
You've tried to change things, and it never worked. You told me so
yourself,
Min. What makes you think this time can be different?"
"Because
it has to be different." she told him fiercely. She leaned toward him
as
though ready to launch herself at him. "Because I want it to be
different.
Because it will be different. Anyway, I don't know about everything
I've seen.
People move on. I was wrong about Moiraine. I saw all sorts of things
in her
future, and she's dead. Maybe some of the other things I saw never came
true
either."
I
must not be different this time. Lews Therin panted. You promised!
A
faint scowl appeared on Logain's face, and he shook his head slightly.
He could
not like hearing Min question her ability. Rand almost regretted
telling him
about her viewing of him, though it had seemed harmless encouragement
at the
time. The man had actually asked Aes Seclai to confirm Min's ability,
though he
had been wise enough to try to keep his doubting from Rand.
"I
cannot see what makes this young woman so vehement for you, boy,"
Cadsuane
mused. She pursed her lips in thought, then shook her head, ornaments
swaying.
"Oh, you re pretty enough, I suppose, but I just cannot see it."
To
avoid another argument with Min-she did not call them that; she called
them
"talking," but he knew the difference-Rand took out Verin's letter
and broke the blob of yellow sealing wax impressed with the head of a
Great
Serpent ring. The Brown sister's spidery hand covered most of the page,
a few
letters blotted where raindrops had soaked the paper. He walked closer
to the
nearest lantern. It gave off a faint stink of spoiled oil.
As
I said, I have done what I can do here. I believe that I can fulfill my
oath to
you better elsewhere, so 1 have taken Tomas and gone to be about it.
There are
many ways to serve you, after all, and many needs. I am convinced that
you can
trust Cadsuane, and you certainly should heed her advice, but be wary
of other
sisters, including those who have sworn fealty to you. Such an oath
means
nothing to a Black sister, and even those who walk in the Light may
interpret
it in ways you would disapprove of. You already know that few see that
oath as
invoking absolute obedience in all things. Some may find other holes.
So
whether or not you follow Cadsuane's advice. and I repeat that you
should,
follow mine. Be very wary.
It
was signed simply, "Verin."
He
grunted sourly. Few thought the oath meant absolute obedience? It was
more like
none. They obeyed, usually, yet the letter was not always the spirit.
Take
Verin herself. She warned him against the
others doing things he might disapprove of, but she had not said where
she was going or what she intended to do there. Was she afraid he might
not
approve? Maybe it was just Aes Sedai concealment. Sisters kept secrets
as
naturally as they breathed.
When
he held out the letter to Cadsuane, her left eyebrow twitched slightly.
She
must have been truly startled to show so much, but she took the letter
and held
it where the lantern's light illuminated it.
"A
woman of many masks," she said finally, handing the page back. "But
she gives good advice here."
What
did she mean about masks? He was about to ask her when Loial and Elder
Haman
suddenly appeared in the doorway, each carrying a long-handled axe,
with an
ornately decorated head, on his shoulder. The white-haired Ogier's
tufted ears
were laid back, his face grim, and Loial's ears were flickering. With
excitement, Rand guessed. It could be difficult to tell.
"I
trust we are not interrupting?" Elder Haman said, his ears rising as he
looked sadly at the line of bodies.
"You
are not," Rand told him. sticking the letter back in his pocket. "I
wish I could come to your wedding, Loial, but-"
"Oh,
that's done, Rand," Loial said. He must be excited: it was unlike him
to
interrupt. "My mother insisted. There won't even be time for much of a
wedding feast, maybe none, what with the Stump and me having to-" The
older Ogier laid a hand on his arm. "What?" Loial said, looking at
him. "Oh. Yes. Of course. Well." He scrubbed under his broad nose
with a finger the size of a fat sausage.
Something
he was not supposed to be told? Even Ogier had secrets, it seemed. Rand
fingered the letter in his pocket. But then, so did everyone else.
"I
promise you this, Rand," Loial said. "Whatever happens, I will be
there with you at Tarmon Gai'don. Whatever happens."
"My
boy," Elder Haman murmured, "I don't think you should…" He
trailed off. shaking his head and rumbling under his breath, like a
distant
earthquake.
Rand
crossed the straw in three strides and offered his right hand. Smiling
widely,
and with an Ogier that meant very wide, Loial took it in a hand that
enveloped
his. This close, Rand had to crane his neck to look up at his friend's
face.
"Thank you, Loial. I can't tell you how much hearing that means to me.
But
I'll need you before then."
"You… need me?"
"Loial,
I've sealed the Waygates I know, in Caemlyn and Cairhien, Illian and
Tear, and
I put a very nasty trap on the one that was cut open near Fal Dara, but
I
couldn't find the one near Far Madding. Even when I know there's a
Waygate
actually in a city, I can't find it by myself, and then there are all
those
cities that don't exist anymore. I need you to find the rest for me,
Loial, or
Trollocs will be able to flood into every country at once, and no one
will know
they're coming until they're in the heart of Andor or Cairhien."
Loial's
smile vanished. His ears trembled and his eyebrows drew down till the
ends lay
on his cheeks. "I can't. Rand," he said mournfully. "1 must
leave first thing tomorrow morning, and I don't know when I'll be able
to come
Outside again."
"I
know you've been out of the stedding a long time, Loial." Rand tried to
make his voice gentle, but it came out hard. Gentleness seemed a fading
memory.
"I'll speak to your mother. I'll convince her to let you leave after
you've had a little rest."
"He
needs more than a little rest." Elder Haman planted the butt of his axe
haft on the floor, gripping the axe with both hands, and directed a
stern look
at Rand. Ogier were peaceful folk, yet he looked anything but. "He has
been Outside more than five years, far too long. He needs weeks of rest
in a
stedding at the least. Months would be better."
"My
mother doesn't make those decisions anymore, Rand. Though truth to
tell, I
think she's still surprised to realize it. Erith does. My wife.' His
booming
voice put so much pride into that word that he seemed ready to burst
with it.
His chest certainly swelled, and his smile split his face in two.
"And
I haven't even congratulated you." Rand said, clapping him on the
shoulder. His attempt at heartiness sounded false in his own ears, but
it was
the best he could manage. "If you need months, then months you shall
have.
But 1 still need an Ogier to find those Way-gates. In the morning, I'll
take
you all to Stedding Shangtai myself. Maybe I can convince someone there
to do
the job." Elder Haman shifted his frown to his hands on the axe haft
and
began muttering again, too softly to make out words, like a bumblebee
the size
of a huge mastiff buzzing in an immense jar in the next room. He seemed
to be
arguing with himself.
"That
might take time." Loial said doubtfully. "You know we don't like to
make hasty decisions. I'm not certain they will even let a human into
the
stedding, because of the Stump. Rand? If I can't come back before the
Last
Battle… You will answer my questions about what happened while I was in
the stedding, won't you? I mean, without making me drag everything out
of
you?"
"If
I can, I will," Rand told him.
If
you can, Lews Therin snarled. You agreed we could finally die at
Tar-mon
Gai'don. You agreed, madman!
"He'll
answer questions to your heart's delight, Loial," Min said firmly,
"if I have to stand over him the whole while." Anger suffused the
bond. She really did seem to know what he was thinking.
Elder
Haman cleared his throat. "It seems to me that I myself am more
accustomed
to Outside than almost anyone except the stonemasons. Um. Yes. In fact,
I think
I am likely to be the best candidate for your task."
"Phaw!"
Cadsuane said. "It seems you infect even Ogier, boy." Her tone was
stern, but her face was all Aes Sedai composure, unreadable, hiding
whatever
was passing behind those dark eyes.
Loial's
ears went rigid with shock, and he almost dropped his axe. fumbling to
catch
it. "You? But the Stump, Elder Haman! The Great Stump!"
"I
believe I can safely leave that in your hands, my boy. Your words were
simple
yet eloquent. Um. Um. My advice is, don't try for beauty. Keep the
simple
eloquence, and you may surprise quite a few. Including your mother.''
It
seemed impossible that Loial's ears could grow any stiffer. but they
did. His
mouth moved, but no words came out. So he was to speak to the Stump.
What was
so secret about that?
"My
Lord Dragon, Lord Davram has returned." It was Elza Penfell who
escorted
Bashere into the barn. She was a handsome woman in a dark green riding
dress;
her brown eyes seemed to grow feverish when they found Rand. She, at
least, was
one he did not have to worry about. Elza was fanatical in her devotion.
"Thank
you. Elza." he said. "Best you return to help with the cleanup.
There's a long way to go. yet."
Her
mouth tightened slightly, and her gaze took in everyone from Cadsuane
to the
Ogier with an air of jealousy before she offered a curtsy and left.
Yes,
fanatical was the word.
Bashere
was a short, slender man in a gold-worked gray coat with the ivory
baton of the
Marshal-General of Saldaea, tipped with a golden wolfs head, tucked
behind his
belt opposite his sword. His baggy trousers were tucked into
turned-down boots
that had been waxed till they shone despite a light splattering of mud.
His
recent work had required as much formality and dignity as he could
supply, and
he could supply a great deal. Even the Seanchan must have heard his
reputation
by now. Gray streaked his black hair and the thick mustaches that
curled around
his mouth like down-turned horns. Dark tilted eyes sad, he walked right
past
Rand with the rolling gait of a man more accustomed to a saddle than
his own
feet, walked slowly along the line of dead men, staring intently at
each face.
Impatient as Rand was, he gave him his time to mourn.
"I've
never seen anything like what's outside," Bashere said quietly as he
walked. "A big raid out of the Blight is a thousand Trollocs. Most are
only a few hundred. Ah, Kirkun. you never did guard your left the way
you
should. Even then, you need to outnumber them three or four times to be
assured
you won't go into their cookpots. Out there… I think I saw a
foreshadowing
of Tarmon Gai'don. A small part of Tar-mon Gai'don. Let's hope it
really is the
Last Battle. If we live through that, I don't think we'll ever want to
see
another. We will, though. There's always another battle. I suppose that
will be
the case until the whole world turns Tinker.'' At the end of the row.
he
stopped in front of a man whose lace was split almost down to his
luxuriant
black beard. "Ahzkan here had a bright future ahead of him. But you
could
say the same of a lot of dead men."
Sighing
heavily, he turned to face Rand. "The Daughter of the Nine Moons will
meet
you in three days at a manor house in northern Altara, near the border
of
Andor." He touched the breast of his coat. "I have a map. She's
already near there somewhere, but they say it isn't in lands they
control. When
it comes to secrecy, these Seanchan make Aes Sedai look as open as
village
girls." Cadsuane snorted.
"You
suspect a trap?" Logain eased his sword in its scabbard, perhaps
unconsciously.
Bashere
made a dismissive gesture, but he eased his sword, too. "I always
suspect
a trap. It isn't that. The High Lady Suroth still didn't want me or
Manfor to
talk to anyone but her. Not anyone. Our servants were mutes, just as
when we
went to Ebou Dar with Loial."
"Mine
had had her tongue cut out," Loial said in tones of disgust, his ears
tilting back. His knuckles paled on the haft of his axe. Haman made a
shocked
sound, his ears going stiff as fence posts.
"Altara
just crowned a new King," Bashere went on, "but everybody in the
Tarasin Palace seemed to be walking on eggshells and looking over their
shoulders,
Seanchan and Altaran alike. Even Suroth looked as though she felt a
sword
hovering above her neck."
"Maybe
they're frightened of Tarmon Gai'don," Rand said. "Or the Dragon
Reborn. I'll have to be careful. Frightened people do stupid things.
What are the
arrangements, Bashere?"
The
Saldaean pulled the map from inside his coat and walked back to Rand
unfolding
it. "They're very precise. She will bring six sul'dam and damane, but
no
other attendants." Alivia made a noise like an angry cat, and he
blinked
before going on. no doubt uncertain of a freed damane, to say the
least.
"You can bring five people who can channel. She'll assume any man with
you
can. but you can bring a woman who can't to make the honors even."
Min
was suddenly at Rand's side, wrapping her arm around his.
"No,"
he said firmly. He was not about to take her into a possible trap.
"We'll
talk about it," she murmured, the bond filling with stubborn resolve.
The
most dire words a woman can say short of "I'm going to kill you,"
Rand thought. Suddenly he felt a chill. Had it been him? Or Lews
Therin? The
madman chuckled softly in the back of his head. No matter. In three
days, one
difficulty would be resolved. One way or another. "What else,
Bashere?"
Lifting
the damp cloth that lay across her eyes, carefully so she did not catch
the
bracelet-and-rings angreal in her hair-she wore that and her jeweled
ter'angreal every waking moment now-Nynaeve sat up on the edge of her
bed. With
men needing Healing from dreadful wounds, some missing a hand or an
arm, it had
seemed petty to ask Healing for a headache, but the willow bark seemed
to have
worked as well. Only more slowly. One of her rings, set with a pale
green stone
that now appeared to glow with a faint internal light, seemed to
vibrate continually
on her finger though it did not really move. The pattern of vibrations
was
mixed, a reaction to saidar and saidin being channeled outside. For
that
matter, someone could have been channeling inside. Cadsuane was sure it
should
be able to indicate direction, but she could not say how. Ha! for
Cadsuane and
her supposed superior knowledge!
She
wished she could say that to the woman's face. It was not that Cadsuane
intimidated her-certainly not; she stood above Cadsuane- just that she
wanted
to maintain some degree of harmony. That was the reason she held her
tongue
around the woman.
The
rooms she shared with Lan were spacious, but also drafty, with no
casement
fitting its window properly, and over the generations the house had
settled
enough that the doors had been trimmed so they could close all the way,
making
more gaps to let every breeze whistle through. The fire on the stone
hearth
danced as though it were outdoors, crackling and spitting sparks. The
carpet,
so faded she could no longer really make out the pattern, had more
holes burned
in it than she could count. The bed with its heavy bedposts and worn
canopy was
large and sturdy, but the mattress was lumpy, the pillows held more
feathers
that poked through than they did down, and the blankets seemed almost
more
darns than original material. But Lan shared the rooms, and that made
all the
difference. That made them a palace.
He
stood at one of the windows where he had been since the attack began,
staring
down now at the work going on outside. Or perhaps studying the
slaughter yard
the manor house grounds had become. He was so still, he might have been
a
statue, a tall man in a well-fitting dark green coat, his shoulders
broad
enough to make his waist appear slender, with the leather cord of his
hadori
holding back his shoulder-length hair, black tinged with white at the
temples.
A hard-faced man, yet beautiful. In her eyes he was, let anyone else
say what
they would. Only they had best not say it in her hearing. Even
Cadsuane. A ring
bearing a flawless sapphire was cold on her right hand. It seemed more
likely
he was feeling anger than hostility. That ring did have a flaw, in her
estimation. It was all very well to know someone nearby was feeling
angry or
hostile, but that did not mean the emotion was directed at you.
"It's
time for me to go back outside and lend a hand again,'' she said as she
stood.
"Not
yet," he told her without turning from the window. Ring or no ring, his
deep voice was calm. And quite firm. "Moiraine used to say a headache
was
sign she had been channeling too much. That's dangerous."
Her
hand strayed toward her braid before she could snatch it down again. As
if he
knew more about channeling than she! Well, in some ways he did. Twenty
years as
Moiraine's Warder had taught him as much as a man could know of saidar.
"My headache is completely gone. I'm perfectly all right now."
"Don't
be petulant, my love. There are only a few hours till twilight. Plenty
of work
will be left tomorrow.'' His left hand tightened on the hilt of his
sword,
relaxed, tightened. Only that hand moved.
Her
lips compressed. Petulant? She smoothed her skirt furiously. She was
not
petulant! He seldom invoked his right to command in private-curse those
Sea
Folk for ever thinking of such a thing!-but when he did, the man was
unbending.
Of course, she could go anyway. He would not try to stop her
physically. She
was certain of that. Fairly certain. Only she did not intend to violate
her
marriage vows in the slightest way. Even if she did want to kick her
beloved
husband's shins.
Kicking
her skirts instead, she went to stand beside him at the window and slip
her arm
through his. His arm was rock hard, though. His muscles were hard,
wonderfully
so, but this was the hardness of tension, as though he were straining
to lift a
great weight. How she wished she had his bond, to give her hints of
what was
troubling him. When she laid hands on Myrelle… No, best not to think of
that hussy! Greens! They simply could not be trusted with men!
Outside,
not far from the house, she could see a pair of those black-coated
Asha'man,
and the sisters bonded to them. She had avoided that whole lot as much
as
possible-the Asha'man for obvious reasons, the sisters because they
supported
Elaida-yet you could not spend time in the same house with people, even
a house
as large and rambling as Algarin's, and avoid coming to recognize them.
Arel
Malevin was a Cairhienin who seemed even wider than he actually was
because he
stood barely chest-high to Lan, Donalo Sandomere a Tairen with a garnet
in his
left ear and his gray-streaked beard trimmed to a point and oiled,
although she
doubted very much that his creased, leathery face belonged to a noble.
Malevin
had bonded Aisling Noon, a fierce-eyed Green who peppered her speech
with
Borderland oaths that sometimes made Lan wince. Nynaeve wished she
understood
them, but he refused to explain. Sandomere's captive was Ayako Norsoni,
a
diminutive White with wavy waist-length black hair who was nearly as
brown-skinned
as a Domani. She seemed shy, a rarity among Aes Sedai. Both women wore
their
fringed shawls. The captives almost always did, perhaps as gestures of
defiance. But then, they seemed to get on strangely well with the men.
Often
Nynaeve had seen them chatting companionably, hardly the behavior of
defiant
prisoners. And she suspected that Logain and Gabrelle were not the only
pair
sharing a bed outside wedlock. It was disgraceful!
Suddenly
fires bloomed below, six enveloping dead Trollocs in front of Malevin
and
Aisling, seven in front of Sandomere and Ayako, and she squinted
against the
blinding glare. It was like trying to look at thirteen noonday suns
blazing in
a cloudless sky. They were linked. She could tell from the way the
flows of
saidar moved, stiffly, as though they were being forced into place
rather than
guided. Or rather, the men were trying to force them. That never worked
with
the female half of the Power. It was pure Fire, and the blazes were
ferocious,
fiercer than she would have expected from Fire alone. But of course
they would
be using saidin as well, and who could say what they were adding from
that
murderous chaos? The little she could recall of being linked with Rand
left her
with no desire ever again to go near that. In just a few minutes the
fires
vanished, leaving only low heaps of grayish ash lying on seared earth
that
looked hard and cracked. That could not do the soil much good.
"You
can't find this very entertaining, Lan. What are you thinking?"
"Idle
thoughts," he said, his arm hard as stone beneath her hand. New fires
flared outside.
"Share
them with me." She managed to put a hint of question in that. He seemed
amused by the nature of their vows, yet he absolutely refused to follow
the
smallest instruction when they were alone. Requests, he granted
instantly-well,
most of the time-but the man would quietly leave his boots muddy till
the mud
flaked off if she told him not to track in mud.
"Unpleasant
thoughts, but if you wish. The Myrddraal and Trollocs make me think of
Tarmon
Gai'don."
"Unpleasant
thoughts, indeed."
Still
staring out the window, he nodded. There was no expression on his
face-Lan
could teach Aes Sedai about hiding emotions!-but a touch of heat
entered his
voice. "It's coming soon, Nynaeve, yet al'Thor seems to think he has
forever to dance with the Seanchan. Shadow-spawn could be moving down
through
the Blight while we stand here, down through-" His mouth snapped shut.
Down through Malkier, he had almost said, dead Malkier, the murdered
land of
his birth. She was sure of it. He went on as if he had not paused.
"They
could scrike at Shienar, at the whole Borderlands, next week, or
tomorrow. And
al'Thor sits weaving his Seanchan schemes. He should send someone to
convince
King Easar and the others to return to their duty along the Blight. He
should
be marshaling all the force he can gather and taking it to the Blight.
The Last
Battle will be there, and at Shayol Ghul. The war is there."
Sadness
welled up in her, yet she managed to keep it out of her voice. "You
have
to go back," she said quietly.
At
last he turned his head, frowning down at her. His clear blue eyes were
so
cold. They held less of death than they had, of that she was certain,
but they
were still so cold. "My place is with you, heart of my heart. Ever and
always."
She
gathered all of her courage and held on to it hard, so hard that she
ached. She
wanted to speak fast, to get the words out before courage failed, but
she
forced herself to a steady tone and an even pace. "A Borderland saying
I
heard from you once. 'Death is lighter than a feather, duty heavier
than a
mountain.' My duty lies here, making sure Alivia doesn't kill Rand. But
I will
take you to the Borderlands. Your duty lies there. You want to go to
Shienar?
You mentioned King Easar and Shienar. And it is close to Malkier."
He
looked down at her for a long time, but at last he exhaled softly, and
the
tension left his arm. "Are you sure, Nynaeve? If you are, then, yes,
Shienar. In the Trolloc Wars, the Shadow used Tarwin's Gap to move
large
numbers of Trollocs, just as it did a few years back, when we sought
the Eye of
the World. But only if you are completely sure."
No,
she was not sure. She wanted to cry, to scream at him that he was a
fool, that
his place was with her, not dying alone in a futile private war with
the
Shadow. Only, she could not say any of that. Bond or no bond, she knew
he was
torn inside, torn between his love of her and his duty, torn and
bleeding as
surely as if he had been stabbed with a sword. She could not add to his
wounds.
She could try to make sure he survived, though. "Would I make the offer
if
I wasn't sure?" she said dryly, surprised at how calm she sounded. "I
won't like sending you away, but you have your duty, and I have mine."
Wrapping
his arms around her, he hugged her to his chest, gently at first, then
harder,
until she thought he might squeeze all the air from her lungs. She did
not
care. She hugged him just as fiercely, and had to pry her hands from
his broad
back when she was done at last. Light, she wanted to weep. And knew she
must
not.
As
he began packing his saddlebags, she hurriedly changed into a riding
dress of
yellow-slashed green silk and stout leather shoes, then slipped from
the room
before he was done. Algarin's library was large, a square,
high-ceilinged room
lined with shelves. Haifa dozen cushioned chairs stood scattered around
the
floor, and a long table and a tall map-rack completed the furnishings.
The
stone hearth was cold and the iron stand-lamps unlit, but she channeled
briefly
to light three of them. A hasty search found the maps she needed in the
rack's
diamond-shaped compartments. They were as old as most of the books, yet
the
land did not change greatly in two or three hundred years.
When
she returned to their rooms, Lan was in the sitting room, saddlebags on
his
shoulder, Warder's color-shifting cloak hanging down his back. His face
was
still, a stone mask. She took only time to get her own cloak, blue silk
lined
with velvet, and they walked in silence, her right hand resting lightly
on his
left wrist, out to the dimly lit stable where their horses were kept.
The air
there smelled of hay and horses and horse dung, as it always did in
stables.
A
lean, balding groom with a nose that had been broken more than once
sighed when
Lan told him they wanted Mandarb and Loversknot saddled. A gray-haired
woman
began work on Nynaeve's stout brown mare, while three of the aging men
made a
job of getting Lan's tall black stallion bridled and out of his stall.
"I
want a promise from you," Nynaeve said quietly as they waited. Mandarb
danced in circles so that the plump fellow trying to lift the saddle
onto the
stallion's back had to run trying to catch up. "An oath. I mean it, Lan
Mandragoran. We aren't alone any longer."
"What
do you want my oath on?" he asked warily. The balding groom called for
two
more men to help.
"That
you'll ride to Fal Moran before you enter the Blight, and that if
anyone wants
to ride with you, you'll let him."
His
smile was small, and sad. "I've always refused to lead men into the
Blight, Nynaeve. There were times men rode with me, but I would not-"
"If
men have ridden with you before," she cut in, "men can ride with you
again. Your oath on it, or I vow I'll let you ride the whole long way
to
Shienar." The woman was fastening the cinches on Lovers-knot's saddle,
but
the three men were still struggling to get Man-darb's saddle on his
back, to
keep him from shaking off the saddle blanket.
"How
far south in Shienar do you mean to leave me?" he asked. When she said
nothing,
he nodded. "Very well, Nynaeve. If that's what you want. I swear it
under
the Light and by my hope of rebirth and salvation."
It
was very hard not to sigh with relief. She had managed it, and without
lying. She
was trying to do as Egwene wanted and behave as though she had already
taken
the Three Oaths on the Oath Rod. but it was very hard dealing with a
husband if
you could not lie even when it was absolutely necessary.
"Kiss
me," she told him. adding hastily, "That wasn't an order. I just want
to kiss my husband." A goodbye kiss. There would be no time for one
later.
"In
front of everyone?" he said, laughing. "You've always been so shy
about that."
The
woman was nearly done with Loversknot. and one of the grooms was
holding
Mandarb as steady as he could while the other two hurriedly buckled the
cinches.
"They're
too busy to see anything. Kiss me. or I'll think you're the one who's-"
His lips on hers shut off words. Her toes curled.
Some
time later, she was leaning on his broad chest to catch her breath
while he
stroked her hair. "Perhaps we can have one last night together in
Shienar." he murmured softly. "It may be some time before we're
together again, and I'll miss having my back clawed."
Her
face grew hot. and she pushed away from him unsteadily. The grooms were
done,
and staring very pointedly at the straw-covered floor, but they might
well be
close enough to overhear! "I think not.' She was proud that she did not
sound breathless. "I don't want to leave Rand alone with Alivia that
long."
"He
trusts her. Nynaeve. I don't understand it, but there it is, and that's
all
that matters."
She
sniffed. As if any man knew what was good for him.
Her
stout mare whickered uneasily as they rode among dead Trol-locs to a
patch of
ground not far from the stable that she knew well enough to weave a
gateway.
Mandarb, a trained warhorse, reacted not at all to the blood and the
stench and
the huge corpses. The black stallion seemed as calm as his rider, now
that Lan
was on his back. She could understand that. Lan had a very calming
effect on
her, too. Usually. Sometimes, he had exactly the opposite effect. She
wished
they could have one more night together. Her face grew hot again.
Dismounting,
she drew on saidar without using the angreal and wove a gateway just
tall
enough for her to lead Loversknot through onto grassland dotted with
thickets
of black-spotted beech and trees she did not recognize. The sun was a
golden
ball only a little down from its peak, yet the air was decidedly cooler
than in
Tear. Cold enough to make her gather her cloak, in fact. Mountains
topped with
snow and clouds rose to the east and north and south. As soon as Lan
was
through, she let the weave dissipate and immediately wove another
gateway,
larger, while she climbed into her saddle and settled the cloak around
her
again.
Lan
led Mandarb a few steps westward, staring. Land ended abruptly in what
was
obviously a cliff no more than twenty paces from him, and from there
ocean
stretched to the horizon. "What is the meaning of this?" he demanded,
turning back. "This isn't Shienar. It's World's End, in Saldaea, as far
from Shienar as you can get and still be in the Botderlands."
"I
told you I would take you to the Borderlands, Lan, and I have. Remember
your
oath, my heart, because I surely will." And with that she dug her heels
in
the mare's flanks and let the animal bolt through the open gateway. She
heard
him call her name, but she let the gateway close behind her. She would
give him
a chance to survive.
Only
a few hours past midday, less than half a dozen tables were occupied in
the
large common room of The Queen's Lance. Most of the well-dressed men
and women,
with clerks and bodyguards standing attentively behind them, were there
to buy
or sell ice peppers, which grew well in the foothills on the landward
side of
the Banikhan Mountains, called the Sea Wall by many in Saldaea. Weilin
Aldragoran had no interest in peppers. The Sea Wall had other crops,
and
richer.
"My
final price," he said, waving a hand over the table. Every finger bore
a
jeweled ring. Not large stones, but fine. A man who sold gems should
advertise.
He traded in other things as well-furs, rare woods for cabinetmakers,
finely
made swords and armor, occasionally other things that offered a good
return-but
gems brought in the greater part of his profit in any year. "I'll come
no
lower." The table was covered with a piece of black velvet, the better
to
show off a good portion of his stock. Emeralds, firedrops, sapphires,
and best
of all, diamonds. Several of those were large enough to interest a
ruler, and
none was small. None held a flaw, either. He was known throughout the
Borderlands for his flawless stones. "Accept it. or someone else
will."
The
younger of the two dark-eyed Illianers across from him, a clean-shaven
fellow
named Pavil Geraneos, opened his mouth angrily, but the older, Jeorg
Damentanis. his gray-streaked beard practically quivering, laid a fat
hand on
Geraneos' arm and gave him a horrified look. Aldragoran made no effort
to
conceal his smile, showing a little tooth.
He
had been only a toddler when the Trollocs swept down into Malkier, and
he had
no memories of that land at all-he seldom even thought of Malkier; the
land was
dead and gone-yet he was glad he had let his uncles give him the
badori. At
another table, Managan was in a shouting match with a dark Tairen woman
wearing
a lace ruff and rather inferior garnets in her ears, the pair of them
nearly
drowning out the young woman playing the hammered dulcimer on the low
platform
beside one of the tall stone fireplaces. That lean young man had
refused the
badori, as had Gorenellin, who was near Aldragoran's age. Gorenellin
was
bargaining hard with a pair of olive-skinned Altarans, one of whom had
a nice ruby
in his left ear, and there was sweat on Gorenellin's forehead. No one
shouted
at a man who wore the badori and a sword, as Aldragoran did, and they
tried to
avoid making him sweat. Such men carried a reputation for sudden,
unpredictable
violence. If he had seldom been forced to use the sword at his hip, it
was
widely known that he could and would.
"I
do accept, Master Aldragoran," Damentanis said, giving his companion a
sidelong glare. Not noticing. Geraneos bared his teeth in what he
probably
hoped Aldragoran would take for a smile. Aldragoran let it pass. He was
a
merchant, after all. A reputation was a fine thing when it enhanced
your
bargaining power, but only a fool went looking for fights.
The
Illianers' clerk, a weedy, graying fellow and also Illianer, unlocked
their
iron-strapped coin box under the watchful eyes of their two bodyguards,
bulky
men with those odd beards that left the upper lip bare, in leather
coats sewn
with steel discs. Each carried a sword and stout cudgel at his belt.
Aldragoran
had a clerk at his own back, a hard-eyed Saldaean who did not know one
end of a
sword from the other, but he never used bodyguards. Guards on his
premises, to
be sure, but not bodyguards. That only added its bit to his reputation.
And of
course, he had no need of them.
Once
Damentanis had endorsed two letters-of-rights and passed over three
leather
purses fat with gold-Aldragoran counted the coins but did not bother
weighing
them; some of those thick crowns from ten different lands would be
lighter than
others, yet he was willing to accept the inevitable loss-the Illianers
carefully gathered up the stones, sorting them into washleather purses
that
went into the coin box. He offered them more wine, but the stout man
declined
politely, and they departed with the bodyguards carrying the
iron-strapped box
between them. How they were to protect anything burdened so was beyond
him.
Kayacun was far from a lawless town, but there were more footpads
abroad than
usual of late, more footpads, more murderers, more arsonists, more of
every
sort of crime, not to mention madness of the sort a man just did not
want to
think on. Still, the gems were the Illianers' concern now.
Ruthan
had Aldragoran's coin box open-a pair of bearers were waiting outside
to carry
it-but he sat staring at the letters-of-rights and the purses. Half
again what
he had expected to get. Light coins from Altara and Murandy or no light
coins,
at least half again. This would be his most profitable year ever. And
all due
to Geraneos letting his anger show. Damentanis had been afraid to
bargain
further after that. A wonderful thing, reputation.
"Master
Aldragoran?" a woman said, leaning on the table. "You were pointed
out to me as a merchant with a wide correspondence by pigeon."
He
noticed her jewelry first, of course, a matter of habit. The slim
golden belt
and long necklace were set with very good rubies, as was one of her
bracelets,
along with some pale green and blue stones he did not recognize and so
dismissed as worthless. The golden bracelet on her left wrist, an odd
affair
linked to four finger rings by flat chains and the whole intricately
engraved,
held no stones, but her remaining two bracelets were set with fine
sapphires
and more of the green stones. Two of the rings on her right hand held
those
green stones, but the other two held particularly fine sapphires.
Particularly
fine. Then he realized she wore a fifth ring on that hand, stuck
against one of
the rings with a worthless stone. A golden serpent biting its own tail.
His
eyes jerked to her face, and he suffered his second shock. Her face,
framed by
the hood of her cloak, was very young, but she wore the ring, and few
were
foolish enough to do that without the right. He had seen young Aes
Scdai
before, two or three times. No, her age did not shock him. But on her
forehead,
she wore the ki'sain, the red dot of a married woman. She did not look
Malkieri. She did not sound Malkieri. Many younger folk had the accents
of
Saldaea or Kandor, Arafel or Shienar-he himself sounded of Saldaea-but
she did
not sound a Borderlander at all. Besides, he could not recall the last
time he
had heard of a Malkieri girl going to the White Tower. The Tower had
failed
Malkier in need, and the Malkieri had turned their backs on the Tower.
Still,
he stood hurriedly. With Aes Sedai, courtesy was always wise. Her dark
eyes
held heat. Yes. courtesy was wise.
"How
may I help you, Aes Sedai? You wish me to send a message for you via my
pigeons? It will be my pleasure." It was also wise to grant Aes Sedai
any
favors they asked, and a pigeon was a small favor.
"A
message to each merchant you correspond with. Tarmon Gai'-don is coming
soon."
He
shrugged uneasily. "That is nothing to do with me. Aes Sedai. I'm a
merchant." She was asking for a good many pigeons. He corresponded with
merchants as far away as Shienar. "But I will send your message." He
would, too. however many birds it required. Only stone-blind idiots
failed to
keep promises to Aes Sedai. Besides which, he wanted rid of her and her
talk of
the Last Battle.
"Do
you recognize this?" she said, fishing a leather cord from the neck of
her
dress.
His
breath caught, and he stretched out a hand, brushed a finger across the
heavy
gold signet ring on the cord. Across the crane in flight. How had she
come by
this? Under the Light, how? "I recognize it," he told her, his voice
suddenly hoarse.
"My
name is Nynaeve ti al'Meara Mandragoran. The message I want sent is
this. My
husband rides from World's End toward Tarwin's Gap. toward Tarmon
Gai'don. Will
he ride alone?"
He
trembled. He did not know whether he was laughing or crying. Perhaps
both. She
was his wife? "I will send your message, my Lady, but it has nothing to
do
with me. I am a merchant. Malkier is dead. Dead, I tell you."
The
heat in her eyes seemed to intensify, and she gripped her long, thick
braid
with one hand. "Lan told me once that Malkier lives so long as one man
wears the hadori in pledge that he will fight the Shadow, so long as
one woman
wears the ki'sain in pledge that she will send her sons to fight the
Shadow. I
wear the ki'sain. Master Aldrago-ran. My husband wears the hadori. So
do you.
Will Lan Mandragoran ride to the Last Battle alone?"
He
was laughing, shaking with it. And yet, he could feel tears
rolling down his cheeks. It was madness!
Complete madness! But he could not help himself. "He will not, my Lady.
I
cannot stand surety for anyone else, but I swear to you under the Light
and by
my hope of rebirth and salvation, he will not ride alone." For a
moment,
she studied his face, then nodded once firmly and turned away. He flung
out a
hand after her. "May I offer you wine, my Lady? My wife will want to
meet
you." Alida was Saldaean, but she definitely would want to meet the
wife
of the Uncrowned King.
"Thank
you. Master Aldragoran. but I have several more towns to visit today,
and I
must be back in Tear tonight."
He
blinked at her back as she glided toward the door gathering her cloak.
She had
several more towns to visit today, and she had to be back in Tear
tonight"! Truly, Aes Sedai were capable of marvels!
Silence
hung in the common room. They had not been keeping their voices low,
and even
the girl with the dulcimer had ceased plying her hammers. Everyone was
staring
at him. Most of the outlanders had their mouths hanging open.
"Well,
Managan, Gorenellin," he demanded, "do you still remember who you
are? Do you remember your blood? Who rides with me for Tarwin's Gap?"
For
a moment, he thought neither man would speak, but then Gorenellin was
on his
feet, tears glistening his eyes. "The Golden Crane flies for Tarmon
Gai'don," he said softly.
"The
Golden Crane flies for Tarmon Gai'don!" Managan shouted, leaping up so
fast he overturned his chair.
Laughing,
Aldragoran joined them, all three shouting at the top of their lungs.
"The
Golden Crane flies for Tarmon Gai'don!"
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Within the Stone
The
mud of the outer city gave way to paved streets at the walls of Tear,
where the
first thing Rand noticed was the
absence of
guards. Despite the lofty stone ramparts with their towers, the city
was less
defended than Stedding Shangtai. where he and every other human had
been gently
but firmly refused entrance at first light. Here, the archers'
balconies on the
towers were empty. The iron-strapped door of the squat gray guardhouse
just inside
the broad gates stood wide open, and a hard-faced woman in rough
woolens, her
sleeves shoved up her thin arms, sat there at a wooden tub scrubbing
clothes
with a washboard. She appeared to have taken up residence; two small,
grubby
children sucking their thumbs stared wide-eyed past her at him and his
companions. At their horses, at least.
Tai'daishar
was a sight to stare at, a sleek black stallion with a massive chest, a
horse
that drew attention, yet he had chosen to ride the animal anyway. If
the Forsaken
could find him as easily as they had at Algarin's manor house, there
was little
point to hiding. Or at least to putting too much effort into it. He
wore black
riding gloves to conceal the dragons' heads on his hands and the herons
branded
into his palms. His coat was dark gray wool without a stitch of
embroidery, the
stallion's saddle cloth simple, and his sword's hilt and scabbard had
been
covered in unworked boarhide ever since it came into his possession,
nothing to
pull a second glance. Cadsuane, in unadorned gray wool, wore the hood
of her
dark green cloak well up to shield her Aes Sedai face, but Min, Nynaeve
and
Alivia had no need for hiding. Though Min's flower-embroidered red coat
and
snug breeches might attract a little notice, not to mention her heeled
red
boots. He had seen women in Cairhien wearing clothes like that, copying
her,
yet it seemed unlikely that her fashion had spread to Tear, where
modesty held
sway. In public, at least. Nynaeve was wearing yellow-slashed blue silk
and all
of her jewelry, just partly concealed by her blue cloak, but Tear would
be full
of silks. She had wanted to wear her shawl! That was in her saddlebags,
though.
A little effort only.
The
second thing he noticed was the sound, a rhythmic racketing clatter
accompanied
periodically by a piercing whistle. Faint at first, it seemed to be
coming
closer rapidly. Despite the early hour, the streets he could see from
the gates
were crowded. Half the people in sight appeared to be Sea Folk, the men
bare-chested, the women in bright linen blouses, all wearing long
sashes more
colorful than those worn by Tairen commoners. Every head appeared to be
turned
toward that sound. Children darted through the throng, dodging carts
most often
pulled by oxen with wide horns, racing toward the noise. Several
well-dressed
men and women had dismounted from their sedan chairs and stood with the
bearers
to watch. A fork-bearded merchant with silver chains across the chest
of his
coat was half out of the window of a red-lacquered coach, shouting at
his
driver to manage the nervously dancing team while he strained for a
better
view.
White-winged
pigeons, startled from pointed slate rooftops by a particularly sharp
whistle,
suddenly wheeled into the air. And two large flocks crashed into each
other,
pelting the folk below with stunned birds. Every single bird fell. A
few people
actually stopped staring toward the approaching noise and gaped at the
sky. A
surprising number snatched up fallen birds and wrung their necks,
though, and
not just barefoot people in worn woolens. A woman in silk and lace,
standing
beside one of the sedan chairs, quickly gathered half a dozen before
gazing
toward the noise with the birds dangling from her hands by their feet.
Alivia
made a startled sound. "Is that ill luck or good?" she drawled.
"It must be ill. Unless pigeons here are different?" Nynaeve gave her
a sour look, but said nothing. She had been very quiet since Lan
vanished the
day before, a subject on which she was doubly silent.
"Some
of those people are going to die of hunger." Min said sadly. The bond
quivered with sorrow. "Every last one I can see something about."
How
can I die? Lews Therin laughed. I am ta'veren!
You're
dead. Rand thought at him sharply. People in front of him were going to
starve,
and he laughed? There was nothing to be done, of course, not when Min
spoke,
but laughing was another matter. I am ta'veren. Me!
What
else was happening in Tear because of his presence? His being ta'veren
did not
always have any effect at all. but when it did, the result could
blanket an
entire city. Best to get on with what he had come for before the wrong
people
figured out what things like pigeons flying into one another meant. If
the
Forsaken were sending armies of Trollocs and Myrddraal after him, it
was likely
that Darkfriends would take any opportunity to put an arrow through his
ribs.
Making little effort to hide was not the same as making no effort.
"You
might as well have brought the Banner of Light and an honor guard of
thousands
instead of six," Cadsuane murmured dryly, eyeing the Maidens who were
trying to pretend they had nothing to do with Rand's party while
standing in a
wide circle around it, sboufa covering their heads and veils hanging
down their
chests. Two were Shaido, fierce-eyed whenever they looked at him. The
Maidens'
spears were all on their backs, stuck through the harness of their
bowcases,
but only because Rand had offered to leave them behind and take someone
else
otherwise. Nandera had insisted on at least a few Maidens, staring at
him with
eyes as hard as emeralds. He had never considered refusing. The only
child of a
Maiden any Maiden had ever known, he had obligations to meet.
He
gathered Tai'daishar's reins, and abruptly a large wagon full of
machinery came
into sight, clanking and hissing, wide iron-studded wheels striking
sparks from
the gray paving stones as it moved along the street as fast as a man
could
trot. The machinery seemed to sweat steam; a heavy wooden shaft swung
up and
down pushing another, vertical shaft, and gray woodsmoke drifted from a
metal
chimney; but there was no sign of a horse, just an odd sort of tiller
in the
front to turn the wheels. One of the three men standing in the wagon
pulled a
long cord, and steam rushed in a shrill whistle out of a tube atop a
huge iron
cylinder. If the onlookers stared in awe and maybe covered their ears,
the
fork-bearded merchant's team was in no such mood.
Whinnying
wildly, they bolted, scattering people as they ran and nearly pitching
the man
out on his head. Curses pursued them, and several braying mules that
galloped
off with their drivers in bouncing carts sawing at the reins. Even a
few oxen
began to lumber along more quickly. Min's astonishment filled the bond.
Controlling
the black with his knees-trained as a warhorse. Tai'-daishar responded
immediately, chough he still snorted-Rand stared in amazement, too. It
seemed
Master Poel actually had made his steamwagon work. "But how did the
thing
get to Tear?" he asked the air. The last he had seen, it had been at
the
Academy of Cairhien. and seizing up every few paces.
"It's
called a steamhorse. my Lord," a barefoot, dirty-faced urchin in a
ragged
shirt said, bouncing on the pavement. Even the sash holding up his
baggy
breeches seemed as much holes as cloth. "I've seen it nine times! Com
here's only seen it seven."
"A
steamwagon, Doni," his equally ragged companion put in. "A
steamwagon." Neither of them could have been more than ten, and they
were
gaunt rather than skinny. Their muddy feet, torn shirts and holed
breeches
meant they came from outside the walls, where the poorest folk lived.
Rand had
changed a number of laws in Tear, especially those that weighed heavily
on the
poor, but he had been unable to change everything. He had not even
known how to
begin. Lews Therin began to maunder on about taxes and money creating
jobs, but
he might as well have been spilling out words at random for all the
sense he
made. Rand muted the voice to a buzz, a fly on the other side of a room.
"Four
of them hitched together, one behind the other, pulled a hundred wagons
all the
way from Cairhien," Doni went on, ignoring the other boy. "They
covered near a hundred miles every day. my Lord. A hundred miles!"
Com
sighed heavily. "There were six of them, Doni, and they only pulled
fifty
wagons, but they covered more than a hundred miles every day. A hundred
and
twenty some days, I heard, and it was one of the steam-men said it."
Doni
turned to scowl at him. the pair of them balling up fists.
"Either
way, it's a remarkable achievement," Rand told them quickly, before
they
could begin trading blows. "Here."
Dipping
into his coat pocket, he pulled out two coins and tossed one toward
each boy
without looking to see what they were. Gold glittered in the air before
the
boys eagerly snatched the coins. Exchanging startled glances, they went
running
out through the gates as fast as they could go. no doubt fearful he
would
demand the coins back. Their families could live for months on that
much gold.
Min
gazed after them with an expression of misery that the bond echoed even
after
she shook her head and smoothed her face. What had she seen? Death,
probably.
Rand felt anger, but no sorrow. How many tens of thousands would die
before the
Last Battle was done? How many would be children? He had no room left
in him
for sorrow.
"Very
generous," Nynaeve said in a tight voice, "but are we going to stand
here all morning?" The steamwagon was moving on out of sight quickly,
yet
her plump brown mare was still blowing anxiously and tossing her head,
and she
was having difficulty with the animal, placid as it was by nature. She
was far
from as good a rider as she thought herself. For that matter. Min's
mount, an
arch-necked gray mare from Algarin's stables, danced so that only Min's
firm,
red-gloved grip on the reins kept her from running, and Alivia's roan
was
trying to dance, though the former damane controlled the animal as
easily as
Cadsuane did her bay. Alivia sometimes displayed surprising talents.
Damane
were expected to ride well.
As
they rode into the city, Rand took a last glance at the disappearing
steamwagon. Remarkable was hardly the word. A hundred wagons or only
fifty-only!-incredible was more like it. Would merchants start using
those
things instead of horses? It hardly seemed likely. Merchants were
conservative
folk, not known for leaping at new ways of doing things. For some
reason, Lews
Therin began laughing again.
Tear
was not beautiful, like Caemlyn or Tar Valon, and few of its streets
could be
called particularly broad, but it was large and sprawling, one of the
great
cities of the world, and, like most great cities, a jumble that had
grown up
willy-nilly. In those tangled streets, tile-roofed inns and
slate-roofed
stables, the roof corners slanted sharply, stood alongside palaces with
squared
white domes and tall, balcony-ringed towers that often came to points,
the
heights of domes and towers gleaming in the early-morning sun. Smithies
and
cutlers, seamstresses and butchers, fishmongers and rugweavers' shops
rubbed
against marble structures with tall bronze doors behind massive white
columns,
guild halls and bankers and merchants' exchanges.
At
this hour, the streets themselves were still cast in deep shadows, yet
they
bustled with that storied southern industry. Sedan chairs borne by
pairs of
lean men wove through the crowds almost as quickly as the children who
raced
about in play while coaches and carriages behind teams of four or six
moved as
slowly as the carts and wagons, most drawn by large oxen. Porters
trudged
along, their bundles slung beneath poles carried on two men's
shoulders, and
apprentices carried rolled carpets and boxes of the masters' handiwork
on their
backs. Hawkers cried their wares from trays or handbarrows, pins and
ribbons, a
few with roasted nuts and meat pies, and tumblers or jugglers or
musicians
performed at nearly every intersection. You would never have thought
this city
was the site of a siege.
Not
everything was peaceful, though. Early morning or not. Rand saw
obstreperous drunks
being thrown out of inns and taverns and so many fistfights and men
wrestling
on the pavement that it seemed one pair was not well out of sight
before the
next came into view. A good many obvious armsmen mingled in the crowd,
swords
at their hips and the fat sleeves of their woolen coats striped in
various
House colors, but even those wearing breastplates and helmets made no
move to
break up the rows. A fair number of the fights involved armsmen, with
one
another, with Sea Folk, with roughly clad fellows who might have been
laborers
or apprentices or shoulderthumpers. Soldiers with nothing to do grew
bored, and
bored soldiers got drunk and fought. He was glad to see the rebels
armsmen
bored.
The
Maidens, drifting through the throng and still trying to pretend they
had no
association with Rand, drew puzzled looks and head-scratching, mainly
from
dark-faced Sea Folk, though a gaggle ot children trailed after them
gaping. The
Tairens. many of whom were not all that much fairer than the Sea Folk,
had seen
Aiel before, and if they wondered why they had returned to the city, it
appeared they had different business at hand this morning, and more
important.
No one seemed to give Rand or his other companions a second glance.
There were
other mounted men and women in the streets, most of them outlanders,
here a
pale Cairhienin merchant in a somber coat, there an Arafellin with
silver bells
fastened to his dark braids, here a copper-skinned Domani in a barely
opaque
riding dress barely hidden by her cloak followed by a pair of hulking
bodyguards in leather coats sewn with steel discs, there a Shienaran
with his
head shaved except for a gray topknot and his belly straining his
buttons. You
could not move ten paces in Tear without seeing outlanders. Tairen
commerce had
long arms.
Which
was not to say that he passed through the city without incident. Ahead
of him,
a running baker's boy tripped and fell, flinging his basket into the
air, and
when the boy levered himself off the paving stones as Rand rode by, he
stopped halfway
up with his mouth hanging open, staring at the long loaves standing on
end near
the basket, propped together in a rough cone. A fellow in his
shirtsleeves,
drinking in a second-story window of an inn. overbalanced and toppled
toward
the street with a shriek that cut off when he landed on his feet not
ten paces
from Tai'daishar, mug still in hand. Rand left him behind wide-eyed and
feeling
at himself in wonderment. Ripples of altered chance were following
Rand,
spreading across the city.
Not
every event would be as harmless as the loaves, or as beneficial as the
man
landing on his feet rather than his head. Those ripples could turn what
should
be a bruiseless tumble into broken bones or a broken neck. Lifelong
feuds could
be started by men speaking words they had never thought to hear come
from their
own lips. Women could decide to poison their husbands over trivial
offenses
they had tolerated complacently for years. Oh, some fellow might find a
rotting
sack full of gold buried in his own basement without really knowing why
he had
decided to dig in the first place, or a man might ask and gain the hand
of a
woman he had never before had the courage to approach, but as many
would find
ruination as found good fortune. Balance, Min had called it. A good to
balance
every ill. He saw an ill to balance every good. He needed to be done in
Tear
and gone as soon as possible. Galloping in those crowded streets was
out of the
question, but he picked up his pace enough that the Maidens had to trot.
His
destination had been in sight since long before he entered the city, a
mass of
stone like a barren, sheer-sided hill that stretched from the River
Erinin into
the city's heart, covering at least eight or nine marches, a good
square mile
or more, and dominating the city's sky. The Stone of Tear was mankind's
oldest
stronghold, the oldest structure in the world, made with the One Power
in the
last days of the Breaking itself. One solid piece of stone it was,
without a
single join, though better than three thousand years of rain and wind
had
weathered the surface to roughness. The first battlements stood a
hundred paces
above the ground, though there were arrowslits aplenty lower, and stone
spouts
for showering attackers with boiling oil or molten lead. No besieger
could stop
the Stone from being supplied through its own wall-shielded docks, and
it
contained forges and manufactories to replace or mend every sort of
weapon
should its armories fall short. Its highest tower, rearing over the
very center
of the Stone, held the banner of Tear, half red, half gold, with a
slanting
line of three silver crescents, and so large that it could be made out
plainly
as it curled in a strong breeze. It had to be strong to move that flag.
Lower
towers supported smaller versions, but here they alternated with
another
rippling banner, the ancient symbol of Aes Sedai black-and-white on a
field of
red. The Banner of Light. The Dragon Banner, some called it, as if
there were
not another that bore that name. The High Lord Darlin was flaunting his
allegiance,
it seemed. That was well.
Alanna
was in there, and whether or not that was well he would have to learn.
He was
not as sharply aware of her as before Elayne and Aviendha and Min
jointly
bonded him-he thought he was not; they had pushed her aside to take
primacy
somehow, and she had told him she could sense little more of him than
his
presence-yet she still lay in the back of his head, a bundle of
emotions and
physical sensations. It seemed a long time since he had been near
enough to her
to sense those. Once again, the bond with her felt an intrusion, a
would-be
usurper of his bond to Min and Elayne and Aviendha. Alanna was weary,
as if
perhaps she had not been getting enough sleep lately, and frustrated,
with
strong streaks of anger and sulkiness. Were the negotiations going
badly? He
would find out soon enough. She would be aware he was in the city,
aware he was
coming closer if little more. Min had tried to teach him a trick called
masking
that supposedly could hide him from the bond, but he had never been
able to
make it work. Of course, she admitted she had never been able to make
it work
either.
Soon
he found himself on a street that ran directly to the plaza that
surrounded the
Stone on three sides, but he had no intention of riding straight there.
For one
thing, every massive iron-strapped gate would be barred tight. For
another, he
could see several hundred armsmen at the foot of the street. He
expected there
would be the same in front of every gate. They hardly gave the
impression of
men besieging a fortress. They seemed to be lounging about with no
order-many
had their helmets off and their halberds propped against the buildings
lining
the street, and serving women from nearby taverns and inns circulated
among
them selling mugs of ale or wine from trays-yet it was highly unlikely
they
would remain complacent about anyone trying to enter the Stone. Not
that they
could stop him, of course. He could sweep aside a few hundred men like
so many
moths.
He
had not come to Tear to kill anyone, though, not unless he had to, so
he rode
into the stableyard of a tile-roofed inn, three stories of dark gray
stone with
a prosperous look. The sign out front was freshly painted with, of all
things,
a rough approximation of the creatures encircling his forearms. The
artist
apparently had decided the thing was inadequate as described, though,
because
he had added long, sharp teeth and leathery, ribbed wings. Wings! They
almost
looked copied from one of those Seanchan flying beasts. Cadsuane looked
at the
sign and snorted. Nynaeve looked at it and giggled. So did Min!
Even
after Rand gave the barefoot stableboys silver to curry the horses,
they stared
at the Maidens harder than at the coins, but no harder than the patrons
stared
in The Dragon's beam-ceilinged common room. Conversation trailed off
when the
Maidens followed Rand and the others inside, spearpoints sticking up
above
their heads and bullhide bucklers in hand. Men and women, most in plain
if good
quality wool, turned in their low-backed chairs to stare. They seemed
to be
middling merchants and solid craftsfolk, yet they gaped like villagers
seeing a
city for the first time. The serving women, in dark high-necked dresses
and
short white aprons, stopped trotting and goggled over their trays. Even
the
woman playing a hammered dulcimer between the two stone fireplaces,
cold on
this fine morning, fell silent.
A
very dark fellow with tightly curled hair, at a square table beside the
door,
seemed not to notice the Maidens at all. Rand took him for one of the
Sea Folk
at first, though he wore a peculiar coat without collar or lapels, once
white
but now stained and wrinkled. "I tell you. I have many, many of the…
the worms that make… yes, make… silk on a ship." he said
haltingly in an odd, musical accent. "But I must have the… the…
andberry… yes, andberry leaves to feed them. We will be rich."
His
companion waved a plump, dismissive hand even while staring at the
Maidens.
"Worms?" he said absently. "Everybody knows silk grows on
trees."
Walking
deeper into the common room. Rand shook his head as the proprietor
advanced to
meet him. Worms! The tales people could come up with to try prying coin
out of
somebody else.
"Agardo
Saranche at your service, my Lord, my Ladies," the lean, balding man
said
with a deep bow. sweeping his hands wide. Not all Tairens were dark by
any
means, but he was nearly as fair complected as a Cairhienin. "How may I
serve?" His dark eyes kept drifting to the Maidens, and every time they
did, he tugged at his long blue coat as though it suddenly felt too
tight.
"We
want a room with a good view of the Stone," Rand said.
"It
is worms that make silk, friend," a man drawled behind him. "My eyes
on it."
At
that familiar accent, Rand spun to find Alivia staring, wide-eyed and
her face
bloodless, at a man in a dark coat who was just passing through the
doorway
into the street. With an oath, Rand ran to the door, but there were
close to a
dozen men in dark coats walking away from the inn, any one of whom
might have
spoken. There was no way to pick out one man of average height and
width seen
only from behind. What was a Seanchan doing in Tear? Scouting for
another
invasion? He would put paid to that soon enough. But he turned from the
door
wishing he could have laid hands on the man. Knowing would be better
than
having to guess.
He
asked Alivia whether she had gotten a good look at the fellow, but she
shook
her head silently. Her face was still pale. She was ferocious when she
talked
of what she wanted to do to sul'dam, yet it seemed just hearing the
accents of
her native land was enough to shake her. He hoped that did not turn out
to be
weakness in her. She was going to help him, somehow, and he could not
afford
her to be weak.
"What
do you know of the man who just left?" he demanded of Saranche. "The
one with the slurred way of talking."
The
innkeeper blinked. "Nothing, my Lord. I've never seen him before. You
want
one room, my Lord?" He ran his eyes over Min and the other women, and
his
lips moved as if he were counting.
"If
you're thinking of any impropriety, Master Saranche," Nynaeve said
indignantly, tugging at the braid hanging from the cowl of her cloak,
"you
had best think twice and again. Before I box your ears." Min hissed
softly, and one hand drifted toward her other wrist before she checked
the
motion. Light, but she was quick to reach for her knives!
"What
impropriety?" Alivia asked in tones of puzzlement. Cadsuane snorted.
"One
room," Rand said patiently. Women can always find a reason to be
indignant, he thought. Or had that been Lews Therin? He shrugged in
discomfort.
And a touch of irritation that he only just managed to keep out of his
voice.
"Your largest with a view of the Stone. We don't want it for long.
You'll
be able to rent it out again for tonight. You may have to keep our
horses a day
or two, though."
A
look of relief crept over Saranche's narrow face, though patently false
rue
filled his voice. "I regret that my largest room is taken, my Lord. In
fact, all of my large rooms are taken. But I will be more than happy to
escort
you up the street to The Three Moons and-"
"Phaw!"
Cadsuane pushed back her hood enough to reveal her face and some of her
golden
hair ornaments. She was all cool composure, her gaze implacable. "I
think
you can find a way to make that room available, boy. I think you had
better
find a way. Pay him well." she added to Rand, ornaments swaying on
their
chains. "That was advice, not an order."
Saranche
took Rand's fat golden crown with alacrity-it was doubtful the entire
inn
earned much more in a week-but it was Cadsuane's ageless face that sent
him
bounding up the staircase at the back of the common room to return in a
handful
of minutes and show them to a room on the second floor with dark
polished
paneling and a rumpled bed wide enough for three flanked by a pair of
windows
filled by the Stone looming over the rooftops. The previous occupant
had been
hustled out so quickly that he had left a woolen stocking crumpled at
the foot
of the bed and a carved horn comb on the washstand in the corner. The
innkeeper
offered to have their saddlebags brought up, and wine, and seemed
surprised
when Rand refused, but one glance at Cadsuane's face, and he bowed his
way out
again hurriedly.
The
room was fairly large as inn rooms went, yet not compared to most
chambers in
Algarin's manor house, much less in a palace. Especially not with near
a dozen
people filling the space. The walls seemed to close in on Rand. His
chest suddenly
felt tight. Every breath came with difficulty. The bond was suddenly
full of
sympathy and concern.
The
box. Lews Therin panted. Have to get out of the box!
Keeping
his eyes on the windows-being able to see the Stone was a necessity,
and seeing
open air between the Dragon and the Stone, the open air above, loosened
his
breathing a little. Just a little-keeping his eyes fixed on the sky
above the
Stone, he ordered everyone to stand against the walls. They obeyed with
speed.
Well, Cadsuane gave him a sharp look before gliding to the wall, and
Nynaeve
sniffed before flouncing over, but the rest moved quickly. If they
thought he
wanted space for safety's sake, in a way he did. Having them out of his
line of
sight made the room seem a little larger. Only a little, yet every inch
was a
blessed relief. The bond was filled with concern.
Must
get out. Lews Therin moaned. Have to get out.
Stiffening
himself against what he knew would come, watchful of any attempt by
Lews
Therin, Rand seized the male half of the True Source, and saidin
flooded into
him. Had the madman tried to seize it first? He had brushed it,
certainly,
touched it, but it was Rand's. Mountains of flame collapsing in fiery
avalanches tried to scour him away. Waves chat made ice seem warm tried
to
crush him in raging seas. He gloried in it, suddenly so alive it seemed
he had
been sleepwalking before. He could hear the breath of everyone in the
room,
could see that great banner atop the Stone so clearly he almost thought
he
could make out the weave of the fabric. The double wound in his side
throbbed
as if trying to rip itself out of his body, but with the Power filling
him, he
could ignore that pain. He thought he could have ignored a sword thrust.
Yet
with saidin came the inevitable violent nausea, the almost overwhelming
desire
to double over and empty himself of every meal he had ever eaten. His
knees
trembled with it. He fought that as hard as he fought the Power, and
saidin had
to be fought ever and always. A man forced saidin to his will, or it
destroyed
him. The face of the man from Shadar Logoth floated in his head for a
moment.
He looked furious. And near to sicking up. Without any doubt he was
aware of
Rand in that moment, and Rand of him. Move a hair in any direction, and
they
would touch. No more than a hair.
"What's
the matter?" Nynaeve demanded, moving close and peering up at him in
concern. "Your face has gone all gray." She reached for his head, and
his skin popped out in goose bumps.
He
brushed her hands away. "I'm all right. Stand clear." She stood there
giving him one of those looks women carried in their belt pouches. This
one
said she knew he was lying even if she could not prove it. Did they
practice
those looks in front of mirrors? "Stand clear, Nynaeve."
"He's
all right, Nynaeve," Min said, though her face had a touch of gray
about
it, too, and she had both red-gloved hands pressed to her middle. She
knew.
Nynaeve
sniffed at him, wrinkling her nose in disdain, but she finally moved
out of his
way. Maybe Lan had had enough and run away. No, not that. Lan would not
leave
her unless she told him to, and then only for as long as was needful.
Wherever
he was, Nynaeve knew and likely had sent him there for reasons of her
own. Aes
Sedai and their bloody secrets.
He
channeled, Spirit touched with Fire, and the familiar vertical silvery
slash
appeared at the foot of the bed, seemed to rotate into a dim view of
massive
columns in darkness. Light from the inn room gave all the illumination.
The
opening, standing inches above the floor, was no larger than the door
to the
room, yet as soon as it was fully open, three of the Maidens, already
veiled,
darted through pulling spears free, and Rand's skin pebbled again as
Alivia
leaped after them. Protecting him was a self-imposed duty, but one she
took as
seriously as the Maidens did.
There
would be no ambush here, though, no dangers, so he stepped through, and
down.
At the other end, the gateway sat more than a foot above the huge gray
slabs of
stone that he had not wanted to damage any more than he already had.
This was
the Heart of the Stone, and with the Power in him, and the light
spilling
through the gateway from the room in The Dragon, he could see the
narrow hole
in one of those stones where he had driven Callandor into the floor.
Who draws
it out shall follow after. He had thought long and hard before sending
Nar-ishma to bring Callandor to him. However the Prophecies meant the
man was
to follow him, Narishma was otherwise occupied today. A forest of
immense
redstone columns surrounded him, stretching up into the dark that hid
the unlit
golden lamps and the vaulted ceiling and the great dome. His boots
echoed
hollowly in the vast chamber, and even the whispers of the Maidens'
soft boots.
In this space, the sense of confinement vanished.
Min
hopped down right behind him-with a throwing knife in either hand, and
her head
swiveling, eyes searching the darkness-but Cadsuane, standing at the
edge of
the gateway, said, "I don't jump unless I absolutely have to, boy."
She held out a hand, waiting for him to take it.
He
handed her down, and she nodded thanks. It could have been meant for
thanks. It
could have meant "You took your bloody time about it," too. A ball of
light appeared over her upturned palm, and a moment later Alivia was
balancing
a globe of light, too. The pair created a pool of brightness that
turned the
surrounding darkness deeper. Nynaeve required the same courtesy, and
had the
grace to murmur thanks-she quickly gained her own ball of light-but
when he
offered a hand to one of the Maidens-he
thought it was Sarendhra. one of the Shaido. though all he could see of
her
face was blue eyes above her black veil-she grunted contemptuously and
leaped
down, spear in hand, followed by the other two. He let the gateway
close, but
held on to saidin despite the roiling in his stomach and head. He did
not
expect to need to channel again before he left the Stone, yet he did
not want
to give Lews Therin another opportunity to seize the Power, either.
You
have to trust me. Lews Therin snarled. If we're going to make it to
Tarmon
Gai'don so we can die, you have to trust me.
You
told me once not to trust anyone. Rand thought. Including you.
Only
madmen trust no one. Lews Therin whispered. Abruptly he began to weep.
Oh, why
do I have a madman in my head? Rand pushed the voice away.
On
striding through the tall arch that led from the Heart, he was
surprised to
find two Defenders of the Stone in ridged helmets and shining
breastplates, the
puffy sleeves of their black coats striped in black and gold. Swords
drawn,
they were staring at the archway with expressions that combined
confusion with
grim resolution. Doubtless they had been startled to see lights and
hear
footsteps echoing in a room with only one entrance, an entrance they
were
guarding. The Maidens crouched, spears coming up, spreading out to
either side,
slowly curling in toward the pair.
"By
the Stone, it's him," one of the men said, sheathing his sword
hurriedly.
Stocky, with a puckered scar that began on his forehead and journeyed
across
the bridge of his nose and down to his jaw. he bowed deeply, hands in
steel-backed gauntlets spreading wide. "My Lord Dragon," he said.
"Iagin Handar, my Lord. The Stone stands. I got this that day." He
touched the scar on his face.
"An
honorable wound, Handar. and a day to remember," Rand told him as the
other, leaner man hastily put up his blade and bowed. Only then did the
Maidens
lower their spears, but their faces remained veiled. A day to remember?
Trollocs and Myrddraal inside the Stone. The second time he had truly
wielded
Callandor, using the Sword that was Not a Sword as it was meant to be
used. The
dead lying everywhere. A dead girl he could not make live again. Who
could
forget such a day? "I know I gave orders for the Heart to be guarded
while
Callandor was there, but why are you still standing guard?"
The
two men exchanged puzzled looks. "You gave the order to set guards, my
Lord Dragon," Handar said, "and the Defenders obey, but you never
said anything about Callandor
except that no one was to approach it unless they had proof they came
from
you." Suddenly the stocky man gave a start and bowed again, more deeply
still. "Forgive me, my Lord, if I seem to question you. I don't mean
to.
Shall I summon the High Lords to your apartments? Your rooms have been
kept in
readiness for your return."
"No
need," Rand told him. "Darlin will be expecting me. and 1 know where
to find him."
Handar
winced. The other man suddenly found something interesting on the floor
to
study. "You may require a guide, my Lord," Handar said slowly.
"The corridors… Sometimes the corridors change."
So.
The Pattern truly was loosening. That meant the Dark One was touching
the world
more than he had since the War of the Shadow. If it loosened too much
before
Tarmon Gai'don, the Age Lace might unravel. An end to time and reality
and
creation. Somehow he had to bring about the Last Battle before that
happened.
Only he did not dare. Not yet.
He
assured Handar and the other man that he needed no guide, and the pair
of them
bowed yet again, apparently accepting that the Dragon Reborn could do
anything
he said he could do. In simple truth, he knew he could locate Alanna-he
could
have pointed straight at her-and she had moved since he first felt her.
To find
Darlin and inform him that Rand al'Thor was approaching, he was sure.
Min had
named her as one he held in his hand, yet Aes Sedai always found a way
to play
both ends against the middle. They always had schemes of their own,
goals of
their own. Witness Nynaeve and Verin. Witness any of them.
"They
hop when you say toad," Cadsuane said coolly, pushing the cowl of her
cloak down her back, as they walked away from the Heart. "That can be
bad
for you, when too many people jump at your word.'' She had the nerve to
say
that! Cadsuane bloody Melaidhrin!
"I'm
fighting a war." he told her harshly. The nausea had his temper on
edge.
That was part of the reason he was harsh. "The fewer people who obey,
the
more chance I'll lose, and if I lose, everybody loses. If I could make
everyone
obey, I would." There were far too many who did not obey as it was. or
obeyed in their own way. Why in the Light would Min feel pity.
Cadsuane
nodded. "As I thought," she murmured, half to herself. And what was
that supposed to mean?
The
Stone had all the trappings of a palace, from silk tapestries and rich
runners
in the corridors from Tarabon and Altara and Tear itself to golden
stands
holding mirrored lamps. Chests standing against the stone walls might
be for
storing what the servants needed for cleaning, yet they were of rare
woods,
often elaborately carved and always with gilded banding. Niches held
bowls and
vases of Sea Folk porcelain, thin as leaves and worth many times their
weight
in gold, or massive. gem-studded figures, a golden leopard with ruby
eyes
trying to pull down a silver deer with pearl-covered antlers that stood
a pace
tall, a golden lion that was even taller, with emerald eyes and
firedrops for
claws, others set so extravagantly with gems that no metal showed.
Servants in
black-and-gold livery bowed or curtsied as Rand climbed through the
Stone,
those who recognized him very deeply indeed. Some eyes widened at sight
of the
Maidens trailing behind, but their surprise never slowed their
courtesies.
All
the trappings of a palace, yet the Stone had been designed for war
within as
well as without. Wherever two corridors crossed, murderholes dotted the
ceiling. Between the tapestries, arrowslits pierced the walls high up,
angled
to cover the corridors in both directions, and no flight of sweeping
stairs but
had arrowslits placed so the staircase could be swept by arrows or
crossbow
bolts. Only one assailant had ever succeeded in forcing a way into the
Stone,
the Aiel, and they had swept over the opposition too quickly for many
of those
defenses to come into play, but any other enemy that managed to get
inside the
Stone would pay a price in blood for every hallway. Except that
Traveling had
changed warfare forever. Traveling and Blossoms of Fire and so much
more. That
blood price would still be paid, yet stone walls and high towers could
no
longer hold back an assault. The Asha'man had made the Stone as
obsolete as the
bronze swords and stone axes men had often been reduced to in the
Breaking.
Mankind's oldest stronghold was now a relic.
The
bond with Alanna led him up and up, until he came to tall, polished
doors with
golden leopards for door handles. She was on the other side. Light, but
his
stomach wanted to empty itself. Hardening himself, he pulled open one
of the
doors and went in, leaving the Maidens to stand guard. Min and the
others
followed him in.
The
sitting room was almost as ornate as his own apartments in the Stone,
the walls
hung with broad silk tapestries showing scenes of the hunt and battle,
the
large, patterned Taraboner carpet on the floor worth sufficient gold to
feed a
large village for a year, the black marble fireplace tall enough for a
man to
walk into and wide enough to hold eight abreast. Every piece of
furnishing, all
massively made, was elaborately carved, crusted with gilt and dotted
with gems,
as were the tall golden stand-lamps, their mirrored flames adding to
the light
let in by the glass-paned ceiling. A golden bear with ruby eyes and
silver
claws and teeth, more than a pace high, stood atop a gilded plinth on
one side
of the room, while an identical plinth held an emerald-eyed,
ruby-taloned eagle
nearly as tall. Restrained pieces for Tear.
Seated
in an armchair, Alanna looked up as he walked in, and held out a golden
goblet
for one of the two young serving women in black and gold to fill with
dark wine
from a tall golden pitcher. Slender in a gray riding dress slashed with
green,
Alanna was beautiful enough that Lews Therin began humming to himself.
Rand
almost thumbed his earlobe before snatching his hand down, suddenly
unsure
whether that gesture was his or the madman's. She smiled, but darkly,
and as
her eyes swept across Min and Nynacve, Alivia and Cadsuane, the bond
carried
her suspicion, not to mention anger and sulkiness. The last two
heightened for
Cadsuane. And there was joy, as well, mixed in with all the rest, when
her gaze
touched him. Not that it showed in her voice. "Why, who would have
expected you, my Lord Dragon?" she murmured, with a hint of asperity in
the title. "Quite a surprise, wouldn't you say, my Lord Astoril?" So
she had not warned anyone after all. Interesting.
"A
very pleasant surprise," an elderly man in a coat with red-and-blue
striped sleeves said as he rose to bow, stroking his oiled beard,
trimmed to a
point. The High Lord Astoril Damara's face was creased, the hair that
hung to
his shoulders snow white and thinning, but his back was straight and
his dark
eyes sharp. "I've been looking forward to this day for some time." He
bowed again, to Cadsuane, and after a moment, to Nynaeve. "Aes
Sedai," he said. Very civil for Tear, where channeling if not Aes Sedai
themselves had been outlawed before Rand altered the law.
Darlin
Sisnera. High Lord and Steward in Tear for the Dragon Reborn, in a
green silk
coat with yellow-striped sleeves and gold-worked boots, was less than a
head
shorter than Rand, with close-cut hair and a pointed beard, a bold nose
and
blue eyes that were rare in Tear. Those eyes widened as he turned from
a
conversation with Caraline Damodred near the fireplace. The Cairhienin
noblewoman gave Rand a jolt, though he had expected to see her here.
The litany
he used to forge his soul in fire almost started up in his head before
he could
stop it. Short and slim and pale, with large dark eyes and a small ruby
dangling onto her forehead from a golden chain woven into the black
hair
falling in waves to her shoulders, she was the very image of her cousin
Moiraine. Of all things, she wore a long blue coat, embroidered in
golden
scrolls except for the horizontal stripes of red, green and white that
ran from
neck to hem. over snug green breeches and heeled blue boots. It seemed
the
fashion had traveled after all. She made a curtsy, even so, though it
looked odd
in that garb. Lews Therin hummed even harder, making Rand wish the man
had a
face so he could hit him. Moiraine was a memory for hardening his soul,
not for
humming at.
"My
Lord Dragon," Darlin said, bowing stiffly. He was not a man accustomed
to
offering the first courtesy. He gave no bow for Cadsuane. just a sharp
look
before he seemed to dismiss her presence entirely. She had kept him and
Caraline as "guests" for a time in Cairhien. He was unlikely to
forget that, or forgive. At his gesture, the two serving women moved
quickly to
offer wine. As might have been expected, Cadsuane with her ageless face
received the first goblet, but surprisingly, Nynaeve got the second.
The Dragon
Reborn was one thing, a woman wearing the Great Serpent ring something
else
again, even in Tear. Throwing her cloak back, Cadsuane retreated to the
wall.
It was unlike her to be retiring. But then, from there, she could
observe
everyone at once. Alivia took a place by the door, doubtless for much
the same
reason. "I am glad to see you better than when I saw you last,"
Darlin went on. "You've done me great honor. Though I may yet lose my
head
for it. if your Aes Sedai make no more progress than they have.
"Do
not be sulky, Darlin," Caraline murmured, her throaty voice sounding
amused.
"Men do sulk, do they not, Min?" For some reason, Min barked a laugh.
"What
are you doing here?" Rand demanded of the two people he had not
expected
to see. He took a goblet from one of the serving women while the other
hesitated between Min and Alivia. Min won out, perhaps because Alivia's
blue
dress was plain. Sipping her wine, Min strolled over to Caraline-at a
glance
from the Cairhienin woman. Darlin moved away, grinning-and the two
women stood
with their heads together, whispering. Filled with the Power, Rand
could catch
the occasional word. His name, Darlin's.
Weiramon
Saniago. also a High Lord of Tear, was not short, and he stood as
straight as a
sword, yet there was something of a strutting rooster about him. His
gray-streaked beard, trimmed to a point and oiled, practically quivered
with
pride. "Hail to the Lord of the Morning," he said, bowing. Or rather,
he intoned it. Weiramon was a great one for intoning and declaiming.
"Why
am I here, my Lord Dragon?" He sounded puzzled at the question. "Why,
when I heard that Darlin was besieged in the Stone, what could I do but
come to
his aid? Burn my soul, I tried to talk some of the others into
accompanying me.
We'd have put a quick end to Estanda and that lot, I vow!" He clutched
a
fist to demonstrate how he would have crushed the rebels. "But only
Anaiyella had the courage. The Cairhienin were a complete lot of
lily-hearts!" Caraline paused her talk with Min to give him a look that
would have had him hunting for the stab wound had he noticed it.
As-toril
pursed his lips and commenced a study of his wine.
The
High Lady Anaiyella Narencelona also wore a coat and snug breeches with
heeled
boots, though she had added a white lace ruff, and her green coat was
sewn with
pearls. A close cap of pearls sat atop her dark hair. A slim, pretty
woman, she
offered a simpering curtsy, and somehow made it seem she wanted to kiss
Rand's
hand. Courage was not a word he would have applied to her. Nerve, on
the other
hand… "My Lord Dragon," she cooed. "I wish we could report
complete success, but my Master of the Horse died fighting the
Seanchan, and
you left most of my armsmen in Illian. Still, we managed to strike a
blow in
your name."
"Success?
A blow?" Alannas scowl took in Weiramon and Anaiyella both before she
twisted back around to face Rand. "They landed at the Stone's docks
with
one ship, but they put most of their armsmen and all the mercenaries
they hired
in Cairhien ashore from the rest upriver. With orders to enter the city
and
attack the rebels." She made a sound of disgust. "The only result was
a great many men dead and our negotiations with the rebels thrown back
to the
beginning." Anaiyella's simper took on a sickly twist.
"My
plan was to sortie from the Stone and attack them from both sides."
Weiramon protested. "Darlin refused. Refused!"
Darlin
was not grinning now. He stood with his feet apart, and looked a man
who wished
he had a sword in his hand rather than a goblet. "I told you then,
Weiramon. If I stripped the Stone of Defenders, the rebels would still
have
outnumbered us badly. Too badly. They've hired every sell-sword from
the Erinin
to the Bay of Remara."
Rand
took a chair, flinging one arm over the back. The heavy arms had no
supports at
the front, so his sword was no problem. Caraline and Min seemed to have
switched their talk to clothing. At least, they were fingering each
other's
coats, and he heard words like back-stitch and bias-cut. whatever that
meant.
Alanna's gaze drifted between him and Min. and he felt disbelief
warring with
suspicion along the bond. "I left you two in Cairhien because I wanted
you
in Cairhien," he said. He trusted neither, but they could cause small
harm
in Cairhien, where they were outlanders without power. Anger heated by
nausea
entered his voice. "You will make plans to return there as soon as
possible. As soon as possible.'
Anaiyella's
simper grew more sickly, and she cringed slightly.
Weiramon
was made of sterner stuff. "My Lord Dragon, I will serve you where you
command, but I can serve best on my native soil. I know these rebels,
know
where they can be trusted and where-"
"As
soon as possible!" Rand snapped, slamming his fist down on the chair
arm
hard enough to make the wood creak loudly.
"One,"
Cadsuane said, quite clearly and quite incomprehensibly.
"I
strongly suggest you do as he says, Lord Weiramon." Nynaeve eyed
Weiramon
blandly, took a sip of wine. "He has a temper lately, worse than ever,
and
you don't want it directed at you."
Cadsuane
exhaled a heavy breath. "Stay out of this, girl," she said sharply.
Nynaeve glared at her, opened her mouth, then grimaced and closed it
again.
Gripping her braid, she glided across the carpet to join Min and
Caraline. She
had gotten very good at gliding.
Weiramon
studied Cadsuane fora moment, tilting back his head so he was staring
down his
nose. "As the Dragon Reborn commands," he said finally, "so does
Weiramon Saniago obey. My ship can be readied to sail by tomorrow, I
wager.
Will that suffice?"
Rand
nodded curtly. It would have to answer. He was not about to waste a
moment
making a gateway to send this pair of fools where they belonged today.
"There's hunger in the city," he said, eyeing the golden bear-how
many days would that much gold feed Tear? The thought of food made his
stomach
clench-and waited tor a response that was quick in coming, if not from
the
direction he expected.
"Darlin
had cattle and sheep herded down to the city," Caraline said with some
considerable warmth. Rand was the one getting the dagger look, now.
"These
days…" She faltered for a moment, though the heat never left her
gaze. "These days, meat is inedible two days after slaughter, so he had
the animals brought, and wagons full of grain. Estanda and her
companions
seized it all for themselves."
Darlin
gave her a fond smile, but his voice was apologetic. "I've tried three
times, but Estanda is greedy, it seems. I saw no point in continuing to
supply
my enemies. Your enemies."
Rand
nodded. At least the man was not ignoring the situation in the city.
"There are two boys who live outside the walls. Doni and Com. I don't
know
any more name than that. About age ten. Once the rebels are settled and
you can
leave the Stone, I would appreciate it if you found them and kept an
eye on
them." Min made a sound in her throat, and the bond carried sadness so
bleak it almost overwhelmed the burst of love that came with it. So. It
must
have been death she saw. But she had been wrong about Moiraine. Maybe
this
viewing could be changed by a ta'veren.
No,
Lews Therin growled. Her viewing* must not change. We have to die! Rand
ignored
him.
Darlin
appeared puzzled by the request, but he acceded, as what else was he to
do when
the Dragon Reborn made it?
Rand
was about to bring up the purpose of his visit when Bera Harkin,
another of the
Aes Sedai he had sent to Tear to deal with the rebels, entered the room
frowning over her shoulder as if the Maidens had made some difficulty
for her.
They might well have. The Aiel considered the Aes Sedai sworn to him to
be Wise
Ones' apprentices, and Maidens took every opportunity to remind
apprentices
that they were not Wise Ones yet. She was a stocky woman, with brown
hair cut
close around a square face, and despite her green silks, lacking Aes
Sedai
agelessness she would have looked a farmwife. A farmwife who ruled her
house
and farm with a firm hand, though, and would tell a king not to track
mud into
her kitchen. She was Green Ajah, after all, with every scrap of Green
Ajah
pride and haughtiness. She frowned at Alivia. too, with all the disdain
of Aes
Sedai for wilder, and that faded only to coolness when she caught sight
of
Rand.
"Well,
I must say I shouldn't be surprised to see you, considering what's
happened this
morning." she said. Unpinning her simple silver cloak brooch, she
fastened
it to her belt pouch and folded the cloak over her arm. "Though it
might
have been the news that the others are no more than a day west of the
Erinin."
"The
others? Rand said quietly. Quietly and steely hard.
Bera
did not seem impressed. She went on arranging the folds of her cloak.
"The
other High Lords and Ladies, of course. Sunamon, Tolmeran, all of them.
Apparently they're traveling hot-foot for Tear as fast their armsmen's
horses
can move."
Rand
leaped up so fast that his sword bound for a moment on the chair arm.
Only a
moment because the gilded wood, weakened by his earlier blow, split
with a loud
crack, and the arm dropped to the carpet. He never so much as glanced
at it.
The fools! The Seanchan at the border with Altara, and they were coming
back to
Tear? "Doesn't anybody remember how to obey?" he thundered. "I
want messengers sent to them immediately! They're to return to Illian
faster
than they left or I'll have the lot of them hanged!"
"Two,"
Cadsuane said. What in the Light was she counting? "A bit of advice,
boy.
Ask her what happened this morning. I smell good news."
Bera
gave a little start at realizing Cadsuane was in the room. Eyeing her
sideways,
and cautiously, she stopped fiddling with her cloak. "We've reached
agreement." she said as if the question had been asked. "Tedosian and
Simaan were wavering, as usual, but Hearne was nearly as adamant as
Estanda." She shook her head. "I think Tedosian and Simaan might have
come around sooner, but some fellows with strange accents have been
promising
them gold and men."
"Seanchan,"
Nynaeve said. Alivia opened her mouth, then closed it without speaking.
"They
might be," Bera allowed. "They keep clear of us and look at us like
we were mad dogs that might bite any moment. That sounds like what
little I've
heard of Seanchan. In any case, less than an hour gone, Estanda
suddenly began
asking whether the Lord Dragon would restore her title and lands, and
they all
collapsed right behind her. The agreement is this. Darlin is accepted
as
Steward in Tear for the Dragon Reborn, all laws you made remain
unchanged, and
they pay for feeding the city for one year as a fine for rebellion. In
return,
they receive full restoration, Darlin is crowned King of Tear, and they
swear
fealty to him. Merana and Rafela are preparing the documents for
signatures and
seals."
"King?"
Darlin said incredulously. Caraline swayed over to take his arm.
"Restoration?"
Rand growled, hurling his goblet aside in a spray of wine. The bond
carried
caution, a warning from Min, but he was too angry to pay heed. The
sickness
twisting his insides twisted his rage. too. "Blood and bloody ashes! I
stripped them of lands and titles for rebelling against me. They can
stay
commoners and swear fealty to me!"
"Three,"
Cadsuane said, and Rand's skin popped out in goose bumps an instant
before
something struck him across the bottom like a hard-swung switch. Bera's
lips parted
in shock, and the cloak slid off her arm to the floor. Nynaeve laughed.
She
smothered it quickly, but she laughed! "Don't make me have to keep
reminding you about manners. boy." Cadsuane went on. "Alanna told me
the terms you offered before she left-Darlin as Steward, your laws
kept,
everything else on the table-and it seems they've been met. You can do
as you
wish, of course, but another piece of advice. When the terms you offer
are
accepted, hold to them."
Else
no one will trust you, Lews Therin said, sounding entirely sane. For
the
moment.
Rand
glared at Cadsuane, fists clenched hard, on the brink of weaving
something that
would singe her. He could feel a welt on his bottom, and would feel it
more in
the saddle. It seemed to pulse, and his anger pulsed with it. She
peered back
calmly over her wine. Was there a hint of challenge in her gaze, of
daring him
to channel? The woman spent every moment in his presence challenging
him! The
trouble was, her advice was good. He had given Alanna those terms. He
had
expected them to bargain harder, gain more, but they had gotten what he
actually asked for. More. He had not thought of fines.
"It
seems your fortunes have risen, King Darlin," he said. One of the
serving
women curtsied and handed Rand another goblet full of wine. Her face
was as
calm as any Aes Sedai's. You might have thought men arguing with
sisters was a
matter of every day with her.
"All
hail King Darlin," Weiramon intoned, sounding half strangled, and after
a
moment Anaiyella echoed him. as breathless as if she had run a mile.
Once, she
had talked of herself for a crown in Tear.
"But
why would they want me as King?" Darlin said, scrubbing a hand through
his
hair. "Or anyone. There've been no kings in the Stone since Moreina
died,
a thousand years ago. Or did you demand that, Bera Sedai?"
Bera
straightened from picking up her cloak and began shaking it out. "It
was
their… 'demand' would be too strong… their suggestion. Any of them
would have leapt at the chance of a throne, especially Estanda."
Anaiyella
made a choking sound. "But of course, they knew there was no hope of
that.
This way, they can swear to you instead of to the Dragon Reborn, making
it
slightly less distasteful."
"And
if you are king," Caraline put in, "it means that Steward in Tear for
the Lord Dragon becomes a lesser title." She laughed throatily. "They
may even tack on three or four more noble sounding titles to try
pushing it
down to obscurity." Bera pursed her lips as though she had been about
to bring
up that very point.
"And
would you marry a king, Caraline?" Darlin asked. "I'll accept the
crown, if you will. Though I'll have to have a crown made."
Min
cleared her throat. "I can tell you how it should look, if you like."
Caraline
laughed again and released Darlin's arm, swaying away from him. "I will
have to see you in it before I could answer that. Have Min's crown
made, and if
it makes you look pretty…" She smiled. "Then perhaps I will
consider it."
"I
wish you both the best," Rand said curtly, "but there are more
important matters to go into right now." Min gave him a sharp look,
disapproval flooding the bond. Nynaeve gave him a sharp look. What was
that
about? "You will accept that crown, Darlin, and as soon as those
documents
are signed, I want you to arrest those Seanchan, then gather every man
in Tear
who knows one end of sword or halberd from the other. I'll arrange for
Asha'man
to take you to Arad Doman."
"And
me, my Lord Dragon?" Weiramon asked avidly. He all but quivered with
eagerness, managing to strut while standing still. "If there is
fighting
to be done, I can serve you better there than languishing in Cairhien.'
Rand
studied the man. And Anaiyella. Weiramon was a bungling idiot, and he
trusted
neither, but he could not see what harm they could do with no more than
a
handful of followers. "Very well. You two may accompany the High Lord…
that is, King Darlin." Anaiyella gulped as though she for one would
rather return to Cairhien.
"But
what am I supposed to do in Arad Doman?'' Darlin wanted to know. "The
little I've heard of that land, it's a madhouse." Lews Therin laughed
wildly in Rand's head.
"Tarmon
Gai'don is coming soon," Rand said. The Light send not too soon. "You
are going to Arad Doman to get ready for Tarmon Gai'don."
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
To Make an Anchor Weep
Despite
the pitching induced by the long blue rollers, Harine din Togara sat
very
straight alongside her sister, just ahead of their parasol bearers and
the
steersman at his long tiller. Shalon seemed intent on studying the
twelve men
and women working the oars. Or perhaps she was deep in thought. There
was
plenty to think on of late, not least this meeting Harine had been
summoned to,
but she let her thoughts drift blindly. Composing herself. Every time
the First
Twelve of the Atha'an Miere met since she had attained Illian, she had
needed
to compose herself before attending. When she reached Tear and found
Zaida's
Blue Gull still anchored in the river, she had been sure the woman was
in
Caemlyn yet, or at least trailing far behind her own wake. A painful
mistake,
that. Though in truth, very little would have been altered had Zaida
been weeks
behind. Not for Harine, at least. No. No thoughts of Zaida.
The
sun stood only a fist above the horizon in the east, and several
vessels of the
shorebound were making for the long breakwater that guarded Illian's
harbor.
One carried three masts and a semblance of a high-rig. all the major
sails
square, yet he was squat and ill-handled, wallowing through the low
rolling
seas in fountains of spray rather than slicing them. Most were small
and
low-rigged, their triangular sails nearly all high-boomed. Some seemed
quick
enough, but since the shorebound seldom sailed beyond sight of land and
usually
anchored at night for fear of shoals, their quickness availed them
little.
Cargo that required true speed went to Atha'an Miere ships. At a
premium price,
to be sure. It was a small portion of what Atha'an Miere carried, in
part
because of the price, in part because few things actually required
their speed.
Besides, cargo hire guaranteed some profit, but when the Cargomaster
traded on
his own for the ship, all of the profit went to vessel and clan.
As
far as the eye could see to east and west along the coastline, Atha'an
Miere
ships lay at anchor, rakers and skimmers, soarers and darters, most
surrounded
by bumboats so cluttered they looked like drunken shore festivals.
Rowed out
from the city, the bumboats offered for sale everything from dried
fruit to
quartered beeves and sheep, from iron nails and iron stock to swords
and
daggers, from gaudy trinkets of Illian that might catch a deckhand's
eye to
gold and gems. Though the gold was usually a thin plate that wore off
in a few
months to show the brass beneath and the gems colored glass. They
brought rats,
too. if not for sale. Anchored so long, every ship was plagued by rats,
now.
Rats and spoilage made sure there was always a market for the peddlers.
Bumboats
also surrounded the massive Seanchan-built vessels, dozens upon dozens
of them,
that had been used in the Escape. That was what it was being called,
now, the
great Escape from Ebou Dar. Say the Escape, and no one asked what
escape you
meant. Great bluff-bowed things they were, twice the beam of a raker
and more,
some, suitable for battering through heavy seas perhaps, but strangely
rigged
and with odd ribbed sails too stiff for proper setting. Men and women
were
swarming over those masts and yards now, altering the rigging to
something more
usable. No one wanted the craft, but the shipyards would require years
to
replace all of the vessels lost at Ebou Dar. And the expense! Overly
beamy or
not, those ships would see many years of use. No Sailmistress had any
desire to
sink into debt, borrowing from the clan coffers, when most if not all
of her
own gold was being salvaged by the Seanchan in Ebou Dar, not unless she
had no
other choice. Some, unlucky enough to have neither their own ships nor
one of
the Seanchan's, did have no other choice.
Harine's
twelve passed the heavy wall of the breakwater, thick with dark slime
and long
hairy weed that the breakers crashing against the gray stone failed to
dislodge, and the broad, gray-green harbor of Illian
opened up
before her, ringed with deep expanses of marsh, just turning from
winter brown
to green in patches, where long-legged birds waded. A line of mist
drifted
across the boat on a gentle breeze, dampening her hair before it passed
on up
the harbor. Small fishing boats were pulling their nets along the edges
of the
marsh, a dozen sorts of gull and tern wheeling overhead to steal what
they
could. The city did not interest her beyond the long stone docks, lined
with
trading craft, but the harbor… That broad, nearly circular expanse of
water was the greatest anchorage known, and filled with shipping and
river
craft, most waiting their turn at the docks. It truly was filled, by
hundreds
of vessels in every shape and size, and not all of those ships belonged
to the
shorebound. There were only rakers here, those slender three-masters
that could
race porpoises. Rakers and three of the ungainly Seanchan
monstrosities. They
were the vessels of Wavemistresses and of Sailmistresses who formed the
First
Twelve of each clan, those that could be fitted into the harbor before
there
was no more room. Even Lilian's anchorage had its limits, and the
Council of
Nine, not to mention this Steward in Illian for the Dragon Reborn,
would have
made trouble had the Atha'an Miere begun crowding their trade.
Abruptly
a strong, icy wind came up out of the north. No. it did not come up; it
just
suddenly was there full strength, whipping the harbor to choppy
whitecaps and
carrying a smell of pines and something… earthy. She knew little of
trees,
but much of timbers used in building ships. Though she did not think
there were
many pines anywhere near to Illian. Then she noticed the mist line.
While ships
rocked and pitched under that southerly blast, the mist continued its
slow
drift northward. Keeping her hands on her knees required effort. She
wanted
very much to wipe the dampness out of her hair. She had thought after
Shadar
Logoth that nothing ever would shake her again, but she had seen too
many…
oddities… of late, oddities that spoke of the world twisting.
As
abruptly as it had come, the wind was gone. Murmurs rose, the stroke
faltered,
and the number four port oar caught a crab, splashing water into the
boat. The
crew knew winds did not behave that way.
"Steady
there," Harine said firmly. "Steady!"
"Give
way together, you shorebound ragpickers," her deckmistress shouted from
the bow. Lean and leathery, Jadein had leather lungs as well. "Do I
need
to call the stroke for you?" The twin insults tightened some faces in
anger, others in chagrin, but the oars began moving smoothly again.
Shalon
was studying the mist, now. Asking what she saw, what she thought,
would have
to wait. Harine was not sure she wanted the answer heard by any of her
crew.
They had seen enough to have them frightened already.
The
steersman turned the twelve toward one of the bulky Seanchan ships,
where any
bumboat that ventured near was being chased away before the peddler
could get
out two words. It was one of the largest of them, with a towering
sterncastle
that had three levels. Three! And the thing actually had a pair of
balconies
across the stern! She would not care to see what a following sea driven
by a
cemaros or one of the Aryth Ocean's soheens would do to those. Other
twelves
and a few eights waited their turn to sidle up to the vessel in the
order of
precedence of their passengers.
Jadein
stood up in the bow and bellowed, "Shodein!" Her voice carried well,
and a twelve that was approaching the ship circled away. The others
continued
their waiting.
Harine
did not stand until the crew had backed oars, and drawn them in on the
starboard, bringing the twelve to a smooth halt right where Jadein
could catch
a dangling line and hold the small craft alongside the larger. Shalon
sighed.
"Courage,
sister," Harine told her. "We have survived Shadar Lo-goth, though
the Light help me, I am unsure what we survived." She barked a laugh.
"More than that, we survived Cadsuane Melaidhrin, and I doubt anyone
else
here could do that."
Shalon
smiled weakly, but at least she smiled.
Harine
scrambled up the rope ladder as easily as she could have twenty years
before
and was piped aboard by the deckmaster, a squat fellow with a fresh
scar
running under the leather patch that covered where his right eye had
been. Many
had taken wounds in the Escape. Many had died. Even the deck of this
ship felt
strange beneath her bare feet, the planking laid in an odd pattern. The
side
was manned properly, however, twelve bare-chested men to her left,
twelve women
in bright linen blouses to her right, all bowing till they were looking
straight down at the deck. She waited for Shalon and the parasol
bearers to
join her before starting forward. The vessel's Sailmistress and
Windfinder, at
the end of the rows, bowed less deeply while touching hearts, lips and
foreheads.
Both wore waist-long white mourning stoles that all but hid their many
necklaces, as did she and Shalon.
"The
welcome of my ship to you, Wavemistress," the Sailmistress said,
sniffing
her scent box, "and the grace of the Light be upon you until you leave
his
decks. The others await you in the great cabin."
"The
grace of the Light be upon you also." Harine replied. Turane, in blue
silk
trousers and a red silk blouse, was stocky enough to make her
Windfinder,
Serile, look slender rather than average, and she had a gimlet eye and
a sour
twist to her mouth, but neither those nor the sniffing was meant for
discourtesy. Turane was not that bold. The gaze was the same she gave
everyone,
her own vessel lay at the bottom of the harbor at Ebou Dar. and the
harbor did
stink after the clean air of the open salt.
The
great cabin ran nearly the whole length of the tall sterncastle, a
space clear
of any furniture save for thirteen chairs and a table against the
bulkhead that
held tall-necked wine pitchers and goblets of yellow porcelain, and two
dozen
women in brocaded silks could not come near filling it. She was the
last of the
First Twelve of the Atha'an Miere to arrive, and the reaction to her
among the
other Wavemistresses was what she had come to expect. Lincora and
Wallein
turned their backs very deliberately. Round-faced Niolle gave her a
scowl, then
stalked over to refill her goblet. Lacine. so slender that her bosom
seemed
immense, shook her head as if wondering at Harine's presence. Others
went on
chatting as if she were not there. All wore the mourning stoles, of
course.
Pelanna
strode across the deck to her, the long pink scar down the right side
of her
square face giving her a dangerous look. Her tightly curled hair was
nearly all
gray, the honor chain across her left cheek heavy with gold medallions
recording her triumphs, including one for her part in the Escape. Her
wrists
and ankles still bore the marks of Seanchan chains, though hidden by
her silks
now. "I hope you are quite recovered, Harine, the Light willing," she
said, tilting her head to one side and clasping her plump, tattooed
hands in
mock sympathy. "Not still sitting tender, are you? I put a cushion on
your
chair just in case."
She
laughed uproariously, looking to her Windfinder, but Caire gave her a
blank
look, as if she had not heard, then added a faint laugh. Pelanna
frowned. When
she laughed at anything, she expected those under her to laugh as well.
The
stately Windfinder had her own worries, however, a daughter missing
among the
shorebound, abducted by Aes Sedai. There would be repayment for that.
One did
not need to like Caire or Pelanna to know that was necessary.
Harine
favored the pair with a tight smile and brushed by Pelanna closely
enough that
the woman had to step back or have her feet trodden on, scowling as she
did.
Daughter of the sands, Harine thought sourly.
Mareil's
approach brought a genuine smile, however. The tall, slender woman, her
shoulder-length hair as much white as black, had been her friend since
they
began as deckhands together on an aging raker with an iron-handed
Sailmistress
embittered by her lack of prospects. Learning that Mareil had escaped
Ebou Dar,
and unharmed, had been a joy. She favored Pelanna and Caire with a
frown.
Tebreille, her Windfinder, also grimaced at the pair, but unlike them,
it was
not because Mareil demanded wrist-licking. Sisters, Tebreille and Caire
shared
a deep concern for Talaan, Caire's daughter, yet beyond that, either
would have
slit the other's throat for a copper. Or better, in their view, seen
her sister
reduced to cleaning the bilges. There was no hatred deeper than hatred
between
siblings.
"Don't
let those mud-ducks peck at you, Harine." Mareil's voice was deep for a
woman, but melodious. She handed Harine one of the two goblets she
carried.
"You did what you felt you had to do, and the Light willing, all will
come
right."
Against
her will, Harine's eyes went to the ringbolt set in one of the beams of
the
overhead. It could have been removed by now. She was sure it remained
for the
purpose of provoking her. That strange young woman Min had been right.
Her
Bargain with the Coramoor had been judged deficient, giving away too
much and
demanding too little in return. In this same cabin, with the rest of
the First
Twelve and the new Mistress of the Ships watching, she had been
stripped and
hung by her ankles from that ringbolt, stretched tight to another set
in the
deck, then strapped until she howled her lungs out. The welts and
bruises had
faded, but the memory lingered however hard she tried to suppress it.
Not howls
for mercy or respite, though. Never that, else she would have had no
alternative to stepping aside, becoming just a Sailmistress again while
someone
else was chosen Wavemistress of Clan Shodein. Most of the women in this
room
believed she should have done so anyway after such a punishment,
perhaps even
Mareil. But she had the other part of Min's foretelling to bolster her
courage.
She would be Mistress of the Ships one day. In law, the First Twelve of
the
Atha'an Miere could choose any Sailmistress as Mistress of the Ships,
yet only
five times in more than three thousand years had they reached outside
their own
number. The Aes Sedai said Min's peculiar visions always came true, but
she did
not intend to gamble.
"All
will come right, Mareil, the Light willing," she said. Eventually. She
just had to have the courage to ride out whatever came before.
As
usual, Zaida arrived without ceremony, striding in followed by Shielyn.
her
Windfinder, tall and slim and reserved, and Amylia, the bosomy,
pale-haired Aes
Sedai Zaida had brought back with her from Caemlyn. Ageless face
seeming
permanently surprised, her startling blue eyes very wide, the Aes Sedai
was
breathing heavily for some reason. Everyone bowed, but Zaida paid the
courtesies no heed. In green brocades and white mourning stole, she was
short,
with a close cap of graying curls, yet she managed to make herself seem
every
bit as tall as Shielyn. A matter of presence, Harine had to admit.
Zaida had
that, and a coolness of thought that being caught by a cemaros on a lee
shore
could not shake. In addition to returning with the first of the Aes
Sedai
agreed to in the bargain for use of the Bowl of the Winds, she also had
returned with her own bargain, for land in Andor under Atha'an Miere
law, and
where Marine's Bargain had been judged wanting, Zaida's had found great
favor.
That and the fact that she had come straight to Illian via one of those
peculiar gateways, woven by her own Windfinder, were not the only
reasons that
she was now Mistress of the Ships, but neither had hurt her cause.
Harine
herself thought this Traveling overrated. Shalon could make a gateway,
now, but
making one to the deck of a ship without causing damage, even on still
waters
like these, especially from the deck of another ship, was chancy at
best, and
no one could make one large enough to sail a ship through. Very
overrated.
"The
man has not arrived yet,'' Zaida announced, taking the chair with its
back to
the large stern windows and arranging her long, fringed red sash just
so,
adjusting the angle of the emerald-studded dagger thrust through the
sash. She
was a very particular woman. It was natural enough to want everything
in its
place on board a ship-tidiness became a habit as well as a
necessity-yet she
was exacting even by the usual standards. The remaining chairs, none
fastened
to the deck in proper fashion, made two rows facing each other, and the
Wavemistresses began taking their seats, each woman's Windfinder
standing
behind her chair. "It appears he intends us to wait on him. Amylia, see
that the goblets are all filled." Ah. It seemed the woman had put her
foot
wrong yet again.
Amylia
jumped, then gathered her bronze-colored skirts to her knees and went
racing
for the table where the wine pitchers sat. Badly wrong, it appeared.
Harine
wondered how long Zaida would continue to allow her to wear dresses
rather than
trousers, which were much more practical shipboard. It would surely be
a shock
to her when they passed beyond sight of land and blouses were
abandoned. Of the
Brown Ajah, Amylia had wanted to study the Atha'an Miere, but she was
given
little time for study. Her purpose was to work, and Zaida saw that she
did. She
was there to teach the Windfinders all that the Aes Sedai knew. She
still
dithered over that, but shorebound instructors, rare as they were,
ranked
barely a whisker above the deckhands- in the beginning, the woman
apparently
had believed her dignity fully equal to Zaida's if not more!-and the
deckmaster's flail laid with some frequent regularity across her rump
supposedly was changing her mind, if slowly. Amylia had actually tried
to
desert three times! Strangely, she did not know how to make a gateway,
knowledge that carefully was being kept from her, and she should have
known she
was being watched too closely to bribe her way onto a bumboat. Well,
she was
unlikely to try again. Reportedly she had been told that a fourth
attempt would
earn a public strapping this time followed by being hung by her ankles
in the
rigging. No one would risk that shame, surely. Sailmistresses and even
Wavemistresses had been reduced to deckhands and gone willingly after
that,
eager to lose themselves and their disgrace in the mass of men and
women
hauling lines and handling sail.
Removing
the cushion from the seat of her chair and dropping it disdainfully on
the
deck, Harine took her place at the bottom of the left-hand row, Shalon
at her
back. She was the least senior except for Mareil. seated across from
her. But
then, Zaida would have sat only one chair farther up had she not gained
the
sixth fat golden earring for each ear and the chains that connected
them. Her
lobes might still be sore from the piercings. A pleasant thought. "As
he
makes us wait, perhaps we should make him wait when he finally does
appear." With an untouched goblet in hand, she waved away the anxious
Aes
Sedai, who scurried over to Mareil. Foolish woman. Did she not know she
should
have served the Mistress of the Ships first and then followed with the
Wavemistresses by seniority}
Zaida
toyed with her piercework scent box, hanging on a very heavy golden
chain
around her neck. She wore a wide, close-fitting collar of heavy gold
links,
too, a gift from Elayne of Andor. "He comes from the Coramoor," she
said dryly, "whom you were supposed to stick to like a barnacle." Her
voice never hardened, but every word cut at Harine. "This man will be
as
close as I can come to speaking to the Coramoor without dire need,
since you
agreed he did not have to attend me more than three times in any period
of two
years. Because of you, I must accept this man's discourtesy if he turns
out to
be a scabrous drunkard who must run to the rail and empty his stomach
every
second sentence. The ambassador I send to the Coramoor will be someone
who
knows how to obey her orders." Pelanna tittered and smirked. She
thought
everyone was like herself.
Shalon
squeezed Harine's shoulder reassuringly, but she did not need it. Stay
with the
Coramoor? There was no way she could explain to anyone, even Shalon,
Cadsuane's
rude methods of enforcing her will or her total lack of respect for
Harine's
dignity. She had been an ambassador from the Atha'an Miere in name, and
forced
to dance to any tune the Aes Sedai piped. She was willing to admit, if
only to
herself, that she had almost wept with relief when she realized that
cursed
woman was going to let her leave. Besides, that girl's visions always
came
true. So the Aes Sedai said, and they could not lie. It was enough.
Turane
slipped into the cabin and bowed to Zaida. "The Coramoor's emissary has
arrived, Shipmistress. He… he stepped out of a gateway on the
quarterdeck." That created murmurs among the Windfinders, and Amylia
jerked as though she had felt the deckmas-ter's flail again.
"I
hope he did not damage your deck too badly, Turane," Zaida said. Harine
sipped wine to hide her small smile. Apparently the man was to be made
to wait
a little, at least.
"Not
at all, Shipmistress." Turane sounded surprised. "The gateway opened
a good foot above the deck, and he stepped through from one of the
city's
docks."
"Yes,"
Shalon whispered. "I can see how to do that." She thought anything to
do with the Power was wonderful.
"That
must have a shock, seeing a stone dock above your quarterdeck," Zaida
said. "Very well. I will see whether the Coramoor has sent me a
scabrous
drunkard. Send him in, Turane. But do not rush. Amylia, am I to get any
wine
before nightfall?"
The
Aes Sedai gasped and, making little whimpers as if on the point of
tears,
rushed to fetch a goblet as Turane bowed and left. Light, what had
Amylia done?
Long moments passed, and Zaida had her wine well before a large man
with dark
hair curling to his broad shoulders entered the cabin. He certainly was
not
scabrous, nor did he appear drunk. The high collar of his black coat
held a
silver pin in the shape of a sword on one side, and on the other a
red-and-gold
pin shaped like one of the creatures that entwined the Coramoor's
forearms. A
dragon. Yes, that was what it was called. A round pin fastened to his
left
shoulder showed three golden crowns against blue enamel. A sigil,
perhaps? Was
he a shorebound noble? Could the Coramoor actually have done Zaida
honor in
sending this man? Knowing Rand al'Thor as she did, she doubted it had
been
intentional. It was not that he tried to dishonor anyone, yet he cared
little
for the honors of others.
He
bowed to Zaida, handling the sword at his side smoothly, but he failed
to touch
heart and lips and forehead. Still, some shortcomings had to be
overlooked with
the shorebound. "I apologize if I arrive late, Shipmistress," he
said, "but it seemed unnecessary to come before all of your number were
here." He must have a very good looking glass to have observed that
from
the docks.
Studying
him up and down with a frown. Zaida sipped her wine. "You have a
name?"
"I
am Logain," he said simply.
Half
the women in the room exhaled sharply, and most of the rest let their
jaws
drop. More than one slopped wine from her goblet. Not Zaida. and not
Harine.
but the others. Logain. That was a name known even to the Atha'an Miere.
"May
I speak, Shipmistress?" Amylia asked breathily. She was clutching the
porcelain pitcher so hard that Harine feared it might shatter in her
hands, but
the woman had learned enough sense to say no more until Zaida nodded.
Then
words spilled from her in a breathless rush. "This man was a false
Dragon.
He was gentled for it. How it is he can channel again. I cannot know,
but he
channels sa'tdin. Saidin. He is tainted, Shipmistress. If you deal with
him,
you will incur the wrath of the White Tower. I know-"
"Enough,"
Zaida cut in. "You should be well aware by now how much I fear the
wrath
of the White Tower."
"But-!"
Zaida held up a single finger, and the Aes Sedai's mouth snapped shut,
her lips
twisting in a sickly fashion. That one word might lead to her kissing
the
deckmaster's sister again, and she knew it.
"What
she says is true in part," Logain said calmly. "I am an Asha'man, but
there is no taint any longer. Saidin is clean. The Creator decided to
show us
mercy, it seems. I have a question for her. Whom do you serve. Aes
Sedai,
Egwene al'Vere or Elaida a'Roihan?" Wisely, Amylia kept her mouth shut.
"For
the next year, she serves me. Logain," Zaida said firmly. The Aes Sedai
squeezed her pale eyes shut for a moment, and when they opened again,
they were
even wider than before, impossible as that seemed, and they held a look
of
horror. Was it possible she had believed Zaida might relent and let her
go
early? "You can confine your questions to me," the Shipmistress went
on. "but first, I have two for you. Where is the Coramoor? I must send
an
ambassador to him, and he must keep her close, in accordance with the
Bargain.
Remind him of that. And what message do you bring from him? A request
for some
service, I suppose."
"As
to where he is. I cannot say." The man smiled slightly, as if he had
made
a joke. He smiled!
"I
demand," Zaida began, but he cut her off. provoking angry mutters and
hot
glares from the other women. The fool seemed to think he was an equal
to the
Mistress of the Ships!
"He
wants his whereabouts kept secret for now, Shipmistress. The Forsaken
have made
efforts to kill him. I am willing to take Harine din Togara with me.
however.
From what I heard, I think he found her acceptable."
Harine
jerked so hard she spilled wine over the back of her hand, then took
another
long swallow. But. no, Zaida would divorce Amel and marry a ballast
stone
before she sent Harine din Togara as her ambassador. Still, even the
thought of
it was enough to make her tongue stick to the roof of her mouth. Even
becoming
Mistress of the Ships might be insufficient recompense for being forced
to
endure Cadsuane any longer.
Studying
Logain with a stony face. Zaida told Amylia to pour wine for him. The
Aes Sedai
flinched, and by the time she reached the table, she was trembling so
hard that
the pitcher's spout clattered on the rim of the goblet. Almost as much
wine
went onto the deck as inside the goblet. Strangely, Logain walked over
to her
and put his hands on hers to steady her. Was he one of those who could
not
leave others to do their own work?
"You've
nothing to fear from me, Amylia Sedai," he told her. "It's been a
long time since I ate anyone for breakfast." She stared up at him with
her
mouth hanging open as though uncertain whether he was making a joke.
"And
the service he requests?" Zaida said.
"Not
a request, Shipmistress." He had to straighten the pitcher to keep the
goblet from overflowing. Taking the goblet, he stepped away from
Amylia, but
she stood gaping at his back. Light, but the woman found no end of ways
to get
into trouble. "A call on your side of the Bargain with the Coramoor.
Among
other things, you promised him ships, and he needs ships to carry food
and
other supplies to Bandar Eban from Illian and Tear."
"That
can be done" Zaida said, not quite masking her relief, though she shot
a
frown at Harine. Pelanna glared as well, of course, but so did Lacine
and
Niolle and several others. Harine suppressed a sigh.
Some
of the details of the Bargain were quite onerous, she had to admit,
such as the
requirement that the Mistress of the Ships be prepared to attend him up
to
three times in any two years. The Jendai Prophecy said the Atha'an
Miere were
to serve the Coramoor, yet few opinions of how they were to serve
included the
Mistress of the Ships going running when he called. But the others had
not been
there, bargaining with Aes Sedai convinced that she had no alternative
to
making whatever Bargain she could. Truth of the Light, it was a wonder
she had
gotten as much as she had!
"Supplies
for more than a million people, Shipmistress," Logain added as casually
as
if he were asking for another goblet of wine. "How many more, I cannot
say, but Bandar Eban itself is starving. The ships must arrive as soon
as
possible."
Shock
rippled through the cabin. Harine was not alone in taking a long drink
of wine.
Even Zaida's eyes widened in amazement. "That might require more rakers
than we possess," she said at last, unable to keep the incredulity from
her voice.
Logain
shrugged as though that were of no account. "Even so, that is what he
requires of you. Use other ships if you must."
Zaida
stiffened in her chair. Required. Bargain or no Bargain, that was
imprudent
language to use with her.
Turane
slipped into the cabin again, and in breach of all protocol, ran to
Zaida, her
bare feet slapping the deck. Bending close, she whispered into the
Shipmistress's ear. Zaida's face slowly took on a look of horror. She
half-raised her scent box, then shuddered and let it fall to her bosom.
"Send
her in," she said. "Send her in immediately. There is news to make an
anchor weep," she went on as Turane raced from the cabin. "I will let
you hear it from she who brought it. You must wait," she added when
Logain
opened his mouth. "You must wait." He had sufficient sense to hold
his peace, but not enough to hide his impatience, stalking to the side
of the
cabin to stand with his mouth tight and his brows drawn down.
The
young woman who entered and bowed deeply to Zaida was tall and lean,
and she
might have been lovely except that her face was haggard. Her blue linen
blouse
and green trousers looked as if they had been worn for days, and she
swayed on
her feet with weariness. Her honor chain held only a handful of
medallions, as
befitted her youth, yet Harine could see that no fewer than three
commended
acts of great courage.
"I
am Cemeille din Selaan Long Eyes, Shipmistress," she said hoarsely,
"Sailmistress of the darter Wind Racer. I sailed as fast as I could,
but I
fear it is too late for anything to be done. I stopped at every island
between
Tremalking and here, but I was always too late." Tears began to trickle
down her cheeks, yet she seemed unaware of them.
"Tell
the First Twelve your sad news in your own way, at your own pace."
Zaida
said gently. "Amylia, give her wine!" Not gently said at all. The Aes
Sedai leaped to obey.
"Almost
three weeks ago," Cemeille said, "Amayar on Tremalking began asking
the gift of passage to every island. Always a man and a woman to each
island.
Those who asked for Aile Somera requested they be put off in boats out
of sight
of land when they were told that the Seanchan hold all of Somera." She
took a full goblet from Amylia, nodding her thanks, then drank deeply.
Harine
exchanged questioning glances with Mareil, who shook her head slightly.
No
Amayar had ever requested the gift of passage in Harine's memory,
though for
them, it truly was a gift, with no gift expected in return. And they
avoided
the salt, keeping their small fishing boats close to shore, so asking
to be put
off out of sight of land was as strange as asking passage. But what
could be so
dire in this?
"All
of the Amayar in the ports left, even those owed money from the
shipyards or
the ropewalks, but no one thought anything of it for two or three
days."
The wine had not wet Cemeille's throat enough to mitigate her
hoarseness. She
scrubbed at the tears on her cheeks with the back of her hand. "Not
until
we realized none had come back. The governor sent people to the Amayar
villages, and they found…" She squeezed her eyes shut. "The
Amayar were all dead or dying. Men. women"-her voice
broke-"children."
Funeral
keening rose in the cabin, and Harine was surprised to realize that
shrill
sound was coming from her mouth, too. Sad enough to make an anchor
weep? This
should make the heavens sob. No wonder the Sailmistress was hoarse. How
many
hours, how many days, had she cried since learning of this catastrophe?
"How?*'
Pelanna demanded when the keening died. Face distraught, she leaned
forward in
her chair. She was holding her scent box to her nose as if the scent
could
somehow ward off the stench of this news. "Some sickness? Speak,
woman!"
"Poison,
Wavemistress." Cemeille replied. She struggled to compose herself, but
tears still leaked down her face. "Everywhere I have been, it was the
same. They gave their children a poison that put them into a deep sleep
from
which they did not waken. It seems there was not enough of that to go
around,
so many of the adults took slower poisons. Some lived long enough to be
found
and tell the tale. The Great Hand on Tremalking melted. The hill where
it stood
reportedly is now a deep hollow. It seems the Amayar had prophecies
that spoke
of the Hand, and when it was destroyed, they believed this signaled the
end of
time, what they called the end of Illusion. They believed it was time
for them
to leave this… this illusion"-she laughed the word bitterly- "we
call the world."
"Have
none been saved?" Zaida asked. "None at all?" Tears glistened on
her cheeks, too, but Harine could not fault her on that. Her own cheeks
were
wet.
"None,
Shipmistress."
Zaida
stood, and tears or no tears, she held the aura of command, and her
voice was
steady. "The fastest ships must be sent to every island. Even to those
of
Aile Somera. A way must be found. When the salt first stilled after the
Breaking, the Amayar asked our protection from brigands and raiders,
and we owe
them protection still. If we can find only a handful who still live, we
still
owe it."
"This
is as sad a story as I have ever heard." Logain's voice sounded too
loud
as he walked back out in front of Zaida. "But your ships are committed
to
Bandar Eban. If you don't have enough rakers, then you must use your
other fast
ships, too. All of them if necessary."
"Are
you mad as well as heartless?" Zaida demanded. Fists on her hips and
feet
apart, she seemed to be standing on a quarterdeck. Her glare stabbed at
Logain.
"We must mourn. We must save who we can, and mourn for the countless
thousands we cannot save."
She
might as well have smiled for all the effect her glares had on Logain.
As he
spoke, it seemed to Harine that the space turned chill and the light
dimmed.
She was not the only woman to hug herself against that cold. "Mourn if
you
must." he said, "but mourn on the march for Tarmon Gai'don."
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
Call to a Sitting
W
ith Magla and Salita out for the morning, Romanda had the patched brown
tent to
herself, a blessed opportunity to read, though the two mismatched brass
lamps
on the small table gave off a faint yet nose-wrinkling scent of rancid
oil. One
had to live with such things these days. Some might consider The Flame,
the
Blade and the Heart unseemly for one of her attainments and position-
as a girl
in Far Madding, she had been forbidden such books-but it made an
agreeable
change from dry histories and terrifying reports of food spoilage. She
had seen
a side of beef kept for months as fresh as the day the cow was
slaughtered, but
now the Keepings were failing one by one. Some had taken to muttering
that
there must be a flaw in Eg-wene's creation, yet that was arrant
blather. If a
weave worked once. then properly done, it always worked, barring
something to
disrupt the weave, and Egwene's new weaves always worked as claimed.
She had to
give the woman that. And try as they might, and they had tried very
hard, no
one could detect any interference. It was as if saidar itself were
failing. It
was unthinkable. And inescapable. Worst of all, no one could think of
anything
to do! She certainly could not. A brief interlude with tales of romance
and
adventure was much preferable to contemplating utter futility and the
failure of
what was by its very nature unfailing.
The
novice straightening the tent had sense enough not to comment on her
reading,
or to glance at the wood-bound book twice. Bodewhin Cauthon was quite
pretty,
but she was an intelligent girl even so, though she had something of
her
brother around the eyes and rather more of him in her head than she was
willing
to admit. Undoubtedly she was already hard on the path to the Green, or
perhaps
the Blue. The girl wanted to live adventure, not just read about it, as
if an
Aes Sedai's life would not bring her more adventure than she wished
without
searching for it. Romanda felt no regret over the girl's path. The
Yellow would
have plenty to choose from among more suitable novices. There could be
no
question of accepting any of the older women, of course, yet that left
a wealth
of choice. She tried to focus on the page. She did enjoy the story of
Birgitte
and Gaidal Cain.
The
tent was not particularly large and was quite crowded. It held a trio
of hard
canvas cots barely softened by thin mattresses stuffed with lumpy wool,
three
ladderback chairs made by distinctly different hands, a rickety
washstand with
a cracked mirror and a chipped blue pitcher standing in the white
basin, and,
along with the table, made steady by a small block of wood under one
leg,
brassbound chests for clothing, bed linens and personal possessions. As
a
Sitter, she could have had the space to herself, but she liked being
able to
keep a close eye on Magla and Salita. Just because they all sat for the
Yellow
was no reason to trust too far. Magla supposedly was her ally in the
Hall yet
went her own way much too often, and Salita seldom did anything else.
Still, it
made for inconvenience aside from crowding. Bodewhin had a great deal
of work,
mainly putting away the dresses and slippers Salita scattered across
the
tattered carpets after deciding they would not do. That woman was
frivolous
enough for a Green. She went through her entire wardrobe every single
morning!
Likely she thought Romanda would have her serving woman straighten-she
always
seemed to think Aelmara was as much in her service as Romanda's-but
Aelmara had
served Romanda for years before she went into retirement, not to
mention
helping her escape Far Madding after a slight misunderstanding a short
time
later. There was no possibility she would require Aelmara to look after
another
sister as well as herself.
She
frowned at the book, not seeing a word. Why in the Light had Magla
insisted on
Salita back in Salidar? In truth, Magla had bandied several names
about, each
more ridiculous than the last, but had settled on Salita once she
decided the
plump Tairen had the best chance of being raised to a chair. Romanda
had thrown
her own support behind Dagdara. a far more suitable candidate, not to
mention
one she thought she could sway without too much difficulty, yet she
herself had
been trying for a chair while Magla already held one. That carried
weight, and
no matter that Romanda had previously held a chair longer than anyone
in living
memory. Well, it was done, and that was that. What could not be cured
must be
endured.
Nisao
ducked into the tent, the light of saidar around her winking out as she
did so.
In the brief instant before the tentflap fell shut. Sarin, her
bald-headed
stump of a Warder, was visible outside, a hand resting on his sword
hilt and
his head swiveling, plainly standing guard.
"May
I speak with you alone?" the diminutive sister said. Short enough to
make
Sarin seem tall, she always minded Romanda of a large-eyed sparrow.
There was
nothing tiny about her powers of observation or her intellect, however.
She had
been a natural choice for the council the Ajahs created to try keeping
an eye
on Egwene, and it was certainly no fault of hers that said council had
had
little or no restraining effect on the woman.
"Of
course. Nisao." Romanda casually closed the book and eased up to tuck
it
beneath the yellow-tasseled cushion on her chair. It would never do to
have
word get around that she was reading that. "It must be almost time for
your next class, Bodewhin. You don't want to be late."
"Oh,
no, Aes Sedai! Sharina would be very upset." Spreading her white skirts
in
a deep curtsy, the novice darted from the tent.
Romanda
compressed her lips. Sharina would be upset. That woman was emblematic
of all
that was wrong with allowing those above eighteen into the novice
ranks. Her
potential was beyond incredible, but that was beside the point. Sharina
Melloy
was a disruption. But how to be rid of her? Her and all the other women
too old
to have had their names written in the novice book in the first place.
Provisions were strictly limited for putting a woman out once her name
was in
the book. Unfortunately, over the years a number of women had been
found to
have lied about their age to gain entrance to the Tower. By a few years
only in
most cases, but allowing them to remain had set precedents. And Egwene
al'Vere
had set another, and worse. There had to be some way to overcome it.
"May
I make us private?" Nisao asked.
"If
you wish. Have you learned something about the negotiations?" Despite
Egwene's capture, talks continued under the pavilion at the foot of the
bridge
in Darein. Or rather, the semblance of talks. They were a farce, a
dumb-show of
obstinacy, yet it was necessary to keep a close eye on the negotiators.
Varilin
had snatched most of that work to herself, claiming Gray Ajah
prerogative, but
Magla found ways to wriggle into the matter whenever she could, and so
did
Saroiya and Takima and Faiselle. Worse than the fact that none of them
seemed
to trust the others to carry out the negotiations-or much at all, for
that
matter-at times, all of them almost seemed to be negotiating for
Elaida. Well,
perhaps it was not that bad. They held fast against the woman's
ridiculous
demand that the Blue Ajah be dissolved and argued, if not nearly with
sufficient force, for Elaida stepping down, but if she-and Lelaine, she
was
forced to admit-did not stiffen their backbones now and then, they
might well
accede to some of Elaida's other odious conditions. Light, at times it
was as
if they had forgotten the entire purpose of marching on Tar Valon!
"Pour
us tea," she went on, gesturing to a painted wooden tray sitting atop
two
stacked chests that held a silver pitcher and several battered pewter
cups,
"and tell me what you've heard."
The
glow surrounded Nisao briefly while she warded the tent and tied off
the weave.
"I know nothing of the negotiations," she said, filling two of the
cups. "I want to ask you to speak to Lelaine."
Romanda
took the proffered cup and used taking a slow swallow to give herself
time for
thought. At least this tea had not yet turned. Lelaine? What could
there be
about Lelaine that required warding? Still, anything that gave her
leverage
against the other woman would be useful. Lelaine seemed entirely too
smug of
late for her to be entirely comfortable about it. She shifted on the
seat
cushion. "Regarding what? Why don't you speak to her yourself? We
haven't
fallen as low as it seems the White Tower has under Elaida."
"I
have spoken to her. Or rather, she has spoken to me. and rather
forcefully." Nisao sat down, and set her cup on the table while she
arranged her yellow-slashed skirts with overly elaborate care. She wore
a small
frown. It seemed she was fiddling for time, too. "Lelaine demanded that
I
stop asking questions about Anaiya and Kairen," she said finally.
"According to her, their murders are Blue Ajah business.''
Romanda
snorted, shifting again. The book's wooden cover was a hard lump
beneath her,
its corners digging into her hip. "That is utter nonsense. But why were
you asking questions? I don't recall you being inquisitive about such
matters."
The
other woman touched her cup to her lips, but if she drank, it was the
tiniest
sip. Lowering the cup, she almost seemed to grow taller, she sat up so
straight. A sparrow becoming a hawk. "Because the Mother ordered me
to."
Romanda
kept her eyebrows from rising only with an effort. So. In the
beginning, she
had accepted Egwene for the same reason she suspected every other
Sitter had.
Certainly Lelaine had done so, once she realized she could not attain
the stole
and staff herself. A malleable young girl would be a puppet in the
hands of the
Hall, and Romanda had fully intended to be the one pulling her strings.
Later,
it had seemed obvious that Siuan was the true puppeteer, and there had
been no
way to stop her short of rebelling against a second Amyrlin, which
surely would
have shattered the rebellion against Elaida. She hoped Lelaine had
ground her
teeth over that half as much as she had. Now Egwene was in Elaida's
hands, yet
in several meetings she had remained cool and collected, determined in
her
course of action and that of the sisters outside Tar Valon's walls.
Romanda
found in herself a grudging respect for the girl. Very grudging, but
she could
not deny it. It had to be Egwene herself. The Hall kept a tight fist on
the
dream ter'angreal. and though no one could find the one Leane had been
loaned
before that dire night, she and Siuan had been practically at each
other's
throats. There was no question of Siuan slipping into Tel'aran'rhiod to
tell
the woman what to say. Was it possible that Nisao had come to the same
conclusion about Egwene without seeing her in the Unseen World? That
council
had stuck very close to her.
"That
is reason enough for you, Nisao?" She could hardly slip the book back
out
without the other woman noticing. She shifted again, but there was no
comfortable position on the thing. She was going to have a bruise if
this
continued.
Nisao
twisted her pewter cup about on the tabletop, but she still did not
look away.
"It is my major reason. In the beginning, I thought she would end up as
your pet. Or Lelaine's. Later, when it was clear she had evaded both of
you, I
thought Siuan must be holding the leash, but I soon learned I was
wrong. Siuan
has been a teacher, I'm sure, and an advisor, and perhaps even a
friend, but
I've seen Egwene call her up short. No one has a leash on Egwene
al'Vere. She
is intelligent, observant, quick to learn and deft. She may become one
of the
great Amyr-lins.'' The bird-like sister gave a sudden, brief laugh. "Do
you realize she will be the longest sitting Amyrlin in history? No one
will
ever live long enough to top her unless she chooses to step down
early."
Smiles faded to solemnity, and perhaps worry. Not because she had
skirted the
edge of violating custom, however. Nisao schooled her face well, but
her eyes
were tight. "If we manage to unseat Elaida, that is."
Hearing
her own thoughts thrown back at her. with emendations, was unnerving. A
great
Amyrlin? Well! It would take many years to see whether that came about.
But
whether or not Egwene managed that considerable and unlikely feat, she
would
discover that the Hall was much less amenable once her war powers
expired.
Romanda Cassin certainly would be. Respect was one thing, becoming a
lapdog
quite another. Standing on the pretext of straightening her deep yellow
skirts,
she drew the book from beneath the cushion as she sat back down and
tried to
drop it surreptitiously. It hit the carpet with a thud, and Nisao's
eyebrows
twitched. Romanda ignored that, pulling the book under the edge of the
table
with her foot.
"We
will." She put more confidence than she felt into that. The peculiar
negotiations and Egwene's continuing imprisonment gave her pause,
forget the
girl's claims that she could undermine Elaida from within. Though it
seemed
half her work had been done by others, if her reporting on the
situation in the
Tower was accurate. But Romanda believed because she had to believe.
She had no
intention of living cut off from her Ajah, accepting penance until
Elaida
thought her fit to be fully Aes Sedai again, no intention of accepting
Elaida
a'Roihan as Amyrlin. Better Lelaine than that, and one argument in her
own mind
for raising Egwene had been that it kept the stole and staff from
Lelaine. No
doubt Lelaine had thought the same concerning her. "And I will inform
Lelaine in no uncertain terms that you can ask any questions you wish.
We must
solve those murders, and the murder of any sister is every sister's
concern.
What have you learned so far?" Not a proper question, perhaps, but
being a
Sitter gave you certain privileges. At least, she had always believed
it did.
Nisao
displayed no pique at being questioned, no hesitation in answering.
"Very
little, I fear,"' she said ruefully, frowning at her winecup. "It
seemed there must be some link between Anaiya and Kairen, some reason
they two
were picked out, but all I've learned so far is that they had been
close
friends for many years. Blues called them and another Blue sister,
Cabriana
Mecandes, 'the Three.' because they were so close. But they were all
closemouthed, too. No one recalls any of them talking about their own
affairs
except with one another. In any event, friendship seems a feeble motive
for
murder. I hope I can find some reason why anyone would want to murder
them,
especially a man who can channel. but I confess, it's a small hope."
Romanda
furrowed her brow. Cabriana Mecandes. She paid little attention to the
other
Ajahs-only the Yellow had any truly useful function: how could any of
their
passions compare to Healing?-yet that name chimed a small gong in the
back of
her head. Why? It would come to her or not. It could not be important.
"Small hopes can grow surprising fruit, Nisao. That's an old saying in
Far
Madding, and it's true. Continue your investigation. In Egwene's
absence, you
may report what you learn to me."
Nisao
blinked, and her jaw tightened briefly, but whether or not reporting to
Romanda
sat well with her, there was little she could do but obey. She could
hardly
claim interference in her affairs. Murder could not be one sister's
affair.
Besides, Magla might have gotten her ridiculous choice for the third
Yellow
Sitter, yet Romanda had secured the position of First Weaver for
herself
easily. After all, she had been head of the Yellow before she retired,
and even
Magla had been unwilling to stand against her. The position carried
much less
power than she would have liked, but at least she could count on
obedience in
most things. From Yellow sisters if not Sitters, at least.
As
Nisao untied her ward against eavesdropping and let it dissipate,
Theodrin
popped into the tent. She was wearing her shawl spread across her
shoulders and
down her arms to display the long fringe, as newly raised sisters often
did.
The willowy Domani had chosen Brown after Egwene granted her that
shawl, but
the Brown had not known what to do with her despite finally accepting
her. They
had seemed ready to largely ignore her. entirely the wrong thing, so
Romanda
had taken her in. Theodrin tried to behave as if she really were Aes
Sedai, yet
she was a bright, levelheaded girl for all that. She spread her brown
woolen
skirts in a curtsy. A small curtsy, but a curtsy. She was well aware
that she
had no right to the shawl until she had been tested. And passed. It
would have
been cruel not to make sure she understood.
"Lelaine
has called a sitting of the Hall." she said breathlessly. "I couldn't
find out why. I ran to tell you, but I didn't want to intrude while the
ward
was up."
"And
rightly not," Romanda said. "Nisao, if you will excuse me. I must see
what Lelaine is about." Gathering her yellow-fringed shawl from atop
one
of the chests holding her clothing, she arranged it over her arms and
checked
her hair in the cracked mirror before herding the others outside and
seeing
them on their way. It was not so much that she thought Nisao would have
looked
for what had made that thud if left in the tent alone, but it was
better to take
no chances. Aelmara would replace the book where it belonged, with
several
similar volumes in the chest that held Romanda's personal possessions.
That had
a very stout lock with only two keys, one kept in her belt pouch, the
other in
Aelmara's.
The
morning was crisp, yet spring had arrived with a rush. The dark clouds
massing
behind Dragonmount's shattered peak would deliver rain rather than
snow, though
not on the camp, it was to be hoped. Many of the tents leaked, and the
camp
streets were a bog already. Horse carts making deliveries splashed mud
from
their high wheels as they made new ruts, driven by women for the most
part, and
a few gray-haired men. Male access to the Aes Sedai camp was strictly
limited,
now. Even so, nearly every sister she saw glided along the uneven
wooden
walkways wrapped in the light oisaidar and followed by her Warder if
she had
one. Romanda refused to embrace the Source whenever she went
outside-someone
had to set an example of proper behavior with every sister in the camp
on
tenterhooks-yet she was very conscious of the lack. Conscious of the
lack of a
Warder, too. Keeping most men out of the camp was all very well, but a
murderer
was unlikely to pay any heed to the restriction.
Ahead,
Gareth Bryne rode out of a crossing street, a stocky man with mostly
gray hair,
his breastplate strapped over a buff-colored coat and his helmet
hanging from
his saddle bow. Siuan was with him, swaying on a plump shaggy mare and
looking
such a pretty girl that it was almost possible to forget she had been
hard-bitten and sharp-tongued as Amyrlin. Easy to forget she was still
an
accomplished schemer. Blues always were. The mare plodded along, but
Siuan
nearly fell off before Bryne reached out to steady her. At the edge of
the Blue
quarters-the camp was laid out in rough approximation of the Ajah
quarters in
the Tower-he dismounted long enough to help her down. then climbed back
into
his bay's saddle and left her standing there holding the mare's reins
and
gazing after him. Now, why would she do that? Blacking the mans boots,
doing
his laundry. That relationship was abhorrent. The Blue should put an
end to it,
and to the Pit of Doom with custom. However strong, custom should not
be abused
to hold all Aes Sedai up to ridicule.
Turning
her back on Siuan, she started toward che pavilion that served as their
temporary Hall of the Tower. As pleasant as it was to meet in the true
Hall,
not to mention under Elaida's very nose, few sisters could manage to
put
themselves to sleep at any hour, so the pavilion must continue to
serve. She
glided along the walkway without haste. She was not about to be seen
hurrying
to answer Lelaine's call. What could the woman want now?
A
gong sounded, magnified with the Power so it carried across the camp
clearly-another of Sharina's suggestions-and suddenly the walkways were
crowded
with novices hurrying to their next class or to chores, all clustered
by
family. Those families of six or seven always attended class together,
did
chores together, in fact, did everything together. It was an effective
way to
manage so many novices-nearly fifty more had wandered into the camp in
just the
last two weeks, pushing the total back near a thousand in spite of
runaways,
and almost a quarter of those were young enough to be proper novices,
more than
the Tower had held in centuries!-yet she wished it were not Sharina's
work. The
woman had not even suggested it to the Mistress of Novices. She had
organized
the thing herself and presented it to Tiana whole and complete! The
novices,
some of them graying or with lines in their faces so that it was
difficult to
think of them as children despite their white dresses, squeezed to the
edge of
the walkway to let sisters pass while they offered curtsies, but none
stepped
into the muddy street to make more room. Sharina again. Sharina had
spread the
word that she did not want to see the girls dirtying their nice white
woolens
unnecessarily. It was enough to make Romanda grind her teeth. The
novices who
curtsied to her straightened hurriedly and practically ran.
Ahead
of her, she spotted Sharina herself, talking to Tiana, who was shrouded
in the
glow of saidar. Doing all of the talking, with Tiana merely nodding now
and
then. There was nothing disrespectful in Sharina's demeanor, but
despite novice
white, with her creased face and gray hair in a tight bun on the back
of her
head, she looked exactly what she was, a grandmother. And Tiana had an
unfortunately youthful appearance. Something about her bone structure
and large
brown eyes overwhelmed the ageless look of Aes Sedai. Lack of
disrespect or no,
there was too much appearance of a woman instructing her granddaughter
to suit
Romanda. As she approached them, Sharina offered a proper curtsy-a very
proper
curtsy, Romanda had to admit-and hurried off the other way to join her
own
family, waiting for her. Were there fewer lines in her face than there
had
been? Well, there was no saying what might happen when a woman began
with the
Power at her age. Sixty-seven and a novice!
"Is
she giving you difficulties?" she asked, and Tiana leaped as though an
icicle had slid down the back of her dress. The woman lacked the
dignity, the
gravity, necessary in a Mistress of Novices. At times, she seemed
smothered by
the number of her charges, too. And she was much too lenient besides,
accepting
excuses where there could be none.
She
recovered quickly, however, falling in beside Romanda, though she
smoothed her
dark gray skirts unnecessarily. "Difficulties? Of course not. Sharina
is
the best-behaved novice in the book. Truth to tell, most are
well-behaved. The
greatest number sent to my study are mothers upset because their
daughters are
learning faster than they or have a higher potential, or aunts with the
same
complaint of nieces. They seem to believe the matter can be rectified
somehow.
They can be surprisingly adamant about it until I set them straight
about being
adamant with any sister. Although a good many have been sent to me more
than
once, I fear. A handful still seem surprised that they can be switched."
"Is
that so," Romanda said absently. Her eye had caught pale-haired Delana
hurrying in the same direction, gray-fringed shawl looped over her arms
and her
so-called secretary striding at her side. Delana wore an almost somber
dark
gray, but the Saranov trollop was in blue-slashed green silk that left
half her
bosom on display and fit much too snugly over hips that she rolled
blatantly.
Of late, the pair of them seemed to have abandoned the story that
Halima was
merely De-lana's servant. Indeed, the woman was gesturing emphatically
while
Delana merely nodded in the meekest manner imaginable. Meek! It was
always a
mistake to choose a pillow-friend who did not wear the shawl.
Especially if you
were fool enough to let her take the lead.
"Sharina
isn't only well-behaved," Tiana continued blithely, "she is showing a
great skill with Nynaeve's new way of Healing. Like a number of the
older
novices. Most were village Wise Women of one sort or another, though I
don't
see how that can have any bearing. One was a noble in Murandy."
Romanda
tripped over her own heel and staggered two steps, arms flailing for
balance,
before she could catch herself and gather her shawl. Tiana put a hand
on her
arm to steady her. murmuring about the un-evenness of the walkway's
planking,
but she shook it off. Sbarina had a gift for the new Healing? And a
number of
the older women? She herself had learned the new way, but while it was
different enough from the old that the second-learned weave limitation
seemed
not to apply, she had no great gift for it. Not nearly what she had for
the old
method.
"And
why are novices being allowed to practice that, Tiana?''
Tiana
flushed, as well she should. Such weaves were much too complex for
novices, not
to mention dangerous if misapplied. Done improperly, Healing could kill
rather
than cure. The woman channeling as well as the patient. "I can hardly
stop
them from seeing Healing done, Romanda." she said defensively, moving
her
arms as if adjusting a shawl she was not wearing. "There are always
broken
bones or some fool who's managed to cut himself badly, not to mention
all the
illness we have to deal with lately. Most of the older women only have
to see a
weave once to have it down." Abruptly, for a bare instant, red returned
to
her cheeks. Smoothing her face, she drew herself up, and defensive-ness
fell
away from her voice. "In any event, Romanda, I shouldn't need to remind
you that the novices and Accepted are mine. As Mistress of Novices. I
decide
what they can learn and when. Some of those women could test for
Accepted
today, after only months. When it comes to the Power, at least. If I
choose not
to make them twiddle their thumbs idly, it is my decision to make.
"Perhaps
you should run to see whether Sharina has any further instructions for
you." Romanda said coldly.
Spots
of crimson staining her cheeks, Tiana turned on her heel and strode
away
without another word. Not quite forbidden rudeness, but close. Even
from behind
she was the image of indignation, her back stiff as an iron rod, her
steps
quick. Well, Romanda was willing to admit she had come near rudeness
herself.
But with cause.
Trying
to put the Mistress of Novices out of her mind, she set out toward the
pavilion
again, but had to restrain herself to keep from walking as fast as
Tiana. Sharina.
And several of the other older women. Should she rethink her position?
No. Of
course not. Their names should never have been allowed in the novice
book in
the first place. Yet their names were there, and it seemed they had
mastered
this wonderful new Healing. Oh, it was a tangled snarl. She did not
want to
think about it. Not now.
The
pavilion stood at the heart of the camp, a much-patched piece of heavy
canvas
surrounded by a walkway three times as wide as any of the others.
Holding her
skirts well up out of the mud, she hurried across to it. She did not
mind haste
when it got her out of the mud more quickly. Even so, Aelmara would
have a time
cleaning her shoes. And her petticoats, she thought as she let her
skirts down,
decently concealing her ankles once more.
Word
of the Hall sitting always drew sisters hoping for news of the
negotiations or
of Egwene, and a good fifty or more were already gathered around the
pavilion
with their Warders, or standing just inside, behind where their Sitters
would
sit. Even here, most shone with the Light of the Power. As if they were
in any
danger surrounded by other Aes Sedai. She found herself with a strong
urge to
walk around the pavilion boxing ears. That was impossible, of course.
Even if
custom could be set aside, which she had no desire to do, a chair in
the Hall
gave no authority for such a thing.
Sheriam,
the narrow blue stole of the Keeper vivid on her shoulders, stood out
in the
crowd, in part because there was a clear space around her. Other
sisters were avoiding
looking at her. much less approaching her. The flame-haired woman
embarrassed
many of the sisters. appearing every time the Hall was called to sit as
she
did. The law was quite clear. Any sister could attend a sitting of the
Hall
unless it was closed, yet the Amyrlin could not enter the Hall of the
Tower
without being announced by the Keeper, and the Keeper was not allowed
in
without the Amyrlin. Sheriam's green eyes were tight, as usual, and she
fidgeted in an unbecoming manner, like a novice who knew she was due
another
visit to the Mistress of Novices. At least she was not embracing the
Source,
and her Warder was nowhere in sight.
Before
stepping beneath the pavilion. Romanda glanced over her shoulder and
sighed.
The great bulk of black clouds behind Dragon-mount was gone. Not
drifting
apart, simply gone entirely. Very likely there would be another wave of
panic
among the grooms and laborers, and the serving women. Surprisingly, the
novices
seemed to take these strange occurrences more in stride. Perhaps that
was
because they were trying to take their cues from the sisters, but she
suspected
Sharina's hand again. What was she to do about the woman?
Inside,
eighteen cloth-covered boxes, colored for the six Ajahs represented in
the
camp, made platforms for polished benches, two slanting rows atop the
layered
carpets, widening toward a box covered with stripes in all seven
colors.
Wisely, Egwene had insisted on including red despite considerable
opposition.
Where Elaida seemed determined to divide every Ajah from every other,
Egwene
was determined to hold them all together, including the Red. The wooden
bench
atop that platform had the Amyrlin's seven-striped stole laid across
it. No one
claimed responsibility for placing it there, but no one had removed it,
either.
Romanda was uncertain whether it was meant to be a reminder of Egwene
al'Vere,
the Amyrlin Seat, an echo of her presence, or a reminder that she was
absent
and a prisoner. How it was seen doubtless depended on the sister
looking.
She
was not the only Sitter taking her time to answer Lelaine's call.
Delana was
there, of course, slumped on her bench and rubbing the side of her
nose, her
watery blue eyes pensive. Once, Romanda had considered her levelheaded.
Unsuitable
for a chair, but levelheaded. At least she had not allowed Halima to
follow her
into the Hall and continue her harangue. Or rather, at least Halima had
chosen
not to. No one who had heard the woman shouting at Delana possessed any
doubts
who gave the orders there. Lelaine herself was already on her bench,
just below
the Amyrlin's, a slender, hard-eyed woman in blue-slashed silk who
rationed her
smiles tightly. Which made it doubly odd that now and then she glanced
toward
the seven-colored stole and gave a small smile. That smile made Romanda
uneasy,
and few things could do that. Moria, in blue wool embroidered with
silver, was
striding up and down in front of the blue-covered platforms. Was her
frown
because she knew why Lelaine had called the Hall and disapproved, or
because
she was worried over not knowing?
"I
saw Myrelle walking with Llyw," Malind said, hitching up her
green-fringed
shawl as Romanda entered the pavilion, "and I don't think I've ever
seen a
sister looking so harassed." Despite the sympathy in her tone, her eyes
sparkled and her full lips quirked with amusement. "How did you ever
talk
her into bonding him? I was there when someone suggested it to her, and
I vow,
she turned pale. The man could almost pass for an Ogier."
"I
expressed myself forcefully on duty." Faiselle, stocky and
square-faced,
was forceful in everything; in truth, a hammer of a woman. She mocked
every
tale of seductive Domani. "I pointed out that Llyw had been becoming
more
and more dangerous to himself and others since Kairen died, and I told
her it
couldn't be allowed to continue. I made her see that as the only sister
ever to
save two other Warders in the same circumstances, she was the only
choice to
try doing it again. I'll admit I had to twist her arm a little, but she
eventually saw the right of the matter."
"How
under the Light could you twist Myrelle's arm?" Malind leaned forward
eagerly.
Romanda
passed them by. How could anyone have twisted Myrelle's arm? No. No
gossip.
Janya
was on her bench for the Brown, squinting in thought. At least, she was
squinting, but the woman always seemed to be thinking of something else
even
when she was talking to you. Maybe her eyes were bad. The rest of the
benches
still stood empty, though. Romanda wished she had been more leisurely.
She
would much rather have been the last to arrive than one of the first.
After
a moment's hesitation, she approached Lelaine. "Would you care to give
an
idea of why you called the Hall?"
Lelaine
smiled down at her, an amused smile, yet unpleasant even so. "You might
as
well wait until we have enough Sitters to proceed. I don't care to
repeat
myself. I will tell you this much. It will be dramatic." Her eyes
drifted
to the striped stole, and Romanda felt a chill.
She
did not let it show, however, merely taking her bench across from
Lelaine. She
could not help glancing uneasily at the stole herself. Was this some
move to
unseat Egwene? It seemed unlikely the other woman could say anything
that would
convince her to stand for the greater consensus. Or many of the other
Sitters,
since that would throw them back to the struggle between her and
Lelaine for
control and weaken their position against Elaida. Yet Lelaine's air of
confidence was unnerving. She schooled her features to calmness and
waited. There
was nothing else to do.
Kwamesa
all but darted into the pavilion, her sharp-nosed face chagrined at not
being
first to arrive, and joined Delana. Salita appeared. dark and cool-eyed
in
yellow-slashed green embroidered with yellow scrollwork on the bosom,
and
suddenly there was a rush. Lyrelle glided in, graceful and elegant in
brocaded
blue silk, to take her place with the Blues, then Saroiya and Aledrin
with
their heads together, the blocky Domani seeming almost slender
alongside the
stout Taraboner. As they took their places on the White benches,
fox-faced
Samalin joined Faiselle and Malind, and tiny Escaralde scurried in. She
scurried! The woman was from Far Madding, too. She should know better
how to
behave.
"Varilin
is in Darein. I believe,'' Romanda said as Escaralde climbed up beside
Janya.
"but even if some others arrive later, we have more than eleven. Are
you
content to begin, Lelaine. or do you wish to wait?"
"I
am content to begin."
"Do
you wish a formal sitting?"
Lelaine
smiled again. She was being very free with those this morning. They did
nothing
to warm her face. "That won't be necessary, Romanda." She rearranged
her skirts slightly. "But I ask that what is said here be Sealed to the
Hall for the time being." A murmur rose from the growing crowd of
sisters
standing behind the benches and those outside the pavilion. Even some
of the
Sitters showed surprise. If the sitting was not formal, what need could
there
be to restrict knowledge of what was said so closely?
Romanda
nodded as though it were the most reasonable request in the world,
though.
"Let all depart who do not hold a chair. Aledrin, will you make us
private?"
Despite
dark yellow hair of a silky texture and large, liquid brown eyes, the
Taraboner
White fell short of pretty, but she had a good head on her shoulders,
which was
far more important. Standing. she seemed uncertain whether she should
speak the
formal words, and finally contented herself with weaving the ward
against
eavesdropping around the pavilion and holding it. The murmuring faded
as
sisters and Warders passed through that ward, until the last was gone
and
silence fell. They stood in ranks shoulder-to-shoulder on the walkway
watching,
however, the Warders all crowded to the rear so everyone could see.
Adjusting
her shawl, Lelaine stood. "A Green sister was brought to me when she
came
asking for Egwene." The Green Sitters stirred, exchanging glances, no
doubt wondering why the sister was not brought to them instead. Lelaine
affected not to notice. "Not for the Amyrlin Seat, for Egwene al'Vere.
She
has a proposal that meets some of our needs, though she was reluctant
to say
very much of it to me. Moria. will you bring her so she can present her
proposal to the Hall?" She resumed her seat.
Moria
left the pavilion still frowning, and the crowd outside opened enough
to let
her through. Romanda could see sisters trying to question her. but she
ignored
them, disappearing across the street and into the Blue Ajah quarters.
Romanda
had a dozen questions she would have liked to ask in the interval, but
informal
session or not, questions would have been improper at this point. The
Sitters
did not wait in silence, however. At every Ajah except the Blue, women
stepped
down so they could come together and speak in low voices. Except the
Blue and
the Yellow. Salita climbed down and walked over to Romanda's platform,
but
Romanda raised a hand slightly as soon as she opened her mouth.
"What
is there to discuss until we know what the proposal is, Salita?"
The
Tairen Sitter's round face was as unreadable as a stone, but after a
moment she
nodded and resumed her seat. She was not unintelligent, far from it.
Just
unsuitable.
At
last Moria returned leading a tall woman in dark green, her dark hair
pulled
back severely from a stern ivory face and held by a silver comb, and
everyone
climbed back to their benches. Three men with swords at their hips
trailed
after her through the watching sisters and into the pavilion. Unusual,
that.
Very unusual when matters had been Sealed to the Hall. Romanda paid
them little
mind at first, though. She had had no real interest in Warders since
her last
had died, a good many years earlier. But someone among the Greens
gasped, and
Aledrin squeaked. She actually squeaked! And she was staring at the
Warders.
That had to be what they were, and not only because they were heeling
the
Green. There was no mistaking a Warder's deadly grace.
Romanda
took a longer look, and nearly gasped herself. They were disparate men,
alike
only in the way a leopard was like a lion, but one, a pretty, sun-dark
boy with
his hair in belled braids, garbed all in black, wore a pair of pins on
the tall
collar of his coat. A silver sword, and a sinuous, maned creature in
red and
gold. She had heard enough descriptions to know she was looking at an
Asha'man.
An Asha'man who had been bonded, apparently. Gathering her skirts,
Malind
jumped down and rushed out into the crowd of sisters. Surely she was
not
frightened. Although Romanda admitted to a hint of unease herself, if
only to
herself.
"You
are not one of us," Janya said, speaking up where she should not as
always. She leaned forward, squinting at the new-come sister. "Should I
take it you have not come here to join us?"
The
Green's mouth twisted in obvious distaste. "You take it correctly."
she said in a strong Taraboner accent. "My name is Merise Haindehl. and
me, I will stand with no sister who wishes to contend against other
sisters
while the world hangs in the balance. Our enemy, it is the Shadow, not
women who
wear the shawl as we do." Mutters rose in the pavilion, some angry,
some,
Romanda thought, shamed.
"If
you disapprove of what we do," Janya went on, as if she had a right to
speak before Romanda. "why do you bring us any sort of proposal?"
"Because
the Dragon Reborn, he asked Cadsuane, and Cadsuane, she asked me,"
Merise
replied. The Dragon Reborn? The tension in the Hall was suddenly
palpable, but
the woman continued as if she were senseless to it. "Properly, it is
not
my proposal. Jahar. speak to them."
The
sun-dark youth stepped forward, and as he passed her. Merise reached up
to pat
him on the shoulder encouragingly. Romanda's respect for her rose. To
bond an
Asha'man was accomplishment enough. To pat one as you might a hunting
hound
took a level of courage and self-confidence she herself was unsure she
possessed.
The
boy strode to the center of the pavilion staring at the bench where the
Amyrlin's stole lay, then turned about slowly, running his gaze over
the
Sitters with an air of challenge. It came to Romanda that he was
unafraid, too.
An Aes Sedai held his bond, he was alone and surrounded by sisters, yet
if
there was a scrap of fear in him, he had it under complete control.
"Where
is Egwene al'Vere?" he demanded. "I was ordered to lay the offer
before her."
"Manners,
Jahar," Merise murmured, and his face colored.
"The
Mother is unavailable at the moment," Romanda said smoothly. "You can
tell us, and we will tell her as soon as we can. This offer comes from
the Dragon
Reborn?" And Cadsuane. But learning what that woman was doing in
company
with the Dragon Reborn was secondary.
Instead
of answering, he snarled and spun to face Merise. "A man just tried to
listen in," he said. "Or maybe it was that Forsaken who killed
Eben."
"He
is right." Aledrin's voice was unsteady. "At least, something touched
my warding, and it wasn't saidar."
"He's
channeling" someone said incredulously. A flurry broke out of Sitters
shifting on the benches, and the light of the Power enveloped several.
Abruptly,
Delana stood. "I need a breath of fresh air," she said, glowering at
Jahar as though she wanted to rip his throat out.
"There's
no need to be uneasy," Romanda said, though she was not sure herself,
but
Delana, wrapped in her shawl, hurried from the pavilion.
Malind
passed her coming in, as did Nacelle, a tall slender Malkieri, one of
the
handful remaining in the Tower. A good many had died in the years after
Malkier
fell to the Shadow, letting themselves be pulled into schemes to avenge
their
native land, and replacements had been few and far between since.
Nacelle was
not particularly intelligent, but then, Greens did not need
intelligence, only
courage.
"This
session has been Sealed to the Hall, Malind," Romanda said sharply.
"Nacelle
needs only moments," Malind replied, rubbing her hands together.
Irritatingly, she did not even bother to look at Romanda, keeping her
eyes on
the other Green. "This is her first chance to test a new weave. Go
ahead,
Nacelle. Try it."
The
glow of saidar appeared around the slim Green. Shocking! The woman
neither
asked permission nor told them what weave she intended, although tight
strictures held on what uses of the Power were allowed in the Hall.
Channeling
all of the Five Powers, she wove around the Asha'man something that
seemed akin
to the weave for detecting residues, a thing Romanda had small facility
for.
Nacelle's blue eyes widened. "He is channeling," she breathed.
"Or at least holding saidin."
Romanda's
eyebrows climbed. Even Lelaine gasped. Finding a man who could channel
was
always a matter of reading the residues of what he had done, then
arduously
narrowing the suspects down to the true culprit. Or rather, it had
been. This
was truly wondrous. Or would have been before men who could channel
started
wearing black coats and strutting around openly. Still, it negated one
advantage those men had always had over Aes Sedai. The Asha'man seemed
not to
care. His lip curled in what might have been a sneer.
"Can
you tell what he is channeling?" she asked, and disappointingly,
Nacelle
shook her head.
"I
thought I'd be able to, but no. On the other hand… You there, Asha'man.
Extend a flow toward one of the Sitters. Nothing dangerous, mind, and
do not
touch her.'' Merise glowered at her, fists planted on her hips. Maybe
Nacelle
failed to realize he was one of her Warders. She certainly gestured at
him in
peremptory fashion.
A
stubborn cast to his eyes, Jahar opened his mouth.
"Do
it, Jahar," Merise said. "He is mine. Nacelle, but I will let you
give him an order. This once." Nacelle looked shocked. Apparently she
had
failed to realize.
For
the Asha'man's part, that stubborn look remained, yet he must have
obeyed
because Nacelle clapped her hands delightedly and laughed.
"Saroiya,"
she said excitedly. "You extended a flow toward Saroiya. The Domani
White.
Am I right?"
Saroiya's
coppery skin paled, and gathering her white-fringed shawl around her,
she
hastily slid back on her bench as far as she could. For that matter,
Aledrin
edged away on her own bench.
"Tell
her." Merise said. "Jahar, he can be stubborn, but he is the good boy
for all that."
"The
Domani White." Jahar agreed reluctantly. Saroiya swayed as if she were
going to fall over, and he glanced at her contemptuously. "It was only
Spirit, and it's gone now." Saroiya's face darkened, but whether from
anger or embarrassment there was no telling.
"A
remarkable discovery." Lelaine said, "and I'm sure that Merise will
allow you to test further, Nacelle, but the Hall has business to
conclude. I'm
certain you agree, Romanda."
Romanda
barely managed to stop herself from glaring. Lelaine overstepped
herself too
often. "If your demonstration is at an end." she said, "you may
withdraw. Nacelle." The Malkieri Green was reluctant to go, perhaps
because she could tell from Merise's expression that there would be no
further
testing-really, you would think a Green of all people would be careful
with any
man who might be another sister's Warder-yet she had no choice, of
course.
"What proposal does the Dragon Reborn have for us. boy?" Romanda
asked once Nacelle was on the other side of the warding.
"This."
he said, facing her proudly. "Any sister who is faithful to Egwene
al'Vere
may bond an Asha'man, to a total of forty-seven. You cannot ask for the
Dragon
Reborn, nor any man who wears the dragon. but any Soldier or Dedicated
you ask
cannot refuse." Romanda felt as if all the breath had been squeezed
from
her lungs.
"You
will agree this meets our needs?" Lelaine said calmly. The woman must
have
known the gist of it from the start, burn her.
"I
do." Romanda replied. With forty-seven men who could channel, surely
they
could expand their circles as far as they would go. Perhaps even a
circle that
included all of them. If there were limits, they would need to be
worked out.
Faiselle
popped to her feet, as if this were a formal sitting. "This must be
debated. I call for a formal session."
"I
see no need for that," Romanda told her without rising. "This is much
better than… what we previously agreed on." There was no point in
saying too much in front of the boy. Or Merise. What was her connection
to the
Dragon Reborn? Could she be one of the sisters said to have sworn oaths
to him?
Saroiya
was on her feet before the last word left Romanda's mouth. "There is
still
the question of covenants, to be sure we are in control. We still have
not
agreed on those."
"I
should think the Warder bond will make any other covenants moot,"
Lyrelle
said dryly.
Faiselle
rose hurriedly, and she and Saroiya spoke atop each other. "The
taint-" They stopped, staring at each other suspiciously.
"Saidin
is clean," Jahar said, though no one had addressed him. Merise really
should teach the boy how to behave if she was going to bring him before
the
Hall.
"Clean?"
Saroiya said derisively.
"It
has been tainted for more than three thousand years," Faiselle put in
sharply. "How can be it clean?"
"Order!"
Romanda snapped, trying to regain control. "Order!" She stared at
Saroiya and Faiselle until they resumed their seats, then turned her
attention
to Merise. "Can I assume that you have linked with him?" The Green
simply nodded once. She really did not like her present company, and
did not
want to say a word more than necessary. "Can you say that saidin is
free
of the taint?"
The
woman did not hesitate. "I can. I took time to be convinced. The male
half
of the Power, it is more alien than you can imagine. Not the inexorable
yet
gentle power ofsaidar, but rather a raging sea of fire and ice whipped
by a
tempest. Yet I am convinced. It is clean."
Romanda
let out a long breath. A marvel to balance some of the horrors. "We are
not formal, but I call the question. Who stands to accept this offer?"
She
was on her feet as soon as she finished, but no faster than Lelaine,
and Janya
beat both of them. In moments, everyone was on her feet save Saroiya
and
Faiselle. Outside the warding, heads turned as sisters doubtless began
discussing what might have just been voted on. "The lesser consensus
standing, the offer to bond forty-seven Asha'man is accepted."
Saroiya's
shoulders slumped, and Faiselle exhaled heavily.
She
called for the greater consensus in the name of unity, but it did not
surprise
her when the pair remained firmly on their benches. After all, they had
fought
approaching the Asha'man at every turn, struggled despite law and
custom to
impede it even after it had been decided on. In any event, it was done,
and
without need of even a temporary alliance. Bonding would last a
lifetime, of
course, yet it was better than any sort of alliance. That implied too
much
equality.
"A
peculiar number, forty-seven," Janya mused. "May I question your
Warder, Merise? Thank you. How did the Dragon Reborn come to that
number.
Jahar?" A very good question, Romanda thought. In the shock of
achieving
what they needed without any requirement for partnership, it had eluded
her.
Jahar
drew himself up as if he had anticipated this, and dreaded answering.
His face
remained hard and cold, though. "Fifty-one sisters have been bonded by
Asha'man already, and four of us are bonded to Aes Sedai. Forty-seven
makes the
difference. There were five of us, but one died defending his Aes
Sedai.
Remember his name. Eben Hopwil. Remember him!"
There
was a stunned silence from the benches. Romanda felt a lump of ice in
her
middle. Fifty-one sisters? Bonded by Asha'man? It was an abomination!
"Manners,
Jahar!" Merise snapped. "Do not make me tell you again!"
Shockingly,
he rounded on her. "They need to know, Merise. They need to know!"
Turning back, he ran his gaze along the benches. His eyes seemed hot.
He had
been dreading nothing. He had been angry, and still was. "Eben was
linked
with his Daigian and Beldeine, with Daigian controlling the link, so
when they
found themselves facing one of the Forsaken, all he could do was shout,
'She's
channeling saidin.' and attack her with his sword. And despite what she
did to
him, ruined as he was, he managed to hang on to life, hang on to
saidin, long
enough for Daigian to drive her off. So you remember his name! Eben
Hopwil. He
fought for his Aes Sedai long after he should have been dead!"
When
he fell silent, no one spoke until Escaralde finally said, very
quietly.
"We will remember him, Jahar. But how did fifty-one sisters come to be…
bonded to Asha'man?" She leaned forward as if his answer would be
pitched as low.
The
boy shrugged, still angry. It was of no matter to him. Asha'man bonding
Aes
Sedai. "Elaida sent them to destroy us. The Dragon Reborn has a
standing
order that no Aes Sedai can be harmed unless she tries to harm one of
us first,
so Taim decided to capture and bond them before they had the chance."
So.
They were Elaida's supporters. Should that make a difference? Somehow
it did, a
little. But any sisters held by Asha'man brought it all back to a
matter of
equality, and that was intolerable.
"I
have another question for him, Merise," Moria said, and waited until
the
Green nodded. "Twice now, you did speak as if a woman did channel
saidin.
Why? That do be impossible." Murmurs of agreement rippled around the
pavilion.
"It
might be impossible," the boy replied coolly, "but she did it.
Daigian told us what Eben said, and she couldn't detect anything at all
even
while the woman was channeling. It had to be saidin."
Suddenly
that small chime sounded again in the back of Ro-manda's head, and she
knew
where she had heard the name Cabriana Mecandes. "We must order the
arrest
of Delana and Halima immediately," she said.
She
had to explain, of course. Not even the Amrylin Seat could order the
arrest of
a Sitter without explanation. The murders with saidin of two sisters
who had
been close friends of Cabriana, a woman Halima had claimed friendship
with as
well. A female Forsaken who channeled the male half of the Power. They
were
hardly convinced, especially Lelaine, not until a thorough search of
the camp
turned up no trace of either woman. They had been seen walking toward
one of
the Traveling grounds with Delana and her serving woman both carrying
large
bundles and scurrying along behind Halima, but they were gone.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
Honey
in the Tea
Egwene
knew from the start that her strange captivity would be difficult, yet
she
believed that embracing pain as the Aiel did would be the easiest part.
After
all, she had been beaten severely when she paid her toh to the Wise
Ones for
lying, strapped by one after another in turn, so she had experience.
But
embracing pain did not mean just giving way to it rather than fighting.
You had
to draw the pain inside of you and welcome it as a part of you.
Aviendha said
you must be able to smile and laugh with joy or sing while the worst of
the
pain still gripped you. That was not so easy at all.
That
first morning before dawn, in Silviana's study, she did her best while
the
Mistress of Novices plied a hard-soled slipper on her bared bottom. She
made no
effort to stifle her sobs when they came, or later her wordless howls.
When her
legs wanted to kick, she allowed them to flail until the Mistress of
Novices
trapped them under one of hers. awkwardly because of Silviana's skirts,
and
then she let her toes drum the floor while her head tossed wildly. She
tried to
draw the pain inside her, to drink it in like breath. Pain was as much
a part
of life as breathing. That was how the Aiel saw life. But, oh. Light,
it hurt!
When
she was finally allowed to straighten, after what seemed a very long
time, she
flinched when her shift and dress fell against her flesh. The white
wool seemed
heavy as lead. She attempted to welcome the scalding heat. It was hard,
though.
So very hard. Still, it seemed that her sobbing stopped very quickly of
its own
accord, and her flow of tears dried up rapidly. She did not snivel or
writhe.
She studied herself in the mirror on the wall, with its fading gilt.
How many
thousands of women had peered into that mirror over the years? Those
who were
disciplined in this room were always required to study their own
reflection
afterward and think over why they had been punished, but that was not
why she
did it. Her face was still red, yet already it looked… calm. Despite
the
painful heat in her bottom, she actually felt calm. Perhaps she should
try
singing? Perhaps not. Plucking a white linen handkerchief from her
sleeve, she
carefully dried her cheeks.
Silviana
studied her with a look of satisfaction before replacing the slipper in
the
narrow cabinet opposite the mirror. "I think I got your attention from
the
start, or I'd have gone harder." she said dryly, patting the bun on the
back of her head. "I doubt I will see you again soon in any case. You
may
like to know that I asked questions as you requested. Melare had
already begun
asking. The woman is Leane Sharif, though the Light knows how…"
Trailing off, shaking her head, she pulled her chair back around behind
the
writing table and sat. "She was most anxious about you, more so than
about
herself. You may visit her in your free time. If you have any free
time. I'll
give instructions. She's in the open cells. And now you had better run
if you
want anything to eat before your first class.''
"Thank
you," Egwene said, and turned toward the door.
Silviana
sighed heavily. "No curtsy, child?" Dipping her pen in the
silver-mounted ink jar, she began to write in the punishment ledger, a
neat,
precise hand. "I will see you at midday. It seems you will eat both of
your first two meals back in the Tower standing."
Egwene
could have left it there, but in the night, while waiting for the
Sitters to
gather in the Hall in Tel'aran'rhiod. she had decided on the fine line
she must
walk. She meant to fight, yet she had to do it while appearing to go
along. To
some extent, at least. Within the limits she set herself. Refusing
every order
would mean appearing merely obstinate-and perhaps would get her
confined to a
cell, where she would be useless-but some commands she must not obey if
she was
to maintain any scrap of dignity. And that, she had to do. More than
scraps.
She could not allow them to deny who she was, however hard they
insisted.
"The Amyrlin Seat curtsies to no one," she said calmly, knowing full
well the reaction she would get.
Silviana's
face hardened, and she took up her pen again. "I will see you at the
dinner hour, as well. I suggest you leave without speaking further,
unless you
wish to end spending the entire day over my knee."
Egwene
left without speaking. And without curtsying. A fine line, like a wire
suspended over a deep pit. But she had to walk it.
To
her surprise, Alviarin was pacing up and down in the hall outside,
wrapped in
her white-fringed shawl and hugging herself, staring at something in
the unseen
distance. She knew the woman was no longer Elaida's Keeper, if not why
she had
been removed so suddenly. Spying in Telaran'rhiodgave only glimpses and
snatches; it was an uncertain reflection of the waking world in so many
ways.
Alviarin must have heard her yowling, but strangely, Egwene felt no
shame. She
was fighting an odd battle, and in battle, you took wounds. The
normally icy
White did not appear so cool today. In fact, she seemed quite agitated.
her
lips parted and her eyes hot. Egwene offered her no courtesies, yet
Alviarin
only gave her a baleful glare before entering Silviana's study. A fine
line.
A
little down the corridor, a pair of Reds stood watching, one
round-faced, the
other slender, both cool-eyed, with shawls draped along their arms so
the long
red fringe was displayed prominently. Not the same pair who had been
there when
she woke, but they were not present by happenstance. They were not
precisely
guards, and then again, they were not precisely not guards. She did not
curtsy
to these, either. They watched her without expression.
Before
she had taken more than half a dozen steps along the red-and-green
floor tiles,
she heard a woman's pained howling start up behind her, hardly muffled
at all
by the heavy door to Silviana's study. So Alviarin was taking a
penance, and
not doing well to be shrieking at the top of her lungs so soon. Unless
she also
was trying to embrace pain, which seemed unlikely. Egwene wished she
knew why
Alviarin was undergoing penance, if it was an imposed penance. A
general had
scouts and eyes-and-ears to inform him on his enemy. She had only her
own eyes
and her own ears, and what little she could learn in the Unseen World.
Any
scrap of knowledge might prove useful, though, so she must dig for
every one
possible.
Breakfast
or no breakfast, she returned to her tiny room in the novice quarters
long
enough to wash her face in cool water at the wash-stand and comb her
hair. That
comb, which had been in her belt pouch, was among the few personal
belongings
she retained. In the night, the clothes she had been wearing when
captured
vanished, replaced by novice white, but the dresses and shifts that
hung from
pegs on the white wall truly were hers. Stored away when she was raised
Accepted, they still carried small tags stitched with her name sewn
into their
hems. The Tower was never wasteful. You never knew when a new girl
would fit an
old set of clothes. But having nothing to wear save novice white did
not make
her a novice, whatever Elaida and the others believed.
Not
until she was sure that her face was no longer red and she looked as
collected
as she felt did she leave. When you had few weapons, your appearance
could be
one. The same two Reds were waiting on the railed gallery to shadow her.
The
dining hall where novices ate lay on the lowest level of the Tower, to
one side
of the main kitchen. It was a large white-walled chamber, plain though
the
floor tiles showed all the Ajah colors, and filled with tables, each of
which
could accommodate six or eight women on small benches. A hundred or
more
white-clad women were sitting at those tables, chattering away over
breakfast.
Elaida must be very set up over their number. The Tower had not held so
many
novices in years. Doubtless even news of the Tower breaking had been
enough to
put the thought of going to Tar Valon into some heads. Egwene was not
impressed. These women filled barely half the dining hall if that, and
there
was another like it one floor up, closed now for centuries. Once she
gained the
Tower, that second kitchen would be opened again, and the novices still
would
need to eat by shifts, something unknown since well before the Trolloc
Wars.
Nicola
caught sight of her as soon as she walked in-the woman appeared to have
been
watching for her-and nudged the novices to either side. Silence slid
across the
tables in a wave, and every head turned as Egwene glided down the
central
aisle. She looked neither to left nor right.
Halfway
to the kitchen door, a short slim novice with long dark hair suddenly
stuck out
a foot and tripped her. Catching her balance just short of falling on
her face,
she turned coolly. Another skirmish. The young woman had the pale look
of a
Cairhienin. This close, Egwene could be sure that she would be tested
for
Accepted unless she had other failings. But the Tower was good at
rooting out
such things. "What is your name?" she said.
"Alvistere,"
the young woman replied, her accent confirming her face. "Why do you
want
to know? So you can carry tales to Silviana? It will do you no good.
Everyone
will say they saw nothing."
"A
pity. that. Alvistere. You want to become Aes Sedai and give up the
ability to lie.
yet you want others to lie for you. Do you see any inconsistency in
that?"
Alvistere's
face reddened. "Who are you to lecture me?"
"I
am the Amyrlin Seat. A prisoner, but still the Amyrlin Seat."
Alvistere's
big eyes widened, and whispers buzzed through the room as Egwene walked
on to
the kitchen. They had not believed she would still claim the title
while garbed
in white and sleeping among them. As well to disabuse them of that
notion
quickly.
The
kitchen was a large, high-ceilinged room with gray-tiled floors, where
the
roasting spits in the long stone fireplace were still but the iron
stoves and
ovens radiated enough heat that she would have begun perspiring
immediately had
she not known how to ignore it. She had labored in this kitchen often
enough,
and it seemed certain she would again. Dining halls surrounded it on
three
sides, for the Accepted and for Aes Sedai as well as novices. Laras,
the
Mistress of the Kitchens, was waddling about sweaty-faced in a spotless
white
apron that could have made three novice dresses, waving her long wooden
spoon
like a scepter as she directed cooks and under-cooks and scullions who
scurried
for her as fast as they would have for any queen. Perhaps faster. A
queen would
be unlikely to give anyone a smack with her scepter for moving too
slowly.
A
great deal of the food seemed to be going onto trays, sometimes worked
silver,
sometimes carved wood and perhaps gilded, that women carried away
through the
door to the sisters' main dining hall. Not kitchen serving women with
the white
Flame of Tar Valon on their bosoms, but dignified women in well-cut
woolens
with an occasional touch of embroidery, sisters' personal servants who
would
make the long climb back to the Ajah quarters.
Any
Aes Sedai could eat in her own rooms if she wished, though it meant
channeling
to warm the food again, yet most enjoyed company at meals. At least,
they had.
That steady stream of women carrying out cloth-covered trays was a
confirmation
that the White Tower was spiderwebbed with cracks. She should have felt
pleasure at that. Elaida stood on a platform that was ready to crumble
beneath
her. But the Tower was home. All she felt was sadness. And anger at
Elaida,
too. That one deserved to be pulled down simply for what she had done
to the
Tower since gaining the stole and staff!
Laras
gave her one long look, drawing in her chin until she had a fourth,
then
returned to brandishing her spoon and looking over an under-cook's
shoulder.
The woman had helped Siuan and Leane escape, once, so her loyalties to
Elaida
were weak. Would she help another now? She was certainly making every
effort to
avoid looking in Eg-wene's direction again. Another under-cook. who
likely did
not know her from any other novice, a smiling woman still working on
her second
chin, handed her a wooden tray with a large, stout cup of steaming tea
and a
thick, white-glazed plate of bread, olives and crumbly white cheese
that she
carried back into the dining hall.
Silence
fell again, and once more every eye centered on her. Of course. They
knew she
had been summoned to the Mistress of Novices. They were waiting to see
whether
she would eat standing. She wanted very much to ease herself onto the
hard
wooden bench, but she made herself sit down normally. Which reignited
the
flames, of course. Not as strongly as before, yet strong enough to make
her
shift before she could stop herself. Strangely, she felt no real desire
to
grimace or squirm. To stand, yes, but not the other. The pain was part
of her.
She accepted it without struggle. She tried to welcome it, yet that
still
seemed beyond her.
She
tore a piece of bread-there were weevils in the flour here, too, it
appeared-and slowly the conversation in the room started up again,
quietly
because novices were expected not to make too much noise. At her table
also the
talk resumed, though no one made any effort to include her. That was
just as
well. She was not here to make friends among the novices. Nor to have
them see
her as one of themselves. No, her purpose was far different.
Leaving
the hall with the novices after returning her tray to the kitchen, she
found
another pair of Reds waiting for her. One was Ka-terine Alruddin.
vulpine in
copiously red-slashed gray, a mass of raven hair falling in waves to
her waist
and her shawl looped over her elbows.
"Drink
this," Katerine said imperiously, extending a pewter cup in one slim
hand.
"All of it, mind." The other Red, dark and square-faced, adjusted her
shawl impatiently and grimaced. Apparently she disliked acting as a
serving
woman even by association. Or perhaps it was dislike for what was in
the cup.
Suppressing
a sigh, Egwene drank. The weak forkroot tea looked and tasted like
water tinged
a faint brown, with just a hint of mint. Almost a memory of mint rather
than
the taste itself. Her first cup had been soon after waking, the Red
sisters on
duty eager to be done with shielding and about their own business.
Katerine had
let the hour slip a little, yet even without this cup. she doubted she
would
have been able to channel very strongly for some time yet. Certainly
not with
enough strength to be useful.
"I
don't want to be late for my first class." she said, handing the cup
back.
Katerine took it. though she seemed surprised to realize that she had.
Egwene
glided on after the novices before the sister could object. Or remember
to call
her down for failing to curtsy.
That
first class, in a plain, windowless room where ten novices occupied
benches for
thirty or more, was every bit the disaster she expected. Not a disaster
for
her, however, no matter the outcome. The instructor was Idrelle
Menford, a
lanky, hard-eyed woman who had already been Accepted when Egwene first
came to
the Tower. She still wore the white dress with the seven bands of color
at hem
and cuffs. Egwene took a seat at the end of a bench, once again without
consideration for her tenderness. That had lessened, though not very
far. Drink
in the pain.
Standing
on a small dais ac the front of the room, Idrelle looked down her long
nose
with more than a spark of satisfaction at seeing Egwene in white once
more. It
almost softened her frown, a fixture with Idrelle. "You have all gone
beyond making simple balls of fire," she told the class, "but let's
see what our new girl is capable of. She used to think a great deal of
herself,
you know." Several of the novices tittered. "Make a ball of fire,
Egwene. Go on, child." A ball of fire? That was one of the earliest
things
novices learned. What was she about?
Opening
herself to the Source, Egwene embraced saidar, let it rush into her.
The
forkroot allowed only a trickle, a thread where she was accustomed to
torrents,
yet it was the Power, and trickle or no, it brought all of the life and
joy of
saidar, all the heightened awareness of herself and the room around
her.
Awareness of herself meant her smarting bottom suddenly felt freshly
slippered
again, but she did not shift. Breathe in the pain. She could smell the
faint
aroma of soap from the novices' morning wash, see a tiny vein pulsing
on
Idrelle's forehead.
Part
of her wanted to clout the woman's ear with a flow of Air, but given
the amount
of the Power she commanded now. Idrelle would barely feel it. Instead,
she
channeled Fire and Air to produce a small ball of green fire that
floated in
front of her. A pale, pitiful thing it was, actually transparent.
"Very
good," Idrelle said sarcastically. All, yes. She had just wanted to
begin
by showing the novices how weak Egwene's channeling was. "Release
saidar.
Now, class-"
Egwene
added a blue ball, then a brown, and a gray, making them spin around
one
another.
"Release
the Source!" Idrelle said brusquely.
A
yellow ball joined the others, a white, and finally, a red ball.
Quickly she
added rings of fire one inside the other around the whirling balls. Red
came
first this time, because she wanted it smallest, green last and
largest. Had
she been able to choose an Ajah, it would have been the Green. Seven
rings of
fire rotated, no two in the same direction, around seven balls of fire
that
carried out an intricate dance at the heart. Pale and thin they might
be, yet
it was an impressive display beyond dividing her flows fourteen ways.
Juggling
with the Power was not all that much easier than juggling with your
hands.
"Stop
that!" Idrelle shouted. "Stop it!" The glow of saidar enveloped
the teacher, and a switch of Air struck Egwene hard across the back. "I
said stop it!" The switch struck again, then again.
Egwene
calmly kept the rings spinning, the balls dancing. After Silviana's
hard-swung
slipper, it was easy to drink in the pain of Idrelle's blows. If not to
welcome
it. Would she ever be able to smile while she was being beaten?
Katerine
and the other Red appeared in the doorway. "What is going on in
here?" the raven-haired sister demanded. Her companion's eyes widened
when
she saw what Egwene was doing. It was very unlikely that either of them
could
divide their flows so far.
The
novices all popped to their feet and curtsied when the Aes Sedai
entered, of
course. Egwene remained seated.
Idrelle
spread her banded skirts looking flustered. "She won't stop," she
wailed. "I told her to, but she won't!"
"Stop
that, Egwene," Katerine ordered firmly.
Egwene
maintained her weaves until the woman opened her mouth again. Only then
did she
release saidar and stand.
Katerine's
mouth snapped shut, and she took a deep breath. Her face retained its
Aes Sedai
serenity, but her eyes glittered. "You will run to Silviana's study and
tell her that you disobeyed your instructor and disrupted a class. Go!"
Pausing
long enough to straighten her skirts-when she obeyed. she must not do
so with
any appearance of eagerness or haste-Egwene squeezed past the two Aes
Sedai and
glided up the hallway.
"I
told you to run," Katerine said sharply behind her.
A
flow of Air struck her still sensitive bottom. Accept the pain. Another
blow.
Drink in the pain like breath. A third, hard enough to stagger her.
Welcome the
pain.
"Unhand
me. Jezrail," Katerine snarled.
"I'll
do no such thing," the other sister said with a strong Tairen accent.
"You go too far. Katerine. A swat or two is permitted, but punishing
her
further belongs to the Mistress of Novices. Light, at this rate, you'll
leave
her unable to walk before she reaches Silviana."
Katerine
breathed heavily. "Very well." she said at last. "But she can
add disobeying a sister to her list of offenses. I will inquire,
Egwene, so
don't think you can let it slip your mind."
When
she stepped into the Mistress of Novices' study. Silviana's eyebrows
rose in
surprise. "Again so soon? Fetch the slipper from the cabinet, child,
and
tell me what you've done now."
After
two more classes and two more visits to Silviana's study-she refused to
be made
mock of. and if an Accepted did not want her doing a thing better than
the
Accepted herself could, the woman should not ask her to do it at
all-plus her
foreordained midday appointment between. the stern-faced woman decided
that she
was to have Healing to begin each day.
"Else
you'll soon be too bruised to spank without bringing blood. But don't
think
this means I am going easy on you. If you require Healing three times a
day,
I'll just spank all the harder to make up. If need be, I'll go to the
strap or
the switch. Because I will make your head straight, child. Believe me
on
that."
Those
three classes, leaving three very embarrassed Accepted, had another
result. Her
teaching was shifted to sessions alone with Aes Sedai, something
normally
reserved for Accepted. That meant climbing the long, tapestry-lined
spiraling
corridors to the Ajah quarters, where sisters stood at the entrances
like
guards. They were guards, in truth. Visitots from other Ajahs were
unwelcome,
to say the least. In fact, she never saw any Aes Sedai near the
quarters of another
Ajah.
Except
for Sitters, she seldom saw sisters in the hallways outside the
quarters other
than in groups, always wearing their shawls, usually with Warders
following
close behind, but this was not like the fear that gripped the
encampment
outside the walls. Here it was always sisters of the same Ajah
together, and
when two groups passed, they cut each other dead if they did not glare.
In the
worst of summer the Tower remained cool, yet the air seemed feverish
and gelid
when sisters of different Ajahs came too close. Even the Sitters she
recognized
walked quickly. The few who realized who she was gave her long,
studying looks,
but most appeared distracted. Pevara Tazanovni, a plumply pretty Sitter
for the
Red, almost walked into her one day-she was not going to jump aside,
even for
Sitters-but Pevara hurried on as if she had not noticed. Another time
Doesine
Alwain, boyishly slim if elegantly dressed, did the same while deep in
conversation with another Yellow sister. Neither glanced at her twice.
She wished
she had some idea who the other Yellow was.
She
knew the names of the ten "ferrets" Sheriam and the others had sent
into the Tower to try undermining Elaida. and she very much would have
liked to
make contact with them, but she did not know their faces, and asking
after them
would only draw attention to them. She hoped one of them would pull her
aside
or hand her a note, but none did. Her battle would have to be fought
alone
except for Leane unless she overheard something that put faces to some
of those
names.
She
did not neglect Leane, of course. Her second night back in the Tower
she went
down to the open cells after supper despite her bone-deep weariness.
Those
half-dozen rooms in the first basement were where women who could
channel were
held if not to be closely confined. Each held a large cage of iron
latticework
that ran from stone floor to stone ceiling, with a space around it four
paces
wide and iron stand-lamps to provide light. At Leane's cell, two Browns
were
sitting on benches against the wall with a Warder, a wide-shouldered
man with a
beautiful face and touches of white at his temples. He looked up when
Egwene
walked in, then returned to honing his dagger on a stone.
One
of the Browns was Felaana Bevaine, slender with long yellow hair that
gleamed
as if she brushed it several times a day. She stopped writing in a
leather-bound notebook on a lapdesk long enough to say in a raspy
voice,
"Oh. It's you, is it? Well, Silviana said you can visit, child, but
don't
give her anything without showing it to Dalevien or me, and don't make
any
fuss." She promptly returned to her writing. Dalevien, a stocky woman
with
gray streaking her short dark hair, never looked up from her comparison
of the
text of two books, one held open on either knee. The glow oi saidar
shone
around her, and she was maintaining a shield on Leane, but there was no
reason
for her to look once it had been woven.
Egwene
lost no time in rushing to thrust her hands through the iron lattice
and clasp
Leane's. "Silviana told me they finally believe who you are," she
said, laughing, "but I didn't expect to find you in such luxury."
It
was luxury only when held up alongside the small dark cells where a
sister
might be held for trial, with rushes on the floor for a mattress and a
blanket
only if you were lucky, yet Leane's accommodations did appear
reasonably
comfortable. She had a small bed that looked softer than those in the
novice
quarters, a ladder-back chair with a tasseled blue cushion, and a table
that
held three books and a tray with the remains of her supper. There was
even a
washstand, though the white pitcher and bowl both had chips and the
mirror was
bubbled, and a privacy screen, opaque enough that she would be only a
shadowy
shape behind it, hid the chamber pot.
Leane
laughed, too. "Oh, I am very popular," she said briskly. Even the way
she stood seemed languorous, the very image of a seductive Domani
despite plain
dark woolens, but that brisk voice remained from before she had decided
to
remake herself as she wanted to be. "I've had a steady stream of
visitors
all day, from every Ajah except the Red. Even the Greens try to
convince me to
teach them how to Travel, and they mainly want to get their hands on me
because
I 'claim' to be Green now." She shivered much too ostentatiously for it
to
be real. "That would be as bad as being back with Melare and Desala.
Dreadful woman, Desala." Her smile faded away like mist in a noonday
sun.
"They told me they'd put you in white. Better than the alternatives, I
suppose. They give you forkroot? Me, too."
Surprised,
Egwene glanced toward the sister holding the shield, and Leane snorted.
"Custom.
If I weren't shielded, I could swat a fly and not hurt it, but custom
says a
woman in the open cells is always shielded. But they just let you
wander around
otherwise?"
"Not
exactly." Egwene said dryly. "There are two Reds waiting outside to
escort me to my room and shield me while I sleep."
Leane
sighed. "So. I'm in a cell, you are being watched, and we're both full
of
forkroot tea." She cast a sidelong look at the two Browns. Felaana was
still intent on her writing. Dalevien turned pages in the two books on
her
knees and began muttering under her breath. The Warder must have
intended to
shave with that dagger, he was honing it so keen. His main attention
seemed to
be on the doorway, though. Leane lowered her voice. "So when do we
escape?"
"We
don't," Egwene told her, and related her reasons and her plan in a near
whisper while watching the sisters out of the corner of her eye. She
told Leane
everything she had seen. And done. It was hard to tell how many times
she had
been spanked that day, and how she had behaved during, but necessary to
convince the other woman that she would not be broken.
"I
can see any sort of raid is out of the question, but I had hoped-" The
Warder shifted, and Leane cut off. but he was merely sheathing his
dagger.
Folding his arms across his chest and stretching his legs out, he
leaned back
against the wall, his eyes on the doorway. He looked as if he could be
on his
feet in the blink of an eye. "Laras helped me escape once," she went
on softly, "but I don't know that she would do it again." She
shivered, and there was nothing fake about it this time. She had been
stilled
when Laras helped her and Siuan escape. "She did it for Min more than
for
Siuan or me, anyway. Are you certain about this? A hard woman, Silviana
Brehon.
Fair, so I hear, but hard enough to break iron. Are you absolutely
certain,
Mother?" When Egwene said that she was, Leane sighed again. "Well,
we'll be two worms gnawing at the root then, won't we." It was not a
question.
She
visited Leane every night that exhaustion failed to drag her to her bed
straight after supper, and found her astonishingly sanguine for a
prisoner
confined to a cell. Leane's stream of visiting sisters was continuing,
and she
slipped the tidbits Egwene suggested into every conversation. Those
visitors
could not order an Aes Sedai punished, even one held in the open cells,
though
a few grew angry enough to wish they could, and besides, hearing those
things
from a sister carried more weight than hearing them from one they saw
as a
novice. Leane could even argue openly, at least until the visitors
stalked out.
But she reported that many did not. A few agreed with her. Cautiously,
hesitantly, perhaps on one point and not others, but they agreed.
Almost as
important, to Leane at least, some of the Greens decided that since she
had
been stilled and thus was no longer Aes Sedai for a time, she had the
right to
ask admission to any Ajah once she was a sister again. Not all by any
means,
but "few" was better than "none." Egwene began to think
that Leane in her cell was having more effect than she was roaming
free. Well,
free after a fashion. She was not exactly jealous. This was important
work they
were doing, and it did not matter which of them did it better so long
as it got
done. But there were times when it made the trek to Silviana's study
much
harder. Still, she had successes. Of a sort.
That
first afternoon, in Bennae Nalsad's cluttered sitting room- books stood
in
haphazard stacks everywhere on the floor tiles, and the shelves were
full of
bones and skulls and the preserved skins of animals, birds and snakes
along
with stuffed examples of some of the smaller specimens: a large brown
lizard
was perched on the huge skull of a bear, so still you would have
thought it
stuffed as well until it blinked-that first afternoon, the Shienaran
Brown
asked her to perform an exhaustive set of weaves one after the other.
Bennae
sat in a high-backed chair on one side of the brown-streaked marble
fireplace,
Egwene, with decided discomfort, in one on the other. She had not been
invited
to sit, but neither had Bennae objected.
Egwene
performed each weave as asked until Bennae casually asked for the weave
for
Traveling, and then she merely smiled and folded her hands in her lap.
The
sister leaned back and adjusted her deep brown silk skirts a hair.
Bennae's
eyes were blue and sharp, her dark hair, caught in a silver net,
liberally
streaked with gray. Ink stains marked two of her fingers, and another
smudged
the side of her nose. She held a porcelain cup of tea, but she had not
offered
any to Egwene.
"I
think there is little of the Power that remains for you to learn.
child,
especially considering your wonderful discoveries." Egwene inclined her
head, accepting the compliment. Some of those things truly were her
discoveries, and it hardly mattered now in any case. "But that hardly
means you have nothing to learn. You had few novice classes before you
were…" The Brown frowned at Egwene's white dress and cleared her
throat.
"And fewer lessons as… well, later. Tell me if you can. what mistakes
did Shein Chunla make that caused the Third War of Garen's Wall? What
were the
causes of the Great Winter War between Andor and Cairhien? What caused
the
Weikin Rebellion and how did it end? Most of history seems to be the
study of
wars, and the important parts of that are how and why they began and
how and
why ended. A great many wars would never have taken place if people had
paid
attention to the mistakes others had made. Well?"
"Shein
didn't make any mistakes," Egwene said slowly, "but you're right. I
do have a lot to learn. I don't even know the names of those other
wars."
Rising, she poured herself a cup of tea from the silver pitcher on the
side
table. Aside from the ropework silver tray, the tabletop held a stuffed
lynx
and the skull of a serpent. That was as big as a man's skull!
Bennae
frowned, but not for the tea. She hardly seemed to notice that. "What
do
you mean Shein didn't make any mistakes, child? Why, she bungled the
situation
as badly as ever I've heard of."
"Well
before the Third War of Garen's Wall," Egwene said, returning to her
chair, "Shein was doing exactly as the Hall told her and nothing they
didn't." She might be lacking in other areas of history, but Siuan had
tutored her thoroughly in the mistakes made by other Amyrlins. And this
particular
question gave her an opening. Sitting down normally took a great effort.
"What
are you talking about?"
"She
tried running the Tower with an iron hand, never a compromise on
anything,
running roughshod over any opposition. The Hall grew tired of it, but
they
couldn't settle on a replacement, so rather than deposing her, they did
worse.
They left her in place and forced a penance on her whenever she tried
to issue
an order of any kind. Any kind at all." She knew she was going on,
sounding as if she were the one giving a lecture, but she had to get it
all
out. Not easing herself on the hard wood of the chair seat was
difficult.
Welcome the pain. "The Hall ran Shein and the Tower. But they
mishandled a
great deal themselves, largely because each Ajah had its own goals and
there
was no hand to shape them into a goal for the Tower. Shein's reign was
marked
by wars all over the map. Eventually, the sisters themselves got tired
of the
Hall's bungling. In one of the six mutinies in Tower history. Shein and
the
Hall were pulled down. I know she supposedly died in the Tower of
natural
causes, but, in fact, she was smothered in her bed in exile fifty-one
years
later after the discovery of a plot to put her back on the Amyrlin
Seat."
"Mutinies?"
Bennae said incredulously. "Six of them? Exiled and smothered?"
"It's
all recorded in the secret histories, in the Thirteenth Deposi tory.
Though I
suppose I shouldn't have told you that." Egwene took a sip of tea and
grimaced. It was all but rancid. No wonder Bennae had not touched hers.
"Secret
histories? A thirteenth Depository? If such a thing existed, and I
think I
would know, why should you not have told me?"
"Because
by law the existence of the secret histories as well as their contents
can be
known only to the Amyrlin, the Keeper, and the Sitters. Them and the
librarians
who keep the records, anyway. Even the law itself is part of the
Thirteenth
Depository, so I guess I shouldn't have told that either. But if you
can gain
access somehow, or ask someone who knows and will tell you, you'll find
out I'm
right. Six times in the history of the Tower, when the Amyrlin was
dangerously
divisive or dangerously incompetent and the Hall failed to act. sisters
have
risen up to remove her." There. She could not have planted the seed
deeper
with a shovel. Or driven it home more bluntly with a hammer.
Bennae
stared at her for a long moment, then raised the cup to her lips. She
spluttered as soon as the tea touched her tongue, and began dabbing at
the
spots on her dress with a delicate, lace-edged handkerchief. "The Great
Winter War," she said huskily as she set the cup on the floor beside
her
chair, "began late in the year six hundred seventy-one…" She
did not mention secret records or mutinies again, but she did not have
to. More
than once during the lesson she trailed off, frowning at something
beyond
Egwene, and Egwene had little doubt what it was.
Later
that day, Lirene Doirellin said, "Yes, Elaida made a vital mistake
there," pacing up and down in front of her sitting room's fireplace.
The
Cairhienin sister was only a little shorter than Egwene, but the
nervous way
her eyes darted gave her the air of a hunted thing, a sparrow fearful
of cats
and convinced there were lots of cats in the vicinity. Her dark green
skirts
had only four discreet slashes of red, though she had been a Sitter
once.
"That proclamation of hers, on top of trying to kidnap him, could not
have
been better calculated to keep the al'Thor boy as far from the Tower as
he can
stay. Oh. she has made mistakes, Elaida has."
Egwene
wanted to ask about Rand and the kidnapping- kidnapping?-but Lirene
left no
opening as she went on about Elaida's many mistakes, all the while
pacing back
and forth, her eyes darting and her hands twisting unconsciously.
Egwene was
unsure whether or not that session could be called a success, but at
least it
was not a failure. And she had learned something.
Not
all of her forays went so well, of course.
"This
is not a discussion," Pritalle Nerbaijan said. Her tone was utterly
calm,
yet her tilted green eyes were heated. Her rooms looked more those of a
Green
than a Yellow, with several bared swords hanging on the walls and a
silk
tapestry showing men fighting Trollocs. She was gripping the hilt of
the dagger
at her woven silver belt. Not a simple belt knife; a dagger with a
blade near a
foot long and an emerald capping its pommel. Why she had agreed to
lecture
Egvvene was a mystery, given her dislike of teaching. Perhaps because
it was
Egwene. "You are here for a lesson on the limits of power. A very basic
lesson, suitable for a novice."
Egwene
wanted to shift on the three-legged stool that Pritalle had given her
for a
seat, but instead she concentrated on the smarting, focused on drinking
it in.
On welcoming it. The day had already seen three visits to Silviana, and
she
could sense a fourth coming, with the midday meal an hour off yet. "I
merely said that if Shemerin could be reduced from Aes Sedai to
Accepted then
Elaida's power has no limits. At least, she thinks it doesn't. But if
you accept
that, then it really doesn't."
Pritalle's
grip tightened on the dagger's hilt until her knuckles showed white,
yet she
seemed unaware. "Since you think you know better than I," she said
coolly, "you can visit Silviana when we finish." A partial success,
perhaps. Egwene did not think Pritalle's anger was for her.
"I
expect proper behavior out of you," Serancha Colvine told her firmly
another day. The word to describe the Gray sister was "pinched." A
pinched mouth, and a pinched nose that constantly seemed to be
detecting a bad
smell. Even her pale blue eyes seemed pinched with disapproval. She
might well
have been pretty otherwise. "Do you understand?"
"I
understand," Egwene said, sitting down on the stool that had been
placed
in front of Serancha's high-backed chair. The morning was cool, and a
small
fire burned on the stone hearth. Drink in the pain. Welcome the pain.
"An
incorrect response," Serancha said. "The correct response would have
been a curtsy and 'I understand. Serancha Sedai.' I intend to make a
list of
your failures for you to carry to Silviana when we're done. We'll begin
again.
Do you understand, child?"
"I
understand." Egwene said without rising. Aes Sedai serenity or no Aes
Sedai serenity, Serancha's face turned purple. In the end, her list
covered
four pages in a tight, cramped hand. She spent more time writing than
she did
lecturing! Not a success.
And
then there was Adelorna Bastine. The Saldaean Green somehow managed
stateliness
in spite of being slim and no taller than Egwene, and she had a regal,
commanding air that might have been intimidating had Egwene let it. "I
hear you make trouble." she said, picking up an ivory-backed hairbrush
from a small inlaid table beside her chair. "If you try to make trouble
with
me, you'll learn that I know how to use this."
Egwene
did learn, without trying. Three times she went across Adelorna's lap,
and the
woman did indeed know how to use a hairbrush for more than brushing her
hair.
That managed to stretch an hour lecture to two.
"May
I go now?" Egwene said at last, calmly drying her cheeks as well as she
could with a handkerchief that was already damp. Breathe in the pain.
Absorb
the fire. "I'm supposed to fetch water up for the Red, and I don't want
to
be late."
Adelorna
frowned at her hairbrush before returning it to the table that Egwene
had
overset twice with her kicking. Then she frowned at Egwene, studying
her as if
trying to see inside her skull. "I wish Cadsuane were in the Tower,"
she murmured. "I think she'd find you a challenge." There seemed a
touch of respect in her voice.
That
day was a turning point in some ways. For one thing, Silviana decided
that
Egwene was to receive Healing twice each day.
"You
seem to invite being beaten, child. It's pure stubbornness, and I won't
put up
with it. You will face reality. The next time you visit me, we'll see
how you
like the strap." The Mistress of Novices folded Egwene's shift over her
back, then paused. "Are you smiling} Did I say something amusing?"
"I
just thought of something funny." Egwene said. "Nothing of
consequence." Not of consequence to Silviana, anyway. She had realized
how
to welcome the pain. She was fighting a war, not a single battle, and
every
time she was beaten, every time she was sent to Silviana. it was a sign
that
she had fought another battle and refused to yield. The pain was a
badge of
honor. She howled and kicked as hard as ever during that slippering,
but while
she was drying her cheeks afterward, she hummed quietly to herself. It
was easy
to welcome a badge of honor.
Attitudes
among the novices began to shift by the second day of her captivity. It
seemed
that Nicola-and Areina. who was working in the stables and often came
to visit
Nicola; they seemed so close that Egwene wondered whether they had
become
pillow-friends, always with their heads together and smiling mysterious
smiles-
Nicola and Areina had regaled them all with tales of her. Very inflated
tales.
The two women had made her seem a combination of every legendary sister
in the
histories, along with Birgitte Silverbow and Amaresu herself, carrying
the
Sword of the Sun into battle. Half of them seemed in awe of her, the
others
angry with her for some reason or outright scornful. Foolishly, some
tried to
emulate her behavior in their classes, but a flurry of visits to
Silviana
quelled that. At the midday meal of the third day, nearly two dozen
novices ate
standing up and red-faced with embarrassment, Nicola among them. And
Alvis-tere. surprisingly. That number dropped to seven at supper, and
on the
fourth day, only Nicola and the Cairhienin girl did so. And that was
the end of
that.
She
expected some might resent the fact that she continued to refuse to
bend while
they had been put back on the straight and narrow so quickly, but to
the contrary,
it only seemed to decrease the number who were angry or scornful and
increase
the respect. No one tried to become her friend, which was just as well.
White
dress or no white dress, she was Aes Sedai, and it was improper for an
Aes
Sedai to befriend a novice. There was too much risk the girl would
start
feeling above herself and get into trouble for it. Novices began coming
to her
for advice, for help learning their lessons, though. Only a handful at
first,
but the number grew day by day. She was willing to help them learn,
which was
usually just a matter of strengthening a girl's confidence or
convincing a
young woman that caution was wise, or taking them patiently through the
steps
of a weave that was giving trouble. Novices were forbidden to channel
without
an Aes Sedai or Accepted present, though they nearly always did in
secret
anyway, but she was a sister. She refused to help more than one at a
time,
however. Word of groups would surely leak out, and she would not be the
only
one sent to Silviana. She would make that trip as often as necessary,
but she
did not want to earn it for others. And as for advice… With the novices
kept strictly clear of men, advice was easy. Though strains between
pillow-friends could be as harsh as anything men ever caused.
One
evening, returning from yet another session with Silviana, she
overheard Nicola
talking to two novices who could not have been more than fifteen or
sixteen.
Egwene hardly remembered being that young. It seemed a lifetime ago.
Marah was
a stocky Murandian with mischievous blue eyes, Namene a tall, slim
Domani who
giggled incessantly.
"Ask
the Mother," Nicola said. A few of the novices had taken to calling
Egwene
that, though never where anyone not wearing white could hear. They were
foolish,
but not utter fools. "She's always willing to give advice."
Namene
giggled nervously and wriggled. "1 wouldn't want to bother her."
"Besides,"
Marah said, a lilt in her voice, "they say she always gives the same
advice, she does."
"And
good advice it is, too." Nicola held up one hand to tick off fingers.
"Obey the Aes Sedai. Obey the Accepted. Work hard. Then work harder."
Gliding
on toward her room, Egwene smiled. She had been unable to make Nicola
behave
properly while she was openly Amyrlin, but it seemed she might have
succeeded
while masquerading as a novice herself. Remarkable.
There
was one more thing she could do for them: comfort them. Impossible as
it seemed
at first, the interior of the Tower sometimes changed. People got lost
trying
to find rooms they had been to dozens of times. Women were seen walking
out of
walls, or into them, often in dresses of old-fashioned cut, sometimes
in
bizarre garb, dresses that seemed simply lengths of brightly colored
cloth
folded around the body, embroidered ankle-length tabards worn over wide
trousers, stranger things still. Light, when could any woman have
wanted to
wear a dress that left her bosom completely exposed? Egwene was able to
discuss
it with Siuan in Tel'aran'rhiod, so she knew that these things were
signs of
the approach of Tarmon Gai'don. An unpleasant thought, yet there was
nothing to
be done about it. What was, was, and it was not as if Rand himself was
not a
herald of the Last Battle. Some of the sisters in the Tower must have
known
what it all meant, too, but wrapped up in their own affairs they made
no effort
to comfort novices who were weeping with fright. Egwene did.
"The
world is full of strange wonders," she told Coride, a pale-haired girl
who
was sobbing facedown on her bed. Only a year younger than herself,
Coride was
most definitely still a girl despite a year and a half in the Tower.
"Why
be surprised if some of those wonders appear in the White Tower? What
better
place?" She never mentioned the Last Battle to these girls. That was
hardly likely to be any comfort.
"But
she walked into a wall!" Coride wailed, raising her head. Her face was
red
and blotchy, and her cheeks glistened damply. "A wall! And then none of
us
could find the classroom, and Pedra couldn't either, and she got cross
with us.
Pedra never gets cross. She was frightened, too!"
"I'll
wager Pedra didn't start crying, though." Egwene sat down on the edge
of
the girl's bed, and was pleased that she did not wince. Novice
mattresses were
not noted for softness. "The dead can't harm the living, Coride. They
can't touch us. They don't even seem to see us. Besides, they were
initiates of
the Tower or else servants here. This was their home as much as it is
ours. And
as for rooms or hallways not being where they're supposed to be, just
remember
that the Tower is a place of wonders. Remember that, and they won't
frighten
you."
It
seemed feeble to her, but Coride wiped her eyes and swore she would
never be
frightened again. Unfortunately, there were a hundred and two like her,
not all
so easily comforted. It was enough to make Egwene angrier at the
sisters in the
Tower than she already had been.
Her
days were not all lessons and comforting novices and being punished by
the
Mistress of Novices, though the last did take up an unfortunate amount
of each
day. Silviana had been right to doubt that she would have much free
time.
Novices were always given chores. Often it was make-work, since the
Tower had
well over a thousand serving men and women without counting laborers,
but
physical work helped build character, so the Tower had always believed.
Plus,
it helped keep the novices too tired to think of men, supposedly. She
was
loaded down with chores beyond what the novices were given, though.
Some were
assigned by sisters who considered her a runaway, others by Silviana in
the
hope that weariness would dull the edge of her "rebellion."
Daily,
alter one meal or another, she scrubbed dirty pots with coarse salt and
a stiff
brush in the workroom off the main kitchen. From time to time Laras
would put
her head in, but she never spoke. And she never used her long spoon,
even when
Egwene was massaging the small of her back, aching from being head-down
in a
large kettle, rather than scrubbing. Laras dealt out smacks aplenty to
scullions
and under-cooks who tried to play pranks on Egwene, as was customary
with
novices sent to work in the kitchen. Supposedly that was just because,
as she
announced loudly every time she gave a thwack, they had plenty of time
to play
when they were not supposed to be working, but Egwene noticed that
Laras was
not so quick when someone goosed one of the true novices or tipped a
cup of
cold water down the back of her neck. It seemed she did have an ally of
sorts.
If she could only figure out how to make use of her.
She
hauled water in buckets hanging from the ends of a pole balanced across
her
shoulders, to the kitchen, to the novices' quarters, to the Accepted's
quarters, all the way up to the Ajah's quarters. She carried meals to
sisters
in their rooms, raked garden paths, pulled weeds, ran errands for
sisters,
attended Sitters, swept floors, mopped floors. scrubbed floors on her
hands and
knees, and that was only a partial list. She never shirked at these
tasks, and
only in part because she would not give anyone an excuse to call her
lazy. In a
way. she viewed them as penance for not having prepared properly before
turning
the harbor chain to cuendillar. Penances were to be borne with dignity.
As much
dignity as anyone can have while scrubbing a floor, anyway.
Besides,
visiting the Accepted's quarters gave her a chance to see how they
viewed her.
There were thirty-one in the Tower, but at any given time some were
teaching
novices and others taking lessons of their own, so she seldom found
more than
ten or twelve in their rooms around the nine-tiered well surrounding a
small
garden. Word of her arrival always spread quickly, though, and she
never lacked
an audience. At first, many of them tried to overwhelm her with orders,
especially Mair, a plump blue-eyed Arafellin, and Asseil, a slim
Taraboner with
pale hair and brown eyes. They had been novices when she came to the
Tower, and
already jealous of her quick rise to Accepted when she left. With them,
every
second sentence was fetch that, or carry this there. For all of them
she was
the "novice" who had caused so much difficulty, the
"novice" who thought she was the Amyrlin Seat. She carried pails of
water till her back ached, uncomplaining, yet she refused to obey their
commands. Which earned her more visits to the Mistress of Novices, of
course.
As the days passed, as her continual trips to Sil-viana's study showed
no
effect, however, that flow of commands dwindled and finally ceased.
Even Asseil
and Mair had not really been trying to be mean, only to behave as they
thought
they should in the circumstances, and they were at a loss as to what to
do with
her. Some of the Accepted showed signs of fright at the dead walking
and the
interior of the Tower changing, and whenever she saw a bloodless face
or teary
eyes she would say the same things she told the novices. Not addressing
the
woman directly, which might have gotten her back up rather than
soothing her,
but as if talking to herself. It worked as well with Accepted as with
novices.
Many gave a start when she began, or opened their mouths as though to
tell her
to be quiet, yet none did, and she always left a thoughtful expression
behind.
The Accepted continued to come out onto the stone-railed galleries when
she
entered, but they watched her in silence as though wondering what she
was.
Eventually she would teach them what she was. Them and the sisters. too.
Attending
Sitters and sisters, a woman in white standing quietly in the corner
quickly
became part of the furniture even when she was notorious. If they
noticed her.
they changed their conversation, yet she overheard many snippets, often
of
plots to avenge some slight given or wrong done by another Ajah. Oddly,
most of
the sisters seemed to see the other Ajahs inside the Tower as more
their
enemies than they did the sisters in the camp outside the city, and the
Sitters
were not much better. It made her want to slap them. True, it boded
well for
relations when the other sisters returned to the Tower, but still…
She
did pick up other things. The unbelievable disaster that had befallen
an
expedition sent against the Black Tower. Some of the sisters seemed not
to
believe it, yet they appeared to be trying to convince themselves it
could not
have happened. More sisters captured after a great battle and somehow
forced to
swear fealty to Rand. She had already had inklings of that, and she
could not
like it any more than she did sisters being bonded by Asha'man. Being
ta'wren
or the Dragon Reborn was no excuse. No Aes Sedai had ever before sworn
fealty
to any man. The sisters and Sitters argued over who was to blame, with
Rand and
the Asha'man at the head of the list. But one name came up again and
again.
Elaida do Avriny a'Roihan. They talked of Rand, too, of how to find him
before
Tarmon Gai'don. They knew it was coming despite their failure to
console the
novices and Accepted, and they were desperate to lay hands on him.
Sometimes
she risked a comment, a mention of Shemerin being stripped of the shawl
against
all custom, a suggestion that Elaida's edict regarding Rand was the
best way in
the world to make him dig in his heels. She offered sympathy for the
sisters
captured by the Asha'-man, for those taken at Dumai's Wells-with
Elaida's name
dropped in-or regretted the neglect that saw garbage rotting in the
once
pristine streets of Tar Valon. There was no need to mention Elaida
there; they
knew who was responsible for Tar Valon. At times, those comments earned
her
still more trips to Silviana's study, and more chores besides, yet
surprisingly
often they did not. She made careful note of the sisters who merely
told her to
be quiet. Or better still, said nothing. Some even nodded agreement
before they
caught themselves.
Some
of those chores led to interesting encounters.
On
the morning of her second day she was using a long-handled bamboo rake
to fish
detritus from the ponds of the Water Garden. There had been a rainstorm
the
night before, and the heavy winds had deposited leaves and grasses in
the ponds
among the bright green lily pads and budding water irises, and even a
dead
sparrow that she calmly buried in one of the flower beds. A pair of
Reds stood
on one of the arching pond bridges, leaning on the lacy stone railing
and
watching her and the fish swirling below them in a flurry of red and
gold and
white. A half-dozen crows burst up out of one of the leatherleafs and
silently
winged their way north. Crows! The Tower grounds were supposed to be
warded
against crows and ravens. The Reds did not seem to have noticed.
She
was squatting on her heels beside one of the ponds, washing the dirt
from her
hands after burying that pitiful bird, when Alviarin appeared, her
white-fringed shawl wrapped tightly around her as if the morning were
still
windy rather than bright and fair. This was the third time she had seen
Alviarin, and every time she had been alone rather than in company with
other
Whites. She had seen clusters of Whites in the hallways, though. Was
there a
clue in that? If so, she could not imagine to what, unless Alviarin was
being
shunned by her own Ajah for some reason. Surely the rot had not gone
that deep.
Eyeing
the Reds, Alviarin approached Egwene along the coarse gravel path that
wound
among the ponds. "You have fallen far," she said when she was close.
"You must feel it keenly."
Egwene
straightened and blotted her hands on her skirt, then picked up the
rake.
"I'm not the only one." She had had another session with Silviana
before dawn, and when she left the woman's study, Alviarin had been
waiting to go
in again. That was a daily ritual for the White, and the talk of the
novices'
quarters, with every tongue speculating on the why of it. "My mother
always says, don't weep over what can't be mended. It seems good advice
under
the circumstances."
Faint
spots of color appeared in Alviarin's cheeks. "But you seem to be
weeping
a good deal. Endlessly, by all reports. Surely you would escape that if
you
could."
Egwene
caught another oak leaf on the broom and brushed it off into the wooden
pail of
damp leaves at her feet. "Your loyalty to Elaida isn't very strong, is
it?"
"Why
do you say that?" Alviarin said suspiciously. Glancing at the two Reds,
who appeared to be paying more mind now to the fish than Egwene, she
stepped
closer, inviting lowered voices.
Egwene
fished at a long strand of grass that had to have come all the way from
the
plains beyond the river. Should she mention the letter this woman had
written
to Rand practically promising him the White Tower at his feet? No, that
piece
of information might prove valuable, but it seemed the sort of thing
that could
only be used once. "She stripped you of the Keeper's stole and ordered
your penance. That's hardly an inducement to loyalty."
Alviarin's
face remained smooth, yet her shoulders relaxed visibly. Aes Sedai
seldom
showed so much. She must feel under phenomenal strain to be so little
in
control of herself. She darted a look at the Reds again. "Think on your
situation," she said in near a whisper. "If you want an escape from
it, well, you may be able to find one."
"I
am content with my situation," Egwene said simply.
Alviarin's
eyebrows quirked upward in disbelief, but with another glance at the
Reds-one
was watching them now rather than the fish- she glided away, a very
fast glide
on the verge of breaking into a trot.
Every
two or three days she would appear while Egwene was doing chores, and
while she
never openly offered help with an escape, she used that word
frequently, and
she began to show frustration when Egwene refused to rise to her bait.
Bait it
was, to be sure. Egwene did not trust the woman. Perhaps it was that
letter,
surely designed to draw Rand to the Tower and into Elaida's clutches,
or maybe
it was the way she kept waiting for Egwene to make the first move, to
beg
possibly. Likely Alviarin would try to set conditions, then. In any
case, she
had no intention of escaping unless there was no other choice, so she
always
gave the same response.
"I
am content with my situation."
Alviarin
began grinding her teeth audibly when she heard that.
On
the fourth day, she was on her hands and knees scrubbing blue-and-white
floor
tiles when the boots of three men accompanied by a sister in
elaborately
red-embroidered gray silk passed her. A few paces on, the boots stopped.
"That
be her," a man's voice said in the accents of Illian. "She did be
pointed out to me. I think me I will speak to her."
"She's
only another novice, Mattin Stepaneos," the sister told him. "You
wanted to walk in the gardens." Egwene dipped her scrub brush in the
bucket of soapy water and began another stretch of tiles.
"Fortune
stab me. Cariandre, this may be the White Tower, but I do still be the
lawful
King of Illian. and if I want to speak to her-with you for chaperone;
all very
proper and decent-then I will speak with her. I did be told she did
grow up in
the same village with al'Thor." One set of boots, blacked till they
glistened, approached Egwene.
Only
then did she stand, the dripping brush in one hand. She used the back
of the
other to brush her hair out of her face. She refrained from knuckling
the small
of her back, much as she wanted to.
Mattin
Stepaneos was stocky and almost entirely bald, with a neatly trimmed
white
beard in the Illianer fashion and a heavily creased face. His eyes were
sharp,
and angry. Armor would have suited him better than the green silk coat
embroidered with golden bees on the sleeves and lapels. "Just another
novice?" he murmured. "I think you be mistaken, Cariandre."
The
plump Red. her lips compressed, left the two serving men with the Flame
of Tar
Valon on their chests and joined the balding man. Her disapproving gaze
touched
Egwene briefly before shifting to him. "She's a much-punished novice
who
has a floor to scrub. Come. The gardens should be very pleasant this
morning."
"What
be pleasant," he said, "do be talking to someone other than Aes
Sedai. And only of the Red Ajah at that, since you do manage to keep me
from
any others. On top of which, the servants you did give me might as well
be
mutes, and I think me the Tower Guards do have orders to hold their
tongues
around me as well."
He
fell silent as two more Red sisters approached. Nesita. plump and blue
eyed and
mean as a snake with the itch, nodded companion-ably to Cariandre while
Barasine handed Egwene the by now all too familiar pewter cup. The Red
seemed
to have custody of her in a way-at least, her watchers and minders were
always
Reds-and they seldom let much more than the promised hour pass before
someone
appeared with the cup of forkroot tea. She drained it and handed it
back.
Nesita seemed disappointed that she did not protest or refuse, but
there seemed
little point. She had, once, and Nesita had helped pour the vile stuff
down her
throat using a funnel she had ready in her belt pouch. That would have
been a
fine show of dignity in front of Martin Stepaneos.
He
watched the silent exchange with puzzled interest, though Cariandre
plucked at
his sleeve, urging him again to his walk in the gardens. "Sisters bring
you water when you thirst?" he asked when Barasine and Nesita glided
away.
"A
tea they think will improve my mood," she told him. "You look well,
Mattin Stepaneos. For a man Elaida had kidnapped." That tale was the
talk
of the novices' quarters, too.
Cariandre
hissed and opened her mouth, but he spoke up first, his jaw tight.
"Elaida
did save me from murder by al'Thor," he said. The Red nodded
approvingly.
"Why
would you think yourself in danger from him?" Egwene asked.
The
man grunted. "He did murder Morgase in Caemlyn, and Colavaere in
Cairhien.
He destroyed half the Sun Palace killing her, 1 did hear. And I did
hear of
Tairen High Lords poisoned or stabbed to death in Cairhien. Who can say
what
other rulers he did murder and destroy the bodies?" Cariandre nodded
again, smiling. You might have thought him a boy reciting his lessons.
Did the
woman have no understanding of men? He certainly saw it. His jaw grew
harder
still, and his hands clenched into fists for a moment.
"Colavaere
hanged herself," Egwene said, making sure she sounded patient. "The
Sun Palace was damaged later by someone trying to kill the Dragon
Reborn, maybe
the Forsaken, and according to Elayne Trakand, her mother was murdered
by
Rahvin. Rand has announced his support for her claims to both the Lion
Throne
and the Sun Throne. He hasn't killed any of the Cairhienin nobles
rebelling
against him, or the High Lords in rebellion. In fact, he named one of
them his
Steward in Tear."
"I
think that is quite-" Cariandre began, pulling her shawl up onto her
shoulders, but Egwene went on right over her.
"Any
sister could have told you all that. If she wanted to. If they were
speaking to
one another. Think why you see only Red sisters. Have you seen sisters
of any
two Ajahs speaking? You've been kidnapped and brought aboard a sinking
ship."
"That
is more than enough," Cariandre snapped right atop Eg-wene's last
sentence. "When you finish scrubbing this floor, you will run to the
Mistress of Novices and ask her to punish you for shirking. And for
showing
disrespect to an Aes Sedai."
Egwene
met the woman's furious gaze calmly. "I have barely enough time after I
finish to get clean before my lesson with Kiyoshi. Could I visit
Silviana after
the lesson?"
Cariandre
shifted her shawl, seemingly taken aback by her calmness. "That is a
problem for you to work out," she said at last. "Come, Mattin
Stepaneos. You have helped this child shirk long enough."
There
was no time to change out of her damp dress or even comb her hair after
leaving
Silviana's study, not if she were to have any hope of being on time for
Kiyoshi
without running, which she refused to do. That made her late, and it
turned out
that the tall, slender Gray was a stickler for both punctuality and
neatness,
which put her back yelping and kicking under Silviana's hard-swung
strap little
more than an hour later. Quite aside from embracing pain, something
else helped
see her through that. The memory of Mattin Stepaneos' thoughtful
expression as
Cariandre led him off down the corridor and how he twice looked back
over his
shoulder at her. She had planted another seed. Enough seeds planted,
and
perhaps what sprouted from them would splinter those cracks in the
platform
beneath Elaida. Enough seeds would bring Elaida down.
Early
on her seventh day of captivity, she was carrying water up the Tower
again, to
the White Ajah quarters this time, when she suddenly stopped in her
tracks
feeling as if she had been punched in her stomach hard. Two women in
gray-fringed shawls were walking down the spi-raling corridor toward
her,
trailed by a pair of Warders. One was Melavaire Someinellin, a stout
Cairhienin
in fine gray wool with white flecking her dark hair. The other, with
blue eyes
and dark honey hair. was Beonin!
"So
you're the one who betrayed me!" Egwene said angrily. A thought
occurred
to her. How could Beonin have betrayed her after swearing fealty? "You
must be Black Ajah!"
Melavaire
drew herself up as much as she could, which was not very far since she
was
inches shorter than Egwene. and planted her fists on her ample hips as
she
opened her mouth to deliver a blast. Egwene had had one lesson from
her, and
while she was a kindly woman usually, when she became angry, she could
be
fearsome.
Beonin
laid a hand on the other sister's plump arm. "Let me speak to her alone
please, Melavaire."
"I
trust you will speak sharply," Melavaire said in a stiff voice. "To
even think of making such a charge… ! To even mention some things…
!" Shaking her head in disgust, she retreated a little up the corridor
followed by her Warder, squat and even wider than she, a bear of a man
though
he moved with the expected Warder grace.
Beonin
gestured and waited until her own Warder, a lean man with a long scar
on his
face, joined them. She adjusted her shawl several times. "Me. I
betrayed
nothing," she said quietly. "I would not have sworn to you except
that the Hall, it would have had me birched if it learned the secrets
you knew.
Perhaps more than once. even. Reason enough to swear, no? I never
pretended to
love you, yet I maintained that oath until you were captured. But you
are no
longer Amyrlin, yes? Not as a captive, not when there was no hope of
rescuing
you, when you refused rescue. And you are a novice once more, so that
oath, it
has two reasons to hold no longer. The talk of rebellion, it was wild
talk. The
rebellion is finished. The White Tower, it will soon be whole again,
and I will
not be sorry to see it so."
Lifting
the pole from her shoulders, Egwene set down the pails of water and
folded her
arms beneath her breasts. She had tried to maintain a calm demeanor
since being
captured-well, except when she being punished-but this encounter would
have
tried a stone. "You explain yourself at great length," she said
dryly. "Are you trying to convince yourself? It won't do, Beonin. It
won't
do. If the rebellion is finished, where is the flood of sisters coming
to kneel
before Elaida and accept her penance? Light, what else have you
betrayed?
Everything?" It seemed likely. She had visited Elaida's study a number
of
times in Tel'aran'rhiod, but the woman's correspondence box had always
been
empty. Now she knew why.
Sharp
spots of red appeared in Beonin's cheeks. "I tell you, I have-betrayed
n-!" She finished with a strangled grunt and put a hand to her throat
as
if it refused to let the lie leave her tongue. That proved she was not
Black
Ajah; but it proved something more.
"You
betrayed the ferrets. Are they all down in the basement cells?"
Beonin's
eyes flashed up the corridor. Melavaire was talking with her Warder,
his head
bent close to hers. Squat or not. he was taller than she. Beonin's
Tervail was
watching her with a worried expression. The distance was too far for
any of the
three to have overheard, but Beonin stepped closer and lowered her
voice.
"Elaida, she is having them watched, though I think the Ajahs, they
keep
what they see to themselves. Few sisters want to tell Elaida any more
than they
must. It was necessary, you understand. I could hardly return to the
Tower and
keep them secret. It would have been discovered eventually."
"Then
you'll have to warn them." Egwene could not keep her voice clear of her
disdain. This woman split hairs with a razor! She took the thinnest
excuse to
decide her oath no longer applied, and then she betrayed the very women
she had
helped choose. Blood and bloody ashes!
Beonin
remained silent for a long moment, fiddling with her shawl, but at last
she
said, surprisingly. "I have already warned Mei-dani and Jennet." They
were the two Grays among the ferrets. "I have done what I can for them.
The others, they must sink or swim by themselves. Sisters have been
assaulted
for simply going too near another Ajah's quarters. Me, I will not walk
back to
my rooms clad only in my shawl and the welts just to try-"
"Think
of it as a penance," Egwene cut in. Light! Sisters assaulted} Things
were
even worse than she had thought. She had to remind herself that
well-manured
ground would help her seeds to grow.
Beonin
glanced up the hallway again, and Tervail took a step toward her before
Beonin
shook her head. Her face was smooth despite the color staining her
cheeks, but
inside, she must have been in turmoil. "You know I could send you to
the
Mistress of Novices, yes?" she said in a tight voice. "I hear you
spend half of each day squealing for her. I think you would dislike
more
visits, yes?"
Egwene
smiled at her. Not two hours earlier she had managed to smile the
moment
Silviana's strap stopped falling. This was much harder. "And who can
say
what I might squeal? About oaths, perhaps?" The color drained from the
other woman's cheeks, leaving her face bloodless pale. No, she did not
want
that getting out. "You may have convinced yourself I am no longer
Amyrlin,
Beonin. but it's time to start convincing yourself that I still am. You
will
warn the others, whatever the cost to yourself. Tell them to stay away
from me
unless I send word otherwise. They've had more than enough attention
drawn to
them. But from now on. you'll seek me out every day in case I have
instructions
for them. I have some now." Quickly she listed the things she wanted
them
to bring up in conversation, Shemerin being stripped of the shawl,
Elaida's
complicity in the disasters at the Black Tower and Dumai's Wells, all
the seeds
she had been planting. They would not be planted one by one now, but
broadcast
by handfuls.
"Me,
I cannot speak for other Ajahs," Beonin said when she finished, "but
in the Gray, sisters speak of most of these things often. The
eyes-and-ears,
they are busy of late. Secrets Elaida hoped to hold, they are coming
out. I am
sure it must be the same in the others. Perhaps it is not necessary for
me
to-"
"Warn
them, and deliver my instructions, Beonin." Egwene lifted the pole back
onto her shoulders, shifting it to the most comfortable position she
could
find. Two or three of the Whites would use a hairbrush or slipper on
her and
send her to Silviana if they thought her slow. Embracing pain, even
welcoming
it, did not mean seeking it out unnecessarily. "Remember. It's a
penance
I've set you."
"I
will do as you say," Beonin said with obvious reluctance. Her eyes
hardened suddenly, but it was not for Egwene. "It would be enjoyable to
see Elaida pulled down," she said in an unpleasant voice before
hurrying
away to join Melavaire.
That
shocking meeting, turned into an unexpected victory, left Egwene
feeling very
good about the day, and no matter that Ferane did turn out to think she
had
been slow. The White Sitter was plump, but she had an arm as strong as
Silviana's.
That
night, she dragged herself down to the open cells after supper despite
wanting
her bed in the worst way. Aside from lessons and howling under
Silviana's
strap-the last time just before supper- most of the rest of the day had
been
given to hauling water. Her back and shoulders ached. Her arms ached,
her legs.
She was swaying on her feet with weariness. Strangely, she had not had
one of
those wretched headaches since being taken prisoner, nor any of those
dark dreams
that left her disturbed even though she could never remember them, but
she
thought she might be heading for a fine headache tonight. That would
make
telling true dreams difficult, and she had had some fine ones lately,
about
Rand, Mat, Perrin. even Gawyn, though most dreams of him were just that.
Three
White sisters she knew in passing were guarding Leaner Nagora, a lean
woman
with pale hair worn in a roll on her nape who sat very straight to make
up for
her lack of stature; Norine, lovely with her large liquid eyes but
often as
vague as any Brown; and Miyasi, tall and plump with iron-gray hair, a
stern
woman who brooked no nonsense and saw nonsense everywhere. Nagora,
surrounded
by the light of saidar, held the shield on Leane, but they were arguing
over
some point of logic that Egwene could not make out from the little she
heard.
She could not even tell whether there were two sides to the argument,
or three.
There were no raised voices, no shaken fists, and their faces remained
smooth
Aes Sedai masks, but the coldness in their voices left no doubt that
had they
not been Aes Sedai, they would have been shouting if not trading blows.
She
might as well not have existed for all the attention they paid her
entrance.
Watching
the three from the edge of her eye. she moved as close to the iron
latticework
as she could and gripped it with both hands to steady herself. Light,
she was
tired! "I saw Beonin today," she said softly. "She's here in the
Tower. She claimed her oath to me no longer held because I was no
longer the
Amyrlin Seat."
Leane
gasped and stepped near enough that she was brushing the iron bars.
"She
betrayed us?"
"The
inherent impossibility of dissimulated structures is a given," Nagora
said
firmly. Her voice was an icy hammer. "A given."
"She
denies it, and I believe her." Egwene whispered. "But she admitted
betraying the ferrets. Elaida is only having them watched for the
moment, but I
told Beonin to warn them, and she said she would. She said she had
already warned
Meidani and Jennet, but why would she betray them and then tell them
about it?
And she said she would like to see Elaida pulled down. Why would she
flee to
Elaida if she still wants her brought down? She as much as admitted no
one else
has abandoned our cause. I'm missing something, and I'm too tired to
see what
it is." A yawn that she barely managed to cover with a hand cracked her
jaw.
"Dissimulated
structures are implied by four of the five axioms of sixth-order
rationality," Miyasi said just as firmly. "Strongly implied."
"So-called
sixth-order rationality has been discarded as an aberration by anyone
with
intellect," Norine put in. a touch sharply. "But dissimulated
structures are fundamental to any possibility of understanding what is
happening right here in the Tower every day. Reality itself is
shifting,
changing day by day.'
Leane
glanced at the Whites. "Some always thought Elaida had spies among us.
If
Beonin was one, her oath to you would have held her until she could
convince
herself you were no longer Amyrlin. But if her reception here wasn't
what she
expected, it might have changed her loyalties. Beonin was always
ambitious. If
she didn't get her due as she sees matters…" She spread her hands.
"Beonin always expected her due and perhaps a little more."
"Logic
is always applicable to the real world," Miyasi said dismis-sively,
"but only a novice would think the real world can be applied to logic.
Ideals must be first principles. Not the mundane world." Nagora snapped
her mouth shut with a dark look, as if she felt words had been snatched
right
off her tongue.
Coloring
faintly, Norine rose and glided away from the benches toward Egwene.
The other
two followed her with their eyes, and she seemed to feel their gazes,
shifting
her shawl uncomfortably first one way than another. "Child, you look
exhausted. Go to your bed now."
Egwene
wanted nothing more than her bed. but she had a question to be answered
first.
Only she had to be careful. The three Whites were all paying attention
now.
"Leane, do the sisters who visit you still ask the same questions?"
"I
told you to go to your bed," Norine said sharply. She clapped her hands
together as if that would somehow make Egwene obey.
"Yes,"
Leane said. "I see what you mean. Perhaps there can be a measure of
trust."
"A
small measure," Egwene said.
Norine
planted her fists on her hips. There was little coolness in her face or
her
voice, and no vagueness at all about her. "Since you refuse to go to
your
bed, you can go to the Mistress of Novices and tell her you disobeyed a
sister."
"Of
course," Egwene said quickly, turning to go. She had her answer-Beonin
had
not passed on Traveling, and that meant she likely had not passed on
anything
else; perhaps there could be a little crust-and besides. Nagora and
Miyasi were
advancing on her. The last thing she wanted was to be dragged bodily to
Silviana's study, something Miyasi at least was quite capable of. She
had even
stronger arms than Ferane.
On
the morning of her ninth day back in the Tower, before first light,
Doesine
herself came to Egwene's small room to give her her morning dose of
Healing.
Outside, rain was falling with a dull roar. The two Reds who had been
watching
over her sleep gave her her forkroot, frowning at Doesine, and hurried
away.
The Yellow Sitter snorted in contempt when the door closed behind them.
She
used the old method of Healing that made Egwene gasp as though doused
in an icy
pond and left her ravenously eager for breakfast. As well as free of
the pain
in her bottom. That actually felt peculiar; you could adapt to anything
over
time, and a bruised bottom already seemed normal. But the use of the
old way.
the way used every time she had been given Healing since being
captured,
reaffirmed that Beonin had kept some secrets, though how she had
managed it was
still a mystery. Beonin herself had only said that most sisters thought
the
tales of new weaves were merely rumors.
"You
don't mean to bloody surrender, do you. child?" Doesine said while
Egwene
was pulling her dress over her head. The woman's language was very much
at odds
with her elegant appearance, in gold-embroidered blue with sapphires at
her
ears and in her hair.
"Should
the Amyrlin Seat ever surrender?" Egwene asked as her head popped out
at
the top of her dress. She doubled her arms behind her to do up the
buttons of
white-dyed horn.
Doesine
snorted again, though not in contempt. Egwene thought. "A brave course,
child. Still, my wager is that Silviana will bloody well have you
sitting
straight and walking right before much longer." But she left without
calling Egwene down for naming herself the Amyrlin Seat.
Egwene
had yet another appointment with the Mistress of Novices before
breakfast-she
had not missed a day, so far-and following a determined effort to undo
Doesine's work in one go, her tears ceased as soon as Silviana's strap
stopped
falling. When she lifted herself off the end of the writing table,
where a
leather pad was attached just for bending over, its surface worn down
by who
knew how many women, and her skirt and shift fell against her fiery
skin, she
felt no urge to flinch. She accepted the painful heat, welcomed it,
warmed
herself with it as she would have warmed her hands in front of a
fireplace on a
cold winter morning. There seemed a strong resemblance between her
bottom and a
blazing fireplace right at that moment. Yet looking into the mirror,
she saw an
unruffled face. Red-cheeked, but calm.
"How
could Shemerin have been reduced to Accepted?'' she asked, wiping her
tears
away with her handkerchief. "I've inquired, and there's no provision
for
it in Tower law."
"How
often have you been sent to me because of those 'inquiries'?" Silviana
asked, hanging the split-tailed strap in the narrow cabinet alongside
the
leather paddle and the limber switch. "I'd think you would have given
over
long since."
"I'm
curious. How. when there's no provision?"
"No
provision, child," Silviana said gently, as if explaining to a child in
truth, "but no prohibition, either. A loophole that… Well, we won't
go into that. You'd only find a way to get yourself another strapping
with
it." Shaking her head, she took her seat behind the writing table and
rested her hands on the tabletop. "The problem was that Shemerin
accepted
it. Other sisters told her to ignore the edict, but once she realized
pleading
wouldn't change the Amyrlin's mind, she moved into the Accepted's
quarters."
Egwene's
stomach growled loudly, anxious for breakfast, but she was not done.
She was
actually having a conversation with Silviana. A conversation, however
odd the
topic. "But why would she run away? Surely her friends didn't stop
trying
to talk sense into her."
"Some
talked sense," Silviana said dryly. "Others…" She moved her
hands like the pans of a balance scale, first one up then the other.
"Others tried to force her to see sense. They sent her to me nearly as
often as you are sent. I treated her visits as private penances, but
she lacked
your-" She stopped abruptly, leaning back in her chair and studying
Egwene
over steepled fingers. "Well, now. You actually have me chatting. Not
prohibited certainly, yet hardly proper in these circumstances. Go on
to
breakfast," she said, picking up her pen and opening the silver cap of
her
ink jar. "I'll mark you down for midday again, since I know you have no
intention of curtsying." The faintest hint of resignation tinged her
voice.
When
Egwene entered the novices' dining hall, the first novice to see her
stood, and
suddenly there was a loud scraping of benches on the colorful floor
tiles as
the others rose, too. They stood there at their benches in silence as
Egwene
walked down the center aisle toward the kitchen. Suddenly Ashelin, a
plump,
pretty girl from Altara, darted into the kitchen. Before Egwene reached
the
kitchen door. Ashelin was back with a tray in her hands that held the
usual
thick cup of steaming tea and plate of bread, olives and cheese. Egwene
reached
for the tray, but the olive-skinned girl hurried to the nearest table
and set
it down in front of an empty bench, offering a suggestion of a curtsy
as she
backed away. Lucky for her, neither of Egwene's escorts this morning
had chosen
that moment to peer into the dining hall. Lucky for all those novices
on their
feet.
A
cushion rested on the bench in front of Egwene's tray. A tattered thing
that
was more patches in different colors than original material, but still
a
cushion. Egwene picked it up and set it on the end of the table before
sitting
down. Welcoming the pain was easy. She basked in the warmth of her own
fires. A
soft susurration gusted through the room, a collective sigh. Only when
she
popped an olive into her mouth did the novices sit.
She
almost spat it out again-it was not far short of spoiled-but she was
famished
after her Healing, so she spat only the pit into the palm of her hand
and
deposited it on the plate, washing the taste away with a sip of tea.
There was
honey in the tea! Novices got honey only on special occasions. She
tried not to
smile as she cleaned her plate, and clean it she did, even picking up
crumbs of
bread and cheese with a dampened finger. Not smiling was difficult,
though.
First Doesine-a Sitter!-then Silviana's resignation, now this. The two
sisters
were far more important than the novices or the honey, but they all
indicated
the same thing. She was winning her war.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
Attending Elaida
Gold-embossed
leather folder under her arm, Tarna kept to the central core of the
Tower as
she climbed toward Elaida's apartments, although it meant using a
seemingly
endless series of staircases-twice those stairs were not located where
she
remembered them, but so long as she continued upward, she would reach
her
destination-rather than the gently spiraling corridors. On the stairs,
she met
no one but occasional liveried servants who bowed or curtsied before
hurrying
on about their tasks. In either of the spiraling hallways she would
have to
pass the entrances to the Ajah quarters and perhaps encounter other
sisters.
Her Keeper's stole allowed her to enter any Ajah's quarters, yet she
avoided
all except the Red save when duty called. Among sisters of the other
Ajahs she
was all too aware that her narrow stole was red. all too aware of hot
eyes watching
her from cold faces. They did not unnerve her-little did; she took the
shifting
interior of the Tower in stride-but still… She thought matters had not
gone so far that anyone would actually attack the Keeper, yet she took
no
chances. Retrieving the situation was going to be a long, hard
struggle,
whatever Elaida thought, and an assault on the Keeper might make it
irretrievable.
Besides,
not having to watch over her shoulder allowed her to think on Pevara's
troubling question, one she had not considered before suggesting the
bonding of
Asha'man. Who in the Red actually could be trusted with the task?
Hunting men
who could channel led Red sisters to look askance at all men, and a
fair number
hated them. A surviving brother or father might well escape hatred, a
favorite
cousin or uncle, but once they were all gone, so was affection. And
trust. And
there was another matter of trust. Bonding any man violated custom
strong as
law. Even with Tsutama's blessings, who might run to Elaida when
bonding Asha'man
was broached? She had removed three more names from her mental list of
possibilities by the time she reached the entrance to Elaida's
apartments, only
two floors below the top of the Tower. After almost two weeks, her list
of
those she could be certain of still contained only a single name, and
that one
was impossible for the task.
Elaida
was in her sitting room, where the furnishings were all gilt and ivory
inlays
and the large patterned carpet was one of Tear's finest creations. She
was
sitting in a low-backed chair before the marble fireplace sipping wine
with
Meidani. Seeing the Gray was no surprise despite the early hour.
Meidani dined
with the Amyrlin most nights, and visited often during the day by
invitation.
Elaida, her six-striped stole wide enough to cover her shoulders, was
regarding
the taller woman over her crystal goblet, a dark-eyed eagle regarding a
mouse
with big blue eyes. Meidani. emeralds at her ears and on a wide collar
around
her slim throat, seemed very conscious of that gaze. Her full lips
smiled, but
they seemed tremulous. The hand not holding her goblet moved
constantly,
touching the emerald comb over her left ear, patting her hair, covering
her
bosom, which was largely exposed by her snug bodice of brocaded
silvery-gray
silk. Her bosom was hardly excessive, yet her slenderness made it seem
so, and
she appeared about to pop free of the garment. The woman was garbed for
a ball.
Or a seduction.
"The
morning reports are ready. Mother," Tarna said, bowing slightly. Light!
She felt as if she had intruded on lovers!
"You
won't mind leaving us, Meidani?" Even the smile Elaida directed at the
yellow-haired woman was predatory.
"Of
course not. Mother." Meidani set her goblet on the small table beside
her
chair and leaped to her feet, offering a curtsy that nearly had her out
of her
dress. "Of course not." She scurried from the room breathing hard,
her eyes wide.
When
the door closed behind her, Elaida laughed. "We were pillow-friends as
novices," she said, rising, "and I believe she wants to renew the
relationship. I may let her. She might reveal more on the pillows than
she's
let slip so far. Which is nothing, truth to tell." She strode to the
nearest window and stood staring down toward where her fantastical
palace would
rise to overtop the Tower itself. Eventually. If sisters could be
convinced to
work on it again. The heavy rain that had begun during the night was
still
falling, and it seemed unlikely she could see anything of that palace's
foundations, all that had been completed so far. "Help yourself to wine
if
you wish."
Tarna
kept her face smooth with an effort. Pillow-friends were common among
novices
and Accepted, but girlhood things should be left behind with girlhood.
Not all
sisters saw it so, certainly. Galina had been quite surprised when
Tarna
refused her advances after gaining the shawl. She herself found men far
more
attractive than women. Most seemed heavily intimidated by Aes Sedai. to
be
sure, especially if they learned you were Red Ajah. but over the years
she had
come across a few who were not.
"That
seems odd, Mother." she said, putting the leather folder down on the
side
table that held an ornately wrought golden tray bearing a crystal wine
pitcher
and goblets. "She appears frightened of you." Filling a goblet, she
sniffed
the wine before sipping. The Keepings seemed to be working. For now.
Elaida had
finally agreed that that weave, at least, must be shared. "Almost as if
she knew that you know about her being a spy."
"Of
course she's afraid of me." Sarcasm dripped heavily from Elaida's
voice,
but then hardened to stone. "I want her afraid. I intend to put her
through the mangle. By the time I have her birched, she'll tie herself
to the
birching frame if I order it. If she knew I knew, Tarna, she'd be
fleeing instead
of delivering herself into my hands." Still staring out into the
rainstorm, Elaida sipped at her wine. "Have you any news of the
others?"
"No,
Mother. If I could inform the Sitters of why they're to be watched-"
"No!"
Elaida snapped, spinning to face her. Her dress was such a mass of
intricate
red scrollwork that the embroidery all but hid the gray silk beneath.
Tarna had
suggested that less flaunting of her former Ajah-she had phrased it
more
diplomatically, but that was what she meant-might help bring the Ajahs
together
again, yet Elaida's eruption of fury had been sufficient to keep her
quiet on
the topic since.
"What
if some of the Sitters are working with them? I wouldn't put it past
them.
Those ridiculous talks continue at the bridge despite my orders. No, I
wouldn't
put it past them at all!"
Tarna
inclined her head over her goblet, accepting what she could not change.
Elaida
refused to see that if the Ajahs disobeyed her order to break off the
talks,
they were unlikely to spy on their own sisters at her command without
knowing
why. Saying so would only result in another tirade, though.
Elaida
stared at her as if to make sure she was not going to argue. The woman
seemed
harder than ever. And more brittle. "A pity the rebellion in Tarabon
failed," she said at last. "There's nothing to be done about it, I
suppose." But she mentioned it frequently, at odd moments, since word
came
that the Seanchan were reasserting their grip on that country. She was
not so
resigned as she pretended. "I want to hear some good news, Tarna. Is
there
any word of the seals on the Dark One's prison? We must make sure no
more get
broken." As if Tarna did not know that!
"Not
that the Ajahs have reported, Mother, and I don't think they would hold
that
back." She wished she had those last words back as soon as they were
spoken.
Elaida
grunted. The Ajahs released only trickles of what their eyes-and-ears
told
them, and she resented that bitterly. Her own eyes-and-ears were
concentrated
in Andor. "How is the work coming at the harbors?"
"Slowly.
Mother." With the flow of trade stifled, the city was already feeling
hunger. It would begin starving soon, unless the harbor mouths were
cleared.
Even cutting away the portion of the Southhar-bor chain that was still
iron had
proved not enough to allow sufficient ships in to feed Tar Valon. Once
Tarna
was able to convince her of the necessity, Elaida had ordered the chain
towers
dismantled so those huge pieces of cuendillar could be removed. Like
the city
walls, however, the towers had been built and strengthened with the
Power, and
only the Power could disassemble them. It was far from easy. The
original
builders had done good work, and those wards seemed not to have
weakened a
hair. "Reds are doing most of the work for the time being. Sisters from
other Ajahs come now and then, but only a few. I expect that will
change soon,
though." They knew the necessity of the work, however much they might
resent it-no sister could like having to labor in that fashion: the
Reds doing
most of it certainly grumbled enough-but the order had come from
Elaida, and
these days, that resulted in foot-dragging.
Elaida
breathed heavily, then took a long drink. She seemed to need it. Her
hand
gripped the goblet so hard that tendons stood out on its back. She
advanced
across the patterned silk carpet as if she meant to strike at Tarna.
"They
defy me again. Again! I will have obedience, Tarna. I will have it!
Write out
an order, and once I sign and seal it, post it in every Ajah's
quarters."
She stopped almost nose-to-nose with Tarna, her dark eyes glittering
like a
raven's. "The Sitters of any Ajah that fails to send its fair share of
sisters to work on the chain towers will take a daily penance from
Silviana until
the matter is rectified. Daily! And the Sitters of any Ajah that sends
sisters
to those… those talks will do the same. Write it out for me to sign!"
Tarna
drew a deep breath. Penances might work and they might not, depending
on how
set the Sitters were, and the Ajah heads-she did not think things had
gone so
wrong that they might refuse to accept penance at all; that would be an
end to
Elaida for sure, perhaps an end to the Tower. But posting the order
publicly,
not allowing the Sitters a scrap to hide behind and maintain their
dignity, was
the wrong way to go about it. In truth, it might well be the very worst
way.
"If I may make a suggestion," she began as delicately as she could
manage. She had never been known for delicacy.
"You
may not," Elaida cut in harshly. She took another long drink, draining
her
goblet, and glided across the carpet to refill it. She drank too much,
of late.
Tarna had even seen her drunk once! "How is Silviana doing with the
al'Vere girl?" she said as she poured.
"Egwene
spends near enough half of every day in Silviana's study. Mother." She
was
careful to keep her tone neutral. This was the first time Elaida had
asked
after the young woman since her capture, nine days ago.
"So
much? I want her tamed to the Tower's harness, not broken."
"I… doubt she will be broken. Mother. Silviana will be careful of
that."
And then there was the girl herself. That was not for Elaida's ears,
though.
Tarna had been shouted at more than enough. She had learned to avoid
subjects
that only resulted in shouting. Advice and suggestions unoffered were
no more
useless than advice and suggestions untaken, and Elaida almost never
took
either. "Egwene's stubborn, but I expect she must come around soon."
The girl had to. Galina, beating Tama's block out of her, had not
expended a
tenth of the effort Silviana was putting into Egwene. The girl had to
yield to
that soon.
"Excellent."
Elaida murmured. "Excellent." She looked over her shoulder, her face
a mask of serenity. Her eyes still glittered, though. "Put her name on
the
roster to attend me. In fact, have her attend me tonight. She can serve
supper
for Meidani and me."
"It
will be as you command. Mother." It seemed yet another visit to the
Mistress of Novices was inevitable, but no doubt Egwene would earn just
as many
of those if she never came near Elaida.
"And
now your reports. Tarna." Elaida sat down again and crossed her legs.
Replacing
her barely touched goblet on the tray, Tarna took up her folder and sat
in the
chair Meidani had been using. "The redone wards appear to be keeping
rats
out of the Tower. Mother." for how long was another question; she
checked
those wards herself every day, "but ravens and crows have been seen in
the
Tower grounds, so the wards on the walls must be…"
The
midday sun cast dappled light through the leafy branches of the tall
trees,
mostly oak and leatherleaf and sourgum with a smattering of cottonwoods
and
massive pines. Apparently there had been a fierce windstorm some years
back,
because fallen timber, scattered about here and there but all stretched
in the
same general direction, provided good seating with only a little
hatchet work
to hack away a few limbs. Sparse undergrowth allowed a good view in all
directions, and not far off, a small clear stream splashed over mossy
stones.
It would have been a good campsite if Mat had not been intent on
covering as
much ground as he could every day, but it did just as well as a place
to rest
the horses and eat. The Damona Mountains still lay at least three
hundred miles
to the east, and he intended to reach them in a week. Vanin said he
knew a
smugglers' pass-purely by hearsay, of course: just something he had
overheard
by chance, but he knew right where to find it-that would have them
inside Murandy
two days after that. Much safer than trying to go north into Andor or
south
toward Illian. In either direction, the distance to safety would be
further and
the chance of encountering Seanchan greater.
Mat
gnawed the last scrap of meat from a rabbit's hind leg, and tossed the
bone on
the ground. Balding Lopin darted in, stroking at his beard in
consternation, to
pick it up and drop it in the pit he and Nerim had made in the
mulch-covered
forest floor, though the pit would be dug up by animals within a
half-hour
after their departure. Mat moved to wipe his hands on his breeches.
Tuon.
nibbling at a grouse leg on the other side of the low fire, gave him a
very
direct look, her eyebrows raised, while the ringers of her free hand
wiggled at
Selucia, who had ravaged half a grouse by herself. The bosomy woman did
not
reply, but she sniffed. Loudly. Meeting Tuon's gaze, he deliberately
wiped his
hands on his breeches. He could have gone over to the stream, where the
Aes
Sedai were washing their hands, but no one's clothing was going to be
pristine
by the time they reached Murandy in any case. Besides, when a woman
named you
Toy all the time, it was natural to take any chance to let her know you
were
nobody's toy. She shook her head and waggled her fingers again. This
time.
Selucia laughed, and Mat felt his face heat. He could imagine two or
three
things she might have said, none of which he would have enjoyed hearing.
Setalle,
sitting on the end of his log. made sure he heard some of them anyway.
Reaching
an agreement with the onetime Aes Sedai had not shifted her attitudes a
hair.
"She might have said men are pigs," she murmured without lifting her
eyes from her embroidery hoop, "or just that you are." Her dark gray
riding dress had a high neck, but she still wore her snug silver
necklace with
the marriage knife hanging from it. "She may have said you're a
mud-footed
country lout with dirt in your ears and hay in your hair. Or she might
have
said-"
"I
think I see the direction you're going," he told her through gritted
teeth. Tuon giggled, though the next instant her face belonged on an
executioner once more, cold and stern.
Pulling
his silver-mounted pipe and goatskin tabac pouch from his coat pocket,
he
thumbed the bowl full and lifted the lid on the box of strikers at his
feet. It
fascinated him the way fire just sprang up, spikes of it darting in all
directions at first, when he scratched the lumpy, red-and-white head of
a
striker down the rough side of the box. He waited until the flame
burned away
from the head before using it to light his pipe. Pulling the taste and
smell of
sulphur into his mouth once had been enough for him. He dropped the
burning
stick and ground it firmly under his boot. The mulch was still damp
from the
last rain to fall here, but he took no chances with fire in woods. In
the Two
Rivers, men turned out from miles around when the woods caught fire.
Sometimes
hundreds of marches burned, even so.
"The
strikers, they should not be wasted," Aludra said, lifting her eyes
from
the small stones board balanced atop a nearby log. Thom. stroking his
long
white mustaches, continued to contemplate the cross-hatched board. He
rarely
lost at stones, yet she had managed to win two games from him since
they left
the show. Two out of a dozen or more, but Thorn took care with anyone
who could
defeat him even once. She swept her beaded braids back over her
shoulders.
"Me, I must be in the same place for two days to make more. Men always
find ways to make work for women, yes?"
Mat
puffed away, if not contentedly, at least with some degree of pleasure.
Women!
A delight to look at and a delight to be with. When they were not
finding ways
to rub salt into a man's hide. It seemed six up and a half dozen down.
It truly
did.
Most
of the party had finished eating-the best part of two grouse and one
rabbit
were all that remained on the spits over the fire, but they would be
taken
along wrapped in linen; the hunting had been good during the morning's
ride,
yet there was no certainty the afternoon would be as profitable, and
flatbread
and beans made a poor meal. Those who had finished were taking their
ease or,
in the case of the Redarms, checking the hobbled packhorses, better
than sixty
of them on four leads. Buying so many in Maderin had been expensive,
but Luca
had rushed into town to take care of the bargaining himself once he
heard about
a merchant dead in the street. He almost-almost but not quite-had been
ready to
give them packhorses from the show's animals to be rid of Mat after
that. Many
of the animals were loaded with Aludra's paraphernalia and her
supplies. Luca
had ended up with the greater part by far of Mat's gold, one way and
another.
Mat had slipped a fat purse to Petra and Clarine, too, but that was
friendship,
to help them buy their inn a little sooner. What remained in his
saddlebags was
more than enough to see them comfortably to Murandy, though, and all he
needed
to replenish it was a common room where dice were being tossed.
Leilwin,
with a curved sword hanging from a broad leather strap that slanted
across her
chest, and Domon. with a shortsword on one side of his belt and a
brass-studded
cudgel on the other, were chatting with Juilin and Amathera on yet
another log
close by. Leilwin-he had come to accept that that was the only name she
would
stomach-made a point of showing that she would not avoid Tuon or
Selucia, or
lower her eyes when they met. though she had to steel herself visibly
to carry
it off. Juilin had the cuffs of his black coat turned back, a sign he
felt
among friends, or at least people he could trust. The onetime Panarch
of
Tarabon still clutched the thief-catcher's arm tightly, but she met
Leilwin's
sharp blue eyes with little flinching. In fact, she often seemed to
gaze at the
other woman with something approaching awe.
Seated
cross-legged on the ground and unmindful of the dampness, Noal was
playing
Snakes and Foxes with Olver and spinning wild tales about the lands
beyond the
Aiel Waste, about some great coastal city that foreigners were not
allowed to
leave except by ship and the inhabitants were not allowed to leave at
all. Mat
wished they would find another game to play. Every time they brought
out that
piece of red cloth with its spiderweb of black lines, it reminded him
of his
promise to Thorn, reminded him the bloody Eelfinn were inside his head
somehow.
and maybe the flaming Aelfinn, too. The Aes Sedai came up from the
stream, and
Joline stopped to talk with Blaeric and Fen. Bethamin and Seta,
trailing along
behind, hesitated until a gesture from the Green sent them to stand
behind the
log where Teslyn and Edesina sat, as far apart as they could manage,
with uncut
branches between, and began reading small leather-bound books taken
from their
belt pouches. Both Bethamin and Seta stood behind Edesina.
The
yellow-haired former sul'dam had come round in spectacular, and
painful,
fashion. Painful for her and for the sisters. When she first hesitantly
asked
them to teach her, too. at supper the night before, they refused. They
were
only teaching Bethamin because she had already channeled. Seta was too
old to
become a novice, she had not channeled, and that was that. So she
duplicated
whatever it was that Bethamin had done and had all three leaping about
the
cookfire and squealing in showers of dancing sparks for as long as she
could
hold onto the Power. They agreed to teach her then. At least. Joline
and
Edesina did. Teslyn still was having none of any sul'dam, former or
not. All
three of them took a hand in switching her, though, and she had spent
the
morning continually easing herself in her saddle. She still looked
afraid, of
the One Power and maybe of the Aes Sedai, but strangely, her face
somehow
seemed… content, too. How to understand that was beyond Mat.
He
should have felt content himself. He had avoided a charge of murder,
avoided
riding blindly into a Seanchan trap that would have killed Tuon,
and left the gholam behind for
good this time. It would be following Luca's show, and Luca had been
warned,
for whatever good that would do. In well under two weeks he would be
over the
mountains into Murandy. The need to figure out how to get Tuon back to
Ebou Dar
safely, no easy task at all now, especially since he would have to
guard
against Aes Sedai trying to spirit her away, would mean that much
longer to
look at her face. And to try puzzling out what went on behind those big
beautiful eyes. He should have been as happy as a goat in a corn crib.
He was
far from it.
For
one thing, all those sword-cuts he had received in Maderin hurt. Some
of them
were inflamed, though he had managed to keep that from anyone so far.
He hated
being fussed over nearly as much as he hated anyone using the Power on
him.
Lopin and Nerim had sewed him up as well as they could, and he had
refused
Healing despite attempted bullying by all three Aes Sedai. He had been
surprised that Joline. of all people, tried to insist, but she did, and
flung
up her hands in disgust when he failed to relent. Another surprise had
been
Tuon.
"Don't
be foolish. Toy," she had drawled in his tent, standing over him, arms
folded
beneath her breasts, while Lopin and Nerim plied their needles and he
gritted
his teeth. Her proprietary air, very much a woman making sure her
property was
repaired properly, had been enough to make him grind his teeth, never
mind the
needles. Or that he was down to his smallclothes! She had just walked
in and
refused to leave short of manhandling, and he had felt in no condition
to
manhandle a woman he suspected might be able to break his arm. "This
Healing is a wonderful thing. My Mylen knows it, and I taught it to my
others,
too. Of course, many people are foolish about having the Power touch
them. Half
my servants would faint at the suggestion, and most of the Blood, too,
I
shouldn't be surprised. But I wouldn't have expected it of you." If she
had
a quarter his experience of Aes Sedai, she would have.
They
had ridden off up the road from Maderin as if setting out for Lugard,
then
taken to the forest as soon as the last farms were out of sight. The
moment
they entered the trees, the dice started up in his head again. That was
the
other thing that soured his mood, those bloody dice drumming inside his
head
for two days. There hardly seemed any way they could stop here in the
forest.
What kind of momentous event could happen in the woods? Still, he had
stayed
well clear of the small villages they had passed. Sooner or later the
dice
would stop, though, and he could only wait for it.
Tuon
and Selucia headed for the stream to wash, wiggling their fingers at
one
another rapidly. Talking about him, he was sure. When women started
putting
their heads together, you could be sure-
Amathera
screamed, and every head whipped around toward her. Mat spotted the
cause as
quickly as Juilin did, a black-scaled snake a good seven feet long
wriggling
quickly away from the log Juilin was seated on. Leilwin cursed and
leaped to
her feet drawing her sword, but no faster than Juilin. who tugged his
shortsword free of its scabbard and started after the snake so swiftly
that his
conical red cap fell off.
"Let
it go, Juilin." Mat said. "It's heading away from us. Let it
go." The thing probably had a den under that log and had been surprised
to
come out and find people. Luckily, blacklances were solitary snakes.
Juilin
hesitated before deciding that comforting a shivering Amathera was more
important than chasing a snake. "What kind is it, anyway?" he said,
folding her in his arms. He was a city man. after all. Mat told him,
and for a
moment, he looked as though he meant to go after it again. Wisely, he
decided
against. Blacklances were quick as lightning, and with a shortsword, he
would
have needed to get close. Anyway, Amathera was clinging to him so hard
he would
have had a time getting free of her.
Taking
his hat from the butt of his ashandarei, which was driven point-down
into the
ground, Mat settled it on his head. "Daylight's wasting," he said
around his pipestem. "Time we were moving on. Don't dawdle over there,
Tuon. Your hands are clean enough." He had tried calling her Precious,
but
since her claim of victory back in Maderin. she refused to acknowledge
that he
had even spoken when he did.
She
did not hurry in the slightest, of course. By the time she returned,
drying her
small hands on a small piece of toweling that Selucia would drape
across the
pommel of her saddle to dry, Nerim and Lopin had filled in the refuse
pit,
wrapped the remains of the meal and tucked them into Nerim's
saddlebags, and
doused the fire with water brought from the stream in folding leather
buckets.
Ashandarei in hand, Mat was ready to mount Pips.
"A
strange man, who lets poisonous serpents go," Tuon said. "From the
fellow's reaction, I assume a blacklance is poisonous?"
"Very." he told her. "But
snakes don't bite anything they can't eat unless they're threatened."
He
put a foot in the stirrup.
"You
may kiss me. Toy."
He
gave a start. Her words, not spoken softly, had made them the object of
every
eye. Selucia's face was so stiffly expressionless her disapproval could
not
have been plainer. "Now?" he said. "When we stop tonight, we
could take a stroll alone-"
"By
tonight. I may have changed my mind, Toy. Call it a whim, for a man who
lets
poisonous snakes go." Maybe she saw one of her omens in that?
Taking
off his hat and sticking the black spear back into the ground, he took
the pipe
from between his teeth and planted a chaste kiss on her full lips. A
first kiss
was nothing to be rough with. He did nor want her to think him pushy,
or crude.
She was no tavern maid to enjoy a bit of slap and tickle. Besides, he
could
almost feel all those eyes watching. Someone snickered. Selucia rolled
her
eyes.
Tuon
folded her arms beneath her breasts and looked up at him through her
long
eyelashes. "Do I remind you of your sister?" she asked in a dangerous
tone. "Or perhaps your mother?" Somebody laughed. More than one
somebody, in fact.
Grimly.
Mat tapped the dottle from his pipe on the heel of his boot and stuffed
the
warm pipe into his coat pocket. He hung his hat back on the ashandarei.
If she
wanted a real kiss… Had he really thought she would not fill his arms?
Slim, she was to be sure, and small, but she filled them very nicely
indeed. He
bent his head to hers. She was far from the first woman he had kissed.
He knew
what he was about. Surprisingly-or then again, perhaps not so
surprisingly-she
did not know. She was a quick pupil, though. Very quick.
When
he finally released her. she stood there looking up at him and trying
to catch
her breath. For that matter, his breath came a little raggedly, too.
Metwyn
whistled appreciatively. Mat smiled. What would she think of what
plainly was
her first real kiss ever? He tried not to smile too widely, though. He
did not
want her to think he was smirking.
She
laid fingers against his cheek. "I thought so," she said in that slow
honey drawl. "You're feverish. Some of your wounds must be infected."
Mat
blinked. He gave her a kiss that had to have curled her toes, and
all she said was that his face was hot?
He bent his head again-this time, she would bloody well need help to
stay
standing!-but she put a hand against his chest, lending him off.
"Selucia,
fetch the box of ointments I got Irom Mistress Luca," she commanded.
Selucia went scurrying for Tuon's black-and-white mount.
"We
don't have time for that now," Mat said. "I'll smear on something
tonight." He might as well have kept his mouth shut.
"Strip
off, Toy." she said in the same tone she had used with her maid. "The
ointment will sting, but I expect you be brave."
"I
am not going to-!"
"Riders
coming." Harnan announced. He was already in his saddle, on a dark bay
gelding with white forefeet, holding the lead to one of the strings of
packhorses. "One of them's Vanin."
Mat
swung up onto Pips for a better vantage. A pair of horsemen were
approaching at
a gallop, dodging around fallen trees when they had to. Aside from
recognizing
Chel Vanin's dun, there was no mistaking the man himself. Nobody else
who was
that wide and sat his saddle like a sack of suet could have maintained
his seat
at that pace without any apparent effort. The man could have stayed in
the
saddle on a wild boar. Then Mat recognized the other rider, whose cloak
was
flailing behind him, and felt as if he had been punched in the belly.
He would
not have been surprised in the least had the dice stopped then, but
they kept
bouncing off the inside of his skull. What in the Light was Tal-manes
bloody
well doing in Altara?
The
two riders slowed to a walk short of Mat, and Vanin reined in to let
Talmanes
approach alone. It was not shyness. There was nothing shy about Vanin.
He
leaned lazily on the tall pommel of his saddle and spat to one side
through a
gap in his teeth. No, he knew Mat would not be best pleased, and he
meant to
stay clear.
"Vanin
brought me up to date. Mat," Talmanes said. Short and wiry, with the
front
of his head shaved and powdered, the Cairhienin had the right to wear
stripes
of color across his chest in considerable number, but a small red hand
sewn to
the breast of his dark coat was its only decoration unless you counted
the long
red scarf tied around his left arm. He never laughed and seldom smiled,
but he
had his reasons. "I was sorry to hear about Nalesean and the others. A
good man, Nale-sean. They all were."
"Yes, they were." Mat said, keeping
a tight rein on his temper. "I assume Egwene never came to you for help
getting away from those fool Aes Sedai, but what in the bloody flaming
Light
are you doing here?" Well, maybe he did not have such a tight rein
after
all. "At least tell me you haven't brought the whole bloody Band three
hundred bloody miles into Altara with you."
"Egwene
is still the Amyrlin," the other man said calmly, straightening his
cloak.
Another red hand, larger, marked that. "You were wrong about her. Mat.
She
really is the Amyrlin Seat, and she has those Aes Sedai by the scruff
of the
neck. Though some of them might not know it yet. The last I saw, she
and the
whole lot of them were off to besiege Tar Valon. She might have it by
now. They
can make holes in the air like the one the Dragon Reborn made to take
us near
Salidar." The colors spun in Mat's head, resolving for an instant into
Rand talking to some woman with gray hair in a bun atop her head, an
Aes Sedai,
he thought, but his anger blew the image away like mist.
All
that talk of the Amyrlin Seat and Tar Valon attracted the sisters, of
course.
They heeled their horses up beside Mat and tried to take over. Well,
Edesina
hung back a little the way she did when Teslyn or Joline had the bit in
her
teeth, but the other two…
"Who
do you be talking about?" Teslyn demanded while Joline was still
opening
her mouth. "Egwene? There did be an Accepted named Egwene al'Vere, but
she
be a runaway."
"Egwene
al'Vere is the one, Aes Sedai." Talmanes said politely. The man was
always
polite to Aes Sedai. "And she is no runaway. She is the Amyrlin Seat,
my
word on it." Edesina made a sound that would have been called a squeak
coming from anyone but an Aes Sedai.
"Later
for that." Mat muttered. Joline opened her mouth again, angrily.
"Later, I said." That was not enough to stop the slender Green. but
Teslyn laid a hand on her arm and murmured something, and that was.
Joline
still glared daggers, though, promising to drag out everything she
wanted to
know later. "The Band, Talmanes?"
"Oh.
No, I only brought three banners of horse and four thousand mounted
crossbowmen. I left three banners of horse and five of foot, a little
short of
crossbows, in Murandy with orders to move north to An-dor. And the
Mason's
Banner, of course. Handy to have masons ready to hand if you need a
bridge
built or the like."
Mat
squeezed his eyes shut for a moment. Six banners of horse and five of
foot. And
a banner of masons! The Band had only been two banners counting horse
and foot
when he left them in Salidar. He wished he had back half the gold he
had handed
over to Luca so freely. "How am I supposed to pay that many men?" he
demanded. "I couldn't find enough dice games in a year!"
"Well,
as to that, I made a small deal with King Roedran. Finished with, now,
and not
before time-I think he was about ready to turn on us; I will explain
later-but
the Band's coffers hold a year's pay and more. Besides, sooner or later
the
Dragon Reborn will give you estates, and grand ones. He has raised men
to rule
nations, so I hear, and you grew up with him."
This
time, he did not fight the colors as they resolved into Rand and the
Aes Sedai.
It was an Aes Sedai, for sure. A hard woman, she looked. If Rand tried
to give
him any titles, he would stuff them down Rand's bloody throat is what
he would
do. Mat Cauthon had no liking for nobles-well, a few like Talmanes were
all
right; and Tuon: never forget Tuon-and he certainly had no bloody
desire to
become one! "That's as may be," was all he said, though.
Selucia
cleared her throat loudly. She and Tuon moved their horses up beside
Mat, and
Tuon was so straight in her mare's saddle, so cool-eyed, cold-faced and
regal,
that he expected Selucia to start proclaiming her titles. She did
nothing of
the sort. Instead, she shifted on her dun and scowled at him, eyes like
blue
coals in a fire, then cleared her throat again. Very loudly. Ah.
"Tuon,"
Mat said, "allow me to present Lord Talmanes Delovinde of Cairhien. His
family is distinguished and ancient, and he has added honors to its
name."
The little woman inclined her head. Perhaps all of an inch. "Talmanes,
this is Tuon." So long as she called him Toy. she would get no titles
from
him. Selucia glared, eyes hotter than ever, impossible as that seemed.
Talmanes
blinked in surprise, though, and bowed very low in his saddle. Vanin
pulled the
sagging brim of his hat lower, half hiding his face. He still avoided
looking
directly at Mat. So. It seemed the man had already told Talmanes
exactly who
Tuon was.
Growling
under his breath. Mat leaned from the saddle to snatch his hat from the
spear
and pull up the ashandarei. He clapped the hat on his head. "We were
ready
to move on, Talmanes. Take us to where your men are waiting, and we'll
see if
we can have as good luck avoiding Seanchan on the way out of Altara as
you had
on the way in."
"We
saw a good many Seanchan." Talmanes said, turning his bay to fall in
beside Pips. "Though most of the men we saw seemed to be Altaran. They
have camps scattered everywhere, it seems. Luckily, we saw none of
those flying
creatures I have heard tell of. But there is a problem. Mat. There was
a
landslide. I lost my rear guard and some of the packhorses. The pass is
well
and truly blocked, Mat. I sent three men to try climbing over with the
orders
sending the Band to Andor. One broke his neck, and another his leg."
Mat
stopped Pips short. "I'm guessing this is the same pass Vanin was
talking
about?"
Talmanes
nodded, and Vanin, waiting to fall in farther back, said, "Bloody
right,
it was. Passes don't grow on trees, not in mountains like the Damonas."
He
was no respecter of rank.
"Then
you'll have to find another one." Mat told him. "I've heard you can
find your way blindfolded at midnight. It should be easy for you."
Flattery never hurt. Besides, he had heard that about the man.
Vanin
made a sound like he was swallowing his tongue. "Find another pass?"
he muttered. "Find another pass, the man says. You don't just go find
another pass in new mountains like the Damonas. Why do you think I only
knew
the one?" He was shaken to admit that much. Before this, he had been
adamant that he had only heard of it.
"What
are you talking about?" Mat demanded, and Vanin explained. At great
length, for him.
"An
Aes Sedai explained it to me, once. You see. there's old mountains.
They was
there before the Breaking, maybe on the bottom of the sea or the like.
They
have passes all over, broad and gentle. You can ride into those and as
long you
keep your head and your direction and have enough supplies, sooner or
later you
come out the other side. And then there's mountains made during the
Breaking." The fat man turned his head and spat copiously. "Passes in
those are narrow, twisty things, and sometimes they aren't really what
you'd
call passes at all. Ride into one of those, and you can wander around
till your
food runs out trying to find a way to the other side. Loss of that pass
is
going to hurt a lot of folks who use it for what you might call untaxed
goods,
and men'll die before they find a new one that gets them all the way
through.
We go into the Damonas with that pass gone, likely we'll all die, too.
Them as
doesn't turn back in time and hasn't gotten their heads so turned
around they
can't find the way back."
Mat
looked around, at Tuon. the Aes Sedai. at Olver. They were all
depending on him
to get them to safety, but his safe route out of Altara was not there
any more.
"Let's ride." he said. "I have to think." He had to bloody
think for all he was worth.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
As If the World Were Fog
Toy
set a fast pace through the forest, but Tuon rode close behind him-with
Selucia
at her side, of course-so she could listen in on him and Talmanes. Her
own
thoughts interfered with eavesdropping, however. So he had grown up
with the
Dragon Reborn, had he? The Dragon Reborn! And he had denied knowing
anything at
all of the man. That was one lie of his she had failed to catch, and
she was
good at catching lies. In Seandar, the undetected lie might be the one
that
killed you or sent you to the sale block as property. Had she known of
his
prevarication, she might have slapped his face rather than allowing him
to kiss
her. Now. that had been a shock, one she was not sure she had recovered
from
yet. Selucia had described being kissed by a man, but the actuality
made the
other woman's descriptions pale. No. she had to listen.
"You
left Estean in charge?" Toy erupted, so loudly that a covey of gray
doves
burst from cover in the thin undergrowth with a mournful whirring
sound.
"The man's a fool!"
"Not
too much of a fool to listen to Daerid." Talmanes replied calmly. He
did
not seem a man to get overly excited. He kept a careful watch, head
swiveling
constantly. Every so often he scanned the sky through the thick
branches
overhead, too. He had only heard of raken, yet he watched for them. His
words
were even crisper and quicker than Toy's, and difficult to follow.
These people
all spoke so fast! "Carlomin and Reimon are not fools, Mat-at least,
Reimon is only a fool sometimes-but neither will they listen to a
commoner, no
matter how much more he knows about warfare than they do. Edorion will,
but I
wanted him with me."
That
red hand symbol Talmanes wore was intriguing. More than intriguing.
Much more.
Of an old and distinguished House, was he? But Toy was the one. He
remembered
Hawkwing's face. That seemed utterly impossible, yet his denial of it
had
plainly been a lie, as plain as the spots on a leopard. Could the Red
Hand be
Toy's sigil? But if so, what about his ring? She had almost fainted
when she
first saw that. Well, she had come as close to it as she had since
childhood.
"That's
going to change, Talmanes," Toy growled. "I let it go on too long as
it is. If Reimon and the others command banners now, that makes them
Banner-Generals. And you a Lieutenant-General. Daerid commands five
banners,
and that makes him a Lieutenant-General, too. Reimon and the others
will obey
his orders or they can go home. Come Tarmon Gai'don, I'm not going to
have my
skull split open because they bloody refuse to listen to somebody who
doesn't
have bloody estates."
Talmanes
turned his horse to ride around a patch of briars, and everyone
followed. The
tangled vines seemed to have particularly long thorns, and hooked
besides.
"They will not like it, Mat. but they will not go home, either. You
know
that. Have you any ideas yet how we are to get out of Altara?"
"I'm
thinking on it," Toy muttered. "I'm thinking on it. Those
crossbowmen…" He exhaled heavily. "That wasn't wise. Talmanes.
For one thing, they're used to marching on their own feet. Half of them
will
have all they can do to stay in the saddle if we're moving fast, and
we're
going to have to. They can be useful in woods like these, or anywhere
they have
plenty of cover, but if we're on open ground, with no pikes, they'll be
ridden
down before they can loose a second flight."
In
the distance, a lion coughed. In the distance, but it was still enough
to make
the horses whicker nervously and dance a few steps. Toy leaned forward
on his
gelding's neck and appeared to whisper in the animal's ear. It quieted
immediately. So that had not been another of his fanciful tales after
all.
Remarkable.
"I
picked men who could ride. Mat," Talmanes said once his bay stopped
frisking. "And they all have the new crank." A touch of excitement
entered his voice now. Even restrained men tended to warmth over
weapons.
"Three turns of the crank." his hands moved in a quick circle,
demonstrating, "and the bowstring is latched. With a little training, a
man can get off seven or eight quarrels in a minute. With a heavy
crossbow."
Selucia
made a small sound in her throat. She was right to be startled. If
Talmanes was
telling the truth, and he had no reason to lie that Tuon could find,
then she
had to obtain one of these marvelous cranks somehow. With one for a
pattern,
artisans could make more. Archers could shoot faster than crossbowmen.
but they
took longer to train. too. There were always more crossbowmen than
archers.
"Seven"
Toy exclaimed incredulously. "That would be more than useful, but I
never
heard of such thing. Ever." He muttered that as if it had some special
significance, then shook his head. "How did you come by it?"
"Seven
or eight. There was a mechanic in Murandy who wanted to take a
wagonload of
things he had invented up to Caemlyn. There is a school of some sort
there for
scholars and inventors. He needed money for the journey, and he was
willing to
teach the Band's armorers to make the things. Smother your enemy with
arrows at
every opportunity. It is always better to kill your enemies far off
than close
at hand."
Selucia
held her hands up so Tuon could see them, slim fingers moving quickly,
WHAT is
THIS BAND THEY SPEAK OF? She used the proper form, inferior to
superior, yet
her impatience was almost palpable. Impatience with everything that was
happening. Tuon kept few secrets from her. but some seemed advisable
for the
present. She would not put it past Selucia to return her to Ebou Dar
forcibly,
so she would not be breaking her word. A shadow's duties were many, and
sometimes required paying the final sacrifice. She did not want to have
to
order Selucia's execution.
She
replied in the imperative form. TOY'S PERSONAL ARMY, OBVIOUSLY. LISTEN
AND WE
MAY LEARN MORE.
Toy
commanding an army seemed very odd. He was charming at times, even
witty and
amusing, but often a buffoon and always a rapscallion. He had seemed
very much
in his element as Tylin's pet. Yet he had seemed in his element among
the
show's performers, too, and with the marath'damane and the two escaped
damane,
and in the hell. That had been such a disappointment. Not even one
fight!
Events later had not compensated for that. Getting swept up in a street
brawl
was hardly the same as seeing fights in a hell. Which admittedly had
been far
more boring than rumor heard in Ebou Dar had made it seem. Toy had
displayed an
unexpected side of himself in that street brawl. A formidable man,
though with
a peculiar weakness. For some reason, she found that strangely
endearing.
"Good
advice." he said absently, tugging at the black scarf tied around his
neck. She wondered about the scar he took such pains to hide. That he
did was
understandable. Why had he been hanged, and how had he survived? She
could not
ask. She did not mind lowering his eyes a little-in fact, it was
enjoyable
making him writhe; it took so little effort-but she did not want to
destroy
him. At least, not for the moment.
"Do
you not recognize it?" Talmanes said. "It is from your book. King
Roedran has two copies in his library. He has it memorized. The man
thinks it
will make him a great captain. He was so pleased with how our bargain
worked
out that he had a copy printed and bound for me."
Toy
gave the other man a mystified look. "My book?"
"The
one you told us about. Mat. Fog and Steel, by Madoc Co-madrin."
"Oh.
that book." Toy shrugged. "I read it a long time ago."
Tuon
gritted her teeth. Her fingers flashed. WHEN WILL THEY STOP TALKING OF
HOOKS
AND GO BACK TO INTERESTING THINGS?
PERHAPS
IF WE LISTEN WE MAY LEARN MORE, Selucia replied. Tuon glared at her,
but the
woman wore such an innocent look that she could not maintain her scowl.
She
laughed-softly, so as not to let Toy realize how close behind him she
was-and
Selucia joined in. Softly.
Toy
had fallen silent, though, and Talmanes seemed content to leave it so.
They
rode in silence save for the sounds of the forest, birds singing,
strange
black-tailed squirrels chittering on branches. Tuon set herself to
watching for
omens, but nothing caught her eye. Bright-feathered birds darted among
the
trees. Once they spotted a herd of perhaps fifty tall, lean cattle with
very
long horns that stuck out almost straight to either side. The animals
had heard
them coming and were squared up, facing them. A bull tossed his head
and pawed
at the ground. Toy and Talmanes led the careful way around the herd,
keeping
their distance. She looked over her shoulder. The Redarms-why were they
called
that? She would have to ask Toy-the Redarms were leading the
packhorses, but
Gorderan had raised his crossbow, and the others had arrows nocked to
their
bows. So these cattle were dangerous. There were few omens concerning
cattle,
and she was relieved when the herd dwindled behind them. She had not
come all
this way to be killed by a cow. Or to see Toy killed by one.
After
a time. Thom and Aludra came up to ride beside her. The woman glanced
at her
once, then looked straight ahead. The Taraboner's face, framed by those
brightly beaded braids was always wooden when she looked at her or
Selucia so
clearly she was one of those who refused to accept the Return. She was
watching
Toy. and she looked… satisfied. As if something had been confirmed for
her, perhaps. Why had Toy brought her along? Surely not for her
fireworks.
Those were pretty enough, but they could not compare with Sky Lights
performed
by even a half-trained damane.
Thom
Merrilin was much more interesting. Patently, the white-haired old man
was an
experienced spy. Who had sent him to Ebou Dar? The White Tower seemed
the most
obvious candidate. He spent little time around the three who called
themselves
Aes Sedai, but a well-trained spy would not give himself away in that
fashion.
His presence troubled her. Until the last Aes Sedai was leashed, the
White Tower
was something to be wary of. Despite everything, she still had
troubling
thoughts at times that somehow, Toy was part of a White Tower plot.
That was
impossible unless some of the Aes Sedai were omniscient, yet the
thought
sometimes came to her.
"A
strange coincidence, wouldn't you say, Master Merrilin?" she said.
"Encountering part of Toy's army in the middle of an Altaran forest."
He
stroked his long mustaches with a knuckle, failing to mask a small
smile.
"He's ta'veren, my Lady, and you can never tell what will happen around
a
ta'veren. It's always… interesting… when you travel with one of
those. Mat has a tendency to find what he needs when he needs it.
Sometimes
before he knows he needs it."
She
stared at him, but he seemed serious. "He's tied to the Pattern?"
That was how the word would translate. "What is that supposed to
mean?"
The
old man's blue eyes widened in astonishment. "You don't know? But it's
said Artur Hawkwing was the strongest ta'veren anyone had ever seen,
perhaps as
strong as Rand al'Thor. I'd have thought you of all people would… Well,
if you don't, you don't. Ta'veren are people the Pattern shapes itself
around,
people who were spun out by the Pattern itself to maintain the proper
course of
the weaving, perhaps co correct flaws that were creeping in. One of the
Aes
Sedai could explain better than I." As if she would have conversation
with
a marath'damane, or worse, a runaway da mane.
"Thank
you,'' she told him politely. "I think I've heard enough." Ta'veren.
Ridiculous. These people and their endless superstitions! A small brown
bird,
surely a finch, flew out of a tall oak and circled wid-dershins three
times
above Toy's head before flying on. She had found her omen. Stay close
to Toy.
Not that she had any intention of doing otherwise. She had given her
word,
playing the game as it had to be played, and she had never broken her
word in
her life.
Little
more than an hour after setting out, as a bird warbled ahead, Selucia
pointed
out the first sentry, a man with a crossbow up in the thick branches of
a
spreading oak cupping a hand to his mouth. Not a bird, then. More
birdcalls
heralded their advance, and soon they were riding through a tidy
encampment.
There were no tents, but the lances were neatly stacked, the horses
picketed on
scattered lines among the trees, near to the blankets of the men who
would ride
them, with a saddle or packsaddle at every animal's head. It would not
take
long for them to break camp and be on the march. Their fires were small
and
gave off little smoke.
As
they rode in. men in dull green breastplates with that red hand on
their
coatsleeves and red scarves tied to their left arms began rising to
their feet.
She saw grizzled faces with scars and fresh young faces, all with their
eyes on
Toy and expressions she could only call eager. A growing murmur of
voices rose,
rustling through the trees like a breeze.
"It's
Lord Mat."
"Lord
Mat is back."
"Lord
Mat's found us."
"Lord
Mat."
Tuon
exchanged glances with Selucia. The affection in those voices was
unfeigned.
That was rare, and often went with a commander who had a slack hand at
discipline. But then, she expected any army of Toy's to be a ragtag
affair,
full of men who spent their time drinking and gambling. Only, these men
looked
no more ragtag than any regiment that had crossed a mountain range and
ridden
several hundred miles. No one looked unsteady on his feet with drink.
"Mostly
we camp during the day and move at night to avoid being seen by the
Seanchan,'
Talmanes said to Toy. "Just because we have seen none of those flying
beasts does not mean some might not be around. Most of the Seanchan
seem to be
farther north or farther south, but apparently they have a camp not
thirty
miles north of here, and rumor says there is one of the creatures
there."
"You
seem pretty well informed," Toy said, studying the soldiers they
passed.
He nodded suddenly, as if he had reached a decision. He seemed grim
and…
could it be resigned?
"I
am that. Mat. I brought half the scouts, and I also signed some
Altarans who
were fighting the Seanchan. Well, most of them seem to have been
stealing
horses more than anything else, but some were willing to give that up
for a
chance to really fight them. I think I know where most of the Seanchan
camps
are from the Malvide Narrows south to here."
Suddenly
a man began to sing in a deep voice, and others joined in, the song
spreading
rapidly.
There're
some delight in ale and wine, and
some in girls with ankles fine, but
my delight, yes, always mine.
is
to dance with jak o the Shadoivs.
Every
man in the camp was singing, now, thousands of voices roaring the song.
We'll
toss the dice however they fall, and
snuggle the girls be they short or tall.
then
follow Lord Mat whenever he calls.
to
dance withjak o the Shadows.
They
finished with shouts, laughing and clapping one another on the
shoulder. Who
under the Light was this Jak o' the Shadows?
Reining
in, Toy raised the hand holding his odd spear. That was all. yet
silence spread
through the soldiers. So he was not soft with discipline. There were a
few
other reasons for soldiers to be fond of their officers, but the most
common
seemed unlikely to apply to Toy, of all people.
"Let's
not let them know we're here until we want them to know."
Toy
said loudly. He was not orating, just making sure his voice carried.
And the
men heard, repeating his words over their shoulders to be passed back
to men
beyond the sound of his voice. "We're a long way from home, but I mean
to
get us home. So be ready to move, and move fast. The Band of the Red
Hand can
move faster than anybody else, and we're going to have to prove it."
There
was no cheering, but plenty of nods. Turning to Talmanes, he said, "Do
you
have maps?"
"The
best to be found," Talmanes replied. "The Band has its own mapmaker.
now. Master Roidelle already had good maps of everything from the Aryth
Ocean
to the Spine of the World, and since we crossed the Damonas, he and his
assistants have been making new maps of the country we crossed. They
even
marked a map of eastern Altara with what we have learned of the
Seanchan. Most
of those camps are temporary, though. Soldiers heading somewhere else."
Selucia
shifted in her saddle, and Tuon signed PATIENCE in high imperative
form, a
command. She kept her face smooth, but inside, she was furious. Knowing
where
soldiers were gave clues to where they were going. There had be some
way to
burn that map. That would be as important as laying hands on one of the
crossbow cranks.
"I'll
want to talk with Master Roidelle, too," Toy said.
Soldiers
came to take the horses, and for a while all seemed confusion and
milling
about. A gap-toothed fellow took Akein's reins, and Tuon gave him
explicit
instructions on caring for the mare. He returned her a sour look along
with his
bow. Commoners in these lands seemed to believe themselves equal to
everyone.
Selucia gave the same sort of instructions to the lanky young man who
took Rosebud.
She thought that an appropriate name for a dresser's horse. The young
man
stared at Selucia's chest, until she slapped him. Hard. He only grinned
and led
the dun away rubbing his cheek. Tuon sighed. That was all very well for
Selucia, but for herself, striking a commoner would lower her eyes for
months.
Soon
enough, though, she was settled on a folding stool with Selucia at her
back,
and stout Lopin presented them with tin cups full of dark tea, bowing
quite
properly to Selucia as well as to her. Not deeply enough, but the
balding man
did try. Her tea was honeyed to perfection, lightly, but then, he had
served
her often enough to know how she liked it. Activity bustled about them.
Talmanes had a brief reunion with gray-haired Nerim, who apparently was
his
serving man, and happy to be reunited with him. At least, the thin
man's
normally mournful countenance actually flashed a momentary smile. That
sort of
thing should have been done in private. Leilwin and Domon allowed
Master Charin
to lead Olver off to explore the camp with Juilin and Thera-Thom and
Aludra
went too, to stretch their legs-then deliberately took stools close by.
Leilwin
even went so far as to stare unblinking at Tuon for a long moment.
Selucia made
a low sound very like a growl, but Tuon ignored the provocation and
gestured
Mistress Anan to bring her stool over beside her. Eventually, the
traitors
would be punished, and the thief, the property restored to its rightful
owners,
and the marath'damane leashed, but those things had to wait on what was
more
important.
Three
more officers appeared, young noblemen with that red hand on their dark
silk
coats, and had their own reunion with Toy, with a great deal of
laughing and
hitting each other on the shoulder, which they seemed to take as a sign
of
fondness. She soon had them sorted out. Edorion was the dark, lean man
with the
serious expression except when smiling, Reimon the broad-shouldered
fellow who
smiled a great deal, and Carlomin the tall, slender one. Edorion was
cleanshaven, while Reimon and Carlomin both had dark beards that were
trimmed
to points and glistened as if oiled. All three made much over the Aes
Sedai,
bowing deeply. They even bowed to Bethamin and Seta! Tuon shook her
head.
"I've
told you often enough it's a different world than you're used to."
Mistress Anan murmured, "but you still don't quite believe it, do
you?"
"Just
because a thing is a certain way." Tuon replied, "doesn't mean it
should be that way, even if it has been for a long time."
"Some
might say the same of your people, my Lady."
"Some
might." Tuon let it rest there, though she usually enjoyed her private
conversations with the woman. Mistress Anan argued against leashing
marath'damane, as might be expected, and even against keeping da'cova/e
of all
things, yet they were discussions rather than arguments, and Tuon had
made her
concede a few points. She had hopes of bringing the woman around
eventually.
Not today, though. She wanted her mind focused on Toy.
Master
Roidelle appeared, a graying, round-faced man whose bulk strained his
dark
coat, followed by six fit-appearing younger men each carrying a long,
cylindrical leather case. "I brought all the maps of Al-tara I have, my
Lord." he told Talmanes in a musical accent as he bowed. Did everyone
in
these lands speak as if racing to get the words out? "Some cover the
whole
country, they do, some no more than a hundred square miles. The best
are my
own, of course, those I made these past weeks."
"Lord
Mat will tell you what he wants to see," Talmanes said. "Shall we
leave you to it, Mat?"
But
Toy was already telling the mapmaker what he wanted, the map marked
with the
Seanchan camps. In short order it was sorted out from the others in one
of the
cases and spread on the ground with Toy squatting on his heels beside
it.
Master Roidelle sent one of his assistants running to fetch him a
stool. He
would have burst his coat buttons trying to imitate Toy, and likely
have fallen
over besides. Tuon stared at that map hungrily. How to get her hands on
it?
Exchanging
glances and laughing as if being snubbed were the funniest thing in the
world,
Talmanes and the other three men strolled toward Tuon. The Aes Sedai
gathered
around the map on the ground until Toy told them to quit peering over
his
shoulder. They moved off a little. Bethamin and Seta heeling them at a
distance, and began talking quietly among themselves, occasionally
glancing in
his direction. If Toy had been paying any heed to their expressions,
especially
Joline's, he might have been worried in spite of the incredible
ter'angreal
Mistress Anan said he carried.
"We're
about here, right?" he said, marking a spot with his finger. Master
Roidelle murmured that they were. "So this is the camp where the raken
supposedly is? The flying beast?" Another murmur of assent. "Good.
What kind of camp is it? How many men are there?"
"Reportedly
it's a supply camp, my Lord. For resupplying patrols." The young man
returned with another folding stool, and the stout man eased himself
down with
a grunt. "Supposedly about a hundred soldiers, mostly Altaran, and
about
two hundred laborers, but I'm told there can be as many as five hundred
more
soldiers at times." A careful man, Master Roidelle.
Talmanes
made one of those odd bows, with one foot forward, and the other three
mirrored
him. "My Lady," Talmanes said, "Vanin told me of your
circumstances, and the promises Lord Mat made. I just want to tell you,
he
keeps his word."
"That
he does, my Lady," Edorion murmured. "Always." Tuon motioned him
to step aside so she could continue to watch Toy, and he did so with a
surprised glance at Toy and another for her. She gave him a stern look.
The
last thing she wanted was for these men to start imagining things. Not
everything had fallen out as it had to. yet. There was still a chance
this
could all go awry.
"Is
he a lord or is he not?" she demanded.
"Excuse
me," Talmanes said, "but would you say that again? I apologize. I
must have dirt in my ears." She repeated herself carefully, but it
still took
them a minute to puzzle out what she had said.
"Burn
my soul, no," Reimon said finally with a laugh. He stroked his beard.
"Except to us. Lord enough for us."
"He
dislikes nobles for the most part," Carlomin said. "I count it an
honor to be among the few he doesn't dislike."
"An
honor," Reimon agreed. Edorion contented himself with nodding.
"Soldiers,
Master Roidelle," Toy said firmly. "Show me where the soldiers are.
And more than any few hundred."
"What
is he doing?" Tuon said, frowning. "He can't think to sneak this many
men out of Altara even if he knows where every last soldier is. There
are
always patrols, and sweeps by raken." Again they took their time before
answering. Perhaps she should try speaking very fast.
"We've
seen no patrols in better than three hundred miles, and no-raken?-no
raken" Edorion said quietly. He was studying her. Too late to stop his
imaginings.
Reimon
laughed again. "If I know Mat, he's planning us a battle. The Band of
the
Red Hand rides to battle again. It's been too long, if you ask me."
Selucia
sniffed, and so did Mistress Anan. Tuon had to agree with them. "A
battle
won't get you out of Altara," she said sharply.
"In
that case," Talmanes said, "he's planning us a war." The other
three nodded agreement as if that were the most normal thing under the
Light.
Reimon even laughed. He seemed to think everything was humorous.
"Three
thousand?" Toy said. "You're sure? Sure enough, man. Sure enough will
do. Vanin can locate them if they haven't moved too far."
Tuon
looked at him, squatting there by the map. moving his fingers over its
surface,
and suddenly she saw him in a new light. A buffoon? No. A lion stuffed
into a
horse-stall might look like a peculiar joke, but a lion on the high
plains was
something very different. Toy was loose on the high plains, now. She
felt a
chill. What sort of man had she entangled herself with? After all this
time,
she realized, she had hardly a clue.
The
night was cool enough to send a small shiver through Perrin whenever
the breeze
gusted despite his fur-lined cloak. A halo around the fat crescent moon
said
there would be more rain before long. Thick clouds drifting across the
moon
made the pale light dim and strengthen, dim and strengthen, yet it was
enough
for his eyes. He sat Stepper just inside the edge of the trees and
watched the
cluster of four tall gray stone windmills in a clearing atop the ridge,
their
pale sails gleaming and shadowed by turns as they rotated. The
machinery of the
windmills groaned loudly. It seemed doubtful the Shaido even knew they
should
grease the works of the things. The stone aqueduct was a dark bar
stretching
east on high stone arches past abandoned farms and rail-fenced
fields-the
Shaido had planted, too early, with this much rain-toward another ridge
and the
lake beyond. Maiden lay one more ridge west. He eased the heavy hammer
in its
loop on his belt. Maiden and Faile. In a few hours, he would add a
fifty-fourth
knot to the leather cord in his pocket.
He
cast his mind out. Are you ready, Snowy Dawn? he thought. Are you close
enough
yet? Wolves avoided towns, and with Shaido hunting parties in the
surrounding
forest during the day, they stayed farther from Maiden than usual.
Patience,
Young Bull, came the reply, touched with irritation. But then, Snowy
Dawn was
irascible by nature, a scarred male of considerable age for a wolf who
had once
killed a leopard by himself. Those old injuries sometimes kept him from
sleeping very long at a stretch. Two days from now. you said. We will
be there.
Now let me try to sleep. We must hunt well tomorrow, since we cannot
hunt the
day after. They were images and smells rather than words, of
course-"two
days" was the sun crossing the sky twice, and "hunt" a pack
trotting with noses into the breeze blended with the scent of deer-but
Perrin's
mind converted the images to words even as he saw them in his head.
Patience.
Yes. Haste spoiled the work. But it was hard now that he was so close.
Very
hard.
A
form appeared from the dark door at the base of the nearest windmill
and waved
an Aiel spear back and forth overhead. The groaning had convinced him
the
windmills must still be deserted-they had been when the Maidens scouted
them
earlier, and no one would put up with that noise any longer than they
had to-but
he had sent Gaul and some of the Maidens to be sure one way or another.
"Let's
go, Mishima." he said, gathering his reins. "It's done." One way
or another.
"How
can you make out anything?" the Seanchan muttered. He avoided looking
at
Perrin. whose golden eyes would be glowing in the night. That had made
the
scarred man jump the first time he saw it. He did not smell amused
tonight. He
smelled tense. But he called softly over his shoulder. "Bring the carts
ahead. Quickly, now. Quickly. And be quiet about it, or I'll have your
ears!"
Perrin
heeled his dun stallion forward without waiting on the others, or the
six
high-wheeled carts. Liberally greased axles made them as silent as
carts could
be. They still sounded noisy to him, the cart horses' hooves squelching
in the
mud, the carts themselves creaking as wood flexed and rubbed, but he
doubted
anyone else could have heard them fifty paces off, and maybe not
closer. At the
top of the gentle slope he dismounted and let Stepper's reins fall. A
trained
warhorse, the stallion would stand there as if hobbled so long as his
reins
hung down. The windmill heads squealed, turning slightly as the breeze
shifted.
The slowly spinning arms were long enough that Perrin could have
touched one by
jumping when it swung low. He stared toward the last ridge that hid
Maiden.
Nothing grew there taller than a bush. Nothing moved in the darkness.
Just one
ridge between him and Faile. The Maidens had come outside to join Gaul,
all of
them still veiled.
"There
was no one," Gaul said, not quietly. This close, the grinding of the
windmills' gears would have swallowed quiet words.
"The
dust has not been disturbed since I was here last," Sulin added.
Perrin
scratched his beard. Just as well. Had they needed to kill Shaido, they
could
have carried away the bodies, but the dead would have been missed, and
it would
have drawn attention to the windmills and aqueduct. It might have
started
someone thinking about the water.
"Help
me get the lids off, Gaul." There was no need for him to do that. It
would
save only minutes, but he needed to be doing something. Gaul simply
stuck his
spear through the harness holding his bowcase to join the others on his
back.
The
aqueduct ran along the ground on the ridgetop, between the four
windmills, and
stood shoulder-high on Perrin, less on Gaul, who climbed over. Just
beyond the
last pair of windmills, bronze handles on either side allowed them to
lift off
heavy pieces of stone two feet wide and five feet long until they had
cleared a
stretch of six feet. What the opening was used for, he did not know.
There was
another like it on the other side. Maybe to work on the flaps that made
sure
water flowed only one way, or to get inside to repair any leaks. He
could see
small ripples of motion as it streamed toward Maiden, filling more than
half
the stone channel.
Mishima
joined them and dismounted to stand peering uncertainly at Sulin and
the
Maidens. He probably believed the night hid his expression. He smelled
wary,
now. He was followed quickly by the first of the red-coated Seanchan
soldiers
scrambling up the muddy slope, each carrying two middling-sized jute
sacks.
Middling, but not heavy. Each contained only ten pounds. Eyeing the
Aiel
suspiciously, the wiry woman set her sacks down and slashed one open
with her
dagger. A handful of fine dark grains spilled on the muddy ground.
"Do
that over the opening," Perrin said. "Make sure every grain goes into
the water."
The
wiry woman looked to Mishima, who said firmly, "Do as Lord Perrin
commands. Arrata."
Perrin
watched as she emptied the sack into the aqueduct, hands lifted over
her head.
The dark grains floated away toward Maiden. He had dropped a pinch into
a cup
of water, hating to waste even that, and they took some time to absorb
enough
water to sink. Long enough to reach the big cistern in the town, he
hoped. And
if not, they could steep in the aqueduct itself. The cistern would
still turn
to forkroot tea eventually. The Light send it would be strong enough.
With
luck, maybe even strong enough to affect the algai'd'siswai. The Wise
Ones who
could channel were his target, but he would take any advantage he could
gain.
The Light send it did not grow strong faster than he expected. If those
Wise
Ones began staggering too soon, they might puzzle out the cause before
he was
ready. But all he could do was go ahead as if he knew exactly. That,
and pray.
By
the time the second sack was being poured into the stone channel, the
others
began crowding up the slope. First came Seonid. a short woman holding
her dark
divided skirts up out of the mud. Shifting his attention from the
Maidens to
her, Mishima made one of those small gestures to ward off evil. Strange
that
they could believe a thing like that worked. The soldiers lined up with
their
sacks stared at her, wide-eyed for the most part, and shifted their
feet. The
Seanchan were none too easy about working with Aes Sedai. Her Warders,
Furen
and Teryl, were at her heels, each with a hand resting on his sword
hilt. They
were just as uneasy about the Seanchan. The one was dark with gray
streaking
his curly black hair, the other fair and young, with curled mustaches.
yet they
were alike as two beans, tall, lean and hard. Rovair Kirklin came a
little
behind them, a compact man with dark receding hair and a glum
expression. He
did not like being separated from Masuri. All three of the men had
small
bundles containing food strapped to their backs and fat waterskins
hanging from
their shoulders. A lanky man rested his sacks on the side of the
opening as the
wiry woman headed downslope to fetch more. The carts were piled high
with them.
"Remember,"
Perrin told Seonid, "the biggest danger will be getting from the
cistern
to the fortress. You'll have to use the guardwalk on the wall, and
there might
be Shaido in the town even at this hour.'' Gralina had seemed unsure on
that.
Thunder boomed hollowly in the distance, then again. "Maybe you'll have
rain to hide you."
"Thank
you," she said icily. Her moonshadowed face was a mask of Aes Sedai
serenity, but her scent spiked with indignation. "I would not have
known
any of that if you had not told me." The next moment her expression
softened, and she laid a hand on his arm. "I know you are worried about
her. We will do what can be done." Her tone was not exactly warm-it
never
was-but not so chill as before, and her scent had mellowed to sympathy.
Teryl
lifted her up onto the edge of the aqueduct-the Seanchan emptying
forkroot into
the thing, a tall fellow with almost as many scars as Mishima, nearly
dropped
his sack-and she grimaced faintly before swinging her legs over and
lowering
herself into the water with a small gasp. It must have been cold.
Ducking her
head, she moved out of sight toward Maiden. Furen climbed in after her.
then
Teryl, and finally Rovair. They had to bend sharply to fit under the
roof of
the aqueduct.
Elyas
clapped Perrin on the shoulder before hoisting himself up. "Should have
trimmed my beard short like yours to keep it out of that," he said,
gazing
down at the water. That graying beard, ruffled by the breeze, spread
across his
chest. For that matter, his hair, gathered at the back of his neck with
a
leather cord, hung to his waist. He carried a small bundle of food and
a
waterslcin, too. "Still, a cold bath helps a man keep his mind off his
troubles."
"I
thought that was for keeping your mind off women," Perrin said. He was
in
no mood for joking, but he could not expect everyone to be as grim as
he was.
Elyas
laughed. "What else causes a man's troubles?" He disappeared into the
water, and Tallanvor replaced him.
Perrin
caught his dark coatsleeve. "No heroics, mind." He had been of two
minds about letting the man be part of this.
"No
heroics, my Lord," Tallanvor agreed. For the first time in a long time,
he
looked eager. The smell of him quivered with eagerness. But there was
an edge
of caution in it, too. That caution was the only reason he was not back
in
their camp. "I won't put Maighdin at risk. Or the Lady Faile. I just
want
to see Maighdin that much quicker."
Perrin
nodded and let him go. He could understand that. Part of him wanted to
climb
into the aqueduct, too. To see Faile again that much quicker. But every
piece
of the work had to be done properly, and he had other tasks. Besides,
if he
were actually inside Maiden, he was not sure he could restrain himself
from
trying to find her. He could not catch his own scent, of course, but he
doubted
there was any caution in it now. The windmill heads turned again with
loud
squeaks as the wind shifted back. At least it never seemed to die up
here. Any
stoppage of the water flow would be disastrous.
The
ridgetop was becoming crowded, now. Twenty of Faile's hangers-on were
waiting
their turn at the aqueduct, all that remained save the two who were
spying on
Masema. The women wore men's coats and breeches and had their hair cut
short
except for a tail at the back in imitation of the Aiel, though no Aiel
would
have worn a sword as they did. Many of the Tairen men had shaved their
beards
because Aiel did not wear them. Behind them fifty Two Rivers men
carried
halberds and unstrung bows, their bowstrings safely tucked away inside
their
coats and each with three bristling quivers tied to his back along with
a
parcel of food. Every man in the camp had volunteered for this, and
Perrin had
had to let them choose lots. He had considered doubling the number, or
more.
Hangers-on and Two Rivers men had their bundles of food and their
waterskins.
The constant flow of Seanchan soldiers continued, carrying full sacks
up the
slope and empty sacks back down. They were disciplined. When a man
slipped in
the mud and fell, as happened with some regularity, there was no
cursing or
even mutters. They just got up and went ahead.
Selande
Darengil, wearing a dark coat with six horizontal stripes of color
across the
chest, stopped to offer Perrin her hand. She only came up to his chest,
but
Elyas claimed she handled the sword at her hip credibly. Perrin no
longer
thought she and the others were fools-well, not all the time-in spite
of their
attempts to copy Aiel ways. With differences, of course. The tail of
dark hair
at Selande's nape was tied with a length of dark ribbon. There was no
fear in
her scent, only determination. "Thank you for allowing us to be part of
this, my Lord," she said in that precise Cairhienin accent. "We will
not let you down. Or the Lady Faile."
"I
know you won't," he said, shaking her hand. There had been a time when
she
had been pointed about serving Faile. and not him. He shook the hand of
every
one of them before they climbed into the aqueduct. They all smelled
determined.
So did Ban al'Seen, who commanded the Two Rivers men going into Maiden.
"When
Faile and the others come, wedge the outer doors shut. Ban." Perrin had
told him this before, but he could not help repeating himself. "Then
see
if you can get them back up the aqueduct." That fortress had not kept
the
Shaido out the first time, and if anything went wrong, he doubted it
would keep
them out this time either. He did not mean to renege on his bargain
with the
Seanchan-the Shaido were going to pay for what they had done to Faile,
and
besides, he could not leave them behind to continue ravaging the
countryside-
but he wanted her out of harm's way as soon as possible.
Ban
propped his bowstave and halberd against the aqueduct and hoisted
himself up to
reach a hand down inside. When he lowered himself back to the ground,
he wiped
his damp hand on his coat then rubbed the side of his prominent nose.
"Below the water, it's coated with something feels like pond slime.
We're
going to have a hard enough time getting down that last slope without
sliding
the whole way, Lord Perrin, much less trying to climb it again. I
expect the
best thing is to wait in that fortress till you reach us."
Perrin
sighed. He had thought of sending ropes, but they would have needed
nearly two
miles of it to span that last slope, a lot to be carried, and if any
Shaido
spotted the butt end of it in the Maiden end of the aqueduct, they
would search
every nook and cranny in the town.
A
small risk, perhaps, yet the bitter loss that might result made it loom
large.
"I'll be there as fast as I can. Ban. I promise you that."
He
shook hands with every one of them, too. Lantern-jawed Tod al'Caar and
Leof
Torfinn, with a white streak through his hair where a scar ran. given
to him by
Trollocs. Young Kenly Maerin, who was making a stab at growing a beard
again
unfortunately, and Bili Adarra, who was almost as wide as Perrin if a
hand
shorter. Bili was a distant cousin, and some of the closest kin Perrin
had
living. He had grown up with many of these men, though some were a few
years
older than he. Some were a few years younger, too. By now, he knew the
men from
down to Deven Ride and up to Watch Hill as well as he did those from
around
Emond's Field. He had more reason than Faile alone to reach that
fortress as
fast as he could.
Had
al'Lora, a lean rellow with thick mustaches like a Taraboner, was the
last of
the Two Rivers men. As he climbed into the aqueduct, Gaul appeared,
face still
veiled and four spears gripped in the hand that held his bull-hide
buckler. He
put a hand on the edge of the aqueduct and leapt up to sit on the stone
coping.
"You're
going in?" Perrin said in surprise.
"The
Maidens can do any scouting you need, Perrin Aybara." The big Aiel
glanced
over his shoulder toward the Maidens. Perrin thought he scowled, though
it was
hard to be sure because of the black veil that hid all but his eyes. "I
heard them talking when they thought I was not listening. Unlike your
wife and
the others, Chiad is properly gai'shain. Bain, too. but I care nothing
about
her. Chiad still has the rest of her year and a day to serve after we
rescue
her. When a man has a woman as gai'shain, or a woman a man, sometimes a
marriage wreath is made as soon as white is put off. It is not
uncommon. But I
heard the Maidens say they would reach Chiad first, to keep her from
me."
Behind him. Sulin's finger flashed in Maiden handtalk, and one of the
others
slapped a hand over her mouth as if stifling laughter. So they had been
goading
him. Maybe they were not so hard against his suit for Chiad as they
pretended.
Or maybe there was something Perrin was missing. Aiel humor could be
rough.
Gaul
slipped into the water. He had to bend almost parallel to the surface
to get
under the aqueduct's top. Perrin stared at the opening. So easy to
follow Gaul.
Turning away was hard. The line of Seanchan soldiers still snaked up
and down
the slope.
"Mishima,
I'm going back to my camp. Grady will take you to yours when you're
done here.
Do what you can to blur the tracks before you go."
"Very
well, my Lord. I've told off some men to scrape grease from the axles
and
grease these windmills. They sound as if they could seize up any
minute. We can
do those at the far ridge, too."
Taking
up Stepper's reins, Perrin looked up at the slow-turning sails. Slow,
but
steady. They had never been made to turn fast. "And if some Shaido
decide
to come out here tomorrow and wonder where the fresh grease came from?"
Mishima
regarded him for a long moment, his face half-hidden by moonshadows.
For once,
he did not seem put off by glowing yellow eyes. His scent… He smelled
as
if he saw something unexpected. "The Banner-General was right about
you," he said slowly.
"What
did she say?"
"You'll
have to ask her, my Lord."
Perrin
rode down the slope and back to the trees thinking how easy it would be
to turn
around. Gallenne could handle everything from here. It was all laid
out. Except
that the Mayener believed every battle climaxed with a grand charge of
horse.
And preferably began with one, too. How long would he stick to the
plan?
Arganda was more sensible, but he was so anxious for Queen Alliandre
that he
might well order that charge, as well. That left himself. The breeze
gusted
hard, and he pulled his cloak around him.
Grady,
elbows on his knees, was in a small clearing sitting on a half-worked
mossy
stone that was partially sunken into the ground and no doubt left over
from
building the aqueduct. A few others like it stood around. The breeze
kept his
scent from Perrin's nose. He did not look up until Perrin drew rein in
front of
him. The gateway they had used to come here still stood open, showing
another
clearing among tall trees, not far from where the Seanchan were now
camped. It
might have been easier to have had them set up close to Perrin's camp,
but he
wanted to keep the Aes Sedai and Wise Ones as far from the sul'dam and
damane
as possible. He was not afraid of the Seanchan breaking Tylee's word,
but the
Aes Sedai and Wise Ones practically came down with the pip just
thinking about
damane. Probably the Wise Ones and Annoura would stay their hands for
the time
being. Probably. Masuri, he was not so sure of. In a number of ways.
Better to
keep a few leagues between them for as long as it could be managed.
"Are
you all right. Grady?" The man's weathered face seemed to have new
lines
in it. That might have been a trick of moonshadows cast by the trees,
but
Perrin did not think so. The carts had passed through the gateway
easily, but
was it a little smaller than the first he had seen Grady make?
"Just
tired a little, my Lord," Grady said wearily. He remained seated with
his
elbows on his knees. "All this Traveling we've been doing lately…
Well, I couldn't have held the gateway open long enough for all those
soldiers
to ride through yesterday. That's why I've taken to tying them off."
Perrin
nodded. Both of the Asha'man were tired. Channeling took strength out
of a man
as surely as swinging a hammer all day at a forge. More so, in truth.
The man
with the hammer could keep going far longer than any Asha'man. That was
why the
aqueduct was the route into Maiden and not a gateway, why there would
be no
gateway to bring Faile and the others out again, much as Perrin wished
there
could be. The two Asha'man only had so much more left in them until
they could
rest, and that little had to be used where it was needed most. Light,
but that
was a hard thought. Only, if Grady or Neald fell one gateway short of
what was
needed, a lot of men were going to die. A hard decision.
"I'm
going to need you and Neald the day after tomorrow." That was like
saying
he needed air. Without the Asha'man, everything became impossible.
"You're
going to be busy then." Another gross understatement.
"Busy
as a one-armed man plastering a ceiling, my Lord."
"Are
you up to it?"
"Have
to be. don't I, my Lord."
Perrin
nodded again. You did what had to be done. "Send me back to our camp.
After you return Mishima and his people to his, you and the Maidens can
sleep
there if you'd like." That would spare Grady a little against two days
from now.
"Don't
know about the Maidens, my Lord, but I'd as soon come on home tonight."
He
turned his head to look at the gateway without rising, and it dwindled
in the
reverse of how it had opened, the view through it seeming to rotate as
it
narrowed, finishing with a vertical slash of silvery blue light that
left a
faint purplish bar in Perrin's vision when it winked out. "Those damane
fair make my skin crawl. They don't want to be free."
"How
would you know that?"
"I
talked to some of them when none of those sul'dam was close by. Soon as
I
brought up maybe they'd like those leashes off. just hinting like, they
started
screaming for the sul'dam. The damae were crying, and the sul'dam
petting them
and stroking them and glaring daggers at me. Fair made my skin crawl."
Stepper
stamped an impatient hoof, and Perrin patted the stallion's neck. Grady
was
lucky those sul'dam had let him go with a whole hide. "Whatever happens
with the damane. Grady, it won't be this week, or next. And it won't be
us who
fixes it. So you let the damane be. We have a job of work in front of
us that
needs doing." And a deal with the Dark One to do it. He pushed the
thought
away. Anyway, it had grown hard to think of Tylee Khirgan being on the
Dark
One's side. Or Mishima. "You understand that?"
"I
understand, my Lord. I'm just saying it makes my skin crawl."
At
last another silvery blue slash appeared, widening into an opening that
showed
a clearing among large, widely spaced trees and a low stone outcrop.
Leaning
low on Stepper's neck. Perrin rode through. The gateway winked out
behind him,
and he rode on through the trees until he came to the large clearing
where the
camp lay, near what had once been the tiny village of Brytan, a
collection of
flea-riddled hovels that the most rain-soaked night could not tempt a
man into.
The sentries up in the trees gave no warnings, of course. They
recognized him.
He
wanted nothing so much as he wanted his blankets right then. Well,
Faile, certainly,
but lacking her, he wanted to be alone in the dark. Likely, he would
fail to
find sleep again, but he would spend the night as he had so often
before,
thinking of her, remembering her. Short of the ten-pace wide thicket of
sharpened stakes that surrounded the camp, though, he reined in. A
raken was
crouched just outside the stakes, its long gray neck lowered so a woman
in a
hooded brown coat could scratch its leathery snout. Her hood hung down
her
back, revealing short-cropped hair and a hard, narrow face. She looked
at
Perrin as if she recognized him, but went right on scratching. The
saddle on
the creature's back had places for two riders. A messenger had come, it
seemed.
He turned into one of the narrow, angled lanes through the stakes that
had been
left to allow horses through. Just not quickly.
Most
everybody had turned in already. He sensed movement on the horselines.
in the
heart of the camp, likely some of the Cairhienin grooms or farriers,
but the
patched canvas tents and small huts of woven evergreen branches, now
long since
brown, lay dark and quiet. Nothing moved among the low Aiel tents, and
only a
few sentries walking up and down in the nearest Mayener section of the
camp.
The Mayeners and Ghealdanin put little trust in the Two Rivers men in
the
trees. His tall, red-striped tent was alight, however, and the shadows
of a
number of people shifted on the tent walls. When he climbed down in
front of
the tent, Athan Chandin appeared to take the reins and knuckle his
forehead
while he hunched a sort of bow. Athan was a good bowshot or he would
not have
been here, but he had a truckling manner. Perrin went in unpinning his
cloak.
"There
you are," Berelain said brightly. She must have dressed hastily,
because
her long black hair looked as though it had had just a lick and a
promise from
a brush, but her high-necked gray riding dress appeared neat and fresh.
Her
serving women never let her don anything unless it was freshly ironed.
She held
out a silver winecup for Breane to refill from a long-necked wine
pitcher,
which the Cairhienin woman did with a grimace. Faile's maid disliked
Berelain
with a passion. Berelain seemed not to notice, though. "Forgive me for
entertaining in your tent, but the Banner-General wanted to see you,
and I
thought I'd keep her company. She's been telling us about some
Whitecloaks."
Balwer
was standing unobtrusively in a corner-the bird-like little man could
be as
unnoticeable as a lizard on a branch when he wished to be-but his scent
sharpened at the mention of Whitecloaks.
Tylee,
her shoulders straining a coat like that of the flier, made a
straight-legged
bow while keeping one eye on Annoura. She seemed to believe the Aes
Sedai might
turn into ravening wild dogs at any moment. Perrin thought she smelled
of
distress, though none showed on her dark face. "My Lord, I have two
pieces
of news I felt I had to bring you immediately. Have you begun putting
the
forkroot into the town's water?"
"I
have," he said worriedly, tossing his cloak down atop one of the
brass-banded
chests. Tylee sighed. "I told you I would. I'd have done it two days
ago
if that fool woman in Almizar hadn't dragged her heels so. What's
happened?"
"Forgive
me." Lini announced, "but I was roused from my blankets, and I would
like to return to them. Does anyone require anything else of me
tonight?"
There were no curtsies or 'my Lords' from the frail-appearing woman
with her
white hair in a loose braid for sleeping. Unlike with Berelain, her
brown dress
looked hastily donned, unusual for her. Her scent was crisp and sharp
with
disapproval. She was one of those who believed the ridiculous tale that
Perrin
had slept with Berelain on the very night after Faile had been
captured. She
managed to avoid looking at him while her gaze swept around the tent's
interior.
"I'll
have some more wine," Aram announced, holding out his cup. Grim-faced
and
haggard in a red-striped coat, his eyes hollow, he was attempting to
lounge in
one of the folding camp chairs, but the sword strapped to his back made
leaning
against the gilt-edged back impossible. Breane started toward him.
"He
s had enough." Lini said sharply, and Breane turned away. Lini had a
firm
hand with Faile's servants.
Aram
muttered an oath and leaped to his feet, tossing his cup down on the
flowered
carpet that served as a floor. "I might as well go somewhere I won't
have
some old woman nagging at me every time I take a drink." He gave Perrin
a
sullen glare before stalking out of the tent. Doubtless on his way to
Masema's
camp. He had pleaded to be one of the party sent into Maiden, but his
hot head
could not be trusted with that.
"You
can go. Lini." Berelain said. "Breane can look after us well
enough." A snort was the acknowledgment Lini gave-she made it sound
almost
delicate-before she stalked out, stiff-backed and reeking of
disapproval. And
still not looking at Perrin.
"Forgive
me. my Lord," Tylee drawled in careful tones, "but you seem to run
your household more… loosely… than I'm accustomed to."
"It's
our way, Banner-General." Perrin said, picking up Aram's cup. No need
to
dirty another. "Nobody around here is property." If that sounded
sharp, so be it. He had come to like Tylee after a fashion, but these
Seanchan
had ways that would make a goat gag. He took the pitcher from
Breane-she
actually tried to hold onto it for a moment, frowning at him as if she
would
deny him a drink-and poured for himself before handing it back. She
snatched
the pitcher out of his hand. "Now, what happened? What about these
Whitecloaks?"
"I
sent raken out scouting as far as they could go just before dawn, and
again
just after sunset. One of the fliers tonight turned back sooner than
expected.
She saw seven thousand Children of the Light on the move not fifty
miles from
my camp."
"On
the move toward you?" Perrin frowned at his wine instead of drinking.
"Seven thousand seems a very exact count to make in the dark.''
"It
seems these men, they are deserters," Annoura broke in. "At least,
the Banner-General sees them so." In gray silk, she appeared as neat as
if
she had spent an hour dressing. Her thrusting nose made her look like a
crow
wearing beaded braids as she peered at Tylee, and the Banner-General a
particularly interesting bit of carrion. She held a winecup, but it
seemed
untouched. "I have heard rumors that Pedron Niall died fighting the
Seanchan, but apparently Eamon Valda, who replaced Niall, swore fealty
to the
Seanchan Empress.' Tylee mouthed, "may she live forever," under her
breath; Perrin doubted anyone but himself heard. Balwer opened his
mouth, too,
but closed it again without speaking. The Whitecloaks were a bugbear to
him.
"Something over a month ago, however," the Gray sister went on.
"Galad Damodred killed Valda and led seven thousand Whitecloaks to
leave
the Seanchan cause. A pity he became enmeshed with Whitecloaks, but
perhaps
some good has come of it. In any case, it appears there is a standing
order
that these men are all to be killed as soon as found. I have summed it
up
nicely, yes. Banner-General?"
Tylee's
hand twitched as if it wanted to make one of those signs against evil.
"That's a fair summing up," she said. To Perrin, not Annoura. The
Seanchan woman seemed to find speaking to an Aes Sedai difficult.
"Except
the part about good coming of it. Oath-breaking and desertion can never
be
called good."
"I
take it they're not moving toward you, or you'd have said.' Perrin put
a hint
of question into that, though there was no question in his mind.
"North,"
Tylee answered. "They're heading north." Balwer half opened his mouth
again, then shut it with a click of teeth.
"If
you have advice," Perrin told him. "then give it. But I don't care
how many Whitecloaks desert the Seanchan. Faile is the only thing I
care about.
And I don't think the Banner-General will give up the chance to collar
three or
four hundred more damane to chase after them." Berelain grimaced.
Annoura's face remained smooth, but she took a long swallow of her
wine. None
of the Aes Sedai felt very complacent about that part of the plan. None
of the
Wise Ones did, either.
"I
will not," Tylee said firmly. "I think I'll take some wine after
all." Breane took a deep breath before moving to comply, and a hint of
fear entered her scent. Apparently the tall dark woman intimidated her.
"I
won't deny I would enjoy a chance to strike a blow at the
White-cloaks,"
Balwer said in that dry-as-dust voice, "but in truth. I feel I owe this
Galad Damodred a debt of gratitude." Perhaps his grudge was against
this
Valda personally. "In any case, you have no need of my advice here.
Events
are in motion in Maiden, and if they weren't. I doubt you'd hold back
even a
day. Nor would I have advised it, my Lord. If I may be so bold. I am
quite fond
of the Lady Faile."
"You
may," Perrin told him. "Banner-General, you said two pieces of
news?"
The
Seanchan took the proffered winecup from Breane and looked at him so
levelly it
was clear she was avoiding a glance at the others in the tent. "May we
speak alone?" she asked quietly.
Berelain
glided across the carpet to rest a hand on his arm and smile up at him.
"Annoura and I don't mind leaving," she said. Light, how could anyone
believe there was anything between him and her? She was as beautiful as
ever,
true, yet the scent that had minded him of a hunting cat was so long
gone from
her smell that he barely remembered it. The bedrock of her scent was
patience
and resolve, now. She had come to accept that he loved Faile and only
Faile,
and she seemed as determined to see Faile freed as he was.
"You
can stay," he said. "Whatever you have to say, Banner-General, you
can say in front of everyone here."
Tylee
hesitated, glancing at Annoura. "There are two large parties of Aiel
heading toward Maiden," she said at last, reluctantly. "One to the
southeast, one to the southwest. The morat'raken estimate they could be
there
in three days."
Suddenly,
everything seemed to ripple in Perrin's sight. He felt himself ripple.
Breane
gave a cry and dropped the pitcher. The world rippled again, and
Berelain
clutched his arm. Tylee's hand seemed frozen in that odd gesture, thumb
and
forefinger forming a crescent. Everything rippled for a third time, and
Perrin
felt as if he were made of fog, as if the world were fog with a high
wind
coming. Berelain shuddered, and he put a comforting arm around her. She
clung
to him, trembling. Silence and the scent of fear filled the tent. He
could hear
voices being raised outside, and they sounded afraid, too.
"What
was that?' Tylee demanded finally.
"I
don't know." Annoura's face remained serene, but her voice was
unsteady.
"Light, I have no idea."
"It
doesn't matter what it was," Perrin told them. He ignored their stares.
"In three days, it will all be over. That's all that matters." Faile
was all that mattered.
The
sun stood short of its noonday peak, but Faile already felt harassed.
The water
for Sevanna's morning bath-she bathed twice a day, now!-had not been
hot
enough, and Faile had been beaten along with everyone else, although
she and
AUiandre had only been there to scrub the woman's back. More than
twenty
wetlander gai'shain had begged to be allowed to swear fealty just since
sunrise. Three had suggested rising up, pointing out that there were
more
gai'shain in all these tents than Shaido. They had seemed to listen
when she
pointed out that nearly all of the Aiel knew how to use a spear, while
most of
the wetlanders were farmers or craftsfolk. Few had ever held a weapon,
and
fewer still used one. They had seemed to listen, but this was the first
day
anyone had suggested such a thing right after swearing. Usually they
took several
days to work themselves around to it. The pressure was building. Toward
a
slaughter unless she could thwart it. And now this…
"It
is only a game, Faile Bashere," Rolan said, towering over her as they
walked along one of the muddy streets that wound through the Shaido
tents. He
sounded amused, and a very small smile curved his lips. A beautiful man
to be
sure.
"A
kissing game, you said." She shifted the lengths of striped toweling
folded over her arm to draw his attention. "I have work to do. and no
time
for games. Especially kissing games."
She
could see a few Aiel, several of them men staggering drunk even at this
hour,
but most of the people in the street were wetlanders wearing dirty
gai'shain
robes or children splashing happily in the mud puddles left by the
night's
heavy rain. The street was thronged with men and women in mud-stained
white
carrying baskets or buckets or pots. Some actually went about chores.
There
were so many gai'shain in the camp that there really was not enough
work to go
around. That would not stop a Shaido from ordering what were seen as
idle hands
to some work or other if those hands stuck out of white sleeves,
however, even
if it was make-work. To avoid having to dig useless holes in muddy
fields or
scrub pots that were already clean, a good many of the gai'shain had
taken to
carrying something that made them look as if they were working. That
did not
help anyone avoid the real work, but it did help avert the other kind.
Faile did
not have to worry about that with most of the Shaido, not so long as
she wore
those thick golden chains around her waist and neck, but the necklace
and belt
were inadequate for deterring Wise Ones. She had scrubbed clean pots
for some
of them. And sometimes had been punished for not being available when
Sevanna
wanted her. Thus the toweling.
"We
could start with a kissing game children play,' he said, "though the
forfeits in that are sometimes embarrassing. In the game adults play,
the
forfeits are fun. Losing can be as pleasant as winning."
She
could not help laughing. The man certainly was persistent. Suddenly she
saw
Galina hurrying through the crowd in her direction. holding her white
silk
robes up out of the mud, eyes searching avidly. Faile had heard the
woman was
allowed clothing again as of this morning. Of course, she had never
been
without the tall necklace and wide belt of gold and firedrops. A cap of
hair
less than an inch long covered her head, and of all things, a large red
bow was
pinned in it. It seemed unlikely that was by the woman's choice. Only a
face
Faile could not put an age to convinced her that Galina really was Aes
Sedai.
Beyond that, she was unsure of anything about her except the danger she
presented. Galina spotted her and stopped dead, hands kneading her
robes. The
Aes Sedai eyed Rolan uncertainly.
"I'll
have to think on it, Rolan." She was not about co chase him away until
she
was sure of Galina. "I need time to think."
"Women
always want time to think. Think on forgetting your troubles in the
pleasure of
a harmless game."
The
finger he drew softly down her cheek before walking away made her
shiver. To
Aiel, touching someone's cheek in public was as much as a kiss. It
surely had
felt like a kiss to her. Harmless? Somehow, she doubted that any game
that
involved kissing Rolan would end with just kissing. Luckily, she would
not have
to find out-or hide anything from Perrin-if Galina proved true. If.
The
Aes Sedai darted to her as soon as Rolan was gone. "Where is it?"
Galina demanded, seizing her arm. "Tell me! I know you have it. You
must
have it!" The woman sounded almost pleading. Therava's tteatment of her
had shattered that fabled Aes Sedai composure.
Faile
shook off her grip. "First tell me again that you will take my friends
and
me with you when you go. Tell me straight out. And tell me when you are
going.'
"Don't
you dare talk to me that way," Galina hissed.
Faile
saw black flecks floating in her vision before she realized that she
had been
slapped. To her surprise, she slapped the other woman back as hard as
she
could, staggering her. She refrained from putting a hand to her
stinging face,
but Galina rubbed her own cheek, her eyes wide with shock. Faile
steeled
herself, perhaps for a blow with the Power or something worse, but
nothing
happened. Some of the passing ga't'shain stared at them, but none
stopped or
even slowed. Anything that looked like a gathering of gai'shain would
draw
Shaido eyes, and earn punishments for everyone involved.
"Tell
me," she said again.
"I
will take you and your friends with me." Galina practically snarled,
snatching her hand down. "I leave tomorrow, If you have it. If not,
Sevanna will know who you are within the hour!" Well, that was
certainly
speaking straight out.
"It's
hidden in the town. I'll get it for you now."
But
as she turned, Galina grabbed her arm again. The Aes Sedai's eyes
darted, and
she lowered her voice as if suddenly concerned about being overheard.
She
sounded frightened. "No. I'll take no chances on anyone seeing. You'll
give it to me tomorrow morning. In the town. We'll meet there. In the
south end
of the town. I'll mark the building. With a red scarf."
Faile
blinked. The southern half of Maiden was a burned-out shell. "Why
there?" she asked incredulously.
"Because
no one goes there, fool! Because no one will see us!" Galina's eyes
were
still darting. "Tomorrow morning, early. Fail me. and you'll regret
it!" Gathering the skirts of her silk robe, she scurried away into the
crowd.
Faile
frowned as she watched the woman go. She should have felt exultation,
but she
did not. Galina seemed almost a wild thing, unpredictable. Still, Aes
Sedai
could not lie. There seemed no way for her to wriggle out of her
promise. And
if she found one, there were still her own plans for an escape, though
those
seemed no further along, if much more dangerous, than they had when
first
begun. Which left Rolan. And his kissing games. Galina had to prove
true. She
had to.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
A Plain Wooden Box
The
midday Altaran sun was warm, though a gusting breeze sometimes whipped Rand's cloak. They had been on the hilltop for
two hours,
now. A great mass of dark clouds creeping down from the north above
blue-gray
haze spoke of rain to come, and a cooling. Andor lay only a few miles
in that
direction across low. forested hills of oak and pine, leatherleaf and
sourgum.
That border had seen countless generations of cattle raids going in
both
directions. Was Elayne watching it rain in Caemlyn? That lay a good
hundred and
fifty leagues east, too far for her to be more than a faint presence in
the
back of his head. Aviendha, in Arad Doman, was fainter still. He had
not
considered that the Wise Ones would take her along. Still, she would be
safe
among tens of thousands of Aiel, as safe as Elayne behind Caem-lyn's
walls.
Tai'daishar stamped a hoof and tossed his head, eager to be moving. Rand patted the big black's neck. The stallion
could
reach the border in under an hour, but their way was west today. A
short way
west in just a short while, now.
He
had to impress at today's meeting, and he had chosen his garb with
care. The
Crown of Swords sat on his head for more reason than making an
impression,
though. Half the small swords nestled among the wide band of laurel
leaves
pointed down, making it uncomfortable to wear, giving constant
reminders of its
weight, in gold and in responsibility. A small chip in one of those
laurel
leaves dug at his temple to remind him of the battle against the
Seanchan where
it had been made. A battle lost when he could not afford to lose. His
dark
green silk coat was embroidered in gold on the sleeves, shoulders and
high
collar, a gold-inlaid buckle in the shape of a dragon fastened his
sword-belt,
and he had the Dragon Scepter in hand, a two-foot length of spearhead
with a
long green-and-white tassel below the polished steel point. If the
Daughter of
the Nine Moons recognized it for part of a Seanchan spear, she must
also see
the dragons that Maidens had carved winding around the remaining haft.
Today,
he wore no gloves. The golden-maned dragonheads on the backs of his
hands
glittered metallically in the sun. However high she stood among the
Seanchan,
she would know whom she faced.
A
fool. Lews Therin's wild laughter echoed inside his head. A fool to
walk Into a
trap. Rand ignored the madman. It
might be a
trap, but he was ready to spring it if it was. It was worth the risk.
He needed
this truce. He could crush the Seanchan, but at what cost in blood, and
in time
he might not have? He glanced north again. The sky above Andor was
clear except
for a few high white clouds, drifting wisps. The Last Battle was
coming. He had
to take the risk.
Min,
toying with the reins of her gray mare nearby, was feeling smug, and
that
irritated him. She had inveigled a promise from him in a weak moment
and
refused to release him. He could just break it. He should break it. As
if she
had heard his thoughts, she looked at him. Her face, surrounded by dark
shoulder-length ringlets, was smooth, but the bond suddenly carried
suspicion
and hints of anger. She seemed to be trying to suppress both, yet she
adjusted
the cuffs of her ornately embroidered red coat the way she did when
checking
her knives. Of course, she would not use one of her blades on him. Of
course
not.
A
woman's love can be violent. Lews Therin murmured. Sometimes they hurt
a man
worse than they think they have, worse than they mean to. Sometimes,
they're
even sorry afterwards. He sounded sane for the moment, but Rand
shoved the voice down.
"You
should let us scout farther out, Rand
al'Thor," Nandera said. She and the two dozen other Maidens on the
sparsely wooded hilltop wore their black veils up. Some had their bows
in hand
and arrows nocked. The rest of the Maidens were among the trees well
out from
the hill, keeping watch against unpleasant surprises. "The land is
clear
all the way to the manor house, but this still smells of a trap to me."
There had been a time when words like "manor" and "house"
sounded awkward on her tongue. She had been a long time in the wetlands
now,
though.
"Nandera
speaks truth." Alivia muttered sullenly, heeling her roan gelding
closer.
Apparently the golden-haired woman still resented the fact that she
would not
be going with him, but her reaction to hearing her native accents in
Tear made
that impossible. She admitted having been shaken, but claimed it had
been the
surprise of the thing. He could not chance it, though. "You cannot
trust
any of the High Blood. especially not a daughter of the Empress, may
she-"
Her mouth snapped shut, and she smoothed her dark blue skirts
unnecessarily,
grimacing at what she had almost said. He trusted her, literally with
his life,
but she had too many deep-buried instincts to risk putting her
face-to-face
with the woman he was going to meet. The bond carried anger with no
effort to
suppress it, now. Min disliked seeing Alivia near him.
"It
smells of a trap to me. too," Bashere said, easing his sinuously curved
sword in its scabbard. He was plainly clad, in burnished helmet and
breastplate, his gray silk coat alone marking him out from the
eighty-one
Saldaean lancers arrayed around the hilltop. His thick. down-curved
mustaches
almost bristled behind the face-bars of his helmet. "I'd give ten
thousand
crowns to know how many soldiers she has out there. And how many
damane. This
Daughter of the Nine Moons is the heir to their throne, man." He had
been
shocked when Alivia revealed that. No one in Ebou Dar had mentioned it
to him,
as if it were of no importance. "They may claim their control ends far
south of here, but you can wager she has at least a small army to see
to her
safety."
"And
if our scouts find this army," Rand replied calmly, "can we be sure
they won't be seen?" Nandera made a scornful sound. "Best not to
assume you're the only one with eyes." he told her. "If they think
we're planning to attack them or kidnap the woman, everything falls
apart." Maybe that was why they had kept their secret. The Imperial
heir
would be a more tempting target for a kidnapping than a mere
high-ranking
noblewoman. "You just keep watch to make sure they don't catch us by
surprise. If it all goes wrong, Bashere, you know what to do. Besides,
she may
have an army, but so do I. and not so small." Bashere had to nod at
that.
Aside
from the Saldaeans and the Maidens, the hilltop was crowded with
Asha'man and
Aes Sedai and Warders, better than twenty-five all told, and as
formidable a
group as any small army. They mingled with surprising ease, and few
outward
signs of tension. Oh, Toveine, a short, coppery-skinned Red, was
scowling at
Logain, but Gabrelle, a dusky Brown with sooty green eyes, was talking
with him
quite companionabiy, perhaps even coquettishly. That might have been
the reason
for Toveine's scowl, though disapproval seemed more likely than
jealousy.
Adrielle and Kurin each had an arm around the other's waist, though she
was
tall enough to overtop the Domani Asha'man, and beautiful where he was
plain
and had gray at his temples. Not to mention that he had bonded the Gray
against
her will. Beldeine, new enough to the shawl that she simply looked like
any
young Saldaean woman with slightly tilted brown eyes, reached out every
now and
then to touch Manfor. and he smiled at her whenever she did. Her
bonding of him
had been a shock, but apparently the yellow-haired man had been more
than
willing. Neither had asked Rand his opinion before the bonding.
Strangest
of all perhaps were Jenare, pale and sturdy in a gray riding dress
embroidered
with red on the skirts, and Kajima, a clerkish fellow in his middle
years who wore
his hair like Narishma, in two braids with silver bells at the ends.
She
laughed at something Kajima said, and murmured something that made him
laugh in
turn. A Red joking with a man who could channel! Maybe Taim had
effected a
change for the better, whatever he had intended. And maybe Rand al'Thor
was
living in a dream, too. Aes Sedai were famous for their dissembling.
But could
a Red dissemble that far?
Not
everyone felt agreeable today. Ayako's eyes seemed almost black as she
glared
at Rand, but then, considering what happened to a Warder when his Aes
Sedai
died, the dark-complected little White had reason to fear Sandomere
going into
possible danger. The Asha'man bond differed from the Warder bond in
some
respects, but in others it was identical, and no one yet knew the
effects of an
Asha'man's death on the woman he had bonded. Elza was frowning at Rand,
too,
one hand on the shoulder of her tall, lean Warder Fearil as if she were
gripping a guard dog's collar and thinking of loosing him. Not against
Rand,
certainly, but he worried for anyone she thought might be threatening
him. He
had given her orders about that, and her oath should see them obeyed,
yet Aes
Sedai could find loopholes in almost anything.
Merise
was speaking firmly to Narishma, with her other two Warders sitting
their
horses a little way off. There was no mistaking the way the stern-faced
woman
gestured as she spoke, leaning close to him so she could speak in a low
voice.
She was instructing him about something. Rand disliked that in the
circumstances, yet there seemed little he could do. Merise had sworn no
oaths,
and she would ignore him when it came to one of her Warders. Or much of
anything else, for that matter.
Cadsuane
was watching Rand, too. She and Nynaeve were wearing all of their
ter'angreal
jewelry. Nynaeve was making a good try at Aes Sedai calm. She seemed to
practice that a great deal since sending Lan wherever she had sent him.
Half
the hilltop separated her plump brown mare from Cadsuane's bay. of
course.
Nynaeve would never admit it. but Cadsuane intimidated her.
Logain
rode up between Rand and Bashere, his black gelding prancing. The horse
was
almost the exact shade of his coat and cloak. "The sun is almost
straight
overhead." he said. "Time we go down?" There was only a mere
hint of question in that. The man chafed at taking orders. He did not
wait on a
reply. "Sandomere!" he called loudly. "Narishma!"
Merise
held Narishma by his sleeve for another moment of instructions before
letting
him ride over, which made Logain scowl. Sun-dark Narishma with his
dark, belled
braids looked years younger than Rand, though he was a few years older
in
truth. Sitting his dun as straight as a sword, he nodded to Logain as
to an
equal, producing another scowl. Sandomere spoke a quiet word to Ayako
before
mounting his dapple, and she touched his thigh once he was in the
saddle.
Wrinkled, with receding hair and a gray-streaked beard trimmed to a
point and
oiled, he made her appear youthful rather than ageless. He wore the
red-and-gold dragon on his high black collar, now, as well as the
silver sword.
Every Asha'man on the hill did, even Manfor. He had only recently been
raised
to Dedicated, but he had been one of the first to come to the Black
Tower,
before there was a Black Tower. Most of the men who had begun with him
were
dead. Even Logain had not denied he deserved it.
Logain
had enough sense not to call Cadsuane or Nynaeve, but they rode to join
Rand
anyway, placing themselves to either side of him, each briefly eyeing
him,
faces so smooth they might have been thinking anything. Their eyes met.
and
Nynaeve looked away quickly. Cadsuane gave a faint snort. And Min came.
too.
His "one more" to balance the honors. A man should never give
promises in bed. He opened his mouth, and she arched an eyebrow,
looking at him
very directly. The bond felt full of… something dangerous.
"You
stay behind me once we get there," he told her, not at all what he had
intended to say.
Danger
faded to what he had come to recognize as love. There was wry amusement
in the
bond, too, for some reason. "I will if I want to, you wool-headed
sheepherder," she said with more than a little asperity, just as il the
bond would not tell him her true feelings. Hard as those might be to
decipher.
"If
we're going to do this fool thing, let's get it done with," Cadsuane
said
firmly, and heeled her dark bay down the hill.
A
short distance from the hill, farms began to appear along a meandering
dirt
road through the forest, hard-packed by long years of use but still
carrying a
slick of mud from the last rainfall. The chimneys of thatched stone
houses
smoked with the midday meal-cooking. Sometimes girls and women sat out
in the
sun at their spinning wheels. Men in rough coats walked in the
stone-walled
fields checking their sprouting crops amid boys hoeing weeds. The
pastures held
brown-and-white cattle or black-tailed sheep, usually watched by a boy
or two
with bows or slings. There were wolves in these forests, and leopards
and other
things that enjoyed the taste of beef and mutton. Some people shaded
their eyes
to peer at the passersby, doubtless wondering who these finely dressed
folk
were who had come to visit the Lady Deirdru. Surely there could be no
other
reason for their presence, heading toward the manor house and so far
from
anywhere important. No one seemed agitated or frightened, though, just
going
about their day's work. Rumors of an army in the region surely would
have upset
them, and rumors of that sort spread like wildfire. Strange. The
Seanchan could
not Travel and arrive without news speeding ahead of them. It was very
strange.
He
felt Logain and the other two men seize saidin, filling themselves with
it.
Logain held almost as much as he could have himself, Narishma and
Sandomere
somewhat less. They were the strongest among the other Asha'man,
though, and
both had been at Dumai's Wells. Logain had proven he could handle
himself in
other places, other battles. If this was a trap, they would be ready,
and the
other side would never know it until too late. Rand did not reach for
the
Source. He could feel Lews Therin lurking in his head. This was no time
to give
the madman a chance to get hold of the Power.
"Cadsuane,
Nynaeve, you'd better embrace the Source now," he said. "We're
getting close."
"I've
been holding saidar since back on that hill," Nynaeve told him.
Cadsuane
snorted and gave him a look that called him an idiot.
Rand
stilled a grimace before it could begin. His skin felt no tingling, no
goosebumps.
They had masked their ability, and with it, shielded him from sensing
the Power
in them. Men had had few advantages over women when it came to
channeling, but
now they had lost those few while women retained all of theirs. Some of
the
Asha'-man were trying to puzzle out how to duplicate what Nacelle had
created,
to find a weave that would allow men to detect women's weaves, but so
far
without success. Well, it would have to be dealt with by someone else.
He had
all he could manage on his plate at the moment.
The
farms continued, some alone in a clearing, others clustered three or
four or
five together. If they followed the road far enough they would reach
the
village of King's Crossing in a few miles, where a wooden bridge
spanned a
narrow river called the Reshalle, but well short of that the road
passed by a
large clearing marked by a pair of tall stone gateposts, though there
were
neither gates nor fence. A hundred paces or more beyond it, at the end
of a
mud-slicked clay lane, lay Lady Deidru's manor, two stories of
thatch-roofed
gray stone saved from looking a large farmhouse only by the gateposts
and the
tall twinned doors at the front. The stables and outbuildings had the
same
practical appearance, sturdy and unornamented. There was no one in
sight, no
stablemen, no servant on her way to fetch eggs, no men in the fields
that
flanked the lane. The house's tall chimneys stood smokeless. It did
smell of a
trap. But the countryside was quiet, the farmers unruffled. There was
only one
way to find out.
Rand
turned Tai'daishar in through the gateposts, and the others followed.
Min did
not heed his warning. She pushed her gray in between Tai'daishar and
Nynaeve's
mare and grinned at him. The bond carried nervousness, but the woman
grinned!
When
he was halfway to the house, the doors opened, and two women came out,
one in
dark gray, the other in blue with red panels on her breast and
ankle-length
skirts. Sunlight glinted off the silvery leash connecting them. Two
more
appeared, and two more, until three pairs stood in a row to either side
of the
door. As he reached the three-quarter point, another woman stepped into
the
doorway, very dark and very small, dressed in pleated white, her head
covered
by a transparent scarf that fell over her face. The Daughter of the
Nine Moons.
She had been described to Bashere right down to her shaven head. A
tension in
his shoulders he had not been aware of melted. That she was actually
here did
away with the possibility of a trap. The Seanchan would not risk the
heir to
their throne in anything so dangerous. He drew rein and dismounted.
"One
of them is channeling.'' Nynaeve said, just loudly enough for him to
hear, as
she climbed down from her saddle. "I can't see anything. so she's
masked
her ability and inverted the weave-and I wonder how the Seanchan
learned
tbatl-but she's channeling. Only one; there isn't enough for it to be
two." Her ter'angreal could not tell whether it was saidin or saidar
being
channeled, but it was unlikely to be a man.
I
told you it was trap. Lews Therin groaned. I told you!
Rand
pretended to check his saddle girth. "Can you tell which one?" he
asked quietly. He still did not reach saidin. There was no telling what
Lews
Therin might do in these circumstances if he managed to grab control
again.
Logain was fiddling with his girth, too, and Narishma was watching
Sandomere
check one of the dapple's hooves. They had heard. The small woman was
waiting
in the doorway, very still but no doubt impatient and likely offended
by their
apparent interest in their horses.
"No,"
Cadsuane replied grimly. "But I can do something about it. Once we're
closer." Her golden hair ornaments swayed as she tossed her cloak back
as
though unmasking a sword.
"Stay
behind me," he told Min, and to his relief, she nodded. Her face wore a
small frown, and the bond carried worry. Not fear, though. She knew he
would
protect her.
Leaving
the horses standing, he started toward the sul'dam and damane with
Cadsuane and
Nynaeve a little distance to either side of him. Logain, hand resting
on his
sword hilt as if that were his real weapon, strode along on the other
side of
Cadsuane, Narishma and Sandomere beyond Nynaeve. The small dark woman
began
walking toward them slowly, holding her pleated skirts up off the damp
ground.
Abruptly,
no more than ten paces away, she… flickered. For an instant, she was
taller than most men. garbed all in black, surprise on her face, and
though she
still wore the veil, her head was covered with short-cut wavy black
hair. Only
an instant before the small woman returned, her step faltering as she
let her
white skirts fall, but another flicker, and the tall dark woman stood
there,
her face twisted in fury behind the veil. He recognized that face,
though he
had never seen it before. Lews Therin had, and that was enough.
"Semirhage."
he said in shock before he could stop the word, and suddenly everything
seemed
to happen at once.
He
reached for the Source and found Lews Therin clawing for it. too. each
of them
jostling the other aside from reaching it. Semirhage flicked her hand,
and a
small ball of fire streaked toward him from her fingertips. She might
have
shouted something, an order. He could not leap aside: Min stood right
behind
him. Frantically trying to seize saidin. he flung up the hand holding
the
Dragon Scepter in desperation. The world seemed to explode in fire.
His
cheek was pressed against the damp ground, he realized. Black flecks
shimmered
in his vision, and everything seemed faintly hazy, as if seen through
water.
Where was he? What had happened? His head felt stuffed with wool.
Something was
prodding him in the ribs. His sword hilt. The old wounds were a hard
knot of
pain just above that. Slowly, he realized he was looking at the Dragon
Scepter,
or what was left of it. The spearpoint and a few inches of charred haft
lay
three paces away. Small, dancing flames were consuming the long tassel.
The
Crown of Swords lay beyond it.
Abruptly
it came to him that he could feel saidin being channeled. His skin was
goose
bumps all over from saidar being wielded. The manor house. Semirhage!
He tried
to push himself up, and collapsed with a harsh cry. Slowly he pulled a
left arm
that seemed all pain up where he could see his hand. See where his hand
had
been. Only a mangled, blackened ruin remained. A stub sticking out of a
cuff
that gave off thin streamers of smoke. But the Power was still being
channeled
around him. His people were fighting for their lives. They might be
dying. Min!
He struggled to rise, and fell again.
As
though thinking of her had summoned her, Min was crouching over him.
Trying to
shield him with her body, he realized. The bond was full of compassion
and
pain. Not physical pain. He would have known if she had the smallest
injury.
She was feeling pain for him. "Lie still," she said. "You've… You've
been hurt."
"I
know," he said hoarsely. Again, he reached for saidin. and for a
wonder,
this time Lews Therin did not try to interfere. The Power filled him,
and that
gave him the strength to push himself to his feet one-handed, preparing
several
very nasty weaves as he did so. Careless of his muddy coat. Min gripped
his
good arm as though she were trying to hold him upright. But the
fighting was
over.
Semirhage
was standing stiffly with her arms at her sides, her skirts pressed
against her
legs, doubtless wrapped up in flows of Air. The hilt of one of Min's
knives
stood out from her shoulder, and she must have been shielded, too, but
her
dark, beautiful face was contemptuous. She had been a prisoner before,
briefly,
during the War of the Shadow. She had escaped from high detention by
frightening her jailers to the point that they actually smuggled her to
freedom.
Others
had been injured more seriously. A short dark sul'dam and tall
pale-haired
damane, linked by an adam, lay sprawled on the ground, staring up at
the sun
with already glazed eyes, and another pair were on their knees and
clinging to
one another, blood running down their faces and matting their hair. The
other
pairs stood as stiffly as Semirhage, and he could see the shields on
three of
the damane. They looked stunned. One of the sul'dam, a slender,
dark-haired
young woman, was weeping softly. Narishma's face was bloodied, too. and
his
coat appeared singed. So did Sandomere's, and a bone jutted through his
left
coatsleeve, white smeared with red, until Nynaeve firmly pulled his arm
straight and guided the bone back into place. Grimacing in pain, he
gave a
guttural groan. She cupped her hands around his arm over the break, and
moments
later he was flexing his arm and moving his fingers and murmuring
thanks.
Logain appeared untouched. as did Nynaeve and Cadsuane, who was
studying
Semirhage the way a Brown might study an exotic animal never before
seen.
Suddenly
gateways began opening all around the manor house, spilling out mounted
Asha'man and Aes Sedai and Warders, veiled Maidens and Bashere riding
at the
head of his horsemen. An Asha'man and Aes Sedai in a ring of two could
make a
gateway considerably larger than those Rand could alone. So someone had
managed
to give the signal, a red sunburst in the sky. Every Asha'man was full
of
saidin, and Rand assumed the Aes Sedai were equally full ofsaidar. The
Maidens
began spreading out into the trees.
"Aghan,
Hamad, search the house!" Bashere shouted. "Matoun, form the lancers!
They'll be on us as soon as they can!" Two soldiers thrust their lances
into the ground and leapt down to run inside drawing their swords while
the
others began arraying themselves in two ranks.
Ayako
flung herself from her saddle and rushed to Sandomere not even
bothering to
hold her skirts out of the mud. Merise rode to Narishma before swinging
down
right in front of him and taking his head in her hands without a word.
He
jerked, his back arching and nearly pulling his head free, as she
Healed him.
She had little facility with Nynaeve's method of Healing.
Ignoring
the turmoil. Nynaeve gathered her skirts in bloodied hands and hurried
to Rand.
"Oh. Rand," she said when she saw his arm, "I'm so sorry. I… I'll do
what I can, but I can't fix it the way it was." Her eyes were
filled with anguish.
Wordlessly,
he held out his left arm. It throbbed with agony. Strangely, he could
still
feel his hand. It seemed he should be able to make a fist with the
fingers that
were no longer there. His goose bumps intensified as she drew more
deeply on
saidar, the tendrils of smoke vanished from his cuff, and she gripped
his arm
above the wrist. His entire arm began tingling, and the pain drained
away.
Slowly, blackened skin was replaced by smooth skin that seemed to ooze
down
until it covered the small lump that had been the base of his hand. It
was a
miraculous thing to see. The scarlet-and-gold scaled dragon grew back,
too, as
much as it could, ending in a bit of the golden mane. He could still
feel the
whole hand.
"I'm
so sorry." Nynaeve said again. "Let me delve you for any other
injuries." She asked, but did not wait, of course. She reached up to
cup
his head between her hands, and a chill ran through him. "There's
something wrong with your eyes," she said with a frown. "I'm afraid
to try fixing that without studying on it. The smallest mistake could
blind
you. How well can you see? How many fingers am I holding up?"
"Two.
I can see fine," he lied. The black flecks were gone, but everything
still
seemed seen through water, and he wanted to squint against a sun that
appeared
to glare ten times brighter than it had. The old wounds in his side
were
knotted with pain.
Bashere
climbed down from his compact bay in front of him and frowned at the
stump of
his left arm. Unbuckling his helmet, he took it off and held it under
his arm.
"Ac least you're alive." he said gruffly. "I've seen men hurt
worse."
"Me,
too," Rand said. "I'll have to learn the sword all over again,
though." Bashere nodded. Most forms required two hands. Rand bene to
pick
up the crown of Illian, but Min released his arm and hurriedly handed
the crown
to him. He settled it on his head. "I'll have to work out new ways to
do
everything."
"You
must be in shock," Nynaeve said slowly. "You've just suffered a
grievous injury. Rand. Maybe you'd better lie down. Lord Davram, have
one your
men bring a saddle to put his feet up."
"He's
not in shock,' Min said sadly. The bond was full of sadness. She had
taken hold
of his arm as if to hold him up again. "He lost a hand, but there's
nothing to do about it. so he's left it behind already."
"Wool-headed
fool.' Nynaeve muttered. Her hand, still smeared with Sandomere's
blood,
drifted toward the thick braid hanging over her shoulder, but she
yanked it
back down. "You've been hurt badly. It's all right to grieve. It's all
right to feel stunned. It's normal!"
"I
don't have time," he told her. Min's sadness threatened to overflow the
bond. Light, he was all right! Why did she feel so sad?
Nynaeve
muttered half under her breath about "woolhead" and "fool"
and "man-stubborn," but she was not finished. "Those old wounds
in your side have broken open," she almost growled. "You aren't
bleeding badly, but you are bleeding. Maybe I can finally do something
about
them."
But
as hard as she tried-and she tried three times-nothing changed. He
still felt
the slow trickle of blood sliding down his ribs. The wounds were still
a
throbbing knot of pain. Finally, he pushed her hand gently away from
his side.
"You've
done what you can. Nynaeve. It's enough."
"Fool."
She did growl, this time. "How can it be enough when you're still
bleeding?"
"Who
is the tall woman?" Bashere asked. He understood, at least. You did not
waste time on what could not be mended. "They didn't try passing her
off
as the Daughter of the Nine Moons, did they? Not after telling me she
was a
little thing."
"They
did," Rand replied, and explained briefly.
"Semirhage?"
Bashere muttered incredulously. "How can you be sure?"
"She's
Anath Dorje, not… not what you called her," a honey-skinned sul'dam
said loudly in a twangy drawl. Her dark eyes were tilted, and her hair
was
streaked with gray. She looked the eldest of the sul'dam. and the least
frightened. It was not that she did not look afraid, but she controlled
it
well. "She's the High Lady's Truthspeaker."
"Be
silent, Falendre," Semirhage said coldly, looking over her shoulder.
Her
gaze promised pain. The Lady of Pain was good at delivering on her
promises.
Prisoners had killed themselves on learning it was she who held them,
men and
women who managed to open a vein with teeth or fingernails.
Falendre
did not seem to see it. though. "You don't command me," she said
scornfully. "You're not even so'jhin."
"How
can you be sure?" Cadsuane demanded. Those golden moons and stars,
birds
and fishes, swung as she moved her piercing gaze from Rand to Semirhage
and
back.
Semirhage
saved him the effort of thinking up a lie. "He's insane," she said
coolly. Standing there stiff as a statue, Min's knife hilt still
sticking out
beside her collarbone and the front of her black dress glistening with
blood,
she might have been a queen on her throne. "Graendal could explain it
better than I. Madness was her specialty. I will try, however. You know
of
people who hear voices in their heads? Sometimes, very rarely, the
voices they
hear are the voices of past lives. Lanfear claimed he knew things from
our own
Age, things only Lews Therin Telamon could know. Clearly, he is hearing
Lews Therin's
voice. It makes no difference that his voice is real, however. In fact,
that
makes his situation worse. Even Graendal usually failed to achieve
reintegration with someone who heard a real voice. I understand the
descent
into terminal madness can be… abrupt." Her lips curved in a smile
that never touched her dark eyes.
Were
they looking at him differently? Logain's face was a carved mask,
unreadable.
Bashere looked as though he still could not believe. Nynaeve's mouth
hung open,
and her eyes were wide. The bond… For a long moment, the bond was full
of… numbness. If Min turned away from him. he did not know whether he
could
stand it. If she turned away, it would be the best thing in the world
for her.
But compassion and determination as strong as mountains replaced
numbness. and
love so bright he thought he could have warmed his hands over it. Her
grip on
his arm tightened, and he tried to put a hand over hers. Too late, he
remembered and snatched the nub of his hand away, but not before it had
touched
her. Nothing in the bond wavered by a hair.
Cadsuane
moved closer to the taller woman and looked up at her. Facing one of
the
Forsaken seemed to faze her no more than facing the Dragon Reborn did.
"You're very calm for a prisoner. Rather than deny the charge, you give
evidence against yourself."
Semirhage
shifted that cold smile from Rand to Cadsuane. "Why should I deny
myself?" Pride dripped from every word. "I am Semirhage."
Someone gasped, and a number of the sul'dam and damane started
trembling and
weeping. One sul'dam, a pretty, yellow-haired woman, suddenly vomited
down the
front of herself, and another, stocky and dark, looked as if she might.
Cadsuane
simply nodded. "I am Cadsuane Melaidhrin. I look forward to long talks
with you." Semirhage sneered. She had never lacked courage.
"We
thought she was the High Lady," Falendre said hurriedly, and haltingly
at
the same time. Her teeth seemed near to chattering, but she forced
words out.
"We thought we were being honored. She took us to a room in the Tarasin
Palace where there was a… a hole in the air, and we stepped through to
this
place. I swear it on my eyes! We thought she was the High Lady."
"So.
no army rushing toward us," Logain said. You could not have told from
his
tone whether he was relieved or disappointed. He bared an inch of his
sword and
thrust it back into its scabbard hard. "What do we do with them?" He
jerked his head toward the sul'dam and damane. "Send them to Caemlyn
like
the others?"
"We
send them back to Ebou Dar." Rand said. Cadsuane turned to stare at
him.
Her face was a perfect mask of Aes Sedai serenity, yet he doubted she
was
anywhere near serene inside. The leashing of damane was an abomination
that Aes
Sedai took personally. Nynaeve was anything but serene. Angry-eyed,
gripping
her braid in a tight, blood-daubed fist, she opened her mouth, but he
spoke
over her. "I need this truce, Nynaeve, and taking these women prisoner
is
no way to get one. Don't argue. That's what they'd call it. including
the
damane, and you know it as well as I do. They can carry word that I
want to
meet the Daughter of the Nine Moons. The heir to the throne is the only
one who
can make a truce stand."
"I
still don't like it,' she said firmly. "We could free the damane. The
others will do as well for carrying messages." The damane who had not
been
weeping before burst into tears. Some of them cried to the sul'dam to
save
them. Nynaeve's face took on sickly cast, but she threw up her hands
and gave
over arguing.
The
two soldiers Bashere had sent into the house came out, young men who
walked
with a rolling motion, more accustomed to saddles than their own feet.
Hamad
had a luxuriant black beard that fell below the edge of his helmet and
a scar
down his face. Aghan wore thick mustaches like Bashere's and carried a
plain
wooden box with no lid under his arm. They bowed to Bashere. free hands
swinging their swords clear.
"The
house is empty, my Lord." Aghan said, "but there's dried blood
staining the carpets in several rooms. Looks like a slaughter yard, my
Lord. 1
think whoever lived here is dead. This was sitting by the front door.
It didn't
look like it belonged, so I brought it along." He held out the box for
inspection. Within lay coiled a'dam and a number of circlets made of
segmented
black metal, some large, some small.
Rand
started to reach in with his left hand before he remembered. Min caught
the
movement and released his right arm so he could scoop up a handful of
the black
metal pieces. Nynaeve gasped.
"You
know what these are?" he asked.
"They're
a'dam for men," she said angrily. "Egeanin said she was going to drop
the thing in the ocean! We trusted her, and she gave it to somebody to
copy!"
Rand
dropped the things back into the box. There were six of the larger
circlets,
and five of the silvery leashes. Semirhage had been prepared no matter
who he
brought with him. "She really thought she could capture all of us."
That thought should have made him shiver. He seemed to feel Lews Therin
shiver.
No one wanted to fall into Semirhage's hands.
"She
shouted for them to shield us," Nynaeve said, "but they couldn't
because we were all holding the Power already. If we hadn't been, if
Cadsuane
and I hadn't had our ter'angreal, I don't know what would have
happened." She
did shiver.
He
looked at the tall Forsaken, and she stared back, utterly composed.
Utterly
cold. Her reputation as a torturer loomed so large that it was easy to
forget
how dangerous she was otherwise. "Tie off the shields on the others so
they'll unravel in a few hours, and send them to somewhere near Ebou
Dar."
For a moment, he thought Nynaeve was going to protest again, but she
contented
herself with giving her braid a strong tug and turning away.
"Who
are you to ask for a meeting with the High Lady?" Falendre demanded.
She
emphasized the title for some reason.
"My
name is Rand al'Thor. I'm the Dragon Reborn." If they had wept at
hearing
Semirhage's name, they wailed at hearing his.
Ashandarei
slanted across his saddle. Mat sat Pips in the darkness among the trees
and
waited, surrounded by two thousand mounted crossbowmen. The sun was not
long
down, and events should be in motion. The Seanchan were going to be hit
hard
tonight in half a dozen places. Some small and some not so small, but
hard in every
case. Moonlight filtering through the branches overhead gave just
enough
illumination for him to make out Tuon's shadowed face. She had insisted
on
staying with him, which meant Selucia was at her side on her dun, of
course,
glaring at him as usual. There were not enough moon-shadows to obscure
that,
unfortunately. Tuon must be unhappy about what was to happen tonight,
yet
nothing showed on her face. What was she thinking? Her expression was
all the
stern magistrate.
"Your
scheme do entail a good deal of luck," Teslyn said, not for the first
time. Even shadowed, her face looked hard. She shifted in her saddle,
adjusting
her cloak. "It be coo late to change everything, but this part can be
abandoned certainly." He would have preferred to have Bethamin or Seta,
neither bound by the Three Oaths and both knowing the weaves damane
used for
weapons, something that horrified the Aes Sedai. Not the weaves; just
that
Bethamin and Seta knew them. At least, he thought he would. Leilwin had
flatly
refused to fight any Seanchan except to defend herself. Bethamin and
Seta might
have done the same, or found at the last minute that they could not act
against
their countrymen. In any case, the Aes Sedai had rejected allowing the
two
women to be involved, and neither had opened her mouth once that was
said. That
pair were too meek around Aes Sedai to say boo to a goose.
"Grace
favor you, Teslyn Sedai. but Lord Mat is lucky," Captain Mandevwin
said.
The stocky one-eyed man had been with the Band since the first days in
Cairhien.
and he had earned the gray streaks in his hair, hidden now beneath his
green-painted helmet, an open-faced footman's helmet, in battles
against Tear
and Andor before that. "I remember times we were outnumbered, with
enemies
on every side, and he danced the Band around them. Not to slip away,
mind, but
to beat them. Beautiful battles."
"A
beautiful battle is one you don't have to fight," Mat said, more
sharply
than he intended. He did not like battles. You could get holes poked in
you in
a battle. He just kept getting caught in them, that was all. Most of
that
dancing around had been trying to slip away. But there would be no
slipping
away tonight, or for many days to come. "Our part of it is important,
Teslyn." What was keeping Aludra, burn her? The attack at the supply
camp
must be under way already, just strong enough that the soldiers
defending it
would think they could hold until help arrived, strong enough to make
them sure
they needed help. The others would be full strength from the start, to
overwhelm
the defenders before they knew what was on them. "I mean to bloody the
Seanchan. bloody them so hard and fast and often that they're reacting
to what
we're doing instead of making their own plans." As soon as the words
left
his tongue he wished he had phrased that another way.
Tuon
leaned close to Selucia. and the taller woman put her scarf-covered
head down
to exchange whispers. It was too dark for their bloody finger-talk, but
he
could not hear a word they were saying. He could imagine. She had
promised not
to betray him. and that had to cover trying to betray his plans, yet
she must
wish she had that promise back. He should have left her with Reimon or
one of
the others. That would have been safer than letting her stay with him.
He could
have if he had tied her up, her and Selucia both. And probably Setalle
as well.
That bloody woman still took Tuon's side every time.
Mandevwin's
bay stamped a hoof, and he patted the animal's neck with a gauntleted
hand.
"You cannot deny there is battle luck, when you find a weakness in your
enemy's lines that you never expected, that should not be there, when
you find
him arrayed to defend against attack from the north only you are coming
from
the south. Battle luck rides on your shoulder, my Lord. I have seen it."
Mat
grunted and resettled his hat on his head irritably. For every time a
banner
got lost and blundered into a bloody chink in the enemy's defenses,
there were
ten when it just was not bloody where you expected when you bloody well
needed
it. That was the truth of battle luck.
"One
green nightflower," a man called from above. "Two! Both green!"
Scrapings told of him climbing down hurriedly.
Mat
heaved a small sigh of relief. The raken was away and headed west. He
had
counted on that-the nearest large body of soldiers loyal to the
Seanchan lay
west-and even cheated by riding as far west as he dared. Just because
you were
sure your opponent would react in a certain way did not mean he would.
Reimon
would be overrunning the supply camp any minute, smothering the
defenders with
ten times their number and securing much-needed provisions.
"Go,
Vanin," he said, and the fat man dug his heels in, sending his dun off
into the night at a canter. He could not outpace the raken, but so long
as he
brought word in time… "Time to move, Mandevwin."
A
lean fellow dropped the last distance from a lower limb, carefully
cradling a
looking glass that he handed up to the Cairhienin.
"Get
mounted, Londraed." Mandevwin said, stuffing the looking glass into the
cylindrical
leather case tied to his saddle. "Connl. form the men by fours."
A
short ride took them to a narrow hard-packed road, winding through low
hills,
that Mat had avoided earlier. There were few farms and fewer villages
in this
area, but he did not want to spread rumors of large parties of armed
men. Not
until he wanted them to spread, anyway. Now he needed speed, and rumor
could
not outrun him in tonight's business. Most of the farmhouses they
trotted by
were dark shapes in the moonlight, lamps and candles already
extinguished. The
thud of hooves and the creak of saddle leather were the only sounds
aside from
the occasional thin, reedy cry of some night bird or an owl's hooting,
but two
thousand or so horses made a fair amount of noise. They passed through
a small
village where only a handful of thatch-roofed houses and the tiny stone
inn
showed any light, but people stuck their heads out of doors and windows
to
gape. Doubtless they thought they were seeing soldiers loyal to the
Seanchan.
There seemed to be few of any other kind remaining in most of Altara.
Somebody
raised a cheer, but he was a lone voice.
Mat
rode alongside Mandevwin with Tuon and the other women behind, and now
and then
he looked over his shoulder. Not to make sure she was still there.
Strange as
it was, he had no doubt she would keep her word not to escape, even
now. And
not to make sure she was keeping up. The razor had an easy stride, and
she rode
well. Pips could not have outrun Akein had he tried. No, he just liked
looking
at her, even by moonlight. Maybe especially by moonlight. He had tried
kissing
her again the night before, and she had punched him in the side so hard
that at
first he thought she had broken one of his shortribs. But she had
kissed him
just before they started out this evening. Only once, and said not to
be greedy
when he attempted a second. The woman melted in his arms while he was
kissing
her, and turned to ice the moment she stepped back. What was he to make
of her?
A large owl passed overhead, wings flapping silently. Would she see
some omen
in that? Probably.
He
should not be spending so much time thinking about her, not tonight. In
truth,
he was depending on luck to some extent. The three thousand lancers
Vanin had
found, mostly Altarans with a few Sean-chan, might or might not be
those Master
Roidelle had marked on his map, though they had not been too far from
where he
placed them, but there was no telling for sure in which direction they
had
moved since. Northeast, almost certainly, toward the Malvide Narrows,
and the
Molvaine Gap beyond. It seemed that except for the last stretch, the
Seanchan
had taken to avoiding the Lugard Road for moving soldiers, doubtless to
conceal
their numbers and destinations in the country roads. Certain was not
absolutely
sure, however. If they had not moved too far, this was the road they
would use
to reach that supply camp. If. But if they had ridden farther than he
expected,
they might use another road. No danger there; just a wasted night.
Their
commander might decide to cut straight across the hills, too. That
could prove
nasty if he decided to join this road at the wrong point.
About
four miles beyond the village, they came to a place where two gently
sloping
hills flanked the road, and he called a halt. Master Roidelle's own
maps were
fine, but those he had from other men were the work of masters, too.
Roidelle
acquired only the best. Mat recognized this spot as if he had seen it
before.
Mandevwin
wheeled his horse around. "Admar, Eyndel, take your men up the north
slope.
Madwin, Dongal, the south slope. One man in four to hold horses."
"Hobble
the horses,' Mat said, "and put the feedbags on to stop whinnying."
They were facing lancers. If it all turned sour and they tried to run,
those
lancers would ride them down like they were hunting wild pigs. A
crossbow was
no good from horseback, especially if you were trying to get away. They
had to
win here.
The
Cairhienin stared at him, any expression hidden by the face-bars of his
helmet,
but he did not hesitate. "Hobble the horses and put on their
nosebags." he ordered. "Every man on the line."
"Tell
off some to keep watch north and south," Mat told him. "Battle luck
can run against you as easily as in your favor." Mandevwin nodded and
gave
the order.
The
crossbowmen divided and rode up the thinly treed slopes, their dark
coats and
dull green armor fading into the shadows. Burnished armor was all very
well for
parades, but it could reflect moonlight as well as sunlight. According
to
Talmanes, the hard part had been convincing the lancers to give up
their bright
breastplates and the nobles their silvering and gilding. The foot had
seen
sense straight off. For a time there was the rustle of men and horses
moving
across the mulch, moving through brush, but finally silence fell. From
the
road, Mat could not have told there was anyone on either slope. Now he
just had
to wait.
Tuon
and Selucia kept him company, and so did Teslyn. A gusting breeze had
sprung up
from the west that tugged at cloaks, but of course, Aes Sedai could
ignore such
things, though Teslyn held hers shut. Selucia let the gusts take her
cloak
where it would, oddly, but Tuon took to holding hers closed with one
hand.
"You
might be more comfortable among the trees," he told her. "They'll cut
the wind.''
For
a moment, she shook with silent laughter. "I'm enjoying watching you
take
your ease on your hilltop," she drawled.
Mat
blinked. Hilltop? He was sitting Pips in the middle of the bloody road
with
flaming gusts cutting through his coat like winter was coming back.
What was
she talking about, hilltop?
"Have
a care with Joline," Teslyn said, suddenly and unexpectedly. "She be…
childish… in some ways, and you do fascinate her the way a shiny new
toy
do fascinate a child. She will bond you if she can decide how to
convince you
to agree. Perhaps even if you do no realize you be agreeing.''
He
opened his mouth to say there was no bloody flaming chance of that, but
Tuon
spoke first.
"She
cannot have him," she said sharply. Drawing a breath, she went on in
amused tones. "Toy belongs to me. Until I am through playing with him.
But
even then, I won't give him to a marath'damane. You understand me,
Tessi? You
tell Rosi that. That's the name I intended to give her. You can tell
her that,
too."
The
sharp gusts might not have affected Teslyn, but she shivered at hearing
her
damane name. Aes Sedai serenity vanished as rage contorted her face.
"What
I do understand-!"
"Give
over!" Mat cut in. "Both of you. I'm in no mood to listen to the pair
of you trying to jab each other with needles." Teslyn stared at him,
indignation plain even by moonlight.
"Why,
Toy," Tuon said brightly, "you're being masterful again."
She
leaned over to Selucia and whispered something that made the bo-somy
woman give
a loud guffaw.
Hunching
his shoulders and pulling his cloak around him, he leaned on the high
pommel of
his saddle and watched the night for Vanin. Women! He would give up all
of his
luck-well, half-if he could understand women.
"What
do you think you can achieve with raids and ambushes?" Teslyn said,
again
not for the first time. "The Seanchan will only send enough soldiers to
hunt you down." She and Joline had kept trying to stick their noses
into
his planning, and so had Edesina to a lesser extent, until he chased
them away.
Aes Sedai thought they knew everything, and while Joline at least did
know
something of war, he had not needed advice. Aes Sedai advice sounded an
awful
lot like telling you what to do. This time, he decided to answer her.
"I'm
counting on them sending more soldiers, Teslyn," he said, still
watching
for Vanin. "The whole army they have in the Molvaine Gap, in fact.
Enough
of it, anyway. They're more likely to use that than any other.
Everything Thom
and Juilin picked up says their big push is aimed at Illian. I think
the army
in the Gap is to guard against anything coming at them out of Murandy
or Andor.
But they're the stopper in the jar for us. I mean to pull that stopper
out so
we can pass through."
After
several minutes of silence, he looked over his shoulder. The three
women were
just sitting their horses and watching him. He wished he had enough
light to
make out their expressions. Why were they bloody staring? He settled
back to
looking for Vanin. yet it seemed he could feel their eyes on his back.
Perhaps
two hours by the shifting of the fat crescent moon went by. with the
wind
slowly picking up strength. It was enough to take the night beyond cool
into
cold. Periodically he tried to make the women take shelter among the
trees, but
they resisted stubbornly. He had to remain, to catch Vanin without
having to
shout-the lancers would be close behind the man; perhaps very close if
their
commander was a fool-but they did not. He suspected that Teslyn refused
because
Tuon and Selucia did. That made no sense, but there it was. As for why
Tuon
refused, he could not have said unless it was because she liked to
listen to
him arguing himself hoarse.
Eventually
the wind brought the sound of a running horse, and he sat up straight
in his
saddle. Vanin's dun cantered out of the night, the bulky man as always
an
improbable sight in a saddle.
Vanin
drew rein and spat through a gap in his teeth. "They're a mile or so
behind me, but there's maybe a thousand more than there was this
morning.
Whoever's in charge knows his business. They're pushing hard without
blowing
their horses."
"If
you be outnumbered two to one." Teslyn said, "perhaps you will
reconsider-"
"I
don't intend to give them a stand-up fight," Mat broke in. "And I
can't afford to leave four thousand lancers loose to make trouble for
me. Let's
join Mandevwin."
The
kneeling crossbowmen on the slope of the northern hill made no sound
when he
rode through their line with the women and Vanin, just shuffled aside
to let
them through. He would have preferred at least two ranks, but he needed
to
cover a wide front. The sparse trees did cut the wind, but not by much,
and
most of the men were huddled in their cloaks. Still, every crossbow he
could
see was drawn, with a bolt in place. Mandevwin had seen Vanin arrive
and knew
what it meant.
The
Cairhienin was pacing just behind the line until Mat appeared and swung
down
from Pips. Mandevwin was relieved to hear that he no longer needed to
keep a
watch to his rear. He merely nodded thoughtfully at hearing of a
thousand more
lancers than expected and sent a man racing off to bring the watchers
down from
the crest to take their places in the line. If Mat Cauthon took it in
stride,
so would he. Mat had forgotten that about the Band. They trusted him
absolutely. Once, that had almost made him break out in a rash.
Tonight, he was
glad of it.
An
owl hooted twice, somewhere behind him, and Tuon sighed.
"Is
there an omen in that?" he asked, just for something to say.
"I'm
glad you are finally taking an interest. Toy. Perhaps I will be able to
educate
you yet." Her eyes were liquid in the moonlight. "An owl hooting
twice means someone will die soon." Well, that put a bloody end to
conversation.
Soon
enough, the Seanchan appeared, four abreast and leading their horses at
a trot,
lances in hand. Vanin had been right about their commander knowing his
job.
Cantered for a time then led at a trot, horses could cover a lot of
ground
quickly. Fools tried to gallop long distances
and ended with dead or crippled horses. Only the first forty or so wore
the
segmented armor and strange helmets of Seanchan. A pity, that. He had
no idea
how the Seanchan would feel about casualties to their Altaran allies.
Losses to
their own would catch notice, though.
When
the middle of the column was right in front of him, a deep voice on the
road
suddenly shouted, "Banner! Halt!" Those two words carried the
familiar slurred drawl of the Seanchan. The men in segmented armor
stopped
sharply. The others straggled to a halt.
Mat
drew breath. Now that had to be ta'veren work. They could hardly have
been
better placed if he had given the order himself. He rested a hand on
Teslyn's
shoulder. She flinched slightly, but he needed to get her attention
quietly.
"Banner!"
the deep voice shouted. "Mount!" Below, soldiers moved to obey.
"Now,"
Mat said quietly.
The
foxhead went cold on his chest, and suddenly a ball of red light was
floating
high above the road, bathing the soldiers below in an unearthly glow.
They had
only a heartbeat to gape. Along the line below Mat, a thousand crossbow
strings
gave what sounded like one loud snap, and a thousand bolts streaked
into the
formation, punching through breastplates at that short range, knocking
men from
their feet, sending horses rearing and screaming, just as a thousand
more
struck from the other side. Not every shot struck squarely, but that
hardly
mattered with a heavy crossbow. Men went down with shattered legs, with
legs
ripped half off. Men clutched at the stumps of ruined arms trying to
stem the
flow of blood. Men screamed as loudly as the horses.
He
watched a crossbowman nearby as the fellow bent to fasten the paired
hooks of
the bulky, boxlike crank, hanging from a strap at the front of his
belt, to his
crossbow string. As the man straightened, the cord streamed out of the
crank,
but once he was erect, he set the crank on the butt of the upended
crossbow,
moved a small lever on the side of the box, and began to work the
handles.
Three quick turns with a rough whirring sound, and the string caught on
the
latch.
'Into
the trees!" the deep voice shouted. "Close with them before they can
reload! Move!"
Some
tried to mount, to ride into the attack, and others dropped reins and
lances to
draw swords. None made it as far as the trees. Two thousand more bolts
slashed
into them, cutting men down, punching through men to kill men behind or
topple
horses. On the hillside, men began working their cranks furiously, but
there
was no need. On the road, a horse kicked feebly here and there. The
only men
moving were frantically trying to use whatever they had to hand for
tourniquets
to keep from bleeding to death. The wind brought the sound of running
horses.
Some might have riders. There were no more shouts from the deep voice.
"Mandevwin,"
Mat shouted, "we're done here. Mount the men. We have places to be."
"You
must stay to offer aid," Teslyn said firmly. "The rules of war do
demand it."
"This
is a new kind of war," he told her harshly. Light, it was silent on the
road, but he could still hear the screaming. "They'll have to wait for
their own to give them aid."
Tuon
murmured something half under her breath. He thought it was, "A lion
can
have no mercy," but that was ridiculous.
Gathering
his men, he led them down the north side of the hill. There was no need
to let
the survivors see how many they were. In a few hours they would join up
with
the men from the other hill, and in a few hours more, with Carlomin.
Before
sunrise they were going to hit the Seanchan again. He intended to make
them run
to pull that bloody stopper for him.
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
In Maiden
Just
before first light, Faile was fastening the wide belt of golden links
around
her waist for the last time when Dairaine entered the small, already
crowded
peaked tent where they all slept. Outside, the sky would be starting to
turn
gray, but inside, it might still have been night. Faile's eyes had
adapted to
the darkness, though. The slender little woman with black hair that
spilled to
her waist in waves was frowning around her yawns. She had stood just
below the
High Seat of her House in Cairhien, but she had been wakened in the
night
because Sevanna could not sleep and wanted to be read to. Sevanna
enjoyed
Dairaine's voice, and likely the tales she carried of supposed misdeeds
among
Sevanna's gai'shain. The Cairhienin woman was never chosen out as one
of those
who had failed to please. Her hands went to her golden collar, then
hesitated
when she took in Faile, Alliandre and Maighdin, already dressed and on
their
feet.
"I
forgot to put the book back in the proper place,'' she said in a voice
like
crystal chimes, turning back toward the tentflap. "Sevanna will have me
beaten if she sees it out of place when she wakes."
"She's
lying." Maighdin growled, and Dairaine darted for outside.
That
was enough to convince Faile. She grabbed the woman's cowl and hauled
her back
into the tent. Dairaine opened her mouth to scream, but Alliandre
clapped her
hand over it, and the three of them wrestled the woman to the
blanket-strewn
ground-cloth. It took all three. Dairaine was small, but she writhed
like a
snake, tried to claw at them, to bite. While the other two held the
woman down,
Faile produced the second knife she had secured, a quite serviceable
dagger
with a ridged steel hilt and a blade longer than her hand, and began
slicing
strips from one of the blankets.
"How
did you know?" Alliandre said, struggling to contain one of Dairaine's
arms while keeping her mouth covered without being bitten. Maighdin had
taken
care of the woman's legs by sitting on them and had her other arm
twisted to
her shoulder blades. Dairaine still managed to twist, if uselessly.
"She
was frowning, but when she spoke, her face went smooth. I could just
make it
out. If she were really worried about being beaten, she'd have frowned
harder,
not stopped." The golden-haired woman was not a very skilled lady's
maid,
yet she was a very observant one.
"But
what made her suspicious?"
Maighdin
shrugged. "Maybe one of us looked surprised, or guilty. Though I can't
say
how she could have noticed without any light."
Soon
enough they had Dairaine trussed up with her ankles and wrists tied
together
behind her back. She would not wriggle far like that. A wadded length
torn from
her shift and tied in place with another piece of blanket served for a
gag that
let her emit only grunts. She twisted her head to glare up at them.
Faile could
not see her face very well, but the woman's expression had to be either
glaring
or pleading, and Dairaine only pleaded with Shaido. She used her
position as
one of Sevanna's gai'shain to bully gai'shain who were not, and her
tale-carrying to bully those who were. The trouble was, they could not
leave
her here. Someone might come at any moment to summon one of them to
serve
Sevanna.
"We
can kill her and hide the body," Alliandre suggested, smoothing her
long
hair. It had become disarrayed in the struggle.
"Where?"
Maighdin said, combing her own sun-gold hair with her fingers. She did
not
sound a lady's maid speaking to a queen. Prisoners were equals in their
captivity or else they aided their captors. It had taken time to teach
Alliandre that. "It has to be somewhere she won't be found for at least
a
day. Sevanna might send men after Galina to bring us back if we're
suspected of
killing one of her belongings." She vested that word with all the scorn
it
would bear. "And I don't trust Galina not to let them bring us back."
Dairaine began struggling against her bonds again and grunting harder
than
ever. Maybe she had decided to plead after all.
"We
aren't going to kill her," Faile told them. She was being neither
squeamish nor merciful. There simply was nowhere they could be sure a
body
would remain hidden long enough, not that they could reach without
being seen.
"I'm afraid our plans have changed a little. Wait here."
Ducking
outside, where the sky was indeed beginning to pearl, she found what
had made
Dairaine suspicious. Bain and Chiad were there in their plain white
robes as
expected, to escort them as far as the meeting place. Rolan and his
friends
might not be done breakfasting yet-she hoped they were not; they might
do
something foolish and ruin everything-and Bain and Chiad had
volunteered to
divert any men who tried to interfere with them. She had not been able
to make
herself ask how they Intended to do that. Some sacrifices deserved a
veil of
secrecy. And all of a heart's gratitude. Two gai'shain holding wicker
baskets
were not enough to rouse suspicion in the Cairhienin woman, but thirty
or forty
gai'shain were, crowding the narrow muddy lane through the gai'shain
tents.
Aravine's plump plain face watched her from a white cowl, and Lusara's
beautiful one. Alvon was there with his son Theril in their robes of
muddy
tentcloth, and Alainia, a plump Amadician silversmith in dirty coarse
white
linen, and Dormin, a stocky Cairhienin bootmaker, and Corvila, a lean
weaver
from right here in Altara, and… They represented not a tenth part of
those who had sworn to her, but a gathering of gai'shain this large
would have
planted suspicion in a stone. At least when added to the three of them
being
dressed. Dairaine likely had heard who had been summoned to Sevanna
this
morning. How had they learned she was leaving today? It was too late to
worry
about that. If any Shaido knew, they would all have been dragged from
the tent
before this.
"What
are you doing here?" she demanded.
"We
wanted to see you go, my Lady," Theril said in his rough, barely
intelligible accents. "We were very careful to come by ones and
twos." Lusara nodded happily, and she was not the only one.
"Well,
we can say goodbye now," Faile said firmly. No need to tell them how
close
they had come to ruining the escape. "Until I come back for you." If
her father would not give her an army, then Perrin would. His
friendship with
Rand al'Thor would provide it. Light. where was he? No! She had to be
glad he
had not caught up yet. Had not gotten himself killed trying to sneak
into the
camp and rescue her. She had to be glad, and not think of what might be
delaying him. "Now go before someone sees you here and runs to tell
tales.
And don't talk to anyone about this." Her adherents were safe enough,
otherwise she would already be chained, but there were too many like
Dairaine
among the gai'shain, and not only among the long-held Cairhienin. Some
people
naturally set to licking wrists wherever they were.
They
bowed or curtsied or knuckled their foreheads, just as if nobody might
be
poking their heads out to see, and scattered in every direction with
chagrined
expressions. They really had expected to watch her leave! She had no
time to
fritter away on exasperation. Hurrying to Bain and Chiad. she hastily
explained
the situation inside the tent.
They
exchanged glances when she finished and put down the baskets to free
fingers
for Maiden handtalk. She avoided looking at their hands, since they
plainly
wanted privacy. Not that she could have understood much in any case.
Their
hands moved very fast. Flame-haired Bain with her dark blue eyes stood
nearly
half a hand taller than she. gray-eyed Chiad just a finger taller. They
were
her close friends, but they had adopted each other as first-sisters,
and that
created bonds closer than any friendship.
''We
will take care of Dairaine Saighan," Chiad said at last. "But it
means you must go into the town alone.''
Faile
sighed, but there was no helping it. Perhaps Rolan was already awake.
He could
be watching her that minute. He always seemed to appear out of nowhere
when she
needed him. Surely he would not interfere with her leaving, not when he
had
promised to take her when he himself left. Yet he still had hopes, so
long as
she wore white. Him and his kissing games! He might want to keep her in
gai'shain robes a little longer. When men wanted to help, they always
thought
their way was the only way.
Bain
and Chiad ducked into the small peaked tent, and Alliandre and Maighdin
came
out. There really was not room inside for five. Maighdin went around
the side
of the tent and returned with a basket like those the other women had
been
carrying. Dirty gai'shain robes bulged out of the top of each, making
them
appear loads of laundry, but beneath were dresses that came near enough
fitting, a hatchet, a sling, cords for making snares, flint and steel,
packets
of flour, meal, dried beans, salt and yeast, a few coins they had been
able to
find, everything they would need to make their way west to find Perrin.
Galina
would take them out of the camp, but there was no saying which
direction her
"Aes Sedai business" would take her then. They had to be self-reliant
from the start. Faile would not put it past the Aes Sedai to abandon
them as
soon as she was able.
Maighdin
stood over her basket with an air of determination, her jaw set and her
eyes firm,
but Alliandre's face was wreathed in smiles.
"Try
not to look so happy," Faile told her. Wetlander gai'shain seldom
smiled,
and never so joyfully.
Alliandre
tried to moderate her expression, but every time she smoothed her
smiles away,
they crept back. "We're escaping today," she said. "It's hard
not to smile."
"You'll
stop if some Wise One sees you and decides to find out why you're
happy."
"We're
hardly likely to meet a Wise One among the gai'shain tents or in
Maiden,"
the woman said through a smile. Determined or not, Maighdin nodded
agreement.
Faile
gave up. In truth, she felt a little giddy herself in spite of
Dairaine. They
were escaping today.
Bain
came out of the tent, holding the tentflap for Chiad, who was carrying
on her
back a blanket-wrapped bundle just large enough to be a small woman
doubled-up.
Chiad was strong, but she had to lean forward a little to support the
weight.
"Why
is she so still?" Faile asked. She had no fear they had killed
Dairaine.
They were fierce about following the rules for gai'shain, and violence
was
forbidden. But that blanket could have been full of wood for all that
it moved.
Bain
spoke softly, an amused light in her eyes. "I stroked her hair and told
her I would be very upset if I had to hurt her. Simple truth,
considering how
much toh even slapping her would cost me." Chiad chuckled. "I think
Dairaine Saighan thought we were threatening her. I think she will be
very
quiet and very still until we let her go." She shook with silent
laughter.
Aiel humor was still a mystery to Faile. She knew they would be
punished
severely for this, though. Aiding an escape attempt was dealt with as
harshly
as trying to escape.
"You
have all my gratitude," she said, "you and Chiad both, now and
forever. I have great toh." She kissed Bain lightly on the cheek. which
made the woman blush as red as her hair, of course. Aiel were almost
prudishly
restrained in public. In some ways.
Bain
glanced at Chiad, and a faint smile appeared on her lips.
"When
you see Gaul, tell him Chiad is gai'shain to a man with strong hands, a
man
whose heart is fire. He will understand. I need to help her carry our
burden to
a safe place. May you always find water and shade, Faile Bashere." She
touched Faile's cheek lightly with her fingertips. "One day, we will
meet
again."
Going
over to Chiad, she took one end of the blanket, and they hurried away
carrying
it between them. Gaul might understand, but Faile did not. Not the
heart of
fire, anyway, and she doubted that Manderic's hands interested Chiad in
the
slightest. The man had bad breath and started getting drunk as soon as
he woke
unless he was going on a raid or hunting. But she put Gaul and Manderic
out of
her mind and shouldered her basket. They had wasted too much time
already.
The
sky was beginning to take on the appearance of actual daylight, and
gai'shain
were stirring among the wildly diverse tents of the camp close on
Maiden's
walls, scurrying off to be about some chore or at least carrying
something to
give a semblance of working, but none paid any mind to three women in
white
carrying baskets of laundry toward the town's gates. There always
seemed to be
laundry to be done, even for Sevanna's gai'shain. There were far too
many
wetlander gai'shain for Faile to know everyone, and she saw no one she
knew
until they came on Arrela and Lacile. shifting from foot to foot with
baskets
on their shoulders. Taller than most Aiel women and dark, Arrela kept
her black
hair cut as short as any Maiden and strode like a man when she walked.
Lacile
was short and pale and slim, and had red ribbons tied in her hair,
which was
not much longer. Her walk was graceful in robes, and had been a
scandalous sway
when she had worn breeches. Their sighs of relief were nearly
identical,
though.
"We
thought something had happened," Arrela said.
"Nothing
we couldn't handle." Faile told her.
"Where
are Bain and Chiad?" Lacile asked anxiously.
"They
have another task," Faile said. "We go alone."
They
exchanged glances, and their sighs were far from relieved this time. Of
course
Rolan would not interfere. Not with them getting away. Of course not.
The
iron-strapped gates of Maiden stood open, shoved back against the
granite
walls, as they had since the city fell. Rust had turned the broad iron
straps
brown, and the hinges were so rusty that pushing the gates shut again
might be
impossible. Pigeons nested in the gray stone towers flanking them, now.
They
were the first to arrive. At least. Faile could see no one ahead of
them down
the street. As they walked through the gates, she retrieved her dagger
from the
pockec inside her sleeve and held it with the blade pressed against her
wrist,
pointing up her arm.
The
other women made similar motions, if not so deftly. Without Bain and
Chiad. and
hoping that Rolan and his friends were otherwise occupied, they had to
provide
their own protection. Maiden was not as dangerous for a woman-for a
gai'shain
woman; Shaido who tried to prey on their own got short shrift-not as
dangerous
as the Shaido portion of the camp, yet women had been assaulted there,
sometimes by groups of men. The Light send if they were accosted, it
was only
by one or two. One or two they might catch by surprise and kill before
they
realized these gai'shain had teeth. If there were more than two. they
would do
what they could, but an Aiel weaver or potter was as dangerous as most
trained
armsmen. Baskets or no baskets, they walked on their toes, heads
swiveling,
ready to spring in any direction.
This
part of the town had not been burned, yet it had a look of desolation.
Broken
dishes and potter crunched beneath their soft white boots. Bits of
clothing,
cut off men and women made gai'shain. still littered the gray paving
stones.
Those sorry, bedraggled rags had lain first in the snow and then in the
rain for
well over a month, and she doubted any ragpicker would have gathered
them, now.
Here and there lay children's toys, a wooden horse or a doll whose
paint was
beginning to flake, dropped by the very young who had been allowed to
flee,
like the very old, the ill and infirm. Slate-roofed buildings of wood
or stone
along the street showed gaping holes where their doors and windows had
been.
Along with anything the Shaido considered valuable or useful, the town
had been
stripped of every easily removable piece of wood, and only the fact
that
tearing down houses was less efficient than cutting firewood in the
surrounding
forests had spared the wooden structures themselves. Those openings
minded
Faile of eye sockets in skulls. She had walked along this street
countless
times, yet this morning, they seemed to be watching her. They made her
scalp
crawl.
Halfway
across the town, she looked back toward the gates, no more than a
hundred and
fifty paces behind. The street was still empty for the moment, but soon
the first
white-clad men and women would materialize with their water buckets.
Fetching
water was a task that began early and lasted all day. They had to
hurry, now.
Turning down a narrower side street, she started to walk faster,
although she
had trouble keeping her basket balanced. The others must have been
having the
same difficulty, yet no one complained. They had to be out of sight
before
those gai'shain appeared. There was no reason for any gai'shain
entering the
town to leave the main street until they reached the cistern below the
fortress. An attempt to curry favor or just a careless word could send
Shaido
into the town hunting for them, and there was only one way out, short
of
climbing onto the walls and dropping ten paces to the ground hoping
that no one
broke a leg.
At
a now signless inn, three stories of stone and empty windows, she
darted into
the common room followed by the others. Lacile set down her basket and
pressed
herself against the doorframe to keep watch up the street. The
beam-ceilinged
room was bare to the dusty floorboards, and the stone fireplaces were
missing
their andirons and firetools. The railing had been stripped from the
staircase
at the back of the room, and the door to the kitchen was gone. too. The
kitchen
was just as empty. She had checked. Pots and knives and spoons were
useful.
Faile lowered her basket to the floor and hurried to the side of the
staircase.
It was a sturdy piece of work, of heavy timbers and made to last for
generations. Tearing it down would have been nearly as hard as tearing
down a
house. She felt underneath, along the top of the wide outer support,
and her
hand closed on the wrist-thick, not quite glassy rod. It had seemed as
good a
hiding place as she could find, a place no one would have any reason to
look,
but she was surprised to find she had been holding her breath.
Lacile
remained by the doorway, but the others hurried to Faile without their
baskets.
"At
last," Alliandre said, gingerly touching the rod with her fingertips.
"The price of our freedom. What is it?"
"An
angreal" Faile said, "or perhaps a ter'angreal. 1 don't know for
certain, except that Galina wants it very badly, so it must be one or
the
other."
Maighdin
put her hand on the rod boldly. "It could be either," she murmured.
"They often have an odd feel. So I've been told, anyway." She claimed
never to have been to the White Tower, but Faile was not so sure as she
once
had been. Maighdin could channel, but so weakly and with so much
difficulty
that the Wise Ones saw no danger in letting her walk free. Well, as
free as any
gai'shain was. Her denials might well be a matter of shame. Faile had
heard
that women who had been put out of the Tower because they could not
become Aes
Sedai sometimes denied ever having gone in order to hide their failure.
Arrela
gave a shake of her head and backed away a step. She was Tairen, and
despite
traveling with Aes Sedai, she was still uncomfortable over the Power or
anything to do with it. She looked at the smooth white rod as if at a
red adder
and licked her lips. "Galina might be waiting on us. She might get
angry
if we make her wait long."
"Is
the way still clear, Lacile?" Faile asked as she stuck the rod far down
into her basket. Arrela exhaled heavily, clearly as relieved at having
the
thing out of her sight as she had been to see Faile earlier.
"Yes,"
the Cairhienin replied, "but I do not understand why." She still
stood so that one eye could peek around the corner of the doorframe.
"The
first gai'shain should be coming for water by now."
"Maybe
something has happened in the camp," Maighdin said. Suddenly, her face
was
grim and her knife was in her hand, a wooden-handled affair with a
chipped and
pitted blade.
Faile
nodded slowly. Maybe something such as Dairaine having been found
already. She
could not tell where Faile and the others had been going, but she might
have
recognized some among the waiting gai'shain. How long would they hold
out if
put to the question? How long would Alvon hold out if Theril were?
"There's nothing we can do about it, in any case. Galina will get us
out."
Even
so, when they left the inn, they ran, carrying the baskets in front of
them and
trying to hold up their long robes so they did not trip. Faile was not
the only
one to look over her shoulder frequently and stumble. She was not sure
whether
or not she was relieved to finally see gai'shain carrying buckets on
yokes
drift across the crossing of the town's main street. She certainly did
not slow
down.
They
did not have far to run. In moments, the smell of charred wood that had
faded
from the rest of Maiden began to grow. The southern end of Maiden was a
ruin.
They halted at the edge of the devastation and edged around a corner so
they
would not be seen by anyone glancing down the street. From where they
stood to the
southern wall, near two hundred paces, marched roofless shells with
blackened
stone walls interspersed with piles of charred beams washed clean of
ash by the
rains. In places, not even the heaviest timbers remained. Only on the
south
side of this street were there any structures even close to whole. This
was
where the fire that raged after the Shaido took the city had been
finally
stopped. Half a dozen buildings stood without roofs, though the lower
floors
looked intact, and twice as many were leaning piles of black timbers
and
half-burned boards that appeared on the edge of collapse.
"There."
Maighdin said, pointing east along the street. A long length of red
cloth
fluttered in the breeze where she pointed. It was tied to a house that
seemed
ready to fall in. Walking to it slowly, they rested their baskets on
the paving
stones. The red cloth fluttered again.
"Why
would she want to meet us here'." Alliandre muttered. "That could
cave in if anybody sneezed." She rubbed at her nose as though the word
had
given her the urge.
"It
is quite sound. I inspected it." Galina's voice behind them jerked
Faile's
head around. The woman was striding toward them, plainly from one of
the sound
buildings on the north side of the street. After so long seeing her in
that belt
and collar of gold and firedrops, she looked odd without them. She
still wore
her white silk robes, but the absence of the jewelry was convincing.
Galina had
not somehow managed to turn truth on its head. She was leaving today.
"Why
not in one of the sound buildings?" Faile demanded. "Or right
here?"
"Because
I don't want anyone to see it in my hands,' Galina said, walking past
her.
"Because no one will look inside that ruin. Because I say so." She
stepped through what had been a doorway, ducking under a heavy, charred
roof
beam that slanted across the opening, and immediately turned to her
right and
began descending stairs. "Don't dawdle."
Faile
exchanged looks with the other women. This was more than passing
strange.
"If
she'll get us out of here," Alliandre growled, snatching up her basket,
"I'm willing to hand her the thing in a privy." Still, she waited on
Faile to pick up her own basket and lead the way.
Charred
timbers and blackened boards hung low over the stone stairs that led
downward,
but Galina's ease at entering reassured Faile. The woman would not risk
being
buried alive or crushed at the very moment she finally gained the rod.
Bars and
beams of light filtering through gaps in the wreckage gave enough
illumination
to show that the basement was quite clear despite the treacherous
nature of
what lay above. Large barrels stacked along one stone wall, most
scorched and
with staves sprung from the heat, said this had been an inn or a tavern.
Or
perhaps a wine merchant's shop. The area around Maiden had produced a
great
deal of mediocre wine.
Galina
stood in the middle of the grit-covered stone floor, in a small beam of
light.
Her face was all Aes Sedai calm, her agitation of the previous day
completely
subdued. "Where is it?" she said coolly. "Give it to me."
Faile
set her basket down and shoved her hand deep inside. When she brought
out the
white rod, Galina's hands twitched. Faile extended the rod toward her,
and she
reached for it almost hesitantly. If she had not known better, Faile
would have
said she was afraid to touch it. Galina's fingers closed around the
rod, and
she exhaled heavily. She jerked the rod away before Faile could release
it. The
Aes Sedai seemed to be trembling, but her smile was… triumphant.
"How
do you intend to get us away from the camp?" Faile asked. "Should we
change our clothes now?"
Galina
opened her mouth, then suddenly raised her free hand, palm out. Her
head tilted
toward the stairs as if listening. "It may be nothing," she said
softly, "but it's best if I check. Wait here and be quiet. Be quiet,"
she hissed when Faile started to speak. Lifting the hem of her silk
robes, the
Aes Sedai scurried to the stairs and started up like a woman uneasy
about what
she might find at the top. Her feet passed out of sight behind the
sagging
boards and beams.
"Did
any of you hear anything?" Faile whispered. They all shook their heads.
"Maybe she's holding the Power. I've heard that can-"
"She
wasn't," Maighdin interrupted. "I've never seen her embracing-"
Suddenly,
wood groaned overhead, and with a thunderous crash charred beams and
boards
collapsed, sending out blinding billows of black dust and grit that
sent Faile
into paroxysms of coughing. The smell of charring suddenly was as thick
in the
air as it had been the day Maiden burned. Something falling from above
hit her
shoulder hard. and she crouched, trying to protect her head. Someone
cried out.
She heard other falling objects hit the basement's stone floor, boards
or
pieces of boards. Nothing made a loud enough noise to be a roof beam or
a heavy
joist.
Eventually-it
seemed like hours; it might have been minutes- the rain of debris
stopped. The
dust began to thin. Quickly she looked around for her companions, and
found
them all huddling on the floor with their arms around their heads.
There seemed
to be more light than before. A little more. Some of the gaps overhead
were
wider, now. A trickle of blood ran down Alliandre's face from her
scalp.
Everyone was dusted with black from head to foot.
"Is
anyone injured?" Faile asked, finishing with a cough. The dust had not
cleared completely, and her throat and tongue felt coated with it. The
stuff
tasted like charcoal.
"No,"
Alliandre said, touching her scalp gingerly. "A scrape, that's all."
The others denied injury as well, though Arrela seemed to be moving her
right
arm carefully. No doubt they had all suffered bruises, and Faile
thought her
left shoulder was going to be black and blue shortly, but she would not
count
that a real injury.
Then
her eyes fell on the stairs, and she wanted to weep. Wreckage from
above filled
the whole space where the staircase had been. They might have been able
to
squeeze through some of the gaps overhead. Faile thought she could
reach them
standing on Arrela's shoulders, but she doubted she could pull herself
through
with one good arm. Or that Arrela could. And if either managed, she
would be in
the middle of a burned-out ruin and likely as not to make the rest of
the thing
fall in, too.
"No!"
Alliandre moaned. "Not now! Not when we were so close!" Rising, she
rushed as near to the rubble as she could get, almost pressing against
it, and
began to shout. "Galina! Help us! We're trapped! Channel and lift the
boards away! Clear a path for us to get out! Galina! Galina! Galina!"
She
sagged against the tangle of timbers. shoulders shaking. "Galina,'' she
wept. "Galina. help us."
"Galina's
gone," Faile said bitterly. The woman would have answered if she was
still
above or had any intention of aiding them. "With us trapped down here,
maybe
dead, she has the perfect excuse for leaving us behind. Anyway. I don't
know
whether an Aes Sedai could move some of those timbers if she tried."
She
did not want to mention the possibility that Galina had arranged that
excuse
herself. Light, she should never have slapped the woman. It was too
late for
self-recrimination, though.
"What
are we going to do now?" Arrela asked.
"Dig
ourselves out," Faile and Maighdin said at the same instant. Faile
looked
at the other woman in surprise. Her maid's dirty face wore a queen's
resolve.
"Yes."
Alliandre said, straightening. She turned around, and if runnels of
tear-tracks
marked the dust on her face, no new tears appeared. She really was a
queen, and
could not like being shamed by the courage of a lady's maid. "We'll dig
ourselves out. And if we fail… If we fail, I will not die wearing
thh't" Unfastening her golden belt, she flung it contemptuously into a
corner of the basement. Her golden collar followed.
"We'll
need those to make our way through the Shaido camp," Faile said gently.
"Galina may not be taking us out, but I intend leaving today."
Dairaine made that imperative. Bain and Chiad could not keep her hidden
long.
"Or as soon we can dig out, anyway. We'll pretend we've been sent to
pick
berries." She did not want to step on her liege-woman's bold gesture,
though. "However, we don't need to wear them now." Removing her belt
and collar, she righted her basket and set them atop the dirty
gai'shain robes.
The others emulated her. Al-liandre retrieved her own belt and collar
with a
rueful laugh. At least she could laugh again. Faile wished she could.
The
jumble of charred timbers and half-burned boards filling the staircase
resembled one of those blacksmith's puzzles her Perrin enjoyed. Almost
everything seemed to be propping up something else. Worse, the heavier
timbers
might be beyond all of them working together. But if they could clear
enough
for them to be able to crawl through, writhing between the thick beams…
It
would be dangerous, that crawl. But when a dangerous path was your only
route
to safety, you had to take it.
A
few boards came away easily and were piled at the back of the basement,
but
after that everything had to be chosen with care, examined to see
whether
anything would fall if it were removed, hands feeling back as far as
they could
go into the tangle, groping for nails that might have caught, trying
not think
about the whole pile shifting and trapping an arm, crushing it. Only
then could
they begin pulling, sometimes two of them together, tugging harder and
harder
until the piece suddenly gave. That work went slowly, with the great
pile
occasionally groaning, or shifting slightly. Everyone darted back,
holding
their breath, when that happened. Nobody moved again until they were
sure the
snarl of timbers was not going to collapse. The work became the focus
of their
world. Once, Faile thought she heard wolves howling. Wolves generally
made her
think of Perrin, but not this time. The work was all.
Then
Alliandre wrenched a charred board free, and with a great groan, the
mass began
to shift. Toward them. Everyone ran toward the back of the basement as
the pile
fell in with a deafening rumble, sending up more billows of dust.
When
they stopped coughing and could see again, dimly, with dust still
hanging in
the air, perhaps a quarter of the basement was filled. All of their
work
undone, and worse, the jumble was leaning toward them precariously.
Groaning,
it sagged a little more toward them and stopped. Everything about it
said the
first board pulled free would bring the whole mass down on their heads.
Arrela
began to cry softly. Tantalizing gaps admitted sunlight and allowed
them to see
the street, the sky, but nothing anyone could wriggle through, even
Lacile.
Faile could see the red scarf Galina had used to mark the building. It
fluttered for a moment in the breeze.
Staring
at the scarf, she seized Maighdin's shoulder. "I want you to try to
make
that scarf do something the wind wouldn't make it do."
"You
want to attract attention?" Alliandre said hoarsely. "It's far more
likely to be Shaido than anyone else.''
"Better
that than dying down here of thirst," Faile replied, her voice harsher
than she wanted. She would never see Perrin again, then. If Sevanna had
her
chained, she would at least be alive for him to rescue. He would rescue
her;
she knew it. Her duty now was to keep the women who followed her alive.
And if
that meant captivity, so be it. "Maighdin?"
"I
might spend all day trying to embrace the Source and never succeed,"
the sun-haired
woman said in dull tones. She stood slumped, staring at nothing. Her
face
suggested that she saw an abyss beneath her feet. "And if I do embrace
it,
I can almost never weave anything."
Faile
loosened her grip on Maighdin and smoothed her hair instead. "I know
it's
difficult," she said soothingly. "Well, in truth, I don't know. I've
never done it. But you have. And you can do it again. Our lives depend
on you,
Maighdin. I know the strength that's in you. I've seen it time and
again. There
is no surrender in you. I know you can do it, and so do you."
Slowly,
Maighdin's back straightened, and despair slid off her face. She might
still
see the abyss, but if she fell, she would fall without flinching. "I'll
try," she said.
For
a long while she stared up at the scarf, then shook her head
dejectedly.
"The Source is there, like the sun just beyond the edge of sight,"
she whispered, "but every time I try to embrace it, it's like trying to
catch smoke with my fingers."
Faile
hastily pulled the gai'sbain robes from her basket and another.
careless of the
gold belts and collars falling to the stone floor. "Sit down," she
said, arranging the robes in a pile. "Make yourself comfortable. I know
you can do it, Maighdin." Pressing the other woman down, she folded her
legs and sat beside her.
"You
can do it." Alliandre said softly, sitting down on Maighdin's other
side.
"Yes,
you can," Lacile whispered, joining them.
"I
know you can." Arrela said as she lowered herself to the floor.
Time
passed, with Maighdin staring at the scarf. Faile whispered
encouragement and
held onto hope hard. Suddenly the scarf went rigid, as if something had
pulled
it taut. A wondrous smile appeared on Maighdin's face as the scarf
began to
swing back and forth like a pendulum. Six, seven, eight times it swung.
Then it
fluttered in the breeze and fell limp.
"That
was marvelous," Faile said.
"Marvelous,"
Alliandre said. "You re going to save us, Maighdin."
"Yes."
Arrela murmured, "you're going to save us, Maighdin."
There
were many kinds of battle. Sitting on the floor, whispering
encouragement,
Maighdin fighting to find what she could seldom find. they fought for
their
lives while the scarf swung, then fell to the breeze, swung and fell
limp. But
they fought on.
Galina
kept her head down and tried not to hurry as she made her way out of
Maiden,
past the streams of white-clad men and women carrying empty buckets
into the
town and full buckets back out. She did not want to attract attention,
not
without that cursed belt and necklace. She had donned the things when
she
dressed in the night, while Ther-ava was still asleep, but it had been
such a
pleasure to remove them and hide them with the clothes and other things
she had
secreted away for her escape that she could not resist. Besides.
Therava would
have been angered to wake and find her missing. She would have ordered
a watch
for her "little Lina," and everyone marked her by those jewels. Well,
they would pay to help her return to the Tower, now, return to her
rightful
place. That arrogant Faile and the other fools were dead or asgood as,
and she
was free. She stroked the rod, hidden in her sleeve, and shivered with
delight.
Free!
She
did hate leaving Therava alive, but if anyone had entered the woman's
tent and
found her with a knife through her heart. Galina would have been the
first
suspect. Besides… Images rose in her head, of her bending stealthily
over
the sleeping Therava, the woman's own belt knife in hand, of Therava's
eyes
snapping open, meeting hers in the darkness, of her screaming, of her
hand
opening nervelessly to drop the knife, of her begging, of Therava… No.
No! It would not have been that way. Certainly not! She had left
Therava alive
of necessity, not because she was… Not for any other reason.
Suddenly
wolves howled, wolves in every direction, a dozen or more. Her feet
stopped of
their own accord. A motley collection of tents surrounded her, walled
tents,
peaked tents, low Aiel tents. She had walked right through the
gai'shain portion
of the camp without realizing it. Her eyes rose to the ridge west of
Maiden,
and she flinched. Thick fog curled along the whole length of it.
concealing the
trees as far as she could see in either direction. The town walls hid
the ridge
to the east, yet she was sure there would be thick fog there, too. The
man had
come! The Great Lord preserve her, she had been just in time. Well, he
would
not find his fool wife even if he managed to survive whatever he was
about to
try. nor would he find Galina Casban.
Thanking
the Great Lord that Therava had not forbidden her to ride-the woman had
much
preferred dangling the possibility that she might be allowed, if she
groveled
sufficiently-Galina hurried toward her hidden stores. Let the fools who
wanted
to die here, die. She was free. Free!
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
The Last Knot
Perrin
stood just below the ridgetop, near the edge of the fog, and studied
the
encampment and stone-walled town below. Two hundred paces of fairly
steep slope
sparsely dotted with low brush down to level ground, perhaps seven
hundred more
of cleared ground to the first tents, then better than a mile to the
town. It
seemed so close, now. He did not use his looking glass. A glint off the
lens
from the sun just peeking over the horizon, a fingernail edge of
golden-red,
might ruin everything. The grayness around him curled but did not
really move
with the breeze, even when it gusted and made his cloak stir. The dense
mist on
the far ridge, obscuring the windmill there, seemed too still as well,
if you
studied it a while. How long before someone among those tents noticed?
There
was nothing to be done for it. The fog felt like any fog, damp and a
little
cool, but somehow Neald had fixed these mists in place before he went
off to
his other tasks. The sun would not burn them off even at noonday, or so
the
Asha'man claimed. Everything would be done by noon, one way or another.
but
Perrin hoped the man was right. The sky was clear, and the day looked
to be
warm for early spring.
Only
a few Shaido seemed to be outside in the camp, relatively speaking, but
thousands of white-clad figures bustled about among the tents. Tens of
thousands. His eyes ached to find Faile among them, his heart ached to
see her,
but he could as well try to pick out one particular pin from a
barley-basket of
them spilled on the ground. Instead, he stared at the town's gates,
standing
wide open as they had every time he had gazed on them. Invitingly wide.
They
called to him. Soon, Faile and her companions would know it was time to
head
for those gates, and the towered fortress that bulked at the north end
of the
town. She might be at chores, if the Maidens were right about how the
prisoners
would be treated as gai'shain, but she would know to slip away and go
to the
fortress. She and her friends, and likely Alyse as well. Whatever her
scheme
with the Shaido, the Aes Sedai would not want to remain on a
battleground. A
second sister in the fortress might come in handy. The Light send it
did not
come to that.
He
had planned with care for every eventuality he could imagine down to
outright
disaster, yet this was no blacksmith's puzzle however much he wished it
were.
The twisted iron pieces of a blacksmith's puzzle moved only in certain
ways.
Move them in the right way, and the puzzle came apart. People could
move in a
thousand ways, sometimes in directions you never believed possible till
it
happened. Would his plans stand up when the Shaido did something
unexpected?
They would do it, almost certainly, and all he could do in return was
hope it
would not lead to that disaster. With a last, longing look at Maiden's
gates,
he turned and walked back up the ridge.
Inside
the fog, even he could not see ten paces, but he soon found Dannil
Lewin among
the trees on the ridgetop. Lean to the point of skinny, with a pickaxe
for a
nose and thick mustaches in the Taraboner style, Dannil stood out even
when you
could not see his face clearly. Other Two Rivers men were shapes beyond
him,
growing dimmer and dimmer with distance. Most were squatting or sitting
on the
ground, resting while they had the chance. Jori Congar was trying to
entice
some of the others into a game of dice, but he was quiet about it, so
Perrin
let it pass. No one was accepting the offer anyway. Jori was uncommon
lucky
with his dice.
Dannil
made a leg when he saw Perrin and murmured, "My Lord." The man had
been spending too much time with Faile's people. He called it acquiring
polish,
whatever that was supposed to mean. A man was not a piece of brass.
"Make
sure nobody does anything woolhead foolish like I just did, Dannil.
Sharp eyes
below might spot movement near the edge of the fog and send men to
investigate."
Dannil
coughed discreetly into his hand. Light, he was getting as bad as any
of those
Cairhienin and Tairens. "As you say. my Lord. I'll keep everybody
back."
"My
Lord?" Balwer's dry voice said out of the mist. "Ah, there you are,
my Lord." The little stick of a man appeared, followed by two larger
shapes, though one was not much taller. They halted at a gesture from
him.
indistinct forms in the fog, and he came on alone. "Masema has put in
an
appearance below, my Lord," he said quietly, folding his hands. 'I
thought
it best to keep Haviar and Nerion out of his sight, and his men's,
under the
circumstances. I don't believe he is suspicious of them. I think he has
anyone
he is suspicious of killed. But out of sight, out of mind is best."
Perrin's
jaw tightened. Masema was supposed to be beyond the eastern ridge with
his
army, if it could be called that. He had counted those men-and a few
women-as
they shuffled uneasily through gateways made by the two Asha'man, and
they were
twenty thousand if they were one. Masema had always been vague about
their
numbers, and Perrin had not had an accurate count until last night.
Ragged and
dirty, only one here or there wore a helmet much less a breastplate,
but every
hand had gripped sword or spear or axe, halberd or crossbow, the women
included. The women among Masema's followers were worse than the men by
far, and
that was saying something. For the most part the lot of them were only
good for
terrorizing people into swearing to follow the Dragon Reborn-the colors
whirled
in his head and were shattered by his anger-that and murdering them if
they
refused. They had a better purpose today. "Maybe it's time for Haviar
and
Nerion to start staying away from Masema's people for good," he said.
"Jf
you wish it, my Lord, but in my judgment, they still are as safe as any
man can
be doing what they do. and they're eager." Baiwer tilted his head, a
curious sparrow in a branch. "They haven't been corrupted, if that's
what
you fear, my Lord. That's always a danger when you send a man to
pretend to be
what he isn't, but I have a keen nose for the signs."
"Keep
them close, Baiwer." After today, with luck, there might not be much of
Masema's army left to spy on in any case. There might not even be a
Masema to
worry about.
Perrin
scrambled down the brushy reverse slope, past where the Mayener and
Ghealdanin
lancers were waiting beside their horses in the thick mist, streamered
lances
propped on their shoulders or steel heads driven into the ground. The
Winged
Guards' red-painted helmets and breastplates might have been safe
enough on the
ridgetop, but not the Ghealdanin's burnished armor, and since Gallenne
and
Ar-ganda both bristled if one was favored over the other, both waited
here. The
fog extended quite some distance-Neald claimed that was intentional,
but the
man had smelled surprised, and pleased, when he realized what he had
done-so
Perrin was still walking through grayness when he reached the bottom of
the
ridge, where all of the high-wheeled carts stood in a line with horses
hitched.
The dim figures of the Cairhienin cart drivers moved about them,
checking
harness. tightening the ropes that held the canvas covers on.
Masema
was waiting, and Perrin wanted nothing so much as to chew off the man's
arm,
but he spotted the stout shape of Basel Gill beside one of the carts
and headed
that way. Lini was with him, wrapped in a dark cloak, and Breane with
her arm
around the waist of Lamgwin, Perrin's hulking manservant. Master Gill
snatched
off his brimmed hat to reveal thin graying hair combed back over a bald
spot
that it failed to cover. Lini sniffed and pointedly avoided looking at
Perrin
while pretending to adjust her cowl. She smelled of anger and fear.
Master Gill
just smelled of fear.
"It's
time for you to start north, Master Gill," Perrin said. "When you
reach the mountains, follow them until you strike the Jehannah Road.
With luck,
we'll catch you up before you reach the mountains. but if not. send
Alliandre's
servants off to Jehannah, then you head east through the pass, then
north
again. We'll be as close behind you as we can." If his plan did not go
too
far awry. Light, he was a blacksmith, not a soldier. But even Tylee had
finally
agreed it was a good plan.
"I
will not leave this spot until I know that Maighdin is safe." Lini told
the fog, her thin voice a reed of iron. "And the Lady Faile. of
course."
Master
Gill rubbed a hand back over his head. "My Lord. Lamgwin and I were
thinking maybe we could help out. The Lady Faile means a great deal to
us, and
Maighdin… Maighdin is one of our own. I know one end of a sword from
the
other, and so does Lamgwin." He was wearing one belted around his bulk,
yet if he had handled a sword these past twenty years. Perrin would eat
the
whole great length of that belt. Breane's grip on Lamgwin tightened,
but the
big man patted her shoulder and rested his other hand on the hilt of a
shortsword. The fog obscured his scarred face and sunken knuckles.
He
was a tavern brawler, though a good man even so, but never a swordsman.
"You're
my shambayan. Master Gill," Perrin said firmly. "It's your duty to
get the cart drivers and grooms and servants to safety. Yours and
Lamgwin's.
Now go on with you and see to it." The stout man nodded reluctantly.
Breane breathed a small sigh of relief when Lam-gwin knuckled his
forehead in
acquiescence. Perrin doubted that the man could have heard the sigh,
though
Lamgwin put his arm around her and murmured comforting words.
Lini
was not so compliant. Back stiff as a rod, she addressed the fog again.
"I
will not leave this spot until I know-"
Perrin
slapped his hands together with a loud crack, startling her into
looking at him
in surprise. "All you can do here is catch the ague from standing in
the
damp. That and die, if the Shaido manage to break through. I'll bring
Faile
out. I'll bring Maighdin and the others out." He would, or die himself
in
the attempt. There was no point saying that, though, and reason not to.
They
had to believe in their bones that he would be following with Faile and
the
rest. "And you are going north, Lini. Faile will be upset with me if I
let
anything happen to you. Master Gill, you make sure she rides with you
if you
have to tie her up and put her in the back of a cart."
Master
Gill jerked, crumpling his hat between his hands. He smelled of alarm,
suddenly, and Lini of pure indignation. Amusement filled Lamgwin's
scent, and
he rubbed at his nose as though concealing a smile, but strangely,
Breane was
indignant, too. Well, he had never claimed to understand women. If he
could not
understand the woman he was married to, which he could not half the
time, then
it was unlikely he ever would understand the rest of them.
In
the end, Lini actually climbed up beside the driver of a cart without
having to
be forced, though she slapped away Master Gill's hand when he tried to
assist
her. and the line of carts began to trundle off northward though the
fog.
Behind one of the carts, laden with the Wise Ones' tents and
possessions,
marched a cluster of white-clad gai'shain, meek even now, men and women
with
their cowls up and their eyes lowered. They were Shaido. taken at
Cairhien. and
in a few months they would put off white and return to their clan.
Perrin had
had them watched, discreetly, despite the Wise Ones' assurances that
they would
adhere to ji'e'toh in this regard whatever others they abandoned, yet
it
appeared the Wise Ones were right. They still numbered seventeen. None
had
tried to run off and warn the Shaido beyond the ridge. The carts' axles
had
been greased liberally, but they still creaked and squealed to his
ears. With
luck, he and Faile would catch up to them shy of the mountains.
As
the strings of spare horses began to pass him, on long leads held by
mounted
grooms, a Maiden appeared in the mist coming down the line of carts.
Slowly she
resolved into Sulin, shoufa around her neck to bare her short white
hair and
black veil hanging down onto her chest. A fresh slash across her left
cheek
would add another scar to her face unless she accepted Healing from one
of the
sisters. She might not. Maidens seemed to have odd attitudes about Wise
Ones'
apprentices, or maybe it was just that these apprentices were Aes
Sedai. They
even saw Annoura as an apprentice, though she was not.
"The
Shaido sentries to the north are dead. Perrin Aybara," she said. "And
the men who were going out to replace them. They danced well, for
Shaido."
"You
took casualties?" he asked quietly.
"Elienda
and Briain woke from the dream." She might have been speaking of the
weather rather than two deaths among women she knew. "We all must wake
eventually. We had to carry Aviellin the last two miles. She will need
Healing." So. She would accept it.
"I'll
send one of the Aes Sedai with you," he said, looking around in the
fog.
Aside from the line of horses passing him, he could see nothing. "As
soon
as I can find one."
They
found him almost as he spoke, Annoura and Masuri striding out of the
fog
leading their horses with Berelain and Masema, his shaven head
glistening
damply. Even in the mist, there was no mistaking the rumpled nature of
the
man's brown coat, or the crude darn on the shoulder. None of the gold
his
followers looted stuck to his hands. It all went to the poor. That was
the only
good that could be said of Masema. But then, a fair number of the poor
that
gold went to feed had been made poor by having their possessions stolen
and
their shops or farms burned by Masema's people. For some reason,
Berelain was
wearing the coronet of the First of Mayene this morning, the golden
hawk in
flight above her brow, though her riding dress and cloak were plain
dark gray.
Beneath her light, flowery perfume, her scent was patience and anxiety,
as odd
a combination as Perrin had ever smelled. The six Wise Ones were with
them,
too. dark shawls draped over their arms, folded kerchiefs around their
temples
holding back their long hair. With all their necklaces and bracelets of
gold
and ivory, they made Berelain appear simply dressed for once. Aram was
one of
their number as well, the wolfhead pommel of his sword rising above one
red-striped shoulder, and the fog could not hide the absence of his
habitual
glower. The man gravitated toward Masema and seemed almost to bask in
some
light that Masema gave off. Perrin wondered whether he should have sent
Aram
with the carts. But if he had. he was sure Aram would have leaped off
and
sneaked back as soon as he was out of Perrin's sight.
He
explained Aviellin's need to the two Aes Sedai, but to his surprise,
when
Masuri said she would come, fair-haired Edarra raised a hand that
stopped the
slim Brown in her tracks. Annoura shifted uncomfortably. She was no
apprentice,
and uneasy over Seonid and Ma-suri's relationship with the Wise Ones.
They
tried to include her in it, and sometimes succeeded.
"Janina
will see to it." Edarra said. "She has more skill than you, Masuri
Sokawa."
Masuri's
mouth tightened, but she kept silent. The Wise Ones were quite capable
of
switching an apprentice for speaking up at the wrong time, even if she
did
happen to be an Aes Sedai. Sulin led Janina, a flaxen-haired woman who
never
seemed to be ruffled by anything, off into the fog, Janina striding as
quickly
as Sulin despite her bulky skirts. So the Wise Ones had learned
Healing, had
they? That might be useful later in the day; the Light send it was not
needed
often.
Watching
the pair disappear into the murk, Masema grunted. The thick mist hid
the
ever-burning intensity of his deep-set eyes and obscured the triangular
white
scar on his cheek, but his scent was full in Perrin's nose, hard and
sharp as a
freshly stropped razor yet twitching in a frenzy. That smell of madness
sometimes made him think his nose must bleed from breathing it.
"Bad
enough you use these blasphemous women who do what only the Lord
Dragon,
blessed be his name, may do," Masema said, his voice full of the heat
that
the fog concealed in his eyes.
The
colors spinning in Perrin's head turned into a brief image of Rand and
Min and
a tall man in a black coat, an Asha'man, and he felt a shock right down
to his
boots. Rand's left hand was gone! No matter. Whatever had happened, had
happened. And today his business lay elsewhere.
"… but if they know Healing," Masema continued, "it will be that
much harder to kill the savages. A pity you won't let the Seanchan
leash all of
them."
His
sidelong glance at Annoura and Masuri said he included them, despite
the fact
both had visited him in secret more than once. They regarded him with
Aes Sedai
calm, though Masuri's slim hands moved once as if to smooth her brown
skirts.
She said she had changed her mind and now believed the man must be
killed, so
why was she meeting him? Why was Annoura? Why did Masema allow them? He
more
than hated Aes Sedai. Perhaps answers could be found now that Haviar
and Nerion
no longer needed protection.
Behind
Masema, the Wise Ones stirred. Fire-haired Carelle, who looked as if
she possessed
a temper though she did not, actually stroked the hilt of her belt
knife, and
Nevarin, who could have given Nynaeve lessons in getting angry, gripped
hers.
Masema should have felt those eyes boring into his back, but his scent
never
shifted. Insane he might be, but never a coward.
"You
wanted to speak to Lord Perrin, my Lord Prophet," Berelain said gently,
though Perrin could smell the strain of her smile.
Masema
stared at her. "I am simply the Prophet of the Lord Dragon, not a lord.
The Lord Dragon is the only lord, now. His coming has shattered all
bonds and
destroyed all titles. King and queens, lords and ladies, are but dust
beneath
his feet."
Those
whirling hues threatened again, but Perrin crushed them. "What are you
doing here?" he demanded. There was no way to soften moments with
Masema.
The man was as hard as a good file. "You're supposed to be with your
men.
You risked being seen by coming here, and you'll risk it again going
back. I
don't trust your people to hold for five minutes without you there to
stiffen
their spines. They'll run as soon as they see the Shaido coming their
way."
"They
are not my people, Aybara. They are the Lord Dragon's people." Light,
being around Masema meant having to stomp on those colors every few
minutes!
"I left Nengar in charge. He has fought more battles than you have
dreamed
of. Including against the savages. I also gave the women orders to kill
any man
who tries to run and have let it be known that I will hunt down anyone
who
escapes the women. They will hold to the last man, Aybara.''
"You
sound as if you're not going back," Perrin said.
"I
intend to stay close to you." Fog might hide the heat in Masema's eyes,
but Perrin could feel it. "A pity if any misfortune should befall you
just
as you reclaim your wife."
So
a small part of his plan had unraveled already. A hope really, rather
than part
of the plan. If all else went well, the Shaido who managed to flee
would carve
a way through Masema's people without more than slowing a step, but
instead of
taking a Shaido spear through his ribs, Masema would be… keeping an eye
on
him. Without any doubt, the man's bodyguard was not far off in the fog,
two
hundred or so ruffians better armed and better mounted than the rest of
his
army. Perrin did not look at Berelain, but the scent of her worry had
strengthened. Masema had reason to want both of them dead. He would
warn
Gallenne that his primary task today would be protecting Berelain from
Masema's
men. And he would have to watch his own back.
Off
in the fog. a brief flash of silver-blue light appeared, and he
frowned. It was
too early yet for Grady. Two figures coalesced out of the mist. One was
Neald,
not strutting for once. In fact, he stumbled. His face looked tired.
Burn him.
why was he wasting his strength this way? The other was a young
Seanchan in
lacquered armor with a single thin plume on the peculiar helmet he
carried
beneath his arm. Perrin recognized him, Gueye Arabah. a lieutenant
Tylee
thought well of. The two Aes Sedai gathered their skirts as if to keep
him from
brushing against them, though he went nowhere near them. For his part,
he
missed a step when he came close enough to make out their faces, and
Perrin
heard him swallow hard. He smelled skittish, of a sudden.
Arabah's
bow included Perrin and Berelain. and he frowned slightly at Masema as
though
wondering what such a ragged fellow was doing in their company. Masema
sneered,
and the Seanchan's free hand drifted toward his sword hilt before he
stopped
it. They seemed touchy folk, Seanchan did. But Arabah did not waste
time.
"Banner-General Khirgan's compliments, my Lord, my Lady First.
Morat'raken
report those bands of Aiel are moving faster than expected. They will
arrive
some time today, possibly as soon as noon. The group to the west is
perhaps
twenty-five or thirty thousand, the one to the east larger by a third.
About
half of them are wearing white, and there will be children, of course,
but that
is still a lot of spears to have behind you. The Banner-General wishes
to know
if you would like to discuss altering the deployments. She suggests
moving a
few thousand of the Altaran lancers to join you."
Perrin
grimaced. There would be at least three or four thousand algal'd'shwai
with
each of those bands. A lot of spears to have at his back for certain
sure.
Neald yawned. "How are you feeling, Neald?"
"Oh,
I'm ready to do whatever needs doing, I am, my Lord," the man said with
just a hint of his usual jauntiness.
Perrin
shook his head. The Asha'man could not be asked to make one gateway
more than
necessary. He prayed that they would not fall one short. "By noon,
we'll
be done here. Tell the Banner-General we go ahead as planned." And pray
that nothing else went amiss. He did not add that aloud, though.
Out
in the fog, wolves howled, an eerie cry that rose all around Maiden. It
was
truly begun, now.
"You're
doing wonderfully, Maighdin," Faile croaked. She felt lightheaded, and
her
throat was dry from encouraging the woman. Everyone's throat was dry.
By the
slant of the light coming through the gaps overhead, it was near
midmorning,
and they had been talking without cease for most of that. They had
tried
tapping the unbroken barrels, but the wine inside was too rancid even
for
wetting lips. Now they were taking turns with the encouragement. She
was
sitting alongside her sun-haired maid while the others rested against
the back
wall, as far from that leaning jumble of boards and timbers as they
could get.
"You're going to save us, Maighdin."
Above
them, the red scarf was just visible through that narrow gap in the
tangle. It
had hung limply for some time, now, except when the breeze caught it.
Maighdin
stared at it fixedly. Her dirty face glistened with sweat, and she
breathed as
if she had been running hard. Suddenly the scarf went taut and began to
swing,
once, twice, three times. Then the breeze sent it fluttering, and it
fell.
Maighdin continued to stare.
"That
was beautiful," Faile said hoarsely. The other woman was getting tired.
More time was passing between each success, and the successes were
lasting a
shorter time. "It was-"
Abruptly
a face appeared beside the scarf, one hand gripping the length of red.
For a
moment, she thought she must be imagining it. Aravine's face framed by
her
white cowl.
"I
see her!" the woman said excitedly. "I see the Lady Faile and
Maighdin! They're alive!" Voices raised a cheer, quickly stilled.
Maighdin
swayed as if she might fall over, but a beautiful smile wreathed her
face. Faile
heard weeping behind her, and wanted to weep with joy herself. Friends
had
found them, not Shaido. They might escape yet.
Pushing
herself to her feet, she moved closer to the leaning pile of charred
rubble.
She tried to work moisture into her mouth, but it was thick. "We're all
alive," she managed in husky voice. "How in the Light did you find
us?"
"It
was Theril, my Lady," Aravine replied. "The scamp followed you
despite your orders, and the Light bless him for it. He saw Galina
leave, and
the building fall in, and he thought you were dead. He sat down and
cried." A voice protested in rough Amadician accents, and Aravine
turned
her head for a moment. "I know someone who's been crying when I see
him.
boy. You just be thankful you stopped to cry. When he saw the scarf
move, my
Lady, he came running for help."
"You
tell him there's no shame in tears," Faile said. "Tell him I've seen
my husband cry when tears were called for."
"My
Lady," Aravine said hesitantly, "he said Galina pulled on a timber
when she came out. It was set like a lever, he said. He said she made
the
building collapse."
"Why
would she do that?" Alliandre demanded. She had helped Maighdin to her
feet and half supported her to reach Faile's side. Lacile and Arrela
joined
them, alternating between tears and laughter. Alliandre's face was a
thunderhead.
Faile
grimaced. How often in the last few hours had she wished she had that
slap
back? Galina had promised. Could the woman be Black Ajah? "That doesn't
matter now. One way or another, I'll see her repaid." How was another
matter. Galina was Aes Sedai. after all. "Aravine, how many people did
you
bring? Can you-?"
Large
hands took Aravine by the shoulders and moved her aside. "Enough
talk." Rolan's face appeared in the gap, shoufa around his neck and
veil
hanging onto his chest. Rolan! "We cannot clear anything with you
standing
there, Faile Bashere. This thing may fall in when we start. Go to the
other end
and huddle against the far wall."
"What
are you doing here?" she demanded.
The
man chuckled. He chuckled! "You still wear white, woman. Do as you are
told, or when I have you out of there, I will smack your bottom
soundly. And
then maybe we will soothe your tears with a kissing game."
She
showed him her teeth, hoping he did not take it for a grin. But he was
right
about them needing to move away, so she led her companions across the
board-strewn stone floor to the far end of the basement where they
crouched
against the wall. She could hear voices muttering outside, likely
discussing exactly
how to go about clearing a path without making the rest of the building
collapse on her head.
"All
this for nothing," Alliandre said bitterly. "How many Shaido do you
suppose are up there?''
Wood
scraped loudly, and with a groan, the leaning pile of rubble leaned
inward a
little more. The voices began again.
"1
haven't any idea," Faile told her. "But they must all be Mera'dhi,
not Shaido." The Shaido did not mingle with the Brotherless. "There
might be some hope in that." Surely Rolan would let her go once he
learned
about Dairaine. Of course, he would. And if he remained stubborn… In
that
case, she would do whatever was necessary to convince him. Perrin would
never
have to find out.
Wood
scraped on wood again, and once more the heap of burned timbers and
boards
tilted inward a little further.
The
fog hid the sun, but Perrin estimated it must be near midmorn-ing.
Grady would
be coming soon. He should have been there by now. If the man had grown
too tired
to make another gateway… No. Grady would come. Soon. But his shoulders
were as tight as if he had been working a forge for a full day and
longer.
"I
tell you, I don't like this one bit," Gallenne muttered. In the thick
mist, his red eyepatch was just another shadow. His heavy-chested bay
nosed his
back, impatient to be moving, and he patted the animal's neck absently.
"If Masema really wants to kill the Lady First, I say we finish him
now.
We outnumber him. We can overwhelm his bodyguard in minutes."
"Fool.''
Arganda growled, glancing off to his right as if he could see Masema
and his
men through the curling grayness. Unlike the Mayener. he had put on his
silvered helmet with its three fat white plumes. It and his
breastplate, worked
in gold and silver, glistened with condensation. Fog or no fog, his
armor
seemed almost to glow. "You think we can kill two hundred men without
making a sound? Shouts will be heard the other side of this ridge. You
have
your ruler where you can surround her with nine hundred men and maybe
get her
away. Alliandre is still in that bloody town, and surrounded by Shaido."
Gallenne
bristled, hand going to his sword hilt, as though he might practice on
Arganda
before moving on to Masema.
"We're
not killing anybody but Shaido today," Perrin said firmly. Gallenne
grunted, but he did not try to argue. He stank of discontent, though.
Protecting Berelain would keep the Winged Guards out of the fighting.
Off
to the left, a bluish flash appeared, dimmed by the thick mist, and the
tightness in Perrin's shoulders loosened. Grady appeared in the fog,
peering
about him. His step picked up when he saw Perrin, but it was unsteady.
Another
man was with him, leading a tall, dark horse. Perrin smiled for the
first time
in a long while.
"It's
good to see you, Tam,'' he said.
"Good
to see you, too, my Lord." Tam al'Thor was still a blocky man who
looked
ready to work from sunup to sundown without slacking, but the hair on
his head
had gone completely gray since Perrin had seen him last, and he had a
few more
lines on his bluff face. He took in Arganda and Gallenne with a steady
gaze.
Fancy armor did not impress him.
"How
are you holding up, Grady?" Perrin asked.
"I'm
holding up, my Lord." The weathered man's voice sounded bone weary.
Shadowed
by the fog as it was, his face still looked older than Tarn's.
"Well,
as soon as you're done here, join Mishima. I want somebody keeping an
eye on
him. Somebody who makes him too nervous to chink they can change what
they
agreed to." He would have liked to tell Grady to tie off this gateway.
It
would make a short path to take Faile back to the Two Rivers. But if
things
went wrong today, it would make a short path for the Shaido, too.
"Don't
know as I could make a cat nervous right now, my Lord, but I'll do what
I
can.''
Frowning,
Tarn watched Grady vanish into the gray murk. "I could wish I'd had
some
other way to get here," he said. "Fellows like him visited the Two
Rivers a while back. One called himself Mazrim Taim, a name we'd all
heard. A
false Dragon. Only now he wears a black coat with fancy embroidery and
calls
himself the M'Hael. They talked everywhere about teaching men to
channel, about
this Black Tower." He freighted the words with sourness. "The Village
Councils tried to put a stop to it, and the Women's Circles, but they
ended up
taking above forty men and boys with them. Thank the Light some
listened to
sense, or I think they'd have had ten times that." His gaze shifted to
Perrin. "Taim said Rand sent him. He said Rand is the Dragon Reborn."
There was a touch of questioning in that, perhaps a hope for denial,
perhaps a
demand to know why Perrin had kept silent.
Those
hues whirled in Perrin's head, but he batted them away and answered by
not
answering. What was, was. "Nothing to be done about it now, Tam."
According to Grady and Neald, the Black Tower did not just let men go
once they
signed on.
Sadness
entered Tam's scent, though he let nothing show on his face. He knew
the fate of
men who could channel. Grady and Neald claimed the male half of the
Source was
clean, now, but Perrin could not see how that could be. What was, was.
You did
the job you were given, followed the road you had to follow, and that
was that.
There was no point complaining about blisters, or rocks underfoot.
Perrin
went on. "This is Bertain Gallenne, Lord Captain of the Winged Guards,
and
Gerard Arganda, First Captain of the Legion of the Wall." Arganda
shrugged
uncomfortably. That name carried political weight in Ghealdan, and
apparently
Alliandre had not felt strong enough to announce that she was
reconstituting
the Legion. Balwer had a nose for sniffing out secrets, though. This
one made
sure Arganda would not go wild trying to reach his queen. "Gallenne.
Arganda,
this is Tam al'Thor. He's my First Captain. You studied the map, Tam,
and my
plan?"
"I
studied them, my Lord," Tam said dryly. Of course he would have. "It
looks a good plan to me. As good as any till the arrows start flying."
Arganda
put a booted foot in his roan's stirrup. "So long as he's your First
Captain, my Lord, I have no objections." He had offered plenty earlier.
Neither he nor Gallenne had been pleased that Perrin was putting
someone over
them.
From
up the slope came a black-winged mocker's shrill cry of alarm. Only
one. If it
had been a real bird, the call would have been repeated.
Perrin
scrambled up the slope as fast he could. Arganda and Gallenne passed
him on
their mounts, but they divided to ride to their men, disappearing into
the
thick gray haze. Perrin continued to the top and beyond. Dannil was
standing
almost at the edge of the fog, peering toward the Shaido encampment. He
pointed, but the reason for the alarm was obvious. A large group of
algai'd'siswai was leaving the tents, maybe four hundred or more. The
Shaido
sent out raiding parties frequently, but this one was aimed straight at
Perrin.
They were just walking, but it would not take them long to reach the
ridge.
"It's
time to let them see us, Dannil," he said, unpinning his cloak and
draping
it over a low bush. He would come back for it later. If he could. It
would only
get in his way, now. Dannil sketched a bow before hurrying back into
the trees
as Aram appeared, sword already in hand. He smelled eager. The cloak
pin Perrin
put into his pocket carefully. Faile had given him that. He did not
want to
lose it. His fingers found the leather cord he had knotted for every
day of her
captivity. Pulling it out, he let it fall to the ground without
glancing at it.
This morning had seen the last knot.
Tucking
his thumbs behind the wide belt that supported his hammer and belt
knife, he
strolled out of the fog. Aram advanced up on his toes, already in one
of those
sword stances. Perrin just walked. The morning sun, indeed halfway to
its noon
peak, was in his eyes. He had considered taking the eastern ridge and
putting
Masema's men here, but it would have meant that much farther to reach
the town
gates. A foolish reason, yet those gates drew him as a lodestone drew
iron
filings. He eased his heavy hammer in its loop on his belt, eased his
belt
knife. That had a blade as long as his hand.
The
appearance of two men, apparently walking idly toward them, was enough
to halt
the Shaido. Well, perhaps not so idly, considering Aram's sword. They
would
have to be blind to miss the sun glinting off his long blade. They must
have
been wondering whether they were watching madmen. Halfway down the
slope, he
stopped.
"Relax,"
he told Aram. "You're going to tire yourself out that way."
The
other man nodded without taking his eyes from the Shaido and planted
his feet
firmly. His scent was that of a hunter after dangerous quarry and
determined to
pull it down.
After
a moment, half a dozen of the Shaido started toward them, slowly. They
had not
veiled. Likely they were hoping he and Aram would not be frightened
into
running. Among the tents, people were pointing at the two fools on the
slope.
The
sound of running boots and hooves and snorting horses made him look
over his
shoulder. Arganda's Ghealdanin appeared out of the fog first, in their
burnished breastplates and helmets, riding behind a rippling red banner
that
bore the three six-pointed silver stars of Ghealdan. and then the
Winged Guards
in their red armor behind the golden hawk on a field of blue of Mayene.
Between
them, Dannil began arraying the Two Rivers men in three ranks. Every
man
carried a pair of bristling quivers at his belt and also a bundle of
shafts
that he stuck point down into the slope before slicing the binding
cords. They
wore their swords and shortswords, but the halberds and other polearms
had been
left on the carts this morning. One of them had brought along the red
wolfhead
banner, but the staff was stuck aslant into the ground behind them. No
one
could be spared to carry the thing. Dannil carried a bow, too.
Masema
and his bodyguard of lancers took position on the Winged Guards' right,
their
poorly handled horses plunging and rearing. Their armor showed patches
of
speckled brown where rust had been scraped away instead of properly
cleaned.
Masema himself was out in front, a sword at his hip but helmetless and
without
a breastplate. No, he did not lack courage. He was glaring at the
Mayeners
where Perrin could just make out Berelain in the middle of that forest
of
lances. He could not get a clear view of her face, but he imagined it
was still
frosty. She had objected strenuously to her soldiers being held back
from the
fighting, and he had needed to be very firm to make her see reason.
Light, the
woman had half suggested she might lead them in a charge!
The
Wise Ones and the two Aes Sedai filed down between the Ghealdanin and
the Two
Rivers men accompanied by the Maidens, each of whom had long strips of
red
cloth tied around her upper arms and dangling to the wrist. He could
not pick
out Aviellin, but by their number she must be among them, newly Healed
or not.
Black veils covered their faces except for their eyes, yet he did not
need to
see their faces or catch their scents to know they were indignant. The
markings
were necessary to avoid accidents, but Edarra had had to put her foot
down to
make them wear the things.
Bracelets
of gold and ivory rattled as Edarra adjusted her dark shawl. With
smooth sun-dark
cheeks that seemed darker because of her pale-yellow hair, she looked
little
older than Perrin, but her blue eyes held an unshakable calm. He
suspected she
was far older than she appeared. Those eyes had seen a great deal. "I
think it will begin soon, Perrin Aybara," she said.
Perrin
nodded. The gates called to him.
The
appearance of near enough two thousand lancers and two hundred-odd
bowmen was
sufficient to make the Shaido below raise their veils and spread out
while more
began rushing from the tents to join them in a thick, lengthening line.
Pointing fingers along that line, pointing spears, made him look back
again.
Tam
was on the slope, now, and more Two Rivers men were pouring out of the
fog with
longbows in hand. Some tried to mingle with the men who had followed
Perrin, to
reunite with brothers, sons, nephews, friends, but Tam chivvied them
away,
trotting his black gelding up and down as he arranged them in three
ever-expanding ranks to either side of the horsemen. Perrin spotted Hu
Barran
and his equally lanky brother Tad, the stablemen from the Winespring
Inn, and
square-faced Bar Dowtry, only a few years older than he himself was,
who was
making a name for himself as a cabinetmaker, and skinny Thad Torfinn,
who
seldom left his farm except to come into Emond's Field. Oren Dautry.
lean and
tall, stood between Jon Ayellin. who was hulking and bald, and Kev
Barstere,
who finally had gotten out from under his mother's thumb if he was
here. There
were Marwins and al'-Dais, al'Seens and Coles. Thanes and al'Caars and
Crawes,
men from every family he knew, men he did not recognize, from down to
Deven
Ride or up to Watch Hill or Taren Ferry, all grim-faced and burdened
with pairs
of bristling quivers and extra sheaves of arrows. And among them stood
others,
men with coppery skins, men with transparent veils across the lower
half of
their faces, fair-skinned men who just did not have the look of the Two
Rivers.
They carried shorter bows, of course-it took a lifetime to learn the
Two Rivers
longbow-but every face he could make out looked as determined as any
Two Rivers
man. What in the Light were the outlanders doing here? On and on the
streams of
running men continued until finally those three long lines held at
least three
thousand men, maybe four.
Tam
walked his horse down the slope to Perrin and sat studying the swelling
Shaido
ranks below, yet he seemed to hear Perrin's unspoken question. "I asked
for volunteers from the Two Rivers men and picked the best bowshots,
but those
you took in started coming forward in groups. You gave them and their
families
homes, and they said they were Two Rivers men too, now. Some of those
bows
won't carry much more than two hundred paces, but the men I chose hit
what they
aim at."
Below,
the Shaido began beating their spears rhythmically against their
bull-hide
bucklers. RAT-tat-tat-tat! RAT-tat-tat-tat! RAT-tat-tat-tat! The sound
rose
like thunder. The flow of veiled shapes running out from the tents
slowed to a
trickle that dwindled further and then ceased. All of the
algai'd'siswai had
been drawn out, it seemed. That was the plan, after all. There must
have been
twenty thousand of them. near enough, all pounding their bucklers.
RAT-tat-tat-tat! RAT-tat-tat-tat! RAT-tat-tat-tat!
"After
the Aiel War. I hoped never to hear that again." Tarn said loudly, to
be
heard. That noise could get on a man's nerves. "Will you give the
command.
Lord Perrin?"
"You
do it." Perrin eased his hammer again, his belt knife. His eyes kept
going
from the Shaido to the town gates, and the dark mass of the fortress
inside the
town. Faile was in there.
"Soon
now we will know," Edarra said. About the tea, she meant. If they had
not
waited long enough, they were all dead. Her voice was calm, though.
Aram
shifted, up on his toes again, sword upright before him in both hands.
Perrin
could hear Tarn calling as he rode along the lines of bowmen.
"Longbows,
nock! Shortbows, hold till you re close! Longbows, nock! Shortbows,
hold till
you're close! Don't draw, you fool! You know better! Longbows… !"
Below,
perhaps a quarter of the Shaido turned and began trotting north,
paralleling
the ridge, still beating their bucklers. Another quarter began trotting
south.
They intended to sweep around and catch the men on the slope from
either side.
Flanking. Tylee called it. A ripple passed through those remaining as
they
began sticking their spears through the harness holding their bowcases,
hanging
their bucklers on their belts, unlimbering their bows.
"Very
soon," Edarra murmured.
A
fireball larger than a man's head arched out from the tents toward the
ridge,
then another, twice the size, and more, streams of them. Sailing high,
the
first turned down. And exploded with loud roars a hundred paces
overhead. In
rapid succession, the others began exploding harmlessly, too, but more
followed, spheres of flame speeding toward the ridge in a continuous
flow.
Forked silver lightning stabbed down from a cloudless sky and erupted
with
booming crashes of thunder and great showers of sparks without ever
coming near
the ground.
"Perhaps
fifteen or twenty Wise Ones escaped the tea," Edarra said, "otherwise
more would have joined in by now. I can see only nine women channeling.
The
rest must be among the tents." She disliked the agreement he had with
the
Seanchan almost as much as the Aes Sedai did, yet her voice was calm.
In her
book, the Shaido had violated ji'e'toh to such a degree that it was
questionable whether they could be called Aiel any longer. To her, they
were
something that had to be cut out of the body of the Aiel, and their
Wise Ones
were the worst of the sickness for allowing it. Masuri drew her arm
back, but
Edarra laid a hand on her shoulder. "Not yet. Masuri Sokawa. We will
tell
you when." Masuri nodded obediently, though she smelled of impatience.
"Well,
I for one feel in danger," Annoura said firmly, drawing her arm back.
Edarra looked at her levelly. After a moment, the Aes Sedai lowered her
arm.
Her beaded braids clicked together as she twisted her head away from
the Wise One's
stare. Her scent was of strong unease. "Perhaps I can wait a little
longer." she muttered.
The
fireballs hurtling across the sky continued to explode far above, the
lightning
jabbed toward the ridge, but the Shaido below were not waiting. With a
shout,
the main mass began trotting quickly toward the ridge. And singing at
the tops
of their lungs. Perrin doubted anyone else on the slope could make out
more
than a roar, but his ears caught words faintly. They were singing in
parts.
Wash
the spears…
… while the sun climbs high. Wash the spears…
… while the sun falls low. Wash the spears…
… who J ears to die? Wash the spears…
… no one 1 know!
He
shut the sound out, ignoring it while his eyes drifted beyond the
onrushing
mass of veiled figures to the gates of Maiden. Iron filings to a
lodestone. The
shapes below seemed to have slowed half a step, though he knew they had
not.
Everything seemed to slow down for him at times like this. How long
before they
came in range? They had covered little more than half the distance to
the
ridge.
"Longbows,
raise! On my signal!" Tarn shouted. "Longbows, raise! On my
signal!"
Perrin
shook his head. It was too soon. Thousands of bowstrings snapped behind
him.
Arrows arced over his head. The sky seemed black with them. Seconds
later
another flight followed, then a third. Fireballs burned swathes through
them,
but it was still thousands of arrows that fell in a deadly hail onto
the
Shaido. Of course. He had forgotten to factor in the bowmen's
elevation. That
gave them a little more distance. Trust Tarn to see it right away. Not
every
arrow struck a man. of course. Many plunged into the ground. Perhaps
half
struck algai'd'siswai, piercing arms or legs, striking bodies. Wounded
Shaido hardly
slowed, even when they had to struggle up from the ground. They left
hundreds
lying still, though, and the second flight put down hundreds more, as
did the
third, with the fourth and fifth already on the way. The Shaido kept
coming,
leaning forward as if trotting into a driving rain while their Wise
Ones' balls
of fire and lightnings exploded far overhead. They were no longer
singing. Some
raised their bows and shot. An arrow grazed Perrin's left arm. but the
rest
fell short. Not by far, though. Another twenty paces, and-
The
sudden sharp sound of Seanchan horns pulled his gaze north and south
just in
time to see the ground erupt in fountains of fire among the flanking
parties.
Spears of lightning stabbed into them. The damane were being kept back
in the
trees, for the time, but they did deadly work. Again and again,
explosions of
fire or lightning hurled men like twigs. Those algai'd'siswai could
have no
idea where the attack was coming from. They began to run toward the
trees,
toward their killers. Some of the fireballs coming out of the camp
began flying
toward the forests where the damane were, and lightnings jabbed toward
the
trees, but with as little effect as they had against the ridge. Tylee
claimed
damane were used for all sorts of tasks, but the truth was, they were
weapons
of war, and they and the sul'dam were very good at it.
"Now,"
Edarra said, and fireballs began raining down on the Shaido below. The
Wise
Ones and Aes Sedai made throwing motions with both arms as fast as they
could,
and every time, a ball of flame seemed to rise from their fingertips.
Many of
those exploded too soon, of course. The Shaido Wise Ones were working
to defend
their own. But the algai'd'siswai were much nearer to the ridge, so
they had
less time to react. Fireballs burst among the Shaido, hurling men
aside,
flinging severed arms and legs into the air. Silver-blue lightning
bolts forked
down, and most of those struck, too. The hair on Perrin's arms stirred.
The
hair on his head tried to stand. The air seemed to crackle with the
lightnings'
discharges.
Even
as they flung death at the men below. Edarra and the others continued
to parry
the Shaido Wise Ones' attacks, and all the while, the Two Rivers men
worked
their bows as fast as they could. A trained man could loose twelve
shafts in a
minute, and the range was shorter now. The Shaido lacked no more than
two
hundred paces of reaching the bottom of the ridge. Their arrows still
fell
short of Perrin, but the Two Rivers arrows were striking home every
time at
this range. Each bowman was picking his own target, of course, so
Perrin saw
algai'd-siswai fall pierced by two, three, even four shafts.
Flesh
could only take so much. The Shaido began to fall back. It was not a
rout. They
did not flee. Many shot arrows back at the ridge despite no hope of
making the
range. But they turned as if on a command and ran, trying to outpace
the Two
Rivers shafts and the rain of fire and lightning that pursued them. The
flankers were falling back, too, as lancers appeared out of the trees
forming
ranks a thousand horses wide, advancing slowly while fire and lightning
harried
the Shaido.
"By
ranks," Tarn shouted, "advance three paces and loose!"
"Advance
at a walk!" Arganda bellowed.
"With
me!" Masema shouted.
Perrin
was supposed to make that slow advance with the others, but he began to
walk
down the slope faster and faster. The gates tugged at him. His blood
was
becoming fire. Elyas claimed it was a natural feeling when you were in
danger
of your life, but he could not see it. He had almost drowned in the
Waterwood
once, and he had felt nothing like this thrill that was surging through
him
now. Someone behind shouted his name, but he trotted on. picking up
speed.
Freeing his hammer from its belt loop, he drew his belt knife with his
left
hand. Aram was running beside him, he realized, but his own focus was
on the
gates, on the Shaido who still stood between him and Faile. Fire,
lightning and
arrows fell among them like hail, and they were no longer turning to
fire their
own arrows, though they often looked over their shoulders. But many
were
supporting wounded, men who dragged a leg or clutched a side with a Two
Rivers
shaft jutting from it, and he was catching up.
Abruptly,
half a dozen veiled men turned back gripping spears and started toward
him and
Aram at the run. Not using their bows meant they had expended their
arrows. He
had heard tales of champions, of men who decided the future by single
combat
between two armies that would abide by the outcome. The Aiel had no
such tales.
He did not slow down, though. His blood was fire. He was fire.
A
Two Rivers shaft took one Shaido in the middle of his chest, and even
as he
fell, three more were feathered with at least a dozen arrows each. But
now he
and Aram were too close to the remaining two. Anyone but the very best
bowshots
would risk hitting him or Aram if he fired. Aram flowed toward one of
the
Shaido as if dancing, his blade a bright blur, but Perrin had no time
to watch
anyone else fight if he had wanted to. A veiled man who overtopped him
by a
head stabbed at him with a short spear held near its base. Blocking the
spear
with his belt knife, Perrin swung his hammer. The Shaido tried to stop
it with
his buckler, but he altered the swing slightly, and heard the bones in
the
man's forearm snap under ten pounds of steel swung by a blacksmith's
arm. He
was inside the spear, now. and without slowing, he slashed across the
man's
throat with his knife. Blood gouted, and he was running again while the
man was
falling. He had to reach Faile. Fire in his blood, fire in his heart.
Fire in
his head. No one and nothing would keep him from Faile.
CHAPTER THIRTY
Outside the Gates
Faile
tried to estimate the time by the slant of light falling through the
gaps in
the ruined building overhead; it seemed still short of noon. All that
had been
cleared was a small space at the very top of the basement stairs. Any
of them
could have passed through it, if they dared to try climbing the
slanting pile
of blackened rubble, but that still looked as though it might fall in
any
moment. The tangled heap still creaked alarmingly at times. The only
good thing
was that it had not started raining on their heads. How long that would
last
was a question. She had been hearing thunder for some time, quite a lot
of it,
and slowly coming closer. The booms were almost continuous. A storm
that fierce
might be enough to make the building finish collapsing. Light, she was
thirsty.
Rolan
suddenly appeared in the opening and lay down on the stone landing. He
was not
wearing the harness that held his bow case. Carefully he wriggled his
way out
onto the rubble. The pile groaned softly under his weight. Kinhuin, a
green-eyed man a good hand or more shorter than he. knelt to grip his
ankles.
There were only three of the Brotherless up there, it seemed, but that
was
three too many.
Head
and shoulders sticking over the edge of the rubble. Rolan lowered one
arm.
"There is no more time, Faile Bashere. Take my hand."
"Maighdin
first." Faile said thickly, waving away the sun-haired woman's weary
protests. Light, but her mouth was coated with grit and too dry to spit
any of
it out. "Arrela and Lacile next. I'll go last." Alliandre nodded
approvingly, but Arrela and Lacile tried to object, too. "Be quiet and
do
as I say," she told them firmly. Thunder crashed and crashed. The storm
that produced that much thunder would bring a deluge, not simple
rainfall.
Rolan
laughed. How could the man laugh at a time like this? He only stopped
when the
charred timbers beneath him groaned again from his shaking. "You still
wear white, woman. So be quiet and do as I say." There was a touch of
mocking in his tone at that, but not when he added, "No one will be
taken
out before you." That sounded like cast iron.
"My
Lady," Alliandre said quietly, hoarsely, "I believe he means it. I
will send the others out in the order you gave."
"Stop
pouting and give me your hand," Rolan commanded.
She
was not pouting! The man could be as infuriatingly stubborn as her
Perrin. Only,
in Perrin, it was intriguing, not really infuriating. Raising her right
hand as
high as it would go, she let Rolan's hand envelope hers. He lifted her
easily,
till her face was just below his.
"Catch
hold of my coat." There was no hint of strain in his voice despite the
awkward angle of his arm. "You will have to climb over me."
She
swung her left hand up and caught a fistful of the rough wool, holding
on hard.
The pain in her shoulder told her it was bruised as badly as she
feared. When
he released her other hand, she gasped at the jolt of agony and quickly
grabbed
his coat with that one, too. Grasping her waist in both hands, he
boosted her
higher, so she was lying on his broad back. Thunder boomed and boomed
without
ceasing. The rain must start falling soon. That would make getting the
others
out more difficult.
"I
like feeling your weight on me. Faile Bashere, but maybe you could
climb a
little faster so I can bring the others out." He pinched her bottom,
and
she laughed in spite of herself. The man just would not stop trying!
The
climb over him was slower than she could have hoped for. She did not
believe
anything was broken in her shoulder, but it hurt. Once, she thought she
kicked
Rolan in the head. Pinch her, would he?
At
last she was outside and past Kinhuin, on her feet under the sky once
more. Her
first sight of the building from outside made her swallow. and then
cough
vigorously as bits of grit entered her throat. The charred timbers were
tilting
to an alarming degree, ready to crash into the basement. The third
Brotherless,
Jhoradin, a blue-eyed man with red-gold hair and a face that fell not
far short
of prettiness, was watching Kinhuin and Rolan, but every so often he
glanced at
the building as if expecting to see it fall. He was squat for an Aiel,
not
quite as tall as Perrin but half again as wide. There must have been at
least a
hundred of her people in the street, staring at her anxiously, some of
their
white robes stained with soot from their efforts at digging her out. A
hundred!
She could not find it in her heart to upbraid them, however. Especially
after
Aravine thrust a plump waterskin into her hands. The first mouthful
went to
wash away grit and dust, though she wanted desperately to swallow it
anyway,
but after that, she held up the skin and all but poured water down her
throat.
Her bruised shoulder protested. She ignored it and drank and drank.
Suddenly
she became aware of lightning striking outside the town to the west and
lowered
the waterskin to stare. Close outside the town. Out of a cloudless sky.
And
sometimes not striking. Many of those forked silvery bolts erupted with
thunderous roars far above the ground. Balls of fire hurtled across the
sky,
sometimes bursting in air with a boom like thunder. Someone was
fighting a battle
with the Power! But who? Could Perrin have found enough Aes Sedai or
Asha'-man
to attack the camp? But something was very odd. She knew how many Wise
Ones in
the camp could channel, and there did not seem to be enough lightning
or
fireballs. Perhaps it was not Perrin after all. There were factions
among the
Wse Ones. Not just between those supporting or opposing Sevanna, but
between
septs with old alliances or animosities. Maybe one of those factions
was
fighting another. That seemed highly unlikely, but less so than Perrin
finding
enough Aes Sedai to attack and the Wise Ones not fighting back with
everything
they could muster.
"When
the lightnings started, Rolan said there was a battle," Aravine said
when
Faile asked her. "That's all. Nobody wanted to go find out more until
we
knew you were safe."
Faile
ground her teeth in frustration. Even if she did not have to deal with
Rolan,
whatever was going on outside the walls might make escaping that much
more
difficult. If only she knew what it was, she might be able to see how
to avoid
it. Or use it. "No one is to go anywhere, Aravine. It might be
dangerous." And they might inadvertently lead Shaido back when they
returned. Light, what was going on?
Maighdin
staggered out past Kinhuin rubbing her hip. "He pinched me!" Her
voice was thick, but indignation came through. Faile felt a stab of…
Not
jealousy. Certainly not that. The bloody man could pinch any woman he
wanted
to. He was not Perrin.
Grimacing,
she handed the sun-haired woman the waterskin, and Maighdin washed out
her
mouth hurriedly before beginning to gulp thirstily. She was not so
sun-haired
at the moment, her curls all sweat-matted and as coated with dust as
her sweaty
face. She was not even pretty at the moment.
Arrela
came out of the ruin rubbing her bottom and looking grim as death, but
she
eagerly took the waterskin that Aldin offered. The tall young
Amadician, a
square-shouldered fellow who looked more a soldier than the bookkeeper
he was,
gazed at her avidly as she drank. Arrela did not like men that way, but
Aldin
refused to accept that he could not convince her to marry him. Lacile
appeared-rubbing her bottom!-and Jhoradin handed her another waterskin,
drawing
a finger down her dirty cheek. She smiled up at him before beginning to
drink.
Already preparing her way back into his blankets if Rolan proved
obstinate. At
least. Faile thought that was what she was doing.
At
last Alliandre stalked past Kinhuin, and if she was not rubbing
herself, her
expression of frosty ire told the tale plainly enough. Kinhuin backed
out of
the opening and stood while Rolan began working his way back across the
dangerous pile of timbers.
"My
Lady,'' Aravine called anxiously, and Faile turned to find the
plump-faced
woman kneeling on the paving stones and lifting Maighdin's head onto
her lap.
Maighdin's eyelids fluttered but never came more than half open. Her
lips moved
weakly, but only mumbles emerged.
"What
happened?" Faile said, hurrying to kneel beside them.
"I
don't know, my Lady. She was drinking as if she intended to empty the
skin, and
suddenly she staggered. The next I knew, she just collapsed." Aravine's
hands fluttered like falling leaves.
"She
must be very tired," Faile said, smoothing her maid's hair and trying
not
to think of how they were to get the woman out of the camp if she could
not
walk. It would be done if they had to carry her. Light, she felt a
touch wobbly
herself. "She saved us. Aravine." The Amadi-cian woman nodded
gravely.
"I
will hide you somewhere safe until tonight, Faile Bashere," Rolan said,
fastening the last buckles of his bow case harness. His brown shoufa
was
already wrapped around his head. "Then I will take you to the
forest." Taking three short spears from Jhoradin, he thrust them up
through the harness behind so the long spearpoints, glinting in the
sun. stuck
up above his head.
Faile
almost collapsed beside Maighdin with relief. There would be no need to
conceal
anything from Perrin. But she could not afford weakness, not now. "Our
supplies." she began, and as if the sound of her voice were the last
straw, the building gave a squealing groan and fell in with a crash
that
drowned out the explosions for a moment.
"I
will see that you have what you need," Rolan told her, raising the
black
veil across his face. Jhoradin handed him another spear and his
buckler, which
he hung on his belt knife before seizing her right arm and drawing her
to her
feer. "'We must move quickly. I do not know who we are dancing the
spears
with, but the Mera'din will dance today."
"Aldin,
will you carry Maighdin?" was all she managed to get out before Rolan
strode away pulling her with him.
She
looked over her shoulder to see Aldin lifting a limp Maighdin in his
arms.
Jhoradin had Lacile by her arm as firmly as Rolan had her. The three
Brotherless were leading a parade of white-garbed men and women. And
one boy.
Theril wore a grim expression. Fumbling in her sleeve, no easy matter
with
Rolan's big hand on her arm. she closed her fingers around the ridged
hilt of
her dagger. Whatever was happening outside the walls, she might have
need of
that blade before nightfall.
Perrin
ran along the winding street through the tents. No one moved in his
sight, but
through the roar of exploding fireballs and lightnings. he could hear
other
sounds of battle. Steel clashing on steel. Men shouting, as they killed
or
died. Men screaming. Blood ran down the left side of his face from a
gash in
his scalp, and he could feel it oozing down his right side from where a
spear
had grazed him, oozing down his left thigh from a spear that had bitten
deeper.
Not all of the blood on him was his own. A face appeared at the opening
to a
low. dark tent and drew back hurriedly. A child's face, and frightened,
not the
first he had seen. The Shaido were being pressed so hard that a good
many
children had been left behind. They would be a problem for later,
though. Over
the tents, he could see the gates little more than a hundred paces
ahead.
Beyond them lay the fortress and Faile.
Two
veiled Shaido darted out from beside a dirty brown wall-tent, spears at
the
ready. But not for him. They were looking at something off to the left.
Without
slowing, he ran into them. Both were larger than he, but the force of
his rush
carried them all to the ground, and he fell already fighting. His
hammer
smashed into the bottom of one man's chin while he stabbed and stabbed
at the
other man, blade biting deep. The hammer rose and crushed the first
man's face,
splashing blood, rose and fell again while he stabbed. The man with the
ruined
face twitched once as Perrin rose. The other lay staring at the sky.
A
hint of motion at the corner of his left eye made him throw himself to
the
right. A sword whisked through the air where his neck would have been.
Aram's
sword. The onetime Tinker had taken wounds, too. Blood coated half his
face
like a strange mask, there were blood-wet rents in his red-striped
coat, and
his eyes looked almost glazed, like those of a corpse, but he still
seemed to
be dancing with that blade in his hands. His scent was the scent of
death, a
death he sought.
"Have
you gone mad?'' Perrin growled. Steel rang against steel as he blocked
that
sword away with the head of his hammer. "What are you doing?" He
blocked another slice of the blade, tried to grapple the other man, and
barely
danced back in time to get away with only a gash across his ribs.
"The
Prophet explained it to me." Aram sounded in a daze, yet his sword
moved
with liquid ease, blows barely diverted with hammer or belt knife as
Perrin backed
away. All he could do was hope he did not trip over a tent rope or come
up
against a tent. "Your eyes. You're really Shadowspawn. It was you who
brought the Trollocs to the Two Rivers. He explained it all. Those
eyes. I
should have known the first time I saw you. You and Elyas with those
Shadowspawn eyes. I have to rescue the Lady Faile from you."
Perrin
gathered himself. He could not keep moving ten pounds of steel as
quickly as
Aram moved a sword that weighed a third of that. Somehow, he had to get
close,
get beyond that blade blurring with the speed of its motion. He could
not do so
without getting cut. and likely badly, but if he waited much longer,
the man
was going to kill him. Something caught his heel, and he staggered
backward,
nearly falling.
Aram
darted in, sword chopping down. Suddenly, he stiffened, eyes going
wide, and
the blade dropped from his hands. He toppled forward to lie on his
face, two
arrows jutting from his back. Thirty paces beyond him, a pair of veiled
Shaido
already had arrows nocked and drawn again. Perrin leaped sideways,
behind a
green, peaked tent, rolling to his feet quickly. At the corner of the
tent, an
arrow poked through the canvas, still quivering. Crouching, he made his
way
past the green tent and then a faded blue one. a low tent of dingy
brown,
hammer in one hand, knife in the other. This was not the first time he
had
played this game today. Cautiously, he peeked around the edge of the
brown
tent. The two Shaido were nowhere to be seen. They might be stalking
him in
turn, or off hunting someone else already. The game had turned both
ways
before. He could see Aram, lying where he had fallen. A scrap of breeze
ruffled
the dark fletchings on the arrows sticking up from his back. Elyas had
been
right. He should never have let Aram pick up that sword. He should have
sent
him away with the carts, or made him go back to the Tinkers. So many
things he
should have done. Too late, now.
The
gates called to him. He glanced over his shoulder. So close, now. Still
crouching,
he began to run again along those twisting streets, wary of those two
Shaido or
any others that might be lurking. The sounds of battle were ahead of
him, now,
coming from north and south, but that did not mean there would be no
stragglers.
Rounding
a corner only a few paces from the wide-open gates, he found them
filled with
people. Most were garbed in dirty white robes, but three were veiled
algai'd'siswai, one of them a hulking fellow who would have dwarfed
Lamgwin.
That one had Faile's arm in his fist. She looked as if she had been
rolled in
the dirt.
With
a roar, Perrin rushed forward raising his hammer, and the huge man
flung Faile
back and ran toward him, spear coming up as he plucked his buckler from
his
belt.
"Perrin!"
Faile screamed.
The
big Shaido seemed to hesitate for a heartbeat, and Perrin took
advantage of it.
His hammer hit the side of the man's head so hard that his feet left
the ground
as he fell. Another was right behind him, though, spear ready to stab.
Suddenly
the man grunted, surprise in the green eyes above his black veil, and
dropped
to his knees peering over his shoulder at Faile. who stood close.
Slowly he
fell forward, revealing a ridged steel hilt rising from his back.
Perrin looked
hastily for the third, and found him also lying on his face, with two
wooden
knife hilts sticking out of his back. Lacile was leaning against
Arrela.
weeping. No doubt she had found actually killing someone not so easy as
she had
supposed.
Alliandre
was at the front of the crowd, too, and Maighdin right behind her,
carried by a
tall young man in white, but Perrin had eyes only for Faile. Letting
knife and
hammer fall, he stepped over the dead men and gathered her in his arms.
The
smell of her filled his nose. It filled his head. She smelled strongly
of
charred wood, of all things, but he could still smell her.
"I've
dreamed of this moment so long," he breathed.
"I
have, too," she said against his chest, hugging him hard. Her scent was
full of joy. but she was trembling.
"Did
they hurt you?" he asked gently.
"No.
They… No, Perrin, they didn't hurt me." There were other smells
mixed in with her joy, though, laced through it inextricably. The dull,
aching
scent of sadness and the greasy aroma of guilt. Shame. like thousands
of
hair-fine needles pricking. Well, the man was dead, and a woman had the
right
to keep her secrets if she wanted.
"All
that matters is that you're alive, and we're together again," he told
her.
"That's all that matters in the world."
"All
that matters," she agreed, hugging him even harder. Hard enough that
she
actually groaned with the effort. But the next instant, she had pushed
back and
was examining his wounds, fingering open tears in his coat to look at
them.
"These don't look too bad." she said briskly, though all of those
emotions still lay tangled in her joy. She reached up to part his hair
and
tugged until he bent his head so she could examine the slash along his
scalp.
"You'll need Healing, of course. How many Aes Sedai did you bring? How
did
you-? No, that's of no matter right now. There are enough of them to
defeat the
Shaido. and that is what's important."
"This
lot of Shaido," he said, straightening to look down at her. Light, dirt
or
no dirt, she was so beautiful. "There'll be another six or seven
thousand
spears here in…" he glanced at the sun; it seemed it should be
higher, "less than two hours, maybe. We need to finish up here and be
moving before then, if we can. What's wrong with Maighdin?" She was
limp
as a feather pillow against the young man's chest. Her eyelids were
fluttering
without opening fully.
"She
tired herself out saving our lives," Faile said, abandoning his
injuries
and turning to the other people in white. "Aravine, all of you, start
gathering up gai'shain. Not just those sworn to me. Everybody in white.
We
leave no one we can reach behind. Perrin. what direction is safest?"
"North."
he told her. "North is safe."
"Start
them moving north," Faile went on. "Gather carts, wagons, pack.horses,
and load them with whatever you think we'll need. Hurry!" People
started
moving. Running. "No. you stay here, Aldin. Maighdin still needs to be
carried. You stay, too, Alliandre. And Ar-rela. Lacile needs a shoulder
to cry
on for a while."
Perrin
grinned. Put his wife down in the middle of a house engulfed in flames,
and she
would calmly set about putting the fire out. She would put it out, too.
Bending, he cleaned his belt knife on the green-eyed man's coat before
sheathing it. His hammer needed a good wiping, too. He tried not to
think about
what he was smearing on the man's coat. The fire was fading from his
blood.
There was no thrill remaining, only tiredness. His wounds were
beginning to
throb. "Will you send someone to he fortress to let Ban and Seonid know
they can come out now?" he said as he slipped the hammer's haft back
through the loop on his belt.
Faile
stared at him in amazement. "They're in the fortress. How? Why?"
"Alyse
didn't tell you?" He had always been slow to anger until Faile was
taken.
Now, he felt fury bubbling up in him. Bubbles like white-hot iron. "She
said she was taking you with her when she left, but she promised to
tell you to
go to the fortress when you saw fog on the ridges and heard wolves howl
by
daylight. I'd swear she said it straight out. Burn me, you can't trust
Aes
Sedai an inch/'
Faile
glanced toward the western ridge, where the fog still clung thickly,
and
grimaced. "Not Alyse, Perrin. Galina. If that wasn't a lie. too. It has
to
be her. And she has to be Black Ajah. Oh, how I wish I knew her real
name." She moved her left arm and winced. She had been hurt. Perrin
found
himself wanting to kill the big Shaido all over again. Faile did not
let her
injury slow her, though. "Theril, come out from there. I see you
peeking
around the gate."
A
skinny young man edged shyly around the corner of the gate. "My father
told me to stay and keep an eye on you, my Lady," he said in an accent
so
rough that Perrin could barely understand.
"That's
as may be," Faile said firmly, "but you run to the fortress as fast
as you can and tell whoever you find there that Lord Perrin says
they're to
come. Run. now." The boy knuckled his forehead and ran.
In
a quarter of an hour or so he reappeared, still running, followed by
Seonid and
Ban and all the others. Ban made a leg to Faile and murmured smoothly
how
pleased he was to see her again before ordering the Two Rivers men to
set up a
guard ring around the gate, bows at the ready and halberds stuck in the
ground.
He used his normal voice for that. He was another who was trying to
acquire
polish. Selande and Faile's other hangers-on rushed around her. all
babbling
with excitement and saying how worried they had been when she failed to
appear
after the wolves howled.
"I'm
going to Masuri," Kirklin announced in tones that dared challenge. He
did
not wait for one, though, simply drawing his sword and running off
along the
wall to the north.
Tallanvor
gave a cry when he saw Maighdin being held by the tall young man and
had to be
convinced that she was only exhausted. He still took her away from the
fellow
and held her against his own chest, whispering to her.
"Where
is Chiad?" Gaul demanded. On learning that she had never been with
them,
he lifted the veil across his face. "The Maidens tricked me," he said
grimly, "but I will find her before them."
Perrin
caught his arm. "There are a lot of men out there who'll take you for a
Shaido."
"I
have to find her first, Perrin Aybara." There was something in the
Aiel's
voice, something in his scent, that Perrin could only call heartache.
He
understood the sorrow of thinking the woman you loved might be lost to
you
forever. He let go of Gaul's sleeve, and the man darted through the
line of
bowmen, spear and buckler in hand.
"I'll
go with him." Elyas grinned. "Maybe I can keep him out of
trouble." Drawing the long knife that had given him his name among the
wolves. Long Tooth, he went running after the tall Aielman. If the two
of them
could not make their way safely out there, then no one could.
"If
you are done jabbering, perhaps you will stand still for Healing,"
Seonid
told Perrin. "You look as if you need it." Furen and Teryl were
heeling her, hands on their sword hilts and eyes trying to watch in
every
direction. The ring of Two Rivers men were all very well, their
attitude seemed
to say, but Seonid's safety was their charge. They looked like leopards
heeling
a house cat. Only she was no house cat.
"See
to Faile first," he said. "Her arm is hurt." Faile was talking
with Alliandre, both of them so angry they should have had tails to
bristle. No
doubt angry over Alyse or Galina or whatever her name was.
"I
do not see her bleeding like a stuck pig." Seonid lifted her hands to
cup
his head, and that too familiar chill hit him, like suddenly being
immersed in
a winter pond on the brink of freezing. He gasped and jerked, arms
flailing out
of his control, and when she released him, his wounds were gone, if not
the
blood smeared on his face and staining his coat and breeches. He also
felt he
could eat a whole deer by himself.
"What
was that?" The diminutive Green turned away from him toward Faile.
"Did you mention Galina Casban?"
"I
don't know her last name," Faile said. "A round-faced Aes Sedai with
a plump mouth and black hair and big eyes. Pretty in a way, but an
unpleasant
woman. Do you know her? I think she must be Black Ajah."
Seonid
stiffened, hands knotting in her skirts. "That sounds like Galina. A
Red,
and decidedly unpleasant. But why would you make such an accusation? It
is not
a charge to bring against a sister lightly, even against one as
disagreeable as
Galina."
As
Faile explained, beginning with the first meeting with Galina, Perrin's
anger
grew again. The woman had blackmailed her, threatened her, lied to her,
then
tried to murder her. His fists clenched so tight that his arms shook.
"I'll break her neck when I get my hands on it," he growled when she
fell silent.
"That
is not your right." Seonid said sharply. "Galina must be tried before
three sisters sitting as a court, and for this charge, they must be
Sitters.
The entire Hall of the Tower might sit for it. If she is found guilty,
she will
be stilled and executed, but justice in this lies with Aes Sedai."
"If?"
he said incredulously. "You heard what Faile said. Can you have any
doubt?"
He must have looked threatening, because Furen and Teryl glided in to
flank
Seonid, their hands resting lightly on sword hilts, their eyes hard on
his
face.
"She's
right, Perrin." Faile said gently. "When Jac Coplin and Len Congar
were accused of stealing a cow, you knew they were thieves, but you
made Master
Thane prove they had stolen it before you let the Village Council have
them
strapped. It's just as important with Galina."
"The
Village Council wouldn't have strapped them without a trial whatever
I'd
said," he muttered. Faile laughed. She laughed! Light, it was good to
hear
again. "Oh. all right. Galina belongs to the Aes Sedai. But if they
don't
take care of her, I will if I ever find her again. I don't like people
hurting
you."
Seonid
sniffed at him, her scent disapproving. "Your arm is injured, my
Lady?"
"See
to Arrela first, please," Faile said. The Aes Sedai rolled her eyes in
exasperation and took Faile's head between her hands. Faile shivered
and
exhaled, hardly more than a heavy sigh. Not a bad injury, then, and
gone now in
any case. She txianked Seonid while leading her to Arrela.
Suddenly
Perrin realized he could not hear the explosions any longer. In fact,
he could
not recall hearing one for some time. That had to be good. "I need to
find
out what's happening. Ban, you keep a close guard on Faile."
Faile
protested his going alone, and by the time he finally agreed to take
ten of the
Two Rivers men. a rider in lacquered armor had appeared rounding the
northern corner
of the town wall. Three thin blue plumes marked her as Tylee. As she
rode
closer, he realized she had a nude woman draped across her tall bay in
front of
the saddle. A woman bound at ankles and knees, wrists and elbows. Her
long
golden hair almost brushed the ground, and there were jeweled necklaces
and
ropes of pearls caught in it. A strand of large green stones and gold
slid free
and fell to the dirt as Tylee reined in. Removing her peculiar helmet
with
gauntleted hands, she rested it on the woman's upturned bottom.
"A
remarkable weapon, those bows of yours," she drawled, eyeing the Two
Rivers men. "I wish we had the like. Kirklin told me where to find you,
my
Lord. They've begun surrendering. Masema's men held to the point of
suicide-most of them are dead or dying, I think-and the damane turned
that
ridge into a deathtrap only a madman would walk into. Best of all, the
sul'dam
have already fitted adam to over two hundred women. That cold tea' of
yours was
enough that most of them could not stand without help. I'll have to
send for
to'raken to fly them all out."
Seonid
made a sound in her throat. Her face was smooth, but her scent was
dagger-sharp
fury. She stared at Tylee as though trying to stare a hole through her.
Tylee
paid her no mind at all except to shake her head slightly.
"After
my people and I are gone," Perrin said. His agreement was with her. He
did
not want to risk testing it with anyone else. "What are our losses
aside
from Masema's men?"
"Light,"
Tylee replied. "Between your archers and the damane, they never really
managed to close with us. I've never seen a battle plan come off so
smoothly.
If we have a hundred dead between us, I'll be surprised."
Perrin
winced. He supposed those were light casualties under the
circumstances, but some
would be Two Rivers men. Whether or not he knew them, they were his
responsibility. "Do you know where Masema is?"
"With
what's left of his army. He's no coward, I'll say that for him. He and
his two
hundred-well, about one hundred, now-cut a path all the way through the
Shaido
to the ridge."
Perrin
ground his teeth. The man was back surrounded by his rabble. It would
be his
word against Masema's about why Aram had tried to kill him, and in any
event,
it was unlikely the man's followers would surrender him for trial. "We
need to start moving before the others get here. If the Shaido think
rescue is
at hand, they might decide to forget they surrendered. Who's your
prisoner?"
"Sevanna."
Faile said in a cold voice. The smell of her hatred was nearly as
strong as it
had been while speaking of Galina.
The
golden-haired woman twisted herself upward, shaking hair out of her
face and
losing several more necklaces in the process. Her eyes, glaring at
Faile, were
green fire above a strip of cloth that had been tied for a gag. She
stank of
rage.
"Sevanna
of the Jumai Shaido." Satisfaction was strong in Tylee's voice. "She
told me so proudly. She's no coward, either. Met us wearing nothing but
a silk
robe and her jewels, but she managed to spear two of my Altarans before
I took
it away from her." Sevanna snarled through her gag and struggled as if
to
throw herself from the horse. Until Tylee smacked her bottom, anyway.
After
that, she contented herself with glaring at everyone in sight. She was
nicely
rounded, though he should not be noticing something like that with his
wife
there. Except that Elyas said she would expect him to notice, so he
made
himself study her openly.
"I
claim the contents of her tent," Faile announced, shooting him a sharp
look. Maybe he was not supposed to be that open. "She has a huge chest
of
jewels in there, and I want them. Don't look at me like a looby,
Perrin. We
have a hundred thousand people to feed, clothe and help get back to
their
homes. A hundred thousand at least."
"I
want to come with you, my Lady, if you'll have me," the young fellow
who
had been holding Maighdin piped up. "I won't be the only one, if you'll
have us."
"Your
lady wife, I presume, my Lord." Tylee said, eyeing Faile.
"She
is. Faile, allow me to present Banner-General Tylee Khirgan, in service
to the
Empress of Seanchan." Perhaps he was acquiring some of that polish
himself. "Banner-General, my wife. Lady Faile ni Bashere't'Aybara."
Tylee bowed in her saddle. Faile made a small curtsy, inclined her head
slightly. Dirty face or no dirty face, she was regal. Which made him
think of
the Broken Crown. Discussion of that little matter would have to come
later. No
doubt it would be a prolonged discussion. He thought he might not find
it so
hard to raise his voice, the way she apparently wanted, this time. "And
this is Alliandre Maritha Kigarin. Queen of Ghealdan. Blessed of the
Light,
Defender of Garen's Wall. And my liege woman. Ghealdan is under my
protection." Fool thing to say, but it had to be said.
"Our
agreement doesn't speak to that, my Lord," Tylee said carefully. "I
don't decide where the Ever Victorious Army goes."
"Just
so you know, Banner-General. And tell those above you they can't have
Ghealdan." Alliandre smiled at him so widely, so gratefully, he almost
wanted to laugh. Light. Faile was smiling, too. A proud smile. He
rubbed the
side of his nose. "We really do need to begin moving before those other
Shaido arrive. I don't want to find myself with them in front of me and
all
those prisoners behind me thinking about picking up a spear again."
Tylee
chuckled. "I have a little more experience with these people than you.
my
Lord. Once they surrender, they won't fight again or try to escape for
three
days. Besides, I have some of my Altarans making bonfires out of their
spears
and bows just to make sure. We have time to make our deployments. My
Lord, I
hope I never have to face you in the field," she said, pulling the
steel-backed gauntlet from her right hand. "I would be honored if you'd
call
me Tylee." She bent over Se-vanna to offer her hand.
For
a moment. Perrin could only stare. It was a strange world. He had gone
to her
thinking he was making a deal with the Dark One, and the Light knew,
some of
what the Seanchan did was beyond repugnant, but the woman was stalwart
and true
to her word.
"I'm
Perrin. Tylee." he said, clasping her hand. A very strange world.
Stripping
off her shift, Galina tossed it down atop the silk robe and bent to
pick up the
riding dress she had pulled from Swift's saddlebags. The thing had been
sewn
for a slightly larger woman, but it would suffice until she could sell
one of
those firedrops.
"Stand
as you are. Lina," came Therava's voice, and suddenly Galina could not
have straightened if the forest around her had been on fire. She could
scream,
though. "Be silent." She choked as her throat swallowed the scream
convulsively. She could still weep, silently, and tears began to fall
on the
mulch of the forest floor. A hand slapped her rudely. "Somehow, you
have
the rod,' Therava said. "You would not be out here, else. Give it to
me,
Lina."
There
was no question even of resisting. Straightening, Galina dug the rod
out of her
saddlebags and handed it to the hawk-eyed woman, tears sliding down her
cheeks.
"Stop
sniveling, Lina. And put on your necklace and collar. I will have to
punish you
for taking them off.''
Galina
flinched. Even Therava's command could not shut off her tears, and she
knew she
would be punished for that, too. Golden necklace and collar came out of
the
saddlebags and went onto her. She stood there wearing only her pale
woolen
stockings and soft laced white boots, and the weight of the
firedrop-studded
collar and belt seemed enough to bear her to the ground. Her eyes
fastened
themselves to the white rod in Therava's hands.
"Your
horse will do for a pack animal, Lina. As for you, you are forbidden to
ride
ever again."
There
had to be some way to get that rod again. There had to be! Therava
turned the
thing over and over in her hands, taunting her.
"Stop
playing with your pet, Therava. What are we going to do?" Belinde, a
slender Wise One with hair bleached almost white by the sun, strode up
to glare
at Therava with pale blue eyes. She was bony, with a face well suited
to
glaring.
That
was the first Galina realized that Therava was not alone. Several
hundred men,
women and children stood among the trees behind them, some of the men
carrying
women slung over their shoulders of all things. She covered herself
with her
hands, her face heating. Those long days of enforced nakedness had not
inured
her to being unclothed in front of men. Then she noticed another
oddity. Only a
handful were algai'd'siswai, with bow cases on their backs and quivers
at their
hips, but every man and every woman except the Wise Ones among them was
carrying at least one spear. They had their faces veiled, too, with a
scarf or
just a scrap of cloth. What could it mean?
"We
are returning to the Three-fold Land." Therava said. "We will send
runners
to find every sept that can be found and tell them to abandon their
wetlander
gai'shain, abandon everything they must, and make their way by stealth
back to
the Three-fold Land. We will rebuild our clan. The Shaido will rise
from the
disaster Sevanna led us to."
"That
will take generations!" Modarra protested. Slim and quite pretty, but
even
taller than Therava. as tall as most Aielmen, she stood up to Therava
unflinchingly. Galina could not understand how she did that. The woman
made her
flinch with a glance.
"Then
we will take generations." Therava said firmly. "We will take
whatever time is necessary. And we will never leave the Three-fold Land
again." Her gaze shifted to Galina. Who flinched. "You will never
touch this again," she said, raising the rod briefly. "And you will
never try to escape me again. She has a strong back. Load her, and let
us be on
our way. They may try to pursue us."
Burdened
with waterskins and pots and kettles till she almost felt decently
covered,
Galina staggered through the forest at Therava's heels. She did not
think of
the rod, or escape. Something had broken in her. She was Galina Casban,
Highest
of the Red Ajah, who sat on the Supreme Council of the Black Ajah, and
she was
going to be Therava's plaything for the rest of her life. She was
Therava's
little Lina. For the rest of her life. She knew that to her bones.
Tears rolled
silently down her face.
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
The House on Full Moon Street
They
must stay together," Elayne said firmly. "The two of you shouldn't be
out by yourselves, for that matter. Always three or four together
anywhere in
Caemlyn. That's the only way to be safe." Just two of the mirrored
stand-lamps were lit, six flames filling the sitting room with a dim
light and
the scent of lilies-so much of the lamp oil had gone bad that it was
always
perfumed, now-but a crackling fire on the hearth was beginning to take
away
some of the early hour's coolness.
"There
are times a woman wants a little privacy," Sumeko replied calmly, as if
yet another Kinswoman had not just died from wanting privacy. Her voice
was
calm, at least, but plump hands smoothed her dark blue skirts.
"If
you won't put the fear of the Light into them, Sumeko, I will," Alise
said, her usually mild face stern. She looked the elder of the two.
with
touches of gray in her hair compared to the glossy black hair that fell
below
Sumeko's stout shoulders, yet she was the younger by better than two
hundred
years. Alise had been intrepid when Ebou Dar fell and they were forced
to flee
the Seanchan, but her hands moved on her brown skirts, too.
It
was long past the bedtime that Essande's niece Melfane had decreed, but
tired
as she was all the time, once Elayne woke, she could never get back to
sleep,
and warm goat's milk did not help. Warm goat's milk tasted worse than
cool. She
was going to make Rand bloody al'Thor
drink
warm bloody goat's milk till it came out of his ears! Right after she
found out
what had hurt him badly enough that she sensed a small jolt of pain
while
everything else in that small knot in the back of her head that was him
remained as vague as a stone. It had been all a stone again ever since,
so he
was all right, yet something had hurt him deeply for her to sense
anything at
all. And why was he Traveling so often? One day, he was far to the
southeast,
the next to the northwest and even more distant, the day after that
somewhere
else. Was he running from whoever had hurt him? But she had her own
worries at
the moment.
Unable
to sleep and restless, she had dressed herself in the first thing that
came to
hand, a dark gray riding dress, and gone for a walk to enjoy the
stillness of
the palace in the small hours of the morning. when even the servants
were abed
and flickering stand-lamps were the only things that moved in the
hallways
aside from her. Her and her bodyguards, but she was learning to ignore
their
presence. She did enjoy the solitude, until the two women encountered
her and
delivered the sad news that would have awaited sunrise otherwise. She
had
brought them back to her smaller sitting room to discuss the matter
behind a
ward against listeners.
Sumeko
shifted her bulk in her armchair to glare at Alise. "Reanne let you
press
boundaries, but as Eldest, I expect-"
"You're
not Eldest, Sumeko,'' the smaller woman said coolly. "You have the
authority here, but by the Rule, the Knitting Circle consists of the
thirteen eldest of us in
Ebou Dar. We aren't in Ebou Dar any longer, so there is no Knitting Circle."
Sumeko's
round face grew hard as granite. "At least you admit I have the
authority."
"And
I expect you to use it to prevent any more of us being murdered.
Suggesting
isn't enough, Sumeko, no matter how strongly you say you suggest. It
isn't
enough."
"Arguing
will get us nowhere." Elayne said. "I know you re on edge. I am,
too." Light, three women murdered with the One Power in the last ten
days,
and very likely seven more before that, were enough to put an anvil on
edge.
"But snapping at each other is the worst thing we can do. Sumeko, you
need
to put your foot down. I don't care how much anyone wants privacy, no
one can
be by herself for a minute. Alise, use your persuasion." Persuasion was
not exactly the word. Alise did not persuade. She simply expected
people to do
as she said, and they nearly always did. "Convince the others that
Sumeko
is right. Between the two of you, you have to-"
The
door opened to admit Deni, who closed it again behind her and bowed,
one hand
on her sword hilt, the other on her long cudgel. The red-lacquered
breastplates
and helmets, trimmed in white, had been delivered only yesterday, and
the
stocky woman had been smiling ever since she donned hers, but she
looked solemn
behind the face-bars now. "Pardon for interrupting, my Lady, but
there's
an Aes Sedai here demanding to see you. A Red, by her shawl. I told her
you
were likely sleeping, but she was ready to come in and wake you
herself."
A
Red. There were reports of Reds in the city from time to time. though
not so
often as once-most Aes Sedai in the city went without their shawls,
concealing
their Ajahs-yet what would a Red want with her? Surely they all knew by
now
that she stood with Egwene and against Elaida. Unless someone was
finally
trying to bring her to book for the bargain with the Sea Folk.
"Tell
her that I'm-"
The
door opened again, bumping Deni's back, pushing her out of the way. The
woman
who entered, vine-woven shawl draped along her arms so the long red
fringe
displayed itself to advantage, was tall and slim and copper-skinned.
She would
have been pretty, except that her mouth was compressed until her full
lips
seemed thin. Her riding dress was so dark it might have been black, but
the
pale light of the stand-mirrors picked up hints of red, and the divided
skirts
were slashed with brighter red. Duhara Basaheen never made any secret
of her
Ajah. Once, Sumeko and Alise would have been on their feet and
curtsying for an
Aes Sedai in a flash, but now they remained seated. studying her. Deni,
normally placid, in appearance at least, scowled and fingered her
cudgel.
"I
see the tales of you gathering wilders are true," Duhara said. "A
great pity, that. The two of you get out. I wish to speak with Elayne
privately. If you're wise, you will leave tonight, heading in different
directions. and tell any others like you to do the same. The White
Tower looks
amiss on wilders gathering together. When the Tower looks on something
amiss,
thrones have been known to tremble." Neither Sumeko nor Alise moved.
Alise
actually arched an eyebrow.
"They
can stay," Elayne said coldly. With the Power in her, her emotions were
not bouncing. They were steady in an icy anger. "They are welcome here.
You, on the other hand… Elaida tried to have me kidnapped, Duhara.
Kidnapped! You can leave."
"A
poor welcome, Elayne, when I came to the palace as soon as I arrived.
And after
a journey that would be as torturous to describe as it was to endure.
Andor has
always had good relations with the Tower. The Tower intends to see they
remain
good. Are you sure you want these wilders to hear everything I have to
say to
you? Very well. If you insist." Gliding to one of the carved
sideboards,
she wrinkled her nose at the silver pitcher holding goat's milk and
poured
herself a cup of dark wine before taking a chair across from Elayne.
Deni made
a move as if to try dragging her out, but Elayne shook her head. The
Domani
sister ignored the Kinswomen as if they had ceased to exist. "The woman
who drugged you has been punished, Elayne. She was flogged in front of
her own
shop with everyone in her village watching." Duhara sipped her wine,
waiting for Elayne to respond.
She
said nothing. She knew very well that Ronde Macura had been flogged for
failure
rather than for feeding her that vile tea, but saying so would make
Duhara
wonder how she knew, and that might lead to things that needed to
remain
hidden.
The
silence stretched, and finally the other woman went on. "You must know
that the White Tower wants very much for you to mount the Lion Throne.
To
achieve that end, Elaida has sent me to be your advisor."
In
spite of herself, Elayne laughed. Elaida had sent her an advisor? It
was
ludicrous! "I have Aes Sedai to advise me when I need advice, Duhara.
You
must know I oppose Elaida. I wouldn't accept a pair of stockings from
that
woman."
"Your
so-called advisors are rebels, child." Duhara said chidingly, with a
heavy
dose of distaste on the word "rebels." She gestured with the silver
winecup. "Why do you think you have so many Houses opposing you, so
many
standing aside? They surely know you don't really have the backing of
the
Tower. With me as your advisor, that changes. I might be able to put
the crown
on your head inside a week. At most, it should take no more than a
month or
two."
Elayne
met the other woman's gaze with a level gaze of her own. Her hands
wanted to
make fists, but she kept them still in her lap. "Even were that so, I'd
refuse you. I expect to hear any day that Elaida has been deposed. The
White
Tower will be whole again, and no one will be able to claim I lack its
backing
then."
Duhara
studied her wine for a moment, her face a mask of Aes Sedai serenity.
"It
won't be entirely smooth going for you," she said as if Elayne had not
spoken. "This is the part I thought you wouldn't want the wilders to
hear.
And that guard. Does she think I'm going to attack you? No matter. Once
you
have the crown firmly on your head, you will have to appoint a regent,
because
you must return to the Tower then, to complete your training and
eventually be
tested for the shawl. You need have no fear of being birched as a
runaway.
Elaida accepts that Siuan Sanche ordered you to leave the Tower. Your
pretense
of being Aes Sedai is another matter. That, you will pay for with
tears."
Sumeko and Alise stirred, and Duhara took notice of them again. "Ah,
you
didn't know that Elayne is really only one of the Accepted?"
Elayne
rose and stared down at Duhara. Usually, someone seated held the
advantage over
someone standing, but she made her stare hard and her voice harder. She
wanted
to slap the woman's face! "I was raised Aes Sedai by Egwene al'Vere on
the
day she herself was raised Amyrlin. I chose the Green Ajah and was
admitted.
Don't you ever say I'm not Aes Sedai, Duhara. Burn me if I'll stand
still for
it!"
Duhara's
mouth pinched down till her lips seemed a gash. "Think, and you will
see
the reality of your situation," she said finally. "Think hard,
Elayne. A blind woman could see how much you need me, and the White
Tower's
blessing. We will talk again later. Have someone show me to my rooms. I
am more
than ready for my bed."
"You'll
have to find a room at an inn, Duhara. Every bed in the palace already
has
three or four people sleeping in it." If dozens of beds had been free,
she
would not have offered Duhara one. Turning her back, she walked to the
fireplace
and stood warming her hands. The gilded pendulum clock on the
scroll-carved
marble mantel chimed three times. Perhaps as many hours remained till
sunrise.
"Deni, have someone escort Duhara to the gates."
"You
won't fend me off so easily, child. No one fends off the White Tower
easily.
Think, and you'll see I'm your only hope." Silk whisked against silk as
she left the room, and the door clicked shut behind her. It seemed very
possible Duhara would cause trouble trying to make herself needed, but
one problem
at a time.
"Did
she put doubts in your minds?" Elayne said, turning from the fire.
"None,"
Sumeko replied. "Vandene and the other two accept you as Aes Sedai, so
you
must be." Conviction was strong in her voice, but then, she had reason
to
want to believe. If Elayne were a liar, her dreams of returning to the
Tower,
of joining the Yellow Ajah, died.
"But
this Duhara believes she was speaking the truth." Alise spread her
hands.
"I'm not saying I doubt you. I don't. But the woman believes."
Elayne
sighed. "The situation is… complicated." That was like saying
water was moist. "I am Aes Sedai, but Duhara doesn't believe. She
can't,
because that would be admitting Egwene al'Vere truly is the Amyrlin
Seat, and
Duhara won't do that until Elaida has been brought down." She hoped
Duhara
would believe then. Accept, at least. The Tower had to be made whole.
"Sumeko, you will order the Kinswomen to stay in groups? Always?" The
stout woman muttered that she would. Unlike Reanne, Sumeko had no flair
for leadership,
or liking for it, either. A pity no older Kinswoman had appeared to
take the
burden from her. "Alise, you'll make sure they obey?" Alise's
agreement was firm and quick. She would have been the perfect candidate
if the
Kin did not determine their rankings by age. "Then we've done what we
can.
It's long past time you were in your beds."
"Long
past time for you, too," Alise said as she stood. "I could send for
Melfane."
"No
need to rob her of sleep, too." Elayne said hastily. And firmly.
Melfane
was short and stout, a merry woman with a ready laugh, and unlike her
aunt in
other ways, as well. Merry or not, the midwife was a tyrant who would
not be
pleased to learn that she was awake. "I'll sleep when I can.''
Once
they left, she released saidar and took up a book from several on the
second
sideboard, yet another history of Andor, but she could not concentrate.
Bereft
of the Power, she felt grumpy. Burn her, she was so weary that her eyes
felt
grainy. She knew that if she lay down, though, she would stare at the
ceiling
till the sun rose. In any case, she had stared at the page for only
minutes
when Deni appeared again.
"Master
Norry is here, my Lady, with that Hark fellow. Said he'd heard you were
up and
wondered if you could spare him a few minutes.''
He
had heard she was up? If he was having her watched… ! The import broke
through her grumpiness. Hark. He had not brought Hark since that first
visit,
ten days ago. No, eleven days, now. Ebullience replaced peevishness.
Telling
Deni to send them in. she followed the woman as far as the anteroom,
where a
patterned carpet covered most of the red-and-white floor tiles. Here,
too, only
a pair of stand-lamps were lit, giving off a dim, wavering light and a
scent of
roses.
Master
Norry looked more than ever a white-crested wading bird with his long,
spindly
shanks, and tufts of hair sticking up behind his ears, but for once, he
almost
seemed excited. He was actually rubbing his hands together. He was not
carrying
his leather folder tonight; even in the dim light, the ink stains on
his
crimson tabard showed. One had turned the tuft of the White Lion's tail
black.
He offered a stiff bow, and the nondescript Hark imitated him
awkwardly, then
knuckled his forehead for good measure. He was wearing a darker brown
than he
had previously, but the same belt and buckle. "Forgive the hour, my
Lady," Norry began in that dry voice.
"How
did you know I was awake?" she demanded, emotions bouncing again.
Norry
blinked, startled by the question. "One of the cooks mentioned sending
up
warm goat's milk for you when I went to get some for myself, my Lady. I
find
warm goat's milk very soothing when I can't sleep. But she mentioned
wine, too,
so I assumed you had visitors and might still be awake."
Elayne
sniffed. She still wanted to snap at someone. Keeping that out of her
voice
required an effort. "I suppose you've success to report, Master
Hark?"
"I
followed him like you said, my Lady, and he's been to the same house
three
nights, counting this one. It's on Full Moon Street in the New City, it
is.
Only place he ever goes except taverns and common rooms. He drinks
some, he
does. Dices a lot, too." The man hesitated, dry-washing his hands
nervously. "I can go now. right, my Lady? You'll take off whatever it
was
you put on me?"
"According
to the tax rolls." Norry said, "the house is owned by the Lady
Shiaine Avarhin. my Lady. She seems to be the last of the House."
"What
else can you tell me about the place, Master Hark? Who else lives there
besides
this Lady Shiaine?"
Hark
rubbed his nose uneasily. "Well, I don't know as they lives there, my
Lady, but there's two Aes Sedai there tonight. I saw one of them
letting Mellar
out while the other was coming in. and the one who was coming in said,
'A pity
there are only two of us, Falion, the way Lady Shiaine works us.' Only,
she
said Lady like she didn't mean it, she did. Funny. She was carrying a
stray
cat, a thing scrawny as she was." He bobbed a sudden, nervous bow.
"Begging your pardon, my Lady. Didn't mean no offence, speaking of an
Aes
Sedai that way, but it took me a minute to realize she was Aes Sedai,
it did.
There was good light from the entry hall, there was, but she was so
thin and
plain, with a wide nose, that nobody would take her for Aes Sedai
without some
study."
Elayne
laid a hand on his arm. Excitement bubbled in her voice, and she let
it.
"What were their accents?"
"Their
accents, my Lady? Well, the one with the cat. she's from right here in
Caemlyn
I'd say. The other… Well, she didn't say above two sentences, but I'd
say
she was Kandori. Called the other Marillin, if that helps, my Lady."
Laughing,
Elayne capered a few steps. She knew who had set Mellar on her now, and
it was
worse than she had feared. Marillin Gemalphin and Falion Bhoda, two
Black
sisters who had fled the Tower after doing murder. That had been to
facilitate
theft, but it was the murders that would see them stilled and beheaded.
It had
been to find them, and the others with them, that she. Egwene and
Nynaeve had
been sent out of the Tower. The Black Ajah had planted Mellar next to
her, to
spy most likely, but still a chilling thought. Worse than she had
feared, and
yet, finding the two now was like completing the circle.
Hark
was staring at her with his mouth hanging open, she realized. Master
Norry was
studiously examining the lion's stained tail. She stopped dancing and
folded
her hands. Fool men! "Where is Mellar now?"
"In
his rooms, I believe," Norry said.
"My
Lady, you'll take it off now?" Hark said. "And I can go? I did what
you asked."
"First
you have to lead us to this house," she said, darting past him to the
twinned doors. "Then we'll talk." Putting her head out into the
corridor, she found Deni and seven more Guardswomen lined up on either
side of
the doors. "Deni, send someone to fetch the Lady Birgitte as fast as
possible, and someone else to wake the Aes Sedai and ask them to come,
too,
with their Warders and prepared to take a ride. Then you go and wake
however
many Guardswomen you think you need to arrest Mellar. You needn't be
too gentle
about it. The charges are murder and being a Darkfriend. Lock him in
one of the
basement storerooms with a strong guard." The stocky woman smiled
broadly
and began giving orders as Elayne went back inside.
Hark
was wringing his hands and shifting from one foot to the other
anxiously.
"My Lady, what do you mean we'll talk? You promised to take this thing
off
me if I followed the man. you did. And I did, so you have to keep your
word."
"I
never said I'd remove the Finder, Master Hark. I said you'd be exiled
to
Baerlon instead of hanging, but wouldn't you rather remain in Caemlyn?"
The
man widened his eyes, trying to look sincere. And failing. He even
smiled.
"Oh, no, my Lady. I've been dreaming about the fresh country air in
Baerlon, I has. I'll wager there's never a worry about getting rotten
meat in
your stew there. Here, you got to sniff careful before you eat
anything. I'm
looking forward to it, I am."
Elayne
put on the stern face her mother had always worn passing judgment.
"You'd
be out of Baerlon two minutes behind the Guardsmen who escorted you
there. And
then you'd hang for breaking your exile. Much better for you to remain
in
Caemlyn and take on a new line of work. Master Norry, could you use a
man with
Hark's talents?"
"I
could, my Lady," Norry replied without even a pause for thought. A
satisfied smile touched his thin lips, and Elayne realized what she had
done.
She had given him a tool to encroach on Mistress Harfor's ground. But
there was
no undoing it, now.
"The
work won't be so remunerative as your former 'trade,' Master Hark, but
you
won't hang for it."
"Not
so what, my Lady?" Hark said, scratching his head.
"It
won't pay so well. What do you say? Baerlon, where you'll surely cut a
purse or
bolt, and hang for either one, or Caemlyn, where you'll have steady
work and no
fear of the hangman. Unless you take up cutting purses again."
Hark
swayed on his feet, scrubbing the back of his hand across his mouth. "I
needs a drink, I does," he muttered hoarsely. Very likely he believed
the
Finder would allow her to know if he cut a purse. If so, she had no
intention
of disabusing him.
Master
Norry scowled at the man, but when he opened his mouth. she said,
"There's
wine in the small sitting room. Let him have one cup, then join me in
the large
sitting room."
The
large sitting room was dark when she walked in. but she channeled to
light the
mirrored stand-lamps against the dark-paneled walls, and the kindling
of the
fires neatly laid on the facing hearths. Then she took a seat in one of
the
low-backed chairs around the scroll-edged table and released saidar
again.
Since her experiment at holding the Power all day, she had not held it
longer
than necessary. Her mood swung from joyful excitement to morose worry
and back.
On the one hand, she was done with having to put up with Mellar, and
soon she
would have her hands on two Black sisters. Questioning them might lead
to the
rest, or at least reveal their plans. And if not, this Shiaine would
have her
own secrets. Anyone who was "working" two Dark-friend sisters would
have secrets worth knowing. On the other hand, what would Duhara do to
try
forcing her acceptance as an advisor? Duhara would try to meddle
somehow, but
she could not see how. Burn her. she did not need any more difficulties
between
her and the throne. With a little luck, tonight would not only snare
two Black
sisters. it might uncover a third, a murderer ten times over. Back and
forth
she went, from Falion and Marillin to Duhara, even after Master Norry
and Hark
joined her.
Hark,
a silver cup in his hand, tried to take a seat at the table, but Master
Norry
tapped him on the shoulder and jerked his head toward a corner.
Sullenly, Hark
went where he was directed. He must have begun drinking as soon as the
cup was
filled, because he emptied it in one long pull then stood turning it
over in
his hands and staring at it. Suddenly he gave a start and directed an
ingratiating grin at her. Whatever he saw on her face made him flinch.
Scuttling
to the long table against the wall, he set the cup down with
exaggerated care,
then scuttled back to his corner.
Birgitte
was the first to arrive, the bond filled with weary discontent. "A
ride?" she said, and when Elayne explained, she began raising
objections.
Well, some of it was objections; the rest was just insults.
"What
hare-brained, crack-pated scheme are you talking about, Birgitte?"
Vandene
said as she entered the room. She wore a riding dress that hung loose
on her.
One of her sister's, it would have fit her perfectly while Adeleas was
alive,
but the white-haired woman had lost weight. Her Jaem, wiry and gnarled,
took
one look at Hark and placed himself where he could watch the man. Hark
ventured
a smile, but it faded when Jaem's expression remained hard as iron. The
Warder's graying hair was thin, but there was nothing soft about him.
"She
intends to try capturing two Black sisters tonight," Birgitte replied,
shooting a hard look at Elayne.
"Two
Black sisters?" Sareitha exclaimed walking through the door. She
gathered
her dark cloak around her as though the words had given a chill.
"Who?" Her Warder Ned. a tall, broad-shouldered young man with yellow
hair, eyed Hark and touched his sword hilt. He chose a spot where he
could
watch the man, too. Hark shifted his feet. He might have been thinking
of
trying to run.
"Falion
Bhoda and Marillin Gemalphin," Elayne said. Sareitha's mouth hardened.
"What
about Falion and Marillin?" Careane asked as she glided into the room.
Her
Warders were disparate men. a tall, gangly Tairen, a blade-slender
Saldaean,
and a broad-shouldered Cairhienin. They exchanged glances, and Tavan,
the
Cairhienin, leaned against the wall watching Hark while Cieryl and Venr
stood
in the doorway. Hark's mouth took on a sickly twist.
There
was nothing for it but to explain again from the beginning. Which
Elayne did
with a rising impatience that had nothing to do with her shifting
moods. The
longer this took, the more chance that Falion and Marillin might be
gone by the
time she reached the house on Full Moon Street. She wanted them. She
intended
to have them! She should have made Birgitte wait until everyone had
gathered.
"A
good plan, I think," Vandene said when she finished. "Yes, it will do
nicely." Others were not so agreeable.
"It
isn't a plan, it's bloody madness!" Birgitte said sharply. Arms folded
beneath her bosom, she scowled down at Elayne, the bond such a turmoil
of
emotions that Elayne could barely make them out. "The four of you enter
the house alone. Alone! That isn't a plan. It's flaming insanity!
Warders are
supposed to guard their Aes Sedai's backs. Let us come with you." The
other Warders put in emphatic agreements, but at least she was not
trying to
stop the whole thing any more.
"There
are four of us." Elayne told her. "We can watch our own backs. And
sisters do not ask their Warders to face other sisters." Birgitte's
face
darkened. "If I need you. I'll shout so loud you'd be able to hear me
if
you were back here in the palace. The Warders remain outside! she added
when
Birgitte opened her mouth. The bond filled with frustration, but
Birgitte's jaw
snapped shut.
"Perhaps
this man can be trusted," Sareitha said, glancing at Hark with no
trust at all, "but even if he
heard correctly, nothing says there are still only two sisters in the
house. Or
any. If they have gone, there's no danger, but if others have joined
them, we
might as well put our necks in a noose and spring the trap ourselves."
Careane
folded her sturdy arms and nodded. "The danger is too great. You
yourself
told us that when they fled the Tower, they stole a number of
ter'angreal. some
very dangerous indeed. I've never been called a coward, but I don't
fancy
trying to sneak up on someone who might have a rod that can make
balefire."
"He
could hardly have misheard something as simple as 'there are only two
of
us,'" Elayne replied firmly. "And they spoke as if they didn't expect
any others." Burn her, considering her standing with respect to them,
they
should have been jumping to obey rather than arguing. "In any case,
this
isn't a discussion." A pity both objected. If only one had, it could
have
been a clue. Unless they both were Black Ajah. A bone-freezing thought,
that,
yet her plan took the possibility into account. "Falion and Marillin
won't
know we are coming until it's too late. If they're gone, we'll arrest
this
Shiaine, but we are going."
It
was a larger party than Elayne had expected that rode out of the
Queen's
Stableyard behind her and Hark. Birgitte had insisted on bringing fifty
Guardswomen, though all they would be doing was missing sleep, a column
of twos
in red-lacquered helmets and breastplates, black in the night, that
snaked
along the palace behind the Aes Sedai and Warders. Reaching the front
of the palace,
they skirted the edge of the Queen's Plaza, the great oval crowded now
with
rude shelters that housed sleeping Guardsmen and nobles' armsmen. Men
were
billeted everywhere room could be found, but there were insufficient
basements
and attics and spare rooms near enough the palace, and the parks where
circles
of Kinswomen would take the men to the places where they were needed.
The
fighting they did was afoot, on the walls, so their horses were all
picketed in
nearby parks and in the larger palace gardens. A few sentries shifted
as they
passed, heads swiveling to follow, but with her hood up, all they could
be sure
of was that a large contingent of Guardswomen were escorting a party
through
the night. The sky to the east was still dark, but it must be less than
two
hours till first light. The Light send dawn would see Falion and
Marillin in
custody. And one more. At least one more.
Winding
streets led over and around the hills past narrow, tile-covered towers
that
would glitter with a hundred colors when the sun rose and glittered
faintly in
the cloud-dappled moonlight, past silent shops and lightless inns,
simple stone
houses with slate roofs and small palaces that might have fit in Tar
Valon. The
ring of horseshoes on the paving stones and the faint creak of saddle
leather
sounded loud in the silence. Except for an occasional dog that slunk
away into
the deeper shadows of alleys, nothing else moved. The streets were
dangerous at
this hour, but no footpad would be mad enough to come in sight of so
large a party.
Half an hour after leaving the Royal Palace, Elayne rode Fireheart
through the
Mondel Gate, a wide, twenty-foot-high arch in the Inner City's tall
white wall.
Once there would have been Guardsmen on duty there, to keep the peace,
but the
Queen's Guards were spread too thin now for that.
Almost
as soon as they were into the New City, Hark turned east into a warren
of
streets that meandered in every direction through the city's hills. He
rode
awkwardly, on a bay mare that had been found for him. Cutpurses seldom
spent
time in the saddle. Some of the streets were quite narrow here, and it
was in
one of those that he finally drew rein, surrounded by stone houses of
two or
three or even four stories. Birgitte raised a hand to halt the column.
The
sudden silence seemed deafening.
"It's
just around that corner there, it is, my Lady, the other side of the
street," Hark said in a near whisper, "but if we go riding out there,
they might hear us or see us. Pardon, my Lady, but if these Aes Sedai
are what
you says they are, I don't want them seeing me." He scrambled down from
his saddle clumsily and looked up her, wringing his hands, his
moonshadowed
face anxious.
Dismounting,
Elayne led Fireheart to the corner and peeked around the corner of a
narrow,
three-story house. The houses along the other street stood dark except
for one,
four substantial stories of stone with the closed gate of a stableyard
beside
it. Not an ornate building, but large enough for a wealthy merchant or
banker.
Bankers and merchants were unlikely to be awake at this hour, however.
"There,"
Hark whispered hoarsely, pointing. He stood far back, so he had to
learn
forward to point. He really did fear being seen. "The one with the
light
on the second floor, it is."
"Best
to find out if anyone else is awake in there." Vandene said. peering
past
Elayne. "Jaem? Don't go inside the house."
Elayne
expected the lean old Warder to sneak across the street, but he just
strolled
out holding his cloak close around him against the early morning chill.
Even
the dangerous grace of a Warder appeared to have deserted him. Vandene
seemed
to sense her surprise.
"Skulking
draws the eye and creates suspicion," she said. "Jaem is just a man
walking, and if it's early to be out in the streets, he isn't sneaking,
so
anyone who sees him will think of some mundane reason for him to be
out."
Reaching
the stableyard gate, Jaem pulled it open and walked through as if he
had a
perfect right. Long minutes passed before he came back out, shutting
the gate
carefully behind him, and strolled back along the street. He rounded
the corner
and the leopard-like grace reappeared in his step.
"All
the windows are dark except that one," he told Vandene quietly. "The
kitchen door is unlatched. So is the back door. That lets onto an
alley.
Trusting, for Darkfriends. Or else dangerous enough they don't worry
about
burglars. There's a big fellow sleeping in the barn, up in the loft.
Big enough
to scare any burglar, but he's so drunk he didn't wake while I was
tying him
up." Vandene raised a questioning eyebrow. "I thought I'd better be
safe. Drunks sometimes wake when you least expect. You wouldn't want
him seeing
you go in and start making noise." She nodded approval.
"It's
time to get ready," Elayne said. Moving back from the corner and
handing
her reins to Birgitte. she tried to embrace the Source. It was like
trying to
catch smoke with her fingers. Frustration and anger welled up, all the
things
you needed to suppress if you were to channel. She tried again, and
failed
again. Falion and Marillin were going to get away. To come this close…
They had to be in that lighted room. She knew it. And they were going
to
escape. Sadness replaced anger, and suddenly saidar flowed into her.
She barely
stifled a sigh of relief. "I'll meld the flows, Sareitha. Vandene, you
meld for Careane."
"I
don't understand why we have to link." the Tairen Brown muttered. but
she
put herself on the edge of embracing the Power. "With two of them and
four
of us, we outnumber them, but linked, it's two and two." A clue?
Perhaps
she wished it to be three and three?
"Two
strong enough to overwhelm them even if they're holding the Power,
Sareitha." Elayne reached through her as if she were an an-greal, and
the
glow of saidar surrounded the other woman as the link was completed. In
truth,
it surrounded both of them, but she could only see the part around
Sareitha-until she wove Spirit around her. Then the glow vanished. She
placed
the same weave on herself and prepared four shields and several other
weaves,
all inverted. She felt almost giddy with excitement, but she did not
intend to
be caught by surprise. Frustration still pulsed along the bond, but for
the
rest, Bir-gitte felt like a drawn arrow. Elayne touched her arm. "We
will
be all right." Birgitte snorted and flung her thick braid back over her
shoulder. "Keep an eye on Master Hark. Birgitte. It would be a shame if
he
had to be hanged because he was tempted to run." Hark squeaked.
She
exchanged glances with Vandene, who said, "We might as well be about
it."
The
four of them walked up Full Moon Street, slowly, as if out for a
stroll, and
slipped into the shadow-shrouded stableyard. Elayne opened the kitchen
door
slowly, but the hinges were well-oiled, emitting not a squeak. The
brick-walled
kitchen was lit only by a tiny fire in the wide stone fireplace where a
kettle
hung steaming, yet that was enough for them to cross the floor without
bumping
into the table or chairs. Someone sighed, and she pressed a warning
finger to
her lips. Vandene frowned at Careane, who looked embarrassed and spread
her
hands.
A
short hall led to stairs at the front of the house. Gathering her
skirts,
Elayne started up, silent on slippered feet. She was careful to keep
Sareitha
where she could see her. Vandene was doing the same with Careane. They
could do
nothing with the Power, but that hardly meant they could do nothing. On
the
second flight of stairs, she began hearing the murmur of voices. Light
spilled
from an open door.
"… don't care what you think." a woman said in that room. "You
leave the thinking to me and do as you're told."
Elayne
moved to the door. It was a sitting room, with gilded stand-lamps and
rich
carpets on the floor and a tall fireplace of blue marble. but she had
eyes only
for the three women in it. Only one, a sharp-faced woman, was seated.
That must
be Shiaine. The other two stood with their backs to the door, heads
bowed like
penitents. The sharp-faced woman's eyes widened when she saw her in the
doorway, but Elayne gave her no time to open her mouth. The two Black
sisters
cried out in alarm as shields went onto them, and flows of Air bound
their arms
to their sides, tightened their skirts around their legs. More flows of
Air
fastened Shiaine to her gilded armchair.
Elayne
drew Sareitha into the room with her and moved to where she could see
all of
their faces. Sareitha tried to step back. She might only have been
trying to
give her the place of prominence, but Elayne caught her sleeve again,
keeping
her in view, too. Vandene and Careane joined them. Marillin's narrow
face held
Aes Sedai calm, but Falion snarled silently.
"What
is the meaning of this?'' Shiaine demanded. "I recognize you. You're
Elayne Trakand. the Daughter-Heir. But that gives you no right to
invade my
home and assault me."
"Falion
Bhoda," Elayne said calmly, "Marillin Gemalphin, Shiaine Avarhin, I
arrest you as Darkfriends." Well, her voice was calm. Inside, she
wanted
to skip with glee. And Birgitte thought this would be dangerous!
"That
is ridiculous." Shiaine said in icy tones. "I walk in the
Light!"
"Not
if you walk with these two," Elayne told her. "To my certain
knowledge they've proven themselves Black Ajah in Tar Valon, Tear and
Tanchico.
You don't hear them denying it. do you? That's because they know I-"
Suddenly
sparks danced all over her from head to toe. She twitched helplessly,
muscles
spasming, saidar slipping from her grasp. She could see Vandene and
Careane and
Sareitha jerking as sparks flickered across them as well. Only a moment
it lasted,
but when the sparks vanished, Elayne felt as if she had been fed
through a
mangle. She had to hold on to Sareitha to stay on her feet, and
Sareitha clung
to her as hard. Vandene and Careane were supporting one another,
swaying, each
with her chin on the other's shoulder. Falion and Marillin wore
startled
expressions, but the light of the Power enveloped them in heartbeats.
Elayne
felt the shield fasten on to her, saw them settle on the other three.
There was
no need for binding. Any of them would have fallen over without
support. She
would have shouted if she could have. If she thought that Birgitte and
the
others could do more than die.
Four
women Elayne recognized entered the room. Asne Zeramene and Temaile
Kinderode.
Chesmal Emry and Eldrith Jhondar. Four Black sisters. She could have
wept.
Sareitha groaned softly.
"Why
did you wait so long?" Asne demanded of Falion and Marillin. The
Saldaean's dark tilted eyes were angry. "I used this so they wouldn't
feel
us embrace saidar. but why did you just stand there?" She waved a
small,
bent black rod, perhaps an inch in diameter, that had a strangely dull
look.
The thing seemed to fascinate her. "A 'gift' from Moghedien. A weapon
from
the Age of Legends. I can kill a man at a hundred paces with this, or
just stun
him if I want to put him to the question."
"I
can kill a man if I can see him." Chesmal said scornfully. Tall and
handsome, she was the image of icy arrogance.
Asne
sniffed. "But my target could be surrounded by a hundred sisters, and
not
one would know what killed him."
"I
suppose it has its uses.'' Chesmal admitted in grudging tones. "Why did
you just stand there?"
"They
had us shielded," Falion said bitterly.
Eldrith's
breath caught, and she put a plump hand to a round cheek. "That's
impossible.
Unless…" Her dark eyes sharpened. "They've discovered a way to
hide the glow, to hide their weaves. Now, that would be most useful."
"You
have my thanks for your timely rescue." Shiaine said, rising, "but do
you have a reason for coming here tonight? Did Moridin send you?"
Asne
channeled a flow of Air that struck Shiaine's cheek with a loud crack,
staggering her. "Keep a civil tongue in your mouth, and perhaps we'll
let
you leave with us. Or we can leave you behind dead." Shiaine's cheek
was
reddened, but her hands remained at her sides. Her face was
expressionless.
"Elayne's
the only one we need." Temaile said. She was pretty in a fox-faced way,
almost a fragile child in appearance despite her ageless face, but her
blue eyes
held an unhealthy light. She touched her lips with the tip of her
tongue.
"I'd enjoy playing with the others, but they'd be a burden we don't
need."
"If
you're going to kill them," Marillin said as though discussing the
price
of bread, "spare Careane. She is one of us."
"A
gift from Adeleas." Vandene murmured, and Careane's eyes went very
wide.
Her mouth opened, but no sound came out. The two women sagged and fell
to the
carpet. Vandene began trying to push herself up, but Careane lay
staring at the
ceiling, the hilt of Vandene's belt knife protruding from beneath her
breastbone.
The
glow surrounded Chesmal, and she touched Vandene with a complex weave
of Fire,
Earth and Water. The white-haired woman collapsed as if her bones had
melted.
The same weave touched Sareitha, and she pulled Elayne down atop her as
she
fell. Sareitha's eyes were already glazing.
"Their
Warders will be coming now," Chesmal said. "A little more killing to
do."
"Run,
Birgitte!" Elayne thought, wishing the bond could carry words. "Run!"
CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO
To Keep
the Bargain
Birgitte
was leaning against the stone wall of the three-story house, thinking
sadly of
Gaidal, when the bundle of emotions and physical sensations in the back
of her
head, her awareness of Elayne, suddenly spasmed. That was the only word
for it.
Whatever it was lasted just a moment, but afterward, the bond was full
of…
limpness. Elayne was conscious, but unsteady. She was unafraid,
however. Still,
Birgitte threw back her cloak and moved to the corner to peer up Full Moon Street.
Elayne could be too brave for her own good. The hardest thing about
being
Elayne's Warder was keeping her from endangering herself beyond need.
Nobody
was indestructible, but the bloody woman thought she bloody well was.
Her sigil
should have been an iron lion rather than a golden lily. That light
shone in
the window, spilling a pale pool into the narrow street, and there was
not a
sound except for a cat yowling somewhere in the night.
"Sareitha
feels… muzzy." Ned Yarman muttered beside her. The tall young
Warder's boyish face was a grim shadowed mask inside the hood of his
cloak.
"She feels weak."
Birgitte
became aware of the other Warders crowding her close, stone-faced and
hard-eyed. That was clear enough even by moonlight. Something had
happened to
all of the Aes Sedai, it seemed. But what? "The Lady Elayne said she'd
shout if she needed us," she told them, as much to reassure herself as
anything else. Even if both Careane and Sarei-tha were Darkfriends,
they would
have been helpless to do anything linked, and apparently whatever had
happened
had happened to them, as well. Burn her, she should have insisted that
she and
the other Warders go along.
"Careane
won't be pleased if we interfere needlessly," Venr Kosaan said quietly.
Blade
slim and dark, with touches of white in his tightly curled black hair
and short
beard, he appeared completely at ease. "I say we wait. She feels
confident, whatever's going on."
"More
so that she did going in," Cieryl Arjuna added, earning him a sharp
glance
from Venr. Still short of his middle years, Cieryl seemed all bones,
though his
shoulders were wide.
Birgitte
nodded. Elayne was confident, too. But then, Elayne would feel
self-assured
walking an unraveling rope stretched over a pit full of sharp stakes. A
dog
began barking in the distance, and the yowling cat went silent, but
other dogs
answered the first in a spreading ripple that faded away as suddenly as
it had
begun.
They
waited, with Birgitte fretting in silence. Suddenly, Venr growled an
oath and
shed his cloak. The next instant, his blade was in his hand and he was
running
up the street followed by Cieryl and Ta-van, cloaks billowing behind,
their
blades bared, too. Before they had gone two steps, Jaem gave a wild
cry.
Unsheathing his sword, he threw his cloak down and raced after the
other three
at a speed that belied his age. Bellowing with rage, Ned ran, too, the
steel in
his fist glittering in the moonlight. Fury stabbed through the bond,
like the
battle fury that took some men. And sadness, too, but still no fear.
Birgitte
heard the soft rasp of swords being unsheathed behind her and spun,
cloak
flaring. "Put those up! They're no use here."
"I
know what the Warders running in means as well as you, my Lady," Yurith
said in courtly accents, obeying smoothly. And with clear reluctance.
Lean and
as tall as most men, the Saldaean denied being nobly born, but whenever
the
conversation came around to what she had done before swearing the oath
as a
Hunter for the Horn, she always gave one of her rare smiles and changed
the
subject. She was skilled with that sword, however. "If the Aes Sedai
are
dying-"
"Elayne
is alive," Birgitte cut in. Alive, and in trouble. "She's our concern,
now, but we'll need a lot more swords to rescue her." And more than
swords. "Somebody collar that man!" Two Guardswomen seized Hark's
coat before he could slip away into the darkness. Apparently he had no
wish to
stay near where Aes Sedai had died. Neither did she. "Gather the… the
extra horses and follow me," she said, swinging into Arrow's saddle.
"And ride like fire!" She suited her words, digging her heels into
the rangy gray gelding's flanks without waiting.
It
was a wild gallop through dark, twisting streets where people were just
beginning to appear. She reined Arrow around the few carts and wagons
out this
early, but men and women had to leap from her path, often shaking fists
and
shouting curses. She only urged the gelding for more speed, her cloak
flapping
behind. Before she reached the Mondel Gate, Elayne was moving. She had
been
uncertain at first, but there could be no mistaking it now. Elayne was
moving
northeast at about walking speed. The bond said she was too wobbly to
walk far,
maybe to walk at all, but a wagon would make the same pace. The sky was
turning
gray. How long before she could gather what was needed? In the Inner
City, the
street spiraled inward, rising past towers glittering in a hundred
colors
toward the golden domes and pale spires of the Royal Palace, atop the
highest
of Caemlyn's hills. As she galloped around the rim of the Queen's
Plaza,
soldiers stared at her. They were being fed from black kettles atop
pushbarrows, cooks ladling some sort of brown stew onto tin plates, and
every
man she could see wore his breastplate and had his helmet hanging from
his
sword hilt. Good. Every moment saved was a moment toward saving Elayne.
Two
lines of Guardswomen were practicing the sword in the Queen's
Stableyard when
she galloped in. but the lath blades stopped rattling when she flung
herself
out of the saddle, let Arrow's reins drop and ran toward the colonnade.
"Hadora. run tell the Windfinders to meet me in the Map Room right
away!" she shouted without slowing. "All of them! Sanetre. you do the
same for Captain Guybon! And have another horse saddled for me!" Arrow
was
played out for today. She was past the columns by that time, but she
did not
look back to see whether they were obeying. They would be.
She
raced through tapestry-hung hallways and up sweeping marble stairs, got
lost
and shouted curses as she retraced her steps at a run. Liveried serving
men and
women gaped as they dodged out of her way. At last she reached the
lion-carved
doors of the Map Room, where she paused only long enough to cell the
two burly
Guardsmen on duty to admit the Windfinders as soon as they appeared,
then went
in. Guybon was alteady there, in his burnished breastplate with the
three
golden knots on his shoulder, and Dyelin delicately holding her blue
silk
skirts up as she moved, the pair of them frowning at the huge mosaic
map, where
well over a dozen red discs marked the city's northern wall. Never
before had
there been so many assaults at once, not even ten, but Birgitte spared
the
discs barely a glance.
"Guybon,
I need every horse and halberd you can muster," she said, unpinning her
cloak and tossing it down on her long writing table. "The crossbowmen
and
archers will have to handle anything that crops up by themselves for a
few
hours. Elayne's been captured by Darkfriend Aes Sedai. and they're
trying to
carry her out of the city." Some of the clerks and messengers began
murmuring, but Mistress Anford silenced them with a sharp order to see
to their
work. Birgitte eyed the colorful map in the floor, measuring distances.
Elayne
seemed to be moving toward the Sunrise Gate and the road to the River
Erinin,
but even if they used one of the smaller gates, they had gone too far
to be
aiming at anything but the eastern wall. "They'll probably have her
through
the gates by the time we're ready to move. We're going to Travel to
just this
side of the ridge east of the city." And take what was going to happen
out
of the streets, away from people's homes. It would be better out in the
open in
any case. In that tangle of streets, with horsemen and halberdmen
jammed
together, there would be too many people to get in the way, too much
chance of
accidents.
Guybon
nodded, already issuing terse orders that brown-clad clerks copied down
hastily
lor him to sign and pass to young messengers in red-and-white who went
running
as soon as the paper was in hand. The boys' faces were frightened.
Birgitte had
no time for her own fear. Elayne felt none, and she was a prisoner.
Sadness,
yes, but no fear.
"We
certainly need to rescue Elayne," Dyelin said calmly, "but she'll
hardly thank you if you give Arymilla Caemlyn by doing it. Not counting
the men
in the towers and holding the gates, almost half the trained soldiers
and
armsmen in the city are on the northern wall. If you strip away the
rest, one
more attack will gain a stretch of the wall. Crossbows and bows alone
won't
stop them. Once they have that, Arymilla's forces will pour into the
city,
enough to overwhelm what you propose to leave. You will have neatly
reversed our
positions, and worsened yours. Arymilla will have Caemlyn. and Elayne
will be
outside without enough armsmen to get back in. Unless these Darkfriends
have
somehow smuggled an army inside Caemlyn, a few hundred men will do as
well as
thousands."
Birgitte
scowled at her. She had never been able to like Dyelin. She did not
know why,
exactly, but Dyelin had just made her bristle at first sight. She was
fairly
certain the other woman felt the same about her. She could never say
"up" without Dyelin saying "down."
"You care about
putting Elayne on the throne, Dyelin. I care about keeping her alive to
mount
that throne. Or not. so long as she's alive. I owe her my life, and I
won't let
hers trickle away in Darkfriend hands." Dyelin sniffed and went back to
studying the red discs as if she could see the soldiers fighting. her
frown
deepening the lines at the corners of her eyes.
Birgitte
clasped her hands behind her back and forced herself to stand still.
She wanted
to pace with impatience. Elayne was still trundling toward the Sunrise
Gate.
"There's something you need to know, Guybon. We'll be facing at least
two
Aes Sedai, likely more, and they may have a weapon, a ter'angreal that
makes
balefire. Have you ever heard of that?"
"Never.
It sounds dangerous, though."
"Oh,
it is. Dangerous enough that it's prohibited for Aes Sedai. In the War
of the
Shadow, even Darkfriends stopped using it." She barked a bitter laugh.
All
she knew of balefire now was what Elayne had told her. It had come from
her in
the first place, yet that only made matters worse. Would all of her
memories
go? She did not think she had lost any recently, but how would she know
if she
had? She could remember bits of the founding of the White Tower, pieces
of what
she and Gaidal had done to help it be founded, but nothing before that.
All of
her earlier memories were yesterday's smoke.
"Well,
at least we'll have Aes Sedai of our own." Guybon said, signing another
order.
"They're
all dead, except for Elayne," she told him flatly. There was no way to
gild
that. Dyelin gasped, her face growing pale. One of the clerks clasped
her hands
to her mouth, and another knocked over his ink jar. The ink fanned
across the
tabletop in a black stream and began dripping onto the floor. Rather
than
reprimanding the man, Mistress Anford steadied herself with a hand on
another
clerk's writing table. "I hope to make up for that," Birgitte went
on, "but I can't promise anything except that we're going to lose men
today. Maybe a lot of men."
Guybon
straightened. His expression was thoughtful, his hazel eyes steady.
"That
will make for an interesting day," he said finally. "But we'll get
the Daughter-Heir back, whatever the cost." A solid man, Charlz Guybon,
and brave. He had demonstrated that often enough on the walls. Too good
looking
for her taste, of course.
Birgitte
realized she had begun pacing back and forth across the mosaic and
stopped. She
knew nothing of being a general, whatever Elayne thought, but she knew
that
showing nerves could infect others with them. Elayne was alive. That
was all
that was important. Alive and moving farther away by the minute. The
left-hand
door opened, and one of the burly Guardsmen announced that Julanya Fote
and
Keraille Surtovni had returned. Guybon hesitated, looking to her, but
when she
said nothing, he told the man to admit them.
They
were very different women, in appearance at least, though each carried
a wooden
walking staff. Julanya was plump and pretty, with touches of white in
her dark
hair, while Keraille was short and slim, with tilted green eyes and
fiery red
curls. Birgitte wondered whether those were their real names. These
Kinswomen
changed names as easily as other women changed stockings. They wore
plain
woolens suitable for country peddlers, which each had been in the past,
and
each was a keen observer, skilled at taking care of herself. They could
talk
their way out of most situations, but their simple belt knives were not
the
only blades they carried and they could surprise a strong man with what
they
could do with those walking staffs. Both offered curtsies. Julanya's
skirts and
cloak were damp and splashed with mud around the hem.
"Ellorien,
Luan and Abelle began breaking camp early this morning, my Lady," she
said. "I only stayed long enough to make sure of their
direction-north-before
coming to report."
"The
same is true with Aemlyn, Arathelle and Pelivar, my Lady," Keraille
added.
"They're coming for Caemlyn."
Birgitte
did not need to examine the large map spread out on the table with its
markers.
Depending on how muddy the roads were, how much rain they had to
contend with,
they could reach the city by that afternoon. "You've done well, both of
you. Go find yourselves hot baths. Do you think they've had a change of
heart?" she asked Dyelin once the two women had left.
"No,"
the woman replied without hesitation, then sighed and shook her head.
"I
fear the most likely thing is that Ellorien has convinced the others to
support
her for the Lion Throne. They may be thinking to defeat Arymilla and
take over
the siege. They have half again her numbers, and double ours." She let
that hang. There was no need to say the rest. Even using Kinswomen to
shift
men, they would be hard pressed to hold the wall against that many.
"First
we get Elayne back, then we can worry about that lot," Birgitte said.
Where were those bloody Windfinders?
No
sooner did she have the thought than they were padding into the room
behind
Chanelle, a riotous rainbow of silks. Except for Re-naile, last in line
in her
linens, yet a red blouse, green trousers and a deep yellow sash made
her bright
enough, though even Rainyn, a round-cheeked young woman with just half
a dozen
golden medallions dangling onto her cheek, made Renaile's honor chain
look
bare. Re-naile's face wore an expression of stoic endurance.
"I
do not appreciate being threatened!" Chanelle said angrily, sniffing
the
golden scent box on its golden chain around her neck. Her dark cheeks
were
flushed. "That Guardswoman said if we did not run, she would kick-!
Never
mind what she said, exactly. It was a threat, and I will not be-!"
"Elayne
has been captured by Darkfriend Aes Sedai," Birgitte cut in. "I need
you to make a gateway for the men who are going to rescue her." A
murmur
rose among the other Windfinders. Chanelle gestured sharply, but only
Renaile
fell silent. The others just lowered their voices to whispers, to her
obvious
displeasure. By the medallions crowding their honor chains, several of
them
matched Chanelle's rank.
"Why
did you summon all of us for one gateway?' she demanded. "I keep the
bargain, you can see. I brought everyone as you ordered. But why do you
need
more than one?"
"Because
you're all going to form a circle and make a gateway big enough to take
thousands of men and horses." That was one reason.
Chanelle
stiffened, and she was not alone. Kurin, her face like a black stone,
practically quivered with outrage, and Rysael, normally a very
dignified woman,
did quiver. Senine. with her weathered face and old marks indicating
she once
had worn more than six earrings, and fatter ones, fingered the jeweled
dagger
thrust behind her green sash.
"Soldiers?"
Chanelle said indignantly. "That is forbidden! Our bargain says we will
take no part in your war. Zaida din Parede Black Wing commanded it so,
and now
that she is Mistress of the Ships, that command carries even greater
weight.
Use the Kinswomen. Use the Aes Sedai."
Birgitte
stepped close to the dark woman, looking her straight in the eyes. The
Kin were
useless for this. None of them had ever used the Power as a weapon.
They might
not even know how. "The other Aes Sedai are dead," she said softly.
Someone behind her moaned, one of the clerks. "What is your bargain
worth
if Elayne is lost? Arymilla certainly won't honor it." Keeping her
voice
steady saying that took effort. It wanted to shake with anger, shake
with fear.
She needed these women, but she could not let them know why or Elayne
would be
lost. "What will Zaida say if you ruin her bargain with Elayne?"
Chanelle's
tattooed hand half-lifted the piercework scent box to her nose again,
then let
it fall among her many jeweled necklaces. From what Birgitte knew of
Zaida din
Parede, she would be more than displeased with anyone who wrecked that
bargain,
and it was beyond doubtful that Chanelle wished to face the woman's
anger, yet
she only looked pensive. "Very well," she said after a moment.
"For transport only, though. It is agreed?" She kissed the fingertips
of her right hand, prepared to seal the bargain.
"You
only need do what you want," Birgitte said, turning away. "Guybon,
it's time. They must have her to the gate by now."
Guybon
buckled on his sword, took up his helmet and steel-backed gauntlets,
and
followed her and Dyelin out of the Map Room trailed by the Windfinders,
with
Chanelle loudly insisting that they would provide a gateway only.
Birgitte
whispered instructions to Guybon before leaving him striding toward the
front
of the palace while she hurried to the Queen's Stableyard where she
found a
hammer-nosed dun gelding wearing her saddle and waiting, the reins held
by a
young groom with her hair in a braid not much different from her own.
She also
found all hundred and twenty-one Guardswomen armored and mounted.
Climbing into
the dun's saddle, she motioned them to follow her. The sun was a golden
ball clear
of the horizon in a sky with only a few high white clouds. At least
they would
not have rain to contend with. too. Even a wagon might have been able
to slip
away in some of the heavy rainstorms Caemlyn had seen lately.
A
thick snake of men ten and twelve abreast spanned the Queen's Plaza,
now,
stretching out of sight in both directions, horsemen in helmets and
breastplates alternating with men in every sort of helmet imaginable
carrying
shouldered halberds, most wearing mail shirts or jerkins sewn with
steel discs
and only rarely a breastplate, each group large or small headed by the
banner
of its House. Or the banner of a mercenary company. The sell-swords
would have
too many watchers to try slacking off today. Minus the crossbowmen and
archers,
there would be close on twelve thousand men in that column, two thirds
of them
mounted. How many would be dead before noon? She pushed that thought
out of her
mind. She needed every one of them to convince the Sea Folk. Any man
who died
today could die as easily on the wall tomorrow. Every man of them had
come to
Caemlyn prepared to die for Elayne.
At
the head of the column were better than a thousand Guardsmen, helmets
and
breastplates gleaming in the sun. steel-tipped lances slanted
precisely, the
first of them waiting behind the banner of Andor. The rearing White
Lion on a
field of scarlet, and Elayne's banner, the Golden Lily on blue, at the
edge of
one of Caemlyn's many parks. It had been a park, anyway, but oaks
hundreds of
years old had been cut down and hauled away along with all the other
trees and
the flowering bushes, their roots dug out to clear a smooth space a
hundred
paces wide. The graveled paths and grassy ground had long since been
trampled
to mud by hooves and boots. Three other parks around the palace had
received
the same treatment, to make places for weaving gateways.
Guybon
and Dyelin were already there, along with all the lords and ladies who
had
answered Elayne's call, from young Perival Mantear to Brannin Marfan
and his
wife, all mounted. Perival wore helmet and breastplate like every other
male
present. Brannin's were plain and dull and slightly dented where the
armorer's
hammer had failed its task, tools of his trade as surely as the
plain-hiked
sword scabbarded at his side. Perival's were as gilded as Conail's and
Branlet's. worked with the silver Anvil of Mantear where theirs were
lacquered
with Northan's Black Eagles and Gilyard's Red Leopards. Pretty armor,
for being
seen in. Birgitte hoped the women had sense enough to keep those boys
out of
any fighting. Looking at some of those women's faces, grim and
determined, she
hoped they had sense enough to stay clear themselves. At least none was
wearing
a sword. The simple truth was, a woman had to be more skilled than a
man to
face him with a sword. Stronger arms made too much difference,
otherwise. Much
better to use a bow.
The
Windfinders were grimacing as they shifted their bare feet uneasily on
ground
still muddy from yesterday's downpour. Wet, they were more than
accustomed to.
but not mud.
"This
man will not tell me where the gateway is to reach," Chanelle said
furiously, pointing to Guybon as Birgitte dismounted. "I want to be
done
so I can wash my feet."
"My
Lady!" a woman's voice called from back down the street. "My Lady
Birgitte!" Reene Harfor came running up the line of Guardsmen, her red
skirts held high, exposing her stockinged legs to the knee. Birgitte
did not
think she had ever seen the woman so much as trot. Mistress Harfor was
one of
those women who always did everything perfectly. Every time they met
she made
Birgitte conscious of every last mistake she herself had ever made. Two
men in
red-and-white livery were running behind her, carrying a litter between
them.
When they came closer, Birgitte saw that it held a lanky, helmetless
Guardsman
with an arrow piercing his right arm and another jutting from his right
thigh.
Blood trickled down both shafts, so he left a thin trail of drops on
the paving
stones. "He insisted on being brought to you or Captain Guybon
immediately,
my Lady," Mistress Harfor said breathlessly, fanning herself with one
hand.
The
young Guardsman struggled to sit up until Birgitte pressed him back
down.
"Three or four companies of mercenaries are attacking the Far Madding
Gate, my Lady," he said, pain wracking his face and tinging his voice.
"From inside the city, I mean. They placed archers to shoot anyone who
tried to wave the signal flags for help, but I managed to get away, and
my
horse lasted just long enough."
Birgitte
growled an oath. Cordwyn. Gomaisen and Bakuvun would be among them, she
was
ready to wager. She should have pressed Elayne to put them out of the
city as
soon as they made their demands. She did not realize she had spoken
aloud until
the wounded Guardsman spoke up.
"No,
my Lady. Leastwise, not Bakuvun. Him and a dozen or so of his men
dropped by to
toss… uh, to pass the time, and the lieutenant figures they're the only
reason we've managed to hold on. If they are still holding. They were
using
battering rams on the tower doors when I looked back. But there's more,
my
Lady. There's men massing in Low Caemlyn outside the gates. Ten
thousand, maybe
twice that. Hard to tell, the way those streets twist."
Birgitte
winced. Ten thousand men would be enough to carry an assault from the
outside
whether or not the mercenaries were held off unless she sent
everything, and
she could not. What in the Light was she to do? Burn her, she could
plan a raid
to rescue someone from a fortress or scout in country held by the enemy
with confidence
that she knew what she was doing, but this was a battle, with the fate
of
Caemlyn and maybe the throne in the balance. Still, she had it to do.
"Mistress Harfor, take this man back to the palace and see his wounds
tended, please." There was no point in asking the Windfinders for
Healing.
They had already made it clear that was taking part in the war, in
their view.
"Dyelin, leave me all of the horse and a thousand halberdmen. You take
the
rest and all of the crossbowmen and archers available. And every man
you can
scrape together who can hold a sword. If the gate is still holding when
the
Kinswomen get you there, make sure it continues to hold. If it's
fallen, take
it back. And hold that bloody wall till I can get there."
"Very
well," Dyelin said as if those were the easiest orders in the world to
carry out. "Conail. Catalyn. Branlet, Perival, you come with me. Your
foot
will fight better with you there." Conail looked disappointed, no doubt
seeing himself riding in a gallant charge, but he gathered his reins
and
whispered something that made the two younger boys chuckle.
"So
will my horse fight better." Catalyn protested. "I want to help
rescue Elayne."
"You
came to help her secure the throne." Dyelin said sharply, "and you'll
go where you're needed to see to that, or you and I will have another
talk
later." Whatever that meant, Catalyn's plump face reddened, but she
sullenly followed Dyelin and the others when they rode away.
Guybon
looked at Birgitte, yet he said nothing, though likely he was wondering
why she
was not sending more. He would not challenge her publicly. The problem
was. she
did not know how many Black sisters would be with Elayne. She needed
every
Windhnder, needed them to believe they were all necessary. Had there
been time,
she would have stripped the sentries from the outer towers, stripped
even the
gates.
"Make
the gateway," she told Chanelle. "To just this side of the ridge east
of the city, right on top of the Erinin Road and facing away from the
city.''
The
Windfinders gathered in a circle, doing whatever they had to do to link
and
taking their bloody time about it. Suddenly the vertical silver-blue
slash of a
gateway appeared, widening into an opening, five paces tall and
covering the
whole width of the cleared ground, that showed a wide road of
hard-packed clay
climbing the gentle slope of the ten-span high ridge on its way to the
River
Erinin. Arymilla had camps beyond that ridge. Given the news, they
might be
empty-with luck, they were- but she could not concern herself with them
now in
any event.
"Forward
and deploy as ordered!" Guybon shouted, and spurred his tall bay
through
followed by the gathered nobles and the Guardsmen ten abreast. The
Guardsmen
began curling off to the left and out of sight while the nobles took a
position
a little up the ridge. Some began peering toward the city through
looking
glasses. Guybon dismounted and ran, crouching, to peer over the crest
through
his. Birgitte could almost feel the impatience of the Guardswomen
waiting
behind her.
"You
did not need a gateway this large," Chanelle said, frowning at the
column
of horsemen flowing into the gateway. "Why-?"
"Come
with me." Birgitte said, taking the Windfinder by her arm. "I want to
show you something." Pulling the dun along by his reins, she began
drawing
the woman toward the gateway. "You can come back once you've seen
it." If she knew the least thing about Chanelle, she was the one
guiding
the circle. For the rest, she was counting on human nature. She did not
look
back, yet she nearly sighed with relief when she heard the other
Windfinders
murmuring among themselves behind her. Following.
Whatever
Guybon had seen, it was good news, because he straightened up before
running
back down to his horse. Arymilla must have stripped her camps to the
bone. Make
it twenty thousand at the Far Madding Gate, then, if not more. The
Light send
it was holding. The Light send everywhere was holding. But Elayne
first. First
and above all else.
When
she reached Guybon. who was back on his bay, the Guardswomen arrayed
themselves
in three lines behind Caseille off to one side. The whole hundred-pace
width of
the gateway was filled with men and horses now. trotting as they
hurried left
and right to join the others already forming in three ranks that grew
to either
side of the road. Good. There would be no easy way for the Windfinders
to duck
back through for a little while. A wagon with an arched canvas cover
and a
four-horse team, surrounded by a small mounted party, was halted in the
road
just beyond the last buildings of Low Caemlyn. perhaps a mile distant.
Beyond
it, people bustled in the open brick markets that lined the road, going
about
their lives as best they could, but they might as well not have
existed. Elayne
was in that wagon. Birgitte raised her hand without taking her eyes
from the
vehicle, and Guybon put his brass-mounted looking glass in her palm.
Wagon and
riders leaped closer when she raised the tube to her eye.
"What
did you want me to see?" Chanelle demanded.
"In
a moment," Birgitte replied. There were four men, three of them
mounted,
but more important were the seven women on horseback. It was a good
looking
glass, but not good enough for her to make out an ageless face at that
distance. Still, she had to assume all seven were Aes Sedai. Eight
against
seven might have seemed almost even odds, but not when the eight were
linked.
Not if she could make the eight take part.
What
were the Darkfriends thinking, seeing thousands of soldiers and armsmen
appear from
behind what would seem to them a heat haze hanging in the air? She
lowered the
glass. Noblemen were beginning to ride down as their armsmen came out
and went
to join the lines.
However
surprised the Darkfriends were, they did not dither long. Lightning
began
flashing down out of a clear sky, silver-blue bolts that struck the
ground with
thunderous crashes and threw men and horses like splashed mud. Horses
reared
and plunged and screamed, but men fought to control their mounts, to
hold their
places. No one ran. The booming thunder that accompanied those blasts
struck
Birgitte like blows, staggering her. She could feel her hair stirring,
trying
to rise out of her braid. The air smelled… sharp. It seemed to tingle.
Again lightning lashed the ranks. In Low Caemlyn, people were running.
Most
were running away, but some fools actually ran to where they could have
a
better view. The ends of narrow streets opening onto the countryside
began
filling with spectators.
"If
we're going to face that, we might as well be moving and make it harder
for
them," Guybon said, gathering his reins. "With your permission, my
Lady?"
"We'll
lose fewer if you're moving." Birgitte agreed, and he spurred down the
ridge.
Caseille
halted her horse in front of Birgitte and saluted, an arm across her
chest. Her
narrow face was grim behind the face-bars of her lacquered helmet.
"Permission for the Bodyguard to join the line, my Lady?" You could
hear the capital. They were not just any bodyguard, they were the
Daughter-Heir's
Bodyguard and would be the Queen's Bodyguard.
"Granted,"
Birgitte said. If anyone had a right, these women did.
The
Arafellin whirled her horse and galloped down the slope followed by the
rest of
the Bodyguard to take their place in those lightning-torn ranks. A
company of
mercenaries, perhaps two hundred men in black-painted helmets and
breastplates,
riding behind a red banner bearing a running black wolf, halted when
they saw
what they were riding into, but men behind the banners of half a dozen
Houses
pushed past them, and they had no choice but to go on. More noblemen
rode down
to lead their men, Brannin and Kelwin, Laerid and Barel. others. None
hesitated
once he saw his own banner appear. Sergase was not the only woman to
move her
horse a few paces as if she, too, meant to join with her armsmen when
her
banner came out of the gateway.
"At
a walk!" Guybon shouted, to be heard over the explosions. All along the
line, other voices echoed him. "Advance!" Wheeling his bay, he rode
slowly toward the Darkfriend Aes Sedai while lightning boomed and
crashed and
men and horses flew in fountains of earth.
"What
did you want me to see?" Chanelle demanded again. "I want to be away
from this place." Small danger of that for the moment. Men were still
coming out of the gateway, galloping or running to catch up. Fireballs
fell
among the ranks, too. now. adding their own eruptions of dirt, arms,
legs. A
horse's head spun lazily into the air.
"This,"
Birgitte said, gesturing to the scene in front of them. Guy-bon had
begun to
trot, pulling the others with him. the three ranks holding steady in
their
advance, others coming as hard as they could to join them. Abruptly a
leg-thick
bar of what appear to be liquid white fire shot out from one of the
women
beside the wagon. It quite literally carved a gap fifteen paces wide in
the
lines. For a heartbeat, shimmering flecks floated in the air, the
shapes of men
and horses struck, and then were consumed. The bar suddenly jerked up
into the
air, higher and higher, then winked out leaving dim purple lines across
Birgittes vision. Balefire, burning men out of the Pattern so that they
were
dead before it struck them. She swung the looking glass up to her eye
long
enough to spot the woman holding a slim black rod that appeared to be
perhaps a
pace long.
Guybon
began to charge. It was too soon, but his only hope was to close while
he still
had men alive. His only hope but one. Over the thunderous explosions of
fireballs and lightning rose a ragged cry of. "Elayne and Andor!"
Ragged, but full-throated. The banners were all streaming. A brave
sight, if
you could ignore how many were falling. A horse and rider struck
squarely by a
fireball simply disintegrated, men and horses all around them going
down as
well. Some managed to rise again. A riderless horse stood on three
legs, tried
to run and fell over thrashing.
"This?"
Chanelle said incredulously. "I have no desire to watch men die."
Another bar of balefire sliced a breach of nearly twenty paces in the
charging
ranks before knifing down into the ground, cutting a trench halfway
back to the
wagon before it vanished. There were a good many dead, though not so
many as it
seemed there should be. Birgitte had seen the same in battles during
the
Trolloc Wars where the Power had been used. For every man who lay
still, two or
three were staggering to their feet or trying to stem a flow of blood.
For
every horse stiff-legged in death, two more stood on wobbly legs. The
hail of
fire and lightning continued unabated.
"Then
stop it." Birgitte said. "If they kill all the soldiers, or just
enough to make the rest break, then Elayne is lost." Not forever. Burn
her, she would track her for the rest of her life to see her free, but
the
Light only knew what they might do to her in that time. "Zaida's
bargain
is lost. You will have lost it."
The
morning was not warm, yet sweat beaded on Chanelle's forehead.
Fireballs and
lightning erupted among the riders following Guy-bon. The woman holding
the rod
raised her arm again. Even without using the looking glass, Birgitte
was sure
it was pointed straight at Guybon. He had to see it. but he never
swerved a
hair.
Suddenly
another bolt of lightning slashed down. And struck the woman holding
the rod. She
flew in one direction, her mount in another. One of the wagon team
sagged to
the ground while the others danced and reared. They would have run
except for
their dead trace-mate. The other horses around the wagon were rearing
and
plunging. too. The rain of fire and lightning ceased as the Aes Sedai
fought to
control their horses, to maintain their saddles. Rather than trying to
calm his
team, the man on the driver's seat leaped down and drew his sword as he
began
to run toward the charging horsemen. The onlookers in Low Caemlyn were
running
again, too, this time away.
"Take
the others alive!" Birgitte snapped. She did not much care whether they
lived-they would die soon enough for being Dark-friends and
murderers-but
Elayne was in that bloody wagon!
Chanelle
nodded stiffly, and around the wagon, riders began toppling from their
fractious mounts to lie struggling on the ground as if bound hand and
foot.
Which they were, of course. The running man fell on his face and lay
writhing.
"I shielded the women, too,' Chanelle said. Even holding the Power,
they
would have been no match for a circle of eight.
Guybon
raised his hand, slowing the charge to a walk. It was remarkable how
short a
time it all had taken. He was less than halfway to the wagon. Men
mounted and
afoot were still pouring out of the gateway. Swinging into the dun's
saddle,
Birgitte galloped toward Elayne. Bloody woman, she thought. The bond
had never
once carried any hint of fear.
CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE
Nine Out of Ten
The
Darkfriends had taken no chances with Elayne. Aside from shielding her,
Temaile
had taken seemingly malicious pleasure in tying her in a tight knot
with her
head between her knees. Her muscles already ached from the cramped
position.
The gag, a dirty piece of rag with a vile, oily taste, tied so tightly
that it
dug into the corners of her mouth, had been meant to keep her from
shouting for
help at the gates. Not that she would have: all that would have done
was
sentence the men guarding the gates to death. She could feel the six
Black sisters
holding saidar until they were through the gate. But the blindfold had
been an
unnecessary touch. She thought they wanted to add to her sense of
helplessness,
yet she refused to feel helpless. After all, she was perfectly safe
until her
babies were born, and so were her babies. Min had said so.
She
knew she was in a wagon or cart by the sound of harness and the feel of
rough
boards beneath her. They had not bothered to pad the floorboards with a
blanket. A wagon, she thought. There seemed to be more than one horse
pulling
it. The wagon box smelled of old hay so strongly that she wanted to
sneeze. Her
situation seemed hopeless, but Birgitte would not fail her.
She
felt Birgitte leap from somewhere miles behind her to perhaps a mile
ahead, and
she wanted to laugh. The bond said Birgitte was aimed at her target,
and
Birgitte Silverbow never missed. When the channeling started on both
sides of
the wagon, the desire to laugh faded. Determination held rock-steady in
the
bond, but there was something else as well, now, a strong distaste and
a rising… not anger, but close. Men would be dying out there. Instead
of laughing,
Elayne wanted to weep for them. They deserved someone to weep for them,
and
they were dying for her. As Vandene and Sareitha had died. Sadness for
them
welled up in her again. No guilt, though. Only by letting Falion and
Marillin
walk free could they have been spared, and neither would have
countenanced
that. There had been no way to anticipate the arrival of the others, or
that
strange weapon Asne had.
A
thunderous crash came close at hand, and her conveyance was jolted so
violently
that she bounced on the floorboards. Her knees and shins were going to
be
bruised from that. She sneezed in the dust that had risen with her,
sneezed
again. She could feel individual hairs lifting where they were not held
down by
the gag and blindfold. The air smelled peculiar. A lightning strike, it
appeared. She hoped Birgitte had managed to involve the Windfinders,
unlikely
as that seemed. The time would come when the Kin would have to use the
Power as
a weapon-no one could stand aside from Tarmon Gai'don-but let them
preserve
their innocence a little longer. Moments later, the shield on her
vanished.
Unable
to see, she could not channel to any real purpose, but she could sense
weaves
near her, some of Spirit, some of Air. Without seeing the weaves, she
was
unable to know what they were, yet she could make a reasonable guess.
Her
captors were themselves captives now. shielded and bound. And all she
could do
was wait impatiently. Birgitte was coming closer rapidly, yet now she
felt
anxious to have that bloody web of ropes off her.
The
wagon box creaked as someone heaved herself in. Birgitte. The bond
carried a
flash of joy. In moments, the ropes fell away from her and Birgitte's
hands
went to the knot of the gag. Moving a little stiffly, Elayne untied the
blindfold herself. Light, she was going to ache like fury until she
could ask
for Healing. That reminded her that she would have to ask the
Windfinders, and
the sadness rose all over again for Vandene and Sareitha.
Once
she could spit out the gag. she wanted to ask for water to wash away
the oily
taste, but instead, she said, "What kept you?" Her laughter at the
other woman's sudden consternation was cut short by another sneeze.
"Let's
get out of here, Birgitte. The Kin?"
"Windfinders,"
Birgitte answered, holding open the canvas flap at the back of the
wagon.
"Chanelle decided she'd rather not report losing her bargain to
Zaida."
Elayne
sniffed in disdain, a mistake. Sneezing repeatedly, she climbed down
from the
wagon as quickly as she could manage. Her legs were as stiff as her
arms. Burn
her, but she wanted a hot bath. And a hairbrush. Birgitte's
white-collared red
coat looked somewhat rumpled, but Elayne suspected she made her warder
appear
fresh from the dressing room.
When
her feet hit the ground, mounted Guardsmen in a thick ring around the
wagon
raised a loud cheer, shaking their lances in the air. Guardswomen
whooped, too.
apparently almost every last one of them. Two of the men bore Andor's
White
Lion and her Golden Lily. That brought a smile. The Queen's Guards were
sworn
to defend Andor, the Queen and the Daughter-Heir, yet the decision to
carry her
personal banner had to have been Charlz Guybon's. Sitting a tall bay
with his
helmet resting on the saddlebow, he bowed to her, a broad smile on his
lips.
The man was a pleasure to look at. Perhaps he would do for a third
Warder.
Beyond the Guards rose House banners and banners of mercenary
companies, banner
after banner. Light, how many men had Birgitte brought? That could be
answered
later, though. First Elayne wanted to see her prisoners.
Asne
lay spreadeagled on the road, her empty eyes staring at the sky; the
shield on
her was unneeded. The others lay as still, bound with flows of Air that
held
their arms to their sides and snugged their divided skirts against
their legs.
A much more comfortable position than she had been in. Most seemed
remarkably
composed considering their situation, though Temaile scowled at her and
Falion
appeared about to sick up. Shiaine's mud-smeared face would have done
credit to
any Aes Sedai. The three men bound with Air were anything but composed.
They
writhed and struggled, glaring at the riders surrounding them as if
they wanted
nothing more than to attack them all. That was enough to identify them
as
Asne's Warders, though not necessarily as Darkfriends. Whether they
were or
not, they would still have to be imprisoned, to protect others from the
death-rage
that Asne's death had filled them with. They would do anything to kill
whomever
they held responsible.
"How
did they find us?" Chesmal demanded. If she had not been lying in the
road
with a dirty face, no one would have thought her a prisoner.
"My
Warder," Elayne said, smiling at Birgitte. "One of them."
"A
woman Warder?" Chesmal said disdainfully.
Marillin
shook in her bonds with silent laughter for a moment. "I'd heard
that,''
she said when the shaking ceased, "but it seemed too incredible to be
true."
"You
heard this, and you never mentioned it?" Temaile said, twisting around
to
transfer her scowl to Marillin. "You great fool!"
"You
forget yourself," Marillin said sharply, and the next instant they were
arguing about whether Temaile should defer to her! In truth. Temaile
should-Elayne could sense their relative strengths-yet it hardly seemed
a topic
they would argue over now!
"Somebody
gag these women." Elayne ordered. Caseille dismounted. handing her
reins
to another Guardswoman. and strode over to begin cutting a strip from
Temaile's
skirts with her dagger. "Load them into the wagon and cut away that
dead
horse. I want to get back inside the walls before Arymilla's people
beyond the
ridge feel tempted." The last thing she needed now was a pitched
battle.
Whatever the outcome, Arymilla could afford to lose more men than she.
"Where are the Windfinders, Birgitte?"
"Still
on the ridge. I think they believe they can deny taking part if they
don't get
too near the carnage. But you don't have to worry about being attacked
here.
The camps beyond the ridge are empty." Caseille hoisted Temaile over
her
shoulder and staggered over to heave her into the wagon like a sack of
grain.
Guardswomen were picking up the other women, too. They wisely left the
struggling
Warders to the Guardsmen. It required two to handle each of them. A
pair of
tall Guardsmen were unfastening the dead horse's harness.
"All
I saw were camp followers, grooms and the like," Charlz put in.
"I
think all of her camps may be empty," Birgitte went on. "She sent
heavy assaults against the northern wall this morning to draw as many
of our
men as possible, and she has twenty thousand or more in Low Caemlyn
below the
Far Madding Gate. Some of the mercenaries changed colors and are
attacking it
from inside, but I sent Dyelin with everything I could spare. As soon
as you're
safe inside the walls, I'll take the rest to help her. To add to the
good news.
Luan and the rest of that lot are riding north. They could be here this
afternoon."
Elayne's
breath caught. Luan and the rest would have be dealt with when they
appeared,
but the other news… ! "Do you remember what Mistress Harfor reported,
Birgitte? Arymilla and the others all intend to be with the first party
to ride
into Caemlyn. They must be outside the Far Madding Gate, too. How many
men do
you have here?"
"What's
the butcher's bill, Guybon?" Birgitte asked, eyeing Elayne warily. The
bond carried wariness, too. Great wariness.
"I
don't have a full tally yet, my Lady. Some of the bodies…" Charlz
grimaced. "I'd say as many as five or six hundred dead, though, perhaps
a
few more. Twice as many wounded one way and another. As nasty a few
minutes as
I've ever seen."
"Call
it ten thousand, Elayne," Birgitte said, thick braid swaying as she
shook
her head. She tucked her thumbs behind her belt, and determination
filled the
bond. "Arymilla has to have at least twice that at the Far Madding
Gate,
maybe three times if she's really stripped her camps. If you're
thinking what I
think you're thinking… I told Dyelin to retake the gate if it had
fallen,
but it's more likely she's fighting Arymilla inside the city. If, by
some
miracle, the gate is holding, you're talking better than two to one
odds
against us."
"If
they're through the gate," Elayne said stubbornly, "it's unlikely
they closed it behind them. We'll take them in the rear." It was not
all
stubbornness. Not entirely. She had not trained with weapons, but she
had
received all of the other lessons Gawyn had gotten from Gareth Bryne. A
queen
had to understand the battle plans her generals gave her rather than
simply
accept them blindly. "If the gate is holding, we'll have them trapped
between us and the wall. Numbers won't count so much in Low Caemlyn.
Arymilla
won't be able to line up any more men across a street than we can. We
are going
to do it. Birgitte. Now somebody find me a horse."
For
a moment, she thought the other woman was going to refuse, which
ratcheted up
her stubbornness, but Birgitte exhaled heavily. "Tzigan, catch up that
tall gray mare for Lady Elayne."
It
seemed that everyone around them except the Darkfriends sighed. They
must have
thought they were going to see a display of Elayne Trakand's fabled
temper. Knowing
that almost sparked one. Burn her bouncing moods!
Stepping
closer. Birgitte lowered her voice. "But you'll ride surrounded by your
bodyguard. This isn't some fool story with a queen carrying her banner
into
battle to lead her troops. I know one of your ancestors did that, but
you're
not her, and you don't have a broken army to rally.''
"Why,
that was exactly my plan," Elayne said sweetly. "How ever did you
guess?"
Birgitte
snorted with laughter and muttered "Bloody woman" not quite softly
enough to escape detection. Affection flowed in the bond, though.
It
was not so simple, of course. Men had to be told off to help the
wounded. Some
could walk, but many could not. Too many had tourniquets around the
bloody
stump of an arm or a leg. Charlz and the nobles gathered around Elayne
and
Birgitte to hear the plan of attack, which was simple of necessity, but
then
Chanelle refused to change the gateway until Elayne agreed that this
time they
need provide transport only and sealed the agreement; with them both
kissing
their fingertips and pressing them to the other's lips. Only then did
the
gateway dwindle to a vertical silvery slash and widen again into a
hundred-pace-wide view of Caemlyn from the south.
There
were no people in the brick markets lining the wide road that ran north
from
the gateway to the Far Madding Gate, but a great mass of men, mounted
and
aroot. crowded the road out of bowshot from the walls. The first of
them was
only a few hundred paces from the gateway. It appeared that they
spilled into
the side streets, too. The mounted men were to the front with a thicket
of
banners, but cavalry or infantry, they were all looking toward the
gates of
Caemlyn itself. The closed gates. Elayne could have shouted for joy.
She
rode through first, but Birgitte was taking no chances. Her bodyguard
gathered
around her. herding her off to one side. Birgitte was right by her
side, but
somehow they did not seem to be herding her. Fortunately, no one tried
to
object to her pushing the gray forward until only a single line of
Guardswomen
was between her and the road. That line might as well have been a stone
wall.
The gray was indeed tall, however, so she could see without standing in
the
stirrups. She should have lengthened those. They were just a little
short for her.
That made this Chesmal's horse, since she was the only one who came
close to
her own height. A horse could not be tainted by its rider-just because
Chesmal
was Black Ajah did not make the horse evil-but she felt uncomfortable
on the
animal for more than short stirrups. The gray would be sold, the gray
and all
the other horses the Darkfriends had been riding, and the money
distributed to
the poor.
Cavalry
and foot came out of the gateway behind Charlz, enough to fill it from
side to
side. Followed by the White Lion and the Golden Lily, he started up the
road at
a trot with five hundred Guardsmen, spread out to cover the width of
the road.
Other parties of similar size split off and vanished into the streets
of Low
Caemlyn. When the last men exited the gateway, it dwindled and
vanished. Now,
there was no quick escape if anything went wrong. Now, they had to win,
or
Arymilla would as good as have the throne whether or not she had
Caemlyn.
"We
need Mat Cauthon's bloody luck today," Birgitte muttered.
"You
said something like that before." Elayne said. "What do you
mean?"
Birgitte
gave her a peculiar look. The bond carried… amusement! "Have you ever
seen him dicing?"
"I
hardly spend much time in places where there's dicing, Birgitte."
"Let's
just say he's luckier than any other man I've ever met."
Shaking
her head, Elayne put Mat Cauthon out of her mind. Charlz's men were
shutting
off her view as they rode forward. Not charging yet, trying to make no
more
noise than absolutely necessary. With a little luck, her men would have
Arymilla's surrounded before they knew what was happening. And then
they would
hit Arymilla from every side. Mat was the luckiest man Birgitte had
ever met?
In that case, he must be very lucky indeed.
Suddenly
Charlz's Guardsmen were moving faster, their steel-tipped lances
swinging down.
Someone must have looked back. Shouts rose, cries of alarm and one
thunderous
shout she heard repeated from many directions. "Elayne and Andor!"
There
were other cries, as well. "The Moons!" and "The Fox!"
"The Triple Keys!' and "The Hammer!" and "The Black
Banner!" Others, for lesser Houses. But from her side came only the
one,
repeated again and again. "Elayne and Andor!"
Suddenly
she was shaking, half laughing, half weeping. The Light send she was
not
consigning those men to their deaths for nothing.
The
cries faded, largely replaced by the clash of steel on steel, by shouts
and
screams as men killed or died. Abruptly she realized the gates were
swinging
out. And she could not see! Kicking her feet free of the stirrups, she
clambered up to stand on the high-cantled saddle. The gray shifted
nervously,
unaccustomed to being a stepstool. but not enough to disturb her
balance.
Birgitte muttered a particularly pungent oath, but the next moment she
was
standing on her saddle, too. Hundreds of crossbowmen and archers were
pouring
out of the Far Madding Gate, but were they her men, or the renegade
mercenaries?
For
answer, archers began firing at Arymilia's massed cavalry as fast as
they could
nock and draw. The first crossbows went up and loosed a volley.
Immediately
those men began working their cranks to rewind their crossbows, but
others
rushed past them to loose a second flight of bolts that cut down men
and horses
like scythes reaping barley. More archers spilled out of the gate,
firing as
fast as they could. A third rank of crossbowmen ran forward to fire, a
fourth,
a fifth, and then men wielding halberds were pushing past the
crossbowmen still
running out of the gate. A halberd was a fearsome weapon, combining
spear-point
and axe blade with a hook for pulling men out of the saddle. Horsemen
with no
room to charge their lances, their swords out-reached by the halberd's
long
haft, began falling. Men in red coats and burnished breastplates were
galloping
out of the gate now, Guardsmen swinging to left and right to find
another way
to get at Arymilla's ranks. The flow of them went on and on, unceasing.
How in
the Light could Dyelin have so many of the Guards? Unless… Burn the
woman, she must have scooped up the half-trained men! Well,
half-trained or
not. they would be anointed in blood today.
Suddenly
three figures in gilded helmets and breastplates rode through the
gates, swords
in hand. Two of them were very small. The shouts that rose when they
appeared
were thin with distance, but still audible over the din of battle. "The
Black Eagles!" and "The Anvil!" and "The Red
Leopards!" Two mounted women appeared in the gate, struggling until the
taller managed to pull the other's horse back out of sight.
"Blood
and bloody ashes!" Elayne snapped. "Conail's old enough, I suppose,
but Branlet and Perival are boys! Somebody should have kept them out of
that!"
"Dyelin
held them back long enough," Birgitte said calmly. The bond carried
bone-deep calm. "Longer than I thought she could hold Conail. And she
did
manage to keep Catalyn out of it. Anyway, the boys have a few hundred
men
between them and the forefront, and I don't see anyone trying to make
room for
them to squeeze forward." It was true. The three were waving their
swords
impotently at least fifty paces from where men were dying. But then,
fifty
paces was a short range for bow or crossbow.
Men
began appearing on the rooftops, first dozens then hundreds, archers
and
crossbowmen climbing over the roof peaks, working their way across the
slates
like spiders until they could shoot down into the packed mass below.
One
slipped and fell, his body lying atop the men in the street and jerking
as it
was stabbed repeatedly. Another suddenly reared up, a shaft sticking
out of his
side, and toppled from his perch. He also lay atop the men in the
street,
twitching as he was stabbed again and again.
"They're
jammed together too tightly." Birgitte said excitedly. "They can't
raise a bow much less draw one. I'll wager the dead don't even have
room to
fall down. It won't be long, now."
But
the slaughter continued for a good half-hour before the first shouts of
"Quarter!" rose. Men began hanging their helmets on sword hilts and
raising them overhead, risking death in the hope of life. Footmen
stripped off
helmets and held their hands up empty. Horsemen flung down lances,
helmets,
swords, and raised their hands. It spread like a fever, the cry
bellowing from
thousands of throats. "Quarter!"
Elayne
sat down on her saddle properly. It was done. Now to learn how well it
had been
done.
The
fighting did not stop immediately, of course. Some tried to fight on.
but they
fought alone and died or were pulled down by men around them who were
no longer
ready to die. At last, however, even the most diehard began shedding
weapons
and armor, and if not every voice cried for quarter, the roar was still
thunderous. Weaponless men shorn of helmets and breastplates and any
other
armor they might have worn began staggering through the line of
Guardsmen,
hands above their heads. Halberdmen herded them like sheep. They had
something
of the stunned look of sheep in a slaughter yard. The same thing must
have been
being repeated on dozens of Low Caemlyn's narrow streets, and at the
gates,
because the only shouts she heard were for quarter, and those were
beginning to
dwindle as men realized it was being granted.
The
sun lacked no more than an hour of its noonday peak by the time the
nobles were
all separated out. The lesser were escorted inside the city, where they
would
be held for ransom. To be paid once the throne was secure. The first of
the
greater nobles to be brought to her, escorted by Charlz and a dozen
Guardsmen,
were Arymilla, Naean and Elenia. Charlz had a bloody gash down his left
sleeve,
and a dent in his shining breastplate that must have been made by a
hammer
blow, but his features were composed behind the face-bars of his
helmet. She
heaved a huge sigh of relief to see the three women. Among the dead or
among
the captives, the others would be found. She had decapitated her
opposition. At
least until Luan and the others arrived. The Guardswomen in front of
her at
last moved aside so she could confront her prisoners.
The
three were garbed as if they had intended to attend Arymilla's
coronation that
very day. Her red silk dress was sewn with seed pearls on the bosom and
embroidered with rearing white lions marching up the sleeves. Swaying
in her
saddle, she had the same stunned look in her brown eyes that her
soldiers had.
Naean, slim and straight-backed in blue with the silver Triple Keys of
Arawn
climbing her sleeves and silver scrollwork across her bosom, her
gleaming black
hair caught in a silver net set with sapphires, seemed subdued rather
than
numb. She even managed a sneer, though it was weak. Honey-haired
Elenia, in
green elaborately embroidered with gold, shared her glares between
Arymilla and
Elayne. The bond carried equal measures of triumph and disgust.
Birgitte's
dislike of these women was as personal as Elayne's own.
"You
will be my guests in the palace for the time being," Elayne told them.
"I hope your coffers are deep. Your ransoms will pay for this war
you've
caused." That was malicious of her, but she felt spiteful all of a
sudden.
Their coffers were not deep at all. They had borrowed far more than
they could
repay in order to hire mercenaries. And bribe mercenaries. They faced
ruin
without any ransom. With, they faced devastation.
"You
cannot believe it ends this way." Arymilla said hoarsely. She sounded
as
if she were trying to convince herself. "Jarid is still in the field
with
a considerable force. Jarid and others. Tell her, Elenia."
"Jarid
will try to preserve what he can of Sarand from this disaster you've
forced us
into," Elenia snarled. They began shouting at one another, but Elayne
ignored them. She wondered how they would enjoy sharing a bed with
Naean.
Next
to appear under escort was Lir Baryn, and moments later Karind Anshar.
As
slender as a blade, and as strong, Lir wore a thoughtful expression
rather than
defiant or sullen. His green coat. embroidered with the silver Winged
Hammer of
House Baryn on the high collar, bore the marks of the breastplate he
was no
longer wearing. and his dark hair was matted with sweat. More glistened
on his
face. He had not gotten so sweaty watching other men fight. Karind was
garbed
as grandly as the other women, in shimmering blue silk heavy with
silver braid
and pearls in her gray-streaked hair. Her square face looked resigned,
especially after Elayne told them about their ransoms. Neither had
borrowed as
heavily as the other three so far as she knew, but that ransom would
still cut
deep.
Then
two Guardsmen appeared with a woman a little older than Elayne, in
simple blue,
a woman she thought she recognized. A single enameled brooch, a red
star and
silver sword on glittering black, appeared to be her only jewelry. But
why was
Sylvase Caeren being brought to her? A pretty woman with alert blue
eyes that
held steady on Elayne's face, she was Lord Nasin's heir, not the High
Seat of
Caeren.
"Caeren
stands for Trakand," Sylvase said shockingly as soon as she reined in.
The
bond echoed Elayne's startlement. Arymilla gaped at Sylvase as if she
were mad.
"My grandfather suffered a seizure, Arymilla," the young woman said
calmly, "and my cousins fell over themselves affirming me as High Seat.
I
will publish it, Elayne, if you wish."
"That
might be best." Elayne said slowly. Publication would make her support
irrevocable. This would not be the first time a House had switched
sides, even
without the death of a High Seat, but best to be certain. "Trakand
welcomes Caeren warmly, Sylvase." Best not to be too distant, either.
She
knew little of Sylvase Caeren.
Sylvase
nodded, accepting. So she had at least a degree of intelligence. She
knew she
would not be fully trusted until she demonstrated her loyalty by
sending out
the proclamations of support. "If you trust me a little, may I have
custody of Arymilla, Naean and Elenia? In the Royal Palace, of course,
or wherever
you choose to house me. I believe my new secretary. Master Lounalt, may
be able
to convince them to throw their support to you."
For
some reason, Naean gave a loud cry and would have fallen from her
saddle if a
Guardsman had not grabbed her arm to support her. Arymilla and Elenia
both
appeared ready to sick up.
"I
think not," Elayne said. No proposed conversation with a secretary
produced those reactions. It seemed Sylvase had a hard core to her.
"Naean
and Elenia have published their support of Arymilla. They'll hardly
destroy
themselves by recanting." That truly would destroy them. Smaller Houses
sworn to them would begin falling away until their own House dwindled
in
importance. They themselves might not survive as High Seats much beyond
announcing that they now stood for Trakand. And as for Arymilla… Elayne
would not allow Arymilla to change her tune. She would refuse the
woman's
support if it were offered!
Something
grim entered Sylvase's gaze as she glanced at the three women. "They
might,
with the proper persuasion." Oh, yes; a very hard core. "But as you
wish, Elayne. Be very careful of them, though. Treachery is in their
blood and
bones."
"Baryn
stands for Trakand," Lir announced suddenly. "I, too, will publish
it. Elayne."
"Anshar
stands for Trakand." Karind said in firm tones. "I will send the
proclamations out today."
"Traitors!"
Arymilla cried. "I'll see you dead for this!" She fumbled at her
belt, where a dagger's scabbard hung, jeweled and empty, as if she
intended to
see to the matter herself. Elenia began to laugh, but she did not sound
amused.
It sounded almost like weeping.
Elayne
drew a deep breath. Now she had nine of the ten Houses needed. She was
under no
illusions. Whatever Sylvase's reasons, Lir and Karind were trying to
salvage
what they could by cutting themselves loose from a lost cause and
hitching
themselves to one that suddenly appeared to be rising. They would
expect her to
give them preferment for standing for her before she had the throne
while
forgetting that they had ever supported Arymilla. She would do neither.
But
neither could she reject them out of hand. "Trakand welcomes Baryn."
Never warmly. though. Never that. "Trakand welcomes Anshar. Captain
Guybon, get the prisoners into the city as soon as you can. Armsmen for
Caeren,
Baryn and Anshar will be restored their weapons and armor once the
proclamations have been sent out. but they can have their banners back
now." He saluted her and wheeled his bay, already shouting orders.
As
she heeled the gray toward Dyelin, who was riding out of a side street
followed
by Catalyn and the three young fools in their gilded armor, Sylvase,
Lir and
Karind fell in behind her and Birgitte. She felt no disquiet having
them at her
back, not with a hundred Guardswomen at theirs. They would be watched
very
closely until those proclamations were sent. Including Sylvase.
Elayne's mind
was already casting itself ahead.
"You're
awfully quiet," Birgitte said softly. "You've just won a great
victory."
"And
in a few hours," she replied, "I'll learn whether I have to win
another."
CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR
A Cup of Kaf
Furyk
Karede pressed his gauntleted fist to his heart, returning the sentry's
salute,
and ignored the fact that the man spat as he rode past. He hoped the
eighty men
and twenty-one Ogier behind him ignored it, too. They had better, if
they knew
what was good for them. He was here for information, and a killing
would make
getting it more difficult. Since his manservant Ajimbura had planted
his knife
in a Standardbearer's heart over a perceived insult to his master- in
truth, a
real insult, but Ajimbura should have held his temper the way he
himself
had-since then, he had taken to leaving the wiry little hill-tribesman
in the
forest with the sul'dam and damam and some of the Guards to watch over
the
packhorses when he entered a camp. He had come a long way from Ebou Dar
chasing
the wind, almost four weeks of haring after rumors, until the news
brought him
here to this camp in east central Altara.
The
neat rows of pale tents and horselines stood in a forest clearing large
enough
for raken to land, but there was no sign of raken or fliers, no ground
company
with its wagons and raken-grooms. But then, he had not seen a raken in
the
skies for some time now. Supposedly almost all had been sent west. Why,
he did
not know and did not care. The High Lady was his goal and his entire
world. A
tall thin message pole cast its long shadow in the early morning sun,
though,
so there must be raken somewhere about. He thought the camp might
contain a
thousand men, not counting farriers and cooks and the like.
Interestingly,
every last soldier he could see wore familiar armor from home rather
than those
solid breastplates and barred helmets. Practice was to pad out most
forces with
men from this side of the ocean. It was interesting that they were all
armored,
too. A rare commander kept his soldiers in armor unless he expected
action
soon. From the rumors he had picked up, that might be the case here.
Three
flagstaffs marked the command tent, a tall, walled affair of pale
canvas with
air vents along the peak that doubled as smoke holes. No smoke issued
from them
now, for the morning was only a little cool. though the sun hung not
far above
the horizon. On one flagstaff the blue-bordered Imperial Banner hung in
limp
folds, hiding the spread-winged golden hawk clutching lightning in its
talons.
Some commanders hung it from a horizontal staff so it was always
visible in
full, but he thought that ostentatious. The other two banners, on
shorter
flanking staffs, would be of the regiments these men belonged to.
Karede
dismounted in front of that tent and removed his helmet. Captain
Musenge
emulated him, revealing a grim expression on his weathered face. The
other men
climbed down too, to rest their horses, and stood by their animals. The
Ogier
Gardeners leaned on their long-hafted, black-tasseled axes. Everyone
knew they
would not be staying long.
"Keep
the men out of trouble." he told Musenge. "If that means accepting
insults, so be it."
"There'd
be fewer insults if we killed a few of them," Musenge muttered. He had
been in the Deathwatch Guards even longer than Karede. though his hair
was
unbroken black, and he would suffer insults to the Empress, might she
live
forever, as gladly as insults to the Guards.
Hartha
scratched one of his long gray mustaches with a finger the size of a
fat
sausage. The First Gardener, commander of all the Ogier in the High
Lady Tuon's
bodyguard, was almost as tall as a man in the saddle, and wide with it.
His
red-and-green lacquered armor contained enough steel to make armor for
three or
four humans. His face was as dour as Musenge's, yet his booming voice
was calm.
Ogier were always calm except in battle. Then they were as cold as deep
winter
in Jer-anem. "After we rescue the High Lady we can kill as many of them
as
need killing, Musenge."
Recalled
to his duty, Musenge flushed for having allowed himself to stray.
"After," he agreed.
Karede
had schooled himself too hard over the years, had been schooled too
hard by his
trainers, to sigh, but had he been other than a Deathwatch Guard, he
might have
done so now. Not because Musenge wanted to kill someone and almost
anyone would
do. Rather it was because the insults he had walked away from these
past weeks
chafed him as much as they did Musenge and Hartha. But the Guards did
whatever
was necessary to carry out their assignments, and if that meant walking
away
from men who spat on the ground at the sight of armor in red and the
dark green
most called black, or dared to murmur about lowered eyes in his
hearing, then
walk away he must. Finding and rescuing the High Lady Tuon was all that
mattered. Everything else was dross beside that.
Helmet
under his arm, he ducked into the tent to find what must have been most
of the
camp's officers gathered around a large map spread out on a folding
camp table.
Half wore segmented breastplates lacquered in horizontal red and blue
stripes,
the other half red and yellow. They straightened and stared when he
walked in.
men from Khoweal or Dalenshar with skin blacker than charcoal,
honey-brown men
from N'Kon, fair-haired men from Mechoacan, pale-eyed men from Alqam,
men from
every part of the Empire. Their stares held not the wariness often
tinged with
admiration that he had always been used to, but very nearly challenges.
It
seemed everyone believed the filthy tale of Guards' involvement with a
girl
pretending to be the High Lady Tuon and extorting gold and jewels from
merchants. Likely they believed that other, whispered tale about the
girl, not
merely vile but horrific. No. That the High Lady was in danger of her
life from
the Ever Victorious Army itself went beyond horrific. That was a world
gone
mad.
"Furyk
Karede," he said coolly. His hand wanted to go to his sword hilt. Only
discipline kept it at his side. Discipline and duty. He had accepted
sword
thrusts for duty. He could accept insults for it. "I wish to speak to
the
commander of this camp." For a long moment the silence stretched.
"Everybody
out," a tall lean man barked at last in the sharp accents of Dalenshar.
The others saluted, gathered their helmets from another table and filed
out.
Not one offered Karede a salute. His right hand twitched once, feeling
a
phantom hilt against his palm, and was still.
"Gamel
Loune." the lean man introduced himself. Missing the top of his right
ear,
he had a slash of solid white there through his tight black curls and
flecks of
white elsewhere. "What do you want?" There was the barest touch of
wariness in that. A hard man. and self-controlled. He would have had to
be to
earn the three red plumes decorating the helmet atop his sword-rack.
Weak men
without mastery of themselves did not rise to Banner-General. Karede
suspected
the only reason Loune was willing to talk to him was that his own
helmet bore
three black plumes.
"Not
to interfere in your command." Loune had cause to fear that. Ranks in
the
Deathwatch Guard stood half a step higher than those outside. He could
have
co-opted the man's command had he needed to. though he would have been
required
to explain his reasons later. They would have had to be good reasons
for him to
avoid losing his head. "I understand there have been… difficulties in
this part of Altara recently. 1 want to know what I am riding into."
Loune
grunted. " 'Difficulties.' That's one word for it."
A
stocky man in a plain brown coat, a narrow beard dangling from the
point of his
chin, entered the tent, carrying a heavily carved wooden tray with a
silver
pitcher and two sturdy white cups, the sort that would not break easily
while
being carried about in wagons. The scent of freshly brewed kaf began to
suffuse
the air.
"Your
kaf Banner-General." Setting the tray on the edge of table holding the
map, he carefully filled one cup with the black liquid while watching
Karede
from the corner of his eye. Somewhere in his middle years, he wore a
pair of
long knives at his belt, and his hands had a knifeman's calluses.
Karede sensed
close kin to Ajimbura, in spirit but not blood. Those dark brown eyes
never
came from the Kaensada Hills. "I waited till the others left since
there's
hardly enough for you any more. Don't know when I'm going to get more,
I
don't."
"Will
you take kaf, Karede?" Loune's reluctance was obvious, but he could
hardly
fail to offer. For an insult that large, Karede would have been forced
to kill
him. Or so the man would think.
"With
pleasure." Karede replied. Placing his helmet alongside the tray, he
doffed his steel-backed gauntlets and laid them beside it.
The
serving man filled the second cup, then started toward a corner of the
tent,
but Loune said. "That will be all for now. Mantual.' The stocky man
hesitated, eyeing Karede. before making a bow to Loune, touching eyes
and lips
with his fingertips, and departing.
"Mantual
is over-protective of me," Loune explained. Clearly he did not want to
explain, but he did want to avoid what might be taken for open insult.
"Odd fellow. Attached himself to me years ago in Pujili, wormed his way
into becoming my manservant. I think he'd stay if I stopped paying
him."
Yes, very close kin to Ajimbura.
For
a time they simply sipped kaf, balancing the cups on fingertips and
enjoying
the pungent bitterness. It seemed to be a pure Ijaz Mountains brew, and
if so.
very expensive. Karede's own supply of black beans, most definitely not
Ijaz
Mountains, had run out a week ago, and he had been surprised at how
much he
missed having kaf. He never used to mind going without anything at
need. The
first cups done, Loune refilled them.
"You
were going to tell me about the difficulties," Karede prompted now that
conversation would not be impolite. He always tried to be polite even
with men
he was going to kill, and rudeness here would dam up the man's tongue.
Loune
set his cup down and leaned his fists on the table, frowning at the
map. Small
red wedges supporting tiny paper banners were scattered across it,
marking
Seanchan forces on the move, and red stars indicating forces holding in
place.
Little black discs marking engagements peppered the map, but strangely,
no
white discs to indicate the enemy. None.
"Over
the last week." Loune said, "there have been four sizeable
engagements and upwards of sixty ambushes, skirmishes and raids, many
quite
large, all spread out across three hundred miles." That encompassed
almost
the entire map. His voice was stiff. Plainly, given a choice, he would
have
told Karede nothing. That half-step gave him none, however. "There must
be
six or eight different armies involved on the other side. The night
after the
first large engagement saw nine major raids, each forty to fifty miles
from the
site of the battle. Not small armies, either, at least not taken
altogether,
but we can't find them, and nobody has any eyeless idea where they came
from.
Whoever they are, they have damane, those Aes Sedai, with them, and
maybe those
cursed Asha'man. Men have been torn apart by explosions our damane say
weren't
caused by the Power."
Karede
sipped his kaf. The man was not thinking. If the enemy had Aes Sedai
and
Asha'man, they could use the thing called Traveling to move as far as
they
wished in a step. But if they could do that, why had they not used it
to step
all the way to safety with their prize? Perhaps
not all Aes Sedai and Asha'man could Travel, yet that begged another
question. Why had they not sent those who could? Maybe the only Aes
Sedai were
the damane stolen from the Tarasin Palace. Reportedly, none of them had
had any
idea how to Travel. That made sense. "What do the prisoners say about
who
sent them?"
Loune's
laugh was bitter. "Before you can have eyeless prisoners, you need an
eyeless victory. What we've had are a string of eyeless defeats."
Picking
up his cup. he took a sip. His voice loosened as if he had forgotten
the colors
of Karede's armor. He was just a soldier talking his trade, now. "Gurat
thought he had some of them two days ago. He lost four banners of horse
and
five of foot almost to the last man. Not all dead, but most of the
wounded are
the next thing to it. Pincushioned with crossbow bolts. Mostly
Taraboners and
Amadicians. but that isn't supposed to matter, is it. Had to be twenty
thousand
or more cross-bowmen to put out that volume. Thirty thousand, maybe.
And yet
they manage to hide from the morat'raken. I know we've killed some-the
reports
claim it, at least-but they don't even leave their dead behind. Some
fools have
begun whispering that we're fighting spirits." Fools he might consider
them, but the fingers of his left hand hooked in a sign to ward off
evil.
"I'll tell you one thing I know. Karede. Their commanders are very
good.
Very, very good. Every man to face them has been fought off his feet,
outmaneuvered and outfought completely."
Karede
nodded thoughtfully. He had speculated that the White Tower must have
tasked
one of its best to kidnap the High Lady Tuon, but he had not been
thinking
along the lines of what people this side of the ocean called the great
captains. Perhaps Thom Merrilin's real name was Agelmar Jagad or Gareth
Bryne.
He looked forward to meeting the man, not least to ask him how he had
known she
would be coming to Ebou Dar. He might hide Suroth's involvement, but
then
again, he might not. On the heights, today's ally could be tomorrow's
sacrifice. Except for the Gardeners, the Deathwatch Guards were da
co-vale to
the Empress herself, might she live forever, yet they lived on the
heights.
"There must be some plan for finding them and pinning them. Are you in
charge of it?"
"No,
praise be to the Light!" Loune said fervently. He took a long drink as
though wishing it were brandy. "General Chisen is bringing his entire
army
back through the Malvide Narrows. Apparently the Tarasin Palace decided
this
was important enough to risk thrusts out of Murandy or Andor, though
from what
I've heard, neither one is capable of striking at anyone at the moment.
I just
have to wait here until Chisen arrives. We'll see a different result
then, I
think. More than half Chisen's men will be veterans from home."
Abruptly
Loune seemed to recall who he was talking to. His face turned to dark
wood, a
hard mask. It did not matter. Karede was convinced this was the work of
Merrilin or whatever his name was. And he knew why the man was doing
what he
was doing. Under different circumstances, he would have told Loune his
reasoning, but the High Lady would not be safe until she was back in
the
Tarasin Palace among those who knew her face. If the man failed to
believe him
on the key point, that she was the High Lady, he would have increased
her
danger for nothing.
"I
thank you for the kaf," he said, setting the cup down and taking up his
helmet and gauntlets. "The Light see you safe, Loune. We will meet in
Seandar someday."
"The
Light see you safe, Karede," Loune said after a moment, plainly
surprised
by the polite farewell. "We will meet in Seandar someday." The man
had shared kaf. and Karede had no quarrel with him. Why should he be
surprised?
Karede
did not speak to Musenge until they had ridden out of the camp, the
Ogier
Gardeners striding along just ahead of the human Guards. Hartha was
walking on
Karede's other side, his long axe propped on his shoulder, his head
nearly
level with theirs.
"We
head northeast." he said, "for the MalvideNarrows."
If he remembered the maps correctly, and he seldom forgot any map he
had more than
glimpsed, they could reach it in four days. "The Light shine on us that
we
arrive before the High Lady." If they did not, the pursuit would
continue,
all the way to Tar Valon if necessary. The thought of turning back
without the
High Lady never occurred to him. If he had to bring her out of Tar
Valon, he
would.
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE
The Importance of Dyelin
They
wanted safe conduct?" Elayne said incredulously. "To enter
Caemlyn?" Lightning flashed outside the windows, and thunder boomed.
Outside, a deluge fell on Caemlyn. a hammering downpour. The sun must
have been
well above the horizon, but the stand-lamps were lit against twilight
darkness.
The
slender young man standing in front of her low-backed chair colored
with
embarrassment, yet he continued to look her in the eye. He was little
more than
a boy. really, his smooth cheeks likely shaved as much for torm as
because he
needed a razor very often. Very properly, Hanselle Renshar, Arathelle's
grandson, wore neither sword nor armor, but the marks or breastplate
straps
remained on his green coat. imprinted by long wear. A large damp spot
on his
left shoulder showed where his cloak had leaked through. Odd, the
things you
noticed at times like this. "I was instructed to ask for it, my
Lady," he said, his voice steady.
Dyelin,
arms folded beneath her breasts, grunted sourly. She was not far from
scowling.
Mistress Harfor, resplendent as always in her crimson tabard with the
White
Lion spotless on her formidable bosom. sniffed audibly. Hanselle
colored again.
They were in Elayne's smaller sitting room, where a small fire on the
marble
hearth took away most of the morning's chill and lamp oil scented the
air with
roses. She wished Birgitte was there. From the mild irritation flowing
through
the bond, she was dealing with reports. Her annoyance was not great
enough for
it to be anything more urgent.
The
arrival of Luan and the others below the city two days ago with their
sixty
thousand armsmen had occasioned more than a little excitement, and
impromptu
celebrations in the streets by the citizens, once it became clear they
were not
going to occupy the camps abandoned when Jarid Sarand left. Taking with
him men
from Houses that now sided with Elayne, though they could not know it
yet. The
Light only knew what trouble that bloody man was going to cause. But
Hanselle's
message put a new complexion on the huge encampment just a mile south
of Low
Caemlyn. If Arathelle, Luan and the others knew about the city being
supplied
from Tear and Illian through gateways, and surely everyone in Andor
knew by
this time, perhaps they had decided a siege would accomplish nothing.
Safe
conduct was a matter of battle lines. Perhaps they intended to call for
Caemlyn's surrender to avoid a grand assault. The proclamations of
support,
carried by Kinswomen rather than riders, had been posted from Aringill
to the
mining villages in the Mountains of Mist, or soon would be, but even
with
Sumeko and other Kinswomen wearing themselves out in Healing, the
armsmen of
Caeren, Anshar and Baryn who had not been carried off by Jarid did not
bring
her numbers anywhere near sixty thousand. Small bands of arms-men were
beginning to flow into the city as word spread that it was safe to
approach
Caemlyn, but not enough yet. It might be a week or more before sizeable
parties
appeared. Those had been staying clear of the city for fear of
Arymilla's army.
The outcome of a massive assault was not a foregone conclusion-men atop
a wall
had considerable advantage over those trying to scale it-but it would
be a near
run thing at best, and no hope for more help soon. Dyelin had paid
another
visit to Danine Candraed in the west, but the woman still dithered.
Elayne had
nine Houses where she needed ten. everything hung in the balance, and
Danine
could not bloody decide whether or not to stand for Trakand.
"'Why
do they wish to speak with me?" She managed to keep Birgitte's
irritation
from tinging her voice. Birgitte's and her own.
Hanselle
reddened yet again. He seemed to do that easily. Burn her, they truly
had sent
a boy! "1 was not informed, my Lady. I was simply told to ask for safe
conduct." He hesitated. "They will not enter Caemlyn without it. my
Lady."
Rising,
she went to her writing desk, removed a smooth sheet of good white
paper from
the rosewood paper-box and dipped a pen in the silver-mounted crystal
ink jar.
Precise letters flowed onto the page without her usual flourishes. She
was
short and to the point.
Lord
Luan Norwelyn. Lady Arathelle Renshar, Lord Pelivar Coelan, Lady Aemlyn
Carand,
Lady Ellorien Traemane and Lord Abelle Pendar may feel safe in entering
Caemlyn
and be assured that they and their retinues may depart the city at any
time
they wish. I will receive them informally this afternoon in the Grand
Hall as
befits their stations. We must speak of the Borderlanders.
Elayne
Trakand Daughter-Heir of Andor High Seat of House Trakand She tried to
maintain
calm, but the steel nib dug into the paper with the last letters. Safe
conduct.
She channeled a sealing candle alight, and her hand trembled as she
dribbled
golden yellow wax onto the page. They implied she would try to hold
them by
force. No, more than implied! They as good as said it! She pressed her
seal, a
blossoming lily, into the wax as if trying to drive it through the
tabletop.
"Here."
she said, handing the sheet to the young man. Her voice was ice, and
she made
no effort to warm it. "If this fails to make them feel safe, perhaps
they
might try wrapping themselves in swaddling." Thunder boomed for
punctuation.
He
colored once more, this time plainly in anger, but wisely confined
himself to
offering thanks as he folded the page. He was carefully tucking it
inside his
coat when Mistress Harfor showed him out. She would escort him to his
horse
personally. A messenger from nobles as powerful as Luan and the others
had to
be given a certain level of honor.
Suddenly
Elayne's anger turned to sadness. She could not have said what she was
sad
over. Her moods often seemed to change without cause. Perhaps for all
those who
had died and all those who would. "Are you certain you don't want to be
queen, Dyelin? Luan and that lot would stand for you in a heartbeat,
and if I
stand for you, those who've stood for me will stand with me. Burn me,
Danine
would probably stand for you."
Dyelin
took a chair, spreading her blue skirts carefully, before answering.
"I'm
absolutely certain. Running my own House is work enough for me without
adding
all of Andor to it. Besides, I disapprove of the throne changing Houses
without
good cause-the lack of a Daughter-Heir, or worse, one who's a fool or
incompetent, cruel or greedy. You're none of those things. Continuity
provides
stability, and stability brings prosperity." She nodded; she liked that
turn of phrase. "Mind, had you died before returning to Caemlyn and
making
your claim, I would have entered my own, but the simple truth is.
you'll make a
better ruler than I would. Better for Andor. In part that's because of
your
connection to the Dragon Reborn." Dyelin's raised eyebrow invited
Elayne
to expound on that connection.'"But in large part," she went on when
Elayne said nothing, "it's you yourself. I watched you grow up, and by
the
time you were fifteen I knew you'd be a good queen, perhaps as good as
Andor
has ever had."
Elayne's
face grew hot, and tears welled in her eyes. Burn her bouncing moods!
Only she
knew she could not blame her pregnancy this time. Praise from Dyelin
was like
praise from her mother, never grudging, but never given unless she felt
it was
deserved.
Her
morning was busy, and she had only Caemlyn and the palace to deal with
rather
than all of Andor. Mistress Harfor reported that the spies in the
palace who
could be confirmed as reporting to Arymilla or her allies had grown
very quiet
and still, like mice that feared a cat might be watching.
"At
least it's safe to dismiss them now, my Lady." Reene said in tones of
great satisfaction. She disliked having spies in the Royal Palace as
much as
Elayne did, perhaps more. Daughter-Heir or Queen might live in the
palace, but
in the First Maid's eyes, it belonged to her. "All of them." Spies
for others had been left in place so that no one would suspect that
Reene knew.
"Keep
them all on and continue to watch them," Elayne told her. "They're
the most likely to take coin from someone else, and we know who they
are."
A spy who was known could be kept from learning anything they should
not, and
you could make sure they learned exactly what you wanted them to. That
went for
the Ajah eyes-and-ears Mistress Harfor had uncovered, too. The Ajahs
had no
right to spy on her, and if she occasionally spoon-fed them false
information,
it would be their own fault if they acted on it. She could not do that
too
often or they would realize she had uncovered their spies, but she
could at
need.
"As
you say, my Lady. The world has changed, hasn't it?"
"I'm
afraid it has, Mistress Harfor."
The
round woman nodded sadly, but she quickly returned to business. "One of
the windows in the Grand Hall has developed a leak, my Lady. I'd have
seen to
anything minor without bothering you, but this is a crack in the glass,
which
means calling in…" The list of problems that needed Elayne's
approval and papers that needed her signature went on.
Master
Norry reported on wagonloads of grain and beans and trade goods in that
dusty
voice of his. and announced with some surprise that the number of
arsons had
not decreased. Seventeen buildings had burned in the night. He had been
sure
the capture of Arymilla would see an end to that, and he was rueful
over being
wrong. He brought death warrants in the names of Rhys a'Balaman and
Aldred
Gomaisen for her to sign and seal. Mercenaries who turned their colors
could
expect no more unless their new masters prevailed. Evard Cordwyn had
died at
the gate or he would have gone to the gallows, too. Hafeen Bakuvun had
sent a
petition asking a reward for his actions at the Far Madding Gate, yet
that was
easy enough to reject. The presence of the Domani mercenary and his men
might
well have been the difference in the gate holding until Dyelin arrived,
but
they had been earning their pay, no more.
"The
prisoners are still being closemouthed, I fear," Norry said, sliding
the
refused petition back into his leather folder. He seemed to feel that
if he did
that quickly enough it was the same as never having removed it. "The
Darkfriend Aes Sedai, I mean, my Lady. And the other two. Very
closemouthed
except for… um… invective. Mellar is the worst with that, shouting
about what he intends to do to the women who arrested him." Deni had
taken
her instuctions literally; the Guardswomen had pummeled Mellar
severely,
leaving him a mass of bruises from head to foot, "but the Aes Sedai can
be
quite… um… vituperative, as well. I fear it may be necessary to put
them to the question if we hope to learn anything useful."
"Don't
call them Aes Sedai," she snapped. Hearing "Aes Sedai" linked
with "Darkfriend" made her stomach writhe. "Those women have
given up any right to be called Aes Sedai." She had taken their Great
Serpent rings herself and had them melted down. That was Eg-wene's
prerogative,
not hers, and she might well be reprimanded for it, but she could not
restrain
herself. "Ask the Lady Sylvase for the use of her secretary." She had
no questioners among her people, and accorddng to Aviendha, an
unskilled questioner
was likely to kill the one being put unsuccessfully to the question.
When was
her sister going to be allowed to visit? Light, she missed Aviendha. "I
suspect he's no such thing.'' Lightning lit up the windows of the
sitting room,
the glassed casements rattling with the boom of its thunder.
Norry
pressed his fingertips together, holding the folder against his
ink-stained
tabard with the heels of his hands and frowning gravely. "Few people
keep
a private questioner, my Lady. It suggests… um… a dark side. But then,
as I understand matters, her grandfather chased away every man who
showed
interest in her until men stopped showing interest, and she has been
virtually
a prisoner since reaching her majority. That would tend to give anyone
a dark
view of the world. She may not… um… be as trustworthy as you could
wish, my Lady."
"Do
you think you can bribe some of her servants to be my eyes-and-ears?"
How
easy it was to ask that. Spies had become a part of her life, as much
as masons
or glaziers.
"That
should be possible, my Lady. 1 will know for certain in a day or two."
Once, he would have been horrified by the very idea of having anything
to do
with spying. All things changed eventually, it seemed. His hands
shifted on the
folder, almost but not quite opening it. "I fear the sewers in the
southern part of the New City need attention urgently."
Elayne
sighed. Not everything changed. Burn her. once she did have all of
Andor, she suspected
she would seldom have an hour to herself. What didLuan and the others
want?
Not
long after midmorning, Melfane Dawlish appeared and had Essande and
Neris strip
Elayne to the skin so she could be weighed in a huge, wooden-armed
balance
scale the midwife had brought along, a daily ritual. The brass pan was
padded
with a blanket, thank the Light! The stout little woman listened to her
heart
though a hollow wooden tube pressed to her chest and back, thumbed back
her
eyelids to examine her eyes, and smelled her breath. She had Elayne
make water,
then held the glass jar up to the light of a stand-lamp to study it.
She
smelled that, too, and even dipped a finger in and licked it! It was
another
daily ritual. Elayne averted her eyes, pulling her flower-embroidered
silk robe
tight around her. but she still shuddered. This time, Melfane noticed.
"I
can tell some sickness from changes in the taste, my Lady.
Anyway,there's worse
things. My boy Jaem, the one who carried the scale for me, his first
paid job
of work was mucking out in a stable. He claimed everything he ate
tasted
like-" Her round belly shook with laughter. "Well, you can imagine,
my Lady." Elayne could, and was glad she was not prone to nausea. She
shuddered again anyway. Essande seemed quite composed, hands folded at
her
waist and watching her niece with approval, but Neris looked about to
sick up.
"Pity he can't learn my craft, but no one would buy herbs from a man.
Or
have a man midwife." Melfane laughed uproariously at that ridiculous
notion. "Wants to be apprenticed to an armorer, of all things. Old for
it,
but there it is. Now, you be sure to read to your babe." She was more
than
doubtful of Elayne's claim that she would have a boy and a girl. She
would not
accept it until she could hear their heartbeats, and that would be some
few
weeks yet. "And have musicians play for her. She'll learn the sound of
your voice. Learn to like reading and music, too. It helps in other
ways
besides. Makes the child brighter."
"You
say that every time, Mistress Dawlish." Elayne said peevishly. "I can
remember, you know. And I am doing it."
Melfane
laughed again, a twinkle in her dark eyes. She accepted Elayne's
bouncing moods
the way she accepted rain and lightning. "You'd be surprised how many
don't believe a babe in the womb can hear, but I can see the difference
in
those who get read to and those who don't. Do you mind if I have a few
words
with my aunt before I go. my Lady? I brought her a pie and an ointment
for her
joints." Es-sande's face reddened. Well, now that her lie was exposed,
she
would accept Healing or Elayne would know the reason why.
At
the end of the midday meal. Elayne brought up the intentions of Luan
and the
others with Birgitte. It was a wonderful meal, and she ate ravenously.
Melfane
had lambasted the cooks and every other woman in earshot for the bland
diet
they had been reeding her. Today there were small pond trout grilled to
perfection, cabbage rolls stuffed with ctumbly white ewe's milk cheese,
broad
beans with pinenuts, and a tangy apple tart. Another reason it was
marvelous
was that nothing had the faintest hint of spoiling. To drink, there was
good
black tea with mint that made her tense for a moment until she realized
it
really was mint. The only thing Melfane had forbidden was wine, however
well
watered. Birgitte had even given up drinking herself, though it seemed
impossible it could have any effect through the bond. Elayne refrained
from
pointing that out. Birgitte had been drinking too much to dull the pain
of
losing her Gaidal. Elayne understood even if she did not approve. She
could not
imagine what she would do if Rand died.
"I
don't know," Birgitte said after wolfing down the last of her tart.
"My best guess is they've come to ask you to help them move against the
Borderlanders. The one bloody thing that's sure is that they didn't
bloody come
to throw their support to you."
"That's
my best guess, too." Elayne picked up crumbs of cheese with a damp
fingertip and popped them into her mouth. She could have eaten as much
again as
had been on her plate, but Melfane had announced her strict intention
to limit
her weight gain. Just enough and not too much. Perhaps a cow being
fattened for
market felt like this. "Unless they're going to demand I surrender
Caemlyn."
"There's
always that," Birgitte said, sounding almost cheerful. The bond said
she
was anything but. "We still have watchers in the towers, though, and
Julanya and Keraille have gotten work as laundresses in their camp, so
we'll
know if they begin to move against the city before the first man sets
out."
Elayne
wished she did not sigh so often. Burn her, she had Arymilla. Naean and
Elenia
under guard and definitely not enjoying sharing a bed-she knew the
thought
should not give her pleasure but it did-and she had gained three more
allies,
if not necessarily the most solid. At least they were tied to her
inextricably,
now. She should have been feeling triumphant.
That
afternoon. Essande and Sephanie dressed her in dark green slashed with
emerald
on the skirts and embroidered with silver across the bosom, down the
sleeves
and around the hem. For jewelry, she wore her Great Serpent ring and a
large
silver pin enameled blue except for the shape of Trakand's Keystone.
The pin
made her morose. Inside the House it was said that Trakand was the
keystone
that held Andor together. She had not done a very good job of it so far.
She
and Birgitte took turns reading aloud to her babes. From histories, of
course;
if Melfane was right, she did not want to direct them to frivolous
tales. Dry stuff,
it was. A plump man in red and white played the flute while a lean
woman in
livery played the twelve-string bittern, producing lively, joyous
tunes. At
least when crashes of thunder did not drown them out. Bards did not
grow on
trees, and Birgitte had been uncertain about allowing anyone from
outside the
palace near Elayne, but Mistress Harfor had found a number of
accomplished
musicians who had leapt at the chance to put on livery. Their pay was
considerably better in the palace than in a common room, and their
clothing was
provided with it. Elayne thought of trying to hire a gleeman. but that
made her
think of Thom. Was he dry? Was he even alive? All she could do was
pray. The
Light send it so. Please.
Mistress
Harfor came to announce the arrival of Luan, Arathelle and the others,
and
Elayne donned the coronet of the Daughter-Heir, a simple gold band that
held a
single golden rose surrounded by thorns above her brows. Caseille,
along with
eight Guardswomen, fell in behind her, Birgitte and Essande as they
left her
apartments, boots thudding loudly on the floor tiles in step. Nine
Guardswomen
had been among the dead when she was rescued from the Darkfriends, and
that
seemed to have bonded the others together even more tightly. They got
lost
twice finding their way to the Grand Hall, but no one so much as
murmured. What
were shifting corridors when you had faced Power-wrought fire and
lightning?
The great arched doors of the Grand Hall, carved with tall lions on
both sides,
stood open, and Caseille took the Guardswomen to stand in front of them
while
she, Birgitte and Essande went in.
The
tall windows in the walls were dark with rain except when lightning
flashed,
but the mirrored stand-lamps, against the walls and around the white
columns
that marched in rows along the sides of the chamber, were all lit. A
loud,
steady plunk-plunk-plunk echoed in the vast space, drops falling into a
prosaic
wooden bucket standing beneath one of the colored windows set in the
ceiling
twenty paces overhead. where one of the rearing White Lions had beads
of water
glistening along a crack, near scenes of battle and the faces of
Andor's
earliest queens. As always in this hall, Elayne felt those women
judging her as
she crossed the red-and-white floor tiles. They had built Andor with
the
sharpness of their minds and the blood of their sons and husbands,
beginning
with a single city and molding a strong nation out of the rubble of
Artur
Hawkwing's empire. They had a right to judge any woman who sat on the
Lion
Throne. She suspected their visages had been placed there so every
queen would
feel her actions judged by history.
The
throne itself sat atop a white marble dais at the far end of the
chamber,
carved and gilded and sized for a woman, yet massive on its lion-pawed
legs. The
White Lion, formed from moonstones set in a field of glittering rubies
on its
tall back, would stand above the head of the tallest woman who sat on
that
throne. Dyelin was already standing at the foot of the dais's steps,
watching
Sylvase converse with Conail and Catalyn while Branlet and Perival
listened
closely. Perival raked his fingers through his hair and nodded. Did
Dyelin have
questions about Sylvase, too? Lir and Karind stood apart from the rest,
and
apart from each other as well. Neither even glanced at the other.
Having been
allies against Elayne, they would not want her to think they were
allied still.
Essande went to join the serving men and women in the liveries of the
eight
other Houses, gathered around a table that held tall silver pitchers of
wine
and tea. That was what informal meant in this context. Each of them
would bring
a single servant in attendance. For a formal meeting, Elayne would have
provided all of the servants, and the Grand Hall would have been
crowded with
every noble in Caemlyn, every noble from the encampment below Caemlyn.
"Ellorien
may well be provocative, Elayne," Dyelin said for about the fifth time
since hearing of the safe conduct request. Her face was cool and calm,
yet she
must have been feeling her nerves. Her hands smoothed unnecessarily at
her
gold-embroidered skirts.
"I
won't let her provoke me," Elayne replied. "Neither will anyone else.
I mean you, Conail. and you, Lir." Conail, in gold-worked blue, colored
as
quickly as Hanselle had. He had gotten into a fight with a mercenary he
thought
had spoken disparagingly of Elayne and almost killed the man. It was
well for
him the other man had begun drawing his sword first. Even mercenaries
deserved
justice, and Andor was not Tear, where nobles could kill commoners with
impunity. Well, before Rand changed so many of their laws. Burn him,
why is he
leaping about so?
"I
stood for you. Elayne, and that means I always stand up for you," Lir
said
smoothly. He looked every inch the self-confident courtier in
silver-embroidered
green silk with House Baryn's silver Winged Hammer on the collar, yet
he was
too smooth by half, Lir was. "But I'll hold my temper whatever Ellorien
says." The bond surged with fleeting contempt. Trying to demonstrate
how
loyal he was to Elayne, Lir had fought with mercenaries three times. In
two
days. The man had to have been searching for fights to manage that.
"If
she tries to goad us, why should we bite our tongues?" Catalyn
demanded.
Her red dress, embroidered with broad bands of gold at the hem and on
the
sleeves, did not suit her coloring, especially when her plump cheeks
were
crimson with anger. Her chin was raised. Perhaps she wore that large
enameled
pin bearing Haevin's Blue Bear where she did so she would be forced to
keep her
chin high and look down her nose at everyone. "I've never allowed
anyone
to poke at me and walk away unscathed."
"An
ox responds to the goad and does as the ox-herd wants," Dyelin said
drily.
"The same way you will be doing what Ellorien wants if you respond to
her goads."
The crimson remained in Catalyn's cheeks, no doubt from embarrassment,
now.
Reene
Harfor appeared in the doorway. "My Ladies," she said loudly, her
voice echoing in the nearly empty chamber. "My Lords."
This
was informality, when two sides met and there was no knowing how far
apart they
were. Mistress Harfor announced the newly arrived lords and ladies in
strict
order of precedence, though among the Houses gathered here, there was
not a
great deal between them. Luan Norwelyn, hard-faced and more gray-haired
than
when Elayne last saw him, his blue coat undecorated except for
Norwelyn's
Silver Salmon on the high collar. Arathelle Renshar, her face creased
and her
brown hair thick with gray, in a red riding dress ornately worked with
gold and
a large ruby-studded pin that displayed the three Golden Hounds.
Peli-var
Coelan, tall and lean, his dark hair receding till he almost looked as
if he
had shaved the front of his head like a Cairhienin. in
silver-embroidered blue
with twinned red roses worked on his collar, the Roses of Coelan.
Aemlyn
Carand, plump in gray silk with the three Golden Arrows climbing her
sleeves
and so thick on her bosom she looked like a bristling quiver. Ellorien
Traemane, not so plump as Elayne recalled but still pretty in
green-slashed
blue embroidered with golden-antlered white stags, the White Stag of
Traemane,
on the sleeves. Abelle Pendar. his angular face stern beneath gray
hair, in
dark gray with the three Golden Stars on his collar. They walked up the
Grand
Hall together, trailed by their servants, but not grouped as announced.
Ellorien and Abelle walked with Luan, Pelivar and Aemlyn with
Arathelle, two
paces between the groups. So. They asked for safe conduct as one, yet
they were
not one. That made a demand for surrender a little less likely. Even
open
enemies could act in concert at times. Divided skirts and snug breeches
glistened damply. The finest cloak could not protect a person
completely in a
downpour like this. They would not be in their best tempers.
"Be
welcome," she told them as their servants peeled away to join the
others.
"Will you take wine, or tea? The wine is hot and spiced. This seems a
wintery day for spring."
Luan
opened his mouth, but Ellorien spoke first. "At least you're not
sitting
on the throne." Her face might have been carved from marble, and her
voice
was that hard and cold. "I half expected you to be." Thunder rolled
overhead.
Luan
looked pained. Arathelle rolled her eyes as if she were hearing
something she
had heard all too often before. Lir stirred, but Elayne fixed him with
a steady
look, and he gave a small, apologetic bow.
"I
have no right to sit on the throne, Ellorien," she replied calmly.
Light,
please let her mood hold steady now. "Yet." There was an unintended
touch of bite in that. Perhaps she was not so calm as she wished to be.
Ellorien
sneered. "If you're waiting for Danine to make your ten, you'll have a
long wait. Danine spent the last Succession visiting her manors. She
never
declared for anyone."
Elayne
smiled, but it was difficult. A Succession was when one House succeeded
another
on the throne. "I will have tea."
Ellorien
blinked, but it sparked the others to announce what they would take.
Only
Elayne. Birgitte, Branlet and Perival took tea. Everyone sniffed at
their cups,
whether silver cups of wine or porcelain teacups, before taking a sip.
Elayne
felt no insult. Food and wine could be fine in the kitchens and tainted
by the
time it reached the table. There was never any telling where or when
spoilage
would strike. The tea had a faint tang of ginger, but not enough to
overwhelm
the taste of good Tremalking black.
"I
see you've gathered most of your support among the children and
Arymilla's
leavings," Ellorien said. Catalyn turned as red as her dress, and
Branlet straightened
angrily, until Perival put a hand on his arm and shook his head. A
level-headed
boy, Perival, and bright beyond his years. Lir managed to restrain
himself this
time, but Conail started to say something sharp before Elayne's firm
look
snapped his teeth shut. Karind merely returned Ellorien's spiteful
stare
stolidly. Karind was not very intelligent, but little ruffled her.
"You
must have had a reason for asking this meeting," Elayne said. "If it
was merely to offer insults…" She let that trail off. She had her
own reasons for wanting this meeting. If they had asked for her to come
to
them, she would have. Without asking for safe conduct. Feeling a pulse
of anger
through the bond, she took a firm rein on hers. Birgitte wore a scowl
directed ac
Ellorien like a dagger. If they began feeding one another's temper…
That
did not bear thinking about, not here, not now.
Ellorien
opened her mouth again, and this time, Luan cut her off. "We've come to
ask for a truce. Elayne." A flash of lightning lit the northern
windows,
and those in the ceiling, but the interval to thunder said it had been
some
distance off.
"A
truce? Are we at war, Luan? Has someone declared for the throne that I
haven't
heard of?" Six sets of eyes swung to Dyelin, who grunted.
"Fools.
I told you and told you, and you wouldn't believe me. Perhaps you'll
believe
this. When Sylvase, Karind and Lir sent their proclamations of support,
I sent
my own. Taravin stands for Trakand, and the whole of Andor will know it
soon
enough."
Ellorien
colored angrily and managed to make even that seem cold. Aemlyn took a
long
drink, looking thoughtful. Arathelle allowed a touch of disappointment
to touch
her face before it returned to a mask nearly as hard as Ellorien's.
"Be
that as it may," Luan said, "we still want… if not a truce, then a
temporary agreement." He drank a small swallow from his winecup and
shook
his head sadly. "Even gathering everything we can, we'll have a
difficult
time defeating the Borderlanders, but if we fail to act together,
they'll carve
up Andor once they decide to move. Frankly, I'm surprised they've
remained in
one place this long. Their men ought to be well rested by now even
after a
thousand-league march." Lightning lit the southern windows brightly,
and
thunder crashed so loudly it seemed the glass panes should shiver.
Close, that
one.
"I
expected them to be into Murandy by now myself." Elayne said. "But I
believe their reason for sitting in one place is a fear of sparking a
war if
they come too near Caemlyn. They seem to be trying to find a way to
Murandy
using country roads. You know what condition those are in this time of
year.
They want no war with us. When I gave them permission to cross Andor,
they told
me they were looking for the Dragon Reborn."
Ellorien
spluttered, and chips of ice should have come from her mouth. "When you
what} You prate of how you have no right to sit on the throne-yet-and
then you
arrogate to yourself the right of-!"
"Of
an Aes Sedai. Ellorien." Elayne held up her right hand so they could
not
miss the golden Great Serpent encircling the third finger. Her own
voice was
frosty despite all she could do. "I did not speak as Daughter-Heir or
even
High Seat of House Trakand. I spoke as Elayne Aes Sedai of the Green
Ajah. Had
I not, they would have come anyway. They were very short of food and
fodder.
Had I tried to stop them, had anyone tried to stop them, there would
have been
war. They are determined to find the Dragon Reborn. It would have been
a war
Andor had faint chance of winning. You speak of acting together, Luan?
Gather
all of Andor's strength, and we could nearly match their numbers, but
two in
three of ours would be men who can handle a halberd or spear but spend
most of
their days behind a plow. Every man of theirs is a long-serving armsman
who
would not be surprised to face Trollocs any day of his life. Instead of
a war
that would soak Andor in blood and cripple her for a generation, we
have the
Borderlanders crossing our nation peacefully. I have them watched. They
pay for
the food and fodder they need, and pay well." Another time, with other
listeners, she would have laughed over that. Andoran farmers would try
to pry
high prices out of the Dark One. "The worst they've done is flog a few
horse-thieves, and if they should have been handed over to a
magistrate, I
can't fault the Borderlanders for it. Now tell me, Ellorien. What would
you
have done differently, and how?"
Ellorien
blinked, icily sullen, then sniffed dismissively and sipped at her wine.
"And
what do you plan for this Black Tower?" Abelle asked quietly. "I…
suspect you have a plan for them, too." Did he suspect her other reason
for letting the Borderlanders cross Andor? Let him, so long as he did
not give
it voice. So long as he kept silent, her motives seemed purely for
Andor's
good. That was hypocritical, no bones about it, but realistic as well.
She had
spoken truthfully concerning her other reasons, but that one, spoken
aloud,
could cost her. She still needed one more House, and it looked as if
Candraed had
to be it, but Danine would never move if she thought Elayne was trying
to force
her into it.
"Nothing,"
she told him. "I send Guardsmen periodically to ride around the Black
Tower grounds and remind them they are in Andor and subject to Andor's
laws, but
aside from that, I can do no more than I could if the White Tower were
somehow
transported to Caemlyn." For a long moment they stared at her, all six
of
them unblinking.
"Pendar
stands for Trakand," Abelle said suddenly, and right atop him, Luan
said.
"Norwelyn stands for Trakand." Lightning flashed overhead,
brightening the colored windows in the ceiling.
Elayne
kept herself from swaying with an effort. Birgitte's face was smooth,
but the bond
carried amazement. It was done. She had eleven, and the throne was hers.
"The
more who stand for her. the better for Andor." Dyelin sounded a touch
dazed herself. "Stand with me for Trakand."
There
was another pause, longer, full of exchanged glances, but then, one by
one.
Arathelle, Pelivar and Aemlyn announced that their Houses stood for
Trakand.
Doing so for Dyelin, though. Elayne would have to remember that.
Perhaps she
could win their loyalty in time, but for the present, they supported
her for Dyelin's
sake.
"She
has the throne." Ellorien said, as cold as ever. "The rest is fluff
and feathers."
Elayne
tried to make her voice warm. "Will you dine with us this evening,
Ellorien? At least remain until the rain abates."
"I
have my own cooks." Ellorien replied, turning away toward the doors.
Her
serving woman came running to take her cup and return it to the table.
"As
soon as the rain stops, I will be leaving for Sheldyn. I've been away
too
long."
"Tarmon
Gai'don is coming soon, Ellorien," Elayne said. "You won't be able to
remain on your estates then."
Ellorien
paused, looking over her shoulder. "When Tarmon Gai'don comes, Traemane
rides for the Last Battle, and we ride behind the Lion of Andor."
Thunder
boomed as she strode out of the Grand Hall with her serving woman at
her heels.
"Will
you all join me in my apartments?'' Elayne asked the others.
Behind
the Lion of Andor, but not a word about behind Elayne Trakand. Nearly
half her
support was suspect one way or another, Jarid Sarand was still on the
loose
with a not inconsiderable force, and she would have trouble from
Ellorien
eventually. It was never this way in stories. In stories, everything
was always
wrapped up neatly by the end. Real life was much… messier. Still, she
had
the throne at last. There was still the coronation, but that was a
formality
now. As she led the procession from the Grand Hall, chatting with Luan
and
Pelivar, thunder rolled overhead like martial drums beating the march
for
Tarmon Gai'don. How long before Andor's banners had to march to the
Last
Battle?
CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX
Under an Oak
The
sun stood well above the mountains as Karede rode through the trees
toward the
so-called MalvideNarrows, perhaps
two
leagues ahead. The five-mile-wide gap in the mountains carried the road
from
Ebou Dar to Lugard, a mile south of him. Well short of the Narrows,
though, he
would find the campAjimbura had
located for
him. Ajimbura had not been fool enough to try entering the camp, so
Karede
still did not know whether he was riding into a deathtrap for nothing.
No, not
for nothing. For the High Lady Tuon. Any Death-watch Guard was ready to
die for
her. Their honor was duty, and duty often meant death. The sky held
only
billowing white clouds with no threat of rain. He had always hoped to
die in
sunlight.
He
had brought just a small party. Ajimbura on his white-footed chestnut
to show
the way, of course. The wiry little man had cut off his white-streaked
red
braid, a measure of his great devotion. The hill tribes took those
braids as
trophies from those they killed in their endless feuds, and to be
without one
was to be disgraced in the eyes of all the tribes and families, a
self-proclaimed coward. That devotion was to Karede rather than the
High Lady
or the Crystal Throne, but Karede's own devotion was such that it came
to the
same thing. Two of the Guards rode at Karede's back, their
red-and-green armor
buffed till it shone, like his own. Hartha and a pair of Gardeners
strode along
with their long-hafted axes on their shoulders, easily keeping pace
with the
horses. Their armor glistened as well. Melitene. the High Lady's
der-sul'dam,
her long, graying hair tied with a bright red ribbon today, was on a
high-stepping gray, the silvery length of an a'dam connecting her left
wrist to
Mylen's neck. There had been little that could be done to make those
two appear
more impressive, but the a'dam and Melitene's blue dress, the red
panels on
skirts and bosom holding silver forked lightning bolts, should draw the
eye.
Taken altogether, no one should notice Ajimbura at all. The rest were
back with
Musenge. in case it truly was a deathtrap.
He
had considered using another damane than Mylen. The tiny woman with the
face he
could never put an age to almost bounced in her saddle with eagerness
to lay eyes
on the High Lady again. She was not properly composed. Still, she could
do
nothing without Melitene, and she was useless as a weapon, a fact that
had made
her hang her head when he pointed it out to the dersul'dam. She had
needed
consoling, her sul'dam petting her and telling her what beautiful Sky
Lights
she made, how wonderful her Healing was. Even thinking about that made
Karede
shudder. Taken in the abstract, it might seem a wonderful thing, wounds
undone
in moments, but he thought he would need to be near death before he
would let
anyone touch him with the Power. And yet. if it could have saved his
wife
Kalia… No, the weapons had been left with Musenge. If there was a
battle
today, it would be of a different sort.
The
first birdcall he heard seemed no different from others he had heard
that
morning, but it was repeated ahead, and then again. Just one call each
time. He
spotted a man up in a tall oak with a crossbow thar tracked him as he
rode.
Seeing him was not easy; his breastplate and open-faced helmet were
painted a
dull green that faded into the tree's foliage. A length of red cloth
tied
around his left arm helped. though. If he really wanted to hide, he
should have
removed that.
Karede
motioned to Ajimbura and the wiry little man grinned at him, a wizened,
blue-eyed rat. before allowing his chestnut to fall back behind the
Guards. His
long knife was under his coat today. He should pass for a servant.
Soon
enough Karede was riding into the camp itself. It had no tents or
shelters of
any kind, but there were long horselines laid out in orderly fashion,
and many
more men in green breastplates. Heads turned to watch his party pass,
but tew
men were on their feet, and fewer held a crossbow. A fair number of
them were
asleep on their blankets, doubtless tired from all the hard riding they
had
been doing by night. So the birdcall had told them he was not enough to
present
a danger. They had the look of well-trained soldiers, but he had
expected as
much. What he had not expected was how few they were. Oh, the trees
might be
hiding some, but surely the camp held no more than seven or eight
thousand men,
far too few to have carried out the campaign Loune had described. He
felt a
sudden tightness in his chest. Where were the rest? The High Lady might
be with
one of the other bands. He hoped Ajimbura was taking note of the
numbers.
Before
he had gone far, a short man mounted on a tall dun met him and reined
in where
he had to stop or ride the man down. The front half of his head was
shaved, and
appeared to be powdered, of all things. He was no popinjay, though. His
dark
coat might be silk, yet he wore the same dull green breastplate as the
common
soldiers. His eyes were hard and expressionless as he scanned Melitene
and
Mylen. the Ogier. His face did not change as his gaze returned to
Karede.
"Lord Mat described that armor to us," he said in accents even
quicker and more clipped than those of the Altarans. "To what do we owe
the honor of a visit from the Deathwatch Guard?"
Lord
Mat? Who under the Light was Lord Mat? "Furyk Karede," Karede said.
"I wish to speak with man who calls himself Thorn Mer-rilin."
"Talmanes
Delovinde," the man said, finding manners. "You want to talk to
Thom't Well, I see no harm in it. I will take you to him."
Karede
heeled Aldazar after Delovinde. The man had made no mention of the
obvious,
that he and the others could not be allowed to leave and carry word of
this
army's location. He had some manners. At least, they would not be
allowed to
leave unless Karede's mad plan worked. Musenge gave him only one chance
in ten
of success, one in five of living. Personally, he himself believed the
odds
longer, but he had to make the attempt. And Merrilin's presence argued
in favor
of the High Lady's presence.
Delovinde
dismounted at an oddly domestic scene among the trees, people on camp
stools or
blankets around a small fire beneath a spreading oak where a kettle was
heating. Karede stepped down from his saddle, motioning the Guards and
Ajimbura
to dismount as well. Melitene and Mylen remained on their mounts for
the
advantage of height. Of all people, Mistress Anan, who had once owned
the inn
where he stayed in Ebou Dar, was sitting on one of the three-legged
stools
reading a book. She no longer wore one of those revealing dresses he
had
enjoyed looking at, but her close-fitting necklace still dangled that
small,
jeweled knife onto her impressive bosom. She closed her book and gave
him a
small nod as if he had returned to the Wandering Woman after an absence
of a
few hours. Her hazel eyes were quite composed. Perhaps the plot was
even more
intricate than the Seeker Mor had thought.
A
tall, lean white-haired man with mustaches nearly as long as Hartha's
was
sitting cross-legged on a striped blanket across a stones board from a
slender
woman with her hair in many beaded braids. He quirked an eyebrow at
Karede,
shook his head and returned to perusing the crosshatched board. She
glared pure
hatred at Karede and those behind him. A gnarled old fellow with long
white
hair was lying on another blanket with a remarkably ugly young boy,
playing
some game or other on a piece of red cloth spiderwebbed with black
lines. They
sat up, the boy studying the Ogier with interest, the man with one hand
hovering as if to reach for a knife beneath his coat. A dangerous man,
and
wary. Perhaps he was Merrilin.
Two
men and two women sitting together on camp stools had been conversing
when
Karede rode up, but as he was stepping down, a stern-faced woman stood
and
fixed her blue eyes on his in very nearly a challenge. She wore a sword
on a
wide leather strap slanting across her chest, the way some sailors did.
Her
hair was close-cropped rather than cut in the style of the low Blood,
her
fingernails were short and none were lacquered, but he was certain she
was Egeanin
Tamarath. A heavy-set man with hair as short as hers and one of those
odd
Illianer beards stood beside her, one hand on the hilt of a shortsword,
staring
at Karede as if he intended to second her challenge. A pretty woman
with dark,
waist-long hair and the same rosebud mouth as the Taraboner stood, and
for a
moment it seemed she might kneel or prostrate herself, but then she
straightened and looked him right in the eyes. The last man, a lean
fellow in a
peculiar red cap who looked carved from dark wood, gave a loud laugh
and flung
his arms around her. The grinning stare he gave Karede could only be
called
triumphant.
"Thom,"
Delovinde said, "this is Furyk Karede. He wants to talk with a man who
'calls himself Thorn Merrilin."
"With
me?" the lean, white-haired man said, rising awkwardly. His right leg
appeared slightly stiff. An old battle injury, perhaps?
"But
1 don't 'call myself Thorn Merrilin. It's my name, though I'm surprised
you
know it. What do you want of me?"
Karede
removed his helmet, but before he could open his mouth, a pretty woman
with
large brown eyes rushed up, pursued by two others. All three had those
Aes
Sedai faces, one minute looking twenty, the next twice that, the third
somewhere in the middle. It was very disconcerting.
"That's
Sheraine!" the pretty woman cried, staring at Mylen. "Release
her!"
"You
do no understand, Joline," one of the women with her said angrily.
Thin-lipped, with a narrow nose, she looked as if she could chew rocks.
"She do no be Sheraine any longer. She would have betrayed us, given a
chance."
"Teslyn
is right, Joline,'' the third woman said. Handsome rather than pretty,
she had
long black hair that fell in waves to her waist. "She would have
betrayed
us."
"I
don't believe it, Edesina," Joline snapped. "You will free her
immediately." she told Melitene, "or I'll-" Suddenly she gasped.
"I
did tell you," Teslyn said bitterly.
A
young man in a wide-brimmed black hat galloped up on a dark,
blunt-nosed
chestnut with a deep chest and flung himself out of the saddle. "What's
bloody going on here?" he demanded, striding up to the fire.
Karede
ignored him. The High Lady Tuon had ridden up with the young man, on a
black-and-white horse with markings like none he had ever seen. Selucia
was at
her side, on a dun, her head wrapped in a scarlet scarf, but he had
eyes only
for the High Lady. Short black hair covered her head, but he could
never
mistake that face. She spared him only one expressionless glance before
returning to a study of the young man. Karede wondered whether she
recognized
him. Probably not. It had been a long time since he had served in her
bodyguard. He did not look over his shoulder, but he knew that the
reins of
Ajimbura's chestnut were now held by one of the Guards. Apparently
unarmed and
his distinctive braid gone, he should have no problem leaving the camp.
The
sentries would never see the little man. Ajimbura was a good runner as
well as
stealthy. Soon, Musenge would know that the High Lady was indeed here.
"She
has us shielded, Mat," Joline said, and the young man snatched off his
hat
and strode to Melitene's horse as if he intended to seize the bridle.
He was
long-limbed, though he could not be called tall, and he wore a black
silk scarf
tied around his neck and dangling onto his chest. That made him the one
everyone had called Tylin's Toy, as if being the queen's plaything were
the
most important feature of him. Likely it was. Playthings seldom had
another
side to them. Strange, but he hardly seemed handsome enough for that.
He did
look fit, though.
"Release
the shield," he told her as if he expected obedience. Karede's eyebrows
rose. This was the plaything? Melitene and Mylen gasped almost as one,
and the
young man barked a laugh. "You see. it doesn't work on me. Now you
bloody
well release the shields, or I'll bloody well haul you out of the
saddle and
paddle your bottoms." Melitene's face darkened. Few people dared speak
so
to a der'sul'datn.
"Release
the shields, Melitene." Karede said.
"The
marath 'damane was on the point of embracing saidar." she said instead
of
obeying. "There's no telling what she might have-"
"Release
the shields," he said firmly. "And release the Power."
The
young man gave a satisfied nod, then suddenly spun, pointing a finger
at the
three Aes Sedai. "Now don't you bloody well start! She's let go of the
Power. You do it, too. Go ahead!" Again he nodded, for all the world as
if
he was sure they had obeyed. From the way Melitene was staring at him,
perhaps
he was. Maybe he was an Asha'man? Perhaps Asha'man could detect a
damane's
channeling somehow. That hardly seemed likely, but it was all Karede
could
think of. Yet that hardly squared with how Tylin reportedly had treated
the
young man.
"One
of these days, Mat Cauthon," Joline said acidly, "someone will teach
you to show proper respect to Aes Sedai, and I hope I am there to see
it."
The
High Lady and Selucia laughed uproariously. It was good to see she had
managed
to keep her spirits up in captivity. Doubtless her maid's companionship
had helped.
But it was time to get on, too. Time to take his mad gamble.
"General
Merrilin," Karede said, "you fought a short but remarkable campaign
and achieved miracles at keeping your forces undetected. but your luck
is about
to run out. General Chisen deduced your real purpose. He has turned his
army
around and is marching for the Malvide Narrows as fast as he can. He
will be
here in two days. I have ten thousand men not far from here, enough to
pin you
until he arrives. But the High Lady Tuon would be in danger, and I want
to
avoid that. Let me leave with her, and I will allow you and your men to
depart
unhindered. You can be well the other side of the mountains, into the
Molvaine
Gap, before Chisen arrives, and into Murandy before he can catch you.
The only
other choice is annihilation. Chisen has enough men to wipe you out. It
won't
be a battle. A hundred thousand men against eight thousand will be a
slaughter."
They
heard him out, every face as blank as if they were stunned. They
schooled
themselves well. Or perhaps they were stunned at Merrilin's plan
apparently
unraveling at the last instant.
Merrilin
stroked one of his white mustaches with a long finger. He seemed to
hiding a
smile. "I fear you have mistaken me, Banner-General Karede." For the
space of a sentence his voice became extremely resonant. "I am a
gleeman,
a position higher than court-bard to be sure, but no general. The man
you want
is Lord Matrim Cauthon." He made a small bow toward the young man, who
was
settling his flat-topped hat back on his head.
Karede
frowned. Tylin's Toy was the general? Were they playing a game with him?
"You
have about a hundred men, Deathwatch Guards, and maybe twenty
Gardeners,"
Cauthon said calmly. "From what I hear, that could make an even fight
against five times their number for most soldiers, but the Band aren't
most
soldiers, and I have a sight more than six hundred. As for Chisen, if
that's
the fellow who pulled back through the Narrows, even if he has figured
out what
I was up to, he couldn't get back in less than five days. My scouts'
last
reports had him pushing southwest along the Ebou Dar Road as fast he
could
march. The real question is this, though. Can you get Tuon to the
Tarasin
Palace safely?"
Karede
felt as if Hartha had kicked him in the belly, and not only because the
man had
used the High Lady's name so casually. "You mean to let me take her
away?" he said incredulously.
"If
she trusts you. If you can get her to the palace safely. She's in
danger till
she reaches that. In case you don't know it, your whole bloody Ever
Victorious
flaming Army is ready to slit her throat or bash in her head with a
rock."
"I
know," Karede said, more calmly than he felt. Why would this man just
release the High Lady after the White Tower had gone to all the trouble
of
kidnapping her? Why, after fighting that short, bloody campaign? "We
will
die to the man if that is what is needed to see safe. It will be best
if we set
out immediately." Before the man changed his mind. Before Karede woke
from
this fever-dream. It surely seemed a fever-dream.
"Not
so fast." Cauthon turned toward the High Lady. "Tuon, do you trust
this man to see you safe to the palace in Ebou Dar?" Karede stifled an
impulse to wince. General and lord the man might be, but he had no
right to use
the High Lady's name so!
"I
trust the Deathwatch Guards with my life." the High Lady-replied
calmly,
"and him more than any other." She favored Karede with a smile. Even
as a child, smiles from her had been rare. "Do you by any chance still
have my doll. Banner-General Karede?"
He
bowed to her formally. The manner of her speaking told him she was
still under
the veil. "Forgiveness, High Lady. I lost everything in the Great Fire
of
Sohima."
"That
means you kept it for ten years. You have my commiseration on the loss
of your
wife, and of your son, though he died bravely and well. Few men will
enter a
burning building once. He saved five people before he was overcome."
Karede's
throat tightened. She had followed news of him. All he could do was bow
again,
more deeply.
"Enough
of that," Cauthon muttered. "You're going to knock your head on the
ground if you keep that up. As soon as she and Selucia can get their
things
together, you take them out of here and ride hard. Tal-manes. roust the
Band.
It isn't that I don't trust you, Karede, but I think I'll sleep easier
beyond
the Narrows."
"Matrim
Cauthon is my husband." the High Lady said in a loud, clear voice.
Everyone froze where they stood. "Matrim Cauthon is my husband."
Karede
felt as if Hartha had kicked him again. No, not Hartha. Aldazar. What
madness
was this? Cauthon looked like a man watching an arrow fly toward his
face,
knowing he had no chance to dodge.
"Bloody
Matrim Cauthon is my husband. That is the wording you used, is it not?"
This
had to be a fever-dream.
It
took a minute before Mat could speak. Burn him, it seemed to take a
bloody hour
before he could move. When he could, he snatched off his hat, strode to
Tuon
and seized the razor's bridle. She looked down at him, cool as any
queen on a
bloody throne. All those battles with the flaming dice rattling away in
his
head, all those skirmishes and raids, and they had to stop when she
said a few
words. Well, at least this time he knew what had happened that was
bloody fateful
for Mat bloody Cauthon. "Why? I mean, I knew you were going to sooner
or
later, but why now? I like you, maybe more than like you, and I enjoy
kissing
you,' he thought Karede grunted, "but you haven't behaved like a woman
in
love. You're ice half the time and spend most of the rest digging under
my
skin."
"Love?"
Tuon sounded surprised. "Perhaps we will come to love one another.
Matrim.
but I have always known I would marry to serve the Empire. What do you
mean,
you knew that I was going to speak the words?"
"Call
me Mat." Only his mother had ever called him Matrim, when he was in
trouble, and his sisters when they were carrying tales to get him in
trouble.
"Your
name is Matrim. What did you mean?"
He
sighed. The woman never wanted much. Just her own way. Like just about
every
other woman he had ever known. "I went through a ter'angreal to
somewhere
else, another world maybe. The people there aren't really people-they
look like
snakes-but they'll answer three questions for you. and their answers
are always
true. One of mine was that I'd marry the Daughter of the Nine Moons.
But you
haven't answered my question. Why now?"
A
faint smile on her lips. Tuon leaned down from her saddle. And rapped
him hard
on the top of his head with her knuckles! "Your superstitions are bad
enough, Matrim, but I won't tolerate lies. An amusing lie, true, but
still a
lie."
"It's
the Light's own truth," he protested, clapping his hat on. Maybe it
would
give him some protection. "You could learn for yourself if you could
make
yourself talk to an Aes Sedai. They could tell you about the Aelfinn
and the
Eelfinn."
"It
could be the truth," Edesina piped up as if she were being helpful.
"The Aelfinn can be reached through a ter'angreal in the Stone of Tear,
so
I understand, and supposedly they give true answers." Mat glared at
her. A
fat lot of help she was, with her "so I understands" and
"supposedlies." Tuon continued to stare at him as if Edesina had not
opened her mouth.
"I
answered your question, Tuon, so you answer mine."
"You
know that damane can tell fortunes?" She gave him a stern look, likely
expecting him to call it superstition, but he nodded curtly. Some Aes
Sedai
could Foretell the future. Why not a damane "I asked Lidya to tell mine
just before I landed at Ebou Dar. This is what she said. 'Beware the
fox that
makes the ravens fly, for he will marry you and carry you away. Beware
the man
who remembers Hawkwing's face, for he will marry you and set you free.
Beware
the man of the red hand, for him you will marry and none other.' It was
your
ring that caught my eye first." He thumbed the long ring unconsciously,
and she smiled. A small smile, but a smile. "A fox apparently startling
two ravens into flight and nine crescent moons. Suggestive, wouldn't
you say?
And just now you fulfilled the second part, so I knew for certain it
was
you." Selucia made a sound in her throat, and Tuon waggled fingers at
her.
The bosomy little woman subsided, adjusting her head scarf, but the
look she
shot at Mat should have been accompanied by a dagger in her hand.
He
laughed mirthlessly. Blood and bloody ashes. The ring was a carver's
try-piece,
bought only because it stuck on his finger; he would give up those
memories of Hawkwing's
face along with every other old memory, if it would get the bloody
snakes out
of his head; and yet those things had gained him a wife. The Band of
the Red
Hand would never have existed without those old memories of battles.
"Seems
to me being ta'veren works on me as much as it does on anybody else."
For
a moment, he thought she was going to rap him again. He gave her his
best
smile. "One more kiss before you leave?"
"I'm
not in the mood at the moment." she said coolly. That hanging
magistrate was
back. All prisoners to be condemned immediately. "Perhaps later. You
could
return to Ebou Dar with me. You have an honored place in the Empire,
now."
He
did not hesitate before shaking his head. There was no honored place
waiting
for Leilwin or Domon. no place at all for the Aes Sedai or the Band.
"The
next time I see Seanchan. I expect it will be on the field somewhere.
Tuon." Burn him, it would be. His life seemed to run that way no matter
what he did. "You're not my enemy, but your Empire is."
"Nor
are you my enemy, husband." she said coolly, "but I live to serve the
Empire."
"Well,
I suppose you'd better get your things…" He trailed off at the sound
of a cantering horse approaching.
Vanin
reined in a rangy gray beside Tuon, eyed Karede and the other
Deathwatch
Guards, then spat through a gap in his teeth and leaned on the high
pommel of
his saddle. "There's ten thousand or so soldiers at a little town about
five miles west of here," the fat man told Mat. "Only one man Seanchan,
near as I could learn. Rest are Altarans. Taraboners. Amadicians. All
mounted.
Thing is, they're asking after fellows wearing armor like that." He
nodded
toward Karede. "And rumor says the one of them that kills a girl that
sounds a lot like the High Lady gets himself a hundred thousand crowns
gold.
Their mouths are dripping for it."
"I
can slip past them," Karede said. His bluff face looked fatherly. His
voice sounded like a drawn sword.
"And
if you can't?" Mat asked quietly. "It can't be chance they're this
close. They've caught some sniff of you. One more smell might be all it
takes
to kill Tuon." Karede's face darkened.
"Do
you intend to go back on your word?" A drawn blade that might be used
soon. Worse, Tuon was watching, looking at Mat like that hanging
magistrate in
truth. Burn him, if she died, something would shrivel up inside him.
And the
only way to stop it, to be sure it was stopped, was to do what he hated
worse
than work. Once, he had thought that fighting battles, much as he hated
it, was
still better than work. Near enough nine hundred dead in the space of a
few
days had changed his mind.
"No."
he said. "She goes with you. But you leave me a dozen of your
Deathwatch
Guards and some of the Gardeners. If I'm going to take these people off
your
back, I need them to think I'm you."
Tuon
abandoned most of the clothing Matrim had bought for her. since she
would need
to travel light. The little cluster of red silk rosebuds he had given
her she
tucked away in her saddlebags, folded in a linen cloth, as carefully as
if were
blown glass. She had no farewells to make except for Mistress Anan-she
really
would miss their discussions-so she and Selucia were ready to ride
quickly.
Mylen smiled so broadly at the sight of her that she had to pat the
little
damane. It seemed that word of what had happened had spread, because as
they
rode through the camp with the Deathwatch Guards, men of the Band stood
and
bowed to her. It was very like reviewing regiments in Seandar.
"What
do you make of him?" she asked Karede once they were away from the
soldiers and beginning to canter. There was no need to say which "he"
she meant.
"It
is not my place to make judgments, High Lady," he said gravely. His
head
swivelled, keeping watch on the surrounding trees. "I serve the Empire
and
the Empress, may she live forever."
"As
do we all, Banner-General. But I ask your judgment."
"A
good general. High Lady," he replied without hesitation. "Brave, but
not overly brave. He won't get himself killed just to show how brave he
is, I think.
And he is… adaptable. A man of many layers. And if you will forgive me,
High Lady, a man in love with you. I saw how he looked at you."
In
love with her? Perhaps. She thought she might be able to come to love
him. Her
mother had loved her father, it was said. And a man of many layers?
Matrim
Cauthon made an onion look like an apple! She rubbed a hand over her
head. She
still was not accustomed to the feel of hair on her head. "I will need
a
razor first thing."
"It
may be best to wait until Ebou Dar, High Lady."
"No,"
she said gently. "If I die, I will die as who I am. I have removed the
veil."
"As
you say, Highness." Smiling, he saluted, gauntleted fist striking over
his
heart hard enough that steel clanged on steel. "If we die, we will die
as
who we are."
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
Prince of the Ravens
Leaning
on the tall pommel of his saddle, ashandarei slanted across Pips' neck,
Mat
frowned at the sky. The sun was well past its noon height. If Vanin and
those
Deathwatch Guards did not return soon, he might find himself fighting a
battle
with the sun in the crossbowmen's eyes, or worse, in twilight. Worst of
all,
dark clouds loomed over the mountains to the east. The gusting wind was
out of
the north. No help there. Rain would put the weasel in the henyard.
Bowstrings
fared poorly in rain. Well, any rain was a few hours off, with luck,
but he had
never noticed his luck saving him from getting soaked in a downpour. He
had not
dared wait until tomorrow. Those fellows hunting Tuon might have gotten
another
whiff of Karede's men, and then he would have had to try attacking
them, or
laying an ambush, and carry it out before they could catch Karede.
Better to
have them come to him, at a place of his choosing. Finding the proper
spot had
not been difficult, between Master Roidelle's collection of maps on the
one
hand and Vanin and the other scouts on the other.
Aludra
was fussing over one of her tall, metal-bound lofting tubes, beaded
braids
hiding her face as she examined something at the broad wooden base. He
wished
she had been willing to remain with the pack animals like Thorn and
Mistress
Anan. Even Noal had been willing to stay, if only to help Juilin and
Amathera
make sure Olver did not run off to watch the battle. The boy was dead
eager,
which could soon lead to plain dead. Matters had been bad enough when
only
Harnan and the other three had been corrupting Olver. but now he had
half the
men teaching him how to use a sword or dagger or fight with his hands
and feet,
and apparently filling his head with tales of heroes from the way he
had been
behaving, begging to go on raids with Mat and the like. Aludra was near
as bad.
Anybody could have used one of those strikers to light the fuse once
she had
loaded that tube, but she insisted on doing it herself. She was a
fierce woman,
Aludra was, and none too pleased at finding herself on the same side as
Seanchan, however temporary the arrangement was. It seemed wrong to her
that
they would see some of her handiwork without being on the receiving
end.
Leilwin and Domon sat their horses nearby keeping an eye on her, as
much to
make sure she did nothing foolish as to protect her. Mat hoped Leilwin
did
nothing foolish herself. Since there was apparently only one Seanchan
with the
people they would fight today, she had decided it was all right to be
there,
and the way she glared at Musenge and the other Deathwatch Guards, it
seemed
she might think she had something to prove to them.
The
three Aes Sedai, standing together with their reins in hand, cast dark
looks at
the Seanchan, too, as did Blaeric and Fen. who caressed their sword
hilts
perhaps unconsciously. Joline and her two Warders had been the only
ones aghast
at Sheraine's willing departure with Tuon-what an Aes Sedai felt on any
subject
was usually how her Warders felt on it. too-but the memory of being
leashed had
to be too fresh for Edesina or Teslyn to feel comfortable around
Seanchan
soldiers. Bethamin and Seta stood very meekly, hands folded at their
waists, a
little apart from the sisters. Bethamin's light-colored bay nudged her
shoulder
with his nose, and the tall, dark woman half reached up to stroke the
animal
before snatching her hand back down and resuming her humble pose. They
still
would take no part. Joline and Edesina had made that plain, yet it
seemed they
wanted the two women under their eyes to make sure of it. The Seanchan
women
plainly were looking at anything but the Seanchan soldiers. For that
matter.
Bethamin, Seta and Leilwin might as well not have existed for all of
Musenge
and that lot. Burn him, there were so many tensions in the air he could
almost
feel that hanging rope around his neck again.
Pips
stamped a hoof, impatient at standing in one place so long, and Mat
patted his
neck then scratched the scar forming on his own jaw. Tuon's ointments
had stung
as badly as she had said they would, but they worked. His new
collection of
scars did itch yet, though. Tuon. His wife. He was married. He had
known it was
coming, had known for a long time, but just the same… Married. He
should
have felt… different… somehow, but he still felt like himself. He
intended to keep it that way, burn him if he did not! If Tuon expected
Mat
Cauthon to settle down, to give up gambling or some such, she had
another think
coming. He supposed he would have to give over chasing after women,
much less
catching them, but he would still enjoy dancing with them. And looking
at them.
Just not when he was with her. Burn him if he knew when that would be.
He was
not about to go anywhere she had the upper hand, her and her talk of
cupbearers
and running grooms and marrying to serve the Empire. How was marrying
him
supposed to serve the flaming Empire?
Musenge
left the other ten men and five Ogier in red-and-black armor and
trotted his
black gelding up to Mat. The horse had good lines, built for speed and
endurance both, as far as Mat could tell without a thorough
examination.
Musenge looked built for endurance, a stocky, stolid man, his face worn
but
hard, his eyes like polished stones. "Forgiveness, Highness," he
drawled,
banging a gauntleted fist against his breastplate, "but shouldn't the
men
be back to work?'' He slurred his words worse than Selucia, almost to
unintelligibility. "Their rest break has stretched a long time. I doubt
they can complete the wall before the traitor arrives as it is." Mat
had
wondered how long it would take him to mention that. He had expected it
earlier.
Open-faced
helmets off but breastplates strapped on, the crossbow-men were sitting
on the
ground behind a long curving wall, perhaps a third of a circle made of
earth
thrown up out of the four-foot deep trench fronting it, with a thicket
of
sharpened stakes driven into the ground in front of that and extending
a little
beyond the ends of the trench. They had finished that in short order.
Infantry
needed to be as handy with shovel, mattock and axe as they were with
weapons.
Even cavalry did, but making horsemen believe was harder. Footmen knew
it was
better to have something between you and the enemy if you could. The
tools lay
scattered along the trench, now. Some of the men were dicing, others
just
taking their ease, even napping. Soldiers slept any chance they got. A
few were
reading books, of all things. Reading! Mandevwin moved among them,
fingering
his eyepatch and now and then bending to say a few words to a
bannerman. The
only lancer present, standing beside his horse, every line of him
saying he had
nothing to do with the crossbowmen, held no lance, but rather a long
banner-staff cased for half its length in leather.
It
was perfect terrain for what Mat had in mind. Near two miles of grassy
meadow
dotted with wildflowers and a few low bushes stretched from the wall to
the
tall trees at the western end. To the north was a blackwater swamp,
full of
oaks and odd. white-flowering trees that seemed half thick roots, with
a lake
clinging to its western edge and forest below the lake. A small river
flowed
south out of the swamp, half a mile behind Mat, before curving away to
the west
on his left. A small river, but wide enough and deep enough that horses
would
have to swim it. The far bank lay beyond bowshot. There was only one
way for
any attacker to get at the wall. Come straight for it.
"When
they arrive, I don't want them stopping to count how many men in red
and black
are here," he replied. Musenge winced slightly for some reason. "I
want them to see an unfinished wall and tools thrown down because we
learned
they were close. The promise of a hundred thousand crowns gold has to
have
their blood up, but I want them too excited to think straight. They'll
see us
vulnerable, our defenses incomplete, and with any luck, they'll rush in
straight away. They'll figure close to half of them will die when we
loose, but
that will just raise the chances for one of the others to get that
gold. They'll
only expect us to manage one volley." He slapped his hands together,
and
Pips shifted. "Then the trap closes."
"Still,
Highness, I wish we had more of your crossbowmen. I've heard you may
have as
many as thirty thousand." Musenge had heard him tell Tuon he would
fight
the Seanchan. too. The man was probing for information.
"I
have fewer than I did." Mat said with a grimace. His victories had
hardly
been bloodless, only remarkably close to it. Near four hundred
crossbowmen lay
in Altaran graves, and close to five hundred of the cavalry. A small
enough
butcher's bill, considering, yet he liked it best when the butcher
presented no
bill. "But what I have is enough for the day."
"As
you say. Highness." Musenge's voice was so neutral he could have been
commenting
on the price of beans. Strange. He did not look like a diffident man.
"I
have always been ready to die for her." There was no need for him to
say
which "her" he meant.
"I
guess I am, too. Musenge." Light, he thought he meant that! Yes, he did
mean
it. Did that mean he was in love? "Better to live for her. though,
wouldn't you say?"
"Should
you not be donning your armor. Highness?"
"I
don't intend getting close enough to the fighting to need armor. A
general who
draws his sword has put aside his baton and become a common soldier."
He
was only quoting Comadrin again-he seemed to do that a lot when
discussing
soldiering, but then, the man had known just about everything there was
to know
about the craft-just quoting, yet it appeared to impress the weathered
man, who
saluted him again and asked bloody permission before riding back to his
men.
Mat was tempted to ask what that "Highness" foolishness was about.
Likely it was just some Seanchan way of calling him a lord, but he had
not heard
anything like it in Ebou Dar, and he had been surrounded by Seanchan
there.
Five
figures appeared out of the forest at the foot of the meadow, and he
did not
need a looking glass to know them. The two Ogier in armor striped
bright red
and black would have told him even if Vanin's bulk had not. The mounted
men
were at a flat gallop, yet the Ogier kept pace, long arms swinging,
axes
swinging like a sawmill's drive-shaft.
"Sling-men
get ready!" Mat shouted. "Everybody else go pick up a shovel!"
The appearance had to be just right.
As
most of the crossbowmen scattered to pick up tools and make a show of
working
on the trench and wall, fifty others strapped on their helmets and
lined up in
front of Aludra. Tall men, they still carried the shortswords they
called
cat-gutters, but instead of crossbows, they were armed with four-foot
long
sling-staffs. He would have liked more than fifty, but Aludra only had
so much
of her powders. Each man wore a cloth belt sewn with pockets slung
across his
breastplate, and each pocket held a stubby leather cylinder larger than
a man's
fist with a short length of dark fuse sticking out of the end. Aludra
had not
come up with a fancy name for them yet. She would, though. She was one
for
fancy names. Dragons, and dragons' eggs.
One
by one the men held up long pieces of slow-match for her to light with
a
striker. She did it quickly, using each striker until the long wooden
stick had
burned down nearly to her fingertips, but she never winced, just
dropped the
thing and lit another while telling the sling-men to be faster, she was
getting
low on strikers. Light, but she was tight with the things. She had five
more
boxes that Mat knew of. As each man turned away from her, he put the
smoking
slow-match between his teeth and secured one of the cylinders to his
sling-staff as he walked to the wall. There were wide intervals between
sling-men. They had to cover the whole length of the wall.
"Time
to get your people in place, Musenge." Mat said loudly.
The
Deathwatch Guards formed a single line abreast with the Gardeners on
the end.
Anybody who took one glance through a looking glass would know what
they were.
Light, all they needed was to see Ogier in armor and the sun glinting
off all
that red and black. And if they stopped to think how few of the Guards
there
were, they would still see they had Mat outnumbered, and there would be
only
one way to find out whether Tuon was with him.
Vanin
galloped behind the wall, flung himself out of the saddle and
immediately began
walking his lathered dun to cool the animal down. As soon as he passed
the
wrall, crossbowmen began dropping the tools and running to put on
helmets and
pick up crossbows. Those had been laid so that the men formed three
spaced
ranks with gaps where the sling-men stood. It no longer mattered if
anyone was
watching from the forest. What they saw would seem natural.
Mat
trotted Pips to Vanin and dismounted. The two human Deathwatch Guards
and the
two Ogier went to join the others. The horses' nostrils flared with
their heavy
breathing, but the Ogier were panting no harder. One was Hartha, a
stone-eyed
fellow who apparently ranked very close to Musenge.
Vanin
scowled at the men who had not gotten down to walk their horses. A
horsethief
he might be, reformed or not. but he disliked mistreating horseflesh.
"They went up like one of her nightflowers when they glimpsed us," he
said, nodding toward Aludra. "We made sure they got a good look at that
fancy armor, then high-tailed it as soon as they started getting
mounted.
They're coming hard behind us. Harder than they should." He spat on the
ground. "I didn't get a good look at their animals, but I doubt they're
all good for that run. Some'll founder before they get here.''
"The
more the better," Mat said. "The fewer who make it, the better in my
book." All he needed was to give Tuon a day or two head start on them,
and
if that came from their ruining horses, if they rode out of the trees
and
decided he had too many men to take on, he would take that over a
battle any
day. After today's six-mile gallop, they would need to rest their
horses a few
days before they were fit to travel any distance at all. Vanin directed
that
scowl at him. Others might go around calling him my Lord and Highness,
but not
Chel Vanin.
Mat
laughed and clapped him on the shoulder before swinging back into Pips'
saddle.
It was good there was someone who did not think he was a fool noble, or
at
least, did not care whether or not he was. He rode to join the Aes
Sedai, who
were mounted now.
Blaeric
and Fen. the one on a bay gelding, the other on a black, gave him
stares almost
as dark as those they had directed at Musenge. They still suspected he
had
something to do with what had happened to Joline. He thought of telling
Fen
that his stub of a topknot looked ridiculous. Fen shifted in his saddle
and
stroked his sword hilt. Then again, maybe not.
"… what I told you," Joline was telling Bethamin and Seta, shaking
an
admonitory finger. Her dark bay gelding looked a war-horse, but was
not. The animal
had a good turn of speed, yet its temperament was mild as milk-water.
"If
you even think about embracing saidar, you'll regret it."
Teslyn
grunted sourly. She patted her white-faced chestnut mare, a much more
feisty
creature than Joline's mount, and spoke to the air. "She does train
wilders and expects them to behave once out of her sight. Or perhaps
she does
think the Tower will accept over-age novices." Spots of color appeared
in
Joline's cheeks, but she straightened in her saddle without saying
anything. As
usual when those two got into a conflict, Edesina concentrated on
something
else, in this case brushing imaginary dust from her divided skirts.
Enough
tension to choke on.
Suddenly
riders poured out of the trees at the far end of the meadow in a
torrent that
swelled into a spreading lake of steel-tipped lances as they drew rein,
no
doubt in surprise at what lay before them, h seemed that not as many
horses had
foundered as Mat had hoped for. Pulling the looking glass from its
scabbard
tied to his saddle's pommel, he raised it to his eye. The Taraboners
were easy
to pick out, with mail veils hiding their faces to the eyes, but the
others
wore every sort of helmet, rounded or conical, with face-bars and
without. He
even saw a few ridged Tairen helmets, though that did not mean there
were
Tairens among them. Most men used whatever armor they could find. Don't
think,
he thought. The woman is here. That hundred thousand gold crowns is
waiting.
Don't bloody-
A
shrill Seanchan bugle sounded, thin with the distance, and the horsemen
began
advancing at a walk, already spreading out to extend beyond the wall's
edges.
"Uncase
the banner, Macoll," Mat ordered. So these flaming sons of goats
thought
they were coming to murder Tuon, did they? "This time, we'll let them
know
who's killing them. Mandevwin. you have the command."
Mandevwin
turned his bay to face front. "Stand ready!" he shouted, and
under-officers and bannermen echoed the cry.
Macoll
pulled the leather case off, carefully fastening it to his saddle, and
the
banner streamed on the wind, a red-fringed white square with a large,
open red
hand in the center, and beneath it, embroidered in red, the words
Dovie'andi se
tovya sagain. It's time to toss the dice. Mat thought, translating. And
so it
was. He saw Musenge eyeing it. He seemed very calm for a man with ten
thousand
lances coming toward him.
"Are
you ready. Aludra?" Mat called.
"Of
course I am ready," she replied. "I only wish I had my dragons!"
Musenge shifted his attention to her. Burn her, she needed to watch her
tongue!
Mat wanted those dragons to be a shock when the Seanchan first faced
them.
Perhaps
twelve hundred paces from the wall, the ranks of lancers began to trot,
and at six
hundred they began to gallop, but not as hard as they might have. Those
horses
were tired after a long run already. They lumbered. None of the lances
had come
down. yet. They would not until the last hundred paces. Some of those
carried
streamers that floated behind them in the air, a large knot of red
here, a
clump of green or blue there. They might have been House colors, or
perhaps
they marked mercenary companies. All those hooves made a noise like
distant
thunder rolling.
"Aludra!"
Mat shouted without looking back. A hollow thump and an acrid sulphur
smell
announced the lofting tube sending its nightflower aloft, and a loud
pop the
blooming of a ball of red streaks overhead. Some of the galloping
horsemen
pointed to it as if in amazement. None looked behind them to see
Talmanes
leading the three banners of horse out of the forest below the lake.
Their
lances had been left with the pack animals, but every man would have
his
horsebow out. Spreading out in a single line, they began following the
galloping
riders, increasing speed as they came. Their horses had been ridden far
last
night, but not pressed too hard, and they had been rested all morning.
The
distance between the two groups of riders began to narrow.
"Front
rank!" Mandevwin shouted when the horsemen were four hundred paces
away.
"Loose!" Above a thousand bolts flashed out, dark streaks in the air.
Immediately the front rank bent to fasten their cranks to their
crossbows and
the second rank raised their weapons. "Second rank!" Mandevwin shouted.
"Loose!" Another thousand quarrels streaked for the oncoming
horsemen.
At
that range, they could not punch through a breastplate despite heads
designed
to do just that, but men with shattered legs toppled from their saddles
and men
with ruined arms reined in frantically to try stemming the flow of
blood. And
the horses… Ah. Light, the poor horses. Horses fell by the hundreds,
some
kicking and screaming, struggling to stand, others not moving at all.
many of
them tripping more animals. Catapulted riders tumbled across the meadow
grass
until they were trampled by the riders behind.
"Third
rank! Loose!" Mandevwin shouted, and as soon as those bolts were away,
the
front rank straightened. "Front rank!" Mandevwin called.
"Loose!" And another thousand bolts added to the carnage.
"Second rank! Loose!"
It
was not so one-sided as an ambush, of course. Some of the galloping
horsemen
had flung down their lances and uncased their horsebows. Arrows began
to fall
among the crossbowmen. Shooting accurately from a galloping horse was
no easy
task, and the range was too far at the start for the arrows to kill,
but more
than one man struggled to work his crossbow with a shaft jutting from
an arm.
The wall protected their legs. yet. Too far to kill unless your
target's luck
had run out. Mat saw a man fall with an arrow in his eye, another with
a shaft
taken in the throat. There were other gaps in the ranks, as well. Men
shuffled
forward quickly to fill them.
"You
could join in any time, Joline," he said.
"Third
rank! Loose!"
The
Aes Sedai shook her head irritably. "I must be in danger. I don't feel
in
danger yet." Teslyn nodded. She was watching the charge as if it were a
parade, and a not very interesting one at that.
"If
you would allow Seta and me," Bethamin began, but Joline looked over
her
shoulder coldly, and the Seanchan woman subsided and dropped her eyes
to her
hands on the reins. Seta smiled nervously, but it slid off her face
under
Joline's stare.
"Front
rank! Loose!"
Mat
rolled his eyes to the heavens and muttered a prayer that was half
curse. The
bloody women did not feel in danger! He felt as though his bloody head
was on
the chopping block!
"Second
rank! Loose!'
Talmanes
had come in range, now, and announced himself with a volley from four
thousand
bows at three hundred paces that cleared saddles. Closing the distance,
they
fired again. Again. The enemy ranks seemed to ripple with the shock.
Some men
whirled about and charged at Talmanes' line with lances coming down.
Others
began returning his hail of arrows with their own. Most continued on,
though.
"Form
square!" Mandevwin shouted a heartbeat before Mat could. He hoped the
man
had not left it too bloody late.
The
Band was well-trained, though. The men on the flanks fell back at the
run. as calmly
as if arrows were not pelting them, clanging off breastplates and
helmets. And
sometimes not. Men fell. The three ranks never lost cohesion, though,
as they
bent into a hollow box with Mat at its center. Musenge and the other
human
Deathwatch Guards had their swords out, and the Ogier were hefting
their long
axes.
"Sling-men!"
Mandevwin shouted. "Loose at will! Front rank, west! Loose!"
Sling-men along the western rank shifted their sling-staffs so they
could touch
the fuses coming from the stubby cylinders to the slow-matches held in
their
teeth and, as the volley lanced out from the crossbows, whipped cheir
slings
back and then forward. The dark cylinders flew more than a hundred
paces to
land among the on-rushing horsemen. The sling-men were already fitting
more of
the cylinders to their slings before the first fell. Aludra had marked
each
fuse with pieces of thread to indicate different burning times, and
each
cylinder erupted with a roar in a burst of flame, some on the ground,
some as
high as a mounted man's head. The explosion was not the real weapon,
though a
man struck in the face was suddenly headless. He stayed upright in the
saddle
for three strides before toppling. No, Aludra had wrapped a layer of
hard
pebbles around the powder inside each cylinder, and those pierced flesh
deeply
when they hit. Shrieking horses fell to thrash on the ground. Riders
fell to
lie still.
An
arrow tugged at Mat's left sleeve, another pierced his right sleeve,
only the
fletchings keeping it from going through cleanly, and a third ripped
open the
right shoulder of his coat. He put a finger behind the scarf around his
neck
and tugged. The bloody thing felt awfully tight of a sudden. Maybe he
should
consider wearing armor at times like this. The enemy flanks were
beginning to
curl in, now, preparing to envelop the crossbowmen behind the wall.
Talmanes'
men still peppered their rear with arrows, but several hundred men had
been
forced to drop their bows to defend themselves with swords, and it was
unlikely
that all of the horses with empty saddles out there had belonged to
Taraboners
or Amadicians. He had left a gap in the center of his line, a path for
anyone
who decided to flee, yet no one was taking the offering. They could
smell that
hundred thousand crowns gold.
"I
think," Joline said slowly. "Yes. I feel in danger, now." Teslyn
simply drew back her hand and threw a sphere of fire larger than a
horse's
head. The explosion hurled dirt and pieces of men and horses into the
air. It
was about bloody time!
Facing
in three directions, the Aes Sedai began hurling fireballs as fast as
they
could swing their arms, but the devastation they wrought did nothing to
slow
the attack. Those men should have been able to see there was no woman
matching
Tuon's description inside the square by this time, but their blood was
no doubt
on fire, the scent of riches in their nostrils. A man could live the
rest of
his life like a noble with a hundred thousand crowns gold. The square
was
encircled, and they fought to close on it, fought and died as volleys
from the
crossbows lashed them and sling-men killed them. Another wall began to
rise,
made of dead and dying men and horses, a wall that some tried to ride
over and
joined in the attempt. More scrambled down from their saddles and tried
to clamber
over. Crossbow bolts hurled them back. This close, bolts penetrated
breastplates like hot knives going into butter. On they came, and died.
The
silence seemed to come suddenly. Not quite silence. The air was full of
the
sound of panting men who had been working those cranks as fast as they
could.
And there was moaning from the wounded. A horse was still shrieking,
somewhere.
But Mat could see no one on his feet between the wall of dead and
Talmanes, no
one in the saddle except men in green helmets and breastplates. Men who
had
lowered their bows and swords. The Aes Sedai folded their hands on the
high
pommels of their saddles. They were breathing hard, too.
"It
is done, Mat!" came Talmanes' shout. "Those who are not dead are
dying. Not one of the fools tried to escape."
Mat
shook his head. He had expected them to be half-mad with the lust for
gold.
They had been completely mad with it.
It
would be necessary to haul away dead men and horses for Mat and the
others to
get out, and Talmanes set men to work, fastening ropes to horses to
drag them
aside. No one wanted to climb over that. No one but the Ogier.
"I
want to see if I can find the traitor," Hartha said, and he and the
other
six Gardeners shouldered their axes and walked over the mound of bodies
as if
it were dirt.
"Well,
at least we settled this," Joline said, patting her face with a
lace-edged
handkerchief. Sweat dotted her forehead. "You owe a debt, Mat. Aes
Sedai
do not become involved in private wars as a rule. I shall have to think
on how
you can pay it." Mat had a pretty good idea what she would come up
with.
She was mad herself if she thought he would agree.
"Crossbows
settled this, marath'damane" Musenge said. His helmet, breastplate and
coat were orf, his left shirt-sleeve ripped away so one of the other
Guards
could wrap a bandage around where an arrow had gone through. The sleeve
had
come away very neatly, as if the stitching had been weak. He had a
raven
tattooed on his shoulder. "Crossbows and men with heart. You never had
more
than this, did you, Highness." That was not a question. "This and
whatever losses you suffered."
"I
told you," Mat said. "I had enough." He was not going to reveal
anything more to the man than he could not avoid, but Musenge nodded as
if he
had confirmed everything.
By
the time an opening could be cleared so that Mat and the others could
ride
through, Hartha and the Gardeners had returned. "I found the
traitor," Hartha said, holding up a severed head by its hair.
Musenge's
eyebrows climbed at the sight of that dark, hook-nosed face. "She will
be
very interested to see this," he said softly. Softly as the sound of
sword
being drawn is soft. "We must carry it to her."
"You
know him?" Mat asked.
"We
know him. Highness." Musenge's face, suddenly seeming carved from
stone,
said he would say no more on the subject.
"Look,
would you stop calling me that? My name is Mat. After today, I'd say
you have a
right to use it." Mat surprised himself by sticking out his hand.
That
stone mask crumpled in astonishment. "I could not do that, Highness,"
he said in scandalized tones. "When she married you. you became Prince
of
the Ravens. To speak your name would lower my eyes forever."
Mat
took off his hat and scrubbed fingers through his hair. He had told
everyone
who would listen that he did not like nobles, did not want to be one.
and he
had meant it. He still meant it. And now he bloody was one! He did the
only
thing he could. He laughed until his sides ached.
CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT
Remember the Old Saying
The
red-walled room, its ceiling painted fancifully with birds and fish
cavorting
among clouds and waves, bustled with brown-clad clerks scurrying along
the
aisles between the long tables that covered the floor. None seemed to
be trying
to listen-most seemed stunned, with cause-but Suroth disliked their
presence.
They had to overhear some of what was being said, and it was
potentially dire
news. Galgan had insisted, though. They needed to work to keep their
minds off
the disastrous news from home, and they were all trusted men and women.
He
insisted! At least the white-haired old man was not dressed as a
soldier, this
morning. His voluminous blue trousers and short, high-collared red coat
with
rows of gold buttons embossed with his sigil were the height of Seandar
fashion, which meant the height of fashion for the Empire. When he wore
armor,
or even just his red uniform, he sometimes looked at her as if she were
a
soldier under his command!
Well,
once Elbar brought word that Tuon was dead, she could have Galgan
killed. His
cheeks were smeared with ashes, as were hers. The ship Semirhage had
promised
had brought word of the Empress's death and the Empire was racked by
rebellion
in every quarter. There was no Empress, no Daughter of the Nine Moons.
To
commoners, the world trembled on the brink of destruction. To some of
the
Blood, too. With Galgan and a few more dead, there would be none to
object to
Suroth Sabelle Meldarath proclaiming herself Empress. She tried not to
think of
the new name she would take. Thinking on a new name beforehand was bad
luck.
A
frown creasing his face. Galgan looked down at the map spread out
before them,
and placed a red-lacquered fingernail atop mountains on the southern
coast of Arad Doman. Suroth did not
know what the mountains were
called. The map showed all of Arad Doman and held three markers, one
red wedge
and two white circles, spaced out in a long line north to south. "Has
Turan gotten an accurate count of how many men came out of these
mountains to
join Ituralde when he crossed into Arad Doman, Yamada?"
Efraim
Yamada wore the ashes, too, since he was of the Blood, if only the low
Blood,
his hair cut in the bowl-and-tail rather than a narrow crest across an
otherwise shaved scalp. Only the commoners around the table, whatever
their
rank, were without. Graying and tall in a blue-and-gold breastplate,
with broad
shoulders and lean hips, Yamada still held some of the beauty of his
youth.
"He reports at least one hundred thousand, Captain-General. Perhaps
half
again that."
"And
how many came out after Turan crossed the border?"
"Possibly
two hundred thousand, Captain-General."
Galgan
sighed and straightened. "So Turan has one army ahead of him and
another behind,
very likely the whole of Arad Doman's strength, and between them he is
outnumbered." The fool! Stating the blindingly obvious.
"Turan
should have stripped Tarabon of every sword and lance!" Suroth snapped.
"If he survives this debacle, I will have his head!"
Galgan
quirked a white eyebrow at her. "I hardly think Tarabon is loyal enough
to
support that just yet," he said drily. "Besides, he has damane and
raken. They should offset his lesser numbers. Speaking of damane and
raken,
I've signed the orders raising Tylee Khirgan to Lieutenant-General and
the low
Blood, since you've dithered over it, and orders to return most of
those raken
to Amadicia and Altara. Chisen still hasn't found whoever created that
little
mess in the north. and I don't like the notion that whoever it was is
lying in
wait to spring out as soon as Chisen returns to the Molvaine Gap."
Suroth
hissed, gripping her pleated blue skirts in her fists before she could
stop her
hands. She would not let the man make her show emotion! "You overstep
yourself, Galgan," she said coldly. "I command the Forerunners. For
the time being, I command the Return. You will sign no orders without
my
approval."
"You
commanded the Forerunners, who have been subsumed into the Return," he
replied calmly, and Suroth tasted bitterness. The news from the Empire
had
emboldened him. With the Empress dead, Gal-gan intended to make himself
the
first Emperor in nine hundred years. It seemed he would have to die by
tonight.
"As for you commanding the Return-" He cut off at the sound of heavy
boots from the corridor.
Suddenly
Deathwatch Guards filled the doorway, armored and hands on their sword
hilts.
Hard eyes stared out of their red-and-green helmets to survey the room.
Only
when they were satisfied did they step aside to reveal that the
corridor was
filled with Deathwatch Guards, human and Ogier. Suroth barely noticed
them. She
had eyes only for the small dark woman in pleated blue with a shaven
head and
ashes on her cheeks. The news was all over the city. She could not have
reached
the palace without hearing of her mother's death, her family's deaths,
but her
face was a stern mask. Suroth's knees hit the floor automatically.
Around her
the Blood knelt, the commoners prostrated themselves.
"The
Light's blessings for your safe return. Highness," she said in chorus
with
the rest of the Blood. So Elbar had failed. No matter. Tuon would not
take a
new name or become empress until the mourning was finished. She could
still
die, clearing the way for a new empress.
"Show
them what Captain Musenge brought me, Banner-General Karede." Tuon said.
A
tall man with three dark plumes on his helmet bent to carefully empty a
large
lump from a canvas bag onto the green floor tiles. The gagging smell of
decay
began to permeate the room. Dropping the bag, he strode across the
floor to
stand beside Suroth.
It
took her a moment to recognize Elbar's hook-nosed face in that rotting
mass,
but as soon as she did. she fell forward, prostrating herself, kissing
the
floor tiles. Not in desperation, though. She could recover from this.
Unless
they had put Elbar to the question. "My eyes are lowered, Highness,
that
one of mine has offended you so deeply that you took his head."
"Offended
me." Tuon seemed to be weighing the words. "It might be said he
offended me. He tried to kill me."
Gasps
filled the room, and before Suroth could more than open her mouth, the
Deathwatch Guard Banner-General planted a boot on her bottom, seized
her crest
in his fist, and hauled her upper body clear of the floor. She did not
struggle. That would only have added to the indignity.
"My
eyes are deeply lowered that one of mine should be a traitor,
Highness,"
she said hoarsely. She wished she could have spoken naturally. but the
cursed
man had her back arched till it was a wonder she could speak at all.
"Had
I even suspected, I would have had him put to the question myself. But
if he
tried to implicate me, Highness, he lied to protect his true master. I
have
some thoughts on that which 1 would share with you in private, if I may
be
allowed." With a little luck, she could lay this to Galgan. His
usurpation
of her authority would help.
Tuon
looked over Suroth's head. She met Galgan's eyes, and Abal-dar's and
Yamada's,
and those of everyone of the Blood, but not Suroth's. "It is well known
that Zaired Elbar was Suroth's man completely. He did nothing that she
did not
order. Therefore Suroth Sabelle Meldarath is no more. This da'covale
will serve
the Deathwatch Guard as they wish until her hair has grown enough for
her to be
decent when she is sent to the block for sale."
Suroth
never thought of the knife she had intended to use to open her veins, a
knife
beyond reach in her apartments. She could not think at all. She started
screaming,
a wordless howl, before they even began cutting her clothing off.
The
Andoran sun was warm after Tar Valon. Pevara removed her cloak and
began tying
it behind her saddle as the gateway winked shut, hiding the view of the
Ogier
grove in Tar Valon. None of them had wanted anyone to see them leaving.
They
would return to the grove for the same reason, unless matters went very
badly.
In which case, they might never return. She had thought this task must
be
carried out by someone who combined the highest diplomatic skills with
the
courage of a lion. Well, she was no coward, at least. She could say
that much
of herself.
"Where
did you learn the weave for bonding a Warder?" Javindhra asked
abruptly,
stowing her own cloak in similar fashion.
"You
should recall that I once suggested Red sisters would be well served by
having
Warders." Pevara snugged her red riding gloves, showing no concern for
the
question. She had expected it before this. "Why would you be surprised
I
know the weave?" In truth, she had needed to ask Yukiri, and had been
hard
pressed to dissemble her reason for asking. She doubted that Yukiri was
suspicious, though. A Red bonding a Warder was as likely as a woman
flying.
Except, of course, that that was why she had come to Andor. Why they
had all
come.
Javindhra
was there only at Tsutama's command, given when Pe-vara and Tarna could
not
come up with enough names to suit the Highest. The angular Sitter did
not
bother to hide her displeasure over that, not from Pevara. although she
had buried
it deeply around Tsutama. Tarna was there, of course, pale-haired and
icy cold,
her Keeper's stole left behind but her divided gray skirts embroidered
in red
to the knee. For Elaida's Keeper to have a Warder would be difficult,
though
the men were to be housed in the city, away from the Tower, yet it had
all been
her idea in the first place, and she was. if not eager, then determined
to take
part in this first experiment. Besides, the need for numbers was
paramount,
because they had found only three other sisters willing to entertain
the idea.
The primary task of the Red for so long, finding men who could channel
and
bringing them to the Tower to be gentled, tended to sour women on all
men, so
the clues had been few and far between. Jezrail was a square-faced
Tairen who
kept a painted miniature of the boy she had almost married instead of
coming to
the Tower. His grandchildren would be grandparents now, but she still
spoke of
him fondly. Desala, a beautiful Cairhienin with large dark eyes and an
unfortunate
temper, when given the chance would dance any number of men to
exhaustion in a
night. And Melare, plump and witty, with a love of conversation, sent
money to
Andor to pay for her grandnephews' education as she had for her nephews
and
nieces.
Weary
of searching out such tiny clues, weary of probing delicately to learn
whether
they meant what they might. Pevara had convinced Tsutama that six would
be
enough to begin. Too, a larger party might cause some unfortunate
reaction.
After all, the whole Red Ajah appearing at this so-called Black Tower,
or even
half, might well make the men think themselves under attack. There was
no
telling how sane they all still were. That was one thing they had
agreed on,
behind Tsutama's back. They would bond no men who showed any signs of
madness.
That was, if they were allowed to bond any.
Ajah
eyes-and-ears in Caemlyn had sent copious reports on the Black Tower,
and some
had even found employment inside it, so they had no difficulty locating
the
well-worn dirt track that led down from the city to a grandiose
double-arched
black gate, near fifty feet tall and ten spans wide, topped by
crenelations
over a down-pointing central spike of stone and flanked by a pair of
thick,
crenelated black towers that stood at least fifteen spans high. There
were no
actual gates to close up the opening, and the black stone wall that
stretched
out of sight east and west, marked at intervals by the foundations of
bastions
and towers, was nowhere higher than four or five paces that she could
see. Weeds
grew along the uneven top, and grasses ruffled by the breeze. Those
unfinished
walls, looking as if they might never be finished, made the gate seem
ludicrous.
The
three men who stepped out into the opening were not at all ludicrous,
however.
They wore long black coats, and swords at their hips. One, a lean young
fellow
with curled mustaches, had a silver pin in the shape of a sword on his
high
collar. One of the Dedicated. Pevara resisted the instinct to think of
him as
equivalent to an Accepted and the other two as novices. Novices and
Accepted
were kept safe and guided until they knew enough of the Power to become
Aes
Sedai. By all reports, Soldiers and Dedicated were considered ready for
battle
almost as soon as they learned to channel. And they were forced from
the first
day, pressed to seize as much of saidin as they could, made to use it
almost
continually. Men died from that, and they called it "training
losses," as if they could hide death behind bland words. The thought of
losing novices or Accepted in that fashion curdled Pevara's stomach.
but it
seemed that the men took it in stride.
"A
fine morning to you, Aes Sedai," the Dedicated said with a small bow as
they reined in before him. A very small bow, never taking his eyes from
them.
His accents were those of Murandy. "Now what would six sisters be
wanting
here at the Black Tower this fine morning?"
"To
see the M'Hael," Pevara replied, managing to avoid choking on the word.
It
meant "leader" in the Old Tongue, but the implication of taking that
alone as a title gave the word much stronger meaning, as if he led
everyone and
everything.
"Ah,
to see the M'Hael. is it? And of what Ajahs should I say?"
"The
Red," Pevara replied and watched him blink. Very satisfying. But not
very
helpful.
"The
Red," he said flatly. He had not remained startled very long. "Well.
then. Enkazin, al'Seen, you keep watch while I see what the M'Hael has
to say
to this."
He
turned his back, and the vertical silvery slash of a gateway appeared
in front
of him, widening into an opening no larger than a door. Was that as
large as he
could make? There had been some discussion
about whether to bond men who were as strong as possible or those who
were weak. The weak might be more easily controlled, while the strong
might-would
definitely-be more useful. They had reached no consensus; each sister
would
have to decide for herself. He darted through the gateway and closed it
before
she had a chance to see more than a white stone platform with steps
leading up
one side and a squared-off black stone that might have been one of the
building
blocks for the wall, polished till it shone in the sun, sitting atop it.
The
two who remained stayed in the middle of the double arch as if to bar
the
sisters from riding in. One was a Saldaean, a skinny broad-nosed man
just short
of his middle years who had something of the look of a clerk about him,
a bit
of a stoop as from hunching for long hours over a writing table, the
other a
boy, little more than a child, who raked dark hair out of his eyes with
his
fingers though the breeze quickly put it back again. Neither seemed the
slightest uneasy over confronting six sisters alone. If they were
alone. Were
there others in those towers? Pevara refrained from glancing at the
tower tops.
"You
there, boy,'' Desala said in a voice like chimes. Chimes tinged with
anger. The
surest way to set off her temper was to harm a child. "You should be at
home with your mother studying your letters. What are you doing here?"
The
boy flushed bright red and raked hair from his face again.
"Saml's
all right, Aes Sedai," the Saldaean said, patting the boy's shoulder.
"He's a quick learner, and you don't need to show him anything twice
before he knows it." The boy stood up very straight, pride on his face,
and tucked his thumbs behind his sword belt. A sword, at his age! True,
a
noble's son would have been learning the sword for several years at
Saml
al'Seen's age, but he would not be allowed to wear the thing about!
"Pevara,"
Tarna said coolly, "no children. I knew they had children here, but no
children."
"Light!"
Melare breathed. Her white mare sensed her agitation and tossed her
head.
"Certainly no children!''
"That
would be an abomination," Jezrail said.
"No
children," Pevara agreed quickly. "I think we should wait to say more
until we see Master… the M'Hael." Javindhra sniffed.
"No
children what, Aes Sedai?" Enkazin asked, frowning. "No children
what?" he said again when no one answered.
He
no longer appeared so much like a clerk. The stoop remained, but
something in
his tilted eyes suddenly seemed… dangerous. Was he holding the male
half
of the Power? The possibility sent a chill down Pevara's spine, but she
resisted the desire to embrace saidar. Some men who could channel
seemed able
to sense when a woman was holding the Power. Enkazin looked like he
might be
hasty, now.
They
waited in silence except for the occasional stamp of a hoof, Pevara
schooling
herself to patience, Javindhra grumbling under her breath. Pevara could
not
make out the words, but she knew grumbling when she heard it. Tama and
Jezrail
took books from their saddlebags and read. Good. Let these Asha'man see
that
they were unconcerned. Only, not even the boy seemed impressed. He and
the
Saldaean just stood there in the middle of the gate watching, hardly
blinking.
After
perhaps half an hour, a larger gateway opened and the Muran-dian strode
through. "The M'Hael will be receiving you at the palace, Aes Sedai. Go
on
through." He jerked his head toward the opening.
"You
will show us the way?" Pevara said, dismounting. The gateway was
larger,
but she would have had to crouch to ride through.
"There'll
be someone the other side to guide you." He barked a laugh. "The
M'Hael doesn't associate with the likes of me." Pevara filed that away
to
chew over later.
As
soon as the last of them was through, near the white stone platform
with its
mirror-bright black stone, the gateway winked shut, but they were not
alone.
Four men and two women in rough woolens took the reins of their horses,
and a
dark, heavyset man with both the silver sword and a sinuous
red-and-gold
figure, a dragon, on his tall black collar gave them a minimal bow.
"Follow
me," he said curtly in a Tairen accent. His eyes were like augers.
The
palace the Murandian had spoken of was just that, two stories of white
marble
topped with pointed domes and spires in the style of Saldaea, separated
from a
large space of bare, hard-packed ground by the white platform. It was
not large
among palaces, but most nobles lived in buildings far smaller and less
grand.
Broad stone stairs rose to a wide landing in front of tall twinned
doors. Each
bore a gauntleted fist gripping three lightning bolts, carved large and
gilded.
Those doors swung open before the Tairen reached them, but there were
no
servants in evidence. The man must have channeled. Pevara felt that
chill
again. Javindhra muttered under her breath. With a sound of prayer,
this time.
The
palace might have belonged to any noble with a taste for tapestries
showing
battles and red-and-black floor tiles, except that there were no
servants in
evidence. He had servants, though unfortunately no Red Ajah
eyes-and-ears among
them, but did he expect them to remain out of sight when not needed or
had he
ordered them from the halls? Perhaps to avoid having anyone see six Aes
Sedai
arrive. That line of reasoning ran toward thoughts she would rather not
consider. She had acknowledged the dangers before leaving the White
Tower.
There was no point dwelling on them.
The
chamber the Tairen led them to was a throne room, where a ring of
spiral-cut
black columns supported what must have been the palace's largest dome,
its
interior layered with gilt and half filled with gilded lamps hanging on
gilded
chains. Tall mirrored stand-lamps stood along the curved walls, too.
Perhaps a
hundred men in black coats were standing to either side of the room.
Every man
she could see wore the sword and the dragon, men with hard faces,
leering
faces, cruel faces. Their eyes focused on her and the other sisters.
The
Tairen did not announce them, but rather simply joined the mass of
Asha'man and
left them to make their own way across the room. The floor tiles were
red and
black here, too. Taim must particularly like those colors. The man
himself was
lounging on what could only be called a throne, a massive chair as
heavily
carved and gilded as any throne she had seen, atop a white marble dais.
Pevara
focused on him, and not only to avoid feeling all those eyes of men who
could
channel following her. Mazrim Taim drew the eye. He was tall, with a
strongly
hooked nose and an air of physical strength about him. An air of
darkness, too.
He sat there with his ankles crossed and one arm hanging over the heavy
arm of
the throne, yet he seemed ready to explode into violence.
Interestingly, though
his black coat was embroidered with blue-and-gold dragons that twined
around
the sleeves from elbows to cuffs, he did not wear the collar pins.
"Six
sisters of the Red Ajah," he said when they stopped short of the dais.
His
eyes… She had only thought the Tairen's eyes were augers. "Plainly
you didn't come to try gentling us all." Chuckles rippled around the
room.
"Why did you come asking to speak to me?"
"I
am Pevara Tazanovni, Sitter for the Red," she said. "This is
Javindhra Doraille, also a Red Sitter. The others are Tarna Feir,
Desala
Nevanche-"
"I
didn't ask your names," Taim cut in coldly. "I asked why you came
here."
This
was not going well. She managed not to take a deep breath, but she
wanted to.
Outwardly, she was cool and calm. Inside, she wondered whether she
would end
the day forcibly bonded. Or dead. "We want to discuss bonding Asha'man
as
Warders. After all, you've bonded fifty-one sisters. Against their
will."
As well to let him know they were aware of that from the start. "We do
not
propose bonding any man against his will, however."
A
tall, golden-haired man standing near the dais sneered at her. "Why
should
we allow Aes Sedai to take any m-" Something unseen struck the side of
his
head so hard that his feet left the floor tiles before he fell in a
heap, eyes
closed and blood trickling from his nostrils.
A
lean man with receding gray-streaked hair and a forked beard bent to
touch a
finger to the fallen man's head. "He's alive," he said as he
straightened, "but his skull's cracked and his jaw's broken." He
might have been talking about the weather. None of the men made any
move to
offer Healing. Not one!
"I
have some small skill in Healing." Melare said, gathering her skirts
and
already moving toward the fallen man. "Enough for this, I think. With
your
permission."
Taim
shook his head. "You do not have my permission. If Mishraile survives
till
nightfall, he'll be Healed. Perhaps the pain will teach him to guard
his
tongue. You say you want to bond Warders? Reds?"
That
last word carried a great deal of contempt, which Pevara chose to
ignore.
Tarna's eyes could have turned the sun to an icicle, though. Pevara
laid a
cautionary hand on the other woman's arm as she spoke. "Reds have
experience
with men who can channel." Mutters rose among the watching Asha'man.
Angry
mutters. She ignored that, too. "We are not afraid of them. Custom can
be
as hard to change as law, harder at times, but it has been decided to
change
ours. Henceforth, Red sisters may bond Warders, but only men who can
channel.
Each sister may bond as many as she feels comfortable with. Given the
Green,
for example, I think that is unlikely to be more than three or four."
"Very
well."
Pevara
blinked in spite of herself. "'Very well'?" She must have
misunderstood him. He could not have been convinced so easily.
Taim's
eyes seemed to bore into her head. He spread his hands, and it was a
mocking
gesture. "What would you have me say? Fair is fair? Equal shares?
Accept 'very
well' and ask who will let you bond them. Besides, you must remember
the old
saying. Let the lord of chaos rule." The chamber erupted with men's
laughter.
Pevara
had never heard any saying like that. The laughter made the hair on the
back of
her neck try to stand.
The
End of the Eleventh Book of The Wheel of Time
GLOSSARY
A
Note on Dates in This Glossary. The Toman Calendar (devised by Toma dur
Ahmid)
was adopted approximately two centuries after the death of the last
male Aes
Sedai, recording years After the Breaking of the World (AB). So many
records
were destroyed in the Trolloc Wars that at their end there was argument
about
the exact year under the old system. A new calendar, proposed by Tiam
of Gazar,
celebrated freedom from the Trolloc threat and recorded each year as a
Free
Year (FY). The Gazaran Calendar gained wide acceptance within twenty
years
after the Wars' end. Artur Hawkwing attempted to establish a new
calendar based
on the founding of his empire (FF, From the Founding), but only
historians now
refer to it. After the death and destruction of the War of the Hundred
Years, a
third calendar was devised by Uren din Jubai Soaring Gull, a scholar of
the Sea
Folk, and promulgated by the Panarch Farede of Tarabon. The Farede
Calendar,
dating from the arbitrarily decided end of the War of the Hundred Years
and
recording years of the New Era (NE), is currently in use. Aelfinn:
A race of beings, largely human in appearance but with
snake-like
characteristics, who will give true answers to three questions.
Whatever the
question, their answers are always correct, if frequently given in
forms that
are not clear, but questions concerning the Shadow can be extremely
dangerous.
Their true location is unknown, but they can be visited by passing
through a
terangreaL once a possession of Mayene but in recent years held in the
Stone of
Tear. There are reports that they can also be reached by entering the
Tower of
Ghenjei. They speak the Old Tongue, mention treaties and agreements,
and ask if
those entering carry iron, instruments of music or devices that can
make fire.
See also Eelfinn. Amayar,
the: The land-dwelling inhabitants of the Sea Folk islands.
Known to few people
other than the Atha'an Miere, the Amayar are the craftsmen who make
what is
known as Sea Folk porcelain. Followers of the Water Way, which prizes
acceptance of what is rather than what might be wished for, they are
very
uncomfortable at sea and only venture onto the water in small boats for
fishing, never leaving sight of land. Their way of life is very
peaceful, and
requires very little oversight from the governors appointed from among
the
Atha'an Miere. Since Atha'an Miere governors have little desire to go
far from
the sea, the Amayar essentially run their villages according to their
own rules
and customs. Arad
Doman: A nation on the Aryth Ocean, currently racked by civil
war and by wars
against those who have declared for the Dragon Reborn. Its capital is
Bandar
Eban. In Arad Doman, those who are descended from the nobility at the
time of
the founding of the nation, as opposed to those raised later, are known
as the
bloodborn. The ruler (king or queen) is elected by a council of the
heads of
merchant guilds (the Council of Merchants), who are almost always
women. He or
she must be from the noble class, not the merchant, and is elected for
life.
Legally the king or queen has absolute authority, except that he or she
can be
deposed by a three-quarter vote of the Council. The current ruler is
King
Alsalam Saeed Al-madar, Lord of Almadar, High Seat of House Almadar.
His
present whereabouts are much shrouded in mystery. Area,
units of: (1) Land: 1 ribbon = 20 paces X 10 paces (200 square
paces); 1 cord =
20 paces X 50 paces (1000 square paces); 1 hide = 100 paces X 100 paces
(10,000
square paces); 1 rope = 100 paces X 1000 paces (100,000 square paces);
1 march
= 1000 paces X 1000 paces ('A square mile). (2) Cloth: 1 pace = 1 pace
and 1
hand X 1 pace and 1 hand. armsmen: Soldiers who owe allegiance or
fealty to a
particular lord or lady. Asha'man:
(1) In the Old Tongue. "Guardian" or "Guardians," but
always a guardian of justice and truth. (2) The name given, both
collectively
and as a rank, to the men who have come to the Black Tower, near
Caemlyn in
Andor. in order to learn to channel. Their training largely
concentrates on the
ways in which the One Power can be used as a weapon, and in another
departure
from the usages of the White Tower, once they learn to seize saidin,
the male
half of the Power, they are required to perform all chores and labors
with the
Power. When newly enrolled, a man is termed a Soldier; he wears a plain
black
coat with a high collar, in the Andoran fashion. Being raised to
Dedicated
brings the right to wear a silver pin, called the Sword, on the collar
of his
coat. Promotion to Asha'man brings the right to wear a Dragon pin, in
gold and
red enamel, on the collar opposite the Sword. Although many women,
including
wives, flee when they learn that their men actually can channel, a fair
number
of men at the Black Tower are married, and they use a version of the
Warder
bond to create a link with their wives. This same bond, altered to
compel
obedience, has recently been used to bond captured Aes Sedai as well.
Some
Asha'man have been bonded by Aes Sedai, although the traditional Warder
bond is
used. The Asha'man are led by Mazrim Taim, who has styled himself the
M'Hael,
Old Tongue for "leader." Balwer,
Sebban: Formerly secretary to Pedron Niall (the Lord Captain
Commander of the
Children of the Light) in public, and secretly Niall's spymaster. After
Niall's
death, Balwer aided the escape of Morgase (once Queen of Andor) from
the
Seanchan in Amador for his own reasons, and was employed as secretary
to Perrin
t'Bashere Aybara and Faile ni Bashere't'Aybara. His duties expanded,
however,
and he now directs Cba Faile in their activities, acting as a spymaster
for
Perrin, though Perrin doesn't think of him so. See Cha Faile. Band
of the Red Hand: See Shen an Calhar. Blood,
the: Term used by the Seanchan to designate the nobility. There
are four
degrees of nobility, two of the High Blood and two of the low. or
lesser.
Blood. The High Blood let their fingernails grow to a length of one
inch and
shave the sides of their heads. leaving a crest down the center,
narrower for
men than for women. The length of this crest varies according to
fashion. The
low Blood also grow their fingernails long, but they shave the sides
and back
of the head leaving what appears to be a bowl of hair, with a wide tail
at the
back allowed to grow longer, often to the shoulder for men or to the
waist for
women. Those of the highest level of the High Blood are called High
Lady or
High Lord and lacquer the first two fingernails on each hand. Those of
the next
level of the High Blood are called simply Lord or Lady and lacquer only
the
nails of the forefingers. Those of the low Blood also are called simply
Lady or
Lord, but those of the higher rank lacquer the nails of the last two
fingers on
each hand, while those on the lowest level lacquer only the nails of
the little
fingers. The Empress and immediate members of the Imperial family shave
their
heads entirely and lacquer all of their fingernails. One can be raised
to the
Blood as well as born to it, and this is frequently a reward for
outstanding
accomplishment or service to the Empire. calendar: There are 10 days to
the
week, 28 days to the month and 13 months to the year. Several feast
days are
not part of any month; these include Sunday (the longest day of the
year), the
Feast of Thanksgiving (once every four years at the spring equinox) and
the
Feast of All Souls Salvation, also called All Souls Day (once every ten
years
at the autumn equinox). While the months have names- Taisham, Jumara.
Saban,
Aine. Adar, Saven, Amadaine, Tammaz. Maigdhal, Choren, Shaldine, Nesan
and
Danu-these are seldom used except in official documents and by
officials. For
most people, using the seasons is good enough. Captain-General:
(1) The military rank of the leader of the Queen's Guard. This position
is
currently held by Lady Birgitte Trahelion. (2) The title given to the
head of
the Green Ajah, though known only to members of the Green. This
position is
currently held by Adelorna Bastine in the Tower, and Myrelle Berengari
among
the rebel Aes Sedai contingent under Egwene al'Vere. (3) A
Seanchan rank, the highest in the Ever Victorious Army
except for Marshal-General, which is a temporary rank sometimes given
to a
Captain-General put in charge of a war. Cha
Faile: (1) In the Old Tongue, "the Falcon's Talon." (2) Name
taken by
the young Cairhienin and Tairen nobles, attempted followers of
ji'e'toh, who
have sworn fealty to Faile ni Bashere't'Ay-bara. In secret, they act as
her
personal scouts and spies. Since her capture by the Shaido, they
continue their
activities under the guidance of Sebban Balwer. Children
of the Light: Society of strict ascetic beliefs, owing
allegiance to no nation
and dedicated to the defeat of the Dark One and the destruction of all
Darkfriends. Founded during the War of the Hundred Years by Lothair
Mantelar to
proselytize against an increase in Darkfriends, they evolved during the
war
into a completely military society. They are extremely rigid in their
beliefs,
and certain that only they know the truth and the right. They consider
Aes
Sedai and any who support them to be Darkfriends. Known disparagingly
as
Whitecloaks. a name they themselves despise, they were formerly
headquartered
in Amador, Amadicia, but were forced out when the Seanchan conquered
the city.
Their sign is a golden sunburst on a field of white. See also
Questioners. Corenne:
In the Old Tongue, "the Return." The name given by the Seanchan both
to the fleet of thousands of ships and to the hundreds of thousands of
soldiers, craftsmen and others carried by those ships, who came behind
the
Forerunners to reclaim the lands stolen from Artur Hawkwing's
descendants. The
Corenne is led by Captain-General Lunal Galgan. See also Hailene,
Rhyagelle.
ctiendillar. A supposedly indestructible substance created during the
Age of
Legends. Any known force used in an attempt to break it, including the
One
Power, is absorbed, making ctiendillar stronger. Although the making of
ctiendillar was thought lost forever, new objects made from it have
surfaced.
It is also known as heartstone. currency: After many centuries of
trade, the
standard terms for coins are the same in every land: crowns (the
largest coin
in size), marks and pennies. Crowns and marks can be minted of gold or
silver.
while pennies can be silver or copper, the last often called simply a
copper.
In different lands, however, these coins are of different sizes and
weights.
Even in one nation, coins of different sizes and weights have been
minted by
different rulers. Because of trade, the coins of many nations can be
found
almost anywhere, and for that reason, bankers, moneylenders and
merchants all
use scales to determine the value of any given coin. Even large numbers
of
coins are weighed.
The
heaviest coins come from Andor and Tar Valon, and in those two places
the
relative values are: 10 copper pennies = 1 silver penny: 100 silver
pennies = 1
silver mark; 10 silver marks = 1 silver crown; 10 silver crowns = 1
gold mark;
10 gold marks = 1 gold crown. By contrast, in Altara, where the larger
coins
contain less gold or silver, the relative values are: 10 copper pennies
= 1
silver penny: 21 silver pennies = 1 silver mark: 20 silver marks = 1
silver
crown: 20 silver crowns = 1 gold mark; 20 gold marks = 1 gold crown.
The
only paper currency is "letters-of-rights," which are issued by
bankers, guaranteeing to present a certain amount of gold or silver
when the
letter-of-rights is presented. Because of the long distances between
cities,
the length of time needed to travel from one to another, and the
difficulties
of transactions at long distance. a letter-of-rights may be accepted at
full
value in a city near to the bank which issued it. but it may be
accepted only
at a lower value in a city farther away. Generally, someone intending
to be
traveling for a long time will carry one or more letters-of-rights to
exchange
for coin when needed. Letters-or-rights are usually accepted only by
bankers or
merchants, and would never be used in shops. da'covale: (1) In the Old
Tongue,
"one who is owned," or "person who is property." (2) Among
the Seanchan. the term often used, along with property, for slaves.
Slavery has
a long and unusual history among the Seanchan, with slaves having the
ability
to rise to positions of great power and open authority, including
authority
over those who are free. It is also possible for those in positions of
great
power to be reduced to da'covale. See also so'jbin. Deathwatch
Guard, the: The elite military formation of the Sean-chan
Empire, including
both humans and Ogier. The human members of the Deathwatch Guard are
all
da'covale, born as property and chosen while young to serve the
Empress, whose
personal property they are. Fanatically loyal and fiercely proud, they
often
display the ravens tattooed on their shoulders, the mark of a da
co-vale of the
Empress. The Ogier members are known as Gardeners, and they are not
da'covah.
The Gardeners are as fiercely loyal as the human Deathwatch Guards,
though, and
are even more feared. Human or Ogier. the Deathwatch Guards not only
are ready
to die for the Empress and the Imperial family, but believe that their
lives
are the property of the Empress, to be disposed of as she wishes. Their
helmets
and armor are lacquered in dark green (so dark that it is often
mistakenly
called black) and blood-red, their shields are lacquered black, and
their swords,
spears, axes and halberds carry black tassels. See also da'covale. Defenders
of the Stone, the: The elite military formation of Tear. The
current Captain of
the Stone (commander of the Defenders) is Rodrivar Tihera. Only Tairens
are
accepted into the Defenders, and officers are usually of noble birth,
though
often from minor Houses or minor branches of strong Houses. The
Defenders are
tasked to hold the great fortress called the Stone of Tear, in the city
of
Tear, to defend the city, and to provide police services in place of
any City
Watch or the like. Except in times of war. their duties seldom take
them far
from the city. Then, as with other such elite formations, they are the
core
around which the army is formed. The uniform of the Defenders consists
of a
black coat with padded sleeves striped black-and-gold with black cuffs,
a
burnished breastplate and a rimmed helmet with a faceguard of steel
bars. The
Captain of the Stone wears three short white plumes on his helmet, and
on the
cuffs of his coat three intertwined golden braids on a white band.
Captains
wear two white plumes and a single line of golden braid on white cuffs,
lieutenants one white plume and a single line of black braid on white
cuffs,
and under-lieutenants one short black plume and plain white cuffs.
Bannermen
have gold-colored cuffs on their coats, and squadmen have cuffs striped
black-and-gold. Delving:
(1) Using the One Power to diagnose physical condition and illness. (2)
Finding
deposits of metal ores with the One Power. That this has long been a
lost
ability among Aes Sedai may account for the name becoming attached to
another
ability. Depository:
A division of the Tower Library. There are twelve publicly know
Depositories,
each having books and records pertaining to a particular subject, or to
related
subjects. A Thirteenth Depository, known only to some Aes Sedai.
contains
secret documents, records and histories which may be accessed only by
the
Amyrlin Seat, the Keeper of the Chronicles and the Sitters in the Hall
of the Tower.
And. of course, by that handful of librarians who maintain the
depository.
der'morat-: (1) In the Old Tongue, "master handler." (2) Among the
Seanchan, the prefix applied to indicate a senior and highly skilled
handler of
one of the exotics, one who trains others, as in der'-morat'raken.
Der'morat
can have a fairly high social status, the highest of all held by
der'sul'dam,
the trainers of'sul'dam, who rank with fairly high military officers.
See also
morat-. Eelfinn:
A race of beings, largely human in appearance but with foxlike
characteristics,
who will grant three wishes, although they ask for a price in return.
If the
person asking does not negotiate a price, the Eelfinn choose it. The
most
common price in such circumstances is death, but they still fulfill
their part
of the bargain, although the manner in which they fulfill it is seldom
the
manner the one asking expects. Their true location is unknown, but it
was
possible to visit them by means of a terangreal that was located in
Rhuidean.
That terangreal was taken by Moiraine Damodred to Cairhien. where it
was
destroyed. It is also reported that they may be reached by entering the
Tower
of Ghenjei. They ask the same questions as the Aelfinn regarding fire,
iron and
musical instruments. See also Aelfinn. Fain,
Padan: Former Darkfriend, now more and worse than a Dark-friend,
and an enemy
of the Forsaken as much as he is of Rand al'Thor. whom he hates with a
passion.
Last seen in Far Madding in company with Toram Riatin, who died there. Fel,
Herid: The author of Reason and Unreason and other books. Fel
was a student
(and teacher) of history and philosophy at the Academy of Cairhien. He
was
discovered in his study torn limb from limb. First
Reasoner: The title given to the head of the White Ajah. This
position is
currently held by Ferane Neheran. an Aes Sedai in the White Tower.
Ferane Sedai
is one of only two Ajah heads to sit in the Hall of the Tower at
present. First
Weaver: The title given to the head of the Yellow Ajah. This
position is
currently held by Suana Dragand in the White Tower. Suana Sedai is one
of only
two Ajah heads to sit in the Hall of the Tower at present. Among the
rebel Aes
Sedai, Romanda Cassin holds this position. forcing; forced: When
someone with
the ability to channel handles as much of the One Power as they can
over long
periods of time and channels continually, they learn faster and gain
strength
more rapidly. This is called forcing, or being forced, by Aes Sedai.
who abjure
the practice with novices and Accepted because of the danger of death
or being
burned out. Forerunners,
the: See Hailene. Forsaken,
the: The name given to thirteen powerful Aes Sedai, men and
women both, who
went over to the Shadow during the Age of Legends and were trapped in
the sealing
of the Bore into the Dark One's prison. While it has long been believed
that
they alone abandoned the Light during the War of the Shadow, in fact
others did
as well; these thirteen wete only the highest-ranking among them. The
Forsaken
(who call themselves the Chosen) are somewhat reduced in number since
their
awakening in the present day. Some of those killed have been
reincarnated in
new bodies and given new names, but much is as yet unknown about their
identities and locations. Hailene:
In the Old Tongue. "Forerunners," or "Those Who Come
Before." The term applied by the Seanchan to the massive expeditionary
force sent across the Aryth Ocean to scout out the land where Artur
Hawkwing once ruled. Now under the command of the High Lady Suroth.
its numbers swollen by recruits from conquered lands, the Hailene has
gone far
beyond its original goals. and has in fact been succeeded by the
Corenne. See
Corenne, Rhyagelle. Hand:
In Seanchan, Hand refers to a primary assistant or one of a
hierarchy of
imperial functionaries. A Hand of the Empress is of the First Rank, and
Lesser
Hands will be found at lower ranks. Some Hands operate in secret, such
as those
who guide the Seekers and Listeners; others are known and display their
rank by
wearing the appropriate number of golden hands embroidered on their
clothing. Hanlon,
Daved: A Darkfriend, formerly commander of the White Lions in
service to the
Forsaken Rahvin while he held Caemlyn using the name Lord Gaebril. From
there,
Hanlon took the White Lions to Cairhien under orders to further the
rebellion
against the Dragon Reborn. The White Lions were destroyed by a "bubble
of
evil," and Hanlon was ordered back to Caemlyn and, under the name
Doilin
Mellar, ingratiated himself with Elayne, the Daughter-Heir. According
to rumor,
he did considerably more than ingratiate himself. heart: The basic unit
of
organization in the Black Ajah. In effect, a cell. A heart consists of
three
sisters who know each other, with each member of the heart knowing one
additional
sister of the Black who is unknown to the other two of her heart. Illuminators,
Guild of: A society that held the secret of making fireworks. It
guarded this
secret very closely, even to the extent of doing murder to protect it.
The
Guild gained its name from the grand displays, called Illuminations,
that it
provided for rulers and sometimes for greater lords. Lesser fireworks
were sold
for use by others, but with dire warnings of the disaster that could
result
from attempting to learn what was inside them. The Guild once had
chapter
houses in Cairhien and Tanchico, but both are now destroyed. In
addition, the
members of the Guild in Tanchico resisted the invasion by the Seanchan
and were
made da'covale, and the Guild as such no longer exists. However,
individual
Illuminators still exist outside of Seanchan rule and work to make sure
that
the Guild will be remembered. See also da'covale. Ishara:
The first Queen of Andor (circa FY 994-1020). At the death of
Artur Hawkwing,
Ishara convinced her husband, one of Hawk-wing's foremost generals, to
raise
the siege of Tar Valon and accompany her to Caemlyn with as many
soldiers as he
could break away from the army. Where others tried to seize the whole
of
Hawk-wing's empire and failed, Ishara took a firm hold on a small part
and
succeeded. Today, nearly every noble House in Andor contains some of
Ishara's
blood, and the right to claim the Lion Throne depends both on direct
descent
from her and on the number of lines of connection to her that can be
established. Kaensada:
An area of Seanchan that is populated by less-than-civilized
hill tribes. These
tribes fight a great deal among themselves, as do individual families
within
the tribes. Each tribe has its own customs and taboos, the latter of
which
often make no sense to anyone outside that tribe. Most of the tribesmen
avoid
the more civilized residents of Seanchan. Kin,
the: Even during the Trolloc Wars, more than two thousand years
ago (circa
1000-1350 AB), the WhiteTower continued to
maintain its standards, putting out women who failed to measure up. One
group
of these women, fearing to return home in the midst of the wars, fled
to
Barashta (near the present-day site of Ebou Dar), as far from the
fighting as
was possible to go at that time. Calling themselves the Kin, and
Kinswomen,
they kept in hiding and offered a safe haven for others who had been
put out.
In time, their approaches to women told to leave the Tower led to
contacts with
runaways, and while the exact reasons may never be known, the Kin began
to
accept runaways, as well. They made great efforts to keep these girls
from
learning anything about the Kin until they were sure that Aes Sedai
would not
swoop down and retake them. After all, everyone knew that runaways were
always
caught sooner or later, and the Kin knew that unless they held
themselves
secret, they themselves would be punished severely.
Unknown
to the Kin, Aes Sedai in the Tower were aware of their existence almost
from
the very first, but prosecution of the wars left no time for dealing
with them.
By the end of the wars, the Tower realized that it might not be in
their best
interests to snuff out the Kin. Prior to that time, a majority of
runaways
actually had managed to escape, whatever the Tower's propaganda, but
once the
Kin began helping them, the Tower knew exactly where any runaway was
heading,
and they began retaking nine out often. Since Kinswomen moved in and
out of
Barashta (and later Ebou Dar) in an effort to hide their existence and
their
numbers, never staying anywhere more than ten years lest someone notice
that
they did not age at a normal speed, the Tower believed they were few,
and they
certainly were keeping themselves low. In order to use the Kin as a
trap for
runaways, the Tower decided to leave them alone, unlike any other
similar group
in history, and to keep the very existence of the Kin a secret known
only to
full Aes Sedai.
The
Kin do not have laws, but rather rules (called "the Rule") based in
large part on the rules for novices and Accepted in the White Tower,
and in
part on the necessity of maintaining secrecy. As might be expected
given the
origins of the Kin, all of their members maintain their rules very
firmly.
Recent
open contacts between Aes Sedai and Kinswomen, while known only to a
handful of
sisters, have produced a number of shocks, including the facts that
there are
twice as many Kinswomen as Aes Sedai and that some have lived more than
a
hundred years longer than any Aes Sedai since before the Trolloc Wars.
The
effect of these revelations, both on Aes Sedai and on Kinswomen, is as
yet a
matter for speculation. See also Knitting Circle, the. Knitting
Circle, the: The leaders of the Kin. Since no member of the Kin
has ever known
how Aes Sedai arrange their own hierarchy-knowledge passed on only when
an
Accepted has passed her test for the shawl-they put no store in
strength in the
Power but give great weight to age, with the older woman always
standing above
the younger. The Knitting Circle (a title chosen, like the Kin, because
it is
innocuous) thus consists of the thirteen oldest Kinswomen resident in
Ebou Dar,
with the oldest given the title of Eldest. By the rules, all will have
to step
down when it is time for them to move on, but so long as they are
resident in
Ebou Dar, they have supreme authority over the Kin, to a degree that
any
Amyrlin Seat would envy. Since the Kin have left Ebou Dar, the Knitting
Circle
does not technically exist. See also Kin, the. Lance-Captain:
In most lands, noblewomen do not personally lead their armsmen
into battle under
normal circumstances. Instead, they hire a professional soldier, almost
always
a commoner, who is responsible both for training and leading their
armsmen.
Depending on the land, this man can be called a Lance-Captain.
Sword-Captain,
Master of the Horse or Master of the Lances. Rumors of closer
relationships
than Lady and servant often spring up, perhaps inevitably. Sometimes
they are
true. Legion
of the Dragon, the: A large military formation, all infantry,
giving allegiance
to the Dragon Reborn, trained by Davram Bashere along lines worked out
by
himself and Mat Cauthon, lines which depart sharply from the usual
employment
of foot. While many men simply walk in to volunteer, large numbers of
the
Legion are scooped up by recruiting parties from the Black Tower, who
first
gather all of the men in an area who are willing to follow the Dragon
Reborn,
and only after taking them through gateways near Caemlyn winnow out
those who
can be taught to channel. The remainder, by far the greater number, are
sent to
Bashere's training camps. Legion
of the Wall: Formerly an elite military formation of Ghealdan
which provided
not only a core to any army that was raised from the Ghealdanin
nobilty's
armsmen but also provided a bodyguard for the ruler of Ghealdan, and
policed
Jehannah, the capital, in place of a City Watch. After they were
slaughtered
and the survivors dispersed by the followers of the Prophet Masema. the
nobles
of the Crown High Council decided that without the Legion, their own
power and
their influence over any ruler was increased, so they managed to stop
the
Legion from being re-formed. The current Queen. Alliandre Maritha
Kigarin, has
plans to do just that, however; plans which would have an explosive
effect if
they became known to the Crown High Council. Length,
units of: 10 inches = 1 foot: 3 feet = 1 pace; 2 paces = 1 span;
1000 spans = 1
mile; 4 miles = 1 league. Listeners:
A Seanchan spy organization. Almost anyone in the household of a
Seanchan
noble, merchant or banker may be a Listener, including da'covale
occasionally,
though seldom so'jhin. They take no active role, merely watching,
listening and
reporting. Their reports are sent to Lesser Hands who control both them
and the
Seekers and decide what should be passed on to the Seekers for further
action.
See also Seekers, Hand. ttiaratb'dantane: In the Old Tongue, "those who
must be leashed," and also "one who must be leashed." The term
applied by the Seanchan to any woman capable of channeling who has not
been
collared as a damane. march: See Area, units of Master of the Horse;
Master of
the Lances: See Lance-Captain. Mellar,
Doilin: See Hanlon. Daved. Mera'din:
In the Old Tongue, "the Brotherless." The name adopted, as a
society,
by those Aiel who abandoned clan and sept and went to the Shaido
because they
could not accept Rand al'Thor, a wet-lander. as the Car a earn, or
because they
refused to accept his revelations concerning the history and origins of
the
Aiel. Deserting clan and sept for any reason is anathema among the
Aiel.
therefore their own warrior societies among the Shaido were unwilling
to take
them in, and they formed this society, the Brotherless. tnorat-: In the
Old
Tongue, "handler." Among the Seanchan, it is used for those who
handle exotics, such as tnorat'raken, a raken handler or rider, also
informally
called a flier. See also der tnorat-. Prophet,
the: More formally, the Prophet of the Lord Dragon. Once known
as Masema Dagar.
a Shienaran soldier, he underwent a revelation and decided that he had
been
called to spread the word of the Dragon's Rebirth. He believes that
nothing (nothing!) is more important than acknowledging the Dragon
Reborn as the
Light made flesh and being ready when the Dragon Reborn calls, and he
and his
followers will use any means to force others to sing the glories of the
Dragon
Reborn. Those who refuse are marked for death, and those who are slow
may find
their homes and shops burned and themselves flogged. Forsaking any name
but
"the Prophet," he has brought chaos to much of Ghealdan and
Amadi-cia, large parts of which he controlled, although with him gone,
the
Seanchan are reestablishing order in Amadicia and the Crown High
Council in
Ghealdan. He joined with Perrin Aybara, who was sent to bring him to
Rand, and
has, for reasons unknown, stayed with him even though this delays his
going to
the Dragon Reborn. He is followed by men and women of the lowest sort;
if they
were not so when they were pulled in by his charisma, they have become
so under
his influence.
Queen's Guards, the: The
elite military formation in Andor. In
peacetime the Guard is responsible for upholding the Queen's law and
keeping
the peace across Andor. The uniform of the Queen's Guard include a red
undercoat, gleaming mail and plate armor, a brilliant red cloak and a
conical
helmet with a barred faceguard. High-ranking officers wear knots of
rank on
their shoulder and golden lion-head spurs. A recent addition to the
Queen's
Guards is the Daughter-Heir's personal bodyguard, which is composed
entirely of
women with the sole exception of its captain. Doilin Mel-lar. These
Guardswomen
wear much more elaborate uniforms than their male counterparts,
including
broad-brimmed hats with white plumes, red-lacquered breastplates and
helmets
trimmed in white and lace-edged sashes bearing the White Lion of Andor.
Questioners, the: An order
within the Children of the Light. They refer to
themselves as the Hand of the Light-they intensely dislike being called
Questioners-and their avowed purposes are to discover the truth in
disputations
and uncover Darkfriends. In the search for truth and the Light, their
normal
method of inquiry is torture; their normal their avowed purposes are to
discover the truth in disputations and uncover Darkfriends. In the
search for
truth and the Light, their normal method of inquiry is torture; their
normal
manner is that they know the truth already and must only make their
victim
confess to it. At times they act as if they are entirely separate from
the
Children and the Council of the Anointed, which commands the Children.
The head
of the Questioners is the High Inquisitor, at present Rhadam Asunawa,
who sits
on the Council of the Anointed. Their sign is a blood-red shepherd's
crook. Redarms:
Soldiers of the Band of the Red Hand, who have been chosen out
for temporary
police duty to make sure that other soldiers of the Band cause no
trouble or
damage in a town or village where the Band has stopped. So named
because, while
on duty, they wear very broad red armbands that reach from cuff to
elbow.
Usually chosen from among the most experienced and reliable men. Since
any
damages must be paid for by the men serving as Redarms, they work hard
to make
sure all is quiet and peaceful. A number of former Redarms were chosen
to
accompany Mat Cauthen to Ebou Dar. See also Sben an Calhar. Return,
the: See Coremie. Rbyage/le,
the: Old Tongue for "Those Who Come Home." Another name for the
Seanchan who have returned to the lands once held by Artur Hawkwing.
See also
Corenne, Hailene. Sea
Folk hierarchy: The Atha'an Miere. the Sea Folk, are ruled by
the Mistress of
the Ships to the Atha'an Miere. She is assisted by the Windfinder to
the
Mistress of the Ships, and by the Master of the Blades. Below this come
the
clan Wavemistresses, each assisted by her Windfinder and her
Swordmaster. Below
each Wavemistress are the Sailmistresses (ship captains) of her clan,
each
assisted by her Windfinder and her Cargomaster. The Windfinder to the
Mistress
of the Ships has authority over all Windfinders to clan Wavemistresses.
who in
turn have authority over all the Windfinders of her clan. Likewise, the
Master
of the Blades has authority over all Swordmasters, and they in turn
over the
Cargomasters of their clans. Rank is not hereditary among the Sea Folk.
The
Mistress of the Ships is chosen, for life, by the First Twelve of the
Atha'an
Miere, the twelve most senior clan Wavemistresses. A clan Wavemistress
is
elected by the twelve seniormost Sailmistresses of her clan, called
simply the
First Twelve, a term which is also used to designate the senior
Sailmistresses
present anywhere. She can also be removed by a unanimous vote of her
clan's
First Twelve. In fact, anyone other than the Mistress of the Ships can
be
demoted, even all the way down to deckhand, for malfeasance, cowardice
or other
crimes. Also, the Windfinder to a Wavemistress or Mistress of the Ship
who dies
will, of necessity, have to serve a lower ranking woman, and her own
rank thus
decreases to the lowest level, equivalent to one who was first raised
from
apprentice to Windfinder on the day she herself put off her higher
honors. The
Atha'an Miere, who have until recently kept their distance from Aes
Sedai by
various means and diversions, are aware that women who can channel have
much
longer lifespans than other people, though life at sea is dangerous
enough that
they seldom live out their entire lifespan, and thus they know that a
Windfinder may rise to a height and fall to the depths to begin again
many
times before she dies. Seandar:
The Imperial capital of Seanchan, located in the northeast of the
Seanchan
continent. It is also the largest city in the empire. Seekers:
More formally, Seekers for Truth, they are a police/spy organization of
the
Seanchan Imperial Throne. Although most Seekers are da'covale and the
property
of the Imperial family, they have wide-ranging powers. Even one of the
Blood
can be arrested for failure to answer any question put by a Seeker, or
for
failure to cooperate fully with a Seeker, this last defined by the
Seekers
themselves, subject only to review by the Empress. Their reports are
sent to
Lesser Hands, who control both them and the Listeners. Most Seekers
feel that
the Hands do not pass on as much information as they should. Unlike the
Listeners', the Seekers' role is active. Those Seekers who are
da'covale are
marked on either shoulder with a raven and a tower. Unlike the
Deathwatch
Guards. Seekers are seldom eager to show their ravens, in part because
it
necessitates revealing who and what they are. See also Hand, Listeners.
sei'mosiev: In the Old Tongue, "lowered eyes," or "downcast
eyes." Among the Seanchan, to say that one has "become
sei'mosiev" means that one has "lost face." See also sei'taer.
sei'taer. In the Old Tongue, "straight eyes," or "level
eyes." Among the Seanchan, it refers to honor or face, to the ability
to
meet someone's eyes. It is possible to "be" or "have"
sei'taer, meaning that one has honor and face, and also to "gain" or
"lose" sei'taer. See also sei'mosiev. Shara:
A mysterious land to the east of the Aiel Waste which is the
source of silk and
ivory, among other trade goods. The land is protected both by
inhospitable
natural features and by man-made walls. Little is known about Shara, as
the
people of that land work co keep their culture secret. The Sharans deny
that the
Trolloc Wars touched them, despite Aiel statements to the contrary.
They deny
knowledge of Artur Hawkwing's attempted invasion, despite the accounts
of
eyewitnesses from the Sea Folk. The little information that has leaked
out
reveals that the Sharans are ruled by a single absolute monarch, a
Sh'boan if a
woman and a Sh'botay if a man. That monarch rules for exactly seven
years, then
dies. The rule then passes to the mate of that ruler, who rules for
seven years
and then dies. This pattern has repeated itself since the time of the
Breaking
of the World. The Sharans believe that the deaths are the "Will of the
Pattern."
There
are channelers in Shara, known as the Ayyad, who are tattooed on their
faces at
birth. The women of the Ayyad enforce the Ayyad laws stringently. A
sexual
relationship between Ayyad and non-Ayyad is punishable by death for the
non-Ayyad, and the Ayyad is also executed if force on his or her part
can be
proven. If a child is born of the union, it is left exposed to the
elements,
and dies. Male Ayyad are used as breeding stock only. They are not
educated in
any fashion, not even how to read or write, and when they reach their
twenty-first year or begin to channel, whichever comes first, they are
killed
and the body cremated. Supposedly, the Ayyad channel the One Power only
at the
command of the Sh'boan or Sh'botay, who is always surrounded by Ayyad
women.
Even
the name of the land is in doubt. The natives have been known to call
it many different
names, including Shamara. Co'-dansin, Tomaka, Kigali and Shibouya. Shen
an Calhar: In the Old Tongue, "the Band of the Red Hand." (1) A
legendary group of heroes who had many exploits, finally dying in the
defense
of Manetheren when that land was destroyed during the Trolloc Wars. (2)
A
military formation put together almost by accident by Mat Cauthon and
organized
along the lines of military forces during what is considered the height
of the
military arts, the days of Artur Hawkwing and the centuries immediately
preceding. Sisnera,
Darlin: A High Lord in Tear, he was formerly in rebellion
against the Dragon
Reborn, but now serves as Steward for the Dragon Reborn in Tear. Snakes
and Foxes: A game that is much loved by children until they
mature enough to
realize that it can never be won without breaking the rules. It is
played with
a board that has a web of lines with arrows indicating direction. There
are ten
discs inked with triangles to represent the foxes, and ten discs inked
with
wavy lines to represent the snakes. The game is begun by saying
"Courage
to strengthen, fire to blind, music to dazzle, iron to bind." while
describing a triangle with a wavy line through it with one's hand. Dice
are
rolled to determine moves for the players and the snakes and foxes. If
a snake
or fox lands on a player's piece, he is out of the game, and as long as
the
rules are followed, this always happens. so'jhin: The closest
translation from
the Old Tongue would be "a height among lowness," though some
translate it as meaning "both sky and valley" among several other
possibilities. So'jhin is the term applied by the Seanchan to
hereditary upper
servants. They are da'covale, property, yet occupy positions of
considerable
authority and often power. Even the Blood step carefully around so'jhin
of the
Imperial family, and speak to so'jhin of the Empress herself as to
equals. See
also Blood, the; da'covale. Standardbearer:
A Seanchan rank equivalent to Bannerman. Stump:
A public meeting among the Ogier. The meeting can be within or
between
stedding. It is presided over by the Council of Elders of a sledding,
but any
adult Ogier may speak, or may choose an advocate to speak for him. A
Stump is
often held at the largest tree stump in a stedding. and may last for
several years.
When a question arises that affects all Ogier, a Great Stump is held,
and Ogier
from all stedding meet to address the question. The various stedding
take turns
hosting the Great Stump. Succession:
In general, when one House succeeds another on the throne. In Andor,
the term
is widely used for the struggle for the throne that arose upon
Mordrellen's
death. Tigraine's disappearance had left Mantear without a
Daughter-Heir, and
two years passed before Morgase. of House Trakand, took the throne.
Outside of
Andor. this conflict was known as the Third War of An-doran Succession. Sword-Captain:
See Lance-Captain. Taborwin,
Breane: Once a bored noblewoman in Cairhien, she lost her wealth
and status and
is now not only a servant, but in a serious romantic relationship with
a man
whom once she would have scorned. Taborwin,
Dobraine: A lord in Cairhien. He presently serves as Steward for
the Dragon
Reborn in Cairhien. Tarabon:
A nation on the ArythOcean. Once a
great
trading nation, a source of rugs, dyes and the Guild of Illuminators'
fireworks
among other things, Tarabon has fallen on hard times. Racked by anarchy
and
civil war compounded by simultaneous wars against Arad Doman and the
Dragonsworn, it was ripe for the picking when the Seanchan arrived. It
is now
firmly under Seanchan control, the chapter house of the Guild of
Illuminators
has been destroyed and the Illuminators themselves have been made
cla'covale.
Most Taraboners appear grateful that the Seanchan have restored order,
and
since the Seanchan allow them to continue living their lives with
minimal
interference, they have no desire to bring on more warfare by trying to
chase
the Seanchan out. There are, however, some lords and soldiers who
remain
outside the Seanchan sphere of influence and are fighting to reclaim
their
land. weight, units of: 10 ounces = 1 pound; 10 pounds = 1 stone: 10
stone = 1
hundredweight; 10 hundredweight = 1 ton. Winged
Guards, the: The personal bodyguards of the First of Mayene, and
the elite
military formation of Mayene. Members of the Winged Guards wear
red-painted
breastplates and helmets shaped like rimmed pots that come down to the
nape of
the neck in the back, and carry red-streamered lances. Officers have
wings
worked on the sides of their helmets, and rank is denoted by slender
plumes. Wise
Woman: Honorific used in Ebou Dar for women famed for their
incredible
abilities at healing almost any injury. A Wise Woman is traditionally
marked by
a red belt. Some have noted that many, indeed most. Ebou Dari Wise
Women are
not even from Altara, much less Ebou Dar, but only few have recently
learned
that all Wise Women are in fact Kinswomen and use various versions of
Healing,
giving out herbs and poultices largely as a cover. With the flight of
the Kin
from Ebou Dar after the Seanchan took the city, no Wise Women remain
there. See
also Kin, the.
About
the Author
Robert Jordan was born in 1948 in Charleston. South Carolina,
where he now lives with his
wife, Harriet, in a house built in 1797. He taught himself to read when
he was
four with the incidental aid of a twelve-years-older brother, and was
tackling
Mark Twain and Jules Verne by five. He is a graduate of the Citadel,
the
Military College of South Carolina, with a degree in physics. He served
two
tours in Vietnam
with the U.S. Army, among his decorations are the Distinguished Flying
Cross
with bronze oak leaf cluster, the Bronze Star with "V" and bronze oak
leaf cluster, and two Vietnamese Gallantry Crosses with Palm. A history
buff,
he has also written dance and theater criticism. He enjoys the outdoor
sports
of hunting and fishing.
Knife of Dreams - Wheel of Time 11
Knife of Dreams
Wheel of Time Book 11
by
Robert Jordan
The
sweetness of victory and the bitterness of defeat are alike a knife of
dreams.
-
From Fog and Steel by Madoc Comadrin
Prologue
Embers
Falling on Dry Grass
The
sun, climbing toward midmorning, stretched Galad's shadow and those of
his
three armored companions ahead of them as they trotted their mounts
down the
road that ran straight through the forest, dense with oak and
leatherleaf, pine
and sourgum, most showing the red of spring growth. He tried to keep
his mind
empty, still, but small things kept intruding. The day was silent save
for the
thud of their horses' hooves.
No
bird sang on a branch, no squirrel chittered. Too quiet for the time of
year,
as though the forest held its breath. This had been a major trade route
once,
long before Amadicia and Tarabon came into being, and bits of ancient
paving
stone sometimes studded the hard-packed surface of yellowish clay. A
single
farm cart far ahead behind a plodding ox was the only sign of human
life now
besides themselves. Trade had shifted far north, farms and villages in
the
region dwindled, and the fabled lost mines of Aelgar remained lost in
the
tangled mountain ranges that began only a few miles to the south. Dark
clouds
massing in that direction promised rain by afternoon if their slow
advance
continued. A red-winged hawk quartered back and forth along the border
of the
trees, hunting the fringes. As he himself was hunting. But at the
heart, not on
the fringes.
The
manor house that the Seanchan had given Eamon Valda came into view, and
he drew
rein, wishing he had a helmet strap to tighten for excuse.
Instead
he had to be content with re-buckling his sword belt, pretending that
it had
been sitting wrong. There had been no point to wearing armor. If the
morning
went as he hoped, he would have had to remove breastplate and mail in
any case,
and if it went badly, armor would have provided little more protection
than his
white coat.
Formerly
a deep-country lodge of the King of Amadicia, the building was a huge,
blue-roofed structure studded with red-painted balconies, a wooden
palace with
wooden spires at the corners atop a stone foundation like a low,
steep-sided
hill. The outbuildings, stables and barns, workmen's small houses and
craftsfolks' workshops, all hugged the ground in the wide clearing that
surrounded the main house, but they were nearly as resplendent in their
blue-and-red
paint. A handful of men and women moved around them, tiny figures yet
at this
distance, and children were playing under their elders' eyes. An image
of
normality where nothing was normal. His companions sat their saddles in
their
burnished helmets and breastplates, watching him without expression.
Their
mounts stamped impatiently, the animals' morning freshness not yet worn
off by
the short ride from the camp.
"It's
understandable if you're having second thoughts, Damodred," Trom said
after a time. "It's a harsh accusation, bitter as gall, but-"
"No
second thoughts for me," Galad broke in. His intentions had been fixed
since yesterday. He was grateful, though. Trom had given him the
opening he needed.
They had simply appeared as he rode out, falling in with him without a
word
spoken. There had seemed no place for words, then. "But what about you
three? You're taking a risk coming here with me. A risk you have no
need to
take. However the day runs, there will be marks against you. This is my
business, and I give you leave to go about yours." Too stiffly said,
but
he could not find words this morning, or loosen his throat.
The
stocky man shook his head. "The law is the law. And I might as well
make
use of my new rank." The three golden star-shaped knots of a captain
sat
beneath the flaring sunburst on the breast of his white cloak. There
had been
more than a few dead at Jeramel, including no fewer than three of the
Lords
Captain. They had been fighting the Seanchan then, not allied with them.
"I've
done dark things in service to the Light," gaunt-faced Byar said
grimly,
his deep-set eyes glittering as though at a personal insult, "dark as
moonless midnight, and likely I will again, but some things are too
dark to be
allowed." He looked as if he might spit.
"That's
right," young Bornhald muttered, scrubbing a gauntleted hand across his
mouth. Galad always thought of him as young, though the man lacked only
a few
years on him. Dain's eyes were bloodshot; he had been at the brandy
again last
night. "If you've done what's wrong, even in service to the Light, then
you have to do what's right to balance it."
Byar
grunted sourly. Likely that was not the point he had been making.
"Very
well," Galad said, "but there's no fault to any man who turns back.
My business here is mine alone."
Still,
when he heeled his bay gelding to a canter, he was pleased to have them
gallop
to catch him and fall in alongside, white cloaks billowing behind. He
would
have gone on alone, of course, yet their presence might keep him from
being
arrested and hanged out of hand. Not that he expected to survive in any
case.
What had to be done, had to be done, no matter the price.
The
horses' hooves clattered loudly on the stone ramp that climbed to the
manor
house, so every man in the broad central courtyard turned to watch as
they rode
in: fifty of the Children in gleaming plate-and-mail and conical
helmets, most
mounted, with cringing, dark-coated Amadician grooms holding animals
for the
rest. The inner balconies were empty except for a few servants who
appeared to
be watching while pretending to sweep. Six Questioners, big men with
the
scarlet shepherd's crook upright behind the sunflare on their cloaks,
stood
close around Rhadam Asunawa like a bodyguard, away from the others. The
Hand of
the Light always stood apart from the rest of the Children, a choice
the rest
of the Children approved. Gray-haired Asunawa, his sorrowful face
making Byar
look fully fleshed, was the only Child present not in armor, and his
snowy
cloak carried just the brilliant red crook, another way of standing
apart. But
aside from marking who was present, Galad had eyes for only one man in
the
courtyard. Asunawa might have been involved in some way-that remained
unclear-yet only the Lord Captain Commander could call the High
Inquisitor to
account.
Eamon
Valda was not a large man, yet his dark, hard face had the look of one
who
expected obedience as his due. As the very least he was due.
Standing
with his booted feet apart and his head high, command in every inch of
him, he
wore the white-and-gold tabard of the Lord Captain Commander over his
gilded
breast- and backplates, a silk tabard more richly embroidered than any
Pedron
Niall had worn. His white cloak, the flaring sun large on either breast
in
thread-of-gold, was silk as well, and his gold-embroidered white coat.
The
helmet beneath his arm was gilded and worked with the flaring sun on
the brow,
and a heavy gold ring on his left hand, worn outside his steel-backed
gauntlet,
held a large yellow sapphire carved with the sunburst. Another mark of
favor
received from the Seanchan.
Valda
frowned slightly as Galad and his companions dismounted and offered
their
salutes, arm across the chest. Obsequious grooms came running to take
their
reins.
"Why
aren't you on your way to Nassad, Trom?" Disapproval colored Valda's
words. "The other Lords Captain will be halfway there by now."
He
himself always arrived late when meeting the Seanchan, perhaps to
assert that
some shred of independence remained to the Children-finding him already
preparing to depart was a surprise; this meeting must be very
important-but he
always made sure the other high-ranking officers arrived on time even
when that
required setting out before dawn.
Apparently
it was best not to press their new masters too far. Distrust of the
Children
was always strong in the Seanchan.
Trom
displayed none of the uncertainty that might have been expected from a
man who
had held his present rank barely a month. "An urgent matter, my Lord
Captain Commander," he said smoothly, making a very precise bow,
neither a
hair deeper nor higher than protocol demanded. "A Child of my command
charges another of the Children with abusing a female relative of his,
and claims
the right of Trial Beneath the Light, which by law you must grant or
deny."
"A
strange request, my son," Asunawa said, tilting his head quizzically
above
clasped hands, before Valda could speak. Even the High Inquisitor's
voice was doleful;
he sounded pained at Trom's ignorance.
His
eyes seemed dark hot coals in a brazier. "It was usually the accused
who
asked to give the judgment to swords, and I believe usually when he
knew the
evidence would convict him. In any case, Trial Beneath the Light has
not been
invoked for nearly four hundred years. Give me the accused's name, and
I will
deal with the matter quietly." His tone turned chill as a sunless
cavern
in winter, though his eyes still burned. "We are among strangers, and
we
cannot allow them to know that one of the Children is capable of such a
thing."
"The
request was directed to me, Asunawa," Valda snapped. His glare might as
well have been open hatred. Perhaps it was just dislike of the other
man's
breaking in. Flipping one side of his cloak over his shoulder to bare
his
ring-quilloned sword, he rested his hand on the long hilt and drew
himself up.
Always one for the grand gesture, Valda raised his voice so that even
people
inside probably heard him, and declaimed rather than merely spoke.
"I
believe many of our old ways should be revived, and that law still
stands. It
will always stand, as written of old. The Light grants justice because
the
Light is justice. Inform your man he may issue his challenge, Trom, and
face
the one he accuses sword-to-sword. If that one tries to refuse, I
declare that
he has acknowledged his guilt and order him hanged on the spot, his
belongings
and rank forfeit to his accuser as the law states. I have spoken." That
with another scowl for the High Inquisitor. Maybe there really was
hatred
there.
Trom
bowed formally once more. "You have informed him yourself, my Lord
Captain
Commander. Damodred?"
Galad
felt cold. Not the cold of fear, but of emptiness. When Dain drunkenly
let slip
the confused rumors that had come to his ears, when Byar reluctantly
confirmed
they were more than rumors, rage had filled Galad, a bone-burning fire
that
nearly drove him insane. He had been sure his head would explode if his
heart
did not burst first. Now he was ice, drained of any emotion. He also
bowed
formally. Much of what he had to say was set in the law, yet he chose
the rest
with care, to spare as much shame as possible to a memory he held dear.
"Eamon
Valda, Child of the Light, I call you to Trial Beneath the Light for
unlawful
assault on the person of Morgase Trakand, Queen of Andor, and for her
murder." No one had been able to confirm that the woman he regarded as
his
mother was dead, yet it must be so. A dozen men were certain she had
vanished
from the Fortress of the Light before it fell to the Seanchan, and as
many
testified she had not been free to leave of her own will.
Valda
displayed no shock at the charge. His smile might have been intended to
show
regret over Galad's folly in making such a claim, yet contempt was
mingled in
it. He opened his mouth, but Asunawa cut in once more.
"This
is ridiculous," he said in tones more of sorrow than of anger.
"Take
the fool, and we'll find out what Darkfriend plot to discredit the
Children he
is part of." He motioned, and two of the hulking Questioners took a
step
toward Galad, one with a cruel grin, the other blank-faced, a workman
about his
work.
Only
one step, though. A soft rasp repeated around the courtyard as Children
eased
their swords in their scabbards. At least a dozen men drew entirely,
letting
their blades hang by their sides. The Amadician grooms hunched in on
themselves, trying to become invisible. Likely they would have run, had
they
dared. Asunawa stared around him, thick eyebrows climbing up his
forehead in
disbelief, knotted fists gripping his cloak. Strangely, even Valda
appeared
startled for an instant.
Surely
he had not expected the Children to allow an arrest after his own
proclamation.
If he had, he recovered quickly.
"You
see, Asunawa," he said almost cheerfully, "the Children follow my
orders, and the law, not a Questioner's whims." He held out his helmet
to
one side for someone to take. "I deny your preposterous charge, young
Galad, and throw your foul lie in your teeth. For it is a lie, or at
best a mad
acceptance of some malignant rumor started by Darkfriends or others who
wish
the Children ill. Either way, you have defamed me in the vilest manner,
so I
accept your challenge to Trial Beneath the Light, where I will kill
you."
That barely squeezed into the ritual, but he had denied the charge and
accepted
the challenge; it would suffice.
Realizing
that he still held the helmet in an outstretched hand, Valda frowned at
one of
the dismounted Children, a lean Saldaean named Kashgar, until the man
stepped
forward to relieve him of it. Kashgar was only an under-lieutenant,
almost
boyish despite a great hooked nose and thick mustaches like inverted
horns, yet
he moved with open reluctance, and Valda's voice was darker and acrid
as he
went on, unbuckling his sword belt and handing that over, too.
"Take
a care with that, Kashgar. It's a heron-mark blade." Unpinning his silk
cloak, he let it fall to the paving stones, followed by his tabard, and
his hands
moved to the buckles of his armor. It seemed that he was unwilling to
see if
others would be reluctant to help him. His face was calm enough, except
that
angry eyes promised retribution to more than Galad. "Your sister wants
to
become Aes Sedai, I understand, Damodred.
Perhaps
I understand precisely where this originated. There was a time I would
have
regretted your death, but not today. I may send your head to the WhiteTower
so the witches can see the fruit of their scheme."
Worry
creasing his face, Dain took Galad's cloak and sword belt, and stood
shifting
his feet as though uncertain he was doing the right thing. Well, he had
been
given his chance, and it was too late to change his mind, now. Byar put
a
gauntleted hand on Galad's shoulder and leaned close.
"He
likes to strike at the arms and legs," he said in a low voice, casting
glances over his shoulder at Valda. From the way he glared, some matter
stood
between them. Of course, that scowl differed little from his normal
expression.
"He likes to bleed an opponent until the man can't take a step or raise
his sword before he moves for the kill. He's quicker than a viper, too,
but
he'll strike at your left most often and expect it from you."
Galad
nodded. Many right-handed men found it easier to strike so, but it
seemed an
odd weakness in a blademaster. Gareth Bryne and Henre Haslin had made
him
practice alternating which hand was uppermost on the hilt so he would
not fall
into that. Strange that Valda wanted to prolong a fight, too. He
himself had
been taught to end matters as quickly and cleanly as possible.
"My
thanks," he said, and the hollow-cheeked man made a dour grimace.
Byar
was far from likable, and he himself seemed to like no one save young
Bornhald.
Of the three, his presence was the biggest surprise, but he was there,
and that
counted in his favor.
Standing
in the middle of the courtyard in his gold-worked white coat with his
fists on
his hips, Valda turned in a tight circle. "Everyone move back against
the
walls," he commanded loudly. Horseshoes rang on the paving stones as
the
Children and the grooms obeyed. Asunawa and his Questioners snatched
their
animals' reins, the High Inquisitor wearing a face of cold fury. "Keep
the
middle clear. Young Damodred and I will meet here-"
"Forgive
me, my Lord Captain Commander," Trom said with a slight bow, "but
since you are a participant in the Trial, you cannot be Arbiter.
Aside
from the High Inquisitor, who by law may not take part, I hold the
highest rank
here after you, so with your permission…?" Valda glared at him, then
stalked over to stand beside Kashgar, arms folded across his chest.
Ostentatiously he tapped his foot, impatient for matters to proceed.
Galad
sighed. If the day went against him, as seemed all but certain, his
friend would
have the most powerful man in the Children as his enemy. Likely Trom
would have
had in any event, but more so now. "Keep an eye on them," he told
Bornhald, nodding toward the Questioners clustered on their horses near
the
gate. Asunawa's underlings still ringed him like bodyguards, every man
with a
hand on his sword hilt.
"Why?
Even Asunawa can't interfere now. That would be against the law."
It
was very hard not to sigh again. Young Dain had been a Child far longer
than
he, and his father had served his entire life, but the man seemed to
know less
of the Children than he himself had learned. To Questioners, the law
was what
they said it was. "Just watch them."
Trom
stood in the center of the courtyard with his bared sword raised
overhead,
blade parallel to the ground, and unlike Valda, he spoke the words
exactly as
they were written. "Under the Light, we are gathered to witness Trial
Beneath the Light, a sacred right of any Child of the Light. The Light
shines
on truth, and here the Light shall illuminate justice. Let no man speak
save he
who has legal right, and let any who seek to intervene be cut down
summarily.
Here, justice will be found under the Light by a man who pledges his
life
beneath the Light, by the force of his arm and the will of the Light.
The
combatants will meet unarmed where I now stand," he continued, lowering
the sword to his side, "and speak privately, for their own ears alone.
May
the Light help them find words to end this short of bloodshed, for if
they do
not, one of the Children must die this day, his name stricken from our
rolls
and anathema declared on his memory. Under the Light, it will be so."
As
Trom strode to the side of the courtyard, Valda moved toward the center
in the
walking stance called Cat Crosses the Courtyard, an arrogant saunter.
He knew
there were no words to stop blood being shed.
To
him, the fight had already begun. Galad merely walked out to meet him.
He was
nearly a head taller than Valda, but the other man held himself as
though he were
the larger, and confident of victory.
His
smile was all contempt, this time. "Nothing to say, boy? Small wonder
considering that a blademaster is going to cut your head off in about
one
minute. I want one thing straight in your mind before I kill you,
though. The
wench was hale the last I saw her, and if she's dead now, I'll regret
it."
That smile deepened, both in humor and disdain.
"She
was the best ride I ever had, and I hope to ride her again one day."
Red-hot,
searing fury fountained inside Galad, but with an effort he managed to
turn his
back on Valda and walk away, already feeding his rage into an imagined
flame as
his two teachers had taught him. A man who fought in a rage, died in a
rage. By
the time he reached young Bornhald, he had achieved what Gareth and
Henre had
called the oneness.
Floating
in emptiness, he drew his sword from the scabbard Bornhald proffered,
and the
slightly curved blade became a part of him.
"What
did he say?" Dain asked. "For a moment there, your face was murderous."
Byar
gripped Dain's arm. "Don't distract him," he muttered.
Galad
was not distracted. Every creak of saddle leather was clear and
distinct, every
ringing stamp of hoof on paving stone. He could hear flies buzzing ten
feet
away as though they were at his ear. He almost thought he could see the
movements of their wings. He was one with the flies, with the
courtyard, with
the two men. They were all part of him, and he could not be distracted
by
himself.
Valda
waited until he turned before drawing his own weapon on the other side
of the
courtyard, a flashy move, the sword blurring as it spun in his left
hand,
leaping to his right hand to make another blurred wheel in the air
before
settling, upright and rock-steady before him, in both hands. He started
forward,
once more in Cat Crosses the Courtyard.
Raising
his own sword, Galad moved to meet him, without thought assuming a
walking
stance perhaps influenced by his state of mind. Emptiness, it was
called, and
only a trained eye would know that he was not simply walking. Only a
trained
eye would see that he was in perfect balance every heartbeat. Valda had
not
gained that heron-mark sword by favoritism. Five blademasters had sat
in
judgment of his skills and voted unanimously to grant him the title.
The vote always
had to be unanimous. The only other way was to kill the bearer of a
heron-mark
blade in fair combat, one on one. Valda had been younger then than
Galad was
now. It did not matter. He was not focused on Valda's death. He focused
on
nothing. But he intended Valda's death if he had to Sheathe the Sword,
willingly welcoming that heron-mark blade in his flesh, to achieve it.
He
accepted that it might come to that.
Valda
wasted no time with maneuvering. The instant he was within range,
Plucking the
Low-hanging Apple flashed toward Galad's neck like lightning, as though
the man
truly did intend to have his head in the first minute. There were
several
possible responses, all made instinct by hard training, but Byar's
warnings
floated in the dim recesses of his mind, and also the fact that Valda
had
warned him of this very thing.
Warned
him twice. Without conscious thought, he chose another way, stepping
sideways
and forward just as Plucking the Low-hanging Apple became the Leopard's
Caress.
Valda's eyes widened in surprise as his stroke missed Galad's left
thigh by
inches, widened more as Parting the Silk laid a gash down his right
forearm,
but he immediately launched into the Dove Takes Flight, so fast that
Galad had
to dance back before his blade could bite deeply, barely fending off
the attack
with Kingfisher Circles the Pond.
Back
and forth they danced the forms, gliding this way then that across the
stone
paving. Lizard in the Thorn-bush met Lightning of Three Prongs. Leaf on
the
Breeze countered Eel Among the Lily Pads, and Two Hares Leaping met the
Hummingbird Kisses the Honeyrose. Back and forth as smoothly as a
demonstration
of the forms. Galad tried attack after attack, but Valda was as fast as
a
viper. The Wood Grouse Dances cost him a shallow gash on his left
shoulder, and
the Red Hawk Takes a Dove another on the left arm, slightly deeper. River of Light might have taken the arm
completely had he not met the draw-cut with a desperately quick Rain in
High
Wind. Back and forth, blades flashing continuously, filling the air
with the
clash of steel on steel.
How
long they fought, he could not have said. There was no time, only the
moment.
It seemed that he and Valda moved like men under water, their motions
slowed by
the drag of the sea. Sweat appeared on Valda's face, but he smiled with
self-assurance, seemingly untroubled by the slash on his forearm, still
the
only injury he had taken. Galad could feel the sweat rolling down his
own face,
too, stinging his eyes. And the blood trickling down his arm. Those
wounds
would slow him eventually, perhaps already had, but he had taken two on
his
left thigh, and both were more serious. His foot was wet in his boot
from
those, and he could not avoid a slight limp that would grow worse with
time. If
Valda was to die, it must be soon.
Deliberately,
he drew a deep breath, then another, through his mouth, another. Let
Valda
think him becoming winded. His blade lanced out in Threading the
Needle, aimed at
Valda's left shoulder and not quite as fast it could have been. The
other man
countered easily with the Swallow Takes Flight, sliding immediately
into the
Lion Springs. That took a third bite in his thigh; he dared not be
faster in
defense than in attack.
Again
he launched Threading the Needle at Valda's shoulder, and again, again,
all the
while gulping air through his mouth. Only luck kept him from taking
more wounds
in those exchanges. Or perhaps the Light really did shine on this fight.
Valda's
smile widened; the man believed him on the edge of his strength,
exhausted and
fixated. As Galad began Threading the Needle, too slowly, for the fifth
time,
the other man's sword started the Swallow Takes Flight in an almost
perfunctory
manner. Summoning all the quickness that remained to him, Galad altered
his
stroke, and Reaping the Barley sliced across Valda just beneath his rib
cage.
For
a moment it seemed that the man was unaware he had been hit. He took a
step,
began what might have been Stones Falling from the Cliff. Then his eyes
widened, and he staggered, the sword falling from his grip to clatter
on the
paving stones as he sank to his knees. His hands went to the huge gash
across
his body as though trying to hold his insides within him, and his mouth
opened,
glassy eyes fixed on Galad's face.
Whatever
he intended to say, it was blood that poured out over his chin.
He
toppled onto his face and lay still.
Automatically,
Galad gave his blade a rapid twist to shake off the blood staining its
last
inch, then bent slowly to wipe the last drops onto Valda's white coat.
The pain
he had ignored now flared. His left shoulder and arm burned; his thigh
seemed
to be on fire. Straightening took effort. Perhaps he was nearer
exhaustion than
he had thought. How long had they fought? He had thought he would feel
satisfaction that his mother had been avenged, but all he felt was
emptiness.
Valda's death was not enough. Nothing except Morgase Trakand alive
again could
be enough.
Suddenly
he became aware of a rhythmic clapping and looked up to see the
Children, each
man slapping his own armored shoulder in approval. Every man. Except
Asunawa
and the Questioners. They were nowhere to be seen.
Byar
hurried up carrying a small leather sack and carefully parted the
slashes in
Galad's coatsleeve. "Those will need sewing," he muttered, "but
they can wait." Kneeling beside Galad, he took rolled bandages from the
sack and began winding them around the gashes in his thigh. "These need
sewing, too, but this will keep you from bleeding to death before you
can get
it." Others began gathering around, offering congratulations, men afoot
in
front, those still mounted behind. None gave the corpse a glance except
for
Kashgar, who cleaned Valda's sword on that already bloodstained coat
before
sheathing it.
"Where
did Asunawa go?" Galad asked.
"He
left as soon as you cut Valda the last time," Dain replied uneasily.
"He'll
be heading for the camp to bring back Questioners."
"He
rode the other way, toward the border," someone put in. Nassad lay just
over the border.
"The
Lords Captain," Galad said, and Trom nodded.
"No
Child would let the Questioners arrest you for what happened here,
Damodred.
Unless his Captain ordered it. Some of them would order it, I think."
Angry muttering began, men denying they would stand for such a thing,
but Trom
quieted them, somewhat, with raised hands. "You know it's true," he
said loudly. "Anything else would be mutiny." That brought dead
silence. There had never been a mutiny in the Children. It was possible
that
nothing before had come as close as their own earlier display. "I'll
write
out your release from the Children, Galad. Someone may still order your
arrest,
but they'll have to find you, and you'll have a good start. It will
take half
the day for Asunawa to catch the other Lords Captain, and whoever falls
in with
him can't be back before nightfall."
Galad
shook his head angrily. Trom was right, but it was all wrong. Too much
was
wrong. "Will you write releases for these other men? You know Asunawa
will
find a way to accuse them, too. Will you write releases for the
Children who
don't want to help the Seanchan take our lands in the name of a man
dead more
than a thousand years?" Several Taraboners exchanged glances and
nodded,
and so did other men, not all of them Amadician. "What about the men
who
defended the Fortress of the Light?
Will
any release get their chains struck off or make the Seanchan stop
working them
like animals?" More angry growls; those prisoners were a sore point to
all
of the Children.
Arms
folded across his chest, Trom studied him as though seeing him for the
first
time. "What would you do, then?"
"Have
the Children find someone, anyone, who is fighting the Seanchan and
ally with
them. Make sure that the Children of the Light ride in the Last Battle
instead
of helping the Seanchan hunt Aiel and steal our nations."
"Anyone?"
a Cairhienin named Doirellin said in a high-pitched voice. No one ever
made fun
of Doirellin's voice. Though short, he was nearly as wide as he was
tall, there
was barely an ounce of fat on him, and he could put walnuts between all
of his
fingers and crack them by clenching his fists. "That could mean Aes
Sedai."
"If
you intend to be at Tarmon Gai'don, then you will have to fight
alongside Aes
Sedai," Galad said quietly. Young Bornhald grimaced in strong distaste,
and he was not the only one. Byar half-straightened before bending back
to his
task. But no one voiced dissent. Doirellin nodded slowly, as if he had
never
before considered the matter.
"I
don't hold with the witches any more than any other man," Byar said
finally, without raising his head from his work. Blood was seeping
through the
bandages even as he wrapped. "But the Precepts say, to fight the raven,
you may make alliance with the serpent until the battle is done." A
ripple
of nods ran through the men. The raven meant the Shadow, but everyone
knew it
was also the Seanchan Imperial sigil.
"I'll
fight beside the witches," a lanky Taraboner said, "or even these
Asha'man we keep hearing about, if they fight the Seanchan. Or at the
Last Battle.
And I'll fight
any man who says I'm wrong." He glared as though ready to begin then
and
there.
"It
seems matters will play out as you wish, my Lord Captain Commander."
Trom
said, making a much deeper bow than he had for Valda. "To a degree, at
least. Who can say what the next hour will bring, much less tomorrow?"
Galad
surprised himself by laughing. Since yesterday, he had been sure he
would never
laugh again. "That's a poor joke, Trom."
"It
is how the law is written. And Valda did make his proclamation.
Besides,
you had the courage to say what many have thought while holding their
tongues,
myself among them. Yours is a better plan for the Children than any
I've heard
since Pedron Niall died."
"It's
still a poor joke." Whatever the law said, that part had been ignored
since the end of the War of the Hundred Years.
"We'll
see what the Children have to say on the matter," Trom replied,
grinning widely,
"when you ask them to follow us to Tarmon Gai'don to fight alongside
the
witches."
Men
began slapping their shoulders again, harder than they had for his
victory. At
first it was only a few, then more joined in, until every man including
Trom
was signaling approval. Every man but Kashgar, that was. Making a deep
bow, the
Saldaean held out the scabbarded heron-mark blade with both hands.
"This
is yours, now, my Lord Captain Commander."
Galad
sighed. He hoped this nonsense would fade away before they reached the
camp.
Returning there was foolish enough without adding in a claim of that
sort. Most
likely they would be pulled down and thrown in chains if not beaten to
death
even without it. But he had to go. It was the right thing to do.
Daylight
began to grow on this cool spring morning, though the sun had yet to
show even
a sliver above the horizon, and Rodel Ituralde raised his gold-banded
looking
glass to study the village below the hill where he sat his roan
gelding, deep
in the heart of Tarabon. He did hate waiting for enough light to see.
Careful
of a glint off the lens, he held the end of the long tube on his thumb
and
shaded it with a cupped hand. At this hour, sentries were at their
least
watchful, relieved that the darkness where an enemy might sneak close
was
departing, yet since crossing from Almoth Plain he had heard tales of
Aiel
raids inside Tarabon. Were he a sentry with Aiel perhaps about, he
would grow
extra eyes. Peculiar that the country was not milling like a kicked
antheap
over those Aiel. Peculiar, and perhaps ominous. There were plenty of
armed men
to be found, Seanchan and Taraboners sworn to them, and hordes of
Seanchan
building farms and even villages, but reaching this far had been almost
too
easy. Today, the easiness ended.
Behind
him among the trees, horses stamped impatiently. The hundred Domani
with him
were quiet, except for an occasional creak of saddle leather as a man
shifted
his seat, but he could feel their tension. He wished he had twice as
many. Five
times. In the beginning, it had seemed a gesture of good faith that he
himself
would ride with a force mainly composed of Taraboners. He was no longer
certain
that had been the right decision. It was too late for recriminations,
in any
event.
Halfway
between Elmora and the Amadician border, Serana sat in a flat grassy
valley
among forested hills, with at least a mile to the trees in any
direction save
his, and a small, reed-fringed lake fed by two wide streams lay between
him and
the village. Not a place that could be surprised by daylight. It had
been
sizable before the Seanchan came, a stopping point for the merchant
trains
heading east, with over a dozen inns and nearly as many streets.
Village folk
were already getting about their day's tasks, women balancing baskets
on their
heads as they glided down the village streets and others starting the
fires
under laundry kettles behind their houses, men striding along toward
their
work-places, sometimes pausing to exchange a few words. A normal
morning, with
children already running and playing, rolling hoops and tossing
beanbags among
the throng. The clang of a smithy rose, dim with the distance. The
smoke from
breakfast fires was fading at the chimneys.
As
far as he could see, no one in Serana gave a second glance to the three
pairs
of sentries with bright stripes painted across their breastplates,
walking
their horses back and forth perhaps a quarter of a mile out. The lake,
considerably wider than the village, shielded the fourth side
effectively. It
seemed the sentries were an accepted matter of every day, and so was
the
Seanchan camp that had swollen Serana to more than twice its former
size.
Ituralde
shook his head slightly. He would not have placed the camp
cheek-by-jowl with
the village that way. The rooftops of Serana were all tile, red or
green or
blue, but the buildings themselves were wooden; a fire in the town
could spread
all too easily into the camp, where canvas store-tents the size of
large houses
far outnumbered the smaller tents where men slept, and great stacks of
barrels
and casks and crates covered twice as much ground as all the tents
combined.
Keeping lightfingered villagers out would be all but impossible. Every
town had
a few tickbirds who picked up anything they thought they could get away
with, and
even somewhat more honest men might be tempted by the proximity. The
location
did mean a shorter distance to haul water from the lake, and a shorter
distance
for soldiers to walk to reach the ale and wine in the village when
off-duty,
but it suggested a commander who kept slack discipline.
Slack
discipline or not, there was activity in the camp, too. Soldiers' hours
made
farmers' hours seem restful. Men were checking the animals on the long
horselines, bannermen checking soldiers standing in ranks, hundreds of
laborers
loading or unloading wagons, grooms harnessing teams. Every day, trains
of
wagons came down the road into this camp from east and west, and others
departed. He admired the Seanchan efficiency at making sure their
soldiers had
what they needed when and where it was needed. Dragonsworn here in
Tarabon,
most sour-faced men who believed their dream snuffed out by the
Seanchan, had
been willing to tell what they knew if not to ride with him. That camp
contained everything from boots to swords, arrows to horseshoes to
water-flasks, enough to outfit thousands of men from the ground up.
They would
feel its loss.
He
lowered the looking glass to brush a buzzing green fly away from his
face. Two
replaced it almost at once. Tarabon teemed with flies. Did they always
come so
early here? They would just have begun hatching at home by the time he
reached
Arad Doman again. If he did. No; no ill thoughts. When he did. Tamsin
would be
displeased, otherwise, and it was seldom wise to displease her too far.
Most
of the men down there were hired workmen, not soldiers, and only a
hundred or
so of those Seanchan. Still, a company of three hundred Taraboners in
stripe-painted armor had ridden in at noon the day before, more than
doubling
their numbers and requiring him to change his plans.
Another
party of Taraboners, as large, had entered the camp at sunset, just in
time to
eat and bed down wherever they could lay their blankets.
Candles
and lamp oil were luxuries for soldiers. There was one of those leashed
women,
a damane, in the camp, too. He wished he could have waited until she
left-they
must have been taking her elsewhere; what use for a damane at a supply
camp?-but today was the appointed day, and he could not afford to give
the
Taraboners reason to claim he was holding back. Some would snatch at
any reason
to go their own way. He knew they would not follow him much longer, yet
he
needed to hold as many as he could for a few days more.
Shifting
his gaze to the west, he did not bother with the looking glass.
"Now,"
he whispered, and as though at his command, two hundred men with mail
veils
across their faces galloped out of the trees. And immediately halted,
cavorting
and jockeying for place, brandishing steel-tipped lances while their
leader
raced up and down before them gesturing wildly in an obvious effort to
establish some semblance of order.
At
this distance, Ituralde could not have made out faces even with the
glass, but
he could imagine the fury on Tornay Lanasiet's features at playing out
this
charade. The stocky Dragonsworn burned to close with Seanchan. Any
Seanchan. It
had been difficult to dissuade him from striking the day they crossed
the
border. Yesterday he had been visibly overjoyed finally to scrape the
hated
stripes indicating loyalty to the Seanchan from his breastplate. No
matter; so
far he was obeying his orders to the letter.
As
the sentries nearest Lanasiet turned their mounts to speed toward the
village
and the Seanchan camp, Ituralde swung his attention there and raised
his
looking glass once more. The sentries would find their warning
superfluous.
Motion had ceased. Some men were pointing toward the horsemen on the
other side
of the village, while the rest seemed to be staring, soldiers and
workmen
alike. The last thing they expected was raiders. Aiel raids or no Aiel
raids,
the Seanchan considered Tarabon theirs, and safely so. A quick glance
at the
village showed people standing in the streets staring toward the
strange
riders. They had not expected raiders, either. He thought the Seanchan
were
right, an opinion he would not share with any Taraboner in the
foreseeable
future.
With
well-trained men shock could last only so long, however. In the camp,
soldiers
began racing toward their horses, many still unsaddled, though grooms
had started
working as fast as they could. Eighty-odd Seanchan footmen, archers,
formed
into ranks and set off running through Serana. At that evidence that
there
truly was a threat, people began snatching up the smaller children and
herding
the older toward the hoped-for safety of the houses. In moments, the
streets
were empty save for the hurrying archers in their lacquered armor and
peculiar
helmets.
Ituralde
turned the glass toward Lanasiet and found the man galloping his line
of
horsemen forward. "Wait for it," he growled. "Wait for it."
Again
it seemed the Taraboner heard his command, finally raising a hand to
halt his
men. At least they were still a half-mile or more from the village. The
hotheaded fool was supposed to be near a mile away, on the edge of the
trees
and still in seeming disorder and easily swept away, but half would
have to
suffice. He suppressed the urge to finger the ruby in his left ear. The
battle
had begun, now, and in battle you had to make those following you
believe that
you were utterly cool, completely unaffected. Not wanting to knock down
a
putative ally.
Emotion
seemed to leak from a commander into his men, and angry men behaved
stupidly,
getting themselves killed and losing battles.
Touching
the half-moon-shaped beauty patch on his cheek-a man should look his
best on a
day like today-he took slow measured breaths until certain that he was
as cool
inside as his outward display, then returned his attention to the camp.
Most of
the Taraboners there were mounted, now, but they waited for twenty or
so
Seanchan led by a tall fellow with a single thin plume on his curious
helmet to
gallop into the village before falling in behind, yesterday's
late-comers
trailing at the rear.
Ituralde
studied the figure leading the column, viewing him through the gaps
between
houses. A single plume would mark a lieutenant or maybe an
under-lieutenant.
Which might mean a beardless boy on his first command or a grizzled
veteran who
could take your head if you made one mistake.
Strangely,
the damane, marked by the shining silvery leash that connected her to a
woman
on a another horse, galloped her animal as hard as anyone. Everything
he had
heard said damane were prisoners, yet she appeared as eager as the
other woman,
the sul'dam. Perhaps-
Abruptly
his breath caught in his throat and all thought of damane fled.
There
were people still in the street, seven or eight men and women, walking
in a
cluster and right ahead of the racing column that they seemed not to
hear
thundering up behind them. There was no time for the Seanchan to stop
if they
wanted to, and good reason not to try with an enemy ahead, but it
looked as
though the tall fellow's hand never twitched on his reins as he and the
rest
rode the people down. A veteran, then. Murmuring a prayer for the dead,
Ituralde lowered the glass. What came next was best seen without it.
Two
hundred paces beyond the village, the officer started forming his
command where
the archers had already stopped and were waiting with nocked arrows.
Waving
directions to the Taraboners behind, he turned to peer at Lanasiet
through a
looking glass. Sunlight glinted off the tube's banding. The sun was
rising,
now. The Taraboners began dividing smoothly, lance heads glittering and
all
slanted at the same angle, disciplined men falling into ordered ranks
to either
side of the archers.
The
officer leaned over to converse with the sul'dam. If he turned her and
the
damane loose now, this could still turn into a disaster. Of course, it
could if
he did not, too. The last of the Taraboners, those who had arrived
late, began
stretching out in a line fifty paces behind the others, driving their
lances
point-down into the ground and pulling their horse-bows from the cases
fastened
behind their saddles. Lanasiet, curse the man, was galloping his men
forward.
Turning
his head for a moment, Ituralde spoke loudly enough for the men behind
him to
hear. "Be ready." Saddle leather creaked as men gathered their reins.
Then he murmured another prayer for the dead and whispered, "Now."
As
one man the three hundred Taraboners in the long line, his Taraboners,
raised
their bows and loosed. He did not need the looking glass to see the
sul'dam and
damane and the officer suddenly sprout arrows. They were all but swept
from
their saddles by near a dozen striking each of them at once. Ordering
that had
given him a pang, but the women were the most dangerous people on that
field.
The rest of that volley cut down most of the archers and cleared
saddles, and
even as men struck the ground, a second volley lanced out, knocking
down the
last archers and emptying more saddles.
Caught
by surprise, the Seanchan-loyal Taraboners tried to fight. Among those
still
mounted, some wheeled about and lowered lances to charge their
attackers.
Others, perhaps seized by the irrationality that could take men in
battle,
dropped their lances and tried to uncase their own horse-bows. But a
third
volley lashed them, pile-headed arrows driving through breastplates at
that
range, and suddenly the survivors seemed to realize that they were
survivors.
Most of their fellows lay still on the ground or struggled to stand
though
pierced by two or three shafts.
Those
still mounted were now outnumbered by their opponents. A few men reined
their
horses around, and in a flash the lot of them were running south
pursued by one
final rain of bowshot that toppled more.
"Hold,"
Ituralde murmured. "Hold where you are."
A
handful of the mounted archers fired again, but the rest wisely
refrained. They
could kill a few more before the enemy was beyond range, but this group
was
beaten, and before long they would be counting every arrow. Best of
all, none
of them went racing in pursuit.
The
same could not be said of Lanasiet. Cloaks streaming, he and his two
hundred
raced after the fleeing men. Ituralde imagined he could hear them
yelping,
hunters on the trail of running prey.
"I
think we've seen the last of Lanasiet, my Lord," Jaalam said, reining
his
gray up beside Ituralde, who shrugged slightly.
"Perhaps,
my young friend. He may come to his senses. In any case, I never
thought the
Taraboners would return to Arad Doman with us. Did you?"
"No,
my Lord," the taller man replied, "but I thought his honor would hold
through the first fight."
Ituralde
lifted his glass to look at Lanasiet, still galloping hard. The man was
gone,
and unlikely to come to senses he did not possess. A third of his force
gone as
surely as if that damane had killed them. He had counted on a few more
days. He
would need to change plans again, perhaps change his next target.
Dismissing
Lanasiet from his thoughts, he swung the glass to glance at where those
people
had been ridden down, and grunted in surprise. There were no trampled
bodies.
Friends and neighbors must have come out to carry them away, though
with a
battle on the edge of the village that seemed about as likely as them
getting
up and walking away after the horses passed.
"It's
time to go burn all those lovely Seanchan stores," he said.
Shoving
the looking glass into the leather case tied to his saddle, he donned
his
helmet and heeled Steady down the hill, followed by Jaalam and the
others in a
column of twos. Ruts from farm wagons and broken-down banks indicated a
ford in
the eastern stream. "And, Jaalam, tell a few men to warn the villagers
to
start moving what they want to save. Tell them to begin with the houses
nearest
the camp." Where fire could spread one way, it could the other, too,
and
likely would.
In
truth, he had already set the important blaze. Breathed on the first
embers, at
least. If the Light shone on him, if no one had been overcome by
eagerness or
given in to despair at the hold the Seanchan had on Tarabon, if no one
had
fallen afoul of the mishaps that could ruin the best-laid plan, then
all across
Tarabon, above twenty thousand men had struck blows like this, or would
before
the day was out. And tomorrow they would do it again. Now all he had to
do was
raid his way back across better than four hundred miles of Tarabon,
shedding
Taraboner Dragonsworn and gathering in his own men, then re-cross
Almoth Plain.
If the Light shone on him, that blaze would singe the Seanchan enough
to bring
them chasing after him full of fury. A great deal of fury, he hoped.
That way,
they would run headlong into the trap he had laid before they ever knew
it was
there. If they failed to follow, then at least he had rid his homeland
of the
Taraboners and bound the Domani Dragonsworn to fight for the King
instead of
against him. And if they saw the trap…
Riding
down the hillside, Ituralde smiled. If they saw the trap, then he had
another
plan already laid, and another behind that. He always looked ahead, and
always
planned for every eventuality he could imagine, short of the Dragon
Reborn
himself suddenly appearing in front of him. He thought the plans he had
would
suffice for the moment.
The
High Lady Suroth Sabelle Meldarath lay awake on her bed, staring up at
the
ceiling. The moon was down, and the triple-arched windows that
overlooked a
palace garden were dark, but her eyes had adjusted so that she could
make out
at least the outlines of the ornate, painted plasterwork. Dawn was no
more than
an hour or two off, yet she had not slept. She had lain awake most
nights since
Tuon vanished, sleeping only when exhaustion closed her eyes however
hard she
tried to keep them open. Sleep brought nightmares she wished she could
forget.
Ebou Dar was never truly cold, but the night held a little coolness,
enough to
help keep her awake, lying beneath only a thin silk sheet. The question
that
tainted her dreams was simple and stark. Was Tuon alive, or dead?
The
escape of the Atha'an Miere damane and Queen Tylin's murder spoke in
favor of
her death. Three events of that magnitude happening on one night by
chance was
pressing coincidence too far, and the first two were horrifying enough
in
themselves to indicate the worst for Tuon. Someone was trying to sow
fear among
the Rhyagelle, Those Who Come Home, perhaps to disrupt the entire
Return. How
better to achieve that than to assassinate Tuon? Worse, it had to be
one of
their own. Because she had landed under the veil, no local knew who
Tuon was.
Tylin had surely been killed with the One Power, by a sul'dam and her
damane.
Suroth had leaped at the suggestion that Aes Sedai were to blame, yet
eventually someone who mattered would question how one of those women
could
enter a palace full of damane in a city full of damane and escape
detection. At
least one sul'dam had been necessary to uncollar the Sea Folk damane.
And
two of her own sul'dam had disappeared at almost the same time.
In
any case, they had been noticed as missing two days later, and no one
had seen
them since the night Tuon vanished. She did not believe they were
involved,
though they had been in the kennels. For one thing, she could not
imagine Renna
or Seta uncollaring a damane. They certainly had reasons enough to
sneak away
and seek employment far off, with someone ignorant of their filthy
secret,
someone like this Egeanin Tamarath who had stolen a pair of a damane.
Strange
that, for one newly raised to the Blood. Strange, but unimportant; she
could
see no way to tie it to the rest. Likely the woman had found the
stresses and
complexities of nobility too much for a simple sailor. Well, she would
be found
and arrested eventually.
The
important fact, the potentially deadly fact, was that Renna and Seta
were gone,
and no one could say exactly when they had left. If the wrong person
noted
their departure so close to the critical time and made the wrong
calculation… She pressed the heels of her hands against her eyes and
exhaled
softly, very near to a groan.
Even
should she escape suspicion of murdering Tuon, if the woman was dead,
then she
herself would be required to apologize to the Empress, might she live
forever.
For the death of the acknowledged heir to the Crystal Throne, her
apology would
be protracted, and as painful as it was humiliating; it might end with
her
execution, or much worse, with being sent to the block as property. Not
that it
would actually come to that, though in her nightmares it often did. Her
hand
slid beneath the pillows to touch the unsheathed dagger there. The
blade was
little longer than her hand, yet more than sharp enough to open her
veins,
preferably in a warm bath. If time came for an apology, she would not
live to
reach Seandar. The dishonor to her name might even be lessened a little
if
enough people believed the act was itself an apology. She would leave a
letter
explaining it so. That might help.
Still,
there was a chance Tuon remained alive, and Suroth clung to it.
Killing
her and spiriting the body away might be a deep move ordered from
Seanchan by
one of her surviving sisters who coveted the throne, yet Tuon had
arranged her
own disappearance more than once. In support of the notion, Tuon's
der'sul'dam
had taken all of her sul'dam and damane into the country for exercise
nine days
ago, and they had not been seen since. Exercising damane did not
require nine
days. And just today-no; yesterday, now, by a good few hours-Suroth had
learned
that the Captain of Tuon's bodyguard also had left the city nine days
ago with
a sizable contingent of his men and not returned. That was too much for
coincidence, and very nearly proof. Near enough for hope, at least.
Each
of those previous disappearances, however, had been part of Tuon's
campaign to
win the approval of the Empress, might she live forever, and be named
heir.
Each time, some competitor among her sisters had been forced or
emboldened to
acts that lowered her when Tuon reappeared. What need had she of such
stratagems now, here? Rack her brains how she would, Suroth could not
find a
worthy target outside Seanchan. She had considered the possibility that
she
herself was the mark, but only briefly and only because she could think
of no
one else. Tuon could have stripped her of her position in the Return
with three
words. All she needed to do was remove the veil; here, the Daughter of
the Nine
Moons, in command of the Return, spoke with the voice of the Empire.
Bare
suspicion that Suroth was Atha'an Shadar, what those this side of the
Aryth
Ocean called a Darkfriend, might have been enough for Tuon to have
handed her
over to the Seekers for questioning. No, Tuon was aiming at someone
else, or
something else. If she did still live. But she had to.
Suroth
did not want to die. She fingered the blade.
Who
or what else did not matter, except as a clue to where Tuon might be,
but that
was very important. Immensely so. Already, despite the announcement of
an
extended inspection trip, whispers floated among the Blood that she was
dead.
The longer she remained missing, the more those whispers would grow,
and with
them the pressure for Suroth to return to Seandar and make that
apology. She
could only resist so long before she would be adjudged sei'mosiev so
deeply
that only her own servants and property would obey her. Her eyes would
be
ground into the dirt. Low Blood as well as High, perhaps even
commoners, would
refuse to speak to her. Soon after that, she would find herself on a
ship
whatever her wishes.
Without
doubt Tuon would be displeased at being found, yet it seemed unlikely
her
displeasure would extend so far as Suroth being dishonored and forced
to slit
her wrists; therefore Tuon must be found. Every Seeker in Altara was
searching
for her-those Suroth knew of, at least.
Tuon's
own Seekers were not among the known, yet they must be hunting twice as
hard as
any others. Unless they had been taken into her confidence. But in
seventeen
days, all that had been uncovered was that ridiculous story of Tuon
extorting
jewelry from goldsmiths, and that was known to every common soldier.
Perhaps…
The
arched door to the anteroom began to open slowly, and Suroth snapped
her right
eye shut to protect her night vision against the light of the outer
room. As
soon as the gap was wide enough, a pale-haired woman in the diaphanous
robes of
a da'covale slipped into the bedchamber and softly closed the door
behind her,
plunging the room into pitch blackness. Until Suroth opened her eye
again, and
made out a shadowy form creeping toward her bed. And another shadow,
huge,
suddenly looming in a corner of the room as Almandaragal rose
noiselessly to
his feet.
The
lopar could cross the room and snap the fool woman's neck in a
heartbeat, but
Suroth still gripped the hilt of her dagger. It was wise to have a
second line
of defense even when the first seemed impregnable.
A
pace short of the bed, the da'covale stopped. Her anxious breathing
sounded
loud in the silence.
"Working
up your courage, Liandrin?" Suroth said harshly. That honey-colored
hair,
worked in thin braids, had been enough to name her.
With
a squeak, the da'covale dropped to her knees and bent to press her face
to the
carpet. She had learned that much, at least. "I would not harm you,
High
Lady," she lied. "You know I would not." Her voice was rushed,
in a breathy panic. Learning when to speak and when not seemed as far
beyond
her as learning how to speak with proper respect. "We are both bound to
serve the Great Lord, High Lady. Have I not proven I can be useful? I
removed
Alwhin for you, yes? You said you wished her dead, High Lady, and I
removed
her."
Suroth
grimaced and sat up in the dark, the sheet sliding down to her lap. It
was so
easy to forget da'covale were there, even this da'covale, and then you
let slip
things you should not have. Alwhin had not been dangerous, merely a
nuisance,
awkward in her place as Suroth's Voice.
She
had achieved all she had ever wanted in reaching that, and the
likelihood of
her risking it by so much as the smallest betrayal had been tiny. True,
had she
broken her neck falling down a flight of stairs, Suroth would have felt
some
small relief from an irritant, but poison that left the woman with
bulging eyes
and a blue face was another matter. Even with the search for Tuon, that
had
brought the Seekers' eyes to Suroth's household. She had been forced to
insist
on it, for the murder of her Voice. That there were Listeners in her
household,
she accepted; every household had its share of Listeners. Seekers did
more than
listen, though, and they might uncover what must remain hidden.
Masking
her anger required surprising effort, and her tone was colder than she
wanted.
"I hope you did not wake me merely to plead again, Liandrin."
"No,
no!" The fool raised her head and actually looked straight at her!
"An
officer came from General Galgan, High Lady. He is waiting to take you
to the
general."
Suroth's
head throbbed with irritation. The woman delayed delivering a message
from
Galgan and looked her in the eyes? In the dark, to be sure, yet an urge
swept
over her to strangle Liandrin with her bare hands. A second death hard
on the
heels of the first would intensify the Seekers' interest in her
household, if
they learned of it, but Elbar could dispose of the body easily; he was
clever
in such tasks.
Except,
she enjoyed owning the former Aes Sedai who once had been so haughty
with her.
Making her a perfect da'covale in every way would be a great pleasure.
It was
time to have the woman collared, however. Already irritating rumors
buzzed of
an uncollared marath'damane among her servants. It would be a
twelve-day wonder
when the sul'dam discovered she was shielded in some way so she could
not
channel, yet that would help answer the question of why she had not
been
leashed before. Elbar would need to find some Atha'an Shadar among the
sul'dam,
though. That was never an easy task-relatively few sul'dam turned to
the Great
Lord, oddly-and she no longer really trusted any sul'dam, but perhaps
Atha'an
Shadar could be trusted more than the rest.
"Light
two lamps, then bring me a robe and slippers," she said, swinging her
legs
over the side of the bed.
Liandrin
scrambled to the table that held the lidded sand bowl on its gilded
tripod and
hissed when she found it with a careless hand, but she quickly used the
tongs
to lift out a hot coal, puffed it to a glow, and lit two of the
silvered lamps,
adjusting the wicks so the flames held steady and did not smoke. Her
tongue
might suggest that she felt herself Suroth's equal rather than a
possession, yet
the strap had taught her to obey commands with alacrity.
Turning
with one of the lamps in her hand, she gave a start and a choked cry at
the
sight of Almandaragal looming in the corner, his dark, ridge-ringed
eyes
focused on her. You would think she had never seen him before! Yet he
was a
fearsome sight, ten feet tall and near two thousand pounds, his
hairless skin
like reddish brown leather, flexing his six toed forepaws so his claws
extended
and retracted, extended and retracted.
"Be
at ease," Suroth told the lopar, a familiar command, but he stretched
his
mouth wide, showing sharp teeth before settling back to the floor and
resting
his huge round head on his paws like a hound. He did not close his eyes
again,
either. Lopar were quite intelligent, and plainly he trusted Liandrin
no more
than she did.
Despite
fearful glances at Almandaragal, the da'covale was quick enough to
fetch blue
velvet slippers and a white silk robe intricately embroidered in green,
red and
blue from the tall, carved wardrobe, and she held the robe for Suroth
to thrust
her arms into the sleeves, but Suroth had to tie the long sash herself,
and to
thrust out a foot before the woman remembered to kneel and fit the
slippers on.
Her eyes, but the woman was incompetent!
By
the dim light, Suroth examined herself in the gilded stand-mirror
against the
wall. Her eyes were hollow and shadowed with weariness, the tail of her
crest
hung down her back in a loose braid for sleeping, and doubtless her
scalp
required a razor. Very well. Galgan's messenger would think her
grief-stricken
over Tuon, and that was true enough.
Before
learning the general's message, though, she had one small matter to
take care
of.
"Run
to Rosala and beg her to beat you soundly, Liandrin," she said.
The
da'covale's tight little mouth dropped open and her eyes widened in
shock.
"But why?" she whined. "Me, I have done nothing!"
Suroth
busied her hands with knotting the sash tighter to keep from striking
the
woman. Her eyes would be lowered for a month if it was learned that she
had
struck a da'covale herself. She certainly owed no explanations to
property, yet
once Liandrin did become completely trained, she would miss these
opportunities
to grind the woman's face in how far she had fallen.
"Because
you delayed telling me of the general's messenger. Because you still
call
yourself 'I' rather than Liandrin. Because you meet my eyes."
She
could not help hissing that. Liandrin had huddled in on herself with
every
word, and now she directed her eyes to the floor, as if that would
mitigate her
offense. "Because you questioned my orders instead of obeying. And
last-last, but most importantly to you-because I wish you beaten. Now,
run, and
tell Rosala each of these reasons so she will beat you well."
"Liandrin
hears and obeys, High Lady," the da'covale whimpered, at last getting
something right, and flung herself at the door so fast that she lost
one of her
white slippers. Too terrified to turn back for it, or perhaps even to
notice-and well for her that she was-she clawed the door open and ran.
Sending
property for discipline should not bring a sense of satisfaction, but
it did.
Oh, yes, it did.
Suroth
took a moment to control her breathing. To appear to be grieving was
one thing,
to appear to be agitated quite another. She was filled with annoyance
at
Liandrin, jolting memories of her nightmares, fears for Tuon's fate and
even
more so her own, but not until the face in the mirror displayed utter
calm did
she follow the da'covale.
The
anteroom to her bedchamber was decorated in the garish Ebou Dari
fashion, a
cloud-painted blue ceiling, yellow walls and green and yellow floor
tiles. Even
replacing the furnishings with her own tall screens, all save two
painted by
the finest artists with birds or flowers, did little to relieve the
gaudiness.
She growled faintly in her throat at sight of the outer door,
apparently left
open by Liandrin in her flight, but she dismissed the da'covale from
her mind
for the moment and concentrated on the man who stood there examining
the screen
that held the image of a kori, a huge spotted cat from the Sen T'jore.
Lanky
and graying, in armor striped blue-and-yellow, he pivoted smoothly at
the soft
sound of her footsteps and went to one knee, though he was a commoner.
The
helmet beneath his arm bore three slender blue plumes, so the message
must be
important. Of course, it must be important to disturb her at this hour.
She
would give him dispensation. This once.
"Banner-General
Mikhel Najirah, High Lady. Captain-General Galgan's compliments, and he
has
received communications from Tarabon."
Suroth's
eyebrows climbed in spite of herself. Tarabon? Tarabon was as secure as
Seandar. Automatically her fingers twitched, but she had not yet found
a
replacement for Alwhin. She must speak to the man herself.
Irritation
over that hardened her voice, and she made no effort to soften it.
Kneeling
instead of prostrate! "What communications? If I have been wakened for
news of Aiel, I will not be pleased, Banner-General."
Her
tone failed to intimidate the man. He even raised his eyes almost to
meet hers.
"Not Aiel, High Lady," he said calmly. "Captain-General Galgan
wishes to tell you himself, so you can hear every detail correctly."
Suroth's
breath caught for an instant. Whether Najirah was just reluctant to
tell her
the contents of these communications or had been ordered not to, this
sounded
ill. "Lead on," she commanded, then swept out of the room without
waiting for him, ignoring as best she could the pair of Deathwatch
Guards
standing like statues in the hallway to either side of the door. The
"honor" of being guarded by those men in red-and-green armor made her
skin crawl. Since Tuon's disappearance, she tried not to see them at
all.
The
corridor, lined with gilded stand-lamps whose flames flickered in
errant drafts
that stirred tapestries of ships and the sea, was empty except for a
few
liveried palace servants, scurrying on early tasks, who thought deep
bows and
curtsies sufficient. And they always looked right at her! Perhaps a
word with
Beslan? No; the new King of Tarabon was her equal, now, in law at any
rate, and
she doubted that he would make his servants behave properly. She stared
straight ahead as she walked. That way, she did not have to see the
servants'
insults.
Najirah
caught up to her quickly, his boots ringing on the too-bright blue
floor tiles,
and fell in at her side. In truth, she needed no guide. She knew where
Galgan
must be.
The
room had begun as a chamber for dancing, a square thirty paces on a
side, its
ceiling painted with fanciful fish and birds frolicking in often
confusing
fashion among clouds and waves. Only the ceiling remained to recall the
room's
beginnings. Now mirrored stand-lamps and shelves full of filed reports
in
leather folders lined the pale red walls. Brown-coated clerks scurried
along
the aisles between the long, map-strewn tables that covered the
green-tiled
dancing-floor. A young officer, an under-lieutenant with no plume on
her
red-and-yellow helmet, raced past Suroth without so much as a move to
prostrate
herself. Clerks merely squeezed themselves out of her path. Galgan gave
his
people too much leeway. He claimed that what he called excessive
ceremony at
"the wrong time" hindered efficiency; she called it effrontery.
Lunal
Galgan, a tall man in a red robe richly worked with bright-feathered
birds, the
hair of his crest snow white and its tail plaited in a tight but untidy
queue
that hung to his shoulders, stood at a table near the center of the
room with a
knot of other high-ranking officers, some in breastplates, others in
robes and
nearly as disheveled as she. It seemed she was not the first to whom he
had
sent a messenger.
She
struggled to keep anger from her face. Galgan had come with Tuon and
the
Return, and thus she knew little of him beyond that his ancestors had
been
among the first to throw their support to Luthair Paendrag and that he
owned a
high reputation as a soldier and a general. Well, reputation and truth
were
sometimes the same. She disliked him entirely for himself.
He
turned at her approach and formally laid his hands on her shoulders,
kissing
her on either cheek, so she was forced to return the greeting while
trying not
to wrinkle her nose at the strong, musky scent he favored. Galgan's
face was as
smooth as his creases would allow, but she thought she detected a hint
of worry
in his blue eyes. A number of the men and women behind him, mainly low
Blood
and commoners, wore open frowns.
The
large map of Tarabon spread out on the table in front of her and held
flat by
four lamps gave reason enough for worry. Markers covered it, red wedges
for
Seanchan forces on the move and red stars for forces holding in place,
each
supporting a small paper banner inked with their numbers and
composition.
Scattered across the map, across the entire map, lay black discs
marking
engagements, and even more white discs for enemy forces, many of those
without
the banners. How could there be any enemies in Tarabon? It was as
secure as…
"What
happened?" she demanded.
"Raken
began arriving with reports from Lieutenant-General Turan about three
hours
ago," Galgan began in conversational tones. Pointedly not making a
report
himself. He studied the map as he talked, never glancing in her
direction.
"They aren't complete-each new one adds to the lists, and I expect that
won't change for a while-but what I've seen runs this way. Since dawn
yesterday, seven major supply camps overrun and burned, along with more
than
two dozen smaller camps. Twenty supply trains attacked, the wagons and
their
contents put to the torch. Seventeen small outposts have been wiped
out, eleven
patrols have failed to report in, and there have been an additional
fifteen
skirmishes. Also a few attacks against our settlers. Only a handful of
fatalities, mostly men who tried to defend their belongings, but a good
many
wagons and stores burned along with some half-built houses, and the
same
message delivered everywhere. Leave Tarabon. All this was done by bands
of
between two and perhaps five hundred men. Estimates are a minimum of
ten
thousand and perhaps twice that, nearly all Taraboners. Oh, yes," he
finished casually, "and most of them are wearing armor painted with
stripes."
She
wanted to grind her teeth. Galgan commanded the soldiers of the Return,
yet she
commanded the Corenne, the Forerunners, and as such, she possessed the
higher
rank in spite of his crest and red-lacquered fingernails. She suspected
the
only reason he did not claim that the Forerunners had been absorbed
into the
Return by its very arrival was that supplanting her meant assuming
responsibility for Tuon's safety.
And
for that apology, should it become necessary. "Dislike" was too mild
a word. She loathed Galgan.
"A
mutiny?" she said, proud of the coolness of her voice. Inside, she had
begun to burn.
Galgan's
white queue swung slowly as he shook his head. "No. All reports say our
Taraboners have fought well, and we've had a few successes, taken a few
prisoners. Not one of them can be found on the rosters of loyal
Taraboners. Several
have been identified as Dragonsworn believed to be up in Arad Doman.
And the
name Rodel Ituralde has been mentioned a number of times as the brain
behind it
all, and the leader. A Domani.
He's
supposed to be one of the best generals this side of the ocean, and if
he
planned and carried out all this," he swept a hand over the map,
"then I believe it." The fool sounded admiring! "Not a mutiny. A
raid on a grand scale. But he won't get out with nearly as many men as
he
brought in."
Dragonsworn.
The word was like a fist clutching Suroth's throat. "Are there
Asha'man?"
"Those
fellows who can channel?" Galgan grimaced and made a sign against evil,
apparently unconscious of doing so. "There was no mention of them,"
he said dryly, "and I rather think there would have been."
Red-hot
anger needed to erupt at Galgan, but screaming at another of the High
Blood
would lower her eyes. And, as bad, gain nothing. Still, it had to be
directed
somewhere. It had to come out. She was proud of what she had done in
Tarabon,
and now the country appeared to be halfway back to the chaos she found
when she
first landed there. And one man was to blame. "This Ituralde." Her
tone was ice. "I want his head!"
"Never
fear," Galgan murmured, folding his hands behind his back and bending
to
examine some of the small banners. "It won't be long before Turan
chases
him back to Arad Doman with his tail between his legs, and with luck,
he'll be
with one of the bands we snap up."
"Luck?"
she snapped. "I don't trust to luck!" Her anger was open, now, and
she did not consider trying to suppress it again. Her eyes scanned the
map as
though she could find Ituralde that way. "If Turan is hunting a hundred
bands, as you suggest, he'll need more scouts to run them down, and I
want them
run down. Every last one of them. Especially Ituralde. General Yulan, I
want
four in every five-no, nine in every ten-raken in Altara and Amadicia
moved to
Tarabon. If Turan can't find them all with that, then he can see if his
own
head will appease me."
Yulan,
a dark little man in a blue robe embroidered with black-crested eagles,
must
have dressed in too great a hurry to apply the gum that normally held
his wig
in place, because he was constantly touching the thing to make sure it
was
straight. He was Captain of the Air for the Forerunners, but the
Return's
Captain of the Air was only a Banner-General, a more senior man having
died on
the voyage. Yulan would have no trouble with him.
"A
wise move, High Lady," he said, frowning at the map, "but may I
suggest leaving the raken in Amadicia and those assigned to
Banner-General
Khirgan. Raken are the best way we have to locate Aiel, and in two days
we
still haven't found those Whitecloaks. That will still give General
Turan-"
"The
Aiel are less of a problem every day," she told him firmly, "and a
few deserters are nothing." He inclined his head in assent, one hand
keeping his wig in place. He was only low Blood, after all.
"I
hardly call seven thousand men a few deserters," Galgan murmured dryly.
"It
shall be as I command!" she snapped. Curse those so-called Children of
the
Light! She still had not decided whether to make Asunawa and the few
thousand
who had remained da'covale. They had remained, yet how long before they
offered
betrayal, too? And Asunawa seemed to hate damane, of all things. The
man was
unbalanced!
Galgan
shrugged, utterly unperturbed. A red-lacquered fingernail traced lines
on the
map as though he were planning movements of soldiers. "So long as you
don't want the to'raken, too, I raise no objections. That plan must go
forward.
Altara is falling into our hands with barely a struggle, I'm not ready
to move
on Illian yet, and we need to pacify Tarabon again quickly. The people
will
turn against us if we can't give them safety."
Suroth
began to regret letting her anger show. He would raise no objections?
He was
not ready for Illian yet? He was all but saying that he did not have to
follow
her orders, only not openly, not so he had to take her responsibility
along
with her authority.
"I
expect this message to be sent to Turan, General Galgan." Her voice was
steady, kept so by will alone. "He is to send me Rodel Ituralde's head
if
he has to hound the man across Arad Doman and into the Blight.
And
if he fails to send me that head, I will take his."
Galgan's
mouth tightened briefly, and he frowned down at the map. "Turan
sometimes
needs a fire lit under him," he muttered, "and Arad Doman has always
been next for him. Very well. Your message will be sent, Suroth."
She
could stay no longer in the same room with him. Without a word, she
left. Had
she spoken, she would have screamed. She stalked all the way back to
her rooms
without bothering to mask her fury. The Deathwatch Guards took no
notice, of
course; they might as well have been carved of stone. Which made her
slam the
anteroom door behind her with a crash.
Perhaps
they noticed that!
Padding
toward her bed, she kicked off her slippers, let the robe and sash fall
to the
floor. She must find Tuon. She had to. If only she could puzzle out
Tuon's
target, puzzle out where she was. If only-
Suddenly
the walls of her bedchamber, the ceiling, even the floor, began to glow
with a
silvery light. Those surfaces seemed to have become light. Gaping in
shock, she
turned slowly, staring at the box of light that surrounded her, and
found
herself looking at a woman made of roiling flames, clothed in roiling
flames.
Almandaragal was on his feet, awaiting his owner's command to attack.
"I
am Semirhage," the woman of fire said in a voice like a tolling funeral
gong.
"Belly,
Almandaragal!" That command, taught as a child because it amused her to
have the lopar prostrate himself before her, ended with a grunt because
she
obeyed it herself even as she gave it. Kissing the
red-and-green-patterned
carpet, she said, "I live to serve and obey, Great Mistress." There
was no doubt in her mind that this woman was who she said. Who would
dare claim
that name falsely? Or could appear as living fire?
"I
think you would also like to rule." The tolling gong sounded faintly
amused, but then it hardened. "Look at me! I dislike the way you
Seanchan
avoid meeting my eyes. It makes me believe you are hiding something.
You don't
want to try hiding anything from me, Suroth."
"Of
course, not, Great Mistress," Suroth said, pushing herself up to sit on
her heels. "Never, Great Mistress." She raised her gaze as far as the
other woman's mouth, but she could not make herself raise it higher.
Surely
that would be enough.
"Better,"
Semirhage murmured. "Now. How would you like to rule in these lands? A
handful of deaths-Galgan and a few others-and you could manage to name
yourself
Empress, with my help. It's hardly important, but circumstances provide
the
opportunity, and you would certainly be more amenable than the current
Empress has
been so far."
Suroth's
stomach clenched. She feared she might vomit. "Great Mistress," she
said dully, "the penalty for that is to be taken before the true
Empress,
may she live forever, and have your entire skin removed, great care
being taken
to keep you alive. After that-"
"Inventive,
if primitive," Semirhage broke in wryly. "But of no account.
The
Empress Radhanan is dead. Remarkable how much blood there is in a human
body. Enough
to cover the whole Crystal Throne. Take the offer, Suroth. I will not
make it
again. You will make certain matters slightly more convenient, but not
enough
for me to put myself out a second time."
Suroth
had to make herself breathe. "Then Tuon is the Empress, may she
live…" Tuon would take a new name, rarely to be spoken outside the
Imperial family. The Empress was the Empress, might she live forever.
Wrapping
her arms around herself, Suroth began to sob, shaking beyond her
ability to
stop. Almandaragal lifted his head and whined at her interrogatively.
Semirhage
laughed, the music of deep gongs. "Grief for Radhanan, Suroth, or is
your
dislike of Tuon becoming Empress so deep?"
Haltingly,
in spurts of three or four words broken by unmanageable weeping, Suroth
explained. As the proclaimed heir, Tuon had become Empress the moment
her
mother died. Except, if her mother had been assassinated, then it must
have
been arranged by one of her sisters, which meant that Tuon herself was
surely
dead. And none of that made the slightest difference. The forms would
be
carried out. She would have to return to Seandar and apologize for
Tuon's
death, for the death of an Empress, now, to the very woman who had
arranged it.
Who would, of course, not take the throne until Tuon's death was
announced. She
could not bring herself to admit that she would kill herself first; it
was too
shaming to say aloud. Words died as howling sobs racked her. She did
not want
to die. She had been promised she would live forever!
This
time, Semirhage's laughter was so shocking that it shut off Suroth's
tears.
That head of fire was thrown back, emitting great peals of mirth. At
last she
regained control, wiping away tears of flame with fiery fingers. "I see
I
didn't make myself clear. Radhanan is dead, and her daughters, and her
sons,
and half the Imperial Court, as well. There is no Imperial family
except for
Tuon. There is no Empire. Seandar is in the hands of rioters and
looters, and
so are a dozen other cities. At least fifty nobles are contending for
the
throne, with armies in the field. There is war from the Aldael
Mountains to
Salaking. Which is why you will be perfectly safe in disposing of Tuon
and
proclaiming yourself Empress. I've even arranged for a ship, which
should
arrive soon, to bring word of the disaster." She laughed again, and
said
something strange. "Let the lord of chaos rule."
Suroth
gaped at the other woman in spite of herself. The Empire…destroyed?
Semirhage
had killed the…? Assassination was not unknown among the Blood, High or
low,
nor within the Imperial family, yet for anyone else to reach inside the
Imperial family in that way was horrifying, unthinkable. Even one of
the
Da'concion, the Chosen Ones.
But
to become Empress herself, even here. She felt dizzy, with a hysterical
desire
to laugh. She could complete the cycle, conquering these lands, and
then send
armies to reclaim Seanchan. With an effort, she managed to regain
possession of
herself.
"Great
Mistress, if Tuon really is alive, then…then killing her will be
difficult." She had to force those words out. To kill the Empress… Even
thinking it was difficult. To become Empress. Her head felt as if it
might
float off her shoulders. "She will have her sul'dam and damane with
her,
and some of her Deathwatch Guards." Difficult? Killing her would be
impossible in those circumstances. Unless Semirhage could be induced to
do it
herself. Six damane might well be dangerous even to her. Besides, there
was a
saying among commoners. The mighty tell the lesser to dig in the mud
and keep
their own hands clean. She had heard it by chance, and punished the man
who
spoke it, but it was true.
"Think,
Suroth!" The gongs rang strong, imperative. "Captain Musenge and the
others would have gone the same night Tuon and her maid left if they
had had
any inkling of what she was about. They are looking for her. You must
put every
effort into finding her first, but if that fails, her Deathwatch Guards
will be
less protection than they seem. Every soldier in your army has heard
that at
least some of the Guards are involved with an impostor. The general
feeling
seems to be that the impostor and anyone connected to her should be
torn apart
bodily and the pieces buried in a dungheap. Quietly." Lips of fire
curled
in a small, amused smile. "To avoid the shame to the Empire."
It
might be possible. A party of Deathwatch Guards would be easy to
locate. She
would need to find out exactly how many Musenge had taken with him, and
send
Elbar with fifty for every one. No, a hundred, to account for the
damane. And
then… "Great Mistress, you understand I am reluctant to proclaim
anything until I am certain Tuon is dead?"
"Of
course," Semirhage said. The gongs were amused once more. "But
remember, if Tuon manages to return safely, it will matter little to
me, so
don't dally."
"I
will not, Great Mistress. I intend to become Empress, and for that I
must kill
the Empress." This time, saying it was not very hard at all.
In
Pevara's estimation, Tsutama Rath's rooms were flamboyant beyond the
point of
extravagance, and her own beginnings as a butcher's daughter played no
part in
her opinion. The sitting room simply put her on edge.
Beneath
a cornice carved with swallows in flight and gilded, the walls held two
large silk
tapestries, one displaying bright red bloodroses, the other a calma
bush
covered in scarlet blossoms larger than her two hands together. The
tables and
chairs were delicate pieces, if you ignored sufficient carving and
gilding for
any throne. The stand-lamps were heavily gilded, too, and the mantel,
worked
with running horses, above the red-streaked marble fireplace. Several
of the
tables held red Sea Folk porcelain, the rarest, four vases and six
bowls, a
small fortune in themselves, as well as any number of jade or ivory
carvings,
none small, and one figure of a dancing woman, a hand tall, that
appeared be
carved from a ruby. A gratuitous display of wealth, and she knew for a
fact
that aside from the gilded barrel-clock on the mantel, there was
another in
Tsutama's bedroom and even one in her dressing room. Three clocks! That
went
far beyond flamboyant, never mind gilding or rubies.
And
yet, the room suited the woman seated across from her and Javindhra.
"Flamboyant"
was exactly the word for her appearance. Tsutama was a strikingly
beautiful
woman, her hair caught in a fine golden net, with firedrops thick at
her throat
and ears and dressed as always in crimson silk that molded her full
bosom,
today with golden scrollwork embroidery to increase the emphasis. You
might
almost think she wanted to attract men, if you did not know her.
Tsutama had
made her dislike of men well known long before being sent into exile;
she would
have given mercy to a rabid dog before a man.
Back
then, she had been hammer-hard, yet many had thought her a broken reed
when she
returned to the Tower. For a while, they had. Then everyone who spent
any time
near her realized that those shifting eyes were far from nervous. Exile
had
changed her, only not toward softness.
Those
eyes belonged on a hunting cat, searching for enemies or prey. The rest
of
Tsutama's face was not so much serene as it was still, an unreadable
mask.
Unless you pushed her to open anger, at least. Even then her voice
would remain
as calm as smooth ice, though. An unnerving combination.
"I
heard disturbing rumors this morning about the battle at Dumai's
Wells,"
she said abruptly. "Bloody disturbing." She had the habits now of
long silences, no small talk, and sudden, unexpected statements.
Exile
had coarsened her language, too. The isolated farm she had been
confined to
must have been…vivid. "Including that three of the dead sisters were
from our Ajah. Mother's milk in a cup!" All delivered in the most even
tones. But her eyes stabbed at them accusingly.
Pevara
took that gaze in stride. Any direct look from Tsutama seemed accusing,
and on
edge or not, Pevara knew better than to let the Highest see it. The
woman
swooped on weakness like a falcon. "I can't see why Katerine would
disobey
your orders to keep her knowledge to herself, and you cannot believe
Tarna is
likely to put discredit on Elaida." Not publicly, at any rate. Tarna
guarded her feelings on Elaida as carefully as a cat guarded a
mousehole.
"But sisters do get reports from their eyes-and-ears. We can't stop
them
learning what happened. I'm surprised it's taken this long."
"That's
so," Javindhra added, smoothing her skirts. The angular woman wore no
jewelry aside from the Great Serpent ring, and her dress was unadorned,
and a
red deep enough to appear near black. "Sooner or later, the facts will
all
come out if we work till our fingers bleed." Her mouth was so tight she
seemed to be biting something, yet she sounded almost satisfied. Odd,
that. She
was Elaida's lapdog.
Tsutama's
stare focused on her, and after a moment a flush grew on Javindhra's
cheeks.
Perhaps as an excuse to break eye contact, she took a long drink of her
tea.
From a cup of beaten gold worked with leopards and deer, of course,
Tsutama
being as she now was. The Highest continued to stare silently, but
whether at
Javindhra or something beyond her, Pevara could no longer say.
When
Katerine brought word that Galina was among the dead at Dumai's Wells,
Tsutama
had been raised to replace her by near acclamation. She had possessed a
very good
reputation as a Sitter, at least before her involvement in the
disgusting
events that led to her downfall, and many in the Red believed the times
called
for as hard a Highest as could be found. Galina's death had lifted a
great
weight from Pevara's shoulders-the Highest, a Darkfriend; oh, that had
been
agony!-yet she was uncertain about Tsutama. There was
something…wild…about
her, now.
Something
unpredictable. Was she entirely sane? But then, the same question could
be
asked regarding the whole White Tower. How many of the sisters were
entirely
sane, now?
As
if sensing her thoughts, Tsutama shifted that unblinking gaze to her.
It
did not make Pevara color or start, as it did so many besides
Javindhra, but
she did find herself wishing Duhara were there, just to give the
Highest a
third Sitter to stare at, just to share them out. She wished she knew
where the
woman had gone and why, with a rebel army camped outside Tar Valon.
Over a week
ago, Duhara had simply taken ship without a word to anyone, so far as
Pevara
was aware, and no one seemed to know whether she had gone north or
south. These
days, Pevara was suspicious of everyone and nearly everything.
"Did
you call us here because of something in that letter, Highest?" she
said
at last. She met that unsettling stare levelly, yet she was beginning
to want a
long pull from her own ornate cup, and she wished it held wine rather
than tea.
Deliberately she rested the cup on the narrow arm of her chair. The
other
woman's gaze made her feel as though spiders were crawling on her skin.
After
a very long moment, Tsutama's eyes dropped to the folded letter in her
lap.
Only her hand held it from rolling up into a little cylinder.
It
was on the very thin paper used for messages sent by pigeon, and the
small inked
letters clearly visible through the page appeared to cover it densely.
"This
is from Sashalle Anderly," she said, bringing a wince of pity from
Pevara
and a grunt that might have been anything from Javindhra. Poor
Sashalle.
Tsutama continued without any outward sign of sympathy, though. "The
bloody woman believes Galina escaped, because it is addressed to her.
Much of
what she writes merely confirms what we already know from other
sources,
including Toveine. But, without naming them, she bloody well says that
she is
'in charge of most of the sisters in the city of Cairhien.'"
"How
can Sashalle be in charge of any sisters?" Javindhra shook her head,
her
expression denying the possibility. "Could she have gone insane?"
Pevara
held her silence. Tsutama gave answers when she wished, rarely when you
asked.
Toveine's earlier letter, also addressed to Galina, had not mentioned
Sashalle
at all, or the other two, but of course, she would have found the
entire
subject beyond distasteful. Even thinking of it was like eating rotten
plums.
Most of her words had been devoted to laying the whole blame for events
at
Elaida's feet, however indirectly.
Tsutama's
eyes flickered toward Javindhra like dagger thrusts, but she went on
without
pausing. "Sashalle recounts Toveine's bloody visit to Cairhien with the
other sisters and the flaming Asha'man, though she clearly doesn't know
about
the bloody bonding. She found it all very strange, sisters mingling
with those
goat-kissing men on 'tense yet often friendly' terms. Blood and bloody
ashes!
That is how she puts it, burn me." Tsutama's tone, suitable for
discussing
the price of lace, in strong contrast to the intensity of her eyes, and
her
language, gave no hint of what she felt on the subject. "Sashalle says
that
when they left, they took flaming Warders belonging to sisters she
believes are
with the boy, so it seems bloody certain they were looking for him and
likely
have found him by now. She has no idea why. But she confirms what
Toveine
claimed concerning Logain. Apparently, the goat-spawned man is no
longer
gentled."
"Impossible,"
Javindhra muttered into her teacup, but softly. Tsutama disliked having
her
statements challenged. Pevara kept her opinions to herself and sipped
from her
own cup. So far, there seemed nothing in the letter worthy of
discussion except
how Sashalle could be "in charge" of anything, and she would rather
think of anything other than Sashalle's fate. The tea tasted of
blueberries.
How had Tsutama obtained blueberries this early in the spring? Perhaps
they had
been dried.
"I
will read the rest to you," Tsutama said, unfolding the page and
scanning
almost to the bottom before beginning. Apparently Sashalle had been
very
detailed. What was the Highest not sharing? So many suspicions.
I
have been so long without communicating because I could not work out
how to say
what I must, but now I see that simply telling the facts is the only
way. Along
with a number of other sisters, who I will leave to decide for
themselves
whether to reveal what I am about to, I have sworn an oath of fealty to
the
Dragon Reborn which is to last until Tarmon Gai'don has been fought.
Javindhra
gasped loudly, her eyes popping, but Pevara merely whispered,
"Ta'veren." It must be that. Ta'veren had always been her explanation
for most of the disturbing rumors out of Cairhien.
Tsutama
read on right over them.
What
I do, I do for the good of the Red Ajah and the good of the Tower.
Should
you disagree, I will surrender myself for your discipline. After Tarmon
Gai'don. As you may have heard, Irgain Fatamed, Ronaille Vevanios and I
were
all stilled when the Dragon Reborn escaped at Dumai's Wells.
We
have been Healed, however, by a man named Damer Flinn, one of the
Asha'man, and
we all seem to be restored fully. Unlikely as this seems, I swear
beneath the
Light and by my hope of salvation and rebirth that it is true. I look
forward
to my eventual return to the Tower, where I will retake the Three Oaths
to
reaffirm my dedication to my Ajah and to the Tower.
Folding
the letter again, she gave her head a small shake. "There's more, but
it's
all more bloody pleading that what she's doing is for the Ajah and the
Tower." A glitter in her eyes suggested that Sashalle might come to
regret
surviving the Last Battle.
"If
Sashalle truly has been Healed," Pevara began, and could not go on.
She
wet her lips with tea, then raised the cup again and took a mouthful.
The
possibility seemed too wonderful to hope for, a snowflake that might
melt at a
touch.
"This
is impossible," Javindhra growled, though not very strongly. Even so,
she
directed the comment to Pevara lest the Highest think it meant for her.
A deep
scowl made her face harsher. "Gentling cannot be Healed.
Stilling
cannot be Healed. Sheep will fly first! Sashalle must be delusional."
"Toveine
might be mistaken," Tsutama said, in a very strong voice, "though if
she is, I can't see why these flaming Asha'man would let Logain be one
of them,
much less command, but I hardly think Sashalle could be bloody mistaken
about
herself. And she doesn't write like a woman having flaming delusions.
Sometimes
what is bloody impossible is only bloody impossible until the first
woman does
it. So. Stilling has been Healed. By a man. Those toad-spawned Seanchan
locusts
are chaining every woman they find who can channel, apparently
including a
number of sisters. Twelve days past… Well, you know what happened as
bloody
well as I. The world has become a more dangerous place than at any time
since
the Trolloc Wars, perhaps since the Breaking itself. Therefore I've
decided we
will move forward with your scheme for these flaming Asha'man, Pevara.
Distasteful and hazardous, yet burn me, there is no bloody choice. You
and
Javindhra will arrange it together."
Pevara
winced. Not for the Seanchan. They were human, whatever strange
ter'angreal
they possessed, and they would be defeated eventually.
Mention
of what the Forsaken had done twelve days ago brought a grimace,
though,
despite her efforts at keeping a smooth face. So much of the Power
wielded in
one place could have been no one else. To the extent she could, she
avoided
thinking about that or what they might have been trying to accomplish.
Or
worse, what they might have accomplished. A second wince came at
hearing the
proposal to bond Asha'man named as hers. But that had been inevitable
from the
moment she presented Tarna's suggestion to Tsutama, while holding her
breath
against the eruption she was sure would come. She had even used the
argument of
increasing the size of linked circles by including men, against that
monstrous
display of the Power. Surprisingly, there had been no eruption, and
small
reaction of any kind. Tsutama merely said she would think on it, and
insisted
on having the relevant papers about men and circles delivered to her
from the
Library. The third wince, the largest, was for having to work with
Javindhra,
for being saddled with the job at all. She had more than enough on her
plate at
the moment, besides which, working with Javindhra was always painful.
The woman
argued against anything put forward by anyone save herself. Nearly
anything.
Javindhra
had been vehemently against bonding Asha'man, horrified at the notion
of Red
sisters bonding anyone almost as much as at bonding men who could
channel, yet
now that the Highest had commanded it, she was stymied. Still, she
found a way
to argue against. "Elaida will never allow it," she muttered.
Tsutama's
glittering eyes caught her gaze and held it. The bony woman swallowed
audibly.
"Elaida
will not know until it is too late, Javindhra. I hide her secrets-the
disaster
against the Black Tower, Dumai's Wells-as best I can because she was
raised
from the Red, but she is the Amyrlin Seat, of all Ajahs and none. That
means
she is no longer Red, and this is Ajah business, not hers." A dangerous
tone entered her voice. And she had not cursed once. That meant she was
on the
edge of open fury. "Do you disagree with me on this? Do you intend to
inform Elaida despite my express wishes?"
"No,
Highest," Javindhra replied quickly, then buried her face in her cup.
Strangely, she seemed to be hiding a smile.
Pevara
contented herself with shaking her head. If it had to be done, and she
was
certain it must, then clearly Elaida had to be kept in the dark. What
did
Javindhra have to smile about? Too many suspicions.
"I'm
very glad that you both agree with me," Tsutama said dryly, leaning
back
in her chair. "Now, leave me."
They
paused only to set down their cups and curtsy. In the Red, when the
Highest
spoke, everyone obeyed, including Sitters. The sole exception, by Ajah
law, was
voting in the Hall, though some women who held the title had managed to
ensure
that any vote near to their hearts went as they wished. Pevara was
certain
Tsutama intended to be one such. The struggle was going to be
distinctly
unpleasant. She only hoped she could give as good as she got.
In
the corridor outside, Javindhra muttered something about correspondence
and
rushed off down the white floor tiles marked with the red Flame of Tar
Valon before
Pevara could say a word. Not that she had intended to say anything, but
surely
as peaches were poison, the woman was going to drag her heels in this
and leave
the whole matter in her lap. Light, but this was the last thing she
needed, at
the worst possible time.
Pausing
at her own rooms only long enough to gather her long-fringed shawl and
check
the hour-a quarter of an hour to noon; she was almost disappointed that
her one
clock agreed with Tsutama's; clocks frequently did not-she left the Red
quarters
and hurried deeper into the Tower, down into the common areas below the
quarters. The wide hallways were well lighted with mirrored stand-lamps
but
almost empty of people, which made them seem cavernous and the
frieze-banded
white walls stark. The occasional rippling of a bright tapestry in a
draft had
an eerie feel, as though the silk or wool had taken on life. The few
people she
saw were serving men and women with the Flame of Tar Valon on their
chests,
scurrying along about their chores and barely pausing long enough to
offer
hurried courtesies. They kept their eyes lowered. With the Ajahs
separated into
all but warring camps, fetid tension and antagonism filled the Tower,
and the
mood had infected the servants. Frightened them, at least.
She
could not be sure, but she thought fewer than two hundred sisters
remained in
the Tower, most keeping to their Ajah quarters except for necessity, so
she
really did not expect to see another sister strolling.
When
Adelorna Bastine glided up the short stairs from a crossing corridor
almost
right in front of her, she was so surprised she gave a start. Adelorna,
who
made slimness appear stately despite her lack of height, walked on
without
acknowledging Pevara in any way. The Saldaean woman wore her shawl,
too-no sister
was seen outside her Ajah quarters without her shawl, now-and was
followed by
her three Warders. Short and tall, wide and lean, they wore their
swords, and
their eyes never ceased moving. Warders wearing swords and plainly
guarding
their Aes Sedai's back, in the Tower. That was all too common, yet
Pevara could
have wept at it. Only, there were too many reasons for weeping to
settle on
one; instead she set about solving what she could.
Tsutama
could command Reds to bond Asha'man, command them not to go running to
Elaida,
but it seemed best to begin with sisters who might be willing to
entertain the
notion without being ordered, especially with rumors spreading of three
Red
sisters dead at Asha'man hands. Tarna Feir had already entertained it,
so a very
private conversation with her was in order. She might know others of a
like
mind. The greatest difficulty would be approaching the Asha'man with
the idea.
They were very unlikely to agree just because they themselves had
already
bonded fifty-one sisters. Light of the world, fifty-one! Broaching the
subject
would require a sister who possessed diplomacy and a way with words.
And iron
nerve. She was still mulling over names when she saw the woman she had
come to
meet, already at the appointed place, apparently studying a tall
tapestry.
Tiny
and willowy, and regal in her pale silver silk with a slightly darker
lace at
her neck and wrists, Yukiri appeared throughly engrossed in the
tapestry and
quite at her ease. Pevara could only recall seeing her the slightest
bit
flustered on one occasion, and putting Talene to the question had been
nerve-racking for everyone there. Yukiri was alone, of course, though
of late
she had been heard to say she was thinking of taking a Warder again.
Doubtless
that was equal parts the current times and their own present situation.
Pevara
could have done with a Warder or two herself.
"Is
there any truth in this, or is it all the weaver's fancy?" she asked,
joining the smaller woman. The tapestry showed a long-ago battle
against Trollocs,
or was purported to. Most such things were made long after the fact,
and the
weavers usually went by hearsay. This one was old enough to need the
protection
of a warding to keep it from falling apart.
"I
know as much about tapestries as a pig knows about blacksmithing,
Pevara."
For all her elegance, Yukiri seldom let long pass without revealing her
country
origins. The silvery gray fringe of her shawl swung as she gathered it
around
her. "You're late, so let's be brief. I feel like a hen being watched
by a
fox. Marris broke this morning, and I gave her the oath of obedience
myself,
but as with the others, her 'one other' is out of the Tower. With the
rebels, I
think." She fell silent as a pair of serving women approached up the
hallway carrying a large wicker laundry basket with neatly folded bed
linens
bulging from the top.
Pevara
sighed. It had seemed so encouraging, at the start. Terrifying and
nearly
overwhelming, too, yet they had appeared to be making a good beginning.
Talene
had only known the name of one other Black sister actually in the Tower
at
present, but once Atuan had been kidnapped-Pevara would have liked to
think of
it as an arrest, yet she could not when they seemed to be violating
half of
Tower Law and a good many strong customs besides-once Atuan was safely
in hand,
she had soon been induced to surrender the names of her heart: Karale
Sanghir,
a Domani Gray, and Marris Thornhill, an Andoran Brown. Only Karale
among them
had a Warder, though he had turned out to be a Darkfriend, too.
Luckily,
soon after learning that his Aes Sedai had betrayed him, he had managed
to take
poison in the basement room where he had been confined while Karale was
questioned. Strange to think of that as lucky, but the Oath Rod only
worked on
those who could channel, and they were too few to guard and tend
prisoners.
It
had been such a bright beginning, however fraught, and now they were at
an
impasse unless one of the others returned to the Tower, back to
searching for
discrepancies between what sisters claimed to have done and what it
could be
proven they actually had, something made harder by the inclination of
most
sisters to be oblique in nearly everything. Of course, Talene and the
other
three would pass along whatever they knew, whatever came into their
hands-the
oath of obedience took care of that-but any message very much more
important
than "take this and put it in that place" would be in a cipher known
only to the woman who sent it and the woman it was directed to. Some
were
protected by a weave that made the ink vanish if the wrong hand broke
the seal;
that could be done with so little of the Power it might go unnoticed
unless you
were looking for it, and there appeared to be no way to circumvent the
ward.
If
they were not at an impasse, then their flow of success was reduced to
a
creeping trickle. And always there was the danger that the hunted would
learn
of them and become the hunters. Invisible hunters, for all practical
purposes,
just as they now seemed invisible prey.
Still,
they had four names plus four sisters in hand who would admit they were
Darkfriends, though likely Marris would be as quick as the other three
to claim
she now rejected the Shadow, repented of her sins, and embraced the
Light once
more. Enough to convince anyone. Supposedly, the Black Ajah knew
everything
that passed in Elaida's study, yet it might be worth the risk. Pevara
refused
to believe Talene's claim that Elaida was a Darkfriend. After all, she
had
initiated the hunt. The Amyrlin Seat could rouse the entire Tower.
Perhaps a
revelation that the Black Ajah truly existed might do what the
appearance of
the rebels with an army had failed to, stop the Ajahs from hissing at
one
another like strange cats and bind them back together. The Tower's
wounds
called for desperate remedies.
The
serving women passed beyond earshot, and Pevara was about to bring up
the
suggestion when Yukiri spoke again.
"Last
night, Talene received an order to appear tonight before their 'Supreme
Council.'" Her mouth twisted around the words in distaste. "It seems
that happens only if you're being honored or given a very, very
important
assignment. Or if you're to be put to the question." Her lips almost
writhed. What they had learned about the Black Ajah's means of putting
someone
to the question was as nauseating as it was incredible.
Forcing
a woman into a circle against her will? Guiding a circle to inflict
pain?
Pevara felt her stomach writhing. "Talene doesn't think she's to be
honored or given an assignment," Yukiri went on, "so she begged to be
hidden away. Saerin put her in a room in the lowest basement. Talene
may be
wrong, but I agree with Saerin. Risking it would be letting a dog into
the
chicken yard and hoping for the best."
Pevara
stared up at the tapestry stretching well above their heads.
Armored
men swung swords and axes, stabbed spears and halberds at huge,
man-like shapes
with boars' snouts and wolves' snouts, with goats' horns and rams'
horns. The
weaver had seen Trollocs. Or accurate drawings. Men fought alongside
the
Trollocs, too. Darkfriends. Sometimes, fighting the Shadow required
spilling
blood. And desperate remedies.
"Let
Talene go to this meeting," she said. "We'll all go. They won't
expect us. We can kill or capture them and decapitate the Black at a
stroke.
This Supreme Council must know the names of all of them. We can destroy
the
whole Black Ajah."
Lifting
an edge of the fringe on Pevara's shawl with a slim hand, Yukiri
frowned at it
ostentatiously. "Yes, red. I thought it might have turned green when I
wasn't looking. There will be thirteen of them, you know.
Even
if some of this 'Council' are out of the Tower, the rest will bring in
sisters
to make up the number."
"I
know," Pevara replied impatiently. Talene had been a fount of
information,
most of it useless and much of it horrifying, almost more than they
could take
in. "We take everyone. We can order Zerah and the others to fight
alongside us, and even Talene and that lot. They'll do as they're
told."
In the beginning, she had been uneasy about that oath of obedience, but
over
time you could become accustomed to anything.
"So,
nineteen of us against thirteen of them," Yukiri mused, sounding much
too
patient. Even the way she adjusted her shawl radiated patience.
"Plus
whoever they have watching to make sure their meeting isn't disturbed.
Thieves
are always the most careful of their purses." That had the irritating
sound of an old saying. "Best to call the numbers even at best, and
probably favoring them. How many of us die in return for killing or
capturing
how many of them? More importantly, how many of them escape? Remember,
they
meet hooded. If just one escapes, then we won't know who she is, but
she'll
know us, and soon enough, the whole Black Ajah will know, too. It
sounds to me
less like chopping off a chicken's head than like trying to wrestle a
leopard
in the dark."
Pevara
opened her mouth, then closed it without speaking. Yukiri was right.
She should
have tallied the numbers and reached the same conclusion herself. But
she
wanted to strike out, at something, at anything, and small wonder. The
head of
her Ajah might be insane; she was tasked with arranging for Reds, who
by
ancient custom bonded no one, to bond not just any men, but Asha'man;
and the
hunt for Darkfriends in the Tower had reached a stone wall. Strike out?
She
wanted to bite holes through bricks.
She
thought their meeting was at an end-she had come only to learn how
matters
progressed with Marris, and a bitter harvest that had turned out-but
Yukiri touched
her arm. "Walk with me awhile. We've been here too long, and I want to
ask
you something." Nowadays, Sitters of different Ajahs standing together
too
long made rumors of plots sprout like mushrooms after rain. For some
reason,
talking while walking seemed to cause many fewer. It made no sense, but
there
it was.
Yukiri
took her time getting to her question. The floor tiles turned from
green-and-blue to yellow-and-brown as they walked along one of the main
corridors that spiraled gently through the Tower, down five floors
without
seeing anyone else, before she spoke. "Has the Red heard from anyone
who
went with Toveine?"
Pevara
almost tripped over her own slippers. She should have expected it,
though.
Toveine would not have been the only one to write from Cairhien. "From
Toveine herself," she said, and told almost everything that had been in
Toveine's letter. Under the circumstances, there was nothing else she
could do.
She did hold back the accusations against Elaida, and also how long ago
the
letter had arrived. The one was still Ajah business, she hoped, while
the other
might require awkward explanations.
"We
heard from Akoure Vayet." Yukiri walked a few paces in silence, then
muttered, "Blood and bloody ashes!"
Pevara's
eyebrows rose in shock. Yukiri was often earthy, but never vulgar
before this.
She noted that the other woman had not said when Akoure's letter
arrived,
either. Had the Gray received other letters from Cairhien, from sisters
who had
sworn to the Dragon Reborn? She could not ask. They trusted one another
with
their lives in this hunt, and still, Ajah business was Ajah business.
"What do you intend doing with the information?"
"We
will keep silent for the good of the Tower. Only the Sitters and the
head of our
Ajah know. Evanellein is for pulling Elaida down because of this, but
that
can't be allowed now. With the Tower to mend and the Seanchan and
Asha'man to
be dealt with, perhaps never." She did not sound happy over that.
Pevara
stifled her irritation. She could not like Elaida, yet you did not have
to like
the Amyrlin Seat. Any number of very unlikeable women had worn the
stole and
done well for the Tower. But could sending fifty-one sisters into
captivity be
called doing well? Could Dumai's Wells, with four sisters dead and more
than
twenty delivered into another sort of captivity, to a ta'veren? No
matter.
Elaida was Red-had been Red-and far too long had passed since a Red
gained the
stole and staff. All the rash actions and ill-considered decisions
seemed
things of the past since the rebels appeared, and saving the Tower from
the
Black Ajah would redeem her failures.
That
was not how she put it, of course. "She began the hunt, Yukiri; she
deserves to finish it. Light, everything we've uncovered so far has
come by
chance, and we are at a full stop. We need the authority of the Amyrlin
Seat
behind us if we're to get any further."
"I
don't know," the other woman said, wavering. "All four of them say
the Black knows everything that happens in Elaida's study." She bit at
her
lip and shrugged uncomfortably. "Perhaps if we can meet her alone, away
from her study-"
"There
you are. I've been looking everywhere."
Pevara
turned calmly at the sudden voice behind them, but Yukiri gave a start
and
muttered something pungent almost under her breath. If she kept this
up, she
would be as bad as Doesine. Or Tsutama.
Seaine
hurried down to them with the fringe of her shawl swinging and her
thick black
eyebrows rising in surprise at Yukiri's glare. How like a White,
logical in
everything and often blind to the world around them.
Half
the time, Seaine seemed unaware they were in any danger at all.
"You
were looking for us?" Yukiri almost growled, planting her fists on her
hips. Despite her diminutive size, she gave a good impression of fierce
looming. Doubtless part of that was for being startled, but she still
believed
Seaine should be guarded closely for her own protection, no matter what
Saerin
had decided, and here the woman was, out and about alone.
"For
you, for Saerin, for anyone," Seaine replied calmly. Her earlier fears,
that the Black Ajah might know what work Elaida had assigned her, were
quite
gone. Her blue eyes held warmth, yet otherwise she was back to being
the
prototypical White, a woman of icy serenity. "I have urgent news,"
she said as though it were anything but. "The lesser is this.
This
morning I saw a letter from Ayako Norsoni that arrived several days
ago. From
Cairhien. She and Toveine and all the others have been captured by the
Asha'man
and…" Tilting her head to one side, she studied them in turn. "You
aren't surprised in the slightest. Of course.
You've
seen letters, too. Well, there's nothing to be done about it now,
anyway."
Pevara
exchanged looks with Yukiri, then said, "This is the less urgent,
Seaine?"
The
White Sitter's composure faded into worry, tightening her mouth and
creasing
the corners of her eyes. Her hands tightened into fists gripping her
shawl.
"For us, it is. I've just come from answering a summons to Elaida. She
wanted
to know how I was getting on." Seaine took a deep breath. "With
discovering proof that Alviarin entered a treasonous correspondence
with the
Dragon Reborn. Really, she was so circumspect in the beginning, so
indirect,
it's no wonder I misunderstood what she wanted."
"I
think that fox is walking on my grave," Yukiri murmured.
Pevara
nodded. The notion of approaching Elaida had vanished like summer dew.
Their
one assurance that Elaida was not herself Black Ajah had been that she
instigated the hunt for them, but since she had done no such thing… At
least
the Black Ajah remained in ignorance of them. At least they had that,
still.
But for how much longer?
"On
mine, too," she said softly.
Alviarin
glided along the corridors of the lower Tower with an outward air of
serenity
that she held on to hard. Night seemed to cling to the walls despite
the
mirrored stand-lamps, the ghosts of shadows dancing where none should
be.
Imagination, surely, yet they danced on the edges of vision. The
hallways were
very nearly empty, though the second sitting of supper had just ended.
Most
sisters preferred to have food brought up to their rooms, these days,
but the
hardier and the more defiant ventured to the dining halls from time to
time,
and a handful still took many of their meals below. She would not risk
sisters
seeing her appear flustered or hurried; she refused to let them believe
she was
scuttling about furtively. In truth, she disliked anyone looking at her
at all.
Outwardly calm, she seethed inside.
Abruptly
she realized that she was fingering the spot on her forehead where
Shaidar
Haran had touched her. Where the Great Lord himself had marked her as
his.
Hysteria bubbled almost to the surface with that thought, but she
maintained a
smooth face by sheer will and gathered her white silk skirts slightly.
That
should keep her hands occupied. The Great Lord had marked her. Best not
to
think on that. But how to avoid it? The Great Lord… On the outside she
displayed absolute composure, but within was a swirling tangle of
mortification
and hatred and very near to gibbering terror. The external calm was
what
mattered, though.
And
there was a seed of hope. That mattered, too. An odd thing to think of
as
hopeful, yet she would hang on to anything that might keep her alive.
Stopping
in front of a tapestry that showed a woman wearing an elaborate crown
kneeling
to some long-ago Amyrlin, she pretended to examine it while glancing
quickly to
left and right. Aside from her, the corridor remained as barren of life
as an
abandoned tomb. Her hand darted behind the edge of the tapestry, and in
an
instant she was walking on again, clutching a folded message. A miracle
that it
had reached her so quickly. The paper seemed to burn her palm, but she
could
not read it here. At a measured pace, she climbed reluctantly to the
White Ajah
quarters. Calm and unfazed by anything, on the outside. The Great Lord
had
marked her. Other sisters were going to look at her.
The
White was the smallest of the Ajahs, and barely more than twenty of its
sisters
were in the Tower at present, yet it seemed that nearly all of them
were out in
the main hallway. The walk along the plain white floor tiles seemed
like
running a gauntlet.
Seaine
and Ferane were heading out despite the hour, shawls draped along their
arms,
and Seaine gave her a small smile of commiseration, which made her want
to kill
the Sitter, always thrusting her sharp nose in where it was unwanted.
Ferane
held no sympathy. She scowled with more open fury than any sister
should have
allowed herself to show. All Alviarin could do was try to ignore the
copper-skinned woman without being obvious. Short and stout, with her
usually
mild round face and an ink smudge on her nose, Ferane was no one's
image of a
Domani, but the First Reasoner possessed a fierce Domani temper. She
was quite
capable of handing down a penance for any slight, especially to a
sister who
had "disgraced" both herself and the White.
The
Ajah felt keenly the shame of her having been stripped of the Keeper's
stole.
Most felt anger at the loss of influence, as well. There were far too
many
glares, some from sisters who stood far enough below her that they
should leap
to obey if she gave a command. Others deliberately turned their backs.
She
made her way through those frowns and snubs at a steady pace,
unhurried, yet
she felt her cheeks beginning to heat. She tried to immerse herself in
the
soothing nature of the White quarters. The plain white walls, lined
with
silvered stand-mirrors, held only a few simple tapestries, images of
snowcapped
mountains, shady forests, stands of bamboo with sunlight slanting
through them.
Ever since attaining the shawl she had used those images to help her
find
serenity in times of stress. The Great Lord had marked her. She
clutched her
skirts in fists to hold her hands at her sides. The message seemed to
burn her
hand. A steady, measured pace.
Two
of the sisters she passed ignored her simply because they did not see
her.
Astrelle and Tesan were discussing food spoilage. Arguing, rather,
faces smooth
but eyes heated and voices on the brink of heat.
They
were arithmetists, of all things, as if logic could be reduced to
numbers, and
they seemed to be disagreeing on how those numbers were used.
"Calculating
with Radun's Standard of Deviation, the rate is eleven times what it
should
be," Astrelle said in tight tones. "Furthermore, this must indicate
the intervention of the Shadow-"
Tesan
cut her off, beaded braids clicking as she shook her head. "The Shadow,
yes,
but Radun's Standard, it is outdated. You must use Covanen's First Rule
of
Medians, and calculate separately for rotting meat or rotten. The
correct
answers, as I said, are thirteen and nine. I have not yet applied it to
the
flour or the beans and the lentils, but it seems intuitively obvious-"
Astrelle
swelled up, and since she was a plump woman with a formidable bosom,
she could
swell impressively. "Covanen's First Rule?" she practically
spluttered, breaking in. "That hasn't been properly proven yet. Correct
and proven methods are always preferable to slipshod…"
Alviarin
very nearly smiled as she moved on. So someone had finally noticed that
the
Great Lord had laid his hand on the Tower. But knowing would not help
them
change matters. Perhaps she had smiled, but if so, she crushed it as
someone
spoke.
"You'd
grimace too, Ramesa, if you were being strapped every morning before
breakfast," Norine said, much too loudly and plainly meaning for
Alviarin
to hear. Ramesa, a tall slender woman with silver bells sewn down the
sleeves
of her white-embroidered dress, looked startled at being addressed, and
likely
she was. Norine had few friends, perhaps none. She went on, cutting her
eyes
toward Alviarin to see whether she had noticed. "It is irrational to
call
a penance private and pretend nothing is happening when the Amyrlin
Seat has
imposed it. But then, her rationality has always been overrated, in my
opinion."
Fortunately,
Alviarin had only a short way further to reach her rooms.
Carefully
she closed the outer door and latched the latch. Not that anyone would
disturb
her, but she had not survived by taking chances except where she had
to. The
lamps were lit, and a small fire burned on the white marble hearth
against the
cool of an early spring evening. At least the servants still performed
their
duties. But even the servants knew.
Silent
tears of humiliation began to stream down her cheeks. She wanted to
kill
Silviana, yet that would only mean a new Mistress of Novices laying the
strap
across her every morning until Elaida relented. Except that Elaida
would never
relent. Killing her would be more to the point, yet such killings had
to be
carefully rationed. Too many unexpected deaths would cause questions,
perhaps
dangerous questions.
Still,
she had done what she could against Elaida. Katerine's news of this
battle was
spreading through the Black Ajah, and beyond it already.
She
had overheard sisters who were not Black talking of Dumai's Wells in
detail,
and if the details had grown in the telling, so much the better.
Soon,
the news from the Black Tower would have diffused through the White
Tower, too,
likely expanding in the same way. A pity that neither would be
sufficient to
see Elaida disgraced and deposed, with those cursed rebels practically
on the
bridges, yet Dumai's Wells and the disaster in Andor hanging over her
head
would keep her from undoing what Alviarin had done. Break the White
Tower from
within, she had been ordered. Plant discord and chaos in every corner
of the
Tower. Part of her had felt pain at that command, a part of her still
did, yet
her greater loyalty was to the Great Lord. Elaida herself had made the
first
break in the Tower, but she had shattered half of it beyond mending.
Abruptly
she realized that she was touching her forehead again and snatched her
hand
down. There was no mark there, nothing to feel or see.
Every
time she glanced into a mirror, she checked in spite of herself.
And
yet, sometimes she thought people were looking at her forehead, seeing
something that escaped her own eyes. That was impossible, irrational,
yet the
thought crept in no matter how often she chased it away. Dashing tears
from her
face with the hand holding the message from the tapestry, she pulled
the other
two she had retrieved out of her belt pouch and went to the writing
table,
standing against the wall.
It
was a plain table, and unadorned like all of her furnishings, some of
which she
suspected might be of indifferent workmanship. A trivial matter; so
long as
furniture did what it was supposed to do, nothing more mattered.
Dropping the
three messages on the table beside a small, beaten copper bowl, she
produced a
key from her pouch, unlocked a brass-banded chest sitting on the floor
beside
the table, and sorted through the small leatherbound books inside until
she
found the three she needed, each protected so that the ink on the pages
would
vanish if any hand but hers touched them. There were far too many
ciphers in
use for her to keep them in memory. Losing these books would be a
painful trial,
replacing them arduous, hence the stout chest and the lock. A very good
lock.
Good locks were not trivialities.
Quickly
she stripped off the thin strips of paper wrapping the message
recovered from behind
the tapestry, held them to a lamp flame and dropped them into the bowl
to burn.
They were only directions as to where the message was to be left, one
meant for
each woman in the chain, the extra strips merely a way of disguising
how many
links the message had to go through to reach its recipient. Too many
precautions were an impossibility. Even the sisters of her own heart
believed
her no more than they. Only three on the Supreme Council knew who she
was, and
she would have avoided that had it been possible. There could never be
too many
precautions, especially now.
The
message, once she worked it out, bending to write on another sheet, was
much as
she had expected since the previous night when Talene failed to appear.
The
woman had left the Green quarters early yesterday carrying fat
saddlebags and a
small chest. Not having a servant carry them; she had performed the
task
herself. No one seemed to know where she had gone. The question was,
had she
panicked on receiving her summons to the Supreme Council, or was there
something more? Something more, Alviarin decided. Talene had looked to
Yukiri
and Doesine as though seeking…guidance, perhaps. She was sure she had
not
imagined it.
Could
she have? A very small seed of hope. There must be something more.
She
needed a threat to the Black, or the Great Lord would withdraw his
protection.
Angrily,
she pulled her hand away from her forehead.
She
never considered using the small ter'angreal she had hidden away to
call
Mesaana. For one thing, one very important thing, the woman surely
intended to
kill her, very likely despite the Great Lord's protection.
On
the instant, if that protection were lost. She had seen Mesaana's face,
knew of
her humiliation. No woman would let that pass, especially not one of
the
Chosen. Every night she dreamed of killing Mesaana, often daydreamed of
how to
manage it successfully, yet that must wait on finding her without the
woman
knowing herself found. In the meanwhile, she needed more proof. It was
possible
that neither Mesaana nor Shaidar Haran would see Talene as verification
of
anything. Sisters had panicked and run in the past, if rarely, and
assuming
Mesaana and the Great Lord were ignorant of that would be dangerous.
In
turn she touched the ciphered message and the clear copy to the lamp
flame and
held each by a corner until they had burned nearly to her fingers
before
dropping them atop the ashes in the bowl. With a smooth black stone
that she
kept as a paperweight, she crushed the ashes and stirred them about.
She doubted
that anyone could reconstitute words from ash, but even so…
Still
standing, she deciphered the other two messages and learned that Yukiri
and
Doesine both slept in rooms warded against intrusion. That was
unsurprising-hardly a sister in the Tower slept without warding these
days-but
it meant kidnapping either would be difficult. That was always easiest
when
carried out in the depths of the night by sisters of the woman's own
Ajah. It
might yet turn out those glances were happenstance, or imagination. She
needed
to consider the possibility.
With
a sigh, she gathered more of the small books from the chest and gently
eased
herself onto the goose-down cushion on the chair at the writing table.
Not
gently enough to stop a wince as her weight settled, though. She barely
stifled
a whimper. At first, she had thought the humiliation of Silviana's
strap far
worse than the pain, but the pain no longer really faded. Her bottom
was a mass
of bruises. And tomorrow, the Mistress of Novices would add to them.
And the
day after that, and the day after… A bleak vision of endless days
howling
under Silviana's strap, of fighting to meet the eyes of sisters who
knew all
about the visits to Silviana's study.
Trying
to chase those thoughts away, she dipped a good steel-nibbed pen and
began to
write out ciphered orders on thin sheets of paper. Talene must be found
and
brought back, of course. For punishment and execution, if she had
simply
panicked, and if she had not, if she had somehow found a way to betray
her
oaths… Alviarin clung to that hope while she commanded a close watch
put on
Yukiri and Doesine. A way had to be found to take them. And if they
were caught
up in chance and imagination, something could still be manufactured
from
whatever they said. She would guide the flows in the circle. Something
could be
made.
She
wrote furiously, unaware that her free hand had risen to her forehead,
searching for the mark.
Afternoon
sunlight slanted through the tall trees on the ridge above the vast
Shaido
encampment, dappling the air, and songbirds trilled on the branches
overhead.
Redbirds and bluejays flashed by, slashes of color, and Galina smiled.
Heavy
rain had fallen in the morning, and the air still held a touch of
coolness
beneath sparse, slowly drifting white clouds. Likely her gray mare,
with its
arched neck and lively step, had been the property of a noblewoman, or
at the
least a wealthy merchant.
No
one else but a sister could have afforded such a fine animal. She
enjoyed these
rides on the horse she had named Swift, because one day it would carry
her
swiftly to freedom; just as she enjoyed this time alone to dwell on
what she
would do once she had her freedom. She had plans for repaying those who
had
failed her, beginning with Elaida. Thinking about those plans, about
their
eventual fruition, was most enjoyable.
At
least, she enjoyed her rides so long as she managed to forget that the
privilege was as much a mark of how thoroughly Therava owned her as
were the
thick white silk robe she wore and her firedrop-studded belt and
collar. Her
smile faded into a grimace. Adornments for a pet that was allowed to
amuse
itself when not required to amuse its owner. And she could not remove
those
jeweled markers, even out here. Someone might see. She rode here to get
away from
the Aiel, yet they could be encountered in the forest, too. Therava
might learn
of it. Difficult as it was to admit to herself, she feared the
hawk-eyed Wise
One to her bones. Therava filled her dreams, and they were never
pleasant.
Often she woke sweat-soaked and weeping. Waking from those nightmares
was
always a relief, whether or not she managed to get any sleep for the
rest of
the night.
There
was never any order against escape on these rides, an order she would
have had to
obey, and that lack produced its own bitterness.
Therava
knew she would return, no matter how she was mistreated, in the hope
that some
day the Wise One might remove that cursed oath of obedience. She would
be able
to channel again, when and as she wished.
Sevanna
sometimes made her channel to perform menial tasks, or just to
demonstrate that
she could command it, but that occurred so seldom that she hungered for
even
that chance to embrace saidar. Therava refused to let her so much as
touch the
Power unless she begged and groveled, but then refused her permission
to
channel a thread. And she had groveled, abased herself completely, just
to be
granted that scrap. She realized that she was grinding her teeth, and
forced
herself to stop.
Perhaps
the Oath Rod in the Tower could lift that oath from her as well as the
nearly
identical rod in Therava's possession, yet she could not be sure. The
two were
not identical. It was only a difference in marking, yet what if that
indicated
that an oath sworn on one was particular to that rod? She dared not
leave
without Therava's rod. The Wise One often left it lying in the open in
her
tent, but you will never pick that up, she had said.
Oh,
Galina could touch that wrist-thick white rod, stroke its smooth
surface, yet
however hard she strained, she could not make her hand close on it. Not
unless
someone handed it to her. At least, she hoped that would not count as
picking
the thing up. It had to be so. Just the thought that it might not be
filled her
with bleakness. The yearning in her eyes when she gazed at the rod
brought
Therava's rare smiles.
Does
my little Lina want to be free of her oath? she would say mockingly.
Then Lina
must be a very good pet, because the only way I will consider freeing
you is
for you to convince me that you will remain my pet even then.
A
lifetime of being Therava's plaything and the target for her temper? A
surrogate to be beaten whenever Therava raged against Sevanna?
Bleakness was
not strong enough to describe her feelings on that. Horror was more
like it.
She feared she might go mad if that happened. And equally, she feared
there
might be no escape into madness.
Mood
thoroughly soured, she shaded her eyes to check the height of the sun.
Therava
had merely said that she would like her back before dark, and a good
two hours
of daylight remained, but she sighed with regret and immediately turned
Swift
downslope through the trees toward the camp. The Wise One enjoyed
finding ways
to enforce obedience without direct commands. A thousand ways to make
her
crawl. For safety, the woman's slightest suggestion must be taken as a
command.
Being a few minutes late brought punishments that made Galina cringe at
the
memories. Cringe and heel the mare to a faster pace through the trees.
Therava
accepted no excuses.
Abruptly
an Aielman stepped out in front of her from behind a thick tree, a very
tall
man in cadin'sor with his spears thrust through the harness that held
his
bowcase on his back and his veil hanging on his chest. Without
speaking, he
seized her bridle.
For
an instant, she gaped at him, then drew herself up indignantly.
"Fool!"
she snapped. "You must know me by now. Release my horse, or Sevanna and
Therava will take turns removing your skin!"
These
Aiel usually showed little on their faces, yet she thought his green
eyes
widened slightly. And then she screamed as he seized the front of her
robe in a
huge fist and jerked her from the saddle.
"Be
silent, gai'shain," he said, but as though he cared nothing for whether
she obeyed.
At
one time she would have had to, but once they realized that she obeyed
any
order from anyone, there had been too many who enjoyed sending her on
foolish
errands that kept her occupied when Therava or Sevanna wanted her. Now,
she
need obey only certain Wise Ones and Sevanna, so she kicked and flailed
and
screamed in desperate hope of attracting someone who knew she belonged
to
Therava. If only she were allowed to carry a knife. Even that would
have been a
help. How could this man not recognize her, or at least know what her
jeweled
belt and collar meant? The encampment was immense, as filled with
people as
many large cities, yet it seemed that everyone could point out
Therava's pet
wetlander. The woman would have this fellow skinned, and Galina meant
to enjoy
every minute of watching.
All
too quickly it became apparent that a knife would have been no use at
all.
Despite her struggles, the brute handled her easily, pulling her cowl
down over
her head, blinding her, then stuffing as much of it as he could into
her mouth
before binding it there. Then he flipped her face down and bound her
wrists and
ankles tightly. As easily as if she had been a child! She still
thrashed, but
it was wasted effort.
"He
wanted some gai'shain that aren't Aiel, Gaul, but a gai'shain in silk
and
jewels, and out riding?" a man said, and Therava stiffened.
That
was no Aielman. Those were the accents of Murandy! "Sure and that's
none
of your ways, is it?"
"Shaido."
The word was spat out like a curse.
"Well,
we still need to find a few more if he's to learn anything useful.
Maybe more
than a few. There are tens of thousands of folks in white down there,
and she
could be anywhere among them."
"I
think maybe this one can tell Perrin Aybara what he needs to know,
Fager
Neald."
If
she had stiffened before, now she froze. Ice seemed to form in her
stomach, and
in her heart. Perrin Aybara had sent these men? If he attacked the
Shaido
trying to rescue his wife, he would be killed, destroying her leverage
with
Faile. The woman would not care what was revealed, with her man dead,
and the
others had no secrets they feared having known. In horror, Galina saw
her hopes
of obtaining the rod melting away. She had to stop him. But how?
"And
why would be you thinking that, Gaul?"
"She
is Aes Sedai. And a friend of Sevanna, it seems."
"Is
she, now?" the Murandian said in a thoughtful tone. "Is she
that?"
Strangely,
neither man sounded the least uneasy over laying hands on an Aes Sedai.
And the
Aielman apparently had done so fully aware of what she was. Even if he
was a
renegade Shaido, he had to be ignorant of the fact that she could not
channel
without permission. Only Sevanna and a handful of the Wise Ones knew
that. This
was all growing more confusing by the moment.
Suddenly
she was lifted into the air and laid on her belly. Across her own
saddle, she
realized, and the next moment she was bouncing on the hard leather, one
of the
men using a hand to keep her from falling as the mare began to trot.
"Let
us go to where you can make us one of your holes, Fager Neald."
"Just
the other side of the slope, Gaul. Why, I've been here so often, I can
make a
gateway nearly anywhere at all. Do you Aiel run everywhere?"
A
gateway? What was the man blathering about? Dismissing his nonsense,
she considered
her options, and found none good. Bound like a lamb for market, gagged
so she
would not be heard ten paces away if she shrieked her lungs out, her
chances of
escape were nonexistent unless some of the Shaido sentries intercepted
her
captors. But did she want them to?
Unless
she reached Aybara, she had no way to stop him from ruining everything.
On the
other hand, how many days off did his camp lie? He could not be very
near, or
the Shaido would have found him by now. She knew scouts had been making
sweeps
as far as ten miles from the camp.
However
many days were required to reach him, it would take as many to return.
Not
merely minutes late, but days late.
Therava
would not kill her for it. Just make her wish she were dead. She could
explain.
A tale of being captured by brigands. No, just a pair; it was hard
enough to
believe two men had gotten this near the encampment, much less a band
of
brigands. Unable to channel, she had needed time to escape. She could
make the
tale convincing. It might persuade Therava.
If
she said… It was useless. The first time Therava had punished her for
being
late, it had been because her cinch broke and she had had to walk back
leading
her horse. The woman had not accepted that excuse, and she would not
accept being
kidnapped, either. Galina wanted to weep. In fact, she realized that
she was
weeping, hopeless tears she was helpless to stop.
The
horse halted, and before she could think, she convulsed wildly, trying
to fling
herself off the saddle, screaming as loudly as her gag permitted. They
had to
be trying to avoid sentries. Surely Therava would understand if the
sentries
returned with her and her captors, even if she was late. Surely she
could find
a way to handle Faile even with her husband dead.
A
hard hand smacked her rudely. "Be silent," the Aielman said, and they
began to trot again.
Her
tears began again, too, and the silk cowl covering her face grew damp.
Therava
was going to make her howl. But even while she wept, she began to work
on what
she would say to Aybara. At least she could salvage her chances of
obtaining
the rod. Therava was going to… No. No!
She
needed to concentrate on what she could do. Images of the cruel-eyed
Wise One
holding a switch or a strap or binding cords reared in her mind, but
every time
she forced them down while she went over every question Aybara might
ask and
what answers she would give him. On what she would say to make him
leave his
wife's safety in her hands.
In
none of her calculations had she expected to be lifted down and stood
upright
no more than an hour after being captured.
"Unsaddle
her horse, Noren, and picket it with the others," the Murandian said.
"Right
away, Master Neald," came a reply. In a Cairhienin accent.
The
bonds around her ankles fell away, a knife blade slid between her
wrists,
severing those cords, and then whatever held her gag in place was
untied. She
spat out silk sodden with her own saliva and jerked the cowl back.
A
short man in a dark coat was leading Swift away through a straggle of
large,
patched brown tents and small, crude huts that seemed made from tree
branches,
including pine boughs with brown needles. How long for pine to turn
brown?
Days, surely, perhaps weeks. The sixty or seventy men tending cookfires
or
sitting on wooden stools looked like farmers in their rough coats, but
some
were sharpening swords, and spears and halberds and other polearms
stood
stacked in a dozen places. Through the gaps between the tents and huts,
she
could see more men moving about to either side, a number of them in
helmets and
breastplates, mounted and carrying long, streamered lances. Soldiers,
riding
out on patrol. How many more lay beyond her sight? No matter. What was
in front
of her eyes was impossible! The Shaido had sentries further from their
camp
than this. She was certain they did!
"If
the face wasn't enough," Neald murmured, "that cool, calculating
study would convince me. Like she's examining worms under a rock she's
turned
over." A weedy fellow in a black coat, he knuckled his waxed mustaches
in
an amused way, careful not to spoil the points. He wore a sword, but he
certainly had no look of soldier or armsman about him.
"Well,
come along then, Aes Sedai," he said, clasping her upper arm.
"Lord
Perrin will be wanting to ask you some questions." She jerked free, and
he
calmly took a firmer grip. "None of that, now."
The
huge Aielman, Gaul, took her other arm, and she could go with them or
be
dragged. She walked with her head high, pretending they were merely an
escort,
but anyone who saw how they held her arms would know differently.
Staring
straight ahead, she was still aware of armed farmboys-most were
young-staring
at her. Not gaping in astonishment, just watching, considering. How
could they
be so high-handed with an Aes Sedai? Some of the Wise Ones who were
unaware of
the oath holding her had begun expressing doubt that she was Aes Sedai
because
she obeyed so readily and truckled so for Therava, but these two knew
what she
was.
And
did not care. She suspected those farmers knew, too, and yet none
displayed any
surprise at how she was being treated. It made the back of her neck
prickle.
As
they approached a large red-and-white striped tent with the doorflaps
tied
back, she overheard voices from inside.
"…said
he was ready to come right now," a man was saying.
"I
can't afford to feed one more mouth when I don't know for how long,"
another man replied. "Blood and ashes! How long does it take to arrange
a
meeting with these people?"
Gaul
had to duck into the tent, but Galina strode in as though entering her
own
rooms in the Tower. A prisoner she might be, yet she was Aes Sedai, and
that
simple fact was a powerful tool. And weapon. Who was he trying to
arrange a
meeting with? Not Sevanna, surely. Let it be anyone but Sevanna.
In
stark contrast to the ramshackle camp outside, there was a good
flowered carpet
for a floor here, and two silk hangings embroidered with flowers and
birds in a
Cairhienin fashion hung from the roof poles. She focused on a tall,
broad-shouldered man in his shirtsleeves with his back to her, leaning
on his
fists against a slender-legged table that was decorated with lines of
gilding
and covered with maps and sheets of paper. She had only glimpsed Aybara
at a
distance in Cairhien, yet she was sure this was the farmboy from Rand
al'Thor's
home village in spite of the silk shirt and well-polished boots. Even
the
turndowns were polished. If nothing else, everyone in the tent seemed
to be
looking to him.
As
she walked into the tent, a tall woman in high-necked green silk with
small
touches of lace at her throat and wrists, black hair falling in waves
to her
shoulders, laid a hand on Aybara's arm in a familiar manner. Galina
recognized
her. "She seems cautious, Perrin," Berelain said.
"Wary
of a trap, in my estimation, Lord Perrin," put in a graying,
hard-bitten
man in an ornate breastplate worn over a scarlet coat. A
Ghealdanin,
Galina thought. At least he and Berelain explained the presence of
soldiers, if
not how they could be where they could not possibly be.
Galina
was very glad she had not encountered the woman in Cairhien. That would
have
made matters now more than merely awkward. She wished her hands were
free to
wipe the residue of tears from her face, but the two men held onto her
arms
firmly. There was nothing to be done about it.
She
was Aes Sedai. That was all that mattered. That was all she would allow
to
matter. She opened her mouth to take command of the situation…
Aybara
suddenly looked over his shoulder at her, as though he had sensed her
presence
in some way, and his golden eyes froze her tongue. She had dismissed
tales that
the man had a wolf's eyes, but he did. A wolf's hard eyes in a
stone-hard face.
He made the Ghealdanin look almost soft.
A
sad face behind that close-cropped beard, as well. Over his wife, no
doubt. She
could make use of that.
"An
Aes Sedai wearing gai'shain white," he said flatly, turning to face
her.
He was a large man, if not nearly so large as the Aielman, and he
loomed just
by standing there, those golden eyes taking in everything.
"And
a prisoner, it seems. She didn't want to come?"
"She
thrashed like a trout on the riverbank while Gaul was tying her up, my
Lord," Neald replied. "Myself, I had nothing to do but stand and
watch."
A
strange thing to say, and in such a significant tone. What could he
have…?
Abruptly she became aware of another man in a black coat, a stocky,
weathered
fellow with a silver pin in the shape of a sword fastened to his high
collar.
And she remembered where she had last seen men in black coats. Leaping
out of
holes in the air just before everything turned to utter disaster at
Dumai's
Wells. Neald and his holes, his gateways. These men could channel.
It
took everything she could summon not to try jerking free of the
Murandian's
clasp, not to edge away. Just being this close to him made her stomach
writhe.
Being touched by him… She wanted to whimper, and that surprised her.
Surely
she was tougher than that! She concentrated on maintaining an
appearance of
calm while trying to work moisture back into her suddenly dry mouth.
"She
claims friendship with Sevanna," Gaul added.
"A
friend of Sevanna," Aybara said, frowning. "But wearing a gai'shain
robe. A silk robe, and jewels, but still… You didn't want to come, but
you
didn't channel to try stopping Gaul and Neald from bringing you. And
you're
terrified." He shook his head. How did he know she was afraid?
"I'm
surprised to see an Aes Sedai with the Shaido after Dumai's Wells.
Or
don't you know about that? Let her go, let her go. I doubt she'll take
off
running since she let you bring her this far."
"Dumai's
Wells does not matter," she said coldly as the men's hands fell away.
The
pair remained on either side of her like guards, though, and she was
proud of
the steadiness of her voice. A man who could channel.
Two
of them, and she was alone. Alone, and unable to channel a thread.
She
stood straight, head erect. She was Aes Sedai, and they must see her
every inch
an Aes Sedai. How could he know she was afraid? Not a shred of fear
tinged her
words. Her face might as well been carved of stone for all she let
show.
"The White Tower has purposes none but Aes Sedai can know or
understand. I
am about White Tower business, and you are interfering. An unwise
choice for
any man." The Ghealdanin nodded ruefully, as though he had learned that
lesson personally; Aybara merely looked at her, expressionless.
"Hearing
your name was the only reason I didn't do something drastic to these
two,"
she continued. If the Murandian or the Aielmen brought up how long that
had
taken, she was ready to claim that she had been stunned at first, but
they held
silent, and she spoke quickly and forcefully. "Your wife Faile is under
my
protection, as well as Queen Alliandre, and when my business with
Sevanna is
done, I will take them to safety with me and help them reach wherever
they wish
to go. In the meanwhile, however, your presence here endangers my
business,
White Tower business, which I cannot allow. It also endangers you, and
your
wife, and Alliandre. There are tens of thousands of Aiel in that camp.
Many
tens of thousands. If they descend on you, and their scouts will find
you soon
if they haven't already, they will wipe all of you from the face of the
earth.
They may harm your wife and Alliandre for it, as well. I may not be
able to
stop Sevanna. She is a harsh woman, and many of her Wise Ones can
channel,
nearly four hundred of them, all willing to use the Power to do
violence, while
I am one Aes Sedai, and constrained by my Oaths. If you wish to protect
your
wife and the Queen, turn away from their camp and ride as hard as you
can. They
may not attack you if you are obviously retreating. That is the only
hope you
or your wife have." There. If only a few of the seeds she had planted
took
root, they should be enough to turn him back.
"If
Alliandre is in danger, Lord Perrin," the Ghealdanin began, but Aybara
stopped him with a raised hand. That was all it took. The soldier's jaw
tightened till she thought she might hear it creak, yet he remained
silent.
"You've
seen Faile?" the young man said, excitement touching his voice.
"She's
well? She hasn't been harmed?" The fool seemed not to have a word she
said
beyond mention of his wife.
"Well,
and under my protection, Lord Perrin." If this jumped-up country boy
wanted to call himself a lord, she would tolerate it for the moment.
"She
and Alliandre, both." The soldier glowered at Aybara, but he did not
take
the opportunity to speak. "You must listen to me. The Shaido will kill
you-"
"Come
here and look at this," Aybara broke in, turning to the table and
drawing
a large page toward him.
"You
must forgive his lack of manners, Aes Sedai," Berelain murmured,
handing
her a worked silver cup of dark wine. "He is under considerable strain,
as
you might understand in the circumstances. I haven't introduced myself.
I am
Berelain, the First of Mayene."
"I
know. You may call me Alyse."
The
other woman smiled as though she knew that was a false name, yet
accepting it.
The First of Mayene was far from unsophisticated. A pity she had to
deal with
the boy instead; sophisticated people who thought they could dance with
Aes
Sedai were easily led. Country folk could prove stubborn out of
ignorance. But
the fellow should know something of Aes Sedai by now. Perhaps ignoring
him
would give him reason to think on who and what she was.
The
wine tasted like flowers on her tongue. "This is very good," she said
with genuine gratitude. She had not tasted decent wine for weeks.
Therava
would not permit her a pleasure the Wise One denied herself. If the
woman
learned that she had found several barrels in Malden, she would not
even have
mediocre wine. And surely would be beaten as well.
"There
are other sisters in the camp, Alyse Sedai. Masuri Sokawa and Seonid
Traighan,
and my own advisor, Annoura Larisen. Would you like to speak to them
after you
finish with Perrin?"
With
feigned casualness, Galina drew up her cowl till her face was shadowed
and took
another swallow of wine for time to think. Annoura's presence was
understandable, given Berelain's, but what were the other two doing
there? They
had been among those who fled the Tower after Siuan was deposed and
Elaida
raised. True, none of them would know of her involvement in kidnapping
the
al'Thor boy for Elaida, but still…
"I
think not," she murmured. "Their business is theirs, and mine is
mine." She would have given a great deal to know their business, but
not
at the cost of being recognized. Any friend of the Dragon Reborn might
have…notions…about a Red. "Help me convince Aybara, Berelain. Your
Winged Guards are no match for what the Shaido will send against them.
Whatever
Ghealdanin you have with you won't make a difference. An army will make
no
difference. The Shaido are too many, and they have hundreds of Wise
Ones ready
to use the One Power as a weapon. I have seen them do it. You may die,
too, and
even if you are captured, I can't promise I can make Sevanna release
you when I
leave."
Berelain
laughed as though thousands of Shaido and hundreds of Wise Ones who
could
channel were of no account. "Oh, have no fear they will find us. Their
camp
lies a good three-day ride from here, perhaps four. The terrain turns
rough not
far from where we are."
Three
days, perhaps four. Galina shivered. She should have put it together
before
this. Three or four days of ground covered in less than an hour.
Through a hole
in the air created with the male half of the Power. She had been near
enough
for saidin to touch her. She kept her voice steady, though. "Even so,
you
must help me convince him not to attack. It would be disastrous, for
him, for
his wife, for everyone involved. Beyond that, what I am doing is
important to
the Tower. You have always been a strong supporter of the Tower."
Flattery, for the ruler of a single city and a few hides of land, but
flattery
oiled the insignificant as well as it did the mighty.
"Perrin
is stubborn, Alyse Sedai. I doubt you'll change his mind. That isn't
easy to do
once he has it set." For some reason, the young woman smiled a smile
mysterious enough to credit a sister.
"Berelain,
could you have your talk later?" Aybara said impatiently, and it was
not a
suggestion. He tapped the sheet of paper with a thick finger. "Alyse,
would you look at this?" That was not a suggestion, either. Who did the
man think he was, ordering an Aes Sedai?
Still,
moving to the table took her a little way from Neald. It brought her
nearer the
other one, who was studying her intently, but he was on the other side
of the
table. A feeble barrier, yet she could ignore him by looking at the
sheet of
paper under Aybara's finger. Keeping her eyebrows from rising was
difficult.
The town of Malden was outlined there, complete with the aqueduct that
brought
water from a lake five miles away, and also a rough outline of the
Shaido camp
surrounding the city. The real surprise was that markings seemed to
indicate
the arrival of septs since the Shaido reached Malden, and the number of
those
meant his men had been observing the camp for some time. Another map,
roughly
sketched, seemed to show the city itself in some detail.
"I
see you have learned how large their camp is," she said. "You must
know rescuing her is hopeless. Even if you have a hundred of those
men,"
speaking of them was not easy, and she could not entirely keep the
contempt
from her voice, "it isn't enough. Those Wise Ones will fight back.
Hundreds
of them. It would be a slaughter, thousands dead, your wife perhaps
among them.
I have told you, she and Alliandre are under my protection. When my
business is
finished, I will take them to safety.
You
have heard me say it, so by the Three Oaths you know it is true.
Don't
make the mistake of thinking that your connection to Rand al'Thor will
protect
you if you interfere in what the White Tower is doing. Yes, I know who
you are.
Did you think your wife wouldn't tell me? She trusts me, and if you
want to keep
her safe, you must trust me, too."
The
idiot looked at her as though her words had flown over his head without
touching his ears. Those eyes were truly unsettling. "Where does she
sleep? Her, and everyone else who was captured with her. Show me."
"I
cannot," she replied levelly. "Gai'shain seldom sleep in the same
place two nights running." With that lie vanished the last chance that
she
could leave Faile and the others alive. Oh, she had never intended to
increase
the risk of her own escape by aiding them, but that could always have
been
explained later by some change in circumstances. She could not hazard
the
possibility that they might actually escape one day and uncover her
direct lie,
however.
"I
will get her free," he growled, almost too softly for her to hear.
"Whatever
it takes."
Her
thoughts raced. There seemed no way to divert him from it, but perhaps
she
could delay him. She had to do at least that. "Will you at least hold
off
your attack? I may be able to conclude my affairs in a few more days,
perhaps a
week." A deadline should sharpen Faile's efforts. Before, it would have
been dangerous; a threat not carried out lost all force, and the chance
had
been too great that the woman might be unable to get the rod in time.
Now, the
chance became necessary. "If I can do that, and bring your wife and
others
out, there will be no reason for you to die needlessly. One week."
Frustration
painting his face, Aybara thumped his fist on the table hard enough to
make it
bounce. "You can have a few days," he growled, "maybe even a
week or more, if-" He bit off whatever he had been about to say.
Those
strange eyes centered on her face. "But I can't promise how many
days," he went on. "If I had my druthers, I'd be attacking now. I
won't leave Faile a prisoner a day longer than I have to while I wait
on Aes
Sedai schemes for the Shaido to bear fruit. You say she's under your
protection, but how great a protection can you really give, wearing
that robe?
There are signs of drunkenness in the camp. Even some of their sentries
drink.
Are the Wise Ones given to it as well?"
The
sudden shift nearly made her blink. "The Wise Ones drink only water, so
you needn't think you can find them all in a stupor," she told him
dryly.
And quite truthfully. It always amused her when the truth served her
purposes.
Not that the Wise Ones' example was bearing much fruit.
Drunkenness
was rife among the Shaido. Every raid brought back all the wine that
could be
found. Dozens and dozens of small stills produced vile brews from
grains, and
every time the Wise Ones destroyed a still, two sprang up in its place.
Letting
him know that would only encourage him, though. "As for the others, I
have
been with armies before this and seen more drinking than I have among
the
Shaido. If a hundred are drunk among tens of thousands, what gain is
there for
you? Really, it will be better if you promise me a week. Two would be
better
still."
His
eyes flashed to the map, and his right hand made a fist again, but
there was no
anger in his voice. "Do the Shaido go inside the town walls very
often?"
She
set the winecup down on the table and drew herself up. Meeting that
yellow-eyed
gaze required effort, yet she managed without a falter. "I think it's
past
time you showed proper respect. I am an Aes Sedai, not a servant."
"Do
the Shaido go inside the town walls very often?" he repeated in exactly
the same even tone. She wanted to grind her teeth.
"No,"
she snapped. "They've looted everything worth stealing and some things
that aren't." She regretted the words as soon as they left her tongue.
They had seemed safe, until she remembered men who could leap through
holes in
the air. "That isn't to say they never enter. Most days, a few go in.
There
might be twenty or thirty at any time, more on occasion, in groups of
two or
three." Did he have the wit to see what that would mean? Best to make
sure
he saw. "You could not secure them all. Inevitably, some will escape to
warn the camp."
Aybara
only nodded. "When you see Faile, tell her that on the day she sees fog
on
the ridges and hears wolves howl by daylight, she and the others must
go to
Lady Cairen's fortress at the north end of the city and hide there.
Tell her I
love her. Tell her I'm coming for her."
Wolves?
Was the man demented? How could he ensure that wolves would…?
Suddenly,
with those wolf's eyes on her, she was not sure she wanted to know.
"I
will tell her," she lied. Perhaps he only meant to use the men in black
coats to grab his wife? But why wait at all, in that case? Those yellow
eyes
hid secrets she wished she knew. Who was he trying to meet?
Clearly
not Sevanna. She would have thanked the Light for that if she had not
abandoned
that foolishness long since. Who was ready to come to him right away?
One man
had been mentioned, but that might mean a king with an army. Or al'Thor
himself? Him, she prayed never to see again.
Her
promise seemed to release something in the young man. He exhaled
slowly, and a
tension she had not noticed left his face. "The trouble with a
blacksmith's puzzle," he said softly, tapping the outline of Malden,
"is always getting the key piece into place. Well, that's done.
Or
soon will be."
"Will
you stay for supper?" Berelain asked. "The hour is near."
The
light was dimming in the open doorway. A lean serving woman in dark
wool, her
white hair in a bun on the back of her head, entered and began lighting
the
lamps.
"Will
you promise me at least a week?" Galina demanded, but Aybara shook his
head. "In that case, every hour is important." She had never intended
staying a moment longer than necessary, but she had to force her next
words
out. "Will you have one of your…men…take me back to as near the camp
as possible?"
"Do
it, Neald," Aybara commanded. "And at least try to be polite."
He said that!
She
drew a deep breath and pushed her cowl back. "I want you to hit me,
here." She touched her cheek. "Hard enough to bruise."
Finally
she had said something that got through to the man. Those yellow eyes
widened,
and he tucked his thumbs behind his belt as though securing his hands.
"I
will not," he said, sounding as though she were insane.
The
Ghealdanin's mouth hung open, and the serving woman was staring at her,
the
burning taper in her hand hanging dangerously near her skirts.
"I
require it," Galina said firmly. She would need every scrap of
verisimilitude she could find with Therava. "Do it!"
"I
don't believe he will," Berelain said, gliding forward with her skirts
gathered. "He has very country ways. If you will permit me?"
Galina
nodded impatiently. There was nothing for it, though the woman likely
would not
leave a very convincing… Her vision went dark, and when she could see
again,
she was swaying slightly. She could taste blood. Her hand went to her
cheek,
and she winced.
"Too
hard?" Berelain inquired anxiously.
"No,"
Galina mumbled, fighting to keep her face smooth. Had she been able to
channel,
she would have torn the woman's head off! Of course, if she could have
channeled, none of this would be necessary. "Now, the other cheek. And
have someone fetch my horse."
She
rode into the forest with the Murandian, to a place where several of
the huge
trees lay toppled and oddly slashed, sure it would be difficult for her
to use
his hole in the air, but when the man produced a vertical silver-blue
slash
that widened into a view of steeply climbing land, she did not think of
tainted
saidin at all as she heeled Swift through the opening. Never a thought
except
of Therava.
She
almost howled when she realized she was on the opposite side of the
ridge from
the encampment. Frantically she raced the sinking sun. And lost.
She
had been right, unfortunately. Therava did not accept excuses. She was
particularly upset over the bruises. She herself never marred Galina's
face.
What followed easily equaled her nightmares. And it lasted much longer.
At
times, when she was screaming her loudest, she almost forgot her
desperate need
to get the rod. But she clung to that.
Obtain
the rod, kill Faile and her friends, and she would be free.
Egwene
regained awareness slowly, and muzzy as she was, barely had the
presence of
mind to keep her eyes closed. Pretending still to be unconscious was
all too
easy. Her head lay slumped on a woman's shoulder, and she could not
have lifted
it had she tried. An Aes Sedai's shoulder; she could sense the woman's
ability.
Her brain felt stuffed with wool, her thoughts were slow and veering,
her limbs
all but numb.
Her
wool riding dress and cloak were dry, she realized, despite the soaking
she had
received in the river. Well, that was easily managed with the Power.
Small
chance they had channeled the water from her garments for her comfort,
though.
She was seated, wedged in between two sisters, one of whom wore a
flowery
perfume, each using a hand to keep her more or less upright. They were
in a
coach by the way they all swayed and the clatter of a trotting team's
horseshoes on paving stones.
Carefully,
she opened her eyes to narrow slits.
The
coach's side curtains were tied back, though the stink of rotting
garbage made
her think it would have been better to pull them shut.
Garbage,
rotting! How could Tar Valon have come to that? Such neglect of the
city was
reason enough by itself for Elaida to be removed. The windows let in
enough
moonlight for her to dimly make out three Aes Sedai seated facing her,
in the
rear of the coach. Even had she not known they could channel, their
fringed
shawls would have made it certain. In Tar Valon, wearing a shawl with
fringe could
result in unpleasantness for a woman who was not Aes Sedai. Oddly, the
sister
on the left appeared to be huddling against the side of the coach, away
from
the other two, and if they were not exactly huddling, at least they
were
sitting very close together, as though avoiding contact with the third
Aes
Sedai. Very odd.
Abruptly
it came to her that she was not shielded. Muddled she might be, but
that made
no sense at all. They could feel her strength, as she could theirs, and
while
none was weak, she thought she could overcome all five if she were
quick
enough. The True Source was a vast sun just beyond the edge of sight,
calling
to her. The first question was, did she dare try yet? In the state her
head
was, thought wading through knee-deep mud, whether she could actually
embrace
saidar was uncertain, and succeed or fail, they would know once she
tried. Best
to try recovering a little beforehand. The second question was, how
long did
she dare wait? They would not let her go unshielded forever.
Experimentally,
she tried wiggling her toes inside her stout leather shoes, and was
delighted
when they moved obediently. Life seemed to be returning slowly to her
arms and
legs. She thought she might be able to raise her head now, if
unsteadily.
Whatever they had given her was wearing off. How long?
Events
were taken out of her hands by the dark-haired sister sitting in the
middle of
the rear seat, who leaned forward and slapped her so hard that she
toppled onto
the lap of the woman she had been leaning against.
Her
hand went to her stinging cheek on its own volition. So much for
pretending
unconsciousness.
"There
was no need for that, Katerine," a raspy voice said above her as its
owner
lifted her upright again. She could hold her head up, just, it turned
out. Katerine.
That would be Katerine Alruddin, a Red. It seemed important to identify
her
captors for some reason, though she knew nothing of Katerine beyond her
name
and Ajah. The sister she had fallen onto was yellow-haired, but her
moon-shadowed face belonged to a stranger. "I think you gave her too
much
of the forkroot," the woman went on.
A
chill flashed through her. So that was what she had been fed! She
racked her
brain for everything Nynaeve had told her about that vile tea, but her
thoughts
were still slow. Better, though, it seemed. She was sure Nynaeve had
said the
effects took some time to go away completely.
"I
gave her the exact dose, Felaana," the sister who had slapped her
replied
dryly, "and as you can see, it is leaving her precisely as it should. I
want her able to walk by the time we reach the Tower. I certainly don't
intend
to help carry her again," she finished with a glare for the sister
seated
to Egwene's left, who shook her head, beaded braids clicking faintly.
That was
Pritalle Nerbaijan, a Yellow who had done her best to avoid teaching
novices or
Accepted and made little secret of her dislike for the task when forced
to it.
"To
have my Harril carry her, it would have been improper, yes?" she said
coldly. In fact, icily. "Myself, I will be glad if she can walk, but if
not, so be it. In any case, I look forward to handing her over to
others. If
you do not want to carry her again, Katerine, I do not want to stand
guard over
her half the night in the cells." Katerine gave a dismissive toss of
her
head.
The
cells. Of course; she was bound for one of those small, dark rooms on
the first
level of the Tower's basement. Elaida would charge her with falsely
claiming to
be the Amyrlin Seat. The penalty for that was death.
Strangely,
that brought no fear. Perhaps it was the herb working on her.
Would
Romanda or Lelaine give way, agreeing to raise Amyrlin after she was
dead? Or
would they continue to struggle with one another until the entire
rebellion
faltered and failed, and the sisters straggled back to Elaida? A sad
thought,
that. Bone-deep sad. But if she could feel sorrow, the forkroot was not
quenching her emotions, so why was she not afraid? She thumbed her
Great
Serpent ring. At least, she tried to, and discovered it gone. Anger
flared,
white-hot. They might kill her, but they would not deny she was Aes
Sedai.
"Who
betrayed me?" she asked, pleased that her tone was even and cool.
"It
can't hurt to tell me, since I'm your prisoner." The sisters stared at
her
as though surprised she had a voice.
Katerine
leaned forward casually, raising her hand. The Red's eyes tightened
when
pale-haired Felaana lunged to catch the slap before it could land on
Egwene.
"She
will no doubt be executed," the raspy-voiced woman said firmly, "but
she is an initiate of the Tower, and none of us has the right to beat
her."
"Take
your hand off me, Brown," Katerine snarled, and shockingly, the light
of
saidar enveloped her.
In
an instant the glow surrounded every woman in the coach except Egwene.
They eyed
one another like strange cats on the brink of hissing, on the brink of
lashing
out with claws. No, not everyone; Katerine and the taller sister seated
against
her flank never glanced at one another.
But
they had glares aplenty for the rest. What under the Light was going
on? The
mutual hostility was so thick in the air, she could have sliced it like
bread.
After
a moment, Felaana released Katerine's wrist and leaned back, yet no one
released the Source. Egwene suddenly suspected that no one was willing
to be
the first. Their faces were all serene in the pale moonlight, but the
Brown's
hands were knotted in her shawl, and the sister leaning away from
Katerine was
smoothing her skirts repeatedly.
"About
time for this, I think," Katerine said, weaving a shield. "We
wouldn't want you to try anything…futile." Her smile was vicious.
Egwene
merely sighed as the weave settled on her; she doubted she could have
embraced
saidar yet in any case, and against five already full of the Power,
success would
have lasted moments at most. Her mild reaction appeared to disappoint
the Red.
"This may be your last night in the world," she went on. "It
wouldn't surprise me in the slightest if Elaida had you stilled and
beheaded
tomorrow."
"Or
even tonight," her lanky companion added, nodding. "I think Elaida
may be that eager to see the end of you." Unlike Katerine, she was
merely
stating a fact, but she was surely another Red. And watching the other
sisters,
as though she suspected one of them might try something.
This
was very strange!
Egwene
held on to her composure, denying them the response they wanted.
The
response Katerine wanted, at least. She was determined to maintain her
dignity
right to the headsman's block. Whether or not she had managed to do
well as
Amyrlin, she would die in a manner fitting for the Amyrlin Seat.
The
woman huddling away from the two Reds spoke, and her voice, full of
Arafel,
allowed Egwene to put a name to the hard, narrow face, dimly seen by
moonlight.
Berisha Terakuni, a Gray with a reputation for the strictest, and often
harshest, interpretation of the law. Always to the letter, of course,
but never
with any sense of mercy. "Not tonight or tomorrow, Barasine, not unless
Elaida is willing to summon the Sitters in the middle of the night, and
they're
willing to answer. This requires a High Court, no thing of minutes or
even
hours, and the Hall seems less eager to please Elaida than she might
wish,
small wonder. The girl will be tried, but the Hall will sit in the
matter when
they choose, I think."
"The
Hall will come when Elaida calls or she'll hand them all penances that
will
make them wish they had," Katerine sneered. "The way Jala and Merym
galloped off when we saw who we'd caught, she knows by now, and I'll
wager that
for this one, Elaida will drag Sitters from their beds with her own
hands if
she must." Her voice grew smug, and cutting at the same time.
"Perhaps she will name you to the Chair of Pardon. Would you enjoy
that?"
Berisha
drew herself up indignantly, shifting her shawl on her arms. In some
instances,
the Chair of Pardon faced the same penalty as the one she defended.
Perhaps
this charge required it; despite Siuan's best efforts to complete her
education, Egwene did not know.
"What
I want to hear," the Gray said after a moment, ostentatiously ignoring
the
women on the seat with her, "is what did you do to the harbor chain?
How
can it be undone?"
"It
can't be undone," Egwene replied. "You must know that it's
cuendillar, now. Even the Power won't break it, only strengthen it. I
suppose
you could sell it if you tear down enough of the harbor wall to remove
it. If
anyone can afford a piece of cuendillar that big. Or would want such a
thing."
This
time, no one tried to stop Katerine from slapping her, and very hard,
too.
"Hold your tongue!" the Red snapped.
That
seemed good advice unless she wanted to be slapped silly. She could
taste blood
in her mouth already. So Egwene held her tongue, and silence descended
on the
rolling coach, the others all glowing with saidar and watching each
other
suspiciously. It was incredible! Why had Elaida ever chosen women who
clearly
detested one another for tonight's task? As a demonstration of her
power, just
because she could? No matter. If Elaida allowed her to live through the
night,
at least she could let Siuan know what had happened to her-and likely
to Leane,
as well. She could let Siuan know they had been betrayed. And pray that
Siuan
could track down the betrayer. Pray that the rebellion would not
collapse. She
offered a small prayer for that on the spot. It was much more important
than
the other.
By
the time the coachman reined in the team, she had recovered enough to
follow
Katerine and Pritalle from the coach unaided, though her head still
felt a
trifle thick. She could stand, but she doubted she had the strength to
run far,
not that trying would achieve anything beyond being halted after a few
steps.
So she stood calmly beside the dark-lacquered coach and waited as
patiently as
the four-horse team in their harness.
After
all, she was harnessed, too, in a manner of speaking. The White Tower
loomed
over them, a thick pale shaft rearing into the night. Few of its
windows were
alight, but some of those were near the very top, perhaps in the rooms
Elaida
occupied. It was very strange. She was a prisoner and unlikely to live
much
longer, yet she felt she had come home. The Tower seemed to renew her
vigor.
Two
Tower-liveried backriders, the Flame of Tar Valon on their chests, had
dismounted from the rear of the coach to unfold the steps, and they
stood
offering a white-gloved hand to each woman who dismounted, but only
Berisha
availed herself, and only because it let her reach the paving stones
quickly
while eyeing the other sisters, Egwene suspected.
Barasine
gave the fellows such looks that one gulped audibly and the other's
face grew
pale. Felaana, busy trying to watch the others, merely waved the men
away
irritably. All five still held saidar, even here.
They
were at the main rear entrance, stone-railed marble stairs descending
from the
second level beneath four massive bronze lanterns that cast a wide pool
of
flickering light, and to her surprise, a single novice stood alone at
the foot
of the stairs, clutching her white cloak against a slight chill in the
air. She
had more than half-expected Elaida to meet them in person, to gloat
over her
capture with a retinue of sycophants. That the novice was Nicola
Treehill was a
second surprise. The last place she would have thought to find the
runaway was
inside the White Tower itself.
By
the way Nicola's eyes widened when Egwene emerged from the coach, the
novice
was more startled than herself, but she dropped a neat if hasty curtsey
to the
sisters. "The Amyrlin says she…she is to be handed over to the Mistress
of Novices, Katerine Sedai. She says that Silviana Sedai has her
instructions."
"So,
it seems you'll be birched tonight, at least," Katerine murmured with a
smile. Egwene wondered whether the woman hated her personally, or for
what she
represented, or simply hated everyone. Birched. She had never seen it
done, but
she had heard a description. It sounded extremely painful. She met
Katerine's
gaze levelly, and after a moment the smile faded. The woman looked
about to
strike her again. The Aiel had a way of dealing with pain. They
embraced it,
gave themselves over to it without fighting or even trying to hold back
screams. Perhaps that would help. The Wise Ones said that way the pain
could be
cast off without keeping its hold on you.
"If
Elaida means to drag this out unnecessarily, I'll have no more part in
it
tonight," Felaana announced, frowning at everyone in sight including
Nicola. "If the girl is to be stilled and executed, that should be
sufficient." Gathering her skirts, the yellow-haired sister darted past
Nicola up the stairs. Actually running! The glow of saidar still
surrounded her
as she vanished inside.
"I
agree," Pritalle said coolly. "Harril, I think I'll walk with you
while you stable Bloodlance." A dark, stocky man, who had come out of
the
darkness leading a tall bay, bowed to her. Stone-faced, he wore a
Warder's
chameleon cloak that made most of him seem not to be there when he
stood still
and rippled with colors when he moved. Silently he followed Pritalle
off into
the night, but watching over his shoulder, guarding Pritalle's back.
The light
remained around her, too. There was something here that Egwene was
missing.
Suddenly,
Nicola spread her skirts in another curtsy, deeper this time, and words
burst
out of her in a rush. "I'm sorry I ran away, Mother. I thought they'd
let
me go faster here. Areina and I thought-"
"Don't
call her that!" Katerine barked, and a switch of Air caught the novice
across the bottom hard enough to make her squeal and jump. "If you're
attending the Amyrlin Seat tonight, child, get back to her and tell her
I said
her orders will be carried out. Now, run!"
With
one last, frantic glance at Egwene, Nicola gathered her cloak and her
skirts
and went scrambling up the stairs so fast that twice she stumbled and
nearly
fell. Poor Nicola. Her hopes had surely been disappointed, and if the
Tower
discovered her age… She must have lied about that to betaken in; lying
was
one of her several bad habits.
Egwene
dismissed the girl from her mind. Nicola was no longer her concern.
"There
was no need to frighten the child out of her wits," Berisha said,
surprisingly. "Novices need to be guided, not bludgeoned." A far cry
from her views on the law.
Katerine
and Barasine rounded on the Gray together, staring at her intently.
Only two
cats, now, but rather than another cat, they saw a mouse.
"Do
you mean to come with us to Silviana alone?" Katerine asked with a
decidedly unpleasant smile twisting her lips.
"Aren't
you afraid, Gray?" Barasine said, a touch of mockery in her voice. For
some reason, she swung one arm a little so the long fringe of her shawl
swayed.
"Just the one of you, and two of us?"
The
two backriders stood like statues, like men who desired heartily to be
anywhere
else and hoped to remain unnoticed if sufficiently still.
Berisha
was no taller than Egwene, but she drew herself up and clutched her
shawl
around her "Threats are specifically prohibited by Tower-"
"Did
Barasine threaten you?" Katerine cut in softly. Softly, yet with sharp
steel wrapped in it. "She just asked whether you are afraid.
Should
you be?"
Berisha
licked her lips uneasily. Her face was bloodless, and her eyes grew
wider and
wider, as though she saw things she had no wish to see.
"I…I
think I will take a walk in the grounds," she said at last, in a
strangled
voice, and sidled away without ever taking her eyes from the two Reds.
Katerine
gave a small, satisfied laugh.
This
was absolute madness! Even sisters who hated one another to the
toenails did
not behave in this fashion. No woman who gave in to fear as easily as
Berisha
had could ever have become Aes Sedai in the first place. Something was
wrong in
the Tower. Very wrong.
"Bring
her," Katerine said, starting up the stairs.
At
last releasing saidar, Barasine gripped Egwene's arm tightly and
followed.
There was no choice save to gather her divided skirts and go along
without a
struggle. Yet her spirits were oddly buoyant.
Entering
the Tower truly did feel like returning home. The white walls with
their
friezes and tapestries, the brightly colored floor tiles, seemed as
familiar as
her mother's kitchen. More so, in a way; it had been far longer since
she saw
her mother's kitchen than these hallways.
She
took in the strength of home with every breath. But there was
strangeness, too.
The stand-lamps were all alight, and the hour could not be all that
late, yet
she saw no one. There were always a few sisters gliding along the
corridors,
even in the dead of night. She remembered that vividly, catching sight
of some
sister while running on an errand in the small hours and despairing
that she
would ever be so graceful, so queenly. Aes Sedai kept their own hours,
and some
Browns hardly liked being awake during daylight at all. Night held
fewer
distractions from their studies, fewer interruptions to their reading.
But
there was no one. Neither Katerine nor Barasine made any comment as
they walked
along hallways lifeless except for the three of them.
Apparently
this silent emptiness was a matter of course, now.
As
they reached pale stone stairs set in an alcove, another sister finally
appeared, climbing from below. A plump woman in a red-slashed riding
dress,
with a mouth that looked ready to smile, she wore her shawl, edged with
long
red silk fringe, draped along her arms. Katerine and the others might
well have
worn theirs to mark them out clearly at the docks-no one in Tar Valon
would
bother a woman wearing a fringed shawl, and most kept clear, if they
could,
particularly men-but why here?
The
newcomer's thick black eyebrows raised over bright blue eyes at the
sight of
Egwene, and she planted her fists on ample hips, letting her shawl
slide to her
elbows. Egwene did not think she had ever seen the woman before, but
apparently, the reverse was not true. "Why, that's the al'Vere girl.
They
sent her to Southharbor? Elaida will give you a pretty for this night's
work;
yes, she will. But look at her. Look at how she stands so. You'd think
the pair
of you were an honor guard for escort. I'd have thought she'd be
weeping and
wailing for mercy."
"I
believe the herb is still dulling her senses," Katerine muttered with a
sidelong scowl for Egwene. "She doesn't seem to realize her
situation." Barasine, still holding Egwene's arm, gave her a vigorous
shake, but after a small stagger she managed to catch her balance and
kept her
face smooth, ignoring the taller woman's glares.
"In
shock," the plump Red said, nodding. She did not sound exactly
sympathetic, but after Katerine, she was near enough. "I've seen that
before."
"How
did matters go at Northharbor, Melare?" Barasine asked.
"Not
so well as with you, it seems. With everyone else squealing to
themselves like
shoats caught under a fence over there being two of us, I was afraid
we'd scare
off who we were trying to catch. It's a good thing there were two of us
who
would talk to one another. As it was, all we caught was a wilder, and
not
before she turned half the harbor chain to cuendillar. We ended up near
killing
the coach-horses by galloping back like, well, like we'd caught your
prize.
Zanica insisted. Even put her Warder up in place of the coachman."
"A
wilder," Katerine said contemptuously.
"Only
half?" Relief stood out clearly in Barasine's voice. "Then
Northharbor isn't blocked."
Melare's
eyebrows climbed again as the implications sank in. "We'll see how
clear
it is in the morning," she said slowly, "when they let down the half
that's still iron. The rest of it stands out stiff like, well, like a
bar of
cuendillar. Myself, I doubt any but smaller vessels will be able to
cross." She shook her head with a puzzled expression. "There was
something strange, though. More than strange. We couldn't find the
wilder, at
first. We couldn't feel her channeling. There was no glow around her,
and we
couldn't see her weaves. The chain just started turning white. If
Arebis's
Warder hadn't spotted the boat, she might have finished and gotten
away."
"Clever
Leane," Egwene murmured. For an instant, she squeezed her eyes shut.
Leane
had prepared everything in advance, before coming in sight of the
harbor, all
inverted and her ability masked. If she herself had been as clever, she
likely
would have escaped cleanly. But then, hindsight always saw furthest.
"That's
the name she gave," Melare said, frowning. The woman's eyebrows, like
dark
caterpillars, were very expressive. "Leane Sharif. Of the Green Ajah.
Two
very stupid lies. Desala is striping her from top to bottom down there,
but she
won't budge. I had to come up for a breath. I never liked flogging,
even for
one like that. Do you know this trick of hers, child? How to hide your
weaves?"
Oh,
Light! They thought Leane was a wilder pretending to be Aes Sedai.
"She's
telling the truth. Stilling cost her the ageless look and made her
appear
younger. She was Healed by Nynaeve al'Meara, and since she was no
longer of the
Blue, she chose a new Ajah. Ask her questions only Leane Sharif could
know the
answers-" Speech ended for her as a ball of Air filled her mouth,
forcing
her jaws wide till they creaked.
"We
don't have to listen to this nonsense," Katerine growled.
Melare
stared into Egwene's eyes, though. "It sounds senseless, to be sure,"
she said after a moment, "but I suppose it wouldn't hurt to ask a few
questions besides, 'What is your name?' At worse, it'll cut the tedium
of the
woman's answers. Shall we take her down to the cells, Katerine? I don't
dare
leave Desala alone with the other one for long.
She
despises wilders, and she purely hates women who claim to be Aes Sedai."
"She's
not going to the cells, yet," Katerine replied. "Elaida wants her
taken to Silviana."
"Well,
as long as I learn that trick from this child or the other one."
Hitching
her shawl up onto her shoulders, Melare took a deep breath and headed
back down
the stairs, a woman with labor ahead of her she was not looking forward
to. She
gave Egwene hope for Leane, though. Leane was "the other one," now,
no longer "the wilder."
Katerine
set off down the corridor walking quickly, and in silence, but Barasine
pushed
Egwene ahead of her after the other Red, muttering half under her
breath about
how ridiculous it was to think that a sister could learn anything from
a
wilder, or from a jumped-up Accepted who told outlandish lies.
Maintaining some
shreds of dignity was difficult, to say the least, while being shoved
down a
hallway by a long-legged woman with your mouth gaping open as wide as
it would
go and drool leaking down your chin, but she managed as best she could.
In
truth, she hardly thought about it. Melare had given her too much to
think on.
Melare
added to the sisters in the coach. It could hardly mean what it seemed
to, but
if it did…
Soon
the blue-and-white floor tiles became red-and-green, and they
approached an
unmarked wooden door between two tapestries of flowered trees and
stout-beaked
birds so colorful they seemed unlikely to be real. Unmarked, but bright
with
polish and known to every initiate of the Tower. Katerine rapped on the
door
with what might almost have been a display of diffidence, and when a
strong
voice inside called, "Come," she drew a deep breath before pushing
the door open. Did she have bad memories of entering here as novice or
Accepted, or was it the woman who awaited them who made her hesitant?
The
study of the Mistress of Novices was exactly as Egwene recalled, a
small,
dark-paneled room with plain, sturdy furnishings. A narrow table by the
doorway
was lightly carved in a peculiar pattern, and bits of gilt clung to the
carved
frame of the mirror on one wall, but nothing else was decorated in any
way. The
stand-lamps and the pair of lamps on the writing table were unadorned
brass,
though of six different patterns. The woman who held the office usually
changed
when a new Amyrlin was raised, yet Egwene was ready to wager that a
woman who
had come to this room as a novice two hundred years ago would recognize
nearly
every stick and perhaps everything.
The
current Mistress of Novices-in the Tower, at least-was on her feet when
they
entered, a stocky woman nearly as tall as Barasine, with a dark bun on
the back
of her head and a square, determined chin. There was an air of brooking
no
nonsense about Silviana Brehon. She was a Red, and her charcoal-colored
skirts
had discreet red slashes, but her shawl lay draped across the back of
the chair
behind the writing table. Her large eyes were unsettling, however. They
seemed
to take in everything about Egwene in a glance, as though the woman not
only
knew every thought in her head, but also what she would think tomorrow.
"Leave
her with me and wait outside," Silviana said in a low, firm voice.
"Leave
her?" Katerine said incredulously.
"Which
words did you not understand, Katerine? Need I repeat myself?"
Apparently
she did not. Katerine flushed, but she said no more. The glow of saidar
surrounded
Silviana, and she took over the shield smoothly, without giving any
opening
when Egwene might have embraced the Power herself. She was certain that
she
could, now. Except that Silviana was far from weak; there was no hope
she could
break the woman's shield. The gag of Air disappeared at the same time,
and she
contented herself with digging a handkerchief from her belt pouch and
calmly
wiping her chin.
The
pouch had been searched-she always kept the handkerchief on top, not
beneath
everything else-but learning whether anything besides her ring had been
taken
would have to wait. There had not been anything of much use to a
prisoner in
any case. A comb, a packet of needles, some small scissors, odds and
ends. The
Amyrlin's stole. What sort of dignity she could maintain while being
birched
was beyond her, but that was the future; this was now.
Silviana
studied her, arms folded beneath her breasts, until the door closed
behind the
other two Reds. "You aren't hysterical, at least," she said then.
"That makes matters easier, but why aren't you hysterical?"
"Would
it do any good?" Egwene replied, returning the handkerchief to her
pouch.
"I can't see how."
Silviana
strode to the writing table and stood reading from a sheet of paper
there,
occasionally glancing up. Her expression was a perfect mask of Aes
Sedai
serenity, unreadable. Egwene waited patiently, hands folded at her
waist. Even
upside down she could recognize Elaida's distinctive hand on that page,
if not
read what it said. The woman need not think she would grow nervous at
waiting.
Patience was one of the few weapons left to her, at present.
"It
seems the Amyrlin has been mulling over what to do about you for some
time," Silviana said finally. If she had expected Egwene to begin
shifting
her feet or wringing her hands, she gave no sign of disappointment.
"She
has a very complete plan ready. She doesn't want the Tower to lose you.
Nor do
I. Elaida has decided that you have been used as a dupe by others and
should
not be held accountable. So you will not be charged with claiming to be
Amyrlin. She has stricken your name from the roll of the Accepted and
entered
it in the novice book again. I agree with that decision, frankly,
though it's
never been done before.
Whatever
your ability with the Power, you missed almost everything else you
should have
learned as a novice. You needn't fear that you'll have to take the test
again,
though. I wouldn't force anyone to go through that twice."
"I
am Aes Sedai by virtue of having been raised to the Amyrlin Seat."
Egwene
replied calmly. There was no incongruity in fighting for a title when
claiming
it might still lead to her death. Acquiescence would be as sharp a blow
to the
rebellion as her execution. Maybe sharper. A novice again? That was
laughable!
"I can cite the relevant passages in the law, if you wish."
Silviana
arched an eyebrow and sat down to open a large leather bound book. The
punishments book. Dipping her pen in the simple glass ink jar, she made
a
notation. "You've just earned your first visit to me. I'll give you the
night to think about it rather than putting you over my knee now. Let's
hope
contemplation increases the salubrious effect."
"Do
you think you can make me deny who I am with a spanking?" Egwene was
hard put
to keep incredulity from her voice. She was not sure she succeeded.
"There
are spankings and spankings," the other woman replied. Wiping the nib
clean on a scrap, she replaced the pen in its glass holder and
considered
Egwene. "You're accustomed to Sheriam Bayanar as Mistress of
Novices." Silviana shook her head disparagingly. "I've browsed her
punishments book. She let the girls get away with too much, and was far
too
lenient with her favorites. As a result, she was forced to deal out
correction
much more often that she should have had to. I record a third of the
punishments in a month that Sheriam did, because I make sure that
everyone I
punish leaves here wishing above all things never to be sent to me
again."
"Whatever
you do, you'll never make me deny who I am," Egwene said firmly. "How
can you possibly think you can make this work? Am I to be escorted to
classes,
shielded all the while?"
Silviana
leaned back against her shawl, resting her hands on the edge of the
table.
"You mean to resist as long as you can, do you?"
"I
will do what I must."
"And
I will do what I must. During the day, you will not be shielded at all.
But
every hour you will be given a mild tincture of forkroot."
Silviana's
mouth twisted on the word. She picked up the sheet that contained
Elaida's
notes as if to read, then let it drop back onto the tabletop, rubbing
her
fingertips as though something noxious clung to them. "I cannot like
the
stuff. It seems aimed directly at Aes Sedai.
Someone
who cannot channel can drink five times the amount that makes a sister
pass out
and barely grow dizzy from it. A disgusting brew. Yet useful, it seems.
Perhaps
it can be used on those Asha'man. The tincture won't make you dizzy,
but you
won't be able to channel enough to cause any problems. Only trickles.
Refuse to
drink, and it will be poured down your throat anyway. You'll be closely
watched
as well, so you don't try to slip away afoot. At night, you will be
shielded,
since giving you enough forkroot to make you sleep through the night
would
leave you doubled up with stomach cramps the next day.
"You
are a novice, Egwene, and you will be a novice. Many sisters still
consider you
a runaway, no matter what orders Siuan Sanche gave, and others
doubtless will
think Elaida wrong not to have you beheaded.
They'll
watch for every infraction, every fault. You may sneer at a spanking
now,
before you've received it, but when you're being sent to me for five,
six,
seven every day? We'll see how long it takes you to change your mind."
Egwene
surprised herself by giving a small laugh, and Silviana's eyebrows shot
up. Her
hand twitched as though to reach for her pen.
"Did
I say something funny, child?"
"Not
at all," Egwene replied truthfully. It had occurred to her that she
could
deal with the pain by embracing it in the Aiel manner. She hoped it
worked, but
there went all hope for dignity. While she was being punished, at
least. For
the rest, she could only do what she could.
Silviana
glanced at her pen, but finally stood without touching it.
"Then
I am done with you. For tonight. I will see you before breakfast,
however. Come
with me."
She
started for the door, confident that Egwene would follow, and Egwene
did.
Attacking the other woman physically would achieve no more than another
entry in
the book. Forkroot. Well, she would find a way around that somehow. If
not…
She refused to think about that.
Katerine
and Barasine were startled to say the least at hearing Elaida's plans
for
Egwene, and not best pleased to learn that they would be watching her
and
shielding her while she slept, although Silviana told them she would
arrange
for other sisters to come after an hour or two.
"Why
both of us?" Katerine wanted to know, which earned her a wry glance
from
Barasine. If only one were sent, it surely would not be Katerine, who
stood
higher.
"Firstly,
because I said so." Silviana waited until the other two Reds nodded in
acceptance. They did so with obvious reluctance, but not enough to make
her
wait long. She had not put on her shawl to come into the hallway, and
in some
odd fashion, she seemed the one out of place.
"And
secondly, because this child is tricky, I think. I want her watched
carefully
awake or asleep. Which of you has her ring?"
After
a moment, Barasine produced the circle of gold from her belt pouch,
muttering,
"I only thought to keep it as a memento. Of the rebels being brought to
heel. They're finished, now, for sure." A memento? It was stealing was
what it was!
Egwene
reached for the ring, but Silviana's hand got there first, and it was
into her
pouch that the ring went. "I'll keep this until you have the right to
wear
it again, child. Now take her to the novice quarters and settle her in.
A room
should have been prepared by now."
Katerine
resumed the shield, and Barasine reached for Egwene's arm again, but
Egwene
stretched out a hand toward Silviana. "Wait. There's something I must
tell
you." She had agonized over this. It would be all too easy to reveal
far
more than she wanted. But she had to do it. "I have the Talent of
Dreaming.
I've learned to tell the true dreams, and to interpret some of them. I
dreamt
of a glass lamp that burned with a white flame. Two ravens flew out of
mist,
struck the lamp, and flew on.
The
lamp wobbled, flinging off droplets of flaming oil. Some of those
burned up in
midair, other landed scattered about, and the lamp still wobbled on the
edge of
falling. It means the Seanchan will attack the White Tower and do great
harm."
Barasine
sniffed. Katerine gave a derisive snort.
"A
Dreamer," Silviana said flatly. "Is there anyone who can back up your
claim? And if there is, how can be sure your dream means the Seanchan?
Ravens
would indicate the Shadow, to me."
"I'm
a Dreamer, and when a Dreamer knows, she knows. Not the Shadow. The
Seanchan.
As for who knows what I can do…" Egwene shrugged. "The only one
you can reach is Leane Sharif, who's being held in the cells below."
She
saw no way to bring the Wise Ones into this, not without revealing
entirely too
much.
"That
woman is a wilder, not B," Katerine began angrily, but her mouth
snapped
shut when Silviana raised a peremptory hand.
The
Mistress of Novices studied Egwene carefully, her face still an
unreadable mask
of calmness. "You truly believe you are what you say," she said
finally. "I do hope your Dreaming won't cause as many problems as young
Nicola's Foretelling. If you truly can Dream. Well, I will pass along
your
warning. I can't see how the Seanchan could strike at us here in Tar
Valon, but
watchfulness never hurts. And I'll question this woman being held
below.
Carefully. And if she fails to back up your tale, then your visit to me
in the
morning will be even more memorable for you."
She
waved her hand at Katerine. "Take her away before she hands me another
nugget and keeps me from getting any sleep at all tonight."
This
time, Katerine muttered as much as Barasine. But they both waited until
they
were beyond earshot of Silviana. That woman was going to be a
formidable
opponent. Egwene hoped embracing pain worked as well as the Wise Ones
claimed.
Otherwise… Otherwise did not bear thinking about.
A
lean, gray-haired serving woman gave them directions to the room she
had just
finished making up, on the third gallery of the novice quarters, and
hurried on
after brief curtsies to the two Reds. She never so much as glanced at
Egwene.
What was another novice to her? It tightened Egwene's jaw. She was
going to
have to make people not see her as just another novice.
"Look
at her face," Barasine said. "I think it's finally settling in on
her."
"I
am who I am," Egwene replied calmly. Barasine pushed her toward the
stairs
that rose through the hollow column of railed galleries, lit by the
fat, waning
moon. A breeze sighed through, the only sound. It all seemed so
peaceful. There
was no light showing around any door. The novices would be asleep by
now,
except for those who had late chores or tasks. It was peaceful for
them. Not
for Egwene, though.
The
tiny, windowless room might almost have been the one she had occupied
when she
first came to the Tower, with its narrow bed built against the wall and
a small
fire burning on the little brick hearth.
The
lamp on the small table was lit, but it lighted little more than the
tabletop,
and the oil must have gone bad, because it gave off a faint, unpleasant
stink.
A washstand completed the furnishings, except for a three-legged stool,
onto
which Katerine promptly lowered herself, adjusting her skirts as
through on a
throne. Realizing there was nowhere for her to sit, Barasine crossed
her arms beneath
her breasts and frowned at Egwene.
The
room was quite crowded with three women in it, but Egwene pretended the
other
two did not exist as she readied herself for bed, hanging her cloak and
belt
and dress on three of the pegs set along one rough-plastered white
wall. She
did not ask for help with her buttons.
By
the time she laid her neatly rolled stockings atop her shoes, Barasine
had
settled herself cross-legged on the floor and was immersed in a small,
leatherbound
book that she must have carried in her belt pouch. Katerine kept her
eyes on
Egwene as though she expected her to make a break for the door.
Crawling
beneath the light woolen blanket in her shift, Egwene settled her head
on the
small pillow-not a goose-down pillow, that was for sure!-and went
through the
exercises, relaxing her body one part at a time, that would put her to
sleep.
She had done that so often that it seemed no sooner had she begun, than
she was
asleep…
…and
floating, formless, in a darkness that lay between the waking world and
Tel'aran'rhiod, the narrow gap between dream and reality, a vast void
filled
with a myriad of twinkling specks of light that were all the dreams of
all the
sleepers in the world. They floated around her, in this place with no
up or
down, as far as the eye could see, flickering out as a dream ended,
springing
alight as one began. She could recognize some at sight, put a name to
the
dreamer, but she did not see the one she sought.
It
was to Siuan she needed to speak, Siuan who likely knew by now that
disaster
had struck, who might be unable to sleep until exhaustion took her
under. She
settled herself to wait. There was no sense of time here; she would not
grow
bored with waiting. But she had to work out what to say. So much had
changed
since she wakened. She had learned so much.
Then,
she had been sure she would die soon, sure the sisters inside the Tower
were a
solid army behind Elaida. Now… Elaida thought her safely imprisoned. No
matter this talk of making her a novice again; even if Elaida really
believed
it, Egwene al'Vere did not. She did not consider herself a prisoner,
either.
She was carrying the battle into the heart of the Tower itself. If she
had had
lips there, she would have smiled.
CHAPTER ONE
When Last Sounds
The
Wheel of Time turns, and Ages come and pass, leaving memories that
become
legend. Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the
Age that
gave it birth comes again. In one Age, called the Third Age by some, an
Age yet
to come, an Age long past, a wind rose above the broken mountain named
Dragonmount. The wind was not the beginning. There are neither
beginnings nor
endings to the turning of the Wheel of Time. But it was a beginning.
Born
beneath the glow of a fat, sinking moon, at an altitude where men could
not
breathe, born among writhing currents heated by the fires inside the
ragged
peak, the wind was a zephyr in the beginning, yet it gained in strength
as it
rushed down the steep, rugged slope. Carrying ash and the stench of
burning
sulfur from the heights, the wind roared across the sudden, snowy hills
that
reared from the plain surrounding the impossible height of Dragonmount,
roared
and tossed trees in the night.
Eastward
out of the hills the wind howled, across a large pasture encampment, a
considerable village of tents and wooden walkways lining streets of
frozen
ruts. Soon enough the ruts would melt and the last of the snow vanish,
replaced
by spring rains and mud. If the encampment remained that long. Despite
the
hour, many among the AesSedai were awake, gathered in small groups
warded
against eavesdropping, discussing what had transpired this night. No
few of
those discussions were quite animated, little short of argument, and
some held
undeniable heat. Fists might have been shaken or worse had they not
belonged to
Aes Sedai. What to do next was the question. Every sister knew the news
from
the riverbank by now, if the details remained sketchy. The Amyrlin
herself had
gone in secret to seal Northharbor, and her boat had been found
overturned and
caught in the reeds. Survival in the swift, icy currents of the Erinin
was
unlikely, and hour by hour it had become more so, until certainty
hardened. The
Amyrlin Seat was dead. Every sister in the camp knew that her future
and
perhaps her life hung by a thread, not to mention the future of the WhiteTower
itself. What to do now? Yet voices fell silent and heads came up as the
fierce
blast struck the camp, fluttering tent canvas like flags, pelting it
with clods
of snow. The sudden stink of burning sulphur hung heavy in the air,
announcing
where that wind had come from, and more than one Aes Sedai offered a
silent
prayer against evil. In moments, though, the wind had passed, and the
sisters
bent back to their deliberations on a future bleak enough to fit the
sharp,
fading stench left behind.
On
the wind roared toward Tar Valon, gaining strength as it went,
shrieking over
military camps near the river where soldiers and camp followers
sleeping on the
ground suddenly had their blankets stripped off and those in tents
awoke to
canvas jerking and sometimes whipping away into the darkness as tent
pegs gave
way or guy ropes snapped. Laden wagons rocked and toppled, and banners
stood
out stiff before they were uprooted, their hurtling staffs now spears
that
pierced whatever lay in their path. Leaning against the gale, men
struggled to
the horselines to calm animals that reared and screamed in fear. None
knew what
the Aes Sedai knew, yet the biting, sulphurous smell that filled the
chill
night air seemed an ill omen, and hardened men offered their prayers
aloud as
fervently as the beardless boys. Camp followers added their own, and
loudly,
armorers and farriers and fletchers, wives and laundresses and
seamstresses,
all clutched by the sudden fear that something darker than blackness
stalked
the night.
The
fierce flutter of canvas overhead, near to ripping, the babble of
voices and
the screams of horses, loud enough to cut through the wailing wind,
helped
Siuan Sanche struggle awake for the second time.
The
abrupt stink of burning sulphur made her eyes water, and she was
grateful for
it. Egwene might be able to don and doff sleep like a pair of
stockings, but
the same was not true for her. Sleep had been hard enough to come by
after she
finally made herself lie down. Once the news had reached her from the
riverbank, she had been sure she never would sleep short of utter
exhaustion.
She had offered prayers for Leane, but all of their hopes rested on
Egwene's
shoulders, and all of their hopes seemed gutted and hung up to dry.
Well, she
had exhausted herself with nerves and worry and pacing. Now there was
hope
again, and she did not dare let her leaden eyelids close for fear she
would
sink back into slumber and not wake till midday, if then. The ferocious
wind
abated, but people's shouts and horses' cries did not.
Wearily,
she tossed aside her blankets and stood up unsteadily. Her bedding was
hardly
comfortable, laid out on the canvas ground-cloth in a corner of the
not-very-large square tent, yet she had come here, though it meant
riding. Of
course, she had been near falling down by then, and likely not in her
right
mind from grief. She touched the twisted ring ter'angreal hanging from
a
leather cord around her neck. Her first waking, every bit as hard as
this one,
had been to fetch that from her belt pouch. Well, the grief was
vanquished now,
and that was adequate to keep her moving. A sudden yawn made her jaws
creak
like rusty oarlocks. Barely adequate. You would have thought Egwene's
message,
the fact that Egwene was alive to send a message, would be enough to
banish
bone-weariness. Not so, it appeared.
Channeling
a globe of light long enough to see the box-lantern on the main tent
pole, she lit
it with a thread of Fire. The single flame gave a very pale, flickering
illumination. There were other lamps and lanterns, but Gareth went on
so about
how little lamp oil there was in stock. The brazier, she left unlit;
Gareth was
not so parsimonious with charcoal as oil-charcoal was easier to come
by-but she
was barely aware of the frigid air. She frowned at his bedding, still
lying
untouched on the other side of the tent. He surely was aware of the
boat's
discovery and who it had carried. The sisters did their best to keep
secrets
from him, but somehow, they succeeded less often than most believed.
More than
once he had startled her with what he knew. Was he out there in the
night
organizing his soldiers for whatever the Hall decided? Or had he
already
departed, leaving a lost cause? No longer lost, yet he must be unaware
of that.
"No,"
she muttered, feeling an odd sense of… treachery… that she had cast
doubt on the man, even in her own mind. He would still be there at
sunrise, and
for every sunrise until the Hall commanded him to leave. Maybe longer.
She did
not believe he would abandon Egwene whatever the Hall commanded. He was
too
stubborn, proud. No; it was not that. Gareth Bryne's word was his
honor. Once
given, he would not take it back unless released, whatever the cost to
himself.
And maybe, just maybe, he had other reasons to stay. She refused to
think of
that.
Putting
Gareth out of her mind-why had she come to his tent? It would have been
so much
easier to lie down in her own in the sisters' camp, cramped as it was,
or even
to have kept the weeping Chesa company, though on second thought, that
last
might have been beyond her. She could not abide weeping, and Egwene's
maid
would not stop- putting Gareth firmly out of her head, she ran a hasty
brush
through her hair, changed her shift for a fresh one, and dressed as
quickly as
she could in the dim light. Her plain blue wool riding dress was
rumpled, and
spotted with mud on the hem besides-she had gone down to see the boat
for
herself-but she did not take the time to clean and press it with the
Power. She
had to hurry.
The
tent was far from the spacious affair you would have expected of a
general, so
hurrying meant bumping her hip against a corner of the writing table
hard
enough that one of the legs almost folded before she could catch it,
nearly
tripping over the camp stool, the only thing approaching a chair, and
barking
her shins on the brass-bound chests that lay scattered about. That
brought a
curse that would have singed any listener's ears. The things served
double
duty, seats as well as storage, and one with a flat top did for a
makeshift
washstand with a white pitcher and bowl. In truth, they were arrayed in
a neat
enough fashion, but one peculiar to him. He could find his way through
that
maze in pitch dark. Anyone else would break a leg trying to reach his
bedding.
She supposed he must have a concern for assassins, though he had never
voiced
it.
Gathering
her dark cloak from atop one of the chests and folding it over her arm,
she
paused on the point of snuffing the lantern with a flow of Air. For a
moment
she stared at Gareth's second pair of boots, standing at the foot of
his
bedding. Channeling another small sphere of light, she moved it close
to the
boots. As she had thought. Freshly blacked. The bloody man insisted she
work
off her debt, then sneaked in behind her back-or worse, under her nose
while
she slept-and blacked his own bloody boots! Gareth bloody Bryne treated
her
like a maidservant, never so much as tried to kiss her… !
She
jerked upright, her mouth going taut as a mooring rope. Now where had
that
thought come from? No matter what Egwene claimed, she was not in love
with
Gareth bloody Bryne! She was not! She had too much work in front of her
to get
caught in that kind of foolishness. That's why you stopped wearing
embroidery,
I suppose, a small voice whispered in the back of her head. All those
pretty
things, stuffed into chests because you're afraid. Afraid? Burn her if
she was
afraid of him or any man!
Carefully
channeling Earth, Fire and Air just so, she laid the weave on the
boots. Every
last bit of the blacking, and most of the dye as well, came away and
formed
into a neat, glistening sphere that floated in the air, leaving the
leather
decidedly gray. For a moment she contemplated depositing the ball among
his
blankets. That would be a suitable surprise for him when he finally lay
down!
With
a sigh, she pushed open the doorflap and took the ball outside into the
darkness to let it splash onto the ground. The man had a short and
extremely
disrespectful way when she let her temper carry her too far, as she had
discovered the first time she hit him over the head with the boots she
was
cleaning. And when he made her so angry she put salt in his tea. Quite
a lot of
salt, but it had not been her fault he was hurried enough to drain the
cup in a
gulp. To try to, at any rate. Oh, he never seemed to mind when she
shouted, and
sometimes he shouted back-sometimes he just smiled, which was purely
infuriating!-yet he had his limits. She could have stopped him with a
simple
weave of Air, of course, but she had her honor as much as he had his,
burn him!
Anyway, she had to stay close to him. Min said so, and the girl seemed
infallible. That was the only reason she had not stuffed a fistful of
gold down
Gareth Bryne's throat and told him he was paid and be burned. The only
reason!
Besides her own honor, of course.
Yawning,
she left the dark puddle shining in the cold moonlight. If he stepped
in it
before it dried and tracked the mess inside, the blame would be his own
and
none of hers. At least the sulphur smell had faded a little. Her eyes
had
stopped overflowing, though what she could see was turmoil.
This
sprawling, night-shrouded camp had never had much order. The rutted
streets
were straight enough, true, and wide for moving soldiers, but for the
rest it
had always seemed a haphazard array of tents and rough shelters and
stone-lined
pits for cook fires. Now, it looked much as if it had been under
attack.
Collapsed tents lay everywhere, some tossed atop others that still
stood,
though a good many of those stood askew, and dozens of wagons and carts
lay on
their sides or upside down. Voices on every side called for help with
the
injured, of whom there appeared to be a fair number. Men limped along
the
street in front of Gareth's tent supported by other men, while several
small
groups hurried by carrying blankets being used as stretchers. Farther
away she
could see four blanket-covered shapes on the ground, three attended by
kneeling
women who rocked back and forth as they keened.
She
could do nothing for the dead, but she could offer her ability with
Healing to
the others. That was hardly her greatest skill, not very strong at all,
though
it seemed to have returned to her fully when Ny-naeve Healed her, yet
she
doubted there was another sister anywhere in the camp. They did avoid
the
soldiers, most of them. Her ability would be better than none. She
could,
except for the news she carried. It was urgent that it reach the right
people
as soon as possible. So she closed her ears to the groans and the keens
alike,
ignored dangling arms and rags clutched to bleeding heads, and hurried
to the
horselines on the edge of the camp, where the oddly sweet smell of
horse dung
was beginning to win over the sulphur. A rawboned, unshaven fellow with
a
haggard glare on his dark face tried to rush past her, but she caught
his rough
coatsleeve.
"Saddle
me the mildest horse you can find," she told him, "and do it right
now." Bela would have done nicely, but she had no notion where among
all
those animals the stout mare was tied and no intention of waiting for
her to be
found.
"You
want to go riding?" he said incredulously, jerking his sleeve free.
"If you own a horse, then saddle it yourself, if you're fool enough to.
Me, I've the rest of the night ahead of me in the cold tending the ones
what's
hurt themselves, and lucky if at least one don't die."
Siuan
ground her teeth. The imbecile took her for one of the seamstresses. Or
one of
the wives! For some reason, that seemed worse. She stuck her right fist
in
front of his face so quickly that he stepped back with a curse, but she
shoved
her hand close enough to his nose that her Great Serpent ring had to be
only
thing he could see. His eyes crossed, staring at it. "The mildest mount
you can find," she said in a flat voice. "But quickly."
The
ring did the trick. He swallowed, then scratched his head and stared
along the
horselines, where every animal seemed be either stamping or shivering.
"Mild," he muttered. "I'll see what I can do, Aes Sedai.
Mild." Touching a knuckle to his forehead, he hurried off down the rows
of
horses still muttering to himself.
Siuan
did a little muttering herself as she paced, three strides this way and
three that.
Snow trampled to slush and frozen again crunched under her stout shoes.
From
what she could see, it might take him hours to find anything that would
not
pitch her off if it heard a grunter jump. Swinging her cloak around her
shoulders, she shoved the small silver circle pin in place with an
impatient
jab, nearly stabbing her own thumb. Afraid, was she? She would show
Gareth
bloody, bloody Bryne! Back and forth, back and forth. Perhaps she
should walk
the whole long way. It would be unpleasant, but better than being
dumped from
the saddle and maybe breaking bones in the bargain. She never mounted a
horse,
including Bela, without thinking of broken bones. But the fellow
returned with
a dark mare bearing a high-cantled saddle.
"She's
mild?" Siuan demanded skeptically. The animal was stepping as though
ready
to dance, and looked sleek. That was supposed to indicate speed.
"Nightlily
here's meek as milk-water, Aes Sedai. Belongs to my wife, and Nemaris
is on the
delicate side. She don't like a mount what gets frisky."
"If
you say so," she replied, and sniffed. Horses were seldom meek in her
experience. But there was nothing for it.
Taking
the reins, she clambered awkwardly into the saddle, then had to shift
so she
was not sitting on her cloak and half-strangling herself every time she
moved.
The mare did dance, however she sawed the reins. She had been sure it
would.
Trying to break her bones already. A boat now-with one oar or two, a
boat went
where you wanted and stopped when you wanted, unless you were a
complete fool
about tides and currents and winds. But horses possessed brains,
however small,
and that meant they might take it into their minds to ignore bridle and
reins
and what the rider wanted. That had to be considered when you had to
straddle a
bloody horse.
"One
thing, Aes Sedai," the man said as she was trying to find a comfortable
seat. Why did saddles always seem harder than wood? "I'd keep her to a
walk tonight, was I you. That wind, you know, and all that stink, well,
she
might be just a touch-"
"No
time," Siuan said, and dug her heels in. Meek-as-milk-water Nightlily
leaped ahead so fast that she nearly pitched backward over the cantle.
Only a
quick grab at the pommel kept her in the saddle. She thought the fellow
shouted
something after her, but she could not be certain. What in the Light
did this
Nemaris consider a frisky horse? The mare sped out of the camp as
though trying
to win a race, sped toward the falling moon and Dragonmount, a dark
spike
rising against the starry sky.
Cloak
billowing behind, Siuan made no effort to slow her, rather digging in
her heels
again and slapping the mare's neck with the reins as she had seen
others do to
urge speed. She had to reach the sisters before anybody did something
irretrievable. All too many possibilities came to mind. The mare
galloped past
small thickets and tiny hamlets and sprawling farms with their
stone-walled
pastures and fields. Snug beneath snow-covered slate roofs, behind
walls of
stone or brick, the inhabitants had not been roused by that fierce
wind; every
building lay dark and still. Even the bloody cows and sheep were
probably
enjoying a good nights sleep. Farmers always had cows and sheep. And
pigs.
Bouncing
around on the hard leather of the saddle, she tried leaning forward
over the
mare's neck. That was how it was done; she had seen it. Almost
immediately she
lost the left stirrup and nearly slid off on that side, barely clawing
her way
back to get her foot back in place. The only thing to do was sit bolt
upright,
one hand clutching the pommel in a deathgrip, the other tighter still
on the
reins. Her flailing cloak tugged uncomfortably against her throat, and
she
jounced up and down so hard that her teeth clicked if she opened her
mouth at
the wrong time, but she hung on, and even heeled the animal once more.
Ah,
Light, but she was going to be bruised within an inch of her life come
sunrise.
On through the night, smacking the saddle with the mare's every
bounding
stride. At least her clenched teeth kept her from yawning.
At
last the horselines and rows of wagons that ringed the Aes Sedai camp
appeared
out of the darkness though a thin rim of trees, and with a sigh of
relief, she
hauled back on the reins as hard as she could. For a horse moving this
fast,
surely it required hard hauling to stop. Nightlily did stop, so
abruptly that
she would have hurdled over its head if the mare had not reared at the
same
time. Wide-eyed, she clung to the animal's neck until it finally
settled all
four hooves to the ground again. And for some little time after, as
well.
Nightlily
was breathing hard, too, she realized. Panting, really. She felt no
sympathy.
The fool animal had tried to kill her, just the way horses would!
Recovering
herself took a moment, but then she pulled her cloak straight, gathered
the
reins and rode past the wagons and the long lines of horses at a sedate
walk.
Shadowy men moved in the darkness along the horselines, doubtless
grooms and
farriers seeing to the visibly unsettled animals. The mare seemed more
biddable, now. Really, this was not too bad at all.
As
she entered the camp proper, she hesitated only a moment before
embracing
saidar. Strange to think of a camp full of Aes Sedai as dangerous, yet
two
sisters had been murdered here. Considering the circumstances of their
deaths,
it seemed unlikely that holding the Power would be enough to save her
if she
was the next target, but saidar at least gave an illusion of safety. So
long as
she remembered it was only illusion. After a moment, she wove the flows
of
Spirit that would hide her ability and the glow of the Power. There was
no need
to advertise, after all.
Even
at this hour, with the moon low in the west, there were a few people
out on the
wooden walkways, serving women and workmen scurrying about late tasks.
Or
perhaps early would be a better word now. Most of the tents, in nearly
every
size and shape imaginable, were dark, but a number of the larger ones
glowed
with the light of lamps or candles. Unsurprising under the
circumstances. Every
lit tent had men around it, or gathered in front. Warders. No one else
could
stand so still they seemed to fade into the night, especially not in
this icy
night. With the Power filling her, she could make out others, their
Warders'
cloaks making them vanish in the shadows. Between the murdered sisters
and what
their bonds to their Aes Sedai must be carrying to them, not surprising
at all.
She suspected more than one sister was ready to tear her own hair, or
someone
else's. They took note of her, heads swiveling to follow her passage as
she
rode slowly along the frozen ruts, searching.
The
Hall had to be informed, of course, but others needed to hear first. In
her
estimation, they were much more likely to do something… precipitate.
And
quite possibly disastrous. Oaths held them, but oaths given under
duress, to a
woman they now believed dead. For the Hall, for most of the Hall, they
had
nailed their flag to the mast in accepting a seat. None oithem would be
jumping
until they were very, very sure where they would land.
Sheriam's
tent was too small for what she was sure she would find, and dark
besides, she
noted in passing. She very much doubted the woman was asleep inside,
though.
Morvrin's, big enough to sleep four comfortably, would have done if
there was
room among all the books the Brown had managed to acquire on the march,
but
that was dark as well. Her third choice provided a catch, though, and
she
reined in Nightlily well short of it.
Myrelle
had two peaked tents in the camp, one for herself and one for her three
Warders-the three she dared acknowledge-and her own shone brightly, the
shadows
of women moving on the patched canvas walls. Three dissimilar men stood
on the
walkway in front of the tent-their stillness marked them Warders-but
she
ignored them for the moment. What exactly were they talking about
inside?
Certain that it was useless effort, she wove Air with just a hint of
Fire; her
weave touched the tent and struck a barrier against eavesdropping.
Inverted, of
course, and so invisible to her. She had only made the attempt on the
chance
they were being careless. Small possibility of that with the secrets
they had
to hide. The shadows against the canvas were still, now. So they knew
someone
had tried. She rode the rest of the way wondering what they had been
talking about.
As
she dismounted-well, at least she managed to turn half-falling off into
something akin to jumping down-one of the Warders, Sheriam's Arinvar, a
lean
Cairhienin little taller than she, stepped forward to reach for the
reins with
a small bow, but she waved him away. Releasing saidar, she tied the
mare to one
of the wooden slats of the walkway using a knot that would have held a
sizable
boat against heavy wind and a strong current. None of those casual
loops that
others used, not for her. She might dislike riding, but when she tied a
horse,
she wanted it there when she came back. Arinvar's eyebrows climbed as
he
watched her finish the knot, but he would not be the one who had to pay
for the
bloody animal if it got loose and lost itself.
Only
one of the other two Warders belonged to Myrelle, Avar Hachami, a
Saldaean with
a nose like an eagle's beak and thick, gray-streaked mustaches. After
sparing
her one glance and a slight inclination of his head, he returned to
watching
the night. Morvrin's Jori, short and bald and nearly as wide as he was
tall,
did not acknowledge her at all. His eyes studied the darkness, and his
hand
rested lightly on his long sword hilt. Supposedly he was among the best
of the
Warders with a blade. Where were the others? She could not ask, of
course, any
more than she could ask who was within. The men would have been shocked
to
their bones. None of them tried to stop her from entering. At least
matters had
not gotten that bad.
Inside,
where two braziers gave off the scent of roses and made the air almost
toasty
compared to the night, she found almost everyone she had hoped for, and
all
watching to see who entered.
Myrelle
herself, sitting on a sturdy straight-chair in a silk robe covered with
red and
yellow flowers, her arms folded beneath her breasts, wore such a
perfect
expression of calm on her olive face that it only pointed up the heat
in her
dark eyes. The light of the Power shone around her. It was her tent,
after all;
she would be the one to weave a ward here. Sheriam, seated on one end
of
Myrelle's cot with a straight back, pretended to be adjusting her
blue-slashed
skirts; her expression was as fiery as her hair, and it grew hotter
when she
saw Siuan. She was not wearing the Keeper's stole, a bad sign.
"I
might have expected it would be you," Carlinya said coldly, fists on
her
hips. She was never a warm woman, but now the ringlets that stopped
well short
of her shoulders framed a face that seemed carved from ice nearly as
pale as
her dress. "I will not have you trying to listen in on my private
conversations, Siuan." Oh, yes; they thought everything was at an end.
Round-faced
Morvrin, for once not appearing at all absentminded or sleepy-eyed
despite the
creases in her brown wool skirt, walked around the small table where a
tall
silver pitcher and five silver cups sat on a lacquered tray. It seemed
no one
felt like tea; the cups were all dry. Dipping into her belt pouch, the
graying
sister thrust a carved horn comb into Siuan's hand. "You are all
windblown, woman. Fix your hair before some lout takes you for a tavern
trull
instead of an Aes Sedai and tries to dandle you on his knee."
"Egwene
and Leane are alive and prisoners inside the Tower," Siuan announced,
more
calmly than she felt. A tavern trull? Touching her hair, she discovered
that
the other woman was right and began working the comb through the
tangles. If
you wanted to be taken seriously, you could not look as though you had
been
tussling in an alley. She had enough difficulty with that as it was,
now, and
would have until some years after she could lay hands on the Oath Rod
again.
"Egwene spoke to me in my dreams. They succeeded in blocking the
harbors,
near enough, but they were captured. Where are Beonin and Nisao? One of
you go
fetch them. I don't want to scale the same fish twice."
There.
If they thought themselves free of their oaths, and free of Eg-wene's
orders to
obey her, that should disabuse them. Except that no one moved to obey.
"Beonin
wanted her bed," Morvrin said slowly, studying Siuan. A very intense
study. A sharp mind hid behind that placid face. "She was too tired to
talk any more. And why would we have asked Nisao to join us?" That
earned
a small frown from Myrelle, who was Nisao's friend, but the other two
nodded
agreement. They and Beonin thought of Nisao as apart from themselves in
spite
of the oaths of fealty they shared. In Siuan's opinion, these women had
never
stopped believing they might still guide events somehow, even after the
rudder
had long since been taken from their hands.
Sheriam
rose from the cot as though about to rush off, even gathering her
skirts, but
that had nothing to do with Siuan's command. Anger had vanished,
replaced by
shining eagerness. "We dont need them for the moment in any case.
'Prisoners' means the deep cells until the Hall convenes for a trial.
We can
Travel there and free them before Elaida knows what is happening."
Myrelle
gave a sharp nod and stood, reaching to undo the sash of her robe.
"Best
if we leave the Warders behind, I think. They won't be needed in this."
She drew more deeply on the Source, already anticipating.
"No!"
Siuan said sharply, and winced as the comb caught in her hair.
Sometimes she
thought of cutting it shorter than Carlinya's, for convenience, but
Gareth had
complimented her, saying how much he liked the way it brushed her
shoulders.
Light, could she not escape the man even here? "Egwene isn't to be
tried,
and she isn't in the deep cells. She wouldn't tell me where she is
being held
except to say that she is guarded constantly. And she orders that there
be no
attempt to rescue her that involves sisters."
The
other women stared at her in shocked silence. In truth, she herself had
argued
the point with Egwene, to no avail. It had been an order, delivered by
the
Amyrlin Seat in full fig.
"What
you're saying is irrational," Carlinya said finally. Her tone was still
cool, her face serene, but her hands smoothed her embroidered white
skirts
unnecessarily. "If we capture Elaida, we will try her and very likely
still her." If. Their doubts and fears were not put to rest yet.
"Since she has Egwene, surely she will do the same. I don't need Beonin
to
tell me what the law says in that regard."
"We
must rescue her, whatever she wants!" Sheriam's voice was hot as
Carlinya's was chill, and her green eyes sparkled. Her hands had turned
to
fists gripping her skirts. "She cannot realize the danger she is in.
She
must be in shock. Did she give you any hints where she's held?"
"Don't
try to hide things from us, Siuan," Myrelle said firmly. Her eyes
seemed
almost on fire, and she jerked the silk sash tighter for emphasis. "Why
would she hide where she's being held?"
"For
fear of what you and Sheriam suggest." Giving up on the wind-whipped
tangles, Siuan tossed the comb down on the table. She could not stand
there
combing her hair and expect them to pay attention. Tousled would have
to do.
"She is guarded, Myrelle. By sisters. And they won't give her up
easily.
If we try a rescue, Aes Sedai will die at the hands of Aes Sedai, sure
as
silverpike spawn in the reeds. It's happened once, but it must not
happen
again, or all hope dies of reuniting the Tower peacefully. We cannot
allow it
to happen again. So there is to be no rescue. As to why Elaida has
decided not
to try her, I can't say." Egwene had been vague on that, as if she did
not
understand either. But she had been definite on the facts, and it was
not a
claim she would make unless she was sure.
"Peacefully,"
Sheriam muttered, sinking back onto the cot. She imbued the word with a
world
of bitterness. "Was there ever any chance of that, from the beginning?
Elaida has abolished the Blue Ajah! What chance of peace is there?"
"Elaida
cannot simply do away with an Ajah," Morvrin murmured, as though that
had
anything to do with anything. She patted Sheriam's shoulder, but the
fire-haired woman sullenly shrugged off her plump hand.
"There
is always a chance," Carlinya said. "The harbors are blocked,
strengthening our position. The negotiators meet every morning…"
Trailing off with a troubled look in her eyes, she poured a cup of tea
and
drank half of it down in one go without adding honey. Blocking the
harbors
likely would have put an end to the negotiations by itself, not that
they had
seemed to be going anywhere. Would Elaida let them continue with Egwene
in her
hands besides?
"I
do not comprehend why Elaida would not have Egwene put on trial,"
Morvrin
said, "since conviction would be sure and certain, but the fact remains
that she is a prisoner." She displayed none of Sheriam or Myrelle's
heat
and none of Carlinya's coldness. She was simply presenting the facts,
with only
a slight tightness of her mouth. "If she is not to be tried, then
without
any doubt she is to be broken. She has proven to be a stronger woman
than I
took her for at first, but no one is strong enough to resist the White
Tower
when it decides to break her. We must consider the consequences if we
don't get
her out before it can."
Siuan
shook her head. "She isn't even going to be birched, Morvrin. I don't
understand why either, but she'd hardly tell us to leave her if she
thought
they were going to torture-"
She
broke off as the tentflap was pushed open and Lelaine Akashi stepped
in,
blue-fringed shawl draped along her arms. Sheriam stood, though she
need not
have; Lelaine was a Sitter, but Sheriam was the Keeper. Then again,
Lelaine was
imposing in blue-slashed velvet despite her slenderness, dignity made
flesh,
with an air of authority that seemed greater than ever tonight. Every
hair in
place, she might have been entering the Hall after a sound night's
sleep.
Smoothly
Siuan turned to the table and picked up the pitcher as if in
anticipation. That
normally would have been her role in this company, to pour tea and
speak when
her opinion was sought. Perhaps if she remained quiet, Lelaine would be
about
her business with the others and leave quickly without giving her a
second
glance. The woman seldom did give her that much.
"I
thought that horse outside was the same I saw you ride in on, Siuan."
Lelaine's gaze ran over the other sisters, each of them absolutely
smooth-faced
now. "Am I interrupting?"
"Siuan
says Egwene is alive," Sheriam said as though relating the price of
delta
perch on the dockhead. "And Leane. Egwene spoke to Siuan's dreams. She
refuses any attempt at a rescue." Myrelle gave her a sidelong glance,
unreadable, but Siuan could have boxed her ears! Likely Lelaine would
have been
the next she sought out, but to tell her in her own way, not spilled
out on the
wharf like this. Of late, Sheriam had become as flighty as a novice!
Pursing
her lips, Lelaine directed a look like twin awls at Siuan. "Did she,
now?
You really should be wearing your stole, Sheriam. You are the Keeper.
Will you
walk with me, Siuan? It's been far too long since we had a conversation
alone." With one hand, she drew back the doorflap, shifting that
penetrating gaze to the other sisters. Sheriam blushed as only a
redhead could,
brilliantly, and fumbled the narrow blue stole from her belt pouch to
lay it
across her shoulders, but Myrelle and Carlinya met Lelaine's study with
level
eyes. Morvrin had begun tapping her round chin with a fingertip as
though
unaware of anyone else. She might well have been. Morvrin was like that.
Had
Egwene's orders sunk in? Siuan had no chance even for a firm look while
putting
the pitcher down. A suggestion from a sister of Lelaine's standing,
Sitter or
not, was a command to one of Siuan's standing. Gathering her cloak and
skirts,
she went out, murmuring thanks to Lelaine for holding the flap for her.
Light,
she hoped those fools had listened to what she said.
Four
Warders stood outside now, but one of them was Lelaine's Burin, a
copper-skinned stump of a Domani wrapped in a Warder cloak that made
most of
him seem not there, and Avar had been replaced by another of Myrelle's,
Nuhel
Dromand, a tall, burly man with an Illianer beard that left his upper
lip bare.
The man was so still you might have thought him a statue if not for the
wisps
of mist in front of his nostrils. Arinvar bowed to Lelaine, a quick
courtesy,
though formal. Nuhel and Jori did not let their vigilance slacken. Nor
did
Burin, for that matter.
The
knot that secured Nightlily took as long to undo as it had to tie, but
Lelaine
waited patiently until Siuan straightened with the reins in her hands,
then set
off at a slow pace along the wooden walkway past dark tents.
Moonshadows masked
her face. She did not embrace the Power, so Siuan could not either.
Trailed by
Burin, Siuan walked beside Lelaine leading the mare, holding her
silence. It
was the Sitter's place to begin, and not only because she was a Sitter.
Siuan
fought the urge to bend her neck and so lose the extra inch she had on
the
other woman. She seldom thought any longer of the time when she had
been
Amyrlin. She had been embraced as Aes Sedai once more, and part of
being Aes
Sedai meant fitting into your niche among the sisters instinctively.
The bloody
horse nuzzled at her hand as though it thought itself a pet, and she
shifted
the reins to her other hand long enough to wipe her fingers on her
cloak. Filthy
slobbering beast. Lelaine eyed her sideways, and she felt her cheeks
heating.
Instinct.
"Strange
friends you have, Siuan. I believe some of them were in favor of
sending you
away when you first appeared in Salidar. Sheriam, I might comprehend,
though
I'd think the fact that she stands so much higher than you now would
make for
awkwardness. That was the major reason I avoided you myself, to avoid
awkwardness."
Siuan
nearly gaped in astonishment. That came very near to talking about what
was
never to be talked about, very near, a transgression she would never
had
expected from this woman. From herself, perhaps-she had fitted herself
into her
niche, yet she was who she was-but never from Lelaine!
"I
hope you and I can become friends again, Siuan, though I can understand
if that
proves impossible. This meeting tonight confirms what Faolain told me."
Lelaine gave a small laugh and folded her hands at her waist. "Oh,
don't
grimace so, Siuan. She didn't betray you, at least not intentionally.
She made
one slip too many, and I decided to press her, rather hard. Not the way
to
treat another sister, but then, she's really just an Accepted until she
can be
tested and passes. Faolain will make a fine Aes Sedai. She was very
reluctant
to surrender everything she gave. Just bits and pieces, really, and a
few
names, but put together with you in that gathering, it gives me a
complete
picture, I think. I suppose I can let her free of confinement now. She
certainly won't think of spying on me again. You and your friends have
been
very faithful to Egwene, Siuan. Can you be as faithful to me?"
So
that was why Faolain had seemed to go into hiding. How many "bits and
pieces" had she revealed while being "pressed hard"? Faolain did
not know everything, yet it would be best to assume that Lelaine did.
But
assume while revealing nothing unless she herself was pressed hard.
Siuan
stopped dead, drawing herself up. Lelaine halted, too, clearly waiting
for her
to speak. Even with her face half in shadow that was clear. Siuan had
to steel
herself to confront this woman. Some instincts were buried in the bone
for Aes
Sedai. "I'm faithful to you as a Sitter for my Ajah, but Egwene al'Vere
is
the Amyrlin Seat."
"So
she is." Lelaine's expression remained unruffled, as much as Siuan
could
make out. "She spoke in your dreams? Tell me what you know of her
situation, Siuan." Siuan glanced over her shoulder at the stocky
Warder.
"Don't mind him," the Sitter said. "I haven't kept a secret from
Burin in twenty years."
"In
my dreams," Siuan agreed. She certainly did not intend to admit that
had
been only to summon her to Salidar in Tel'aran'rhiod. She was not
supposed to
have that ring in her possession. The Hall would take it away if they
learned
of it. Calmly-outwardly calm, at least- she related what she had told
Myrelle
and the others, and more. But not everything. Not the certainty of
betrayal.
That had to have come from the Hall itself-no one else had known of the
plan to
block the harbor, except the women involved-though whoever was
accountable
could not have known they were betraying Egwene. Only helping Elaida,
which was
mystery enough. Why would any among them want to help Elaida? There had
been
talk of Elaida's secret adherents from the start, yet she herself had
long
since dismissed the notion. Most assuredly every Blue fervently wanted
Elaida
pulled down, but until she knew who was responsible, no Sitter, not
even a
Blue, would learn everything. "She's called a sitting of the Hall for
tomorrow… no, it would be tonight, now, when Last sounds," she
finished. "Inside the Tower, in the Hall of the Tower."
Lelaine
laughed so hard that she had to brush a tear from her eye. "Oh, that is
priceless. The Hall to sit right under Elaida's nose, as it were. I
almost wish
I could let her know just to see her face." Just as abruptly, she
turned
serious again. Lelaine had always had a ready laugh, when she chose to
let it
out, but the core of her was always serious. "So Egwene thinks the
Ajahs
may be turning on one another. That hardly seems possible. She's only
seen a
handful of sisters, you say. Still, it bears looking into the next time
in
Tel'aran'rhiod. Perhaps someone can see what they can find in the Ajah
quarters
instead of concentrating on Elaida's study."
Siuan
barely suppressed a wince. She planned to do a little searching in
Tel'aran'rhiod herself. Whenever she went to the Tower in the World of
Dreams,
she was a different woman in a different dress every time she turned a
corner,
but she would have to be even more cautious than usual.
"Refusing
rescue is understandable, I suppose, even laudable-no one wants any
more dead
sisters-but very risky," Lelaine went on. "No trial, and not even a
birching? What can Elaida be playing at? Can she think to make her take
up as
Accepted again? That hardly seems likely." But she gave a small nod, as
though considering it.
This
was heading in a dangerous direction. If sisters convinced themselves
they knew
where Egwene might be, the chance increased that someone would try to
bring her
out, Aes Sedai guards or no. Trying at the wrong place could be as
risky as at
the right one, if not more so. Worse, Lelaine was ignoring something.
"Egwene
has called the Hall to sit," Siuan asked acidly. "Will you go?"
Reproving silence answered her, and her cheeks grew hot again. Some
things were
buried in the bone.
"Of
course, I will go," Lelaine said at last. A direct statement, yet there
had been a pause. "The entire Hall will go. Egwene ai'Vere is the
Amyrlin Seat,
and we have more than sufficient dream tefangreal. Perhaps she will
explain how
she believes she can hold out if Elaida orders her broken. I would very
much
like to hear that."
"Then
what are you asking me to be faithful to you about?"
Instead
of answering, Lelaine resumed her slow walk through the moonlight,
carefully
adjusting her shawl. Burin followed her, a half-invisible lion in the
night.
Siuan hurried to catch up, tugging Nightlily after her, fending off the
fool
mare's attempts to nuzzle her hand again.
"Egwene
al'Vere is the lawful Amyrlin Seat," Lelaine said finally. "Until she
dies. Or is stilled. Should either happen, we would be back to Romanda
trying
for the staff and the stole and me forestalling her." She snorted.
"That woman would be a disaster as bad as Elaida. Unfortunately, she
had
enough support to forestall me, as well. We'd be back to that, except
that if
Egwene dies or is stilled, you and your friends will be as faithful to
me as
you've been to Egwene. And you will help me gain the Amyrlin Seat in
spite of
Romanda."
Siuan
felt as though her stomach had turned to ice. No Blue would have been
behind
the first betrayal, but one Blue, at least, had reason to betray Egwene
now.
CHAPTER TWO
The Dark One's Touch
Beonin
woke at first light, as was her habit, though little of the dawn
trickled into
her tent past the closed doorflap. Habits were good when they were the
right
habits. She had taught herself a number over the years. The air inside
the tent
held a touch of the night's chill, but she left the brazier unlit. She
did not
intend to remain long. Channeling briefly, she lit a brass lamp, then
heated
the water in the white-glazed pitcher and washed her face at the
rickety
washstand with its bubbled mirror. Nearly everything in the small round
tent
was unsteady, from the tiny table to her narrow camp cot, and the only
sturdy
piece, a low-backed chair, was rude enough to have come from the
poorest farm
kitchen. She was accustomed to making do, though. Not all of the
judgments she
had been called on to make had been given in palaces. The meanest
hamlet also
deserved justice. She had slept in barns and even hovels to make it so.
Moving
deliberately, she put on the best riding dress she had with her, a
plain gray
silk that was very well cut, and snug boots that came to her knees,
then began
brushing her dark golden hair with an ivory-backed hairbrush that had
belonged
to her mother. Her reflection in the mirror was slightly distorted. For
some
reason, that irritated her this morning.
Someone
scratched at the tentflap, and a man called cheerily in a Murandian
accent,
"Breakfast, Aes Sedai, if it pleases you." She lowered the brush and
opened herself to the Source.
She
had not acquired a personal serving woman, and it often seemed a new
face
brought every meal, yet she remembered the stout, graying man with a
permanent
smile who entered at her command carrying a tray covered with a white
cloth.
"Leave
it on the table, please, Ehvin," she said, releasing saidar, and was
rewarded with a widening of his smile, a deep bow over the tray, and
another
before he left. Too many sisters forgot the small courtesies to those
beneath
them. Small courtesies were the lubricant of daily life.
Eyeing
the tray without enthusiasm, she resumed her brushing, a twice-a-day
ritual
that she always found soothing. Rather than finding comfort in the
brush
sliding through her hair this morning, however, she had to make herself
complete the full one hundred strokes before laying the brush on the
washstand
beside the matching comb and hand mirror. Once, she could have taught
the hills
patience, yet that had become harder and harder since Salidar. And
nearly
impossible since Murandy. So she schooled herself to it, as she had
schooled
herself to go to the White Tower against her mother's stern wishes,
schooled
herself to accept the Tower's discipline along with its teaching. As a
girl,
she had been headstrong, always aspiring to more. The Tower had taught
her that
you could achieve much if you could control yourself. She prided
herself on
that ability.
Self-control
or no self-control, lingering over her breakfast of stewed prunes and
bread
proved as difficult as completing her ritual with the hairbrush. The
prunes had
been dried, and perhaps too old to begin with; they had been stewed to
mush,
and she was sure she had missed a few of the black flecks that
decorated the
crusty bread. She tried to convince herself that anything that crunched
between
her teeth was a barley grain or a rye seed. This was not the first time
she had
eaten bread containing weevils, yet it was hardly a thing to enjoy. The
tea had
a strange aftertaste, too, as though that also was beginning to spoil.
When
she finally replaced the linen cloth over the carved wooden tray, she
very nearly
sighed. How long before nothing edible remained in the camp? Was the
same
happening inside Tar Valon? It must be so. The Dark One was touching
the world,
a thought as bleak as a field of jagged stones. But victory would come.
She
refused to entertain any other possibility. Young al'Thor had a great
deal to
answer for, a very great deal, yet he would-must!-achieve that somehow.
Somehow. But the Dragon Reborn lay beyond her purview; all she could do
was
watch events unfold from afar. She had never liked sitting to one side
and
watching.
All
this bitter musing was useless. It was time to be moving. She stood up
so
quickly that her chair toppled over backward, but she left it lying
there on
the canvas ground-cloth.
Putting
her head out at the doorflap, she found Tervail on a stool on the
walkway, his
dark cloak thrown back, leaning on the scabbarded sword propped between
his
boots. The sun stood on the horizon, two-thirds of a bright golden
ball, yet
dark clouds in the other direction, massing around Dragonmount,
suggested more
snow before long. Or perhaps rain. The sun felt close to warm after the
previous night. Either way, with luck she could be snug indoors soon.
Tervail
gave a small nod to acknowledge her without stopping what appeared to
be an
idle study of everyone who moved in his sight. There were none but
laborers at
the moment, men in rough woolens carrying baskets on their backs, men
and women
just as roughly clad driving high-wheeled carts, laden with bound
firewood and
sacks of charcoal and water barrels, that clattered along the rutted
street. At
least, his scrutiny would have seemed idle to someone lacking the
Warder bond
with him. Her Tervail, he was focused as a drawn arrow. It was only the
men he
studied, and his gaze lingered on those he did not know personally.
With two
sisters and a Warder dead at the hands of a man who could channel-it
seemed
beyond possibility there could be two murderers of that sort-everyone
was leery
of strange men. Everyone who knew, at least. The news had hardly been
shouted
abroad.
How
he thought he might recognize the killer was beyond her unless the man
carried
a banner, but she would not upbraid or belittle him for trying to
perform his
duty. Whipcord lean, with a strong nose and a thick scar along his jaw
earned
in her sendee, he had been little more than a boy when she found him,
cat-quick
and already one of the finest swordsmen in her native Tarabon, and for
all the
years since there had never been a moment when he did less. At least
twenty
times he had saved her life. Quite aside from brigands and footpads too
ignorant to recognize an Aes Sedai, the law could be dangerous when one
side or
the other became desperate not to have the judgment go against them,
and often
he had spotted the peril before she herself.
"Saddle
Winterfinch for me and bring your own horse," she told him. "We are
going for the little ride."
Tervail
raised one eyebrow slightly, half-glancing in her direction, then
attached the
scabbard to the right side of his belt and set off down the wooden
walkway
toward the horselines, walking very quickly. He never asked unnecessary
questions. Perhaps she was more agitated within than she believed.
Ducking
back inside, she carefully wrapped the hand mirror in a silk scarf
woven in a
black-and-white Tairen maze and tucked it into one of the two large
pockets
sewn inside her good gray cloak, along with the hairbrush and comb. Her
neatly
folded shawl and a small box of intricately carved blackwood went into
the
other. The box contained a few pieces of jewelry, some that had come
down from
her mother and the rest from her maternal grandmother. She herself
seldom wore
jewelry aside from her Great Serpent ring, yet she always took the box
and the
brush, comb and mirror with her when she journeyed, reminders of the
women
whose memories she loved and honored, and of what they had taught her.
Her
grandmother, a noted advocate in Tanchico, had infused her with a love
for the
intricacies of the law, while her mother had demonstrated that it was
always
possible to better yourself. Advocates rarely became wealthy, though
Collaris
certainly had been more than comfortable, yet despite her disapproval,
her
daughter Aeldrine had become a merchant and amassed a tidy fortune
buying and
selling dyes. Yes, it was always possible to better yourself, if you
seized the
moment when it appeared, as she had when Elaida aRoihan deposed Siuan
Sanche.
Matters since had not gone anywhere near as she had foreseen, of
course.
Matters seldom did. That was why a wise woman always planned
alternative paths.
She
considered waiting inside for Tervail to return-he could not fetch two
horses
in mere minutes-but now that the time had actually arrived, her last
stores of
patience seemed to flee. Settling the cloak around her shoulders, she
snuffed
the lamp with an air of finality. Outside, however, she forced herself
to stand
in one place rather than pacing along the walkway's rough planks.
Pacing would
attract eyes, and perhaps some sister who thought she was fearful of
being
alone. In all truth, she was afraid, a little. When a man could kill
you,
unseen, undetected, it was most reasonable to be afraid. She did not
want
company, though. She pulled up her cowl, signaling a desire for
privacy, and
drew the cloak around her.
A
gray cat, notch-eared and lean, began stropping himself against her
ankles.
There were cats all over the camp; they appeared anywhere that Aes
Sedai
gathered, tame as house pets however feral they had been before. After
a few
moments without having his ears scratched, the cat strolled away, as
proud as a
king, in search of someone who would see to them. He had plenty of
candidates.
Just
moments earlier there had been only roughly garbed laborers and cart
drivers in
view, but now the camp began to bustle. Clusters of white-clad novices,
the
so-called "families," scurried along the walkways to reach their
classes, held in any tent large enough to accommodate them, or even in
the
open. Those who hurried by her ceased their childish prattle to offer
perfect
curtsies in passing. The sight never ceased to amaze her. Or to produce
anger.
A fair number of those "children" were well into their middle years
or older-no few had at least some gray in their hair, and some were
grandmothers!-yet they were bending to the ancient routines as well as
any girl
she had ever seen come to the Tower. And so many. A seemingly endless
flood
pouring down the streets. How much had the Tower lost through its focus
on
bringing in girls born with the spark and those already on the brink of
channeling through their own fumbling while leaving the rest to find
their way
to Tar Valon as they would or could? How much lost through insisting no
girl
above eighteen could submit to the discipline? Change was nothing she
had ever
sought-law and custom ruled an Aes Sedai's life, a bedrock of
stability-and
some changes, such as these novice families, seemed too radical to go
on, but
how much had the Tower lost?
Sisters
glided along the walkways, too, usually in pairs or even threes,
usually
trailed by their Warders. The flow of novices parted around them in
ripples of
curtsies, ripples made jagged by the stares directed at the sisters,
who
pretended not to notice. Very few of the Aes Sedai lacked the glow of
the Power
around them. Beonin came close to clicking her tongue in irritation.
The
novices knew that Anaiya and Kairen were dead-there had been no thought
of
hiding the funeral pyres-but telling them how the two sisters had died
would
simply have frightened them. The newest, added to the novice book in
Mu-randy, had
worn white long enough to be aware that sisters walking about filled
with
saidar was beyond unusual, though. Eventually that alone would frighten
them,
and to no purpose. The killer seemed unlikely to strike in public, with
dozens
of sisters about.
Five
mounted sisters riding slowly eastward, none carrying the light of
saidar,
caught her eye. Each was followed by a small entourage, generally a
secretary,
a serving woman, perhaps a serving man as well in case of heavy
lifting, and
some Warders. All rode with their hoods up, but she had no difficulty
making
out who was who. Varilin, of her own Gray, would have been tall as a
man, while
Takima, the Brown, was a tiny thing. Saroiya's cloak was flamboyant
with white
embroidery- she must use saidar to keep it so sparkling bright-and a
pair of
Warders trailing Faiselle marked her as clearly as her brilliant green
cloak.
Which made the last, wrapped in dark gray, Magla, the Yellow. What
would they
find when they reached Darein? Surely not negotiators from the Tower,
not now.
Perhaps they thought they must go through the motions anyway. People
frequently
continued to go on as they had been after all purpose in it had been
lost. That
seldom lasted long with Aes Sedai, however.
"They
hardly seem to be together at all, do they, Beonin? You might think
they just
happened to be riding in the same direction."
So
much for the cowl providing a modicum of privacy. Luckily, she was
practiced at
suppressing sighs, or anything else that might give away more than she
wished. The
two sisters who had stopped beside her were much of a height, both
small-boned,
dark-haired and brown-eyed, but there resemblance ended. Ashmanaille's
narrow
face, with its pointed nose, seldom displayed any emotion at all. Her
silk
dress, slashed with silver, might have come from a tirewoman's hands
only
moments before, and silver scrollwork decorated the edges of her
fur-lined
cloak and cowl. Phaedrine's dark wool bore a number of creases, not to
mention
several stains, her woolen cloak was unadorned and needed darning, and
she
frowned much too often, as she was doing right then. She might have
been pretty
without that. An odd pair of friends, the usually unkempt Brown and the
Gray
who paid as much attention to her clothes as to anything else.
Beonin
glanced at the departing Sitters. They did appear to be riding in the
same
direction by chance more than riding together. It was a measure of her
upset
this morning that she had failed to note that. "Perhaps," she said
turning to face her unwanted visitors, "they are contemplating the
consequences of last night, yes, Ashmanaille?" Unwelcome or not,
courtesy
must be observed.
"At
least the Amyrlin is alive," the other Gray replied, "and by what
I've been told, she will remain alive and… healthy. Her and Leane
both." Not even Nynaeve's Healing of Siuan and Leane could make anyone
speak of stilling with ease.
"Alive
and a captive, it is better than being beheaded, I suppose. But not a
great
deal better." When Morvrin woke her to tell her the news, it had been
hard
to share the Brown's excitement. Excitement for Morvrin, at least. The
woman
had worn a small grin. Beonin had never considered altering her plans,
though.
Facts, they must be faced. Egwene was a prisoner, and that was that.
"Do
you not agree, Phaedrine?"
"Of
course," the Brown replied curtly. Curtly! But that was Phaedrine,
always
so immersed in whatever had caught her attention that she forgot how
she should
behave. And she was not done. "But that is not why we sought you.
Ashmanaille says you have considerable acquaintance with murders." A
sudden gust of wind snatched at their cloaks, but Beonin and
Ashmanaille caught
theirs smoothly. Phaedrine let hers swirl behind her, eyes intent on
Beonin.
"Perhaps
you have had some thoughts on our murders, Beonin," Ashmanaille said
smoothly. "Will you share them with us? Phaedrine and I have been
putting
our heads together, but we are getting nowhere. My own experience is
more with
civil matters. I know that you have gotten to the bottom of a number of
unnatural
deaths."
Of
course she had thought on the murders. Was there a sister in the camp
who had
not? She herself could not have avoided it had she tried. Finding a
murderer
was a joy, far more satisfying than settling a boundary dispute. It was
the
most heinous of crimes, the theft of what could never be recovered, all
the
years that would never be lived, all that might have been done in them.
And
these were the deaths of Aes Sedai, which surely made it personal for
every
sister in the camp. She waited for a last covey of white-clad women,
two with
gray hair, to make their curtsies and hurry on. The number of novices
on the
walkways was finally beginning to thin out. The cats seemed to be
following
them. Novices were more free with petting than most sisters.
"The
man who stabs from greed," she said once the novices were beyond
hearing,
"the woman who poisons from jealousy, they are one thing. This is quite
another altogether. There are two killings, surely by the same man, but
well
over a week apart. That implies both the patience and the planning. The
motive
is unclear, yet it seems very unlikely that he chose his victims by
chance.
Knowing no more of him than the fact that he can channel, you must
begin by
looking at what ties the victims together. In this case, Anaiya and
Kairen,
they were both Blue Ajah. So I ask myself, what connection has the Blue
Ajah
with a man who can channel? The answer comes back, Moiraine Damodred
and Rand
al'Thor. And Kairen, she also had contact with him, yes?"
Phaedrine's
frown deepened to near a scowl. "You cannot be suggesting be is the
killer." Really, she was getting much too far above herself.
"No,"
Beonin said coolly. "I am saying you must follow the connection. Which
leads to the Asha'man. Men who can channel. Men who can channel, who
know how
to Travel. Men who have some reason to fear Aes Sedai, perhaps
particular Aes
Sedai more than others. A connection is not the proof," she admitted
reluctantly, "but it is suggestive, yes?"
"Why
would an Asha'man come here twice and each time kill one sister? That
sounds as
though the killer wanted those two and no others." Ashmanaille shook
her
head. "How could he know when Anaiya and Kairen would be alone? You
cannot
think he is lurking about disguised as a workman. From all I hear,
these
Asha'man are far too arrogant for that. To me, it seems more likely we
have an
actual workman who can channel and bears a grudge of some sort."
Beonin
sniffed dismissively. She could feel Tervail approaching. He must have
run to
be back so soon. "And why would he have waited until now? The last
workmen, they were taken on in Murandy, more than a month ago."
Ashmanaille
opened her mouth, but Phaedrine darted in, quick as a sparrow snatching
a
crumb. "He might have only just learned how. A male wilder, as it were.
I've overheard workmen talking. As many admire the Asha'man as fear
them. I've
even heard some say they wish they had the nerve to go to the Black
Tower
themselves."
The
other Gray's left eyebrow twitched, as much as both shooting to her
hairline in
another woman. The two were friends, yet she could not be pleased with
Phaedrine plucking the words from her mouth in that way. All she said,
though,
was "An Asha'man could find him, I'm sure."
Beonin
let herself feel Tervail, waiting only a few paces behind her, now. The
bond
carried a steady flow of unwavering calm and patience as strong as the
mountains. How she wished she could draw on that as she could on his
physical
strength. "That is most unlikely to happen,
I'm
sure you will agree." she said thinly. Romanda and the others might
have
stood in favor of this nonsensical "alliance" with the Black Tower,
but from that moment on they had fought like drunken cart drivers over
how to
implement it, how to word the agreement, how to present it, every
single detail
corn apart, put back together and torn apart again. The thing was
doomed, thank
the Light.
"I
must go," she told them, and turned to take Winterfinch's reins from
Tervail. His tall bay gelding was sleek and powerful and fast, a
trained
warhorse. Her brown mare was stocky, and not fast, yet she had always
preferred
endurance to speed. Winterfinch could keep going long after taller,
supposedly
more powerful animals gave up. Putting a foot in the stirrup, she
paused with
her hands on tall pommel and can-tie. "Two sisters dead. Ashmanaille,
and
both Blues. Find sisters who knew them and learn what else they had in
common.
To locate the murderer, you must follow the connections."
"I
doubt very much they will lead to Asha'man. Beonin."
"The
important thing is that the killer is found," she replied, pulling
herself
into the saddle, and turned Winterfinch away before the other woman
could go
on. An abrupt ending, and discourteous, but she had no more wisdom to
offer,
and time seemed to press down on her, now. The sun was clear of the
horizon and
climbing. After so long, time pressed very hard indeed.
The
ride to the Traveling ground used for departures was short. but near a
dozen
Aes Sedai were waiting in a line outside the call canvas wall, some
leading
horses, some cloakless as if they expected to be indoors before long,
and one
or two wearing their shawls for some reason. About half were
accompanied by
Warders, several of whom wore their color-shifting cloaks. The one
thing the
sisters shared was that each shone with the glow of the Power. Tervail
expressed no surprise at their destination, of course, but more than
that, the
Warder bond continued to carry steady calm. He trusted her. A silvery
flash
appeared inside che walls, and after sufficient time to count slowly to
thirty,
a pair of Greens who could not make a gateway alone entered together
with four
Warders leading horses. The custom of privacy already had attached
itself to
Traveling. Unless someone allowed you to see her weave a gateway,
trying to
learn where she was going was accounted akin to asking direct questions
about
her business. Beonin waited patiently on Winterfinch, with Tervail
towering
over her on Hammer. At least the sisters here respected her raised
cowl. Or
perhaps they had their own reasons for silence. Either way, she did not
have to
talk with anyone. At this moment, that would have been insupportable.
The
line in front of her dwindled quickly, and soon enough she and Tervail
were
dismounting at the head of a much shorter line, only three sisters. He
held
aside the heavy canvas flap for her to enter first. Hung between tall
poles,
the wall enclosed a space of nearly twenty paces by twenty where frozen
slush
covered the ground, an uneven surface marked by footprints and
hooiprints atop
one another and scored in the middle by a razor-straight line. Everyone
used
the middle. The ground glistened faintly, perhaps the beginning of
another thaw
that would turn it all to slush that might well freeze again. Spring
came later
here than in Tarabon, but it was on the brink.
As
soon as Tervail let the canvas fall, she embraced saidarand wove Spirit
almost
caressingly. This weave fascinated her. a rediscovery of something
thought lost
forever and surely the greatest of Egwene al'-Veres discoveries. Every
time she
wove it she felt a sense of wonder, so familiar as novice and even
Accepted,
that had not come to her since she attained the shawl. Something new
and
marvelous. The vertical silvery line appeared in front of her, right
atop the
scoring on the ground. and suddenly became a gap that widened, the view
through
appearing to rotate until she was faced by a square hole in the air,
more than
two paces by two, that showed snow-draped oaks with heavy spreading
limbs. A
light breeze blew through the gateway, rippling her cloak. She had
often
enjoyed walking in that grove, or sitting on one of the low branches
for hours
reading, though never in snow.
Tervail
did not recognize it, and darted through, sword in hand. tugging Hammer
behind
him, the warhorse's hooves kicking up puffs of snow on the other side.
She
followed a little more slowly and let the weave dissipate almost
reluctantly.
It truly was wondrous.
She
found Tervail looking at what rose above the treetops in the near
distance, a
thick pale shaft rearing against the sky. The White Tower. His face was
very
still, and the bond seemed filled with stillness, too. "I think me you
are
planning something dangerous. Beonin." He still held his blade bared,
though lowered now.
She
laid a hand on his left arm. That should be enough to reassure him: she
would
never have impeded his sword arm if there was any real danger. "No more
dangerous than is ne…"
The
words trailed off as she saw a woman some thirty paces away walking
slowly
toward her through the grove of massive trees. She must have been
behind a tree
before. An Aes Sedai in a dress of old-fashioned cut, with straight
white hair
held back by a pearl-studded cap of silver wire and falling to her
waist. It
could not be. That strong face with its dark, tilted eyes and hooked
nose was
unmistakable, though. Unmistakable, but Turanine Merdagon had died when
Beonin
was Accepted. In midstep, the woman vanished.
"What
is it?" Tervail spun, his sword coming up, to stare in the direction
she
had been looking. "What frightened you?"
"The
Dark One, he is touching the world," she said softly. It was
impossible!
Impossible, but she was not given to delusions or fancies. She had seen
what
she had seen. Her shiver had nothing to with standing ankle-deep in
snow.
Silently, she prayed. May the Light illumine me all of my days, and may
I
shelter in the Creator's hand in the sure and certain hope of salvation
and
rebirth.
When
she told him about seeing a sister more than forty years dead, he did
not try
to dismiss it as hallucination, merely muttered his own prayer half
under his
breath. She felt no fear in him, though. Plenty in herself, but none in
him.
The dead could not frighten a man who took each day as his last. He was
not so
sanguine when she revealed what she intended. Part of it, anyway. She
did so
looking into the hand mirror and weaving very carefully. She was not as
adept
with Illusion as she would have liked. The face in the mirror changed
as the
weave settled on her. It was not a great change, but the face was no
longer an
Aes Sedai's face, no longer Beonin Marinye's face, just that of a woman
who
looked vaguely like her, though with much paler hair.
"Why
do you want to reach Elaida?" he demanded suspiciously. Abruptly the
bond carried
an edge. "You mean to get close to her then lower the Illusion, yes?
She
will attack you, and- No, Beonin. If it must be done, let me go. There
are too
many Warders in the Tower for her to know them all, and she will never
expect a
Warder to attack her. I can put a dagger in her heart before she knows
what is
happening.'' He demonstrated, a short blade appearing in his right hand
quick
as lightning.
"What
I do, I must do myself, Tervail." Inverting the Illusion and tying it
off,
she prepared several other weaves just in case matters went too far
awry,
inverting them also, then began another, a very complex weave that she
laid on
herself. That would hide her ability to channel. She had always
wondered why
some weaves, such as Illusion, could be placed on yourself while it was
impossible to make others, such as Healing, touch your own body. When
she had
asked that question as Accepted. Turanine had said in that memorable
deep
voice, "As well ask why water is wet and sand dry. child. Put your mind
on
what is possible rather than why some things are not." Good advice, yet
she never had been able to accept the second part. The dead were
walking. May
the Light illumine me all the days of… She tied off the last weave and
removed her Great Serpent ring, tucking it into her belt pouch. Now she
could
stand beside any Aes Sedai unrecognized for what she was. "You have
always
trusted me to know what is best." she went on. "Do you still?"
His
face remained as smooth as a sister's, yet the bond brought an instant
of
shock. "But of course, Beonin."
"Then
take Winterfinch and go into the city. Hire a room at an inn until I
come for
you." He opened his mouth, but she raised an admonitory hand. "Go,
Tervail."
She
watched him disappear through the trees, leading both horses, then
turned to
face the Tower. The dead were walking. But all that mattered was that
she reach
Elaida. Only that.
Gusts
of wind rattled the casements set in the windows. The fire on the white
marble
hearth had warmed the air to the point that moisture condensed on the
glass
panes and trickled down like raindrops. Seated behind her gilded
writing table
with her hands calmly folded on the tabletop, Elaida do Avriny
a'Roihan, the
Watcher of the Seals, the Flame of Tar Valon, the Amyrlin Seat, kept a
smooth
face while she listened to the man in front of her rant, shoulders
hunched and
shaking his fist.
"…
did be kept bound and gagged for most of the voyage, confined day and
night to
a cabin better called a cupboard! For that, I demand the captain of
that vessel
be punished, Elaida. More, I do demand an apology from you and from the
White
Tower. Fortune stab me, the Amyrlin Seat does no have the right to
kidnap kings
any longer! The White Tower does no have that right! I do demand…"
He
was repeating himself again. The man barely paused for breath. It was
difficult
to keep her attention on him. Her eyes wandered to the bright
tapestries on the
walls, the neatly arrayed red roses on white plinths in the corners.
Tiresome,
maintaining outward calm while enduring this tirade. She wanted to
stand up and
slap him. The audacity of the man! To speak so to the Amyrlin Seat! But
enduring calmly served her purpose better. She would let him exhaust
himself.
Mattin
Stepaneos den Balgar was muscular, and he might have been good-looking
when
young, but the years had proven unkind. The white beard that left his
upper lip
bare was neatly trimmed, but the hair had retreated from most of his
scalp, his
nose had been broken more than once, and his scowl deepened creases on
his
flushed face that needed no deepening. His green silk coat, embroidered
on the
sleeves with the Golden Bees of Illian. had been brushed and cleaned
well,
short of a sister channeling to do the work, yet it had been his only
coat for
the voyage, and not all the stains had come out. The ship carrying him
had been
slow, arriving late the day before, but for once, she was not
displeased with
someone else's slowness. The Light only knew what a mess Alviarin would
have
made of matters had he arrived in a timely fashion. The woman deserved
to go to
the headsman for the mire she had driven the Tower into, a mire Elaida
now had
to dig out of, much less for daring to blackmail the Amyrlin Seat.
Mattin
Stepaneos cut off abruptly, taking half a step back on the patterned
Taraboner
carpet. Elaida wiped the frown from her face. Thinking of Alviarin
always made
her glare unless she was careful.
"Your
rooms are comfortable enough for you?" she said into the silence.
"The serving men are suitable?"
He
blinked at the sudden change of direction. "The rooms do be comfortable
and the serving men suitable," he replied in a much milder tone,
perhaps
remembering her frown. "Even so, I-"
"You
should be grateful to the Tower. Mattin Stepaneos, and to me. Rand
al'Thor took
Illian only days after you departed the city. He took the Laurel Crown,
as
well. The Crown of Swords, he named it. Can you believe he would have
faltered
in cutting off your head to take it? I knew you would not leave
voluntarily. I
saved your life." There. He should believe it had been done with his
best
interests at heart, now.
The
fool had the temerity to snort and fold his arms across his chest. "I
am
no a toothless old hound yet, Mother. I did face death defending Illian
many
times. Do you believe I fear dying so much I would rather be your
guest' for
the rest of my life?" Still, that was the first time he had given her
her
proper title since entering the room.
The
ornate gilded case clock standing against the wall chimed, small
figures of
gold and silver and enamel moving on three levels. On the highest,
above the
clockface, a king and queen knelt to an Amyrlin Seat. Unlike the wide
stole
resting on Elaida's shoulders, that Amyr-lin's stole still had seven
stripes.
She had not yet gotten around to bringing in an enameler. There was so
much to
be done that was so much more important.
Adjusting
her stole on the bright red silk of her dress, she leaned back so the
Flame of Tar
Valon. picked out in moonstones on the tall gilded chairback, would
stand
directly above her head. She intended to make the man take in every
symbol of
who she was and what she represented. Had the Flame-topped staff been
at hand,
she would have held it under his crooked nose. "A dead man can reclaim
nothing, my son. From here, with my help, it may be that you can
reclaim your
crown and your nation."
Mattin
Stepaneos' mouth opened a crack and he inhaled deeply, like a man
scenting a
home he had never thought to see again. "And how would you arrange
that.
Mother? I understand the City do be held by these… Asha'man," he
fumbled the cursed name slightly, "and Aiel who follow the Dragon
Reborn." Someone had been talking to him, telling him too much. His
news
of events was to be strictly rationed. It seemed his serving man would
have to
be replaced. But hope had washed the anger from his voice, and that was
to the
good.
"Regaining
your crown will require planning, and time," she told him, since at the
moment
she had no idea of how it could be accomplished. She certainly intended
to find
a way, however. Kidnapping the King of Illian had been meant to
demonstrate her
power, but restoring him to a stolen throne would demonstrate it even
further.
She would rebuild the full glory of the White Tower at its highest, the
days
when thrones trembled if the Amyrlin Seat frowned.
"I
am sure you are still weary from your journey." she said, standing.
Just
as if he had undertaken it of his own free will. She hoped he was
intelligent
enough to make that pretense, too. It would serve them both far better
than the
truth in the days to come. "We will dine together at midday and discuss
what might be done. Cariandre, escort His Majesty to his rooms and see
to
fetching a tailor. He will need new clothes made. A gift from me." The
plump Ghealdanin Red who had been standing still as a mouse beside the
door to
the anteroom glided forward to touch his arm. He hesitated, reluctant
to go,
but Elaida continued as though he were already leaving. "Tell Tarna to
come in to me, Cariandre. I have a great deal of work today," she added
for his benefit.
At
last Mattin Stepaneos let himself be turned, and she sat down again
before he
reached the door. Three lacquered boxes were arranged just so on the
tabletop,
one her correspondence box, where she kept recently received letters
and
reports from the Ajahs. The Red shared whatever their eyes-and-ears
learned-she
thought they did-but the other Ajahs still provided only dribbles,
though they had
produced a number of unwelcome pieces of information in the last week
or so.
Unwelcome in part because they indicated contact with the rebels that
must go
beyond those farcical negotiations. It was the fat, gold-embossed
leather
folder in front of her that she opened, however. The Tower itself
generated
enough reports to have buried the table had she tried to read them all
herself,
and Tar Valon produced ten times as many. Clerks handled the vast
majority,
selecting only the most important for her to read. They still made a
thick
stack.
"You
wanted me. Mother?" Tarna said coolly, shutting the door behind her.
There
was no disrespect in it; the yellow-haired woman was cold by nature,
her blue
eyes icy. Elaida did not mind that. What irritated her was that the
bright red
Keeper's stole around Tarna's neck was little more than a wide ribbon.
Her pale
gray dress was slashed with enough red to display her pride in her
Ajah, so why
was her stole so narrow? But Elaida had a great deal of trust in the
woman, and
of late that was a rare commodity.
"What
news from the harbor, Tarna?" There was no need to say which.
Southharbor
alone had any hope of remaining functional without massive repairs.
"Only
riverships of the shallowest draft can enter," Tarna said, crossing the
carpet to stand in front of the writing table. She might have been
discussing
the possibility of rain. Nothing fazed her. "But the rest are taking
turns
tying up to the part of the chain that's cuendil-lar so they can
off-load into
barges. The ship captains complain, and it takes considerably longer,
yet for
the time being, we can make do."
Elaida's
mouth compressed, and she drummed her fingers on the tabletop. For the
time
being. She could not begin to repair the harbors until the rebels
finally collapsed.
So far, they had not launched an assault, thank the Light. That might
begin
with soldiers only, yet sisters certainly would be drawn into it,
something
they must want to evade as much as she did. But razing the harbor
towers, as
repairs would require, laying the harbors open and defenseless, might
lead them
to desperate acts. Light! Fighting must be avoided, if at all possible.
She
intended to fold their army into the Tower Guard once they realized
they were
finished and returned to the Tower. Part of her already thought as if
Gareth
Bryne were commanding the Tower Guard for her. An infinitely better man
for
High Captain than Jimar Chubain. The world would know the White Tower's
influence then! She did not want her soldiers killing one another, any
more
than she wanted the Tower weakened by her Aes Sedai killing one
another. The
rebels were hers as much as those inside the Tower, and she meant to
make them
acknowledge it.
Picking
up the top sheet from the stack of reports, she scanned it rapidly.
"Apparently,
despite my express order, the streets are still not being cleaned. Why?"
An
uneasy light appeared in Tarna's eyes, the first time Elaida had ever
seen her
look troubled. "People are frightened. Mother. They don't leave their
homes except at need, and with great reluctance even then. They say
they have
seen the dead walking in the streets."
"This
has been confirmed?" Elaida asked quietly. Her blood suddenly seemed
chill. "Have any sisters seen them?"
"None
in the Red, that I know of." The others would speak with her as Keeper,
yet not freely, not to share confidences. How under the Light was that
to be
mended? "But people in the city are adamant. They have seen what
they've
seen."
Slowly,
Elaida set the page down to one side. She wanted to shiver. So. She had
read
everything she could find concerning the Last Battle, even studies and
Foretellings so old they had never been translated out of the Old
Tongue and
had lain covered in dust in the darkest corners of the library. The
al'Thor boy
had been a harbinger, but now it seemed that Tarmon Gai'don would come
sooner
than anyone had thought. Several of those ancient Foretellings, from
the
earliest days of the Tower, said the dead appearing was the first sign,
a
thinning of reality as the Dark One gathered himself. There would be
worse
before long.
"Have
the Tower Guards drag able-bodied men out of their houses, if need be,"
she said calmly. "I want those streets clean, and I want to hear that a
start was made today. Today!"
The
other woman's pale eyebrows lifted in surprise-she bad lost her usual
frigid
self-control!-but all she said, of course, was. "As you command.
Mother."
Elaida
projected serenity, but it was a charade. What would come, would come.
And she
still had secured no hold on the al'Thor boy. To think she had once had
him
right under her hand! If only she had known then. Curse Alviarin and
that
triply cursed proclamation calling anathema on anyone who approached
him save
through the Tower. She would have recalled it, except That would seem
weakness,
and in any case, the damage had been done beyond simple mending. Still,
soon
she would have Elayne back in hand, and the Royal House of An-dor was
the key
to winning Tarmon Gai'don. That, she had Foretold long ago. And news of
rebellion against the Seanchan sweeping across Tarabon had been very
pleasant
reading. Not everything was a tangle of briars stabbing her from every
side.
Scanning
the second report, she grimaced. No one liked sewers, yet they were
one-third
of the life's blood of a city, the other two being trade and clean
water.
Without the sewers, Tar Valon would become prey to a dozen diseases,
overwhelming anything the sisters could do, not to mention even more
malodorous
than the rotting garbage must have made the streets already. Though
trade was
cut to a trickle for the moment, the water still came in at the upriver
end of
the island and was distributed to watertowers throughout the city, then
to
fountains, ornamental and plain, that anyone was free to use, but now
it seemed
the sewer outlets on the downriver end of the island were nearly
clogged.
Dipping her pen in the ink jar, she scrawled I WANT THESE CLEARED BY
TOMORROW
across the top of the page and signed her name below. If the clerks had
any
sense, the work was already underway, but she never accused clerks of
having
much sense.
The
next report made her own eyebrows rise. "Rats inside the Tower?" That
was beyond serious! This should have been on top! "Have someone check
the
Wards, Tarna." Those Wardings had held since the Tower was built, but
perhaps they could have weakened after three thousand years. How many
of those
rats were the Dark One's spies?
A
rap came at the door, followed an instant later by a plump Accepted
named
Anemara, who spread her striped skirts in a deep curtsy. "If it pleases
you, Mother, Felaana Sedai and Negaine Sedai have brought a woman to
you they
found wandering in the Tower. They say she wants to present a petition
to the
Amyrlin Seat.''
"Tell
her to wait and offer her tea, Anemara." Tarna said briskly. "The
Mother is busy-"
"No,
no," Elaida broke in. "Send them in, child. Send them in." It
had been too long since anyone had come to present her with a petition.
She was
of a mind to grant whatever it was. if it was not too ridiculous.
Perhaps that
would restart the flow. It was far too long since any sisters had come
to her
without being summoned, too. Perhaps the two Browns would end that
drought, as
well.
But
only one woman entered the room, carefully closing the door behind her.
By her
silk riding dress and good cloak, she appeared to be a noblewoman or a
prosperous merchant, a supposition supported by her confident manner.
Elaida
was sure she had never met the woman before, yet there seemed something
vaguely
familiar about that face framed by hair even fairer than Tarna's.
Elaida
stood and started around the table, hands outstretched and an
unaccustomed
smile on her face. She tried to make it seem welcoming. "I understand
that
you have a petition for me, my daughter. Tarna, pour her some tea." The
silver pot sitting on a silver tray atop the side table must still be
at least
warm.
"The
petition, it was something I let them believe in order to reach you
unbruised,
Mother," the woman replied in Taraboner accents, curtsying, and halfway
through that, her face was suddenly that of Beonin Marinye.
Embracing
saidar, Tarna wove a shield on the woman, but Elaida contented herself
with
planting her fists on her hips.
"To
say that I'm surprised you dare show me your face would be an
understatement,
Beonin."
"I
managed to become part of what you might call the ruling council in
Salidar," the Gray said calmly. "I made sure they sat there and did
nothing, and I put the rumors about that many among them were in truth
your
secret adherents. The sisters, they were looking at one another with so
much
suspicion. I think me most might have returned to the Tower soon at
that point,
but then other Sitters beside the Blues appeared. The next 1 knew, they
had
chosen their own Hall of the Tower, and the ruling council, it was
done. Still,
I continued to do what 1 could. I know that you commanded me to remain
with
them until they were all ready to return, but that must happen within
days,
now. If I may say, Mother, it was the most excellent decision not to
try
Egwene. For one thing, she has the genius for discovering new weaves,
even
better than Elayne Trakand or Nynaeve al'Meara. For another, before
they raised
her. Lelaine and Romanda struggled with one another to be named
Amyrlin. With
Egwene alive, they will struggle again, but neither can succeed, yes?
Me. I
think very soon now sisters will begin following behind me. In a week
or two,
Lelaine and Romanda will find themselves alone with the remainder of
their
so-called Hall."
"How
did you know the al'Vere girl wasn't to be tried?" Elaida demanded.
"How did you know she's even alive? Unshield her, Tarna!"
Tarna
complied, and Beonin gave her a nod as if in gratitude. A small
gratitude. Those
large blue-gray eyes might make Beonin appear constantly startled, but
she was
a very composed woman. Combine composure with a wholehearted dedication
to the
law and also ambition, which she possessed in as great a measure, and
Elaida
had known immediately that Beonin was the one to send off after the
sisters
fleeing the Tower. And the woman had failed utterly! Oh, she had
apparently
sowed a little dissension, but really, she had achieved nothing of what
Elaida
had expected from her. Nothing! She would find her rewards commensurate
with
her failure.
"Egwene,
she can enter Tel'aran'rhiod simply by going to sleep, Mother. 1 myself
have
been there and seen her, but I must use a ter'augreal. I could not
acquire any
of those the rebels have to bring with me. In any event, she spoke to
Siuan
Sanche, in her dreams, it is claimed, though I think more likely in the
World
of Dreams. Apparently, she said that she is a prisoner, but she would
not tell
where, and she forbade any rescue attempt. May I pour myself that tea?"
Elaida
was so stunned she could not speak. She motioned Beonin to the side
table, and
the Gray curtsied again before going over to feel the silver pitcher
cautiously
with the back of her hand. The girl could enter Tel'aran'rhiod? And
there were
ter'augreal that allowed the same thing? The World of Dreams was almost
a
legend. And according to those troubling scraps the Ajahs had deigned
to share
with her, the girl had rediscovered the weave for Traveling and made
any number
of other discoveries as well. They had been the determining factor in
her
decision to preserve the girl for the Tower, but this on top of it?
"If
Egwene can do this, Mother, perhaps she really is a Dreamer," Tarna
said.
"The warning she gave Silviana-"
"Is
useless, Tarna. The Seanchan are still deep in Altara and barely
touching
Illian." At least the Ajahs were willing to pass on everything they
learned of the Seanchan. Or rather, she hoped they passed on
everything. The
thought roughened her voice. "Unless they learn to Travel, can you
think
of any precaution I need to take beyond what is already in place?" She
could not, of course. The girl had forbidden a rescue. That was good on
the
face of it, but it indicated she still thought of herself as Amyrlin.
Well,
Silviana would remove that nonsense from her head soon enough if the
sisters
teaching her classes failed. "Can she be fed enough of that potion to
keep
her out of Te/'aran'rhiod?"
Tarna
grimaced slightly-no one liked that vile brew, even the Browns who had
brought
themselves to test it-and shook her head. "We can make her sleep
through
the night, but she would be useless for anything the next day, and who
can say
whether it would affect this ability of hers."
"May
I pour for you, Mother?" Beonin said, balancing a thin white teacup on
her
fingertips. "Tarna? The most important news i have-"
"I
don't care for any tea." Elaida said harshly. "Did you bring back
anything to save your skin from your miserable failure? Do you know the
weave
for Traveling, or this Skimming, or…" There were so many. Perhaps
they were all Talents and skills that had been lost, but apparently
most had
not been named yet.
The
Gray peered at her across the teacup, her face very still. "Yes." she
said at last. "I cannot make cuendillar, but I can make the new Healing
weaves work as well as most sisters, and I know them all." An edge of
excitement crept into her voice. "The most marvelous is Traveling."
Without asking permission, she embraced the Source and wove Spirit. A
vertical
line of silver appeared against one wall and widened into a view of
snow-covered oaks. A cold breeze blew into the room. making the flames
dance in
the fireplace. "That is called a gateway. It can only be used to reach
a
place you know well, but you learn a place by making a gateway there,
and to go
somewhere you do not know well, you use Skimming." She altered the
weave,
and the opening dwindled into that silvery line once more then widened
again.
The oaks were replaced by blackness, and a gray-painted barge, railed
and gated,
that floated on nothing against the opening.
"Release
the weave," Elaida said. She had the feeling that if she walked over to
that barge, the darkness would extend as far as she could see in any
direction.
That she could fall in it forever. It made her queasy. The opening-the
gateway-vanished. The memory remained, however.
Resuming
her seat behind the table, she opened the largest of the lacquered
boxes,
decorated with red roses and golden scrollwork. From the top tray, she
picked
up a small ivory carving, a fork-tailed swallow dark yellow with years,
and
stroked her thumb along the curved wings. "You will not teach these
things
to anyone without receiving my permission."
"But… why ever not, Mother?"
"Some
of the Ajahs oppose the Mother almost as strongly as those sisters
beyond the
river," Tarna said.
Elaida
shot a dark look at her Keeper, but that cool visage absorbed it
without
changing a hair. "I will decide who is… reliable enough… to be
taught, Beonin. I want your promise. No. I want your oath.'
"On
my way here, I saw sisters of different Ajahs glaring at one another.
Glaring.
What has happened in the Tower, Mother?"
"Your
oath, Beonin."
The
woman stood peering into her teacup long enough that Elaida was
beginning to think
she would refuse. But ambition won out. She had tied herself to
Elaida's skirts
in the hope of preferment, and she would not abandon that now. "Under
the
Light and by my hope of salvation and rebirth, I swear that I will
teach the
weaves I learned among the rebels to no one without the permission of
the
Amyrlin Seat." She paused, taking a sip from the cup. "Some sisters
in the Tower, they are perhaps less reliable than you think. I tried to
stop
it, but that 'ruling council' sent ten sisters to return to the Tower
and
spread the tale of the Red Ajah and Logain." Elaida recognized few of
the
names she reeled off, until the last. That one made her sit bolt
upright.
"Shall
I have them arrested. Mother?" Tarna asked, still as chill as ice.
"No.
Have them watched. Watch whoever they associate with." So there uas a
conduit between the Ajahs inside the Tower and the rebels. How deeply
had the
rot spread? However deep, she would clean it out!
"That
may be difficult as matters stand, Mother."
Elaida
slapped the table with her free hand, a sharp crack. "I didn't ask
whether
it would be difficult. I said do it! And inform Meidani that I invite
her to
dinner this evening." The woman had been persistent in trying to resume
a
friendship that had ended many years before. Now she knew why. "Go and
do
that now." A shadow crossed Tarna's face as she curtsied. "Don't
worry," Elaida said. "Beonin can feel free to teach you every weave
she knows." She did trust Tarna. after all, and it certainly made her
expression brighter, if not warmer.
As
the door closed behind her Keeper. Elaida pushed the leather folder to
one side
and leaned her elbows on the table, focusing on Beonin. "Now. Show me
everything."
CHAPTER THREE
At the Gardens
A
ran'gar arrived in answer to Moridin's summons, spoken into her furious
dreams,
to find him not yet there. That was hardly surprising; he liked to make
an
entrance. Eleven tall armchairs, carved and gilded, sat in a circle in
the
middle of the striped wooden floor, but they were empty. Semirhage. all
in
black as usual, looked around to see who had entered, then returned to
her
huddled conversation with Demandred and Mesaana in one corner of the
room.
Deman-dred's hook-nosed face carried an expression of anger that only
made him
more striking. Not enough to attract her, of course. He was far too
dangerous
for that. That well-fitted coat of bronze silk, with falls of snowy
lace at
neck and wrists, suited him, however. Mesaana also wore the style of
this Age,
a darker, pattern-embroidered bronze. She appeared wan and subdued, for
some
reason, almost as if she had taken ill. Well, that was possible. This
Age had a
number of nasty diseases. and it seemed unlikely even she would trust
Semirhage
for Healing. Graendal, the only other human present, stood in the
corner
opposite cradling a delicate crystal goblet filled with dark wine, but
watching
the trio rather than drinking. Only idiots ignored being studied by
Graendal,
yet the three went on with their fierce murmurs.
The
chairs jarred with the rest of their surroundings. The room appeared to
have
view-walls, though the stone arch of a doorway destroyed the illusion.
The
chairs could have been anything, here in Tel'aran'rhiod, so why not
something
to suit the room, and why eleven when that was surely two more than
needed?
Asmodean and Sammael must be as dead as Be'lal and Rahvin. Why not the
usual
dilating door of a view-room? The display made the floor seem to be
surrounded
by the AnsalineGardens, with
Cormalinde Masoon's
immense sculptures of stylized humans and animals towering over low
buildings
themselves like delicate sculptures in spinglass. At the Gardens only
the
finest wines had been served, the finest dishes, and it almost always
had been
possible to impress a beautiful woman with large winnings at the chinje
wheels,
though cheating enough to win consistently had been difficult.
Difficult, but
necessary for a scholar who lacked wealth. All gone, in ruins by the
third year
of the war.
A
golden-haired, ever-smiling zomara in a flowing white blouse and tight
breeches
bowed fluidly and offered Aran'gar a crystal goblet of wine on a silver
tray.
Graceful and beautifully androgynous, apparently human despite those
dead black
eyes, the creatures had been one of Aginor's less inspired creations.
Still,
even in their own Age, when Moridin had been called Ishamael-there was
no
longer any doubt in her mind of who he was-he had trusted the creatures
above
any human servant, despite their uselessness for every other task.
Somewhere he
must have found a stasis box stuffed with the tilings. He had dozens,
although
he seldom brought them out. Yet ten more stood waiting, graceful while
standing
still. He must consider this meeting more important than most.
Taking
the goblet, she waved the zomara away, though it was already turning
before she
gestured. She hated the creatures' ability to know what was in her
head. At
least it could not communicate what it learned to anyone. Memories of
anything
but commands faded in minutes. Even Aginor possessed sense enough to
see the
need for that. Would he appear today? Osan'gar had missed every meeting
since
the failure at Shadar Logoth. The true question was, was he among the
dead or
was lie moving in secret, perhaps at the Great Lord's direction? Either
way,
his absences presented delicious opportunities, but the latter
presented as
many dangers. Dangers had been much on her mind lately.
Casually,
she strolled over to Graendal. "Who do you think arrived first,
Graendal? The
Shadow take me, whoever it was chose a depressing setting." Lanfear had
preferred meetings that floated in endless night, yet this was worse in
its own
way, like meeting in a cemetery.
Graendal
smiled thinly. At least, she attempted a thin smile, but no amount of
effort
would make those lips thin. Lush was the word for all of Graendal, lush
and
ripe and beautiful, and barely concealed by the gray mist of her
streith gown.
Though perhaps she should not have worn quite so many rings, all but
one adorned
with gems. The coronet encrusted with rubies clashed with her sun-gold
hair,
too. The emerald necklace Delana had provided went much better with her
own
green satin silks. Of course, while the emeralds were real, her silks
were a
product of the World of Dreams. She would have attracted too much
notice in the
waking world with a dress cut so low, if it would even stay up, there.
And
there was the slit that bared her left leg to the hip. Her legs were
better
than Graendal's. She had considered two slits. Her abilities here were
not as
large as some-she could not find Egwene's dreams without the girl right
beside
her-but she could manage the clothes she wanted. She enjoyed having her
body
admired, and the more she flaunted it, the more the others took her for
inconsequential.
"I
arrived first," Graendal said, frowning slightly into her wine. "I
have fond memories of the Gardens."
Aran'gar
managed a laugh. "So do I, so do I." The woman was a fool like the
rest, living in the past among the tatters of what was lost. "We'll
never
see the Gardens again, but we'll see their like." She herself was the
only
one of them suited to rule in this Age. She was the only one who
understood
primitive cultures. They had been her specialty before the war. Still,
Graendal
had useful skills, and a wider range of contacts among the Friends of
the Dark
than she herself had, though the other woman would certainly disapprove
of how
Aran'gar meant to use them should she learn. "Has it occurred to you
that
all of the others have alliances, while you and I stand alone?" And
Osan'gar, if he was alive, but there was no need to bring him into this.
Graendal's
gown turned a darker gray, regrettably obscuring the view. It was real
streith.
Aran'gar had found a pair of stasis-boxes herself. but filled with the
most
appalling rubbish for the most part. "Has it occurred to you that this
room must have ears? The zomaran were here when I arrived."
"Graendal."
She purred the name. "If Moridin is listening, he'll assume I'm trying
to
get into your bed. He knows I never made alliances with anyone." In
truth,
she had made several, but her allies always seemed to suffer fatal
misfortunes
once their usefulness ended, and they took all knowledge of the
affiliations to
their graves. Those who found graves.
The
streith went black as midnight in Larcheen. and spots of color appeared
on
Graendal's creamy cheeks. Her eyes became blue ice. But her words were
at odds
with her face, and her gown faded to near transparency as she spoke,
slowly,
sounding thoughtful. "An intriguing notion. One I've never before
considered. I might do so now. Perhaps. You will have to… convince me,
though." Good. The other woman was as quick-witted as ever. It was a
reminder that she must be careful. She meant to use Graendal and
dispose of
her, not be caught in one of her traps.
"I
am very good at convincing beautiful women." She stretched out a hand
to
caress Graendal's cheek. Now was not too soon to begin convincing the
others.
Besides, something more than an alliance might come of it. She had
always
fancied Graendal. She no longer really remembered having been a man. In
her
memories, she wore the body she did now, which did make for a few
oddities, yet
that body's influence had not changed everything. Her appetites had not
altered,
only broadened. She would like very much to have that streith gown. And
anything else useful that Graendal might possess, of course, but she
dreamed of
wearing that dress sometimes. The only reason she was not wearing one
now was
that she would not have the other woman thinking she had imitated her.
The
streith remained barely opaque, but Graendal stepped away from the
caress
looking past Aran'gar, who turned to find Mesaana approaching, flanked
by
Demandred and Semirhage. He still appeared angry, and Semirhage coolly
amused.
Mesaana was still pale, but no longer subdued. No. not subdued at all.
She was
a hissing coreer. spitting venom.
"Why
did you let her go. Aran'gar? You were supposed to be controlling her!
Were you
so busy playing your little dream-games with her that you forgot to
learn what
she was thinking? The rebellion will fall apart without her for a
figurehead.
All my careful planning ruined because you couldn't keep a grasp on one
ignorant girl!"
Aran'gar
held on to her temper firmly. She could hold it, when she was willing
to make
the effort. Instead of snarling, she smiled. Could Mesaana actually
have based
herself inside the WhiteTower? How
wonderful it
would be if she could find a way to split that threesome apart. "I
listened in on a sitting of the rebels' Hall last night. In the World
of
Dreams, so they could meet inside the WhiteTower,
with Egwene leading it. She's not the figurehead you believe. I've
tried
telling you before, but you never listened." That came out too hard.
With an
effort, and it required effort, she moderated her tone. "Egwene told
them
all about the situation inside the Tower, the Ajahs at one another's
throats.
She convinced them it's the Tower that is about to fall apart, and that
she
might be able to help it along from where she is. Were I you, I'd worry
whether
the Tower can hold together long enough to keep this conflict going."
"They're
determined to hold on?" Mesaana murmured, half under her breath. She
nodded. "Good. Good. Then everything is proceeding according to plan. I
had been thinking I would need to stage some sort of'rescue,' but
perhaps I can
wait until Elaida has broken her. Her return should create even more
confusion,
then. You need to sow more dissension, Aran'gar. Before I'm done, I
want these
so-called Aes Sedai hating each other in their blood."
Kzomara
appeared, bowing gracefully as it offered a tray with three goblets.
Mesaana
and her companions took the wine without a glance at the creature, and
it bowed
again before flowing away.
"Dissension
was always something she was good at." Semirhage said. Demandred
laughed.
Aran'gar
forced her anger down. Sipping her own wine-it was quite good, with a
heady
aroma, if nowhere near the vintages served at the Gardens-she laid her
free
hand on Graendal's shoulder and toyed with one of those sun-colored
curls. The
other woman never flinched, and the streith remained a bare mist.
Either she
was enjoying this, or she had better control of herself than seemed
possible.
Semirhage's smile grew more amused. She. too, took her pleasures where
she
found them, though Semirhage's pleasures had never attracted Aran'gar.
"If
you're going to fondle one another." Demandred growled, "do it in
private."
"Jealous?"
Aran'gar murmured, and laughed lightly at his scowl. "Where is the girl
kept. Mesaana? She didn't say."
Mesaana's
big blue eyes narrowed. They were her best feature, yet only ordinary
when she
frowned. "Why do you want to know? So you can 'rescue' her yourself? I
won't tell you."
Graendal
hissed, and Aran'gar realized that her hand had become a fist in that
golden
hair, bending Graendal's head back. The other woman's face remained
tranquil,
but her gown was a red mist and rapidly growing darker, more opaque.
Aran'gar
loosened her grip, holding on lightly. One of the first steps was
making your
quarry accustomed to your touch. She did nothing to keep the anger from
her
voice this time, however. Her bared teeth were an undisguised snarl. "I
want the girl, Mesaana. Without her, I have much weaker tools to work
with."
Mesaana
sipped wine calmly before responding. Calmly! "By your own account, you
don't need her at all. It has been my plan from the start, Aran'gar. I
will
adapt it according to need, but it is mine. And I will decide when and
where
the girl is set free."
"No,
Mesaana, I will decide when and where, or whether, she is freed,"
Moridin
announced, striding through the stone arch. So he had set ears in
place. He was
in unrelieved black this time, a black somehow darker than what
Semirhage wore.
As usual. Moghedien and Cyn-dane followed him, both attired in
identical
red-and-black that suited neither. What hold did he have on them?
Moghedien, at
least, had never willingly followed anyone. As for that beautiful,
bosomy
little pale-haired doll Cyndane… Aran'gar had approached her, just to
see
what might be learned, and the girl had coldly threatened to rip her
heart out
if Aran'gar touched her again. Hardly the words of someone who
submitted
easily.
"Sammael
appears to have resurfaced," Moridin announced, crossing the floor to
take
a seat. He was a big man, and he made the ornate high-backed chair seem
a
throne. Moghedien and Cyndane sat down to either side of him, but
interestingly, not until he had. Zomaran in snowy white were there
instantly
with wine, yet Moridin received his first. Whatever was at work there,
the
zomaran sensed it.
"That
hardly seems possible," Graendal said as they all moved to take chairs.
Her gown was dark gray now, concealing everything. "He must be dead."
No one moved quickly, though. Moridin was Nae'blis. yet no one except
Moghedien
and Cyndane was willing to display any hint of subservience. Aran'gar
certainly
was not.
She
took a seat across from Moridin, where she could watch him without
seeming to.
And Moghedien and Cyndane. Moghedien was so still she would have faded
into the
chair except for her bright dress. Cyndane was a queen, her face
chiseled from
ice. Trying to pull down the Nae'blis was dangerous, yet those two
might hold
the key. If she could figure out how to turn it. Graendal sat down
beside her,
and the chair was suddenly closer. Aran'gar could have laid her hand on
the
other woman's wrist but refrained from anything more than a slow smile.
It was
best to keep her mind centered right then.
"He
could never have borne staying hidden this long,' Demandred put in,
lounging
into his chair between Semirhage and Mesaana, legs crossed as though
perfectly
at ease. That seemed doubtful. He was another who was unreconciled, she
was
sure. "Sammael needed to have every eye directed at him."
"Nevertheless,
Sammael, or someone disguised as him, gave orders to Myrddraal, and
they
obeyed, so it was one of the Chosen." Moridin scanned around the chairs
as
though he could detect who it had been. Black saa trickled across his
blue eyes
in a continuous stream. She had no regrets that the True Power was
limited to
his use alone, now. The price was much too high. Ishamael had certainly
been at
least half insane, and he still was as Moridin. How long before she
could
remove him?
"Are
you going to tell us what these orders were?' Semirhage's tone was
cool, and
she sipped her wine calmly, watching Moridin over the goblet's rim. She
sat
very erect, but she always did. She too appeared completely at ease,
yet that was
unlikely.
Moridin's
jaw tightened. "I don't know.'' he said at last, reluctantly. He never
liked saying that. "But they sent a hundred Myrddraal and thousands of
Trollocs into the Ways."
"That
sounds like Sammael," Demandred said thoughtfully, twisting his goblet
and
studying the swirling wine. "Perhaps I was mistaken." A remarkable
admission, coming from him. Or an attempt to hide being the one who had
worn
Sammael as a disguise. She would like very much to know who had begun
playing
her own game. Or whether Sammael really was alive.
Moridin
grunted sourly. "Pass orders to your Friends of the Dark. Any report of
Trollocs or Myrddraal outside the Blight is to be handed to me as soon
as you receive
it. The Time of Return is coming soon. No one is allowed to go
adventuring on
their own any longer." He studied them again, each in turn save for
Moghedien and Cyndane. With a smile even more languorous than
Graendal's,
Aran'gar met his gaze. Mesaana shrank back from it.
"As
you learned to your sorrow," he told Mesaana, and impossible as it
seemed,
her face went paler still. She took a long drink from her goblet, her
teeth
clicking on the crystal. Semirhage and Demandred avoided looking at her.
Aran'gar
exchanged looks with Graendal. Something had been done to punish
Mesaana's
failure to appear at Shadar Logoth. but what? Once, dereliction on that
scale
would have meant death. They were too few for that. now. Cyndane and
Moghedien
appeared as curious as she was, so they did not know either.
"We
can see the signs as clearly as you, Moridin," Demandred said
irritably.
"The Time is near. We need to find the rest of the seals on the Great
Lord's prison. I've had my followers searching everywhere, but they've
found
nothing.''
"Ah,
yes. The seals. Indeed, they must be found." Moridin's smile was almost
complacent. "Only three remain, all in al'Thor's possession. though I
doubt he has them with him. They're too susceptible to breaking, now.
He will
have hidden them. Direct your people to places he has been. Search them
yourselves."
"The
easiest way is to kidnap Lews Therin." In strong contrast to her
ice-maiden appearance, Cyndane's voice was breathy and sultry, a voice
made for
lying on soft pillows wearing very little. There was considerable heat
in those
big blue eyes, now. A searing heat. "I can make him tell where the
seals
are."
"No!"
Moridin snapped, fixing her with a steady stare. "You would
'accidentally'
kill him. The time and manner of al'Thor's death will be at my
choosing. No one
else." Strangely, he put his free hand to the breast of his coat, and
Cyndane flinched. Moghedien shivered. "No one else," he repeated, in
a hard voice.
"No
one else," Cyndane said. When he lowered his hand, she exhaled softly
then
took a swallow of wine. Sweat glistened on her forehead.
Aran'gar
found the exchange illuminating. It seemed that once she had disposed
of
Moridin, she would have Moghedien and the girl on leashes. Very good,
indeed.
Moridin
straightened himself in his chair, directing that stare at the rest of
them.
"That goes for all of you. Al'Thor is mine. You will not harm him in
any
way!" Cyndane bent her head over her goblet, sipping, but the hatred in
her eyes was plain. Graendal had said she was not Lanfear. that she was
weaker
in the One Power, but she surely was fixated on al'Thor. and she called
him by
the same name Lanfear had always used.
"If
you want to kill someone," he went on. "kill these two!"
Suddenly the semblances of two young men in rough country clothes stood
in the
center of the circle, turning so that everyone could get a good look at
their
faces. One was tall and wide, with yellow eyes, of all things, while
the other
was not quite slender and wore a cheeky grin. Creations of Tel
aran'driod they
moved stiffly and their expressions never altered. "Perrin Aybara and
Mat
Cauthon are ta'veren, easily found. Find them, and kill them."
Graendal
laughed, a mirthless sound. "Finding ta'veren was never as simple as
you
made out, and now it's harder than ever. The whole Pattern is in flux,
full of
shifts and spikes."
"Perrin
Aybara and Mat Cauthon," Semirhage murmured, inspecting the two shapes.
"So that is what they look like. Who knows, Moridin. If you had shared
this with us before now. they might already have been dead."
Moridin's
fist came down hard on the arm of his chair. "Find them! Make doubly
sure
that your followers know their faces. Find Aybara and Cauthon and kill
them!
The Time is coming, and they must be dead!"
Aran'gar
took a sip of her wine. She had no objections to killing these two if
she
happened to come across them, but Moridin was going to be terribly
disappointed
over Rand al'Thor.
CHAPTER FOUR
A Deal
Perrin
sat Stepper's saddle a little back from the edge of the trees and
watched the
large meadow where red and blue wildflowers were beginning to poke
through the
winter-brown grass that the now vanished snows had flattened into a
mat. This
stand was mainly leatherleaf that kept its broad dark foliage through
the
winter, but only a few small pale leaves decorated the branches of the
sweet-gums among them. The dun stallion stamped a hoof with an
impatience
Perrin shared, though he let none of it show. The sun stood almost
overhead; he
had been waiting there nearly an hour. A stiff, steady breeze blew out
of the
west, down the meadow toward him. That was good.
Every
so often his gauntleted hand stroked a nearly straight branch hacked
from an
oak. thicker than his forearm and more than twice as long, that lay
across the
saddle in front of him. For half its length he had shaved two sides
flat and
smooth. The meadow, ringed by huge oaks and leatherleaf, towering pine
and
shorter sweetgum, was less than six hundred paces wide, though longer
than
that. The branch should be broad enough. He had planned for every
possibility
he could imagine. The branch fit more than one.
"My
Lady First, you should return to the camp," Gallenne said, not for the
first time, rubbing irritably at his red eyepatch. His crimson plumed
helmet
hung from the pommel of his saddle, leaving his shoulder-length gray
hair
uncovered. He had been heard to say. in Berelain's hearing, that most
of those
gray hairs were presents from her. His black warhorse tried to take a
nip at
Stepper, and he reined the heavy-chested gelding sharply without taking
his
attention from Bere-lain. He had counseled against her coming in the
first
place. "Grady can take you back and return while the rest of us wait a
while
longer to see whether the Seanchan are going to show up."
"I
will remain. Captain. I will remain." Berelain's tone was firm and
calm,
yet beneath her usual smell of patience lay an edge of concern. She was
not so
certain as she made herself sound. She had taken to wearing a light
perfume
that smelled of flowers. Perrin sometimes found himself trying to
puzzle out
which flowers, but he was too focused for idle thoughts today.
Vexation
spiked in Annouras scent, though her ageless Aes Sedai face, framed by
dozens
of thin braids, remained as smooth as ever. But then, the beak-nosed
Gray
sister had smelled vexed ever since the rift between her and Berelain.
It was
her own fault, visiting Masema behind Berelain's back. She also had
counseled
Berelain to stay behind. Annoura edged her brown mare closer to the
First of
Mayene, and Berelain moved her white mare just that far away without so
much as
a glance in her advisor's direction. Vexation spiked again.
Berelain's
red silk dress, heavily embroidered in golden scrollwork, displayed
more bosom
than she had in some time, though a wide necklace of firedrops and
opals
provided a degree of modesty. A wide matching belt, supporting a
jeweled
dagger, cinched her waist. The narrow crown of Mayene resting on her
black
hair, holding a golden hawk in flight above her brows, appeared
ordinary beside
the belt and necklace. She was a beautiful woman, the more so, it
seemed to
him, since she had stopped chasing him. though still not a patch on
Faile, of
course.
Annoura
wore an unadorned gray riding dress, but most of them were in their
best. For
Perrin, that was a dark green silk coat with silver embroidery covering
the
sleeves and shoulders. He was not much for fancy clothes-Faile had
chivvied him
into buying what little he had; well, she had chivvied him gently-but
today he
needed to impress. If the wide, plain leather belt fastened over the
coat
spoiled the impression a little, so be it.
"She
must come," Arganda muttered. A short stocky man, Alliandre's First
Captain had not removed his silvered helmet with its three short white
plumes,
and he sat his saddle, easing his sword in its scabbard, as though
awaiting a
charge. His breastplate was silver-plated, too. He would be visible for
miles
out in the sunlight. "She must!"
"The
Prophet says they won't." Aram
put in, and not softly, heeling his leggy gray up beside Stepper. The
brass
wolfhead pommel of his sword stuck up over the shoulder of his
green-striped
coat. Once. he had seemed too good looking for a man, but now his face
grew
grimmer every day. There was a haggardness about him, his eyes sunken
and his
mouth tight. "The Prophet says either that, or it's a trap. He says we
shouldn't trust the Seanchan."
Perrin
held his silence, but felt his own spike of irritation, as much with
himself as
with the onetime Tinker. Balwer had informed him that Aram
had begun
spending time with Masema. yet it had seemed unnecessary to tell the
man not to
let Masema know everything Perrin was doing. There was no putting the
egg back
into the shell, but he would know better in the future. A workman
should know
his tools, and not use them to breaking. The same went for people. As
for
Masema, no doubt he was afraid they would meet someone who knew he
himself was
dealing with the Seanchan.
They
were a large party, though most would remain right there among the
trees. Fifty
of Berelain's Winged Guards in rimmed red helmets and red breastplates,
scarlet
streamers floating from their slender steel-tipped lances, were mounted
behind
the golden hawk on blue of Mayene, rippling on the breeze. Beside them
fifty
Ghealdanin in burnished breastplates and dark green conical helmets sat
their
horses behind Ghealdan's three silver stars on red. The streamers on
their
lances were green. They made a brave show, yet all of them together
were far
less deadly than Jur Grady, with his weathered farmer's face, even if
they made
him appear drab in his plain black coat with a silver sword pin on the
high
collar. He knew it. whether or not they did. and he stood beside his
bay
gelding with the ease of a man resting before the day's labor.
In
contrast, Leof Torfinn and Tod al'Caar, the only other Two Rivers men
present,
were still all but bouncing in their saddles with excitement despite
the long
wait. It might have taken some of their pleasure away had they known
they had
been chosen in large part because they came nearest fitting their
borrowed
coats of dark, finely woven green wool. Leof carried Perrin's own Red
Wolfhead
banner. Tod the Red Eagle of Manetheren, both rippling on staffs a
little
longer than the lances. They had almost come to blows over who was to
carry
which. Perrin hoped it was not because neither wanted to carry the
red-bordered
Wolfhead. Leof looked happy enough. Tod looked ecstatic. Of course, he
did not know
why Perrin had brought the thing along. In any trade, you needed to
make the
other fellow think he was getting something extra, as Mat's father
often said.
Colors swirled in Perrin's head, and for a brief instant he thought he
saw Mat
talking to a small dark woman. He shook off the image. Here and now
today, were
all that mattered. Faile was all that mattered.
"They
will come," Arganda snapped in answer to Aram, though he glared
through the
face-bars of his helmet as if expecting a challenge.
"What
if they don't?" Gallenne demanded, his one eye scowling as fiercely as
Arganda's pair. His red-lacquered breastplate was not much better than
Arganda's silvered one. Small chance they could be talked into painting
them
something dull. "What if it is a trap?" Arganda growled, almost a
wolf's guttural growl. The man was near the end of his tether.
The
breeze brought the scent of horses only moments before Perrin's ears
caught the
first bluetits' trills, too distant for anyone else to hear. They came
from the
trees flanking the meadow. Large parties of men. perhaps unfriendly,
were
entering the woods. More trills sounded, closer.
"They're
here," he said, which earned him looks from Arganda and Gallenne. He
tried
to avoid revealing the acuteness of his hearing, or his sense of smell,
yet
that pair had been on the point of coming to blows. The relayed trills
grew
nearer, and everyone could hear them. The two men's looks grew odd.
"I
can't risk the Lady First if there's any chance of a trap." Gallenne
said,
buckling on his helmet. They all knew what the signal meant.
"The
choice is mine. Captain." Berelain replied before Perrin could open his
mouth.
"And
your safety is my responsibility, my Lady First."
Berelain
drew breath, her face darkening, but Perrin got there first. "I told
you
how we're going to spring that trap, if that's what it is. You know how
suspicious the Seanchan are. Likely they're worried about us ambushing
them." Gallenne harrumphed loudly. The patience in Bere-lain's smell
flickered, then settled in again rock steady.
"You
should listen to him, Captain." she said with a smile for Perrin. "He
knows what he is doing."
A
party of riders appeared at the far end of the meadow and drew rein.
Tallanvor
was easy to pick out. In a dark coat and mounted on a good dappled
gray, he was
the only man not wearing armor vividly striped in red and yellow and
blue. The
other pair unarmored were women, one in blue with red on her skirts and
breast,
the other in gray. The sun reflected off something connecting them. So.
A
sul'dam and damane. There had been no mention of that in all the
negotiations
carried out through Tallanvor, but Perrin had counted on it.
"It's
time," he said, gathering Stepper's reins one-handed. "Before she
decides we're not coming."
Annoura
managed to get close enough to lay a hand on Berelain's arm for a
moment before
the other woman could move her mare away. "You should let me come with
you. Berelain. You may need my counsel, yes? This sort of negotiation,
it is my
specialty."
"I
suspect the Seanchan know an Aes Sedai face by now. don't you. Annoura?
I
hardly think they'd negotiate with you. Besides," Berelain added, in a
too
sweet voice, "you must remain here to assist Master Grady."
Spots
of color appeared briefly on the Aes Sedai's cheeks, and her wide mouth
tightened. It had taken the Wise Ones to make her agree to take orders
from
Grady today, though Perrin was just as glad he did not know how they
had done
it, and she had been trying to wiggle out ever since leaving the camp.
"You
stay, too," Perrin said when Aram made to ride forward.
"You've been hotheaded lately, and I won't risk you saying or doing the
wrong thing out there. I won't risk Faile on it." That was true. No
need
to say he would not risk the man carrying what was said out there back
to
Masema. "You understand?"
Bubbles
of disappointment filled Aram's
scent, but he nodded, however reluctantly, and rested his hands on the
pommel
of his saddle. He might come close to worshiping Masema, but he would
give his
life a hundred times over rather than risk Faile's. On purpose, anyway.
What he
did without thinking was another matter.
Perrin
rode out of the trees flanked by Arganda on one side and Berelain and
Gallenne
on the other. The banners followed behind, and ten Mayeners and ten
Ghealdanin
in a column of twos. As they walked their mounts forward, the Seanchan
started
toward them, also in column, with Tallanvor riding beside the leaders,
one on a
roan, the other a bay. The horses' hooves made no sound on the thick
mat of dead
grass. The forest had gone silent, even to Perrin's ears.
While
the Mayeners and Ghealdanin spread out in a line, and most of the
Seanchan in
their brightly painted armor did the same, Perrin and Berelain advanced
toward
Tallanvor and two of the armored Seanchan, one with three thin blue
plumes on
that lacquered helmet that was so like an insect's head, the other with
two.
The sul'dam and damane came, too. They met in the middle of the meadow,
surrounded by wildflowers and silence, with six paces between them.
As
Tallanvor positioned himself to one side between the two groups, the
armored
Seanchan removed their helmets with hands in steel-backed gauntlets
that were
striped like the rest of their armor. The two-plumed helmet revealed a
yellow-haired man with half a dozen scars seaming his square face. He
was a
hard-bitten man who smelled of amusement, strangely, but it was the
other who
interested Perrin. Mounted on the bay, a trained warhorse if he had
ever seen
one, she was tall and broad-shouldered for a woman, though lean
otherwise, and
not young. Gray marked the temples of her close-cut, tightly curled
black hair.
As dark as good topsoil, she displayed only two scars, one slanting
across her
left cheek. The other, on her forehead, had taken part of her right
eyebrow.
Some people thought scars a sign of toughness. It seemed to Perrin that
fewer
scars meant that you knew what you were doing. Confidence filled the
scent of
her in the breeze.
Her
gaze flickered across the fluttering banners. He thought she paused
slightly on
Manetheren's Red Eagle, and again on Mayene's Golden Hawk, yet she
quickly
settled to studying him. Her expression never altered a whit, but when
she
noticed his yellow eyes, something unidentifiable entered her scent,
something
sharp and hard. When she saw the heavy blacksmith's hammer in its loop
on his
belt, the strange scent grew.
"I
give you Perrin't'Bashere Aybara, Lord of the Two Rivers, Liege Lord to
Queen
Alliandre of Ghealdan," Tallanvor announced, raising a hand toward
Perrin.
He claimed the Seanchan were sticklers for formality, but Perrin had no
idea
whether this was a Seanchan ceremony or something from Andor. Tallanvor
could
have made it up for all of him. "I give you Berelain sur Paendrag
Paeron,
First of Mayene, Blessed of the Light, Defender of the Waves, High Seat
of
House Paeron." With a bow to the pair of them, he shifted his reins and
raised the other hand toward the Seanchan. "I give you Banner-General
Tylee Khirgan of the Ever Victorious Army, in service to the Empress of
Seanchan. I give you Captain Bakayar Mishima of the Ever Victorious
Army, in
service to the Empress of Seanchan." Another bow, and Tal-lanvor turned
his gray to ride back to a place beside the banners. His face was as
grim as Aram's,
but he
smelled of hope.
"I'm
glad he didn't name you the Wolf King, my Lord," the Banner-General
drawled. The way she slurred her words, Perrin had to listen hard to
make out
what she was saying. "Otherwise, I'd think Tarmon Gai'don was on us.
You
know the Prophecies of the Dragon? 'When the Wolf King carries the
hammer, thus
are the final days known. When the fox marries the raven, and the
trumpets of
battle are blown.' I never understood that second line, myself. And
you. my
Lady. Sur Paendrag. That would mean from Paendrag?"
"My
family is descended from Artur Paendrag Tanreall," Berelain replied,
holding her head high. An eddy in the breeze brought a whiff of pride
among the
patience and perfume. They had agreed that Perrin was to do all of the
talking-she was there to dazzle the Seanchan with a beautiful young
ruler, or
at least to lend weight to Perrin with it- but he supposed she had to
answer a
direct question.
Tylee
nodded as though that were exactly the answer she expected. "That makes
you a distant cousin of the Imperial family, my Lady. No doubt the
Empress, may
she live forever, will honor you. So long as you make no claims to
Hawkwing's
empire yourself, anyway."
"The
only claim I make is to Mayene," Berelain said proudly. "And that I
will defend to my last breath."
"I
didn't come here to talk about the Prophecies or Hawkwing or your
Empress," Perrin said irritably. For the second time in a matter of
moments those colors tried to coalesce in his head only to be
dispelled. He had
no time. The Wolf King? Hopper would come as near to laughing as a wolf
could
over that. Any wolf would. Still, he felt a chill. He had not realized
that he
was mentioned in the Prophecies. And his hammer was a harbinger of the
Last
Battle? But nothing mattered except Faile. Only her. And whatever it
took to
free her. "The agreement for this meeting was no more than thirty in
either party. but you have men in the woods on both sides of us. A lot
of
men."
"So
do you." Mishima said with grin distorted by a white scar that met the
corner of his mouth, "or you wouldn't know about ours." His drawl was
worse than hers.
Perrin
kept his eyes on the Banner-General. "As long as they both remain,
there's
the chance of accidents. I don't want any accidents. I want my wife
back from
the Shaido."
"And
how do you propose we avoid accidents?" Mishima said, idly flipping his
reins. He sounded as though the question was not urgent. It seemed
Tylee was
content to let him do the talking while she observed Perrin's
reactions.
"Are we supposed to trust you if we send our men out first, or you to
trust us if we ask you to withdraw first? 'On the heights, the paths
are paved
with daggers.' There isn't much room for trust. I suppose we could both
order
our men to pull back at the same time, but one side might cheat."
Perrin
shook his head. "You're going to have to trust me. Banner-General. I
have
no reason to want to attack you or capture you, and every reason not
to. I
can't be sure of the same about you. You might think capturing the
First of
Mayene worth a little betrayal." Berelain laughed softly. It was time
tor
the branch. Not just to force the Sean-chan out of the woods first, but
to
convince them that they needed what he could offer. He stood the branch
upright
on the saddle in front of him. "I expect your men are probably good
soldiers. My men aren't soldiers, though they've fought Trollocs and
Shaido and
done well against both." Gripping the branch at its base, he held it
high
overhead, the shaved sides uppermost and facing either side. "But
they're
used to hunting lions and leopards and ridgecats come down out of the
mountains
after our flocks, and wild boar and bear, animals that hunt back, in
forests
not much different from this."
The
branch tried to twist violently in his gauntleted fist as twin impacts
not a
heartbeat apart shivered down his arm. He lowered the branch to display
two
pile arrows, their chisel-shaped heads driven clear of the tough wood
on either
side. Three hundred paces was a long range for that target, but he had
chosen Jondyn
Barran and Jori Congar to makes the shots. They were the best he had.
"If
it comes down to it, your men won't even see who's killing them, and
that armor
won't do much good against a Two Rivers longbow. I hope it doesn't come
to
that." With all of his strength, he heaved the branch up into the air.
"My
eyes!" Mishima growled, a hand going to his sword even as he tried to
rein
the roan back and watch Perrin and the branch all at the same time. His
helmet
toppled from his saddle to the grass.
The
Banner-General made no move toward her sword, though she also tried
watching
Perrin and the branch. At first she did. Then her gaze followed only
the branch
as it continued to climb until it hung centered between them a hundred
feet in
the air. Abruptly a ball of flame enveloped the branch, so fierce that
Perrin
felt the heat as from an open furnace. Berelain put up a hand to shield
her
face. Tylee merely watched thoughtfully.
The
fire lasted just moments, yet that was enough to leave only ash
drifting on the
breeze when it vanished. Ash and two plummeting specks that fell into
the dry
grass. Small flames shot up immediately and began growing, spreading.
Even the
warhorses snorted in fear. Berelain's mare danced in an attempt to
fight her
reins and flee.
Perrin
muttered a curse-he should have thought of the arrowheads-and started
to
dismount to stamp out the fire, but before he could swing his leg over
the
saddle, the flames vanished, leaving only thin tendrils of smoke rising
from a
patch of blackened grass.
"Good
Norie," the sul'dam murmured, patting the damane. "Norie is a
wonderful damane." The gray-clad woman smiled shyly at the praise.
Despite
her words, the sul'dam looked worried.
"So,"
Tylee said, "you have a marath-" She paused, pursing her lips.
"You have an Aes Sedai with you. More than one? No matter. I can't say
the
Aes Sedai I've seen have impressed me very much."
"Not
marath'damane, my general." the sul'dam said quietly.
Tylee
sat very still, studying Perrin intently. "Asha'man," she said at last,
not a question. "You begin to interest me, my Lord."
"Then
maybe one last thing will convince you," Perrin said. "Tod. roll that
banner around the staff and bring it here." Hearing nothing behind him,
he
looked over his shoulder. Tod was staring at him with a stricken look.
"Tod."
Giving
himself a shake, Tod began winding the Red Eagle around its staff. He
still
looked unhappy when he rode forward and handed it to Perrin, though. He
sat
there with his hand still stretched out as though hoping the staff
might be
returned to him.
Heeling
Stepper toward the Seanchan, Perrin held the banner in front of him in
his
fist, parallel to the ground. "The Two Rivers was the heart of
Manetheren.
Banner-General. The last King of Manetheren died in a battle right
where
Emond's Field, the village I was born in. grew up. Manetheren is in our
blood.
But the Shaido have my wife prisoner. To free her, I'll give up any
claim to
reviving Manetheren, sign any sort of oath on it you want. That claim
would be
a field of brambles for you Seanchan. You could be the one who cleared
that
field without a drop of blood shed." Behind him, someone groaned
miserably. He thought it was Tod.
Suddenly,
the breeze was a gale howling in the opposite direction, pelting them
with
grit, blowing so hard that he had to cling to his saddle to kept from
being
knocked out of it. His coat seemed on the point of being ripped from
his body.
Where had the grit come from? The forest was carpeted inches deep with
dead
leaves. The tempest stank of burned sulphur, too. sharp enough to burn
Perrin's
nose. The horses tossed their heads, mouths open, but the roar of the
wind
buried their frightened whinnies.
Only
moments the ferocious wind lasted, and then as suddenly as it came, it
was gone,
leaving only the breeze blowing the other way The horses stood
shivering,
snorting and tossing their heads and rolling their eyes. Perrin patted
Stepper's neck and murmured soothing sounds, yet it had little effect.
The
Banner-General made a strange gesture and muttered, "Avert the Shadow.
Where under the Light did that come from? I've heard tales of strange
things
happening. Or was it more 'convincing' on your part, my Lord?''
"No,"
Perrin said truthfully. Neald possessed abilities with weather, it had
turned
out, but not Grady. "What does it matter where it came from?"
Tylee
looked at him thoughtfully, then nodded. "What does it matter?" she
said, sounding as if she did not necessarily agree with him. "We have
stories about Manetheren. That would be brambles underfoot and no
boots. Half
of Amadicia is buzzing with talk of you and that banner, come to bring
Manetheren alive again and 'save' Amadicia from us. Mishima, sound
withdrawal." Without hesitation, the yellow-haired man raised a small,
straight horn that was hanging by a red cord around his neck. Blowing
four
shrill notes, he repeated the sequence twice before letting the horn
fall to
swing against his chest. "My part is done," Tylee said.
Perrin
put back his head and shouted as loudly and distinctly as he could.
"Dannü! Tell! When the last Seanchan moves below the end of the meadow,
gather everyone and join Grady!"
The
Banner-General stuck her little finger into her ear and wiggled it
about in
spite of her gauntlet. "You have a strong voice," she said dryly.
Only then did she reach out to take the banner-staff, laying it
carefully
across the saddle in front of her. She did not look at it again,
but one hand stroked the banner itself,
perhaps unconsciously. "Now what do you have that can aid my plan, my
Lord?" Mishima hooked an ankle behind the tall pommel of his saddle and
lowered himself to catch up his helmet. The wind had rolled it across
the
beaten-down grass halfway back to the line of Seanchan soldiers. Brom
the trees
came a brief snatch of larksong, then another, another. The Seanchan
were
withdrawing. Had they felt the wind, too? No matter.
"Not
near as many men as you already have," Perrin admitted, "not that are
trained soldiers, at least, but 1 have Asha'man and Aes Sedai and Wise
Ones who
can channel, and you'll need every one of them." She opened her mouth,
and
he raised a hand. "I'll want your word that you won't try putting
collars
on them." He glanced pointedly at the sid'dam and damane. The sul'dam
was
keeping her eyes on Tylee. awaiting orders, but at the same time she
was idly
stroking the other woman's hair the way you might stroke a cat to
soothe it.
And Norie looked to be almost purring! Light! "Your word that they're
safe
from you, them and anyone in the camp wearing a white robe. Most of
those
aren't Shaido anyway, and the only Aiel among them I know about are
friends of
mine."
Tylee
shook her head. "You have strange friends, my Lord. In any case, we've
found people from Cairhien and Amadicia with bands of Shaido and let
them go,
though most of the Cairhienin seem too disoriented to know what to do
with
themselves. The only ones in white we keep are the Aiel. These
gai'shain make
marvelous da'covale, unlike the rest. Still, I'll agree to letting your
friends
go free. And your Aes Sedai and Asha'man. Putting an end to this
gathering is
very important. Tell me where they are, and 1 can start incorporating
you into
my plans."
Perrin
rubbed the side of his nose with a finger. It seemed unlikely many of
those
gai'sbain were Shaido, but he was not about to tell her that. Let them
have
their chance at freedom when their year and a day was up. "It'll have
to
be my plan, I'm afraid. Sevanna will be a tough nut to crack, but I've
worked
out how. For one thing, she has maybe a hundred thousand Shaido with
her. and
she's gathering in more. Not every one is alga/'d'siswai, but any adult
will
pick up a spear if they need to."
"Sevanna."
Tylee gave a pleased smile. "We've heard that name. I would dearly love
to
present Sevanna of the Jumai Shaido to the Captain-General." Her smile
faded. "A hundred thousand is many more than I expected, but not more
than
I can handle. We've fought these Aiel before, in Amadicia. Eh, Mishima?"
Riding
back to join them, Mishima laughed, but it was a harsh sound, no
amusement in
it. "That we have. Banner-General. They're fierce fighters, disciplined
and crafty, but they can be handled. You surround one of their bands,
their
septs, with three or four damane and pound them till they give up. It's
a nasty
business. They have their families with them. But they surrender the
sooner for
it."
"I
understand you have a dozen or so damane" Perrin said, "but is that
enough to face three or four hundred Wise Ones channeling?"
The
Banner-General frowned. "You mentioned that before, Wise Ones
channeling.
Every band we've caught had its Wise Ones, but not one of them could
channel."
"That's
because all the Shaido have are with Sevanna," Perrin replied. "At
least three hundred and maybe four. The Wise Ones with me are sure of
it."
Tylee
and Mishima exchanged a look, and the Banner-General sighed. Mishima
looked
glum. "Well," she said, "orders or no orders, that puts an end
to finishing this quietly. The Daughter of the Nine Moons will have to
be
disturbed if I must apologize for it to the Empress, may she live
forever.
Likely I will." The Daughter of the Nine Moons? Some high-ranking
Seanchan, apparently. But how was she supposed to be disturbed by any
of this?
Mishima
grimaced, a fearsome sight with all those scars crisscrossing his face.
"I
read there were four hundred damane on each side at Semalaren, and that
was a
slaughterhouse. Half the Imperial army on the field dead and better
than three
out of four among the rebels."
"Nevertheless,
Mishima, we have it to do. Or rather, someone else does. You might
escape an
apology, but I won't." What under the Light was so upsetting about an
apology? The woman smelled… resigned. "Unfortunately, it will take
weeks if not months to gather enough soldiers and damane to prick this
boil. I
thank you for your offer of help, my Lord. It will be remembered."
Tylee
held out the banner. "You'll want this back since I can't deliver my
side
of the bargain, but a piece of advice. The Ever Victorious Army may
have other
tasks in front of it for the nonce, but we won't let anyone take
momentary
advantage of the situation to set himself up as a king. We mean to
reclaim this
land, not divide it into parcels."
"And
we mean to keep our lands," Berelain said fiercely, making her mare
lunge
across the few paces of dead grass between her and the Seanchan. The
mare was
eager to lunge, eager to run, away from that wind, and she had trouble
reining
the animal in. Even her scent was fierce. No patience now. She smelled
like a
she-wolf defending her injured mate. "I've heard that your Ever
Victorious
Army is misnamed. I've heard the Dragon Reborn defeated you soundly to
the
south. Don't you ever think that Perrin Aybara can't do the same.''
Light, and
he had been worried over Aram's hotheadedness!
"I
don't want to defeat anybody except the Shaido," Perrin said firmly,
fighting off the image that tried to form in his mind. He folded his
hands on
the pommel of his saddle. Stepper seemed to be settling down, at least.
The
stallion still gave small shivers now and then, but he had stopped
rolling his
eyes. "There's a way to do that and still keep everything quiet so you
don't need to apologize." If that was important to her, he was ready to
use it. "The Daughter of the Nine Moons can rest easy. I told you I had
this planned out. Tallanvor told me you have some kind of tea that
makes a
woman who can channel go wobbly in the knees."
After
a moment, Tylee lowered the banner back to her saddle and sat studying
him.
"A woman or a man." she drawled at last. "I've heard of several
men being caught that way. But just how do you propose feeding it to
these four
hundred women when they're surrounded by a hundred thousand Aiel?"
"By
feeding it to all of them without letting them know they're drinking
it. I'll
need as much as I can get, though. Wagonloads. probably. There's no way
to heat
the water, you see, so it'll be thin tea."
Tylee
laughed softly. "A bold plan, my Lord. I suppose they might have
cartloads
at the manufactory where the tea's made, but that's a long way from
here, in
Amadicia almost to Tarabon, and the only way I could get more than a
few pounds
at once would be to tell someone of higher rank why I wanted it. And
there's
the end of keeping it quiet all over again."
"The
Asha'man know a thing called Traveling," Perrin told her, "a way to
cross hundred of miles in a step. And as for getting the tea, maybe
this will
help." From his left gauntlet he pulled a folded, grease-stained piece
of
paper.
Tylee's
eyebrows rose as she read it. Perrin had the short text by heart. THE
BEARER OF
THIS STANDS UNDER MY PERSONAL PROTECTION. IN THE NAME OF THE EMPRESS,
MAY SHE
LIVE FOREVER. GIVE HIM WHAT EVER AID HE REQUIRES IN SERVICE TO THE
EMPIRE AND
SPEAK OF IT TO NONE BUT ME. He had no idea who Suroth Sabelle Meldarath
was,
but if she signed her name to something like that, she had to be
important.
Maybe she was this Daughter of the Nine Moons.
Handing
the paper to Mishima, the Banner-General stared at Per-rin. That sharp,
hard
scent was back, stronger than ever. "Aes Sedai, Asha'man, Aiel, your
eyes,
that hammer, now this! Who are you?"
Mishima
whistled through his teeth. "Suroth herself," he murmured.
"I'm
a man who wants his wife back," Perrin said, "and I'll deal with the
Dark One to get her." He avoided looking at the sul'dam and damane. He
was
not far short of making a deal with the Dark One. "Do we have a
bargain?"
Tylee
looked at his outstretched hand, then took it. She had a firm grip. A
deal with
the Dark One. But he would do whatever it took to get Faile free.
CHAPTER FIVE
Something… Strange
The
drumbeat of rain on the tent roof that had lasted through most of the
night
faded to something softer as Faile approached Sevanna's chair, a
heavily carved
and gilded throne placed in the center of the bright, layered carpets
that made
up the tent's floor, with her eyes carefully lowered, to avoid offense.
Spring
had arrived in a rush, but the braziers were unlit, and the morning air
held a
touch of chill. Curtsying deeply, she presented the ropework silver
tray. The
Aiel woman took the golden goblet of wine and drank without so much as
a glance
in her direction, but she gave another deep curtsy before backing away
and
setting the tray down on the brass-bound blue chest that already held a
tall-necked silver wine pitcher and three more goblets, then returned
to her
place with the other eleven gai'shain present, standing between the
mirrored
stand-lamps along the red silk tent wall. It was a spacious tent, and
tall. No
low Aiel tent for Sevanna.
Often
it was hard to see her as Aiel at all. This morning, she lounged in a
red
brocaded silk robe, tied so it gaped nearly to her waist and exposed
half her
considerable bosom, though she wore enough jeweled necklaces, emeralds
and
firedrops and opals, ropes of fat pearls, that she came near to being
decent.
The Aiel did not wear rings, yet Sevanna had at least one be-gemmed
ring on
every finger. The thick band of gold and firedrops worn over the folded
blue
silk scarf that held back her waist-long yellow hair had taken on the
aspect of
a coronet if not a crown. There was nothing Aiel in that.
Faile
and the others, six women and five men, had been wakened in the night
to stand
beside Sevanna's bed-a pair of feather mattresses laid one atop the
other-in
case the woman woke and wanted something. Was any ruler in the world
attended
by a dozen servants while she slept? She fought the urge to yawn. Many
things
might earn punishment. but yawning surely would. Gai'shain were
supposed to be
meek and eager to please, and it seemed that that meant obsequious to
the point
of groveling. Bain and Chiad, fierce as they were otherwise, seemed to
find it
easy. Faile did not. In the near month since she was stripped and tied
up like
a blacksmith's puzzle for hiding a knife, she had been switched nine
times for
trivial offenses that were serious in Sevanna's eyes. Her last set of
welts had
not faded completely yet, and she had no intention of earning another
set
through carelessness.
She
hoped that Sevanna thought her tamed by that night trussed up in the
cold. Only
Rolan and his braziers had saved her life. She hoped that she was not
being
tamed. Pretend something too long, and it could become truth. She had
been a
prisoner less than two months, yet she could no longer recall exactly
how many
days ago she was captured. At times it seemed she had been in white
robes for a
year or more. Sometimes the wide belt and collar of flat golden links
felt
natural. That frightened her. She clung hard to hope. She would escape
soon.
She had to. Before Perrin caught up and tried to rescue her. Why had he
not
caught up yet? The Shaido had been camped at Maiden for a long time.
now. He
would not have abandoned her. Her wolf would be coming to rescue her.
She had
to escape before he got himself killed in the attempt. Before she was
no longer
pretending.
"How
long are you going to keep punishing Galina Sedai, Therava?" Sevanna
demanded, frowning at the Aes Sedai. Therava was seated cross-legged in
front
of her on a tasseled blue cushion, straight-backed and stern. "Last
night,
she made my bath water coo hot, and she is so welted, I had to order
the soles
of her feet beaten. That is not very effective when she must be left
able to
walk."
Faile
had been avoiding looking at Galina ever since Therava brought her into
the
tent, but her eyes went to the woman of their own accord at mention of
her
name. Galina was kneeling erect halfway between the two Aiel women and
slightly
to one side, mottled brown bruises on her cheeks, her skin damp and
slick from
the heavy rain she had been walked through to get there, her feet and
ankles
muddy. She wore only her firedrop-studded golden collar and belt, and
seemed
more naked than naked. Just a stubble remained of her hair and
eyebrows. Every
hair from head to toe had been singed from her with the One Power.
Faile had
heard it described, along with how the Aes Sedai had been hung from her
ankles
for her first beating. That had been half the talk among the gai'shain
for
days. Only the handful who recognized her ageless face for what it was
still
believed that she was Aes Sedai, and some of those had the same doubts
that had
plagued Faile on finding an Aes Sedai among the gai'shain. After all,
she
possessed the face, and the ring, but why would an Aes Sedai let
Therava treat
her so? Faile asked herself that question often without arriving at any
answer.
She kept telling herself that Aes Sedai often did what they did for
reasons no
one else could understand, but that was not very satisfying.
Whatever
her reasons for tolerating such abuse. Galina's eyes were wide and
frightened,
now, and fixed on Therava. She was panting so hard that her breasts
heaved. She
had reason for fear. Anyone passing Therava's tent was likely to hear
Galina
howling for mercy inside. For more than half a week Faile had gotten
glimpses
of the Aes Sedai on some errand, hairless and garbed as she was now and
running
as hard as she could with panic painting her face, and every day
Therava added
to the bands of welts that striped Galina from her shoulders to the
backs of
her knees. Whenever one band began to heal, Therava refreshed it. Faile
had
heard Shaido mutter that Galina was being treated too harshly, but no
one was
about to interfere with a Wise One.
Therava,
nearly as tall as most Aiel men, adjusted her dark shawl in a rattle of
gold
and ivory bracelets and regarded Galina like a blue-eyed eagle
regarding a
mouse. Her necklaces, also gold and ivory, seemed plain compared to
Sevanna's
opulence, her dark woolen skirts and white algode blouse drab, yet of
the two
women, Faile feared Therava far more than she did Sevanna. Sevanna
might have
her punished for a stumble, but Therava could kill her or crush her for
a whim.
She surely would if Faile attempted escape and failed. "So long as the
faintest bruise remains on her face, the rest of her will be bruised as
well. I
have left the front of her unmarked so she can be punished for other
misdeeds." Galina began trembling. Silent tears leaked down her cheeks.
Faile
averted her gaze. It was painful to watch. Even if she managed to get
the rod
from Therava's tent, could the Aes Sedai still be of help in escape?
She gave
every sign of being completely broken. That was a harsh thought, but a
prisoner
needed to be practical above all else. Would Galina betray her to try
buying
her way out of the beatings? She had threatened to betray her, if Faile
failed
to obtain the rod. It was Sevanna who would be interested in Perrin
Aybara's
wife, yet Galina looked desperate enough to try anything. Faile prayed
for the
woman to find strength to hold out. Of course she was planning an
escape on her
own, in case Galina could not keep her promise to take them with her
when she
left, but it would be so much easier, so much safer for everyone, if
she could
do it. Oh. Light, why had Perrin not caught up yet? No! She had to keep
her
focus.
"She
is not very impressive like that," Sevanna muttered, frowning into her
goblet, now. "Even that ring cannot make her look like an Aes Sedai."
She shook her head irritably. For some reason Faile did not understand,
it was
very important to Sevanna that everyone know that Galina was a sister.
She had
even taken to giving her the honorific. "Why are you here so early,
Therava? I have not even eaten, yet. Will you take some wine?"
"Water,"
Therava said firmly. "As for it being early, the sun is almost over the
horizon. I broke fast before it rose. You grow as indolent as a
wetlander,
Sevanna."
Lusara.
a buxom Domani gai'shain, quickly filled a goblet from the silver water
pitcher. Sevanna seemed amused by the Wise Ones' insistence on drinking
only
water, yet she provided it for them. Anything else would have been an
insult
even she would want to avoid. The copper-skinned Domani had been a
merchant,
and well into her middle years, but a few white hairs among the black
falling
below her shoulders had not been enough to save her. She was stunningly
beautiful, and Sevanna gathered the rich, the powerful and the
beautiful,
simply taking them if they were gai'shain to someone else. There were
so many
gai'shain that few complained at having one taken. Lusara curtsied
gracefully
and bowed to present her tray to Therava on her cushion, all very
proper, but
on the way back to her place against the wall, she smiled at Faile.
Worse, it
was a conspiratorial smile.
Faile
suppressed a sigh. Her last switching had been for a sigh at the wrong
moment.
Lusara was one of those who had sworn fealty to her in the past two
weeks.
After Aravine, Faile had tried to choose carefully, but rejecting
someone who
asked to swear was creating a possible betrayer, so she had far too
many
adherents, a good number of whom she was unsure of. She was beginning
to
believe that Lusara was trustworthy, or at least that she would not
intentionally betray her, but the woman treated their escape plans like
a
child's game, without cost if they lost. It seemed she had treated
merchanting
in the same way, making and losing several fortunes, but Faile would
have no
chance to start over if they lost. Nor would Alliandre or Maighdin. Or
Lusara.
Among Sevanna's gai'shain, those who actually attempted escape were
kept
chained when not serving her or performing tasks.
Therava
took a swallow of water, then set the goblet down on the flowered
carpet beside
her and fixed Sevanna with a steely gaze. "The Wise Ones believe it is
past time for us to move north and east. We can find easily defended
valleys in
the mountains there, and we can reach them in less than two weeks even
slowed
as we are by the gai'shain. This place is open on every side, and our
raids to
find food must go further and further."
Sevanna's
green eyes met that stare without blinking, which Faile doubted she
herself
could have done. It nettled Sevanna when the other Wise Ones met
without her,
and frequently she took it out on her gai'shain. but she smiled and
took a sip
of wine before replying in patient tones, as though explaining to
someone not
quite bright enough to understand. "Here, there is good soil for
planting,
and we have their seed to add to our own. Who knows what the soil is
like in
the mountains? Our raids bring in cattle and sheep and goats, too.
Here, there
are good pastures. What pasturage do you know of in these mountains,
Therava?
Here, we have more water than any clan has ever had. Do you know where
the
water is in the mountains? As to defending ourselves, who will come
against us?
These wetlanders run from our spears."
"Not
all run," Therava said drily. "Some are even good at dancing the
spears. And what if Rand al'Thor
sends one of
the other clans against us? We would never know until the horns closed
in on
us." Suddenly she smiled, too, a smile that never reached her eyes.
"Some say your plan is to be captured and made gai'shain to Rand al'Thor so you can induce him to marry you.
An
amusing idea, you agree?"
Despite
herself. Faile flinched. Sevanna's mad intention to marry al'Thor-she
had to be
mad to think she could!-was what put Faile in danger from Galina. If
the Aiel
woman did not know that Perrin was linked to al'Thor, Galina could tell
her.
Would tell her if she could not get her hands on that cursed rod.
Sevanna would
take no chances on losing her then. She would be chained as certainly
as if
caught trying to escape.
Sevanna
looked anything except amused. Eyes glittering, she leaned forward, her
robe
gaping to expose her bosom completely. "Who says this? Who?" Therava
picked up her goblet and took another swallow of water. Realizing she
would get
no answer. Sevanna leaned back, and rearranged her robe. Her eyes still
glittered like polished emeralds, though, and there was nothing casual
in her
words. They came out as hard as her eyes. "1 will marry Rand
al'Thor, Therava. I almost had him, until you and the other Wise Ones
failed
me. I will marry him, unite the clans, and conquer all of the wetlands!"
Therava
sneered over her goblet. "Couladin was the Car'a'carn, Sevanna. I have
not
found the Wise Ones who gave him permission to go to Rhuidean, but I
will. Rand al'Thor is a creature of
the Aes Sedai. They told
him what to say at Alcair Dal. and a black day it was when he revealed
secrets
few are strong enough to know. Be grateful that most believe he lied.
But I
forget. You have never gone to Rhuidean. You believed his secrets lies
yourself."
Gai'shain
began entering past the tentflap, their white robes rain-damp. holding
their
hems knee-high until they were inside. Each wore the golden collar and
belt.
Their soft white laced boots left muddy-marks on the carpets. Later,
when those
had dried, they would have to clean them away, but getting visible mud
on your
robes was a sure path to the switch. Sevanna wanted her gai'shain
spotless when
they were around her. Neither Aiel woman paid the slightest attention
to the
arrivals.
Sevanna
seemed taken aback by what Therava had said. "Why do you care who gave
Couladin permission? No matter," she said, waving a hand as though
brushing away a fly, when she got no reply. "Couladin is dead. Rand al'Thor has the markings, however he got
them. I
will marry him, and I will make use of him. If the Aes Sedai could
control him,
and I saw them handling him like a babe, then I can. With a little help
from
you. And you will help. You agree that uniting the clans is worth doing
no
matter how it is done? You did once." Somehow, there was more than a
hint
of threat in that. "We Shaido will become the most powerful of the
clans
in one leap."
Lowering
their cowls, the new gai'shain filed wordlessly along the tent walls,
nine men
and three women, one of them Maighdin. The sun-haired woman wore a grim
expression that had been on her face since the day Therava had
discovered her
in the Wise One's tent. Whatever Therava had done, all Maighdin would
say of it
was that she wanted to kill the other woman. Sometimes she whimpered in
her
sleep, though.
Therava
kept whatever she thought about uniting the clans to herself. "There is
much feeling against staying here. Many of the sept chiefs press the
red disc
on their nar'baha every morning. I advise you to heed the Wise Ones."
Nar'baha.
That would mean 'box of fools.' or something very near. But what could
this be?
Bain and Chiad were still teaching her about Aiel ways, when they could
find
time, and chey had never mentioned any such thing. Maighdin stopped
beside
Lusara. A slender Cairhienin nobleman named Doirmanes stopped beside
Faile. He
was young and very pretty, but he bit his lip nervously. If he learned
about
the oaths of fealty, he would have to be killed. She was certain he
would run
to Sevanna in a heartbeat.
"We
remain here," Sevanna said angrily, flinging her goblet to the carpets
in
a spray of wine. "I speak for the clan chief, and I have spoken!"
"You
have spoken," Therava agreed calmly. "Bendhuin, sept chief of the
Green Salts, has received permission to go to Rhuidean. He left five
days ago with
twenty of his algai'd'siswai and four Wise Ones to stand witness."
Not
until one of the new gaishain stood beside each of those already there
did
Faile and the others raise their cowls and begin filing along the walls
toward
the doorflap. already gathering their robes to the knee. She had become
quite
sanguine about exposing her legs so.
"He
seeks to replace me, and I was not even informed?"
"Not
you, Sevanna. Couladin. As his widow, you speak for the clan chief
until a new chief
returns from Rhuidean, but you are not the clan chief."
Faile
stepped out into the cold, gray morning drizzle, and the tent-flap cut
off
whatever Sevanna said to that. What was going on between the two women?
Sometimes, as this morning, they seemed antagonists, but at others they
seemed
reluctant conspirators bound together by something that gave neither
any
comfort. Or perhaps it was the being bound together itself that made
them
uncomfortable. Well, she could not see how knowing would help her
escape, so it
did not really matter. But the puzzle nagged at her.
Six
Maidens stood clustered in front of the tent, veils hanging down onto
their
chests, spears thrust up through the harness of the bow cases on their
backs.
Bain and Chiad were contemptuous of Sevanna for using Maidens of the
Spear for
her guard of honor though she herself had never been a Maiden, and for
having
her tent always guarded, but there were never fewer than six, night or
day.
Those two were contemptuous of the Shaido Maidens for allowing it, too.
Neither
being a clan chief nor speaking for one gave you as much power as most
nobles
possessed. These Maidens' hands were flashing in a rapid conversation.
She
caught the sign for Car'a'carn several times, but not sufficient else
to make out
what they were saying, or whether about al'Thor or Couladin.
Standing
there long enough to find out, if she could find out, was beyond the
question.
With the others already hurrying away down the muddy street, the
Maidens would
become suspicious, for one thing, and then they might switch her
themselves, or
worse, use her own bootlaces. She had had a hard dose of that from some
Maidens, for having "insolent eyes," and she did not want another.
Especially when it meant baring herself in public. Being Sevanna's
gai'shain
gave no protection. Any Shaido could discipline any gai'shain they
thought was
behaving improperly. Even a child could, if the child was set to watch
you
carry out a chore. For another thing, the cold rain, light as it was,
was going
to soak through her woolen robes soon enough. She had only a short walk
back to
her tent, no more than a quarter of a mile, but she would not complete
it
without being stopped for a time.
A
yawn cracked her jaw as she turned from the large red tent. She very
much
wanted her blankets and a few more hours sleep. There would be more
chores come
afternoon. What they might be, she did not know. Matters would be much
simpler
if Sevanna settled on who she wanted to do what when, but she seemed to
choose
names at random, and always at the last minute. It made planning
anything, much
less the escape, very difficult.
All
sorts of tents surrounded Sevanna's, low, dark Aiel tents, peaked
tents, walled
tents, tents of every sort and size in every color imaginable,
separated by a
tangle of dirt streets that were now rivers of mud. Lacking enough of
their
own, the Shaido snatched up every tent they could find. Fourteen septs
were
camped in a sprawl around Maiden now, a hundred thousand Shaido and as
many
gai'shain, and rumor said two more septs, the Morai and the White
Cliff, would
arrive within days. Aside from small children splashing through the mud
with
romping dogs, most of the people she could see as she walked wore
mud-stained
white and were carrying baskets or bulging sacks.
Most
of the women did not hurry; they ran. Except for the blacksmiths, the
Shaido
seldom did any work themselves, and generally only out of boredom, she
suspected. With so many gai'sbain, finding chores for them all was
itself a
chore. Sevanna was no longer the only Shaido to actually sit in a
bathtub with
a gai'sbain scrubbing her back. None of the Wise Ones had gone that far
yet.
but some of the others would not stir themselves two paces to pick
something up
when they could tell a gai'sbain to fetch it.
She
was almost to the gai'sbain portion of the camp, hard against the gray
stone
walls of Maiden, when she saw a Wise One striding toward her with her
dark
shawl wrapped around her head against the rain. Faile did not stop, but
she
bent her knees a little. Meira was not so frightening as Therava, but
the
grim-faced woman was hard enough, and shorter than Faile. Her narrow
mouth
always grew even tighter when she was confronted with a woman taller
than she.
Faile would have thought that learning her own sept, the White Cliff,
would be
there soon, would brighten the woman's mood, but the news had had no
dis-cernable effect at all.
"So
you were just lagging," Meira said as she came close. Her eyes were as
hard as the sapphires they resembled. "I left Rhiale listening to the
others because I feared some drunken fool had pulled you into a tent."
She
glared around her as though looking for a drunken fool about to do just
that.
"No
one accosted me, Wise One," Faile said quickly. Several had in the last
few weeks, some drunk and some not, but Rolan always appeared in the
nick of
time. Twice the big Mera'din had had to fight to save her. and once he
had
killed the other man. She had expected nine kinds of uproar and
trouble, but
the Wise Ones judged it a fair fight, and Rolan said her name had never
been
mentioned. For all that Bain and Chiad insisted it went against all
custom,
assault was a constant danger for gai'shain women here. She was sure
that
Alliandre had been assaulted once, before she and Maighdin also
acquired
Mera'din shadows. Rolan denied having asked them to help her people. He
said
they were just bored and looking for something to do. "I'm very sorry I
was slow."
"Do
not cringe. I am not Therava. I will not beat you for the pleasure of
it."
Words said in tones hard enough for a headsman. Meira might not beat
people for
pleasure, but Faile knew for a fact that she had a strong arm swinging
a
switch. "Now tell me what Sevanna said and did. This water falling from
the sky may be a wondrous thing, but it is miserable to walk around in."
Obeying
the command was easy. Sevanna had not wakened during the night, and
once she
did rise, all her talk had been of what clothes and jewels she would
wear,
especially the jewels. Her jewelry chest had been made to hold
clothing, and it
was filled to the top with more gems than most queens possessed. Before
putting
on any garment at all, Sevanna had spent time trying on different
combinations
of necklaces and rings and studying herself in the gilt-framed
stand-mirror. It
had been very embarrassing. For Faile.
She
had just reached Therava's arrival with Galina when everything in front
of her
eyes rippled. She rippled! It was not imagination. Meira's blue eyes
widened as
far as they could go; she had felt it, too. Again everything rippled,
including
herself, harder than before. In shock, Faile stood up straight and let
go of
her robe. A third time the world rippled, harder still, and as it
passed
through her. she felt as if she might blow away in a breeze, or simply
dissipate
in a mist.
Breathing
hard, she waited for the fourth ripple, the one she knew would destroy
her and
everything else. When it did not come, she expelled every bit of air in
her
lungs from relief. "What just happened, Wise One? What was that?"
Meira
touched her own arm and looked faintly surprised that her hand did not
pass
through flesh and bone. "I… do not know," she said slowly.
Giving herself a shake, she added, "Go on about your business, girl."
She gathered her skirts and strode past Faile at little short of a
trot,
splashing mud as she went.
The
children had vanished from the street, but Faile could hear them
wailing inside
the tents. Abandoned dogs shivered and whined, tails tucked between
their legs.
People in the street were touching themselves, touching each other,
Shaido and
gai'shain alike. Faile clasped her hands together. Of course she was
solid. She
had only felt as though she were turning to mist. Of course. Hoisting
her robes
to avoid any more washing than she absolutely had to do. she began to
walk. And
then to run, careless of how much mud she splashed onto herself or
anyone else.
She knew there could be no running from another of those ripples. But
she ran
anyway, as fast as her legs could carry her.
The
gai'shain tents made a broad ring around Maiden's high granite walls,
and they
were as varied as the tents in the outer part of the encampment, though
most
were small. Her own peaked tent could have slept two uncomfortably; it
housed
herself and three others, Alliandre. Maighdin and a former Cairhienin
noblewoman named Dairaine. one of those who curried favor with Sevanna
by
carrying tales about the other garshain. That complicated matters, but
there
was no mending it short of killing the woman, and Faile would not
countenance that.
Not unless Dairaine became a real threat. They slept huddled together
like
puppies of necessity, glad of the shared body warmth on cold nights.
The
interior of the low tent was dim when she ducked inside. Lamp oil and
candles
were in short supply, and not wasted on gai'shain. Only Alliandre was
there,
lying facedown on her blankets in her collar with a damp cloth, dipped
in an
herbal infusion, over her bruised bottom. At least the Wise Ones were
as
willing to give their healing herbs to gai'shain as to Shaido.
Alliandre had
done nothing wrong, but had been named as one of the five who had
pleased
Sevanna least yesterday. Unlike some, she had done quite well while
being
punished- Doirmanes had begun weeping even before he was bent over the
chest-but she seemed to be among those chosen out every three or four
days.
Being a queen did not teach you how to serve a queen. But then,
Maighdin was
picked nearly as often, and she was a lady's maid, if not a very
skilled one.
Faile herself had only been chosen once.
It
was a measure of how Alliandre's spirits had fallen that she made no
move to
cover herself, only raised up on her elbows. Still, she had combed her
long
hair. If she failed to do that, Faile would know the woman had reached
bottom.
"Did anything… strange… happen to you just now. my Lady?"
she asked, fear strong in her unsteady voice.
"It
did." Faile said, standing crouched under the ridgepole. "I don't
know what it was. Meira doesn't know what it was. I doubt any of the
Wise Ones
do. But it didn't harm us." Of course it had not harmed them. Of course
not. "And it changes nothing in our plans.-' Yawning, she unfastened
the
wide golden belt and dropped it on her blankets, then grasped her outer
robe to
pull it over her head.
Alliandre
put her head down on her hands and began weeping quietly. "We'll never
escape. I'm going to be beaten again tonight. I know it. I'm going to
be beaten
every day for the rest of my life."
With
a sigh. Faile left her outer robe where it was and knelt to stroke her
liege
woman's hair. There were as many responsibilities down as up. "I have
those same fears now and then," she admitted softly. "But I refuse to
let them take control. I will escape. We will escape. You have to keep
your
courage, Alliandre. I know you're brave. I know you've dealt with
Masema and
kept your nerve. You can keep it now, if you try."
Aravine
put her head in at the tentflap. She was a plain, plump woman, a noble
Faile
was sure, though she never claimed it, and despite the dimness Faile
could see
that she was beaming. She wore Sevanna's belt and collar, too. "My
Lady,
Alvon and his son have something for you."
"It
will have to wait a few minutes," Faile said. Alliandre had stopped
crying, but she was just lying there, silent and still.
"My
Lady, you won't want to wait for this."
Faile's
breath caught. Could it be possible? It seemed too much to hope for.
"I
can keep my nerve," Alliandre said, raising her head to gaze at
Aravine.
"If what Alvon has is what I hope it is, I'll keep my nerve if Sevanna
has
me put to the question."
Snatching
up her belt-being seen outside without belt and collar both meant
punishment
almost as severe as for trying to run away- Faile hurried out of the
tent. The
drizzle had slackened to a misting rain, but she pulled up her cowl
anyway. The
rain was still cold.
Alvon
was a stocky man, overtopped by his son Theril, a lanky boy. Both wore
mud-stained, almost-white robes made of tentcloth. Theril, Alvon's
eldest, was only
fourteen, but the Shaido had not believed it because of his height, as
much as
most men in Amadicia. Faile had been ready to trust Alvon from the
start. He
and his son were something of legends among the gai'shain. Three times
they had
run away, and each time it had taken the Shaido longer to bring them
back. And
despite increasingly fierce punishment, on the day they swore fealty
they had
been planning a fourth attempt to return to the rest of their family.
Neither
ever smiled that Faile had seen, but today, smiles wreathed Alvon's
weathered
face and Theril's skinny one alike.
"What
do you have for me?" Faile asked, hastily fastening her belt around her
waist. She thought her heart was going to pound its way out of her
chest.
"It
was my Theril, my Lady," Alvon said. A woodcutter, he spoke with a
coarse
accent that made him barely intelligible. "He was just walking by, see,
and there was nobody around, nobody at all, so he ducked in quick like,
and… Show the Lady, Theril."
Shyly.
Theril reached into his wide sleeve-the robes usually had pockets sewn
in
there-and drew out a smooth white rod that looked like ivory, about a
foot long
and as slim as her wrist.
Looking
around to see if anyone was watching-the street was empty save for
them, for
the moment at least-Faile took it quickly and pushed it up her own
sleeve to
tuck into the pocket there. The pocket was just deep enough to keep it
from
falling out, but now that she had the thing in hand, she did not want
to let go
of it. It felt like glass, and was distinctly cool to the touch, cooler
than
the morning air. Perhaps it was an angreal or a ter'angreal. That would
explain
why Galina wanted it. if not why she had not taken it herself. Hand
buried in
her sleeve, Faile gripped the rod hard. Galina was no longer a threat.
Now she
was salvation.
"You
understand, Alvon, that Galina may be unable to take you and your son
with her
when she leaves," she said. "She has only promised that to me and
those captured with me. But I promise you that I will find a way to
free you
and everyone who has sworn to me. All the rest, too, if I can, but
those above
all. Under the Light and by my hope of salvation and rebirth. I swear
it."
How. she had no idea short of calling on her father for an army, but
she would do
it.
The
woodcutter made as if to spit then glanced at her. and his face
colored. He
swallowed, instead. "That Galina ain't going to help nobody, my Lady.
Says
she's Aes Sedai and all, but she's that Therava's plaything if you ask
me, and
that Therava ain't never going to let her go. Anyways, I know if we can
get you
free, you'll come back for the rest of us. No need for you to swear and
all
that. You said you wanted the rod if anybody could lay hands on it
without
getting caught, and Theril got it for you. that's all."
"I
want to be free," Theril said suddenly, "but if we get anybody free,
then we've beaten them." He looked surprised that he had spoken, and
blushed deep red. His father frowned at him. then nodded thoughtfully.
"Very
well said," Faile told the boy gently, "but I made my oath. and I
stand by it. You and your father-" She cut off as Aravine, looking past
her shoulder, laid a hand on her arm. The woman's smile had been
replaced by
fright.
Turning
her head, Faile saw Rolan standing beside her tent. A good two hands
taller
than Perrin. he wore his shoi/fa coiled around his neck with the black
veil
hanging down his broad chest. Rain slicked his face and made his short
red hair
cling to his scalp in curls. How long had he been there? Not long, or
Aravine
would have noticed him before. The tiny tent offered little
concealment. Alvon
and his son had their shoulders hunched, as if they were thinking about
attacking the tall Mera'din. That was a very bad idea. Mice attacking a
cat was
not in it, as Perrin would have said.
"Go
on about your duties. Alvon." she said quickly. "You, too, Aravine.
Go on, now."
Aravine
and Alvon had sense enough not to offer courtesies before leaving with
final
worried glances at Rolan, but Theril half raised a hand toward
knuckling his
forehead before catching himself. Blushing, he scurried away after his
father.
Rolan
came out from beside the tent to stand in front of her. Oddly, he had a
small
bunch of blue and yellow wildflowers in one hand. She was very
conscious of the
rod she was holding in her sleeve. Where was she to hide it? Once
Therava
discovered it missing, she likely would turn the camp upside down.
"You
must be careful, Faile Bashere," Rolan said, smiling down at her.
Alliandre called him not quite pretty, but Faile had decided she was
wrong.
Those blue eyes and that smile made him very nearly beautiful. "What
you
are about is dangerous, and I may not be here to pro-tect you much
longer."
"Dangerous?"
She felt a chill in her middle. "What do you mean? Where are you
going?" The thought of losing his protection made her stomach lurch.
Few
of the wetlander women had escaped the attentions of Shaido men.
Without him…
"Some
of us are thinking of returning to the Three-foldLand."
Mis smile faded. "We cannot follow a false Car'a'cani, and a wetlander
at
that, but perhaps we will be allowed to live out our lives in our own
holds. We
think on it. We have been a long time from home, and these Shaido
sicken
us."
She
would find a way to deal with it once he was gone. She would have to.
Somehow.
"And what am I doing that is dangerous?" She tried to make her voice
light, but it was difficult. Light, what would happen to her without
him?
"These
Shaido are blind even when they are not drunk. Faile Bashere." he
replied
calmly. Pushing her cowl back, he tucked one of the wildflowers into
her hair
above her left ear. "We Mera'din use our eyes." Another wildflower
went into her hair, on the other side. "You have made many new
friends lately, and you
are planning to escape with them. A bold plan, but dangerous."
"And
will you tell the Wise Ones, or Sevanna?" She was startled when that
came
out in an even tone. Her stomach was trying to tie itself into knots.
"Why
would I do that?" he asked, adding another flower to her decorations.
"Jhoradin thinks he will take Lacile Aldorwin back to the Three-fold
Land
with him even if she is a Treekiller. He believes he may convince her
to make a
bridal wreath to lay at his feet." Lacile had found her own protector
by
climbing into the blankets of the Mera'din who had made her gai'shain.
and
Arrela had done the same with one of the Maidens who had captured her,
but
Faile doubted that Jhoradin would attain his wish. Both women were
focused on
escape like arrows aimed at a target. "And now that I think on it, I
may
take you with me if we go."
Faile
stared up at him. The rain was beginning to soak through her hair. "To
the
Waste? Rolan. I love my husband. I've told you that, and it is true."
"I
know," he said, continuing to add flowers. "But for the moment. you
still wear white, and what happens while you wear white is forgotten
when you
put it off. Your husband cannot hold it against you. Besides, if we go,
when we
come near to a wetlander town, I will let you go. I should never have
made you
gai'shain in the first place. That collar and belt hold enough gold to
get you
safely back to your husband."
Her
mouth fell open in shock. It surprised her when her fist struck his
wide chest.
Gai'shain were never allowed to offer violence, but the man just
grinned at
her. "You-!" She struck him again, harder. She beat at him.
"You-! I can't think of a word bad enough. You let me think you were
going
to abandon me to these Shaido while all along you were meaning to help
me escape?"
Finally
he caught her fist and held it easily with a hand that enveloped hers
completely. "If we go, Faile Bashere," he laughed. The man laughed!
"It is not decided. Anyway, a man cannot let a woman think he is too
eager."
Again
she surprised herself, this time by beginning to laugh and cry at the
same
time, so hard that she had to lean against him or fall down. That
bloody Aiel
sense of humor!
"You
are very beautiful with flowers in your hair, Faile Bashere," he
murmured,
tucking in another blossom. "Or without them. And for the moment, you
still wear white."
Light!
She had the rod, leaning against her arm so coolly, but there was no
way to
give it to Galina until Therava let her walk around freely again, no
way to be
sure that the woman would not betray her before then out of
desperation. Rolan
offered her escape, if the Mera'din decided to leave, but he would
continue to
try to inveigle her into his blankets so long as she wore white. And if
the
Alera'din decided not to go, would one of them betray her escape plans?
If
Rolan could be believed, they all knew! Hope and danger, all tied
together
inextricably. What a tangle.
She
turned out to have been exactly right about Therava's reaction. Just
before
midday all of the gai'shain were herded into the open and made to strip
to
their skins. Covering herself as best she could with her hands, Faile
huddled
together with other women wearing Sevanna's belt and collar-they had
been made
to put those on again straightaway-huddled for a scrap of decency while
Shaido
rummaged through the gai'shain tents, tossing everything out into the
mud. All
Faile could do was think about her hiding place inside the town and
pray. Hope
and danger, and no way to untangle them.
CHAPTER SIX
A Stave and a Razor
Mat
had never really expected Luca to leave Jurador after only one day-the
stone-walled salt town was wealthy, and Luca did like to see coin stick
to his
hands-so he was not exactly disappointed when the man told him that
Valan
Luca's Grand Traveling Show and Magnificent Display of Marvels and
Wonders
would remain there at least two more days. Not exactly disappointed,
yet he had
hoped that his luck might hold good, or his being ta'veren. But then,
being
ta'veren had never brought anything other than bad that he could see.
"The
lines at the entrance are already as long as they were at their best,
yesterday," Luca said, gesturing expansively. They were inside Luca's
huge
gaudy wagon, early in the morning after Renna's death, and the tall man
sat in
the gilded chair at the narrow table-a real table, with stools tucked
under for
guests; most other wagons had an affair rigged on ropes from the
ceiling, and
people sat on the beds to eat. Luca had not yet donned one of his
flamboyant
coats, but he made up for it with gestures. Latelle, his wife, was
cooking the
breakfast porridge on a small, iron-topped brick stove built into a
corner of
the win-dowless wagon, and the air was sharp with spices. The
harsh-faced woman
put so many spices into everything she prepared that it was all
inedible, in
Mat's estimation, yet Luca always gobbled down whatever she set in
front of him
as if it were a feast. He must have a leather tongue. "I expect twice
as
many visitors today, maybe three times as many, and tomorrow as well.
People can't
see everything in one visit, and here they can afford to come twice.
Word of
mouth, Cauthon. Word of mouth. That brings as many as Aludra's
nightflowers. I
feel almost like a ta'veren, the way things are falling out. Large
audiences
and the prospect of more. A warrant of protection from the High Lady."
Luca cut off abruptly, looking faintly embarrassed, as if he had just
remembered that Mat's name was on that warrant as being excluded from
protection.
"You
might not like it if you really were ta'veren," Mat muttered, which
made
the other man give him an odd look. He put a finger behind the black
silk scarf
that hid his hanging scar and tugged at it. For a moment, the thing had
felt
too tight. He had spent a night of bleak dreams about corpses floating
downstream
and woken to the dice spinning in his head, always a bad sign, and now
they
seemed to be bouncing off the inside of his skull harder than before.
"I
can pay you as much as you'll make for every show you give between here
and
Lugard, no matter how many people attend. That's on top of what I
promised for
carrying us to Lugard." If the show was not stopping all the time, they
could cut the time to reach Lugard by three quarters at the least.
More, if he
could convince Luca to spend whole days on the road instead of half
days, the
way they did now.
Luca
seemed taken with the idea, nodding thoughtfully, but then he shook his
head
with a sadness that was plainly feigned and spread his hands. "And what
will that look like, a traveling show that never stops to give shows?
It will
look suspicious, that's what. I have the warrant, and the High Lady
will speak
up for me besides, but you certainly don't want to pull the Seanchan
down on
us. No, it's safer for you this way." The man was not thinking of Mat
Cauthon's
bloody safety, he was thinking that his bloody shows might earn him
more than
Mat paid. That, plus making himself as much the center of attention as
any of
the performers was nearly as important to him as gold. Some of the
showfolk
talked of what they would do when they retired. Not Luca. He intended
to keep
on until he fell over dead in the middle of a show. And he would
arrange it so
he had the largest audience possible when he did.
"It's
ready, Valan," Latelle said affectionately as she lifted the iron pot
from
the stove with a cloth protecting her hands and set it down on a thick
woven
mat on the table. Two places had already been set. with white-glazed
plates and
silver spoons. Luca would have silver spoons when everyone else settled
for tin
or pot metal or even horn or wood. Stern-eyed, with a hard set to her
mouth,
the bear trainer looked quite odd wearing a long white apron over her
spangled
blue dress. Her bears probably wished they had trees to climb when she
frowned
at them. Strangely, though, she jumped to ensure her husband's
comforts.
"Will you be eating with us, Master Cauthon?" There was no welcome in
that; in tact, just the opposite, and she showed no sign of turning to
the
cupboard where the plates were stored.
Mat
gave her a bow that soured her face further. He had never been less
than civil
to the woman, but she refused to like him. "I thank you for the kind
invitation, Mistress Luca, but no." She grunted. So much for being
courteous. He put on his flat-brimmed hat and left, the dice rattling
away.
Luca's
big wagon, glittering in red and blue and covered with golden stars and
comets,
not to mention the phases of the moon in silver, stood in the middle of
the
show, as far as possible from the animals' smelly cages and the
horselines. It
was surrounded by smaller wagons, little houses on wheels, most
windowless and
most painted just a single color with none of Luca's extra decorations,
and by
wall-tents the size of small houses in blue or green or red. sometimes
striped.
The sun stood nearly its own height above the horizon in a sky where a
sprinkling of white clouds drifted slowly, and children ran playing
with hoops
and balls while the showfolk were limbering up for their morning
performances,
men and women twisting and stretching, many with glittering, colorful
spangles
on their coats or dresses. Four contortionists. in filmy trousers tied
at the
ankle and blouses thin enough to leave little to the imagination, made
him
wince. Two were sitting on their own heads atop blankets spread on the
ground
beside their red tent, while the others had twisted themselves into a
pair of
knots that looked beyond untying. Their backbones must have been made
of
spring-wire! Petra,
the strongman, stood bare-chested beside the green wagon he shared with
his
wife, warming up by lifting weights with either hand that Mat was not
sure he
could have lifted with both. The man had arms thicker than Mat's legs,
and he
was not sweating at all. Clarine's small dogs stood in a line at the
steps of
the wagon wagging their tails and eagerly waiting on their trainer.
Unlike
Latelle's bears, Mat figured the plump woman's dogs performed so they
could
make her smile.
He
was always tempted to just sit quietly somewhere when the dice were
clicking in
his head, some place nothing seemed likely to happen, waiting for the
dice to
stop, and though he would have enjoyed watching some of the female
acrobats, a
number of whom wore as little as the contortionists, he set out to walk
the
half mile to Jurador, eyeing everyone on the wide, hard-packed clay
road
closely. There was a purchase he hoped to make.
People
were coming to join the long line waiting behind a stout rope stretched
along
the show's tall canvas wall, only a handful with more than a touch of
embroidery on the women's dresses or the men's short coats, and a few
farmers'
high-wheeled carts lumbering behind a horse or an ox. Figures moved
among the
small forest of windmills that pumped the salt wells on the low hills
behind
the town, and around the long evaporation pans. A merchant's train of
canvas-covered wagons, twenty of them behind six-horse teams, rumbled
out of
the town gates as he approached, the merchant herself in a bright green
cloak
seated beside the driver of the first wagon. A flock of crows cawed
past overhead,
giving him a chill, but no one vanished before his eyes, and everybody
cast a
long shadow so far as he could make out. There were no dead people's
shades
walking the road today, although he was convinced that was what he had
seen the
day before.
The
dead walking surely could mean nothing good. Very likely it had
something to
with Tarmon Gai'don and Rand. Colors whirled in his brain, and for an
instant,
in his head, he saw Rand and Min
standing
beside a large bed, kissing. He stumbled and nearly tripped over his
own boots.
They had not been wearing any clothes! He would have to be careful
thinking
about Rand… The colors swirled and
resolved for a moment, and he stumbled again. There were worse things
to spy on
than kissing. Very careful what he thought. Light!
The
pair of guards leaning on their halberds at the iron-studded gates,
hard-faced
men in white breastplates and conical white helmets with horsetail
crests, eyed
him suspiciously. They probably thought he was drunk. A reassuring nod
failed to
change their expressions by a hair. He could have used a stiff drink
right
then. The guards did not try to stop him entering, though, just watched
him
pass. Drunks caused trouble, especially a man who was drunk this early
in the
day, but a drunk in a good coat-plain, but well-cut and good silk-a man
with a
little lace at his wrists was an altogether different matter.
The
stone-paved streets of Jurador were noisy even at this hour, with
hawkers
carrying trays or standing behind barrows crying their wares, and
shopkeepers
beside narrow tables in front of their shops bellowing the fineness of
their
goods, and coopers hammering hoops onto barrels for shipping salt. The
clatter
of rugmakers' looms nearly drowned out the ringing of the occasional
blacksmith's hammer, not to mention the music of flutes and drums and
dulcimers
drifting from inns and taverns. It was a jumble of a town, with shops
and
houses and inns cheek by jowl with taverns and stables, all of stone
and roofed
with reddish tiles. A solid town. Jurador. And one accustomed to
thievery. Most
windows on the lower floors were covered with stout screens of wrought
iron.
The upper windows as well on the homes of the wealthy, most of whom
were no
doubt salt merchants. The music of the inns and taverns pulled at him.
Likely
there would be dice games going on in most of them. He could almost
feel those
dice spinning across a table. It had been too long since he had rattled
a set
of dice in his hands instead of inside his head, but he was not there
for gambling
this morning.
He
had had no breakfast yet, so he approached a wrinkled woman with a tray
hung
from a strap around her neck who shouted "meat pies, made from the
finest
beef to be found in Altara." He took her word for it and handed over
the
coppers she demanded. He had seen no cattle at any farms near Jurador,
only
sheep and goats, but it was best not to inquire too closely what was in
a pie
bought in the streets of any town. There could be cows on nearby farms.
There
could be. In any case, the meat pie was tasty, and still hot for a
wonder, and
he walked on along the crowded street juggling the pie and wiping
greasy juice
from his chin.
He
was careful not to bump into anyone in the throng. Altarans were a
touchy lot, by
and large. In this town, you could tell somebody's station to within a
whisker
by the amount of embroidery on coat or dress or cloak, the more the
higher,
long before you were close enough to tell wool from silk, though the
richer
women covered their olive-skinned faces with transparent veils hung
from ornate
combs stuck into their tightly coiled braids, but men and women alike,
whether
salt merchants or ribbon hawkers, wore long belt knives with curved
blades and
sometimes fondled the hilts as though looking for a fight. He always
tried to
avoid fighting, though his luck seldom did him much good there.
Ta'veren took
over with that, it seemed. The dice had never before signaled a
fight-battles,
yes, but never a dust-up in the street-yet he walked very carefully
indeed. Not
that that would help, of course. When the dice stopped, they stopped,
and that
was that. But he saw no reason to take chances. He hated taking
chances. Except
with gambling, of course, and that was hardly taking a chance for him.
He
spotted a barrel full of thick quarterstaffs and walking staffs in
front of a
shop displaying swords and daggers under the watchful eye of a bulky
fellow
with sunken knuckles, a nose that had been broken more than once, and a
thick
truncheon hanging at his belt beside the inevitable dagger. The man
announced
in a rough voice that all the blades on display were Andoran made, but
anybody
who did not make his own blades always claimed they were Andoran or
else from
the Borderlands. Or Tairen, sometimes. Tear made good steel.
To
Mat's surprise and delight, a slim stave of what appeared to be black
yew, more
than a foot taller than he was, stood upright in the barrel. Pulling
the stave
out, he checked the fine, almost braided grain. It was black yew. all
right.
That braided grain was what gave bows made from it such power, twice
what any
other wood could give. You could never be sure until you started
slicing away
the excess, but the stave looked perfect. How in the Light had black
yew come
to be in southern Altara? He was sure it only grew in the Two Rivers.
When
the proprietor, a sleek woman with bright-feathered birds embroidered
to below
her bosom, came out and began extolling the virtues of her blades, he
said.
"How much for this black stick, Mistress?"
She
blinked, startled that a man in silk and lace wanted a
quarterstaff-slim as it
was, she bloody well thought the bloody thing was a quarterstaff!-and
named a
price that he paid without bargaining. Which made her blink again, and
frown as
if she thought she should have asked for more. He would have paid more
for the
makings of a Two Rivers bow. With the raw bowstave over his shoulder,
he walked
on, wolfing down the last of the meat pie and wiping his hand on his
coat. But
he had not come for breakfast or a bowstave any more than for gambling.
It was
the stables that interested him.
Livery
stables always had a horse or three for sale, and if the price
was right, they would usually sell one that
had not been for sale. At least, they did when the Seanchan had not
snapped
them up already. Luckily, the Seanchan presence in Jurador had been
fleeting so
far. He wandered from stable to stable examining bays and roans, blue
roans and
piebalds, duns, sorrels, blacks, whites, grays and dapples, all mares
or
geldings. A stallion would not serve his purposes. Not every animal he
looked
at had a shallow girth or long cannons, yet none matched what he had in
mind.
Until he entered a narrow stable jammed between a large stone inn
called The
Twelve Salt Wells and a rugmaker's shop.
He
would have thought the racketing looms would have bothered the horses,
but they
were all quiet, apparently accustomed to the noise. Stalls stretched
farther
into the block than he had expected, but lanterns hanging from the
stall posts
gave a fair light away from the doors. The air. speckled with dust from
the
loft above, smelled of hay and oats and horse dung, but not old dung.
Three men
with shovels were mucking out stalls. The owner kept his place clean.
That
meant less chance of disease. Some stables he had walked out of after
getting
one whiff.
The
black-and-white mare was out of her stall on a rope halter while a
groom put
down fresh straw, and she stood squarely, and with her ears perked
forward,
showing alertness. About fifteen hands tall, she was long in front,
with a deep
girth that promised endurance, and her legs were perfectly
proportioned, with
short cannons and a good angle to her fetlocks. Her shoulders were well
sloped,
and her croup dead level with her whithers. She had lines as good as
Pips', or
even better. More than that, she was a breed he had heard tell of but
never
thought to see, a razor, from Arad Doman. No other breed would have
that
distinctive coloring. In her coat, black met white in straight lines
that could
have been sliced by a razor, hence the name. Her presence here was as
mystifying as the black yew. He had always heard no Do-mani would sell
a razor
to any outlander. He let his eyes sweep past her without lingering,
studying
the other animals in their stalls. Had the dice inside his skull
slowed? No, it
was his imagination. He was sure they were spinning as hard as they had
in
Luca's wagon.
A
wiry man with only a fringe of gray hair remaining came forward.
ducking his
head over folded hands. "Toke Fearnim. my Lord," he introduced
himself in rough accents, eyeing the bowstave on Mat's shoulder
dubiously. Men
who wore silk coats and gold signet rings rarely carried such things.
"How
can I be of service? My Lord wishes to
rent a horse? Or to buy?" Embroidery, small bright flowers, covered
the shoulders of the vest he wore over a shirt that might have been
white once.
Mat avoided looking at the flowers at all. The fellow had one of those
curved
knives at his belt and two long white scars on his leathery face. Old
scars. Any
fighting he had done lately had not marked him where it showed.
"Buy,
Master Fearnim, if you have anything for sale. If I can find one that's
halfway
decent. I've had more spavined gluebaits offered to me as six-year-olds
when
they were eighteen if a day than I can shake a stick at." He hefted the
bowstave slightly with a grin. His Da claimed bargaining went better if
you
could make the other fellow start grinning.
"I
have three for sale, my Lord, none of them spavined," the wiry man
replied
with another bow, and no hint of a grin. Fearnim gestured. "One is out
of
her stall there. Five years old and prime horseflesh, my Lord. And a
steal at
ten crowns. Gold," he added blandly.
Mat
let his jaw drop. "For a pkbalcfi I know the Seanchan have driven
prices
up, but that's ridiculous!"
"Oh,
she's not your common piebald, my Lord. A razor is what she is. Domani
bloodborn ride razors."
Blood
and bloody ashes! So much for catching a bargain. "So you say, so you
say," Mat muttered, lowering one end of the bowstave to the stone floor
so
he could lean on it. His hip seldom bothered him any longer except when
he did
a lot of walking, but he had done so this morning, and he felt twinges.
Well,
bargain or no, he had to play out the game. There were rules to horse
trading.
Break them, and you were asking to have your purse emptied out. "I've
never heard of any horse called a razor myself. What else do you have?
Only
geldings or mares, mind."
"Geldings
are all I have for sale except the razor, my Lord," Fearnim said,
emphasizing
the word razor a little. Turning toward the back of the stable, he
shouted,
"Adela, bring out that big bay what's for sale."
A
lanky young woman with a pimply face, in breeches and a plain dark
vest, came
darting out of the back of the stable to obey. Fearnim had Adela walk
the bay
and then a dappled gray on rope leads in the good light near the doors.
Mat had
to hand him that. Their conformation was not bad at all, but the bay
was too
big, better than seventeen hands, and the gray kept his ears half laid
back and
tried to bite Adela's hand twice. She was deft with the animals,
though, easily
evading the bad-tempered gray's lunges. Rejecting the pair of them
would have
been easy even if he had not had his mind set on the razor.
A
lean, gray-striped tomcat, like a ridgecat in miniature, appeared and
sat at
Fearnim's feet to lick a bloody gash on his shoulder. "Rats are worse
this
year than I ever recall," the stablekeeper muttered, frowning down at
the
cat. "They fight back more, too. I'm going to have to get another cat,
or
maybe two." He brought himself back to the business at hand. "Will my
Lord take a look at my prize, since the others don't suit?"
"I
suppose I could look at the piebald, Master Fearnim," Mat said
doubtfully.
"But not for any ten crowns."
"In
gold," Fearnim said. "Hurd, walk the razor for the Lord here."
He emphasized the breed again. Working the man down would be difficult.
Unless
he got some help for a change from being ta'veren. His luck never
helped with
anything as straightforward as dickering.
Hurd
was the fellow refreshing the straw in the razor's stall, a squat man
who had
about three white hairs left on his head and no teeth in his mouth at
all. That
was evident when he grinned, which he did while he led the mare in a
circle. He
clearly liked the animal, and well he should.
She
walked well, but Mat still inspected her closely. Her teeth said
Fearnim had
been honest enough about her age-only a fool lied very far about a
horse's age
unless the buyer was a fool himself, though it was surprising how many
sellers
thought buyers were all just that- and her ears pricked toward him when
he
stroked her nose while checking her eyes. They were clear and bright,
free of
rheum. He felt along her legs without finding any heat or swelling.
There was
never a hint of a lesion or sore, or of ringworm, anywhere on her. He
could get
his fist easily between her rib cage and her elbow-she would have a
long
stride-and was barely able to fit his flat hand between her last rib
and the
point of her hip. She would be hardy, unlikely to strain a tendon if
run fast.
"My
Lord knows his horseflesh, I see."
"That
I do, Master Faernim. And ten crowns gold is too much, especially for a
piebald. Some say they're bad luck, you know. Not that I believe it.
not as
such, or I wouldn't offer at all."
"Bad
luck? I never heard that, my Lord. What do you offer?"
"1
could get Tairen bloodstock for ten crowns gold. Not the best, true,
but still
Tairen. I'll give you ten crowns. In silver."
Fearnim
threw back his head, laughing uproariously, and when he stopped, they
settled
down to the dickering. In the end. Mat handed over five crowns in gold
along
with four marks gold and three crowns silver, all stamped in Ebou Dar.
There
were coins from many countries in the chest under his bed. but foreign
coin
usually meant finding a banker or money changer to weigh them and work
out what
they were worth locally. Aside from attracting more notice than he
wanted, he
would have ended paying more for the animal, maybe even the full ten
crowns
gold. Money changers' scales always seemed to work that way. He had not
expected to get the man down that far, but from Fearnims expression,
grinning
at last, he had never expected to receive so much. It was the best way
for
horse trading to end, with both sides thinking they had come out ahead.
All in
all, the day had begun very well, dice or no bloody dice. He should
have known
it would not last.
When
he got back to the show at midday, riding the razor bareback because of
his
aching hip and with the dice rattling in his head, the line of people
was
longer than when he had left, waiting to pass beneath the big blue
banner,
stretched between two tall poles, that carried the show's name in big
red
letters. As people dropped their coins into the clear glass pitcher
held by a
heavy-set horse handler in a rough woolen coat, to be poured from there
into an
iron-bound chest under the watchful eyes of another horse handler who
was even
larger, more people joined the line, so it never seemed to grow
shorter. The
thing stretched beyond the end of the rope and around the corner. For a
small
wonder, no one was pushing or shoving. There were obvious farmers in
the line,
wearing rough woolens and with dirt ingrained in their hands, though
the
children's faces and those of the farmwives at least had been scrubbed
clean.
Luca was getting his hoped-for crowd, unfortunately. No chance of
convincing
him to leave tomorrow now. The dice said something was going to happen,
something fateful to Mat bloody Cauthon. but what? There had been times
when
the dice stopped and he still had no idea what happened.
Just
inside the canvas wall, with people streaming past to enjoy the
performers
lining both sides of the main street. Aludra was taking delivery of two
wagonloads of barrels in various sizes. Of more than the barrels, it
seemed.
"I will show you where to park the wagons," the slender woman told
the driver of the lead wagon, a lean man with a jutting jaw. Aludra's
waist-long beaded braids swung as her eyes followed Mat for a moment,
but she
quickly turned back to the wagon driver. "The horses, you will take to
the
horselines afterward, yes?"
Now.
what had she bought in such quantity? Something for her fireworks,
certainly.
Every night, soon after dark so she would catch everyone before they
went to
bed. she launched her nightflowers, two or three for a town the size of
Jurador
or if there were several villages close together. He had had some
thoughts on
why she wanted a bellfounder. but the only one that seemed to make any
sense
actually made no sense at all that he could see.
He
hid the mare on the horselines. Well, you could not really hide a
razor, but a
horse was noticed less among other horses, and the time was not right,
yet. The
bowstave he left in the wagon he shared with Egeanin and Domon. neither
of whom
was there, then headed for Tuon's faded purple wagon. That was parked
not far
from Luca's wagon, now, though Mat wished it had been left near the
storage
wagons. Only Luca and his wife knew that Tuon was a High Lady rather
than a
servant who had been about to expose Mat and Egeanin to her supposed
husband as
lovers, but many among the showfolk were already wondering why Mat
spent more
time with Tuon than with Egeanin. Wondering and disapproving. They were
an
oddly prim lot for the most part, even the contortionists. Running off
with the
wife of a cruel lord was romantic. Canoodling with the lady's maid was
sordid.
Giving Tuon's wagon this favored spot, among the people who had been
with Luca
for years and were his most prized performers, was going to cause more
talk.
In
truth, he hesitated about going to Tuon at all with the dice drumming
in his
head. They had stopped too often in her presence. and he still did not
know the
why for a single one of those times. Not for certain. Maybe the first
time, it
had just been meeting her. Thinking of it made the hair on the back of
his neck
want to stand up. Still, with women, you always had to take chances.
With a
woman like Tuon, ten chances a day, and nevet knowing the odds until it
was too
late. Sometimes he wondered why his luck failed to help him more with
women.
Women were certainly as unpredictable as any honest dice ever made.
None
of the Redarms was on guard outside the wagon-they were beyond that,
now-so he
trotted up the short flight of steps at the back of the wagon and
rapped once
before pulling the door open and entering. After all, he paid the rent
for the
thing, and they were hardly likely to be lying around unclothed at this
time of
day. Anyway, the door had a latch if they needed to keep people out.
Mistress
Anan was off somewhere, but the interior was still crowded. The narrow
table
had been let down on ropes from the ceiling, with mismatched plates of
bread
and olives and cheese laid out on it along with one of Luca's tall
silver wine
pitchers, a squat red-striped pitcher and flower-painted cups. Tuon. a
month's
growth of tightly curled black hair on her head, sat on the wagon's
sole stool
at the far end of the table, with Selucia sitting on one of the beds at
her
side, and Noal and Olver on the other bed, elbows on the table. Today,
Selucia
was in the dark blue Ebou Dari dress that displayed her memorable bosom
so
well, with a flowered scarf tied around her head, but Tuon wore a red
dress
that seemed to be made entirely of tiny pleats. Light, he had only
bought her
the silk yesterday! How had she convinced the show's seamstresses to
complete a
dress already? He was pretty certain that usually took longer than a
day. With liberal
promises of his gold, he suspected. Well, if you bought a woman silk,
you had
to expect to pay to have it sewn. He had heard that saying as a boy,
when he
never expected to be able to afford silk, but it was the Light's own
truth.
"… only the women are ever seen outside their villages," Noal was
saying, but the gnarled, white-haired old man cut off when Mat entered
the
wagon, pulling the door shut behind him. The scraps of lace at Noal's
wrists
had seen better days, as had his well-cut coat of fine gray wool, but
both were
clean and neat, though in truth they looked odd with his crooked
fingers and
battered face. Those belonged on an aging tavern tough, one who had
gone on
fighting long past his prime. Olver, in the good blue coat Mat had had
made for
him, grinned as widely as an Ogier. Light, he was a good boy, but he
would
never be handsome with those big ears and that wide mouth. His manner
with
women needed vast improvement if he was ever to have any luck there at
all. Mat
had been trying to spend more time with Olver, to get him away from the
influence of his "uncles." Vanin and Harnan and the other Redarms,
and the boy seemed to enjoy that. Just not as much as he enjoyed
playing Snakes
and Foxes or stones with Tuon and staring at Selucia's bosom. It was
all very
well for those fellows to teach Olver how to shoot a bow and use a
sword and
the like, but if Mat ever learned who was teaching him to leer…
"Manners.
Toy," Tuon drawled like honey sliding out of a dish. Hard honey. Around
him, unless they were playing stones, her expression was usually severe
enough
for a judge handing down a death sentence, and her tone matched it.
"You
knock, then wait for permission to enter. Unless you are property or a
servant.
Then you do not knock. You also have grease on your coat. I expect you
to keep
yourself clean." Olver's grin faded at hearing Mat admonished. Noal
raked
bent fingers through his long hair and sighed, then began studying the
green
plate in front of him as if he might find an emerald among the olives.
Grim
tone or no grim tone, Mat enjoyed looking at the dark little woman who
was to
be his wife. Who was halfway his wife already. Light, all she had to do
was say
three sentences and the thing was done! Burn him but she was beautiful.
Once,
he had mistaken her for a child, but that had been because of her size,
and her
face had been obscured by a transparent veil. Without that veil, it was
plain
that that heart-shaped face belonged to a woman. Her big eyes were dark
pools a
man could spend a lifetime swimming in. Her rare smiles could be
mysterious or
mischievous, and he prized them. He enjoyed making her laugh, too. At
least,
when she was not laughing at him. True, she was a little slimmer than
he had
always preferred, but if he could ever get an arm around her without
Selucia
there, he believed she would feel just right. And he might convince her
to give
him a few kisses with those full lips. Light, he dreamed about that
sometimes!
Never mind that she called him down as if they were already married.
Well,
almost never mind. Burn him if he could see what a little grease
mattered.
Lopin and Nerim, the two serving men he was saddled with, would fight
over
which one got to clean the coat. They had little enough to do that they
really
would if he did not name who received the task. He did not say that to
her.
Women liked nothing better than making you defend yourself, and once
you
started, she had won.
"I'll
try to remember that. Precious," he said with his best smile, sliding
in
beside Selucia and putting his hat down on the other side from her. The
blanket
scrunched up between them, and they were a foot apart to boot, yet you
would
have thought he had pressed himself against her hip. Her eyes were
blue, but
the furious look she gave him was hot enough his coat should have been
singed.
"I hope there's more water than wine in that cup in front of Olver."
"It's
goat's milk," the boy said indignantly. Ah. Well, maybe Olver was still
a
little too young even for well-watered wine.
Tuon
sat up very straight, though she was still shorter than Selucia, who
was a
short woman herself. "What did you call me?" she said, as close to
crisply as her accent allowed.
"Precious.
You have a pet name for me. so I thought I should have one for you.
Precious." Pie thought Selucia's eyes were going to pop right out of
her
head.
"I
see," Tuon murmured, pursing her lips in thought. The fingers of her
right
hand waggled, as though idly, and Selucia immediately slid off the bed
and went
to one of the cupboards. She still took time to glare at him over
Tuon's head.
"Very well," Tuon said after a moment. "It will be interesting
to see who wins this game. Toy."
Mat's
smile slipped. Game? He was just trying to regain a little balance. But
she saw
a game, and that meant he could lose. Was likely to, since he had no
idea what
the game was. Why did women always make things so… complicated?
Selucia
resumed her place and slid a chipped cup in front of him, and a
blue-glazed
plate that held half a loaf of crusty bread, six varieties of pickled
olives
mounded up. and three sorts of cheese. That perked his spirits again.
He had
hoped for this, if not expected it. Once you got a woman feeding you,
she had a
hard time finding it in herself to stop you from putting your feet
under her
table again.
"The
thing of it is," Noal said, resuming his tale, "in those Ayyad
villages, you can see woman of any age. but no men much above twenty if
that.
Not a one." Olver's eyes grew even wider. The boy practically inhaled
Noal's
tales, about the countries he had seen, even the lands beyond the Aiel
Waste,
swallowed them whole without butter.
"Are
you any relation to Jain Charin. Noal?" Mat chewed an olive and
discreetly
spat the pit into his palm. The thing tasted not far from spoiling. So
did the
next one. But he was hungry, so he gobbled them down and followed with
some
crumbly white goat cheese while ignoring the frowns Tuon directed at
him.
The
old man's face went still as stone, and Mat had torn off a piece of
bread and
eaten that as well before Noal answered. "A cousin," he said at last,
grudgingly. "He was my cousin."
"You're
related to Jain Farstrider?" Olver said excitedly. His favorite book
was
The Travels of Jain Farstrider, which he would have sat up reading by
lamplight
long past his bedtime had Juilin and Thera allowed. He said he intended
to see
everything Farstrider had. when he grew up, all that and more.
"Who
is this man with two names?" Tuon asked. 'Only great men are spoken of
so,
and you speak as if everyone should know him."
"He
was a fool," Noal said grimly before Mat could open his mouth, though
Olver did get his open, and left it gaping while the old man continued.
"He went gallivanting about the world and left a good and loving wife
to
die of a fever without him there to hold her hand while she died. He
let
himself be made into a tool by-" Abruptly Noal's face went blank.
Staring
through Mat, he rubbed at his forehead as though attempting to recall
something.
"Jain
Farstrider was a great man," Olver said fiercely. His hands curled into
small fists, as though he was ready to fight for his hero. "He fought
Trollocs and Myrddraal, and he had more adventures than anyone else in
the
whole world! Even Mat! He captured Cowin Gemallan after Gemallan
betrayed
Malkier to the Shadow!"
Noal
came to himself with a start and patted Olver's shoulder. "He did that,
boy. That much is to his credit. But what adventure is worth leaving
your wife
to die alone?" He sounded sad enough to die on the spot himself.
Olver
had no answer to that, and his face fell. If Noal had put the boy off
his
favorite book, Mat was going to have words with the old man. Reading
was
important-he read himself; sometimes, he did- and he had made sure
Olver had
books he enjoyed.
Standing,
Tuon leaned across the table to rest a hand on Noal's arm. The stern
look had
vanished from her face, replaced by tenderness. A wide belt of dark
yellow
tooled leather cinched her waist, emphasizing her slim curves. More of
his coin
spent. Well, coin was always easy to come by for him, and if she did
not spend
it, likely he would throw it away on some other woman. "You have a good
heart, Master Charin." She gave everybody their bloody names except for
Mat Cauthon!
"Do
I, my Lady?" Noal said, sounding as though he really wanted to hear an
answer. "Sometimes I think-" Whatever he thought sometimes, they were
not to learn it now.
The
door swung open and Juilin put his head into the wagon. The Tairen
thief-catcher's conical red cap was at its usual jaunty angle, but his
dark
face was worried. "Seanchan soldiers are setting up across the road.
I'm
going to Thera. She'll take a fright if she hears it from anybody
else."
And as quickly as that he was gone again, leaving the door swinging.
CHAPTER SEVEN
A Cold Medallion
Seanchan
soldiers. Blood and bloody ashes! That was all Mat needed, with the
dice
spinning his head. "Noal, find Egeanin and warn her. Olver. you warn
the
Aes Sedai. and Bethamin and Seta." Those five would all be together or
at
least close by one another. The two former sul'dam shadowed the sisters
whenever they left the wagon they all shared. Light, he hoped none of
them had
gone into the town again. That could put a weasel in the chicken yard
for sure!
"I'll go down to the entrance and try to see whether we're in any
trouble."
"She
won't answer to that name." Noal muttered, sliding out from the table.
He
moved spryly for a fellow who looked to have had half the bones in his
body
broken one time or another. "You know she won't."
"You
know who I mean." Mat told him sharply, frowning at Tuon and Selucia.
This
name foolishness was their fault. Selucia had told Egeanin that her
name was
now Leilwin Shipless, and that was the name Egeanin was using. Well, he
was not
about to put up with that sort of thing, not for himself and not for
her. She
had to come to her senses, soon or late.
"I'm
just saying," Noal said. "Come on, Olver."
Mat
slid out after them, but before he reached the door, Tuon spoke.
"No
warnings for us to remain inside, Toy? No one left to guard us?"
The
dice said he should find Hainan or
one of the
other Redarms and plant him outside just to guard against accidents,
but he did
not hesitate. "You gave your word." he said, settling his hat on his
head. The smile he got in reply was worth the risk. Burn him, but it
lit up her
face. Women were always a gamble, but sometimes a smile could be win
enough.
He
saw from the entrance that Jurador's days without a Seanchan presence
had come
to an end. Directly across the road from the show, several hundred men
were
taking off armor, unloading wagons, setting up tents in ordered rows,
establishing horselines. All very efficiently done. He saw Taraboners
with mail
veils hanging from their helmets and bars of blue, yellow and green
painted
across their breastplates, and men who were clearly infantry, stacking
long
pikes and racking bows much shorter than a Two Rivers bow. in armor
painted the
same. He thought those must be Amadicians. Neither Tarabon nor Altara
ran much
to foot, and Altarans in service to the Seanchan had their armor marked
differently for some reason. There were actual Seanchan, of course,
perhaps
twenty or thirty that he could see. There was no mistaking that painted
armor of
over-lapping plates or those strange, in-sectile helmets.
Three
of the soldiers came ambling across the road. lean, hardbitten men.
Their blue
coats, with the collars striped green-and-yellow. were plain enough
despite the
colors and showed the wear of armor use, but no signs of rank. Not
officers,
then, but still maybe as dangerous as red adders. Two of the fellows
could have
been from An-dor or Murandy or even the Two Rivers, but the third had
eyes
tilted like a Saldaean's, and his skin was the color of honey. Without
slowing,
they started into the show.
One
of the horse handlers at the entrance gave a shrill three-note whistle
that
began to echo through the show while the other, a squint-eyed fellow
named
Bollin, pushed the glass pitcher in front of the three. "Price is a
silver
penny each, Captain," he said with deceptive mildness. Mat had heard
the
big man speak in the same tone a heartbeat before he thumped another
horse
handler over the head with a stool. "Children is five coppers if they's
more than waist-high on me, and three if they's shorter, but only
children as
has to be carried gets in free."
The
honey-skinned Seanchan raised a hand as if to push Bollin out of his
way, then
hesitated, his face growing harder, if that was possible.
The
other two squared up beside him. fists clenched, as pounding boots
announced
the arrival of every man in the show, it seemed, performers in their
flashy
garb and horse handlers in coarse wool. Every man had a club of some
sort in
his hand, including Luca. in a brilliant red coat embroidered with
golden stars
to his turned-down boot-tops, and even the bare-chested Petra, who
possessed the mildest nature of
any man Mat had ever met. Petra's
face was a thunderhead now, though.
Light,
this had the makings of a massacre, with these fellows' companions not
a
hundred paces away and all their weapons to hand. It was a good place
for Mat
Cauthon to take himself out of. Surreptitiously he touched the throwing
knives
hidden up his sleeves and shrugged just to feel the one hanging down
behind the
back of his neck. No way to check those under his coat or in his boots
without
being noticed, though. The dice seemed like continuous thunder. He
began to
plan how to get Tuon and the others away. He had to hang onto her a
while longer,
yet.
Before
disaster could open the door, another Seanchan appeared, in
blue-green-and-yellow striped armor but carrying her helmet on her
right hip.
She had the tilted eyes and honey-colored skin, and there was a
scattering of white
in her close-cropped black hair. She was near a foot shorter than any
of the
other three, and there were no plumes on her helmet, just a small crest
like a
bronze arrowhead at the front, but the three soldiers stood up very
straight
when they saw her. "Now why am I not surprised to find you here at what
looks to be the fine beginnings of a riot. Murel?" Her slurred accent
had
a twang in it. "What's this all about then?"
"We
paid our money, Standardbearer," the honey-skinned man replied in the
same
twangy accents, "then they said we had to pay more on account of us
being
soldiers of the Empire."
Bollin
opened his mouth, but she silenced him with a raised hand. She had that
kind of
presence. Running her eyes over the men gathered in a thick semicircle
with
their clubs, and pausing a moment to shake her head over Luca, she
settled on
Mat. "Did you see what happened?"
"I
did," Mat replied, "and they tried to walk in without paying."
"That's
good for you, Murel," she said, getting a surprised blink from the man.
"Good for all three of you. Means you won't be out your coin. Because
you're all confined to camp for ten days, and I doubt this show will be
here
that long. You're all docked ten days' pay, as well.
You're
supposed to be unloading wagons so the homefolks don't get the idea we
think
we're better than they are. Or do you want a charge of causing
dissension in
the ranks?" The three men paled visibly. Apparently that was a serious
charge. "I didn't think so. Now get out of my sight and get to work
before
I make it a full month instead of a week."
"Yes.
Standardbearer," they snapped out as one, then ran back across the road
as
hard as they could go while tugging off their coats. Hard men. yet the
Standardbearer was harder.
She
was not finished, however. Luca stepped forward, bowing with a grand
flourish,
but she cut off whatever thanks he was about to offer. "I don't much
like
fellows threatening my men with cudgels," she drawled, resting her free
hand on her sword hilt, "not even Murel, not at these odds. Still,
shows
you have backbone. Any of you fine fellows want a life of glory and
adventure?
Step across the road with me, and I'll sign you up. You there in that
fancy red
coat. You have the look of a born lancer, to me. I'll wager I can whip
you into
a proper hero in no time." A ripple of head-shaking ran through the
assembled men, and some, seeing that no trouble was likely now, began
slipping
away. Pe-tra was one of those. Luca looked as though he had been
poleaxed. A
number of others appeared almost as stunned by the offer. Performing
paid
better than soldiering, and you avoided the risk of people sticking
swords into
you. "Well, as long as you're standing here, maybe I can convince you.
Not
likely you'll get rich, but the pay is usually on time, and there
always the
chance of loot if the order is given. Happens now and then. The food
varies,
but it's usually hot, and there's usually enough to fill your belly.
The days
are long, but that just means you're tired enough to get a good night's
sleep. When
you don't have to work the night, too. Anyone interested yet?"
Luca
gave himself a shake. "Thank you, Captain, but no," he said, sounding
half-strangled. Some fools thought soldiers were flattered by someone
thinking
they had a higher rank than they did. Some fool soldiers were. "Excuse
me,
if you please. We have a show to put on. And people who aren't going to
be
pleased if they have to wait much longer to see it.'' With a last, wary
look at
the woman, as if he feared she might try to drag him off by his collar,
he
rounded on the men behind him. "All of you get back to your stands.
What
are you doing lounging around here? I have everything well in hand. Get
back to
your stands before people start demanding their money back." That would
have been a disaster in his book. Given the choice between handing back
coin
and having a riot, Luca would have been unable to decide which was
worse.
With
the showfolk dispersing and Luca hurrying away while shooting glances
at her
over his shoulder, the woman turned to Mat, the only man remaining
aside from
the two horse handlers. "And what about you? From the look of you, you
might be made an officer and get to give me orders." She sounded amused
by
the notion.
He
knew what she was doing. The people in the line had seen three Seanchan
soldiers sent running, and who could say for sure why they had run. but
now
they had seen her disperse a much larger crowd by herself. He would
have given
her a place in the Band as a Bannerman in a breath. "I'd make a
terrible
soldier, Standardbearer." he said, tipping his hat, and she laughed.
As
he turned away, he heard Bollin saying, mildly. "You didn't hear what I
told that man? It's a silver penny for you and another for your
goodwife."
Coins clinked into the pitcher. "Thank you." Things were back to
normal. And the dice were still racketing in his head.
Making
his way through the show, where acrobats were again tumbling for the
crowds on
their wooden platforms and jugglers juggling and Clarine's dogs running
atop
large wooden balls and Miyora's leopards standing on their hind legs
inside a
cage that looked barely strong enough to hold them, he decided to check
on the
Aes Sedai. The leopards brought them to mind. The common soldiers might
spend
the day working, yet he would have laid coin on at least some of the
officers
coming for a look before long. He trusted Tuon, strangely enough, and
Egeanin
had enough sense to stay out of sight when there might be other
Seanchan
around, but common sense seemed in short supply among Aes Sedai. Even
Teslyn
and Edesina, who had spent time as damane, took foolish chances.
Joline, who
had not, seemed to think herself invulnerable.
Everybody
in the show knew the three women were Aes Sedai now, but their large
wagon,
covered with rain-streaked whitewash, still stood near the
canvas-topped
storage wagons, not far from the horse-lines. Luca had been willing to
rearrange his show for a High Lady who gave him a warrant of
protection, but
not for Aes Sedai who put him at risk with their presence and were
practically
penniless besides. The women among the showfolk were sympathetic to the
sisters
for the most part, the men wary to one degree or another-it was almost
always
so with Aes Sedai-but Luca likely would have turned them out to make
their own
way without Mat's gold. Aes Sedai were more threat than anything else
so long
as they were in lands controlled by the Sean-chan. Mat Cauthon got no
thanks
for it. not that he was looking for any. He would have settled for a
touch of
respect, unlikely as that was. Aes Sedai were Aes Sedai, after all.
Joline's
Warders. Blaeric and Fen. were nowhere to be seen, so there was no need
to talk
his way past them to get inside, but as he approached the dirt-streaked
steps at
the back of the wagon, the foxhead medallion hanging beneath his shirt
went icy
cold against his chest, then colder still. For a moment, he froze like
a
statue. Those fool women were channeling in there! Coming to himself,
he
pounded up the steps and banged the door open.
The
women he expected to see were all present, Joline, a Green sister,
slender and
pretty and big-eyed, and Teslyn. a narrow-shouldered Red who looked as
though
she chewed rocks, and Edesina, a Yellow. handsome rather than pretty,
with
waves of black hair spilling to her waist. He had saved all three from
the
Seanchan. had gotten Teslyn and Edesina out of the damam kennels
themselves,
yet their gratitude was variable to say the best. Bethamin, as dark as
Tuon but
tall and nicely rounded, and yellow-haired Seta had been suldam before
they
were forced into helping rescue the three Aes Sedai. The five of them
shared
this wagon, the Aes Sedai to keep an eye on the former suldam, the
former
suldam to keep an eye on the Aes Sedai. None realized their task, but
mutual
distrust made them carry it out assiduously. The one woman he had not
expected
to see was Setalle Anan, who had kept the Wandering Woman in Ebou Dar
before
she decided to make herself part of that rescue for some reason. But
then, Setalle
had a way of pushing herself in. Of meddling, in fact. She meddled
between him
and Tuon incessantly. What they were doing was completely unexpected,
though.
In
the middle of the wagon, Bethamin and Seta were standing rigid as fence
posts,
jammed shoulder-to-shoulder between the two beds that could not be
raised
against the walls, and Joline was slapping Bethamin's face again and
again,
first with one hand then the other. Silent tears trickled down the tall
woman's
cheeks, and Seta looked afraid that she would be next. Edesina and
Teslyn, arms
folded beneath their breasts, were watching with no expression
whatsoever while
Mistress Anan frowned her disapproval over Teslyn's shoulder. Whether
disapproval of the slapping or of what Bethamin had done to earn it, he
could
not have said and did not care.
Crossing
the floor in one stride, he seized Joline's upraised arm and spun her
around.
"What in the Light are you-?" That was as far as he got before she
used her other hand to catch him a buffet so hard that his ears rang.
"Now.
that killed the goat," he said, and, spots still floating in his
vision,
he dropped down onto the nearest bed and pulled a surprised Joline
across his
lap. His right hand landed on her bottom with a loud smack that pulled
a startled
squawk from her. The medallion went colder still, and Edesina gasped
when
nothing happened, but he tried to keep one eye on the other two sisters
and one
on the open door for Joline's Warders while he held her in place and
whacked as
fast and as hard as he could. With no idea how many shifts or
petticoats she
was wearing under that worn blue wool, he wanted to make sure he left
an
impression. It seemed his hand was beating time for the dice spinning
in his
head. Struggling and kicking, Joline began cursing like a wagon driver
as the
medallion seemed to turn to ice, and then to grow so cold he wondered
if it
would give him frostbite, but he soon added wordless yelps to her
pungent
vocabulary. His arm might not match Petra's,
but he was far from weak. Practice with bow and quarterstaff gave you
strong
arms.
Edesina
and Teslyn seemed as frozen in place as the two wide-eyed former
ml'dam-well,
Bethamin was grinning, yet she appeared as amazed as Seta-but just as
he began
to think Joline's yelps were outnumbering her curses, Mistress Anan
tried to
push past the two Aes Sedai. Astonishingly. Teslyn made a peremptory
gesture
for her to remain where she was! Very few women, or men. argued with an
Aes
Sedai's commands, but Mistress Anan gave the Red sister a frosty look
and
squeezed between the two Aes Sedai muttering something that made both
of them
eye her curiously. She still had to force her way between Bethamin and
Seta,
and he took advantage of that to land a final flurry of hard smacks,
then
rolled the Green sister off his lap. His hand had begun to sting
anyway. Joline
landed with a thump and let out a gasped "Oh!"
Planting
herself in front of him, close enough that she interfered with Joline's
hasty
scramble to her feet. Mistress Anan studied him with her arms folded
beneath
her breasts in a way that increased the generous cleavage displayed by
her
plunging neckline. Despite the dress, she was not Ebou Dari, not with
those
hazel eyes, but she had large golden hoops in her ears, a marriage
knife, the
hilt marked with red and white stones for her sons and daughters,
dangling from
a wide silver collar around her neck, and a curved dagger thrust behind
her
belt. Her dark green skirts were sewn up on the left side to show red
petticoats. With touches of gray in her hair, she was every inch the
stately
Ebou Dari innkeeper, sure of herself and accustomed to giving orders.
He
expected her to upbraid him-she was as good as an Aes Sedai when it
came to
upbraiding!-so he was surprised when she spoke, sounding very
thoughtful.
"Joline
must have tried to stop you. and Teslyn and Edesina as well, but
whatever they
did failed. I think that means you possess a ter'angreal that can
disrupt flows
of the Power. I've heard of such things-Cadsuane Melaidhrin supposedly
had one,
or so rumor said- but I've never seen the like. I would very much like
to. I
won't try to take it away from you, but I would appreciate seeing it."
"How
do you know Cadsuane?" Joline demanded, attempting to brush off the
seat
of her skirt. The first brush of her hand brought a wince, and she gave
over
with a glare for Mat just to show him she still had him in mind. Tears
glistened in her big brown eyes and on her cheeks, but if he had to pay
for
them, it was worth the price.
"She
said something about the test for the shawl," Edesina said.
"She
did say, 'How could you have passed the test for the shawl if you
freeze at
moments like this?' " Teslyn added.
Mistress
Anan's mouth tightened for a moment, but if she was discomposed, she
regained
her poise in a breath. "You may recall that I owned an inn," she said
dryly. "Many people visited The Wandering Woman, and many of them
talked,
perhaps more than they should have."
"No
Aes Sedai would," Joline began, then turned hurriedly. Blaeric and Fen
were starting up the steps. Borderlanders both, they were big men. and
Mat
quickly got to his feet, ready to use his knives if necessary. They
might drub
him, but not without bleeding for it.
Surprisingly,
Joline darted to the door and shut it right in Fen's face, then
fastened the
latch. The Saldaean made no effort to open the door, but Mat had no
doubt the
pair of them would be waiting when he left. When she turned around, her
eyes
were blazing hot, tears and all. and she seemed to have forgotten
Mistress Anan
for the moment. "If you ever even think of…" she began, shaking a
finger at him.
He
stepped forward and stuck a finger of his own to her nose, so fast that
she
jumped back and bumped into the door. From which she rebounded with a
squeak,
spots of red blooming in her cheeks. He cared not a whisker whether
that was
anger or embarrassment. She opened her mouth, but he refused to let her
get a
word in edgewise.
"Except
for me, you'd be wearing a damane collar around your neck, and so would
Edesina
and Teslyn," he said, as much heat in his voice as there was in her
eyes.
"In return, you all try to bully me. You go your own way and endanger
all
of us. You bloody well channeled when you know there are Seanchan right
across
the road! They could have a damane with them, or a dozen, for all you
know." He doubted there was even one, but doubt was not certainty, and
in
any case, he was not about to share his doubts with her, not now.
"Well, I
might have to put up with some of that, though you'd better know I'm
getting close
to my edge, but I won't put up with you hitting me. You do that again,
and I
vow I'll pepper your hide twice as hard and twice as hot. My word on
it!"
"And
I won't try to stop him next time if you do." Mistress Anan said.
"Nor
I." Teslyn added, echoed after a long moment by Edesina.
Joline
looked as though she had been hit between the eyes with a hammer. Very
satisfactory. As long as he could figure out how to avoid having his
bones
broken by Blaeric and Fen.
"Now
would someone like to tell me why you bloody decided to start
channeling like
it was the Last Battle? Do you have to keep holding them like that,
Edesina?" He nodded at Seta and Bethamin. It was only an educated
guess,
but Edesina's eyes widened for a moment as if she thought his
ter'angreal let
him see flows of the Power as well as stop them. In any case, an
instant later
both women were standing normally. Bethamin calmly began drying her
tears with
a white linen handkerchief. Seta sat down on the nearest bed, hugging
herself
and shivering; she looked more shaken than Bethamin.
None
of the Aes Sedai seemed to want to answer, so Mistress Anan did it for
them.
"There was an argument. Joline wanted to go see these Seanchan for
herself, and she wouldn't be argued out of it. Bethamin decided to
discipline
her, just as if she had no clue what would happen." The innkeeper shook
her head in disgust. "She tried to pull Joline across her lap, with
Seta
helping her, and Edesina wrapped them up in flows of air. I'm
assuming,"
she said when the Aes Sedai all looked at her sharply. "I may not be
able
to channel, but I do use my eyes."
"That
doesn't account for what I felt," Mat said. "There was a lot of
channeling going on in here."
Mistress
Anan and the three Aes Sedai studied him speculatively, long stares
that seemed
to probe for the medallion. They were not going to forget about his
ter'angreal. that was for sure.
Joline
took up the story. "Bethamin channeled. I've never before seen the
weave
she used, but for a few moments, until she lost the Source, she had
sparks
dancing all over the three of us. I think she may have used as much of
the
Power as she could draw."
Sobs
suddenly racked Bethamin. She sagged, halfway to falling to the floor.
"I
didn't mean to," she wept, shoulders shaking, face contorted. "I
thought you were going to kill me. but I didn't mean to. I didn't."
Seta
began rocking back and forth, staring at her friend in horror. Or
perhaps her
former friend. They both knew a'dam could hold them, and maybe any
sul'dam, but
they might well have denied the full import. Any woman who could use an
a'dam
could learn to channel. Likely they had tried as hard as they could to
deny
that hard fact, to forget it. Actually channeling altered everything,
however.
Burn
him, this was all he needed on top of everything else. "What are you
going
to do about it?" Only an Aes Sedai could handle this. "Now she's
started, she can't just stop. I know that much."
"Let
her die," Teslyn said harshly. "We can keep her shielded until we can
be rid of her, then she can die."
"We
can't do that," Edesina said, sounding shocked. Though not, apparently,
at
the thought of Bethamin dying. "Once we let her go, she'll be a danger
to
everyone around her."
"I
won't do it again," Bethamin wept, almost pleading. "I won't!"
Pushing
past Mat as if he were a coatrack, Joline confronted Bethamin, staring
up at
the taller woman with her fists on her hips. "You won't stop. You
can't,
once you begin. Oh, you may be able to go months between attempts to
channel,
but you will try again, and again. and every time, your danger will
increase." With a sigh, she lowered her hands. "You are much too old
for the novice book, but there's nothing for it. We will have to teach
you.
Enough to make you safe, at least."
"Teach
her?" Teslyn screeched, planting her fists on her hips. "I do say let
her die! Do you have any idea how these sul'dam did treat me when they
did have
me prisoner?"
"No,
since you've never gone into detail beyond moaning over how horrible it
was." Joline replied dryly, then added in very firm tones. "But I
will not leave any woman to die when I can stop it."
That
did not end things, of course. When a woman wanted to argue, she could
keep it
going if she was by herself, and they all wanted to argue. Edesina
joined in on
joline's side, and so did Mistress Anan, just as if she had as much
right to
speak as the Aes Sedai. Of all things. Bethamin and Seta took Teslyn's
part,
denying any wish to learn to channel, waving their hands and arguing as
loudly
as anyone. Wisely, Mat took the opportunity to slip out of the wagon
and pull
the door shut behind him softly. No need to remind them of him. The Aes
Sedai,
at least, would remember soon enough. At least he could stop worrying
about
where the bloody a'dam were and whether the sul'dam would try using
them again.
That was well and truly finished, now.
He
had been right about Blaeric and Fen. They were waiting at the loot of
the
steps, and stormclouds were not in it for their faces. Without any
doubt, they
knew exactly what had happened to Joline. But not who was to blame, it
turned
out.
"What
went on in there, Cauthon?" Blaeric demanded, his blue eyes sharp
enough
to poke holes. Slightly the taller of the two. he had shaved his
Shienaran
topknot and was not best pleased by the growth of short hair covering
his
scalp.
"Were
you involved?" Fen asked coldly.
"How
could I have been?" Mat replied, trotting down the steps as if he had
not
a care in the world. "She's Aes Sedai, in case you hadn't noticed. If
you
want to know what happened, I suggest you ask her. I'm not woolheaded
enough to
talk about it. I'll tell you that. Only. I wouldn't ask her right now.
They're
all still arguing in there. I took the chance to slip out while my hide
was
still intact."
Not
the best choice of words, perhaps. The two Warders' faces grew darker
still,
impossible as that seemed. But they let him go on his way without
having to
resort to his knives. There was that. Neither seemed very eager to
enter the
wagon, either. Instead, they settled on the wagon's steps to wait, more
fools
they. He doubted Joline would be very forthcoming with them, but she
might well
take out some of her temper on them because they knew. Had he been
them, he
would have found tasks to keep him clear of that wagon for… oh. say, a
month
or two. That might help. Some. Women had long memories for some things.
He was
going to need to watch over his shoulder for Joline himself from now
on. But it
had still been worth it.
With
Seanchan camped across the road and Aes Sedai arguing and women
channeling as
if they had never heard of the Seanchan and the dice spinning in his
head, not
even winning two games of stones from Tuon that night could make him
feel
anything but wary. He went to sleep-on the floor, since it was Domon's
turn to
use the second bed; Egeanin always got the other-with the dice bouncing
off the
insides of his skull, but he was sure that tomorrow had to be better
than
today. Well, he had never claimed to always be right. He just wished he
was not
quite so wrong so often.
CHAPTER EIGHT
Dragons' Eggs
Luca
had the showfolk breaking camp, taking down the big canvas wall and
packing
everything into the wagons, while the sky was still dark the next
morning. It
was the clatter and banging of it. the shouting, that woke Mat, groggy
and
stiff from sleeping on the floor. As much as he could sleep, for the
bloody
dice. Those things gave a man dreams that slaughtered sleep. Luca was
rushing
about in his shirtsleeves with a lantern, giving orders and likely
impeding
matters as much as speeding them, but Petra, wide enough to seem squat
though
he was not all that much shorter than Mat, paused in hitching the
four-horse
team to his and Clarine's wagon to explain. With the waning moon low on
the
horizon and half-hidden by trees, a lantern on the driver's seat gave
all the
light they had, a flickering pool of yellow that was repeated a hundred
times
and more through the camp. Clar-ine was off walking the dogs, since
they would
be spending most of the day inside the wagon.
"Yesterday…" The strongman shook his head and patted the nearest
animal,
patiently waiting for the last straps to be buckled, as if the horse
had showed
signs of nerves. Maybe he felt edgy himself. The night was only cool,
not
really cold, yet he was bundled up in a dark coat and had on a knitted
cap. His
wife worried about him falling sick from drafts or the cold, and took
care that
he would not. "Well, we're strangers everywhere, you see, and a lot of
people think they can take advantage of strangers. But if we let one
man get
away with it, ten more will try, if not a hundred. Sometimes the local
magistrate, or what passes for one, will uphold the law for us, too,
but only
sometimes. Because we're strangers, and tomorrow or the next day. we'll
be
gone, and anyway, everybody knows strangers are usually up to no good.
So we
have to stand up for ourselves, fight for what's ours if need be. Once
you do
that, though, it's time to move along. Same now as when there were only
a few
dozen of us with Luca, counting the horse handlers, though in those
days, we'd
have been gone as soon as those soldiers left. In those days, there
weren't so
many coins to be lost by leaving in a hurry," he said dryly, and shook
his
head, perhaps for Luca's greed or perhaps for how large the show had
grown,
before going on.
"Those
three Seanchan have friends, or at least companions who won't like
their own
being faced down. That Standard bearer did it, but you can be sure
they'll lay it
to us, because they think they can hit at us, and they can't at her.
Maybe
their officers will uphold the law, or their rules or whatever, like
she did,
but we can't be sure of that. What is certain sure, though, is that
those
fellows will cause trouble if we stay another day. No point to staying
when it
means fights with soldiers, and maybe people hurt so they can't
perform, and
sure trouble with the law one way or another." It was the longest
speech
Mat had ever heard from Petra,
and the man cleared his throat as though embarrassed by saying so much.
"Well," he muttered, bending back to the harness, "Luca will
want to be on the road soon. You'll want to be seeing to your own
horses."
Mat
wanted no such thing. The most wonderful thing about having coin was
not what
you could buy, but that you could pay others to do the work. As soon as
he
realized the show was preparing to move, he had rousted the four
Redarms from
the tent they shared with Chel Vanin to hitch the teams for his wagon
and
Tuon's. do as he instructed with the razor and saddle Pips. The stout
horsethief-he had not stolen a horse since Mat had known him, but that
was what
he was- had roused himself long enough to say that he would get up when
the
others returned, then rolled over in his blankets and was snoring again
before
Harnan and the others had their boots half on. Vanin's skills were such
that no
one voiced any complaint beyond the usual grumbling about the hour, and
all but
Harnan would have grumbled if allowed to sleep till noon. When those
skills
were needed, he would repay them tenfold, and they knew it. even
Fergin. The
skinny Redarm was none too bright except when it came to soldiering,
but he was
plenty smart enough there. Well, smart enough.
The
show left Jurador before the sun broke the horizon, a long snake of
wagons
rolling along the wide road through the darkness with Luca's lurid
monstrosity
pulled by six horses at its head. Tuon's wagon came just behind with
Gorderan
driving, almost wide-shouldered enough to seem a strongman himself, and
Tuon
and Selucia, well-cloaked and hooded, squeezed in on either side of
him. The
storage wagons and animal cages and spare horses brought up the tail.
Sentries
at the Seanchan camp watched them depart, silent armored figures in the
night marching
the camp's perimeter. Not that the camp itself was quiet. Shadowy forms
stood
in rigid lines among the tents while loud voices bellowed the rollcall
at a
steady pace and others answered. Mat all but held his breath until
those
regular shouts faded away behind him. Discipline was a wonderful thing.
For
other men, anyway.
He
rode Pips alongside the Aes Sedai wagon, near the middle of the long
line,
flinching a little every time the foxhead went cool against his chest,
which it
began to do before they had gone much more than a mile. It seemed that
Joline
was wasting no time. Fergin, handling the reins, chattered away about
horses
and women with Metwyn. Both were as happy as pigs in clover, but then,
neither
had any idea what was going on inside the wagon. At least the medallion
only
turned cool, and barely that. They were using small amounts of the
Power.
Still, he disliked being so near any channeling at all. In his
experience, Aes
Sedai carried trouble in their belt pouches and seldom were shy about
scattering
it, never mind who might be in the way. No, with the dice bouncing
inside his
head, he could have done without Aes Sedai within ten miles.
He
would have ridden up beside Tuon, for the chance to talk with her, no
matter
that Selucia and Gorderan would hear every word, but you never wanted a
woman
thinking you were too eager. Do that, and she either took advantage or
else
skittered away like a water drop on a hot greased griddle. Tuon found
enough
ways to take advantage already, and he had too little time for very
much in the
way of chasing. Sooner or later she would speak the words that
completed the
marriage ceremony, sure as water was wet, but that only made it more
urgent for
him to find out what she was like, which had hardly been easy so far.
That
little woman made a blacksmith's puzzle seem simple. But how could a
man be
married to a woman if he did not know her? Worse, he had to make her
see him as
something more than Toy. Marriage to a woman with no respect for him
would be
like wearing a shirt of black-wasp nettles day and night. Worse still,
he had
to make her care for him, or he would find himself forced to hide from
his own
wife to keep her from making him da'covale. And to cap it off, he had
to do all
of that in whatever time remained before he had to send her back to
Ebou Dar. A
fine stew, and doubtless a tasty meal for some hero out of legend, a
little
something to occupy his idle time before he rushed off to perform some
great
deed, only Mat bloody Cauthon was no bloody hero. He still had it to
do,
though, and no time or room for missteps.
It
was the earliest start they had made yet, but his hopes that the
Seanchan had
frightened Luca into moving faster were soon dashed. As the sun
climbed, they
passed stone farm buildings clinging to hillsides and occasionally a
tiny tile-
or thatch-roofed village nestled beside the road in a surround of
stone-walled
fields carved out of the forest, where men and women stood gaping as
the show
streamed past and children ran alongside until their parents called
them back,
but in the mid-afternoon, the show reached something larger. Runnien
Crossing,
near a so-called river that could have been waded in fewer than twenty
paces
without going more than waist-deep despite the stone bridge across it,
was never
a patch on Jurador, but it possessed four inns, each three stories of
stone
roofed in green or blue tiles, and near half a mile of hard-packed dirt
between
the village and the river where merchants could park their wagons for
the
night. Farms with their walled fields and orchards and pastures made a
quilt of
the countryside for a good league along the road and maybe more beyond
the
hills to either side of it. They certainly covered the hillsides Mat
could see.
That was enough for Luca.
Ordering
the canvas wall erected in the clearing, near to the river to make
watering the
animals easier, the man strutted into the village wearing coat and
cloak red
enough to make Mat's eyes hurt and so embroidered with golden stars and
comets
that a Tinker would have wept for the shame of donning the garments.
The huge
blue-and-red banner was stretched across the entrance, each wagon in
its place,
the performing platforms unloaded and the wall nearly all up by the
time he
returned escorting three men and three women. The village was not all
that far
from Ebou Dar, yet their clothing might have come from another country
altogether. The men wore short wool coats in bright colors embroidered
with
angular scrollwork along the shoulders and sleeves, and dark, baggy
trousers
stuffed into knee boots. The women, their hair in a sort of coiled bun
atop
their heads, wore dresses nearly as colorful as Luca's garments, their
narrow
skirts resplendent with flowers from hem to hips. They did all carry
long belt
knives, though with straight blades for the most part, and caressed the
hilts
whenever anybody looked at them: that much was the same. Altara was
Altara when
it came to touchiness. These were the village Mayor, the four
innkeepers. and a
lean, leathery, white-haired woman in red: the others addressed her
respectfully as Mother. Since the round-bellied Mayor was as
white-haired as
she, not to mention mostly bald, and none of the innkeepers lacked at
least a
little gray hair. Mat decided she must be the village Wisdom. He smiled
and tipped
his hat to her as she passed, and she gave him a sharp look and sniffed
in near
perfect imitation of Nynaeve. Oh, yes, a Wisdom all right.
Luca
showed them around with wide smiles and expansive gestures, elaborate
bows and
flourishes of his cloak, stopping here and there to make a juggler or a
team of
acrobats perform a little for his guests, but his smile turned to a
sour
grimace once they were safely back on their way and out of sight. "Free
admission for them and their husbands and wives and all the children,"
he
growled to Mat. "and I'm supposed to pack up if a merchant comes down
the
road. They weren't that blunt, but they were clear enough, especially
that
Mother Dar-vale. As if this flyspeck ever attracted enough merchants to
fill
this field. Thieves and scoundrels, Cauthon. Country folk are all
thieves and
scoundrels, and an honest man like me is at their mercy."
Soon
enough he was toting up what he might earn there despite the
complimentary
admissions, but he never did give over complaining entirely, even when
the line
at the entrance stretched nearly as far as it had in Jurador. He just
added
complaining about how much he would have taken in with another three or
four
days at the salt town. It was three or four more days. now. and likely
he would
have lingered until the crowds had dwindled to nothing. Maybe those
three
Sean-chan had been ta'veren work. Not likely, but it was a pleasant way
to
think of it. Now that it was all in the past, it was.
That
was how they progressed. At best a mere two leagues or perhaps three at
an
unhurried pace, and usually Luca would find a small town or a cluster
of
villages that he felt called for a halt. Or better to say that he felt
their
silver calling to him. Even if they passed nothing but flyspecks not
worth the
labor of erecting the wall, they never made as much as four leagues
before Luca
called a halt. He was not about to risk having to camp strung out along
the
road. If there was not to be a show, Luca liked to find a clearing
where the
wagons could be parked without too much crowding, though if driven to
it, he
would dicker with a farmer for the right to stop in an unused pasture.
And
mutter over the expense the whole next day if it cost no more than a
silver
penny. He was tight with his purse strings, Luca was.
Trains
of merchants' wagons passed them in both directions, making good speed
and
managing to raise small clouds of dust from the hard-packed road.
Merchants
wanted to get their goods to market as quickly as possible. Now and
then they
saw a caravan of Tinkers, too, their boxy wagons as bright as anything
in the
show except for Luca's wagon. All of them were headed toward Ebou Dar,
oddly
enough, but then, they moved as slowly as Luca. Not likely any coming
the other
way would overtake the show. Two or three leagues a day, and the dice
rattled
away so that Mat was always wondering what lay beyond the next bend in
the road
or what was catching him up from behind. It was enough to give a man
hives.
The
very first night, outside Runnien Crossing, he approached Aludra. Near
her
bright blue wagon she had set up a small canvas enclosure, eight feet
tall, for
launching her nightflowers, and she straightened with a glare when he
pulled
back a flap and ducked in. A closed lantern sitting on the ground near
the wall
gave enough light for him to see that she was holding a dark ball the
size of a
large melon. Runnien Crossing was only big enough to merit a single
nightflower. She opened her mouth, all set to chivvy him out. Not even
Luca was
allowed in here.
"Lofting
tubes." he said quickly, gesturing to the metal-bound wooden tube, as
tall
as he was and near enough a foot across, sitting upright in front of
her on a
broad wooden base. "That's why you want a bellfounder. To make lofting
tubes from bronze. It's the why I can't puzzle out." It seemed a
ridiculous idea-with a little effort, two men could lift one of her
wooden
lofting tubes into the wagon that carried them and her other supplies;
a bronze
lofting tube would require a derrick-but it was the only thing that had
occurred to him.
With
the lantern behind her, shadows hid her expression, but she was silent
for a
long moment. "Such a clever young man," she said finally. Her beaded
braids clicked softly as she shook her head. Her laugh was low and
throaty.
"Me, I should watch my tongue. I always get into the trouble when I
make
promises to clever young men. Never think I will tell you the secrets
that
would make you blush, though, not now. You are already juggling two
women, it
seems, and me, I will not be juggled."
"Then
I'm right?" He was barely able to keep the incredulity from his voice.
"You
are," she said. And casually tossed the nightflower at him!
He
caught it with a startled oath, and only dared to breathe when he was
sure he had
a good grip. The covering seemed to be stiff leather, with a tiny stub
of fuse
sticking out of one side. He had a little familiarity with smaller
fireworks,
and supposedly those only exploded from fire or if you let air touch
what was
inside-though he had cut one open once without it going off-yet who
could say
what might make a nightflower erupt? The firework he had opened had
been small
enough to hold in one hand. Something the size of this nightflower
would likely
blow him and Aludra to scraps.
Abruptly
he felt foolish. She was not very likely to go throwing the thing if
dropping
it was dangerous. He began tossing the ball from hand to hand. Not to
make up
for gasping and all that. Just for something to do.
"How
will casting lofting tubes from bronze make them a better weapon?" That
was what she wanted, weapons to use against the Sean-chan, to repay
them for
destroying the Guild of Illuminators. "They seem fearsome enough to me
already."
Aludra
snatched the nightflower back muttering about clumsy oafs and turning
the ball
over in her hands to examine the leather surface. Maybe it was not so
safe as
he had assumed. "A proper lofting tube." she said once she was sure
he had not damaged the thing, "it will send this close to three hundred
paces straight up into the sky with the right charge, and a longer
distance
across the ground if the tube is tilted at an angle. But not far enough
for
what I have in mind. A lofting charge big enough to send it further
would burst
the tube. With a bronze tube, I could use a charge that would send
something a
little smaller close to two miles. Making the slow-match slower, to let
it
travel that far, is easy enough. Smaller but heavier, made of iron, and
there
would be nothing for pretty colors, only the bursting charge."
Mat
whistled through his teeth, seeing it in his head, explosions erupting
among
the enemy before they were near enough to see you clearly. A nasty
thing to be
receiving. Now that would be as good as having Aes Sedai on your side,
or some
of those Asha'man. Better. Aes Sedai had to be in danger to use the
Power as a
weapon, and while he had heard rumors about hundreds of Asha'man,
rumors grew
with every telling. Besides, if Asha'man were anything like Aes Sedai,
they
would start deciding where they were needed and then take over the
whole fight.
He began envisioning how to use Aludra's bronze tubes, and right away
he
spotted a glaring problem. All your advantage was gone if the enemy
came from
the wrong direction, or got behind you, and if you needed derricks to
move
these things… "These bronze lofting tubes-'
"Dragons,"
she broke in. "Lofting tubes are for making the night-flowers bloom.
For
delighting the eye. I will call them dragons, and the Seanchan will
howl when
my dragons bite." Her tone was grim as sharp stone.
"These
dragons, then. Whatever you call them, they'll be heavy and hard to
move. Can
you mount them on wheels? Like a wagon or cart? Would they be too heavy
for
horses to pull?"
She
laughed again. "It's good to see you are more than the pretty face."
Climbing a three-step folding ladder that put her waist nearly level
with the
top of the lofting tube, she set the nightflower into the tube with the
fuse
down. It slid in a little way and stopped, a dome above the top of the
tube.
"Hand me that," she told him, gesturing to a pole as long and thick
as a quarterstaff. When he handed it up to her, she held it upright and
used a
leather cap on one end to push the nightflower deeper. That appeared to
take
little effort. "I have already drawn plans for the dragoncarts. Four
horses could draw one easily, along with a second cart to hold the
eggs. Not
nightflowers. Dragons' eggs. You see, I have thought long and hard
about how to
use my dragons, not just how to make them.' Pulling the capped rod from
the
tube, she climbed down and picked up the lantern. "Come. I must make
the
sky bloom a little, then I want my supper and my bed."
Just
outside the canvas enclosure stood a wooden rack filled with more
peculiar
implements, a forked stick, tongs as long as Mat was tall, other things
just as
odd and all made of wood. Setting the lantern on the ground, she placed
the
capped pole in the rack and took a square wooden box from a shelf. "I
suppose now you want to learn how to make the secret powders, yes?
Well. 1 did
promise. I am the Guild, now," she added bitterly, removing the box's
lid.
It was an odd box. a solid piece of wood drilled with holes, each of
which held
a thin stick. She plucked out one and replaced the lid. "I can decide
what
is secret."
"Better
than that, I want you to come with me. I know somebody who'll be happy
to pay
for making as many of your dragons as you want. He can make every
bellfounder
from Andor to Tear stop casting bells and start casting dragons."
Avoiding
Rand's name did not stop the colors
from
whirling inside his head and resolving for an instant into Rand-fully
clothed,
thank the Light-talking with Loial by lamplight in a wood-paneled room.
There
were other people, but the image focused on Rand,
and it vanished too quickly for Mat to make out who they were. He was
pretty
sure that what he saw was what was actually happening right that
moment,
impossible as that seemed. It would be good to see Loial again, but
burn him.
there had to be some way to keep those things out of his head! "And if
he
isn't interested." again the colors came, but he resisted, and they
melted
away. "I can pay to have hundreds cast myself. A lot of them,
anyway."
The
Band was going to end up fighting Seanchan, and most likely Trollocs as
well.
And he would be there when it happened. There was no getting around the
fact.
Try to avoid it how he would, that bloody ta'veren twisting would put
him right
in the bloody middle. So he was ready to pour out gold like water if it
gave
him a way to kill his enemies before they got close enough to poke
holes in his
hide.
Aludra
tilted her head to one side, pursing her rosebud lips. "Who is this man
with such power?"
"It'll
have to be a secret between us. Thorn and Juilin know, and Egeanin and
Domon, and
the Aes Sedai, Teslyn and Joline at least, and Van in and the Redarms,
but
nobody else, and I want to keep it that way." Blood and bloody ashes,
far
too many people knew already. He waited for her curt nod before saying,
"The Dragon Reborn." The colors swirled and despite his fighting them
again became Rand and Loial for a moment. This was not going to be as
easy as
it had seemed.
"You
know the Dragon Reborn." she said doubtfully.
"We
grew up in the same village," he growled, already fighting the colors.
This time, they nearly coalesced before vanishing. "If you don't
believe
me. ask Teslyn and Joline. Ask Thorn. But don't do it around anyone
else. A
secret, remember."
"The
Guild has been my life since I was a girl." She scraped one of the
sticks
quickly down the side of the box, and the thing sputtered into flame!
It
smelled of sulphur. "The dragons, they are my life now. The dragons,
and
revenge on the Seanchan." Bending, she touched the flame to a dark
length
of fuse that ran under the canvas. As soon as the fuse caught, she
shook the
stick until the fire went out, then dropped it. With a crackling hiss
the flame
sped along the fuse. "I think me I believe you." She held out her
free hand. "When you leave, 1 will go with you. And you will help me
make
many dragons."
For
a moment, as he shook her hand, he was sure the dice had stopped, but a
heartbeat later they were rattling again. It must have been
imagination. After
all, this agreement with Aludra might help the Band, and incidentally
Mat
Cauthon. stay alive, yet it could hardly be called fateful. He would
still have
to fight those battles, and however you planned, however well-trained
your men
were, luck played its part, too. bad as well as good, even for him.
These
dragons would not change that. But were the dice bouncing as loudly? He
thought
not, yet how could he be sure? Never before had they slowed without
stopping.
It had to be his imagination.
A
hollow thump came from inside the enclosure, and acrid smoke billowed
over the
canvas wall. Moments later the nightflower bloomed in the darkness
above
Runnien Crossing, a great ball of red and green streaks. It bloomed
again and
again in his dreams that night and for many nights after, but there it
bloomed
among charging horsemen and massed pikes, rending flesh as he had once
seen
stone rent by fireworks. In his dreams, he tried to catch the things
with his
hands, tried to stop them, yet they rained down in unending streams on
a
hundred battlefields. In his dreams, he wept for the death and
destruction. And
somehow it seemed that the rattling of the dice in his head sounded
like
laughter. Not his laughter. The Dark One's laughter.
The
next morning, with the sun just rising toward a cloudless sky, he was
sitting
on the steps of his green wagon, carefully scraping at the bowstave
with a
sharp knife-you had to be careful, almost delicate: a careless slice
could ruin
all your work-when Egeanin and Domon came out. Strangely, they seemed
to have
dressed with special care, in their best, such as it was. He was not
the only
one to have bought cloth in Jurador, but without promises of Mat's gold
to
speed them, the seamstresses were still sewing for Domon and Egeanin.
The
blue-eyed Seanchan woman wore a bright green dress heavily embroidered
with
tiny white and yellow flowers on the high neck and all down the
sleeves. A
flowered scarf held her long black wig in place. Domon, looking
decidedly odd
with a head of very short hair and that Illianer beard that left his
upper lip
bare, had brushed his worn brown coat till it actually had some
semblance of
neatness. They squeezed past Mat and hurried off without a word, and he
thought
no more of it until they returned an hour or so later to announce that
they had
been into the village and gotten Mother Darvale to marry them.
He
could not stop himself from gaping. Egeanin's stern face and sharp eyes
gave
good indications of her character. What could have brought Domon to
marry the
woman? As soon marry a bear. Realizing the Illianer was beginning to
glare at
him, he hastily got to his feet and made a presentable bow over the
bowstave.
"Congratulations, Master Domon. Congratulations. Mistress Domon. The
Light
shine on you both." What else was he to say?
Domon
kept glaring as if he had heard Mat's thoughts, though, and Egeanin
snorted.
"My name is Leilwin Shipless, Cauthon," she drawled. "That's the
name I was given and the name I'll die with. And a good name it is,
since it
helped me reach a decision I should have made weeks ago." Frowning, she
looked sideways at Domon. "You do understand why I could not take your
name, don't you, Bayle?"
"No,
lass," Domon replied gently, resting a thick hand on her shoulder,
"but I will take you with any name you do care to use so long as you be
my
wife. I told you that." She smiled and laid her hand atop his, and he
began smiling, too. Light, but the pair of them were sickening. If
marriage
made a man start smiling like dreamy syrup… Well, not Mat Cauthon. He
might be as good as wed, but Mat Cauthon was never going to start
carrying on like
a loon.
And
that was how he ended up in a green-striped wall-tent, not very large,
that
belonged to a pair of lean Domani brothers who ate fire and swallowed
swords.
Even Thom admitted that Balat and Abar were good, and they were popular
with
the other performers, so finding them places to stay was easy, but that
tent
cost as much as the wagon had! Everybody knew he had gold to fling
about, and
that pair just sighed over giving up their snug home when he tried to
bargain
them down. Well, a new bride and groom needed privacy, and he was more
than
glad to give it to them if it meant he did not have to watch them go
moon-eyed
at each other. Besides, he was tired of taking his turn sleeping on the
floor.
In the tent, at least he had his own cot every night-narrow and hard it
might
be, yet it was softer than floorboards-and with only him, he had more
room than
in the wagon even after the rest of his clothes were moved in and
stowed in a
pair of brass-bound chests. He had a washstand of his very own, a
ladder-back
chair that was not too unsteady, a sturdy stool, and a table big enough
to hold
a plate and cup and a pair of decent brass lamps. The chest of gold he
left in
the green wagon. Only a blind fool would try robbing Domon. Only a
madman would
try robbing Egeanin. Leilwin. if she insisted, though he was still
certain she
would regain her senses eventually. After the first night, spent close
by the
Aes Sedai wagon, with the foxhead cool for half the night, he had the
tent set
up facing Tuon's wagon by dint of making sure that the Redarms started
raising
it before anyone else could claim the space.
"Are
you placing yourself as my guard now?" Tuon said coolly when she saw
the
tent for the first time.
"No,"
he replied. "I'm just hoping for more glimpses of you." That was the
Light's own truth-well, getting away from the Aes Sedai was part of it,
but the
other was true, too-yet the woman waggled her fingers at Selucia, and
the pair
of them launched into gales of giggles before recovering themselves and
reentering
the faded purple wagon with all the dignity of a royal procession.
Women!
He
was not often alone in the tent. He had taken on Lopin as his
bodyservant after
Nalesean's death, and the stout Tairen, with his blocky face and a
beard that
nearly reached his chest, was always popping in to bow his balding head
and ask
what "my Lord" would enjoy for his next meal or inquire whether
"my Lord" had any need of wine or tea or would care for a plate of
candied dried figs he had vaguely acquired somewhere. Lopin was vain
over his
ability to find delicacies where it seemed there could be none. That,
or he was
rifling through the clothes chests to see whether anything needed
repair or
cleaning or ironing. Something always did, in his estimation, though it
all
looked fine to Mat. Nerim. Talmanes' melancholy bodyservant, frequently
accompanied him, largely because the skinny, gray-haired Cairhienin was
bored.
Mat could not understand how anyone could get bored with not having any
work to
do, but Nerim was full of dolorous comments on how poorly Talmanes must
be
faring without him, mournfully sighing about five times a day that
Talmanes
must have given his place to another by now, and he was ready to
wrestle Lopin
if need be for a share of the cleaning and mending. He even wanted his
turn
blacking Mat's boots!
Noal
dropped by to spin his tall tales, and Olver to play stones or Snakes
and
Foxes, when he was not playing with Tuon instead. Thorn came to play
stones,
too, and to share rumors he picked up in the towns and villages,
knuckling his
long white mustache over the choicer bits. Juilin brought his own
reports, but
he always brought Amathera. as well. The former Panarch of Tarabon was
pretty
enough for Mat to understand why the thief-catcher was interested, with
a rosebud
mouth just made for kissing, and she clung to Juilin's arm as if she
might
return some of his feelings, but her big eyes always gazed fearfully
toward
Tuon's wagon, even when they were all inside Mat's tent, and it was
still all
Juilin could do to keep her from dropping to her knees and putting her
face to
the ground whenever she glimpsed Tuon or Selucia. She did the same with
Egeanin. and with Bethamin and Seta, besides. Considering that Amathera
had
been da'covale for just a matter of months, it fair made Mat's skin
crawl. Tuon
could not really mean to make him da'covale when she was going to marry
him.
Could she?
He
soon told them to stop bringing him rumors about Rand.
Fighting the colors in his head was too much effort, and he lost that
fight as often
as he won. Sometimes it was all right, but sometimes he caught glimpses
of Rand and Min, and it seemed those
two were carrying on
something awful. Anyway, the rumors were all the same, really. The
Dragon
Reborn was dead, killed by Aes Sedai, by Asha'man, by the Seanchan, by
a dozen
other assassins. No, he was in hiding, he was massing a secret army, he
was
doing some fool thing or other that varied village by village and
usually inn
by inn. The one thing that was clear was that Rand
was no longer in Cairhien, and nobody had any idea where he was. The
Dragon
Reborn had vanished.
It
was odd how many of these Altaran farmers and villagers and townsfolk
seemed
worried by that, as worried as the merchants passing through and the
men and
women who worked for them. Not one of those people knew any more of the
Dragon
Reborn than the tales they carried, yet his disappearance frightened
them.
Thorn and Juilin were clear on that, until he made them stop. If the
Dragon
Reborn was dead, what was the world to do? That was the question that
people
asked over breakfast in the morning and ale in the evening and likely
on going
to bed. Mat could have told them Rand
was
alive-those bloody visions made him sure of that-but explaining how he
knew was
another matter. Even Thom and Juilin seemed uncertain about the colors.
The
merchants and the others would have thought him a mad man. And if they
believed, that would only scatter rumors about him, not to mention
likely
setting the Seanchan to hunting for him. All he wanted was the bloody
colors
out of his head.
Moving
into the tent made the showfolk eye him very oddly, and small wonder.
First he
had been running off with Egearrin-Leilwin, if she insisted on it-and
Domon
supposedly was her servant, but now she was married to Domon, and Mat
was out
of the wagon entirely. Some of the showfolk seemed to think it no more
than he
deserved for trailing after Tuon. yet a surprising number offered him
sympathy.
Several men commiserated over the fickleness of women-at least they did
when
they there were no women around-and some of the unmarried women,
contortionists
and acrobats and seamstresses, began eyeing him much too warmly. He
might have
enjoyed that if they had not been so willing to give him smoky looks
right in
front of Tuon. The first time that happened, he was so startled that
his eyes
nearly popped. Tuon seemed to find it amusing, of all things! She
seemed to.
But only a fool thought he knew what was in a woman's head just because
she had
a smile on her face.
He
continued to dine with her every midday, if they were halted, and began
arriving for his nightly games of stones early, so she had to feed him
then,
too. Light's truth, if you got a woman to feed you on a regular basis,
she was
halfway won. At least, he dined with her when she would let him into
the wagon.
One night he found the latch down, and no amount of talking would make
her or
Selucia open the door. It seemed a bird had managed to get inside
during the
day, an extremely bad omen apparently, and the pair of them had to
spend the
night in prayer and contemplation to avert some evil or other. They
seemed to
run half their lives according to strange superstitions. Tuon or
Selucia either
one would make odd signs with their hands if they saw a torn spiderweb
with the
spider in it. and Tuon explained to him, just as serious as if she were
making
sense, that the sure result of clearing away a spiderweb before shooing
the
spider out of it was the death of someone close to you within the
month. They
would see a flight of birds circle more than once and predict a storm,
or draw
a finger through a line of marching ants, count how long it took for
the ants
to rejoin their line, and predict how many days of fair weather lay
ahead, and
never mind that it did not work out that way. Oh, there was rain three
days
after the birds-crows, disturbingly enough-but it was nowhere near a
storm,
just a gray, drizzling day.
"Obviously,
Selucia miscounted with the ants," Tuon said, placing a white stone on
the
board with that oddly graceful arching of her fingers. Selucia,
watching over
her shoulder in a white blouse and divided brown skirts, nodded. As
usual, she
wore a head scarf over her short golden hair even indoors, a length of
red-and-gold silk that day. Tuon was all in brocaded blue silk, a coat
of odd
cut that covered her hips and divided skirts so narrow they seemed to
be wide
trousers. She spent considerable time giving the seamstresses detailed
instructions on what she wanted sewn, and little of it was much like
anything
he had ever seen before. It was all in Seanchan styles, he suspected,
though
she had had a few riding dresses sewn that would not draw comment, for
when she
went outside. Rain pattered softly on the roof of the wagon.
"Obviously,
what the birds told us was modified by the ants. It is never simple,
Toy. You
must learn these things. I will not have you ignorant."
Mat
nodded as if that made sense and placed his black stone. And she called
his
uneasiness about crows and ravens superstition! Knowing when to keep
your mouth
shut was a useful skill around women. Around men, too, but more so
around
women. You could be pretty certain what would set a man's eyes on fire.
Talking
with her could be dangerous in other ways, too. "What do you know of
the
Dragon Reborn?" she asked him another evening.
He
choked on a mouthful of wine, and the whirling colors in his brain
dissipated
in a fit of coughing. The wine was near enough vinegar; but even Nerim
had a
hard time finding good wine these days. "Well, he's the Dragon
Reborn," he said when he could speak, wiping wine from his chin with
one
hand. For a moment, he saw Rand
eating at a
large dark table. "What else is there to know?" Selucia refilled his
cup smoothly.
"A
great deal, Toy. For one thing, he must kneel to the Crystal Throne
before
Tarmon Gai'don. The Prophecies are clear on that, but I haven't even
been able
to learn where he is. It becomes still more urgent if he is the one who
sounded
the Horn of Valere, as I suspect."
"The
Horn of Valere?" he said weakly. The Prophecies said what} "It's been
found, then?"
"It
must have been, mustn't it, if it was sounded?" she drawled dryly.
"The reports I've seen from the place where it was blown, a place
called
Falme, are very disturbing. Very disturbing. Securing whoever blew the
Horn,
man or woman, may be as important as securing the Dragon Reborn
himself. Are
you going to play a stone or not, Toy?"
He
played his stone, but he was so shaken that the colors whirled and
faded
without forming any image. In fact, he was barely able to eke out a
draw from
what had seemed a clear winning position.
"You
played very poorly toward the end." Tuon murmured, frowning
thoughtfully
at the board, now divided evenly between the control of black stones
and white.
He could all but see her start trying to work out what they had been
talking
about when his poor play began. Talking with her was like walking a
crumbling
ledge across the face of a cliff. One misstep, and Mat Cauthon would be
as dead
as last year's mutton. Only, he had to walk that ledge. He had no
bloody
choice. Oh, he enjoyed it. In a way. The longer he spent with her, the
more
opportunity to memorize that heart-shaped face, to get it down so he
could see
her just by closing his eyes. But there was always that misstep waiting
ahead.
He could almost see that, too.
For
several days after giving her the little bunch of silk flowers, he
brought her
no presents, and he thought he was beginning to detect hints of
disappointment
when he appeared empty-handed. Then, four days out of Jurador, just as
the sun
was peeking over the horizon into a nearly cloudless sky, he got her
and
Selucia out of the purple wagon. Well, he just wanted Tuon, but Selucia
might
as well have been her shadow when it came to trying to separate them.
He had
commented on that once, making a joke, and both women went on talking
as if he
had not spoken. It was a good thing he knew Tuon could laugh at a joke,
because
sometimes she seemed to have no sense of humor at all. Selucia, wrapped
in a
green wool cloak with the cowl all but hiding her red headscarf, eyed
him
suspiciously, but then, she nearly always did. Tuon never bothered with
a
scarf, yet the shortness of her black hair was not so apparent with the
hood of
her blue cloak up.
"Cover
your eyes, Precious," he said. "I have a surprise for you."
"I
like surprises," she replied, placing her hands over her big eyes. For
an
instant, she smiled in anticipation, but only for an instant. "Some
surprises, Toy." That had the sound of a warning. Selucia stood hard by
her shoulder, and though the bosomy woman appeared completely at her
ease,
something told him she was as tense as a cat ready to leap. He
suspected she
did not like surprises.
"Wait
right there," he said, and ducked around the side of the purple wagon.
When he returned, he was leading Pips and the razor, both saddled and
bridled.
The mare stepped lively, frisking at the prospect of an outing. 'You
can look
now. I thought you might like a ride." They had hours; the show might
as
well have been deserted for all the evidence of life among the wagons.
Only a
handful had smoke rising from their metal chimneys. "She's yours!' he
added, and stiffened as the words nearly froze in his throat.
There
was no doubt this time. He had said the horse was hers, and suddenly
the dice
were not beating so loudly in his head. It was not that they had
slowed: he was
sure of that. There had been more than one set rattling away. One had
stopped
when he made his agreement with Aludra, and another when he told Tuon
the horse
was hers. That was odd in itself-how could giving her a horse be
fateful for
him?- but Light, it had been bad enough when he had to worry about one
set of
dice giving warning at a time. How many sets were still bouncing off
the inside
of his skull? How many more fateful moments were waiting to crash down
on him?
Tuon
went immediately to the razor, all smiles as she examined the animal as
thoroughly as he had himself. She did train horses for fun, after all.
Horses
and damane, the Light help him. Selucia was studying him, he realized,
her face
an expressionless mask. Because of the horse, or because he had gone
stiff as a
post?
"She's
a razor," he said, patting Pips' blunt nose. The gelding had been
getting
plenty of exercise, but the razor's eagerness seemed to have infected
him.
"Domani bloodborn favor razors, and it's not likely you'll ever see
another one outside of Arad Doman. What will you name her?"
"It
is bad luck to name a horse before riding it," Tuon replied, taking the
reins. She was still beaming. Her big eyes shone. "She's a very-fine
animal. Toy. A wonderful gift. Either you have a good eye. or you were
very
lucky."
"I
have a good eye, Precious," he said warily. She seemed more delighted
than
even the razor called for.
"If
you say so. Where is Selucia's mount?"
Oh,
well. It had been worth a try. A smart man hedged his bets, though, so
a sharp
whistle brought Metwyn at a trot leading a saddled dapple. Mat ignored
the wide
grin that split the man's pale face. The Cairhienin Redarm had been
sure he
would not get away with leaving Selucia behind, but there was no need
to smirk
over it. Mat judged the dapple gelding, ten years old, to be gentle
enough for
Seiucia-in his memory, ladies's maids seldom were more than tolerable
riders-but the woman gave the animal a going over as complete as
Tuon's. And
when she was done, she directed a look at Mat that said she would ride
the
horse so as not to make a bother, but she found it decidedly lacking.
Women
could compress a great deal into one look.
Once
clear of the field where the show was camped, Tuon walked the razor
along the
road for a time, then took her to a trot, and then a canter. The
surface was
hard-packed yellow clay here, studded with edges of old paving stones.
No
trouble for a well-shod horse, though, and he had made sure of the
razor's
shoes. Mat kept Pips even with Tuon as much for the pleasure of
watching her
smile as anything else. When Tuon was enjoying herself, che stern judge
was
forgotten and pure delight shone on her face. Not that watching her was
easy,
since Seiucia held the dapple between them. The yellow-haired woman was
a
formidable chaperone, and by the sidelong glances she gave him, her
small
smiles, she very much enjoyed the job of frustrating him.
At
the start they had the road to themselves except for a few farm carts,
but
after a while a Tinker caravan appeared ahead of them, a line of
garishly
painted and lacquered wagons rolling slowly southward down the other
side of
the road with massive dogs trotting alongside. Those dogs were the only
real
protection Tinkers had. The driver of the lead wagon, a thing as red as
Lucas
coats, trimmed in yellow and with violent green-and-yellow wheels to
boot,
half-stood to peer toward Mat. then sat back down and said something to
the
woman beside him, doubtless reassured by the presence of the two women
with
Mat. Tinkers were a cautious lot, of necessity. That whole caravan
would whip
up their horses and flee a single man they thought meant harm.
Mat
nodded to the fellow as the wagons began to pass. The lean, gray-haired
man's
high-collared coat was as green as his wagon's wheels, and his wife's
dress was
striped in shades of blue, most bright enough to suit any of the show's
performers. The gray-haired man raised his hand in a wave…
And
Tuon suddenly turned the razor and galloped into the trees, cloak
streaming out
behind her. In a flash, Seiucia had the dapple darting after her.
Snatching his
hat off so as not to lose it. Mat wheeled Pips and followed. Shouts
rose from
the wagons, but he paid them no mind. His attention was all on Tuon. He
wished
he knew what she was up to. Not escape, he was sure. Likely she was
just trying
to make him tear out his hair. If so, she was in a fair way for
succeeding.
Pips
quickly reeled in the dapple and left a scowling Selucia behind
flailing her
mount with the reins, bur Tuon and the razor kept their lead as the
rolling
land climbed toward hills. Startled flights of birds sprang up from
beneath
both animals' hooves, coveys of gray dove and of brown-speckled quail,
sometimes
ruffed brown grouse. All disaster needed was for the mare to be
frightened by
one of those. The best-trained mount could rear and fall when a bird
burst up
under hoof. Worse, Tuon rode like a madwoman, never slowing, only
swerving from
her line where the underbrush lay dense, leaping trees toppled by old
storms as
if she had a clue what lay on the other side. Well, he had to ride like
a
madman himself to keep up, though he winced every time he set Pips to
jump a
tree trunk. Some were near as thick as he was tall. He dug his
bootheels into
the gelding's flanks, urging more speed though he knew Pips was running
as hard
as he ever had. He had chosen too well in that bloody razor. Up and up
they
raced through the forest.
As
abruptly as she had begun her mad dash, Tuon reined in, well over a
mile from
the road. The trees were old here and widely spaced, black pines forty
paces
tall and wide-spreading oaks with branches that arched down to touch
the ground
before rising again and could have been sliced crosswise into tables to
seat a
dozen in comfort. Thick creepers shrouded half-buried boulders and
stone
outcrops, but aside from that only a few weeds pushed through the
mulch. Oaks
that size killed off any lesser undergrowth beneath them.
"Your
animal is better than he looks," the fool woman said, patting her
mount's
neck, when he reached her. Oh, she was all innocence, just out for a
pleasant
ride. "Maybe you do have a good eye." With the cowl of her cloak
fallen down her back, her cap of short hair was visible, glistening
like black
silk. He suppressed a desire to stroke it.
"Burn
how good my eye is," he growled, clapping his hat on. He knew he should
speak smoothly, but he could not have taken the roughness from his
voice with a
file. "Do you always ride like a moon-blinded idiot? You could have
broken
that mare's neck before she even got a name. Worse, you could have
broken your
own. I promised to get you home safely, and I mean to do just that. If
you're
going to risk killing yourself every time you go riding, then I won't
let you
ride." He wished he had those last words back as soon as they left his
tongue.
A
man might laugh off a threat like that as a joke, maybe, if you were
lucky, but
a woman… Now all he could do was wait for the explosion. He expected
Aludra's nightflowers to pale by comparison.
She
raised the hood of her cloak, settling it just so. She studied him,
tilting her
head first one way then the other. Finally, she nodded to herself. "I
name
her Akein. That means 'swallow.' "
Mat
blinked. That was it? No eruption? "I know. A good name. It suits
her." What was she about now? The woman almost never did or said what
he
expected.
"What
is this place, Toy?" she said, frowning at the trees. "Or should 1
say, what was it? Do you know?"
What
did she mean, what was this place? It was a bloody forest was what it
was. But
suddenly what had seemed a large boulder right in front of him, nearly
obscured
by thick vines, resolved into a huge stone head, slightly tilted to one
side. A
woman's head, he thought; those smooth roundels were probably meant for
jewels
in her hair. The statue it sat on must have been immense. A full span
of the
thing showed, yet only her eyes and the top of her head were out of the
ground.
And that long white stone outcrop with an oak tree's roots growing over
it was
piece of a spiral column. All around them now he could make out bits of
columns
and large worked stones that plainly had been part of some grand
structure and
what had to be a stone sword two spans long, all half buried. Still,
ruins of
cities and monuments could be found in many places, and few even among
Aes
Sedai had any idea what they had been. Opening his mouth to say that he
did not
know, he caught sight through the trees of three tall hills in a row,
perhaps
another mile on. The middle hill had a cleft top, like a wedge cut
cleanly out,
while the hill on the'left had two. And he knew. There could hardly be
three
hills exactly like that anywhere else.
Those
hills had been called The Dancers when this place had been Londaren
Cor, the
capital city of Eharon.
The road behind them had been paved then and ran through the heart of
the city,
which had sprawled for miles. People had said that the artistry in
stone that
the Ogier had practiced in Tar Valon. they had perfected in Londaren
Cor. Of
course, the people of every Ogier-built city had claimed their own
outdid Tar
Valon, confirming Tar Valon as the touchstone. He had a number of
memories of
the city-dancing at a ball in the Palace of the Moon, carousing in
soldiers'
taverns where veiled dancers writhed, watching the Procession of Flutes
during
the Blessing of the Swords-but oddly, he had another memory of those
hills,
from near enough five hundred years after the Trollocs left no stone
standing
in Londaren Cor and Eharon died in blood and fire. Why it had been
necessary
for Nerevan and Esandara to invade Shiota, as the land was then, he did
not
know. Those old memories were fragments however long a time any one
covered,
and full of gaps. He had no idea why those hills had been called The
Dancers,
either, or what the Blessing of the Swords was. But he remembered being
an
Esandaran lord in a battle fought among these ruins, and he remembered
having
those hills in view when he took an arrow through his throat. He must
have
fallen no more than half a mile from the very spot where he sat Pips,
drowning
in his own blood.
Light.
I hate to remember dying, he thought, and the thought turned to a coal
burning
in his brain. A coal that burned hotter and hotter. He remembered those
men's
deaths, not just one but dozens of them. He-remembered-dying.
"Toy,
are you ill?" Tuon brought the mare close and peered up into his face.
Concern filled her big eyes. "You've gone pale as the moon."
"I'm
right as spring water," he muttered. She was close enough for him to
kiss
if he bent his head, but he did not move. He could not. He was thinking
so
furiously he had nothing left for motion. Somehow only the Light knew,
the
Eelfinn had gathered the memories they had planted in his head, but how
could
they harvest memory from a corpse? A corpse in the world of men, at
that. He
was certain they never came to this side of that twisted doorframe
ter'angreal
for longer than minutes at a time. A way occurred to him, one he did
not like,
not a scrap. Maybe they created some sort of link to any human who
visited
them, a link that allowed them to copy all of a man's memories after
that right
up to the moment he died. In some of those memories from other men he
was white-haired,
in some only a few years older than he really was, and everything in
between,
but there were none of childhood or growing up. What were the odds of
that, if
they had just stuffed him with random bits and pieces, likely things
they
considered rubbish or had done with? What did they do with memories,
anyway?
They had to have some reason for gathering them beyond giving them away
again.
No, he was just trying to avoid where this led. Burn him, the bloody
foxes were
inside his head right then! They had to be. It was the only explanation
that
made sense.
"Well,
you look as if you're about to vomit," Tuon said, backing the razor
away
with a grimace. "Who in the show would have herbs? I have some
knowledge
there."
"I'm
all right, I tell you." In truth, he did want to sick up. Having those
foxes in his head was a thousand times worse than the dice however hard
the
dice rattled. Could the Eelfinn see through his eyes? Light, what was
he going
to do? He doubted any Aes Sedai could Heal him of this, not that he
would trust
them to, not when it meant leaving off the foxhead. There was nothing
to be
done. He would just have to live with it. He groaned at the thought.
Cantering
up to them, Selucia gave him and Tuon each a quick look, as if
considering what
they might have been up to in their time alone. But then, she had taken
her
time in catching up. giving them that time. That was hopeful. "Next
time,
you can ride this gentle creature and I will ride your gelding," she
told
Mat. "High Lady, people from those wagons are following us with dogs.
They're afoot, but they will be here soon. The dogs don't bark."
"Trained
guard dogs, then," Tuon said, gathering her reins. "Mounted, we can
avoid them easily enough."
"No
need to try, and no use," Mat told her. He should have expected this.
"Those people are Tinkers, Tuatha'an, and they're no danger to anybody.
They couldn't be violent if their lives depended on it. That's no
exaggeration,
just simple truth. But they saw you two go haring off, trying to get
away from
me as it must have seemed, and me chasing after. Now that those dogs
have a
scent trail, the Tinkers will follow us all the way back to the show if
need be
to make sure you two haven't been kidnapped or harmed. We'll go meet
them to
save the time and trouble." It was not the Tinkers' time he cared
about.
Luca probably would not care one way or the other if a bunch of Tinkers
getting
in the way delayed the show setting out. but Mat certainly would.
Selucia
scowled at him indignantly, and her fingers flew, but Tuon laughed.
"Toy
wishes to be commanding today, Selucia. I will let him command and see
how he
does." Bloody kind of her.
They
trotted back the way they had come-riding around the fallen trees this
time,
though now and then Tuon would gather her reins as if she meant to jump
one,
then give Mat a mischievous grin- and it was not long before the
Tinkers came
into sight running through the trees behind their huge mastiffs like a
flight
of butterflies, fifty or so men and women in bright colors, often in
jarring
combinations. A man might be wearing a red-and-blue striped coat and
baggy
yellow trousers tucked into knee boots, or a violet-colored coat above
red
trousers, or worse. Some women wore dresses striped in as many colors
as there
were colors and even colors Mat had no name for, while others wore
skirts and
blouses as varied in hue and as clashing as the men's coats and
trousers. A
fair number had shawls, as well, to add more colors to the
eye-scrambling
blend. Except for the gray-haired man who had been driving the lead
wagon, they
all appeared to be short of their middle years. He must be the Seeker,
the
leader of the caravan. Mat dismounted, and after a moment, Tuon and
Selucia
did, too.
The
Tinkers stopped at that, calling their clogs to heel. The big animals
slumped
to the ground, tongues lolling out, and the people came on more slowly.
None
carried so much as a stick, and though Mat wore no weapons that showed,
they
eyed him warily. The men clustered in front of him, while the women
gathered around
Tuon and Selucia. There was no threat in it, but as easily as that,
Tuon and
Selucia were separated from him, off where the Tinker women could make
inquiries. Suddenly it occurred to him that Tuon might think it a fine
game to
claim he was trying to bother her. She and Selucia could ride off while
he was
trying to contend with Tinkers crowding around him and Pips so he could
not
climb into the saddle. That was all they would do, but unless he was
willing to
fight his way clear, they might keep him here for hours, maybe, to give
that
pair time to "escape."
The
gray-haired man bowed with his hands pressed to his chest. "Peace be on
you and yours, my Lord. Forgiveness if we intrude, but we feared our
dogs had
frightened the ladies' horses."
Mat
responded with a bow in the same fashion. "Peace be on you always.
Seeker,
and on all the People. The ladies' horses weren't frightened. The
ladies are… impetuous at times." What were the women saying? He tried
to
eavesdrop, but their voices were low murmurs.
"You
know something of the People, my Lord?" The Seeker sounded surprised
and
had a right to. The Tuatha'an kept away from anywhere larger than a
moderate-sized village. They would seldom encounter anyone in a silk
coat.
"Only
a little," Mat replied. A very little. He had memories of meeting
Tinkers,
but he himself had never spoken to one before. What were those bloody
women
saying? "Will you answer me a question? I've seen a number of your
caravans the past few days, more than I'd have expected to, and all
heading
toward Ebou Dar. Is there a reason?"
The
man hesitated, darting a glance toward the women. They were still
murmuring
away, and he had to be wondering why their conversation was lasting so
long.
After all, it only needed a moment to say yes, I need help, or the
opposite.
"It is the people called Seanchan, my Lord," he said finally.
"Word is spreading among the People that there is safety where the
Seanchan rule, and equal justice for all. Elsewhere… You understand, my
Lord?"
Mat
did. Like the showfolk, Tinkers were strangers wherever they went, and
worse,
strangers with an undeserved reputation for thievery-well, they stole
no more
often than anyone else-and a deserved one for trying to entice young
people
into joining them. And on top of it, for Tinkers there was no question
of
fighting back if anybody tried to rob them or chase them away. "Take a
care. Seeker. Their safety comes at a price, and some of their laws are
harsh.
You know what they do with women who can channel?"
"Thank
you for your concern, my Lord," the man said calmly, "but few of our
women ever begin channeling, and if one does, we will do as we always
do and
take her to Tar Valon."
Abruptly,
the women began laughing, great gales and peals. The Seeker relaxed
visibly. If
the women were laughing, Mat was not the kind of man who would strike
them down
or kill them for getting in his way. For Mat's part, he scowled. There
was
nothing in that laughter that he liked.
The
Tinkers made their departure with more apologies from the Seeker for
having
bothered them, but the women kept looking back and laughing behind
cupped
hands. Some of the men leaned close as they walked, plainly asking
questions,
but the women just shook their heads. And looked back again, laughing.
"What
did you tell them?" Mat asked sourly.
"Oh.
that's none of your business, now is it, Toy?" Tuon replied, and
Selucia
laughed. Oh, she bloody cackled, she did. He decided he was better off
not
knowing. Women just purely enjoyed planting needles in a man.
CHAPTER NINE
A Short Path
Tuon
and Selucia were not the only women who caused Mat trouble, of course.
Sometimes it seemed that most of the trouble in his life came from
women, which
he could not understand at all since he always tried to treat them
well. Even
Egeanin gave her share of grief, though it was the smallest share.
"I
was right. You do think you can marry her," she drawled when he asked
her
for help with Tuon. She and Domon were seated on the steps of their
wagon, with
their arms around each other. A trickle of smoke rose from Domon's
pipe. It was
midmorning on a fine day. though gathering clouds threatened rain for
later,
and the performers were putting on their acts for the inhabitants of
four small
villages that, combined, perhaps equaled Runnien Crossing in size. Mat
had no
desire to go watch. Oh, he still enjoyed watching the contortionists.
and
better still the female acrobats and tumblers, but when you saw
jugglers and
fire-eaters and the like every day just about, even Miyora and her
leopards
became, well, less interesting if not exactly ordinary. "Never you mind
what I think. Egeanin. Will you tell me what you know of her? Trying to
find
out from her is like fishing blindfolded and bare-handed in a briar
patch
trying to catch a rabbit."
"My
name is Leilwin. Cauthon. Don't forget it again." she said in tones
suitable for giving orders on a ship's deck. Her eyes tried to drive
the
command home like blue hammers. "Why should I help you? You aim too
high
above yourself, a mole yearning for the sun. You could face execution
for
simply saying you want to marry her. It's disgusting. Besides. I've
left all
that behind me. Or it's left me," she added bitterly. Domon gave her a
one-armed hug.
"If
you've left all that behind you. what do you care how disgusting my
wanting to
marry her is?" There. It was out in the open. Partly, at least.
Domon
removed the pipe from his mouth long enough to blow a smoke-ring aimed
at Mat's
face. "If she does no want to help you. then give over." He gave it
that same ship's deck voice of command.
Egeanin
muttered under her breath. She appeared to be arguing with herself.
Finally,
she shook her head. "No, Bayle. He's right. If I'm cast adrift, then I
have to find a new ship and a new course. I can never return to
Seanchan, so I
might as well cut the cable and be done with it."
What
she knew of Tuon was mainly rumor-it seemed the Imperial family lived
their
lives behind walls even when in plain sight, and only whispers of what
went on
behind those walls escaped-yet those were sufficient to make the hair
on the
back of Mat's neck stand up. His wife-to-be had had a brother and a
sister
assassinated? After they tried to have her killed, true, but still!
What kind
of family went around killing one another? The Seanchan Blood and the
Imperial
family, for starters. Half of her siblings were dead, assassinated,
most of
them, and maybe the others, too. Some of what Egeanin-Leilwin- had to
tell was
generally known among Seanchan, and hardly more comforting. Tuon would
have
been schooled in intrigue from infancy, schooled in weapons and
fighting with
her bare hands, heavily guarded yet expected to be her own last line of
defense. All of those born to the Blood were taught to dissemble, to
disguise
their intentions and ambitions. Power shifted constantly among the
Blood, some
climbing higher, others slipping down, and the dance was only faster
and more
dangerous in the Imperial family. The Empress-she started to add, 'May
she live
forever," and half-choked in swallowing the words, then closed her eyes
tor a long moment before continuing-the Empress had borne many
children, as
every Empress did, so that among those who survived there would be one
fit to
rule after her. It would not do to have someone who was stupid or a
fool ascend
the Crystal Throne. Tuon was accounted very far from either. Light! The
woman
he was to marry was as bad as Warder and Aes Sedai wrapped into one.
And maybe
as dangerous.
He
had several conversations with Egeanin-he was careful to name her
Leilwin to
her face lest she go for him with her dagger, yet he thought of her as
Egeanin-trying to learn more, but her knowledge of the Blood was
largely from
the outside looking in, and her knowledge of the Imperial Court, by her
own
admission, little better than that of a street urchin in Seandar. The
day he
gave Tuon the mare, he had ridden alongside Egeanin's wagon having one
of those
fruitless conversations. He had accompanied Tuon and Selucia for a
time, but
they kept looking at him sideways, then exchanging glances and
giggling. Over
what they had told the Tinker women, without a sliver of doubt. A man
could
only take so much of that sort of thing.
"A
clever gift, that mare," Egeanin said, leaning out from the driver's
seat
to look up the line of wagons. Domon was handling the reins. She took
her turn
sometimes, but handling a team was not among the skills she had learned
on
ships. "How did you know?"
"Know
what?" he asked.
She
straightened and adjusted her wig. He did not know why she continued to
wear the
thing. Her own black hair was short, but no shorter than Selucia's.
"About
courting gifts. Among the Blood, when you are courting someone higher
than you.
a traditional gift is something exotic or rare. Best of all is if you
can
connect the gift somehow to one of the recipient's pleasures, and it's
well
known the High Lady loves horses. It's good you've acknowledged that
you don't
expect to be her equal, too. Not that this is going to work, you
understand. I
don't have a clue why she's still here, now you've stopped guarding
her, but
you can't believe she'll actually say the words. When she marries, it
will be
for the good of the Empire, not because some layabout like you gave her
a horse
or made her smile."
Mat
ground his teeth to keep from shouting a curse. He had acknowledged
what} No
wonder a set of bloody dice had stopped. Tuon would let him forget this
when it
snowed on Sunday. He was certain sure of that.
If
Leilwin bloody Shipless gave him small griefs, the Aes Sedai managed
larger.
Aes Sedai liked nothing better. He was resigned to them traipsing about
every
village and town they stopped at, asking questions and doing the Light
knew
what else. He had no choice but resignation, with no way to stop them.
They
claimed to be taking care-at least, Teslyn and Edesina did: Joline
snapped that
he was a fool for worrying-yet an Aes Sedai taking care was still
clearly a
woman of consequence whether or not anybody recognized what she was.
Lacking
the coin for silks, they had purchased bolts of fine wool in Jurador,
and the
seamstresses worked as hard for Aes Sedai as they did for Mat's gold,
so they
strolled about dressed like wealthy merchants and as sure of themselves
as any
noble ever born. Nobody saw one of them walk five strides without
knowing that
she expected the world to conform itself to her. Three women like that,
with a
traveling show at that, were sure to cause talk. At least Joline left
her Great
Serpent ring in her belt pouch. The other two had lost theirs to the
Seanchan.
If Mat had seen Joline with the thing actually on her finger, he
thought he
would have wept.
He
got no more reports on their activities from the former suldam. Joline
had
Bethamin firmly in hand; the tall dark woman ran when Joline said run
and
jumped when she said toad. Edesina was giving her lessons, too, but
Joline
considered Bethamin a personal project for some reason. She was never
harsh
that Mat saw. not after the face slapping, but you might have thought
she was
getting Bethamin ready to go to the Tower, and Bethamin returned a sort
of
gratitude that made it clear her loyalties had shifted. As for Seta,
the
yellow-haired woman was so frightened of the sisters that she did not
dare
follow them any longer. She actually shivered when he suggested it.
Strange as
it seemed, Seta and Bethamin had been so accustomed to how Seanchan
women who
could channel saw themselves that they had really believed Aes Sedai
could not
be much different. They were dangerous when off the leash, yet
dangerous dogs
could be handled by someone who knew how, and they were experts with
that
particular sort of dangerous dog. Now they knew that Aes Sedai were not
dogs of
any kind. They were wolves. Seta would have found another place to
sleep had
that been possible, and he learned from Mistress Anan that the Seanchan
woman
put her hands over her eyes whenever Joline or Edesina was teaching
Bethamin in
the wagon.
"I'm
certain she can see the weaves." Setalle said. He would have said she
sounded envious except that he doubted she envied anyone. "She's
halfway
to admitting it, or she wouldn't hide her eyes. Soon or late, she'll
come
around and want to learn, too." Maybe she did sound envious at that.
He
could have wished for Seta to come around soon rather than late.
Another
student would have left the Aes Sedai less time to trouble him. If the
show was
halted, he could hardly turn around without seeing Joline or Edesina
peering
around the corner of a tent or wagon at him. Usually, the foxhead
cooled on his
chest. He could not prove they were actually channeling at him, yet he
was
certain of it. He was unsure which of them found the loophole in his
protection
that Ade-leas and Vandene had, that something thrown with the Power
would hit
him, but after that, he could barely leave his tent without getting hit
by a
rock, and later, by other things, burning sparks like a shower from a
forge
fire, stinging sparks that made him leap and his hair try to stand on
end. He
was positive that Joline was behind it. If for no other reason, he
never saw
her without Blaeric or Fen or both nearby for protection. And she
smiled at him
like a cat smiling at a mouse.
He
was planning how to get her alone-it was that or spend his time hiding
from
her-when she and Teslyn got into a shouting match that cleared Edesina
out of
the whitewashed wagon almost as quickly as Bethamin and Seta, and those
two ran
out and stood gaping at the wagon. The Yellow sister calmly went back
to
brushing her long black hair, lifting it up with one hand and sweeping
the
wooden hairbrush down it with the other. Seeing Mat, she smiled at him
without
ceasing the motions of her brush. The medallion went cold, and the
shouting
vanished as though cut off by a knife.
He
never learned what was said behind that Power-woven shield. Teslyn
favored him
somewhat, yet when he asked her. she gave him one of those looks and
silence.
It was Aes Sedai business and none of his. Whatever had gone on in
there,
though, the rocks stopped, and the sparks. He tried thanking Teslyn,
but she
was having none of it.
"When
something be no to be spoken of, it be no to be spoken of," she told
him
firmly. "It would be well for you to learn that lesson if you are to be
around sisters, and I think your life be tied to Aes Sedai. now if it
was no
before." Bloody thing for her to say.
She
never cracked her teeth about his ter'angreal, but the same could not
be said
of Joline and Edesina, even after the argument. They tried to bully him
into
handing it over every single day, Edesina cornering him by herself,
Joline with
her Warders glowering over her shoulders at him. Ter'angreal were
rightfully
the property of the WhiteTower. Ter'angreal
needed
proper study, particularly one with the odd properties this one
possessed.
Ter'angreal were potentially dangerous. too much so to be left in the
hands of
the uninitiated. Neither said especially a man's hands, but Joline came
close.
He began to worry that the Green would have Blaeric and Fen simply take
it from
him. That pair still suspected he had been involved in what had
happened to
her, and the dark looks they gave him said they wanted any excuse to
beat him
like a drum.
"That
would be stealing," Mistress Anan told him in a lecturing tone,
gathering
her cloak around her. The sunlight was beginning to fade, and coolness
already
setting in. They were standing outside Tuon's wagon, and he was hoping
to get
inside in time to be fed. Noal and Olver were already inside. Setalle
was
apparently off to visit the Aes Sedai, something she did frequently.
"Tower law is quite clear on that. There might be considerable…
discussion… over whether it had to be given back to you-1 rather think
it
would not be, in the end-but Joline would face a fairly harsh penance
for theft
all the same."
"Maybe
she'd think it worth a penance." he muttered. His stomach rumbled. The
potted finches and creamed onions that Lopin had presented proudly for
his
midday meal had both turned out to be spoiling, to the Tairen's extreme
mortification, which meant Mat had had a heel of bread since breakfast
and no
more. "You know an awful lot about the WhiteTower."
"What
I know. Lord Mat, is that you've made just about every misstep a man
can make
with Aes Sedai, short of trying to kill one. The reason I came with you
in the
first place instead of going with my husband. half the reason I'm still
here,
is to try to keep you from making too many missteps. Truth to tell. I
don't
know why I should care, but I do, and that's that. If you had let
yourself be
guided by me, you'd not be in trouble with them now. I can't say how
much I can
recover for you, not now, but I am still willing to try."
Mat
shook his head. There were only two ways to deal with Aes Sedai without
getting
burned, let them walk all over you or stay away from them. He would not
do the
first and could not do the second, so he had to find a third way, and
he
doubted it could come from following Setalle's advice. Women's advice
about Aes
Sedai generally was to follow the first path, though they never worded
it that
way. They talked of accommodation, but it was never the Aes Sedai who
was
expected to do any accommodating. "Half the reason? What's the other…
?" He grunted as though he had been punched in the stomach. "Tuon?
You think I can't be trusted with Tuon?"
Mistress
Anan laughed at him. a fine rich laugh. "You are a rogue. my Lord. Now.
some rogues make fine husbands, once they've been tamed a little around
the
edges-my Jasfer was a rogue when I met him-but you still think you can
nibble a
pastry here, nibble a pastry there, then dance off to the next."
"There's
no dancing away from this one." Mat said frowning up at the wagon door.
The dice clicked away in his head. "Not for me." He was not sure he
really wanted to dance away anymore, but want and wish as he might, he
was well
and truly caught.
"Like
that, is it?" she murmured. "Oh. you've chosen a fine one to break
your heart."
"That's
as may be, Mistress Anan, but I have my reasons. I'd better get inside
before
they eat everything." He turned toward the steps at the back of the
wagon,
and she laid a hand on his arm.
"Could
I see it? Just to see?"
There
was no doubt what she meant. He hesitated, then fished in the neck of
his shirt
for the leather cord that held the medallion. He could not have said
why. He
had refused Joline and Edesina even a glimpse. It was a fine piece of
work, a
silver foxhead nearly as big as his palm. Only one eye showed, and
enough
daylight remained to see, if you looked close, that the pupil was half
shaded
to form the ancient symbol of Aes Sedai. Her hand trembled slightly as
she
traced a finger around that eye. She had said she only wanted to see
it. but he
allowed the touching. She breathed out a long sigh.
"You
were Aes Sedai, once,'' he said quietly, and her hand froze.
She
recovered herself so quickly that he might have imagined it. She was
stately
Setalle Anan, the innkeeper from Ebou Dar with the big golden hoops in
her ears
and the marriage knife dangling hilt-down into her round cleavage,
about as far
from an Aes Sedai as could be. "The sisters think I'm lying about never
having been to the Tower. They think I was a servant there as a young
woman and
listened where I shouldn't have."
"They
haven't seen you looking at this." He bounced the foxhead once on his
hand
before tucking it safely back under his shirt. She pretended not to
care, and
he pretended not to know she was pretending.
Her
lips twitched into a brief, rueful smile, as if she knew what he was
thinking.
"The sisters would see it if they could let themselves," she said, as
simply as if she were discussing the chances of rain, "but Aes Sedai
expect that when… certain things… happen, the woman
A
SHORT PATH
will go away decently and die soon after. I went away, but Jasfer
found me half
starved and sick on the streets of Ebou Dar and took me to his mother."
She chuckled, just a woman telling how she met her husband. "He used to
take in stray kittens, too. Now, you know some of my secrets, and I
know some
of yours. Shall we keep them to ourselves?"
"What
secrets of mine do you know?" he demanded, instantly wary. Some of his
secrets were dangerous to have known, and if too many knew of them,
they were
not really secrets anymore.
Mistress
Anan glanced at the wagon, frowning. "That girl is playing a game with
you
as surely as you are playing one with her. Not the same game that you
are.
She's more like a general plotting a battle than a woman being courted.
If she
learns you're moonstruck with her, though, she'll still gain the
advantage. I
am willing to let you have an even chance. Or as near to one as any man
has
with a woman of any brains. Do we have an agreement?"
"We
do," he replied fervently. "That we do." He would not have been
surprised if the dice stopped then, but they went on bouncing.
Had
the sisters' fixation on his medallion been the only problem they gave
him, had
they contented themselves with creating rumors everywhere the show
stopped, he
could have said those days were no more than tolerably bad for
traveling with
Aes Sedai. Unfortunately, by the time the show departed Jurador they
had
learned who Tuon was. Not that she was the Daughter of the Nine Moons,
but that
she was a Seanchan High Lady, someone of rank and influence.
"Do
you take me for a fool?" Luca protested when Mat accused him of telling
them. He squared up beside his wagon, fists on his hips, a tall man
full of
indignation and ready to fight over it by his glare. "That's a secret I
want buried deep until… well… until she says I can use that warrant
of protection. That won't be much use if she revokes it because I told
something she wants hidden." But his voice was a shade too earnest, and
his eyes shifted a hair from meeting Mat's directly. The truth of it
was, Luca
liked to boast nearly as much as he liked gold. He must have thought it
was
safe-safe!-to tell the sisters and only realized the snarl he had
created after
the words were out of his mouth.
A
snarl it was, as tangled as a pit full of snakes. The High Lady Tuon,
readily
at hand, presented an opportunity no Aes Sedai could have resisted.
Teslyn was
every bit as bad as Joline and Edesina. The three of them visited Tuon
in her
wagon daily, and descended on her when she went out for a walk. They
talked of
truces and treaties and negotiations, tried to learn what connection
she had to
the leaders of the invasion, attempted to convince her to help arrange
talks to
end the fighting. They even offered to help her leave the show and
return home!
Unfortunately
for them. Tuon did not see three Aes Sedai. representatives of the WhiteTower,
perhaps the greatest power on earth, not even after the seamstresses
began
delivering their riding dresses and they could change out of the ragbag
leavings Mat had been able to find for them. She saw two escaped damane
and a
mantttidamam. and she had no use for either until they were decently
collared.
Her phrase, that. When they came to her wagon, she latched the door,
and if
they managed to get inside before she could, she left. When they
cornered her.
or tried to, she walked around them the same as walking around a stump.
They
all but talked themselves hoarse. And she refused to listen.
Any
Aes Sedai could teach a stone patience if she had reason, yet they were
unaccustomed to flat being ignored. Mat could see the frustration
growing, the
tight eyes and tighter mouths that took longer and longer to relax, the
hands
gripping skirts in fists to keep them from grabbing Tuon and shaking
her. It
all came to a head sooner than he expected, and not at all in the way
he had
imagined.
The
night after he gave Tuon the mare, he ate his supper with her and
Selucia. And
with Noal and Olver. of course. That pair managed as much time with
Tuon as he
did. Lopin and Nerim, as formal as if they were in a palace instead of
squeezed
for room to move, served a typical early-spring meal, stringy mutton
with peas
that had been dried and turnips that had sat too long in somebody's
cellar. It
was too early yet for anything to be near harvesting. Still. Lopin had
made a
pepper sauce for the mutton, Nerim had found pine nuts for the peas,
there was
plenty to go around, and nothing tasted off, so it was as fine a meal
as could
be managed. Olver left once supper was done, having already had his
games with
Tuon, and Mat changed places with Selucia to play stones. Noal remained
too,
despite any number of telling looks, rambling on about the SevenTowers
in dead Malkier, which apparently had overtopped anything in Cairhien.
and Shol
Arbela. the City of Ten Thousand Bells, in Arafel, and all manner of
Borderland
wonders, strange spires made of crystal harder than steel and a metal
bowl a
hundred paces across set into a hillside and the like. Sometimes he
interjected
comments on Mat's play, that he was exposing himself on the left, that
he was
setting a fine trap on the right, and just when Tuon looked ready to
fall into
it. That sort of thing. Mat kept his mouth shut except for chatting
with Tuon,
though it took gritting his teeth more than once to accomplish. Tuon
found
Noal's natter entertaining.
He
was studying the board, wondering whether he might have a small chance
of
gaining a draw, when Joline led Teslyn and Edesina into the wagon like
haughty
on a pedestal, smooth-faced Aes Sedai to their toenails. Joline was
wearing her
Great Serpent ring. Squeezing by Selucia, giving her very cold looks
when she
was slow to move aside, they arrayed themselves at the foot of the
narrow
table. Noal went very still, eyeing the sisters sideways, one hand
beneath his
coat as if the fool thought his knives would do any good here.
"There
must be an end to this. High Lady," Joline said, very pointedly
ignoring
Mat. She was telling, not pleading, announcing what would be because it
had to
be. "Your people have brought a war to these lands such as we have not
seen since the War of the Hundred Years, perhaps not since the Trolloc
Wars.
Tarmon Gai'don is approaching, and this war must end before it comes
lest it
bring disaster to the whole world. It threatens no less than that. So
there
will be an end to your petulance. You will carry our offer to whoever
commands
among you. There can be peace until you return to your own lands across
the
sea. or you can face the full might of the WhiteTower followed by every throne
from
the Borderlands to the Sea
of Storms. The
Amyrlin
Seat has likely summoned them against you already. I have heard of vast
Borderland armies already in the south, and other armies moving. Better
to end
this without more bloodshed, though. So avert your people's destruction
and
help bring peace."
Mat
could not see Edesina's reaction, but Teslyn simply blinked. For an Aes
Sedai,
that was as good as a gasp. Maybe this was not exactly what she had
expected
Joline to say. For his part, he groaned under his breath. Joline was no
Gray,
as deft as a skilled juggler in negotiations, that was for sure, but
neither
was he. and he still figured she had found a short path to putting
Tuon's back
up.
But
Tuon folded her hands in her lap beneath the table and sat very
straight,
looking right through the Aes Sedai. Her face was as stern as it had
ever been
for him. "Selucia," she said quietly.
Moving
up behind Teslyn, the yellow-haired woman bent long enough to take
something
from beneath the blanket Mat was sitting on. As she straightened,
everything
seem to happen all at once. There was a click, and Teslyn screamed,
clapping
her hands to her throat. The foxhead turned to ice against Mat's chest,
and
Joline's head whipped around with an incredulous stare for the Red.
Edesina
turned and ran for the door, which swung half open, then slammed shut.
Slammed
against Blaeric or Fen, by the sound of men falling down the wagon's
steps.
Edesina jerked to a halt and stood very stiffly, arms at her sides and
divided
skirts pressed against her legs by invisible cords. All that in
moments, and
Selucia had not stayed still. She bent briefly to the bed Noal was
sitting on,
then snapped the silver collar of another adam around Joline's neck.
Mat could
see that was what Teslyn was gripping with both hands. She was not
trying to
take it off, just holding on to it, but her knuckles were white. The
Red's
narrow face was an image of despair, her eyes staring and haunted.
Joline had
regained the utter calm of an Aes Sedai, but she did touch the
segmented collar
encircling her neck.
"If
you think that you can," she began, then cut off abruptly, her mouth
going
tight. An angry light shone in her eyes.
"You
see, the a'dam can be used to punish, though that is seldom done." Tuon
stood, and she had the bracelet of an a'dam on each wrist. the gleaming
leashes
snaking away under the blankets on the beds. How in the Light had she
managed
to get her hands on those?
"No,"
Mat said. "Your promised not to harm my followers. Precious." Maybe
not the wisest thing to use that name now. but it was too late to call
it back.
"You've kept your promises so far. Don't go back on one now."
"I
promised not to cause dissension among your followers. Toy," she said
snippily, "and in any case, it is very clear that these three are not
your
followers." The small sliding door used to talk to whoever was driving
or
pass out food slid open with a loud bang. She glanced over her
shoulder, and it
slid shut with a louder. A man cursed outside and began beating at the
door.
"The
a'dam can also be used to give pleasure, as a great reward," Tuon told
Joline, ignoring the hammering fist behind her.
Joline's
lips parted, and her eyes grew very wide. She swayed, and the
rope-suspended
table swung as she caught herself with both hands to keep from falling.
If she
was impressed, though, she hid it well. She did smooth her dark gray
skirts
once after she was upright again, but that might have meant nothing.
Her face
was all Aes Sedai composure. Edesina. looking over her shoulder,
matched that
calm gaze, although she now wore the third a'dam around her neck-and
come to
it, her face was paler than usual-but Teslyn had begun weeping
silently,
shoulders shaking, tears leaking down her cheeks.
Noal
was tensed, a man ready to do something stupid. Mat kicked him under
the table
and, when the man glared at him. shook his head. Noal's scowl deepened,
but he
took his hand out of his coat and leaned back against the wall. Still
glaring.
Well, let him. Knives were no use here, but maybe words could be. Much
better
if this could be ended with words.
"Listen,"
Mat said to Tuon. "If you think, you'll see a hundred reasons this
won't
work. Light, you can learn to channel yourself. Doesn't knowing that
change
anything? You're not far different from them." He might as well have
turned to smoke and blown away for all the attention she paid.
"Try
to embrace saiclar," she drawled, stern eyes steady on Joline. Her
voice
was quite mild in comparison to her gaze, yet plainly she expected
obedience.
Obedience? She looked a bloody leopard staring at three tethered goats.
And
strangely, more beautiful than ever. A beautiful leopard who might rake
him
with her claws as soon as the goats. Well, he had faced a leopard a few
times
before this, and those were his own memories. There was an odd sort of
exhilaration
that came with confronting a leopard. "Go ahead," she went on.
"You know the shield is gone." Joline gave a small grunt of surprise,
and Tuon nodded. "Good. You've obeyed for the first time. And learned
that
you cannot touch the Power while you wear the adam unless I wish it.
But now, I
wish you to hold the Power, and you do. though you didn't try to
embrace
it." Joline's eyes widened slightly, a small crack in her calm. "And
now," Tuon went on, "I wish you not to be holding the Power, and it is
gone from you. Your first lessons." Joline drew a deep breath. She was
beginning to look… not afraid, but uneasy.
"Blood
and bloody ashes, woman," Mat growled, "do you think you can parade
them around on those leashes without anyone noticing?" A heavy thump
came
from the door. A second produced the sound of cracking wood. Whoever
was
beating at the wooden window was still at it, too. Somehow, that caused
no
sense of urgency. If the Warders got in, what could they do?
"I
will house them in the wagon they are using and exercise them at
night."
she snapped irritably. "I am nothing like these women, Toy. Nothing
like
them. Perhaps I could learn, but I choose not to, just as I choose not
to steal
or commit murder. That makes all the difference."
Recovering
herself with visible effort, she sat down with her hands on the table,
focused
on the Aes Sedai once again. "I've had considerable success with one
woman
like you.'' Edesina gasped, murmured a name too low to be caught.
"Yes." Tuon said. "You must have met my Mylen in the kennels or
at exercise. I will train you all as well as she is. You have been
cursed with
a dark taint, but I will reach you to have pride in the service you
give the
Empire."
"I
didn't bring these three out of Ebou Dar so you could take them back."
Mat
said firmly, sliding himself along the bed. The foxhead grew colder
still, and
Tuon made a startled sound.
"How
did you… do that, Toy? The weave… melted… when it touched
you."
"It's
a gift, Precious."
As
he stood up, Selucia started toward him, crouching, her hands
outstretched in
pleading. Fear painted her face. "You must not." she began.
"No!"
Tuon said sharply.
Selucia
straightened and backed away, though she kept her eyes on him.
Strangely, the
fear vanished from her expression. He shook his head in wonder. He knew
the
bosomy woman obeyed Tuon instantly- she was so'jhiv, after all, as much
owned
as Tuon's horse, and she actually thought that right and good-but how
obedient
did you need to be to lose your fear at an order?
"They
have annoyed me, Toy," Tuon said as he put his hands on Teslyn's
collar.
Still trembling, tears still streaming down her cheeks. the Red looked
as
though she could not believe he would actually remove the thing.
"They
annoy me. too." Placing his fingers just so. he pressed, and the collar
clicked open.
Teslyn
seized his hands and began kissing them. "Thank you," she wept over
and over. "Thank you. Thank you."
Mat
cleared his throat. "You're welcome, but there's' no need for… Would
you stop that? Teslyn?" Reclaiming his hands took some effort.
"I
want them to stop annoying me. Toy," Tuon said as he turned to Joline.
From anyone else, that might have been petulant. The dark little woman
made it
a demand.
"I
think they'll agree to that after this," he said dryly. But Joline was
looking up at him with a stubborn set to her jaw. "You will agree,
won't
you?" The Green said nothing.
"I
do agree," Teslyn said quickly. "We do all agree."
"Yes.
we all agree," Edesina added.
Joline
stared at him silently, stubbornly, and Mat sighed.
"1
could let Precious keep you for a few days, until you change your
mind."
Joline's collar clicked open in his hands. "But I won't."
Still
staring into his eyes, she touched her throat as though to confirm the
collar
was gone. "Would you like to be one of my Warders?" she asked, then
laughed softly. "No need to look like that. Even if I would bond you
against your will, I couldn't so long as you have that ter'angreal. I
agree.
Master Cauthon. It may cost our best chance to stop the Seanchan, but I
will no
longer bother… Precious."
Tuon
hissed like a doused cat, and he sighed again. What you gained on the
swings,
you lost on the roundabouts.
He
spent part of that night doing what he liked least in the world.
Working.
Digging a deep hole to bury the three adam. He did the job himself
because,
surprisingly, Joline wanted them. They were ter'angreal, after all, and
the WhiteTower
needed to study them. That might well have been so, but the Tower would
just
have to find their a'dam elsewhere. He was fairly certain that none of
the
Redarms would have handed them over if he told them to bury the things,
yet he
was taking no chances that they would reappear to cause more trouble.
It
started raining before the hole was knee-deep, a cold driving rain, and
by the
time he was done, he was soaked to the skin and mud to his waist. A
fine end to
a fine night, with the dice bouncing around his skull.
CHAPTER TEN
A Village in Shiota
The
following day brought a respite, or so it seemed. Tuon, in a blue silk
riding
dress and her wide tooled-leather belt, not only rode beside him as the
show
rolled slowly north, she waggled her fingers at Selucia when the woman
tried to
put her dun between them. Selucia had acquired her own mount, somehow,
a
compact gelding that could not match Pips or Akein but still surpassed
the
dapple by a fair margin. The blue-eyed woman, with a green head scarf
beneath
her cowl today, fell in on Tuon's other side, and her face would have
done an
Aes Sedai proud when it came to giving notüing away. Mat could not help
grinning. Let her hide frustration for a change. Lacking horses, the
real Aes
Sedai were confined to their wagon; Metwyn was too far away, on the
driver's seat
of the purple wagon, to overhear what he said to Tuon: only a few thin
clouds
remained in the sky from the night's rain: and all seemed right in the
world.
Even the dice bouncing in his head could steal nothing from that. Well,
there
were bad moments, but only moments.
Early
on, a flight of ravens winged overhead, a dozen or more big black
birds. They
flew swiftly, never deviating from their line, but he eyed them anyway
until
they dwindled to specks and vanished. Nothing to spoil the day there.
Not for
him, at least. Maybe for someone farther north.
"Did
you see some omen in them, Toy?" Tuon asked. She was as graceful in the
saddle as she was in everything else she did. He could not recall
seeing her be
awkward about anything. "Most omens I know concerning ravens
specifically
have to do with them perching on someone's rooftop or cawing at dawn or
dusk."
"They
can be spies for the Dark One," he told her. "Sometimes. Crows, too.
And rats. But they didn't stop to look at us. so we don't need to
worry."
Running
a green-gloved hand across the top of her head, she sighed. "Toy,
Toy," she murmured, resettling the cowl of her cloak. "How many
children's tales do you believe? Do you believe that if you sleep on
Old Hob's
Hill under a full moon, the snakes will give you true answers to three
questions, or that foxes steal people's skins and take the nourishment
from
food so you can starve to death while eating your fill?"
Putting
on a smile took effort. "I don't think I ever heard either one of
those." Making his voice amused required effort, too. What were the
odds
of her mentioning snakes giving true answers, which the Aelfinn did
after a
fashion, in the same breath with foxes stealing skins? He was pretty
sure that
the Eelfinn did. and made leather from it. But it was Old Hob that
nearly made
him flinch. The other was likely just ta'veren twisting at the world.
She
certainly knew nothing about him and the snakes or the foxes. In
Shandalle, the
land where Artur Hawkwing had been born, though, Old Hob. Caisen Hob,
had been
another name for the Dark One. The Aelfinn and the Eelfinn both surely
deserved
to be connected to the Dark One, yet that was hardly anything he wanted
to
think on when he had his own connection to the bloody foxes. And to the
snakes,
too? That possibility was enough to sour his stomach.
Still,
it was a pleasant ride, with the day warming as the sun rose, though it
never
could be called warm. He juggled six colored wooden balls, and Tuon
laughed and
clapped her hands, as well she should. That feat had impressed the
juggler he
bought the balls from, and it was harder while riding. He told several
jokes
that made her laugh, and one that made her roll her eyes and exchange
finger-twitchings with Selucia. Maybe she did not like jokes about
common room
serving maids. It had not been the least off-color. He was no fool. He
did wish
she had laughed, though. She had a marvelous laugh, rich and warm and
free.
They talked of horses and argued over training methods with stubborn
animals.
That pretty head held a few odd notions, such as that you could calm a
fractious horse by biting its ear! That sounded more likely to send it
up like
a haystack fire. And she had never heard of humming under your breath
to soothe
a horse, and would not believe his father had taught him such a skill
shy of
demonstration.
"Well,
I can hardly do that without a horse that needs soothing, can I?" he
said.
She rolled her eyes again. Selucia rolled hers, too.
There
was no heat in the argument, though, no anger, just spirit. Tuon had so
much
spirit it seemed impossible it could fit into such a tiny woman. It was
her
silences that put a small damper on the day, more so than snakes or
foxes. They
were far away, and there was nothing to be done. She was right there
beside
him. and he had a great deal to do concerning her. She never alluded to
what
had happened with the three Aes Sedai. or to the sisters themselves
either. She
never mentioned his ter'angreaL or the fact that whatever she had made
Teslyn
or Joline weave against him had failed. The night before might as well
have
been a dream.
She
was like a general planning a battle, Setalle had said. Trained at
intrigue and
dissembling from infancy, according to Egeanin. And it was all aimed
straight
at him. But to what end? Surely it could not be some Seanchan Blood
form of
courting. Egeanin knew little of that, but surely not. He had known
Tuon a
matter of weeks and kidnapped her, she called him Toy. had tried to buy
him,
and only a vain fool could twist that into a woman falling in love.
Which left
anything from some elaborate scheme for revenge to… to the Light alone
knew
what. She had threatened to make him a cupbearer. That meant
da'co-vale,
according to Egeanin. though she had scoffed at the notion. Cupbearers
were
chosen for their beauty, and in Egeanin's estimation, he fell far
short. Well,
in his own as well, truth to tell, not that he was likely to admit it
to
anybody. Any number of women had admired his face. Nothing said Tuon
could not
complete the marriage ceremony just to make him think himself home free
and
safe, then have him executed. Women were never simple, but Tuon made
the rest
look like children's games.
For
a long while they saw not so much as a farm, but perhaps two hours
after the
sun passed its zenith, they came on a sizable village. The ring of a
blacksmith's hammer on an anvil sounded dimly. The buildings, some of
three
stories, were all heavy timber framing with whitish plaster between and
had
high-peaked roofs of thatch and tall
stone chimneys. Something about them tugged at Mat's memory, but he
could not say what. There was not a farm to be seen anywhere in the
unbroken
forest. But villages were always tied to farms, supporting them and
living off
them. They must all be further in from the road, back in the trees.
Oddly,
the people he could see ignored the approaching train of show wagons. A
fellow
in his shirtsleeves, right beside the road, glanced up from the hatchet
he was
sharpening on a grindstone worked by a footpedal, then bent to his work
again
as though he had seen nothing. A cluster of children came hurtling
around a
corner and darted into another street without more than a glance in the
show's
direction. Very odd. Most village children would stop to stare at a
passing
merchant's train, speculating on the strange places the merchant had
been, and
the show had more wagons than any number of merchants' trains. A
peddler was
coming from the north behind six horses, his wagon's high canvas cover
almost
hidden by clusters of pots and pans and kettles. That should have
caused
interest, too. Even a large village on a well-traveled road depended on
peddlers for most things the people bought. But no one pointed or
shouted that
a peddler had come. They just went on about their business.
Perhaps
three hundred paces short of the village, Luca stood up on his driver's
seat
and looked back over the roof of his wagon. "We'll turn in here," he
bellowed, gesturing toward a large meadow where wild-flowers. cat
daisies and
jumpups and something that might have been loversknots, dotted spring
grasses
already a foot high. Sitting back down, he suited his own words, and
the other
wagons began following, their wheels rutting the rain-sodden ground.
As
Mat turned Pips toward the meadow, he heard the shoes of the peddler's
horses
ringing on paving stones. The sound jerked him upright. That road had
not been
paved since… He pulled the gelding back around. The canvas-topped wagon
was
rolling over level gray paving stones that stretched just the width of
the
village. The peddler himself, a rotund fellow in a wide hat. was
peering at the
pavement and shaking his head, peering at the village and shaking his
head.
Peddlers followed fixed routes. He must have been this way a hundred
times. He
had to know. The peddler halted his team and tied the reins to the
brake
handle.
Mat
cupped both hands around his mouth. "Keep going, man!" he shouted at
the top of his lungs. "As fast as you can! Keep going!"
The
peddler glanced in his direction, then hopped up on his seat quite
spryly for
such a stout man. Gesturing as grandly as Luca, he began to declaim.
Mat could
not make out the words, but he knew what they would be. News of the
world that
he had picked up along the way interspersed with lists of his goods and
claims
for their vast superiority. Nobody in the village stopped to listen or
even
paused.
"Keep
going!" Mat bellowed. "They're dead! Keep going!" Behind him,
somebody gasped, Tuon or Selucia. Maybe both.
Suddenly
the peddler's horses screamed, tossing their heads madly. They screamed
like
animals beyond the ragged edge of terror and kept screaming.
Pips
jerked in fear, and Mat had his hands full; the gelding danced in
circles,
wanting to run, in any direction so long as it was away from here.
Every horse
belonging to the show heard those screams and began whinnying
fearfully. The
lions and bears began roaring, and the leopards joined in. That set
some of the
show's horses to screaming, too, and rearing in their harnesses. The
tumult
built on itself in moments. As Mat swung round, struggling to control
Pips,
every one he could see handling reins was fighting to keep a wild-eyed
team
from racing off or injuring themselves. Tuon's mare was dancing, too,
and Selucia's
dun. He had a moment of fear for Tuon. but she seemed to be handling
Akein as
well as she had in her race into the forest. Even Selucia seemed sure
of her
seat, if not of her mount. He caught glimpses of the peddler, as well,
pulling
off his hat, peering toward the show. At last, Mat got Pips under
control.
Blowing hard, as if he had been run too hard for too long, but no
longer trying
to race away. It was too late. Likely, it had always been too late. Hat
in
hand, the round peddler leaped down to see what was the matter with his
horses.
Landing,
he lurched awkwardly and looked down toward his feet. His hat fell from
his
hand, landing on the hardpacked road. That was when he began screaming.
The
paving stones were gone, and he was ankle-deep in the road, just like
his
shrieking horses. Ankle-deep and sinking into rock-hard clay as if into
a bog,
just like his horses and his wagon. And the village, houses and people
melting
slowly into the ground. The people never stopped what they were doing.
Women walked
along carrying baskets, a line of men carried a large timber on their
shoulders, children darted about, the fellow at the grindstone
continued
sharpening his hatchet, all of them nearly knee-deep in the ground by
this
time.
Tuon
caught Mat's coat from one side, Selucia from the other. That was the
first he
realized he had moved Pips. Toward the peddler. Light!
"What
do you think you can do?" Tuon demanded fiercely.
"Nothing,"
he replied. His bow was done, the horn nocks fitted, the linen
bowstrings braided
and waxed, but he had not fitted one arrowhead to its ash shaft yet,
and with
all the rain they had been having, the glue holding the goose-feather
fletchings was still tacky. That was all he could think of, the mercy
of an
arrow in the peddler's heart before he was pulled under completely.
Would the
man die, or was he being carried to wherever those dead Shiotans were
going?
That was what had caught him about those buildings. That was how
country people
had built in Shiota for near enough three hundred years.
He
could not tear his eyes away. The sinking peddler shrieked loudly
enough to be
heard over the screaming of his team.
"Help
meeee!" he cried, waving his arms. He seemed to be looking straight at
Mat. "Help meeee!" Over and over.
Mat
kept waiting for him to die, hoping for him to die-surely that was
better than
the other-but the man kept on screaming as he sank to his waist, to his
chest.
Desperately, he tipped back his head like a man being pulled under
water,
sucking for one last breath. Then his head vanished, and just his arms
remained, frantically waving until they, too, were gone. Only his hat
lying on
the road said there had ever been a man there.
When
the last of the thatched rooftops and tall chimneys melted away. Mat
let out a
long breath. Where the village had been was another meadow decked out
in cat
daisies and jumpups where red and yellow butterflies fluttered from
blossom to
blossom. So peaceful. He wished he could believe the peddler was dead.
Except
for the few that had followed Luca into the meadow, the show's wagons
stood
strung out along the road, and everybody was down on the ground, women
comforting crying children, men trying to quiet trembling horses,
everyone
talking fearfully, and loudly, to be heard over the bears and the lions
and the
leopards. Well, everyone except the three Aes Sedai. They glided
hurriedly up
the road, Joline heeled by Blaeric and Fen. By their expressions, Aes
Sedai and
Warders alike, you might have thought villages sinking into the ground
were as
common as house cats. Pausing beside the peddler's wide hat, the three
of them
stared down it. Teslyn picked it up and turned over in her hands, then
let it
drop. Moving into the meadow where the village had stood, the sisters
walked
about talking, peering at this and that as if they could learn
something from
wildflowers and grasses. None had taken the time to don a cloak, but
for once
Mat could not find it in him to upbraid them. They might have
channeled, but if
so they did not use enough of the Power to make the foxhead turn
chilly. He
would not have taken them to task if they had. Not today, not after
what he had
just seen.
The
arguing started right away. No one wanted to cross that patch of
hard-packed
clay that seemingly had been paved with stone. They shouted over one
another,
including the horse handlers and the seamstresses, all telling Luca
what had to
be done, and right now. Some wanted to turn back far enough to find a
country
road and use those narrower ways to find their way to Lugard. Others
were for
forgetting Lugard altogether, for striking out for Illian by those
country
roads, or even going all the way back to Ebou Dar and beyond. There was
always
Amadicia, and Tarabon. Ghealdan, too, for that matter. Plenty of towns
and
cities there, and far from this Shadow-cursed spot.
Mat
sat Pips' saddle, idly playing with his reins, and held his peace
through all
the shouting and arm-waving. The gelding gave a shiver now and then,
but he was
no longer attempting to bolt. Thorn came striding through the crowd and
laid a
hand on Pips' neck. Juilin and Amathera were close behind, she clinging
to him
and eyeing the show-folk fearfully, and then Noal and Olver. The boy
looked as
though he would have liked to cling to someone for comfort, to anyone,
but he
was old enough not to want it seen if he did. Noal appeared troubled,
too,
shaking his head and muttering under his breath. He kept peering up the
road
toward the Aes Sedai. Doubtless by that night he would be claiming to
have seen
something very like this before, only on a much grander scale.
"I
think we'll be going on alone from here," Thorn said quietly. Juilin
nodded grimly.
"If
we must," Mat replied. Small parties would stand out for those who were
hunting for Tuon. for the kidnapped heir to the Seanchan Empire, else
he would
have left the show long since. Making their way to safety without the
show to
hide in would be much more dangerous, but it could be done. What he
could not
do was turn these people's minds. One glance into any of those
frightened faces
told him he did not have enough gold for that. There might not have
been enough
gold in the world.
Luca
listened in silence, a bright red cloak wrapped around him, until most
of the
showfolk's energy was spent. When their shouts began to trickle away,
he flung
back the cloak and walked among them. There were no grand gestures,
now. Here
he clapped a man on the shoulder, there peered earnestly into a woman's
eyes.
The country roads? They would be half mud, more streams than roads,
from the
spring rains. It would take twice as long to reach Lugard that way,
three
times, maybe longer. Mat almost choked to hear Luca invoke speed, but
the man
was hardly warming up. He talked of the labor of freeing wagons that
bogged
down, made his listeners all but see themselves straining to help the
teams
pull them through mud nearly hub-deep on the wagon wheels. Not even a
country
road would get that bad, but he made them see it. At least, he made Mat
see it.
Towns of any size would be few and far between along those back roads,
the
villages tiny for the most part. Few places to perform, and food for so
many
hard to come by. He said that while smiling sadly at a little girl of
six or so
who was peering up at him from the shelter of her mother's skirts, and
you just
knew he was envisioning her hungry and crying for food. More than one
woman
pulled her children close around her.
As
for Amadicia and Tarabon, and yes. Ghealdan, they would be fine places
to
perform. Valan Lucas Grand Traveling Show and Magnificent Display of
Marvels
and Wonders would visit those lands and draw immense crowds. One day.
To reach
any of them now. they must first return to Ebou Dar, covering the same
ground
they had crossed these past weeks, passing the same towns, where people
were
unlikely to lay out coin to see again what they had seen so short a
time
before. A long way, with everyone's purses growing lighter and their
bellies
tighter by the day. Or, they could press on to Lugard.
Here
his voice began to take on energy. He gestured, but simply. He still
moved
among them, but stepping more quickly. Lugard was a grand city. Ebou
Dar was a
shadow beside Lugard. Lugard truly was one of the great cities, so
populous
they might perform there all spring and always have new crowds. Mat had
never
been to Lugard. but he had heard it was half a ruin, with a king who
could not
afford to keep the streets clean, yet Luca made it sound akin to
Caemlyn.
Surely some of these people had seen the place, but they listened with
rapt
faces as he described palaces that made the Tarasin Palace in Ebou Dar
seem a
hovel, talked of the silk-clad nobles by the score who would come to
see them
perform or even commission private performances. Surely King Roedran
would want
such. Had any of them ever performed before a king before? They would.
They
would. From Lugard, to Caemlyn, a city that made Lugard look an
imitation of a
city. Caemlyn, one of the largest and wealthiest cities in the world,
where
they might perform the whole summer to never-ending throngs.
"I
should like to see these cities," Tuon said, moving Akein nearer to
Pips.
"Will you show them to me, Toy?" Selucia kept the dun at Tuon's hip.
The woman looked composed enough, but doubtless she was shaken by what
she had
seen.
"Lugard,
maybe. From there 1 can find a way to send you back to Ebou Dar." With
a
well-guarded merchant's train and as many reliable bodyguards as he
could hire.
Tuon might be as capable and dangerous as Egeanin made out, but two
women alone
would be seen as easy prey by too many, and not just brigands. "Maybe
Caemlyn." He might need more time than from here to Lugard, after all.
"We
shall see what we shall see," Tuon replied cryptically, then began
exchanging finger-wriggles with Selucia.
Talking
about me behind my back, only doing it right under my nose. He hated it
when
they did that. "Luca's as good as a gleeman, Thom. but I don't think
he's
going to sway them."
Thom
snorted derisively and knuckled his long white mustaches. "He's not
bad,
I'll grant him that, but he's no gleeman. Still, he's caught them. I'd
say. A
wager on it. my boy? Say one gold crown?"
Mat
surprised himself by laughing. He had been sure he would not be able to
laugh
again until he could rid his head of the image of that peddler sinking
into the
road. And the horses. He could almost hear them screaming still, loudly
enough
that it came near to drowning out the dice. "You want to wager with we?
Very well. Done."
"I
wouldn't play at dice with you," Thom said dryly, "but I know a man
turning a crowd's head with words when I see it. I've done as much
myself."
Finishing
with Caemlyn, Luca gathered himself with a spark of his usual
grandiosity. The
man strutted. "And from there," he announced. "to Tar Valon
itself. I will hire ships to carry us all." Mat did choke at that. Luca
would hire ships} Luca. who was tight enough to render mice for tallow?
"Such crowds will come in Tar Valon that we could spend the rest of our
lives in that vast city's splendor, where Ogier-built shops seem like
palaces
and palaces are beyond description. Rulers seeing Tar Valon for the
first time
weep that their cities are villages and their own palaces no more than
peasant's huts. The WhiteTower itself is in
Tar
Valon, remember, the greatest structure in the world. The Amyrlin Seat
herself
will ask us to perform before her. We have given shelter to three Aes
Sedai in
need. Who can believe they will do other than speak for us with the
Amyrlin
Seat?"
Mat
looked over his shoulder, and found the three sisters no longer
wandering about
the meadow where the village had vanished. Instead, they stood side by
side in
the road watching him. perfect images of Aes Sedai serenity. No, they
were not
watching him. he realized. They were studying Tuon. The three had
agreed not to
bother her anymore, and being Aes Sedai, were bound by that, but how
far did an
Aes Sedai's word ever go? They found ways around the Oath against lying
all the
time. So Tuon would not get to see Caemlyn, and perhaps not Lugard.
Chances
were, there would be Aes Sedai in both cities. What easier for Joline
and the
others than to inform those Aes Sedai that Tuon was a Seanchan High
Lady? In
all likelihood, Tuon would be on her way to Tar Valon before he could
blink. As
a "guest." of course, to help stop the fighting. No doubt many would
say that would be for the good, that he should hand her over himself
and tell
them who she really was, but he had given his word. He began to
calculate how
near to Lugard he dared wait before finding her passage back to Ebou
Dar.
Luca
had had a difficult time making Tar Valon sound greater than Caemlyn
after his
spiel on that city, and if they ever reached Tar Valon, some might
actually be
disappointed comparing his mad descriptions- the WhiteTower
a thousand paces high? Ogier-built palaces the size of small mountains?
he
claimed there was an Ogier stedding actually inside the city!-but
finally he
called for a show of hands in favor of pressing on. Every hand shot up,
even
the children's hands, and they had no vote.
Mat
pulled a purse from his coat pocket and handed over an Ebou Dari crown.
"I
never enjoyed losing more. Thorn." Well, he never enjoyed losing, but
in
this instance it was better than winning.
Thom
accepted with a small bow. "I think I'll keep this as a memento," he
said, rolling the fat gold coin across the back of his fingers. "To
remind
me that even the luckiest man in the world can lose."
For
all of the show of hands, there was a shadow of reluctance to cross
that patch
of road ahead. After Luca got his wagon back onto the road, he sat
staring,
with Latelle clinging to his arm as hard as Am-athera ever clung to
Juilin.
Finally, he muttered something that might have been an oath and whipped
his
team up with the reins. By the time they reached the fatal stretch,
they were at
a gallop, and Luca kept them there until well beyond where the paving
stones
had been. It was the same with every wagon. A pause, waiting until the
wagon
ahead was clear, then a flailing of reins and a hard gallop. Mat
himself drew a
deep breath before heeling Pips forward. At a walk, not a gallop, but
it was
hard not to dig his heels in, especially when passing the peddler's
hat. Tuon's
dark face and Selucia's pale displayed no more emotion than Aes Sedai's
faces
did.
"I
will see Tar Valon one day," Tuon said calmly in the middle of that.
"I shall probably make it my capital. I shall have you show me the
city,
Toy. You have been there?"
Light!
She was a tough little woman. Gorgeous, but definitely tough as nails.
After
slowing from his gallop. Luca set the pace at a fast walk rather than
the
show's usual amble. The sun slid lower, and they passed several
roadside
meadows sufficiently large to hold the show, but Luca pressed on until
their
shadows stretched long ahead of them and the sun was a fat red ball on
the
horizon. Even then he sat holding the reins and peering at a grassy
expanse
beside the road.
"It's
just a field," he said at last, too loudly, and turned his team toward
it.
Mat
accompanied Tuon and Selucia to the purple wagon once the horses had
been
handed over to Metwyn, but there was to be no meal or games of stones
with her
that night.
"This
is a night for prayer," she told him before going in with her maid.
"Do you know nothing, Toy? The dead walking is a sign that Tarmon
Gai'don
is near." He did not take this for one of her superstitions; after all,
he
had thought something very like that himself. He was not much for
praying, yet
he offered a small one then and there. Sometimes there was nothing else
to do.
No
one wanted to sleep, so lamps burned late throughout the camp. No one
wanted to
be alone, either. Mat ate by himself in his tent, with little appetite
and the
dice in his head sounding louder than ever, but Thorn came to play
stones just
as he finished, and Noal soon after. Lopin and Nerim popped in every
few
minutes, bowing and inquiring whether Mat or the others wanted
anything, but
once they fetched wine and cups-Lopin carried the tall pottery jar and
broke
the wax seal; Nerim carried the cups on a wooden tray-Mat told them to
find
Harnan and the other soldiers.
"I
don't doubt they're getting drunk, which seems a good notion to me," he
said. "That's an order. You tell them I said to share."
Lopin
bowed gravely over his round belly. "I have assisted the file leader
now and
again by procuring a few items for him. my Lord. I expect he will be
generous
with the brandy. Come along, Nerim. Lord Mat wants us to get drunk, and
you are
getting drunk with me if I have to sit on you and pour brandy down your
throat." The abstemious Cairhienin's narrow face grew pinched with
disapproval, but he bowed and followed the Tairen out with alacrity.
Mat did
not think Lopin would need to sit on the man, not tonight.
Juilin
came with Amathera and Olver. so games of Snakes and Foxes, played
sprawled on
the ground-cloth, were added to stones played at the small table.
Amathera
proved an adequate player at stones, unsurprising given that she had
been a
ruler once, but her mouth became even more pouty when she and Olver
lost at
Snakes and Foxes, although nobody ever won that game. Then again. Mat
suspected
she had not been a very good ruler. Whoever was not playing sat on the
cot. Mat
watched the games when it was his turn there, as did Juilin if Amathera
was
playing. He seldom took his eyes from her except when it was his turn
at a
game. Noal nattered on with his stories-but then, he spun those tales
even
while playing, and talking seemed to have no effect on his skill at
stones-and
Thorn sat reading the letter Mat had brought him what seemed a very
long time
ago. The page was heavily creased from being carried in Thorn's coat
pocket and
much smudged from being read and re-read. He had said it was from a
dead woman.
It
was a surprise when Domon and Egeanin ducked through the entry flaps.
They had
not precisely been avoiding Mat since he moved out of the green wagon,
but
neither had they gone out of their way to seek him out. Like everyone
else,
they were in bettet clothes than they had worn for disguises in the
beginning.
Egeanin's divided skirts and high-collared coat, both of blue wool and
embroidered in a yellow near to gold on the hem and cuffs, had
something of a
uniform about them, while Domon, in a well-cut brown coat and baggy
trousers
stuffed into turned-down boots just below his knees, looked every inch
the
prosperous, if not exactly wealthy, Illianer merchant.
As
soon as Egeanin entered, Amathera, who was on the ground-cloth with
Olver,
curled herself into a ball on her knees. Juilin sighed and got up from
the
stool across the table from Mat, but Egeanin reached the other woman
first.
"There's
no need for that, with me or anyone else," she drawled, bending to take
Amathera by the shoulders and draw her to her feet. Amathera rose
slowly,
hesitantly, and kept her eyes down until Egeanin put a hand beneath her
chin
and raised her head gently. "You look me in the eyes. You look everyone
in
the eyes." The Taraboner woman touched her tongue to her lips
nervously,
but she did keep looking straight at Egeanin's face when the hand was
removed
from her chin. On the other hand, her eyes were very wide.
"This
is a change," Juilin said suspiciously. And with a touch of anger. He
stood stiff as a statue carved from dark wood. He disliked any
Seanchan, for
what they had done to Amathera. "You've called me a thief for freeing
her." There was more than a touch of anger in that. He hated thieves.
And
smugglers, which Domon was.
"All
things change given time," Domon said jovially, smiling to head off
more
heated words. "Why, you do be looking at an honest man, Master
Thief-catcher. Leilwin did make me promise to give up smuggling before
she
would agree to marry me. Fortune prick me, who did ever hear of a woman
refusing to marry a man unless he did give up a lucrative trade?" He
laughed as though that were the funniest joke in the world.
Egeanin
fisted him in the ribs hard enough to change his laughter to a grunt.
Married
to her, his ribs must be a mass of bruises. "I expect you to keep that
promise, Bayle. I am changing, and so must you." Eyeing Amathera
briefly-perhaps
to make sure she was still obeying; Egeanin was big on others doing as
she told
them-she stuck out a hand toward Juilin. "I am changing. Master Sandar.
Will you?"
Juilin
hesitated, then clasped her hand. "I'll make a try at it." He sounded
doubtful.
"An
honest try is all I ask." Frowning around the tent, she shook her head.
"I've seen orlop decks less crowded than this. We have some decent wine
in
our wagon, Master Sandar. Will you and your lady join us in a cup or
two?"
Again
Juilin hesitated. "He has this game all but won," he said finally.
"No point in playing it out." Clapping his conical red hat on his
head, he adjusted his dark, flaring Tairen coat unnecessarily, and
offered his
arm to Amathera formally. She clasped it tightly, and though her eyes
were
still on Egeanin's face, she trembled visibly. "I expect Olver will
want
to stay here and play his game, but my lady and I will be pleased to
share wine
with you and your husband, Mistress Shipless." There was a hint of
challenge
in his gaze. It was clear that to him, Egeanin had further to go to
prove she
no longer saw Amathera as stolen property.
Egeanin
nodded as if she understood perfectly. "The Light shine on you tonight,
and for as many days and nights as we have remaining," she said by way
of
farewell to those staying. Cheerful of her.
No
sooner had the four departed than thunder boomed overhead. Another loud
peal,
and rain began pattering on the tent roof, quickly growing to a
downpour that
drummed the green-striped canvas. Unless Juilin and the others had run,
they
would do their drinking wet.
Noal
settled on the other side of the red cloth from Olver and took up
Amathera's
part of the game, rolling the dice for the snakes and the foxes. The
black
discs that now represented Olver and him were nearly to the edge of the
web-marked cloth, but it was evident to any eye that they would not
make it. To
any eye but Olver's, at least. He groaned loudly when a pale disc inked
with a
wavy line, a snake, touched his piece, and again when a disc marked
with a
triangle touched Noal's.
Noal
took up the tale he had left off when Egeanin and Domon appeared, as
well, a
story of some supposed voyage on a Sea Folk raker. "Atha'an Miere women
are the most graceful in the world," he said, moving the black discs
back
to the circle in the center of the board. "even more so than Domani,
and
you know that's saying something. And when they're out of sight of
land-"
He cut off abruptly and cleared his throat, eyeing Olver, who was
stacking the
snakes and foxes on the board's corners.
"What
do they do then?" Olver asked.
"Why…" Noal rubbed his nose with a gnarled finger. "Why, they
scramble about the rigging so nimbly you'd think they had hands where
their
feet should be. That's what they do." Olver oohed, and Noal gave a soft
sigh of relief.
Mat
began removing the black and white stones from the board on the table,
placing
them in two carved wooden boxes. The dice in his head bounced and
rattled even
when the thunder was loudest. "Another game. Thom?"
The
white-haired man looked up from his letter. "I think not, Mat. My
mind's
in a maze, tonight."
"If
you don't mind my asking, Thorn, why do you read that letter the way
you do? I
mean, sometimes your face looks like you're trying to puzzle out what
it
means." Olver yelped with glee at a good toss of the dice.
"That's
because I am. In a way. Here." He held out the letter, but Mat shook
his
head.
"It's
no business of mine, Thorn. It's your letter, and I'm no good with
puzzles."
"Oh,
it's your business, too. Moiraine wrote it just before… Well, anyway,
she
wrote it."
Mat
stared at him for a long moment before taking the creased page, and
when his
eyes fell on the smudged ink, he blinked. Small, precise writing
covered the
sheet, but it began. "My dearest Thorn." Who would have thought
Moiraine, of all people, would address old Thorn Merrilin so? "Thorn,
this
is personal. I don't think I should-"
"Read."
Thorn cut in. "You'll see."
Mat
drew a deep breath. A letter from a dead Aes Sedai that was a puzzle
and
concerned him in some way? Suddenly, he wanted nothing less than to
read the
thing. But he began anyway. It was near enough to make his hair stand
on end.
My
dearest Thom, There are many words I would like to write to you, words
from my
heart, but I have put this off because I knew that I must, and now
there is
little time. There are many things I cannot tell you lest I bring
disaster, but
what I can, I will. Heed carefully what I say. In a short while I will
go down
to the docks, and there I will confront Lanfear. How can I know that?
That
secret belongs to others. Suffice it that I know, and let that
foreknowledge
stand as proof for the rest of what I say.
When
you receive this, you will be told that I am dead. All will believe
that. I am
not dead, and it may be that I shall live to my appointed years. It
also may be
that you and Mat Cau-thon and another, a man I do not know, will try to
rescue
me. May, I say because it may be that you will not or cannot, or
because Mat
may refuse. He does not hold me in the affection you seem to. and he
has his
reasons which he no doubt thinks are good. If you try, it must be only
you and
Mat and one other. More will mean death for all. Fewer will mean death
for all.
Even if you come only with Mat and one other, death also may come. I
have seen
you try and die, one or two or all three. I have seen myself die in the
attempt. I have seen all of us live and die as captives. Should you
decide to
make the attempt anyway, young Mat knows the way to find me, yet you
must not
show him this letter until he asks about it. That is of the utmost
importance.
He must know nothing that is in this letter until he asks. Events must
play out
in certain ways, whatever the costs.
If
you see Lan again, tell him that all of this is for the best. His
destiny
follows a different path from mine. I wish him all happiness with
Nynaeve.
A
final point. Remember what you know about the game of Snakes and Foxes.
Remember, and heed.
It
is time, and I must do what must be done.
May
the Light illumine you and give you joy, my dearest Thom. whether or
not we
ever see one another again.
Moiraine
Thunder boomed as he finished. Fitting, that. Shaking his head, he
handed the
letter back. "Thom," he said gently, "Lan's bond to her was broken.
It takes death to do that. He said she was dead."
"And
her letter says everyone would believe that. She knew. Mat. She knew it
all in
advance."
"That's
as may be, but Moiraine and Lanfear went into that doorframe
terangreal, and it
melted. The thing was redstone, or looked to be, stone, Thom, yet it
melted
like wax. I saw it. She went to wherever the Eelfinn are, and even if
she is
alive, there's no way for us to get there anymore."
"The
Tower of Ghenjei," Olver piped up, and
all
three adults turned their heads to stare at him. "Birgitte told me,"
he said defensively. "The Tower
of Ghenjei is the
way to
the lands of the Aelfinn and the Eelfinn." He made the gesture that
began
a game of Snakes and Foxes, a triangle drawn in the air and then a wavy
line
through it. "She knows even more stories than you, Master Charin."
"That
wouldn't be Birgitte Silverbow, would it?" Noal said wryly.
The
boy gave him a level look. "I'm not an infant, Master Charin. But she
is
very good with a bow, so maybe she is. Birgitte born again, I mean."
"I
don't think there's any chance of that," Mat said. "I've talked with
her. too, you know, and the last thing she wants is to be any kind of
hero." He kept his promises, and Birgitte's secrets were safe with him.
"In any case, knowing about this tower doesn't help much unless she
told
you where it is." Olver shook his head sadly, and Mat bent to ruffle
his
hair. "Not your fault, boy. Without you, we wouldn't even know it
exists." That did not seem to help much. Olver stared at the red cloth
game board dejectedly.
"The
Tower of Ghenjei." Noal said, sitting up
cross-legged and tugging his coat straight. "Not many know that tale
anymore. Jain always said he'd go looking for it one day. Somewhere
along the ShadowCoast,
he said."
"That's
still a lot of ground to search." Mat fitted the lid on one of the
boxes.
"It could take years." Years they did not have if Tuon was right, and
he was sure that she was.
Thorn
shook his head. "She says you know, Mat. 'Mat knows the way to find
me.' I
doubt very much she'd have written that on a whim."
"Well,
I can't help what she says, now can I? I never heard of any Tower of Ghenjei
until tonight."
"A
pity," Noal sighed. "I'd like to have seen it, something Jain bloody
Farstrider never did. You might as well give over," he added when Thom
opened his mouth. "He wouldn't forget seeing it, and even if he never
heard the name, he'd have to think of it when he heard of a strange
tower that
lets people into other lands. The thing gleams like burnished steel.
I'm told,
two hundred feet high and forty thick, and there's not an opening to be
found
in it. Who could forget seeing that?"
Mat
went very still. His black scarf felt too tight against his hanging
scar. The
scar itself suddenly felt fresh and hot. It was hard for him to draw
breath.
"If
there's no opening, how do we get in?" Thom wanted to know.
Noal
shrugged, but Olver spoke up once more. "Birgitte says you make the
sign
on the side of it anywhere with a bronze knife." He made the sign that
started
the game. "She says it has to be a bronze knife. Make the sign, and a
door
opens."
"What
else did she tell you about-" Thom began, then cut off with a frown.
"What ails you. Mat? You look about to sick up."
What
ailed him was his memory, and not the other men's memories for once.
Those had
been stuffed into him to fill holes in his own memories, which they did
and
more, or so it seemed. He certainly remembered many more days than he
had
lived. But whole stretches of his own life were lost to him, and others
were
like moth-riddled blankets or shadowy and dim. He had only spotty
memories of
fleeing Shadar Logoth, and very vague recollections of escaping on
Domon's
rivership, but one thing seen on that voyage stood out. A tower shining
like
burnished steel. Sick up? His stomach wanted to empty itself.
"I
think I know where that tower is, Thorn. Rather, Domon knows. But I
can't go
with you. The Eelfinn will know I'm coming, maybe the Aelfinn, too.
Burn me,
they might already know about this letter, because I read it. They
might know
every word we've said. You can't trust them. They'll take advantage if
they
can, and if they know you're coming, they'll be planning to do just
that.
They'll skin you and make harnesses for themselves from your hide.' His
memories
of them were all his own, but they were more than enough to support the
judgment.
They
stared at him as if he were mad, even Olver. There was nothing for it
but to
tell them about his encounters with the Aelfinn and the Eelfinn. As
much as was
needful, at least. Not about his answers from the Eelfinn, certainly,
or his
two gifts from the Aelfinn. But the other men's memories were necessary
to
explain what he had reasoned out about the Eelfinn and Aelfinn having
links to
him, now. And the pale leather harnesses the Eelfinn wore; those seemed
important. And how they had tried to kill him. That was very important.
He had
said he wanted to leave and failed to say alive, so they took him
outside and
hanged him. He even removed the scarf to show his scar for extra
weight, and he
seldom let anybody see that. The three of them listened in silence,
Thom and
Noal intently, Olver's mouth slowly dropping open in wonder. The rain
beating
on the tent roof was the only sound aside from his voice.
"That
all has to stay inside this tent," he finished. "Aes Sedai have
enough reasons already to want to put their hands on me. If they find
out about
those memories, I'll never be free of them." Would he ever be entirely
free of them? He was beginning to think not, yet there was no reason to
give
them fresh reasons to meddle in his life.
"Are
you any relation to Jain?" Noal raised his hands in a placating
gesture.
"Peace, man. I believe you. It's just, that tops anything I ever did.
Anything Jain ever did, too. Would you mind if I made the third? I can
be handy
in tight spots, you know."
"Burn
me, did everything I said pass in one ear and out the other? They'll
know I'm
coming. They may already know everything!''
"And
it doesn't matter," Thom put in, "not to me. I'll go by myself, if
necessary. But if I read this correctly," he began folding the letter
up,
almost tenderly, "the only hope of success is if you are one of the
three." He sat there on the cot, silent now. looking Mat in the eye.
Mat
wanted to look away, and could not. Bloody Aes Sedai! The woman almost
certainly was dead, and yet she still tried coercing him into being a
hero.
Well, heroes got patted on the head and pushed out of the way until the
next
time a hero was needed, if they survived being a hero in the first
place. Very
often heroes did not. He had never really trusted Moiraine, or liked
her
either. Only fools trusted Aes Sedai. But then, if not for her, he
would be
back in the Two Rivers mucking out the barn and tending his da's cows.
Or he
would be dead. And there old Thom sat, saying nothing, just staring at
him.
That was the rub. He liked Thom. Oh, blood and bloody ashes.
"Burn
me for a fool," he muttered. "I'll go."
Thunder
crashed deafeningly right atop a flash of lightning so bright it shone
through
the tent canvas. When the rumbling booms faded, there was dead silence
in his
head. The last set of dice had stopped. He could have wept.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
A Hell in Maderin
Despite
the late hours kept by everyone that night, the show made a very early
start
the next morning. Grainy-eyed and groggy, Mat trudged out of his tent
while the
sky was still dark to find men and women with lanterns trotting to get
ready
when they were not running, and nearly everyone shouting for somebody
or other
to move faster. Many had the unsteady step of people who had not slept.
Everyone seemed to feel that the farther they could get from where that
village
had vanished in front ot their eyes, the better. Luca's great gaudy
wagon took to
the road before the sun had cleared the horizon, and once again he set
a goodly
pace. Two merchants' trains of twenty or so wagons each passed them
heading
south, and a slow caravan of Tinkers, but nothing going the other way.
The
farther, the better.
Mat
rode with Tuon, and Selucia made no attempt to put the dun between
them, yet
there was no conversation however much he tried to start one. Save for
an
occasional unreadable glance when he made a sally or told a joke, Tuon
rode
looking straight ahead, the cowl of her blue cloak hiding her face.
Even
juggling failed to catch her attention. There was something broody
about her
silence, and it worried him. When a woman went silent on you. there
usually was
trouble in the offing. When she brooded, you could forget about
usually. He
doubted it was the village of the dead that had her fretting. She was
too tough
for that. No, there was trouble ahead.
Little
more than an hour after they set out, a farm on rolling ground hove
into sight,
with dozens of black-faced goats cropping grass in a wide pasture and a
large
olive grove. Boys weeding among the rows of dark-leaved olive trees
dropped
their hoes and rushed down to the stone fences to watch the show pass,
shouting
with excitement to know who they were and where they were going and
where
coming from. Men and women came out of the sprawling tile-roofed
farmhouse and
two big thatch-roofed barns, shading their eyes to watch. Mat was
relieved to
see it. The dead paid no mind to the living.
As
the show rolled onward, farms and olive groves grew thicker on the
ground until
they ran side by side, pushing the forest back a mile or more on either
side of
the road, and well short of midmorning they reached a prosperous town
somewhat
larger than Jurador. A merchant's long train of canvas-topped wagons
was
turning in at the main gates, where half a dozen men in polished
conical
helmets and leather coats sewn with steel discs stood guard with
halberds. More
men, cradling crossbows, kept watch atop the two gate towers. But if
the Lord
of Maderin, one Nathin Sarmain Vendare, expected trouble, the guards
were the
only sign of it. Farms and olive groves reached right to the stone
walls of
Maderin, an unsound practice, and right costly should the town ever
need to be
defended. Luca had to bargain with a farmer for the right to set up the
show in
an unused pasture and came back muttering that he had just bought the
scoundrel
a new flock of goats or maybe two. But the canvas wall was soon rising,
with
Luca chivvying everyone for speed. They were to perform today and leave
early
in the morning. Very early. Nobody complained, or much said an unneeded
word.
The farther, the better.
"And
tell no one what you saw," Luca cautioned more than once. "We saw
nothing out of the ordinary. We wouldn't want to frighten the patrons
away." People looked at him as if he were insane. No one wanted to
think
of that melting village or the peddler, much less speak of them.
Mat
was sitting in his tent in his shirtsleeves, waiting for Thorn and
Juilin to return
from their trip into the town to learn whether there was a Seanchan
presence.
He was idly tossing a set of dice on his small table. After an early
run of
mostly high numbers, five single pips stared up at him ten times in a
row; most
men thought the Dark One's eyes an unlucky toss.
Selucia
pulled back the entry flap and strode in. Despite her plain brown
divided
skirts and white blouse, she managed to seem a queen entering a stable.
A
filthy stable, by the expression on her face, though Lopin and Nerim
could have
satisfied his mother when it came to cleaning.
"She
wants you," she drawled peremptorily, touching her flowered scarf to
make
sure her short yellow hair was covered. "Come."
"What's
she want with me, then?" he said, and leaned his elbows on the table.
He
even stretched out his legs and crossed his ankles. Once you let a
woman think
you would jump whenever she called, you never got out from under again.
"She'll
tell you. You are wasting time, Toy. She won't be pleased."
"If
Precious expects me to come running when she crooks a finger, she
better learn
to like being displeased."
Grimacing-if
her mistress tolerated the name, Selucia took it for a personal
affront-she
folded her arms beneath that impressive bosom.
It
was clear as good glass that she intended to wait there until he went
with her,
and he was of a mind to make it a long wait. He tossed the dice. The
Dark One's
Eyes. Expecting him to jump when Tuon said toad. Hah! Another toss,
spinning
across the table, one die nearly going over the edge. The Dark One's
Eyes.
Still, he had nothing else to do at the moment.
Even
so, he took his time donning his coat, a good bronze-colored silk. By
the time
he picked up his hat, he could hear her foot tapping impatiently.
"Well, what
are you waiting for?" he asked. She hissed at him. She held the entry
flap
open, but she purely hissed like a cat.
Setalle
and Tuon were sitting on one of the beds talking when he entered the
purple
wagon, but they cut off the instant he stepped through the door and
gave him
brief but appraising looks. Which told him the subject of their talk
had been
Mat Cauthon. It made his hackles rise. Plainly, whatever Tuon wanted
was
something they thought he would disapprove of. And just as plainly, she
meant to
have it anyway. The table was snug against the ceiling, and Selucia
brushed
past him to take a place behind Tuon as the tiny woman sat down on the
stool,
her face stern and those beautiful big eyes steady. Hang all the
prisoners
immediately.
"I
wish to visit the common room of an inn," she announced. "Or a
tavern. I have never seen the inside of either. You will take me to one
in this
town, Toy."
He
let himself breathe again. "That's easy enough. Just as soon as Thorn
or
Juilin lets me know it's safe."
"It
must be a low place. What is called a hell."
His
mouth fell open. Low? Hells were the lowest of the low. dirty and dimly
lit,
where the ale and wine were cheap and still not worth half what you
paid, the
food was worse, and any woman who sat on your lap was trying to pick
your
pocket or cut your purse or else had two men waiting upstairs to crack
you over
the head as soon as you walked into her room. At any hour of the day or
night
you would find dice rolling in a dozen games, sometimes for surprising
stakes
given the surroundings. Not gold-only a stone fool displayed gold in a
hell-but
silver often crossed the tables. Few of the gamblers would have come by
their
coin by any means even halfway honest, and those few would be as
hard-eyed as
the headcrackers and knife-men who preyed on drunks in the night. Hells
always
had two or three strong-arms with cudgels about to break up fights, and
most
days they worked hard for their pay. They usually stopped the patrons
from
killing one another, but when they failed, the corpse was dragged out
the back
and left in an alley somewhere or on a rubbish heap. And while they
were
dragging, the drinking never slowed, or the gambling either. That was a
hell.
How had she even heard of such places?
"Did
you plant this fool notion in her head?" he demanded of Setalle.
"Why.
what in the Light makes you think that?'' she replied, going all
wide-eyed the
way women did when pretending to be innocent. Or when they wanted you
to think
they were pretending, just to confuse you. He could not see why they
bothered.
Women confused him all the time without trying.
"It's
out of the question. Precious. I walk into a hell with a woman like
you, and
I'll be in six knife fights inside the hour, if I survive that long."
Tuon
gave a pleased smile. Just a flicker, but definitely pleased. "Do you
really think so?"
"I
know so for a fact." Which produced another brief smile of delight.
Delight! The bloody woman wanted to see him in a knife fight!
"Even
so. Toy, you promised."
They
were arguing over whether he had made a promise-well, he was calmly
presenting
the logic that saying something was easy was no promise; Tuon just
stubbornly
insisted he had promised, while Setalle took up her embroidery hoop and
Selucia
watched him with the amused air of
someone watching a man try to defend the indefensible: and he did not
shout, no
matter what Tuon said-when a knock came at the door.
Tuon
paused. "You see, Toy," she said after a moment, "that is how it
is done. You knock and then wait." She made a simple gesture over one
shoulder at her maid.
"You
may enter the presence," Selucia called, drawing herself up regally.
She
probably expected whoever came in to prostrate themselves!
It
was Thom, in a dark blue coat and dark gray cloak that would make him
unremarked in any common room or tavern, neither well-to-do nor poor. A
man who
could afford to pay for his own drink while listening to the gossip, or
buy
another man a cup of wine to pay for hearing his news and the latest
rumors. He
did not prostrate himself. but he did make an elegant bow despite his
bad right
leg. "My Lady," he murmured to Tuon before turning his attention to
Mat. "Harnan said he saw you strolling this way. I trust I'm not
interrupting? I heard… voices."
Mat
scowled. He had not been shouting. "You're not interrupting. What did
you
find out?"
"That
there may be Seanchan in the town from time to time. No soldiers, but
it seems
they're building two farm villages a few miles to the north of the road
and
three more a few miles south. The villagers come to town to buy things
now and
then."
Mat
managed to keep from smiling as he spoke over his shoulder. He even got
a
smattering of regret into his voice. "I'm afraid there's no jaunt into
Maderin for you, Precious. Too dangerous."
Tuon
folded her arms, emphasizing her bosom. There were more curves to her
than he
once had thought. Not like Selucia, certainly, but nice curves.
"Farmers,
Toy," she drawled dismissively. "No farmer has ever seen my face. You
promised me a tavern or a common room, and you won't escape on this
puny
excuse."
"A
common room should present no difficulties," Thom said. "It's a pair
of scissors or a new pot these farmers are after, not drink. They make
their
own ale, it seems, and don't much like the local brew."
"Thank
you, Thorn," Mat said through gritted teeth. 'She wants to see a
hell."
The
white-haired man gave a wheezing cough and knuckled his mustache
vigorously.
"A hell." he muttered.
"A
hell. Do you know a hell in this town where I might take her without
starting a
riot?" He intended the question for sarcasm, but Thorn surprised him by
nodding.
"I
might just know a place at that," the man said slowly. "The White
Ring. I intend to go there anyway, to see what news I can pick up."
Mat
blinked. However unremarked Thom might be elsewhere, he would be looked
at
askance in a hell wearing that coat. More than askance. The usual garb
there
was coarse dirty wool and stained linen. Besides, asking questions in a
hell
was a good way to have a knife planted in your back. But maybe Thom
meant that
this White Ring was not a hell at all. Tuon might not know the
difference if
the place were only a little rougher than the usual. "Should I get
Harnan
and the others?" he asked, testing.
"Oh,
I think you and I should be protection enough for the Lady," Thom said
with what might have been the ghost of a smile, and knots loosened in
Mat's
shoulders.
He
still cautioned the two women-there was no question of Selu-cia staying
behind,
of course; Mistress Anan refused Tuon's invitation to accompany them,
saying
she had already seen as many hells as she had any wish to-about keeping
their
hoods well up. Tuon might believe no farmer had ever seen her face, but
if a cat
could gaze on a king. as the old saying said, then a farmer might have
gazed on
Tuon some time or other, and it would be just their luck to have one or
two of
them turn up in Maderin. Being ta'veren usually seemed to twist the
Pattern for
the worst in his experience.
"Toy,"
Tuon said gently as Selucia settled the blue cloak on her slim
shoulders,
"I have met many farmers while visiting the country. but they very
properly kept their eyes on the ground even if I allowed them to stand.
Believe
me. they never saw my face."
Oh.
He went to fetch his own cloak. White clouds nearly obscured the sun,
still
short of its midday peak, and it was a brisk day for spring. with a
strong
breeze to boot.
People
from the town crowded the main street of the show, men in rough woolens
or
sober coats of finer stuff with just a touch of embroidery on the
cuffs: women,
many wearing lace caps, in somber, collared dresses beneath long white
aprons
or dark, high-necked dresses with embroidery curling across the bosom;
children
darting everywhere, escaping their parents and being chased down, all
of them
oohing and aahing at Miyora's leopards or Latelle's bears, at the
jugglers or
Balat and Abar eating fire, the lean brothers moving in unison. Not
pausing for
so much as a glimpse of the female acrobats, Mat threaded through the
throng
with Tuon on his arm, which he assured by placing her hand on his left
wrist.
She hesitated a moment, then nodded slightly, a queen giving assent to
a
peasant. Thorn had offered his arm to Selucia, but she stayed at her
mistress's
left shoulder. At least she did not try to crowd between.
Luca,
in scarlet coat and cloak, was beneath the big banner at the entrance
watching
coins clink into the glass pitcher, clink again as they were dropped
into the
strongbox. He wore a smile on his face. The line waiting to get in
stretched
near a hundred paces along the canvas wall, and more people were
trickling out
of the town and heading toward che show. "I could take in a fine bit
here
over two or three days," he told Mat. "After all, this place is
solid, and we're far enough from." His smile flickered out like a
snuffed
candle. "You think we're far enough, don't you?"
Mat
sighed. Gold would defeat fear every time in Valan Luca.
He
could not hold his cloak closed with Tuon on his arm, so it flared
behind him
in the stiff breeze, yet that was to the good. The gate guards,
slouching in a
ragged line, eyed them curiously, and one made a sketchy bow. Silk and
lace had
that effect, with country armsmen, at least, and that was what these
men were
no matter how brightly they had burnished their helmets and coin-armor
coats.
Most leaned on their halberds like farmers leaning on shovels. But
Thorn
stopped, and Mat was forced to halt too, a few paces into the town.
After all,
he had no idea where The White Ring lay.
"A
heavy guard, Captain," Thom said, worry touching his voice. "Are
there brigands in the area?"
"No
outlaws around here," a grizzled guard said gruffly. A puckered white
scar
slanting across his square face combined with a squint to give him a
villainous
appearance. He was not one of the leaners, and he held his halberd as
if he
might know how to use it. "The Seanchan cleaned out the few we hadn't
caught.
Move along, now, old fellow. You re blocking the way.'' There was not a
wagon
or cart in sight, and the few people leaving the town afoot had plenty
of room.
The gate arch was wide enough for two wagons abreast, though it might
be a
squeeze.
"The
Seanchan said we didn't set enough guards," a stocky fellow about Mat's
age put in cheerfully, "and Lord Nathin listens close when the Seanchan
talk."
The
grizzled man clouted him with a gauntleted hand on the back of his
helmet hard
enough to stagger him. "You watch your mouth with people from off,
Keilar," the older man growled, "else you'll be back behind a plow
before you can blink. My Lord." he added to Mat. raising his voice,
"you want to call your servant before he gets himself in trouble."
"My
apologies. Captain," Thom said humbly, ducking his white head, the very
image of a chastened serving man. "No offense meant. My apologies."
"He
would have thumped you, too, if I hadn't been here," Mat told him when
he
caught up. Thorn was limping noticeably. He must have been tired for it
to show
that much. "He almost did anyway. And what did you learn that was worth
risking that?"
"I
wouldn't have asked without you, in that coat." Thorn chuckled as they
walked deeper into the town. "The first lesson is what questions to
ask.
The second, and just as important, is when and how to ask. I learned
there
aren't any brigands, which is always good to know. though I've heard of
very
few bands big enough to attack something as large as the show. I
learned Nathin
is under the Seanchan thumb. Either he's obeying a command with those
extra
guards, or he takes their suggestions as commands. And most important,
I
learned that Nathin's armsmen don't resent the Seanchan."
Mat
quirked an eyebrow at him.
"They
didn't spit when they said the name, Mat. They didn't grimace or growl.
They
won't fight the Seanchan, not unless Nathin tells them to, and he
won't."
Thorn exhaled heavily. "It's very strange. I've found the same
everywhere
from Ebou Dar to here. These outlanders come, take charge, impose their
laws,
snatch up women who can channel. and if the nobles resent them, very
few among
the common people seem to. Unless they've had wife or relation
collared,
anyway. Very strange, and it bodes ill for getting them out again. But
then. Altara
is Altara. I'll wager they're finding a colder reception in Amadicia
and
Tarabon." He shook his head. "We had best hope they are, else…" He did
not say what else, but it was easy to imagine.
Mat
glanced at Tuon. How did she feel hearing Thom talk about her people
so? She
said nothing, only walked at his side peering curiously at everything
from the
shelter of her cowl.
Tile-roofed
buildings three and four stories tall, most of brick. lined the wide,
stone-paved
main street of Maderin. shops and inns with signs that swung in the
stiff
breeze crowded in beside stables and rich people's homes with large
lamps above
the arched doorways and humbler structures that housed poorer folk, by
the
laundry hanging from nearly every window. Horse carts and hand-barrows
laden
with bales or crates or barrels slowly made their way through a
moderately
thick throng, men and women with brisk strides, full of that storied
southern
industry, children dashing about in games of catch. Tuon studied it all
with
equal interest. A fellow pushing a wheeled grindstone and crying that
he
sharpened scissors or knives till they could cut wishes caught her
attention as
much as a lean, hard-faced woman in leather trousers with two swords
strapped
to her back. Doubtless a merchant's guard or perhaps a Hunter for the
Horn, but
a rarity either way. A buxom Domani in a clinging red dress that fell
just
short of transparent with a pair of bulky bodyguards in scale-armor
jerkins at
her back got neither more nor less study than a lanky one-eyed fellow
in frayed
wool hawking pins, needles and ribbons from a tray. He had not noticed
this
sort of curiosity from her in Jurador, but she had been intent on
finding silk
in Jurador. Here, she seemed to be trying to memorize all she saw.
Thorn
soon led them off into a maze of twisting streets, most of which
deserved the
name only because they were paved with rough stone blocks the size of a
man's
two fists. Buildings as big as those on the main street, some housing
shops on
the ground floor, loomed over them, almost shutting out the sky. Many
of those
ways were too narrow for horse carts-in some Mat would not have had to
extend
his arms fully to touch the walls on either side-and more than once he
had to press
Tuon against the front of a building to let a heavy-loaded hand-barrow
rumble
past over the uneven paving stones, the barrow-man calling apologies
for the
inconvenience without slowing. Porters trudged through that cramped
warren,
too, men walking bent nearly parallel to the ground, each with a bale
or crate
on his back held level by a padded leather roll strapped to his hips.
Just the
sight of them made Mat's own back ache. They reminded him how much he
hated
work.
He
was on the point of asking Thorn how far they had to go- Maderin was
not that
big a town-when they reached The White Ring, on one of those winding
streets
where his arms could more than compass the width of the pavement, a
brick
building of three floors across from a cutler's shop. The painted sign
hanging
over the inn's red door, a frilly white circle of lace, made the knots
return
to his shoulders. Ring, it might be
called, but that was a woman's garter if ever he had seen one. It might
not be
a hell, but inns with signs like that usually were rowdy enough in
their own
right. He eased the knives up his coatsleeves, and those in his boot
tops, as
well, felt the blades under his coat, shrugged just to get the feel of
the one
hanging behind his neck. Though if it went that far… Tuon nodded
approvingly. The bloody woman was dying to see him get into a knife
fight!
Selucia had the sense to frown.
"Ah,
yes," Thom said. "A wise precaution." And he checked his own
knives, tightening those knots in Mat's shoulders a little more. Thom
carried
almost as many blades as he did, up his sleeves, beneath his coat.
Selucia
writhed her fingers at Tuon, and suddenly they were in a silent
argument,
fingers flashing. Of course, it could not be that- Tuon bloody well
owned
Selucia the same as owning a dog and you did not argue with your
dog-but an
argument it seemed, both women with their jaws set stubbornly. Finally,
Selucia
folded her hands and bowed her head in acquiescence. A reluctant
submission.
"It
will be well." Tuon told her in a jollying tone. "You will see. It
will be well."
Mat
wished he was sure of that. Taking a deep breath, he extended his wrist
for her
hand again and followed Thom.
The
spacious, wood-paneled common room of The White Ring held better than
two dozen
men and women, nearly half obvious out-landers, at square tables
beneath a
thick-beamed ceiling. All neatly dressed in finely woven wool with
little by
way of ornamentation, most were talking quietly over their wine in
pairs,
cloaks draped over their low-backed chairs, though three men and a
woman with
long beaded braids were tossing bright red dice from a winecup at one
table.
Pleasant smells drifted from the kitchen, including meat roasting.
Goat, most
likely. Beside the wide stone fireplace, where a parsimonious fire
burned and a
polished brass barrel-clock sat on the mantel, a saucy-eyed young woman
who
rivaled Selucia-and with her blouse unlaced nearly to her waist to
prove
it-swayed her hips and sang, accompanied by a hammered dulcimer and a
flute, a
song about a woman juggling all of her lovers. She sang in a suitably
bawdy
voice. None of the patrons appeared to be listening.
"As
I walked out one fine spring day, I met young Jac who was pitching hay,
his
hair so fair, and his eyes were. too.
Well.
I gave him a kiss; oh, what could I do?
We
snuggled and we tickled while the sun rose high. and I won't say how
often he
made me sigh."
Lowering
her hood, Tuon stopped just inside the door and frowned around the
room.
"Are you certain this is a hell. Master Merrilin?" she asked. In a
low voice, thank the Light. Some places, a question of that sort could
get you
thrown out and roughly, silk coat or no. In others, the prices just
doubled.
"I
assure you, you won't find a bigger collection of thieves and rascals
anywhere
in Maderin at this hour," Thorn murmured, stroking his mustaches.
"Nowjac
gels an hour when the sky is clear, and Willi gets an hour when my
father's not
near. It's the hayloft with MoriI. for he shows no fear, and
Keilin
comes at midday: he's oh so bold! Lord Brelan gets an evening when the
night is
cold. Master Andril gets a morning, but he's very old. Oh. what, oh.
what is a
poor girl to do? My loves are so many and the hours so few."
Tuon
looked doubtful, but with Selucia at her shoulder, she walked over to
stand in
front of the singer, who faltered a moment at Tuon's intense scrutiny
before
catching the song up again. She sang over the top of Tuon's head,
plainly
attempting to ignore her. It seemed that with every other verse, the
woman in
the song added a new lover to her list. The male musician, playing the
dulcimer, smiled at Selucia and got a frosty stare back. The two women
got
other looks as well, the one so small and with very short black hair,
the other
rivaling the singer and with her head wrapped in a scarf, but no more
than
glances. The patrons were intent on their own business.
"It
isn't a hell." Mat said softly, "but what is it? Why would so many
people be here in the middle of the day?" It was mornings and evenings
when common rooms filled up like this.
"The
locals are selling olive oil, lacquerware or lace," Thom replied just
as
quietly, "and the outlanders are buying. It seems local custom is to
begin
with a few hours of drink and conversation. And if you have no head for
it," he added dryly, "you sober up to find you've made much less of a
bargain than you thought in your wine."
"Light,
Thorn, she'll never believe this place is a hell. I thought you were
taking us
somewhere merchants' guards drink, or apprentices. At least she might
believe
that."
"Trust
me. Mat. I think you'll find she has lived a very sheltered life in
some
ways."
Sheltered?
When her own brothers and sisters tried to kill her? "You wouldn't care
to
wager a crown on it. would you?"
Thorn
chuckled. "Always glad to take your coin."
Tuon
and Selucia came gliding back, faces expressionless. "I expected
rougher
garb on the patrons," Tuon said quietly, "and perhaps a fight or two,
but the song is too salacious for a respectable inn. Though she is much
too
covered to sing it properly, in my opinion. What is that for?" she
added
in tones of suspicion as Mat handed Thorn a coin.
"Oh,"
Thorn said, slipping the crown into his coat pocket. "I thought you
might
be disappointed that only the more successful blackguards were
present-they
aren't always so colorful as the poorer sort-but Mat said you'd never
notice."
She
leveled a look at Mat, who opened his mouth indignantly. And closed it
again.
What was there to say? He was already in the pickling kettle. No need
to stoke
the fire.
As
the innkeeper approached, a round woman with suspiciously black hair
beneath a
white lace cap and stuffed into a gray dress embroidered in red and
green
across her more than ample bosom, Thorn slipped away with a bow and a
murmured.
"By your leave, my Lord, my Lady." Murmured, but loud enough for
Mistress Heilin to hear.
The
innkeeper had a flinty smile, yet she exercised it for a lord and lady,
curtsying so deeply that she grunted straightening back up, and she
seemed only
a little disappointed that Mat wanted wine and perhaps food, not rooms.
Her
best wine. Even so. when he paid, he let her see that he had gold in
his purse
as well as silver. A silk coat was all very well, but gold wearing rags
got
better service than copper wearing silk.
"Ale."
Tuon drawled. "I've never tasted ale. Tell me, good mistress, is it
likely
any of these people will start a fight any time soon?" Mat nearly
swallowed his tongue.
Mistress
Heilin blinked and gave her head a small shake, as if uncertain she
really had
heard what she thought she had. "No need to worry, my Lady," she
said. "It happens time to time, if they get too far in their cups, but
I'll settle them down hard if it does."
"Not
on my account." Tuon told her. "They should have their sport."
The
innkeeper's smile went crooked and barely held, but she managed another
curtsy
then scurried away clutching Mat's coin and calling, "Jera, wine for
the
lord and lady, a pitcher of the Kiranaille. And a mug of ale."
"You
mustn't ask questions like that. Precious," Mat said quietly as he
escorted Tuon and Selucia to an empty table. Selucia refused a chair,
taking
Tuon's cloak and draping it over the chair she held for Tuon, then
standing
behind it. "It isn't polite. Besides, it lowers your eyes." Thank the
Light for those talks with Egeanin, whatever name she wanted to go by.
Seanchan
would do any fool thing or refuse to do what was sensible to avoid
having their
eyes lowered.
Tuon
nodded thoughtfully. "Your customs are often very peculiar, Toy. You
will
have to teach me about them. I have learned some, but I must know the
customs
of the people I will rule in the name of the Empress, may she live
forever."
"I'll
be glad to teach you what I can," Mat said, unpinning his cloak and
letting it fall carelessly over the low back of his chair. "It will be
good for you to know our ways even if you end up ruling a sight less
than you
expect to." He set his hat on the table.
Tuon
and Selucia gasped as one, hands darting for the hat. Tuon's reached it
first,
and she quickly put it on the chair next to her. "That is very bad
luck.
Toy. Never put a hat on a table." She made one of those odd gestures
for
warding off evil, folding under the middle two fingers and extending
the other
two stiffly. Selucia did the same.
"I'll
remember that,' he said dryly. Perhaps too dryly. Tuon gave him a level
look.
Very level.
"I
have decided you will not do for a cupbearer, Toy. Not until you learn
meekness, which I almost despair of teaching you. Perhaps I will make
you a
running groom, instead. You are good with horses. Would you like
trotting at my
stirrup when I ride? The robes are much the same as for a cupbearer,
but I will
have yours decorated with ribbons. Pink ribbons."
He
managed to maintain a smooth face, but he felt his cheeks growing hot.
There
was only one way she could know pink ribbons had any special
significance to
him. Tylin had told her. It had to be. Burn him, women would talk about
anything'.
The
arrival of the serving maid with their drink saved him from having to
make any
response. Jera was a smiling young woman with nearly as many curves as
the
singer, not so well displayed yet not really concealed by the white
apron she
wore tied snugly. Her dark woolen dress fit quite snugly, too. Not that
he gave
her more than a glance, of course. He was with his wife-to-be. Anyway,
only a
complete woolhead looked at a woman while with another.
Jera
placed a tall pewter wine pitcher and two polished pewter cups on the
table and
handed a thick mug of ale to Selucia, then blinked in confusion when
Selucia
transferred the mug to Tuon and took a cup of wine in return. He handed
her a
silver penny to settle her discomposure, and she gave him a beaming
smile with
her curtsy before darting off to another call from the innkeeper. It
was
unlikely she received much in the way of silver.
"You
could have smiled back at her. Toy," Tuon said, holding the mug up for
a
sniff and wrinkling her nose. "She is very pretty. You were so
stone-faced, you probably frightened her." She took a sip, and her eyes
widened in surprise. "This actually is quite good."
Mat
sighed and took a long swallow of dark wine that smelled faintly of
flowers. In
none of his memories, his own or those other men's, could he recall
having
understood women. Oh, one or two things here and there, but never
anywhere near
completely.
Sipping
her ale steadily-he was not about to tell her ale was taken in
swallows, not
sips: she might get herself drunk deliberately, just to experience a
hell
fully; he was not ready to put anything past her today. Or any
day-taking sips
between every sentence, the maddening little woman questioned him on
customs.
Telling her how to behave in a hell was easy enough. Keep to yourself,
ask no
questions, and sit with your back to a wall if you could and near to a
door in
case of a need to leave suddenly. Better not to go at all, but if you
had to… Yet she quickly passed on to courts and palaces, and got few
answers there.
He could have told her more of customs in the courts of Eharon or
Shiota or a
dozen other dead nations than in those of any nation that still lived.
Scraps
of how things were done in Caemlyn and Tear were all he really knew,
and bits from
Fal Dara, in Shienar. Well, that and Ebou Dar. but she already knew
those ways.
"So
you have traveled widely and been in other palaces than the Tarasin,"
she
said finally, and took the last bit of ale in her mug. He had not
finished half
his wine yet; he thought Selucia had not taken above two small swallows
of
hers. "But you are not nobly born, it seems. I thought you must not
be."
"That
I am not," he told her firmly. "Nobles…" He trailed off, clearing
his throat. He could hardly tell her nobles were fools with their noses
so high
in the air they could not see where they were stepping. She was who and
what
she was, after all.
Expressionless,
Tuon studied him while pushing her empty mug to one side. Still
studying, she
flickered the fingers of her left hand over her shoulder, and Selucia
clapped
her own hands together loudly. Several of the other patrons looked at
them in
surprise. "You called yourself a gambler," Tuon said, "and
Master Merrilin named you the luckiest man in the world."
Jera
came running, and Selucia handed her the mug. "Another, quickly," she
commanded, though not in an unkindly way. Still, she had a regal manner
to her.
Jera dropped a hasty curtsy and scurried off again as though she had
been
shouted at.
"I
have luck sometimes," Mat said cautiously.
"Let's
see whether you have any today, Toy." Tuon looked toward the table
where
the dice were rattling on the tabletop.
He
could see no harm in it. It was a certainty he would win more than he
lost, yet
he thought it unlikely one of the merchants would pull a knife however
much his
luck was in. He had not noticed anyone carrying one of those long belt
knives
that everybody wore farther south. Standing, he offered Tuon his arm,
and she
rested her hand lightly on his wrist. Selucia left her wine on the
table and
stayed close to her mistress.
Two
of the Altaran men, one lean and bald except for a dark fringe, the
other
round-faced above three chins, scowled when he asked whether a stranger
might
join the game, and the third, a graying, stocky fellow with a pendulous
lower
lip, went stiff as a fence post. The Taraboner woman was not so
unfriendly.
"Of
course, of course. Why not?" she said, her speech slightly slurred. Her
face was flushed, and the smile she directed at him had a slackness
about it.
Apparently she was one of those with no head for wine. It seemed the
locals
wanted to keep her happy because the scowls vanished, though the
graying man
remained wooden-faced. Mat fetched chairs from a nearby table for
himself and
Tuon. Selucia chose to remain standing behind Tuon. which was just as
well. Six
people crowded the table.
Jera
arrived to curtsy and proffer a refilled mug to Tuon with both hands
and a
murmured "My Lady." and another serving woman, graying and nearly as
stout as Mistress Heilin, replaced the wine pitcher on the gambler's
table.
Smiling, the bald man filled the Taraboner's cup to the brim. They
wanted her
happy and drunk. She drained half the cup and with a laugh wiped her
lips
delicately with a lace-edged handkerchief. Getting it back up her
sleeve
required two tries. She would come away with no good bargains this day.
Mat
watched a little play and soon recognized the game. It used four dice
rather
than two, but without a doubt it was a version of Phi, Match, a game
that had
been popular for a thousand years before Artur Hawkwing began his rise.
Small
piles of silver admixed with a few gold coins lay in front of each of
the
players, and it was a silver mark that he laid in the middle of the
table to
buy the dice while the stout man was gathering his winnings from the
last toss.
He expected no trouble from merchants, but trouble was less likely if
they lost
silver rather than gold.
The
lean man matched the wager, and Mat rattled the crimson dice in the
pewter cup,
then spun them out onto the table. They came to rest showing four fives.
"Is
that a winning toss?" Tuon asked.
"Not
unless I match it," Mat replied, scooping the dice back into the cup,
"without tossing a fourteen or the Dark One's eyes first." The dice
clattered in the cup, clattered across the table. Four fives. His luck
was in,
for sure. He slid one coin over in front of himself and left the other.
Abruptly,
the graying fellow scraped back his chair and stood up. "I've had
enough." he muttered, and began fumbling the coins in front of him into
his coat pockets. The other two Altarans stared at him incredulously.
"You're
leaving, Vane?" the lean man said. "Now?"
"I
said I've had enough. Camrin." the graying man growled and went
stumping
out into the street pursued by Camrin's scowl at his back.
The
Taraboner woman leaned over unsteadily, her beaded braids clicking on
the
tabletop, to pat the fat man's wrist. "Just means I'll buy my
lacquerware
from you, Master Kostelle," she said fuzzily. "You and Master
Camrin."
Kostelle's
triple chins wobbled as he chuckled. "So it does. Mistress Alstaing. So
it
does. Doesn't it, Camrin?"
"I
suppose," the bald man replied grumpily. "I suppose." He shoved
a mark out to match Mat's.
Once
again the dice spun across the table. This time, they came up totaling
fourteen.
"Oh,"
Tuon said, sounding disappointed. "You lost."
"I
won, Precious. That's a winning toss if it's your first." He left his
original bet in the middle of the table. "Another?" he said with a
grin.
His
luck was in. all right, as strong as it had ever been. The bright red
dice
rolled across the table, bounced across the table, ricocheted off the
wagered
coins sometimes, and toss after toss they came to rest showing fourteen
white
pips. He made fourteen every way it could be made. Even at one coin to
a wager,
the silver in front of him grew to a tidy sum. Half the people in the
common
room came to stand around the table and watch. He grinned at Tuon, who
gave him
a slight nod. He had missed this, dice in a common room or tavern, coin
on the
table, wondering how long his luck would hold. And a pretty woman at
his side
while he gambled. He wanted to laugh with pleasure.
As
he was shaking the dice in the cup again, the Taraboner merchant
glanced at
him, and for an instant, she did not look drunk at all. Suddenly, he no
longer
felt like laughing. Her face slackened immediately, and her eyes became
a tad
unfocused once more, but for that instant they had been awls. She had a
much
better head for wine than he had supposed. It seemed Camrin and
Kostelle would
not get away with fobbing off shoddy work at top prices or whatever
their
scheme had been. What concerned him, though, was that the woman was
suspicious
of him. Come to think, she herself had not risked a coin against him.
The two
Altarans were frowning at him. but just the way men who were losing
frowned
over their bad luck. She thought he had found some way to cheat. Never
mind
that he was using their dice, or more likely the inn's dice; an
accusation of
cheating could get a man a drubbing even in a merchants' inn. Men
seldom waited
on proof of that charge.
"One
last toss." he said, "and I think I'll call it done. Mistress
Heilin?" The innkeeper was among the onlookers. He handed her a small
handful of his new-won silver coins. "To celebrate my good fortune,
serve
everybody what they want to drink until those run out." That brought
appreciative murmurs, and someone behind him clapped him on the back. A
man
drinking your wine was less likely to believe you had bought it with
cheated
coin. Or at least they might hesitate long enough to give him a chance
to get
Tuon out.
"He
can't keep this run going forever," Camrin muttered, scrubbing a hand
through the hair he no longer possessed. "What say you, Kostelle?
Halves?" Fingering a gold crown free of the coins piled in front of
him,
he slid it over beside Mat's silver mark. "If there's only to be one
more
toss, let's make a real wager on it. Bad luck has to follow this much
good." Kostelle hesitated, rubbing his chins in thought, then nodded
and
added a gold crown of his own.
Mat
sighed. He could refuse the bet, but walking away now might well
trigger
Mistress Alstaing's charge. So could winning this toss. Reluctantly he
pushed
out silver marks to match their gold. That left only two in front of
him. He
gave the cup an extra heavy shake before spilling the dice onto the
table. He
did not expect that to alter anything. He was just venting his feelings.
The
red dice tumbled across the tabletop, hit the piled coins and bounced
back,
spinning before they fell to a stop. Each showing a single pip. The
Dark One's
Eyes.
Laughing
just as if it were not just their own coin won back, Camrin and
Kostelle began
dividing their winnings. The watchers started drifting away, calling
congratulations to the two merchants, murmuring words of commiseration
to Mat.
some lifting the cup he was paying for in his direction. Mistress
Alstaing took
a long pull at her winecup, studying him over the rim, to all outward
appearance as drunk as a goose. He doubted she thought he had been
cheating any
longer, not when he was walking away with only one mark more than he
sat down
with. Sometimes bad luck could turn out to be good.
"So
your luck is not endless, Toy," Tuon said as he escorted her back to
their
table. "Or is it that you are lucky only in small things?'
"Nobody
has endless luck, Precious. Myself, I think that last toss was one of
the
luckiest I've ever made." He explained about the Taraboner woman's
suspicions, and why he had bought wine for the whole common room.
At
the table, he held her chair for her, but she remained standing,
looking at
him. "You may do very well in Seandar," she said finally, thrusting
her nearly empty mug at him. "Guard this until I return."
He
straightened in alarm. "Where are you going?" He trusted her not to
run away, but not to stay out of trouble without him there to pull her
out of
it.
She
put on a long-suffering face. Even that was beautiful. "If you must
know,
I am going to the necessary, Toy."
"Oh.
The innkeeper can tell you where it is. Or one of the serving women."
"Thank
you, Toy," she said sweetly. "I'd never have thought to ask."
She waggled her fingers at Selucia, and the two of them walked toward
the back
of the common room having one of their silent talks and giggling.
Sitting
down, he scowled into his winecup. Women seemed to enjoy finding ways
to make
you feel a fool. And he was half-married to this one.
"Where
are the women?" Thom asked, dropping down into the chair beside Mat and
setting a nearly full winecup on the table. He grunted when Mat
explained, and
went on in a low voice, leaning his elbows on the table to put his head
close.
"We have trouble behind and ahead. Far enough ahead that it may not
bother
us here, but best we leave as soon as they return."
Mat
sat up straight. "What kind of trouble?"
"Some
of those merchant trains that passed us the last few days brought news
of a
murder in Jurador about the time we left. Maybe a day or two later;
it's hard
to be sure. A man was found in his own bed with his throat ripped, only
there
wasn't enough blood." He had no need to say more.
Mat
took a long pull at his wine. The bloody gholam was still following
him. How
had it found out he was with Luca's show? But if it was still a day or
two
behind at the pace the show was making, likely it would not catch up to
him
soon. He fingered the silver foxhead through his coat. At least he had
a way to
fight it if it did appear. The thing carried a scar he had given it.
"And
the trouble ahead?"
"There's
a Seanchan army on the border of Murandy. How they assembled it without
my
learning about it before this…" He puffed out his mustaches,
offended by his failure. "Well, no matter. Everybody who passes through
they make drink a cup of some herbal tea."
"Tea?"
Mat said in disbelief. "Where's the trouble in tea?"
"Every
so often, this tea makes a woman go unsteady in her legs, and then the
sul'dam
come and collar her. But that's not the worst. They're looking very
hard for a
slight, dark young Seanchan woman."
"Well,
of course they are. Did you expect they wouldn't be? This solves my
biggest
problem. Thorn. When we get closer, we can leave the show, take to the
forest.
Tuon and Selucia can travel on with Luca. Luca will like being the hero
who
returned their Daughter of the Nine Moons to them."
Thom
shook his head gravely. "They're looking for an impostor, Mat. Somebody
claiming to be the Daughter of the Nine Moons. Except the description
fits her
too closely. They don't talk about it openly, but there are always men
who
drink too much, and some always talk too much as well when they do.
They mean
to kill her when they find her. Something about blotting out the shame
she
caused."
"Light!"
Mat breathed. "How could that be, Thom? Whatever general commands that
army must know her face, wouldn't he? And other officers, too, I'd
think. There
must be nobles who know her."
"Won't
do her much good if they do. Even the lowest soldier will slit her
throat or
bash in her head as soon as she's found. I had that from three
different
merchants, Mat. Even if they're all wrong, are you willing to take the
chance?"
Mat
was not, and over their wine they began planning. Not that they did
much drinking.
Thom seldom did anymore for all his visits to common rooms and taverns,
and Mat
wanted a clear head.
"Luca
will scream over letting us have enough horses to mount everyone
whatever you
pay him," Thom said at one point. "And there are packhorses for
supplies
if we're taking to the forest."
"Then
I'll start buying, Thom. By the time we have to go, we'll have as many
as we
need. I'll wager I can find a few good animals right here. Vanin has a
good
eye, too. Don't worry. I'll make sure he pays for them." Thom nodded
doubtfully. He was not so certain how reformed Vanin was.
"Aludra's
coming with us?" the white-haired man said in surprise a little later.
"She'll want to take all of her paraphernalia. That'll mean more
packhorses."
"We
have time, Thom. The border of Murandy is a long way, yet. I mean to
head north
into Andor, or east if Vanin knows a way through the mountains. Better
east." Any way Vanin knew would be a smuggler's path, a horsethief's
escape route. There would be much less chance of unfortunate encounters
along
something like that. The Sean-chan could be almost anywhere in Altara.
and the
way north took him nearer that army than he liked.
Tuon
and Selucia appeared from the back of the common room, and he stood,
taking up
Tuon's cloak from her chair. Thorn rose, too, lifting Selucia's cloak.
"We're leaving." Mat said, trying to place the cloak around Tuon.
Selucia snatched it out of his hands.
"I
haven't seen even one fight yet." Tuon protested, too loudly. Any
number
of people turned to stare, merchants and serving women.
"I'll
explain outside," he told her quietly. "Away from prying ears."
Tuon
stared up at him, expressionless. He knew she was tough, but she was so
tiny,
like a pretty doll, that it was easy to believe she would break if
handled
roughly. He was going to do whatever was necessary to make sure she was
not put
in danger of being broken. Whatever it took. Finally she nodded and let
Selucia
place the blue cloak on her shoulders. Thorn attempted to do the same
for the
yellow-haired woman, but she took it away from him and donned it
herself. Mat
could not recall ever seeing her let anyone help her with her cloak.
The
crooked street outside was empty of human life. A slat-ribbed brown dog
eyed
them warily, then trotted away around the nearest bend. Mat moved
nearly as
quickly in the other direction, explaining as they went. If he had
expected
shock or dismay, he would have been disappointed.
"It
could be Ravashi or Chimal." the little woman said thoughtfully, as if
having
an entire Seanchan army out to kill her were no more than an idle
distraction.
"My two nearest sisters in age. Aurana is too young, I think, only
eight.
Fourteen, you would say. Chimal is quiet in her ambition, but Ravashi
has
always believed she should have been named just because she is older.
She might
well have sent someone to plant rumors should I disappear for a time.
It is
really quite clever of her. If she is the one." Just as coolly as
talking
about whether it might rain.
"This
plot could be dealt with easily if the High Lady were in the TarasinPalace
where she belongs," Selucia said, and coolness vanished from Tuon.
Oh,
her face became as chill as that of an executioner, but she rounded on
her
maid, fingers flashing so furiously they should have been striking
sparks.
Selucia's face went pale, and she sank to her knees, head down and
huddling.
Her fingers gestured briefly, and Tuon let her own hands fall, stood
looking
down at the scarf-covered top of Selucia's head, breathing heavily.
After a
moment, she bent and lifted the other woman to her feet. Standing very
close,
she said something very short in that finger-talk. Selucia replied
silently,
Tuon made the same gestures again, and they exchanged tremulous smiles.
Tears
glistened in their eyes. Tears!
"Will
you tell me what that was all about?'' Mat demanded. They turned their
heads to
study him.
"What
are your plans, Toy?" Tuon asked at last.
"Not
Ebou Dar, if that's what you're thinking. Precious. If one army is out
to kill
you, then they probably all are, and there are too many soldiers
between here
and Ebou Dar. But don't worry: I'll find some way to get you back
safely."
"So
you always…" Her eyes went past him, widening, and he looked over his
shoulder to see seven or eight men round the last bend in the street.
Every man
had an unsheathed sword in his hand. Their steps quickened at sight of
him.
"Run,
Tuon!" he shouted, spinning to face their attackers. "Thom get her
away from here!" A knife came into either hand from his sleeves, and he
threw them almost as one. The left-hand blade took a graying man in the
eye,
the right-hand a skinny fellow in the throat. They dropped as if their
bones
had melted, but before their swords clattered on the paving stones, he
had
already snatched another pair of knives from his boot tops and was
sprinting
toward them.
It
took them by surprise, losing two of their number so quickly, and him
closing
the distance instead of trying to flee. But with him so close so
quickly, and
them jamming against one another on that narrow street, they lost most
of the
advantage that swords gave them over his knives. Not all,
unfortunately. His
blades could deflect a sword, but he only bothered when someone drew
back for a
thrust. In short order he had a fine collection of gashes, across his
ribs, on
his left thigh, along the right side of his jaw, a cut that would have
laid
open his throat had he not jerked aside in time. But had he tried to
flee, they
would have run him through from behind. Alive and bleeding was better
than
dead.
His
hands moved as fast as ever they had, short moves, almost delicate.
Flamboyance
would have killed him. One knife slipped into a fat man's heart
and out again before the fellow's
knees began to crumple. He sliced inside the elbow of a man built like
a
blacksmith, who dropped his sword and awkwardly drew his belt knife
with his
left hand. Mat ignored him; the fellow was already staggering from
blood loss
before his blade cleared the scabbard. A square-faced man gasped as Mat
sliced
open the side of his neck. He clapped a hand to the wound, but he only
managed
to totter back two steps before he fell. As men died, the others gained
room,
but Mat moved faster still, dancing so that a falling man shielded him
from
another's sword while he closed inside the sword-arc of a third. To
him, the
world consisted of his two knives and the men crowding each other to
get at
him, and his knives sought the places where men bleed most heavily.
Some of
those ancient memories came from men who had not been very nice at all.
And
then, miracle of miracles, bleeding profusely, but his blood too hot to
let him
feel the full pain yet, he was facing the last, one he had not noticed
before.
She was young and slim in a ragged dress, and she might have been
pretty had
her face been clean, had her teeth not been showing in a rictus snarl.
The
dagger she was tossing from hand to hand had a double-edged blade twice
the
length of his hand.
"You
can't hope to finish alone what the others failed in together," he told
her. "Run. I'll let you go unharmed.''
With
a cry like a feral cat, she rushed at him slashing and stabbing wildly.
All he
could do was dance backwards awkwardly, trying to fend her off. His
boot slid
in a patch of blood, and as he staggered, he knew he was about to die.
Abruptly
Tuon was there, left hand seizing the young woman's wrist-not the wrist
of her
knife hand, worse luck-twisting so the arm went stiff and the girl was
forced
to double over. And then it mattered not at all which hand held her
knife, because
Tuon's right hand swept across, bladed like an axe, and struck her
throat so
hard that he heard the cartilage cracking. Choking, she clutched her
ruined
throat and sagged to her knees, then fell over still sucking hoarsely
for
breath.
"I
told you to run," Mat said, not sure which of the two he was addressing.
"You
very nearly let her kill you, Toy," Tuon said severely. "Why?"
"I
promised myself I'd never kill another woman," he said wearily. His
blood
was beginning to cool, and Light, he hurt! "Looks like I've ruined this
coat," he muttered, fingering one of the blood-soaked slashes. The
motion
brought a wince. When had he been gashed on the left arm?
Her
gaze seemed to bore into his skull, and she nodded as if she-had come
to some
conclusion.
Thorn
and Selucia were standing a little down the street, in front of the
reason Tuon
was still there, better than half a dozen bodies sprawled on the paving
stones.
Thorn had a knife in either hand and was allowing Selucia to examine a
wound on
his ribs through the rent in his coat. Oddly, by evidence of the dark
glistening patches on his coat, he seemed to have fewer injuries than
Mat. Mat
wondered whether Tuon had taken part there, too, but he could not see a
spot of
blood on her anywhere. Selucia had a bloody gash down her left arm,
though it
appeared not to hinder her.
"I'm
an old man," Thorn said suddenly, "and sometimes I imagine I see
things that can't be, but luckily, I always forget them."
Selucia
paused to look up at him coolly. Lady's maid she might be, but blood
seemed not
to faze her at all. "And what might you be trying to forget?"
"I
can't recall," Thorn replied. Selucia nodded and went back to examining
his wounds.
Mat
shook his head. Sometimes he was not entirely sure Thorn still had all
his
wits. For that matter, Selucia seemed a shovel shy of a full load now
and then,
too.
"This
one can't live to be put to the question." Tuon drawled, frowning at
the
woman choking and twitching at her feet, "and she can't talk if she
somehow managed to.' Bending fluidly, she scooped up the woman's knife
and
drove it hard beneath the woman's breastbone. That rasping fight for
air went
silent; glazing eyes stared up at the narrow strip of sky overhead. "A
mercy she did not deserve, but I see no point to needless suffering. I
won.
Toy."
"You
won? What are you talking about?"
"You
used my name before I used yours, so I won."
Mat
whistled faintly through his teeth. Whenever he thought he knew how
tough she
was, she found a way to show him he did not know the half. If anybody
happened
to be looking out a window, that stabbing might raise questions with
the local
magistrate, probably Lord Nathin himself. But there were no faces at
any window
he could see. People avoided getting embroiled in this sort of thing if
they
could. For all he knew, any number of porters or barrow-men might have
come
along during the fight. For a certainty, they would have turned right
around
again as quickly as they could. Whether any might have gone for Lord
Nathin's
guards was another question. Still. he had no fear of Nathin or his
magistrate.
A pair of men escorting two women did not decide to attack more than a
dozen
carrying swords. Likely these fellows, and the unfortunate young woman,
were
well known to the guards.
Limping
to retrieve his thrown knives, he paused in the act of pulling the
blade from
the graying man's eye. He had not really taken in that face, before.
Everything
had happened too quickly for more than general impressions. Carefully
wiping
the knife on the man's coat, he tucked it away up his sleeve as he
straightened. "Our plans have changed. Thorn. We're leaving Maderin as
fast as we can, and we're leaving the show as fast as we can. Luca will
want to
be rid of us so much that he'll let us have all the horses we need."
"This
must be reported, Toy," Tuon said severely. "Failure to do so is as
lawless as what they did."
"You
know that fellow?" Thorn said.
Mat
nodded. "His name is Vane, and I don't think anybody in this town will
believe
a respectable merchant attacked us in the street. Luca will give us
horses to
be rid of this." It was very strange. The man had not lost a coin to
him.
had not wagered a coin. So, why? Very strange indeed. And reason enough
to be
gone quickly.
CHAPTER TWELVE
A Manufactory
The
midday Amadician sun was warm on Perrin's head as he rode Stayer toward
the
roofs of Almizar beneath high, scudding white clouds, a hundred miles
southwest
of Amador. Impatient, he kept the bay at a trot. Farms stretched as far
as he
could see in any direction on both sides of the road, thatch-roofed
stone
houses with gray smoke rising from the chimneys and chickens scratching
in
front of the barns. Fat-tailed sheep and spotted black cattle grazed in
stonewalled pastures, and men and boys were plowing the fields or
sowing those
already plowed. It seemed to be laundry day; he could see large kettles
sitting
over fires behind houses, and women and girls hanging shirts and
blouses and
bed linens on long lines to dry. There was little of wildness, only
scattered
thickets, and most of those neatly coppiced to provide firewood.
He
reached out with his mind to find wolves, and found nothing.
Unsurprising.
Wolves stayed clear of this many people, this much tameness. The breeze
stiffened, and he gathered his cloak around him. Despite the need to
make a
show, it was plain brown wool. The only silk cloak he had was lined
with fur,
and too hot for the day. His green silk coat worked in silver would
have to do.
That and his cloak pin. two wolves' heads in silver-and-gold. A gift
from
Faile. it had always seemed too ornate to wear, but he had dug it out
of the
bottom of a chest that morning. A little something to make up for the
plain
cloak.
What
was surprising were the Tinker caravans camped in fields scattered
around the
town, five of them within his sight. According to Elyas, there was
always
feasting when two caravans encountered one another, and a meeting of
three
caused days of celebration, but larger gatherings seldom occurred
except in the
summer, at Sunday, when they had their meeting places. He almost wished
he had
brought Aram,
despite the risk of Masema learning too much. Maybe if the man could
spend a
little time among his own people, he might decide to put down his
sword. That
was the best solution Perrin could think of to a thorny problem,
although not
likely to work. Aram
liked the sword, perhaps too well. But he could not send the man away.
He had
as good as put that sword in Aram's
hand, and now Aram
and the sword were his responsibility. The Light only knew what would
become of
the man if he truly went over to Masema.
"You
study the Tuatha'an and frown, my Lord," General Khirgan drawled. He
could
understand her speech a little better, now that they had spent time
together.
"You've had problems with them in your lands? We have nothing like them
at
home, but the only trouble connected to them I know of has been locals
trying
to drive them away. Apparently, they're supposed to be great thieves.''
She
and Mishima were ornate today in blue cloaks trimmed with red and
yellow, and
red coats with blue cuffs and lapels edged in yellow. Three small
vertical blue
bars, shaped like the thin plumes of a Seanchan helmet, on the left
breast of
her coat indicated her rank, as two did for Mishima. The dozen soldiers
riding
behind wore their striped armor and painted helmets, however, and
carried
steel-tipped lances held at precisely the same angle. The cluster of
Faile's
hangers-on following the Seanchan, also twelve in number, made a brave
display
in Tairen coats with puffy satin-striped sleeves and dark Cairhienin
coats with
stripes of House colors across the chests, yet in spite of their swords
they
looked much less dangerous than the soldiers and seemed to know it.
Whenever
the breeze gusted from behind, it carried traces of irritation that
Perrin
doubted came from the Seanchan. The soldiers' scent was of stillness,
waiting,
like wolves who knew teeth might be needed soon, but not now. Not yet.
"Ah,
they steal a chicken now and then. General," Neald said with a laugh,
giving one of his thin waxed mustaches a twist, "but I'd not be calling
them great thieves." He had enjoyed the Seanchan astonishment at the
gateway that had brought them all here, and he was still posing over
it, somehow
managing to strut while sitting his saddle. It was difficult to
remember that
had he not earned that black coat, he would still be working his
father's farm
and perhaps wondering about marriage to a neighbor girl in a year or
two.
"Great theft requires courage, and Tinkers have not a bit of it."
Huddled
in his dark cloak, Balwer grimaced, or perhaps smiled. Sometimes it was
hard to
tell the difference with the desiccated little man unless Perrin could
catch
his scent. The pair of them accompanied Perrin in much the same way as
a
gray-haired sul'dam linked to a cool-eyed damane with touches of gray
in her
own dark hair accompanied Khirgan and Mishima, supposedly to balance
the
numbers. To the Seanchan, sul'dam and damane counted as one when
connected by
the segmented metal leash. He would have been satisfied to come with
Neald
alone, or Neald and Balwer at least, but Tallanvor had been right about
Seanchan and protocol. The talks had dragged on for three days, and
while some
time had been spent on whether to follow Per-rin's plan or make it a
part of
something Tylee would come up with- with her yielding at the end only
because
she could find nothing better-a good part had been wasted on how many
each side
was to bring here. It had to be the same number for each, and the
Banner-General had wanted to bring a hundred of her soldiers and a pair
of
damane. For honor's sake. She had been astounded that he was willing to
come
with less, and was only willing to accept it after he pointed out that
everyone
among Faile's people was noble in his or her own lands. He had the
feeling she
thought she had been cheated because she could not match his escorts'
rank with
her own. Strange folk, these Seanchan. Oh, there were sides, to be
sure. This
alliance was purely temporary, not to mention delicate, and the
Banner-General
was just as aware of that as he.
"Twice
they offered me shelter when I needed it, me and my friends, and asked
nothing
in return," Perrin said quietly. "Yet what I remember best about them
was when Trollocs surrounded Emond's Field. The Tuatha'an stood on the
green
with children strapped to their backs, the few of their own that
survived and
ours. They would not fight-it isn't their way-but if the Trollocs
overran us,
they were ready to try to carry the children to safety. Carrying our
children
would have hampered them, made escape even less likely than it already
was. but
they asked for the task." Neald gave an embarrassed cough and looked
away.
A flush tinged his cheek. For all he had seen and done, he was young
yet. just
seventeen. This time, there was no doubt about Balwer's thin smile.
"I
think your life might make a story," the general said, her expression
inviting him to tell as much of it as he would.
"I'd
rather my life were ordinary," he told her. Stories were no place for a
man who wanted peace.
"One
day. I'd very much like to see some of these Trollocs I keep hearing
about." Mishima said when the silence began to stretch. Amusement
tinged
his smell, yet he stroked his sword hilt, perhaps without knowing it.
"No
you wouldn't," Perrin told him. "You'll get your chance soon or late,
but you won't like it." After a moment, the scarred man nodded solemnly
in
understanding, amusement melting. At last he must be beginning to
believe that
Trollocs and Myrddraal were more than travelers' fanciful tales. If any
doubts
remained to him, the time was coming that would erase doubt forever.
Heading
into Almizar, as they turned their horses toward the north end of the
town
along a narrow cart lane, Balwer slipped away. Medore went with him, a
tall
woman nearly as dark as Tylee but with deep blue eyes, in dark breeches
and a
man's coat with puffy red-striped sleeves, a sword at her hip. Balwer
rode with
his shoulders hunched, a bird perched precariously on his saddle,
Medore
straight-backed and proud, every inch a High Lord's daughter and leader
of
Faile's people, though she followed Balwer rather than riding beside.
Surprisingly, Failes hangers-on seemed to have accepted taking
direction from
the fussy little man. It made them much less bother than they once had
been; it
actually made them useful in some ways, which Perrin would have thought
impossible. The Banner-General offered no objection to them leaving,
though she
gazed after them thoughtfully.
"Kind
of the Lady to visit a servant's friend," she mused. That was the tale
Balwer had given, that he used to know a woman who lived in Almizar and
Medore
wanted to meet her if she was still alive.
"Medore's
a kind woman," Perrin replied. "It's our way, being kind to
servants." Tylee gave him one glance, only that, yet he reminded
himself
not to take her for a fool. It was too bad he knew nothing of Seanchan
ways to
speak of, or they might have come up with a better story. But then,
Baiwer had
been in a frenzy-a dry, dusty frenzy, yet still a frenzy-to seize this
chance
to gather information on what was happening in Amadicia under the
Seanchan. For
himself, Perrin could barely make himself care. Only Faile mattered,
now. Later
he could worry about other matters.
Just
north of Almizar, the stone walls dividing seven or eight fields had
been
removed to make a long stretch of bare earth that appeared thoroughly
turned by
the harrow, the dirt all scored and scuffed. A large odd creature with
a pair
of hooded people crouched on its back was running awkwardly along that
stretch
on two legs that seemed spindly for its size. In fact, "odd" barely
began to encompass it. Leathery and gray, the thing was larger than a
horse
without counting a long, snake-like neck and a thin, even longer tail
that it
held stretched out stiffly behind. As it ran. it beat wings ribbed like
those
of a bat, stretching as long as most riverships. He had seen animals
like this
before, but in the air, and at a distance. Tylee had told him they were
called
raken. Slowly the creature lumbered into the air, barely clearing the
treetops
of a coppiced thicket at the end of the field. His head swiveled to
follow as
the raken climbed slowly toward the sky, awkwardness vanishing in
flight. Now,
that would be a thing, to fly on one of those. He crushed the thought,
ashamed
and angered that he could let himself be diverted.
The
Banner-General slowed her bay and frowned at the field. At the far end,
men
were feeding four more of the peculiar animals, holding up large
baskets for
them to eat from, horned snouts darting and horny mouths gulping.
Perrin hated
to think what a creature that looked like that might eat. "They should
have more raken than this here." she muttered. "If this is all there
are…"
"We
take what we can get and go on," he said. "None, if it comes to that.
We already know where the Shaido are."
"I
like to know if anything is coming up behind me." she told him dryly, picking up
the
pace again.
At
a nearby farm that appeared to have been taken over by the Seanchan, a
dozen or
so soldiers were dicing at tables set up haphazardly in front of the
thatch-roofed house. More were passing in and out of the stone barn,
though he
saw no sign of horses except for a team hitched to a wagon that was
being
unloaded of its crates and barrels and jute sacks by a pair of men in
rough
woolens. At least, Perrin assumed the others were soldiers. Nearly half
were
women, the men as short as the women for
the most part and thin if taller, and none carried a sword, but they
all wore
close-fitting coats of sky-blue and each had a pair of knives in
scabbards sewn
to their snug boots. Uniforms implied soldiers.
Mat
would be right at home with this lot, he thought, watching them laugh
over good
tosses and groan over bad. Those colors spun in his head, and for an
instant he
glimpsed Mat riding off a road into forest followed by a line of
mounted folk
and packhorses. An instant only, because he dashed the image aside
without so
much as a thought to why Mat was going into the woods or who was with
him. Only
Faile mattered. That morning he had tied a fifty-first knot in the
leather cord
he carried in his pocket. Fifty-one days she had been a prisoner. He
hoped she
had been a prisoner that long. It would mean she was still alive to be
rescued.
If she was dead… His hand tightened on the head of the hammer hanging
at
his belt, tightened until his knuckles hurt.
The
Banner-General and Mishima were watching him, he realized. Mishima
warily, with
a hand hovering near his sword hilt, Tylee thoughtfully. A delicate
alliance,
and little trust on either side. "For a moment, I thought you might be
ready to kill the fliers," she said quietly. "You have my word. We
will free your wife. Or avenge her."
Perrin
drew a shuddering breath and released his hold on the hammer. Faile had
to be
alive. Alyse had said she was under her protection. But how much
protection
could the Aes Sedai give when she wore gai'shain white herself? "Let's
be
done here. Time is wasting." How many more knots would he need to tie
in
that cord? The Light send not many.
Dismounting,
he handed Stayer's reins to Carlon Belcelona, a clean-shaven Tairen
with a long
nose and an unfortunately narrow chin. Carlon had a habit of fingering
that
chin as if wondering where his beard had gone, or running a hand over
his hair
as though wondering why it was tied with a ribbon at the nape of his
neck,
making a tail that just reached his shoulders. But he gave no more sign
of
giving up his fool pretense that he was following Aiel ways than the
others
did. Balwer had given them their instructions, and at least they obeyed
those.
Most of them were already drifting over to the tables, leaving their
mounts in
the care of the rest, some producing coin, others offering leather
flasks of
wine. Which the soldiers were rejecting, strangely, though it seemed
anyone
with silver was welcome in their games.
Without
more than glancing in their direction, Perrin tucked his gauntlets
behind his
thick belt and followed the two Seanchan inside, tossing back his cloak
so his
silk coat showed. By the time he came out, Faile's people-his people,
he
supposed-would have learned a great deal of what those men and women
knew. One
thing he had learned from Balwer. Knowledge could be very useful, and
you never
knew which scrap would turn out worth more than gold. For the moment,
though,
the only knowledge he was interested in would not come from this place.
The
front room of the farmhouse was filled with tables facing the door,
where clerks
sat poring over papers or writing. The only sound was the scritching of
pen on
paper and a man's dry persistent cough. The men wore coats and breeches
of dark
brown, the women dresses in the exact same shade. Some wore pins, in
silver or
brass, in the shape of a quill pen. The Seanchan had uniforms for
everything,
it seemed. A round-cheeked fellow at the back of the room who wore two
silver
pens on his chest stood and bowed deeply, belly straining his coat, as
soon as
Tylee entered. Their boots were loud on the wooden floor as they walked
back to
him between the tables. He did not straighten until they reached his
table.
"Tylee
Khirgan." she said curtly. "I would speak with whoever is in command
here."
"As
the Banner-General commands," the fellow replied obsequiously, made
another deep bow. and hurried through a door behind him.
The
clerk who was coughing, a smooth-faced fellow younger than Perrin who,
by his
face, might have come from the Two Rivers, began hacking more roughly,
and
covered his mouth with a hand. He cleared his throat loudly, but the
harsh
cough returned.
Mishima
frowned at him. "Fellow shouldn't be here if he's ill," he muttered.
"What if it's catching? You hear about all sorts of strange sicknesses
these days. Man's hale at sunrise, and by sunfall, he's a corpse and
swollen to
half again his size, with no one knowing what he died of. I heard of a
woman
who went mad in the space of an hour, and everybody who touched her
went mad,
too. In three days, she and her whole village were dead, those who
hadn't
fled." He made a peculiar gesture, forming an arc with thumb and
forefinger, the others curled tightly.
"You
know better than to believe rumors, or repeat them.'' the
Banner-General said
sharply, making the same gesture. She seemed unaware she had done so.
The
stout clerk reappeared, holding the door for a graying, lean-faced man
with a
black leather patch hiding the spot where his right eye had been. A
puckered
white scar ran down his forehead, behind the patch and onto his cheek.
As short
as the men outside, he wore a coat of darker blue, with two small white
bars on
his chest, though he had the same sheaths sewn to his boots. "Blasic
Faloun, Banner-General," he said with a bow as the clerk hurried back
to
his table. "How may I serve you?"
"Captain
Faloun, we need to speak in-" Tylee cut off when the man who was
coughing
surged to his reet. his stool toppling with a clatter.
Clutching
his middle, the young man doubled over and vomited a dark stream that
hit the
floor and broke up into tiny black beetles that went scurrying in every
direction. Someone cursed, shockingly loud in what was otherwise dead
silence.
The young man stared at the beetles in horror, shaking his head to deny
them.
Wild-eyed, he looked around the room still shaking his head and opened
his
mouth as if to speak. Instead, he bent over and spewed another black
stream,
longer, that broke into beetles darting across the floor. The skin of
his face
began writhing, as though more beetles were crawling on the outside of
his
skull. A woman screamed, a long shriek of dread, and suddenly clerks
were
shouting and leaping up. knocking over stools and even tables in their
haste,
frantically dodging the flitting black shapes. Again and again the man
vomited,
sinking to his knees, then falling over, twitching disjointedly as he
spewed
out more and more beetles in a steady stream. He seemed somehow to be
getting… flatter. Deflating. His jerking ceased, but black beetles
continued to pour
from his gaping mouth and spread across the floor. At last-it seemed to
have
gone on for an hour, but could not have been more than a minute or
two-at last,
the torrent of insects dwindled and died. What remained of the fellow
was a
pale flat thing inside his clothes, like a wineskin that had been
emptied. The
shouting went on. of course. Half the clerks were up on the tables that
remained upright, men as well as women, cursing or praying or sometimes
alternating both at the tops of their lungs. The other half had fled
outside.
Small black beetles scuttled all across the floor. The room stank of
terror.
"I
heard a rumor," Faloun said hoarsely. Sweat beaded on his forehead. He
smelled of fear. Not terror, but definitely fear. "From east of here.
Only
that was centipedes. Little black centipedes." Some of the beetles
scurried toward him, and he backed away with a curse, making the same
odd
gesture that Tylee and Mishima had.
Perrin
crushed the beetles under his boot. They made the hair on the back of
his neck
want to stand, but nothing mattered except Faile. Nothing! "They're
just
borer beetles. You can find them almost anywhere there's old fallen
timber."
The
man jerked, lifted his gaze and jerked again when he saw Per-rin's
eyes.
Catching sight of the hammer at Perrin's belt, he darted a quick,
startled
glance at the Banner-General. "These beetles came from no log. They're
Soulblinder's work!"
"That's
as may be," Perrin replied calmly. He supposed Soulblinder was a name
for
the Dark One. "It makes no difference." He moved his foot, revealing
the crushed carcasses of seven or eight of the insects. "They can be
killed. And I have no time to waste on beetles I can crush underfoot."
"We
do need to talk in private, Captain," Tylee added. Her scent was full
of
fear, too, yet tightly controlled. Mishima's hand was locked in that
same
strange gesture. His fear was almost as well controlled as hers.
Faloun
gathered himself visibly, the fear smell fading. It did not go away,
yet he had
mastery of himself, now. He avoided looking at the beetles, however.
"As
you say, Banner-General. Atal. get down off that table and have these…
these things swept out of here. And see that Mehtan is laid out
properly for
the rites. However he died, he died in service." The stout clerk bowed
before climbing down, gingerly, and again when he was on the floor, but
the
captain was already turning away. "Will you follow me,
Banner-General?"
His
study might have been a bedroom originally, but now it held a writing
table
with flat boxes full of papers and another table, larger, that was
covered with
maps weighted down by inkwells, stones and small brass figures. A
wooden rack
against one wall held rolls that appeared to be more maps. The gray
stone
fireplace was cold. Faloun gestured them to half a dozen mismatched
chairs that
stood on the bare floor in front of the writing table and offered to
send for
wine. He seemed disappointed when Tylee refused both. Perhaps he wanted
a drink
to steady his nerves. A small scent of fright still clung to him.
Tylee
began. "I need to replace six raken, Captain, and eighteen morat'raken.
And a full company of groundlings. The one I had is somewhere in
Amadicia
heading west, and beyond finding."
Faloun
winced. "Banner-General, if you lost raken, you know everything has
been
stripped to the bone because of…" His one eye flickered to Perrin.
and he cleared his throat before going on. "You ask for three-quarters
of
the animals I have left. If you can possibly do with fewer, perhaps
only one or
two?"
"Four,"
Tylee said firmly, "and twelve fliers. I'll settle for that." She
could make that slurred Seanchan accent sound crisp when she wanted to.
"This region is as stable as Seandar by all I hear, but I'll leave you
four."
"As
you say, Banner-General," Faloun sighed. "May 1 see the order,
please? Everything has to be recorded. Since I lost the ability to fly
myself,
I spend all my time pushing a pen like a clerk."
"Lord
Perrin?" Tylee said, and he produced the document signed by Suroth from
his coat pocket.
That
made Faloun's eyebrows climb higher and higher as he read, and he
fingered the
wax seal lightly, but he did not question it any more than the
Banner-General
had. It appeared the Seanchan were accustomed to such things. He
appeared
relieved to hand it back, though, and wiped his hands on his coat
unconsciously. Accustomed to them, but not comfortably so. He studied
Perrin,
trying to be surreptitious, and Perrin could all but see on his face
the
question the Banner-General had asked. Who was he, to have such a thing?
"I
need a map of Altara, Captain, if you have such a thing," Tylee said.
"I can manage if you don't, but better if you do. The northwestern
quarter
of the country is what I'm interested in."
"You're
favored by the Light. Banner-General," the man said. bending to pull a
roll from the lowest level of the rack. "I have the very thing you
want.
By accident, it was in with the Amadician maps I was issued. I'd
forgotten I
had the thing until you mentioned it. Uncommon luck for you, I'd say."
Perrin shook his head slightly. Accident, not ta'veren work. Even Rand was not ta'veren enough to make this
happen. The
colors whirled, and he splintered them unformed.
Once
Faloun had the map spread out on the map table, the corners held down
by brass
weights in the form of raken. the Banner-General studied it until she
had her
landmarks fixed. It was large enough to cover the table and showed
exactly what
she had asked for, along with narrow strips of Amadicia and Ghealdan,
the
terrain rendered in great detail, with the names of towns and villages,
rivers
and streams, in very small letters. Perrin knew he was looking at a
fine
example of the map-maker's art, far better than most maps. Could it be
ta'veren
work? No. No, that was impossible.
"They'll
find my soldiers here." she drawled, marking a point with her finger.
"They're to leave immediately. One flier to a raken, and no personal
items. They fly light, and as fast as possible. I want them there
before
tomorrow night. The other morat'raken will travel with the groundlings.
I hope
to be leaving in a few hours. Have them assembled and ready.''
"Carts,"
Perrin said. Neald could not make a gateway large enough to accommodate
a
wagon. "Whatever they bring has to be in carts, not wagons." Faloun
mouthed the word incredulously.
"Carts,"
Tylee agreed. "See to it. Captain."
Perrin
could smell an eagerness in the man that he interpreted as a desire to
ask
questions, but all Faloun said, bowing, was. "As you command,
Banner-General, so shall it be done."
The
outer room was in a different sort of turmoil when they left the
captain.
Clerks darted everywhere, sweeping frantically or beating at the
remaining
beetles with their brooms. Some of the women wept as they wielded their
brooms,
some of the men looked as though they wanted to. and the room was still
rank
with terror. There was no sign of the dead man, but Perrin noticed that
the
clerks moved around the place where he had lain, refusing to let a foot
touch
it. They tried not to step on any beetles, either, which made for
considerable
dancing about on their toes. When Perrin crunched his way toward the
outer
door, they stopped to stare at him.
Outside,
the mood was calmer, but not by much. Tylee's soldiers still stood by
their
horses in a row. and Neald was affecting an air of casual indifference,
even to
yawning and patting his mouth, but the suldam was petting the trembling
damane
and murmuring soothingly, and the blue-coated soldiers, many more than
had been
there before, stood in a large cluster talking worriedly. The
Cairhienin and
Tairens rushed to surround Perrin, leading their horses and all talking
at
once.
"Is
it true, my Lord?" Camaille asked, her pale face twisted with worry,
and
her brother Barmanes said uneasily. "Four men carried out something in
a
blanket, but they averted their eyes from whatever it was."
All
of them atop one another, all smelling of near panic. "They said he
spewed
beetles," and "They said the beetles chewed their way out of
him," and "The Light help us, they're sweeping beetles out of the
door; we'll be killed," and "Burn my soul, it's the Dark One breaking
free," and more that made less sense.
"Be
quiet," Perrin said, and for a wonder, they fell silent. Usually, they
were very prickly with him. insisting that they served Faile, not him.
Now they
stood staring at him. waiting for him to put their fears to rest. "A
man
did spew up beetles and die, but they're ordinary beetles you can find
in dead
timber anywhere. Give you a nasty pinch if you sit on one, but nothing
worse.
Likely it was the Dark One's work somehow, true enough, but it has
nothing to
do with freeing the Lady Faile, and that means it has nothing to do
with us. So
calm yourselves, and let's get on about our business."
Strangely,
it worked. More than one cheek reddened, and the smell of fear was
replaced-or
at least suppressed-by the scent of shame at letting themselves come so
near to
panic. They looked abashed. As they began mounting, their own natures
reasserted themselves, though. First one then another offered boasts of
the
deeds they would do in rescuing Faile. each wilder than the next. They
knew
them for wild, because each boast brought laughter from the others, yet
the
next always tried to make his more outrageous still.
The
Banner-General was watching him again, he realized as he took Stayer's
reins
from Carlon. What did she see? What did she think she might learn?
"What
sent all the raken away?" he asked.
"We
should have come here second or third," she replied, swinging up into
her
saddle. "I still have to acquire a'dam. I wanted to keep believing I
had a
chance as long as I could, but we might as well get to the heart. That
piece of
paper faces a real test now. and if it fails, there's no point to going
after
a'dam." A frail alliance, and small trust.
"Why
should it fail? It worked here."
"Faloun's
a soldier, my Lord. Now we must talk with an Imperial functionary." She
imbued that last word with a wealth of scorn. She turned her bay. and
he had no
choice but to mount and follow.
Almizar
was a considerable town, and prosperous, with six tall watchtowers
around its
edge but no wall. Elyas said Amadician law forbade walls anywhere save
Amador,
a law made at the behest of the Whitecloaks and enforced by them as
much as by
whoever held the throne. Balwer would no doubt learn who that might be
now,
with Ailron dead. The streets were paved with granice blocks, and lined
with
solid buildings of brick or stone, some gray, some black, many three or
four
stories high and most roofed in dark slate, the rest in thatch. People
filled
the streets, dodging between wagons and horse carts and handcarts,
hawkers
crying their wares, women in deep bonnets that hid their faces carrying
shopping baskets, men in knee-length coats striding along
self-importantly,
apprentices in aprons or vests running errands. As many soldiers walked
the
streets as locals, men and women, with skin as dark as any Tairen, skin
the
color of honey, men as pale as Cairhienin but fair-haired and tall, all
in
brightly colored Seanchan uniforms. Most wore no more than a belt knife
or
dagger, but he saw some with swords. They walked in pairs, watchful of
everyone
around them, and had truncheons at their belts, too. A town Watch, he
supposed,
but a lot of them for a place the size of Almizar. He never had fewer
than two
of those pairs in his sight.
Two
men and a woman came out of a tall, slate-roofed inn and mounted horses
held by
grooms. He knew her for a woman only by the way her long, split-tailed
coat fit
over her bosom because her hair was cut shorter than the men's and she
wore
men's clothing and a sword, just like the other two. Her face was
certainly as
hard as theirs. As the three cantered off west down the street, Mishima
grunted
sourly.
"Hunters
for the Horn," he muttered. "My eyes if they're not. Those fine
fellows cause trouble everywhere they go, getting in fights, sticking
their
noses where they don't belong. I've heard the Horn of Valere has
already been
found. What do you think, my Lord?''
"I've
heard it's been found, too," Perrin replied cautiously. "There are
all sorts of rumors floating about."
Neither
one so much as glanced at him, and in the middle of a crowded street,
catching
their scents was well-nigh impossible, yet for some reason he thought
they were
mulling over his answer as if it had hidden depths. Light, could they
think be
was tied up with the Horn? He knew where it was. Moiraine had carried
it off to
the WhiteTower. He was not
about to tell them,
though. Small trust worked both ways.
The
local people gave the soldiers no more heed than they did each other,
nor the
Banner-General and her armored followers, but Perrin was another
matter. At
least, when they noticed his golden eyes. He could tell instantly when
someone
did. The quick jerk of a woman's head, her mouth falling open as she
stared.
The man who froze, gaping at him. One fellow actually tripped over his
own
boots and stumbled to his knees. That one stared, then scrambled to his
feet
and ran, pushing people from his path, as though fearful Perrin might
pursue
him.
"I
suppose he never saw yellow eyes on a man before,'' Perrin said wryly.
"Are
they common where you come from?" the Banner-General asked.
"Not
common, I wouldn't say that, but I'll introduce you to another man who
has
them."
She
and Mishima exchanged glances. Light, he hoped there was nothing in the
Prophecies about two men with yellow eyes. Those colors whirled, and he
dashed
them.
The
Banner-General knew exactly where she was going, a stone stable on the
southern
edge of the town, but when she dismounted in the empty stableyard. no
groom
came rushing out. A stone-fenced paddock stood next to the stable, but
it held
no horses. She handed her reins to one of her soldiers and stood
staring at the
stable doors, only one of which was open. By her scent. Perrin thought
she was
steeling herself.
"Follow
my lead, my Lord," she said finally, "and don't say anything you
don't have to. It might be the wrong thing. If you must speak, speak to
me.
Make it clear you're speaking to me."
That
sounded ominous, but he nodded. And began planning how to steal the
forkroot if
things went wrong. He would need to learn whether the place was guarded
at
night. Balwer might already know. The little man seemed to pick up
information
like that without trying. When he followed her inside, Mishima remained
with
the horses, and looking relieved not to accompany them. What did that
mean? Or
did it mean anything? Seanchan. In just a few days they had him seeing
hidden
meanings in everything.
The
place had been a stable once, obviously, but now it was something else.
The
stone floor had been swept clean enough to satisfy any farmwife, there
were no
horses, and a thick smell like mint would have overwhelmed the
remaining scent
of horse and hay to any nose but his or Elyas'. The stalls at the front
were
filled with stacked wooden crates, and in the back, the stalls had been
removed
except for the uprights that supported the loft. Now men and women were
working
back there, some using mortats and pestles or sieves at tables, others
carefully tending flat pans sitting on metal legs above charcoal
braziers,
using tongs to turn what appeared to be roots.
A
lean young man in his shirtsleeves put a plump jute bag into one of the
crates,
then bowed to Tylee as deeply as the clerk had, body parallel to the
floor. He
did not straighten until she spoke.
"Banner-General
Khirgan. I wish to speak with whoever is in charge, if I may." Her tone
was much different than it had been with the clerk, not peremptory at
all.
"As
you command," the lean fellow replied in what sounded an Amadician
accent.
At least, if he was Seanchan, he spoke at a proper speed and without
chewing
his words.
Bowing
again, just as deeply, he hurried to where six stalls had been walled
in,
halfway down the left-hand row, and tapped diffidently at a door, then
awaited
permission before going in. When he came out, he went to the back of
the
building without so much as a glance toward Perrin and Tylee. After a
few
minutes, Perrin opened his mouth, but Tylee grimaced and shook her
head, so he
closed it again and waited. A good quarter of an hour he waited,
growing more
impatient by the heartbeat. The Banner-General smelled solidly of
patience.
At
last a sleekly plump woman in a deep yellow dress of odd cut came out
of the
small room, but she paused to study the work going on in the back of
the
building, ignoring Tylee and him. Half of her scalp had been shaved
bald! Her
remaining hair was in a thick, graying braid that hung to her shoulder.
Finally
she nodded in satisfaction and made her unhurried way to them. An oval
blue
panel on her bosom was embroidered with three golden hands. Tylee bowed
as
deeply as Faloun had for her, and remembering her admonition. Perrin
did the
same. The sleek woman inclined her head. Slightly. She smelled of pride.
"You
wish to speak with me. Banner-General?" She had a smooth voice, as
sleek
as she herself. And not welcoming. She was a busy woman being bothered.
A busy
woman well aware of her own importance.
"Yes.
Honorable," Tylee said respectfully. A spike of irritation appeared
among
her smell of patience, then was swallowed again. Her face remained
expressionless. "Will you tell me how much prepared forkroot you have
on
hand?"
"An
odd request," the other woman said as though considering whether to
grant
it. She tilted her head in thought. "Very well," she said after a
moment. "As of the midmorning accounting, I have four thousand eight
hundred seventy-three pounds nine ounces. A remarkable achievement, if
I do say
it myself, considering how much I have shipped off and how hard it is
getting
to find the plant in the wild without
sending diggers unreasonable distances." Impossible as it seemed, the
pride in her scent deepened. "I've solved that problem. however, by
inducing the local farmers to plant some of their fields in forkroot.
By this
summer I will need to build something bigger to house this manufactory.
I'll
confide in you, I will not be surprised if I am offered a new name for
this.
Though of course, I may not accept." Smiling a small, sleek smile, she
touched the oval panel lightly, but it was near a caress.
"The
Light will surely favor you. Honorable," Tylee murmured. "My Lord,
will you do me the favor of showing your document to the Honorable?"
That
with a bow to Perrin markedly lower than the one she had offered the
Honorable.
The sleek woman's eyebrows twitched.
Reaching
out to take the paper from his hand, she froze, staring at his face.
She had
finally noticed his eyes. Giving hersell a small shake, she read
without any
outward expression of surprise, then folded the paper up again and
stood
tapping it against her free hand. "It seems you walk the heights.
Banner-General. And with a very strange companion. What aid do you-or
he-ask of
me?"
"Forkroot,
Honorable," Tylee said mildly. "All that you have. Loaded into carts
as soon as possible. And you must provide the carts and drivers as
well, I
fear."
"Impossible!"
the sleek woman snapped, drawing herself up haughtily. "I have
established
strict schedules as to how many pounds of prepared forkroot are shipped
every
week, which I have adhered to rigidly, and I'll not see that record
sullied.
The harm to the Empire would be immense. The sul'dam are snapping up
marattidamane on every hand."
"Forgiveness.
Honorable," Tylee said, bowing again. "If you could see your way
clear to let us have-"
"Banner-General,"
Perrin cut in. Plainly this was a touchy encounter, and he tried to
keep his
face smooth, but he could not avoid a frown. He could not be certain
that even
near five tons of the stuff would be sufficient, and she was trying to
negotiate some lesser weight! His mind raced, trying to find a way.
Fast
thought was shoddy thought, in his estimation-it led to mistakes and
accidents-but he had no choice. "This may not interest the Honorable,
of
course, but Suroth promised death and worse if there was any hindrance
to her
plans. I don't suppose her anger will go beyond you and me, but she did
say to
take it all."
"Of
course, the Honorable will not be touched by the High Lady's anger."
Tylee
sounded as though she was not so sure of that.
The
sleek woman was breathing hard, the blue oval with the golden hands
heaving.
She bowed to Perrin as deeply as Tylee had. "I'll need most of the day
to
gather enough carts and load them. Will that suffice, my Lord?"
"It
will have to, won't it," Perrin said, plucking the note from her hand.
She
let go reluctantly and watched hungrily as he tucked it into his coat
pocket.
Outside,
the Banner-General shook her head as she swung into the saddle.
"Dealing
with the Lesser Hands is always difficult. None of them see anything
lesser in
themselves. I thought this would be in the charge of someone of the
Fourth or
Fifth Rank, and that would have been hard enough. When I saw that she
was of
the Third Rank-only two steps below a Hand to the Empress herself, may
she live
forever- I was sure we wouldn't get away with more than a few hundred
pounds if
that. But you handled it beautifully. A risk taken, but still,
beautifully
masked."
"Well,
nobody wants to chance death," Perrin said as they started out of the
stableyard into the town with everyone strung out behind them. Now they
had to
wait for the carts, perhaps find an inn. Impatience burned in him. The
Light
send they did not need to spend the night.
"You
didn't know," the dark woman breathed. 'That woman knew she stood in
the
shadow of death as soon as she read Suroth's words, but she was ready
to risk
it to do her duty to the Empire. A Lesser Hand of the Third Rank has
standing
enough that she might well escape death on the plea of duty done. But
you used
Suroth's name. That's all right most of the time, except when
addressing the
High Lady herself, of course, but with a Lesser Hand, using her name
without
her title meant you were either an ignorant local or an intimate of
Suroth
herself. The Light favored you, and she decided you were an intimate."
Perrin
barked a mirthless laugh. Seanchan. And maybe ta'veren, too.
"Tell
me, if the question does not offend, did your Lady bring powerful
connections,
or perhaps great lands?"
That
surprised him so much that he twisted in his saddle to stare at her.
Something
hit his chest hard, sliced a line of fire across his chest, punched his
arm.
Behind him, a horse squealed in pain. Stunned, he stared down at the
arrow
sticking through his left arm.
"Mishima,"
the Banner-Genetal snapped, pointing, "that four-story building with
the
thatched roof, between two slate roofs. I saw movement on the rooftop."
Shouting
a command to follow, Mishima galloped off down the crowded street with
six of
the Seanchan lancers, horseshoes ringing on the paving stones. People
leapt out
of their way. Others stared. No one in the street seemed to realize
what had
happened. Two of the other lancers were out of their saddles, tending
the
trembling mount of one that had an arrow jutting from its shoulder.
Perrin
fingered a broken button hanging by a thread. The silk of his coat was
slashed
from the button across his chest. Blood oozed, dampening his shirt,
trickled
down his arm. Had he not twisted just at that moment, that arrow would
have
been through his heart instead of his arm. Maybe the other would have
hit him
as well, but the one would have done the job. A Two Rivers shaft would
not have
been deflected so easily.
Cairhienin
and Tairens crowded around him as he dismounted, all of them trying to
help
him, which he did not need. He drew his belt knife, but Camaille took
it from
him and deftly scored the shaft so she could break it cleanly just
above his
arm. That sent a jolt of pain down his arm. She did not seem to mind
getting
blood on her fingers, just plucking a lace-edge handkerchief Irom her
sleeve, a
paler green than usual for Cairhienin, and wiping them, then examined
the end
of the shaft sticking out of his arm to make sure there were no
splinters.
The
Banner-General was down off her bay, too, and frowning. "My eyes are
lowered that you have been injured, my Lord. I'd heard that there has
been an
increase in crime of late, arsons, robbers killing when there was no
need,
murders done for no reason anyone knows. I should have protected you
better."
"Grit
your teeth, my Lord," Barmanes said, tying a length of leather cord
just
above the arrowhead. "Are you ready, my Lord?" Perrin tightened his
jaw and nodded, and Barmanes jerked the bloodstained shaft free. Perrin
stifled
a groan.
"Your
eyes aren't lowered." he said hoarsely. Whatever that meant. It did not
sound good, the way she said it. "Nobody asked you to wrap me in
swaddling. I certainly never did." Neald pushed through the crowd
surrounding Perrin, his hands already raised, but Perrin waved him
away.
"Not here, man. People can see." Folk in the street had finally
noticed and were gathering to watch, murmuring excitedly to one
another.
"He can Heal this so you'd never know I was hurt," he explained,
flexing his arm experimentally. He winced. That had been a bad idea.
"You'd
let him use the One Power on you?" Tylee said disbeliev-ingly.
"To
be rid of a hole in my arm and a slice across my chest? As soon as
we're
somewhere half the town isn't staring at us. Wouldn't you?"
She
shivered and made that peculiar gesture again. He was going to have to
ask her
what that meant.
Mishima
joined them, leading his horse and looking grave. "Two men fell from
that
roof with bows and quivers," he said quietly, "but it wasn't that
fall that killed them. They hit the pavement hard, yet there was hardly
any
blood. I think they took poison when they saw they'd failed to kill
you."
"That
doesn't make any sense." Perrin muttered.
"If
men will kill themselves rather than report failure," Tylee said
gravely,
"it means you have a powerful enemy."
A
powerful enemy? Very likely Masema would like to see him dead, but
there was no
way Masema's reach could extend this far. "Any enemies I have are far
away
and don't know where I am." Tylee and Mishima agreed that he must know
about that, but they looked doubtful. Then again, there were always the
Forsaken. Some of them had tried to kill him before. Others had tried
to use
him. He did not think he was going to bring the Forsaken into the
discussion.
His arm was throbbing. The cut on his chest, too. "Let's find an inn
where
I can hire a room." Fifty-one knots. How many more? Light, how many
more?
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Siege
"Push
them!" Elayne shouted. Fireheart tried to dance, impatient at being
crowded in a narrow cobblestone street with other horses and women
afoot, but
she steadied the black gelding with a firm hand. Birgitte had insisted
she
remain well back. Insisted! As if she were a brainless fool! "Push
them,
burn you!"
None
of the hundreds of men on the wide guardwalk atop the city wall,
white-streaked
gray stone rearing fifty feet, paid her any heed, of course. It was
doubtful
they heard her. Amid shouts of their own, curses and screams, the clash
of
steel rang over the broad street that ran alongside the wall beneath
the
noonday sun suspended in a rare cloudless sky as those men sweated and
killed
one another with sword or spear or halberd. The melee spanned two
hundred paces
of the wall, enveloping three of the high round towers where the White
Lion of
Andor flew and threatening two more, though all still seemed secure,
thank the
Light. Men stabbed and hacked and thrust, no one giving ground or
quarter that
she could see. Red-coated crossbowmen atop the towers did their share
of
killing, but once fired, a crossbow required time to ready for another
shot,
and they were too few to turn the tide in any case. They were the only
Guardsmen up there. The rest were mercenaries. Save Birgitte. This
near, the
bond let Elayne's eye find her Warder easily, intricate golden braid
swaying as
she shouted encouragement to her soldiers, pointing her bow to where
reinforcement was needed. In her short white-collared red coat and wide
sky-blue trousers tucked into her boots, she alone atop the wall wore
no armor
of any sort. She had insisted Elayne don plain gray in the hope of
avoiding
notice, and any effort to capture or kill her-some of the men up there
had
crossbows or shortbows slung on their backs, and for those not in the
forefront
and engaged, fifty paces made an easy shot-but the four golden knots of
rank on
her own shoulder would make Birgitte the target of any of Arymilla's
men with
eyes. At least she was not actually mingling in the press. At least she…
Elayne's
breath caught as a wiry fellow in breastplate and conical steel cap
lunged at
Birgitte with a sword, but the golden-haired woman dodged the thrust
calmly-the
bond said she might have been out for a hard ride, no more!-and a
backhand blow
with her bow caught the fellow on the side of his head, knocking him
from the
rampart. He had time to scream before he hit the paving stones with a
sickening
splat. His was not the only corpse decorating the street. Birgitte said
men
would not follow you unless they knew you were ready to face the same
dangers
and hardships they did. but if she got herself killed with this
man-foolishness…
Elayne
did not realize she had heeled Fireheart forward until Ca-seille seized
her
bridle. 'I am not an idiot, Guardswoman Lieutenant," she said frigidly.
"I have no intention of going closer until it is… safe."
The
Arafellin woman jerked her hand back, her face becoming very still
behind the
face-bars of her burnished conical helmet. Instantly. Elayne felt sorry
for the
outburst-Caseille was just doing her job- but she still felt coldly
angry, too.
She would not apologize. Shame surged as she recognized the sulkiness
of her
own thoughts. Blood and bloody ashes, but there were times she wanted
to slap Rand for planting these babes
in her. These days, she
could not be certain from one moment to the next which way her emotions
would
leap. Leap they did, however.
"If
this is what happens to you when you get with child," Aviendha said,
adjusting the dark shawl looped over her arms. "I think I will never
have
any." The high-cantled saddle of her dun pushed her bulky Aiel skirts
high
enough to bare her stockinged legs to the knee, but she showed no
discomfort at
the display. With the mare standing still, she looked quite at home on
a horse.
But then, Mageen, Daisy in the Old Tongue, was a gentle, placid animal
tending
to stoutness. Luckily, Aviendha was too ignorant of horses to realize
that.
Muffled
laughter pulled Elayne's head around. The women of her bodyguard, all
twenty-one of them assigned this morning counting Caseille. in polished
helmets
and breastplates, wore smooth faces- much too smooth, in fact; without
doubt
they were laughing inside- but the four Kinswomen standing behind them
had
hands over their mouths and their heads together. AJise, a
pleasant-faced woman
normally, with touches of gray in her hair, saw her looking-well,
glaring-and
rolled her eyes ostentatiously, which set the others off in another
round of
laughter. Caiden, aplumply pretty Domani, laughed so hard she had to
hold on to
Kumiko, though the stout graying woman seemed to be having her own
difficulties. Irritation stabbed at Elayne. Not at the laughter-all
right, a
little at the laughter-and certainly not at the Kinswomen. Not very
much, at
least. They were invaluable.
This
fight on the wall was not Arymilla's first assault in recent weeks by
far. In
truth, the frequency was increasing, with three or four attacks coming
some
days, now. She knew very well that Elayne had insufficient soldiers to
hold six
leagues of wall. Burn her, Elayne was all too aware that she could not
even
spare trained hands to fit hoardings to all those miles of wall and
towers.
Untrained hands would only bungle the work. All Arymilla needed was to
get
enough men across to seize a gate. Then she could bring the battle into
the
city, where Elayne would be badly outnumbered. The population might
rise in her
favor, no certain thing, yet that only meant adding to the slaughter,
apprentices and grooms and shopkeepers fighting trained armsmen and
mercenaries. Whoever sat on the Lion Throne then-and very likely that
would not
be Elayne Trakand-it would be stained red with the blood of Caemlyn. So
apart
from holding the gates and leaving watchmen on the towers, she had
pulled all
of her soldiers back into the Inner City, close to the Royal Palace,
and
stationed men with looking glasses in the tallest spires of the palace.
Whenever a watchman signaled an attack forming, linked Kinswomen made
gateways
to carry soldiers to the spot. They took no part in the fighting, of
course.
She would not have allowed them to use the Power as a weapon even had
they been
willing.
So
far it had worked, though often by a hair. Low Caemlyn, outside the
walls, was
a warren of houses, shops, inns and warehouses that allowed men to
close before
they were seen. Three times her soldiers had been forced to fight on
the ground
inside the wall and to retake at least one wall tower. Bloody work,
that. She
would have burned Low Caemlyn to the ground to deny Arymilla's people
cover,
except that the fire might easily spread inside the walls and spawn a
conflagration, spring rains or no spring rains. As it was. every night
saw
arsons inside the city, and containing chose was difficult enough.
Besides,
people lived in those houses despite the siege, and she did not want to
be
remembered as the one who had destroyed their homes and livelihoods.
No, what
nettled her was that she had not thought of using the Kin that way
earlier. If
she had, she would not be saddled with Sea Folk still, not to mention a
bargain
that gave up a square mile of Andor. Light, a square mile! Her mother
had never
given up one inch of Andor. Burn her, this siege hardly gave her time
to mourn
her mother. Or Lini, her old nursemaid. Rahvin had murdered her mother,
and
likely Lini had died trying to protect her. White-haired and thin with
age,
Lini would not have backed down even for one of the Forsaken. But
thinking of
Lini made her hear the woman's reedy voice. You can't put honey back in
the comb,
child. What was done, was done, and she had to live with it.
"That's
it. then." Caseille said. "They're making for the ladders." It
was true. All along the wall Elayne's soldiers were pushing forward,
Arymilla's
falling back, climbing through the crenels where their ladders were
propped.
Men still died on the rampart, but the fight was ending.
Elayne
surprised herself by digging her heels into Fireheart's flanks. No one
was
quick enough to catch her this time. Pursued by shouts, she galloped
across the
street and flung herself out of the saddle at the base of the nearest
tower
before the gelding was fully halted. Pushing open the heavy door, she
gathered
her divided skirts and raced up the widdershins spiraling stairs, past
large
niches where clusters of armored men stared in amazement as she darted
by.
These towers were made to be defended against attackers trying to make
their
way down and into the city. At last the stairs opened into a large room
where stairs
on the other side spiraled upward in the opposite direction. Twenty men
in
mismatched helmets and breastplates were taking their ease, tossing
dice,
sitting against the wall, calking and laughing as if there were no dead
men
beyond the room's two iron-strapped doors.
Whatever
they were doing, they stopped to gape when she appeared.
"Uh,
my Lady, I wouldn't do that," a rough voice said as she laid hands on
the
iron bar across one of the doors. Ignoring the man. she turned the bar
on its
pivot pin and pushed the door open. A hand caught at her skirt, but she
pulled
free.
None
of Arymilla's men remained on the wall. None standing, at least. Dozens
of men
lay on the blood-streaked guardwalk, some still, others groaning. Any
number of
those might belong to Arymilla, but the ringing of steel had vanished.
Most of
the mercenaries were tending the wounded, or just squatting on their
heels to
catch their breath.
"Shake
them off and pull up the bloody ladders!" Birgitte shouted. Loosing an
arrow into the mass of men trying to flee down the dirt-paved Low
Caemlyn
street below the wall, she nocked another and fired again. "Make them
build more if they want to come again!" Some of the mercenaries leaned
through crenels to obey, but only a handful. "I knew I shouldn't have
let
you come along today," she went on, still loosing shafts as fast as she
could nock and draw. Crossbow bolts from the towertops struck down men
below as
well, but tile-roofed warehouses offered shelter here for any who could
get
inside.
It
took a moment for Elayne to realize that last comment had been directed
at her,
and her face heated. "And how would you have stopped me?" she
demanded, drawing herself up.
Quiver
empty, Birgitte lowered her bow and turned with a scowl. "By tying you
up
and having her sit on you," she said, nodding toward Aviendha, who was
striding out of the tower. The glow of saidar surrounded her. yet her
horn-hilted belt knife was in her fist. Caseille and the rest of the
Guardswomen spilled out behind her. swords in hand and faces grim.
Seeing
Elayne unharmed changed their expressions not a whit. Those bloody
women were
insufferable when it came to treating her like a blown glass vase that
might
break at the rap of a knuckle. They would be worse than ever after
this. And she
would have to suffer it.
"I
would have caught you," Aviendha muttered, rubbing her hip, "except
that fool horse tossed me off." That was highly unlikely with such a
placid mare. Aviendha had simply managed to fall off. Seeing the
situation, she
slipped her knife back into its sheath quickly, trying to pretend she
had never
had it out. The light of saidar vanished, too.
"I
was quite safe." Elayne tried to remove the acerbic touch from her
voice,
without much success. "Min said I will bear my babes, sister. Until
they're born, no harm can come to me."
Aviendha
nodded slowly, thoughtfully, but Birgitte growled, "I'd just as soon
you
didn't put her visions to the test. Take too many chances, and you
might prove
her wrong." That was foolish. Min was never wrong. Surely not.
"That
was Aldin Miheres' company," a tall mercenary said in a lilting if
rough
Murandian accent as he removed his helmet to reveal a lean, sweaty face
with
gray-streaked mustaches waxed to spikes. Rhys a'Balaman, as he called
himself,
had eyes like stones and a thin-lipped smile that always seemed a leer.
He had
been listening to their conversation, and he kept darting sideways
glances at
Elayne while he talked to Birgitte. "I recognized him, I did. Good man.
Miheres. I fought alongside him more times than I can number, I have.
He'd
almost made it to that warehouse door when your arrow took him in the
neck,
Captain-General. A shame, that."
Elayne
frowned. "He made his choice as you did. Captain. You may regret the
death
of a friend, but I hope you aren't regretting your choice." Most of the
mercenaries she had put out of the city, maybe all, had signed on with
Arymilla. Her greatest fear at present was that the woman would succeed
in
bribing companies still inside the walls. None of the mercenary
captains had
reported anything, but Mistress Harfor said approaches had been made.
Including
an approach to a'Balaman.
The
Murandian favored her with his leer and a formal bow, flourishing a
cloak he
was not wearing. "Oh, 1 fought against him as often as with, my Lady.
I'd
have killed him, or he'd have killed me. had we come face to face this
fine
day. More acquaintance than friend, you see. And I'd much rather take
gold to
defend a wall like this than to attack it."
"I
notice some of your men have crossbows on their backs. Captain, but I
didn't
see any using them."
"Not
the mercenary way," Birgitte said dryly. Irritation floated in the
bond,
though whether with a'Balaman or Elayne there was no way to know. The
sensation
vanished quickly. Birgitte had learned to master her emotions once they
discovered how she and Elayne mirrored one another through the bond.
Very
likely she wished Elayne could do the same, but then, so did Elayne.
A'Balaman
rested his helmet on his hip. "You see, my Lady, the way of it is. if
you
press a man too hard when he's trying to get off the field, attempting
to ride
him down and the like, well, the next time it's you trying to get off
the
field, he might return the favor. After all, if a man's leaving the
field, then
he's out of the fight, now isn't he?"
"Until
he comes back tomorrow." Elayne snapped. "The next time, I want to
see those crossbows put to work!"
"As
you say, my Lady," a'Balaman said stiffly, making an equally stiff bow.
"If you'll pardon me, I must be seeing to my men." He stalked off
without waiting on her pardon, shouting to his men to stir their lazy
stumps.
"How
far can he be trusted?" Elayne asked softly.
"As
far as any mercenary," Birgitte replied, just as quietly. "If someone
offers him enough gold, it becomes a toss of the dice, and not even Mat
Cauthon
could say how they'll land."
That
was a very odd remark. She wished she knew how Mat was. And dear Thom.
And poor
little Olver. Every night she offered prayers that they had escaped the
Seanchan safely. There was nothing she could do to help them, though.
She had
enough on her plate trying to help herself at the moment. "Will he obey
me? About the crossbows?"
Birgitte
shook her head, and Elayne sighed. It was bad to give orders that would
not be
obeyed. It put people in the habit of disobeying.
Moving
close, she spoke in a near whisper. "You look tired, Birgitte." This
was nothing for anyone else's ears. Birgitte's face was tight, her eyes
haggard. Anyone could see that, but the bond said she was bone-weary,
as it had
for clays now. But then, Elayne felt that same dragging tiredness, as
though
her limbs were made of lead. Their bond mirrored more than emotions.
"You
don't have to lead every counterattack yourself."
"And
who else is there?" For a moment weariness larded Birgitte's voice,
too,
and her shoulders actually slumped, but she straightened quickly and
strengthened her tone. It was pure willpower. Elayne could feel it,
stone hard
in the bond, so hard she wanted to weep. "My officers are inexperienced
boys," Birgitte went on, "or else men who came out of retirement and
should still be warming their bones in front of their grandchildren's
fireplace. Except for the mercenary captains, anyway, and there isn't
one I'd
trust without someone looking over his shoulder. Which brings us back
to: Who
else but me?"
Elayne
opened her mouth to argue. Not about the mercenaries. Birgitte had
explained
about them, bitterly and at great length. At times, mercenaries would
fight as
hard as any Guardsman, but other times, they pulled back rather than
take too
many casualties. Fewer men meant less gold for their next hire unless
they
could be replaced with men as good. Battles that could have been won
had been
lost instead because mercenaries left the field to preserve their
numbers. They
disliked doing it if anybody except their own kind was watching,
though. That
spoiled their reputation and lowered their hire price. But there had to
be
someone else. She could not afford Birgitte falling over from
exhaustion.
Light, she wished Gareth Bryne were there. Egwene needed him, but so
did she.
She opened her mouth, and suddenly rumbling booms crashed from the city
behind
her. She turned, and her mouth stayed open, gaping in astonishment, now.
Where
moments before there had been clear sky over the Inner City, a huge
mass of
black clouds loomed like sheer-sided mountains, forked lightning
slashing down
through a gray wall of rain that seemed as solid as the city walls. The
gilded
domes of the RoyalPalace that should
have
been glittering in the sun were invisible behind that wall. That
torrent fell
only over the Inner City. Everywhere else the sky remained bright and
cloudless. There was nothing natural in that. Amazement lasted only
moments,
though. That silver-blue lightning. three-tined, five-tined, was
striking
inside Caemlyn, causing damage and maybe deaths. How had those clouds
come to
be? She reached to embrace saiciar, to disperse them. The True Source
slipped
away from her, and then again. It was like trying to grasp a bead
buried in a
pot of grease. Just when she thought she had it, it squirted away. It
was like
this far too often, now.
"Aviendha.
will you deal with that, please?"
"Of
course," Aviendha replied, embracing saidar easily. Elayne stifled a
surge
of jealousy. Her difficulty was Rand's
bloody
fault, not her sister's. "And thank you. I need the practice."
That
was untrue, an attempt to spare her feelings. Aviendha began weaving
Air, Fire,
Water and Earth in complex patterns, and doing so nearly as smoothly as
she
herself could have, if much more slowly. Her sister lacked her skill
with
weather, but then, she had not had the advantage of Sea Folk teaching.
The
clouds did not simply vanish, of course. First the lightnings became
single
bolts, dwindled in number, then ceased. That was the hardest part.
Calling
lightning was twirling a feather between your fingers compared to
stopping it.
That was more like picking up a blacksmith's anvil in your hands. Then
the
clouds began to spread out. to thin and grow paler. Thar was slow. too.
Doing
too much too fast with weather could cause effecrs that rippled across
the
countryside for leagues, and you never knew what the effects might be.
Raging
storms and flash floods were as likely as balmy days and gentle
breezes. By the
time the clouds had spread far enough to reach the outer walls of
Caemlyn. they
were gray and dropping a steady, soaking downpour that quickly slicked
Elayne's
curls to her scalp.
"Is
that enough?" Smiling, Aviendha turned her face up to let the rain run
down her cheeks. "I love to watch water falling from rhe sky." Light,
you would think she had had enough of rain. It had rained nearly every
bloody
day since spring came!
"It's
time to be getting back to the palace, Elayne," Birgitte said, tucking
her
bowstring into her coat pocket. She had begun unstringing her bow as
soon as
the clouds began moving toward them. "Some of these men need a sister's
attention. And my breakfast seems two days past."
Elayne
scowled. The bond carried a wariness that told her all she needed to
know. They
must return to the palace to get Elayne, in her delicate condition, out
of the
rain. As if she might melt! Abruptly she became aware of the groans
from the
wounded, and her face grew hot. Those men did need a sister's
attention. Even
if she could hold on to saidar, the least of their injuries were beyond
her
modest abilities, and Aviendha was no better at Healing.
"Yes.
it is time," she said. If only she could get her emotions back under
control! Birgitte would be pleased at that, too. Spots of color
decorated her
cheeks, too, echoes of Elayne's shame. They looked very odd with the
frown she
wore as she hurried Elayne into the tower.
Fireheart
and Mageen and the other horses were all standing patiently where their
reins
had been dropped, as Elayne expected. Even Mageen was well trained.
They had
the wall street utterly to themselves until Alise and the other Kin
walked out
of the narrower way. There was not a cart or wagon to be seen. Every
door in
sight was tightly shut, every window curtained, though there might well
be no
one behind any of them. Most people had had sense enough to leave as
soon they
caught a glimmering that hundreds of men were about to start swinging
swords in
their vicinity. One curtain twitched; a woman's face showed for a
moment, then
vanished. Some others took ghoulish delight in watching.
Talking
quietly among themselves, the four Kinswomen took their places where
they had
opened their gateway some hours earlier. They eyed the corpses in the
street
and shook their heads, but these were not the first dead men they had
seen. Not
one would have been allowed to test for Accepted, yet they were calm,
sure of
themselves, as dignified as sisters despite the rain soaking their hair
and
dresses. Learning Eg-wene's plans for the Kin. to be associated with
the Tower
and a place for Aes Sedai to retire, had lessened their fears over
their
future, especially once they found out that their Rule would remain in
place
and the former Aes Sedai would have to follow it, too. Not all
believed- over
the last month, seven of their number had run away without leaving so
much as a
note-yet most did, and took strength from belief. Having work to do had
restored their pride. Elayne had not realized that had been dented
until they
stopped seeing themselves as refugees wholly dependent on her. They
held
themselves straighter, now. Worry had vanished from their faces. And
they were
not so quick to bend their necks for a sister, unfortunately. Though
that part
of it really had begun earlier. They once had considered Aes Sedai
superior to
mortal flesh, but had learned to their dismay that the shawl did not
make a
woman more than she was without it.
Alise
eyed Elayne, compressing her lips for a moment and adjusting her brown
skirts
unnecessarily. She had argued against Elayne being allowed-allowed!-to
come
here. And Birgitte had almost given way! Alise was a forceful woman.
"Are
you ready for us. Captain-General?" she said.
"We
are," Elayne said, but Alise waited until Birgitte nodded before
linking
with the other three Kinswomen. She ignored Elayne after that one
glance.
Really, Nynaeve should never have begun trying to "put some backbone
into
them," as she had put it. When she could lay hands on Nynaeve again,
she
was going to have words with the woman.
The
familiar vertical slash appeared and seemed to rotate into a view of
the main
stableyard in the palace, a hole in the air nearly four paces by four,
but the
view through the opening, of the tall arched doors of one of the white
marble
stables, was a little off-center from what she expected. When she rode
onto the
rain-drenched flagstones of the stableyard. she saw why. There was
another
gateway, slightly smaller, open. If you tried to open a gateway where
one
already existed, yours was displaced just enough that the two did not
touch,
though the gap between was thinner than a razor's edge. From that other
gateway
a twinned column of men seemed to be riding out of the stable-yard's
outer
wall, curving away to exit the stableyard through the open
iron-strapped gates.
Some wore burnished helmets and breastplates or plate-and-mail, but
every man
had on the white-collared red coat of the Queen's Guard. A tall,
broad-shouldered man with two golden knots on the left shoulder of his
red coat
stood in the rain watching them, helmet balanced on his hip.
"That's
a sight to soothe sore eyes," Birgitte murmured. Small groups of
Kinswomen
were scouring the countryside for anyone trying to come to Elayne's
support,
but it was a chancy business. Thus far, the Kinswomen had brought word
of
dozens and dozens of groups trying to find a way into the city, yet
they had
only managed to locate five bands totaling fewer than a thousand. Word
had
spread of how many men Arymilla had around the city, and men supporting
Trakand
were skittish about being found. About who might do the finding.
As
soon as Elayne and the others appeared, red-clad grooms with the White
Lion on
their left shoulders came running. A scrawny, gap-toothed fellow with a
fringe
of white hair took Fireheart's bridle while a lean, graying woman held
Elayne's
stirrup for her to dismount. Ignoring the downpour, she strode toward
the tall
man, splashing water with every step. His hair hung every which way
over his
face, clinging wetly, but she could see he was young, well short of his
middle
years.
"The
Light shine on you, Lieutenant," she said. "Your name? How many did
you bring? And from where?" Through that smaller opening she could see
a
line of horsemen extending out of sight among tall trees. Whenever a
pair rode
through, another appeared at the far end of the column. She would not
have
believed that many of the Guards remained anywhere.
"Charlz
Guybon, my Queen," he replied, sinking to one knee and pressing a
gauntleted fist to the flagstones. "Captain Kindlin in Aringill gave me
permission to try reaching Caemlyn. That was after we learned Lady
Naean and
the others had escaped."
Elayne
laughed. "Stand, man. Stand. I'm not Queen yet." Aringill? There had
never been so many of the Guards there.
"As
you say, my Lady," he said as he regained his feet and made a bow that
was
more proper for the Daughter-Heir.
"Can
we continue this inside?" Birgitte put in irritably. Guybon took in her
coat
with its gold stripes on the cuffs and knots of rank, and offered a
salute that
she returned with a quick arm across her chest. If he was surprised to
see a
woman as Captain-General, he was wise enough not to show it. "I'm
soaked
to the skin, and so are you. Elayne." Aviendha was right behind her.
shawl
wrapped around her head and not looking so pleased with rain now that
her white
blouse clung wetly and her dark skirts hung with water. The Guardswomen
were
leading their horses toward one of the stables, except for the eight
who would
remain with Elayne until their replacements arrived. Guybon made no
comment on
them, either. A very wise man.
Elayne
allowed herself to be hustled as far as the simple colonnade that
offered
entrance to the palace itself. Even here the Guardswomen surrounded
her, four
ahead and four behind, so she felt a prisoner. Once out of the rain,
though,
she balked. She wanted to know. She tried again to embrace
saidar-removing the
moisture from her clothes would be a simple matter with the Power-but
the
Source skittered away once more. Aviendha did not know the weave, so
they had
to stand there dripping. The plain iron stand-lamps along the wall were
still
unlit, and with the rain, the space was dim. Guybon raked his hair into
a semblance
of order with his fingers. Light, he was little short of beautiful! His
greenish hazel eyes were tired, but his face seemed suited to smiling.
He
looked as if he had not smiled in too long.
"Captain
Kindlin said I could try to find men who d been discharged by Gaebril,
my Lady,
and they started flocking in as soon as I put out the call. You'd be
surprised
how many tucked their uniforms into a chest against the day they might
be
wanted again. A good many carried off their armor, too. which they
shouldn't
have done, strictly speaking, but I'm glad they did. I feared I'd
waited too
long when I heard of the siege. I was considering trying to fight my
way to one
of the city gates when Mistress Zigane and the others found me." A
puzzled
look came over his face. "She became very upset when I called her Aes
Sedai. but that has to be the One Power that brought us here.''
"It
was, and she isn't," Elayne said impatiently. "How many, man?"
"Four
thousand seven hundred and sixty-two of the Guards, my Lady. And I
encountered
a number of lords and ladies who were trying to reach Caemlyn with
their
armsmen. Be content. I made sure they were loyal to you before I let
them join
me. There are none from the great Houses, but they bring the total near
to ten
thousand, my Lady." He said that as if it were of no moment at all.
There
are forty horses fit for riding in the stable. I have brought you ten
thousand
soldiers.
Elayne
laughed and clapped her hands in delight. "Wonderful, Captain Guybon!
Wonderful!" Arymilla still had her outnumbered. but not so badly as
before.
"Guardsman
Lieutenant, my Lady. I am a Lieutenant."
"From
this moment, you are Captain Guybon."
"And
my second." Birgitte added, "at least for the present. You've shown
resourcefulness, you're old enough to have experience, and I need both."
Guybon
seemed overwhelmed, bowing and murmuring stammered thanks. Well, a man
of his
age would normally expect to serve at least ten or fifteen more years
before
being considered for captain, much less second to the Captain-General,
however
temporary.
"And
now it's past time for us to be getting into dry clothes," Birgitte
continued. "Especially you, Elayne." The Warder bond carried an
implacable firmness that suggested she might try dragging Elayne if she
dallied.
Temper
flared, hot and sharp, but Elayne fought it down. She had nearly
doubled the
number of her soldiers, and she would not let anything spoil this day.
Besides,
she wanted dry clothes, too.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
Wet Things
Inside,
the gilded stand-lamps were lit, since daylight never penetrated far
into the
palace, flames flickering on the lamps that lacked glass mantles. The
lamps'
mirrors provided a good light in the bustling corridor, though, and
bustling it
was, with liveried servants scurrying in every direction, or sweeping
or
mopping. Serving men with the White Lion on the left breast of their
red coats
were up on tall ladders taking down the winter tapestries, mainly
flowers and
scenes of summer, and putting up the spring tapestries, many displaying
the
colorful foliage of fall. Always two seasons ahead for the majority of
the
hangings was the custom, to provide a touch of relief from winter's
cold or
summer's heat, to remind while spring's new growth was on all the trees
that
the branches would grow bare and the snows come again, to remind when
dead
leaves were falling and the first snows, too, and days grew ever
colder, that
there would be a spring. There were a few battles among them, showing
days of
particular glory for Andor, but Elayne did not enjoy looking at those
as much
as she had as a girl. Still, they had their place now. as well, tokens
of what
battle actually was. The difference between how a child looked at
things and a
woman did. Glory was always bought with blood. Glory aside, necessary
things
were often paid for with battle and blood.
There
were too few servants to carry out such tasks in a timely manner, and a
fair
number were white-haired pensioners with bent backs who seldom moved
quickly in
any case. However slow they were, she was glad they had willingly come
out of
retirement, to train those newly hired and take up the slack left by
those who
had fled while Gaebril reigned or after Rand
took Caemlyn, else the palace would have taken on the aspect of a barn
by this
time. A dirty barn. At least all of the winter runners were up off the
floors.
She left a damp trail behind her on the red-and-white floor tiles, and
with all
the spring rains, wet runners would have been sprouting mildew before
nightfall.
Servants
in red-and-white hurrying about their duties looked aghast as they
bowed or
curtsied, which did nothing for her temper. They did not appear upset
to see
Aviendha or Birgitte drenched and dripping, or the Guardswomen either.
Burn
her, if everyone did not stop expecting her to be mollycoddled all the
day
long… ! Her scowl was such that the servants began making their
courtesies
quickly and scurrying on. Her temper was becoming the stuff of evening
stories
in front of the fireplace, though she tried not to unleash it on
servants. On
anyone, really, but more so with servants. They lacked the luxury of
shouting
back.
She
intended to go straight to her apartments and change, but intentions or
no, she
turned aside when she saw Reanne Corly walking in a crossing corridor
where the
floor tiles were all red. The servants' reactions had nothing to do
with it.
She was not being stubborn. She was wet, and she wanted dry clothing
and a warm
towel in the worst way, but seeing the Kinswoman was a surprise, and
the two
women with Reanne also caught her eye. Birgitte muttered a curse before
following her. swishing her bowstave sideways through the air as though
thinking of striking someone. The bond carried a blend of
long-suffering and
irritability, soon stifled. Aviendha never left Elayne's side, though
busily
trying to wring water out of her shawl. Despite all the rain she had
seen, all
the rivers since crossing the Spine of the World and the great cisterns
beneath
the city, Aviendha winced at the waste, the water splashing uselessly
on the
floor. The eight Guardswomen. left behind by her sudden swerve, hurried
to
catch up, stolid and silent except for the stamp of their boots on the
floor
tiles. Give anyone a sword and boots, and they began stamping.
One
of the women with Reanne was Kara Defane, who had been the wise woman,
or
Healer, of a fishing village on Toman Head before the Seanchan collared
her.
Plump and merry-eyed in brown wool with embroidered blue and white
flowers at
her cuffs, Kara appeared little older than Elayne. though she was
nearly fifty.
The other was named Jillari. a former damane from Seanchan. Despite
everything,
the sight of her made Elayne's flesh feel cold. Whatever else could be
said of
her, the woman was Seanchan. after all.
Not
even Jillari herself knew how old she was, though she appeared just
into her
middle years. Slight of build, with long, fiery red hair and eyes as
green as
Aviendha's. she and Marille, the other Seanchan-born damane who
remained in the
palace, persisted in maintaining that they still were damane. that they
needed
to be collared because of what they could do. Daily walks were one way
the Kin
were trying to accustom them to freedom. Carefully supervised walks, of
course.
They were always closely watched, day and night. Either might try to
free the
suldam, otherwise. For that matter, Kara herself was not trusted alone
with any
of the sul'dam. nor was Lemore, a young Taraboner noble collared when
Tanchico
fell. The notion would not come to them on its own, yet there was no
saying
what either would do if a suldam ordered her to help the woman escape.
The
habit of obedience remained strong in Kara and Lemore both.
Jillari's
eyes widened at the sight of Elayne. and she immediately fell to her
knees with
a thud. She tried to fold herself into a bundle on the floor, but Kara
caught
her shoulders and gently urged her back to her feet. Elayne tried not
to let
her distaste show. And hoped that if it did. everyone would take it for
the
kneeling and crouching. Some of it was. How could anyone want to be
collared?
She heard Lini's voice again, and shivered. You can't know another
woman's
reasons until you've worn her dress for a year. Burn her if she had any
desire
to do that!
"No
need for all that," Kara said. "This is what we do." She
curtsied, not very gracefully. She had never seen a town larger than a
few
hundred people before the Seanchan took her. After a moment, the
red-haired
woman spread her own dark blue skirts more awkwardly still. She almost
fell
over, in fact, and blushed a bright crimson.
"Jillari
is sorry," she almost whispered, folding her hands at her waist. Her
eyes,
she kept meekly directed at the floor. "Jillari will try to
remember."
"
'I.' " Kara said. "Remember what I
told you? I call you Jillari, but you call yourself'l' or 'me.' Try it.
And
look at me. You can do it." She sounded as though she were encouraging
a
child.
The
Seanchan woman wet her lips, giving Kara a sidelong look.
"I." she said softly. And promptly
began weeping,
tears rolling down her cheeks faster than she could wipe them away with
her
fingers. Kara enveloped her in a hug and made soothing noises. She
seemed about
to cry, too. Aviendha shifted uncomfortably. It was not the tears-men
or women,
Aiel wept unashamed when they felt the need-but for them, touching
hands was a
great display in public.
"Why
don't you two walk on alone for a while," Reanne told the pair with a
comforting smile that deepened the fine lines at the corners of her
blue eyes.
Her voice was high and lovely, suitable for singing. "I'll catch you
up,
and we can eat together." They offered her curtsies, too. Jillari still
weeping, and turned away with Kara's arm around the smaller woman's
shoulders.
"If you care to, my Lady," Reanne said before they had gone two
steps, "we could talk on the way to your apartments."
The
woman's face was calm, and her tone put no special freight on the
words, yet
Elayne's jaw tightened. She forced it to relax. There was no point in
being stubborn
stupid. She was wet. And beginning to shiver, though the day could
hardly be
called cold. "An excellent suggestion." she said, gathering her
sodden gray skirts. "Come."
"We
could walk a little faster." Birgitte muttered, not quite far enough
under
her breath.
"We
could run," Aviendha said, without trying to keep her voice low at all.
"We might get dry from the exertion."
Elayne
ignored them and glided at a suitable pace. In her mother, it would
have been
called regal. She was not sure she managed that, but she was not about
to run
through the palace. Or even hurry. The sight of her rushing would start
a dozen
rumors if not a hundred, each one of some dire event worse than the one
before.
Too many rumors floated on every breath of air as it was. The worst was
that
the city was about to fall, that she planned to flee before it did. No,
she
would be seen to be utterly unruffled. Everyone had to believe her
completely
confident. Even if that was a false facade. Anything else, and she
might as
well yield to Arymilla. Fear of defeat had lost as many battles as
weakness
had, and she could not afford to lose a single one. "I thought the
Captain-General had you out scouting, Reanne."
Birgitte
had been using two of the Kin for scouts, women who could not make a
gateway
large enough to admit a horse cart, but with circles of Kinswomen
available to
make gateways, for trade as well as moving soldiers, she had coopted
the
remaining six who could Travel on their own. An encircling army was no
impediment to them. Yet Re-anne's well-cut, fine blue wool, though
unadorned
save for a red-enameled circle pin on the high neck, was decidedly
unsuited for
skulking about the countryside.
"The
Captain-General believes her scouts need rest. Unlike herself," Reanne
added blandly, raising an eyebrow at Birgitte. The bond carried a brief
flash
of annoyance. Aviendha laughed for some reason: Elayne still did not
understand
Aiel humor. "Tomorrow, I go out again. It takes me back to the days
long
ago when I was a pack-peddler with one mule." The Kin all followed many
crafts during their long lives, always changing location and craft
before
anyone took note of how slowly they aged. The oldest among them had
mastered
half a dozen crafts or more, shifting from one to another easily. "I
decided to use my freeday helping Jillari settle on a surname." Reanne
grimaced. "It's custom in Seanchan to strike a girl's name from her
family's rolls when she's collared, and the poor woman feels she has no
right
to the name she was born with. Jillari was given with the collar, but
she wants
to keep that."
"There
are more reasons to hate the Seanchan than I can count," Elayne said
heatedly. Then, belatedly, she caught up to the import of it all.
Learning to
curtsy. Choosing a new surname. Burn her. if pregnancy was making her
slow-witted on top of everything else… ! "When did Jillari change her
mind about the collar?" There was no reason to let everyone know she
was
being dense today.
The
other woman's expression did not alter a whit, but she hesitated just
long
enough to let Elayne know her deception had failed. "Just this morning,
after you and the Captain-General left, or you'd have been informed."
Reanne hurried on so the point had no time to fester. "And there's
other
news as good. At least, it's somewhat good. One of the suldam, Marli
Noichin-you recall her?-has admitted seeing the weaves."
"Oh.
that is good news," Elayne murmured. "Very good. Twenty-eight more to
go, but they might be easier now that one of them has broken." She had
watched an attempt to convince Marli that she could learn to channel,
that she
could already see weaves of the Power. The plump Seanchan woman had
been
stubbornly defiant even after she began crying.
"Somewhat
good, I said." Reanne sighed. "In Marli's opinion, she might as well
have admitted she kills children. Now she insists that she must be
collared.
She begs for the a'dam. It makes my skin creep. I don't know what to do
with
her."
"Send
her back to the Seanchan as soon as we can," Elayne replied.
Reanne
stopped dead in shock, her eyebrows climbing. Birgitte cleared her
throat
loudly-impatience filled the bond before being stifled-and the
Kinswoman gave a
start, then began walking again, at a faster pace than before. "But
they'll make her a damane. I can't condemn any woman to that."
Elayne
gave her Warder a look that slid off like a dagger sliding off good
armor.
Birgitte's expression was… bland. To the golden-haired woman, being a
Warder contained strong elements of older sister. And worse, sometimes
mother.
"/
can," she said emphatically, lengthening her own stride. Well, it would
not hurt to get dry a little sooner rather than later. "She helped hold
enough others prisoner that she deserves a taste of it herself, Reanne.
But
that's not why I mean to send her back. If any of the others wants to
stay and
learn, and make up for what she's done, I certainly won't hand her to
the
Seanchan, but Light's truth, I hope they all feel like Marli. They'll
put an
a'dam on her, Reanne, but they won't be able to keep secret who she
was. Every
one-time sul'dam I can send the Seanchan to collar will be a mattock
digging at
their roots."
"A
harsh decision," Reanne said sadly. She plucked at her skirts in an
agitated manner, smoothed them, then plucked at them again. "Perhaps
you
might consider thinking on it for a few days? Surely it isn't anything
that has
to be done immediately."
Elayne
gritted her teeth. The woman had as much as implied that she had
reached this decision
in one of her swinging moods! But had she? It seemed reasonable and
logical.
They could not keep the sul'dam imprisoned forever. Sending those who
did not
want to be free back to the Seanchan was a way to be rid of them and
strike a
blow at the Seanchan at the same time. It was more than hatred of any
Seanchan.
Of course, it was. Burn her. but she bloody well hated being unsure
whether her
own decisions were sound! She could not afford to make unsound
decisions.
Still, there was no hurry. Better to send back a group, if possible, in
any
event. There was less chance of someone arranging an "accident," that
way. She did not put that sort of thing past the Seanchan. "I will
think
on it, Reanne, but I doubt I'll change my mind."
Reanne
sighed again, deeply. Eager for her promised return to the WhiteTower
and novice white-she had been heard to say she envied Kirstian and
Zarya-she
wanted very much to enter the Green Ajah, but Elayne had her doubts.
Reanne was
kindhearted. softhearted in fact, and Elayne had never met any Green
who could
be called soft. Even those who seemed frilly or frail on the surface
were cold
steel inside.
Ahead
of them, Vandene glided from a crossing corridor, slender, white-haired
and
graceful in dark gray wool with deep brown trim, and turned in the same
direction they were going, apparently without noticing them. She was
Green, and
as hard as a hammerhead. Jaem, her Warder, walked beside her, head bent
in
close conversation, now and then raking a hand through his thinning
gray hair.
Gnarled and lean, his dark green coat hanging loose on him. he was old,
but
every scrap as hard as she. an old root that could dull axes. Kirstian
and
Zarya, both in plain novice white, followed meekly with their hands
folded at
their waists, the one pale as a Cairhienin, the other short and
slim-hipped.
For runaways who had succeeded in what so few did. remaining free of
the WhiteTower
for years, over three hundred years in Kirstian's case, they had
resettled into
their places as novices with remarkable ease. But then, the Kin's Rule
was a
blending of the rules that governed novices and those that Accepted
lived by.
Perhaps, to them, the white woolen dresses and the loss of freedom to
come and
go as they chose were the only real change, though the Kin regulated
that last
to some extent.
"I'm
very glad she has those two to occupy her," Reanne murmured in tones of
sympathy. Pained caring shone in her eyes. "It's good that she mourns
her
sister, but I fear she'd be obsessed with Adeleas' death without
Kirstian and
Zarya. She may be anyway. I believe that dress she's wearing belonged
to
Adeleas. I've tried offering solace-I have experience helping people
overcome
grief; I've been a village Wise Woman as well as wearing the red belt
in Ebou
Dar many years ago- but she won't give me two words."
In
fact, Vandene wore only her dead sister's clothing, now, and Adeleas'
flowery
perfume, as well. At times. Elayne thought Vandene was trying to become
Adeleas, to offer up herself in order to bring her sister back to life.
But
could you fault someone for being obsessed with finding who had
murdered her
sister? Not that more than a handful of people knew that was what she
was
doing. Everyone else believed as Reanne did, that she was absorbed with
teaching Kirstian and Zarya. that and beginning their punishment for
running
away. Vandene was doing both, of course, and with a will, yet it was
really
just a cover for her true purpose.
Elayne
reached out without looking, and found Aviendha's hand waiting to take
hers, a
comforting grip. She squeezed back, unable to imagine the grief of
losing
Aviendha. They shared a quick glance, and Aviendha's eyes mirrored her
own
feelings. Had she really once thought Aiel faces impassive and
unreadable?
"As
you say. Reanne. she has Kirstian and Zarya to occupy her." Reanne was
not
among the handful who knew the truth. "We all mourn in our own way.
Vandene will find solace along her own path."
When
she found Adeleas' murderer, it was to be hoped. If that failed to at
least
begin assuaging the pain… Well, that was to be faced when it must be.
For
now, she must allow Vandene her head. Especially since she had no doubt
the
Green would ignore any attempt to rein her in. That was more than
irritating;
it was infuriating. She had to watch Vandene perhaps destroying
herself, and
worse, make use of it. Having no alternative made that no less
unpalatable.
As
Vandene and her companions turned aside down another hallway, Reene
Harfor
appeared out of a side corridor right in front of Elayne, a stout,
quiet woman
with a graying bun atop her head and an air of regal dignity, her
formal
scarlet tabard with the White Lion of Andor as always looking freshly
ironed.
Elayne had never seen her with a hair out of place or looking even
slightly the
worse for a long day spent overseeing the workings of the palace. And
more
besides. Her round face appeared puzzled for some reason, but it took
on a look
of concern at the sight of Elayne. "Why, my Lady, you're drenched."
she said, sounding shocked, as she made her curtsy. "You need to get
out
of those wet things right away."
"Thank
you, Mistress Harfor," Elayne said through her teeth. "1 hadn't
noticed."
She
regretted the outburst instantly-the First Maid had been as faithful to
her as
to her mother-but what made matters worse was that Mistress Harfor took
her
flare-up in stride, never so much as blinking. Elayne Trakand's moods
were no
longer anything to be surprised at.
"I
will walk with you if I may, my Lady," she said calmly, falling in at
Elayne's side. A freckled young serving woman carrying a basket of
folded bed
linens began to offer her courtesies, only a hair more directed at
Elayne than
the First Maid, but Reene made a quick gesture
that sent the girl scurrying before she completed bending her knees.
Perhaps it was just to keep her from overhearing. Reene did not stop
talking.
"Three of the mercenary captains are demanding to meet with you. I put
them in the Blue Reception Room, and told the servants to keep watch so
no
small valuables accidentally fall into their pockets. Not that I had
to, as it
turned out. Careane Sedai and Sareitha Sedai appeared soon after and
settled in
to keep the captains company. Captain Mellar is with them, too."
Elayne
frowned. Mellar. She was trying to keep him too busy for mischief, yet
he had a
way of turning up where and when she least wanted him. For that matter,
so did
Careane and Sareitha. One of them had to be the Black Ajah killer.
Unless it
was Merilille, and she was beyond reach, it seemed. Reene knew about
that.
Keeping her in the dark would have been criminal. She had eyes
everywhere, and
they might notice a vital clue. "What do the mercenaries want. Mistress
Harfor?"
"More
money, is my guess," Birgitte growled, and swung her unstrung bow like
a
club.
"Most
likely," Reene agreed, "but they refused to tell me." Her mouth
tightened slightly. No more than that, yet it seemed these mercenaries
had
managed to offend her. If they were stupid enough not to see that she
was more
than a superior serving woman, then they were very dense indeed.
"Has
Dyelin returned?" Elayne asked, and when the First Maid said not,
added,
"Then I will see these mercenaries as soon as I've changed clothes."
She might as well get them out of the way.
Rounding
a corner, she found herself face-to-face with two of the Windfinders
and barely
suppressed a sigh. The Sea Folk were the last people on earth she
wanted to
confront right then. Lean and dark and barefoot in red brocaded silk
trousers
and a blue brocaded silk blouse with a green sash tied in an elaborate
knot.
Chanelle din Seran White Shark was aptly named. Elayne had no idea what
a white
shark looked like-it might well have been a little thing-but Chanelle's
big
eyes were hard enough to belong on a fierce predator, especially when
she took
in Aviendha. There was bad blood, there. A tattooed hand raised the
gold
piercework scent box hanging on a chain about Chanelle's neck, and she
inhaled
the sharp, spicy scent deeply, as though covering some foul odor.
Aviendha
laughed out loud, which made Chanelle's full lips grow thin. Thinner,
at least.
Thin was beyond them.
The
other was Renaile din Calon. once Windfinder to the Mistress of the
Ships, in
blue linen trousers and a red blouse sashed with blue, tied in a much
less
intricate knot. Both women wore the long white mourning stoles for
Nesta din
Reas, yet Renaile must have felt Nesta's death most keenly. She was
carrying a
carved wooden writing box with a capped ink jar set in one corner and a
sheet
of paper with a few scrawled lines clipped to its top. Wings of white
in her
black hair hid the six gold earrings in her ears, much thinner rings
than the
eight she had worn before learning of Nesta's fate, and the gold honor
chain
crossing her dark left cheek looked stark supporting only the medallion
that
named her clan. After Sea Folk custom, Nesta's death had meant starting
over
for Renaile, with no more rank than a woman raised from apprentice on
the day
she herself had put off her honors. Her face still held dignity, though
much
subdued now that she was acting as Chanelle's secretary.
"I
am on my way-" Elayne began, but Chanelle cut her off imperiously.
"What
news do you have of Talaan? And of Merilille. Are you even trying to
find
them?"
Elayne
took a deep breath. Shouting at Chanelle never did any good. The woman
was more
than willing to shout back and seldom willing to listen to reason. She
would
not engage in another screaming match. Servants slipping by to either
side did
not pause to offer bows or curtsies-they could sense the mood here-but
they
shot grim looks at the Sea Folk women. That was pleasing, though it
should not
have been. However upsetting they were, the Windfinders were guests. In
a way.
they were, bargain or no bargain. Chanelle had complained more than
once of
slow-footed servants and tepid bathwater. And that was pleasing, too.
Still,
she would maintain her dignity, and civility.
"The
news is the same as yesterday," she replied in tones of moderation.
Well,
she attempted tones of moderation. If traces of sharpness remained, the
Windfinder would have to live with them. "The same as last week, and
the
week before that. Inquiries have been made at every inn in Caemlyn.
Your
apprentice is not to be found. Merilille is not to be found. It seems
they must
have managed to leave the city." The gate guards had been warned to
watch
for a Sea Folk woman with tattooed hands, but they would not have tried
to stop
an Aes Sedai leaving, or taking anyone with her that she wanted. For
that
matter, the mercenaries would let anyone at all pass who offered a few
coins.
"And now, if you will excuse me, I am on my way-"
"That
is not good enough." Chanelle's voice was hot enough to singe leather.
"You Aes Sedai stick together as tightly as oysters. Merilille
kidnapped
Talaan, and I think you are hiding her. We will search for them, and I
assure
you, when we find them, Merilille will be punished sharply before she
is sent
to the ships to fulfill her part of the bargain."
"You
seem to be forgetting yourself." Birgitte said. Her voice was mild, her
face calm, but the bond quivered with anger. She held her bowstave
propped in
front of her with both hands as if to keep them from making fists.
"You'll
withdraw your accusations, or you'll suffer for it." Perhaps she was
not
as self-controlled as she seemed. This was no way to go on with
Windfinders.
They were women of power among their own people, and accustomed to
wielding it.
But Birgitte did not hesitate. "By the bargain Zaida made, you're under
the Lady Elayne's authority. You're under my authority. Any searching
you do
will be when you aren't needed. And unless I misremember badly, you're
supposed
to be in Tear right now to bring back wagonloads of grain and salt
beef. I
strongly suggest you Travel there immediately, or you might learn a
little about
punishment yourself." Oh, that was entirely the wrong way with
Windfinders.
"No,"
Elayne said as hotly as Chanelle, surprising herself. "Search if you
wish,
Chanelle, you and all of the Windfinders. Search Caemlyn from end to
end. And
when you can't find Talaan or Merilille, you will apologize for calling
me a
liar.'' Well, the woman had. As good as, anyway. She felt a strong
desire to
slap Chanelle. She wanted to… Light, her anger and Birgitte's were
feeding each other! Frantically she tried to soothe her fury before it
burst
into open rage, but the only result was a sudden longing to weep that
she had
to fight just as wildly.
Chanelle
drew herself up, scowling. "You would claim we had reneged on the
bargain.
We have labored like bilge girls this past month and more. You will not
cast us
off without meeting your side of the bargain. Renaile, the Aes Sedai at
The
Silver Swan are to be told- told, mind!-that they must produce
Merilille and
Talaan or else pay what the White Tower owes themselves. They cannot
pay all,
but they can make a start."
Renaile
began unscrewing the silver cap of the ink jar.
"Not
a note," Chanelle snapped. "Go yourself and tell them. Now."
Tightening
the cap, Renaile bowed almost parallel to the floor, quickly touching
fingertips
to her heart. "As you command,'' she murmured, her face a dark mask.
She
did not delay in obeying, setting out at a trot the way she had come
with the
writing box tucked under her arm.
Still
fighting the desire to strike Chanelle and weep at the same time,
Elayne
winced. This was not the first time the Sea Folk had gone to The Silver
Swan,
nor even the second or third, but always before they had gone asking,
not
demanding. There were nine sisters resident at the inn at present-the
number
kept changing as sisters entered the city or left, and rumor said there
were
other Aes Sedai in the city, too-and it worried her that none had
appeared at
the palace. She had stayed clear of the Swan-she knew how much Elaida
wanted to
lay hands on her, but not who the sisters at the Swan supported, or
whether
they supported anyone; they had been closemouthed as mussels with
Sareitha and
Careane-yet she had expected some of them to come to the palace if only
to learn
what was behind the Sea Folk's claim. Why were so many Aes Sedai in
Caemlyn
when Tar Valon itself was under siege? She herself was the first answer
that
came to mind, and that made her more determined to avoid any sister she
did not
personally know to be a supporter of Egwene. But that would not stop
word of
the bargain made for aid in using the Bowl of the Winds from spreading,
and of
the price the Tower had been committed to pay for that help. Burn her,
but that
news would be a bloody wagonload of fireworks going off at once when it
became
general knowledge among Aes Sedai. Worse. Ten wagonloads.
Watching
Renaile trot away, she fought to steady her emotions. And tried to
bring the
tone back to something approaching civility. "She handles her change in
circumstances very well, I think."
Chanelle
gave a dismissive puff. "And well she should. Every Windfinder knows
she
will rise and fall many times before her body is given back to the
salt.'' She
twisted to gaze after the other Sea Folk woman, and a touch of malice
entered
her voice. She seemed to be speaking to herself. "She fell from a
greater
height than most, and she should not have been surprised to find her
landing
hard after so many fingers she trod on while she was-" Her mouth
snapped
shut, and she jerked her head around to glare at Elayne, at Birgitte,
at
Aviendha and Reene, even at the Guardswomen, daring them to comment.
Elayne
prudently kept her mouth closed, and, the Light be thanked, so did
everyone
else. For her pan, she thought she almost had her temper smoothed, the
desire
to cry suppressed, and she did not want
to say anything that might start Chanelle shouting and undo all her
work. For
that matter, she could not think of anything to say after hearing that.
She
doubted it was part of Atha'an Miere custom to take revenge on someone
you
believed had misused their position above you. It was very human,
though.
The
Windfinder stared her up and down, frowning. "You're wet," she said
as though just noticing. "It is very bad to be wet for long in your
condition. You should change your clothes right away."
Elayne
threw back her head and screamed as loudly as she could, a howl of pure
outrage
and fury. She screamed until her lungs were empty, leaving her panting.
In
the silence that followed, everyone stared at her in amazement. Almost
everyone. Aviendha began laughing so hard she had to lean against a
tapestry of
mounted hunters confronting a leopard that had turned. She had one arm
pressed
across the middle as if her ribs hurt. The bond carried amusement,
too-amusement!-though Birgitte's face remained as smooth as a sister's.
"I
must Travel to Tear." Chanelle said breathily after a moment, and she
turned away without another word or any gesture toward a courtesy.
Reene and
Reanne offered curtsies, neither quite meeting Elayne's eye, and pled
duties
before hurrying off.
Elayne
stared at Birgitte and Aviendha in turn. "If one of you says a single
word," she said warningly.
Birgitte
put on such an expression of innocence that it was palpably false, and
the bond
carried such mirth that Elayne found herself fighting the urge to
laugh.
Aviendha only laughed the harder.
Gathering
her skirts and such dignity as she could summon. Elayne set out for her
apartments. If she walked faster than before, well, she want to get out
of
these damp clothes. That was the only reason. The only reason.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
A Different Skill
To
Elayne's fury, a quiet, simmering fury that clenched her jaw, she got
lost on
the way to her apartments. Those rooms had been hers since she left the
nursery, yet twice she took a turn only to find that it did not lead
where she
expected. And a sweeping flight of marble-railed stairs took her in
entirely
the wrong direction. Burn her, now being with child was fuzzing her
wits completely!
She could feel puzzlement, and increasing concern, through the bond as
she
retraced her way, climbed a different set of stairs. Some of the
Guardswomen
murmured uneasily, not quite loudly enough for her to make out the
words, until
the Bannerwoman in charge, a slim, cool-eyed Saldaean named Devore
Zarbayan,
silenced them with a sharp word. Even Aviendha began looking at her
doubtfully.
Well, she was not about to have getting lost-in the palace!-flung in
her face.
"Not
a word from anybody," she said grimly. "Not one!" she added when
Birgitte opened her mouth anyway.
The
golden-haired woman snapped her jaws shut and gave a tug at her thick
braid,
almost the way Nynaeve did. She did not bother to keep disapproval from
her
face, and the bond still carried puzzlement, and worry. Enough that
Elayne
began to feel worried herself. She struggled to fight that off before
she found
herself wringing her hands and apologizing. It was that strong.
"I
think I'll try to find my rooms, if I can have just a few words."
Birgitte
said in a tight voice. "I want to get dry before I wear out my boots.
We
need to talk of this later. I fear there's nothing to be done, but…"
With a stiff nod. barely bending her neck, she stalked off slashing her
unstrung bow from side to side.
Elayne
almost called her back. She wanted to. But Birgitte had as much need of
dry
clothing as she. Besides, her mood had swung to grumpy and stubborn.
She was
not going to talk about losing her way in the very halls where she had
grown up,
not now or later. Nothing to be done? What did that mean? If Birgitte
was
suggesting that her wits were too befuddled to be set straight… ! Her
jaw
tightened all over again.
At
last, after yet another unexpected turn, she found the tall,
lion-carved doors
of her apartments and heaved a small sigh of relief. She had begun to
think her
memories of the palace really were completely jumbled. A pair of
Guardswomen.
resplendent in broad-brimmed hats with white plumes and lace-edged
sashes
embroidered with the White Lion slanting across their burnished
breastplates
and more pale lace at their cuffs and necks, stiffened on either side
of the
doors at her approach. She intended them to have red-lacquered
breastplates to
match their silk coats and breeches when she had time to spend on that
sort of
thing. If they were to be so pretty that any assailant would discount
them
until it was too late, she would make them positively gaudy. None of
the
Guardswomen seemed to mind. In fact, they were eagerly looking forward
to the
lacquered breastplates.
She
had overheard some who were unaware she was near disparage the
Guardswomen-mostly women, but including Doilin Mellar. their own
commander-yet
she had full confidence in their ability to protect her. They were
brave and
determined, or they would not have been there. Yurith Azeri and others
who had
been merchants' guards, a rare trade for women, gave daily lessons in
the
sword, and one or another of the Warders gave a second lesson every
day, too.
Sareitha's Ned Yarman and Vandene's Jaem were quite laudatory about how
quickly
they learned. Jaem said it was because they did not think they already
knew
something of how to use a blade, which seemed silly. How could you
believe you
already knew something if you needed lessons in it?
Despite
the guards already there, Devore told off two of those who accompanied
her. and
they drew their swords and went inside while Elayne waited in the
corridor with
Aviendha and the rest, tapping her foot impatiently. Everyone avoided
looking at
her. The search was not a slur on the women guarding the doors-she
supposed it
was possible for someone to scale the side of the palace; there
certainly was
carving enough to provide handholds-yet she felt irritation at being
made to
wait on it. Only when they came out and reported to Devore that there
were no
assassins waiting within, no Aes Sedai waiting to whisk Elayne back to
Elaida
and the Tower, were she and Aviendha allowed to enter, with the
Guardswomen
forming upon either side of the doors with the others. She was not sure
they
would have physically prevented her from entering sooner, but so far
she had
been unwilling to put it to the test. Being restrained by her own
bodyguards
would have been beyond insufferable, no matter that they were just
doing their
jobs. Better to avoid the possibility altogether.
A
small fire burned on the white marble hearth of the anteroom, but it
seemed to
give little warmth. The carpets had been taken up for spring, and the
floor
tiles felt cold beneath the soles of her shoes, stout as they were.
Essande.
her maid, spread red-trimmed gray skirts with still surprising grace,
though
the slim, white-haired woman suffered from painful joints, which she
denied and
refused Healing for. She would have refused any suggestion that she
return to
her retirement as vehemently. Elayne's Golden Lily was embroidered
large on her
breast, and proudly worn. Two younger women flanked her a pace back in
similar
livery but with smaller lilies, stocky square-faced sisters named
Sephanie and Naris.
Shy-eyed yet quite well trained by Essande. they made deep curtsies,
settling
nearly to the floor.
Slow-moving
and frail Essande might be, but she never wasted time in idle chitchat
or
stating the obvious. There were no exclamations over how wet Elayne and
Aviendha were, though doubtless the Guardswomen had alerted her. "We'll
get you both warm and dry, my Lady, and right into something suitable
for
meeting mercenaries. The red silk with firedrops on the neck should
impress
them suitably. It's past time you ate, too. Don't bother telling me you
have,
my Lady. Naris. go fetch meals from the kitchens for the Lady Elayne
and the
Lady Aviendha." Aviendha gave a snort of laughter, yet she had long
since
ceased objecting to being called Lady. And a good thing, since she
would never
stop Essande. With servants, there were things you commanded and things
you
simply had to tolerate.
Naris
grimaced and took a deep breath for some reason, but dropped another
deep
curtsy, this to Essande, and one only slightly deeper to Elayne-she and
her
sister were every bit as much in awe of the elderly woman as they were
of the
Daughter-Heir of Andor- before gathering her skirts and darting into
the
corridor.
Elayne
grimaced, too. The Guardswomen also had told Essande about the
mercenaries,
apparently. And that she had not eaten. She hated people talking about
her
behind her back. But how much of that was her shifting moods? She could
not
recall being upset before because a maid knew what dress to lay out in
advance,
or because someone knew she was hungry and sent for a meal without
being asked.
Servants talked among themselves - gossiped constantly, in truth; that
was a
given-and passed along anything that might help their mistress be
served
better, if they were good at their jobs. Essande was very good at hers.
Still,
it rankled, and rankled the worse for her knowing that it was
irrational.
She
let Essande lead her and Aviendha into the dressing room, with Sephanie
bringing up the rear. She was feeling very miserable by this time, damp
and
shivering, not to mention angry with Birgitte for stalking off,
frightened by
losing her way in the place where she had grown up, and sullen over her
bodyguards gossiping about her. In truth, she felt absolutely wretched.
Soon
enough, though, Essande had her out of her wet things and wrapped in a
large
white towel that had been hanging on a warming rack in front of the
wide marble
fireplace at the end of the room. That had a soothing effect. This fire
was not
at all small, and the room seemed not far short of hot, a welcome heat
that
soaked into the flesh and banished shivers. Essande toweled Elayne's
hair dry
while Sephanie performed the same office for Aviendha, which chagrined
Aviendha
still, though this was hardly the first time. She and Elayne frequently
brushed
each other's hair at night, yet accepting this simple service from a
lady's
maid put spots of color in Aviendha's sun-dark cheeks.
When
Sephanie opened one of the wardrobes lining one wall, Aviendha sighed
deeply.
She held one towel loosely draped around her-another woman drying her
hair
might be embarrassing, but near nudity presented no difficulties-and a
second,
smaller, was wrapped around her hair. "Do you think I should wear
wetlander clothes. Elayne, since we are going to meet these
mercenaries?"
she asked in tones of great reluctance. Essande smiled. She enjoyed
dressing
Aviendha in silks.
Elayne
hid a smile of her own, no easy task since she wanted to laugh. Her
sister pretended
to disdain silks, but she seldom missed an opportunity to wear them.
"If
you can bear it, Aviendha." she said gravely, adjusting her own robing
towel carefully. Essande saw her in her skin every day, and Sephanie.
too, but
it was nothing to let happen without reason. "For best effect, we
should
both over-awe them. You won't mind too much, will you?"
But
Aviendha was already at the wardrobe, her towel gaping carelessly as
she
fingered dresses. Several sets of Aiel garb hung in another of the
wardrobes,
but Tylin had given her chests of finely cut silks and woolens before
they left
Ebou Dar, enough to fill nearly a quarter of the carved cabinets.
That
brief burst of amusement left Elayne no longer feeling as if she had to
argue
over everything, so without demurral she let Essande get her into the
red silk
with firedrops the size of a finger joint sewn in a band around the
high neck.
The garment would impress, for sure, with no need for other jewels,
though in
truth the Great Serpent ring on her right hand was jewel enough for
anyone. The
white-haired woman had a delicate touch, but Elayne still winced as she
began
doing up the rows of tiny buttons down her back, tightening the bodice
across
her tender bosom. Opinions varied on how long that would last, yet all
agreed
that she could expect more swelling.
Oh,
how she wished Rand were near enough
to share
the full effect of her bond with him. That would teach him to get her
with
child so carelessly. Of course, she could have drunk the heartleaf tea
before
lying with him-she pushed that thought away firmly. This was all Rand's fault, and that was that.
Aviendha
chose blue, which she often did, with rows of tiny pearls edging the
bodice.
The silk was not so deeply cut as Ebou Dari fashions. yet still would
display a
little cleavage; few dresses sewn in Ebou Dar failed to do that. As
Sephanie
began fastening her buttons, Aviendha fondled something she had
retrieved from
her belt pouch, a small dagger with a rough hilt of deerhorn wrapped in
gold
wire. It was also a ter'angreal, though Elayne had not been able to
puzzle out
what it did before pregnancy forced a halt to such studies. She had not
known
her sister was carrying the thing. Aviendha's eyes were almost dreamy
as she
stared at it.
"Why
does that fascinate you so?" Elayne asked. This was not the first time
she
had seen the other woman absorbed in that knife.
Aviendha
gave a start and blinked at the dagger in her hands. The iron blade-it
looked
like iron, at least, and felt almost like iron-had never been sharpened
so far
as Elayne could tell and was little longer than her palm, though wide
in
proportion. Even the point was too blunt for stabbing. "I thought to
give
it to you, but you never said anything about it, so I thought I might
be wrong,
and then we would believe you were safe, from some dangers at least,
when you
were not. So I decided to keep it. That way. if I am right, at least 1
could
protect you, and if I am wrong, it does no harm."
Elayne
shook her towel-wrapped head in confusion. "Right about what? What are
you
talking about?"
"This,"
Aviendha said, holding up the dagger. "I think that if you have this in
your possession, the Shadow cannot see you. Not the Eyeless or the
Shadowtwisted, maybe not even Leafblighter. Except that I must be wrong
if you
did not see it."
Sephanie
gasped, her hands going still until Essande murmured a soft admonition.
Essande
had lived too long to be shaken by mere mention of the Shadow. Or much
else,
for that matter.
Elayne
stared. She had tried teaching Aviendha to make ter'angreal, but her
sister
possessed not a scrap of facility there. Yet perhaps she had a
different skill,
maybe even one that could be called a Talent. "Come with me," she
said, and taking Aviendha's arm, she almost pulled her out of the
dressing
room. Essande followed with a torrent of protest, and Sephanie,
attempting to
continue buttoning up Aviendha's dress on the fly.
In
the larger of the apartment's two sitting rooms, goodly fires blazed in
both of
the fireplaces, and if the air was not so warm as in the dressing room,
it was
still comfortable. The scroll-edged table bordered with low-backed
chairs in
the middle of the white-tiled floor was where she and Aviendha took
most of
their meals. Several leather-bound books from the palace library sat in
a stack
on one end of the table, histories of Andor and books of tales. The
mirrored
stand-lamps gave a good light, and they often read here of an evening.
More
important, a long side table against one dark-paneled wall was covered
with
ter'angreal from the cache the Kin had kept hidden in Ebou Dar, cups
and bowls,
statuettes and figurines, jewelry, all manner of things. Most looked
commonplace, aside from perhaps a strangeness of design, yet even the
most
fragile-seeming could not be broken, and some were much lighter or
heavier than
they appeared. She could no longer safely study them in any meaningful
way-she
had Min's assurance her babes could not be harmed, but with her control
of the
Power so slippery, damaging herself was more a possibility than
ever-yet she
changed what was on the table every day, picking out pieces at random
from the
panniers kept in the apartment's boxroom, just so she could look at
them and
speculate on what she had learned before getting with child. Not that
she had learned
very much-well, nothing, really- but she could think on them. There was
no
worry of anything being stolen. Reene had rooted out most, if not all.
of the
dishonest among the servants, and the constant guard at the entrance
saw to the
rest.
Mouth
tight with disapproval-dressing was done in the dressing room,
decently, not
out where anyone at all might walk in-Essande resumed her task with
Elayne's
buttons. Sephanie, likely as agitated by the older woman's displeasure
as
anything else, breathed hard as she worked on Aviendha's.
"Pick
out something and tell me what you think it does." Elayne said. Looking
and speculating had done no good, and she had not expected it to. Yet
if
Aviendha could somehow tell what a tev'angreal did just by holding it…
Jealousy
surged up in her, hot and bitter, but she knocked it down, then for
good
measure jumped up and down on it until it vanished. She would not be
jealous of
Aviendha!
"I
am not sure that I can, Elayne. I only think this knife makes a kind of
warding.
And I must be wrong or you would know it. You know more of these things
than
anyone."
Elayne's
cheeks heated with embarrassment. "I don't know nearly as much as you
seem
to think. Try, Aviendha. I've never heard of anyone being able to… to
read'
tev'angreal, but if you can, even a little, don't you see how wonderful
that
would be?"
Aviendha
nodded, but her face held doubt. Hesitantly, she touched a slim black
rod, a
pace long and so flexible it could be bent into a circle and spring
back, lying
in the middle of the table. Touched it and jerked her hand back
swiftly, wiping
her fingers unconsciously on her skirt. "This causes pain."
"Nynaeve
told us that," Elayne said impatiently, and Aviendha gave her a level
look.
"Nynaeve
al'Meara did not say you can change how much pain each blow gives."
Uncertainty overcame her again at once, though, and her voice became
tentative.
"At least, I think that can be done. I think one blow can feel like
one,
or a hundred. But I am only guessing, Elayne. It is only what I think."
"Keep
going," Elayne told her encouragingly. "Maybe we'll find something
that makes it certain. What about this?" She picked up an oddly shaped
metal cap. Covered with strange, angular patterns of what seemed to be
the most
minute engraving, it was much too thin to be of use as a helmet, though
it was
twice as heavy as it appeared. The metal felt slick, too, not simply
smooth, as
if it were oiled.
Aviendha
put down the dagger reluctantly and turned the cap over once in her
hands
before setting it back on the table and taking up the dagger again. "I
think that allows you to direct a… a device of some sort. A machine."
She shook her towel-wrapped head. "But I do not know how, or what kind
of
machine. You see? I am only guessing again."
Elayne
would not let her stop, though. Ter'angreal after ter'angreal Aviendha
touched
or sometimes held for a moment, and every time she had an answer.
Delivered
hesitantly and with cautions that it was only a surmise, but always an
answer.
She thought a small hinged box, apparently ivory and covered with
rippling red
and green stripes, held music, hundreds of tunes, perhaps thousands.
With a
ter'angreal, that might be possible. After all, a fine music box might
have
cylinders for as many as a hundred tunes and some could play quite long
pieces
on one cylinder after another without changing them. A flatfish white
bowl
almost a pace across was for looking at things that were far away. she
thought,
and a tall vase worked with vines in green and blue- blue vines!-would
gather
water out of the air. That sounded useless. but Aviendha almost
caressed it,
and after consideration, Elayne realized it would be very useful indeed
in the
Waste. If it worked as Aviendha believed. And someone figured out how
to make
it work. A black-and-white figurine of a bird with long wings spread in
flight
was for talking to people a long way off, she said. So was a blue
figure of a
woman, small enough to fit in the palm of her hand, in an oddly cut
skirt and
coat. And five earrings, six finger-rings and three bracelets.
Elayne
began to think that Aviendha was giving up, offering the same answer
every time
in hopes that she would stop asking, but then she realized that her
sister's
voice was becoming more confident rather than less, that the protests
that she
was only guessing had dwindled. And her "guesses" were growing in
detail. A bent, featureless rod of dull black, as wide as her wrist-it
seemed
metal, yet one end accommodated itself to any hand that gripped it-made
her
think of cutting, either metal or stone if they were not too thick.
Nothing
that could catch fire, though. The apparently glass figure of a man, a
foot
tall, with his hand raised as if to signal stop, would chase away
vermin, which
would certainly have been useful, given Caemlyn's plague of rats and
flies. A
stone carving the size of her hand, all deep blue curves-it felt like
stone, at
least, though somehow it did not really look carved- was for growing
something.
Not plants. It made her think of holes, only they were not exactly
holes. And
she did not believe anyone had to channel to make it work. Only sing
the right
song! Some ter'angreal did not require channeling, but really! Singing?
Done
with Aviendha's dress, Sephanie had grown enthralled with the
recitation, her
eyes getting wider and wider. Essande listened with interest too, her
head
tilted to one side, murmuring small exclamations at each new
revelation, but
she was not bouncing on her toes the way Sephanie was. "What about that
one, my Lady?" the younger woman blurted when Aviendha paused. She
pointed
to the statuette of a stout, bearded man with a merry smile, holding a
book.
Two feet tall, it appeared to be age-darkened bronze and was certainly
heavy
enough to be. "Looking at him always makes me want to smile, too, my
Lady."
"Me
as well, Sephanie Pelden," Aviendha said, stroking the bronze man's
head.
"He holds more than the book you see. He holds thousands and thousands
of
books." Abruptly the light of saidar enveloped her, and she touched
thin
flows of Fire and Earth to the bronze figure.
Sephanie
squeaked as two words in the Old Tongue appeared in the air above the
statuette, as black as if printed with good ink. Some of the letters
were
shaped a little oddly, but the words were quite clear. Ansoen and
Imsoen,
floating on nothing. Aviendha looked nearly as startled as the maid.
"I
think we have proof at last," Elayne said more calmly than she felt.
Her
heart was in her throat, and pounding. Lies and Truth, the two words
might be
translated. Or in context, perhaps Fiction and Not Fiction would be
better. It
was proof enough for her. She marked where the flows touched the
figure, for
when she could return to her studies. "But you shouldn't have done
that.
It isn't safe."
The
glow around Aviendha vanished. "Oh, Light," she exclaimed, flinging
her arms around Elayne, "I never thought! I have great't'oh to you! I
never meant to endanger you or your babes! Never!"
"My
babes and I are safe." Elayne laughed, hugging back. "Min's
viewing?" Her babes were safe, at least. Until they were born. So many
babies died in their first year. Min had said nothing beyond them being
born
healthy. Min had said nothing about her not being burned out. either.
but she
had no intention of bringing that up with her sister already feeling
guilty.
"You have no toh to me. It was you I was thinking of. You could have
died,
or burned yourself out."
Aviendha
pulled back enough to look into Elayne's eyes. What she saw there
reassured
her, for a small smile curved her lips. "I did make it work, though.
Perhaps 1 can take over the study of them. With you to guide me, it
should be
perfectly safe. We have months before you can do it yourself."
"You
have no time at all, Aviendha," a woman's voice said from the doorway.
"We are leaving. I hope you have not grown too used to wearing silk. I
see
you, Elayne."
Aviendha
leaped away from the embrace, flushing furiously, as two Aiel women
entered the
room, and not just any two Aiel. Pale-haired Nadere, as tall as most
men and wide
with it, was a Wise One of considerable authority among the Goshien.
and
Dorindha, her long red hair touched with white, was the wife of Bael,
clan
chief of the Goshien, though her true prominence came from being
Roofmistress
of Smoke Springs Hold, the clan's largest hold. It was she who had
spoken.
"I
see you. Dorindha." Elayne said. "I see you, Nadere. Why are you
taking Aviendha away?"
"You
said I could stay with Elayne. to help guard her back," Aviendha
protested.
"You
did. Dorindha." Elayne took her sister's hand in a firm grip. and
Aviendha
squeezed back. "You and the Wise Ones, too."
Gold
and ivory bracelets clattered as Dorindha shifted her dark shawl. "How
many do you need to guard your back, Elayne?" she asked dryly. "You
have perhaps a hundred or more dedicated to nothing else. and as hard
as Far
Dareis Alai." A smile deepened the creases at the corners of her eyes.
"I think those women outside wanted us to give up our belt knives
before
letting us in."
Nadere
touched the horn hilt of her knife, her green eyes holding a fierce
light,
though it was unlikely the guards had shown any such desire. Even
Birgitte,
suspicious of everyone when it came to Elayne's safety, could see no
danger
from the Aiel, and Elayne had accepted certain obligations when she and
Aviendha adopted each other. Wise Ones who had taken part in that
ceremony, as
Nadere had. could go wherever they wished in the palace whenever they
wished:
that was one of the obligations. As for Dorindha, her presence was so
commanding, if in a quiet way, that it seemed inconceivable anyone
would
attempt to bar her way.
"Your
training has been in abeyance too long, Aviendha," Nadere said firmly.
"Go and change into proper clothing."
"But
I am learning so much from Elayne. Nadere. Weaves even you do not know.
I think
I can make it rain in the Three-fold Land! And just now we learned that
I
can-"
"Whatever
you may have learned," Nadere cut in sharply, "it seems you have
forgotten as much. Such as the fact that you are an apprentice still.
The Power
is the least of what a Wise One must know, else only those who can
channel
would be Wise Ones. Now go and change, and count your luck that I do
not make
you return in your skin to face a strapping. The tents are being struck
as we
speak, and if the clan's departure is delayed, you will face the strap."
Without
another word, Aviendha dropped Elayne's hand and ran from the room,
bumping
into Naris. who staggered and almost dropped the large, cloth-covered
tray she
was carrying. At a quick gesture from Essande, Sephanie hurried after
Aviendha.
Naris' eyes went wide at the sight of the Aiel women, but Essande
admonished
her for taking so long and directed her to lay out the meal on the
table,
setting the young maid into hurried motion while muttering apologies
under her
breath.
Elayne
wanted to run after Aviendha, too, to grasp every moment with her, but
Nadere's
words held her. "You're leaving Caemlyn, Dorindha? Where are you
going?" As much as Elayne liked the Aiel, she did not want them
wandering
about the countryside. With the situation as unstable as it was. they
were
problem enough simply venturing out of their camp to hunt or trade.
"We
are leaving Andor, Elayne. In a few hours, we will be far beyond your
borders.
As to where, you must ask the Car a'cam."
Nadere
had walked over to study what Naris was laying out. and Naris began to
tremble
so that she nearly dropped more than one dish. "This looks good, but 1
do
not recognize some of these herbs," the Wise One said. "Your midwife
has
approved all of this, Elayne?"
"I'll
summon a midwife when my time is near. Nadere. Dorindha, you can't
think Rand
would want your destination kept from me. What did he say?"
Dorindha
gave a small shrug. "He sent a messenger, one of the black coats, with
a
letter for Bael. Bael let me read it. of course"-her tone said there
had
never been any question of her not reading it- "but the Cava'cam asked
Bael not to tell anyone, so I cannot tell you."
"No
midwife?" Nadere said incredulously. "Who tells you what to eat and
drink? Who gives you the proper herbs? Stop looking daggers at me,
woman.
Melaine's temper is worse than yours could ever be, but she has sense
enough to
let Monaelle govern her in these things."
"Every
woman in the palace governs what I eat," Elayne replied bitterly.
"Sometimes I think every woman in Caemlyn does. Dorindha, can't you at
least-"
"My
Lady, your food is getting cold." Essande said mildly, but with just
the
touch of firmness that an elderly retainer was allowed.
Gritting
her teeth. Elayne glided to the chair Essande stood behind. She did not
flounce, much as she wanted to. She glided. Essande produced an
ivory-backed
hairbrush and, removing the towel from Elayne's head, began brushing
her hair
while she ate. She ate largely because not eating only meant someone
would be
told to fetch more hot food, because Essande and her own bodyguards
between
them might well keep her there until she did, but except for some dried
apple
that had not gone bad, the meal was decidedly unappetizing. The bread
was
crusty but flecked with weevils, and the soaked dried beans. since all
of the
preserved beans had spoiled, were tough and tasteless. The apple was
mixed in a
bowl of herbs-sliced burdock root, black haw, cramp bark, dandelion,
nettle leaf-with
a touch of oil, and for meat she had a piece of kid simmered in bland
broth.
With next to no salt, as far as she could tell. She would have killed
for salty
beef dripping with fat! Avkndba's plate had sliced beef, though it
looked
tough. She could as well ask for wine. To drink, she had her choice of
water or
goat's milk. She wanted tea almost as much as she did fatty meat, but
even the
weakest tea sent her running to make water, and she had quite enough
difficulties with that as it was. So she ate methodically,
mechanically. trying
to think of anything but the tastes in her mouth. Except for the apple,
at
least.
She
tried to pry some news of Rand out of the two Aiel women, but it seemed
they
knew less than she. As far as they would admit, anyway. They could be
closemouthed when they wanted to be. She at least knew that he was
somewhere
far to the southeast. Somewhere in Tear, she suspected, though he could
as
easily have been on the Plains of Maredo or in the Spine of the World.
Beyond
that, she knew he was alive and not a
whit more. She tried keeping the conversation on Rand in the hope they
might
let something slip, yet she might as well have tried dressing bricks
with her
fingers. Dorindha and Nadere had their own goal, convincing her to
acquire a midwife
right away. They went on and on about how she might be endangering
herself and
her babes, and not even Min's viewing would dissuade them.
"Very
well," she said at last, slapping down her knife and fork. "I will
start looking for one today." And if she failed to find one, well, they
would never know.
"I
have a niece who's a midwife, my Lady," Essande said. "Melfane
dispenses herbs and ointments from a shop on Candle Street in the New
City, and
I believe she is quite knowledgeable." She patted a few last curls into
place and stepped back with a pleased smile. "You do so remind me of
your
mother, my Lady."
Elayne
sighed. It seemed she was to have a midwife whether she wanted one or
not.
Someone else to see that her meals were wretched. Well, perhaps the
midwife
could suggest a remedy for those backaches at night, and the tender
bosom.
Thank the Light she had been spared the desire to sick up. Women who
could
channel never suffered that part of pregnancy.
When
Aviendha returned, she was in Aiel garb again, with her still-damp
shawl draped
over her arms, a dark scarf tied around her temples to hold back her
hair, and
a bundle on her back. Unlike the multitudes of bracelets and necklaces
Dorindha
and Nadere wore, she had a single silver necklace, intricately worked
discs in
a complex pattern, and one ivory bracelet densely carved with roses and
thorns.
She handed Elayne the blunt dagger. "You must keep this, so you will be
safe. I will try to visit you as often as I can."
"There
may be time for an occasional visit," Nadere said severely, "but you
have fallen behind and must work hard to catch up. Strange," she mused,
shaking her head, "to speak casually of visiting from so far. To cover
leagues, hundreds of leagues, in a step. Strange things we have learned
in the
wetlands."
"Come,
Aviendha, we must go," Dorindha said.
"Wait,"
Elayne told them. "Please wait, just a moment." Clutching the dagger,
she raced to her dressing room. Sephanie paused in hanging up
Aviendha's blue
dress to curtsy, but Elayne ignored her and opened the carved lid of
her ivory
jewelry chest. Sitting atop the necklaces and bracelets and pins in
their
compartments were a brooch in the shape of a turtle that appeared to be
amber
and a seated woman, wrapped in her own hair, apparently carved from
age-darkened ivory. Both were angreal. Placing the antler-hilted dagger
in the
chest, she picked up the turtle, and then, impulsively, snatched up the
twisted
stone dream ring, all red and blue and brown. It seemed to be useless
to her
since she became pregnant, and if she could manage to weave Spirit, she
still
had the silver ring, worked in braided spirals, that had been recovered
from
Ispan.
Hurrying
back to the sitting room, she found Dorindha and Nadere arguing, or at
least
having an animated discussion, while Essande pretended to be checking
for dust,
running her fingers under the edge of the table. From the angle of her
head,
she was listening avidly, though. Naris, putting Elayne's dishes back
on the
tray, was gaping at the Aiel women openly.
"I
told her she would feel the strap if we delayed the departure," Nadere
was
saying with some heat as Elayne entered the room. "It is hardly fair if
she is not the cause, but I said what I said."
"You
will do as you must," Dorindha replied calmly, but with a tightness to
her
eyes that suggested these were not the first words they had exchanged.
"Perhaps we will not delay anything. And perhaps Aviendha will pay the
price gladly to say farewell to her sister."
Elayne
did not bother with trying to argue for Aviendha. It would have done no
good.
Aviendha herself displayed an equanimity that would have credited an
Aes Sedai.
as if whether she was to be beaten for another's fault were of no
matter at
all.
"These
are for you," Elayne said, pressing the ring and the brooch into her
sister's hand. "Not as gifts. I'm afraid. The White Tower will want
them
back. But to use as you need."
Aviendha
looked at the things and gasped. "Even the loan of these is a great
gift.
You shame me, sister. I have no farewell gift to give in return."
"You
give me your friendship. You gave me a sister." Elayne felt a tear
slide
down her cheek. She essayed a laugh, but it was a weak, tremulous
thing.
"How can you say you have nothing to give? You've given me
everything."
Tears
glistened in Aviendha's eyes, too. Despite the others watching, she put
her
arms around Elayne and hugged her hard. "I will miss you, sister,"
she whispered. "My heart is as cold as night."
"And
mine, sister," Elayne whispered, hugging back equally hard.
"I
will miss you, too. But you will be allowed to visit me sometimes. This
isn't
forever."
"No.
not forever. But I will still miss you."
They
might have begun weeping next, only Dorindha laid her hands on their
shoulders.
"It is time. Aviendha. We must go if you are to have any hope of
avoiding
the strap."
Aviendha
straightened with a sigh, scrubbing at her eyes. "May you always find
water and shade, sister."
"May
you always find water and shade, sister," Elayne replied. The Aiel way
had
a finality about it, so she added. "Until I see your face again."
And
as quickly as that, they were gone. As quickly as that, she felt very
alone.
Aviendha's presence had become a certainty, a sister to talk to. laugh
with, share
her hopes and fears with, but that comfort was gone.
Essande
had slipped from the room while she and Aviendha were hugging, and now
she
returned to set the coronet of the Daughter-Heir on Elayne's head, a
simple
circlet of gold supporting a single golden rose on her forehead. "So
these
mercenaries won't forget who they're talking to, my Lady."
Elayne
did not realize her shoulders had slumped until she straightened them.
Her
sister was gone, yet she had a city to defend and a throne to gain.
Duty would
have to sustain her, now.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
The New Follower
The
Blue Reception Room, named for its arched ceiling, painted to display
the sky
and white clouds, and its blue floor tiles, was the smallest reception
room in
the palace, less than ten paces square. The arched windows that made up
the far
wall, overlooking a courtyard and still filled with glassed casements
against
the spring weather, gave a fair light even with the rain falling
outside, but
despite two large fireplaces with carved marble mantels, a cornice of
plaster
lions and a pair of tapestries bearing the White Lion that flanked the
doors, a
delegation of Caemlyn's merchants would have been insulted to be
received in
the Blue Room, a delegation of bankers livid. Likely that was why
Mistress Harfor
had put the mercenaries there, although they would not know they were
being
insulted. She herself was present "overseeing" the pair of liveried
young maids who were keeping the winecups full from tall silver
pitchers
standing on a tray atop a plainly carved sideboard, but she had the
embossed
leather folder used to carry her reports pressed to her bosom, as if in
anticipation of the mercenaries being dealt with quickly. Halwin Norry.
the
wisps of white hair behind his ears as always looking like feathers,
was
standing in a corner, also with his leather folder clutched to his
narrow
chest. Their reports were a daily fixture, and seldom much in them to
cheer the
heart of late. Quite the opposite.
Warned
by the pair of Guards women who had checked the room ahead of her,
everyone was
on their feet when Elayne entered with another pair at her back. Deni
Colford,
in charge of the Guardswomen who had replaced Devore and the others,
had simply
ignored her order for them all to remain outside. Ignored her! She
supposed
they made a good show, swaggering proudly as they did, yet she could
not stop
grinding her teeth.
Careane
and Sareitha, formal in their fringed shawls, bowed their heads
slightly in
respect, but Mellar swept off his plumed hat in a flourishing bow. one
hand
laid over the lace-edged sash slanting across his burnished
breastplate. The
six golden knots brazed to that breastplate, three on each shoulder,
rankled
her, yet she had let them pass so far. His hatchet face offered her a
smile
that was much too warm, too. but then, however cold she was to him, he
thought
he had some chance with her because she had not denied the rumor her
babes were
his. Her reasons for not countering that filthy tale had changed-she no
longer
had need to protect her babes, Rand's
babes-yet she let it stand. Give the man time, and he would braid a
rope for
his own neck. And if he failed to, she would braid one for him.
The
mercenaries, all well into their middle years, were only a heartbeat
behind
Mellar, though not so elaborate in their courtesies. Evard Cordwyn, a
tall,
square-jawed Andoran, wore a large ruby in his left ear, and Aldred
Gomaisen,
short and slender, the front of his head shaved, had horizontal stripes
of red
and green and blue covering half his chest, far more than it seemed at
all
likely he was entitled to in his native Cairhien. Hafeen Bakuvun,
graying, was
ornamented with a thick gold hoop in his left ear and a jeweled ring on
every
finger. The Domani was very stout, but the way he moved spoke of solid
muscle
beneath the fat.
"Don't
you have duties. Captain Mellar?" Elayne said coolly, taking one of the
room's few chairs. There were only five, arms and high backs simply
carved with
vines and leaves and lacking even a hint of gilt. Standing in a widely
spaced
row in front of the windows, the chairs put the light behind whoever
sat in
them. On a bright day, those given audience here squinted in the glare.
Unfortunately, that advantage was lost today. The two Guardswomen took
up
positions behind her and to either side, each with a hand resting on
her sword
hilt, watching the mercenaries with fierce expressions that made
Bakuvun smile
and Gomaisen rub his chin to half-hide a sly grin. The women gave no
sign of
being offended; they knew the point of their uniforms. Elayne knew they
would
wipe away any smiles very quickly if they needed to draw their blades.
"My
first duty above all is to protect you. my Lady." Easing his sword,
Mellar
eyed the mercenaries as though he expected them to attack her. or
perhaps him. Gomaisen
looked bitterly amused, and Baku-vun laughed aloud. All three men had
empty
scabbards, Cordwyn a pair on his back; no mercenary was allowed to
enter the
palace carrying so much as a dagger.
"I
know you have other duties." she said levelly, "because I assigned
them to you. Captain. Training the men I brought in from the
countryside. You
are not spending as much time with them as I expect. You have a company
of men
to train, Captain." A company of old men and boys, and surely enough to
occupy his hours. He spent few enough with her bodyguards in spite of
commanding them. That was just as well, really. He liked to pinch
bottoms.
"I suggest you see to them. Now."
Rage
flashed across Mellar's narrow face-he actually quivered!- but he
mastered
himself instantly. It was all gone so fast that she might have imagined
it. But
she knew she had not. "As you command, my Lady," he said smoothly.
His smile had an oily smoothness, too. "My honor is to serve you
well." With another flamboyant bow, he started for the door, as near to
strutting as made no difference. Little could dent Doilin Mellar's
demeanor for
long.
Bakuvun
laughed again, throwing his head back. "Man wears so much lace now, I
vow.
I keep expecting him to offer to teach us to dance, and now he does
dance." The Cairhienin laughed, too, a nasty, guttural sound.
Mellar's
back stiffened and his step hesitated, then quickened, so much so that
he
bumped into Birgitte at the doorway. He hurried on without stopping to
ask pardon,
and she frowned after him-the bond carried anger, quickly suppressed,
and
impatience, which was not- before shutting the door behind her and
moving to
stand beside Elayne's chair with one hand resting on the chairback. Her
thick
braid was not so neatly done as usual after having been undone for
drying, but
the uniform of the Captain-General suited her. Taller than Gomaisen in
her
heeled boots. Birgitte had a commanding presence when she wanted to.
The
mercenaries offered her small bows, respectful though not deferential.
Whatever
misgivings of her they might have entertained in the beginning, few who
had
seen her use her bow.or expose herself to the enemy, had any remaining.
"You
speak as if you know Captain Mellar, Captain Bakuvun." Elayne put just
a
hint of question in that, but kept her tone casual. Birgitte was
attempting to
project confidence along the bond to equal her expression, yet wariness
and
worry kept intruding. And the ever-present weariness. Elayne tightened
her jaw
to fight a yawn. Birgitte had to get some rest.
"I've
seen him once or twice before, my Lady," the Domani replied cautiously.
"Not above thrice at most, I'd say. Yes. no more than that." He
tilted his head, eyeing her almost sideways. "You know he's followed my
trade in the past?"
"He
did not try to hide the fact. Captain," she said, as if tired of the
subject. Had he let anything interesting slip, she might have arranged
to
question him alone, but pressing was not worth the risk of Mellar
discovering
that questions were being asked. He might run then, before she could
learn what
she wanted to know.
"Do
we really have need of the Aes Sedai, my Lady?" Bakuvun asked. "The
other Aes Sedai," he added, glancing at her Great Serpent ring. He held
out his silver cup, and one of the maids darted to fill it. They were
both
pretty women, perhaps not the best choices, but Reene had not much to
choose
from; most of the maids were either young or else aged and not so spry
as they
once had been. "All they've done the whole time we've been here is try
to
put us in awe of the White Tower's might and reach. I respect Aes Sedai
as much
as any man, yes, I do indeed, but if you'll forgive me, it gets
tiresome when
they turn to trying to browbeat a man. I vow it does, my Lady."
"A
wise man always stands in awe of the Tower," Sareitha said calmly,
shifting her brown-fringed shawl, perhaps to draw attention to it. Her
dark,
square face lacked the ageless look as yet, and she admitted yearning
for it.
"Only
fools fail to stand in awe of the Tower." Careane said on Sarei-tha's
heels. A bulky woman, as wide in the shoulders as most men, the Green
had no
need for gestures. Her coppery face proclaimed what she was to anyone
who knew
what to look for as loudly as did the ring on her right forefinger.
"The
word I hear," Gomaisen said darkly, "is that Tar Valon is besieged. I
hear the White Tower is split, with two Amyrlins. I even hear the Tower
itself
is held by the Black Ajah." A brave man, to mention that rumor to Aes
Sedai, but he still flinched saying it. Flinched and went right on.
"Who
is it you want us to be in awe of?"
"Do
not believe everything you hear. Captain Gomaisen." Sarei-tha's voice
was
serene, a woman stating indisputable fact. "Truth has more shadings
than
you might think, and distance often distorts truth into something very
different from the facts. Lies about Darkfriend sisters are dangerous
to
repeat, however."
"What
you had best believe," Careane added, just as calmly, "is that the
White Tower is the White Tower, now and always. And you stand before
three Aes
Sedai. You should have a care with your words, Captain."
Gomaisen
scrubbed the back of a hand across his mouth, but his dark eyes held
defiance.
A hunted defiance. "I am just saying what can be heard on any
street," he muttered.
"Are
we here to talk about the White Tower?" Cordwyn said, scowling. He
emptied
his winecup before going on. as if this talk made him uneasy. How much
had he
already consumed? He seemed a trifle unsteady on his feet, and there
was a
touch of slur in his words. "The Tower is hundreds of leagues from
here,
and what happens there is no business of ours."
"True,
friend," Bakuvun said. "True. Our business is swords, swords and
blood. Which, my Lady, brings us to the sordid matter of…"-he waggled
thick, be-gemmed fingers-"gold. Every day, we lose men, day after day
with
no end in sight, and there are very few suitable replacements to be
found in
the city."
"None
at all that I've found." Cordwyn muttered, eyeing the young maid
filling
his cup. She blushed at his scrutiny and finished her task quickly,
spilling
wine on the floor tiles and making Mistress Har-for frown. "Those that
might have been are all signing up for the Queen's Guards." That was
true
enough; enlistments seemed to increase by the day. The Queen's Guards
would be
a formidable force. Eventually. Unfortunately, the vast majority of
those men
were months from being able to handle a sword without stabbing
themselves in
the foot, and further from being of any use in battle.
"As
you say, friend," Bakuvun murmured. "As you say." He directed a
wide smile at Elayne. Perhaps he meant to seem friendly, or maybe
reasonable,
but it minded her of a man trying to sell her a pig in a sack. "Even
after
we're done here, finding new men won't be easy, my Lady. Suitable men
aren't
found under cabbage leaves, no they're not. Fewer men means fewer coins
for our
next hires. An inescapable fact of the world. We think it's only just
that we
receive compensation."
Anger
surged in Elayne. They thought she was desperate to hold on to them was
what
they thought! Worse, they were right. These three men represented
better than a
thousand more between them. Even with what Guybon had brought her, that
would
be a grievous loss. Especially if it started other mercenaries thinking
her
cause was lost. Mercenaries disliked being on the losing side. They
would run
like rats fleeing fire to avoid that. Her anger surged, but she held it
in
rein. By a hair's breadth. She could not keep the scorn from her voice,
though.
"Did you think you would take no casualties? Did you expect to mount
guard
and take gold for it without baring your swords?"
'You
signed for so much gold each day," Birgitte put in. She did not say how
much because every company had bargained for its own agreement. The
last thing
they needed was for the mercenary companies to grow jealous of one
another. As
it was, it seemed that half the common room fights the Guards broke up
were
between men of different companies. "A fixed amount. To put it cruelly,
the
more men you lose, the greater your profit."
"Ah.
Captain-General," the stout man said blandly, "but you forget the
death-money that has to be paid to the widows and orphans." Go-maisen
made
a choking noise, and Cordwyn stared at Bakuvun incredulously then tried
to
cover it by draining his winecup again.
Elayne
trembled, her hands tightening to fists on the arms of her chair. She
would not
give way to anger. She would not't "I intend to hold you to your
agreements," she said coldly. Well, at least she was not raging.
"You'll be paid what you signed for, including the usual victory gold
after I gain the throne, but not a penny more. If you try to back out.
I'll
assume you are turning coat and going over to Arymilla, in which case,
I'll
have you and your companies arrested and put outside the gates without
swords
or horses." The maid refilling Cordwyn's winecup yet again suddenly
squealed and danced away from him rubbing her hip. The anger Elayne had
been
holding down fountained white hot. "And if one of you ever again dares
fondle one of my women, he and his company will be put out without
swords,
horses, or bootsl Do I make myself clear?"
"Very
clear, my Lady." Bakuvun's voice held a distinct chill, and his wide
mouth
was tight. "Very clear indeed. And now. since our… discussion…
seems concluded, may we withdraw?"
"Think
carefully." Sareitha said suddenly. "Will the White Tower choose to
see an Aes Sedai on the Lion Throne, or a fool like Arymilla Marne?"
"Count
the Aes Sedai in this palace." Careane added. "Count the Aes Sedai
inside Caemlyn. There are none in Arymilla's camps. Count and decide
where the
White Tower's favor lies."
"Count,"
Sareitha said, "and remember that the White Tower's displeasure can be
fatal."
It
was very hard to believe that one of them must be Black Ajah. yet it
must be
so. Unless it was Merilille, of course. Elayne hoped that was not so.
She liked
Merilille. But then, she liked Careane and Sareitha, too. Not as much
as she
did Merilille. yet still a liking. Any way she looked at it, a woman
she liked
was a Darkfriend, and already under penalty of death.
When
the mercenaries had departed, making their courtesies hurriedly, and
Mistress
Harfor had sent the maids away with the remnants of the wine, Elayne
leaned
back in her chair and sighed. "I handled that very badly, didn't I?"
"Mercenaries
require a strong hand on the reins," Birgitte replied, but there was
doubt
in the bond. Doubt and worry.
"If
I may say, my Lady." Norry said in his dry voice, "I cannot see
anything else you could have done. Mildness would only have emboldened
them to
make further demands.' He had been so still that Elayne had almost
forgotten he
was there. Blinking at the world, he seemed a wading bird wondering
where the
water had gone. In contrast to Mistress Harfor's neatness, ink stains
marked
his tabard, and his fingers. She eyed the leather folder in his hands
with
distinct distaste.
"Will
you leave us, please, Sareitha, Careane?' she said. They hesitated
slightly,
but there was nothing they could do save bow their heads and glide from
the
room like swans. "And you two as well," she added over her shoulder
to the Guardswomen. They did not so much as twitch!
"Outside!"
Birgitte snapped with a jerk of her head that set her braid swaying.
"Now!"
Oh, the pair jumped for her, they did! They headed for the doors so
fast they
might as well have trotted!
Elayne
scowled as the door closed behind them. "Burn me, I don't want to hear
any
bloody bad news, not today. I don't want to hear how much of the food
brought
in from Illian and Tear is already spoiled when it arrives. I don't
want to
hear about arson, or flour black with weevils, or sewers breeding rats
faster
than they can be killed, or flies so thick you'd think Caemlyn was a
filthy
stable. I want to hear some bloody good news for a change." Burn her,
she
sounded petulanti Truth be told, she felt petulant. Oh, how that
grated! She
was trying to gain a throne, and behaving like a child in the nursery!
Master
Norry and Mistress Harfor exchanged glances, which only made matters
worse. He
fondled his folder with a sigh of regret. The man enjoyed droning his
numbers,
even when they were dire. At least they no longer balked at giving
their
reports in company. Well, not very far. Jealous of their own
responsibilities,
each was wary of the other straying and quick to point out where some
imagined
boundary had been crossed. Still, they managed to run the palace and
the city
efficiently. with few barked knuckles.
"Are
we private, my Lady?" Reene asked.
Elayne
drew a deep breath and performed novice exercises that seemed to have
no
calming effect whatsoever, then attempted to embrace the Source. To her
surprise, saidar came to her easily, filling her with the sweetness of
life and
joy. And soothing her moods, too. It was always that way. Anger or
sorrow or
just being with child might interfere with embracing the Power in the
first
place, yet once it filled her, her emotions stopped jumping about.
Deftly she
wove Fire and Air, just so, with traces of Water, but when she was
done, she
did not release the Source. The feel of being filled with the Power was
wondrous, yet not that much more so than knowing she would not be
wanting to
weep for no reason or shout for as little in the next moment. After
all, she
was not foolish enough to draw too deeply.
"We
are private." she said. Saidar touched her ward and was gone. Someone
had
tried to listen in. not the first time that had happened. With so many
women
who could channel gathered in the palace, it would have been surprising
if no
one attempted to snoop, but she wished she knew how to trace whoever
was making
those attempts. As it was, she hardly dared say anything of substance
without a
ward in place.
"Then
I have a little good news," Mistress Harfor said, shifting her folder
but
not opening it, "from Jon Skellit." The barber had been most
assiduous about carrying his reports, approved beforehand by Reene, out
to
Arymilla and bringing back what he could learn in the camps outside the
city.
He was in the employ of Naean Arawn, but Naean, supporting Arymilla's
claim,
would surely share Skellit's reports with Arymilla. Unfortunately, what
he had
been able to learn so far had not been much of use. "He says that
Arymilla
and the High Seats supporting her intend to be in the first party to
ride into
Caem-lyn. She boasts of it constantly, it seems."
Elayne
sighed. Arymilla and the others stayed together, moving from camp to
camp
according to no pattern she could see, and for some time great effort
had gone
into trying to learn where they would be ahead of time. A simple matter
then to
send soldiers through a gateway to seize all of them at once and
decapitate her
opposition. As simple as such things could be, anyway. Men would die
under the
best of circumstances, some of the High Seats might well escape, yet if
only
Arymilla herself could be taken, there would be an end to it. Elenia
and Naean
had made public renunciation of their own claims, which was
irreversible. That
pair might go on supporting Arymilla if they remained free-they had
tied
themselves to her tightly-but with Arymilla in hand, all Elayne really
would
have to contend with was gaining the support of at least four more of
the great
Houses. As if it were easy. So far, efforts in that direction had
proven
futile. Perhaps today would bring good news on that front, though. But
this
news was useless. If Arymilla and the others were riding into Caemlyn
it would
mean the city was beyond the brink of falling. Worse, if Arymilla was
boasting.
she must believe it would happen soon. The woman was a fool in many
ways, but
it would be a mistake to underestimate her completely. She had not
carried her
claim this far by being an absolute fool.
"This
is your good news?" Birgitte said. She saw the implications, too. "A
hint of when might help."
Reene
spread her hands. "Arymilla gave Skellit a gold crown with her own
hands
once, my Lady. He turned it over to me as proof that he's reformed."
Her
lips compressed for a moment; Skellit had saved himself from hanging,
yet he
would never regain trust. "That's the only time the man's been within
ten
paces of her. He has to go by what he can pick up gossiping with the
other
men." She hesitated. "He's very afraid, my Lady. The men in those
camps are certain they'll take the city in a matter of days."
"Afraid
enough to turn his coat a third time?" Elayne asked quietly. There was
nothing to say to the other matter.
"No,
my Lady. If Naean, or Arymilla, learns what he's done, he's a dead man,
and he
knows it. But he's afraid if the city falls, they will learn. I think
he may
bolt soon."
Elayne
nodded grimly. Mercenaries were not the only rats to flee fire. "Do you
have any good news, Master Norry?"
The
First Clerk had been standing quietly, fingering his embossed leather
folder
and trying to appear as if he were not listening to Reene. "I think I
can
better Mistress Harfor, my Lady." There might have been a touch of
triumph
in his smile. Of late, it was rare for him to have better news than
she.
"I have a man 1 believe can follow Mellar successfully. May I have him
brought in?"
Now,
that was excellent news. Five men had died trying to follow Doilin
Mellar when
he went out into the city at night, and the "coincidence" seemed
strained. The first time, it had appeared the fellow fell afoul of a
footpad,
and she thought nothing of it beyond settling a pension on the man's
widow. The
Guards managed to keep crime under some control-except for arson, at
least-yet
robbers used darkness as a cloak to hide in. The other four had seemed
the
same, killed with a single knife thrust, their purses emptied, but
however
dangerous the streets at night, coincidence hardly seemed credible.
When
she nodded, the spindly old man hurried to the doors and opened one to
put his
head out. She could not hear what he said-the ward worked both ways-but
in a
few minutes a burly Guardsman entered pushing ahead of him a shuffling
man with
fetters on his wrists and ankles. Everything about the prisoner seemed…
average. He was neither fat nor thin, tall nor short. His hair was
brown, of no
particular shade she could name, and his eyes as well. His face was so
ordinary
she doubted she could describe him. No feature stood out at all. His
clothing
was just as unremarkable, a plain brown coat and breeches of neither
the best
wool nor the worst, somewhat rumpled and beginning to show dirt, a
lightly
embossed belt with a simple metal buckle that might have ten thousand
twins in
Caemlyn. In short, he was eminently forgettable. Birgitte motioned the
Guardsman to stop the fellow well short of the chairs and told him to
wait
outside.
"A
reliable man," Norry said, watching the Guardsman leave. "Afrim
Hansard. He served your mother faithfully, and knows how to keep his
mouth
shut."
"Chains?'
Elayne said.
"This
is Samwil Hark, my Lady," Norry said, eyeing the man with the sort of
curiosity he might have shown toward an unfamiliar and oddly shaped
animal,
"a remarkably successful cutpurse. The Guards only caught him because
another ruffian… um… 'turned the cat on him.' as they say in the
streets, hoping to lessen his own sentence for a third offense of
strongarm
robbery." A thief would be eager for that. Not only was the flogging
longer, the thief-mark branded on his forehead would be much harder to
disguise
or hide than the mark on his thumb for his second offense. "Anyone who
has
managed to keep from being caught for as long as Master Hark should be
able to
carry out the task I have in mind for him."
"I'm
innocent, I am, my Lady." Hark knuckled his forehead, the iron chains
of
his fetters clinking, and put on an ingratiating smile. He talked very
quickly.
"It's all lies and happenstances, it is. I'm a good Queen's man, I am.
I
wore your mother's colors in the riots, my Lady. Not that I took part
in the
rioting, you understand. I'm a clerk when I have work, which I'm out of
at the
moment. But I wore her colors on my cap for all to see, 1 did." The
bond
was full of Birgitte's skepticism.
"Master
Hark's rooms contained chests full of neatly cut purses," the First
Clerk
went on. "There are thousands of them, my Lady. Quite literally
thousands.
I suppose he may regret keeping… urn… trophies. Most cutpurses have
sense enough to get rid of the purse as soon as possible."
"1
picks them up when I sees one, I does, my Lady." Hark spread his hands
as
far as his chains allowed and shrugged, the very image of injured
innocence.
"Maybe it were foolish, but I never saw no harm. Just a harmless sort
of
amusement, my Lady."
Mistress
Harfor sniffed loudly, disapproval clear on her face. Hark managed to
look even
more hurt.
"His
rooms also contained coins to the value of over one hundred twenty gold
crowns,
secreted under the floorboards, in cubbyholes in the walls, in the
rafters,
everywhere. His excuse for that," Norry raised his voice as Hark opened
his mouth again, "is that he distrusts bankers. He claims the money is
an
inheritance from an aged aunt in Four Kings. I myself very much doubt
the
magistrates in Four Kings will have registered such an inheritance,
though. The
magistrate judging his case says he seemed surprised to learn that
inheritances
are registered.' Indeed, Hark's smile laded somewhat at being reminded.
"He says that he worked for Wilbin Saems, a merchant, until Saems'
death
four months ago, but Master Saems' daughter maintains the business, and
neither
she nor any of the other clerks recall any Samwil Hark."
"They
hates me, they does, my Lady," Hark said in a sullen voice. His hands
gripped the chain between them in fists. "I was gathering evidence of
how
they was stealing from the good master-his own daughter, mind!-only he
died
afore I could give it to him. and I was turned out in the streets
without a
reference or a penny, I was. They burned what I'd gathered, gave me a
drubbing
and threw me out."
Elayne
tapped her chin thoughtfully. "A clerk, you say. Most clerks are better
spoken than you. Master Hark, but I'll offer you a chance to give
evidence for
your claim. Would you send for a lapdesk. Master Norry?"
Norry
gave a thin smile. How could the man make a smile seem dry? "No need,
my
Lady. The magistrate in the case had the same idea." For the first time
that she had ever seen, he took a sheet of paper from the folder
clutched to
his chest. She thought trumpets should sound! Hark's smile faded away
completely as his eyes followed that page from Norry's hand to hers.
One
glance was all that was needed. A few uneven lines covered less than
half the
sheet, the letters cramped and awkward. No more than half a dozen words
were
actually legible, and those barely.
"Hardly
the hand of a clerk." she murmured. Returning the page to Norry, she
tried
to make her face stern. She had seen her mother passing judgment.
Morgase had
been able to make herself appear implacable. "I fear. Master Hark, that
you will sit in a cell until the magistrates in Four Kings can be
queried, and
soon after that you will hang." Hark's lips writhed, and he put a hand
to
his throat as if he could already feel the noose. "Unless, of course,
you
agree to follow a man for me. A dangerous man who doesn't like to be
followed.
If you can tell me where he goes at night, instead of hanging, you will
be
exiled to Baerlon. Where you would be well advised to find a new line
of work.
The governor will be informed of you."
Suddenly
Hark's smile was back. "Of course, my Lady. I'm innocent. but I can see
how things look dark against me, I can. I'll follow any man you want me
to. I
was your mother's man, I was. and I'm your man. too. Loyal is what I
am, my
Lady, loyal if I suffers for it."
Birgitte
snorted derisively.
"Arrange
for Master Hark to see Mellar's face without being seen, Birgitte." The
man
was unmemorable, but there was no point in taking chances. "Then turn
him
loose." Hark looked ready to dance, iron chains or no iron chains.
"But first… You see this. Master Hark?" She held up her right
hand so he could not miss the Great Serpent ring. "You may have heard
that
1 am Aes Sedai." With the Power already in her, it was a simple matter
to
weave Spirit. "It is true." The weave she laid on Hark's belt buckle,
his boots, his coat and breeches, was somewhat akin to that for the
Warder
bond, though much less complex. It would fade from the clothing and
boots in a
few weeks, or months at best, but metal would hold a Finder forever.
"I've
laid a weave on you. Master Hark. Now you can be found wherever you
are."
In truth, only she would be able to find him-a Finder was attuned to
the one
who wove it-but there was no reason to tell him that. "Just to be sure
that you are indeed loyal."
Hark's
smile seemed frozen in place. Sweat beaded on his forehead. When
Birgitte went
to the door and called in Hansard, giving him instructions to take Hark
away
and keep him safe from prying eyes, Hark staggered and would have
fallen if the
husky Guardsman had not held him up on the way out of the room.
"I
fear I may just have given Mellar a sixth victim," Elayne muttered.
"He hardly seems capable of following his own shadow without tripping
over
his boots." It was not so much Hark's death she regretted. The man
would
have hanged for sure. "I want whoever put that bloody man in my palace.
I
want them so badly my teeth ache!" The palace was riddled with
spies-Reene
had uncovered above a dozen beyond Skellit, though she believed that
was all of
them-but whether Mellar had been set to spy or to facilitate kidnapping
her, he
was worse than the others. He had arranged for men to die, or he had
killed
them, in order to gain his place. That those men had thought they were
to kill
her made no difference. Murder was murder.
"Trust
me, my Lady," Norry said, laying a finger alongside his long nose.
"Cutpurses are… um… stealthy by nature, yet they seldom last
long. Sooner or later they cut the purse of someone faster afoot than
they,
someone who doesn't wait for the Guards." He made a quick gesture as if
stabbing someone. "Hark has lasted at least twenty years. A number of
the
purses in his… um… collection were embroidered with prayers of thanks
for the end of the Aiel War. Those went out of fashion very quickly, as
I
recall."
Birgitte
sat down on the arm of the next chair and folded her arms beneath her
breasts.
"I could arrest Mellar," she said quietly, "and have him put to
the question. You'd have no need of Hark then."
"A
poor joke, my Lady, if I may say so," Mistress Harfor said stiffly. at
the
same time that Master Norry said, "That would be… um… against
the law, my Lady."
Birgitte
bounded to her feet, outrage flooding the bond. "Blood and bloody
ashes!
We know the man's as rotten as last month's fish.''
"No."
Elayne sighed, fighting not to feel outraged as well. "We have
suspicions,
not proof. Those five men might have fallen afoul of footpads. The law
is quite
clear on when someone may be put to the question, and suspicions are
not reason
enough. Solid evidence is needed. My mother often said, 'The Queen must
obey
the law she makes, or there is no law." I will not begin by breaking
the
law." The bond carried something… stubborn. She fixed Birgitte with a
steady look. "Neither will you. Do you understand me. Birgitte
Trahelion?
Neither will you."
To
her surprise, the stubbornness lasted only moments longer before
dwindling away
to be replaced by chagrin. "It was only a suggestion," Birgitte
muttered weakly.
Elayne
was wondering how she had done that and how to do it again-sometimes
there
seemed doubt in Birgitte's mind over which of them was in charge-when
Deni
Coiford slipped into the room and cleared her throat to draw attention
to
herself. A long, brass-studded cudgel balanced the sword hanging at the
heavyset woman's waist, looking out of place. Deni was getting better
with the
sword but still preferred the cudgel she had used keeping order in a
wagon
drivers' tavern. "A servant came to say that the Lady Dyelin has
arrived,
my Lady, and will be at your service as soon as she's freshened
herself."
"Send
the Lady Dyelin word that she's to meet me in the Map Room." Elayne
felt a
surge of hope. At last, perhaps, she might hear some good news.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
A Bronze Bear
Leaving
Mistress Harfor and Master Norry, Elayne started eagerly toward the Map
Room still
holding saidar. Eagerly, but not hurriedly. Deni and three Guardswomen
strode
ahead of her, heads swiveling in constant search of threats, and the
other four
stamped along behind. She doubted that Dyelin would take long over her
ablutions. good news or bad. The Light send that it was good. Birgitte.
hands
clasped behind her back and wearing a frown, seemed sunk in silence as
they
walked, though she studied every crossing corridor as if expecting an
attack
from it. The bond still carried worry. And tiredness. A yawn cracked
Elayne's
jaws before she could stop herself.
An
unwillingness to start rumors was not the only reason she maintained a
stately
pace. There were more than servants in the hallways, now. Courtesy had
required
her to offer rooms in the palace to the nobles who managed to reach the
city
with armsmen-counting armsmen loosely; some were well-trained and
carried a
sword every day. others had been guiding a plow before being called to
follow
their lord or lady-and a fair number had accepted. Mainly those who had
no
dwelling in Caemlyn or. she suspected, felt pinched for coin. Farmers
or
laborers might think all nobles wealthy, and certainly most were. if
only in
comparison, but the expenses required by their positions and duties
left many counting
coins as carefully as any farmwife. What she was to do for the newest
arrivals
she did not know. Nobles already were sleeping three and four to a bed
wherever
the beds were large enough; all but the narrowest could take at least
two, and
did. Many Kinswomen had been reduced to pallets on the floor in the
servants'
quarters, and thank the Light spring had made that possible.
It
seemed the whole lot of her noble guests were out strolling, and when
they
offered her courtesies, she had to stop and pass at least a few words.
Sergase
Gilbearn, small and slim in a green riding dress, her dark hair lightly
touched
with white, who had brought all twenty of the armsmen in her service,
and
vinegary old Kelwin Janevor, wiry in his discreetly darned blue wool
coat, who
had brought ten, received as gracious an exchange as did lanky Barel
Layden and
stout Anthelle Sharplyn. though they were High Seats, if of minor
Houses. All
had ridden to her support with whatever they could gather, and none had
turned
back on learning the odds. Many looked uneasy today, though. No one
said
anything of it-they were all full of good wishes and hopes for a speedy
coronation and how honored they were to follow her-but worry was
written on
their faces. Arilinde Branstrom, normally so ebullient you might think
she
believed her fifty armsmen could turn the tide for Elayne by
themselves, was
not the only woman chewing her lip, and Laerid Traehand, stocky and
taciturn
and usually as stolid as stone, was not the only man with a furrowed
brow. Even
news of Guybon and the aid he had brought caused only brief smiles,
quickly
swallowed in ill ease.
"Do
you think they've heard of Arymilla's confidence?" she asked in one of
the
brief intervals when she was not responding to bows and curtsies. "No,
that
wouldn't be enough to upset Arilinde or Laerid." Arymilla inside the
walls
with thirty thousand men likely would fail to upset that pair.
"It
wouldn't," Birgitte agreed. She glanced around as if to see who besides
the Guardswomen might hear before going on. "Maybe they're worried over
what's been worrying me. You didn't get lost when we got back. Or
rather, you
had help."
Elayne
paused to offer a few hurried words to a gray-haired couple in woolens
that
would have suited prosperous farmers. Brannin and El-vaine Martan's
manor house
was much like a large farmhouse, sprawling and housing generations. A
third of
their armsmen were their sons and grandsons, nephews and great-nephews.
Only
those too young or too old to ride had been left behind to see to
planting. She
hoped the smiling pair did not reel they were getting short shrift, but
she was
walking on almost as soon as she stopped. "What do you mean. I had
help?" she demanded.
"The
palace is… changed." For a moment, there was confusion in the bond.
Birgitte grimaced. "It sounds mad, I know, but it's as if the whole
thing
had been built to a slightly different plan." One of the Guardswomen
ahead
missed a step, caught herself. "I have a good memory…" Birgitte
hesitated, the bond filled with a jumble of emotions hastily pushed
down. Most
of her memories of past lives had vanished as surely as the winter's
snow.
Nothing remained before the founding of the White Tower, and the four
lives she
had lived between then and the end of the Trolloc Wars were beginning
to
fragment. Little seemed to frighten her, yet she feared losing the
rest,
especially her memories of Gaidal Cain. "I don't forget a path once
I've
followed it," she went on. "and some of these hallways aren't the
same as they were. Some of the corridors have been… shifted. Others
aren't
there anymore, and there are some new. Nobody is talking about it that
I could
find out, but I think the old people are keeping quiet because they're
afraid
their wits are going, and the younger are afraid they'll lose their
positions."
"That's-"
Elayne shut her mouth. Clearly it was not impossible. Birgitte did not
suffer
from sudden fancies. Naris' reluctance to leave her apartments suddenly
made
sense, and perhaps Reene's earlier puzzlement, too. She almost wished
being
with child really had befuddled her. But how? "Not the Forsaken," she
said firmly. "If they could do something like this, they'd have done it
long since, and worse than… A good day to you, too, Lord Aubrem."
Lean
and craggy and bald save for a thin white fringe, Aubrem Pensenor
should have
been dandling his grandchildren's children on his knee, but his back
was
straight, his eyes clear. He had been among the first to reach Caemlyn.
with
near to a hundred men and the first news that it was Arymilla Marne
marching
against the city, with Naean and Elenia supporting her. He began
reminiscing
about riding for her mother in the Succession, until Birgitte murmured
that
Lady Dyelin would be waiting for her.
"Oh.
in that case, don't let me delay you, my Lady," the old man said
heartily.
"Please give my regards to Lady Dyelin. She's been so busy, I've not
exchanged two words with her since reaching Caemlyn. My very best
regards, if
you will." House Pensenor had been allied to Dyelin's Taravin since
time
out of mind.
"Not
the Forsaken," Birgitte said once Aubrem was out of earshot. "But
what caused it is only the first question. Will it happen again? If it
does,
will the changes always be benign? Or might you wake up and find
yourself in a
room without doors or windows? What happens if you're sleeping in a
room that
disappears? If a corridor can go. so can a room. And what if it's more
than the
palace? We need to find out if all the streets still lead where they
did. What
if the next time, part of the city wall isn't there anymore?"
"You
do think dark thoughts," Elayne said bleakly. Even with the Power in
her,
the possibilities were enough to give her a sour stomach.
Birgitte
fingered the four golden knots on the shoulder of her white-collared
red coat.
"They came with these." Strangely, the worry carried by the bond was
less now that she had shared her concerns. Elayne hoped the woman did
not think
she had answers. No, that really was impossible. Birgitte knew her too
well for
that.
"Does
this frighten you, Deni?" she asked. "I'll admit it does me."
"No
more than needful, my Lady," the blocky woman answered without stopping
her careful scan of what lay ahead. Where the others walked with a hand
on their
sword hilts, her hand rested on her long cudgel. Her voice was as
placid, and
as matter-of-fact, as her face. "One time a big wagon man named Eldrin
Hackly came near breaking my neck. Not usually a rough man, but he was
drunk
beyond drunk that night. I couldn't get the angle right, and my cudgel
seemed
to bounce off his skull without making a dent. That frightened me more,
because
I knew certain sure I was about to die. This is just maybe, and any day
you
wake up, maybe you die."
Any
day you wake up, maybe you die. There were worse ways to look at life,
Elayne
supposed. Still, she shivered. She was safe, at least till her babes
were born,
but no one else was.
The
two guards at the wide, lion-carved doors to the Map Room were
experienced
Guardsmen, one short and the next thing to scrawny, the other wide
enough to
appear squat though he was of average height. Nothing visible picked
them out
from any other men in the Guards, but only good swordsmen, trusted men,
got
this duty. The short man nodded to Deni, then straightened his back
stiffly at
a disapproving frown from Birgitte. Deni smiled at him shyly-Deni!
shyly!-while
a pair of Guardswomen went through the inevitable routine. Birgitte
opened her
mouth, but Elayne laid a hand on her arm, and the other woman looked at
her.
then shook her head, thick golden braid swaying slowly.
"It's
not good when they're on duty, Elayne. They should be seeing to their
duties,
not mooning over each other." She did not raise her voice, yet color
appeared in Deni's round cheeks, and she stopped smiling and started
watching
the corridor again. It was better that way. perhaps, yet still a pity.
Somebody
ought to have a little pleasure in their lives.
The
Map Room was the second-largest ballroom in the palace, and spacious,
with four
red-streaked marble fireplaces where small fires burned beneath the
carved
mantels, a domed ceiling worked with gilt and supported by widely
spaced
columns two spans from white marble walls that had been stripped of
tapestries,
and sufficient mirrored stand-lamps to light the room as well as if it
had
windows. The greatest part of its tile floor was a detailed mosaic map
of
Caemlyn, originally laid down more than a thousand years ago, after the
New
City had been completed though before Low Caemlyn began growing. Long
before
there was an Andor. before even Artur Hawk wing. It had been redone
several
times since, as tiles faded or became worn, so every street was
exact-at least,
they had been until today; the Light send they still were-and despite
many
buildings replaced over the years, even some of the alleys were
unchanged from
what the huge map showed.
There
would be no dancing in the Map Room for the foreseeable future,
however. Long
tables between the columns held more maps. some large enough to spill
over the
edges, and shelves along the walls held stacks of reports, those not so
sensitive they needed to be locked away or else committed to memory and
burned.
Birgitte's wide writing table, nearly covered with baskets, most full
of
papers, stood at the far end of the room. As Captain-General, she had
her own
study, but as soon as she discovered the Map Room, she had decided the
map in
the floor made it too good not to use.
A
small wooden disc, painted red, marked the spot on the outer wall where
the
assault had just been beaten back. Birgitte scooped it up in passing
and tossed
it into a round basket full of the things on her writing table. Elayne
shook
her head. It was a small basket, but if there were enough attacks at
once to
need that many markers…
"My
Lady Birgitte, I have that report on available fodder you asked for," a
graying woman said, holding out a page covered with neat lines. The
White Lion
was worked small on the breast of her neat brown dress. Five other
clerks went
on with their work, pens skritching. They were among Master Norry's
most
trusted, and Mistress Harfor had personally screened the half dozen
messengers
in red-and-white livery. swift young men-boys really-who stood against
the wall
behind the clerks' small writing tables. One, a pretty youth, began a
bow
before cutting it short with a blush. Birgitte had settled the question
of
courtesies, to her or other nobles, with very few words. Work came
first, and
any noble who disliked that could just avoid the Map Room.
"Thank
you, Mistress Anford. I'll look at it later. If you and the others will
wait
outside, please?"
Mistress
Anford quickly gathered up the messengers and the other clerks, giving
them
only time to stopper their ink jars and blot their work. No one showed
a
glimmer of surprise. They were accustomed to the need for privacy at
times.
Elayne had heard people call the Map Room the Secrets Room, though
nothing very
secret was kept there. All of that was locked away in her apartments.
While
the clerks and messengers were filing out, Elayne strode to one of the
long
tables where a map showed Caemlyn and its surroundings for at least
fifty miles
in each direction. Even the Black Tower had been inked in. a square
sitting
less than two leagues south of the city. A growth on Andor. and no way
to be
rid of it. She still sent parties of Guardsman to inspect some days,
via
gateways, but the place was large enough that the Asha'man could have
been up
to anything without her learning of it. Pins with enameled heads marked
Arymilla's
eight camps around the city, and small metal figures various other
camps. A
falcon, finely wrought in gold and no taller than her little finger,
showed
where the Goshien were. Or had been. Were they gone yet? She slipped
the falcon
into her belt pouch. Aviendha was very much a falcon. On the other side
of the
table. Birgitte raised a questioning eyebrow.
"They're
gone, or going." Elayne told her. There would be visits. Aviendha was
not
gone forever. "Sent somewhere by Rand. Where, I don't know, burn
him."
"I
wondered why Aviendha wasn't with you."
Elayne
laid one finger atop a bronze horseman less than a hand tall, standing
a few
leagues west of the city. "Someone needs to take a look at Davram
Bashere's camp. Find out whether the Saldaeans are leaving, too. And
the Legion
of the Dragon." It did not matter if they were, really. They had not
interfered in matters, thank the Light, and the time when fear that
they might
restrained Arymilla was long past. But she disliked things happening in
Andor without
her knowledge. "Send Guardsmen to the Black Tower tomorrow, as well.
Tell
them to count how many Asha'man they see."
"So
he's planning a big battle. Another big battle. Against the Seanchan, I
suppose." Folding her arms beneath her breasts, Birgitte frowned at the
map. "I'd wonder where and when, except we have enough in front of us
to
be going on with."
The
map displayed the reasons Arymilla was pressing so hard. For one, to
the
northeast of Caemlyn. almost off the map. lay the bronze image of a
sleeping
bear, curled up with its paws over its nose. Two hundred thousand men,
near
enough, almost as many trained men as all of Andor could field. Four
Borderland
rulers, accompanied by perhaps a dozen Aes Sedai they tried to keep
hidden,
searching for Rand, their reasons unstated. Borderlanders had no cause
to turn
against Rand that she could see-though the simple fact was, he had not
bound
them to him as he had other lands-but Aes Sedai were another matter,
especially
with their allegiance uncertain, and twelve approached a dangerous
number even
for him. Well, the four rulers had in part deciphered her motives for
asking
them into Andor, yet she had managed to mislead them concerning Rand's
whereabouts. Unfortunately, the Borderlanders had belied every tale of
how
swiftly they could move as they crept south, and now they sat in place,
trying
to find a way to avoid coming near a city under siege. That was
understandable,
even laudable. Outland armies in close proximity to Andoran armsmen, on
Andoran
soil, would make for a touchy situation. There were always at least a
few
hotheads. Bloodshed, and maybe war, could start all too easily under
those
circumstances. Even so, bypassing Caemlyn was going to be difficult:
the narrow
country roads had been turned to bogs by the rains, giving hard passage
to an
army that large. Elayne could have wished they had marched another
twenty or
thirty miles toward Caemlyn, though. She had hoped their presence would
have
had a different effect by now. It might still.
More
important, certainly to Arymilla and possibly to herself, a few leagues
below
the Black Tower stood a tiny silver swordsman with his blade upright in
front
of him and a silver halberdier, plainly by the same silversmith's hand,
one to
the west of the black square, the other to the east. Luan. Ellorien and
Abelle,
Aemlyn, Arathelle and Pelivar had close to sixty thousand men between
them in
those two camps. Their estates and those of the nobles tied to them
must have been
stripped near the bone. Those two camps were where Dyelin had been
these past
three days, trying to learn their intentions.
The
spindly Guardsman opened one of the doors and held it for an elderly
serving
woman carrying a rope-work silver tray with two tall golden wine
picchers and a
circle of goblets made of blue Sea Folk porcelain. Reene must have been
uncertain how many would be present. The frail woman moved slowly,
careful not
to tilt the heavy tray and drop anything. Elayne channeled flows of Air
to take
the tray, then let them dissipate unused. Implying that the woman could
not do
her job would only be hurtful. She was effusive in her thanks, though.
The old
woman smiled broadly, clearly delighted, and offered her a deep curtsy
once
unburdened of the tray.
Dyelin
arrived almost right behind the maid, an image of vigor, and shooed her
out
before grimacing over the contents of one pitcher-Elayne sighed;
doubtless it
held goat's milk-and filling a goblet from the other. Plainly Dyelin
had
confined her freshening to washing her face and brushing her hair,
golden
flecked with gray, because her dark gray riding dress, with a large
round
silver pin worked with Taravin's Owl and Oak on the high neck, had
spots of
half-dried mud on the skirts.
"There's
something seriously amiss," she said, swirling the wine in her goblet
without drinking. A frown deepened the fine lines at the corners of her
eyes.
"I've been in this palace more times than I can remember. and today I
got
lost twice."
"We
know about that," Elayne told her, and quickly explained what little
they
had puzzled out, what she intended to do. Belatedly, she wove a ward
against
eavesdropping and was unsurprised to feel it slice through saidar. At
least
whoever had been listening in would get a jolt from that. A small jolt,
since
so little of the power was involved that she had not sensed it. Maybe
there was
a way to make it a bard jolt next time, though. Maybe that would begin
to
discourage eavesdroppers.
"So
it might happen again," Dyelin said when Elayne was done. Her tone was
calm, but she licked her lips and took a swallow of wine, as if her
mouth was
suddenly dry. "Well. Well, then. If you don't know what caused it, and
you
don't know whether it will happen again, what are we to do?"
Elayne
stared. Again someone seemed to think she had answers she did not. But
then,
that was what it meant to be queen. You were always expected to have an
answer,
to find one. That was what it meant to be Aes Sedai. "We can't stop it,
so
we'll live with it, Dyelin, and try to keep people from growing too
afraid.
I'll announce what happened. as much as we know, and have the other
sisters do
the same. That way, people will know that Aes Sedai are aware, and that
should
provide some comfort. A little. They'll still be frightened, of course,
but not
as much as they'll be if we say nothing and it does happen again."
That
seemed a feeble effort to her, but surprisingly Dyelin agreed without
hesitation. "1 myself can suggest nothing else to be done. Most people
think you Aes Sedai can handle anything. It should suffice, in the
circumstances."
And
when they realized that Aes Sedai could not handle anything, that she
could
not? Well, that was a river that she would cross when she reached it.
"Is
the news good, or bad?"
Before
Dyelin could answer, the door opened again.
"I
heard that Lady Dyelin had returned. You should have sent for us,
Elayne. You
aren't queen yet, and I dislike you keeping secrets from me. Where is
Aviendha?" Catalyn Haevin. a cool-eyed, ungovernable young woman-a girl
in
truth, still long months short of her majority, though her guardian had
abandoned her to go her own way-was pride to her toenails, her plump
chin held
high. Of course, that might have been because of the large enameled pin
of
Haevin's Blue Bear that decorated the high neck of her blue riding
dress. She
had begun showing Dyelin respect, and a certain wariness, shortly after
she
started sharing a bed with her and Sergase. but with Elayne she
insisted on
every perquisite of a High Seat.
"We
all heard," Conail Northan said. Lean and tall in a red silk coat, with
laughing eyes and an eagle's beak of a nose, he was of age, just, a few
months
past his sixteenth name day. He swaggered and caressed the hilt of his
sword
much too fondly, but there seemed no harm in him. Only boyishness, an
unfortunate trait in a High Seat. "And none of us could wait to hear
when
Luan and the others will join us. This pair would have run the whole
way."
He ruffled the hair of the two younger boys with him, Perival Mantear
and
Branlet Gilyard, who gave him a dark look and raked fingers through his
hair to
straighten it. Perival blushed. Quite short but already pretty, he was
the
youngest at twelve, yet Branlet had only a year on him.
Elayne
sighed, but she could not ask them to leave. Children most of them
might
be-perhaps all, considering Conail's behavior-yet they were the High
Seats of
their Houses, and along with Dyelin, her most important allies. She did
wish
she knew how they had learned the purpose of Dyelin's journey. That had
been
intended to be a secret until she knew what news Dyelin brought.
Another task
for Reene. Gossip unchecked, the wrong gossip, could be as dangerous as
spies.
"Where
is Aviendha? ' Catalyn demanded. Strangely, she had become quite taken
with
Aviendha. Fascinated might have been a better word. Of all things, she
had
persisted in trying to make Aviendha teach her to use a spear!
"So,
my Lady," Conail said, strolling over to fill a blue goblet with wine,
"when are they joining us?"
"The
bad news is that they aren't," Dyelin said calmly. "The good news is
that they've each rejected an invitation to join Arymilla." She cleared
her throat loudly as Branlet reached for the wine pitcher. His cheeks
reddened,
and he picked up the other pitcher as if he had really meant to all
along. The
High Seat of House Gilyard, yet still a boy for all of the sword on his
hip.
Perival also wore a sword, one that dragged on the floor tiles and
looked too
big for him. but he had already taken goat's milk. Pouring her own
wine,
Catalyn smirked at the younger boys, a superior smile that vanished
when she
noticed Dyelin looking at her.
"That's
small turnips to call good news," Birgitte said. "Burn me, if it
isn't. You bring back a bloody half-starved squirrel and call it a side
of
beef."
"Pungent
as always," Dyelin said dryly. The two women glared at each other,
Birgitte's hands balling into fists, Dyelin fingering the dagger at her
belt.
"No
arguing." Elayne said, making her voice sharp. The anger in the bond
helped. At times she feared the pair might come to blows. "I won't put
up
with your bickering today."
"Where
is Aviendha?"
"Gone,
Catalyn. What else did you learn, Dyelin?"
"Gone
where?"
"Gone
away," Elayne said calmly. Saidar or no saidai she wanted to slap the
girl's face. "Dyelin?"
The
older woman took a sip of wine to cover breaking off her staring match
with
Birgitte. Coming to stand beside Elayne, she picked up the silver
swordsman,
turned him over, set him down again. "Aem-lyn, Arathelle and Pelivar
tried
to convince me to announce a claim to the throne, but they were less
adamant
than when I spoke with them last. I believe I've almost convinced them
I won't
do it."
"Almost?"
Birgitte put a hundredweight of derision in the word. Dyelin ignored
her
pointedly. Elayne frowned at Birgitte, who shifted uncomfortably and
stalked
off long enough to get herself a goblet of wine. Very satisfying.
Whatever she
was doing right, she hoped it continued to work.
"My
Lady," Perival said with a bow, extending one of two goblets he held to
Elayne. She managed a smile and a curtsy before taking the offering.
Goat's
milk. Light, but she was beginning to revile the stuff!
"Luan
and Abelle were… noncommittal," Dyelin continued, frowning at the
halberdier. "They may be swaying toward you." She hardly sounded as
though she believed it, however. "I reminded Luan that he helped me
arrest
Naean and Elenia. back in the beginning, but that may have done no more
good
than it did with Pelivar."
"So
they may all be waiting for Arymilla to win," Birgitte said grimly.
"If you survive, they'll declare for you against her. If you don't, one
of
them will make her own claim. Ellorien has the next best right after
you,
doesn't she?" Dyelin scowled, but she offered no denials.
"And
Ellorien?" Elayne asked quietly. She was sure she knew the answer there
already. Her mother had had Ellorien flogged. That had been under
Rahvin's
influence, but few seemed to believe that. Few seemed to believe
Gaebril had
even been Rahvin.
Dyelin
grimaced. "The woman's head is stone! She'd announce a claim in my name
if
she thought it would do any good. At least she has enough sense to see
it
won't." Elayne noted that she made no mention of any claims in
Ellorien's
own name. "In any case. I left Keraille Sur-tovni and Julanya Fote to
watch them. I doubt they'll move, but if they do. we'll know
straightaway."
Three Kinswomen who needed to form a circle to Travel were watching the
Borderlanders for the same reason.
No
good news at all, then, no matter what face Dyelin tried to put on it.
Elayne
had hoped the threat of the Borderlanders would drive some of the
Houses to support
her. At least one reason I let them cross An-clor still holds, she
thought
grimly. Even if she failed to gain the throne, she had done that
service for
Andor. Unless whoever did take the throne bungled matters completely.
She could
see Arymilla doing just that. Well, Arymilla was not going to wear the
Rose
Crown, and that was that. One way or another, she had to be stopped.
"So
it's six, six and six," Catalyn said, frowning and thumbing the long
signet ring on her left hand. She looked thoughtful, unusual for her.
Her usual
style was to speak her mind with no consideration whatsoever. "Even if
Candraed joins us, we are short often." Was she wondering whether she
had
tied Haevin to a hopeless cause? Unfortunately, she had not tied her
House so
tightly the knots could not be undone.
"I
was certain Luan would join us," Conail muttered. "And Abelle and
Pelivar." He took a deep swallow of wine. "Once we beat Arymilla,
they'll come. You mark me on it."
"But
what are they thinking?" Branlet demanded. "Are they trying to start
a war with three sides?" His voice went from treble to bass halfway
through that, and his face flooded with red. He buried his face in his
goblet,
but grimaced. Apparently he liked goat's milk as little as she did.
"It's
the Borderlanders." Perival's voice was a boy's piping, but he sounded
sure of himself. "They're holding back because whoever wins here, the
Borderlanders still have to be dealt with." He picked up the bear,
hefting
it as if its weight would give him answers. "What I don't understand is
why they're invading us in the first place. We're so far from the
Borderlands.
And why haven't they marched on and attacked Caemlyn? They could sweep
Arymilla
aside, and I doubt we could keep them out as easily as we do her. So
why are they
here?"
Smiling,
Conail clapped him on the shoulder. "Now that will be a battle to see,
when we face the Borderlanders. Northan's Eagles and Mantear's Anvil
will do
Andor proud that day, eh?" Perival nodded, but he did not look happy at
the prospect. Conail certainly did.
Elayne
exchanged glances with Dyelin and Birgitte, both of whom looked amazed.
Elayne
felt astonished herself. The other two women knew, of course, but
little
Perival had come near touching a secret that had to be kept. Others
might puzzle
out eventually that the Borderlanders had been meant to push Houses
into
joining her, but it must not be confirmed.
"Luan
and the others sent to Arymilla asking for a truce until the
Borderlanders were
turned back," Dyelin said after a moment. "She asked time to
consider. As near as I can calculate, it was then that she began
increasing her
efforts at the walls. She tells them she's still considering."
"Aside
from anything else," Catalyn said heatedly, "that shows why Arymilla
doesn't deserve the throne. She puts her own ambition above Andor's
safety.
Luan and the others must be fools not to see it."
"Not
fools." Dyelin replied. "Just men and women who think they see the
future better than they do."
What
if she and Dyelin were the ones who were not seeing the future clearly.
Elayne
wondered. To save Andor, she would have thrown her support to Dyelin.
Not
gladly, but to save Andor's blood, she would have. Dyelin would have
the
support of ten Houses, more than ten. Even Danine Candraed might
finally decide
to stir herself in support of Dyelin. Except that Dyelin did not want
to be
queen. She believed that Elayne was the one to wear the Rose Crown. So
did
Elayne. But what if they were wrong? Not the first time that question
had come
to her, but now, staring at the map with all of its ill tidings, she
could not
shake free of it.
That
evening, after a dinner memorable only for the surprise of tiny
strawberries,
she sat in the large sitting room of her apartments. reading. Trying to
read.
The leather-bound book was a history of Andor, as was most of her
reading of
late. It was necessary to read as many as possible to gain any real
version of
truth, cross-checking one against another. For one thing, a book first
published during any monarch's reign never mentioned any of her
missteps, or
those of her immediate predecessors if they were of her own House. You
had to
read books written while Trakand held the throne to learn of Mantear's
mistakes, and books written under Mantear to learn of Norwelyn's
errors. Others'
mistakes could teach her how not to make the same herself. Her mother
had made
that almost her first lesson.
She
could not concentrate, however. She often found herself staring at a
page without
seeing a word, thinking of her sister, or starting to say something to
Aviendha
before remembering that she was not there. She felt very lonely, which
was
ridiculous. Sephanie stood in a corner against the possibility she
wanted
anything. Eight Guardswomen were standing outside the door to the
apartments,
and one of them. Yurith Azeri, was an excellent conversationalist, an
educated
woman though silent on her past. But none of them was Aviendha.
When
Vandene glided into the room followed by Kirstian and Zarya. it seemed
a
relief. The two white-clad women stopped by the doorway, expressions
meek.
Untouched by the Oath Rod, pale Kirstian, hands folded at her waist,
appeared
just into her middle years; Zarya, with her tilted eyes and hooked
nose, well short
of them. She held something wrapped in white toweling.
"Forgive
me if I'm interrupting." Vandene began, then frowned. The white-haired
Green's face somehow gave an impression of age despite her Aes Sedai
features.
Those could have been twenty, or forty, or anything in between: that
seemed to
change at every blink. Perhaps it was her dark eyes, luminous and deep
and
pained, which had seen so much. There was an air of tiredness about
her, too.
Her back was straight, but she still looked weary. "It is none of my
business, of course," she said delicately, "but is there a reason you
are holding so much of the Power? I thought you must be weaving
something very
complex when I felt you in the corridor."
With
a start, Elayne realized that she held nearly as much ofsaidar as she
could
contain safely. How had that happened? She did not recall drawing any
deeper.
Hastily, she released the Source, regret filling her as the Power
drained away
and the world became… ordinary again. On the instant, her mood bounced
sideways.
"You
aren't interrupting anything," she said peevishly, setting her book
down
on the table in front of her. She had not finished three pages of the
thing
anyway.
"May
I make us private, then?"
Elayne
gave a curt nod-it was none of the woman's bloody business how much of
the
Power she held; she knew the protocols as well as Elayne. or better-and
told
Sephanie to wait in the anteroom while Vandene wove a ward against
eavesdropping.
Ward
or no ward, Vandene waited until the door closed behind the maid before
speaking. "Reanne Corly is dead, Elayne."
"Oh,
Light, no." Temper vanished into sobs, and she hastily snatched a
lace-edged handkerchief from her sleeve to blot the tears suddenly
streaming
down her cheeks. Her cursed shifting moods at work, yet Reanne surely
deserved
tears. She had so wanted to become a Green. "How?" Burn her. she
wished she could stop blubbering!
There
were no tears from Vandene. Perhaps there were no more tears in her.
"She
was smothered with the Power. Whoever did it used much more than was
needed.
The residues of saidar were thick on her and in the room where she was
found.
The murderer wanted to be sure no one would miss seeing how she died."
"That
makes no sense, Vandene."
"Perhaps
it does. Zarya?"
The
Saldaean woman laid her small bundle on rhe table and unwrapped it to
reveal an
articulated wooden doll. It was very old. the simple dress threadbare,
the
painted face flaking and missing an eye, half of its long dark hair
gone.
"This
belonged to Mirane Larinen," Zarya said. "Derys Nermala found it
behind a cupboard."
"I
don't see what Mirane leaving a doll behind has to do with Re-anne's
death," Elayne said, wiping her eyes. Mirane was one of the Kinswomen
who
had run away.
"Only
this," Vandene answered. "When Mirane went to the Tower, she hid this
doll outside because she had heard that everything she owned would be
burned.
After she was put out, she retrieved it and always carried it with her.
Always.
She had a quirk, though. Wherever she stopped for a time, she hid the
doll
again. Do not ask me why. But she would not have run away and abandoned
it."
Still
dabbing at her eyes, Elayne leaned back in her chair. Her weeping had
dwindled
to sniffles, but her eyes still leaked tears. "So Mirane didn't run
away.
She was murdered and… disposed of." A grisly way to put it. "The
others, too, you think? All of them?"
Vandene
nodded, and for a moment her slender shoulders slumped. "I very much
fear
so," she said, straightening. "I expect clues were left among the
things they left behind, treasured keepsakes like this doll, a favorite
piece
of jewelry. The murderer wanted us to think she was being clever at
hiding her
crimes but not clever enough, only we weren't clever enough to find
those
clues, so she decided to become more blatant."
"To
frighten the Kinswomen into fleeing," Elayne muttered. That would not
cripple her, but it would throw her back on the mercies of the
Windfinders, and
those seemed to be growing mingy. "How many of them know of this?"
"All,
by now. I should think." Vandene said dryly. "Zarya told Derys to
keep quiet, but that woman likes the sound of her own voice."
"This
seems aimed at me, at helping Arymilla gain the throne, but why would a
Black
sister have any interest in that? I can't think we have two murderers
among us.
At least this settles the question of Merilille. Speak with Sumeko and
Alise.
Vandene. They can make sure the rest don't panic." Sumeko ranked next
after Reanne, as the Kin ordered their hierarchy, and while Alise stood
much
lower, she was a woman of great influence. "From now on, none of them
is
to be alone, not ever. Always at least two together, and three or four
would be
better. And warn them to be careful of Careane and Sareitha."
"I'd
advise against that," Vandene said quickly. "They should be safe in
groups, and word would reach Careane and Sareitha. Warned against Aes
Sedai?
The Kin would give themselves away in a minute." Kirstian and Zarya
nodded
solemnly.
After
a moment, Elayne reluctantly agreed to the continued secrecy. The Kin
should be
safe in groups. "Let Chanelle know about Reanne and the others. I can't
imagine the Windfinders are in any danger-losing them wouldn't hurt me
the way
losing the Kin would-but wouldn't it be wonderful if they did decide to
leave?"
She
did not expect that they would-Chanelle feared returning to the Sea
Folk with
the bargain unfulfilled-yet it would be a bright spot in an otherwise
miserable
day if they did. At least it seemed unlikely anything could darken the
day
further. The thought sent a chill through her. The Light send nothing
would
darken it more.
Arymilla
pushed her plate of stew away with a grimace. She had been offered her
choice
of beds for the night-Arlene, her maid, was making the choice now; the
woman
knew what she liked-and the least she had expected was a decent meal,
but the
mutton was fatty, and definitely beginning to go rancid besides. There
had been
too much of that lately. This time the cook was going to be flogged!
She was
unsure which of the nobles in this camp employed him, just that he was
supposed
to be the best at hand-the best!-but that did not matter. He would be
flogged
to make an example. And then sent away, of course. You could never
trust a cook
after he had been punished.
The
mood in the tent was far from lively. Several of the nobles in the camp
had
hoped for invitations to dine with her, but none stood high enough. She
was
beginning to regret not asking one or two, even some of Naean's or
Elenia's
people. They might have been entertaining. Her closest allies at table
together, and you might have thought they sat over funeral meats. Oh,
scrawny
old Nasin, his thinning white hair uncombed, was eating away heartily,
apparently not noticing that the meat was nearly rotten, and giving her
fatherly pats on the hand. She met his smiles like a dutiful daughter.
The fool
was wearing one of his flower-embroidered coats tonight. The thing
could have
passed for a woman's dressing robe! Happily, his leers were all
directed down
the table at Elenia; the honey-haired woman flinched, her foxlike face
paling
whenever she glanced at him. She controlled House Sarand as if she were
the
High Seat instead of her husband, yet she feared that Arymilla would
still let
Nasin have his way with her. That threat was unneeded, now, but it was
well to
have it to hand just in case. Yes, Nasin was happy enough in his futile
pursuit
of Elenia. but the others were sunk in gloom. Their plates were
abandoned
barely touched, and they kept her two serving men trotting to refill
wine cups.
She never liked trusting others' servants. At least the wine had not
turned.
"I
still say we should make a heavier push." Lir grumbled drunk-enly into
his
cup. A whip of a man. his red coat showing the wear of armor straps,
the High
Seat of Baryn was ever eager to strike. Subtlety was simply beyond him.
"My eyes-and-ears report more armsmen entering the city every day
through
these 'gateways.' " He shook his head and muttered something under his
breath. The man actually believed those rumors of dozens of Aes Sedai
in the
Royal Palace. "All these pinprick attacks do is lose men."
"I
agree," Karind said, fiddling with a large golden pin, enameled with
the
running Red Fox of Anshar, that was fastened to her bosom. She was not
much
less intoxicated than Lir. Her square face had a slackness about it.
"We
need to press home instead of throwing men away. Once we're over the
walls, our
advantage in numbers will pay off."
Arymilla's
mouth tightened. They might at least show her the respect due a woman
who was soon
to be Queen of Andor, rather than disagreeing with her all the time.
Unfortunately, Baryn and Anshar were not bound to her so tightly as
Sarand and
Arawn. Unlike Jarid and Naean. Lir and Karind had announced their
support of
her without publishing it in writing. Neither had Nasin, but she had no
fear of
losing him. Him, she had wound around her wrist for a bracelet.
Forcing
a smile, she made her voice jovial. "We lose mercenaries. What else are
mercenaries
good for if not dying in place of our arms-men?" She held up her
winecup
and a lean man in her silver-trimmed blue hastened to fill it. In fact,
he was
so hasty that he spilled a drop on her hand. Her scowl made him snatch
a
handkerchief from his pocket to blot up the drop before she could pull
her hand
away. His handkerchief! The Light only knew where that filthy thing had
been,
and he had touched her with it! His mouth writhed with fear as he
retreated,
bowing and mumbling apologies. Let him serve out the meal. He could be
dismissed after. "We will need all of our armsmen when I ride against
the
Borderlanders. Don't you agree, Naean?"
Naean
twitched as though stuck with a pin. Slim and pale in yellow silk
worked with
silver patterns of Arawn's Triple Keys on the breast, she had begun
looking
haggard in recent weeks, her blue eyes drawn and tired. All of her
supercilious
airs were quite gone. "Of course. Arymilla," she said meekly and
drained her cup. Good. She and Elenia were definitely tamed, but
Arymilla liked
to check now and then to make sure neither was growing a new backbone.
"If
Luan and the others will not support you, what good will taking Caemlyn
do?" Sylvase, Nasin's granddaughter and heir, spoke so seldom that the
question came as a shock. Sturdy and not quite pretty, she usually had
a vapid
gaze, but her blue eyes appeared quite sharp at the moment. Everyone
stared at
her. That seemed not to faze her a bit. She toyed with a winecup, but
Arymilla
thought it no more than her second. "If we must fight the
Borderlanders,
why not accept Luan's truce so Andor can field its full strength
unhindered by
divisions?"
Arymilla
smiled. She wanted to slap the silly woman. Nasin would be angered by
that,
however. He wanted her kept as Arymilla's "guest" to prevent his
removal as High Seat-part of him seemed aware that his wits were gone;
all of
him intended holding on as High Seat until he died-but he did love her.
"Ellorien and some of the others will come to me yet. child," she said
smoothly. Smoothness required some effort. Who did the chit think she
was?
"Aemlyn, Arathelle, Pelivar. They have grievances against Trakand."
Surely they would come once Elayne and Dyelin were out of the way.
Those two
would not survive Caem-lyn's fall. "Once I have the city, they will be
mine in any event. Three of Elayne's supporters are children, and
Conail
Northan is little more than a child. I trust I can convince them to
publish
their support of me easily enough." And if she could not. Master
Lounalt
surely could. A pity if children had to be handed over to him and his
cords.
"I will be queen by sunset of the day Caemlyn falls to me. Isn't that
right, father?"
Nasin
laughed, spraying gobbets of half-chewed stew across the table. "Yes,
yes," he said, patting Arymilla's hand. "You listen to your aunt,
Sylvase. Do as she tells you. She'll be Queen of Andor soon." His smile
faded, and an odd note entered his voice. It might almost have been…
pleading. "Remember, you will be High Seat of Caeren after I'm gone.
After
I'm gone. You will be High Seat."
"As
you say, Grandfather," Sylvase murmured, inclining her head briefly.
When
she straightened, her gaze was as insipid as ever. The sharpness must
have been
a trick of the light. Of course.
Nasin
grunted and went happily back to wolfing down the stew. "Best I've had
in
days. I think I'll have another plate. More wine here. man. Can't you
see my
cup's dry?"
The
silence around the table stretched in discomfort. Nasin's more open
displays of
senility had a way of causing that.
"I
still say," Lir began finally, only to cut off as a stocky armsman with
Marne's four Silver Moons on his chest entered the tent.
Bowing
respectfully, the fellow made his way around the table and bent to
whisper in
Arymilla's ear. "Master Hernvil asks a word in private. my Lady."
Everyone
but Nasin and his granddaughter pretended to concentrate on their wine,
certainly not attempting to eavesdrop. He went on eating. She watched
Arymilla,
bland-faced. That sharpness must have been a trick of the light.
"I'll
be but a few moments," Arymilla said, rising. She waved a hand,
indicating
the food and wine. "Enjoy yourselves until I return. Enjoy." Lir
called for more wine.
Outside,
she did not bother raising her skirts to keep them clear of the mud.
Arlene
would already have to clean them, so what did a little more mud matter?
Light
showed in some tents, but by and large the camp was dark beneath a half
moon.
Jakob Hernvil, her secretary, waited a little away from the tent in a
plain
coat, holding a lantern that made a yellow pool around him. He was a
little
man, and lean, as if all the fat had been boiled from him. Discretion
was bred
in his bones, and she ensured his loyalty by paying him enough that
only the
largest bribes could be of interest, far more than anyone would offer a
scrivener.
"Forgive
me for interrupting your meal, my Lady." he said with a bow, "but I
was sure you would want to hear right away." It was always a surprise,
hearing such a deep voice from such a tiny man. "They have agreed. But
they want the whole amount of gold first."
Her
lips compressed of their own accord. The whole amount. She had hoped to
get off
with paying only the first half. After all, who would dare dun her once
she was
queen? "Draw up a letter to Mistress Andscale. I'll sign and seal it
first
thing in the morning." Transferring that much gold would require days.
And
how long to have the arms-men ready? She had never really paid
attention to
that sort of thing. Lir could tell her, but she hated showing weakness.
"Tell them a week from tomorrow, to the day." That should be enough.
In a week. Caem-lyn would be hers. The throne would be hers. Arymilla,
by the
Grace of the Light, Queen of Andor, Defender of the Realm, Protector of
the
People, High Seat of House Marne. Smiling, she went back inside to tell
the
others the wonderful news.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
News for the Dragon
"Enough,
Loial," Rand said firmly, thumbing
tabac
into his short-stemmed pipe from a goatskin pouch. It was Tairen leaf,
with a
slightly oily taste from the curing, but that was all that was to be
had.
Thunder rolled overhead, slow and ponderous. "You'll talk me hoarse
with
all these questions."
They
were seated at a long table in one of the larger rooms in Lord
Algarin's manor
house, the remains of the midday meal pushed down to one end. The
servants were
old. for the most part, and slower moving than ever since Algarin left
for the BlackTower.
The rain pouring down outside seemed to be slackening, though strong
gusts of
wind still pelted the windows with raindrops hard enough to rattle the
glass in
the six yellow-painted casements. Many of those panes held bubbles;
some
distorted what lay outside almost beyond recognition. The table and
chairs were
simply carved, no more elaborate than might be found in many
farmhouses, and
the yellow cornices beneath the high, beamed ceiling little more so.
The two
fireplaces, at either end of the room, were broad and tall but of plain
stone,
the andirons and firetools sturdy wrought iron and simple. Lord or no,
Algarin
was far from wealthy.
Tucking
the tabac pouch into his pocket. Rand
strolled
to one of the fireplaces and used small brass tongs from the mantel to
lift a
burning sliver of oak for lighting his pipe. He hoped no one thought
that
strange. He avoided channeling any more than absolutely necessary,
especially
if anyone else was present-the dizziness that hit him when he did was
difficult
to conceal-but no one had mentioned it so far. A gust of wind brought a
squeaking as though tree branches had scraped across the windowpanes.
Imagination. The nearest trees were beyond the fields, more than half a
mile
away.
Loial
had brought down a vine-carved chair from the Ogier rooms that put his
knees
level with the tabletop, so he had to lean forward sharply to write in
his
leather-bound notebook. The volume was small for him, little enough to
fit
neatly into one of his capacious coat pockets, but still as large as
most human
books Rand had seen. Fine hair
decorated
Loial's upper lip and a patch beneath his chin; he was attempting a
beard and
mustaches, though with only a few weeks' growth, it did not seem a very
successful attempt so far.
"But
you've told me almost nothing really useful," the Ogier rumbled, a drum
booming its disappointment. His tufted ears drooped. Even so, he began
wiping
the steel nib of his polished wooden pen. Fatter than Rand's
thumb and long enough to seem slender, it fitted Loial's thick fingers
perfectly. "You never mention heroics, except by somebody else. You
make
it all sound so everyday. To hear you tell it, the fall of IIlian was
as
exciting as watching a weaver repair her loom. And cleansing the True
Source?
You and Nynaeve linked, then you sat and channeled while everybody else
was off
fighting Forsaken. Even Nynaeve told me more than that, and she claims
to
remember almost nothing."
Nynaeve,
wearing all of her jeweled ter'angreal and her strange
bracelet-and-rings
angreal, shifted in her chair in front of the other fireplace, then
went back
to watching Alivia. Every so often she glanced toward the windows and
tugged at
her thick braid, but for the most part she focused on the yellow-haired
Seanchan woman. Standing beside the doorway like a guard, Alivia gave a
small,
brief smile of amusement. The former damane knew Nynaeve's display was
meant
for her. The intensity never left her hawkish blue eyes, though. It
seldom had,
ever since her collar had been removed in Caemlyn. The two Maidens
squatting on
their heels near her playing cat's cradle, Harilin of the Iron Mountain
Taardad
and Enaila of the Jarra Chareen, were making their own display. Shoufa
wrapped
around their heads and black veils hanging down their chests, each had
three or
four spears stuck through the harness holding her bow case on her back
and a
bull-hide buckler lying on the floor. There were fifty Maidens in the
manor
house, several of them Shaido, and they all went about ready to dance
the
spears in a heartbeat. Perhaps with him. They seemed torn between
delight at
providing a guard for him again and displeasure over how long he had
avoided
them.
As
for himself, he could not look at any of them without the litany of
women who
had died for him, women he had killed, starting up in his head.
Moiraine
Damodred. Her above all. Her name was written inside his skull in fire.
Liah of
the Cosaida Chareen, Sendara of the Iron Mountain Taardad. Lamelle of
the Smoke
Water Miagoma, Andhilin of the Red Salt Goshien, Desora of the Musara
Reyn…
So many names. Sometimes he woke in the middle of the night muttering
that
list, with Min holding him and murmuring to him as if soothing a child.
He
always told her he was all right and wanted to go back to sleep, yet
after he
closed his eyes, he did not sleep until the list had been completed.
Sometimes
Lews Therin chanted it with him.
Min
looked up from the volume she had open on the table, one of Herid Fel's
books.
She devoured those, and used the note he had sent Rand before his
murder, the
one where he said she was a distraction because she was so pretty, as a
bookmark. Her short blue coat, embroidered with white flowers on the
sleeves
and lapels, was cut to fit snugly over her bosom, where her creamy silk
blouse
showed a touch of cleavage, and her big dark eyes, framed by dark
ringlets to
her shoulders, held a pleased light. He could feel her pleasure through
the
bond. She liked him looking at her. Without a doubt the bond told her
how much
he liked looking. Oddly enough, it said she liked looking at him, too.
Pretty?
He hummed, thumbing his earlobe. She was beautiful. And tied to him
tighter
than ever. She and Elayne and Aviendha. How was he to keep them safe
now? He
forced himself to smile back at her around his pipestem. unsure how
well the
deception was working. A touch of irritation had entered the bond from
her end,
though why she should become irritable whenever she thought he was
worrying
about her was beyond him. Light, she wanted to protect him't
"Rand
isn't very talkative, Loial," she said, no longer smiling. Her low,
almost
musical voice held no anger, but the bond told another story. "In fact,
sometimes he's about as talkative as a mussel." The look she directed
at
Rand made him sigh. It seemed there would be a great deal of talking
once they
were alone together. "I can't tell you much, myself, but I'm sure
Cadsuane
and Venn will tell you anything you want to know. Others will, too. Ask
them if
you want more than yes and no and two words besides.''
Stout
little Verin. knitting in a chair beside Nynaeve, appeared startled to
hear her
name mentioned. She blinked vaguely, as though wondering why it had
been.
Cadsuane, at the far end of the table with her sewing basket open
beside her,
only took her attention away from her embroidery hoop long enough to
glance at
Loial. Golden ornaments swayed, dangling from the iron-gray bun atop
her head.
It was only that, a glance, not a frown, yet Loial's ears twitched. Aes
Sedai
always impressed him, and Cadsuane more than any other.
"Oh,
I will, Min. I will," he said. "But Rand is central to my book."
With no sand jar at hand, he began blowing gently on the page of his
notebook
to dry the ink, but Loial being Loial, he still talked between puffs.
"You
never give enough detail. Rand. You make me drag everything out of you.
Why,
you never even mentioned being imprisoned in Far Madding until Min did.
Never
mentioned it! What did the Council of Nine say when they offered you
the Laurel
Crown? And when you renamed it? I can't think they liked that. What was
the
coronation like? Was there feasting, a festival, parades? How many
Forsaken
came against you at Shadar Logoth? Which ones? What did it look like at
the
end? What did he feel like? My book won't be very good without the
details. I
hope Mat and Perrin give me better answers.'' He frowned, long eyebrows
grazing
his cheeks. "I hope they're all right."
Colors
spun in Rand's head, twin rainbows swirled in water. He knew how to
suppress
them, now, but this time he did not try. One resolved into a brief
image of Mat
riding through forest at the head of a line of mounted folk. He seemed
to be
arguing with a small, dark woman who rode beside him, taking his hat
off and
peering into it, then cramming it back onto his head. That lasted only
moments,
then was replaced by Perrin sitting over winecups in a common room or
tavern
with a man and a woman who wore identical red coats ornately trimmed
with blue
and yellow. Odd garments. Perrin looked grim as death, his companions
wary. Of
him?
"They're
well." he said, calmly ignoring a piercing look from Cadsuane. She did
not
know everything, and he intended to keep it that way. Calm on the
surface,
content, blowing smoke rings. Inside was another matter. Where are
they? he
thought angrily, pushing down another
appearance of the colors. That was as easy as breathing, now. I need
them, and
they're off for a day at the Ansaline Gardens'.
Abruptly
another image was floating his head, a man's face, and his breath
caught. For
the first time, it came without any dizziness. For the first time, he
could see
it clearly in the moments before it vanished. A blue-eyed man with a
square
chin, perhaps a few years older than himself. Or rather, he saw it
clearly for
the first time in a long while. It was the face of the stranger who had
saved his
life in Shadar Logoth when he fought Sammael. Worse…
He
was aware of me, Lews Therin said. He sounded sane for a change.
Sometimes he
did, but the madness always returned eventually. How can a face
appearing in my
mind be aware of me?
If
you don't know, how do yon expect me to? Rand thought. But I was aware
of him,
as well. It had been a strange sensation, as if he were… touching…
the other man somehow. Only not physically. A residue hung on. It
seemed he
only had to move a hair's breadth, in any direction. to touch him
again. I
think he saw my face, too.
Talking
to a voice in his head no longer seemed peculiar. In truth, it had not
for
quite a long time. And now… ? Now, he could see Mat and Perrin by
thinking
of them or hearing their names, and he had this other face coming to
him
unbidden. More than a face, apparently. What was holding conversations
inside
his own skull alongside that? But the man had been aware, and Rand of
him.
When
our streams of balefire touched in Shadar Logoth, it must have created
some
sort of link between us. I can't think of any other explanation. That
was the
only time we ever met. He was using their so-called True Power. It had
to be
that. I felt nothing, saw nothing except his stream of balefire. Having
bits of
knowledge seem his when he knew they came from Lews Therin no longer
seemed
odd, either. He could remember the Ansaline Gardens, destroyed in the
War of
the Shadow, as well as he did his father's farm. Knowledge drifted the
other
way, too. Lews Therin sometimes spoke of Emond's Field as if he had
grown up
there. Does that make any sense to you?
Oh.
Light, why do I have this voice in my head? Lews Therin moaned. Why can
I not
die? Oh, Ilyena, my precious Ilyena, I want to join you. He trailed off
into
weeping. He often did when he spoke of the wife he had murdered in his
madness.
It
did not matter. Rand suppressed the sound of the man crying. pushed it
down to
a faint noise on the edge of hearing. He was certain that he was right.
But who
was the fellow? A Darkfriend, for sure, but not one of the Forsaken.
Lews
Therin knew their faces as well as he knew his own, and now Rand did,
too. A
sudden thought made him grimace. How aware of him was the other man?
Ta'veren
could be found by their effect on the Pattern, though only the Forsaken
knew
how. Lews Therin certainly had never mentioned knowing-their
"conversations" were always brief, and the man seldom gave
information willingly-and nothing had drifted across from him on the
subject.
At least, Lanfear and Ishamael had known how. but no one had found him
that way
since they had died. Could this link be used in the same fashion? They
could
all be in danger. More danger than usual, as if the usual were not
enough.
"Are
you well, Rand?" Loial asked worriedly, screwing the leaf-engraved
silver
cap onto his ink jar. The glass of that was so thick it could have
survived
anything short of being hurled against stone, but Loial handled it as
though it
were fragile. In his huge hands, it looked fragile. "I thought the
cheese
tasted off, but you ate a good bit of it."
"I'm
fine," Rand said, but of course. Nynaeve paid him no heed. She was out
of
her chair and gliding down the room in a flash, blue skirts swirling.
Goose
bumps popped out on his skin as she embraced saidar and stretched to
lay her
hands on his head. An instant later, a chill rippled through him. The
woman
never askedl Sometimes she behaved as if she were still the Wisdom in
Emond's
Field and he would be heading back to the farm come morning.
"You're
not ill," she said in tones of relief. Spoiled food was causing all
sorts
of sickness among the servants, some of it serious. People would have
died
except for the presence of Asha'man and Aes Sedai to give Healing.
Reluctant to
cost their lord scarce money by throwing food out. despite all the
admonitions
Cadsuane and Nynaeve and the other Aes Sedai gave them, they fed
themselves
things that should have been tossed on the midden heap. A different
tingling
centered briefly around the double wound in his left side.
"That
wound is no better," she said with a frown. She had tried Healing it,
succeeding no better than Flinn had. That did not sit well with her.
Nynaeve
took failure as a personal insult. "How can you even stand up? You must
be
in agony."
"He
ignores it," Min said flatly. Oh. yes, there would be words.
"It
hurts no worse standing than sitting," he told Nynaeve, gently taking
her
hands from his head. Simple truth. So was what Min had said. He could
not
afford to let pain make him a prisoner.
One
of the twinned doors creaked open to admit a white-haired man in a worn
yellow
coat trimmed with red and blue that hung loosely on his bony frame. His
bow was
halting, a fault of his joints rather than disrespect. "My Lord
Dragon," he said in a voice nearly as creaky as the hinges, "Lord
Logain has returned."
Logain
did not wait on invitations, entering practically on the serving man's
heels. A
tall man with dark hair curling to his shoulders, and dark for a
Ghealdanin,
women likely thought him handsome, yet there was a streak of darkness
inside
him as well. He wore his black coat with the Sword and the Dragon on
the high
collar, and a long-hiked sword on his hip, but he had made an addition,
a round
enameled pin on his shoulder showing three golden crowns in u field of
blue.
Had the man adopted a sigil? The old man's hairy eye-brows shot up in
surprise,
and he looked to Rand as if inquiring whether he wanted Logain removed.
"The
news from Andor is fair enough, I suppose," Logain said. tucking black
gauntlets behind his sword belt. He offered Rand a minimal bow, the
slightest
bending of his back. "Elayne still holds Caem-lyn, and Arymilla still
holds her siege, but Elayne has the advantage since Arymilla can't even
stop
food getting in. much less reinforcements. No need to scowl. I kept out
of the
city. Black coats aren't exactly welcome there, in any case. The
Borderlanders
are still in the same place. You were wise to stay clear of them, it
seems.
Rumor says there are thirteen Aes Sedai with them. Rumor says they're
looking
for you. Has Bashere gotten back yet?" Nynaeve gave him a scowl and
moved
away from Rand gripping her braid tightly. Aes Sedai bonding Asha'man
was all
very well in her book, but not the reverse.
Thirteen
and looking for him? He had stayed clear of the Border-landers because
Elayne
did not welcome his help-interference, she called it, and he had begun
to see
that she had the right of it; the Lion Throne was hers to gain, not his
to
give-but perhaps it was as well that he had. The Borderland rulers all
had ties
to the White Tower, and no doubt Elaida was still eager to get her
hands on
him. Her and that mad proclamation about no one approaching him except
through
her. If she believed that would force him to come to her, she was a
fool.
"Thank
you, that will be all, Ethin. Lord Logain?" he asked as the serving man
bowed himself out with a last disgruntled glance at Logain. Rand
thought the
man would have tried had he told him to haul Logain out.
"The
title is his by birth," Cadsuane said without looking up from her
embroidery. She would know; she had helped capture him back when he was
calling
himself the Dragon Reborn, him and Taim both. Her hair ornaments bobbed
as she
nodded to herself. "Phaw! A minor lordling with a scrap of land in the
mountains,
most of it all but straight up and down. But King Johanin and the Crown
High
Council stripped him of his lands and title after he became a false
Dragon."
Small
spots of color appeared in Logain's cheeks, yet his voice was cool and
composed. "They could take my estate, but they could not take away who
I
am."
Still
seemingly intent on her embroidery needle. Cadsuane laughed softly.
Verin's
knitting needles had stopped. She was studying Logain, a plump sparrow
studying
an insect. Alivia had shifted her intense gaze to the man, too, and
Harilin and
Enaila seemed to be just going through the motions of their game. Min
appeared
to be reading still, but each hand rested near the opposite cuff of her
coatsleeves. She kept some of her knives hidden there. None of them
trusted
him.
Rand
frowned. The man could call himself whatever he wanted so long as he
did what
he was supposed to. but Cadsuane prodded him and anyone else in a black
coat
nearly as much as she did Rand himself. He was unsure how far to trust
Logain
either, yet he had to work with the tools he had to hand. "Is it
done?" With Logain here, Loial was uncapping his ink jar again.
"More
than half the Black Tower is in Arad Doman and Illian. I sent all the
men with
bonded Aes Sedai except those here, as you ordered." Logain walked to
the
table while he talked, found a blue-glazed pitcher that still held wine
among
the plates and scraps, and filled a green-glazed cup. There was very
little
silver in the house. "You should have let me bring more men here. The
numbers tilt too much to Aes Sedai for my liking."
Rand
grunted. "Since part of that is your doing, you can live with it.
Others
will have to, as well. Go on."
"Dobraine
and Rhuarc will send a Soldier with a message as soon as they find
anyone in
charge of more than a village. The Council of Merchants claim King
Alsalam
still reigns, but they wouldn't or couldn't produce him or say where he
is,
they seem to be at one another's throats themselves, and Bandar Eban is
more
than half deserted and given over to the mob." Logain grimaced into his
winecup. "Gangs of strongarms provide what little order there is, and
they
extort food and coin from the people they claim to protect and take
whatever
else they want, including women." The bond suddenly held white-hot
rage,
and Nynaeve growled in her throat. "Rhuarc has set about putting an end
to
that, but it was already turning into a battle when I left," Logain
finished.
"Strongarms
won't hold out long against Aiel. If Dobraine can't find anyone in
charge, then
he will have to be, for the time being." If Alsalam was dead, as seemed
likely, he would have to appoint a Steward for the Lord Dragon in Arad
Doman.
But who? It would have to be someone the Domani would accept.
The
other man took a long swallow of wine. "Taim wasn't pleased at me
taking
so many men out of the Tower and not telling him where they were going.
I
thought he was going to rip up your order. He tried every trick to
learn where
you are. Oh, he burns to know that. His eyes were practically on fire.
I
wouldn't put it past him to have had me put to the question if I'd been
fool
enough to meet him without company. One thing pleased him, though: that
I
didn't take any of his cronies. That was plain on his face." He smiled,
a
dark smile, not amused. "There are forty-one of those now, by the way.
He's given over a dozen men the Dragon pin in the past few days, and he
has
above fifty more in his 'special' classes, most of them men recruited
just
lately. He's planning something, and I doubt you'll like it."
I
told you to kill him when you had the chance. Lews Therin cackled in
mad mirth.
I told you. And now it's too late. Too late.
Rand
angrily expelled a stream of blue-gray smoke. "Give over," he said,
meaning it for both Logain and Lews Therin. "Taim built the Black Tower
till it nearly matches the White Tower for numbers, and it grows every
day. If
he's a Darkfriend the way you claim, why would he do that?"
Logain
met his stare levelly. "Because he couldn't stop it. From what I've
heard,
even in the beginning there were men who could Travel who weren't his
toad-eaters, and he had no excuse to do all the recruiting himself. But
he's
made a Tower of his own hidden inside the Black Tower, and the men in
it are
loyal to him, not you. He amended the deserters' list and sends his
apologies
for an 'honest mistake.' but you can wager all you own it was no
mistake."
And
how loyal was Logain? If one false Dragon chafed at following the
Dragon
Reborn, why not another? He might think he had cause. He had been far
more
famous as a false Dragon than Taim, more successful, gathering an army
that
swept out of Ghealdan and nearly reached Lugard on its way to Tear.
Half the
known world had trembled at the name Logain. Yet Mazrim Taim commanded
the
Black Tower while Logain Ablar was only another Asha'man. Min still saw
an aura
of glory around him. Just how that glory was to be achieved was beyond
her
viewing, however.
He
took the pipe from his mouth, and the bowl was hot against the heron
branded
into his palm. He must have been puffing away furiously without being
aware of
it. The trouble was, Taim and Logain were lesser problems. They had to
wait.
The tools at hand. He made an effort to keep his voice even. "Taim took
their names off the list. That's the important thing. If he's showing
favoritism, I'll put an end to it when I have time. But the Seanchan
have to
come first. And maybe Tarmon Gai'don, too."
"If?"
Logain growled, slamming his cup down on the table so hard that it
broke. Wine
spread across the tabletop and dripped over the edge. Scowling, he
wiped his
damp hand on his coat. "Do you think I'm imagining things?" His tone
grew more heated by the word. "Or making them up? Do you think this is
jealousy, al'Thor? Is that what you think?"
"You
listen to me," Rand began, raising his voice against a peal of thunder.
"I
told you I expected you and your friends in black coats to be civil to
me, my
friends and my guests," Cadsuane said sternly, "but I've decided that
must be expanded to include each other." Her head was still bent over
her
embroidery hoop, but she spoke as if she were shaking a finger under
their
noses. "At least when I am present. That means if you continue
squabbling,
I may have to spank both of you." Harilin and Enaila began laughing so
hard they got the string of their game in a snarl. Nynaeve laughed,
too, though
she tried to hide it behind her hand. Light, even Min smiled!
Logain
bristled, jaw tightening until Rand thought he should hear the man's
teeth
grating. He was trying hard not to bristle himself. Cadsuane and her
bloody
rules. Her conditions for becoming his advisor. She pretended that he
had
askedTor them, and every so often she added another to her list. The
rules were
not precisely onerous, though their
existence was, but her way of presenting them was always like a poke
with a sharp stick. He opened his mouth to tell her he was finished
with her
rules, and with her, too, if need be.
"Taim
very likely will have to wait on the Last Battle, whatever he's about,"
Verin said suddenly. Her knitting, a shapeless lump that might have
been
anything, sat in her lap. "It will come soon. According to everything
I've
read on the subject, the signs are quite clear. Half the servants have
recognized dead people in the halls, people they knew alive. It's
happened
often enough that they aren't frightened by it any longer. And a dozen
men
moving the cattle to spring pasture watched a considerable town melt
into mist
just a few miles to the north."
Cadsuane
had raised her head and was staring at the stout Brown sister. "Thank
you
for repeating what you told us yesterday, Verin," she said dryly. Verin
blinked, then took up her knitting again, frowning at it as though she,
too,
were unsure what it was going to be.
Min
caught Rand's eyes, shaking her head slowly, and he sighed. The bond
held
irritation and wariness, the last a deliberate warning to him, he
suspected. At
times, she seemed able to read his mind. Well, if he needed Cadsuane.
and Min
said he did, then he needed her. He just wished he knew what she was
supposed
to teach him aside from how to grind his teeth.
"Advise
me, Cadsuane. What do you think of my plan?"
"At
last the boy asks." she murmured, setting her embroidery down beside
her
sewing basket. "All his schemes in motion, some I've not been made
privy
to, and now he asks. Very well. Your peace with the Seanchan will be
unpopular."
"A
truce," he broke in. "And a truce with the Dragon Reborn will last only
as long as the Dragon Reborn. When I die, everyone will be free to go
to war
with the Seanchan again if they wish."
Min
slammed her book shut and folded her arms beneath her breasts. "Don't
you
talk that way!'' she said, red-faced with anger. The bond also carried
fear.
"The
Prophecies, Min,'' he said sadly. Not sad for himself, but for her. He
wanted
to protect her, her and Elayne and Aviendha, but he would hurt them in
the end.
"I
said don't you talk that way! The Prophecies don't say you have to die!
I'm not
going to let you die, Rand al'Thor! Elayne and Aviendha and I won't let
you!" She glared at Alivia, who her viewing had said would help Rand
die.
and her hands slid down her arms toward her cuffs.
"Behave,
Min," he said. Her hands shot away from her cuffs, but she set her jaw.
and the bond suddenly was flooded with stubbornness. Light, was he
going to
have to worry about Min trying to kill Alivia? Not that she was likely
to
succeed-as well try throwing a knife at an Aes Sedai as at the Seanchan
woman-but she might get herself injured. He was not sure Alivia knew
any weaves
but those for weapons.
"Unpopular,
as I say," Cadsuane said firmly, raising her voice. She favored Min
with a
brief frown before turning her attention back to Rand. Her face was
smooth,
composed, an Aes Sedai's face. Her dark eyes were hard, like polished
black
stones. "Especially in Tarabon, Amadicia and Altara, but also
elsewhere,
if you agree to allow the Seanchan to keep what they've already taken,
what
lands will you give away next? That is how most rulers will see
matters."
Rand
dropped back into his chair, stretching his legs in front of him and
crossing
his ankles. "It doesn't matter how unpopular it is. I went through that
doorframe ter'angreal in Tear, Cadsuane. You know about that?" Golden
ornaments bobbled as she nodded impatiently. "One of my questions for
the
Aelfinn was 'How can I win the Last Battle?'"
"A
dangerous question to pose." she said quietly, "touching on the
Shadow as it does. Supposedly, the results can be quite unpleasant.
What was
the answer?"
"
'The north and the east must be as one. The west and the south must be
as one.
The two must be as one.'" He blew a smoke ring, put another in the
middle
of it as it expanded. That was not the whole of it. He had asked how to
win and
survive. The last part of his answet had been 'To live, you must die.'
Not
something he was going to bring up in front of Min anytime soon. In
front of
anyone except Alivia, for that matter. Now he just had to figure out
how to live
by dying. "At first, I thought it meant I had to conquer everywhere,
but
that wasn't what they said. What if it means the Seanchan hold the west
and
south, as you could say they already do, and there's an alliance to
fight the
Last Battle, the Seanchan with everybody else?"
"It's
possible," she allowed. "But if you're going to make this… truce… why
are you moving what seems to be a considerable army to Arad Doman and
reinforcing what is already in Illian?"
"Because
Tarmon Gai'don is coming, Cadsuane, and I can't fight the Shadow and
the
Seanchan at the same time. I'll have a truce, or I'll crush them
whatever the
cost. The Prophecies say I have to bind the nine moons to me. I only
understood
what that meant a few days ago. As soon as Bashere returns, I'll know
when and
where I'm to meet the Daughter of the Nine Moons. The only question now
is how
do I bind her, and she'll have to answer that.''
He
spoke matter-of-factly, now and then blowing a smoke ring for
punctuation.
Reactions varied. Loial just wrote very fast, trying to capture every
word,
while Harilin and Enaila went on with their game. If the spears had to
be
danced, they were ready. Alivia nodded fiercely, doubtless hoping it
would come
to crushing those who had kept her wearing an a dam for five hundred
years.
Logain had found another winecup and filled it with the last of what
was in the
pitcher, but he merely held the cup rather than drinking, his
expression
unreadable. Now it was Rand whom Verin studied intently. But then, she
had
always been curious about him. But why in the Light would Min feel
bone-deep
sadness? And Cadsuane…
"Stone
cracks from a hard enough blow," she said, her face an Aes Sedai mask
of
calm. "Steel shatters. The oak fights the wind and breaks. The willow
bends where it must and survives."
"A
willow won't win Tarmon Gai'don," he told her.
The
door creaked open again, and Ethin tottered in. "My Lord Dragon, three
Ogier have arrived. They were most pleased to learn that Master Loial
is here. One
of them is his mother."
"My
mother?" Loial squeaked, and even that sounded like a hollow wind
gusting
in caverns. He leaped up so fast that his chair fell over backward,
wringing
his hands, ears wilting. His head swung from side to side as if he were
hunting
for a way out besides the door. "What am I going to do, Rand? The other
two must be Elder Haman and Erith. What am I going to do?"
"Mistress
Covril said she was most anxious to speak with you, Master Loial,"
Ethin
said in that creaky voice. "Most anxious. They are all damp from the
rain,
but she said they will wait for you in the Ogier sitting room upstairs."
"What
am I going to do, Rand?"
"You
said you want to marry Erith," Rand said as gently as he could.
Gentleness
was difficult except with Min.
"But
my book! My notes aren't complete, and I'll never find out what happens
next.
Erith will take me back to Stedding Tsofu with her."
"Phaw!"
Cadsuane picked up her embroidery again and began working the needle
delicately. She was making the ancient symbol of Aes Sedai. the
Dragon's Fang
and the Flame of Tar Valon melded into a disc, black and white
separated by a
sinuous line. "Go to your mother, Loial. If she's CovriL daughter of
Ella
daughter ofSoong, you don't want to keep her waiting. As I expect you
know."
Loial
seemed to take Cadsuane's words as a command. He began wiping his pen
nib
again, capping his ink jar. But he did everything very slowly, with his
ears
drooping. Every so often he moaned sadly, half under his breath, "My
book!'
"Well,"
Verin said, holding up her knitting for inspection, "I believe I have
done
all that I can here. I think I'll go find Tomas. The rain makes his
knee ache,
though he denies it even to me." She glanced at the window. "It does
seem to be slowing."
"And
I think I'll go find Lan," Nynaeve said, gathering her skirts. "The
company is better where he is." That with a sharp tug on her braid and
a
glare divided between Alivia and Logain. "The wind tells me a storm is
coming. Rand. And you know I don't mean rain."
"The
Last Battle?" Rand asked. "How soon?" When it came to weather,
listening to the wind could sometimes tell her when the rains would
come to the
hour.
"It
may be, and I don't know. Just remember. A storm is coming. A terrible
storm." Overhead, thunder rolled.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
Vows
Uneasy.
Loial watched Nynaeve glide off down the lamp-lit corridor in one
direction and
Verin in the other. Neither was much taller than his waist, but they
were Aes Sedai.
The fact knotted his tongue sufficiently that by the time he had worked
up his
nerve to ask one of them to accompany him. both were out of sight
around sharp
corners. The manor house was a rambling place, added to over many years
with no
real overall plan that he could discern, and hallways frequently met at
odd
angles. He really wished he had an Aes Sedai for company when he faced
his
mother. Even Cadsuane, although she made him very nervous with how she
was
always pinching at Rand. Sooner or
later. Rand was going to explode. He
was not the same man Loial
first met in Caemlyn or even the man he had left in Cairhien. The mood
around Rand was dark and stony now, a
dense patch of lion's claw
and treacherous ground underfoot. The whole house felt that way with Rand in it.
A
lean, gray-haired serving woman carrying a basket of folded towels gave
a
start, then shook her head and muttered something under her breath
before
offering him a brief curtsy and walking on. She made a small side-step
as
though she was moving around something. Or someone. He stared at the
spot and
scratched behind his ear. Maybe he could only see Ogier dead. Not that
he
actually wanted to. It was sad enough just knowing that human dead
could no
longer rest. Having the same confirmed for Ogier would be enough to
break his
heart. Most likely they would appear only inside stedding, in any case.
He
would very much like to see a town vanish, though. Not a real town, but
a town
that was as dead as those spirits the humans claimed to see. You might
be able
to walk its streets before it melted and see what people were like
before the
War of the Hundred Years, or even the Trolloc Wars. So Verin said, and
she
seemed to know a very great deal about it. That would certainly be
worth a
mention in his book. It was going to be a fine book. Scratching his
beard with
two fingers-the thing itched!-he sighed. It would have been a fine book.
Standing
there in the corridor was only putting off the inevitable. Put off
clearing the
brush and you always find chokevine in it, so the old saying went. Only
he felt
as though the chokevine was tight around him instead of a tree.
Breathing hard,
he followed the serving woman all the way to the wide stairs that led
up to the
Ogier rooms. The staircase had two sturdy bannisters, shoulder-high on
the
gray-haired woman and stout enough to give a decent handhold. He was
often
afraid just to brush against stair rails made for humans for fear he
might
break them. One ran down the middle, with the steps along the
wood-paneled wall
pitched for human feet: those on the outside for Ogier.
The
woman was old as humans counted years, yet she climbed more quickly
than he and
was scurrying down the corridor by the time he reached the top.
Doubtless she
was taking the towels to his mother's room, and to Elder Hainan's and
Erith's.
Surely they would prefer to get dry before talking. He would suggest
that. It
would gain him time to think. His thoughts seemed as sluggish as his
feet, and
his feet felt like millstones.
There
were six bedrooms built for Ogier along the corridor, which itself was
properly
scaled for them-his up-stretched hands would have come a pace short of
touching
the ceiling beams-along with a storeroom, a bathing room with a large
copper
tub, and the sitting room. This was the oldest part of the house,
dating back
nearly five hundred years. A lifetime for a very old Ogier, but many
lifetimes
for humans. They lived such brief lives, except for Aes Sedai; that had
to be
why they flitted about like hummingbirds. But even Aes Sedai could be
nearly as
precipitous as the rest. That was a puzzlement.
The
sitting room door was carved with a Great Tree, not Ogier work, yet
finely
detailed and instantly recognizable. He stopped, tugging his coat
straight,
combing his hair with his fingers, wishing he had time to black his
boots.
There was an ink stain on his cuff. No time to do anything about that,
either.
Cadsuane was right. His mother was not a woman to be kept waiting.
Strange that
Cadsuane knew of her. Perhaps knew her. by the way she had spoken.
Covril,
daughter of Ella daughter of Soong, was a famous Speaker, but he had
not
realized she was known Outside. Light, he was all but panting with
anxiety.
Trying
to control his breathing, he went in. Even here the hinges creaked. The
servants had been aghast when he asked after some oil to put on
them-that was
their task; he was a guest-but they still had not gotten around to it
themselves.
The
high-ceilinged room was quite spacious, with dark polished wallpapers
and
vine-carved chairs and small vine-carved tables and wrought-iron
stand-lamps of
a proper size, their mirrored flames dancing above his head. Except for
a shelf
of books, all old enough that the leather bindings were flaking and all
of
which he had read before, only a small bowl of sung wood was Ogier
made. A nice
piece; he wished he knew who had sung it, but it was aged enough that
singing
to it had failed to raise so much as an echo. Yet everything had been
made by
someone who at least had been to a stedding. The pieces would have
looked at
home in any dwelling. Of course, the room looked nothing like a room in
a
stedding, but Lord Algarin's ancestor had made an effort to have his
visitors
feel comfortable.
His
mother was standing in front of one of the brick fireplaces, a
strong-faced
woman with her vine-embroidered skirts spread to let the flames dry
them. He
heaved a sigh of relief at seeing she was not as wet as he had
expected,
although it put paid to suggesting they take the time to get dry. Their
raincloaks must have developed leaks. They did that after a time, as
the anseed
oil wore off. Maybe her temper would not be as bad as he feared,
either.
White-haired Elder Haman, his flaring coat dark with damp in several
large
patches, was examining one of the axes from the wall, shaking his head
over it.
Its haft was as long as he was tall. Made during the Trolloc Wars or
even
before, there were a pair of those, the long axe heads inlaid with gold
and
silver, and a pair of ornate pointed pruning knives with long shafts,
as well.
Of course. pruning knives, sharp on one side and sawtoothed on the
other,
always had long handles, but the inlays and long red tassels indicated
that
these had been made for weapons, too. Not the most felicitous choices
for
hanging in a room meant for reading or conversation or the quiet
contemplation
of stillness.
But
Loial's eyes swept past his mother and Elder Haman to the other
fireplace,
where Erith, small and almost fragile appearing, was drying her own
skirts. Her
mouth was straight, her nose short and well-rounded, her eyes the exact
color
of a silverbell's ripe seedpod. In short, she was beautiful! And her
ears,
sticking up through the glossy black hair that hung down her back…
Curving and plump, tipped with fine tufts that looked as soft as
dandelion
down, they were the most gorgeous ears he had ever seen. Not that he
would be
crude enough to say so. She smiled at him, a very mysterious smile, and
his own
ears quivered with embarrassment. Surely she could not know what he had
been
thinking. Could she? Rand said women could sometimes, but that was
human women.
"So,
here you are." his mother said, planting her fists on her hips. There
were
no smiles from her. Her brows were drawn down, her jaw set. If this was
her
better temper, she might as well have been drenched. "I must say,
you've
led me a merry chase, but I have you in hand now. and 1 do not mean to
let you
run- What is that on your lip? And your chin! Well, you can shave those
right
off again. Don't you grimace at me, Son Loial."
Fingering
the growth on his upper lip uneasily, he tried to smooth his face-when
your
mother named you Son, she was in no mood to trifle with-but it was
hard. He
wanted Wis beard and mustaches. Some might think it pretentious, as
young as he
was. but just the same…
"A
merry chase indeed," Elder Haman said dryly, hanging the axe back on
its
hooks. He had long white mustaches that fell past his chin and a long
narrow
beard that hung to his chest. True, he was well above three hundred
years old,
but it still seemed unfair. "A very merry chase. First we walked to
Cairhien, having heard you were there, only you had gone. After a stop
at
Stedding Tsofu. we walked to Caem-lyn, where young al'Thor informed us
you were
in the Two Rivers and took us there. But you were gone again. To
Caemlyn, it
seemed!" His eyebrows rose almost to his hairline. "I began to think
we were playing ring-in-the-dell."
"The
people in Emond's Field told us how heroic you were." Erith said, her
high
voice like music. Clutching her skirts with both hands, ears fluttering
with
excitement, she seemed about to bounce up and down. "They told us all
about you fighting Trollocs and Myrddraal, and going out among them by
yourself
to seal the Manetheren Way-gate so no more could come."
"I
wasn't by myself," Loial protested, waving his hands. He thought his
ears
might fly from his head, they were twitching so with embarrassment.
"Gaul
was with me. We did it together. I'd never have reached the Waygate
without
Gaul." She wrinkled her delicate nose at him, dismissing Gaul's
participation.
His
mother sniffed. Her ears were rigid with distaste. "Foolishness.
Fighting
in battles. Putting yourself in danger. Gambling. All of it. Pure
foolishness,
and there will be no more of it."
Elder
Haman harrumphed, ears twitching irritably, and folded his hands behind
his
back. He disliked being interrupted. "So we returned to Caemlyn. to
find
you gone, and then to Cairhien once more, to find you gone yet again."
"And
you put yourself in danger again in Cairhien," Loial's mother broke in,
shaking a finger at him. "Have you no sense at all?"
"The
Aiel said you were very brave at Dumai's Wells,'' Erith murmured,
looking at
him through her long eyelashes. He swallowed hard. Her gaze made his
throat feel
tight. He knew he should look away, but how could he be demure when she
was
looking at him?
"In
Cairhien your mother decided she couldn't stay away from the Great
Stump any
longer, though why I cannot say, since they aren't likely to reach any
sort of decision
for another year or two, so we set out to return to Stedding Shangtai
in the
hope we could find you later." Elder Haman said all of that very fast,
glaring at the two women as if he thought they might break in on him
again. His
beard and mustaches seemed to bristle.
Loial's
mother gave another sniff, sharper. "I expect to bring a decision very
quickly, in a month or two, or I'd never have given over the search for
Loial
even temporarily. Now that I've found him, we can finish matters and be
on our
way without any more delay." She took in Elder Haman, who was frowning,
his ears slanted back, and amended her tone. He was an Elder, after
all.
"Forgive me, Elder Haman. I meant to say, if it pleases you, will you
perform the ceremony?''
"I
believe that it does please me, Covril," he said mildly. Much too
mildly.
When Loial heard that tone from his teacher, with ears back, he had
always
known that he had put a foot very badly wrong. Elder Haman had been
known to
throw a piece of chalk at a pupil when he used that tone. "Since I
abandoned my students, not to mention speaking to the Great Stump, to
follow
you on this wild chase for that very reason, I believe it does please
me
indeed. Erith, you are very young."
"She's
past eighty, old enough to marry," Loial's mother said sharply, folding
her arms across her chest. Her ears twitched with impatience. "Her
mother
and I reached agreement. You yourself witnessed us signing the
betrothal and
Loial's dowry."
Elder
Haman's ears tilted back a little further, and his shoulders hunched as
if he
was gripping his hands together very hard behind his back. His eyes
never left
Erith. "I know you want to marry Loial. but are you sure you are ready?
Taking a husband is a grave responsibility."
Loial
wished someone would ask him that question, but that was not the way.
His
mother and Erith's had reached their agreement, and only Erith could
stop it
now. If she wanted to. Did he want her to? He could not stop thinking
of his
book. He could not stop thinking of Erith.
She
certainly looked grave. "My weaving sells well, and I am ready to buy
another loom and take an apprentice. But that may not be what you mean.
I am
ready to tend a husband." Suddenly, she grinned, a lovely grin that
divided her face in two. "Especially one with such beautiful long
eyebrows."
Loial's
ears quivered, and so did Elder Haman's, if not so much. Women were
very free
in their talk among themselves, so he had heard, but usually they tried
not to
embarrass men with it. Usually. His mother's ears actually trembled
with
amusement!
The
older man cleared his throat. "This is serious, Erith. Come now. If you
are sure, take his hands."
Without
hesitation, she came to stand in front of Loial, smiling up at him as
she took
his hands in hers. Her small hands felt very warm. His felt numb and
cold. He
swallowed. It really was going to happen.
"Erith,
daughter of Iva daughter of Alar," Elder Haman said, holding one hand
palm
down over each of their heads, "will you take Loial, son of Arent son
of Halan,
as husband and vow under the Light and by the Tree to treasure, esteem
and love
him so long as he lives, to care for him and tend him. and to guide his
feet on
the path they should follow?"
"Under
the Light and by the Tree, I so vow." Erith's voice was firm and clear,
and her smile seemed to have grown wider than her face
"Loial,
son of Arent son of Halan, will you accept Erith, daughter of Iva
daughter of
Alar, as wife and vow under the Light and by the Tree to treasure,
esteem and
love her so long as she lives, to care for her and to heed her
guidance?"
Loial
took a deep breath. His ears trembled. He wanted to marry her. He did.
Just not
yet. "Under the Light and by the Tree, I so vow," he said hoarsely.
"Then
under the Light and by the Tree, I declare you wed. May the blessings
of the
Light and the Tree be upon you always."
Loial
looked down at his wife. His wife. She raised a hand and stroked
slender
fingers along his mustaches. The beginnings of mustaches. anyway.
"You
are very handsome, and I think mustaches will be beautiful on you. A
beard,
too."
"Nonsense."
his mother said. Surprisingly, she was dabbing at her eyes with a small
lace
handkerchief. She was never emotional. "He's much too young for that
sort
of thing."
For
a moment, he thought Erith's ears began to slant back. That had to be
his
imagination. He had had a number of long talks with her-she was a
wonderful
conversationalist; though come to think of it, for the most part she
listened,
but what little she did say was always very cogent-and he was sure she
possessed no sort of temper at all. He had no time to think on it, in
any
event. Resting her hands on his arms, she rose on tiptoes, and he bent
to rub
his nose against hers. In truth, they nosed for longer than they should
have
with Elder Haman and his mother present, but others faded from his
thoughts as
he inhaled his wife's scent and she his. And the feel of her nose on
his! Pure
bliss! Lie cupped the back of her head and barely had the presence of
mind not
to finger her ear. She tugged the tuft on one of his! After a while, a
very
long while it seemed, voices intruded.
"It
is still raining, Covril. You cannot seriously be suggesting we set out
again
when we have a sound roof over our heads and proper beds to sleep in
for a change.
No, I say. No! I will not sleep on the ground tonight, or in a barn, or
worst
of all, in a house where my feet and knees hang over the end of the
largest bed
available. There have been times I've seriously thought of refusing
hospitality, and to the Pit with rudeness."
"If
you insist," his mother said grudgingly, "but I want an early start
come morning. I refuse to waste an hour more than I must. The Book of
Translation must be opened as soon as possible."
Loial
jerked erect, aghast. "That's what the Great Stump is discussing? They
can't do that, not now!"
"We
must leave this world eventually, so we can come to it when the Wheel
turns." his mother said, striding to the nearest fireplace to spread
her
skirts again. "That is written. Now is exactly the right time, and the
sooner the better."
"Is
that what you think, Elder Haman?" Loial asked worriedly.
"No,
my boy, not at all. Before we left, I gave a speech of three hours that
I think
swayed a few minds in the right direction." Elder Haman picked up a
tall
yellow pitcher and filled a blue cup. but rather than drink, he frowned
into
the tea. "Your mother has swayed more, I fear. She may even get her
decision in months, as she says."
Erith
filled a cup for his mother, then two more, bringing one to him. His
ears
quivered with embarrassment yet again. He should have done that. He had
a great
deal to learn about being a husband, but he knew that much.
"I
wish I could address the Stump," he said bitterly.
"You
sound eager, Husband." Husband. That meant Erith was very serious. It
was
almost as bad as being called Son Loial. "What would you say to the
Stump?"
"I
won't have him embarrassed, Erith," his mother said before he could
open
his mouth. "Loial writes well, and Elder Haman says he may have the
makings of a scholar about him. but he gets tongue-tied before even a
hundred.
Besides, he is only a boy."
Elder
Hainan had said that? Loial wondered when his ears would stop quivering.
"Any
married man may address the Stump," Erith said firmly. There was no
doubt
this time. Her ears definitely slanted back. "Will you allow me to tend
my
own husband. Mother Covril?" His mother's mouth moved, but no sound
came
out, and her eyebrows were halfway up her forehead. He did not think he
had
ever seen her so taken aback, though she must have expected this. A
wife always
took precedence with her husband over his mother. "Well, Husband, what
would you say?''
He
was not eager, he was desperate. He took a long swallow of the
spice-scented
tea, but his mouth felt just as dry afterward. His mother was right;
the more
people were listening, the more he tended to forget what he intended to
say and
go off on tangents. In truth, he had to admit that sometimes he rambled
a bit
with only a few listeners. Just a bit. Now and then. He knew the
forms-a child
of fifty knew the forms-yet he could not make the words come. The few
listening
to him now were not just any few. His mother was a famous Speaker,
Elder Haman
a noted one, not to mention being an Elder. And there was Erith. A man
wanted
to stand well in his wife's eyes.
Turning
his back on them, he strode to the nearest window and stood rolling the
teacup
between his palms. The window was sized decently, though the panes set
in the
carved casement were no larger than those in the rooms below. The rain
had
dwindled to a drizzle falling from a gray sky, and despite bubbles in
the glass
he could make out the trees beyond the fields, pine and sourgum and the
occasional oak, all full of new growth. Algarin's people tended their
forest
well, clearing out the deadfall to rob wildfire of its tinder. Fire had
to be
used carefully.
The
words came more easily now that he could not see the others watching
him.
Should he begin with the Longing? Could they dare leave if they would
begin
dying in a handful of years? No, that question would have been
addressed first
thing and suitable answers found, else the Stump would have finished
inside a
year. Light, if he did address the Stump… For a moment, he saw the
crowds
standing all around him, hundreds and hundreds of men and women waiting
to hear
his words, perhaps several thousand. His tongue tried to cling to the
roof of
his mouth. He blinked, and there was only the bubbled glass before him,
and the
trees. He had to do it. He was not particularly brave, whatever Erith
thought,
but he had learned about bravery watching humans, watching them hang on
no
matter how strong the winds grew, fight when they had no hope, fight
and win
because they fought with desperate courage. Suddenly, he knew what to
say.
"In
the War of the Shadow, we did not huddle in our stedding, hoping no
Trollocs or
Myrddraal would be driven to enter. We did not open the Book of
Translation and
flee. We marched alongside the humans and fought the Shadow. In the
Trolloc
Wars, we neither hid in the stedding nor opened the Book of
Translation. We
marched with the humans and fought the Shadow. In the darkest years,
when hope
seemed gone, we fought the Shadow."
"And
by the War of the Hundred Years we had learned not to get ourselves
tangled in
human affairs." his mother put in. That was allowed. Speaking could
turn
into a debate unless the pure beauty of your words held the listeners.
She had
once spoken from sunrise to sunset in favor of a very unpopular
position
without a single interruption, and the next day, no one had risen to
Speak
against her. He could not form beautiful sentences. He could only say
what he
believed. He did not turn from the window.
"The
War of the Hundred Years was a human affair, and none of ours. The
Shadow is
our affair. When it is the Shadow that must be fought, our axes have
always
grown long handles. Perhaps in a year, or five, or ten, we will open
the Book
of Translation, but if we do it now, we cannot run away with any real
hope of
safety. Tarmon Gai'don is coming, and on that hangs the fate not only
of this
world, but of any world we might flee to. When fire threatens the
trees, we do
not run away and hope that the flames will not follow us. We fight. Now
the
Shadow is coming like wildfire, and we dare not run from it." Something
was moving among the trees, all along the line he could see. A herd of
cattle?
A very big herd, if so.
"That
isn't bad," his mother said. "Much too plainspoken to carry any
weight at a stedding Stump much less the Great Stump, of course, but
not bad.
Go on."
"Trollocs,"
he breathed. That was what it was, thousands of Trol-locs in black,
spiked mail
spilling out of the trees at a run with scythe-curved swords raised,
shaking
their spiked spears, some carrying torches. Trollocs as far as he could
see to
left and right. Not thousands. Tens of thousands.
Erith
pushed in beside him at the window and gasped. "So many! Are we going
to
die, Loial?" She did not sound afraid. She sounded… excited!
"Not
if I can warn Rand and the others." He was already starting for the
door.
Only Aes Sedai and Asha'man could save them now.
"Here,
my boy, I think we may need these."
He
turned just in time to catch the long-handled axe that Elder Haman
tossed him.
The other man's ears were back all the way, laid flat against his
skull. Loial
realized his own were, too.
"Here,
Erith," his mother said calmly, lifting down one of the pruning knives.
"If they get inside, we will try to hold them at the stairs."
"You
are my hero, Husband," Erith said as she took the knife's shaft in
hand,
"but if you get yourself killed, I will be very angry with you." She
sounded as if she meant it.
And
then he and Elder Haman were running down the corridor together.
pounding down
the stairs, bellowing at the tops of their lungs a warning, and a
battle cry
that had not been heard in over two thousand years. "Trollocs coming!
Up
axes and clear the field! Trollocs coming!"
"… so I will take care of Tear, Logain. while you-" Abruptly Rand
wrinkled his nose. It was not that he actually smelled a rotting midden
heap
suddenly, but he felt as if he did, and the feeling was getting
stronger.
"Shadowspawn,"
Cadsuane said quietly, putting down her embroidery and rising. His skin
tingled
as she embraced the Source. Or maybe it was Alivia, walking briskly
toward the
windows after the Green sister. Min stood, drawing a pair of throwing
knives
from her coatsleeves.
At
the same instant, through the thick walls, he faintly heard Ogier
shouting.
There was no mistaking those deep, drumlike voices. "Trollocs coming!
Up
axes and clear the field!"
With
an oath, he leaped to his feet and ran to a window. Trollocs in the
thousands
came running through the light rain across the newly planted fields,
Trollocs
as tall as Ogier and taller. Trollocs with rams' horns and goats'
horns,
wolves' snouts, boars' snouts, Trollocs with eagles' beaks and crests
of
feathers, muddy earth splashing beneath boots and hooves and paws.
Silent as
death they ran. Black-clad Myrddraal galloped behind them, cloaks
hanging as if
they were standing still. He could see thirty or forty. How many more
on other
sides of the house?
Others
had heard the Ogier's cries, or maybe just looked out a window.
Lightning began
to fall among the charging Trollocs, silvery bolts that struck with a
roar and
hurled huge bodies in every direction. In other places, the ground
erupted in
flames, fountaining dirt and parts of Trollocs, heads, arms, legs
wheeling
through the air. Balls of fire struck them and exploded, each killing
dozens.
But on they ran, as fast as horses if not faster. Rand could not see
the weaves
that drew some of those lightning bolts. Now that they were discovered,
the
Trollocs began to shout, a wordless roar of rage. In the thatch-roofed
outbuildings, large sturdy barns and stables, some of Bashere's
Sal-daeans
stuck their heads out and quickly pulled them back again. drawing the
doors
shut behind them.
"You
told your Aes Sedai they could channel to defend themselves?" he said
calmly.
"Do
I look fool enough not to?" Logain snarled. At another window, he
already
held saidin, nearly as much as Rand could draw. He was weaving as fast
as he
could. "Do you intend to help or just watch. my Lord Dragon?" There
was entirely too much sarcasm in that, but now was not the time to
bring it up.
Drawing
a deep breath. Rand gripped the casement on either side of the window
against
the dizziness that would come-the Dragons' golden-maned heads on the
backs of
his hands seemed to writhe-and reached out to seize the Power. His head
spun as
saidin flooded into him, icy flames and crumbling mountains, a chaos
trying to
pull him under. But blessedly clean. He still felt the wonder of that.
His head
spun and his stomach wanted to empty itself, the odd illness that
should have
gone with the taint, yet that was not why he clung to the casement even
harder.
The One Power filled him-but in that moment of dizziness, Lews Therin
had
seized it away from him. Numb with horror, he stared at the Trollocs
and
Myrddraal racing toward the outbuildings. With the Power in him, he
could make
out the pins fastened to massive mailed shoulders. The silver whirlwind
of the
Ahf'frait band and the blood-red trident of the Ko'bal. The forked
lightning of
the Ghraem'lan and the hooked axe of the Al'ghol. The iron fist of the
Dhai'mon
and the red, bloodstained fist of the Kno'-mon. And there were skulls.
The
horned skull of the Dha'vol and the piled human skulls of the
Ghar'ghael and
the skull cloven by a scythe-curved sword of the Dhjin'nen and the
dagger-pierced skull of the Bhan'sheen. Trollocs liked skulls, if they
could be
said to like anything. It seemed the twelve principal bands might all
be
involved, and some of the lesser. He saw pins he did not recognize.
What seemed
a staring eye. a dagger-pierced hand, a man-shape wrapped in flames.
They
neared the outbuildings, where swords were beginning to thrust through
the
thatch as the Saldaeans tried to cut ways onto the roofs. Thatch was
tough.
They would need to work desperately hard. Odd, the thoughts that came
when a
madman who wanted to die might well kill you in the next heartbeat.
Flows
of Air pushed the casement in front of him out in a shower of shattered
glass and
fragmented wood. My hands. Lews Therin panted. Why can't I move my
hands? 1
need to raise my hands! Earth, Air and Fire went into a weave Rand did
not
know, six of them at once. Except that as soon as he saw the spinning,
he did
know. Blossom of Fire. Six vertical red shafts appeared among the
Trollocs, ten
feet tall and thinner than Rand's forearm. The nearest Trollocs would
be
hearing their shrill whine, but unless memories had been passed down
from the
War of the Shadow, they would not realize they were hearing death. Lews
Therin
spun the last thread of Air, and fire blossomed. With a roar that shook
the
manor house, each red shaft expanded in a heartbeat to a disc of flame
thirty
feet across. Horned heads and snouted heads flew into the air, and
pinwheeling
arms, booted legs and legs that ended in paws or hooves. Trollocs a
hundred
paces and more away from the explosions went down, and only some got up
again.
Even as he was spinning those webs. Lews Therin spun six others, Spirit
touched
with Fire, the weave for a gateway, but then he added touches of Earth,
so, and
so. The familiar silvery-blue vertical streaks appeared, spaced out not
far
from the manor house, ground Rand knew well, rotating into-not
openings, but
the misty back of a gateway, four paces by four. Rather than remaining
open,
they rotated shut again, opening and shutting continuously. And rather
than
remaining fixed, they sped toward the Trollocs. Gateways and yet not.
Deathgates. As soon as the Deathgates began to move, Lews Therin
knotted the
webs, a loose knotting that would hold only for minutes before allowing
the
whole weave to dissipate, and began spinning again. More Deathgates,
more
Blossoms of Fire, rattling the walls of the house, blowing Trollocs
apart,
flinging them down. The first of the speeding Deathgates struck the
Trollocs
and carved through them. It was not just the slicing edge of the
constantly
opening and closing gateways. Where a Deathgate passed. there simply
were no
Trollocs remaining. My hands! the madman howled. My hands!
Slowly
Rand raised his hands, stuck them through the opening. Immediately Lews
Therin
wove Fire and Earth in intricate combination, and red filaments flashed
from
Rand's fingertips, ten from each. fanning out. Arrows of Fire. this. He
knew.
As soon as those vanished. more appeared, so fast that they seemed to
flicker
rather than actually go away. Trollocs struck by the filaments jerked
as flesh
and blood. heated in a flash beyond boiling, erupted, jerked and fell,
holes
blown entirely through their thick bodies. Often, two or three behind
fell
victim as well before a filament died. He spread his fingers and moved
his
hands slowly from side to side, spreading death across the whole line.
Blossoms
of Fire appeared that were not his weaving, and Death-gates, slightly
smaller
than Lews Therin's, and Arrows of Fire that must have been Logains. The
other
Asha'man were paying attention, but few would be where they could see
those
last two webs spun.
Trollocs
fell by the hundreds, the thousands, riven by lightning bolts and balls
of
fire. Blossoms of Fire and Deathgates and Arrows of Fire, the earth
itself
exploding beneath their feet, yet on they raced. roaring and waving
their
weapons, Myrddraal riding close behind, black-bladed swords in hand. As
they reached
the outbuildings, some of the Trollocs surrounded them, pounding on the
doors
with their fists, prying at the boards or the walls with their swords
and
spears, tossing flaming torches onto the thatched roofs. Saldaeans up
there,
working their horsebows as fast they could, kicked the torches back
down, but
some hung up on the edges of the roof, and flames began catching even
on damp
thatch.
The
fires. Rand thought at Lews Therin. The Saldaeans will burn! Do
something!
Lews
Therin made no reply, only wove death as fast as he could and hurled it
at the
Trollocs, Deathgates and Arrows of Fire. A Myrddraal, riddled by half a
dozen
red filaments, was flung from its saddle, then another. A third lost
its head
to an Arrow of Fire in an explosion of boiled blood and flesh, but that
one
rode on, waving its sword, as if it did not know it was dead. Rand was
seeking
them out. If the Myrddraal were all killed, the Trollocs might well
turn and
run.
Deathgates
and Arrows of Fire only, Lews Therin spun now. The mass of Trollocs was
too
close to the manor house for Blossoms of Fire. Some of the Asha'man
apparently
did not realize that right away. The room shook to great booms, the
whole manor
house shook, as if struck by huge sledgehammers, shook as though about
to shake
apart, and then there were no more explosions, except where a fireball
erupted
or the ground itself exploded to throw Trollocs like broken toys. The
sky
seemed to rain lightning. Silver-blue bolts struck continuously so
close to the
house that the hair on Rand's arms and chest tried to lift, the hair on
his
head.
Some
of the Trollocs succeeded in forcing open the doors to one of the barns
and
began flooding inside. He shifted his hands, cutting down those still
outside
with flickering red filaments that blew holes in them. Some had managed
to get
inside, but those the Saldaeans would have to deal with themselves. On
another
barn and a stable. flames were beginning to ripple up the thatch, men
coughing
from the acrid smoke as they shot their bows.
Listen
to me, Lews Therin. The fire. You must do something!
Lews
Therin said nothing, just spun his webs to kill Trollocs and Myrddraal.
"Logain,"
Rand shouted. "The fires! Put them out!"
The
other man did not answer either, but Rand saw the weaves that pulled
the heat
from the flames, killing them. They just vanished. leaving behind cold
blackened thatch where not even tendrils of smoke rose. Death walked
among the
Trollocs, but they were so close that even the explosions of fireballs
rattled
the house, now.
Suddenly
there was a Myrddraal afoot beside the window, pale eyeless face as
calm as an
Aes Sedai's, black sword already stabbing toward him. Two thrown Aiel
spears
took it in the chest, and a throwing knife blossomed in its throat, but
it only
staggered before resuming the thrust. Rand bunched his fingers
together, and
just before the blade reached him, a hundred Arrows of Fire ripped
through the
Myrddraal. flinging it back twenty paces to lie riddled and leaking
black blood
onto the ground. Myrddraal seldom died right away, but this one never
twitched.
Hurriedly,
Rand searched for more targets, but he realized that Lews Therin had
stopped
channeling. He could still feel the goose bumps that told him Cadsuane
and
Alivia held the Power, still feel saidin in Logain. but the other man
was
weaving no more webs either. Outside, the ground lay carpeted with
bodies and
parts of bodies from the fields almost to the manor house walls. Within
paces
of them. A few horses belonging to Myrddraal still stood, one holding
up a
foreleg as if it were broken. A headless Myrddraal staggered about,
flailing
wildly with its sword, and here and there a Trolloc jerked or tried to
lift
itself and failed, but nothing else moved.
It's
done, he thought. It's done. Lews Therin. You can release saidin now.
Harilin
and Enaila were standing on the table, veiled and spears in hand. Min
stood
beside them, her face grim, a throwing knife in either hand. The bond
was full
of fear, and not for herself, he suspected. They had saved his life,
but he had
to save it himself, now.
"A
close run thing," Logain muttered. "If this had happened before I
arrived… A close-run thing." He gave himself a shake and released the
Source, turning away from his glassless window. "Did you intend keeping
these
new weaves for your favorites, like Taim? Those gateways. Where did we
send
those Trollocs? I just copied your weave exactly."
"It
doesn't matter where they went," Rand said absently. His attention was
focused on Lews Therin. The madman, the bloody voice in his head, drew
a little
deeper on the Power. Let go. man. "Shadowspawn can't survive passing
through a gateway."
I
want to die, Lews Therin said. I want to join llyena.
If
you really wanted to die, why did you kill Trollocs? Rand thought. Why
kill
that Myrddraal? People will find groups of dead Trollocs and maybe
Myrddraal
without a mark on them," he said aloud.
I
seem to remember dying. Lews Therin murmured. I remember how I did it.
He drew
deeper still, and small pains grew in Rand's temples.
"Not
too many in any one place, though. The destination shifts every time a
Deathgate opens." Rand rubbed at his temples. That pain was a warning.
He
was close to the amount of saidin he could hold without dying or being
burnt
out. You can't die yet, he told Lews Therin. We have to reach Tarmon
Gai'don or
the world dies.
"A
Deathgate," Logain said, his voice tinged with distaste. "Why are you
still holding the Power?'- he asked suddenly. "And so much. If you're
trying to show me that you're stronger than I am, I already know it. I
saw how
large your… your Deathgates were compared to mine. And I'd say you're
holding every drop of saidin that you can safely."
That
certainly caught everyone's attention. Min tucked her knives away and
leapt
down from the table, the bond suddenly so full of fear it seemed to
throb with
it. Harilin and Enaila exchanged worried glances, then went back to
staring out
the windows. They did not trust Trollocs to be dead until the corpses
were
three days buried. Alivia took a step toward him, frowning, but he
shook his
head slightly, and she turned back to her window, though her frown
remained.
Cadsuane
glided down the room, her smooth face sternly composed. "What does he
feel?" she demanded of Min. "Don't toy with me, girl. You know the
cost of that. I know that he bonded you, and you know I know. Is he
afraid?"
"He's
never afraid," Min said. "Except for me or…" She set her
jaw stubbornly and folded her arms beneath her breasts, fixing Cadsuane
with a
glare that dared the Green sister to do her worst. By the tangled mix
of
emotions ranging from fear to shame that she tried to keep out of the
bond and
failed, she had some idea of what Cadsuane's worst could be.
"I'm
standing under your nose." Rand said. "If you want to know how I
feel, ask me." Lews Therin? he thought. There was no answer. and the
saidin filling him did not slacken. His temples began to throb.
"Well?"
Cadsuane said impatiently.
"I
feel right as well water." Lews Therin? "But I have a rule for you.
Cadsuane. Don't threaten Min again. In fact, leave her alone
altogether."
"Well.
well. The boy shows some teeth." Golden birds and fish, stars and
moons,
swayed as she shook her head. "Just don't show too many. And you might
ask
the young woman whether she wants your protection." Strangely. Min had
shifted her frown to him, and the bond was threaded with irritation.
Light, it
was bad enough that she did not like him worrying about her. Now she
seemed to
want to take on Cadsuane single-handed, something he would not be eager
to do
himself.
We
can die at Tarmon Gai'don, Lews Therin said, and suddenly, the Power
drained
out of him.
"He
released," Logain said, as if he were suddenly on Cadsuane's side.
"I
know." she told him. He whipped his head around in surprise.
"Min
can deal with you in your own way if she wishes," Rand said starting
for
the door. "But don't threaten her." Yes, he thought. We can die at
Tarmon Gai'don.
CHAPTER TWENTY
The Golden Crane
The
wind had died away as the rain diminished, but gray clouds still hid
the sun.
The fine drizzle was enough to dampen Rand's
hair, however, and begin soaking into his gold-embroidered black coat
as he
walked through the dead Trollocs. Logain had spun a shield of Air so
that
raindrops bounced from it or apparently slid down nothing to cascade
around
him, but Rand refused to risk Lews
Therin
seizing saidin again. The man had said he could wait until the Last
Battle to
die. but how far could you trust a madman on anything?
Madman?
Lews Therin whispered. Am I any madder than you? He cackled with wild
laughter.
Now
and then Nandera looked over her shoulder at Rand.
A tall. sinewy woman, her graying hair hidden beneath her brown shoufa,
she led
the Maidens, those on this side of the Dragonwall, at least, but she
had chosen
to lead his bodyguard of Maidens personally. Her green eyes, all he
could see
of her sun-dark face above her black veil, carried little expression,
yet he
was sure she was worried over him not protecting himself from the rain.
Maidens
noticed what seemed out of the ordinary. He hoped she would keep quiet.
You
have to trust me. Lews Therin said. Trust me. Oh, Light, I'm pleading
with a
voice in my head! I must be mad.
Nandera
and the rest of the fifty veiled Maidens made a large ring around Rand, almost shoulder-to-shoulder, prodding
their spears
into every Trolloc and Myrddraal they passed, casually stepping over
huge
severed arms and legs, severed heads bearing horns or tusks or sharp
teeth.
Occasionally a Trolloc groaned or feebly tried to crawl away-or to
lunge at
them, snarling-but not for long. War with Trollocs was like war with
rabid
dogs. You killed them, or they killed you. There was no parley, no
surrender,
no middle ground.
Rain
had kept the vultures away so far, yet crows and ravens flapped
everywhere,
black feathers glistening wetly, and if any were the Dark One's eyes,
it did
not stop them alighting to pluck out Trollocs' eyes or see whether they
could
wrench loose some other gobbet. Enough of the Trollocs had been torn
apart that
the birds had rich feasting. None went near any dead Myrddraal, though,
and
they shunned Trollocs too near a Myrddraal. That indicated nothing
beyond
caution. Very likely the Myrddraal smelled wrong to the birds. A
Myrddraal's
blood would etch steel if left on it very long. To ravens and crows, it
must
have smelled like poison.
The
surviving Saldaeans shot the birds with arrows or skewered them on
their
sinuously curved swords or simply bludgeoned them with shovels or hoes
or
rakes, anything that could make a handy club)-in the Borderlands,
leaving a
crow or raven alive was unthinkable; there, they were all too often the
Dark
One's eyes-yet there were too many. Hundreds of black-feathered shapes
lay
crumpled among the Trollocs, and for every corpse there seemed to be
hundreds
more squabbling loudly over the softer bits, including pieces of their
dead
fellows. The Asha'man and Aes Sedai had long since given up trying to
kill them
all.
"I
don't like my men tiring themselves this way," Logain said. His men.
"Or the sisters, for that matter. Gabrelle and Toveine will be near
exhaustion by nightfall." He had bonded the two Aes Sedai, so he should
know. "What if there's another attack?"
All
around the manor house and outbuildings brief fires flared, so hot that
people
shielded their eyes against them, as Aes Sedai and Asha'man incinerated
Trolloc
and Myrddraal dead where they lay. There were too many to afford the
labor of
gathering them into heaps. With fewer than twenty Aes Sedai. fewer than
a dozen
Asha'man. and maybe a hundred thousand Trollocs. it was going to be a
long job.
Very likely, before it was done the stench of decay would be added to
the
already foul odors in the air. the fetid, coppery smell of Shadowspawn
THE
GOLDEN CRANE
i7
blood, the stink of whatever had been in the Trollocs' intestines when
they
were ripped open. Best not to think too closely on that. There might
not be a
farmer or villager left alive between the manor house and the Spine of
the
World. That had to be where the Trollocs had come from, the Waygate
outside
Stedding Shangtai. At least Loial's home itself was safe. Neither
Trollocs nor
Myrddraal would enter a stedding unless driven, and it required
considerable
driving.
"Would
you rather let them rot where they are?" Cadsuane inquired, sounding as
if
she herself had no preference in the matter. She held her green skirts
up so
the silk did not trail in the blood-soaked mud or the offal that
littered the
ground, yet she stepped over legs and around heads as casually as did
the
Maidens. She also had woven a parasol against the rain, as had Alivia,
although
not until she saw the Green do so. Rand had tried to make the sisters
sworn to
him teach the Seanchan woman more about the Power, but to their minds,
that had
nothing to do with their oaths of fealty. She was safe to herself and
seemed
safe to others, and they were content to leave matters as they were.
Nynaeve
had refused, too, because of Min's viewing. Cadsuane had coolly
informed him
that she was not in the business of instructing wilders.
"This
truly would be a charnel house then," Min said. Her walk had a fetching
sway to it, though she was plainly trying not to think of what lay
underfoot
while avoiding planting a heeled blue boot on any of it at the same
time, and
that made her stumble now and again. She was getting wet, too. her
ringlets
beginning to cling to her head, though the bond carried no hint of
vexation.
Only anger, and that seemed directed at Logain from the sharp stare she
was
giving him. "Where would the servants go, and the people who work the
fields and stables and barns? How would they live?"
"There
won't be another attack." Rand said. "Not until whoever sent this one
learns it failed, and maybe not then. This is all they sent. The
Myrddraal wouldn't
have attacked piecemeal." Logain grunted, but he could not argue with
that.
Rand
looked back toward the manor house. In some places, dead Trollocs lay
right at
the foundations. None had made it inside, but… Logain was right, he
thought, surveying the carnage. It had been a close-run thing. Minus
the
Asha'man and Aes Sedai Logain had brought, the end might well have been
different. A very close-run thing. And if there was another attack,
later…
? Plainly someone knew Ishamaei's trick. Or that blue-eyed man in his
head
really could locate him. Another attack would be larger. That, or come
from
some unexpected direction. Perhaps he should let Logain bring a few
more
Asha'man.
Yon
should have killed them, Lews Therin wept. Too late. now. Too late.
The
Source is clean now, fool. Rand thought.
Yes,
Lews Therin replied. But are they? Am I?
Rand
had wondered that about himself. Half of the double wound in his side
had come
from Ishamael, the other half from Padan Fain's dagger that carried the
taint
of Shadar Logoth. They often throbbed, and when they did. they seemed
alive.
The
circle of Maidens parted slightly to let through a white-haired serving
man
with a long sharp nose who looked even frailer than Ethin. He was
trying to
shelter beneath a two-tiered Sea Folk parasol missing half its fringe,
of all
things, but the aged blue silk had several ragged holes worn in it, so
small
rivulets fell on his yellow coat and one on his head. His thinning hair
clung
to his skull and dripped. He seemed wetter than if he had gone without.
Doubtless one of Algarin's forebears had obtained the thing somehow as
a
memento, but the obtaining must have been a story in itself. Rand
doubted the
Sea Folk gave up a clan Wavemistress's parasol lightly.
"My
Lord Dragon," the old man said with a bow that spilled more water down
his
back, "Verin Sedai instructed me to give this to you straightaway."
From beneath his coat, he produced a paper, folded and sealed.
Rand
hastily stuffed it into a pocket of his own coat against the rain. Ink
ran
easily. "Thank you, but it could have waited till I returned to the
house.
Best you get back inside before you're soaked through completely."
"She
did say straightaway, my Lord Dragon." The fellow sounded offended.
"She is Aes Sedai."
At
Rand's nod, he bowed again and started slowly back toward the manor
house, his
back stiff with pride, the parasol showering him with streams of water.
She was
Aes Sedai. Everyone hopped for Aes Sedai, even in Tear, where they were
not much
liked. What did Verin have to say that she needed to put in a letter?
Thumbing
the seal, Rand walked on.
His
destination was one of the barns, its thatched roof partially
blackened. This
was the barn the Trollocs had gotten into. A burly fellow in a rough
brown coat
and muddy boots, leaning against a jamb in the open doors, straightened
and for
some reason hastily looked inside over his shoulder as Rand approached,
the
Maidens spreading out to surround the barn.
He
stopped dead in the doorway. Min and the others halting beside him.
Logain
growled an oath. A pair of lanterns hanging from uprights that
supported the
loft gave a dim light, enough to see that every single surface was
thick with
crawling flies, even the straw-covered dirt floor. As many more buzzed
around
in the air, it seemed.
"Where
did they come from?" Rand asked. Algarin might not be wealthy, yet his
barns and stables were kept as clean as such places could be. The burly
man
gave a guilty start. He was younger than most of the servants in the
house, but
his head was bald halfway back, and creases bracketed his wide mouth,
fanned
out from his eyes.
"Don't
know, my Lord,'' he muttered, knuckling his forehead with a grimy hand.
He
focused on Rand so hard that it was plain he did not want to look into
the
barn. "I stepped to the door for a breath of fresh, and when I turned
around, they was all over everything. I thought… I thought maybe they's
dead flies."
Rand
shook his head in disgust. These flies were all too alive. Not every
Saldaean
defending this barn had died, but all of the Saldaean dead had been
gathered
here. Saldaeans disliked burials in rain. None of them could say why.
but you
just did not bury people while it was raining. Nineteen men lay in a
neat row
on the floor, as neat as it could be when some were missing limbs or
had their
heads split open. But they had been laid out carefully by their friends
and
companions, their faces washed, their eyes closed. They were why he had
come
there. Not to say goodbye or anything sentimental; he had not known any
of
these men more than to recognize a face here and there. He had come to
remind
himself that even what seemed a complete victory had its cost in blood.
Still,
they deserved better than to be crawling with flies.
I
need no reminders, Lews Therin growled.
I'm
not you. Rand thought. I have to harden myself. "Logain, get rid of
these
bloody things!" he said aloud.
You're
harder than I ever was, Lews Therin said. Suddenly he giggled. If
you're not
me, then who are you?
"Now
I'm a flaming fly-whisk?" Logain muttered.
Rand
rounded on him angrily, but Alivia spoke in that slurred drawl before
he could
get a word out.
"Let
me try, my Lord." She asked, in a manner of speaking, but like an Aes
Sedai, she did not await permission. His skin tingled with goose bumps
as she
embraced saidar and channeled.
Flies
always took shelter from even the lightest rain because one raindrop
was enough
to put a fly on the ground, easy prey until its wings dried off, yet
suddenly
the doorway was billowing with buzzing flies as if the rain were far
preferable
to the barn. The air seemed solid with them. Rand batted flies away
from his
face, and Min covered her face with her hands, the bond heavy with
distaste,
but they were interested only in flight. In moments, they were all
gone. The
balding man, staring at Alivia with his mouth hanging open, suddenly
coughed
and spat out two flies onto his hand. Cadsuane gave him a look that
snapped his
mouth shut and sent his rough knuckle flying to his forehead. Just a
look, yet
she was who she was.
"So
you watch," she said to Alivia. Her dark eyes were fixed on the
Seanchan
woman's face, but Alivia did not start or stammer. She was much less
impressed
by Aes Scdai than most people.
"And
remember what I see. I must learn somehow if I am to help the Lord
Dragon. I
have learned more than you are aware of." Min made a sound in her
throat,
very nearly a growl, and the bond swelled with anger, but the
yellow-haired
woman ignored her. "You are not angry with me?" she asked Rand, her
voice anxious.
"I'm
not angry. Learn as much as you can. You're doing very well."
She
blushed and dropped her eyes like a girl startled by an unexpected
compliment.
Fine lines decorated the corners of her eyes, but sometimes it was hard
to
remember that she was a hundred years older than any living Aes Sedai,
rather
than half a dozen years younger than himself. He had to find someone to
teach
her more.
"Rand
al'Thor," Min said angrily, folding her arms beneath her breasts,
"you are not going to let that woman-"
"Your
viewings are never wrong," he broke in. "What you see always happens.
You've tried to change things, and it never worked. You told me so
yourself,
Min. What makes you think this time can be different?"
"Because
it has to be different." she told him fiercely. She leaned toward him
as
though ready to launch herself at him. "Because I want it to be
different.
Because it will be different. Anyway, I don't know about everything
I've seen.
People move on. I was wrong about Moiraine. I saw all sorts of things
in her
future, and she's dead. Maybe some of the other things I saw never came
true
either."
I
must not be different this time. Lews Therin panted. You promised!
A
faint scowl appeared on Logain's face, and he shook his head slightly.
He could
not like hearing Min question her ability. Rand almost regretted
telling him
about her viewing of him, though it had seemed harmless encouragement
at the
time. The man had actually asked Aes Seclai to confirm Min's ability,
though he
had been wise enough to try to keep his doubting from Rand.
"I
cannot see what makes this young woman so vehement for you, boy,"
Cadsuane
mused. She pursed her lips in thought, then shook her head, ornaments
swaying.
"Oh, you re pretty enough, I suppose, but I just cannot see it."
To
avoid another argument with Min-she did not call them that; she called
them
"talking," but he knew the difference-Rand took out Verin's letter
and broke the blob of yellow sealing wax impressed with the head of a
Great
Serpent ring. The Brown sister's spidery hand covered most of the page,
a few
letters blotted where raindrops had soaked the paper. He walked closer
to the
nearest lantern. It gave off a faint stink of spoiled oil.
As
I said, I have done what I can do here. I believe that I can fulfill my
oath to
you better elsewhere, so 1 have taken Tomas and gone to be about it.
There are
many ways to serve you, after all, and many needs. I am convinced that
you can
trust Cadsuane, and you certainly should heed her advice, but be wary
of other
sisters, including those who have sworn fealty to you. Such an oath
means
nothing to a Black sister, and even those who walk in the Light may
interpret
it in ways you would disapprove of. You already know that few see that
oath as
invoking absolute obedience in all things. Some may find other holes.
So
whether or not you follow Cadsuane's advice. and I repeat that you
should,
follow mine. Be very wary.
It
was signed simply, "Verin."
He
grunted sourly. Few thought the oath meant absolute obedience? It was
more like
none. They obeyed, usually, yet the letter was not always the spirit.
Take
Verin herself. She warned him against the
others doing things he might disapprove of, but she had not said where
she was going or what she intended to do there. Was she afraid he might
not
approve? Maybe it was just Aes Sedai concealment. Sisters kept secrets
as
naturally as they breathed.
When
he held out the letter to Cadsuane, her left eyebrow twitched slightly.
She
must have been truly startled to show so much, but she took the letter
and held
it where the lantern's light illuminated it.
"A
woman of many masks," she said finally, handing the page back. "But
she gives good advice here."
What
did she mean about masks? He was about to ask her when Loial and Elder
Haman
suddenly appeared in the doorway, each carrying a long-handled axe,
with an
ornately decorated head, on his shoulder. The white-haired Ogier's
tufted ears
were laid back, his face grim, and Loial's ears were flickering. With
excitement, Rand guessed. It could be difficult to tell.
"I
trust we are not interrupting?" Elder Haman said, his ears rising as he
looked sadly at the line of bodies.
"You
are not," Rand told him. sticking the letter back in his pocket. "I
wish I could come to your wedding, Loial, but-"
"Oh,
that's done, Rand," Loial said. He must be excited: it was unlike him
to
interrupt. "My mother insisted. There won't even be time for much of a
wedding feast, maybe none, what with the Stump and me having to-" The
older Ogier laid a hand on his arm. "What?" Loial said, looking at
him. "Oh. Yes. Of course. Well." He scrubbed under his broad nose
with a finger the size of a fat sausage.
Something
he was not supposed to be told? Even Ogier had secrets, it seemed. Rand
fingered the letter in his pocket. But then, so did everyone else.
"I
promise you this, Rand," Loial said. "Whatever happens, I will be
there with you at Tarmon Gai'don. Whatever happens."
"My
boy," Elder Haman murmured, "I don't think you should…" He
trailed off. shaking his head and rumbling under his breath, like a
distant
earthquake.
Rand
crossed the straw in three strides and offered his right hand. Smiling
widely,
and with an Ogier that meant very wide, Loial took it in a hand that
enveloped
his. This close, Rand had to crane his neck to look up at his friend's
face.
"Thank you, Loial. I can't tell you how much hearing that means to me.
But
I'll need you before then."
"You… need me?"
"Loial,
I've sealed the Waygates I know, in Caemlyn and Cairhien, Illian and
Tear, and
I put a very nasty trap on the one that was cut open near Fal Dara, but
I
couldn't find the one near Far Madding. Even when I know there's a
Waygate
actually in a city, I can't find it by myself, and then there are all
those
cities that don't exist anymore. I need you to find the rest for me,
Loial, or
Trollocs will be able to flood into every country at once, and no one
will know
they're coming until they're in the heart of Andor or Cairhien."
Loial's
smile vanished. His ears trembled and his eyebrows drew down till the
ends lay
on his cheeks. "I can't. Rand," he said mournfully. "1 must
leave first thing tomorrow morning, and I don't know when I'll be able
to come
Outside again."
"I
know you've been out of the stedding a long time, Loial." Rand tried to
make his voice gentle, but it came out hard. Gentleness seemed a fading
memory.
"I'll speak to your mother. I'll convince her to let you leave after
you've had a little rest."
"He
needs more than a little rest." Elder Haman planted the butt of his axe
haft on the floor, gripping the axe with both hands, and directed a
stern look
at Rand. Ogier were peaceful folk, yet he looked anything but. "He has
been Outside more than five years, far too long. He needs weeks of rest
in a
stedding at the least. Months would be better."
"My
mother doesn't make those decisions anymore, Rand. Though truth to
tell, I
think she's still surprised to realize it. Erith does. My wife.' His
booming
voice put so much pride into that word that he seemed ready to burst
with it.
His chest certainly swelled, and his smile split his face in two.
"And
I haven't even congratulated you." Rand said, clapping him on the
shoulder. His attempt at heartiness sounded false in his own ears, but
it was
the best he could manage. "If you need months, then months you shall
have.
But 1 still need an Ogier to find those Way-gates. In the morning, I'll
take
you all to Stedding Shangtai myself. Maybe I can convince someone there
to do
the job." Elder Haman shifted his frown to his hands on the axe haft
and
began muttering again, too softly to make out words, like a bumblebee
the size
of a huge mastiff buzzing in an immense jar in the next room. He seemed
to be
arguing with himself.
"That
might take time." Loial said doubtfully. "You know we don't like to
make hasty decisions. I'm not certain they will even let a human into
the
stedding, because of the Stump. Rand? If I can't come back before the
Last
Battle… You will answer my questions about what happened while I was in
the stedding, won't you? I mean, without making me drag everything out
of
you?"
"If
I can, I will," Rand told him.
If
you can, Lews Therin snarled. You agreed we could finally die at
Tar-mon
Gai'don. You agreed, madman!
"He'll
answer questions to your heart's delight, Loial," Min said firmly,
"if I have to stand over him the whole while." Anger suffused the
bond. She really did seem to know what he was thinking.
Elder
Haman cleared his throat. "It seems to me that I myself am more
accustomed
to Outside than almost anyone except the stonemasons. Um. Yes. In fact,
I think
I am likely to be the best candidate for your task."
"Phaw!"
Cadsuane said. "It seems you infect even Ogier, boy." Her tone was
stern, but her face was all Aes Sedai composure, unreadable, hiding
whatever
was passing behind those dark eyes.
Loial's
ears went rigid with shock, and he almost dropped his axe. fumbling to
catch
it. "You? But the Stump, Elder Haman! The Great Stump!"
"I
believe I can safely leave that in your hands, my boy. Your words were
simple
yet eloquent. Um. Um. My advice is, don't try for beauty. Keep the
simple
eloquence, and you may surprise quite a few. Including your mother.''
It
seemed impossible that Loial's ears could grow any stiffer. but they
did. His
mouth moved, but no words came out. So he was to speak to the Stump.
What was
so secret about that?
"My
Lord Dragon, Lord Davram has returned." It was Elza Penfell who
escorted
Bashere into the barn. She was a handsome woman in a dark green riding
dress;
her brown eyes seemed to grow feverish when they found Rand. She, at
least, was
one he did not have to worry about. Elza was fanatical in her devotion.
"Thank
you. Elza." he said. "Best you return to help with the cleanup.
There's a long way to go. yet."
Her
mouth tightened slightly, and her gaze took in everyone from Cadsuane
to the
Ogier with an air of jealousy before she offered a curtsy and left.
Yes,
fanatical was the word.
Bashere
was a short, slender man in a gold-worked gray coat with the ivory
baton of the
Marshal-General of Saldaea, tipped with a golden wolfs head, tucked
behind his
belt opposite his sword. His baggy trousers were tucked into
turned-down boots
that had been waxed till they shone despite a light splattering of mud.
His
recent work had required as much formality and dignity as he could
supply, and
he could supply a great deal. Even the Seanchan must have heard his
reputation
by now. Gray streaked his black hair and the thick mustaches that
curled around
his mouth like down-turned horns. Dark tilted eyes sad, he walked right
past
Rand with the rolling gait of a man more accustomed to a saddle than
his own
feet, walked slowly along the line of dead men, staring intently at
each face.
Impatient as Rand was, he gave him his time to mourn.
"I've
never seen anything like what's outside," Bashere said quietly as he
walked. "A big raid out of the Blight is a thousand Trollocs. Most are
only a few hundred. Ah, Kirkun. you never did guard your left the way
you
should. Even then, you need to outnumber them three or four times to be
assured
you won't go into their cookpots. Out there… I think I saw a
foreshadowing
of Tarmon Gai'don. A small part of Tar-mon Gai'don. Let's hope it
really is the
Last Battle. If we live through that, I don't think we'll ever want to
see
another. We will, though. There's always another battle. I suppose that
will be
the case until the whole world turns Tinker.'' At the end of the row.
he
stopped in front of a man whose lace was split almost down to his
luxuriant
black beard. "Ahzkan here had a bright future ahead of him. But you
could
say the same of a lot of dead men."
Sighing
heavily, he turned to face Rand. "The Daughter of the Nine Moons will
meet
you in three days at a manor house in northern Altara, near the border
of
Andor." He touched the breast of his coat. "I have a map. She's
already near there somewhere, but they say it isn't in lands they
control. When
it comes to secrecy, these Seanchan make Aes Sedai look as open as
village
girls." Cadsuane snorted.
"You
suspect a trap?" Logain eased his sword in its scabbard, perhaps
unconsciously.
Bashere
made a dismissive gesture, but he eased his sword, too. "I always
suspect
a trap. It isn't that. The High Lady Suroth still didn't want me or
Manfor to
talk to anyone but her. Not anyone. Our servants were mutes, just as
when we
went to Ebou Dar with Loial."
"Mine
had had her tongue cut out," Loial said in tones of disgust, his ears
tilting back. His knuckles paled on the haft of his axe. Haman made a
shocked
sound, his ears going stiff as fence posts.
"Altara
just crowned a new King," Bashere went on, "but everybody in the
Tarasin Palace seemed to be walking on eggshells and looking over their
shoulders,
Seanchan and Altaran alike. Even Suroth looked as though she felt a
sword
hovering above her neck."
"Maybe
they're frightened of Tarmon Gai'don," Rand said. "Or the Dragon
Reborn. I'll have to be careful. Frightened people do stupid things.
What are the
arrangements, Bashere?"
The
Saldaean pulled the map from inside his coat and walked back to Rand
unfolding
it. "They're very precise. She will bring six sul'dam and damane, but
no
other attendants." Alivia made a noise like an angry cat, and he
blinked
before going on. no doubt uncertain of a freed damane, to say the
least.
"You can bring five people who can channel. She'll assume any man with
you
can. but you can bring a woman who can't to make the honors even."
Min
was suddenly at Rand's side, wrapping her arm around his.
"No,"
he said firmly. He was not about to take her into a possible trap.
"We'll
talk about it," she murmured, the bond filling with stubborn resolve.
The
most dire words a woman can say short of "I'm going to kill you,"
Rand thought. Suddenly he felt a chill. Had it been him? Or Lews
Therin? The
madman chuckled softly in the back of his head. No matter. In three
days, one
difficulty would be resolved. One way or another. "What else,
Bashere?"
Lifting
the damp cloth that lay across her eyes, carefully so she did not catch
the
bracelet-and-rings angreal in her hair-she wore that and her jeweled
ter'angreal every waking moment now-Nynaeve sat up on the edge of her
bed. With
men needing Healing from dreadful wounds, some missing a hand or an
arm, it had
seemed petty to ask Healing for a headache, but the willow bark seemed
to have
worked as well. Only more slowly. One of her rings, set with a pale
green stone
that now appeared to glow with a faint internal light, seemed to
vibrate continually
on her finger though it did not really move. The pattern of vibrations
was
mixed, a reaction to saidar and saidin being channeled outside. For
that
matter, someone could have been channeling inside. Cadsuane was sure it
should
be able to indicate direction, but she could not say how. Ha! for
Cadsuane and
her supposed superior knowledge!
She
wished she could say that to the woman's face. It was not that Cadsuane
intimidated her-certainly not; she stood above Cadsuane- just that she
wanted
to maintain some degree of harmony. That was the reason she held her
tongue
around the woman.
The
rooms she shared with Lan were spacious, but also drafty, with no
casement
fitting its window properly, and over the generations the house had
settled
enough that the doors had been trimmed so they could close all the way,
making
more gaps to let every breeze whistle through. The fire on the stone
hearth
danced as though it were outdoors, crackling and spitting sparks. The
carpet,
so faded she could no longer really make out the pattern, had more
holes burned
in it than she could count. The bed with its heavy bedposts and worn
canopy was
large and sturdy, but the mattress was lumpy, the pillows held more
feathers
that poked through than they did down, and the blankets seemed almost
more
darns than original material. But Lan shared the rooms, and that made
all the
difference. That made them a palace.
He
stood at one of the windows where he had been since the attack began,
staring
down now at the work going on outside. Or perhaps studying the
slaughter yard
the manor house grounds had become. He was so still, he might have been
a
statue, a tall man in a well-fitting dark green coat, his shoulders
broad
enough to make his waist appear slender, with the leather cord of his
hadori
holding back his shoulder-length hair, black tinged with white at the
temples.
A hard-faced man, yet beautiful. In her eyes he was, let anyone else
say what
they would. Only they had best not say it in her hearing. Even
Cadsuane. A ring
bearing a flawless sapphire was cold on her right hand. It seemed more
likely
he was feeling anger than hostility. That ring did have a flaw, in her
estimation. It was all very well to know someone nearby was feeling
angry or
hostile, but that did not mean the emotion was directed at you.
"It's
time for me to go back outside and lend a hand again,'' she said as she
stood.
"Not
yet," he told her without turning from the window. Ring or no ring, his
deep voice was calm. And quite firm. "Moiraine used to say a headache
was
sign she had been channeling too much. That's dangerous."
Her
hand strayed toward her braid before she could snatch it down again. As
if he
knew more about channeling than she! Well, in some ways he did. Twenty
years as
Moiraine's Warder had taught him as much as a man could know of saidar.
"My headache is completely gone. I'm perfectly all right now."
"Don't
be petulant, my love. There are only a few hours till twilight. Plenty
of work
will be left tomorrow.'' His left hand tightened on the hilt of his
sword,
relaxed, tightened. Only that hand moved.
Her
lips compressed. Petulant? She smoothed her skirt furiously. She was
not
petulant! He seldom invoked his right to command in private-curse those
Sea
Folk for ever thinking of such a thing!-but when he did, the man was
unbending.
Of course, she could go anyway. He would not try to stop her
physically. She
was certain of that. Fairly certain. Only she did not intend to violate
her
marriage vows in the slightest way. Even if she did want to kick her
beloved
husband's shins.
Kicking
her skirts instead, she went to stand beside him at the window and slip
her arm
through his. His arm was rock hard, though. His muscles were hard,
wonderfully
so, but this was the hardness of tension, as though he were straining
to lift a
great weight. How she wished she had his bond, to give her hints of
what was
troubling him. When she laid hands on Myrelle… No, best not to think of
that hussy! Greens! They simply could not be trusted with men!
Outside,
not far from the house, she could see a pair of those black-coated
Asha'man,
and the sisters bonded to them. She had avoided that whole lot as much
as
possible-the Asha'man for obvious reasons, the sisters because they
supported
Elaida-yet you could not spend time in the same house with people, even
a house
as large and rambling as Algarin's, and avoid coming to recognize them.
Arel
Malevin was a Cairhienin who seemed even wider than he actually was
because he
stood barely chest-high to Lan, Donalo Sandomere a Tairen with a garnet
in his
left ear and his gray-streaked beard trimmed to a point and oiled,
although she
doubted very much that his creased, leathery face belonged to a noble.
Malevin
had bonded Aisling Noon, a fierce-eyed Green who peppered her speech
with
Borderland oaths that sometimes made Lan wince. Nynaeve wished she
understood
them, but he refused to explain. Sandomere's captive was Ayako Norsoni,
a
diminutive White with wavy waist-length black hair who was nearly as
brown-skinned
as a Domani. She seemed shy, a rarity among Aes Sedai. Both women wore
their
fringed shawls. The captives almost always did, perhaps as gestures of
defiance. But then, they seemed to get on strangely well with the men.
Often
Nynaeve had seen them chatting companionably, hardly the behavior of
defiant
prisoners. And she suspected that Logain and Gabrelle were not the only
pair
sharing a bed outside wedlock. It was disgraceful!
Suddenly
fires bloomed below, six enveloping dead Trollocs in front of Malevin
and
Aisling, seven in front of Sandomere and Ayako, and she squinted
against the
blinding glare. It was like trying to look at thirteen noonday suns
blazing in
a cloudless sky. They were linked. She could tell from the way the
flows of
saidar moved, stiffly, as though they were being forced into place
rather than
guided. Or rather, the men were trying to force them. That never worked
with
the female half of the Power. It was pure Fire, and the blazes were
ferocious,
fiercer than she would have expected from Fire alone. But of course
they would
be using saidin as well, and who could say what they were adding from
that
murderous chaos? The little she could recall of being linked with Rand
left her
with no desire ever again to go near that. In just a few minutes the
fires
vanished, leaving only low heaps of grayish ash lying on seared earth
that
looked hard and cracked. That could not do the soil much good.
"You
can't find this very entertaining, Lan. What are you thinking?"
"Idle
thoughts," he said, his arm hard as stone beneath her hand. New fires
flared outside.
"Share
them with me." She managed to put a hint of question in that. He seemed
amused by the nature of their vows, yet he absolutely refused to follow
the
smallest instruction when they were alone. Requests, he granted
instantly-well,
most of the time-but the man would quietly leave his boots muddy till
the mud
flaked off if she told him not to track in mud.
"Unpleasant
thoughts, but if you wish. The Myrddraal and Trollocs make me think of
Tarmon
Gai'don."
"Unpleasant
thoughts, indeed."
Still
staring out the window, he nodded. There was no expression on his
face-Lan
could teach Aes Sedai about hiding emotions!-but a touch of heat
entered his
voice. "It's coming soon, Nynaeve, yet al'Thor seems to think he has
forever to dance with the Seanchan. Shadow-spawn could be moving down
through
the Blight while we stand here, down through-" His mouth snapped shut.
Down through Malkier, he had almost said, dead Malkier, the murdered
land of
his birth. She was sure of it. He went on as if he had not paused.
"They
could scrike at Shienar, at the whole Borderlands, next week, or
tomorrow. And
al'Thor sits weaving his Seanchan schemes. He should send someone to
convince
King Easar and the others to return to their duty along the Blight. He
should
be marshaling all the force he can gather and taking it to the Blight.
The Last
Battle will be there, and at Shayol Ghul. The war is there."
Sadness
welled up in her, yet she managed to keep it out of her voice. "You
have
to go back," she said quietly.
At
last he turned his head, frowning down at her. His clear blue eyes were
so
cold. They held less of death than they had, of that she was certain,
but they
were still so cold. "My place is with you, heart of my heart. Ever and
always."
She
gathered all of her courage and held on to it hard, so hard that she
ached. She
wanted to speak fast, to get the words out before courage failed, but
she
forced herself to a steady tone and an even pace. "A Borderland saying
I
heard from you once. 'Death is lighter than a feather, duty heavier
than a
mountain.' My duty lies here, making sure Alivia doesn't kill Rand. But
I will
take you to the Borderlands. Your duty lies there. You want to go to
Shienar?
You mentioned King Easar and Shienar. And it is close to Malkier."
He
looked down at her for a long time, but at last he exhaled softly, and
the
tension left his arm. "Are you sure, Nynaeve? If you are, then, yes,
Shienar. In the Trolloc Wars, the Shadow used Tarwin's Gap to move
large
numbers of Trollocs, just as it did a few years back, when we sought
the Eye of
the World. But only if you are completely sure."
No,
she was not sure. She wanted to cry, to scream at him that he was a
fool, that
his place was with her, not dying alone in a futile private war with
the
Shadow. Only, she could not say any of that. Bond or no bond, she knew
he was
torn inside, torn between his love of her and his duty, torn and
bleeding as
surely as if he had been stabbed with a sword. She could not add to his
wounds.
She could try to make sure he survived, though. "Would I make the offer
if
I wasn't sure?" she said dryly, surprised at how calm she sounded. "I
won't like sending you away, but you have your duty, and I have mine."
Wrapping
his arms around her, he hugged her to his chest, gently at first, then
harder,
until she thought he might squeeze all the air from her lungs. She did
not
care. She hugged him just as fiercely, and had to pry her hands from
his broad
back when she was done at last. Light, she wanted to weep. And knew she
must
not.
As
he began packing his saddlebags, she hurriedly changed into a riding
dress of
yellow-slashed green silk and stout leather shoes, then slipped from
the room
before he was done. Algarin's library was large, a square,
high-ceilinged room
lined with shelves. Haifa dozen cushioned chairs stood scattered around
the
floor, and a long table and a tall map-rack completed the furnishings.
The
stone hearth was cold and the iron stand-lamps unlit, but she channeled
briefly
to light three of them. A hasty search found the maps she needed in the
rack's
diamond-shaped compartments. They were as old as most of the books, yet
the
land did not change greatly in two or three hundred years.
When
she returned to their rooms, Lan was in the sitting room, saddlebags on
his
shoulder, Warder's color-shifting cloak hanging down his back. His face
was
still, a stone mask. She took only time to get her own cloak, blue silk
lined
with velvet, and they walked in silence, her right hand resting lightly
on his
left wrist, out to the dimly lit stable where their horses were kept.
The air
there smelled of hay and horses and horse dung, as it always did in
stables.
A
lean, balding groom with a nose that had been broken more than once
sighed when
Lan told him they wanted Mandarb and Loversknot saddled. A gray-haired
woman
began work on Nynaeve's stout brown mare, while three of the aging men
made a
job of getting Lan's tall black stallion bridled and out of his stall.
"I
want a promise from you," Nynaeve said quietly as they waited. Mandarb
danced in circles so that the plump fellow trying to lift the saddle
onto the
stallion's back had to run trying to catch up. "An oath. I mean it, Lan
Mandragoran. We aren't alone any longer."
"What
do you want my oath on?" he asked warily. The balding groom called for
two
more men to help.
"That
you'll ride to Fal Moran before you enter the Blight, and that if
anyone wants
to ride with you, you'll let him."
His
smile was small, and sad. "I've always refused to lead men into the
Blight, Nynaeve. There were times men rode with me, but I would not-"
"If
men have ridden with you before," she cut in, "men can ride with you
again. Your oath on it, or I vow I'll let you ride the whole long way
to
Shienar." The woman was fastening the cinches on Lovers-knot's saddle,
but
the three men were still struggling to get Man-darb's saddle on his
back, to
keep him from shaking off the saddle blanket.
"How
far south in Shienar do you mean to leave me?" he asked. When she said
nothing,
he nodded. "Very well, Nynaeve. If that's what you want. I swear it
under
the Light and by my hope of rebirth and salvation."
It
was very hard not to sigh with relief. She had managed it, and without
lying. She
was trying to do as Egwene wanted and behave as though she had already
taken
the Three Oaths on the Oath Rod. but it was very hard dealing with a
husband if
you could not lie even when it was absolutely necessary.
"Kiss
me," she told him. adding hastily, "That wasn't an order. I just want
to kiss my husband." A goodbye kiss. There would be no time for one
later.
"In
front of everyone?" he said, laughing. "You've always been so shy
about that."
The
woman was nearly done with Loversknot. and one of the grooms was
holding
Mandarb as steady as he could while the other two hurriedly buckled the
cinches.
"They're
too busy to see anything. Kiss me. or I'll think you're the one who's-"
His lips on hers shut off words. Her toes curled.
Some
time later, she was leaning on his broad chest to catch her breath
while he
stroked her hair. "Perhaps we can have one last night together in
Shienar." he murmured softly. "It may be some time before we're
together again, and I'll miss having my back clawed."
Her
face grew hot. and she pushed away from him unsteadily. The grooms were
done,
and staring very pointedly at the straw-covered floor, but they might
well be
close enough to overhear! "I think not.' She was proud that she did not
sound breathless. "I don't want to leave Rand alone with Alivia that
long."
"He
trusts her. Nynaeve. I don't understand it, but there it is, and that's
all
that matters."
She
sniffed. As if any man knew what was good for him.
Her
stout mare whickered uneasily as they rode among dead Trol-locs to a
patch of
ground not far from the stable that she knew well enough to weave a
gateway.
Mandarb, a trained warhorse, reacted not at all to the blood and the
stench and
the huge corpses. The black stallion seemed as calm as his rider, now
that Lan
was on his back. She could understand that. Lan had a very calming
effect on
her, too. Usually. Sometimes, he had exactly the opposite effect. She
wished
they could have one more night together. Her face grew hot again.
Dismounting,
she drew on saidar without using the angreal and wove a gateway just
tall
enough for her to lead Loversknot through onto grassland dotted with
thickets
of black-spotted beech and trees she did not recognize. The sun was a
golden
ball only a little down from its peak, yet the air was decidedly cooler
than in
Tear. Cold enough to make her gather her cloak, in fact. Mountains
topped with
snow and clouds rose to the east and north and south. As soon as Lan
was
through, she let the weave dissipate and immediately wove another
gateway,
larger, while she climbed into her saddle and settled the cloak around
her
again.
Lan
led Mandarb a few steps westward, staring. Land ended abruptly in what
was
obviously a cliff no more than twenty paces from him, and from there
ocean
stretched to the horizon. "What is the meaning of this?" he demanded,
turning back. "This isn't Shienar. It's World's End, in Saldaea, as far
from Shienar as you can get and still be in the Botderlands."
"I
told you I would take you to the Borderlands, Lan, and I have. Remember
your
oath, my heart, because I surely will." And with that she dug her heels
in
the mare's flanks and let the animal bolt through the open gateway. She
heard
him call her name, but she let the gateway close behind her. She would
give him
a chance to survive.
Only
a few hours past midday, less than half a dozen tables were occupied in
the
large common room of The Queen's Lance. Most of the well-dressed men
and women,
with clerks and bodyguards standing attentively behind them, were there
to buy
or sell ice peppers, which grew well in the foothills on the landward
side of
the Banikhan Mountains, called the Sea Wall by many in Saldaea. Weilin
Aldragoran had no interest in peppers. The Sea Wall had other crops,
and
richer.
"My
final price," he said, waving a hand over the table. Every finger bore
a
jeweled ring. Not large stones, but fine. A man who sold gems should
advertise.
He traded in other things as well-furs, rare woods for cabinetmakers,
finely
made swords and armor, occasionally other things that offered a good
return-but
gems brought in the greater part of his profit in any year. "I'll come
no
lower." The table was covered with a piece of black velvet, the better
to
show off a good portion of his stock. Emeralds, firedrops, sapphires,
and best
of all, diamonds. Several of those were large enough to interest a
ruler, and
none was small. None held a flaw, either. He was known throughout the
Borderlands for his flawless stones. "Accept it. or someone else
will."
The
younger of the two dark-eyed Illianers across from him, a clean-shaven
fellow
named Pavil Geraneos, opened his mouth angrily, but the older, Jeorg
Damentanis. his gray-streaked beard practically quivering, laid a fat
hand on
Geraneos' arm and gave him a horrified look. Aldragoran made no effort
to
conceal his smile, showing a little tooth.
He
had been only a toddler when the Trollocs swept down into Malkier, and
he had
no memories of that land at all-he seldom even thought of Malkier; the
land was
dead and gone-yet he was glad he had let his uncles give him the
badori. At
another table, Managan was in a shouting match with a dark Tairen woman
wearing
a lace ruff and rather inferior garnets in her ears, the pair of them
nearly
drowning out the young woman playing the hammered dulcimer on the low
platform
beside one of the tall stone fireplaces. That lean young man had
refused the
badori, as had Gorenellin, who was near Aldragoran's age. Gorenellin
was
bargaining hard with a pair of olive-skinned Altarans, one of whom had
a nice ruby
in his left ear, and there was sweat on Gorenellin's forehead. No one
shouted
at a man who wore the badori and a sword, as Aldragoran did, and they
tried to
avoid making him sweat. Such men carried a reputation for sudden,
unpredictable
violence. If he had seldom been forced to use the sword at his hip, it
was
widely known that he could and would.
"I
do accept, Master Aldragoran," Damentanis said, giving his companion a
sidelong glare. Not noticing. Geraneos bared his teeth in what he
probably
hoped Aldragoran would take for a smile. Aldragoran let it pass. He was
a
merchant, after all. A reputation was a fine thing when it enhanced
your
bargaining power, but only a fool went looking for fights.
The
Illianers' clerk, a weedy, graying fellow and also Illianer, unlocked
their
iron-strapped coin box under the watchful eyes of their two bodyguards,
bulky
men with those odd beards that left the upper lip bare, in leather
coats sewn
with steel discs. Each carried a sword and stout cudgel at his belt.
Aldragoran
had a clerk at his own back, a hard-eyed Saldaean who did not know one
end of a
sword from the other, but he never used bodyguards. Guards on his
premises, to
be sure, but not bodyguards. That only added its bit to his reputation.
And of
course, he had no need of them.
Once
Damentanis had endorsed two letters-of-rights and passed over three
leather
purses fat with gold-Aldragoran counted the coins but did not bother
weighing
them; some of those thick crowns from ten different lands would be
lighter than
others, yet he was willing to accept the inevitable loss-the Illianers
carefully gathered up the stones, sorting them into washleather purses
that
went into the coin box. He offered them more wine, but the stout man
declined
politely, and they departed with the bodyguards carrying the
iron-strapped box
between them. How they were to protect anything burdened so was beyond
him.
Kayacun was far from a lawless town, but there were more footpads
abroad than
usual of late, more footpads, more murderers, more arsonists, more of
every
sort of crime, not to mention madness of the sort a man just did not
want to
think on. Still, the gems were the Illianers' concern now.
Ruthan
had Aldragoran's coin box open-a pair of bearers were waiting outside
to carry
it-but he sat staring at the letters-of-rights and the purses. Half
again what
he had expected to get. Light coins from Altara and Murandy or no light
coins,
at least half again. This would be his most profitable year ever. And
all due
to Geraneos letting his anger show. Damentanis had been afraid to
bargain
further after that. A wonderful thing, reputation.
"Master
Aldragoran?" a woman said, leaning on the table. "You were pointed
out to me as a merchant with a wide correspondence by pigeon."
He
noticed her jewelry first, of course, a matter of habit. The slim
golden belt
and long necklace were set with very good rubies, as was one of her
bracelets,
along with some pale green and blue stones he did not recognize and so
dismissed as worthless. The golden bracelet on her left wrist, an odd
affair
linked to four finger rings by flat chains and the whole intricately
engraved,
held no stones, but her remaining two bracelets were set with fine
sapphires
and more of the green stones. Two of the rings on her right hand held
those
green stones, but the other two held particularly fine sapphires.
Particularly
fine. Then he realized she wore a fifth ring on that hand, stuck
against one of
the rings with a worthless stone. A golden serpent biting its own tail.
His
eyes jerked to her face, and he suffered his second shock. Her face,
framed by
the hood of her cloak, was very young, but she wore the ring, and few
were
foolish enough to do that without the right. He had seen young Aes
Scdai
before, two or three times. No, her age did not shock him. But on her
forehead,
she wore the ki'sain, the red dot of a married woman. She did not look
Malkieri. She did not sound Malkieri. Many younger folk had the accents
of
Saldaea or Kandor, Arafel or Shienar-he himself sounded of Saldaea-but
she did
not sound a Borderlander at all. Besides, he could not recall the last
time he
had heard of a Malkieri girl going to the White Tower. The Tower had
failed
Malkier in need, and the Malkieri had turned their backs on the Tower.
Still,
he stood hurriedly. With Aes Sedai, courtesy was always wise. Her dark
eyes
held heat. Yes. courtesy was wise.
"How
may I help you, Aes Sedai? You wish me to send a message for you via my
pigeons? It will be my pleasure." It was also wise to grant Aes Sedai
any
favors they asked, and a pigeon was a small favor.
"A
message to each merchant you correspond with. Tarmon Gai'-don is coming
soon."
He
shrugged uneasily. "That is nothing to do with me. Aes Sedai. I'm a
merchant." She was asking for a good many pigeons. He corresponded with
merchants as far away as Shienar. "But I will send your message." He
would, too. however many birds it required. Only stone-blind idiots
failed to
keep promises to Aes Sedai. Besides which, he wanted rid of her and her
talk of
the Last Battle.
"Do
you recognize this?" she said, fishing a leather cord from the neck of
her
dress.
His
breath caught, and he stretched out a hand, brushed a finger across the
heavy
gold signet ring on the cord. Across the crane in flight. How had she
come by
this? Under the Light, how? "I recognize it," he told her, his voice
suddenly hoarse.
"My
name is Nynaeve ti al'Meara Mandragoran. The message I want sent is
this. My
husband rides from World's End toward Tarwin's Gap. toward Tarmon
Gai'don. Will
he ride alone?"
He
trembled. He did not know whether he was laughing or crying. Perhaps
both. She
was his wife? "I will send your message, my Lady, but it has nothing to
do
with me. I am a merchant. Malkier is dead. Dead, I tell you."
The
heat in her eyes seemed to intensify, and she gripped her long, thick
braid
with one hand. "Lan told me once that Malkier lives so long as one man
wears the hadori in pledge that he will fight the Shadow, so long as
one woman
wears the ki'sain in pledge that she will send her sons to fight the
Shadow. I
wear the ki'sain. Master Aldrago-ran. My husband wears the hadori. So
do you.
Will Lan Mandragoran ride to the Last Battle alone?"
He
was laughing, shaking with it. And yet, he could feel tears
rolling down his cheeks. It was madness!
Complete madness! But he could not help himself. "He will not, my Lady.
I
cannot stand surety for anyone else, but I swear to you under the Light
and by
my hope of rebirth and salvation, he will not ride alone." For a
moment,
she studied his face, then nodded once firmly and turned away. He flung
out a
hand after her. "May I offer you wine, my Lady? My wife will want to
meet
you." Alida was Saldaean, but she definitely would want to meet the
wife
of the Uncrowned King.
"Thank
you. Master Aldragoran. but I have several more towns to visit today,
and I
must be back in Tear tonight."
He
blinked at her back as she glided toward the door gathering her cloak.
She had
several more towns to visit today, and she had to be back in Tear
tonight"! Truly, Aes Sedai were capable of marvels!
Silence
hung in the common room. They had not been keeping their voices low,
and even
the girl with the dulcimer had ceased plying her hammers. Everyone was
staring
at him. Most of the outlanders had their mouths hanging open.
"Well,
Managan, Gorenellin," he demanded, "do you still remember who you
are? Do you remember your blood? Who rides with me for Tarwin's Gap?"
For
a moment, he thought neither man would speak, but then Gorenellin was
on his
feet, tears glistening his eyes. "The Golden Crane flies for Tarmon
Gai'don," he said softly.
"The
Golden Crane flies for Tarmon Gai'don!" Managan shouted, leaping up so
fast he overturned his chair.
Laughing,
Aldragoran joined them, all three shouting at the top of their lungs.
"The
Golden Crane flies for Tarmon Gai'don!"
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Within the Stone
The
mud of the outer city gave way to paved streets at the walls of Tear,
where the
first thing Rand noticed was the
absence of
guards. Despite the lofty stone ramparts with their towers, the city
was less
defended than Stedding Shangtai. where he and every other human had
been gently
but firmly refused entrance at first light. Here, the archers'
balconies on the
towers were empty. The iron-strapped door of the squat gray guardhouse
just inside
the broad gates stood wide open, and a hard-faced woman in rough
woolens, her
sleeves shoved up her thin arms, sat there at a wooden tub scrubbing
clothes
with a washboard. She appeared to have taken up residence; two small,
grubby
children sucking their thumbs stared wide-eyed past her at him and his
companions. At their horses, at least.
Tai'daishar
was a sight to stare at, a sleek black stallion with a massive chest, a
horse
that drew attention, yet he had chosen to ride the animal anyway. If
the Forsaken
could find him as easily as they had at Algarin's manor house, there
was little
point to hiding. Or at least to putting too much effort into it. He
wore black
riding gloves to conceal the dragons' heads on his hands and the herons
branded
into his palms. His coat was dark gray wool without a stitch of
embroidery, the
stallion's saddle cloth simple, and his sword's hilt and scabbard had
been
covered in unworked boarhide ever since it came into his possession,
nothing to
pull a second glance. Cadsuane, in unadorned gray wool, wore the hood
of her
dark green cloak well up to shield her Aes Sedai face, but Min, Nynaeve
and
Alivia had no need for hiding. Though Min's flower-embroidered red coat
and
snug breeches might attract a little notice, not to mention her heeled
red
boots. He had seen women in Cairhien wearing clothes like that, copying
her,
yet it seemed unlikely that her fashion had spread to Tear, where
modesty held
sway. In public, at least. Nynaeve was wearing yellow-slashed blue silk
and all
of her jewelry, just partly concealed by her blue cloak, but Tear would
be full
of silks. She had wanted to wear her shawl! That was in her saddlebags,
though.
A little effort only.
The
second thing he noticed was the sound, a rhythmic racketing clatter
accompanied
periodically by a piercing whistle. Faint at first, it seemed to be
coming
closer rapidly. Despite the early hour, the streets he could see from
the gates
were crowded. Half the people in sight appeared to be Sea Folk, the men
bare-chested, the women in bright linen blouses, all wearing long
sashes more
colorful than those worn by Tairen commoners. Every head appeared to be
turned
toward that sound. Children darted through the throng, dodging carts
most often
pulled by oxen with wide horns, racing toward the noise. Several
well-dressed
men and women had dismounted from their sedan chairs and stood with the
bearers
to watch. A fork-bearded merchant with silver chains across the chest
of his
coat was half out of the window of a red-lacquered coach, shouting at
his
driver to manage the nervously dancing team while he strained for a
better
view.
White-winged
pigeons, startled from pointed slate rooftops by a particularly sharp
whistle,
suddenly wheeled into the air. And two large flocks crashed into each
other,
pelting the folk below with stunned birds. Every single bird fell. A
few people
actually stopped staring toward the approaching noise and gaped at the
sky. A
surprising number snatched up fallen birds and wrung their necks,
though, and
not just barefoot people in worn woolens. A woman in silk and lace,
standing
beside one of the sedan chairs, quickly gathered half a dozen before
gazing
toward the noise with the birds dangling from her hands by their feet.
Alivia
made a startled sound. "Is that ill luck or good?" she drawled.
"It must be ill. Unless pigeons here are different?" Nynaeve gave her
a sour look, but said nothing. She had been very quiet since Lan
vanished the
day before, a subject on which she was doubly silent.
"Some
of those people are going to die of hunger." Min said sadly. The bond
quivered with sorrow. "Every last one I can see something about."
How
can I die? Lews Therin laughed. I am ta'veren!
You're
dead. Rand thought at him sharply. People in front of him were going to
starve,
and he laughed? There was nothing to be done, of course, not when Min
spoke,
but laughing was another matter. I am ta'veren. Me!
What
else was happening in Tear because of his presence? His being ta'veren
did not
always have any effect at all. but when it did, the result could
blanket an
entire city. Best to get on with what he had come for before the wrong
people
figured out what things like pigeons flying into one another meant. If
the
Forsaken were sending armies of Trollocs and Myrddraal after him, it
was likely
that Darkfriends would take any opportunity to put an arrow through his
ribs.
Making little effort to hide was not the same as making no effort.
"You
might as well have brought the Banner of Light and an honor guard of
thousands
instead of six," Cadsuane murmured dryly, eyeing the Maidens who were
trying to pretend they had nothing to do with Rand's party while
standing in a
wide circle around it, sboufa covering their heads and veils hanging
down their
chests. Two were Shaido, fierce-eyed whenever they looked at him. The
Maidens'
spears were all on their backs, stuck through the harness of their
bowcases,
but only because Rand had offered to leave them behind and take someone
else
otherwise. Nandera had insisted on at least a few Maidens, staring at
him with
eyes as hard as emeralds. He had never considered refusing. The only
child of a
Maiden any Maiden had ever known, he had obligations to meet.
He
gathered Tai'daishar's reins, and abruptly a large wagon full of
machinery came
into sight, clanking and hissing, wide iron-studded wheels striking
sparks from
the gray paving stones as it moved along the street as fast as a man
could
trot. The machinery seemed to sweat steam; a heavy wooden shaft swung
up and
down pushing another, vertical shaft, and gray woodsmoke drifted from a
metal
chimney; but there was no sign of a horse, just an odd sort of tiller
in the
front to turn the wheels. One of the three men standing in the wagon
pulled a
long cord, and steam rushed in a shrill whistle out of a tube atop a
huge iron
cylinder. If the onlookers stared in awe and maybe covered their ears,
the
fork-bearded merchant's team was in no such mood.
Whinnying
wildly, they bolted, scattering people as they ran and nearly pitching
the man
out on his head. Curses pursued them, and several braying mules that
galloped
off with their drivers in bouncing carts sawing at the reins. Even a
few oxen
began to lumber along more quickly. Min's astonishment filled the bond.
Controlling
the black with his knees-trained as a warhorse. Tai'-daishar responded
immediately, chough he still snorted-Rand stared in amazement, too. It
seemed
Master Poel actually had made his steamwagon work. "But how did the
thing
get to Tear?" he asked the air. The last he had seen, it had been at
the
Academy of Cairhien. and seizing up every few paces.
"It's
called a steamhorse. my Lord," a barefoot, dirty-faced urchin in a
ragged
shirt said, bouncing on the pavement. Even the sash holding up his
baggy
breeches seemed as much holes as cloth. "I've seen it nine times! Com
here's only seen it seven."
"A
steamwagon, Doni," his equally ragged companion put in. "A
steamwagon." Neither of them could have been more than ten, and they
were
gaunt rather than skinny. Their muddy feet, torn shirts and holed
breeches
meant they came from outside the walls, where the poorest folk lived.
Rand had
changed a number of laws in Tear, especially those that weighed heavily
on the
poor, but he had been unable to change everything. He had not even
known how to
begin. Lews Therin began to maunder on about taxes and money creating
jobs, but
he might as well have been spilling out words at random for all the
sense he
made. Rand muted the voice to a buzz, a fly on the other side of a room.
"Four
of them hitched together, one behind the other, pulled a hundred wagons
all the
way from Cairhien," Doni went on, ignoring the other boy. "They
covered near a hundred miles every day. my Lord. A hundred miles!"
Com
sighed heavily. "There were six of them, Doni, and they only pulled
fifty
wagons, but they covered more than a hundred miles every day. A hundred
and
twenty some days, I heard, and it was one of the steam-men said it."
Doni
turned to scowl at him. the pair of them balling up fists.
"Either
way, it's a remarkable achievement," Rand told them quickly, before
they
could begin trading blows. "Here."
Dipping
into his coat pocket, he pulled out two coins and tossed one toward
each boy
without looking to see what they were. Gold glittered in the air before
the
boys eagerly snatched the coins. Exchanging startled glances, they went
running
out through the gates as fast as they could go. no doubt fearful he
would
demand the coins back. Their families could live for months on that
much gold.
Min
gazed after them with an expression of misery that the bond echoed even
after
she shook her head and smoothed her face. What had she seen? Death,
probably.
Rand felt anger, but no sorrow. How many tens of thousands would die
before the
Last Battle was done? How many would be children? He had no room left
in him
for sorrow.
"Very
generous," Nynaeve said in a tight voice, "but are we going to stand
here all morning?" The steamwagon was moving on out of sight quickly,
yet
her plump brown mare was still blowing anxiously and tossing her head,
and she
was having difficulty with the animal, placid as it was by nature. She
was far
from as good a rider as she thought herself. For that matter. Min's
mount, an
arch-necked gray mare from Algarin's stables, danced so that only Min's
firm,
red-gloved grip on the reins kept her from running, and Alivia's roan
was
trying to dance, though the former damane controlled the animal as
easily as
Cadsuane did her bay. Alivia sometimes displayed surprising talents.
Damane
were expected to ride well.
As
they rode into the city, Rand took a last glance at the disappearing
steamwagon. Remarkable was hardly the word. A hundred wagons or only
fifty-only!-incredible was more like it. Would merchants start using
those
things instead of horses? It hardly seemed likely. Merchants were
conservative
folk, not known for leaping at new ways of doing things. For some
reason, Lews
Therin began laughing again.
Tear
was not beautiful, like Caemlyn or Tar Valon, and few of its streets
could be
called particularly broad, but it was large and sprawling, one of the
great
cities of the world, and, like most great cities, a jumble that had
grown up
willy-nilly. In those tangled streets, tile-roofed inns and
slate-roofed
stables, the roof corners slanted sharply, stood alongside palaces with
squared
white domes and tall, balcony-ringed towers that often came to points,
the
heights of domes and towers gleaming in the early-morning sun. Smithies
and
cutlers, seamstresses and butchers, fishmongers and rugweavers' shops
rubbed
against marble structures with tall bronze doors behind massive white
columns,
guild halls and bankers and merchants' exchanges.
At
this hour, the streets themselves were still cast in deep shadows, yet
they
bustled with that storied southern industry. Sedan chairs borne by
pairs of
lean men wove through the crowds almost as quickly as the children who
raced
about in play while coaches and carriages behind teams of four or six
moved as
slowly as the carts and wagons, most drawn by large oxen. Porters
trudged
along, their bundles slung beneath poles carried on two men's
shoulders, and
apprentices carried rolled carpets and boxes of the masters' handiwork
on their
backs. Hawkers cried their wares from trays or handbarrows, pins and
ribbons, a
few with roasted nuts and meat pies, and tumblers or jugglers or
musicians
performed at nearly every intersection. You would never have thought
this city
was the site of a siege.
Not
everything was peaceful, though. Early morning or not. Rand saw
obstreperous drunks
being thrown out of inns and taverns and so many fistfights and men
wrestling
on the pavement that it seemed one pair was not well out of sight
before the
next came into view. A good many obvious armsmen mingled in the crowd,
swords
at their hips and the fat sleeves of their woolen coats striped in
various
House colors, but even those wearing breastplates and helmets made no
move to
break up the rows. A fair number of the fights involved armsmen, with
one
another, with Sea Folk, with roughly clad fellows who might have been
laborers
or apprentices or shoulderthumpers. Soldiers with nothing to do grew
bored, and
bored soldiers got drunk and fought. He was glad to see the rebels
armsmen
bored.
The
Maidens, drifting through the throng and still trying to pretend they
had no
association with Rand, drew puzzled looks and head-scratching, mainly
from
dark-faced Sea Folk, though a gaggle ot children trailed after them
gaping. The
Tairens. many of whom were not all that much fairer than the Sea Folk,
had seen
Aiel before, and if they wondered why they had returned to the city, it
appeared they had different business at hand this morning, and more
important.
No one seemed to give Rand or his other companions a second glance.
There were
other mounted men and women in the streets, most of them outlanders,
here a
pale Cairhienin merchant in a somber coat, there an Arafellin with
silver bells
fastened to his dark braids, here a copper-skinned Domani in a barely
opaque
riding dress barely hidden by her cloak followed by a pair of hulking
bodyguards in leather coats sewn with steel discs, there a Shienaran
with his
head shaved except for a gray topknot and his belly straining his
buttons. You
could not move ten paces in Tear without seeing outlanders. Tairen
commerce had
long arms.
Which
was not to say that he passed through the city without incident. Ahead
of him,
a running baker's boy tripped and fell, flinging his basket into the
air, and
when the boy levered himself off the paving stones as Rand rode by, he
stopped halfway
up with his mouth hanging open, staring at the long loaves standing on
end near
the basket, propped together in a rough cone. A fellow in his
shirtsleeves,
drinking in a second-story window of an inn. overbalanced and toppled
toward
the street with a shriek that cut off when he landed on his feet not
ten paces
from Tai'daishar, mug still in hand. Rand left him behind wide-eyed and
feeling
at himself in wonderment. Ripples of altered chance were following
Rand,
spreading across the city.
Not
every event would be as harmless as the loaves, or as beneficial as the
man
landing on his feet rather than his head. Those ripples could turn what
should
be a bruiseless tumble into broken bones or a broken neck. Lifelong
feuds could
be started by men speaking words they had never thought to hear come
from their
own lips. Women could decide to poison their husbands over trivial
offenses
they had tolerated complacently for years. Oh, some fellow might find a
rotting
sack full of gold buried in his own basement without really knowing why
he had
decided to dig in the first place, or a man might ask and gain the hand
of a
woman he had never before had the courage to approach, but as many
would find
ruination as found good fortune. Balance, Min had called it. A good to
balance
every ill. He saw an ill to balance every good. He needed to be done in
Tear
and gone as soon as possible. Galloping in those crowded streets was
out of the
question, but he picked up his pace enough that the Maidens had to trot.
His
destination had been in sight since long before he entered the city, a
mass of
stone like a barren, sheer-sided hill that stretched from the River
Erinin into
the city's heart, covering at least eight or nine marches, a good
square mile
or more, and dominating the city's sky. The Stone of Tear was mankind's
oldest
stronghold, the oldest structure in the world, made with the One Power
in the
last days of the Breaking itself. One solid piece of stone it was,
without a
single join, though better than three thousand years of rain and wind
had
weathered the surface to roughness. The first battlements stood a
hundred paces
above the ground, though there were arrowslits aplenty lower, and stone
spouts
for showering attackers with boiling oil or molten lead. No besieger
could stop
the Stone from being supplied through its own wall-shielded docks, and
it
contained forges and manufactories to replace or mend every sort of
weapon
should its armories fall short. Its highest tower, rearing over the
very center
of the Stone, held the banner of Tear, half red, half gold, with a
slanting
line of three silver crescents, and so large that it could be made out
plainly
as it curled in a strong breeze. It had to be strong to move that flag.
Lower
towers supported smaller versions, but here they alternated with
another
rippling banner, the ancient symbol of Aes Sedai black-and-white on a
field of
red. The Banner of Light. The Dragon Banner, some called it, as if
there were
not another that bore that name. The High Lord Darlin was flaunting his
allegiance,
it seemed. That was well.
Alanna
was in there, and whether or not that was well he would have to learn.
He was
not as sharply aware of her as before Elayne and Aviendha and Min
jointly
bonded him-he thought he was not; they had pushed her aside to take
primacy
somehow, and she had told him she could sense little more of him than
his
presence-yet she still lay in the back of his head, a bundle of
emotions and
physical sensations. It seemed a long time since he had been near
enough to her
to sense those. Once again, the bond with her felt an intrusion, a
would-be
usurper of his bond to Min and Elayne and Aviendha. Alanna was weary,
as if
perhaps she had not been getting enough sleep lately, and frustrated,
with
strong streaks of anger and sulkiness. Were the negotiations going
badly? He
would find out soon enough. She would be aware he was in the city,
aware he was
coming closer if little more. Min had tried to teach him a trick called
masking
that supposedly could hide him from the bond, but he had never been
able to
make it work. Of course, she admitted she had never been able to make
it work
either.
Soon
he found himself on a street that ran directly to the plaza that
surrounded the
Stone on three sides, but he had no intention of riding straight there.
For one
thing, every massive iron-strapped gate would be barred tight. For
another, he
could see several hundred armsmen at the foot of the street. He
expected there
would be the same in front of every gate. They hardly gave the
impression of
men besieging a fortress. They seemed to be lounging about with no
order-many
had their helmets off and their halberds propped against the buildings
lining
the street, and serving women from nearby taverns and inns circulated
among
them selling mugs of ale or wine from trays-yet it was highly unlikely
they
would remain complacent about anyone trying to enter the Stone. Not
that they
could stop him, of course. He could sweep aside a few hundred men like
so many
moths.
He
had not come to Tear to kill anyone, though, not unless he had to, so
he rode
into the stableyard of a tile-roofed inn, three stories of dark gray
stone with
a prosperous look. The sign out front was freshly painted with, of all
things,
a rough approximation of the creatures encircling his forearms. The
artist
apparently had decided the thing was inadequate as described, though,
because
he had added long, sharp teeth and leathery, ribbed wings. Wings! They
almost
looked copied from one of those Seanchan flying beasts. Cadsuane looked
at the
sign and snorted. Nynaeve looked at it and giggled. So did Min!
Even
after Rand gave the barefoot stableboys silver to curry the horses,
they stared
at the Maidens harder than at the coins, but no harder than the patrons
stared
in The Dragon's beam-ceilinged common room. Conversation trailed off
when the
Maidens followed Rand and the others inside, spearpoints sticking up
above
their heads and bullhide bucklers in hand. Men and women, most in plain
if good
quality wool, turned in their low-backed chairs to stare. They seemed
to be
middling merchants and solid craftsfolk, yet they gaped like villagers
seeing a
city for the first time. The serving women, in dark high-necked dresses
and
short white aprons, stopped trotting and goggled over their trays. Even
the
woman playing a hammered dulcimer between the two stone fireplaces,
cold on
this fine morning, fell silent.
A
very dark fellow with tightly curled hair, at a square table beside the
door,
seemed not to notice the Maidens at all. Rand took him for one of the
Sea Folk
at first, though he wore a peculiar coat without collar or lapels, once
white
but now stained and wrinkled. "I tell you. I have many, many of the…
the worms that make… yes, make… silk on a ship." he said
haltingly in an odd, musical accent. "But I must have the… the…
andberry… yes, andberry leaves to feed them. We will be rich."
His
companion waved a plump, dismissive hand even while staring at the
Maidens.
"Worms?" he said absently. "Everybody knows silk grows on
trees."
Walking
deeper into the common room. Rand shook his head as the proprietor
advanced to
meet him. Worms! The tales people could come up with to try prying coin
out of
somebody else.
"Agardo
Saranche at your service, my Lord, my Ladies," the lean, balding man
said
with a deep bow. sweeping his hands wide. Not all Tairens were dark by
any
means, but he was nearly as fair complected as a Cairhienin. "How may I
serve?" His dark eyes kept drifting to the Maidens, and every time they
did, he tugged at his long blue coat as though it suddenly felt too
tight.
"We
want a room with a good view of the Stone," Rand said.
"It
is worms that make silk, friend," a man drawled behind him. "My eyes
on it."
At
that familiar accent, Rand spun to find Alivia staring, wide-eyed and
her face
bloodless, at a man in a dark coat who was just passing through the
doorway
into the street. With an oath, Rand ran to the door, but there were
close to a
dozen men in dark coats walking away from the inn, any one of whom
might have
spoken. There was no way to pick out one man of average height and
width seen
only from behind. What was a Seanchan doing in Tear? Scouting for
another
invasion? He would put paid to that soon enough. But he turned from the
door
wishing he could have laid hands on the man. Knowing would be better
than
having to guess.
He
asked Alivia whether she had gotten a good look at the fellow, but she
shook
her head silently. Her face was still pale. She was ferocious when she
talked
of what she wanted to do to sul'dam, yet it seemed just hearing the
accents of
her native land was enough to shake her. He hoped that did not turn out
to be
weakness in her. She was going to help him, somehow, and he could not
afford
her to be weak.
"What
do you know of the man who just left?" he demanded of Saranche. "The
one with the slurred way of talking."
The
innkeeper blinked. "Nothing, my Lord. I've never seen him before. You
want
one room, my Lord?" He ran his eyes over Min and the other women, and
his
lips moved as if he were counting.
"If
you're thinking of any impropriety, Master Saranche," Nynaeve said
indignantly, tugging at the braid hanging from the cowl of her cloak,
"you
had best think twice and again. Before I box your ears." Min hissed
softly, and one hand drifted toward her other wrist before she checked
the
motion. Light, but she was quick to reach for her knives!
"What
impropriety?" Alivia asked in tones of puzzlement. Cadsuane snorted.
"One
room," Rand said patiently. Women can always find a reason to be
indignant, he thought. Or had that been Lews Therin? He shrugged in
discomfort.
And a touch of irritation that he only just managed to keep out of his
voice.
"Your largest with a view of the Stone. We don't want it for long.
You'll
be able to rent it out again for tonight. You may have to keep our
horses a day
or two, though."
A
look of relief crept over Saranche's narrow face, though patently false
rue
filled his voice. "I regret that my largest room is taken, my Lord. In
fact, all of my large rooms are taken. But I will be more than happy to
escort
you up the street to The Three Moons and-"
"Phaw!"
Cadsuane pushed back her hood enough to reveal her face and some of her
golden
hair ornaments. She was all cool composure, her gaze implacable. "I
think
you can find a way to make that room available, boy. I think you had
better
find a way. Pay him well." she added to Rand, ornaments swaying on
their
chains. "That was advice, not an order."
Saranche
took Rand's fat golden crown with alacrity-it was doubtful the entire
inn
earned much more in a week-but it was Cadsuane's ageless face that sent
him
bounding up the staircase at the back of the common room to return in a
handful
of minutes and show them to a room on the second floor with dark
polished
paneling and a rumpled bed wide enough for three flanked by a pair of
windows
filled by the Stone looming over the rooftops. The previous occupant
had been
hustled out so quickly that he had left a woolen stocking crumpled at
the foot
of the bed and a carved horn comb on the washstand in the corner. The
innkeeper
offered to have their saddlebags brought up, and wine, and seemed
surprised
when Rand refused, but one glance at Cadsuane's face, and he bowed his
way out
again hurriedly.
The
room was fairly large as inn rooms went, yet not compared to most
chambers in
Algarin's manor house, much less in a palace. Especially not with near
a dozen
people filling the space. The walls seemed to close in on Rand. His
chest suddenly
felt tight. Every breath came with difficulty. The bond was suddenly
full of
sympathy and concern.
The
box. Lews Therin panted. Have to get out of the box!
Keeping
his eyes on the windows-being able to see the Stone was a necessity,
and seeing
open air between the Dragon and the Stone, the open air above, loosened
his
breathing a little. Just a little-keeping his eyes fixed on the sky
above the
Stone, he ordered everyone to stand against the walls. They obeyed with
speed.
Well, Cadsuane gave him a sharp look before gliding to the wall, and
Nynaeve
sniffed before flouncing over, but the rest moved quickly. If they
thought he
wanted space for safety's sake, in a way he did. Having them out of his
line of
sight made the room seem a little larger. Only a little, yet every inch
was a
blessed relief. The bond was filled with concern.
Must
get out. Lews Therin moaned. Have to get out.
Stiffening
himself against what he knew would come, watchful of any attempt by
Lews
Therin, Rand seized the male half of the True Source, and saidin
flooded into
him. Had the madman tried to seize it first? He had brushed it,
certainly,
touched it, but it was Rand's. Mountains of flame collapsing in fiery
avalanches tried to scour him away. Waves chat made ice seem warm tried
to
crush him in raging seas. He gloried in it, suddenly so alive it seemed
he had
been sleepwalking before. He could hear the breath of everyone in the
room,
could see that great banner atop the Stone so clearly he almost thought
he
could make out the weave of the fabric. The double wound in his side
throbbed
as if trying to rip itself out of his body, but with the Power filling
him, he
could ignore that pain. He thought he could have ignored a sword thrust.
Yet
with saidin came the inevitable violent nausea, the almost overwhelming
desire
to double over and empty himself of every meal he had ever eaten. His
knees
trembled with it. He fought that as hard as he fought the Power, and
saidin had
to be fought ever and always. A man forced saidin to his will, or it
destroyed
him. The face of the man from Shadar Logoth floated in his head for a
moment.
He looked furious. And near to sicking up. Without any doubt he was
aware of
Rand in that moment, and Rand of him. Move a hair in any direction, and
they
would touch. No more than a hair.
"What's
the matter?" Nynaeve demanded, moving close and peering up at him in
concern. "Your face has gone all gray." She reached for his head, and
his skin popped out in goose bumps.
He
brushed her hands away. "I'm all right. Stand clear." She stood there
giving him one of those looks women carried in their belt pouches. This
one
said she knew he was lying even if she could not prove it. Did they
practice
those looks in front of mirrors? "Stand clear, Nynaeve."
"He's
all right, Nynaeve," Min said, though her face had a touch of gray
about
it, too, and she had both red-gloved hands pressed to her middle. She
knew.
Nynaeve
sniffed at him, wrinkling her nose in disdain, but she finally moved
out of his
way. Maybe Lan had had enough and run away. No, not that. Lan would not
leave
her unless she told him to, and then only for as long as was needful.
Wherever
he was, Nynaeve knew and likely had sent him there for reasons of her
own. Aes
Sedai and their bloody secrets.
He
channeled, Spirit touched with Fire, and the familiar vertical silvery
slash
appeared at the foot of the bed, seemed to rotate into a dim view of
massive
columns in darkness. Light from the inn room gave all the illumination.
The
opening, standing inches above the floor, was no larger than the door
to the
room, yet as soon as it was fully open, three of the Maidens, already
veiled,
darted through pulling spears free, and Rand's skin pebbled again as
Alivia
leaped after them. Protecting him was a self-imposed duty, but one she
took as
seriously as the Maidens did.
There
would be no ambush here, though, no dangers, so he stepped through, and
down.
At the other end, the gateway sat more than a foot above the huge gray
slabs of
stone that he had not wanted to damage any more than he already had.
This was
the Heart of the Stone, and with the Power in him, and the light
spilling
through the gateway from the room in The Dragon, he could see the
narrow hole
in one of those stones where he had driven Callandor into the floor.
Who draws
it out shall follow after. He had thought long and hard before sending
Nar-ishma to bring Callandor to him. However the Prophecies meant the
man was
to follow him, Narishma was otherwise occupied today. A forest of
immense
redstone columns surrounded him, stretching up into the dark that hid
the unlit
golden lamps and the vaulted ceiling and the great dome. His boots
echoed
hollowly in the vast chamber, and even the whispers of the Maidens'
soft boots.
In this space, the sense of confinement vanished.
Min
hopped down right behind him-with a throwing knife in either hand, and
her head
swiveling, eyes searching the darkness-but Cadsuane, standing at the
edge of
the gateway, said, "I don't jump unless I absolutely have to, boy."
She held out a hand, waiting for him to take it.
He
handed her down, and she nodded thanks. It could have been meant for
thanks. It
could have meant "You took your bloody time about it," too. A ball of
light appeared over her upturned palm, and a moment later Alivia was
balancing
a globe of light, too. The pair created a pool of brightness that
turned the
surrounding darkness deeper. Nynaeve required the same courtesy, and
had the
grace to murmur thanks-she quickly gained her own ball of light-but
when he
offered a hand to one of the Maidens-he
thought it was Sarendhra. one of the Shaido. though all he could see of
her
face was blue eyes above her black veil-she grunted contemptuously and
leaped
down, spear in hand, followed by the other two. He let the gateway
close, but
held on to saidin despite the roiling in his stomach and head. He did
not
expect to need to channel again before he left the Stone, yet he did
not want
to give Lews Therin another opportunity to seize the Power, either.
You
have to trust me. Lews Therin snarled. If we're going to make it to
Tarmon
Gai'don so we can die, you have to trust me.
You
told me once not to trust anyone. Rand thought. Including you.
Only
madmen trust no one. Lews Therin whispered. Abruptly he began to weep.
Oh, why
do I have a madman in my head? Rand pushed the voice away.
On
striding through the tall arch that led from the Heart, he was
surprised to
find two Defenders of the Stone in ridged helmets and shining
breastplates, the
puffy sleeves of their black coats striped in black and gold. Swords
drawn,
they were staring at the archway with expressions that combined
confusion with
grim resolution. Doubtless they had been startled to see lights and
hear
footsteps echoing in a room with only one entrance, an entrance they
were
guarding. The Maidens crouched, spears coming up, spreading out to
either side,
slowly curling in toward the pair.
"By
the Stone, it's him," one of the men said, sheathing his sword
hurriedly.
Stocky, with a puckered scar that began on his forehead and journeyed
across
the bridge of his nose and down to his jaw. he bowed deeply, hands in
steel-backed gauntlets spreading wide. "My Lord Dragon," he said.
"Iagin Handar, my Lord. The Stone stands. I got this that day." He
touched the scar on his face.
"An
honorable wound, Handar. and a day to remember," Rand told him as the
other, leaner man hastily put up his blade and bowed. Only then did the
Maidens
lower their spears, but their faces remained veiled. A day to remember?
Trollocs and Myrddraal inside the Stone. The second time he had truly
wielded
Callandor, using the Sword that was Not a Sword as it was meant to be
used. The
dead lying everywhere. A dead girl he could not make live again. Who
could
forget such a day? "I know I gave orders for the Heart to be guarded
while
Callandor was there, but why are you still standing guard?"
The
two men exchanged puzzled looks. "You gave the order to set guards, my
Lord Dragon," Handar said, "and the Defenders obey, but you never
said anything about Callandor
except that no one was to approach it unless they had proof they came
from
you." Suddenly the stocky man gave a start and bowed again, more deeply
still. "Forgive me, my Lord, if I seem to question you. I don't mean
to.
Shall I summon the High Lords to your apartments? Your rooms have been
kept in
readiness for your return."
"No
need," Rand told him. "Darlin will be expecting me. and 1 know where
to find him."
Handar
winced. The other man suddenly found something interesting on the floor
to
study. "You may require a guide, my Lord," Handar said slowly.
"The corridors… Sometimes the corridors change."
So.
The Pattern truly was loosening. That meant the Dark One was touching
the world
more than he had since the War of the Shadow. If it loosened too much
before
Tarmon Gai'don, the Age Lace might unravel. An end to time and reality
and
creation. Somehow he had to bring about the Last Battle before that
happened.
Only he did not dare. Not yet.
He
assured Handar and the other man that he needed no guide, and the pair
of them
bowed yet again, apparently accepting that the Dragon Reborn could do
anything
he said he could do. In simple truth, he knew he could locate Alanna-he
could
have pointed straight at her-and she had moved since he first felt her.
To find
Darlin and inform him that Rand al'Thor was approaching, he was sure.
Min had
named her as one he held in his hand, yet Aes Sedai always found a way
to play
both ends against the middle. They always had schemes of their own,
goals of
their own. Witness Nynaeve and Verin. Witness any of them.
"They
hop when you say toad," Cadsuane said coolly, pushing the cowl of her
cloak down her back, as they walked away from the Heart. "That can be
bad
for you, when too many people jump at your word.'' She had the nerve to
say
that! Cadsuane bloody Melaidhrin!
"I'm
fighting a war." he told her harshly. The nausea had his temper on
edge.
That was part of the reason he was harsh. "The fewer people who obey,
the
more chance I'll lose, and if I lose, everybody loses. If I could make
everyone
obey, I would." There were far too many who did not obey as it was. or
obeyed in their own way. Why in the Light would Min feel pity.
Cadsuane
nodded. "As I thought," she murmured, half to herself. And what was
that supposed to mean?
The
Stone had all the trappings of a palace, from silk tapestries and rich
runners
in the corridors from Tarabon and Altara and Tear itself to golden
stands
holding mirrored lamps. Chests standing against the stone walls might
be for
storing what the servants needed for cleaning, yet they were of rare
woods,
often elaborately carved and always with gilded banding. Niches held
bowls and
vases of Sea Folk porcelain, thin as leaves and worth many times their
weight
in gold, or massive. gem-studded figures, a golden leopard with ruby
eyes
trying to pull down a silver deer with pearl-covered antlers that stood
a pace
tall, a golden lion that was even taller, with emerald eyes and
firedrops for
claws, others set so extravagantly with gems that no metal showed.
Servants in
black-and-gold livery bowed or curtsied as Rand climbed through the
Stone,
those who recognized him very deeply indeed. Some eyes widened at sight
of the
Maidens trailing behind, but their surprise never slowed their
courtesies.
All
the trappings of a palace, yet the Stone had been designed for war
within as
well as without. Wherever two corridors crossed, murderholes dotted the
ceiling. Between the tapestries, arrowslits pierced the walls high up,
angled
to cover the corridors in both directions, and no flight of sweeping
stairs but
had arrowslits placed so the staircase could be swept by arrows or
crossbow
bolts. Only one assailant had ever succeeded in forcing a way into the
Stone,
the Aiel, and they had swept over the opposition too quickly for many
of those
defenses to come into play, but any other enemy that managed to get
inside the
Stone would pay a price in blood for every hallway. Except that
Traveling had
changed warfare forever. Traveling and Blossoms of Fire and so much
more. That
blood price would still be paid, yet stone walls and high towers could
no
longer hold back an assault. The Asha'man had made the Stone as
obsolete as the
bronze swords and stone axes men had often been reduced to in the
Breaking.
Mankind's oldest stronghold was now a relic.
The
bond with Alanna led him up and up, until he came to tall, polished
doors with
golden leopards for door handles. She was on the other side. Light, but
his
stomach wanted to empty itself. Hardening himself, he pulled open one
of the
doors and went in, leaving the Maidens to stand guard. Min and the
others
followed him in.
The
sitting room was almost as ornate as his own apartments in the Stone,
the walls
hung with broad silk tapestries showing scenes of the hunt and battle,
the
large, patterned Taraboner carpet on the floor worth sufficient gold to
feed a
large village for a year, the black marble fireplace tall enough for a
man to
walk into and wide enough to hold eight abreast. Every piece of
furnishing, all
massively made, was elaborately carved, crusted with gilt and dotted
with gems,
as were the tall golden stand-lamps, their mirrored flames adding to
the light
let in by the glass-paned ceiling. A golden bear with ruby eyes and
silver
claws and teeth, more than a pace high, stood atop a gilded plinth on
one side
of the room, while an identical plinth held an emerald-eyed,
ruby-taloned eagle
nearly as tall. Restrained pieces for Tear.
Seated
in an armchair, Alanna looked up as he walked in, and held out a golden
goblet
for one of the two young serving women in black and gold to fill with
dark wine
from a tall golden pitcher. Slender in a gray riding dress slashed with
green,
Alanna was beautiful enough that Lews Therin began humming to himself.
Rand
almost thumbed his earlobe before snatching his hand down, suddenly
unsure
whether that gesture was his or the madman's. She smiled, but darkly,
and as
her eyes swept across Min and Nynacve, Alivia and Cadsuane, the bond
carried
her suspicion, not to mention anger and sulkiness. The last two
heightened for
Cadsuane. And there was joy, as well, mixed in with all the rest, when
her gaze
touched him. Not that it showed in her voice. "Why, who would have
expected you, my Lord Dragon?" she murmured, with a hint of asperity in
the title. "Quite a surprise, wouldn't you say, my Lord Astoril?" So
she had not warned anyone after all. Interesting.
"A
very pleasant surprise," an elderly man in a coat with red-and-blue
striped sleeves said as he rose to bow, stroking his oiled beard,
trimmed to a
point. The High Lord Astoril Damara's face was creased, the hair that
hung to
his shoulders snow white and thinning, but his back was straight and
his dark
eyes sharp. "I've been looking forward to this day for some time." He
bowed again, to Cadsuane, and after a moment, to Nynaeve. "Aes
Sedai," he said. Very civil for Tear, where channeling if not Aes Sedai
themselves had been outlawed before Rand altered the law.
Darlin
Sisnera. High Lord and Steward in Tear for the Dragon Reborn, in a
green silk
coat with yellow-striped sleeves and gold-worked boots, was less than a
head
shorter than Rand, with close-cut hair and a pointed beard, a bold nose
and
blue eyes that were rare in Tear. Those eyes widened as he turned from
a
conversation with Caraline Damodred near the fireplace. The Cairhienin
noblewoman gave Rand a jolt, though he had expected to see her here.
The litany
he used to forge his soul in fire almost started up in his head before
he could
stop it. Short and slim and pale, with large dark eyes and a small ruby
dangling onto her forehead from a golden chain woven into the black
hair
falling in waves to her shoulders, she was the very image of her cousin
Moiraine. Of all things, she wore a long blue coat, embroidered in
golden
scrolls except for the horizontal stripes of red, green and white that
ran from
neck to hem. over snug green breeches and heeled blue boots. It seemed
the
fashion had traveled after all. She made a curtsy, even so, though it
looked odd
in that garb. Lews Therin hummed even harder, making Rand wish the man
had a
face so he could hit him. Moiraine was a memory for hardening his soul,
not for
humming at.
"My
Lord Dragon," Darlin said, bowing stiffly. He was not a man accustomed
to
offering the first courtesy. He gave no bow for Cadsuane. just a sharp
look
before he seemed to dismiss her presence entirely. She had kept him and
Caraline as "guests" for a time in Cairhien. He was unlikely to
forget that, or forgive. At his gesture, the two serving women moved
quickly to
offer wine. As might have been expected, Cadsuane with her ageless face
received the first goblet, but surprisingly, Nynaeve got the second.
The Dragon
Reborn was one thing, a woman wearing the Great Serpent ring something
else
again, even in Tear. Throwing her cloak back, Cadsuane retreated to the
wall.
It was unlike her to be retiring. But then, from there, she could
observe
everyone at once. Alivia took a place by the door, doubtless for much
the same
reason. "I am glad to see you better than when I saw you last,"
Darlin went on. "You've done me great honor. Though I may yet lose my
head
for it. if your Aes Sedai make no more progress than they have.
"Do
not be sulky, Darlin," Caraline murmured, her throaty voice sounding
amused.
"Men do sulk, do they not, Min?" For some reason, Min barked a laugh.
"What
are you doing here?" Rand demanded of the two people he had not
expected
to see. He took a goblet from one of the serving women while the other
hesitated between Min and Alivia. Min won out, perhaps because Alivia's
blue
dress was plain. Sipping her wine, Min strolled over to Caraline-at a
glance
from the Cairhienin woman. Darlin moved away, grinning-and the two
women stood
with their heads together, whispering. Filled with the Power, Rand
could catch
the occasional word. His name, Darlin's.
Weiramon
Saniago. also a High Lord of Tear, was not short, and he stood as
straight as a
sword, yet there was something of a strutting rooster about him. His
gray-streaked beard, trimmed to a point and oiled, practically quivered
with
pride. "Hail to the Lord of the Morning," he said, bowing. Or rather,
he intoned it. Weiramon was a great one for intoning and declaiming.
"Why
am I here, my Lord Dragon?" He sounded puzzled at the question. "Why,
when I heard that Darlin was besieged in the Stone, what could I do but
come to
his aid? Burn my soul, I tried to talk some of the others into
accompanying me.
We'd have put a quick end to Estanda and that lot, I vow!" He clutched
a
fist to demonstrate how he would have crushed the rebels. "But only
Anaiyella had the courage. The Cairhienin were a complete lot of
lily-hearts!" Caraline paused her talk with Min to give him a look that
would have had him hunting for the stab wound had he noticed it.
As-toril
pursed his lips and commenced a study of his wine.
The
High Lady Anaiyella Narencelona also wore a coat and snug breeches with
heeled
boots, though she had added a white lace ruff, and her green coat was
sewn with
pearls. A close cap of pearls sat atop her dark hair. A slim, pretty
woman, she
offered a simpering curtsy, and somehow made it seem she wanted to kiss
Rand's
hand. Courage was not a word he would have applied to her. Nerve, on
the other
hand… "My Lord Dragon," she cooed. "I wish we could report
complete success, but my Master of the Horse died fighting the
Seanchan, and
you left most of my armsmen in Illian. Still, we managed to strike a
blow in
your name."
"Success?
A blow?" Alannas scowl took in Weiramon and Anaiyella both before she
twisted back around to face Rand. "They landed at the Stone's docks
with
one ship, but they put most of their armsmen and all the mercenaries
they hired
in Cairhien ashore from the rest upriver. With orders to enter the city
and
attack the rebels." She made a sound of disgust. "The only result was
a great many men dead and our negotiations with the rebels thrown back
to the
beginning." Anaiyella's simper took on a sickly twist.
"My
plan was to sortie from the Stone and attack them from both sides."
Weiramon protested. "Darlin refused. Refused!"
Darlin
was not grinning now. He stood with his feet apart, and looked a man
who wished
he had a sword in his hand rather than a goblet. "I told you then,
Weiramon. If I stripped the Stone of Defenders, the rebels would still
have
outnumbered us badly. Too badly. They've hired every sell-sword from
the Erinin
to the Bay of Remara."
Rand
took a chair, flinging one arm over the back. The heavy arms had no
supports at
the front, so his sword was no problem. Caraline and Min seemed to have
switched their talk to clothing. At least, they were fingering each
other's
coats, and he heard words like back-stitch and bias-cut. whatever that
meant.
Alanna's gaze drifted between him and Min. and he felt disbelief
warring with
suspicion along the bond. "I left you two in Cairhien because I wanted
you
in Cairhien," he said. He trusted neither, but they could cause small
harm
in Cairhien, where they were outlanders without power. Anger heated by
nausea
entered his voice. "You will make plans to return there as soon as
possible. As soon as possible.'
Anaiyella's
simper grew more sickly, and she cringed slightly.
Weiramon
was made of sterner stuff. "My Lord Dragon, I will serve you where you
command, but I can serve best on my native soil. I know these rebels,
know
where they can be trusted and where-"
"As
soon as possible!" Rand snapped, slamming his fist down on the chair
arm
hard enough to make the wood creak loudly.
"One,"
Cadsuane said, quite clearly and quite incomprehensibly.
"I
strongly suggest you do as he says, Lord Weiramon." Nynaeve eyed
Weiramon
blandly, took a sip of wine. "He has a temper lately, worse than ever,
and
you don't want it directed at you."
Cadsuane
exhaled a heavy breath. "Stay out of this, girl," she said sharply.
Nynaeve glared at her, opened her mouth, then grimaced and closed it
again.
Gripping her braid, she glided across the carpet to join Min and
Caraline. She
had gotten very good at gliding.
Weiramon
studied Cadsuane fora moment, tilting back his head so he was staring
down his
nose. "As the Dragon Reborn commands," he said finally, "so does
Weiramon Saniago obey. My ship can be readied to sail by tomorrow, I
wager.
Will that suffice?"
Rand
nodded curtly. It would have to answer. He was not about to waste a
moment
making a gateway to send this pair of fools where they belonged today.
"There's hunger in the city," he said, eyeing the golden bear-how
many days would that much gold feed Tear? The thought of food made his
stomach
clench-and waited tor a response that was quick in coming, if not from
the
direction he expected.
"Darlin
had cattle and sheep herded down to the city," Caraline said with some
considerable warmth. Rand was the one getting the dagger look, now.
"These
days…" She faltered for a moment, though the heat never left her
gaze. "These days, meat is inedible two days after slaughter, so he had
the animals brought, and wagons full of grain. Estanda and her
companions
seized it all for themselves."
Darlin
gave her a fond smile, but his voice was apologetic. "I've tried three
times, but Estanda is greedy, it seems. I saw no point in continuing to
supply
my enemies. Your enemies."
Rand
nodded. At least the man was not ignoring the situation in the city.
"There are two boys who live outside the walls. Doni and Com. I don't
know
any more name than that. About age ten. Once the rebels are settled and
you can
leave the Stone, I would appreciate it if you found them and kept an
eye on
them." Min made a sound in her throat, and the bond carried sadness so
bleak it almost overwhelmed the burst of love that came with it. So. It
must
have been death she saw. But she had been wrong about Moiraine. Maybe
this
viewing could be changed by a ta'veren.
No,
Lews Therin growled. Her viewing* must not change. We have to die! Rand
ignored
him.
Darlin
appeared puzzled by the request, but he acceded, as what else was he to
do when
the Dragon Reborn made it?
Rand
was about to bring up the purpose of his visit when Bera Harkin,
another of the
Aes Sedai he had sent to Tear to deal with the rebels, entered the room
frowning over her shoulder as if the Maidens had made some difficulty
for her.
They might well have. The Aiel considered the Aes Sedai sworn to him to
be Wise
Ones' apprentices, and Maidens took every opportunity to remind
apprentices
that they were not Wise Ones yet. She was a stocky woman, with brown
hair cut
close around a square face, and despite her green silks, lacking Aes
Sedai
agelessness she would have looked a farmwife. A farmwife who ruled her
house
and farm with a firm hand, though, and would tell a king not to track
mud into
her kitchen. She was Green Ajah, after all, with every scrap of Green
Ajah
pride and haughtiness. She frowned at Alivia. too, with all the disdain
of Aes
Sedai for wilder, and that faded only to coolness when she caught sight
of
Rand.
"Well,
I must say I shouldn't be surprised to see you, considering what's
happened this
morning." she said. Unpinning her simple silver cloak brooch, she
fastened
it to her belt pouch and folded the cloak over her arm. "Though it
might
have been the news that the others are no more than a day west of the
Erinin."
"The
others? Rand said quietly. Quietly and steely hard.
Bera
did not seem impressed. She went on arranging the folds of her cloak.
"The
other High Lords and Ladies, of course. Sunamon, Tolmeran, all of them.
Apparently they're traveling hot-foot for Tear as fast their armsmen's
horses
can move."
Rand
leaped up so fast that his sword bound for a moment on the chair arm.
Only a
moment because the gilded wood, weakened by his earlier blow, split
with a loud
crack, and the arm dropped to the carpet. He never so much as glanced
at it.
The fools! The Seanchan at the border with Altara, and they were coming
back to
Tear? "Doesn't anybody remember how to obey?" he thundered. "I
want messengers sent to them immediately! They're to return to Illian
faster
than they left or I'll have the lot of them hanged!"
"Two,"
Cadsuane said. What in the Light was she counting? "A bit of advice,
boy.
Ask her what happened this morning. I smell good news."
Bera
gave a little start at realizing Cadsuane was in the room. Eyeing her
sideways,
and cautiously, she stopped fiddling with her cloak. "We've reached
agreement." she said as if the question had been asked. "Tedosian and
Simaan were wavering, as usual, but Hearne was nearly as adamant as
Estanda." She shook her head. "I think Tedosian and Simaan might have
come around sooner, but some fellows with strange accents have been
promising
them gold and men."
"Seanchan,"
Nynaeve said. Alivia opened her mouth, then closed it without speaking.
"They
might be," Bera allowed. "They keep clear of us and look at us like
we were mad dogs that might bite any moment. That sounds like what
little I've
heard of Seanchan. In any case, less than an hour gone, Estanda
suddenly began
asking whether the Lord Dragon would restore her title and lands, and
they all
collapsed right behind her. The agreement is this. Darlin is accepted
as
Steward in Tear for the Dragon Reborn, all laws you made remain
unchanged, and
they pay for feeding the city for one year as a fine for rebellion. In
return,
they receive full restoration, Darlin is crowned King of Tear, and they
swear
fealty to him. Merana and Rafela are preparing the documents for
signatures and
seals."
"King?"
Darlin said incredulously. Caraline swayed over to take his arm.
"Restoration?"
Rand growled, hurling his goblet aside in a spray of wine. The bond
carried
caution, a warning from Min, but he was too angry to pay heed. The
sickness
twisting his insides twisted his rage. too. "Blood and bloody ashes! I
stripped them of lands and titles for rebelling against me. They can
stay
commoners and swear fealty to me!"
"Three,"
Cadsuane said, and Rand's skin popped out in goose bumps an instant
before
something struck him across the bottom like a hard-swung switch. Bera's
lips parted
in shock, and the cloak slid off her arm to the floor. Nynaeve laughed.
She
smothered it quickly, but she laughed! "Don't make me have to keep
reminding you about manners. boy." Cadsuane went on. "Alanna told me
the terms you offered before she left-Darlin as Steward, your laws
kept,
everything else on the table-and it seems they've been met. You can do
as you
wish, of course, but another piece of advice. When the terms you offer
are
accepted, hold to them."
Else
no one will trust you, Lews Therin said, sounding entirely sane. For
the
moment.
Rand
glared at Cadsuane, fists clenched hard, on the brink of weaving
something that
would singe her. He could feel a welt on his bottom, and would feel it
more in
the saddle. It seemed to pulse, and his anger pulsed with it. She
peered back
calmly over her wine. Was there a hint of challenge in her gaze, of
daring him
to channel? The woman spent every moment in his presence challenging
him! The
trouble was, her advice was good. He had given Alanna those terms. He
had
expected them to bargain harder, gain more, but they had gotten what he
actually asked for. More. He had not thought of fines.
"It
seems your fortunes have risen, King Darlin," he said. One of the
serving
women curtsied and handed Rand another goblet full of wine. Her face
was as
calm as any Aes Sedai's. You might have thought men arguing with
sisters was a
matter of every day with her.
"All
hail King Darlin," Weiramon intoned, sounding half strangled, and after
a
moment Anaiyella echoed him. as breathless as if she had run a mile.
Once, she
had talked of herself for a crown in Tear.
"But
why would they want me as King?" Darlin said, scrubbing a hand through
his
hair. "Or anyone. There've been no kings in the Stone since Moreina
died,
a thousand years ago. Or did you demand that, Bera Sedai?"
Bera
straightened from picking up her cloak and began shaking it out. "It
was
their… 'demand' would be too strong… their suggestion. Any of them
would have leapt at the chance of a throne, especially Estanda."
Anaiyella
made a choking sound. "But of course, they knew there was no hope of
that.
This way, they can swear to you instead of to the Dragon Reborn, making
it
slightly less distasteful."
"And
if you are king," Caraline put in, "it means that Steward in Tear for
the Lord Dragon becomes a lesser title." She laughed throatily. "They
may even tack on three or four more noble sounding titles to try
pushing it
down to obscurity." Bera pursed her lips as though she had been about
to bring
up that very point.
"And
would you marry a king, Caraline?" Darlin asked. "I'll accept the
crown, if you will. Though I'll have to have a crown made."
Min
cleared her throat. "I can tell you how it should look, if you like."
Caraline
laughed again and released Darlin's arm, swaying away from him. "I will
have to see you in it before I could answer that. Have Min's crown
made, and if
it makes you look pretty…" She smiled. "Then perhaps I will
consider it."
"I
wish you both the best," Rand said curtly, "but there are more
important matters to go into right now." Min gave him a sharp look,
disapproval flooding the bond. Nynaeve gave him a sharp look. What was
that
about? "You will accept that crown, Darlin, and as soon as those
documents
are signed, I want you to arrest those Seanchan, then gather every man
in Tear
who knows one end of sword or halberd from the other. I'll arrange for
Asha'man
to take you to Arad Doman."
"And
me, my Lord Dragon?" Weiramon asked avidly. He all but quivered with
eagerness, managing to strut while standing still. "If there is
fighting
to be done, I can serve you better there than languishing in Cairhien.'
Rand
studied the man. And Anaiyella. Weiramon was a bungling idiot, and he
trusted
neither, but he could not see what harm they could do with no more than
a
handful of followers. "Very well. You two may accompany the High Lord…
that is, King Darlin." Anaiyella gulped as though she for one would
rather return to Cairhien.
"But
what am I supposed to do in Arad Doman?'' Darlin wanted to know. "The
little I've heard of that land, it's a madhouse." Lews Therin laughed
wildly in Rand's head.
"Tarmon
Gai'don is coming soon," Rand said. The Light send not too soon. "You
are going to Arad Doman to get ready for Tarmon Gai'don."
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
To Make an Anchor Weep
Despite
the pitching induced by the long blue rollers, Harine din Togara sat
very
straight alongside her sister, just ahead of their parasol bearers and
the
steersman at his long tiller. Shalon seemed intent on studying the
twelve men
and women working the oars. Or perhaps she was deep in thought. There
was
plenty to think on of late, not least this meeting Harine had been
summoned to,
but she let her thoughts drift blindly. Composing herself. Every time
the First
Twelve of the Atha'an Miere met since she had attained Illian, she had
needed
to compose herself before attending. When she reached Tear and found
Zaida's
Blue Gull still anchored in the river, she had been sure the woman was
in
Caemlyn yet, or at least trailing far behind her own wake. A painful
mistake,
that. Though in truth, very little would have been altered had Zaida
been weeks
behind. Not for Harine, at least. No. No thoughts of Zaida.
The
sun stood only a fist above the horizon in the east, and several
vessels of the
shorebound were making for the long breakwater that guarded Illian's
harbor.
One carried three masts and a semblance of a high-rig. all the major
sails
square, yet he was squat and ill-handled, wallowing through the low
rolling
seas in fountains of spray rather than slicing them. Most were small
and
low-rigged, their triangular sails nearly all high-boomed. Some seemed
quick
enough, but since the shorebound seldom sailed beyond sight of land and
usually
anchored at night for fear of shoals, their quickness availed them
little.
Cargo that required true speed went to Atha'an Miere ships. At a
premium price,
to be sure. It was a small portion of what Atha'an Miere carried, in
part
because of the price, in part because few things actually required
their speed.
Besides, cargo hire guaranteed some profit, but when the Cargomaster
traded on
his own for the ship, all of the profit went to vessel and clan.
As
far as the eye could see to east and west along the coastline, Atha'an
Miere
ships lay at anchor, rakers and skimmers, soarers and darters, most
surrounded
by bumboats so cluttered they looked like drunken shore festivals.
Rowed out
from the city, the bumboats offered for sale everything from dried
fruit to
quartered beeves and sheep, from iron nails and iron stock to swords
and
daggers, from gaudy trinkets of Illian that might catch a deckhand's
eye to
gold and gems. Though the gold was usually a thin plate that wore off
in a few
months to show the brass beneath and the gems colored glass. They
brought rats,
too. if not for sale. Anchored so long, every ship was plagued by rats,
now.
Rats and spoilage made sure there was always a market for the peddlers.
Bumboats
also surrounded the massive Seanchan-built vessels, dozens upon dozens
of them,
that had been used in the Escape. That was what it was being called,
now, the
great Escape from Ebou Dar. Say the Escape, and no one asked what
escape you
meant. Great bluff-bowed things they were, twice the beam of a raker
and more,
some, suitable for battering through heavy seas perhaps, but strangely
rigged
and with odd ribbed sails too stiff for proper setting. Men and women
were
swarming over those masts and yards now, altering the rigging to
something more
usable. No one wanted the craft, but the shipyards would require years
to
replace all of the vessels lost at Ebou Dar. And the expense! Overly
beamy or
not, those ships would see many years of use. No Sailmistress had any
desire to
sink into debt, borrowing from the clan coffers, when most if not all
of her
own gold was being salvaged by the Seanchan in Ebou Dar, not unless she
had no
other choice. Some, unlucky enough to have neither their own ships nor
one of
the Seanchan's, did have no other choice.
Harine's
twelve passed the heavy wall of the breakwater, thick with dark slime
and long
hairy weed that the breakers crashing against the gray stone failed to
dislodge, and the broad, gray-green harbor of Illian
opened up
before her, ringed with deep expanses of marsh, just turning from
winter brown
to green in patches, where long-legged birds waded. A line of mist
drifted
across the boat on a gentle breeze, dampening her hair before it passed
on up
the harbor. Small fishing boats were pulling their nets along the edges
of the
marsh, a dozen sorts of gull and tern wheeling overhead to steal what
they
could. The city did not interest her beyond the long stone docks, lined
with
trading craft, but the harbor… That broad, nearly circular expanse of
water was the greatest anchorage known, and filled with shipping and
river
craft, most waiting their turn at the docks. It truly was filled, by
hundreds
of vessels in every shape and size, and not all of those ships belonged
to the
shorebound. There were only rakers here, those slender three-masters
that could
race porpoises. Rakers and three of the ungainly Seanchan
monstrosities. They
were the vessels of Wavemistresses and of Sailmistresses who formed the
First
Twelve of each clan, those that could be fitted into the harbor before
there
was no more room. Even Lilian's anchorage had its limits, and the
Council of
Nine, not to mention this Steward in Illian for the Dragon Reborn,
would have
made trouble had the Atha'an Miere begun crowding their trade.
Abruptly
a strong, icy wind came up out of the north. No. it did not come up; it
just
suddenly was there full strength, whipping the harbor to choppy
whitecaps and
carrying a smell of pines and something… earthy. She knew little of
trees,
but much of timbers used in building ships. Though she did not think
there were
many pines anywhere near to Illian. Then she noticed the mist line.
While ships
rocked and pitched under that southerly blast, the mist continued its
slow
drift northward. Keeping her hands on her knees required effort. She
wanted
very much to wipe the dampness out of her hair. She had thought after
Shadar
Logoth that nothing ever would shake her again, but she had seen too
many…
oddities… of late, oddities that spoke of the world twisting.
As
abruptly as it had come, the wind was gone. Murmurs rose, the stroke
faltered,
and the number four port oar caught a crab, splashing water into the
boat. The
crew knew winds did not behave that way.
"Steady
there," Harine said firmly. "Steady!"
"Give
way together, you shorebound ragpickers," her deckmistress shouted from
the bow. Lean and leathery, Jadein had leather lungs as well. "Do I
need
to call the stroke for you?" The twin insults tightened some faces in
anger, others in chagrin, but the oars began moving smoothly again.
Shalon
was studying the mist, now. Asking what she saw, what she thought,
would have
to wait. Harine was not sure she wanted the answer heard by any of her
crew.
They had seen enough to have them frightened already.
The
steersman turned the twelve toward one of the bulky Seanchan ships,
where any
bumboat that ventured near was being chased away before the peddler
could get
out two words. It was one of the largest of them, with a towering
sterncastle
that had three levels. Three! And the thing actually had a pair of
balconies
across the stern! She would not care to see what a following sea driven
by a
cemaros or one of the Aryth Ocean's soheens would do to those. Other
twelves
and a few eights waited their turn to sidle up to the vessel in the
order of
precedence of their passengers.
Jadein
stood up in the bow and bellowed, "Shodein!" Her voice carried well,
and a twelve that was approaching the ship circled away. The others
continued
their waiting.
Harine
did not stand until the crew had backed oars, and drawn them in on the
starboard, bringing the twelve to a smooth halt right where Jadein
could catch
a dangling line and hold the small craft alongside the larger. Shalon
sighed.
"Courage,
sister," Harine told her. "We have survived Shadar Lo-goth, though
the Light help me, I am unsure what we survived." She barked a laugh.
"More than that, we survived Cadsuane Melaidhrin, and I doubt anyone
else
here could do that."
Shalon
smiled weakly, but at least she smiled.
Harine
scrambled up the rope ladder as easily as she could have twenty years
before
and was piped aboard by the deckmaster, a squat fellow with a fresh
scar
running under the leather patch that covered where his right eye had
been. Many
had taken wounds in the Escape. Many had died. Even the deck of this
ship felt
strange beneath her bare feet, the planking laid in an odd pattern. The
side
was manned properly, however, twelve bare-chested men to her left,
twelve women
in bright linen blouses to her right, all bowing till they were looking
straight down at the deck. She waited for Shalon and the parasol
bearers to
join her before starting forward. The vessel's Sailmistress and
Windfinder, at
the end of the rows, bowed less deeply while touching hearts, lips and
foreheads.
Both wore waist-long white mourning stoles that all but hid their many
necklaces, as did she and Shalon.
"The
welcome of my ship to you, Wavemistress," the Sailmistress said,
sniffing
her scent box, "and the grace of the Light be upon you until you leave
his
decks. The others await you in the great cabin."
"The
grace of the Light be upon you also." Harine replied. Turane, in blue
silk
trousers and a red silk blouse, was stocky enough to make her
Windfinder,
Serile, look slender rather than average, and she had a gimlet eye and
a sour
twist to her mouth, but neither those nor the sniffing was meant for
discourtesy. Turane was not that bold. The gaze was the same she gave
everyone,
her own vessel lay at the bottom of the harbor at Ebou Dar. and the
harbor did
stink after the clean air of the open salt.
The
great cabin ran nearly the whole length of the tall sterncastle, a
space clear
of any furniture save for thirteen chairs and a table against the
bulkhead that
held tall-necked wine pitchers and goblets of yellow porcelain, and two
dozen
women in brocaded silks could not come near filling it. She was the
last of the
First Twelve of the Atha'an Miere to arrive, and the reaction to her
among the
other Wavemistresses was what she had come to expect. Lincora and
Wallein
turned their backs very deliberately. Round-faced Niolle gave her a
scowl, then
stalked over to refill her goblet. Lacine. so slender that her bosom
seemed
immense, shook her head as if wondering at Harine's presence. Others
went on
chatting as if she were not there. All wore the mourning stoles, of
course.
Pelanna
strode across the deck to her, the long pink scar down the right side
of her
square face giving her a dangerous look. Her tightly curled hair was
nearly all
gray, the honor chain across her left cheek heavy with gold medallions
recording her triumphs, including one for her part in the Escape. Her
wrists
and ankles still bore the marks of Seanchan chains, though hidden by
her silks
now. "I hope you are quite recovered, Harine, the Light willing," she
said, tilting her head to one side and clasping her plump, tattooed
hands in
mock sympathy. "Not still sitting tender, are you? I put a cushion on
your
chair just in case."
She
laughed uproariously, looking to her Windfinder, but Caire gave her a
blank
look, as if she had not heard, then added a faint laugh. Pelanna
frowned. When
she laughed at anything, she expected those under her to laugh as well.
The
stately Windfinder had her own worries, however, a daughter missing
among the
shorebound, abducted by Aes Sedai. There would be repayment for that.
One did
not need to like Caire or Pelanna to know that was necessary.
Harine
favored the pair with a tight smile and brushed by Pelanna closely
enough that
the woman had to step back or have her feet trodden on, scowling as she
did.
Daughter of the sands, Harine thought sourly.
Mareil's
approach brought a genuine smile, however. The tall, slender woman, her
shoulder-length hair as much white as black, had been her friend since
they
began as deckhands together on an aging raker with an iron-handed
Sailmistress
embittered by her lack of prospects. Learning that Mareil had escaped
Ebou Dar,
and unharmed, had been a joy. She favored Pelanna and Caire with a
frown.
Tebreille, her Windfinder, also grimaced at the pair, but unlike them,
it was
not because Mareil demanded wrist-licking. Sisters, Tebreille and Caire
shared
a deep concern for Talaan, Caire's daughter, yet beyond that, either
would have
slit the other's throat for a copper. Or better, in their view, seen
her sister
reduced to cleaning the bilges. There was no hatred deeper than hatred
between
siblings.
"Don't
let those mud-ducks peck at you, Harine." Mareil's voice was deep for a
woman, but melodious. She handed Harine one of the two goblets she
carried.
"You did what you felt you had to do, and the Light willing, all will
come
right."
Against
her will, Harine's eyes went to the ringbolt set in one of the beams of
the
overhead. It could have been removed by now. She was sure it remained
for the
purpose of provoking her. That strange young woman Min had been right.
Her
Bargain with the Coramoor had been judged deficient, giving away too
much and
demanding too little in return. In this same cabin, with the rest of
the First
Twelve and the new Mistress of the Ships watching, she had been
stripped and
hung by her ankles from that ringbolt, stretched tight to another set
in the
deck, then strapped until she howled her lungs out. The welts and
bruises had
faded, but the memory lingered however hard she tried to suppress it.
Not howls
for mercy or respite, though. Never that, else she would have had no
alternative to stepping aside, becoming just a Sailmistress again while
someone
else was chosen Wavemistress of Clan Shodein. Most of the women in this
room
believed she should have done so anyway after such a punishment,
perhaps even
Mareil. But she had the other part of Min's foretelling to bolster her
courage.
She would be Mistress of the Ships one day. In law, the First Twelve of
the
Atha'an Miere could choose any Sailmistress as Mistress of the Ships,
yet only
five times in more than three thousand years had they reached outside
their own
number. The Aes Sedai said Min's peculiar visions always came true, but
she did
not intend to gamble.
"All
will come right, Mareil, the Light willing," she said. Eventually. She
just had to have the courage to ride out whatever came before.
As
usual, Zaida arrived without ceremony, striding in followed by Shielyn.
her
Windfinder, tall and slim and reserved, and Amylia, the bosomy,
pale-haired Aes
Sedai Zaida had brought back with her from Caemlyn. Ageless face
seeming
permanently surprised, her startling blue eyes very wide, the Aes Sedai
was
breathing heavily for some reason. Everyone bowed, but Zaida paid the
courtesies no heed. In green brocades and white mourning stole, she was
short,
with a close cap of graying curls, yet she managed to make herself seem
every
bit as tall as Shielyn. A matter of presence, Harine had to admit.
Zaida had
that, and a coolness of thought that being caught by a cemaros on a lee
shore
could not shake. In addition to returning with the first of the Aes
Sedai
agreed to in the bargain for use of the Bowl of the Winds, she also had
returned with her own bargain, for land in Andor under Atha'an Miere
law, and
where Marine's Bargain had been judged wanting, Zaida's had found great
favor.
That and the fact that she had come straight to Illian via one of those
peculiar gateways, woven by her own Windfinder, were not the only
reasons that
she was now Mistress of the Ships, but neither had hurt her cause.
Harine
herself thought this Traveling overrated. Shalon could make a gateway,
now, but
making one to the deck of a ship without causing damage, even on still
waters
like these, especially from the deck of another ship, was chancy at
best, and
no one could make one large enough to sail a ship through. Very
overrated.
"The
man has not arrived yet,'' Zaida announced, taking the chair with its
back to
the large stern windows and arranging her long, fringed red sash just
so,
adjusting the angle of the emerald-studded dagger thrust through the
sash. She
was a very particular woman. It was natural enough to want everything
in its
place on board a ship-tidiness became a habit as well as a
necessity-yet she
was exacting even by the usual standards. The remaining chairs, none
fastened
to the deck in proper fashion, made two rows facing each other, and the
Wavemistresses began taking their seats, each woman's Windfinder
standing
behind her chair. "It appears he intends us to wait on him. Amylia, see
that the goblets are all filled." Ah. It seemed the woman had put her
foot
wrong yet again.
Amylia
jumped, then gathered her bronze-colored skirts to her knees and went
racing
for the table where the wine pitchers sat. Badly wrong, it appeared.
Harine
wondered how long Zaida would continue to allow her to wear dresses
rather than
trousers, which were much more practical shipboard. It would surely be
a shock
to her when they passed beyond sight of land and blouses were
abandoned. Of the
Brown Ajah, Amylia had wanted to study the Atha'an Miere, but she was
given
little time for study. Her purpose was to work, and Zaida saw that she
did. She
was there to teach the Windfinders all that the Aes Sedai knew. She
still
dithered over that, but shorebound instructors, rare as they were,
ranked
barely a whisker above the deckhands- in the beginning, the woman
apparently
had believed her dignity fully equal to Zaida's if not more!-and the
deckmaster's flail laid with some frequent regularity across her rump
supposedly was changing her mind, if slowly. Amylia had actually tried
to
desert three times! Strangely, she did not know how to make a gateway,
knowledge that carefully was being kept from her, and she should have
known she
was being watched too closely to bribe her way onto a bumboat. Well,
she was
unlikely to try again. Reportedly she had been told that a fourth
attempt would
earn a public strapping this time followed by being hung by her ankles
in the
rigging. No one would risk that shame, surely. Sailmistresses and even
Wavemistresses had been reduced to deckhands and gone willingly after
that,
eager to lose themselves and their disgrace in the mass of men and
women
hauling lines and handling sail.
Removing
the cushion from the seat of her chair and dropping it disdainfully on
the
deck, Harine took her place at the bottom of the left-hand row, Shalon
at her
back. She was the least senior except for Mareil. seated across from
her. But
then, Zaida would have sat only one chair farther up had she not gained
the
sixth fat golden earring for each ear and the chains that connected
them. Her
lobes might still be sore from the piercings. A pleasant thought. "As
he
makes us wait, perhaps we should make him wait when he finally does
appear." With an untouched goblet in hand, she waved away the anxious
Aes
Sedai, who scurried over to Mareil. Foolish woman. Did she not know she
should
have served the Mistress of the Ships first and then followed with the
Wavemistresses by seniority}
Zaida
toyed with her piercework scent box, hanging on a very heavy golden
chain
around her neck. She wore a wide, close-fitting collar of heavy gold
links,
too, a gift from Elayne of Andor. "He comes from the Coramoor," she
said dryly, "whom you were supposed to stick to like a barnacle." Her
voice never hardened, but every word cut at Harine. "This man will be
as
close as I can come to speaking to the Coramoor without dire need,
since you
agreed he did not have to attend me more than three times in any period
of two
years. Because of you, I must accept this man's discourtesy if he turns
out to
be a scabrous drunkard who must run to the rail and empty his stomach
every
second sentence. The ambassador I send to the Coramoor will be someone
who
knows how to obey her orders." Pelanna tittered and smirked. She
thought
everyone was like herself.
Shalon
squeezed Harine's shoulder reassuringly, but she did not need it. Stay
with the
Coramoor? There was no way she could explain to anyone, even Shalon,
Cadsuane's
rude methods of enforcing her will or her total lack of respect for
Harine's
dignity. She had been an ambassador from the Atha'an Miere in name, and
forced
to dance to any tune the Aes Sedai piped. She was willing to admit, if
only to
herself, that she had almost wept with relief when she realized that
cursed
woman was going to let her leave. Besides, that girl's visions always
came
true. So the Aes Sedai said, and they could not lie. It was enough.
Turane
slipped into the cabin and bowed to Zaida. "The Coramoor's emissary has
arrived, Shipmistress. He… he stepped out of a gateway on the
quarterdeck." That created murmurs among the Windfinders, and Amylia
jerked as though she had felt the deckmas-ter's flail again.
"I
hope he did not damage your deck too badly, Turane," Zaida said. Harine
sipped wine to hide her small smile. Apparently the man was to be made
to wait
a little, at least.
"Not
at all, Shipmistress." Turane sounded surprised. "The gateway opened
a good foot above the deck, and he stepped through from one of the
city's
docks."
"Yes,"
Shalon whispered. "I can see how to do that." She thought anything to
do with the Power was wonderful.
"That
must have a shock, seeing a stone dock above your quarterdeck," Zaida
said. "Very well. I will see whether the Coramoor has sent me a
scabrous
drunkard. Send him in, Turane. But do not rush. Amylia, am I to get any
wine
before nightfall?"
The
Aes Sedai gasped and, making little whimpers as if on the point of
tears,
rushed to fetch a goblet as Turane bowed and left. Light, what had
Amylia done?
Long moments passed, and Zaida had her wine well before a large man
with dark
hair curling to his broad shoulders entered the cabin. He certainly was
not
scabrous, nor did he appear drunk. The high collar of his black coat
held a
silver pin in the shape of a sword on one side, and on the other a
red-and-gold
pin shaped like one of the creatures that entwined the Coramoor's
forearms. A
dragon. Yes, that was what it was called. A round pin fastened to his
left
shoulder showed three golden crowns against blue enamel. A sigil,
perhaps? Was
he a shorebound noble? Could the Coramoor actually have done Zaida
honor in
sending this man? Knowing Rand al'Thor as she did, she doubted it had
been
intentional. It was not that he tried to dishonor anyone, yet he cared
little
for the honors of others.
He
bowed to Zaida, handling the sword at his side smoothly, but he failed
to touch
heart and lips and forehead. Still, some shortcomings had to be
overlooked with
the shorebound. "I apologize if I arrive late, Shipmistress," he
said, "but it seemed unnecessary to come before all of your number were
here." He must have a very good looking glass to have observed that
from
the docks.
Studying
him up and down with a frown. Zaida sipped her wine. "You have a
name?"
"I
am Logain," he said simply.
Half
the women in the room exhaled sharply, and most of the rest let their
jaws
drop. More than one slopped wine from her goblet. Not Zaida. and not
Harine.
but the others. Logain. That was a name known even to the Atha'an Miere.
"May
I speak, Shipmistress?" Amylia asked breathily. She was clutching the
porcelain pitcher so hard that Harine feared it might shatter in her
hands, but
the woman had learned enough sense to say no more until Zaida nodded.
Then
words spilled from her in a breathless rush. "This man was a false
Dragon.
He was gentled for it. How it is he can channel again. I cannot know,
but he
channels sa'tdin. Saidin. He is tainted, Shipmistress. If you deal with
him,
you will incur the wrath of the White Tower. I know-"
"Enough,"
Zaida cut in. "You should be well aware by now how much I fear the
wrath
of the White Tower."
"But-!"
Zaida held up a single finger, and the Aes Sedai's mouth snapped shut,
her lips
twisting in a sickly fashion. That one word might lead to her kissing
the
deckmaster's sister again, and she knew it.
"What
she says is true in part," Logain said calmly. "I am an Asha'man, but
there is no taint any longer. Saidin is clean. The Creator decided to
show us
mercy, it seems. I have a question for her. Whom do you serve. Aes
Sedai,
Egwene al'Vere or Elaida a'Roihan?" Wisely, Amylia kept her mouth shut.
"For
the next year, she serves me. Logain," Zaida said firmly. The Aes Sedai
squeezed her pale eyes shut for a moment, and when they opened again,
they were
even wider than before, impossible as that seemed, and they held a look
of
horror. Was it possible she had believed Zaida might relent and let her
go
early? "You can confine your questions to me," the Shipmistress went
on. "but first, I have two for you. Where is the Coramoor? I must send
an
ambassador to him, and he must keep her close, in accordance with the
Bargain.
Remind him of that. And what message do you bring from him? A request
for some
service, I suppose."
"As
to where he is. I cannot say." The man smiled slightly, as if he had
made
a joke. He smiled!
"I
demand," Zaida began, but he cut her off. provoking angry mutters and
hot
glares from the other women. The fool seemed to think he was an equal
to the
Mistress of the Ships!
"He
wants his whereabouts kept secret for now, Shipmistress. The Forsaken
have made
efforts to kill him. I am willing to take Harine din Togara with me.
however.
From what I heard, I think he found her acceptable."
Harine
jerked so hard she spilled wine over the back of her hand, then took
another
long swallow. But. no, Zaida would divorce Amel and marry a ballast
stone
before she sent Harine din Togara as her ambassador. Still, even the
thought of
it was enough to make her tongue stick to the roof of her mouth. Even
becoming
Mistress of the Ships might be insufficient recompense for being forced
to
endure Cadsuane any longer.
Studying
Logain with a stony face. Zaida told Amylia to pour wine for him. The
Aes Sedai
flinched, and by the time she reached the table, she was trembling so
hard that
the pitcher's spout clattered on the rim of the goblet. Almost as much
wine
went onto the deck as inside the goblet. Strangely, Logain walked over
to her
and put his hands on hers to steady her. Was he one of those who could
not
leave others to do their own work?
"You've
nothing to fear from me, Amylia Sedai," he told her. "It's been a
long time since I ate anyone for breakfast." She stared up at him with
her
mouth hanging open as though uncertain whether he was making a joke.
"And
the service he requests?" Zaida said.
"Not
a request, Shipmistress." He had to straighten the pitcher to keep the
goblet from overflowing. Taking the goblet, he stepped away from
Amylia, but
she stood gaping at his back. Light, but the woman found no end of ways
to get
into trouble. "A call on your side of the Bargain with the Coramoor.
Among
other things, you promised him ships, and he needs ships to carry food
and
other supplies to Bandar Eban from Illian and Tear."
"That
can be done" Zaida said, not quite masking her relief, though she shot
a
frown at Harine. Pelanna glared as well, of course, but so did Lacine
and
Niolle and several others. Harine suppressed a sigh.
Some
of the details of the Bargain were quite onerous, she had to admit,
such as the
requirement that the Mistress of the Ships be prepared to attend him up
to
three times in any two years. The Jendai Prophecy said the Atha'an
Miere were
to serve the Coramoor, yet few opinions of how they were to serve
included the
Mistress of the Ships going running when he called. But the others had
not been
there, bargaining with Aes Sedai convinced that she had no alternative
to
making whatever Bargain she could. Truth of the Light, it was a wonder
she had
gotten as much as she had!
"Supplies
for more than a million people, Shipmistress," Logain added as casually
as
if he were asking for another goblet of wine. "How many more, I cannot
say, but Bandar Eban itself is starving. The ships must arrive as soon
as
possible."
Shock
rippled through the cabin. Harine was not alone in taking a long drink
of wine.
Even Zaida's eyes widened in amazement. "That might require more rakers
than we possess," she said at last, unable to keep the incredulity from
her voice.
Logain
shrugged as though that were of no account. "Even so, that is what he
requires of you. Use other ships if you must."
Zaida
stiffened in her chair. Required. Bargain or no Bargain, that was
imprudent
language to use with her.
Turane
slipped into the cabin again, and in breach of all protocol, ran to
Zaida, her
bare feet slapping the deck. Bending close, she whispered into the
Shipmistress's ear. Zaida's face slowly took on a look of horror. She
half-raised her scent box, then shuddered and let it fall to her bosom.
"Send
her in," she said. "Send her in immediately. There is news to make an
anchor weep," she went on as Turane raced from the cabin. "I will let
you hear it from she who brought it. You must wait," she added when
Logain
opened his mouth. "You must wait." He had sufficient sense to hold
his peace, but not enough to hide his impatience, stalking to the side
of the
cabin to stand with his mouth tight and his brows drawn down.
The
young woman who entered and bowed deeply to Zaida was tall and lean,
and she
might have been lovely except that her face was haggard. Her blue linen
blouse
and green trousers looked as if they had been worn for days, and she
swayed on
her feet with weariness. Her honor chain held only a handful of
medallions, as
befitted her youth, yet Harine could see that no fewer than three
commended
acts of great courage.
"I
am Cemeille din Selaan Long Eyes, Shipmistress," she said hoarsely,
"Sailmistress of the darter Wind Racer. I sailed as fast as I could,
but I
fear it is too late for anything to be done. I stopped at every island
between
Tremalking and here, but I was always too late." Tears began to trickle
down her cheeks, yet she seemed unaware of them.
"Tell
the First Twelve your sad news in your own way, at your own pace."
Zaida
said gently. "Amylia, give her wine!" Not gently said at all. The Aes
Sedai leaped to obey.
"Almost
three weeks ago," Cemeille said, "Amayar on Tremalking began asking
the gift of passage to every island. Always a man and a woman to each
island.
Those who asked for Aile Somera requested they be put off in boats out
of sight
of land when they were told that the Seanchan hold all of Somera." She
took a full goblet from Amylia, nodding her thanks, then drank deeply.
Harine
exchanged questioning glances with Mareil, who shook her head slightly.
No
Amayar had ever requested the gift of passage in Harine's memory,
though for
them, it truly was a gift, with no gift expected in return. And they
avoided
the salt, keeping their small fishing boats close to shore, so asking
to be put
off out of sight of land was as strange as asking passage. But what
could be so
dire in this?
"All
of the Amayar in the ports left, even those owed money from the
shipyards or
the ropewalks, but no one thought anything of it for two or three
days."
The wine had not wet Cemeille's throat enough to mitigate her
hoarseness. She
scrubbed at the tears on her cheeks with the back of her hand. "Not
until
we realized none had come back. The governor sent people to the Amayar
villages, and they found…" She squeezed her eyes shut. "The
Amayar were all dead or dying. Men. women"-her voice
broke-"children."
Funeral
keening rose in the cabin, and Harine was surprised to realize that
shrill
sound was coming from her mouth, too. Sad enough to make an anchor
weep? This
should make the heavens sob. No wonder the Sailmistress was hoarse. How
many
hours, how many days, had she cried since learning of this catastrophe?
"How?*'
Pelanna demanded when the keening died. Face distraught, she leaned
forward in
her chair. She was holding her scent box to her nose as if the scent
could
somehow ward off the stench of this news. "Some sickness? Speak,
woman!"
"Poison,
Wavemistress." Cemeille replied. She struggled to compose herself, but
tears still leaked down her face. "Everywhere I have been, it was the
same. They gave their children a poison that put them into a deep sleep
from
which they did not waken. It seems there was not enough of that to go
around,
so many of the adults took slower poisons. Some lived long enough to be
found
and tell the tale. The Great Hand on Tremalking melted. The hill where
it stood
reportedly is now a deep hollow. It seems the Amayar had prophecies
that spoke
of the Hand, and when it was destroyed, they believed this signaled the
end of
time, what they called the end of Illusion. They believed it was time
for them
to leave this… this illusion"-she laughed the word bitterly- "we
call the world."
"Have
none been saved?" Zaida asked. "None at all?" Tears glistened on
her cheeks, too, but Harine could not fault her on that. Her own cheeks
were
wet.
"None,
Shipmistress."
Zaida
stood, and tears or no tears, she held the aura of command, and her
voice was
steady. "The fastest ships must be sent to every island. Even to those
of
Aile Somera. A way must be found. When the salt first stilled after the
Breaking, the Amayar asked our protection from brigands and raiders,
and we owe
them protection still. If we can find only a handful who still live, we
still
owe it."
"This
is as sad a story as I have ever heard." Logain's voice sounded too
loud
as he walked back out in front of Zaida. "But your ships are committed
to
Bandar Eban. If you don't have enough rakers, then you must use your
other fast
ships, too. All of them if necessary."
"Are
you mad as well as heartless?" Zaida demanded. Fists on her hips and
feet
apart, she seemed to be standing on a quarterdeck. Her glare stabbed at
Logain.
"We must mourn. We must save who we can, and mourn for the countless
thousands we cannot save."
She
might as well have smiled for all the effect her glares had on Logain.
As he
spoke, it seemed to Harine that the space turned chill and the light
dimmed.
She was not the only woman to hug herself against that cold. "Mourn if
you
must." he said, "but mourn on the march for Tarmon Gai'don."
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
Call to a Sitting
W
ith Magla and Salita out for the morning, Romanda had the patched brown
tent to
herself, a blessed opportunity to read, though the two mismatched brass
lamps
on the small table gave off a faint yet nose-wrinkling scent of rancid
oil. One
had to live with such things these days. Some might consider The Flame,
the
Blade and the Heart unseemly for one of her attainments and position-
as a girl
in Far Madding, she had been forbidden such books-but it made an
agreeable
change from dry histories and terrifying reports of food spoilage. She
had seen
a side of beef kept for months as fresh as the day the cow was
slaughtered, but
now the Keepings were failing one by one. Some had taken to muttering
that
there must be a flaw in Eg-wene's creation, yet that was arrant
blather. If a
weave worked once. then properly done, it always worked, barring
something to
disrupt the weave, and Egwene's new weaves always worked as claimed.
She had to
give the woman that. And try as they might, and they had tried very
hard, no
one could detect any interference. It was as if saidar itself were
failing. It
was unthinkable. And inescapable. Worst of all, no one could think of
anything
to do! She certainly could not. A brief interlude with tales of romance
and
adventure was much preferable to contemplating utter futility and the
failure of
what was by its very nature unfailing.
The
novice straightening the tent had sense enough not to comment on her
reading,
or to glance at the wood-bound book twice. Bodewhin Cauthon was quite
pretty,
but she was an intelligent girl even so, though she had something of
her
brother around the eyes and rather more of him in her head than she was
willing
to admit. Undoubtedly she was already hard on the path to the Green, or
perhaps
the Blue. The girl wanted to live adventure, not just read about it, as
if an
Aes Sedai's life would not bring her more adventure than she wished
without
searching for it. Romanda felt no regret over the girl's path. The
Yellow would
have plenty to choose from among more suitable novices. There could be
no
question of accepting any of the older women, of course, yet that left
a wealth
of choice. She tried to focus on the page. She did enjoy the story of
Birgitte
and Gaidal Cain.
The
tent was not particularly large and was quite crowded. It held a trio
of hard
canvas cots barely softened by thin mattresses stuffed with lumpy wool,
three
ladderback chairs made by distinctly different hands, a rickety
washstand with
a cracked mirror and a chipped blue pitcher standing in the white
basin, and,
along with the table, made steady by a small block of wood under one
leg,
brassbound chests for clothing, bed linens and personal possessions. As
a
Sitter, she could have had the space to herself, but she liked being
able to
keep a close eye on Magla and Salita. Just because they all sat for the
Yellow
was no reason to trust too far. Magla supposedly was her ally in the
Hall yet
went her own way much too often, and Salita seldom did anything else.
Still, it
made for inconvenience aside from crowding. Bodewhin had a great deal
of work,
mainly putting away the dresses and slippers Salita scattered across
the
tattered carpets after deciding they would not do. That woman was
frivolous
enough for a Green. She went through her entire wardrobe every single
morning!
Likely she thought Romanda would have her serving woman straighten-she
always
seemed to think Aelmara was as much in her service as Romanda's-but
Aelmara had
served Romanda for years before she went into retirement, not to
mention
helping her escape Far Madding after a slight misunderstanding a short
time
later. There was no possibility she would require Aelmara to look after
another
sister as well as herself.
She
frowned at the book, not seeing a word. Why in the Light had Magla
insisted on
Salita back in Salidar? In truth, Magla had bandied several names
about, each
more ridiculous than the last, but had settled on Salita once she
decided the
plump Tairen had the best chance of being raised to a chair. Romanda
had thrown
her own support behind Dagdara. a far more suitable candidate, not to
mention
one she thought she could sway without too much difficulty, yet she
herself had
been trying for a chair while Magla already held one. That carried
weight, and
no matter that Romanda had previously held a chair longer than anyone
in living
memory. Well, it was done, and that was that. What could not be cured
must be
endured.
Nisao
ducked into the tent, the light of saidar around her winking out as she
did so.
In the brief instant before the tentflap fell shut. Sarin, her
bald-headed
stump of a Warder, was visible outside, a hand resting on his sword
hilt and
his head swiveling, plainly standing guard.
"May
I speak with you alone?" the diminutive sister said. Short enough to
make
Sarin seem tall, she always minded Romanda of a large-eyed sparrow.
There was
nothing tiny about her powers of observation or her intellect, however.
She had
been a natural choice for the council the Ajahs created to try keeping
an eye
on Egwene, and it was certainly no fault of hers that said council had
had
little or no restraining effect on the woman.
"Of
course. Nisao." Romanda casually closed the book and eased up to tuck
it
beneath the yellow-tasseled cushion on her chair. It would never do to
have
word get around that she was reading that. "It must be almost time for
your next class, Bodewhin. You don't want to be late."
"Oh,
no, Aes Sedai! Sharina would be very upset." Spreading her white skirts
in
a deep curtsy, the novice darted from the tent.
Romanda
compressed her lips. Sharina would be upset. That woman was emblematic
of all
that was wrong with allowing those above eighteen into the novice
ranks. Her
potential was beyond incredible, but that was beside the point. Sharina
Melloy
was a disruption. But how to be rid of her? Her and all the other women
too old
to have had their names written in the novice book in the first place.
Provisions were strictly limited for putting a woman out once her name
was in
the book. Unfortunately, over the years a number of women had been
found to
have lied about their age to gain entrance to the Tower. By a few years
only in
most cases, but allowing them to remain had set precedents. And Egwene
al'Vere
had set another, and worse. There had to be some way to overcome it.
"May
I make us private?" Nisao asked.
"If
you wish. Have you learned something about the negotiations?" Despite
Egwene's capture, talks continued under the pavilion at the foot of the
bridge
in Darein. Or rather, the semblance of talks. They were a farce, a
dumb-show of
obstinacy, yet it was necessary to keep a close eye on the negotiators.
Varilin
had snatched most of that work to herself, claiming Gray Ajah
prerogative, but
Magla found ways to wriggle into the matter whenever she could, and so
did
Saroiya and Takima and Faiselle. Worse than the fact that none of them
seemed
to trust the others to carry out the negotiations-or much at all, for
that
matter-at times, all of them almost seemed to be negotiating for
Elaida. Well,
perhaps it was not that bad. They held fast against the woman's
ridiculous
demand that the Blue Ajah be dissolved and argued, if not nearly with
sufficient force, for Elaida stepping down, but if she-and Lelaine, she
was
forced to admit-did not stiffen their backbones now and then, they
might well
accede to some of Elaida's other odious conditions. Light, at times it
was as
if they had forgotten the entire purpose of marching on Tar Valon!
"Pour
us tea," she went on, gesturing to a painted wooden tray sitting atop
two
stacked chests that held a silver pitcher and several battered pewter
cups,
"and tell me what you've heard."
The
glow surrounded Nisao briefly while she warded the tent and tied off
the weave.
"I know nothing of the negotiations," she said, filling two of the
cups. "I want to ask you to speak to Lelaine."
Romanda
took the proffered cup and used taking a slow swallow to give herself
time for
thought. At least this tea had not yet turned. Lelaine? What could
there be
about Lelaine that required warding? Still, anything that gave her
leverage
against the other woman would be useful. Lelaine seemed entirely too
smug of
late for her to be entirely comfortable about it. She shifted on the
seat
cushion. "Regarding what? Why don't you speak to her yourself? We
haven't
fallen as low as it seems the White Tower has under Elaida."
"I
have spoken to her. Or rather, she has spoken to me. and rather
forcefully." Nisao sat down, and set her cup on the table while she
arranged her yellow-slashed skirts with overly elaborate care. She wore
a small
frown. It seemed she was fiddling for time, too. "Lelaine demanded that
I
stop asking questions about Anaiya and Kairen," she said finally.
"According to her, their murders are Blue Ajah business.''
Romanda
snorted, shifting again. The book's wooden cover was a hard lump
beneath her,
its corners digging into her hip. "That is utter nonsense. But why were
you asking questions? I don't recall you being inquisitive about such
matters."
The
other woman touched her cup to her lips, but if she drank, it was the
tiniest
sip. Lowering the cup, she almost seemed to grow taller, she sat up so
straight. A sparrow becoming a hawk. "Because the Mother ordered me
to."
Romanda
kept her eyebrows from rising only with an effort. So. In the
beginning, she
had accepted Egwene for the same reason she suspected every other
Sitter had.
Certainly Lelaine had done so, once she realized she could not attain
the stole
and staff herself. A malleable young girl would be a puppet in the
hands of the
Hall, and Romanda had fully intended to be the one pulling her strings.
Later,
it had seemed obvious that Siuan was the true puppeteer, and there had
been no
way to stop her short of rebelling against a second Amyrlin, which
surely would
have shattered the rebellion against Elaida. She hoped Lelaine had
ground her
teeth over that half as much as she had. Now Egwene was in Elaida's
hands, yet
in several meetings she had remained cool and collected, determined in
her
course of action and that of the sisters outside Tar Valon's walls.
Romanda
found in herself a grudging respect for the girl. Very grudging, but
she could
not deny it. It had to be Egwene herself. The Hall kept a tight fist on
the
dream ter'angreal. and though no one could find the one Leane had been
loaned
before that dire night, she and Siuan had been practically at each
other's
throats. There was no question of Siuan slipping into Tel'aran'rhiod to
tell
the woman what to say. Was it possible that Nisao had come to the same
conclusion about Egwene without seeing her in the Unseen World? That
council
had stuck very close to her.
"That
is reason enough for you, Nisao?" She could hardly slip the book back
out
without the other woman noticing. She shifted again, but there was no
comfortable position on the thing. She was going to have a bruise if
this
continued.
Nisao
twisted her pewter cup about on the tabletop, but she still did not
look away.
"It is my major reason. In the beginning, I thought she would end up as
your pet. Or Lelaine's. Later, when it was clear she had evaded both of
you, I
thought Siuan must be holding the leash, but I soon learned I was
wrong. Siuan
has been a teacher, I'm sure, and an advisor, and perhaps even a
friend, but
I've seen Egwene call her up short. No one has a leash on Egwene
al'Vere. She
is intelligent, observant, quick to learn and deft. She may become one
of the
great Amyr-lins.'' The bird-like sister gave a sudden, brief laugh. "Do
you realize she will be the longest sitting Amyrlin in history? No one
will
ever live long enough to top her unless she chooses to step down
early."
Smiles faded to solemnity, and perhaps worry. Not because she had
skirted the
edge of violating custom, however. Nisao schooled her face well, but
her eyes
were tight. "If we manage to unseat Elaida, that is."
Hearing
her own thoughts thrown back at her. with emendations, was unnerving. A
great
Amyrlin? Well! It would take many years to see whether that came about.
But
whether or not Egwene managed that considerable and unlikely feat, she
would
discover that the Hall was much less amenable once her war powers
expired.
Romanda Cassin certainly would be. Respect was one thing, becoming a
lapdog
quite another. Standing on the pretext of straightening her deep yellow
skirts,
she drew the book from beneath the cushion as she sat back down and
tried to
drop it surreptitiously. It hit the carpet with a thud, and Nisao's
eyebrows
twitched. Romanda ignored that, pulling the book under the edge of the
table
with her foot.
"We
will." She put more confidence than she felt into that. The peculiar
negotiations and Egwene's continuing imprisonment gave her pause,
forget the
girl's claims that she could undermine Elaida from within. Though it
seemed
half her work had been done by others, if her reporting on the
situation in the
Tower was accurate. But Romanda believed because she had to believe.
She had no
intention of living cut off from her Ajah, accepting penance until
Elaida
thought her fit to be fully Aes Sedai again, no intention of accepting
Elaida
a'Roihan as Amyrlin. Better Lelaine than that, and one argument in her
own mind
for raising Egwene had been that it kept the stole and staff from
Lelaine. No
doubt Lelaine had thought the same concerning her. "And I will inform
Lelaine in no uncertain terms that you can ask any questions you wish.
We must
solve those murders, and the murder of any sister is every sister's
concern.
What have you learned so far?" Not a proper question, perhaps, but
being a
Sitter gave you certain privileges. At least, she had always believed
it did.
Nisao
displayed no pique at being questioned, no hesitation in answering.
"Very
little, I fear,"' she said ruefully, frowning at her winecup. "It
seemed there must be some link between Anaiya and Kairen, some reason
they two
were picked out, but all I've learned so far is that they had been
close
friends for many years. Blues called them and another Blue sister,
Cabriana
Mecandes, 'the Three.' because they were so close. But they were all
closemouthed, too. No one recalls any of them talking about their own
affairs
except with one another. In any event, friendship seems a feeble motive
for
murder. I hope I can find some reason why anyone would want to murder
them,
especially a man who can channel. but I confess, it's a small hope."
Romanda
furrowed her brow. Cabriana Mecandes. She paid little attention to the
other
Ajahs-only the Yellow had any truly useful function: how could any of
their
passions compare to Healing?-yet that name chimed a small gong in the
back of
her head. Why? It would come to her or not. It could not be important.
"Small hopes can grow surprising fruit, Nisao. That's an old saying in
Far
Madding, and it's true. Continue your investigation. In Egwene's
absence, you
may report what you learn to me."
Nisao
blinked, and her jaw tightened briefly, but whether or not reporting to
Romanda
sat well with her, there was little she could do but obey. She could
hardly
claim interference in her affairs. Murder could not be one sister's
affair.
Besides, Magla might have gotten her ridiculous choice for the third
Yellow
Sitter, yet Romanda had secured the position of First Weaver for
herself
easily. After all, she had been head of the Yellow before she retired,
and even
Magla had been unwilling to stand against her. The position carried
much less
power than she would have liked, but at least she could count on
obedience in
most things. From Yellow sisters if not Sitters, at least.
As
Nisao untied her ward against eavesdropping and let it dissipate,
Theodrin
popped into the tent. She was wearing her shawl spread across her
shoulders and
down her arms to display the long fringe, as newly raised sisters often
did.
The willowy Domani had chosen Brown after Egwene granted her that
shawl, but
the Brown had not known what to do with her despite finally accepting
her. They
had seemed ready to largely ignore her. entirely the wrong thing, so
Romanda
had taken her in. Theodrin tried to behave as if she really were Aes
Sedai, yet
she was a bright, levelheaded girl for all that. She spread her brown
woolen
skirts in a curtsy. A small curtsy, but a curtsy. She was well aware
that she
had no right to the shawl until she had been tested. And passed. It
would have
been cruel not to make sure she understood.
"Lelaine
has called a sitting of the Hall." she said breathlessly. "I couldn't
find out why. I ran to tell you, but I didn't want to intrude while the
ward
was up."
"And
rightly not," Romanda said. "Nisao, if you will excuse me. I must see
what Lelaine is about." Gathering her yellow-fringed shawl from atop
one
of the chests holding her clothing, she arranged it over her arms and
checked
her hair in the cracked mirror before herding the others outside and
seeing
them on their way. It was not so much that she thought Nisao would have
looked
for what had made that thud if left in the tent alone, but it was
better to take
no chances. Aelmara would replace the book where it belonged, with
several
similar volumes in the chest that held Romanda's personal possessions.
That had
a very stout lock with only two keys, one kept in her belt pouch, the
other in
Aelmara's.
The
morning was crisp, yet spring had arrived with a rush. The dark clouds
massing
behind Dragonmount's shattered peak would deliver rain rather than
snow, though
not on the camp, it was to be hoped. Many of the tents leaked, and the
camp
streets were a bog already. Horse carts making deliveries splashed mud
from
their high wheels as they made new ruts, driven by women for the most
part, and
a few gray-haired men. Male access to the Aes Sedai camp was strictly
limited,
now. Even so, nearly every sister she saw glided along the uneven
wooden
walkways wrapped in the light oisaidar and followed by her Warder if
she had
one. Romanda refused to embrace the Source whenever she went
outside-someone
had to set an example of proper behavior with every sister in the camp
on
tenterhooks-yet she was very conscious of the lack. Conscious of the
lack of a
Warder, too. Keeping most men out of the camp was all very well, but a
murderer
was unlikely to pay any heed to the restriction.
Ahead,
Gareth Bryne rode out of a crossing street, a stocky man with mostly
gray hair,
his breastplate strapped over a buff-colored coat and his helmet
hanging from
his saddle bow. Siuan was with him, swaying on a plump shaggy mare and
looking
such a pretty girl that it was almost possible to forget she had been
hard-bitten and sharp-tongued as Amyrlin. Easy to forget she was still
an
accomplished schemer. Blues always were. The mare plodded along, but
Siuan
nearly fell off before Bryne reached out to steady her. At the edge of
the Blue
quarters-the camp was laid out in rough approximation of the Ajah
quarters in
the Tower-he dismounted long enough to help her down. then climbed back
into
his bay's saddle and left her standing there holding the mare's reins
and
gazing after him. Now, why would she do that? Blacking the mans boots,
doing
his laundry. That relationship was abhorrent. The Blue should put an
end to it,
and to the Pit of Doom with custom. However strong, custom should not
be abused
to hold all Aes Sedai up to ridicule.
Turning
her back on Siuan, she started toward che pavilion that served as their
temporary Hall of the Tower. As pleasant as it was to meet in the true
Hall,
not to mention under Elaida's very nose, few sisters could manage to
put
themselves to sleep at any hour, so the pavilion must continue to
serve. She
glided along the walkway without haste. She was not about to be seen
hurrying
to answer Lelaine's call. What could the woman want now?
A
gong sounded, magnified with the Power so it carried across the camp
clearly-another of Sharina's suggestions-and suddenly the walkways were
crowded
with novices hurrying to their next class or to chores, all clustered
by
family. Those families of six or seven always attended class together,
did
chores together, in fact, did everything together. It was an effective
way to
manage so many novices-nearly fifty more had wandered into the camp in
just the
last two weeks, pushing the total back near a thousand in spite of
runaways,
and almost a quarter of those were young enough to be proper novices,
more than
the Tower had held in centuries!-yet she wished it were not Sharina's
work. The
woman had not even suggested it to the Mistress of Novices. She had
organized
the thing herself and presented it to Tiana whole and complete! The
novices,
some of them graying or with lines in their faces so that it was
difficult to
think of them as children despite their white dresses, squeezed to the
edge of
the walkway to let sisters pass while they offered curtsies, but none
stepped
into the muddy street to make more room. Sharina again. Sharina had
spread the
word that she did not want to see the girls dirtying their nice white
woolens
unnecessarily. It was enough to make Romanda grind her teeth. The
novices who
curtsied to her straightened hurriedly and practically ran.
Ahead
of her, she spotted Sharina herself, talking to Tiana, who was shrouded
in the
glow of saidar. Doing all of the talking, with Tiana merely nodding now
and
then. There was nothing disrespectful in Sharina's demeanor, but
despite novice
white, with her creased face and gray hair in a tight bun on the back
of her
head, she looked exactly what she was, a grandmother. And Tiana had an
unfortunately youthful appearance. Something about her bone structure
and large
brown eyes overwhelmed the ageless look of Aes Sedai. Lack of
disrespect or no,
there was too much appearance of a woman instructing her granddaughter
to suit
Romanda. As she approached them, Sharina offered a proper curtsy-a very
proper
curtsy, Romanda had to admit-and hurried off the other way to join her
own
family, waiting for her. Were there fewer lines in her face than there
had
been? Well, there was no saying what might happen when a woman began
with the
Power at her age. Sixty-seven and a novice!
"Is
she giving you difficulties?" she asked, and Tiana leaped as though an
icicle had slid down the back of her dress. The woman lacked the
dignity, the
gravity, necessary in a Mistress of Novices. At times, she seemed
smothered by
the number of her charges, too. And she was much too lenient besides,
accepting
excuses where there could be none.
She
recovered quickly, however, falling in beside Romanda, though she
smoothed her
dark gray skirts unnecessarily. "Difficulties? Of course not. Sharina
is
the best-behaved novice in the book. Truth to tell, most are
well-behaved. The
greatest number sent to my study are mothers upset because their
daughters are
learning faster than they or have a higher potential, or aunts with the
same
complaint of nieces. They seem to believe the matter can be rectified
somehow.
They can be surprisingly adamant about it until I set them straight
about being
adamant with any sister. Although a good many have been sent to me more
than
once, I fear. A handful still seem surprised that they can be switched."
"Is
that so," Romanda said absently. Her eye had caught pale-haired Delana
hurrying in the same direction, gray-fringed shawl looped over her arms
and her
so-called secretary striding at her side. Delana wore an almost somber
dark
gray, but the Saranov trollop was in blue-slashed green silk that left
half her
bosom on display and fit much too snugly over hips that she rolled
blatantly.
Of late, the pair of them seemed to have abandoned the story that
Halima was
merely De-lana's servant. Indeed, the woman was gesturing emphatically
while
Delana merely nodded in the meekest manner imaginable. Meek! It was
always a
mistake to choose a pillow-friend who did not wear the shawl.
Especially if you
were fool enough to let her take the lead.
"Sharina
isn't only well-behaved," Tiana continued blithely, "she is showing a
great skill with Nynaeve's new way of Healing. Like a number of the
older
novices. Most were village Wise Women of one sort or another, though I
don't
see how that can have any bearing. One was a noble in Murandy."
Romanda
tripped over her own heel and staggered two steps, arms flailing for
balance,
before she could catch herself and gather her shawl. Tiana put a hand
on her
arm to steady her. murmuring about the un-evenness of the walkway's
planking,
but she shook it off. Sbarina had a gift for the new Healing? And a
number of
the older women? She herself had learned the new way, but while it was
different enough from the old that the second-learned weave limitation
seemed
not to apply, she had no great gift for it. Not nearly what she had for
the old
method.
"And
why are novices being allowed to practice that, Tiana?''
Tiana
flushed, as well she should. Such weaves were much too complex for
novices, not
to mention dangerous if misapplied. Done improperly, Healing could kill
rather
than cure. The woman channeling as well as the patient. "I can hardly
stop
them from seeing Healing done, Romanda." she said defensively, moving
her
arms as if adjusting a shawl she was not wearing. "There are always
broken
bones or some fool who's managed to cut himself badly, not to mention
all the
illness we have to deal with lately. Most of the older women only have
to see a
weave once to have it down." Abruptly, for a bare instant, red returned
to
her cheeks. Smoothing her face, she drew herself up, and defensive-ness
fell
away from her voice. "In any event, Romanda, I shouldn't need to remind
you that the novices and Accepted are mine. As Mistress of Novices. I
decide
what they can learn and when. Some of those women could test for
Accepted
today, after only months. When it comes to the Power, at least. If I
choose not
to make them twiddle their thumbs idly, it is my decision to make.
"Perhaps
you should run to see whether Sharina has any further instructions for
you." Romanda said coldly.
Spots
of crimson staining her cheeks, Tiana turned on her heel and strode
away
without another word. Not quite forbidden rudeness, but close. Even
from behind
she was the image of indignation, her back stiff as an iron rod, her
steps
quick. Well, Romanda was willing to admit she had come near rudeness
herself.
But with cause.
Trying
to put the Mistress of Novices out of her mind, she set out toward the
pavilion
again, but had to restrain herself to keep from walking as fast as
Tiana. Sharina.
And several of the other older women. Should she rethink her position?
No. Of
course not. Their names should never have been allowed in the novice
book in
the first place. Yet their names were there, and it seemed they had
mastered
this wonderful new Healing. Oh, it was a tangled snarl. She did not
want to
think about it. Not now.
The
pavilion stood at the heart of the camp, a much-patched piece of heavy
canvas
surrounded by a walkway three times as wide as any of the others.
Holding her
skirts well up out of the mud, she hurried across to it. She did not
mind haste
when it got her out of the mud more quickly. Even so, Aelmara would
have a time
cleaning her shoes. And her petticoats, she thought as she let her
skirts down,
decently concealing her ankles once more.
Word
of the Hall sitting always drew sisters hoping for news of the
negotiations or
of Egwene, and a good fifty or more were already gathered around the
pavilion
with their Warders, or standing just inside, behind where their Sitters
would
sit. Even here, most shone with the Light of the Power. As if they were
in any
danger surrounded by other Aes Sedai. She found herself with a strong
urge to
walk around the pavilion boxing ears. That was impossible, of course.
Even if
custom could be set aside, which she had no desire to do, a chair in
the Hall
gave no authority for such a thing.
Sheriam,
the narrow blue stole of the Keeper vivid on her shoulders, stood out
in the
crowd, in part because there was a clear space around her. Other
sisters were avoiding
looking at her. much less approaching her. The flame-haired woman
embarrassed
many of the sisters. appearing every time the Hall was called to sit as
she
did. The law was quite clear. Any sister could attend a sitting of the
Hall
unless it was closed, yet the Amyrlin could not enter the Hall of the
Tower
without being announced by the Keeper, and the Keeper was not allowed
in
without the Amyrlin. Sheriam's green eyes were tight, as usual, and she
fidgeted in an unbecoming manner, like a novice who knew she was due
another
visit to the Mistress of Novices. At least she was not embracing the
Source,
and her Warder was nowhere in sight.
Before
stepping beneath the pavilion. Romanda glanced over her shoulder and
sighed.
The great bulk of black clouds behind Dragon-mount was gone. Not
drifting
apart, simply gone entirely. Very likely there would be another wave of
panic
among the grooms and laborers, and the serving women. Surprisingly, the
novices
seemed to take these strange occurrences more in stride. Perhaps that
was
because they were trying to take their cues from the sisters, but she
suspected
Sharina's hand again. What was she to do about the woman?
Inside,
eighteen cloth-covered boxes, colored for the six Ajahs represented in
the
camp, made platforms for polished benches, two slanting rows atop the
layered
carpets, widening toward a box covered with stripes in all seven
colors.
Wisely, Egwene had insisted on including red despite considerable
opposition.
Where Elaida seemed determined to divide every Ajah from every other,
Egwene
was determined to hold them all together, including the Red. The wooden
bench
atop that platform had the Amyrlin's seven-striped stole laid across
it. No one
claimed responsibility for placing it there, but no one had removed it,
either.
Romanda was uncertain whether it was meant to be a reminder of Egwene
al'Vere,
the Amyrlin Seat, an echo of her presence, or a reminder that she was
absent
and a prisoner. How it was seen doubtless depended on the sister
looking.
She
was not the only Sitter taking her time to answer Lelaine's call.
Delana was
there, of course, slumped on her bench and rubbing the side of her
nose, her
watery blue eyes pensive. Once, Romanda had considered her levelheaded.
Unsuitable
for a chair, but levelheaded. At least she had not allowed Halima to
follow her
into the Hall and continue her harangue. Or rather, at least Halima had
chosen
not to. No one who had heard the woman shouting at Delana possessed any
doubts
who gave the orders there. Lelaine herself was already on her bench,
just below
the Amyrlin's, a slender, hard-eyed woman in blue-slashed silk who
rationed her
smiles tightly. Which made it doubly odd that now and then she glanced
toward
the seven-colored stole and gave a small smile. That smile made Romanda
uneasy,
and few things could do that. Moria, in blue wool embroidered with
silver, was
striding up and down in front of the blue-covered platforms. Was her
frown
because she knew why Lelaine had called the Hall and disapproved, or
because
she was worried over not knowing?
"I
saw Myrelle walking with Llyw," Malind said, hitching up her
green-fringed
shawl as Romanda entered the pavilion, "and I don't think I've ever
seen a
sister looking so harassed." Despite the sympathy in her tone, her eyes
sparkled and her full lips quirked with amusement. "How did you ever
talk
her into bonding him? I was there when someone suggested it to her, and
I vow,
she turned pale. The man could almost pass for an Ogier."
"I
expressed myself forcefully on duty." Faiselle, stocky and
square-faced,
was forceful in everything; in truth, a hammer of a woman. She mocked
every
tale of seductive Domani. "I pointed out that Llyw had been becoming
more
and more dangerous to himself and others since Kairen died, and I told
her it
couldn't be allowed to continue. I made her see that as the only sister
ever to
save two other Warders in the same circumstances, she was the only
choice to
try doing it again. I'll admit I had to twist her arm a little, but she
eventually saw the right of the matter."
"How
under the Light could you twist Myrelle's arm?" Malind leaned forward
eagerly.
Romanda
passed them by. How could anyone have twisted Myrelle's arm? No. No
gossip.
Janya
was on her bench for the Brown, squinting in thought. At least, she was
squinting, but the woman always seemed to be thinking of something else
even
when she was talking to you. Maybe her eyes were bad. The rest of the
benches
still stood empty, though. Romanda wished she had been more leisurely.
She
would much rather have been the last to arrive than one of the first.
After
a moment's hesitation, she approached Lelaine. "Would you care to give
an
idea of why you called the Hall?"
Lelaine
smiled down at her, an amused smile, yet unpleasant even so. "You might
as
well wait until we have enough Sitters to proceed. I don't care to
repeat
myself. I will tell you this much. It will be dramatic." Her eyes
drifted
to the striped stole, and Romanda felt a chill.
She
did not let it show, however, merely taking her bench across from
Lelaine. She
could not help glancing uneasily at the stole herself. Was this some
move to
unseat Egwene? It seemed unlikely the other woman could say anything
that would
convince her to stand for the greater consensus. Or many of the other
Sitters,
since that would throw them back to the struggle between her and
Lelaine for
control and weaken their position against Elaida. Yet Lelaine's air of
confidence was unnerving. She schooled her features to calmness and
waited. There
was nothing else to do.
Kwamesa
all but darted into the pavilion, her sharp-nosed face chagrined at not
being
first to arrive, and joined Delana. Salita appeared. dark and cool-eyed
in
yellow-slashed green embroidered with yellow scrollwork on the bosom,
and
suddenly there was a rush. Lyrelle glided in, graceful and elegant in
brocaded
blue silk, to take her place with the Blues, then Saroiya and Aledrin
with
their heads together, the blocky Domani seeming almost slender
alongside the
stout Taraboner. As they took their places on the White benches,
fox-faced
Samalin joined Faiselle and Malind, and tiny Escaralde scurried in. She
scurried! The woman was from Far Madding, too. She should know better
how to
behave.
"Varilin
is in Darein. I believe,'' Romanda said as Escaralde climbed up beside
Janya.
"but even if some others arrive later, we have more than eleven. Are
you
content to begin, Lelaine. or do you wish to wait?"
"I
am content to begin."
"Do
you wish a formal sitting?"
Lelaine
smiled again. She was being very free with those this morning. They did
nothing
to warm her face. "That won't be necessary, Romanda." She rearranged
her skirts slightly. "But I ask that what is said here be Sealed to the
Hall for the time being." A murmur rose from the growing crowd of
sisters
standing behind the benches and those outside the pavilion. Even some
of the
Sitters showed surprise. If the sitting was not formal, what need could
there
be to restrict knowledge of what was said so closely?
Romanda
nodded as though it were the most reasonable request in the world,
though.
"Let all depart who do not hold a chair. Aledrin, will you make us
private?"
Despite
dark yellow hair of a silky texture and large, liquid brown eyes, the
Taraboner
White fell short of pretty, but she had a good head on her shoulders,
which was
far more important. Standing. she seemed uncertain whether she should
speak the
formal words, and finally contented herself with weaving the ward
against
eavesdropping around the pavilion and holding it. The murmuring faded
as
sisters and Warders passed through that ward, until the last was gone
and
silence fell. They stood in ranks shoulder-to-shoulder on the walkway
watching,
however, the Warders all crowded to the rear so everyone could see.
Adjusting
her shawl, Lelaine stood. "A Green sister was brought to me when she
came
asking for Egwene." The Green Sitters stirred, exchanging glances, no
doubt wondering why the sister was not brought to them instead. Lelaine
affected not to notice. "Not for the Amyrlin Seat, for Egwene al'Vere.
She
has a proposal that meets some of our needs, though she was reluctant
to say
very much of it to me. Moria. will you bring her so she can present her
proposal to the Hall?" She resumed her seat.
Moria
left the pavilion still frowning, and the crowd outside opened enough
to let
her through. Romanda could see sisters trying to question her. but she
ignored
them, disappearing across the street and into the Blue Ajah quarters.
Romanda
had a dozen questions she would have liked to ask in the interval, but
informal
session or not, questions would have been improper at this point. The
Sitters
did not wait in silence, however. At every Ajah except the Blue, women
stepped
down so they could come together and speak in low voices. Except the
Blue and
the Yellow. Salita climbed down and walked over to Romanda's platform,
but
Romanda raised a hand slightly as soon as she opened her mouth.
"What
is there to discuss until we know what the proposal is, Salita?"
The
Tairen Sitter's round face was as unreadable as a stone, but after a
moment she
nodded and resumed her seat. She was not unintelligent, far from it.
Just
unsuitable.
At
last Moria returned leading a tall woman in dark green, her dark hair
pulled
back severely from a stern ivory face and held by a silver comb, and
everyone
climbed back to their benches. Three men with swords at their hips
trailed
after her through the watching sisters and into the pavilion. Unusual,
that.
Very unusual when matters had been Sealed to the Hall. Romanda paid
them little
mind at first, though. She had had no real interest in Warders since
her last
had died, a good many years earlier. But someone among the Greens
gasped, and
Aledrin squeaked. She actually squeaked! And she was staring at the
Warders.
That had to be what they were, and not only because they were heeling
the
Green. There was no mistaking a Warder's deadly grace.
Romanda
took a longer look, and nearly gasped herself. They were disparate men,
alike
only in the way a leopard was like a lion, but one, a pretty, sun-dark
boy with
his hair in belled braids, garbed all in black, wore a pair of pins on
the tall
collar of his coat. A silver sword, and a sinuous, maned creature in
red and
gold. She had heard enough descriptions to know she was looking at an
Asha'man.
An Asha'man who had been bonded, apparently. Gathering her skirts,
Malind
jumped down and rushed out into the crowd of sisters. Surely she was
not
frightened. Although Romanda admitted to a hint of unease herself, if
only to
herself.
"You
are not one of us," Janya said, speaking up where she should not as
always. She leaned forward, squinting at the new-come sister. "Should I
take it you have not come here to join us?"
The
Green's mouth twisted in obvious distaste. "You take it correctly."
she said in a strong Taraboner accent. "My name is Merise Haindehl. and
me, I will stand with no sister who wishes to contend against other
sisters
while the world hangs in the balance. Our enemy, it is the Shadow, not
women who
wear the shawl as we do." Mutters rose in the pavilion, some angry,
some,
Romanda thought, shamed.
"If
you disapprove of what we do," Janya went on, as if she had a right to
speak before Romanda. "why do you bring us any sort of proposal?"
"Because
the Dragon Reborn, he asked Cadsuane, and Cadsuane, she asked me,"
Merise
replied. The Dragon Reborn? The tension in the Hall was suddenly
palpable, but
the woman continued as if she were senseless to it. "Properly, it is
not
my proposal. Jahar. speak to them."
The
sun-dark youth stepped forward, and as he passed her. Merise reached up
to pat
him on the shoulder encouragingly. Romanda's respect for her rose. To
bond an
Asha'man was accomplishment enough. To pat one as you might a hunting
hound
took a level of courage and self-confidence she herself was unsure she
possessed.
The
boy strode to the center of the pavilion staring at the bench where the
Amyrlin's stole lay, then turned about slowly, running his gaze over
the
Sitters with an air of challenge. It came to Romanda that he was
unafraid, too.
An Aes Sedai held his bond, he was alone and surrounded by sisters, yet
if
there was a scrap of fear in him, he had it under complete control.
"Where
is Egwene al'Vere?" he demanded. "I was ordered to lay the offer
before her."
"Manners,
Jahar," Merise murmured, and his face colored.
"The
Mother is unavailable at the moment," Romanda said smoothly. "You can
tell us, and we will tell her as soon as we can. This offer comes from
the Dragon
Reborn?" And Cadsuane. But learning what that woman was doing in
company
with the Dragon Reborn was secondary.
Instead
of answering, he snarled and spun to face Merise. "A man just tried to
listen in," he said. "Or maybe it was that Forsaken who killed
Eben."
"He
is right." Aledrin's voice was unsteady. "At least, something touched
my warding, and it wasn't saidar."
"He's
channeling" someone said incredulously. A flurry broke out of Sitters
shifting on the benches, and the light of the Power enveloped several.
Abruptly,
Delana stood. "I need a breath of fresh air," she said, glowering at
Jahar as though she wanted to rip his throat out.
"There's
no need to be uneasy," Romanda said, though she was not sure herself,
but
Delana, wrapped in her shawl, hurried from the pavilion.
Malind
passed her coming in, as did Nacelle, a tall slender Malkieri, one of
the
handful remaining in the Tower. A good many had died in the years after
Malkier
fell to the Shadow, letting themselves be pulled into schemes to avenge
their
native land, and replacements had been few and far between since.
Nacelle was
not particularly intelligent, but then, Greens did not need
intelligence, only
courage.
"This
session has been Sealed to the Hall, Malind," Romanda said sharply.
"Nacelle
needs only moments," Malind replied, rubbing her hands together.
Irritatingly, she did not even bother to look at Romanda, keeping her
eyes on
the other Green. "This is her first chance to test a new weave. Go
ahead,
Nacelle. Try it."
The
glow of saidar appeared around the slim Green. Shocking! The woman
neither
asked permission nor told them what weave she intended, although tight
strictures held on what uses of the Power were allowed in the Hall.
Channeling
all of the Five Powers, she wove around the Asha'man something that
seemed akin
to the weave for detecting residues, a thing Romanda had small facility
for.
Nacelle's blue eyes widened. "He is channeling," she breathed.
"Or at least holding saidin."
Romanda's
eyebrows climbed. Even Lelaine gasped. Finding a man who could channel
was
always a matter of reading the residues of what he had done, then
arduously
narrowing the suspects down to the true culprit. Or rather, it had
been. This
was truly wondrous. Or would have been before men who could channel
started
wearing black coats and strutting around openly. Still, it negated one
advantage those men had always had over Aes Sedai. The Asha'man seemed
not to
care. His lip curled in what might have been a sneer.
"Can
you tell what he is channeling?" she asked, and disappointingly,
Nacelle
shook her head.
"I
thought I'd be able to, but no. On the other hand… You there, Asha'man.
Extend a flow toward one of the Sitters. Nothing dangerous, mind, and
do not
touch her.'' Merise glowered at her, fists planted on her hips. Maybe
Nacelle
failed to realize he was one of her Warders. She certainly gestured at
him in
peremptory fashion.
A
stubborn cast to his eyes, Jahar opened his mouth.
"Do
it, Jahar," Merise said. "He is mine. Nacelle, but I will let you
give him an order. This once." Nacelle looked shocked. Apparently she
had
failed to realize.
For
the Asha'man's part, that stubborn look remained, yet he must have
obeyed
because Nacelle clapped her hands delightedly and laughed.
"Saroiya,"
she said excitedly. "You extended a flow toward Saroiya. The Domani
White.
Am I right?"
Saroiya's
coppery skin paled, and gathering her white-fringed shawl around her,
she
hastily slid back on her bench as far as she could. For that matter,
Aledrin
edged away on her own bench.
"Tell
her." Merise said. "Jahar, he can be stubborn, but he is the good boy
for all that."
"The
Domani White." Jahar agreed reluctantly. Saroiya swayed as if she were
going to fall over, and he glanced at her contemptuously. "It was only
Spirit, and it's gone now." Saroiya's face darkened, but whether from
anger or embarrassment there was no telling.
"A
remarkable discovery." Lelaine said, "and I'm sure that Merise will
allow you to test further, Nacelle, but the Hall has business to
conclude. I'm
certain you agree, Romanda."
Romanda
barely managed to stop herself from glaring. Lelaine overstepped
herself too
often. "If your demonstration is at an end." she said, "you may
withdraw. Nacelle." The Malkieri Green was reluctant to go, perhaps
because she could tell from Merise's expression that there would be no
further
testing-really, you would think a Green of all people would be careful
with any
man who might be another sister's Warder-yet she had no choice, of
course.
"What proposal does the Dragon Reborn have for us. boy?" Romanda
asked once Nacelle was on the other side of the warding.
"This."
he said, facing her proudly. "Any sister who is faithful to Egwene
al'Vere
may bond an Asha'man, to a total of forty-seven. You cannot ask for the
Dragon
Reborn, nor any man who wears the dragon. but any Soldier or Dedicated
you ask
cannot refuse." Romanda felt as if all the breath had been squeezed
from
her lungs.
"You
will agree this meets our needs?" Lelaine said calmly. The woman must
have
known the gist of it from the start, burn her.
"I
do." Romanda replied. With forty-seven men who could channel, surely
they
could expand their circles as far as they would go. Perhaps even a
circle that
included all of them. If there were limits, they would need to be
worked out.
Faiselle
popped to her feet, as if this were a formal sitting. "This must be
debated. I call for a formal session."
"I
see no need for that," Romanda told her without rising. "This is much
better than… what we previously agreed on." There was no point in
saying too much in front of the boy. Or Merise. What was her connection
to the
Dragon Reborn? Could she be one of the sisters said to have sworn oaths
to him?
Saroiya
was on her feet before the last word left Romanda's mouth. "There is
still
the question of covenants, to be sure we are in control. We still have
not
agreed on those."
"I
should think the Warder bond will make any other covenants moot,"
Lyrelle
said dryly.
Faiselle
rose hurriedly, and she and Saroiya spoke atop each other. "The
taint-" They stopped, staring at each other suspiciously.
"Saidin
is clean," Jahar said, though no one had addressed him. Merise really
should teach the boy how to behave if she was going to bring him before
the
Hall.
"Clean?"
Saroiya said derisively.
"It
has been tainted for more than three thousand years," Faiselle put in
sharply. "How can be it clean?"
"Order!"
Romanda snapped, trying to regain control. "Order!" She stared at
Saroiya and Faiselle until they resumed their seats, then turned her
attention
to Merise. "Can I assume that you have linked with him?" The Green
simply nodded once. She really did not like her present company, and
did not
want to say a word more than necessary. "Can you say that saidin is
free
of the taint?"
The
woman did not hesitate. "I can. I took time to be convinced. The male
half
of the Power, it is more alien than you can imagine. Not the inexorable
yet
gentle power ofsaidar, but rather a raging sea of fire and ice whipped
by a
tempest. Yet I am convinced. It is clean."
Romanda
let out a long breath. A marvel to balance some of the horrors. "We are
not formal, but I call the question. Who stands to accept this offer?"
She
was on her feet as soon as she finished, but no faster than Lelaine,
and Janya
beat both of them. In moments, everyone was on her feet save Saroiya
and
Faiselle. Outside the warding, heads turned as sisters doubtless began
discussing what might have just been voted on. "The lesser consensus
standing, the offer to bond forty-seven Asha'man is accepted."
Saroiya's
shoulders slumped, and Faiselle exhaled heavily.
She
called for the greater consensus in the name of unity, but it did not
surprise
her when the pair remained firmly on their benches. After all, they had
fought
approaching the Asha'man at every turn, struggled despite law and
custom to
impede it even after it had been decided on. In any event, it was done,
and
without need of even a temporary alliance. Bonding would last a
lifetime, of
course, yet it was better than any sort of alliance. That implied too
much
equality.
"A
peculiar number, forty-seven," Janya mused. "May I question your
Warder, Merise? Thank you. How did the Dragon Reborn come to that
number.
Jahar?" A very good question, Romanda thought. In the shock of
achieving
what they needed without any requirement for partnership, it had eluded
her.
Jahar
drew himself up as if he had anticipated this, and dreaded answering.
His face
remained hard and cold, though. "Fifty-one sisters have been bonded by
Asha'man already, and four of us are bonded to Aes Sedai. Forty-seven
makes the
difference. There were five of us, but one died defending his Aes
Sedai.
Remember his name. Eben Hopwil. Remember him!"
There
was a stunned silence from the benches. Romanda felt a lump of ice in
her
middle. Fifty-one sisters? Bonded by Asha'man? It was an abomination!
"Manners,
Jahar!" Merise snapped. "Do not make me tell you again!"
Shockingly,
he rounded on her. "They need to know, Merise. They need to know!"
Turning back, he ran his gaze along the benches. His eyes seemed hot.
He had
been dreading nothing. He had been angry, and still was. "Eben was
linked
with his Daigian and Beldeine, with Daigian controlling the link, so
when they
found themselves facing one of the Forsaken, all he could do was shout,
'She's
channeling saidin.' and attack her with his sword. And despite what she
did to
him, ruined as he was, he managed to hang on to life, hang on to
saidin, long
enough for Daigian to drive her off. So you remember his name! Eben
Hopwil. He
fought for his Aes Sedai long after he should have been dead!"
When
he fell silent, no one spoke until Escaralde finally said, very
quietly.
"We will remember him, Jahar. But how did fifty-one sisters come to be…
bonded to Asha'man?" She leaned forward as if his answer would be
pitched as low.
The
boy shrugged, still angry. It was of no matter to him. Asha'man bonding
Aes
Sedai. "Elaida sent them to destroy us. The Dragon Reborn has a
standing
order that no Aes Sedai can be harmed unless she tries to harm one of
us first,
so Taim decided to capture and bond them before they had the chance."
So.
They were Elaida's supporters. Should that make a difference? Somehow
it did, a
little. But any sisters held by Asha'man brought it all back to a
matter of
equality, and that was intolerable.
"I
have another question for him, Merise," Moria said, and waited until
the
Green nodded. "Twice now, you did speak as if a woman did channel
saidin.
Why? That do be impossible." Murmurs of agreement rippled around the
pavilion.
"It
might be impossible," the boy replied coolly, "but she did it.
Daigian told us what Eben said, and she couldn't detect anything at all
even
while the woman was channeling. It had to be saidin."
Suddenly
that small chime sounded again in the back of Ro-manda's head, and she
knew
where she had heard the name Cabriana Mecandes. "We must order the
arrest
of Delana and Halima immediately," she said.
She
had to explain, of course. Not even the Amrylin Seat could order the
arrest of
a Sitter without explanation. The murders with saidin of two sisters
who had
been close friends of Cabriana, a woman Halima had claimed friendship
with as
well. A female Forsaken who channeled the male half of the Power. They
were
hardly convinced, especially Lelaine, not until a thorough search of
the camp
turned up no trace of either woman. They had been seen walking toward
one of
the Traveling grounds with Delana and her serving woman both carrying
large
bundles and scurrying along behind Halima, but they were gone.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
Honey
in the Tea
Egwene
knew from the start that her strange captivity would be difficult, yet
she
believed that embracing pain as the Aiel did would be the easiest part.
After
all, she had been beaten severely when she paid her toh to the Wise
Ones for
lying, strapped by one after another in turn, so she had experience.
But
embracing pain did not mean just giving way to it rather than fighting.
You had
to draw the pain inside of you and welcome it as a part of you.
Aviendha said
you must be able to smile and laugh with joy or sing while the worst of
the
pain still gripped you. That was not so easy at all.
That
first morning before dawn, in Silviana's study, she did her best while
the
Mistress of Novices plied a hard-soled slipper on her bared bottom. She
made no
effort to stifle her sobs when they came, or later her wordless howls.
When her
legs wanted to kick, she allowed them to flail until the Mistress of
Novices
trapped them under one of hers. awkwardly because of Silviana's skirts,
and
then she let her toes drum the floor while her head tossed wildly. She
tried to
draw the pain inside her, to drink it in like breath. Pain was as much
a part
of life as breathing. That was how the Aiel saw life. But, oh. Light,
it hurt!
When
she was finally allowed to straighten, after what seemed a very long
time, she
flinched when her shift and dress fell against her flesh. The white
wool seemed
heavy as lead. She attempted to welcome the scalding heat. It was hard,
though.
So very hard. Still, it seemed that her sobbing stopped very quickly of
its own
accord, and her flow of tears dried up rapidly. She did not snivel or
writhe.
She studied herself in the mirror on the wall, with its fading gilt.
How many
thousands of women had peered into that mirror over the years? Those
who were
disciplined in this room were always required to study their own
reflection
afterward and think over why they had been punished, but that was not
why she
did it. Her face was still red, yet already it looked… calm. Despite
the
painful heat in her bottom, she actually felt calm. Perhaps she should
try
singing? Perhaps not. Plucking a white linen handkerchief from her
sleeve, she
carefully dried her cheeks.
Silviana
studied her with a look of satisfaction before replacing the slipper in
the
narrow cabinet opposite the mirror. "I think I got your attention from
the
start, or I'd have gone harder." she said dryly, patting the bun on the
back of her head. "I doubt I will see you again soon in any case. You
may
like to know that I asked questions as you requested. Melare had
already begun
asking. The woman is Leane Sharif, though the Light knows how…"
Trailing off, shaking her head, she pulled her chair back around behind
the
writing table and sat. "She was most anxious about you, more so than
about
herself. You may visit her in your free time. If you have any free
time. I'll
give instructions. She's in the open cells. And now you had better run
if you
want anything to eat before your first class.''
"Thank
you," Egwene said, and turned toward the door.
Silviana
sighed heavily. "No curtsy, child?" Dipping her pen in the
silver-mounted ink jar, she began to write in the punishment ledger, a
neat,
precise hand. "I will see you at midday. It seems you will eat both of
your first two meals back in the Tower standing."
Egwene
could have left it there, but in the night, while waiting for the
Sitters to
gather in the Hall in Tel'aran'rhiod. she had decided on the fine line
she must
walk. She meant to fight, yet she had to do it while appearing to go
along. To
some extent, at least. Within the limits she set herself. Refusing
every order
would mean appearing merely obstinate-and perhaps would get her
confined to a
cell, where she would be useless-but some commands she must not obey if
she was
to maintain any scrap of dignity. And that, she had to do. More than
scraps.
She could not allow them to deny who she was, however hard they
insisted.
"The Amyrlin Seat curtsies to no one," she said calmly, knowing full
well the reaction she would get.
Silviana's
face hardened, and she took up her pen again. "I will see you at the
dinner hour, as well. I suggest you leave without speaking further,
unless you
wish to end spending the entire day over my knee."
Egwene
left without speaking. And without curtsying. A fine line, like a wire
suspended over a deep pit. But she had to walk it.
To
her surprise, Alviarin was pacing up and down in the hall outside,
wrapped in
her white-fringed shawl and hugging herself, staring at something in
the unseen
distance. She knew the woman was no longer Elaida's Keeper, if not why
she had
been removed so suddenly. Spying in Telaran'rhiodgave only glimpses and
snatches; it was an uncertain reflection of the waking world in so many
ways.
Alviarin must have heard her yowling, but strangely, Egwene felt no
shame. She
was fighting an odd battle, and in battle, you took wounds. The
normally icy
White did not appear so cool today. In fact, she seemed quite agitated.
her
lips parted and her eyes hot. Egwene offered her no courtesies, yet
Alviarin
only gave her a baleful glare before entering Silviana's study. A fine
line.
A
little down the corridor, a pair of Reds stood watching, one
round-faced, the
other slender, both cool-eyed, with shawls draped along their arms so
the long
red fringe was displayed prominently. Not the same pair who had been
there when
she woke, but they were not present by happenstance. They were not
precisely
guards, and then again, they were not precisely not guards. She did not
curtsy
to these, either. They watched her without expression.
Before
she had taken more than half a dozen steps along the red-and-green
floor tiles,
she heard a woman's pained howling start up behind her, hardly muffled
at all
by the heavy door to Silviana's study. So Alviarin was taking a
penance, and
not doing well to be shrieking at the top of her lungs so soon. Unless
she also
was trying to embrace pain, which seemed unlikely. Egwene wished she
knew why
Alviarin was undergoing penance, if it was an imposed penance. A
general had
scouts and eyes-and-ears to inform him on his enemy. She had only her
own eyes
and her own ears, and what little she could learn in the Unseen World.
Any
scrap of knowledge might prove useful, though, so she must dig for
every one
possible.
Breakfast
or no breakfast, she returned to her tiny room in the novice quarters
long
enough to wash her face in cool water at the wash-stand and comb her
hair. That
comb, which had been in her belt pouch, was among the few personal
belongings
she retained. In the night, the clothes she had been wearing when
captured
vanished, replaced by novice white, but the dresses and shifts that
hung from
pegs on the white wall truly were hers. Stored away when she was raised
Accepted, they still carried small tags stitched with her name sewn
into their
hems. The Tower was never wasteful. You never knew when a new girl
would fit an
old set of clothes. But having nothing to wear save novice white did
not make
her a novice, whatever Elaida and the others believed.
Not
until she was sure that her face was no longer red and she looked as
collected
as she felt did she leave. When you had few weapons, your appearance
could be
one. The same two Reds were waiting on the railed gallery to shadow her.
The
dining hall where novices ate lay on the lowest level of the Tower, to
one side
of the main kitchen. It was a large white-walled chamber, plain though
the
floor tiles showed all the Ajah colors, and filled with tables, each of
which
could accommodate six or eight women on small benches. A hundred or
more
white-clad women were sitting at those tables, chattering away over
breakfast.
Elaida must be very set up over their number. The Tower had not held so
many
novices in years. Doubtless even news of the Tower breaking had been
enough to
put the thought of going to Tar Valon into some heads. Egwene was not
impressed. These women filled barely half the dining hall if that, and
there
was another like it one floor up, closed now for centuries. Once she
gained the
Tower, that second kitchen would be opened again, and the novices still
would
need to eat by shifts, something unknown since well before the Trolloc
Wars.
Nicola
caught sight of her as soon as she walked in-the woman appeared to have
been
watching for her-and nudged the novices to either side. Silence slid
across the
tables in a wave, and every head turned as Egwene glided down the
central
aisle. She looked neither to left nor right.
Halfway
to the kitchen door, a short slim novice with long dark hair suddenly
stuck out
a foot and tripped her. Catching her balance just short of falling on
her face,
she turned coolly. Another skirmish. The young woman had the pale look
of a
Cairhienin. This close, Egwene could be sure that she would be tested
for
Accepted unless she had other failings. But the Tower was good at
rooting out
such things. "What is your name?" she said.
"Alvistere,"
the young woman replied, her accent confirming her face. "Why do you
want
to know? So you can carry tales to Silviana? It will do you no good.
Everyone
will say they saw nothing."
"A
pity. that. Alvistere. You want to become Aes Sedai and give up the
ability to lie.
yet you want others to lie for you. Do you see any inconsistency in
that?"
Alvistere's
face reddened. "Who are you to lecture me?"
"I
am the Amyrlin Seat. A prisoner, but still the Amyrlin Seat."
Alvistere's
big eyes widened, and whispers buzzed through the room as Egwene walked
on to
the kitchen. They had not believed she would still claim the title
while garbed
in white and sleeping among them. As well to disabuse them of that
notion
quickly.
The
kitchen was a large, high-ceilinged room with gray-tiled floors, where
the
roasting spits in the long stone fireplace were still but the iron
stoves and
ovens radiated enough heat that she would have begun perspiring
immediately had
she not known how to ignore it. She had labored in this kitchen often
enough,
and it seemed certain she would again. Dining halls surrounded it on
three
sides, for the Accepted and for Aes Sedai as well as novices. Laras,
the
Mistress of the Kitchens, was waddling about sweaty-faced in a spotless
white
apron that could have made three novice dresses, waving her long wooden
spoon
like a scepter as she directed cooks and under-cooks and scullions who
scurried
for her as fast as they would have for any queen. Perhaps faster. A
queen would
be unlikely to give anyone a smack with her scepter for moving too
slowly.
A
great deal of the food seemed to be going onto trays, sometimes worked
silver,
sometimes carved wood and perhaps gilded, that women carried away
through the
door to the sisters' main dining hall. Not kitchen serving women with
the white
Flame of Tar Valon on their bosoms, but dignified women in well-cut
woolens
with an occasional touch of embroidery, sisters' personal servants who
would
make the long climb back to the Ajah quarters.
Any
Aes Sedai could eat in her own rooms if she wished, though it meant
channeling
to warm the food again, yet most enjoyed company at meals. At least,
they had.
That steady stream of women carrying out cloth-covered trays was a
confirmation
that the White Tower was spiderwebbed with cracks. She should have felt
pleasure at that. Elaida stood on a platform that was ready to crumble
beneath
her. But the Tower was home. All she felt was sadness. And anger at
Elaida,
too. That one deserved to be pulled down simply for what she had done
to the
Tower since gaining the stole and staff!
Laras
gave her one long look, drawing in her chin until she had a fourth,
then
returned to brandishing her spoon and looking over an under-cook's
shoulder.
The woman had helped Siuan and Leane escape, once, so her loyalties to
Elaida
were weak. Would she help another now? She was certainly making every
effort to
avoid looking in Eg-wene's direction again. Another under-cook. who
likely did
not know her from any other novice, a smiling woman still working on
her second
chin, handed her a wooden tray with a large, stout cup of steaming tea
and a
thick, white-glazed plate of bread, olives and crumbly white cheese
that she
carried back into the dining hall.
Silence
fell again, and once more every eye centered on her. Of course. They
knew she
had been summoned to the Mistress of Novices. They were waiting to see
whether
she would eat standing. She wanted very much to ease herself onto the
hard
wooden bench, but she made herself sit down normally. Which reignited
the
flames, of course. Not as strongly as before, yet strong enough to make
her
shift before she could stop herself. Strangely, she felt no real desire
to
grimace or squirm. To stand, yes, but not the other. The pain was part
of her.
She accepted it without struggle. She tried to welcome it, yet that
still
seemed beyond her.
She
tore a piece of bread-there were weevils in the flour here, too, it
appeared-and slowly the conversation in the room started up again,
quietly
because novices were expected not to make too much noise. At her table
also the
talk resumed, though no one made any effort to include her. That was
just as
well. She was not here to make friends among the novices. Nor to have
them see
her as one of themselves. No, her purpose was far different.
Leaving
the hall with the novices after returning her tray to the kitchen, she
found
another pair of Reds waiting for her. One was Ka-terine Alruddin.
vulpine in
copiously red-slashed gray, a mass of raven hair falling in waves to
her waist
and her shawl looped over her elbows.
"Drink
this," Katerine said imperiously, extending a pewter cup in one slim
hand.
"All of it, mind." The other Red, dark and square-faced, adjusted her
shawl impatiently and grimaced. Apparently she disliked acting as a
serving
woman even by association. Or perhaps it was dislike for what was in
the cup.
Suppressing
a sigh, Egwene drank. The weak forkroot tea looked and tasted like
water tinged
a faint brown, with just a hint of mint. Almost a memory of mint rather
than
the taste itself. Her first cup had been soon after waking, the Red
sisters on
duty eager to be done with shielding and about their own business.
Katerine had
let the hour slip a little, yet even without this cup. she doubted she
would
have been able to channel very strongly for some time yet. Certainly
not with
enough strength to be useful.
"I
don't want to be late for my first class." she said, handing the cup
back.
Katerine took it. though she seemed surprised to realize that she had.
Egwene
glided on after the novices before the sister could object. Or remember
to call
her down for failing to curtsy.
That
first class, in a plain, windowless room where ten novices occupied
benches for
thirty or more, was every bit the disaster she expected. Not a disaster
for
her, however, no matter the outcome. The instructor was Idrelle
Menford, a
lanky, hard-eyed woman who had already been Accepted when Egwene first
came to
the Tower. She still wore the white dress with the seven bands of color
at hem
and cuffs. Egwene took a seat at the end of a bench, once again without
consideration for her tenderness. That had lessened, though not very
far. Drink
in the pain.
Standing
on a small dais ac the front of the room, Idrelle looked down her long
nose
with more than a spark of satisfaction at seeing Egwene in white once
more. It
almost softened her frown, a fixture with Idrelle. "You have all gone
beyond making simple balls of fire," she told the class, "but let's
see what our new girl is capable of. She used to think a great deal of
herself,
you know." Several of the novices tittered. "Make a ball of fire,
Egwene. Go on, child." A ball of fire? That was one of the earliest
things
novices learned. What was she about?
Opening
herself to the Source, Egwene embraced saidar, let it rush into her.
The
forkroot allowed only a trickle, a thread where she was accustomed to
torrents,
yet it was the Power, and trickle or no, it brought all of the life and
joy of
saidar, all the heightened awareness of herself and the room around
her.
Awareness of herself meant her smarting bottom suddenly felt freshly
slippered
again, but she did not shift. Breathe in the pain. She could smell the
faint
aroma of soap from the novices' morning wash, see a tiny vein pulsing
on
Idrelle's forehead.
Part
of her wanted to clout the woman's ear with a flow of Air, but given
the amount
of the Power she commanded now. Idrelle would barely feel it. Instead,
she
channeled Fire and Air to produce a small ball of green fire that
floated in
front of her. A pale, pitiful thing it was, actually transparent.
"Very
good," Idrelle said sarcastically. All, yes. She had just wanted to
begin
by showing the novices how weak Egwene's channeling was. "Release
saidar.
Now, class-"
Egwene
added a blue ball, then a brown, and a gray, making them spin around
one
another.
"Release
the Source!" Idrelle said brusquely.
A
yellow ball joined the others, a white, and finally, a red ball.
Quickly she
added rings of fire one inside the other around the whirling balls. Red
came
first this time, because she wanted it smallest, green last and
largest. Had
she been able to choose an Ajah, it would have been the Green. Seven
rings of
fire rotated, no two in the same direction, around seven balls of fire
that
carried out an intricate dance at the heart. Pale and thin they might
be, yet
it was an impressive display beyond dividing her flows fourteen ways.
Juggling
with the Power was not all that much easier than juggling with your
hands.
"Stop
that!" Idrelle shouted. "Stop it!" The glow of saidar enveloped
the teacher, and a switch of Air struck Egwene hard across the back. "I
said stop it!" The switch struck again, then again.
Egwene
calmly kept the rings spinning, the balls dancing. After Silviana's
hard-swung
slipper, it was easy to drink in the pain of Idrelle's blows. If not to
welcome
it. Would she ever be able to smile while she was being beaten?
Katerine
and the other Red appeared in the doorway. "What is going on in
here?" the raven-haired sister demanded. Her companion's eyes widened
when
she saw what Egwene was doing. It was very unlikely that either of them
could
divide their flows so far.
The
novices all popped to their feet and curtsied when the Aes Sedai
entered, of
course. Egwene remained seated.
Idrelle
spread her banded skirts looking flustered. "She won't stop," she
wailed. "I told her to, but she won't!"
"Stop
that, Egwene," Katerine ordered firmly.
Egwene
maintained her weaves until the woman opened her mouth again. Only then
did she
release saidar and stand.
Katerine's
mouth snapped shut, and she took a deep breath. Her face retained its
Aes Sedai
serenity, but her eyes glittered. "You will run to Silviana's study and
tell her that you disobeyed your instructor and disrupted a class. Go!"
Pausing
long enough to straighten her skirts-when she obeyed. she must not do
so with
any appearance of eagerness or haste-Egwene squeezed past the two Aes
Sedai and
glided up the hallway.
"I
told you to run," Katerine said sharply behind her.
A
flow of Air struck her still sensitive bottom. Accept the pain. Another
blow.
Drink in the pain like breath. A third, hard enough to stagger her.
Welcome the
pain.
"Unhand
me. Jezrail," Katerine snarled.
"I'll
do no such thing," the other sister said with a strong Tairen accent.
"You go too far. Katerine. A swat or two is permitted, but punishing
her
further belongs to the Mistress of Novices. Light, at this rate, you'll
leave
her unable to walk before she reaches Silviana."
Katerine
breathed heavily. "Very well." she said at last. "But she can
add disobeying a sister to her list of offenses. I will inquire,
Egwene, so
don't think you can let it slip your mind."
When
she stepped into the Mistress of Novices' study. Silviana's eyebrows
rose in
surprise. "Again so soon? Fetch the slipper from the cabinet, child,
and
tell me what you've done now."
After
two more classes and two more visits to Silviana's study-she refused to
be made
mock of. and if an Accepted did not want her doing a thing better than
the
Accepted herself could, the woman should not ask her to do it at
all-plus her
foreordained midday appointment between. the stern-faced woman decided
that she
was to have Healing to begin each day.
"Else
you'll soon be too bruised to spank without bringing blood. But don't
think
this means I am going easy on you. If you require Healing three times a
day,
I'll just spank all the harder to make up. If need be, I'll go to the
strap or
the switch. Because I will make your head straight, child. Believe me
on
that."
Those
three classes, leaving three very embarrassed Accepted, had another
result. Her
teaching was shifted to sessions alone with Aes Sedai, something
normally
reserved for Accepted. That meant climbing the long, tapestry-lined
spiraling
corridors to the Ajah quarters, where sisters stood at the entrances
like
guards. They were guards, in truth. Visitots from other Ajahs were
unwelcome,
to say the least. In fact, she never saw any Aes Sedai near the
quarters of another
Ajah.
Except
for Sitters, she seldom saw sisters in the hallways outside the
quarters other
than in groups, always wearing their shawls, usually with Warders
following
close behind, but this was not like the fear that gripped the
encampment
outside the walls. Here it was always sisters of the same Ajah
together, and
when two groups passed, they cut each other dead if they did not glare.
In the
worst of summer the Tower remained cool, yet the air seemed feverish
and gelid
when sisters of different Ajahs came too close. Even the Sitters she
recognized
walked quickly. The few who realized who she was gave her long,
studying looks,
but most appeared distracted. Pevara Tazanovni, a plumply pretty Sitter
for the
Red, almost walked into her one day-she was not going to jump aside,
even for
Sitters-but Pevara hurried on as if she had not noticed. Another time
Doesine
Alwain, boyishly slim if elegantly dressed, did the same while deep in
conversation with another Yellow sister. Neither glanced at her twice.
She wished
she had some idea who the other Yellow was.
She
knew the names of the ten "ferrets" Sheriam and the others had sent
into the Tower to try undermining Elaida. and she very much would have
liked to
make contact with them, but she did not know their faces, and asking
after them
would only draw attention to them. She hoped one of them would pull her
aside
or hand her a note, but none did. Her battle would have to be fought
alone
except for Leane unless she overheard something that put faces to some
of those
names.
She
did not neglect Leane, of course. Her second night back in the Tower
she went
down to the open cells after supper despite her bone-deep weariness.
Those
half-dozen rooms in the first basement were where women who could
channel were
held if not to be closely confined. Each held a large cage of iron
latticework
that ran from stone floor to stone ceiling, with a space around it four
paces
wide and iron stand-lamps to provide light. At Leane's cell, two Browns
were
sitting on benches against the wall with a Warder, a wide-shouldered
man with a
beautiful face and touches of white at his temples. He looked up when
Egwene
walked in, then returned to honing his dagger on a stone.
One
of the Browns was Felaana Bevaine, slender with long yellow hair that
gleamed
as if she brushed it several times a day. She stopped writing in a
leather-bound notebook on a lapdesk long enough to say in a raspy
voice,
"Oh. It's you, is it? Well, Silviana said you can visit, child, but
don't
give her anything without showing it to Dalevien or me, and don't make
any
fuss." She promptly returned to her writing. Dalevien, a stocky woman
with
gray streaking her short dark hair, never looked up from her comparison
of the
text of two books, one held open on either knee. The glow oi saidar
shone
around her, and she was maintaining a shield on Leane, but there was no
reason
for her to look once it had been woven.
Egwene
lost no time in rushing to thrust her hands through the iron lattice
and clasp
Leane's. "Silviana told me they finally believe who you are," she
said, laughing, "but I didn't expect to find you in such luxury."
It
was luxury only when held up alongside the small dark cells where a
sister
might be held for trial, with rushes on the floor for a mattress and a
blanket
only if you were lucky, yet Leane's accommodations did appear
reasonably
comfortable. She had a small bed that looked softer than those in the
novice
quarters, a ladder-back chair with a tasseled blue cushion, and a table
that
held three books and a tray with the remains of her supper. There was
even a
washstand, though the white pitcher and bowl both had chips and the
mirror was
bubbled, and a privacy screen, opaque enough that she would be only a
shadowy
shape behind it, hid the chamber pot.
Leane
laughed, too. "Oh, I am very popular," she said briskly. Even the way
she stood seemed languorous, the very image of a seductive Domani
despite plain
dark woolens, but that brisk voice remained from before she had decided
to
remake herself as she wanted to be. "I've had a steady stream of
visitors
all day, from every Ajah except the Red. Even the Greens try to
convince me to
teach them how to Travel, and they mainly want to get their hands on me
because
I 'claim' to be Green now." She shivered much too ostentatiously for it
to
be real. "That would be as bad as being back with Melare and Desala.
Dreadful woman, Desala." Her smile faded away like mist in a noonday
sun.
"They told me they'd put you in white. Better than the alternatives, I
suppose. They give you forkroot? Me, too."
Surprised,
Egwene glanced toward the sister holding the shield, and Leane snorted.
"Custom.
If I weren't shielded, I could swat a fly and not hurt it, but custom
says a
woman in the open cells is always shielded. But they just let you
wander around
otherwise?"
"Not
exactly." Egwene said dryly. "There are two Reds waiting outside to
escort me to my room and shield me while I sleep."
Leane
sighed. "So. I'm in a cell, you are being watched, and we're both full
of
forkroot tea." She cast a sidelong look at the two Browns. Felaana was
still intent on her writing. Dalevien turned pages in the two books on
her
knees and began muttering under her breath. The Warder must have
intended to
shave with that dagger, he was honing it so keen. His main attention
seemed to
be on the doorway, though. Leane lowered her voice. "So when do we
escape?"
"We
don't," Egwene told her, and related her reasons and her plan in a near
whisper while watching the sisters out of the corner of her eye. She
told Leane
everything she had seen. And done. It was hard to tell how many times
she had
been spanked that day, and how she had behaved during, but necessary to
convince the other woman that she would not be broken.
"I
can see any sort of raid is out of the question, but I had hoped-" The
Warder shifted, and Leane cut off. but he was merely sheathing his
dagger.
Folding his arms across his chest and stretching his legs out, he
leaned back
against the wall, his eyes on the doorway. He looked as if he could be
on his
feet in the blink of an eye. "Laras helped me escape once," she went
on softly, "but I don't know that she would do it again." She
shivered, and there was nothing fake about it this time. She had been
stilled
when Laras helped her and Siuan escape. "She did it for Min more than
for
Siuan or me, anyway. Are you certain about this? A hard woman, Silviana
Brehon.
Fair, so I hear, but hard enough to break iron. Are you absolutely
certain,
Mother?" When Egwene said that she was, Leane sighed again. "Well,
we'll be two worms gnawing at the root then, won't we." It was not a
question.
She
visited Leane every night that exhaustion failed to drag her to her bed
straight after supper, and found her astonishingly sanguine for a
prisoner
confined to a cell. Leane's stream of visiting sisters was continuing,
and she
slipped the tidbits Egwene suggested into every conversation. Those
visitors
could not order an Aes Sedai punished, even one held in the open cells,
though
a few grew angry enough to wish they could, and besides, hearing those
things
from a sister carried more weight than hearing them from one they saw
as a
novice. Leane could even argue openly, at least until the visitors
stalked out.
But she reported that many did not. A few agreed with her. Cautiously,
hesitantly, perhaps on one point and not others, but they agreed.
Almost as
important, to Leane at least, some of the Greens decided that since she
had
been stilled and thus was no longer Aes Sedai for a time, she had the
right to
ask admission to any Ajah once she was a sister again. Not all by any
means,
but "few" was better than "none." Egwene began to think
that Leane in her cell was having more effect than she was roaming
free. Well,
free after a fashion. She was not exactly jealous. This was important
work they
were doing, and it did not matter which of them did it better so long
as it got
done. But there were times when it made the trek to Silviana's study
much
harder. Still, she had successes. Of a sort.
That
first afternoon, in Bennae Nalsad's cluttered sitting room- books stood
in
haphazard stacks everywhere on the floor tiles, and the shelves were
full of
bones and skulls and the preserved skins of animals, birds and snakes
along
with stuffed examples of some of the smaller specimens: a large brown
lizard
was perched on the huge skull of a bear, so still you would have
thought it
stuffed as well until it blinked-that first afternoon, the Shienaran
Brown
asked her to perform an exhaustive set of weaves one after the other.
Bennae
sat in a high-backed chair on one side of the brown-streaked marble
fireplace,
Egwene, with decided discomfort, in one on the other. She had not been
invited
to sit, but neither had Bennae objected.
Egwene
performed each weave as asked until Bennae casually asked for the weave
for
Traveling, and then she merely smiled and folded her hands in her lap.
The
sister leaned back and adjusted her deep brown silk skirts a hair.
Bennae's
eyes were blue and sharp, her dark hair, caught in a silver net,
liberally
streaked with gray. Ink stains marked two of her fingers, and another
smudged
the side of her nose. She held a porcelain cup of tea, but she had not
offered
any to Egwene.
"I
think there is little of the Power that remains for you to learn.
child,
especially considering your wonderful discoveries." Egwene inclined her
head, accepting the compliment. Some of those things truly were her
discoveries, and it hardly mattered now in any case. "But that hardly
means you have nothing to learn. You had few novice classes before you
were…" The Brown frowned at Egwene's white dress and cleared her
throat.
"And fewer lessons as… well, later. Tell me if you can. what mistakes
did Shein Chunla make that caused the Third War of Garen's Wall? What
were the
causes of the Great Winter War between Andor and Cairhien? What caused
the
Weikin Rebellion and how did it end? Most of history seems to be the
study of
wars, and the important parts of that are how and why they began and
how and
why ended. A great many wars would never have taken place if people had
paid
attention to the mistakes others had made. Well?"
"Shein
didn't make any mistakes," Egwene said slowly, "but you're right. I
do have a lot to learn. I don't even know the names of those other
wars."
Rising, she poured herself a cup of tea from the silver pitcher on the
side
table. Aside from the ropework silver tray, the tabletop held a stuffed
lynx
and the skull of a serpent. That was as big as a man's skull!
Bennae
frowned, but not for the tea. She hardly seemed to notice that. "What
do
you mean Shein didn't make any mistakes, child? Why, she bungled the
situation
as badly as ever I've heard of."
"Well
before the Third War of Garen's Wall," Egwene said, returning to her
chair, "Shein was doing exactly as the Hall told her and nothing they
didn't." She might be lacking in other areas of history, but Siuan had
tutored her thoroughly in the mistakes made by other Amyrlins. And this
particular
question gave her an opening. Sitting down normally took a great effort.
"What
are you talking about?"
"She
tried running the Tower with an iron hand, never a compromise on
anything,
running roughshod over any opposition. The Hall grew tired of it, but
they
couldn't settle on a replacement, so rather than deposing her, they did
worse.
They left her in place and forced a penance on her whenever she tried
to issue
an order of any kind. Any kind at all." She knew she was going on,
sounding as if she were the one giving a lecture, but she had to get it
all
out. Not easing herself on the hard wood of the chair seat was
difficult.
Welcome the pain. "The Hall ran Shein and the Tower. But they
mishandled a
great deal themselves, largely because each Ajah had its own goals and
there
was no hand to shape them into a goal for the Tower. Shein's reign was
marked
by wars all over the map. Eventually, the sisters themselves got tired
of the
Hall's bungling. In one of the six mutinies in Tower history. Shein and
the
Hall were pulled down. I know she supposedly died in the Tower of
natural
causes, but, in fact, she was smothered in her bed in exile fifty-one
years
later after the discovery of a plot to put her back on the Amyrlin
Seat."
"Mutinies?"
Bennae said incredulously. "Six of them? Exiled and smothered?"
"It's
all recorded in the secret histories, in the Thirteenth Deposi tory.
Though I
suppose I shouldn't have told you that." Egwene took a sip of tea and
grimaced. It was all but rancid. No wonder Bennae had not touched hers.
"Secret
histories? A thirteenth Depository? If such a thing existed, and I
think I
would know, why should you not have told me?"
"Because
by law the existence of the secret histories as well as their contents
can be
known only to the Amyrlin, the Keeper, and the Sitters. Them and the
librarians
who keep the records, anyway. Even the law itself is part of the
Thirteenth
Depository, so I guess I shouldn't have told that either. But if you
can gain
access somehow, or ask someone who knows and will tell you, you'll find
out I'm
right. Six times in the history of the Tower, when the Amyrlin was
dangerously
divisive or dangerously incompetent and the Hall failed to act. sisters
have
risen up to remove her." There. She could not have planted the seed
deeper
with a shovel. Or driven it home more bluntly with a hammer.
Bennae
stared at her for a long moment, then raised the cup to her lips. She
spluttered as soon as the tea touched her tongue, and began dabbing at
the
spots on her dress with a delicate, lace-edged handkerchief. "The Great
Winter War," she said huskily as she set the cup on the floor beside
her
chair, "began late in the year six hundred seventy-one…" She
did not mention secret records or mutinies again, but she did not have
to. More
than once during the lesson she trailed off, frowning at something
beyond
Egwene, and Egwene had little doubt what it was.
Later
that day, Lirene Doirellin said, "Yes, Elaida made a vital mistake
there," pacing up and down in front of her sitting room's fireplace.
The
Cairhienin sister was only a little shorter than Egwene, but the
nervous way
her eyes darted gave her the air of a hunted thing, a sparrow fearful
of cats
and convinced there were lots of cats in the vicinity. Her dark green
skirts
had only four discreet slashes of red, though she had been a Sitter
once.
"That proclamation of hers, on top of trying to kidnap him, could not
have
been better calculated to keep the al'Thor boy as far from the Tower as
he can
stay. Oh. she has made mistakes, Elaida has."
Egwene
wanted to ask about Rand and the kidnapping- kidnapping?-but Lirene
left no
opening as she went on about Elaida's many mistakes, all the while
pacing back
and forth, her eyes darting and her hands twisting unconsciously.
Egwene was
unsure whether or not that session could be called a success, but at
least it
was not a failure. And she had learned something.
Not
all of her forays went so well, of course.
"This
is not a discussion," Pritalle Nerbaijan said. Her tone was utterly
calm,
yet her tilted green eyes were heated. Her rooms looked more those of a
Green
than a Yellow, with several bared swords hanging on the walls and a
silk
tapestry showing men fighting Trollocs. She was gripping the hilt of
the dagger
at her woven silver belt. Not a simple belt knife; a dagger with a
blade near a
foot long and an emerald capping its pommel. Why she had agreed to
lecture
Egvvene was a mystery, given her dislike of teaching. Perhaps because
it was
Egwene. "You are here for a lesson on the limits of power. A very basic
lesson, suitable for a novice."
Egwene
wanted to shift on the three-legged stool that Pritalle had given her
for a
seat, but instead she concentrated on the smarting, focused on drinking
it in.
On welcoming it. The day had already seen three visits to Silviana, and
she
could sense a fourth coming, with the midday meal an hour off yet. "I
merely said that if Shemerin could be reduced from Aes Sedai to
Accepted then
Elaida's power has no limits. At least, she thinks it doesn't. But if
you accept
that, then it really doesn't."
Pritalle's
grip tightened on the dagger's hilt until her knuckles showed white,
yet she
seemed unaware. "Since you think you know better than I," she said
coolly, "you can visit Silviana when we finish." A partial success,
perhaps. Egwene did not think Pritalle's anger was for her.
"I
expect proper behavior out of you," Serancha Colvine told her firmly
another day. The word to describe the Gray sister was "pinched." A
pinched mouth, and a pinched nose that constantly seemed to be
detecting a bad
smell. Even her pale blue eyes seemed pinched with disapproval. She
might well
have been pretty otherwise. "Do you understand?"
"I
understand," Egwene said, sitting down on the stool that had been
placed
in front of Serancha's high-backed chair. The morning was cool, and a
small
fire burned on the stone hearth. Drink in the pain. Welcome the pain.
"An
incorrect response," Serancha said. "The correct response would have
been a curtsy and 'I understand. Serancha Sedai.' I intend to make a
list of
your failures for you to carry to Silviana when we're done. We'll begin
again.
Do you understand, child?"
"I
understand." Egwene said without rising. Aes Sedai serenity or no Aes
Sedai serenity, Serancha's face turned purple. In the end, her list
covered
four pages in a tight, cramped hand. She spent more time writing than
she did
lecturing! Not a success.
And
then there was Adelorna Bastine. The Saldaean Green somehow managed
stateliness
in spite of being slim and no taller than Egwene, and she had a regal,
commanding air that might have been intimidating had Egwene let it. "I
hear you make trouble." she said, picking up an ivory-backed hairbrush
from a small inlaid table beside her chair. "If you try to make trouble
with
me, you'll learn that I know how to use this."
Egwene
did learn, without trying. Three times she went across Adelorna's lap,
and the
woman did indeed know how to use a hairbrush for more than brushing her
hair.
That managed to stretch an hour lecture to two.
"May
I go now?" Egwene said at last, calmly drying her cheeks as well as she
could with a handkerchief that was already damp. Breathe in the pain.
Absorb
the fire. "I'm supposed to fetch water up for the Red, and I don't want
to
be late."
Adelorna
frowned at her hairbrush before returning it to the table that Egwene
had
overset twice with her kicking. Then she frowned at Egwene, studying
her as if
trying to see inside her skull. "I wish Cadsuane were in the Tower,"
she murmured. "I think she'd find you a challenge." There seemed a
touch of respect in her voice.
That
day was a turning point in some ways. For one thing, Silviana decided
that
Egwene was to receive Healing twice each day.
"You
seem to invite being beaten, child. It's pure stubbornness, and I won't
put up
with it. You will face reality. The next time you visit me, we'll see
how you
like the strap." The Mistress of Novices folded Egwene's shift over her
back, then paused. "Are you smiling} Did I say something amusing?"
"I
just thought of something funny." Egwene said. "Nothing of
consequence." Not of consequence to Silviana, anyway. She had realized
how
to welcome the pain. She was fighting a war, not a single battle, and
every
time she was beaten, every time she was sent to Silviana. it was a sign
that
she had fought another battle and refused to yield. The pain was a
badge of
honor. She howled and kicked as hard as ever during that slippering,
but while
she was drying her cheeks afterward, she hummed quietly to herself. It
was easy
to welcome a badge of honor.
Attitudes
among the novices began to shift by the second day of her captivity. It
seemed
that Nicola-and Areina. who was working in the stables and often came
to visit
Nicola; they seemed so close that Egwene wondered whether they had
become
pillow-friends, always with their heads together and smiling mysterious
smiles-
Nicola and Areina had regaled them all with tales of her. Very inflated
tales.
The two women had made her seem a combination of every legendary sister
in the
histories, along with Birgitte Silverbow and Amaresu herself, carrying
the
Sword of the Sun into battle. Half of them seemed in awe of her, the
others
angry with her for some reason or outright scornful. Foolishly, some
tried to
emulate her behavior in their classes, but a flurry of visits to
Silviana
quelled that. At the midday meal of the third day, nearly two dozen
novices ate
standing up and red-faced with embarrassment, Nicola among them. And
Alvis-tere. surprisingly. That number dropped to seven at supper, and
on the
fourth day, only Nicola and the Cairhienin girl did so. And that was
the end of
that.
She
expected some might resent the fact that she continued to refuse to
bend while
they had been put back on the straight and narrow so quickly, but to
the contrary,
it only seemed to decrease the number who were angry or scornful and
increase
the respect. No one tried to become her friend, which was just as well.
White
dress or no white dress, she was Aes Sedai, and it was improper for an
Aes
Sedai to befriend a novice. There was too much risk the girl would
start
feeling above herself and get into trouble for it. Novices began coming
to her
for advice, for help learning their lessons, though. Only a handful at
first,
but the number grew day by day. She was willing to help them learn,
which was
usually just a matter of strengthening a girl's confidence or
convincing a
young woman that caution was wise, or taking them patiently through the
steps
of a weave that was giving trouble. Novices were forbidden to channel
without
an Aes Sedai or Accepted present, though they nearly always did in
secret
anyway, but she was a sister. She refused to help more than one at a
time,
however. Word of groups would surely leak out, and she would not be the
only
one sent to Silviana. She would make that trip as often as necessary,
but she
did not want to earn it for others. And as for advice… With the novices
kept strictly clear of men, advice was easy. Though strains between
pillow-friends could be as harsh as anything men ever caused.
One
evening, returning from yet another session with Silviana, she
overheard Nicola
talking to two novices who could not have been more than fifteen or
sixteen.
Egwene hardly remembered being that young. It seemed a lifetime ago.
Marah was
a stocky Murandian with mischievous blue eyes, Namene a tall, slim
Domani who
giggled incessantly.
"Ask
the Mother," Nicola said. A few of the novices had taken to calling
Egwene
that, though never where anyone not wearing white could hear. They were
foolish,
but not utter fools. "She's always willing to give advice."
Namene
giggled nervously and wriggled. "1 wouldn't want to bother her."
"Besides,"
Marah said, a lilt in her voice, "they say she always gives the same
advice, she does."
"And
good advice it is, too." Nicola held up one hand to tick off fingers.
"Obey the Aes Sedai. Obey the Accepted. Work hard. Then work harder."
Gliding
on toward her room, Egwene smiled. She had been unable to make Nicola
behave
properly while she was openly Amyrlin, but it seemed she might have
succeeded
while masquerading as a novice herself. Remarkable.
There
was one more thing she could do for them: comfort them. Impossible as
it seemed
at first, the interior of the Tower sometimes changed. People got lost
trying
to find rooms they had been to dozens of times. Women were seen walking
out of
walls, or into them, often in dresses of old-fashioned cut, sometimes
in
bizarre garb, dresses that seemed simply lengths of brightly colored
cloth
folded around the body, embroidered ankle-length tabards worn over wide
trousers, stranger things still. Light, when could any woman have
wanted to
wear a dress that left her bosom completely exposed? Egwene was able to
discuss
it with Siuan in Tel'aran'rhiod, so she knew that these things were
signs of
the approach of Tarmon Gai'don. An unpleasant thought, yet there was
nothing to
be done about it. What was, was, and it was not as if Rand himself was
not a
herald of the Last Battle. Some of the sisters in the Tower must have
known
what it all meant, too, but wrapped up in their own affairs they made
no effort
to comfort novices who were weeping with fright. Egwene did.
"The
world is full of strange wonders," she told Coride, a pale-haired girl
who
was sobbing facedown on her bed. Only a year younger than herself,
Coride was
most definitely still a girl despite a year and a half in the Tower.
"Why
be surprised if some of those wonders appear in the White Tower? What
better
place?" She never mentioned the Last Battle to these girls. That was
hardly likely to be any comfort.
"But
she walked into a wall!" Coride wailed, raising her head. Her face was
red
and blotchy, and her cheeks glistened damply. "A wall! And then none of
us
could find the classroom, and Pedra couldn't either, and she got cross
with us.
Pedra never gets cross. She was frightened, too!"
"I'll
wager Pedra didn't start crying, though." Egwene sat down on the edge
of
the girl's bed, and was pleased that she did not wince. Novice
mattresses were
not noted for softness. "The dead can't harm the living, Coride. They
can't touch us. They don't even seem to see us. Besides, they were
initiates of
the Tower or else servants here. This was their home as much as it is
ours. And
as for rooms or hallways not being where they're supposed to be, just
remember
that the Tower is a place of wonders. Remember that, and they won't
frighten
you."
It
seemed feeble to her, but Coride wiped her eyes and swore she would
never be
frightened again. Unfortunately, there were a hundred and two like her,
not all
so easily comforted. It was enough to make Egwene angrier at the
sisters in the
Tower than she already had been.
Her
days were not all lessons and comforting novices and being punished by
the
Mistress of Novices, though the last did take up an unfortunate amount
of each
day. Silviana had been right to doubt that she would have much free
time.
Novices were always given chores. Often it was make-work, since the
Tower had
well over a thousand serving men and women without counting laborers,
but
physical work helped build character, so the Tower had always believed.
Plus,
it helped keep the novices too tired to think of men, supposedly. She
was
loaded down with chores beyond what the novices were given, though.
Some were
assigned by sisters who considered her a runaway, others by Silviana in
the
hope that weariness would dull the edge of her "rebellion."
Daily,
alter one meal or another, she scrubbed dirty pots with coarse salt and
a stiff
brush in the workroom off the main kitchen. From time to time Laras
would put
her head in, but she never spoke. And she never used her long spoon,
even when
Egwene was massaging the small of her back, aching from being head-down
in a
large kettle, rather than scrubbing. Laras dealt out smacks aplenty to
scullions
and under-cooks who tried to play pranks on Egwene, as was customary
with
novices sent to work in the kitchen. Supposedly that was just because,
as she
announced loudly every time she gave a thwack, they had plenty of time
to play
when they were not supposed to be working, but Egwene noticed that
Laras was
not so quick when someone goosed one of the true novices or tipped a
cup of
cold water down the back of her neck. It seemed she did have an ally of
sorts.
If she could only figure out how to make use of her.
She
hauled water in buckets hanging from the ends of a pole balanced across
her
shoulders, to the kitchen, to the novices' quarters, to the Accepted's
quarters, all the way up to the Ajah's quarters. She carried meals to
sisters
in their rooms, raked garden paths, pulled weeds, ran errands for
sisters,
attended Sitters, swept floors, mopped floors. scrubbed floors on her
hands and
knees, and that was only a partial list. She never shirked at these
tasks, and
only in part because she would not give anyone an excuse to call her
lazy. In a
way. she viewed them as penance for not having prepared properly before
turning
the harbor chain to cuendillar. Penances were to be borne with dignity.
As much
dignity as anyone can have while scrubbing a floor, anyway.
Besides,
visiting the Accepted's quarters gave her a chance to see how they
viewed her.
There were thirty-one in the Tower, but at any given time some were
teaching
novices and others taking lessons of their own, so she seldom found
more than
ten or twelve in their rooms around the nine-tiered well surrounding a
small
garden. Word of her arrival always spread quickly, though, and she
never lacked
an audience. At first, many of them tried to overwhelm her with orders,
especially Mair, a plump blue-eyed Arafellin, and Asseil, a slim
Taraboner with
pale hair and brown eyes. They had been novices when she came to the
Tower, and
already jealous of her quick rise to Accepted when she left. With them,
every
second sentence was fetch that, or carry this there. For all of them
she was
the "novice" who had caused so much difficulty, the
"novice" who thought she was the Amyrlin Seat. She carried pails of
water till her back ached, uncomplaining, yet she refused to obey their
commands. Which earned her more visits to the Mistress of Novices, of
course.
As the days passed, as her continual trips to Sil-viana's study showed
no
effect, however, that flow of commands dwindled and finally ceased.
Even Asseil
and Mair had not really been trying to be mean, only to behave as they
thought
they should in the circumstances, and they were at a loss as to what to
do with
her. Some of the Accepted showed signs of fright at the dead walking
and the
interior of the Tower changing, and whenever she saw a bloodless face
or teary
eyes she would say the same things she told the novices. Not addressing
the
woman directly, which might have gotten her back up rather than
soothing her,
but as if talking to herself. It worked as well with Accepted as with
novices.
Many gave a start when she began, or opened their mouths as though to
tell her
to be quiet, yet none did, and she always left a thoughtful expression
behind.
The Accepted continued to come out onto the stone-railed galleries when
she
entered, but they watched her in silence as though wondering what she
was.
Eventually she would teach them what she was. Them and the sisters. too.
Attending
Sitters and sisters, a woman in white standing quietly in the corner
quickly
became part of the furniture even when she was notorious. If they
noticed her.
they changed their conversation, yet she overheard many snippets, often
of
plots to avenge some slight given or wrong done by another Ajah. Oddly,
most of
the sisters seemed to see the other Ajahs inside the Tower as more
their
enemies than they did the sisters in the camp outside the city, and the
Sitters
were not much better. It made her want to slap them. True, it boded
well for
relations when the other sisters returned to the Tower, but still…
She
did pick up other things. The unbelievable disaster that had befallen
an
expedition sent against the Black Tower. Some of the sisters seemed not
to
believe it, yet they appeared to be trying to convince themselves it
could not
have happened. More sisters captured after a great battle and somehow
forced to
swear fealty to Rand. She had already had inklings of that, and she
could not
like it any more than she did sisters being bonded by Asha'man. Being
ta'wren
or the Dragon Reborn was no excuse. No Aes Sedai had ever before sworn
fealty
to any man. The sisters and Sitters argued over who was to blame, with
Rand and
the Asha'man at the head of the list. But one name came up again and
again.
Elaida do Avriny a'Roihan. They talked of Rand, too, of how to find him
before
Tarmon Gai'don. They knew it was coming despite their failure to
console the
novices and Accepted, and they were desperate to lay hands on him.
Sometimes
she risked a comment, a mention of Shemerin being stripped of the shawl
against
all custom, a suggestion that Elaida's edict regarding Rand was the
best way in
the world to make him dig in his heels. She offered sympathy for the
sisters
captured by the Asha'-man, for those taken at Dumai's Wells-with
Elaida's name
dropped in-or regretted the neglect that saw garbage rotting in the
once
pristine streets of Tar Valon. There was no need to mention Elaida
there; they
knew who was responsible for Tar Valon. At times, those comments earned
her
still more trips to Silviana's study, and more chores besides, yet
surprisingly
often they did not. She made careful note of the sisters who merely
told her to
be quiet. Or better still, said nothing. Some even nodded agreement
before they
caught themselves.
Some
of those chores led to interesting encounters.
On
the morning of her second day she was using a long-handled bamboo rake
to fish
detritus from the ponds of the Water Garden. There had been a rainstorm
the
night before, and the heavy winds had deposited leaves and grasses in
the ponds
among the bright green lily pads and budding water irises, and even a
dead
sparrow that she calmly buried in one of the flower beds. A pair of
Reds stood
on one of the arching pond bridges, leaning on the lacy stone railing
and
watching her and the fish swirling below them in a flurry of red and
gold and
white. A half-dozen crows burst up out of one of the leatherleafs and
silently
winged their way north. Crows! The Tower grounds were supposed to be
warded
against crows and ravens. The Reds did not seem to have noticed.
She
was squatting on her heels beside one of the ponds, washing the dirt
from her
hands after burying that pitiful bird, when Alviarin appeared, her
white-fringed shawl wrapped tightly around her as if the morning were
still
windy rather than bright and fair. This was the third time she had seen
Alviarin, and every time she had been alone rather than in company with
other
Whites. She had seen clusters of Whites in the hallways, though. Was
there a
clue in that? If so, she could not imagine to what, unless Alviarin was
being
shunned by her own Ajah for some reason. Surely the rot had not gone
that deep.
Eyeing
the Reds, Alviarin approached Egwene along the coarse gravel path that
wound
among the ponds. "You have fallen far," she said when she was close.
"You must feel it keenly."
Egwene
straightened and blotted her hands on her skirt, then picked up the
rake.
"I'm not the only one." She had had another session with Silviana
before dawn, and when she left the woman's study, Alviarin had been
waiting to go
in again. That was a daily ritual for the White, and the talk of the
novices'
quarters, with every tongue speculating on the why of it. "My mother
always says, don't weep over what can't be mended. It seems good advice
under
the circumstances."
Faint
spots of color appeared in Alviarin's cheeks. "But you seem to be
weeping
a good deal. Endlessly, by all reports. Surely you would escape that if
you
could."
Egwene
caught another oak leaf on the broom and brushed it off into the wooden
pail of
damp leaves at her feet. "Your loyalty to Elaida isn't very strong, is
it?"
"Why
do you say that?" Alviarin said suspiciously. Glancing at the two Reds,
who appeared to be paying more mind now to the fish than Egwene, she
stepped
closer, inviting lowered voices.
Egwene
fished at a long strand of grass that had to have come all the way from
the
plains beyond the river. Should she mention the letter this woman had
written
to Rand practically promising him the White Tower at his feet? No, that
piece
of information might prove valuable, but it seemed the sort of thing
that could
only be used once. "She stripped you of the Keeper's stole and ordered
your penance. That's hardly an inducement to loyalty."
Alviarin's
face remained smooth, yet her shoulders relaxed visibly. Aes Sedai
seldom
showed so much. She must feel under phenomenal strain to be so little
in
control of herself. She darted a look at the Reds again. "Think on your
situation," she said in near a whisper. "If you want an escape from
it, well, you may be able to find one."
"I
am content with my situation," Egwene said simply.
Alviarin's
eyebrows quirked upward in disbelief, but with another glance at the
Reds-one
was watching them now rather than the fish- she glided away, a very
fast glide
on the verge of breaking into a trot.
Every
two or three days she would appear while Egwene was doing chores, and
while she
never openly offered help with an escape, she used that word
frequently, and
she began to show frustration when Egwene refused to rise to her bait.
Bait it
was, to be sure. Egwene did not trust the woman. Perhaps it was that
letter,
surely designed to draw Rand to the Tower and into Elaida's clutches,
or maybe
it was the way she kept waiting for Egwene to make the first move, to
beg
possibly. Likely Alviarin would try to set conditions, then. In any
case, she
had no intention of escaping unless there was no other choice, so she
always
gave the same response.
"I
am content with my situation."
Alviarin
began grinding her teeth audibly when she heard that.
On
the fourth day, she was on her hands and knees scrubbing blue-and-white
floor
tiles when the boots of three men accompanied by a sister in
elaborately
red-embroidered gray silk passed her. A few paces on, the boots stopped.
"That
be her," a man's voice said in the accents of Illian. "She did be
pointed out to me. I think me I will speak to her."
"She's
only another novice, Mattin Stepaneos," the sister told him. "You
wanted to walk in the gardens." Egwene dipped her scrub brush in the
bucket of soapy water and began another stretch of tiles.
"Fortune
stab me. Cariandre, this may be the White Tower, but I do still be the
lawful
King of Illian. and if I want to speak to her-with you for chaperone;
all very
proper and decent-then I will speak with her. I did be told she did
grow up in
the same village with al'Thor." One set of boots, blacked till they
glistened, approached Egwene.
Only
then did she stand, the dripping brush in one hand. She used the back
of the
other to brush her hair out of her face. She refrained from knuckling
the small
of her back, much as she wanted to.
Mattin
Stepaneos was stocky and almost entirely bald, with a neatly trimmed
white
beard in the Illianer fashion and a heavily creased face. His eyes were
sharp,
and angry. Armor would have suited him better than the green silk coat
embroidered with golden bees on the sleeves and lapels. "Just another
novice?" he murmured. "I think you be mistaken, Cariandre."
The
plump Red. her lips compressed, left the two serving men with the Flame
of Tar
Valon on their chests and joined the balding man. Her disapproving gaze
touched
Egwene briefly before shifting to him. "She's a much-punished novice
who
has a floor to scrub. Come. The gardens should be very pleasant this
morning."
"What
be pleasant," he said, "do be talking to someone other than Aes
Sedai. And only of the Red Ajah at that, since you do manage to keep me
from
any others. On top of which, the servants you did give me might as well
be
mutes, and I think me the Tower Guards do have orders to hold their
tongues
around me as well."
He
fell silent as two more Red sisters approached. Nesita. plump and blue
eyed and
mean as a snake with the itch, nodded companion-ably to Cariandre while
Barasine handed Egwene the by now all too familiar pewter cup. The Red
seemed
to have custody of her in a way-at least, her watchers and minders were
always
Reds-and they seldom let much more than the promised hour pass before
someone
appeared with the cup of forkroot tea. She drained it and handed it
back.
Nesita seemed disappointed that she did not protest or refuse, but
there seemed
little point. She had, once, and Nesita had helped pour the vile stuff
down her
throat using a funnel she had ready in her belt pouch. That would have
been a
fine show of dignity in front of Martin Stepaneos.
He
watched the silent exchange with puzzled interest, though Cariandre
plucked at
his sleeve, urging him again to his walk in the gardens. "Sisters bring
you water when you thirst?" he asked when Barasine and Nesita glided
away.
"A
tea they think will improve my mood," she told him. "You look well,
Mattin Stepaneos. For a man Elaida had kidnapped." That tale was the
talk
of the novices' quarters, too.
Cariandre
hissed and opened her mouth, but he spoke up first, his jaw tight.
"Elaida
did save me from murder by al'Thor," he said. The Red nodded
approvingly.
"Why
would you think yourself in danger from him?" Egwene asked.
The
man grunted. "He did murder Morgase in Caemlyn, and Colavaere in
Cairhien.
He destroyed half the Sun Palace killing her, 1 did hear. And I did
hear of
Tairen High Lords poisoned or stabbed to death in Cairhien. Who can say
what
other rulers he did murder and destroy the bodies?" Cariandre nodded
again, smiling. You might have thought him a boy reciting his lessons.
Did the
woman have no understanding of men? He certainly saw it. His jaw grew
harder
still, and his hands clenched into fists for a moment.
"Colavaere
hanged herself," Egwene said, making sure she sounded patient. "The
Sun Palace was damaged later by someone trying to kill the Dragon
Reborn, maybe
the Forsaken, and according to Elayne Trakand, her mother was murdered
by
Rahvin. Rand has announced his support for her claims to both the Lion
Throne
and the Sun Throne. He hasn't killed any of the Cairhienin nobles
rebelling
against him, or the High Lords in rebellion. In fact, he named one of
them his
Steward in Tear."
"I
think that is quite-" Cariandre began, pulling her shawl up onto her
shoulders, but Egwene went on right over her.
"Any
sister could have told you all that. If she wanted to. If they were
speaking to
one another. Think why you see only Red sisters. Have you seen sisters
of any
two Ajahs speaking? You've been kidnapped and brought aboard a sinking
ship."
"That
is more than enough," Cariandre snapped right atop Eg-wene's last
sentence. "When you finish scrubbing this floor, you will run to the
Mistress of Novices and ask her to punish you for shirking. And for
showing
disrespect to an Aes Sedai."
Egwene
met the woman's furious gaze calmly. "I have barely enough time after I
finish to get clean before my lesson with Kiyoshi. Could I visit
Silviana after
the lesson?"
Cariandre
shifted her shawl, seemingly taken aback by her calmness. "That is a
problem for you to work out," she said at last. "Come, Mattin
Stepaneos. You have helped this child shirk long enough."
There
was no time to change out of her damp dress or even comb her hair after
leaving
Silviana's study, not if she were to have any hope of being on time for
Kiyoshi
without running, which she refused to do. That made her late, and it
turned out
that the tall, slender Gray was a stickler for both punctuality and
neatness,
which put her back yelping and kicking under Silviana's hard-swung
strap little
more than an hour later. Quite aside from embracing pain, something
else helped
see her through that. The memory of Mattin Stepaneos' thoughtful
expression as
Cariandre led him off down the corridor and how he twice looked back
over his
shoulder at her. She had planted another seed. Enough seeds planted,
and
perhaps what sprouted from them would splinter those cracks in the
platform
beneath Elaida. Enough seeds would bring Elaida down.
Early
on her seventh day of captivity, she was carrying water up the Tower
again, to
the White Ajah quarters this time, when she suddenly stopped in her
tracks
feeling as if she had been punched in her stomach hard. Two women in
gray-fringed shawls were walking down the spi-raling corridor toward
her,
trailed by a pair of Warders. One was Melavaire Someinellin, a stout
Cairhienin
in fine gray wool with white flecking her dark hair. The other, with
blue eyes
and dark honey hair. was Beonin!
"So
you're the one who betrayed me!" Egwene said angrily. A thought
occurred
to her. How could Beonin have betrayed her after swearing fealty? "You
must be Black Ajah!"
Melavaire
drew herself up as much as she could, which was not very far since she
was
inches shorter than Egwene. and planted her fists on her ample hips as
she
opened her mouth to deliver a blast. Egwene had had one lesson from
her, and
while she was a kindly woman usually, when she became angry, she could
be
fearsome.
Beonin
laid a hand on the other sister's plump arm. "Let me speak to her alone
please, Melavaire."
"I
trust you will speak sharply," Melavaire said in a stiff voice. "To
even think of making such a charge… ! To even mention some things…
!" Shaking her head in disgust, she retreated a little up the corridor
followed by her Warder, squat and even wider than she, a bear of a man
though
he moved with the expected Warder grace.
Beonin
gestured and waited until her own Warder, a lean man with a long scar
on his
face, joined them. She adjusted her shawl several times. "Me. I
betrayed
nothing," she said quietly. "I would not have sworn to you except
that the Hall, it would have had me birched if it learned the secrets
you knew.
Perhaps more than once. even. Reason enough to swear, no? I never
pretended to
love you, yet I maintained that oath until you were captured. But you
are no
longer Amyrlin, yes? Not as a captive, not when there was no hope of
rescuing
you, when you refused rescue. And you are a novice once more, so that
oath, it
has two reasons to hold no longer. The talk of rebellion, it was wild
talk. The
rebellion is finished. The White Tower, it will soon be whole again,
and I will
not be sorry to see it so."
Lifting
the pole from her shoulders, Egwene set down the pails of water and
folded her
arms beneath her breasts. She had tried to maintain a calm demeanor
since being
captured-well, except when she being punished-but this encounter would
have
tried a stone. "You explain yourself at great length," she said
dryly. "Are you trying to convince yourself? It won't do, Beonin. It
won't
do. If the rebellion is finished, where is the flood of sisters coming
to kneel
before Elaida and accept her penance? Light, what else have you
betrayed?
Everything?" It seemed likely. She had visited Elaida's study a number
of
times in Tel'aran'rhiod, but the woman's correspondence box had always
been
empty. Now she knew why.
Sharp
spots of red appeared in Beonin's cheeks. "I tell you, I have-betrayed
n-!" She finished with a strangled grunt and put a hand to her throat
as
if it refused to let the lie leave her tongue. That proved she was not
Black
Ajah; but it proved something more.
"You
betrayed the ferrets. Are they all down in the basement cells?"
Beonin's
eyes flashed up the corridor. Melavaire was talking with her Warder,
his head
bent close to hers. Squat or not. he was taller than she. Beonin's
Tervail was
watching her with a worried expression. The distance was too far for
any of the
three to have overheard, but Beonin stepped closer and lowered her
voice.
"Elaida, she is having them watched, though I think the Ajahs, they
keep
what they see to themselves. Few sisters want to tell Elaida any more
than they
must. It was necessary, you understand. I could hardly return to the
Tower and
keep them secret. It would have been discovered eventually."
"Then
you'll have to warn them." Egwene could not keep her voice clear of her
disdain. This woman split hairs with a razor! She took the thinnest
excuse to
decide her oath no longer applied, and then she betrayed the very women
she had
helped choose. Blood and bloody ashes!
Beonin
remained silent for a long moment, fiddling with her shawl, but at last
she
said, surprisingly. "I have already warned Mei-dani and Jennet." They
were the two Grays among the ferrets. "I have done what I can for them.
The others, they must sink or swim by themselves. Sisters have been
assaulted
for simply going too near another Ajah's quarters. Me, I will not walk
back to
my rooms clad only in my shawl and the welts just to try-"
"Think
of it as a penance," Egwene cut in. Light! Sisters assaulted} Things
were
even worse than she had thought. She had to remind herself that
well-manured
ground would help her seeds to grow.
Beonin
glanced up the hallway again, and Tervail took a step toward her before
Beonin
shook her head. Her face was smooth despite the color staining her
cheeks, but
inside, she must have been in turmoil. "You know I could send you to
the
Mistress of Novices, yes?" she said in a tight voice. "I hear you
spend half of each day squealing for her. I think you would dislike
more
visits, yes?"
Egwene
smiled at her. Not two hours earlier she had managed to smile the
moment
Silviana's strap stopped falling. This was much harder. "And who can
say
what I might squeal? About oaths, perhaps?" The color drained from the
other woman's cheeks, leaving her face bloodless pale. No, she did not
want
that getting out. "You may have convinced yourself I am no longer
Amyrlin,
Beonin. but it's time to start convincing yourself that I still am. You
will
warn the others, whatever the cost to yourself. Tell them to stay away
from me
unless I send word otherwise. They've had more than enough attention
drawn to
them. But from now on. you'll seek me out every day in case I have
instructions
for them. I have some now." Quickly she listed the things she wanted
them
to bring up in conversation, Shemerin being stripped of the shawl,
Elaida's
complicity in the disasters at the Black Tower and Dumai's Wells, all
the seeds
she had been planting. They would not be planted one by one now, but
broadcast
by handfuls.
"Me,
I cannot speak for other Ajahs," Beonin said when she finished, "but
in the Gray, sisters speak of most of these things often. The
eyes-and-ears,
they are busy of late. Secrets Elaida hoped to hold, they are coming
out. I am
sure it must be the same in the others. Perhaps it is not necessary for
me
to-"
"Warn
them, and deliver my instructions, Beonin." Egwene lifted the pole back
onto her shoulders, shifting it to the most comfortable position she
could
find. Two or three of the Whites would use a hairbrush or slipper on
her and
send her to Silviana if they thought her slow. Embracing pain, even
welcoming
it, did not mean seeking it out unnecessarily. "Remember. It's a
penance
I've set you."
"I
will do as you say," Beonin said with obvious reluctance. Her eyes
hardened suddenly, but it was not for Egwene. "It would be enjoyable to
see Elaida pulled down," she said in an unpleasant voice before
hurrying
away to join Melavaire.
That
shocking meeting, turned into an unexpected victory, left Egwene
feeling very
good about the day, and no matter that Ferane did turn out to think she
had
been slow. The White Sitter was plump, but she had an arm as strong as
Silviana's.
That
night, she dragged herself down to the open cells after supper despite
wanting
her bed in the worst way. Aside from lessons and howling under
Silviana's
strap-the last time just before supper- most of the rest of the day had
been
given to hauling water. Her back and shoulders ached. Her arms ached,
her legs.
She was swaying on her feet with weariness. Strangely, she had not had
one of
those wretched headaches since being taken prisoner, nor any of those
dark dreams
that left her disturbed even though she could never remember them, but
she
thought she might be heading for a fine headache tonight. That would
make
telling true dreams difficult, and she had had some fine ones lately,
about
Rand, Mat, Perrin. even Gawyn, though most dreams of him were just that.
Three
White sisters she knew in passing were guarding Leaner Nagora, a lean
woman
with pale hair worn in a roll on her nape who sat very straight to make
up for
her lack of stature; Norine, lovely with her large liquid eyes but
often as
vague as any Brown; and Miyasi, tall and plump with iron-gray hair, a
stern
woman who brooked no nonsense and saw nonsense everywhere. Nagora,
surrounded
by the light of saidar, held the shield on Leane, but they were arguing
over
some point of logic that Egwene could not make out from the little she
heard.
She could not even tell whether there were two sides to the argument,
or three.
There were no raised voices, no shaken fists, and their faces remained
smooth
Aes Sedai masks, but the coldness in their voices left no doubt that
had they
not been Aes Sedai, they would have been shouting if not trading blows.
She
might as well not have existed for all the attention they paid her
entrance.
Watching
the three from the edge of her eye. she moved as close to the iron
latticework
as she could and gripped it with both hands to steady herself. Light,
she was
tired! "I saw Beonin today," she said softly. "She's here in the
Tower. She claimed her oath to me no longer held because I was no
longer the
Amyrlin Seat."
Leane
gasped and stepped near enough that she was brushing the iron bars.
"She
betrayed us?"
"The
inherent impossibility of dissimulated structures is a given," Nagora
said
firmly. Her voice was an icy hammer. "A given."
"She
denies it, and I believe her." Egwene whispered. "But she admitted
betraying the ferrets. Elaida is only having them watched for the
moment, but I
told Beonin to warn them, and she said she would. She said she had
already warned
Meidani and Jennet, but why would she betray them and then tell them
about it?
And she said she would like to see Elaida pulled down. Why would she
flee to
Elaida if she still wants her brought down? She as much as admitted no
one else
has abandoned our cause. I'm missing something, and I'm too tired to
see what
it is." A yawn that she barely managed to cover with a hand cracked her
jaw.
"Dissimulated
structures are implied by four of the five axioms of sixth-order
rationality," Miyasi said just as firmly. "Strongly implied."
"So-called
sixth-order rationality has been discarded as an aberration by anyone
with
intellect," Norine put in. a touch sharply. "But dissimulated
structures are fundamental to any possibility of understanding what is
happening right here in the Tower every day. Reality itself is
shifting,
changing day by day.'
Leane
glanced at the Whites. "Some always thought Elaida had spies among us.
If
Beonin was one, her oath to you would have held her until she could
convince
herself you were no longer Amyrlin. But if her reception here wasn't
what she
expected, it might have changed her loyalties. Beonin was always
ambitious. If
she didn't get her due as she sees matters…" She spread her hands.
"Beonin always expected her due and perhaps a little more."
"Logic
is always applicable to the real world," Miyasi said dismis-sively,
"but only a novice would think the real world can be applied to logic.
Ideals must be first principles. Not the mundane world." Nagora snapped
her mouth shut with a dark look, as if she felt words had been snatched
right
off her tongue.
Coloring
faintly, Norine rose and glided away from the benches toward Egwene.
The other
two followed her with their eyes, and she seemed to feel their gazes,
shifting
her shawl uncomfortably first one way than another. "Child, you look
exhausted. Go to your bed now."
Egwene
wanted nothing more than her bed. but she had a question to be answered
first.
Only she had to be careful. The three Whites were all paying attention
now.
"Leane, do the sisters who visit you still ask the same questions?"
"I
told you to go to your bed," Norine said sharply. She clapped her hands
together as if that would somehow make Egwene obey.
"Yes,"
Leane said. "I see what you mean. Perhaps there can be a measure of
trust."
"A
small measure," Egwene said.
Norine
planted her fists on her hips. There was little coolness in her face or
her
voice, and no vagueness at all about her. "Since you refuse to go to
your
bed, you can go to the Mistress of Novices and tell her you disobeyed a
sister."
"Of
course," Egwene said quickly, turning to go. She had her answer-Beonin
had
not passed on Traveling, and that meant she likely had not passed on
anything
else; perhaps there could be a little crust-and besides. Nagora and
Miyasi were
advancing on her. The last thing she wanted was to be dragged bodily to
Silviana's study, something Miyasi at least was quite capable of. She
had even
stronger arms than Ferane.
On
the morning of her ninth day back in the Tower, before first light,
Doesine
herself came to Egwene's small room to give her her morning dose of
Healing.
Outside, rain was falling with a dull roar. The two Reds who had been
watching
over her sleep gave her her forkroot, frowning at Doesine, and hurried
away.
The Yellow Sitter snorted in contempt when the door closed behind them.
She
used the old method of Healing that made Egwene gasp as though doused
in an icy
pond and left her ravenously eager for breakfast. As well as free of
the pain
in her bottom. That actually felt peculiar; you could adapt to anything
over
time, and a bruised bottom already seemed normal. But the use of the
old way.
the way used every time she had been given Healing since being
captured,
reaffirmed that Beonin had kept some secrets, though how she had
managed it was
still a mystery. Beonin herself had only said that most sisters thought
the
tales of new weaves were merely rumors.
"You
don't mean to bloody surrender, do you. child?" Doesine said while
Egwene
was pulling her dress over her head. The woman's language was very much
at odds
with her elegant appearance, in gold-embroidered blue with sapphires at
her
ears and in her hair.
"Should
the Amyrlin Seat ever surrender?" Egwene asked as her head popped out
at
the top of her dress. She doubled her arms behind her to do up the
buttons of
white-dyed horn.
Doesine
snorted again, though not in contempt. Egwene thought. "A brave course,
child. Still, my wager is that Silviana will bloody well have you
sitting
straight and walking right before much longer." But she left without
calling Egwene down for naming herself the Amyrlin Seat.
Egwene
had yet another appointment with the Mistress of Novices before
breakfast-she
had not missed a day, so far-and following a determined effort to undo
Doesine's work in one go, her tears ceased as soon as Silviana's strap
stopped
falling. When she lifted herself off the end of the writing table,
where a
leather pad was attached just for bending over, its surface worn down
by who
knew how many women, and her skirt and shift fell against her fiery
skin, she
felt no urge to flinch. She accepted the painful heat, welcomed it,
warmed
herself with it as she would have warmed her hands in front of a
fireplace on a
cold winter morning. There seemed a strong resemblance between her
bottom and a
blazing fireplace right at that moment. Yet looking into the mirror,
she saw an
unruffled face. Red-cheeked, but calm.
"How
could Shemerin have been reduced to Accepted?'' she asked, wiping her
tears
away with her handkerchief. "I've inquired, and there's no provision
for
it in Tower law."
"How
often have you been sent to me because of those 'inquiries'?" Silviana
asked, hanging the split-tailed strap in the narrow cabinet alongside
the
leather paddle and the limber switch. "I'd think you would have given
over
long since."
"I'm
curious. How. when there's no provision?"
"No
provision, child," Silviana said gently, as if explaining to a child in
truth, "but no prohibition, either. A loophole that… Well, we won't
go into that. You'd only find a way to get yourself another strapping
with
it." Shaking her head, she took her seat behind the writing table and
rested her hands on the tabletop. "The problem was that Shemerin
accepted
it. Other sisters told her to ignore the edict, but once she realized
pleading
wouldn't change the Amyrlin's mind, she moved into the Accepted's
quarters."
Egwene's
stomach growled loudly, anxious for breakfast, but she was not done.
She was
actually having a conversation with Silviana. A conversation, however
odd the
topic. "But why would she run away? Surely her friends didn't stop
trying
to talk sense into her."
"Some
talked sense," Silviana said dryly. "Others…" She moved her
hands like the pans of a balance scale, first one up then the other.
"Others tried to force her to see sense. They sent her to me nearly as
often as you are sent. I treated her visits as private penances, but
she lacked
your-" She stopped abruptly, leaning back in her chair and studying
Egwene
over steepled fingers. "Well, now. You actually have me chatting. Not
prohibited certainly, yet hardly proper in these circumstances. Go on
to
breakfast," she said, picking up her pen and opening the silver cap of
her
ink jar. "I'll mark you down for midday again, since I know you have no
intention of curtsying." The faintest hint of resignation tinged her
voice.
When
Egwene entered the novices' dining hall, the first novice to see her
stood, and
suddenly there was a loud scraping of benches on the colorful floor
tiles as
the others rose, too. They stood there at their benches in silence as
Egwene
walked down the center aisle toward the kitchen. Suddenly Ashelin, a
plump,
pretty girl from Altara, darted into the kitchen. Before Egwene reached
the
kitchen door. Ashelin was back with a tray in her hands that held the
usual
thick cup of steaming tea and plate of bread, olives and cheese. Egwene
reached
for the tray, but the olive-skinned girl hurried to the nearest table
and set
it down in front of an empty bench, offering a suggestion of a curtsy
as she
backed away. Lucky for her, neither of Egwene's escorts this morning
had chosen
that moment to peer into the dining hall. Lucky for all those novices
on their
feet.
A
cushion rested on the bench in front of Egwene's tray. A tattered thing
that
was more patches in different colors than original material, but still
a
cushion. Egwene picked it up and set it on the end of the table before
sitting
down. Welcoming the pain was easy. She basked in the warmth of her own
fires. A
soft susurration gusted through the room, a collective sigh. Only when
she
popped an olive into her mouth did the novices sit.
She
almost spat it out again-it was not far short of spoiled-but she was
famished
after her Healing, so she spat only the pit into the palm of her hand
and
deposited it on the plate, washing the taste away with a sip of tea.
There was
honey in the tea! Novices got honey only on special occasions. She
tried not to
smile as she cleaned her plate, and clean it she did, even picking up
crumbs of
bread and cheese with a dampened finger. Not smiling was difficult,
though.
First Doesine-a Sitter!-then Silviana's resignation, now this. The two
sisters
were far more important than the novices or the honey, but they all
indicated
the same thing. She was winning her war.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
Attending Elaida
Gold-embossed
leather folder under her arm, Tarna kept to the central core of the
Tower as
she climbed toward Elaida's apartments, although it meant using a
seemingly
endless series of staircases-twice those stairs were not located where
she
remembered them, but so long as she continued upward, she would reach
her
destination-rather than the gently spiraling corridors. On the stairs,
she met
no one but occasional liveried servants who bowed or curtsied before
hurrying
on about their tasks. In either of the spiraling hallways she would
have to
pass the entrances to the Ajah quarters and perhaps encounter other
sisters.
Her Keeper's stole allowed her to enter any Ajah's quarters, yet she
avoided
all except the Red save when duty called. Among sisters of the other
Ajahs she
was all too aware that her narrow stole was red. all too aware of hot
eyes watching
her from cold faces. They did not unnerve her-little did; she took the
shifting
interior of the Tower in stride-but still… She thought matters had not
gone so far that anyone would actually attack the Keeper, yet she took
no
chances. Retrieving the situation was going to be a long, hard
struggle,
whatever Elaida thought, and an assault on the Keeper might make it
irretrievable.
Besides,
not having to watch over her shoulder allowed her to think on Pevara's
troubling question, one she had not considered before suggesting the
bonding of
Asha'man. Who in the Red actually could be trusted with the task?
Hunting men
who could channel led Red sisters to look askance at all men, and a
fair number
hated them. A surviving brother or father might well escape hatred, a
favorite
cousin or uncle, but once they were all gone, so was affection. And
trust. And
there was another matter of trust. Bonding any man violated custom
strong as
law. Even with Tsutama's blessings, who might run to Elaida when
bonding Asha'man
was broached? She had removed three more names from her mental list of
possibilities by the time she reached the entrance to Elaida's
apartments, only
two floors below the top of the Tower. After almost two weeks, her list
of
those she could be certain of still contained only a single name, and
that one
was impossible for the task.
Elaida
was in her sitting room, where the furnishings were all gilt and ivory
inlays
and the large patterned carpet was one of Tear's finest creations. She
was
sitting in a low-backed chair before the marble fireplace sipping wine
with
Meidani. Seeing the Gray was no surprise despite the early hour.
Meidani dined
with the Amyrlin most nights, and visited often during the day by
invitation.
Elaida, her six-striped stole wide enough to cover her shoulders, was
regarding
the taller woman over her crystal goblet, a dark-eyed eagle regarding a
mouse
with big blue eyes. Meidani. emeralds at her ears and on a wide collar
around
her slim throat, seemed very conscious of that gaze. Her full lips
smiled, but
they seemed tremulous. The hand not holding her goblet moved
constantly,
touching the emerald comb over her left ear, patting her hair, covering
her
bosom, which was largely exposed by her snug bodice of brocaded
silvery-gray
silk. Her bosom was hardly excessive, yet her slenderness made it seem
so, and
she appeared about to pop free of the garment. The woman was garbed for
a ball.
Or a seduction.
"The
morning reports are ready. Mother," Tarna said, bowing slightly. Light!
She felt as if she had intruded on lovers!
"You
won't mind leaving us, Meidani?" Even the smile Elaida directed at the
yellow-haired woman was predatory.
"Of
course not. Mother." Meidani set her goblet on the small table beside
her
chair and leaped to her feet, offering a curtsy that nearly had her out
of her
dress. "Of course not." She scurried from the room breathing hard,
her eyes wide.
When
the door closed behind her, Elaida laughed. "We were pillow-friends as
novices," she said, rising, "and I believe she wants to renew the
relationship. I may let her. She might reveal more on the pillows than
she's
let slip so far. Which is nothing, truth to tell." She strode to the
nearest window and stood staring down toward where her fantastical
palace would
rise to overtop the Tower itself. Eventually. If sisters could be
convinced to
work on it again. The heavy rain that had begun during the night was
still
falling, and it seemed unlikely she could see anything of that palace's
foundations, all that had been completed so far. "Help yourself to wine
if
you wish."
Tarna
kept her face smooth with an effort. Pillow-friends were common among
novices
and Accepted, but girlhood things should be left behind with girlhood.
Not all
sisters saw it so, certainly. Galina had been quite surprised when
Tarna
refused her advances after gaining the shawl. She herself found men far
more
attractive than women. Most seemed heavily intimidated by Aes Sedai. to
be
sure, especially if they learned you were Red Ajah. but over the years
she had
come across a few who were not.
"That
seems odd, Mother." she said, putting the leather folder down on the
side
table that held an ornately wrought golden tray bearing a crystal wine
pitcher
and goblets. "She appears frightened of you." Filling a goblet, she
sniffed
the wine before sipping. The Keepings seemed to be working. For now.
Elaida had
finally agreed that that weave, at least, must be shared. "Almost as if
she knew that you know about her being a spy."
"Of
course she's afraid of me." Sarcasm dripped heavily from Elaida's
voice,
but then hardened to stone. "I want her afraid. I intend to put her
through the mangle. By the time I have her birched, she'll tie herself
to the
birching frame if I order it. If she knew I knew, Tarna, she'd be
fleeing instead
of delivering herself into my hands." Still staring out into the
rainstorm, Elaida sipped at her wine. "Have you any news of the
others?"
"No,
Mother. If I could inform the Sitters of why they're to be watched-"
"No!"
Elaida snapped, spinning to face her. Her dress was such a mass of
intricate
red scrollwork that the embroidery all but hid the gray silk beneath.
Tarna had
suggested that less flaunting of her former Ajah-she had phrased it
more
diplomatically, but that was what she meant-might help bring the Ajahs
together
again, yet Elaida's eruption of fury had been sufficient to keep her
quiet on
the topic since.
"What
if some of the Sitters are working with them? I wouldn't put it past
them.
Those ridiculous talks continue at the bridge despite my orders. No, I
wouldn't
put it past them at all!"
Tarna
inclined her head over her goblet, accepting what she could not change.
Elaida
refused to see that if the Ajahs disobeyed her order to break off the
talks,
they were unlikely to spy on their own sisters at her command without
knowing
why. Saying so would only result in another tirade, though.
Elaida
stared at her as if to make sure she was not going to argue. The woman
seemed
harder than ever. And more brittle. "A pity the rebellion in Tarabon
failed," she said at last. "There's nothing to be done about it, I
suppose." But she mentioned it frequently, at odd moments, since word
came
that the Seanchan were reasserting their grip on that country. She was
not so
resigned as she pretended. "I want to hear some good news, Tarna. Is
there
any word of the seals on the Dark One's prison? We must make sure no
more get
broken." As if Tarna did not know that!
"Not
that the Ajahs have reported, Mother, and I don't think they would hold
that
back." She wished she had those last words back as soon as they were
spoken.
Elaida
grunted. The Ajahs released only trickles of what their eyes-and-ears
told
them, and she resented that bitterly. Her own eyes-and-ears were
concentrated
in Andor. "How is the work coming at the harbors?"
"Slowly.
Mother." With the flow of trade stifled, the city was already feeling
hunger. It would begin starving soon, unless the harbor mouths were
cleared.
Even cutting away the portion of the Southhar-bor chain that was still
iron had
proved not enough to allow sufficient ships in to feed Tar Valon. Once
Tarna
was able to convince her of the necessity, Elaida had ordered the chain
towers
dismantled so those huge pieces of cuendillar could be removed. Like
the city
walls, however, the towers had been built and strengthened with the
Power, and
only the Power could disassemble them. It was far from easy. The
original
builders had done good work, and those wards seemed not to have
weakened a
hair. "Reds are doing most of the work for the time being. Sisters from
other Ajahs come now and then, but only a few. I expect that will
change soon,
though." They knew the necessity of the work, however much they might
resent it-no sister could like having to labor in that fashion: the
Reds doing
most of it certainly grumbled enough-but the order had come from
Elaida, and
these days, that resulted in foot-dragging.
Elaida
breathed heavily, then took a long drink. She seemed to need it. Her
hand
gripped the goblet so hard that tendons stood out on its back. She
advanced
across the patterned silk carpet as if she meant to strike at Tarna.
"They
defy me again. Again! I will have obedience, Tarna. I will have it!
Write out
an order, and once I sign and seal it, post it in every Ajah's
quarters."
She stopped almost nose-to-nose with Tarna, her dark eyes glittering
like a
raven's. "The Sitters of any Ajah that fails to send its fair share of
sisters to work on the chain towers will take a daily penance from
Silviana until
the matter is rectified. Daily! And the Sitters of any Ajah that sends
sisters
to those… those talks will do the same. Write it out for me to sign!"
Tarna
drew a deep breath. Penances might work and they might not, depending
on how
set the Sitters were, and the Ajah heads-she did not think things had
gone so
wrong that they might refuse to accept penance at all; that would be an
end to
Elaida for sure, perhaps an end to the Tower. But posting the order
publicly,
not allowing the Sitters a scrap to hide behind and maintain their
dignity, was
the wrong way to go about it. In truth, it might well be the very worst
way.
"If I may make a suggestion," she began as delicately as she could
manage. She had never been known for delicacy.
"You
may not," Elaida cut in harshly. She took another long drink, draining
her
goblet, and glided across the carpet to refill it. She drank too much,
of late.
Tarna had even seen her drunk once! "How is Silviana doing with the
al'Vere girl?" she said as she poured.
"Egwene
spends near enough half of every day in Silviana's study. Mother." She
was
careful to keep her tone neutral. This was the first time Elaida had
asked
after the young woman since her capture, nine days ago.
"So
much? I want her tamed to the Tower's harness, not broken."
"I… doubt she will be broken. Mother. Silviana will be careful of
that."
And then there was the girl herself. That was not for Elaida's ears,
though.
Tarna had been shouted at more than enough. She had learned to avoid
subjects
that only resulted in shouting. Advice and suggestions unoffered were
no more
useless than advice and suggestions untaken, and Elaida almost never
took
either. "Egwene's stubborn, but I expect she must come around soon."
The girl had to. Galina, beating Tama's block out of her, had not
expended a
tenth of the effort Silviana was putting into Egwene. The girl had to
yield to
that soon.
"Excellent."
Elaida murmured. "Excellent." She looked over her shoulder, her face
a mask of serenity. Her eyes still glittered, though. "Put her name on
the
roster to attend me. In fact, have her attend me tonight. She can serve
supper
for Meidani and me."
"It
will be as you command. Mother." It seemed yet another visit to the
Mistress of Novices was inevitable, but no doubt Egwene would earn just
as many
of those if she never came near Elaida.
"And
now your reports. Tarna." Elaida sat down again and crossed her legs.
Replacing
her barely touched goblet on the tray, Tarna took up her folder and sat
in the
chair Meidani had been using. "The redone wards appear to be keeping
rats
out of the Tower. Mother." for how long was another question; she
checked
those wards herself every day, "but ravens and crows have been seen in
the
Tower grounds, so the wards on the walls must be…"
The
midday sun cast dappled light through the leafy branches of the tall
trees,
mostly oak and leatherleaf and sourgum with a smattering of cottonwoods
and
massive pines. Apparently there had been a fierce windstorm some years
back,
because fallen timber, scattered about here and there but all stretched
in the
same general direction, provided good seating with only a little
hatchet work
to hack away a few limbs. Sparse undergrowth allowed a good view in all
directions, and not far off, a small clear stream splashed over mossy
stones.
It would have been a good campsite if Mat had not been intent on
covering as
much ground as he could every day, but it did just as well as a place
to rest
the horses and eat. The Damona Mountains still lay at least three
hundred miles
to the east, and he intended to reach them in a week. Vanin said he
knew a
smugglers' pass-purely by hearsay, of course: just something he had
overheard
by chance, but he knew right where to find it-that would have them
inside Murandy
two days after that. Much safer than trying to go north into Andor or
south
toward Illian. In either direction, the distance to safety would be
further and
the chance of encountering Seanchan greater.
Mat
gnawed the last scrap of meat from a rabbit's hind leg, and tossed the
bone on
the ground. Balding Lopin darted in, stroking at his beard in
consternation, to
pick it up and drop it in the pit he and Nerim had made in the
mulch-covered
forest floor, though the pit would be dug up by animals within a
half-hour
after their departure. Mat moved to wipe his hands on his breeches.
Tuon.
nibbling at a grouse leg on the other side of the low fire, gave him a
very
direct look, her eyebrows raised, while the ringers of her free hand
wiggled at
Selucia, who had ravaged half a grouse by herself. The bosomy woman did
not
reply, but she sniffed. Loudly. Meeting Tuon's gaze, he deliberately
wiped his
hands on his breeches. He could have gone over to the stream, where the
Aes
Sedai were washing their hands, but no one's clothing was going to be
pristine
by the time they reached Murandy in any case. Besides, when a woman
named you
Toy all the time, it was natural to take any chance to let her know you
were
nobody's toy. She shook her head and waggled her fingers again. This
time.
Selucia laughed, and Mat felt his face heat. He could imagine two or
three
things she might have said, none of which he would have enjoyed hearing.
Setalle,
sitting on the end of his log. made sure he heard some of them anyway.
Reaching
an agreement with the onetime Aes Sedai had not shifted her attitudes a
hair.
"She might have said men are pigs," she murmured without lifting her
eyes from her embroidery hoop, "or just that you are." Her dark gray
riding dress had a high neck, but she still wore her snug silver
necklace with
the marriage knife hanging from it. "She may have said you're a
mud-footed
country lout with dirt in your ears and hay in your hair. Or she might
have
said-"
"I
think I see the direction you're going," he told her through gritted
teeth. Tuon giggled, though the next instant her face belonged on an
executioner once more, cold and stern.
Pulling
his silver-mounted pipe and goatskin tabac pouch from his coat pocket,
he
thumbed the bowl full and lifted the lid on the box of strikers at his
feet. It
fascinated him the way fire just sprang up, spikes of it darting in all
directions at first, when he scratched the lumpy, red-and-white head of
a
striker down the rough side of the box. He waited until the flame
burned away
from the head before using it to light his pipe. Pulling the taste and
smell of
sulphur into his mouth once had been enough for him. He dropped the
burning
stick and ground it firmly under his boot. The mulch was still damp
from the
last rain to fall here, but he took no chances with fire in woods. In
the Two
Rivers, men turned out from miles around when the woods caught fire.
Sometimes
hundreds of marches burned, even so.
"The
strikers, they should not be wasted," Aludra said, lifting her eyes
from
the small stones board balanced atop a nearby log. Thom. stroking his
long
white mustaches, continued to contemplate the cross-hatched board. He
rarely
lost at stones, yet she had managed to win two games from him since
they left
the show. Two out of a dozen or more, but Thorn took care with anyone
who could
defeat him even once. She swept her beaded braids back over her
shoulders.
"Me, I must be in the same place for two days to make more. Men always
find ways to make work for women, yes?"
Mat
puffed away, if not contentedly, at least with some degree of pleasure.
Women!
A delight to look at and a delight to be with. When they were not
finding ways
to rub salt into a man's hide. It seemed six up and a half dozen down.
It truly
did.
Most
of the party had finished eating-the best part of two grouse and one
rabbit
were all that remained on the spits over the fire, but they would be
taken
along wrapped in linen; the hunting had been good during the morning's
ride,
yet there was no certainty the afternoon would be as profitable, and
flatbread
and beans made a poor meal. Those who had finished were taking their
ease or,
in the case of the Redarms, checking the hobbled packhorses, better
than sixty
of them on four leads. Buying so many in Maderin had been expensive,
but Luca
had rushed into town to take care of the bargaining himself once he
heard about
a merchant dead in the street. He almost-almost but not quite-had been
ready to
give them packhorses from the show's animals to be rid of Mat after
that. Many
of the animals were loaded with Aludra's paraphernalia and her
supplies. Luca
had ended up with the greater part by far of Mat's gold, one way and
another.
Mat had slipped a fat purse to Petra and Clarine, too, but that was
friendship,
to help them buy their inn a little sooner. What remained in his
saddlebags was
more than enough to see them comfortably to Murandy, though, and all he
needed
to replenish it was a common room where dice were being tossed.
Leilwin,
with a curved sword hanging from a broad leather strap that slanted
across her
chest, and Domon. with a shortsword on one side of his belt and a
brass-studded
cudgel on the other, were chatting with Juilin and Amathera on yet
another log
close by. Leilwin-he had come to accept that that was the only name she
would
stomach-made a point of showing that she would not avoid Tuon or
Selucia, or
lower her eyes when they met. though she had to steel herself visibly
to carry
it off. Juilin had the cuffs of his black coat turned back, a sign he
felt
among friends, or at least people he could trust. The onetime Panarch
of
Tarabon still clutched the thief-catcher's arm tightly, but she met
Leilwin's
sharp blue eyes with little flinching. In fact, she often seemed to
gaze at the
other woman with something approaching awe.
Seated
cross-legged on the ground and unmindful of the dampness, Noal was
playing
Snakes and Foxes with Olver and spinning wild tales about the lands
beyond the
Aiel Waste, about some great coastal city that foreigners were not
allowed to
leave except by ship and the inhabitants were not allowed to leave at
all. Mat
wished they would find another game to play. Every time they brought
out that
piece of red cloth with its spiderweb of black lines, it reminded him
of his
promise to Thorn, reminded him the bloody Eelfinn were inside his head
somehow.
and maybe the flaming Aelfinn, too. The Aes Sedai came up from the
stream, and
Joline stopped to talk with Blaeric and Fen. Bethamin and Seta,
trailing along
behind, hesitated until a gesture from the Green sent them to stand
behind the
log where Teslyn and Edesina sat, as far apart as they could manage,
with uncut
branches between, and began reading small leather-bound books taken
from their
belt pouches. Both Bethamin and Seta stood behind Edesina.
The
yellow-haired former sul'dam had come round in spectacular, and
painful,
fashion. Painful for her and for the sisters. When she first hesitantly
asked
them to teach her, too. at supper the night before, they refused. They
were
only teaching Bethamin because she had already channeled. Seta was too
old to
become a novice, she had not channeled, and that was that. So she
duplicated
whatever it was that Bethamin had done and had all three leaping about
the
cookfire and squealing in showers of dancing sparks for as long as she
could
hold onto the Power. They agreed to teach her then. At least. Joline
and
Edesina did. Teslyn still was having none of any sul'dam, former or
not. All
three of them took a hand in switching her, though, and she had spent
the
morning continually easing herself in her saddle. She still looked
afraid, of
the One Power and maybe of the Aes Sedai, but strangely, her face
somehow
seemed… content, too. How to understand that was beyond Mat.
He
should have felt content himself. He had avoided a charge of murder,
avoided
riding blindly into a Seanchan trap that would have killed Tuon,
and left the gholam behind for
good this time. It would be following Luca's show, and Luca had been
warned,
for whatever good that would do. In well under two weeks he would be
over the
mountains into Murandy. The need to figure out how to get Tuon back to
Ebou Dar
safely, no easy task at all now, especially since he would have to
guard
against Aes Sedai trying to spirit her away, would mean that much
longer to
look at her face. And to try puzzling out what went on behind those big
beautiful eyes. He should have been as happy as a goat in a corn crib.
He was
far from it.
For
one thing, all those sword-cuts he had received in Maderin hurt. Some
of them
were inflamed, though he had managed to keep that from anyone so far.
He hated
being fussed over nearly as much as he hated anyone using the Power on
him.
Lopin and Nerim had sewed him up as well as they could, and he had
refused
Healing despite attempted bullying by all three Aes Sedai. He had been
surprised that Joline. of all people, tried to insist, but she did, and
flung
up her hands in disgust when he failed to relent. Another surprise had
been
Tuon.
"Don't
be foolish. Toy," she had drawled in his tent, standing over him, arms
folded
beneath her breasts, while Lopin and Nerim plied their needles and he
gritted
his teeth. Her proprietary air, very much a woman making sure her
property was
repaired properly, had been enough to make him grind his teeth, never
mind the
needles. Or that he was down to his smallclothes! She had just walked
in and
refused to leave short of manhandling, and he had felt in no condition
to
manhandle a woman he suspected might be able to break his arm. "This
Healing is a wonderful thing. My Mylen knows it, and I taught it to my
others,
too. Of course, many people are foolish about having the Power touch
them. Half
my servants would faint at the suggestion, and most of the Blood, too,
I
shouldn't be surprised. But I wouldn't have expected it of you." If she
had
a quarter his experience of Aes Sedai, she would have.
They
had ridden off up the road from Maderin as if setting out for Lugard,
then
taken to the forest as soon as the last farms were out of sight. The
moment
they entered the trees, the dice started up in his head again. That was
the
other thing that soured his mood, those bloody dice drumming inside his
head
for two days. There hardly seemed any way they could stop here in the
forest.
What kind of momentous event could happen in the woods? Still, he had
stayed
well clear of the small villages they had passed. Sooner or later the
dice
would stop, though, and he could only wait for it.
Tuon
and Selucia headed for the stream to wash, wiggling their fingers at
one
another rapidly. Talking about him, he was sure. When women started
putting
their heads together, you could be sure-
Amathera
screamed, and every head whipped around toward her. Mat spotted the
cause as
quickly as Juilin did, a black-scaled snake a good seven feet long
wriggling
quickly away from the log Juilin was seated on. Leilwin cursed and
leaped to
her feet drawing her sword, but no faster than Juilin. who tugged his
shortsword free of its scabbard and started after the snake so swiftly
that his
conical red cap fell off.
"Let
it go, Juilin." Mat said. "It's heading away from us. Let it
go." The thing probably had a den under that log and had been surprised
to
come out and find people. Luckily, blacklances were solitary snakes.
Juilin
hesitated before deciding that comforting a shivering Amathera was more
important than chasing a snake. "What kind is it, anyway?" he said,
folding her in his arms. He was a city man. after all. Mat told him,
and for a
moment, he looked as though he meant to go after it again. Wisely, he
decided
against. Blacklances were quick as lightning, and with a shortsword, he
would
have needed to get close. Anyway, Amathera was clinging to him so hard
he would
have had a time getting free of her.
Taking
his hat from the butt of his ashandarei, which was driven point-down
into the
ground, Mat settled it on his head. "Daylight's wasting," he said
around his pipestem. "Time we were moving on. Don't dawdle over there,
Tuon. Your hands are clean enough." He had tried calling her Precious,
but
since her claim of victory back in Maderin. she refused to acknowledge
that he
had even spoken when he did.
She
did not hurry in the slightest, of course. By the time she returned,
drying her
small hands on a small piece of toweling that Selucia would drape
across the
pommel of her saddle to dry, Nerim and Lopin had filled in the refuse
pit,
wrapped the remains of the meal and tucked them into Nerim's
saddlebags, and
doused the fire with water brought from the stream in folding leather
buckets.
Ashandarei in hand, Mat was ready to mount Pips.
"A
strange man, who lets poisonous serpents go," Tuon said. "From the
fellow's reaction, I assume a blacklance is poisonous?"
"Very." he told her. "But
snakes don't bite anything they can't eat unless they're threatened."
He
put a foot in the stirrup.
"You
may kiss me. Toy."
He
gave a start. Her words, not spoken softly, had made them the object of
every
eye. Selucia's face was so stiffly expressionless her disapproval could
not
have been plainer. "Now?" he said. "When we stop tonight, we
could take a stroll alone-"
"By
tonight. I may have changed my mind, Toy. Call it a whim, for a man who
lets
poisonous snakes go." Maybe she saw one of her omens in that?
Taking
off his hat and sticking the black spear back into the ground, he took
the pipe
from between his teeth and planted a chaste kiss on her full lips. A
first kiss
was nothing to be rough with. He did nor want her to think him pushy,
or crude.
She was no tavern maid to enjoy a bit of slap and tickle. Besides, he
could
almost feel all those eyes watching. Someone snickered. Selucia rolled
her
eyes.
Tuon
folded her arms beneath her breasts and looked up at him through her
long
eyelashes. "Do I remind you of your sister?" she asked in a dangerous
tone. "Or perhaps your mother?" Somebody laughed. More than one
somebody, in fact.
Grimly.
Mat tapped the dottle from his pipe on the heel of his boot and stuffed
the
warm pipe into his coat pocket. He hung his hat back on the ashandarei.
If she
wanted a real kiss… Had he really thought she would not fill his arms?
Slim, she was to be sure, and small, but she filled them very nicely
indeed. He
bent his head to hers. She was far from the first woman he had kissed.
He knew
what he was about. Surprisingly-or then again, perhaps not so
surprisingly-she
did not know. She was a quick pupil, though. Very quick.
When
he finally released her. she stood there looking up at him and trying
to catch
her breath. For that matter, his breath came a little raggedly, too.
Metwyn
whistled appreciatively. Mat smiled. What would she think of what
plainly was
her first real kiss ever? He tried not to smile too widely, though. He
did not
want her to think he was smirking.
She
laid fingers against his cheek. "I thought so," she said in that slow
honey drawl. "You're feverish. Some of your wounds must be infected."
Mat
blinked. He gave her a kiss that had to have curled her toes, and
all she said was that his face was hot?
He bent his head again-this time, she would bloody well need help to
stay
standing!-but she put a hand against his chest, lending him off.
"Selucia,
fetch the box of ointments I got Irom Mistress Luca," she commanded.
Selucia went scurrying for Tuon's black-and-white mount.
"We
don't have time for that now," Mat said. "I'll smear on something
tonight." He might as well have kept his mouth shut.
"Strip
off, Toy." she said in the same tone she had used with her maid. "The
ointment will sting, but I expect you be brave."
"I
am not going to-!"
"Riders
coming." Harnan announced. He was already in his saddle, on a dark bay
gelding with white forefeet, holding the lead to one of the strings of
packhorses. "One of them's Vanin."
Mat
swung up onto Pips for a better vantage. A pair of horsemen were
approaching at
a gallop, dodging around fallen trees when they had to. Aside from
recognizing
Chel Vanin's dun, there was no mistaking the man himself. Nobody else
who was
that wide and sat his saddle like a sack of suet could have maintained
his seat
at that pace without any apparent effort. The man could have stayed in
the
saddle on a wild boar. Then Mat recognized the other rider, whose cloak
was
flailing behind him, and felt as if he had been punched in the belly.
He would
not have been surprised in the least had the dice stopped then, but
they kept
bouncing off the inside of his skull. What in the Light was Tal-manes
bloody
well doing in Altara?
The
two riders slowed to a walk short of Mat, and Vanin reined in to let
Talmanes
approach alone. It was not shyness. There was nothing shy about Vanin.
He
leaned lazily on the tall pommel of his saddle and spat to one side
through a
gap in his teeth. No, he knew Mat would not be best pleased, and he
meant to
stay clear.
"Vanin
brought me up to date. Mat," Talmanes said. Short and wiry, with the
front
of his head shaved and powdered, the Cairhienin had the right to wear
stripes
of color across his chest in considerable number, but a small red hand
sewn to
the breast of his dark coat was its only decoration unless you counted
the long
red scarf tied around his left arm. He never laughed and seldom smiled,
but he
had his reasons. "I was sorry to hear about Nalesean and the others. A
good man, Nale-sean. They all were."
"Yes, they were." Mat said, keeping
a tight rein on his temper. "I assume Egwene never came to you for help
getting away from those fool Aes Sedai, but what in the bloody flaming
Light
are you doing here?" Well, maybe he did not have such a tight rein
after
all. "At least tell me you haven't brought the whole bloody Band three
hundred bloody miles into Altara with you."
"Egwene
is still the Amyrlin," the other man said calmly, straightening his
cloak.
Another red hand, larger, marked that. "You were wrong about her. Mat.
She
really is the Amyrlin Seat, and she has those Aes Sedai by the scruff
of the
neck. Though some of them might not know it yet. The last I saw, she
and the
whole lot of them were off to besiege Tar Valon. She might have it by
now. They
can make holes in the air like the one the Dragon Reborn made to take
us near
Salidar." The colors spun in Mat's head, resolving for an instant into
Rand talking to some woman with gray hair in a bun atop her head, an
Aes Sedai,
he thought, but his anger blew the image away like mist.
All
that talk of the Amyrlin Seat and Tar Valon attracted the sisters, of
course.
They heeled their horses up beside Mat and tried to take over. Well,
Edesina
hung back a little the way she did when Teslyn or Joline had the bit in
her
teeth, but the other two…
"Who
do you be talking about?" Teslyn demanded while Joline was still
opening
her mouth. "Egwene? There did be an Accepted named Egwene al'Vere, but
she
be a runaway."
"Egwene
al'Vere is the one, Aes Sedai." Talmanes said politely. The man was
always
polite to Aes Sedai. "And she is no runaway. She is the Amyrlin Seat,
my
word on it." Edesina made a sound that would have been called a squeak
coming from anyone but an Aes Sedai.
"Later
for that." Mat muttered. Joline opened her mouth again, angrily.
"Later, I said." That was not enough to stop the slender Green. but
Teslyn laid a hand on her arm and murmured something, and that was.
Joline
still glared daggers, though, promising to drag out everything she
wanted to
know later. "The Band, Talmanes?"
"Oh.
No, I only brought three banners of horse and four thousand mounted
crossbowmen. I left three banners of horse and five of foot, a little
short of
crossbows, in Murandy with orders to move north to An-dor. And the
Mason's
Banner, of course. Handy to have masons ready to hand if you need a
bridge
built or the like."
Mat
squeezed his eyes shut for a moment. Six banners of horse and five of
foot. And
a banner of masons! The Band had only been two banners counting horse
and foot
when he left them in Salidar. He wished he had back half the gold he
had handed
over to Luca so freely. "How am I supposed to pay that many men?" he
demanded. "I couldn't find enough dice games in a year!"
"Well,
as to that, I made a small deal with King Roedran. Finished with, now,
and not
before time-I think he was about ready to turn on us; I will explain
later-but
the Band's coffers hold a year's pay and more. Besides, sooner or later
the
Dragon Reborn will give you estates, and grand ones. He has raised men
to rule
nations, so I hear, and you grew up with him."
This
time, he did not fight the colors as they resolved into Rand and the
Aes Sedai.
It was an Aes Sedai, for sure. A hard woman, she looked. If Rand tried
to give
him any titles, he would stuff them down Rand's bloody throat is what
he would
do. Mat Cauthon had no liking for nobles-well, a few like Talmanes were
all
right; and Tuon: never forget Tuon-and he certainly had no bloody
desire to
become one! "That's as may be," was all he said, though.
Selucia
cleared her throat loudly. She and Tuon moved their horses up beside
Mat, and
Tuon was so straight in her mare's saddle, so cool-eyed, cold-faced and
regal,
that he expected Selucia to start proclaiming her titles. She did
nothing of
the sort. Instead, she shifted on her dun and scowled at him, eyes like
blue
coals in a fire, then cleared her throat again. Very loudly. Ah.
"Tuon,"
Mat said, "allow me to present Lord Talmanes Delovinde of Cairhien. His
family is distinguished and ancient, and he has added honors to its
name."
The little woman inclined her head. Perhaps all of an inch. "Talmanes,
this is Tuon." So long as she called him Toy. she would get no titles
from
him. Selucia glared, eyes hotter than ever, impossible as that seemed.
Talmanes
blinked in surprise, though, and bowed very low in his saddle. Vanin
pulled the
sagging brim of his hat lower, half hiding his face. He still avoided
looking
directly at Mat. So. It seemed the man had already told Talmanes
exactly who
Tuon was.
Growling
under his breath. Mat leaned from the saddle to snatch his hat from the
spear
and pull up the ashandarei. He clapped the hat on his head. "We were
ready
to move on, Talmanes. Take us to where your men are waiting, and we'll
see if
we can have as good luck avoiding Seanchan on the way out of Altara as
you had
on the way in."
"We
saw a good many Seanchan." Talmanes said, turning his bay to fall in
beside Pips. "Though most of the men we saw seemed to be Altaran. They
have camps scattered everywhere, it seems. Luckily, we saw none of
those flying
creatures I have heard tell of. But there is a problem. Mat. There was
a
landslide. I lost my rear guard and some of the packhorses. The pass is
well
and truly blocked, Mat. I sent three men to try climbing over with the
orders
sending the Band to Andor. One broke his neck, and another his leg."
Mat
stopped Pips short. "I'm guessing this is the same pass Vanin was
talking
about?"
Talmanes
nodded, and Vanin, waiting to fall in farther back, said, "Bloody
right,
it was. Passes don't grow on trees, not in mountains like the Damonas."
He
was no respecter of rank.
"Then
you'll have to find another one." Mat told him. "I've heard you can
find your way blindfolded at midnight. It should be easy for you."
Flattery never hurt. Besides, he had heard that about the man.
Vanin
made a sound like he was swallowing his tongue. "Find another pass?"
he muttered. "Find another pass, the man says. You don't just go find
another pass in new mountains like the Damonas. Why do you think I only
knew
the one?" He was shaken to admit that much. Before this, he had been
adamant that he had only heard of it.
"What
are you talking about?" Mat demanded, and Vanin explained. At great
length, for him.
"An
Aes Sedai explained it to me, once. You see. there's old mountains.
They was
there before the Breaking, maybe on the bottom of the sea or the like.
They
have passes all over, broad and gentle. You can ride into those and as
long you
keep your head and your direction and have enough supplies, sooner or
later you
come out the other side. And then there's mountains made during the
Breaking." The fat man turned his head and spat copiously. "Passes in
those are narrow, twisty things, and sometimes they aren't really what
you'd
call passes at all. Ride into one of those, and you can wander around
till your
food runs out trying to find a way to the other side. Loss of that pass
is
going to hurt a lot of folks who use it for what you might call untaxed
goods,
and men'll die before they find a new one that gets them all the way
through.
We go into the Damonas with that pass gone, likely we'll all die, too.
Them as
doesn't turn back in time and hasn't gotten their heads so turned
around they
can't find the way back."
Mat
looked around, at Tuon. the Aes Sedai. at Olver. They were all
depending on him
to get them to safety, but his safe route out of Altara was not there
any more.
"Let's ride." he said. "I have to think." He had to bloody
think for all he was worth.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
As If the World Were Fog
Toy
set a fast pace through the forest, but Tuon rode close behind him-with
Selucia
at her side, of course-so she could listen in on him and Talmanes. Her
own
thoughts interfered with eavesdropping, however. So he had grown up
with the
Dragon Reborn, had he? The Dragon Reborn! And he had denied knowing
anything at
all of the man. That was one lie of his she had failed to catch, and
she was
good at catching lies. In Seandar, the undetected lie might be the one
that
killed you or sent you to the sale block as property. Had she known of
his
prevarication, she might have slapped his face rather than allowing him
to kiss
her. Now. that had been a shock, one she was not sure she had recovered
from
yet. Selucia had described being kissed by a man, but the actuality
made the
other woman's descriptions pale. No. she had to listen.
"You
left Estean in charge?" Toy erupted, so loudly that a covey of gray
doves
burst from cover in the thin undergrowth with a mournful whirring
sound.
"The man's a fool!"
"Not
too much of a fool to listen to Daerid." Talmanes replied calmly. He
did
not seem a man to get overly excited. He kept a careful watch, head
swiveling
constantly. Every so often he scanned the sky through the thick
branches
overhead, too. He had only heard of raken, yet he watched for them. His
words
were even crisper and quicker than Toy's, and difficult to follow.
These people
all spoke so fast! "Carlomin and Reimon are not fools, Mat-at least,
Reimon is only a fool sometimes-but neither will they listen to a
commoner, no
matter how much more he knows about warfare than they do. Edorion will,
but I
wanted him with me."
That
red hand symbol Talmanes wore was intriguing. More than intriguing.
Much more.
Of an old and distinguished House, was he? But Toy was the one. He
remembered
Hawkwing's face. That seemed utterly impossible, yet his denial of it
had
plainly been a lie, as plain as the spots on a leopard. Could the Red
Hand be
Toy's sigil? But if so, what about his ring? She had almost fainted
when she
first saw that. Well, she had come as close to it as she had since
childhood.
"That's
going to change, Talmanes," Toy growled. "I let it go on too long as
it is. If Reimon and the others command banners now, that makes them
Banner-Generals. And you a Lieutenant-General. Daerid commands five
banners,
and that makes him a Lieutenant-General, too. Reimon and the others
will obey
his orders or they can go home. Come Tarmon Gai'don, I'm not going to
have my
skull split open because they bloody refuse to listen to somebody who
doesn't
have bloody estates."
Talmanes
turned his horse to ride around a patch of briars, and everyone
followed. The
tangled vines seemed to have particularly long thorns, and hooked
besides.
"They will not like it, Mat. but they will not go home, either. You
know
that. Have you any ideas yet how we are to get out of Altara?"
"I'm
thinking on it," Toy muttered. "I'm thinking on it. Those
crossbowmen…" He exhaled heavily. "That wasn't wise. Talmanes.
For one thing, they're used to marching on their own feet. Half of them
will
have all they can do to stay in the saddle if we're moving fast, and
we're
going to have to. They can be useful in woods like these, or anywhere
they have
plenty of cover, but if we're on open ground, with no pikes, they'll be
ridden
down before they can loose a second flight."
In
the distance, a lion coughed. In the distance, but it was still enough
to make
the horses whicker nervously and dance a few steps. Toy leaned forward
on his
gelding's neck and appeared to whisper in the animal's ear. It quieted
immediately. So that had not been another of his fanciful tales after
all.
Remarkable.
"I
picked men who could ride. Mat," Talmanes said once his bay stopped
frisking. "And they all have the new crank." A touch of excitement
entered his voice now. Even restrained men tended to warmth over
weapons.
"Three turns of the crank." his hands moved in a quick circle,
demonstrating, "and the bowstring is latched. With a little training, a
man can get off seven or eight quarrels in a minute. With a heavy
crossbow."
Selucia
made a small sound in her throat. She was right to be startled. If
Talmanes was
telling the truth, and he had no reason to lie that Tuon could find,
then she
had to obtain one of these marvelous cranks somehow. With one for a
pattern,
artisans could make more. Archers could shoot faster than crossbowmen.
but they
took longer to train. too. There were always more crossbowmen than
archers.
"Seven"
Toy exclaimed incredulously. "That would be more than useful, but I
never
heard of such thing. Ever." He muttered that as if it had some special
significance, then shook his head. "How did you come by it?"
"Seven
or eight. There was a mechanic in Murandy who wanted to take a
wagonload of
things he had invented up to Caemlyn. There is a school of some sort
there for
scholars and inventors. He needed money for the journey, and he was
willing to
teach the Band's armorers to make the things. Smother your enemy with
arrows at
every opportunity. It is always better to kill your enemies far off
than close
at hand."
Selucia
held her hands up so Tuon could see them, slim fingers moving quickly,
WHAT is
THIS BAND THEY SPEAK OF? She used the proper form, inferior to
superior, yet
her impatience was almost palpable. Impatience with everything that was
happening. Tuon kept few secrets from her. but some seemed advisable
for the
present. She would not put it past Selucia to return her to Ebou Dar
forcibly,
so she would not be breaking her word. A shadow's duties were many, and
sometimes required paying the final sacrifice. She did not want to have
to
order Selucia's execution.
She
replied in the imperative form. TOY'S PERSONAL ARMY, OBVIOUSLY. LISTEN
AND WE
MAY LEARN MORE.
Toy
commanding an army seemed very odd. He was charming at times, even
witty and
amusing, but often a buffoon and always a rapscallion. He had seemed
very much
in his element as Tylin's pet. Yet he had seemed in his element among
the
show's performers, too, and with the marath'damane and the two escaped
damane,
and in the hell. That had been such a disappointment. Not even one
fight!
Events later had not compensated for that. Getting swept up in a street
brawl
was hardly the same as seeing fights in a hell. Which admittedly had
been far
more boring than rumor heard in Ebou Dar had made it seem. Toy had
displayed an
unexpected side of himself in that street brawl. A formidable man,
though with
a peculiar weakness. For some reason, she found that strangely
endearing.
"Good
advice." he said absently, tugging at the black scarf tied around his
neck. She wondered about the scar he took such pains to hide. That he
did was
understandable. Why had he been hanged, and how had he survived? She
could not
ask. She did not mind lowering his eyes a little-in fact, it was
enjoyable
making him writhe; it took so little effort-but she did not want to
destroy
him. At least, not for the moment.
"Do
you not recognize it?" Talmanes said. "It is from your book. King
Roedran has two copies in his library. He has it memorized. The man
thinks it
will make him a great captain. He was so pleased with how our bargain
worked
out that he had a copy printed and bound for me."
Toy
gave the other man a mystified look. "My book?"
"The
one you told us about. Mat. Fog and Steel, by Madoc Co-madrin."
"Oh.
that book." Toy shrugged. "I read it a long time ago."
Tuon
gritted her teeth. Her fingers flashed. WHEN WILL THEY STOP TALKING OF
HOOKS
AND GO BACK TO INTERESTING THINGS?
PERHAPS
IF WE LISTEN WE MAY LEARN MORE, Selucia replied. Tuon glared at her,
but the
woman wore such an innocent look that she could not maintain her scowl.
She
laughed-softly, so as not to let Toy realize how close behind him she
was-and
Selucia joined in. Softly.
Toy
had fallen silent, though, and Talmanes seemed content to leave it so.
They
rode in silence save for the sounds of the forest, birds singing,
strange
black-tailed squirrels chittering on branches. Tuon set herself to
watching for
omens, but nothing caught her eye. Bright-feathered birds darted among
the
trees. Once they spotted a herd of perhaps fifty tall, lean cattle with
very
long horns that stuck out almost straight to either side. The animals
had heard
them coming and were squared up, facing them. A bull tossed his head
and pawed
at the ground. Toy and Talmanes led the careful way around the herd,
keeping
their distance. She looked over her shoulder. The Redarms-why were they
called
that? She would have to ask Toy-the Redarms were leading the
packhorses, but
Gorderan had raised his crossbow, and the others had arrows nocked to
their
bows. So these cattle were dangerous. There were few omens concerning
cattle,
and she was relieved when the herd dwindled behind them. She had not
come all
this way to be killed by a cow. Or to see Toy killed by one.
After
a time. Thom and Aludra came up to ride beside her. The woman glanced
at her
once, then looked straight ahead. The Taraboner's face, framed by those
brightly beaded braids was always wooden when she looked at her or
Selucia so
clearly she was one of those who refused to accept the Return. She was
watching
Toy. and she looked… satisfied. As if something had been confirmed for
her, perhaps. Why had Toy brought her along? Surely not for her
fireworks.
Those were pretty enough, but they could not compare with Sky Lights
performed
by even a half-trained damane.
Thom
Merrilin was much more interesting. Patently, the white-haired old man
was an
experienced spy. Who had sent him to Ebou Dar? The White Tower seemed
the most
obvious candidate. He spent little time around the three who called
themselves
Aes Sedai, but a well-trained spy would not give himself away in that
fashion.
His presence troubled her. Until the last Aes Sedai was leashed, the
White Tower
was something to be wary of. Despite everything, she still had
troubling
thoughts at times that somehow, Toy was part of a White Tower plot.
That was
impossible unless some of the Aes Sedai were omniscient, yet the
thought
sometimes came to her.
"A
strange coincidence, wouldn't you say, Master Merrilin?" she said.
"Encountering part of Toy's army in the middle of an Altaran forest."
He
stroked his long mustaches with a knuckle, failing to mask a small
smile.
"He's ta'veren, my Lady, and you can never tell what will happen around
a
ta'veren. It's always… interesting… when you travel with one of
those. Mat has a tendency to find what he needs when he needs it.
Sometimes
before he knows he needs it."
She
stared at him, but he seemed serious. "He's tied to the Pattern?"
That was how the word would translate. "What is that supposed to
mean?"
The
old man's blue eyes widened in astonishment. "You don't know? But it's
said Artur Hawkwing was the strongest ta'veren anyone had ever seen,
perhaps as
strong as Rand al'Thor. I'd have thought you of all people would… Well,
if you don't, you don't. Ta'veren are people the Pattern shapes itself
around,
people who were spun out by the Pattern itself to maintain the proper
course of
the weaving, perhaps co correct flaws that were creeping in. One of the
Aes
Sedai could explain better than I." As if she would have conversation
with
a marath'damane, or worse, a runaway da mane.
"Thank
you,'' she told him politely. "I think I've heard enough." Ta'veren.
Ridiculous. These people and their endless superstitions! A small brown
bird,
surely a finch, flew out of a tall oak and circled wid-dershins three
times
above Toy's head before flying on. She had found her omen. Stay close
to Toy.
Not that she had any intention of doing otherwise. She had given her
word,
playing the game as it had to be played, and she had never broken her
word in
her life.
Little
more than an hour after setting out, as a bird warbled ahead, Selucia
pointed
out the first sentry, a man with a crossbow up in the thick branches of
a
spreading oak cupping a hand to his mouth. Not a bird, then. More
birdcalls
heralded their advance, and soon they were riding through a tidy
encampment.
There were no tents, but the lances were neatly stacked, the horses
picketed on
scattered lines among the trees, near to the blankets of the men who
would ride
them, with a saddle or packsaddle at every animal's head. It would not
take
long for them to break camp and be on the march. Their fires were small
and
gave off little smoke.
As
they rode in. men in dull green breastplates with that red hand on
their
coatsleeves and red scarves tied to their left arms began rising to
their feet.
She saw grizzled faces with scars and fresh young faces, all with their
eyes on
Toy and expressions she could only call eager. A growing murmur of
voices rose,
rustling through the trees like a breeze.
"It's
Lord Mat."
"Lord
Mat is back."
"Lord
Mat's found us."
"Lord
Mat."
Tuon
exchanged glances with Selucia. The affection in those voices was
unfeigned.
That was rare, and often went with a commander who had a slack hand at
discipline. But then, she expected any army of Toy's to be a ragtag
affair,
full of men who spent their time drinking and gambling. Only, these men
looked
no more ragtag than any regiment that had crossed a mountain range and
ridden
several hundred miles. No one looked unsteady on his feet with drink.
"Mostly
we camp during the day and move at night to avoid being seen by the
Seanchan,'
Talmanes said to Toy. "Just because we have seen none of those flying
beasts does not mean some might not be around. Most of the Seanchan
seem to be
farther north or farther south, but apparently they have a camp not
thirty
miles north of here, and rumor says there is one of the creatures
there."
"You
seem pretty well informed," Toy said, studying the soldiers they
passed.
He nodded suddenly, as if he had reached a decision. He seemed grim
and…
could it be resigned?
"I
am that. Mat. I brought half the scouts, and I also signed some
Altarans who
were fighting the Seanchan. Well, most of them seem to have been
stealing
horses more than anything else, but some were willing to give that up
for a
chance to really fight them. I think I know where most of the Seanchan
camps
are from the Malvide Narrows south to here."
Suddenly
a man began to sing in a deep voice, and others joined in, the song
spreading
rapidly.
There're
some delight in ale and wine, and
some in girls with ankles fine, but
my delight, yes, always mine.
is
to dance with jak o the Shadoivs.
Every
man in the camp was singing, now, thousands of voices roaring the song.
We'll
toss the dice however they fall, and
snuggle the girls be they short or tall.
then
follow Lord Mat whenever he calls.
to
dance withjak o the Shadows.
They
finished with shouts, laughing and clapping one another on the
shoulder. Who
under the Light was this Jak o' the Shadows?
Reining
in, Toy raised the hand holding his odd spear. That was all. yet
silence spread
through the soldiers. So he was not soft with discipline. There were a
few
other reasons for soldiers to be fond of their officers, but the most
common
seemed unlikely to apply to Toy, of all people.
"Let's
not let them know we're here until we want them to know."
Toy
said loudly. He was not orating, just making sure his voice carried.
And the
men heard, repeating his words over their shoulders to be passed back
to men
beyond the sound of his voice. "We're a long way from home, but I mean
to
get us home. So be ready to move, and move fast. The Band of the Red
Hand can
move faster than anybody else, and we're going to have to prove it."
There
was no cheering, but plenty of nods. Turning to Talmanes, he said, "Do
you
have maps?"
"The
best to be found," Talmanes replied. "The Band has its own mapmaker.
now. Master Roidelle already had good maps of everything from the Aryth
Ocean
to the Spine of the World, and since we crossed the Damonas, he and his
assistants have been making new maps of the country we crossed. They
even
marked a map of eastern Altara with what we have learned of the
Seanchan. Most
of those camps are temporary, though. Soldiers heading somewhere else."
Selucia
shifted in her saddle, and Tuon signed PATIENCE in high imperative
form, a
command. She kept her face smooth, but inside, she was furious. Knowing
where
soldiers were gave clues to where they were going. There had be some
way to
burn that map. That would be as important as laying hands on one of the
crossbow cranks.
"I'll
want to talk with Master Roidelle, too," Toy said.
Soldiers
came to take the horses, and for a while all seemed confusion and
milling
about. A gap-toothed fellow took Akein's reins, and Tuon gave him
explicit
instructions on caring for the mare. He returned her a sour look along
with his
bow. Commoners in these lands seemed to believe themselves equal to
everyone.
Selucia gave the same sort of instructions to the lanky young man who
took Rosebud.
She thought that an appropriate name for a dresser's horse. The young
man
stared at Selucia's chest, until she slapped him. Hard. He only grinned
and led
the dun away rubbing his cheek. Tuon sighed. That was all very well for
Selucia, but for herself, striking a commoner would lower her eyes for
months.
Soon
enough, though, she was settled on a folding stool with Selucia at her
back,
and stout Lopin presented them with tin cups full of dark tea, bowing
quite
properly to Selucia as well as to her. Not deeply enough, but the
balding man
did try. Her tea was honeyed to perfection, lightly, but then, he had
served
her often enough to know how she liked it. Activity bustled about them.
Talmanes had a brief reunion with gray-haired Nerim, who apparently was
his
serving man, and happy to be reunited with him. At least, the thin
man's
normally mournful countenance actually flashed a momentary smile. That
sort of
thing should have been done in private. Leilwin and Domon allowed
Master Charin
to lead Olver off to explore the camp with Juilin and Thera-Thom and
Aludra
went too, to stretch their legs-then deliberately took stools close by.
Leilwin
even went so far as to stare unblinking at Tuon for a long moment.
Selucia made
a low sound very like a growl, but Tuon ignored the provocation and
gestured
Mistress Anan to bring her stool over beside her. Eventually, the
traitors
would be punished, and the thief, the property restored to its rightful
owners,
and the marath'damane leashed, but those things had to wait on what was
more
important.
Three
more officers appeared, young noblemen with that red hand on their dark
silk
coats, and had their own reunion with Toy, with a great deal of
laughing and
hitting each other on the shoulder, which they seemed to take as a sign
of
fondness. She soon had them sorted out. Edorion was the dark, lean man
with the
serious expression except when smiling, Reimon the broad-shouldered
fellow who
smiled a great deal, and Carlomin the tall, slender one. Edorion was
cleanshaven, while Reimon and Carlomin both had dark beards that were
trimmed
to points and glistened as if oiled. All three made much over the Aes
Sedai,
bowing deeply. They even bowed to Bethamin and Seta! Tuon shook her
head.
"I've
told you often enough it's a different world than you're used to."
Mistress Anan murmured, "but you still don't quite believe it, do
you?"
"Just
because a thing is a certain way." Tuon replied, "doesn't mean it
should be that way, even if it has been for a long time."
"Some
might say the same of your people, my Lady."
"Some
might." Tuon let it rest there, though she usually enjoyed her private
conversations with the woman. Mistress Anan argued against leashing
marath'damane, as might be expected, and even against keeping da'cova/e
of all
things, yet they were discussions rather than arguments, and Tuon had
made her
concede a few points. She had hopes of bringing the woman around
eventually.
Not today, though. She wanted her mind focused on Toy.
Master
Roidelle appeared, a graying, round-faced man whose bulk strained his
dark
coat, followed by six fit-appearing younger men each carrying a long,
cylindrical leather case. "I brought all the maps of Al-tara I have, my
Lord." he told Talmanes in a musical accent as he bowed. Did everyone
in
these lands speak as if racing to get the words out? "Some cover the
whole
country, they do, some no more than a hundred square miles. The best
are my
own, of course, those I made these past weeks."
"Lord
Mat will tell you what he wants to see," Talmanes said. "Shall we
leave you to it, Mat?"
But
Toy was already telling the mapmaker what he wanted, the map marked
with the
Seanchan camps. In short order it was sorted out from the others in one
of the
cases and spread on the ground with Toy squatting on his heels beside
it.
Master Roidelle sent one of his assistants running to fetch him a
stool. He
would have burst his coat buttons trying to imitate Toy, and likely
have fallen
over besides. Tuon stared at that map hungrily. How to get her hands on
it?
Exchanging
glances and laughing as if being snubbed were the funniest thing in the
world,
Talmanes and the other three men strolled toward Tuon. The Aes Sedai
gathered
around the map on the ground until Toy told them to quit peering over
his
shoulder. They moved off a little. Bethamin and Seta heeling them at a
distance, and began talking quietly among themselves, occasionally
glancing in
his direction. If Toy had been paying any heed to their expressions,
especially
Joline's, he might have been worried in spite of the incredible
ter'angreal
Mistress Anan said he carried.
"We're
about here, right?" he said, marking a spot with his finger. Master
Roidelle murmured that they were. "So this is the camp where the raken
supposedly is? The flying beast?" Another murmur of assent. "Good.
What kind of camp is it? How many men are there?"
"Reportedly
it's a supply camp, my Lord. For resupplying patrols." The young man
returned with another folding stool, and the stout man eased himself
down with
a grunt. "Supposedly about a hundred soldiers, mostly Altaran, and
about
two hundred laborers, but I'm told there can be as many as five hundred
more
soldiers at times." A careful man, Master Roidelle.
Talmanes
made one of those odd bows, with one foot forward, and the other three
mirrored
him. "My Lady," Talmanes said, "Vanin told me of your
circumstances, and the promises Lord Mat made. I just want to tell you,
he
keeps his word."
"That
he does, my Lady," Edorion murmured. "Always." Tuon motioned him
to step aside so she could continue to watch Toy, and he did so with a
surprised glance at Toy and another for her. She gave him a stern look.
The
last thing she wanted was for these men to start imagining things. Not
everything had fallen out as it had to. yet. There was still a chance
this
could all go awry.
"Is
he a lord or is he not?" she demanded.
"Excuse
me," Talmanes said, "but would you say that again? I apologize. I
must have dirt in my ears." She repeated herself carefully, but it
still took
them a minute to puzzle out what she had said.
"Burn
my soul, no," Reimon said finally with a laugh. He stroked his beard.
"Except to us. Lord enough for us."
"He
dislikes nobles for the most part," Carlomin said. "I count it an
honor to be among the few he doesn't dislike."
"An
honor," Reimon agreed. Edorion contented himself with nodding.
"Soldiers,
Master Roidelle," Toy said firmly. "Show me where the soldiers are.
And more than any few hundred."
"What
is he doing?" Tuon said, frowning. "He can't think to sneak this many
men out of Altara even if he knows where every last soldier is. There
are
always patrols, and sweeps by raken." Again they took their time before
answering. Perhaps she should try speaking very fast.
"We've
seen no patrols in better than three hundred miles, and no-raken?-no
raken" Edorion said quietly. He was studying her. Too late to stop his
imaginings.
Reimon
laughed again. "If I know Mat, he's planning us a battle. The Band of
the
Red Hand rides to battle again. It's been too long, if you ask me."
Selucia
sniffed, and so did Mistress Anan. Tuon had to agree with them. "A
battle
won't get you out of Altara," she said sharply.
"In
that case," Talmanes said, "he's planning us a war." The other
three nodded agreement as if that were the most normal thing under the
Light.
Reimon even laughed. He seemed to think everything was humorous.
"Three
thousand?" Toy said. "You're sure? Sure enough, man. Sure enough will
do. Vanin can locate them if they haven't moved too far."
Tuon
looked at him, squatting there by the map. moving his fingers over its
surface,
and suddenly she saw him in a new light. A buffoon? No. A lion stuffed
into a
horse-stall might look like a peculiar joke, but a lion on the high
plains was
something very different. Toy was loose on the high plains, now. She
felt a
chill. What sort of man had she entangled herself with? After all this
time,
she realized, she had hardly a clue.
The
night was cool enough to send a small shiver through Perrin whenever
the breeze
gusted despite his fur-lined cloak. A halo around the fat crescent moon
said
there would be more rain before long. Thick clouds drifting across the
moon
made the pale light dim and strengthen, dim and strengthen, yet it was
enough
for his eyes. He sat Stepper just inside the edge of the trees and
watched the
cluster of four tall gray stone windmills in a clearing atop the ridge,
their
pale sails gleaming and shadowed by turns as they rotated. The
machinery of the
windmills groaned loudly. It seemed doubtful the Shaido even knew they
should
grease the works of the things. The stone aqueduct was a dark bar
stretching
east on high stone arches past abandoned farms and rail-fenced
fields-the
Shaido had planted, too early, with this much rain-toward another ridge
and the
lake beyond. Maiden lay one more ridge west. He eased the heavy hammer
in its
loop on his belt. Maiden and Faile. In a few hours, he would add a
fifty-fourth
knot to the leather cord in his pocket.
He
cast his mind out. Are you ready, Snowy Dawn? he thought. Are you close
enough
yet? Wolves avoided towns, and with Shaido hunting parties in the
surrounding
forest during the day, they stayed farther from Maiden than usual.
Patience,
Young Bull, came the reply, touched with irritation. But then, Snowy
Dawn was
irascible by nature, a scarred male of considerable age for a wolf who
had once
killed a leopard by himself. Those old injuries sometimes kept him from
sleeping very long at a stretch. Two days from now. you said. We will
be there.
Now let me try to sleep. We must hunt well tomorrow, since we cannot
hunt the
day after. They were images and smells rather than words, of
course-"two
days" was the sun crossing the sky twice, and "hunt" a pack
trotting with noses into the breeze blended with the scent of deer-but
Perrin's
mind converted the images to words even as he saw them in his head.
Patience.
Yes. Haste spoiled the work. But it was hard now that he was so close.
Very
hard.
A
form appeared from the dark door at the base of the nearest windmill
and waved
an Aiel spear back and forth overhead. The groaning had convinced him
the
windmills must still be deserted-they had been when the Maidens scouted
them
earlier, and no one would put up with that noise any longer than they
had to-but
he had sent Gaul and some of the Maidens to be sure one way or another.
"Let's
go, Mishima." he said, gathering his reins. "It's done." One way
or another.
"How
can you make out anything?" the Seanchan muttered. He avoided looking
at
Perrin. whose golden eyes would be glowing in the night. That had made
the
scarred man jump the first time he saw it. He did not smell amused
tonight. He
smelled tense. But he called softly over his shoulder. "Bring the carts
ahead. Quickly, now. Quickly. And be quiet about it, or I'll have your
ears!"
Perrin
heeled his dun stallion forward without waiting on the others, or the
six
high-wheeled carts. Liberally greased axles made them as silent as
carts could
be. They still sounded noisy to him, the cart horses' hooves squelching
in the
mud, the carts themselves creaking as wood flexed and rubbed, but he
doubted
anyone else could have heard them fifty paces off, and maybe not
closer. At the
top of the gentle slope he dismounted and let Stepper's reins fall. A
trained
warhorse, the stallion would stand there as if hobbled so long as his
reins
hung down. The windmill heads squealed, turning slightly as the breeze
shifted.
The slowly spinning arms were long enough that Perrin could have
touched one by
jumping when it swung low. He stared toward the last ridge that hid
Maiden.
Nothing grew there taller than a bush. Nothing moved in the darkness.
Just one
ridge between him and Faile. The Maidens had come outside to join Gaul,
all of
them still veiled.
"There
was no one," Gaul said, not quietly. This close, the grinding of the
windmills' gears would have swallowed quiet words.
"The
dust has not been disturbed since I was here last," Sulin added.
Perrin
scratched his beard. Just as well. Had they needed to kill Shaido, they
could
have carried away the bodies, but the dead would have been missed, and
it would
have drawn attention to the windmills and aqueduct. It might have
started
someone thinking about the water.
"Help
me get the lids off, Gaul." There was no need for him to do that. It
would
save only minutes, but he needed to be doing something. Gaul simply
stuck his
spear through the harness holding his bowcase to join the others on his
back.
The
aqueduct ran along the ground on the ridgetop, between the four
windmills, and
stood shoulder-high on Perrin, less on Gaul, who climbed over. Just
beyond the
last pair of windmills, bronze handles on either side allowed them to
lift off
heavy pieces of stone two feet wide and five feet long until they had
cleared a
stretch of six feet. What the opening was used for, he did not know.
There was
another like it on the other side. Maybe to work on the flaps that made
sure
water flowed only one way, or to get inside to repair any leaks. He
could see
small ripples of motion as it streamed toward Maiden, filling more than
half
the stone channel.
Mishima
joined them and dismounted to stand peering uncertainly at Sulin and
the
Maidens. He probably believed the night hid his expression. He smelled
wary,
now. He was followed quickly by the first of the red-coated Seanchan
soldiers
scrambling up the muddy slope, each carrying two middling-sized jute
sacks.
Middling, but not heavy. Each contained only ten pounds. Eyeing the
Aiel
suspiciously, the wiry woman set her sacks down and slashed one open
with her
dagger. A handful of fine dark grains spilled on the muddy ground.
"Do
that over the opening," Perrin said. "Make sure every grain goes into
the water."
The
wiry woman looked to Mishima, who said firmly, "Do as Lord Perrin
commands. Arrata."
Perrin
watched as she emptied the sack into the aqueduct, hands lifted over
her head.
The dark grains floated away toward Maiden. He had dropped a pinch into
a cup
of water, hating to waste even that, and they took some time to absorb
enough
water to sink. Long enough to reach the big cistern in the town, he
hoped. And
if not, they could steep in the aqueduct itself. The cistern would
still turn
to forkroot tea eventually. The Light send it would be strong enough.
With
luck, maybe even strong enough to affect the algai'd'siswai. The Wise
Ones who
could channel were his target, but he would take any advantage he could
gain.
The Light send it did not grow strong faster than he expected. If those
Wise
Ones began staggering too soon, they might puzzle out the cause before
he was
ready. But all he could do was go ahead as if he knew exactly. That,
and pray.
By
the time the second sack was being poured into the stone channel, the
others
began crowding up the slope. First came Seonid. a short woman holding
her dark
divided skirts up out of the mud. Shifting his attention from the
Maidens to
her, Mishima made one of those small gestures to ward off evil. Strange
that
they could believe a thing like that worked. The soldiers lined up with
their
sacks stared at her, wide-eyed for the most part, and shifted their
feet. The
Seanchan were none too easy about working with Aes Sedai. Her Warders,
Furen
and Teryl, were at her heels, each with a hand resting on his sword
hilt. They
were just as uneasy about the Seanchan. The one was dark with gray
streaking
his curly black hair, the other fair and young, with curled mustaches.
yet they
were alike as two beans, tall, lean and hard. Rovair Kirklin came a
little
behind them, a compact man with dark receding hair and a glum
expression. He
did not like being separated from Masuri. All three of the men had
small
bundles containing food strapped to their backs and fat waterskins
hanging from
their shoulders. A lanky man rested his sacks on the side of the
opening as the
wiry woman headed downslope to fetch more. The carts were piled high
with them.
"Remember,"
Perrin told Seonid, "the biggest danger will be getting from the
cistern
to the fortress. You'll have to use the guardwalk on the wall, and
there might
be Shaido in the town even at this hour.'' Gralina had seemed unsure on
that.
Thunder boomed hollowly in the distance, then again. "Maybe you'll have
rain to hide you."
"Thank
you," she said icily. Her moonshadowed face was a mask of Aes Sedai
serenity, but her scent spiked with indignation. "I would not have
known
any of that if you had not told me." The next moment her expression
softened, and she laid a hand on his arm. "I know you are worried about
her. We will do what can be done." Her tone was not exactly warm-it
never
was-but not so chill as before, and her scent had mellowed to sympathy.
Teryl
lifted her up onto the edge of the aqueduct-the Seanchan emptying
forkroot into
the thing, a tall fellow with almost as many scars as Mishima, nearly
dropped
his sack-and she grimaced faintly before swinging her legs over and
lowering
herself into the water with a small gasp. It must have been cold.
Ducking her
head, she moved out of sight toward Maiden. Furen climbed in after her.
then
Teryl, and finally Rovair. They had to bend sharply to fit under the
roof of
the aqueduct.
Elyas
clapped Perrin on the shoulder before hoisting himself up. "Should have
trimmed my beard short like yours to keep it out of that," he said,
gazing
down at the water. That graying beard, ruffled by the breeze, spread
across his
chest. For that matter, his hair, gathered at the back of his neck with
a
leather cord, hung to his waist. He carried a small bundle of food and
a
waterslcin, too. "Still, a cold bath helps a man keep his mind off his
troubles."
"I
thought that was for keeping your mind off women," Perrin said. He was
in
no mood for joking, but he could not expect everyone to be as grim as
he was.
Elyas
laughed. "What else causes a man's troubles?" He disappeared into the
water, and Tallanvor replaced him.
Perrin
caught his dark coatsleeve. "No heroics, mind." He had been of two
minds about letting the man be part of this.
"No
heroics, my Lord," Tallanvor agreed. For the first time in a long time,
he
looked eager. The smell of him quivered with eagerness. But there was
an edge
of caution in it, too. That caution was the only reason he was not back
in
their camp. "I won't put Maighdin at risk. Or the Lady Faile. I just
want
to see Maighdin that much quicker."
Perrin
nodded and let him go. He could understand that. Part of him wanted to
climb
into the aqueduct, too. To see Faile again that much quicker. But every
piece
of the work had to be done properly, and he had other tasks. Besides,
if he
were actually inside Maiden, he was not sure he could restrain himself
from
trying to find her. He could not catch his own scent, of course, but he
doubted
there was any caution in it now. The windmill heads turned again with
loud
squeaks as the wind shifted back. At least it never seemed to die up
here. Any
stoppage of the water flow would be disastrous.
The
ridgetop was becoming crowded, now. Twenty of Faile's hangers-on were
waiting
their turn at the aqueduct, all that remained save the two who were
spying on
Masema. The women wore men's coats and breeches and had their hair cut
short
except for a tail at the back in imitation of the Aiel, though no Aiel
would
have worn a sword as they did. Many of the Tairen men had shaved their
beards
because Aiel did not wear them. Behind them fifty Two Rivers men
carried
halberds and unstrung bows, their bowstrings safely tucked away inside
their
coats and each with three bristling quivers tied to his back along with
a
parcel of food. Every man in the camp had volunteered for this, and
Perrin had
had to let them choose lots. He had considered doubling the number, or
more.
Hangers-on and Two Rivers men had their bundles of food and their
waterskins.
The constant flow of Seanchan soldiers continued, carrying full sacks
up the
slope and empty sacks back down. They were disciplined. When a man
slipped in
the mud and fell, as happened with some regularity, there was no
cursing or
even mutters. They just got up and went ahead.
Selande
Darengil, wearing a dark coat with six horizontal stripes of color
across the
chest, stopped to offer Perrin her hand. She only came up to his chest,
but
Elyas claimed she handled the sword at her hip credibly. Perrin no
longer
thought she and the others were fools-well, not all the time-in spite
of their
attempts to copy Aiel ways. With differences, of course. The tail of
dark hair
at Selande's nape was tied with a length of dark ribbon. There was no
fear in
her scent, only determination. "Thank you for allowing us to be part of
this, my Lord," she said in that precise Cairhienin accent. "We will
not let you down. Or the Lady Faile."
"I
know you won't," he said, shaking her hand. There had been a time when
she
had been pointed about serving Faile. and not him. He shook the hand of
every
one of them before they climbed into the aqueduct. They all smelled
determined.
So did Ban al'Seen, who commanded the Two Rivers men going into Maiden.
"When
Faile and the others come, wedge the outer doors shut. Ban." Perrin had
told him this before, but he could not help repeating himself. "Then
see
if you can get them back up the aqueduct." That fortress had not kept
the
Shaido out the first time, and if anything went wrong, he doubted it
would keep
them out this time either. He did not mean to renege on his bargain
with the
Seanchan-the Shaido were going to pay for what they had done to Faile,
and
besides, he could not leave them behind to continue ravaging the
countryside-
but he wanted her out of harm's way as soon as possible.
Ban
propped his bowstave and halberd against the aqueduct and hoisted
himself up to
reach a hand down inside. When he lowered himself back to the ground,
he wiped
his damp hand on his coat then rubbed the side of his prominent nose.
"Below the water, it's coated with something feels like pond slime.
We're
going to have a hard enough time getting down that last slope without
sliding
the whole way, Lord Perrin, much less trying to climb it again. I
expect the
best thing is to wait in that fortress till you reach us."
Perrin
sighed. He had thought of sending ropes, but they would have needed
nearly two
miles of it to span that last slope, a lot to be carried, and if any
Shaido
spotted the butt end of it in the Maiden end of the aqueduct, they
would search
every nook and cranny in the town.
A
small risk, perhaps, yet the bitter loss that might result made it loom
large.
"I'll be there as fast as I can. Ban. I promise you that."
He
shook hands with every one of them, too. Lantern-jawed Tod al'Caar and
Leof
Torfinn, with a white streak through his hair where a scar ran. given
to him by
Trollocs. Young Kenly Maerin, who was making a stab at growing a beard
again
unfortunately, and Bili Adarra, who was almost as wide as Perrin if a
hand
shorter. Bili was a distant cousin, and some of the closest kin Perrin
had
living. He had grown up with many of these men, though some were a few
years
older than he. Some were a few years younger, too. By now, he knew the
men from
down to Deven Ride and up to Watch Hill as well as he did those from
around
Emond's Field. He had more reason than Faile alone to reach that
fortress as
fast as he could.
Had
al'Lora, a lean rellow with thick mustaches like a Taraboner, was the
last of
the Two Rivers men. As he climbed into the aqueduct, Gaul appeared,
face still
veiled and four spears gripped in the hand that held his bull-hide
buckler. He
put a hand on the edge of the aqueduct and leapt up to sit on the stone
coping.
"You're
going in?" Perrin said in surprise.
"The
Maidens can do any scouting you need, Perrin Aybara." The big Aiel
glanced
over his shoulder toward the Maidens. Perrin thought he scowled, though
it was
hard to be sure because of the black veil that hid all but his eyes. "I
heard them talking when they thought I was not listening. Unlike your
wife and
the others, Chiad is properly gai'shain. Bain, too. but I care nothing
about
her. Chiad still has the rest of her year and a day to serve after we
rescue
her. When a man has a woman as gai'shain, or a woman a man, sometimes a
marriage wreath is made as soon as white is put off. It is not
uncommon. But I
heard the Maidens say they would reach Chiad first, to keep her from
me."
Behind him. Sulin's finger flashed in Maiden handtalk, and one of the
others
slapped a hand over her mouth as if stifling laughter. So they had been
goading
him. Maybe they were not so hard against his suit for Chiad as they
pretended.
Or maybe there was something Perrin was missing. Aiel humor could be
rough.
Gaul
slipped into the water. He had to bend almost parallel to the surface
to get
under the aqueduct's top. Perrin stared at the opening. So easy to
follow Gaul.
Turning away was hard. The line of Seanchan soldiers still snaked up
and down
the slope.
"Mishima,
I'm going back to my camp. Grady will take you to yours when you're
done here.
Do what you can to blur the tracks before you go."
"Very
well, my Lord. I've told off some men to scrape grease from the axles
and
grease these windmills. They sound as if they could seize up any
minute. We can
do those at the far ridge, too."
Taking
up Stepper's reins, Perrin looked up at the slow-turning sails. Slow,
but
steady. They had never been made to turn fast. "And if some Shaido
decide
to come out here tomorrow and wonder where the fresh grease came from?"
Mishima
regarded him for a long moment, his face half-hidden by moonshadows.
For once,
he did not seem put off by glowing yellow eyes. His scent… He smelled
as
if he saw something unexpected. "The Banner-General was right about
you," he said slowly.
"What
did she say?"
"You'll
have to ask her, my Lord."
Perrin
rode down the slope and back to the trees thinking how easy it would be
to turn
around. Gallenne could handle everything from here. It was all laid
out. Except
that the Mayener believed every battle climaxed with a grand charge of
horse.
And preferably began with one, too. How long would he stick to the
plan?
Arganda was more sensible, but he was so anxious for Queen Alliandre
that he
might well order that charge, as well. That left himself. The breeze
gusted
hard, and he pulled his cloak around him.
Grady,
elbows on his knees, was in a small clearing sitting on a half-worked
mossy
stone that was partially sunken into the ground and no doubt left over
from
building the aqueduct. A few others like it stood around. The breeze
kept his
scent from Perrin's nose. He did not look up until Perrin drew rein in
front of
him. The gateway they had used to come here still stood open, showing
another
clearing among tall trees, not far from where the Seanchan were now
camped. It
might have been easier to have had them set up close to Perrin's camp,
but he
wanted to keep the Aes Sedai and Wise Ones as far from the sul'dam and
damane
as possible. He was not afraid of the Seanchan breaking Tylee's word,
but the
Aes Sedai and Wise Ones practically came down with the pip just
thinking about
damane. Probably the Wise Ones and Annoura would stay their hands for
the time
being. Probably. Masuri, he was not so sure of. In a number of ways.
Better to
keep a few leagues between them for as long as it could be managed.
"Are
you all right. Grady?" The man's weathered face seemed to have new
lines
in it. That might have been a trick of moonshadows cast by the trees,
but
Perrin did not think so. The carts had passed through the gateway
easily, but
was it a little smaller than the first he had seen Grady make?
"Just
tired a little, my Lord," Grady said wearily. He remained seated with
his
elbows on his knees. "All this Traveling we've been doing lately…
Well, I couldn't have held the gateway open long enough for all those
soldiers
to ride through yesterday. That's why I've taken to tying them off."
Perrin
nodded. Both of the Asha'man were tired. Channeling took strength out
of a man
as surely as swinging a hammer all day at a forge. More so, in truth.
The man
with the hammer could keep going far longer than any Asha'man. That was
why the
aqueduct was the route into Maiden and not a gateway, why there would
be no
gateway to bring Faile and the others out again, much as Perrin wished
there
could be. The two Asha'man only had so much more left in them until
they could
rest, and that little had to be used where it was needed most. Light,
but that
was a hard thought. Only, if Grady or Neald fell one gateway short of
what was
needed, a lot of men were going to die. A hard decision.
"I'm
going to need you and Neald the day after tomorrow." That was like
saying
he needed air. Without the Asha'man, everything became impossible.
"You're
going to be busy then." Another gross understatement.
"Busy
as a one-armed man plastering a ceiling, my Lord."
"Are
you up to it?"
"Have
to be. don't I, my Lord."
Perrin
nodded again. You did what had to be done. "Send me back to our camp.
After you return Mishima and his people to his, you and the Maidens can
sleep
there if you'd like." That would spare Grady a little against two days
from now.
"Don't
know about the Maidens, my Lord, but I'd as soon come on home tonight."
He
turned his head to look at the gateway without rising, and it dwindled
in the
reverse of how it had opened, the view through it seeming to rotate as
it
narrowed, finishing with a vertical slash of silvery blue light that
left a
faint purplish bar in Perrin's vision when it winked out. "Those damane
fair make my skin crawl. They don't want to be free."
"How
would you know that?"
"I
talked to some of them when none of those sul'dam was close by. Soon as
I
brought up maybe they'd like those leashes off. just hinting like, they
started
screaming for the sul'dam. The damae were crying, and the sul'dam
petting them
and stroking them and glaring daggers at me. Fair made my skin crawl."
Stepper
stamped an impatient hoof, and Perrin patted the stallion's neck. Grady
was
lucky those sul'dam had let him go with a whole hide. "Whatever happens
with the damane. Grady, it won't be this week, or next. And it won't be
us who
fixes it. So you let the damane be. We have a job of work in front of
us that
needs doing." And a deal with the Dark One to do it. He pushed the
thought
away. Anyway, it had grown hard to think of Tylee Khirgan being on the
Dark
One's side. Or Mishima. "You understand that?"
"I
understand, my Lord. I'm just saying it makes my skin crawl."
At
last another silvery blue slash appeared, widening into an opening that
showed
a clearing among large, widely spaced trees and a low stone outcrop.
Leaning
low on Stepper's neck. Perrin rode through. The gateway winked out
behind him,
and he rode on through the trees until he came to the large clearing
where the
camp lay, near what had once been the tiny village of Brytan, a
collection of
flea-riddled hovels that the most rain-soaked night could not tempt a
man into.
The sentries up in the trees gave no warnings, of course. They
recognized him.
He
wanted nothing so much as he wanted his blankets right then. Well,
Faile, certainly,
but lacking her, he wanted to be alone in the dark. Likely, he would
fail to
find sleep again, but he would spend the night as he had so often
before,
thinking of her, remembering her. Short of the ten-pace wide thicket of
sharpened stakes that surrounded the camp, though, he reined in. A
raken was
crouched just outside the stakes, its long gray neck lowered so a woman
in a
hooded brown coat could scratch its leathery snout. Her hood hung down
her
back, revealing short-cropped hair and a hard, narrow face. She looked
at
Perrin as if she recognized him, but went right on scratching. The
saddle on
the creature's back had places for two riders. A messenger had come, it
seemed.
He turned into one of the narrow, angled lanes through the stakes that
had been
left to allow horses through. Just not quickly.
Most
everybody had turned in already. He sensed movement on the horselines.
in the
heart of the camp, likely some of the Cairhienin grooms or farriers,
but the
patched canvas tents and small huts of woven evergreen branches, now
long since
brown, lay dark and quiet. Nothing moved among the low Aiel tents, and
only a
few sentries walking up and down in the nearest Mayener section of the
camp.
The Mayeners and Ghealdanin put little trust in the Two Rivers men in
the
trees. His tall, red-striped tent was alight, however, and the shadows
of a
number of people shifted on the tent walls. When he climbed down in
front of
the tent, Athan Chandin appeared to take the reins and knuckle his
forehead
while he hunched a sort of bow. Athan was a good bowshot or he would
not have
been here, but he had a truckling manner. Perrin went in unpinning his
cloak.
"There
you are," Berelain said brightly. She must have dressed hastily,
because
her long black hair looked as though it had had just a lick and a
promise from
a brush, but her high-necked gray riding dress appeared neat and fresh.
Her
serving women never let her don anything unless it was freshly ironed.
She held
out a silver winecup for Breane to refill from a long-necked wine
pitcher,
which the Cairhienin woman did with a grimace. Faile's maid disliked
Berelain
with a passion. Berelain seemed not to notice, though. "Forgive me for
entertaining in your tent, but the Banner-General wanted to see you,
and I
thought I'd keep her company. She's been telling us about some
Whitecloaks."
Balwer
was standing unobtrusively in a corner-the bird-like little man could
be as
unnoticeable as a lizard on a branch when he wished to be-but his scent
sharpened at the mention of Whitecloaks.
Tylee,
her shoulders straining a coat like that of the flier, made a
straight-legged
bow while keeping one eye on Annoura. She seemed to believe the Aes
Sedai might
turn into ravening wild dogs at any moment. Perrin thought she smelled
of
distress, though none showed on her dark face. "My Lord, I have two
pieces
of news I felt I had to bring you immediately. Have you begun putting
the
forkroot into the town's water?"
"I
have," he said worriedly, tossing his cloak down atop one of the
brass-banded
chests. Tylee sighed. "I told you I would. I'd have done it two days
ago
if that fool woman in Almizar hadn't dragged her heels so. What's
happened?"
"Forgive
me." Lini announced, "but I was roused from my blankets, and I would
like to return to them. Does anyone require anything else of me
tonight?"
There were no curtsies or 'my Lords' from the frail-appearing woman
with her
white hair in a loose braid for sleeping. Unlike with Berelain, her
brown dress
looked hastily donned, unusual for her. Her scent was crisp and sharp
with
disapproval. She was one of those who believed the ridiculous tale that
Perrin
had slept with Berelain on the very night after Faile had been
captured. She
managed to avoid looking at him while her gaze swept around the tent's
interior.
"I'll
have some more wine," Aram announced, holding out his cup. Grim-faced
and
haggard in a red-striped coat, his eyes hollow, he was attempting to
lounge in
one of the folding camp chairs, but the sword strapped to his back made
leaning
against the gilt-edged back impossible. Breane started toward him.
"He
s had enough." Lini said sharply, and Breane turned away. Lini had a
firm
hand with Faile's servants.
Aram
muttered an oath and leaped to his feet, tossing his cup down on the
flowered
carpet that served as a floor. "I might as well go somewhere I won't
have
some old woman nagging at me every time I take a drink." He gave Perrin
a
sullen glare before stalking out of the tent. Doubtless on his way to
Masema's
camp. He had pleaded to be one of the party sent into Maiden, but his
hot head
could not be trusted with that.
"You
can go. Lini." Berelain said. "Breane can look after us well
enough." A snort was the acknowledgment Lini gave-she made it sound
almost
delicate-before she stalked out, stiff-backed and reeking of
disapproval. And
still not looking at Perrin.
"Forgive
me. my Lord," Tylee drawled in careful tones, "but you seem to run
your household more… loosely… than I'm accustomed to."
"It's
our way, Banner-General." Perrin said, picking up Aram's cup. No need
to
dirty another. "Nobody around here is property." If that sounded
sharp, so be it. He had come to like Tylee after a fashion, but these
Seanchan
had ways that would make a goat gag. He took the pitcher from
Breane-she
actually tried to hold onto it for a moment, frowning at him as if she
would
deny him a drink-and poured for himself before handing it back. She
snatched
the pitcher out of his hand. "Now, what happened? What about these
Whitecloaks?"
"I
sent raken out scouting as far as they could go just before dawn, and
again
just after sunset. One of the fliers tonight turned back sooner than
expected.
She saw seven thousand Children of the Light on the move not fifty
miles from
my camp."
"On
the move toward you?" Perrin frowned at his wine instead of drinking.
"Seven thousand seems a very exact count to make in the dark.''
"It
seems these men, they are deserters," Annoura broke in. "At least,
the Banner-General sees them so." In gray silk, she appeared as neat as
if
she had spent an hour dressing. Her thrusting nose made her look like a
crow
wearing beaded braids as she peered at Tylee, and the Banner-General a
particularly interesting bit of carrion. She held a winecup, but it
seemed
untouched. "I have heard rumors that Pedron Niall died fighting the
Seanchan, but apparently Eamon Valda, who replaced Niall, swore fealty
to the
Seanchan Empress.' Tylee mouthed, "may she live forever," under her
breath; Perrin doubted anyone but himself heard. Balwer opened his
mouth, too,
but closed it again without speaking. The Whitecloaks were a bugbear to
him.
"Something over a month ago, however," the Gray sister went on.
"Galad Damodred killed Valda and led seven thousand Whitecloaks to
leave
the Seanchan cause. A pity he became enmeshed with Whitecloaks, but
perhaps
some good has come of it. In any case, it appears there is a standing
order
that these men are all to be killed as soon as found. I have summed it
up
nicely, yes. Banner-General?"
Tylee's
hand twitched as if it wanted to make one of those signs against evil.
"That's a fair summing up," she said. To Perrin, not Annoura. The
Seanchan woman seemed to find speaking to an Aes Sedai difficult.
"Except
the part about good coming of it. Oath-breaking and desertion can never
be
called good."
"I
take it they're not moving toward you, or you'd have said.' Perrin put
a hint
of question into that, though there was no question in his mind.
"North,"
Tylee answered. "They're heading north." Balwer half opened his mouth
again, then shut it with a click of teeth.
"If
you have advice," Perrin told him. "then give it. But I don't care
how many Whitecloaks desert the Seanchan. Faile is the only thing I
care about.
And I don't think the Banner-General will give up the chance to collar
three or
four hundred more damane to chase after them." Berelain grimaced.
Annoura's face remained smooth, but she took a long swallow of her
wine. None
of the Aes Sedai felt very complacent about that part of the plan. None
of the
Wise Ones did, either.
"I
will not," Tylee said firmly. "I think I'll take some wine after
all." Breane took a deep breath before moving to comply, and a hint of
fear entered her scent. Apparently the tall dark woman intimidated her.
"I
won't deny I would enjoy a chance to strike a blow at the
White-cloaks,"
Balwer said in that dry-as-dust voice, "but in truth. I feel I owe this
Galad Damodred a debt of gratitude." Perhaps his grudge was against
this
Valda personally. "In any case, you have no need of my advice here.
Events
are in motion in Maiden, and if they weren't. I doubt you'd hold back
even a
day. Nor would I have advised it, my Lord. If I may be so bold. I am
quite fond
of the Lady Faile."
"You
may," Perrin told him. "Banner-General, you said two pieces of
news?"
The
Seanchan took the proffered winecup from Breane and looked at him so
levelly it
was clear she was avoiding a glance at the others in the tent. "May we
speak alone?" she asked quietly.
Berelain
glided across the carpet to rest a hand on his arm and smile up at him.
"Annoura and I don't mind leaving," she said. Light, how could anyone
believe there was anything between him and her? She was as beautiful as
ever,
true, yet the scent that had minded him of a hunting cat was so long
gone from
her smell that he barely remembered it. The bedrock of her scent was
patience
and resolve, now. She had come to accept that he loved Faile and only
Faile,
and she seemed as determined to see Faile freed as he was.
"You
can stay," he said. "Whatever you have to say, Banner-General, you
can say in front of everyone here."
Tylee
hesitated, glancing at Annoura. "There are two large parties of Aiel
heading toward Maiden," she said at last, reluctantly. "One to the
southeast, one to the southwest. The morat'raken estimate they could be
there
in three days."
Suddenly,
everything seemed to ripple in Perrin's sight. He felt himself ripple.
Breane
gave a cry and dropped the pitcher. The world rippled again, and
Berelain
clutched his arm. Tylee's hand seemed frozen in that odd gesture, thumb
and
forefinger forming a crescent. Everything rippled for a third time, and
Perrin
felt as if he were made of fog, as if the world were fog with a high
wind
coming. Berelain shuddered, and he put a comforting arm around her. She
clung
to him, trembling. Silence and the scent of fear filled the tent. He
could hear
voices being raised outside, and they sounded afraid, too.
"What
was that?' Tylee demanded finally.
"I
don't know." Annoura's face remained serene, but her voice was
unsteady.
"Light, I have no idea."
"It
doesn't matter what it was," Perrin told them. He ignored their stares.
"In three days, it will all be over. That's all that matters." Faile
was all that mattered.
The
sun stood short of its noonday peak, but Faile already felt harassed.
The water
for Sevanna's morning bath-she bathed twice a day, now!-had not been
hot
enough, and Faile had been beaten along with everyone else, although
she and
AUiandre had only been there to scrub the woman's back. More than
twenty
wetlander gai'shain had begged to be allowed to swear fealty just since
sunrise. Three had suggested rising up, pointing out that there were
more
gai'shain in all these tents than Shaido. They had seemed to listen
when she
pointed out that nearly all of the Aiel knew how to use a spear, while
most of
the wetlanders were farmers or craftsfolk. Few had ever held a weapon,
and
fewer still used one. They had seemed to listen, but this was the first
day
anyone had suggested such a thing right after swearing. Usually they
took several
days to work themselves around to it. The pressure was building. Toward
a
slaughter unless she could thwart it. And now this…
"It
is only a game, Faile Bashere," Rolan said, towering over her as they
walked along one of the muddy streets that wound through the Shaido
tents. He
sounded amused, and a very small smile curved his lips. A beautiful man
to be
sure.
"A
kissing game, you said." She shifted the lengths of striped toweling
folded over her arm to draw his attention. "I have work to do. and no
time
for games. Especially kissing games."
She
could see a few Aiel, several of them men staggering drunk even at this
hour,
but most of the people in the street were wetlanders wearing dirty
gai'shain
robes or children splashing happily in the mud puddles left by the
night's
heavy rain. The street was thronged with men and women in mud-stained
white
carrying baskets or buckets or pots. Some actually went about chores.
There
were so many gai'shain in the camp that there really was not enough
work to go
around. That would not stop a Shaido from ordering what were seen as
idle hands
to some work or other if those hands stuck out of white sleeves,
however, even
if it was make-work. To avoid having to dig useless holes in muddy
fields or
scrub pots that were already clean, a good many of the gai'shain had
taken to
carrying something that made them look as if they were working. That
did not
help anyone avoid the real work, but it did help avert the other kind.
Faile did
not have to worry about that with most of the Shaido, not so long as
she wore
those thick golden chains around her waist and neck, but the necklace
and belt
were inadequate for deterring Wise Ones. She had scrubbed clean pots
for some
of them. And sometimes had been punished for not being available when
Sevanna
wanted her. Thus the toweling.
"We
could start with a kissing game children play,' he said, "though the
forfeits in that are sometimes embarrassing. In the game adults play,
the
forfeits are fun. Losing can be as pleasant as winning."
She
could not help laughing. The man certainly was persistent. Suddenly she
saw
Galina hurrying through the crowd in her direction. holding her white
silk
robes up out of the mud, eyes searching avidly. Faile had heard the
woman was
allowed clothing again as of this morning. Of course, she had never
been
without the tall necklace and wide belt of gold and firedrops. A cap of
hair
less than an inch long covered her head, and of all things, a large red
bow was
pinned in it. It seemed unlikely that was by the woman's choice. Only a
face
Faile could not put an age to convinced her that Galina really was Aes
Sedai.
Beyond that, she was unsure of anything about her except the danger she
presented. Galina spotted her and stopped dead, hands kneading her
robes. The
Aes Sedai eyed Rolan uncertainly.
"I'll
have to think on it, Rolan." She was not about co chase him away until
she
was sure of Galina. "I need time to think."
"Women
always want time to think. Think on forgetting your troubles in the
pleasure of
a harmless game."
The
finger he drew softly down her cheek before walking away made her
shiver. To
Aiel, touching someone's cheek in public was as much as a kiss. It
surely had
felt like a kiss to her. Harmless? Somehow, she doubted that any game
that
involved kissing Rolan would end with just kissing. Luckily, she would
not have
to find out-or hide anything from Perrin-if Galina proved true. If.
The
Aes Sedai darted to her as soon as Rolan was gone. "Where is it?"
Galina demanded, seizing her arm. "Tell me! I know you have it. You
must
have it!" The woman sounded almost pleading. Therava's tteatment of her
had shattered that fabled Aes Sedai composure.
Faile
shook off her grip. "First tell me again that you will take my friends
and
me with you when you go. Tell me straight out. And tell me when you are
going.'
"Don't
you dare talk to me that way," Galina hissed.
Faile
saw black flecks floating in her vision before she realized that she
had been
slapped. To her surprise, she slapped the other woman back as hard as
she
could, staggering her. She refrained from putting a hand to her
stinging face,
but Galina rubbed her own cheek, her eyes wide with shock. Faile
steeled
herself, perhaps for a blow with the Power or something worse, but
nothing
happened. Some of the passing ga't'shain stared at them, but none
stopped or
even slowed. Anything that looked like a gathering of gai'shain would
draw
Shaido eyes, and earn punishments for everyone involved.
"Tell
me," she said again.
"I
will take you and your friends with me." Galina practically snarled,
snatching her hand down. "I leave tomorrow, If you have it. If not,
Sevanna will know who you are within the hour!" Well, that was
certainly
speaking straight out.
"It's
hidden in the town. I'll get it for you now."
But
as she turned, Galina grabbed her arm again. The Aes Sedai's eyes
darted, and
she lowered her voice as if suddenly concerned about being overheard.
She
sounded frightened. "No. I'll take no chances on anyone seeing. You'll
give it to me tomorrow morning. In the town. We'll meet there. In the
south end
of the town. I'll mark the building. With a red scarf."
Faile
blinked. The southern half of Maiden was a burned-out shell. "Why
there?" she asked incredulously.
"Because
no one goes there, fool! Because no one will see us!" Galina's eyes
were
still darting. "Tomorrow morning, early. Fail me. and you'll regret
it!" Gathering the skirts of her silk robe, she scurried away into the
crowd.
Faile
frowned as she watched the woman go. She should have felt exultation,
but she
did not. Galina seemed almost a wild thing, unpredictable. Still, Aes
Sedai
could not lie. There seemed no way for her to wriggle out of her
promise. And
if she found one, there were still her own plans for an escape, though
those
seemed no further along, if much more dangerous, than they had when
first
begun. Which left Rolan. And his kissing games. Galina had to prove
true. She
had to.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
A Plain Wooden Box
The
midday Altaran sun was warm, though a gusting breeze sometimes whipped Rand's cloak. They had been on the hilltop for
two hours,
now. A great mass of dark clouds creeping down from the north above
blue-gray
haze spoke of rain to come, and a cooling. Andor lay only a few miles
in that
direction across low. forested hills of oak and pine, leatherleaf and
sourgum.
That border had seen countless generations of cattle raids going in
both
directions. Was Elayne watching it rain in Caemlyn? That lay a good
hundred and
fifty leagues east, too far for her to be more than a faint presence in
the
back of his head. Aviendha, in Arad Doman, was fainter still. He had
not
considered that the Wise Ones would take her along. Still, she would be
safe
among tens of thousands of Aiel, as safe as Elayne behind Caem-lyn's
walls.
Tai'daishar stamped a hoof and tossed his head, eager to be moving. Rand patted the big black's neck. The stallion
could
reach the border in under an hour, but their way was west today. A
short way
west in just a short while, now.
He
had to impress at today's meeting, and he had chosen his garb with
care. The
Crown of Swords sat on his head for more reason than making an
impression,
though. Half the small swords nestled among the wide band of laurel
leaves
pointed down, making it uncomfortable to wear, giving constant
reminders of its
weight, in gold and in responsibility. A small chip in one of those
laurel
leaves dug at his temple to remind him of the battle against the
Seanchan where
it had been made. A battle lost when he could not afford to lose. His
dark
green silk coat was embroidered in gold on the sleeves, shoulders and
high
collar, a gold-inlaid buckle in the shape of a dragon fastened his
sword-belt,
and he had the Dragon Scepter in hand, a two-foot length of spearhead
with a
long green-and-white tassel below the polished steel point. If the
Daughter of
the Nine Moons recognized it for part of a Seanchan spear, she must
also see
the dragons that Maidens had carved winding around the remaining haft.
Today,
he wore no gloves. The golden-maned dragonheads on the backs of his
hands
glittered metallically in the sun. However high she stood among the
Seanchan,
she would know whom she faced.
A
fool. Lews Therin's wild laughter echoed inside his head. A fool to
walk Into a
trap. Rand ignored the madman. It
might be a
trap, but he was ready to spring it if it was. It was worth the risk.
He needed
this truce. He could crush the Seanchan, but at what cost in blood, and
in time
he might not have? He glanced north again. The sky above Andor was
clear except
for a few high white clouds, drifting wisps. The Last Battle was
coming. He had
to take the risk.
Min,
toying with the reins of her gray mare nearby, was feeling smug, and
that
irritated him. She had inveigled a promise from him in a weak moment
and
refused to release him. He could just break it. He should break it. As
if she
had heard his thoughts, she looked at him. Her face, surrounded by dark
shoulder-length ringlets, was smooth, but the bond suddenly carried
suspicion
and hints of anger. She seemed to be trying to suppress both, yet she
adjusted
the cuffs of her ornately embroidered red coat the way she did when
checking
her knives. Of course, she would not use one of her blades on him. Of
course
not.
A
woman's love can be violent. Lews Therin murmured. Sometimes they hurt
a man
worse than they think they have, worse than they mean to. Sometimes,
they're
even sorry afterwards. He sounded sane for the moment, but Rand
shoved the voice down.
"You
should let us scout farther out, Rand
al'Thor," Nandera said. She and the two dozen other Maidens on the
sparsely wooded hilltop wore their black veils up. Some had their bows
in hand
and arrows nocked. The rest of the Maidens were among the trees well
out from
the hill, keeping watch against unpleasant surprises. "The land is
clear
all the way to the manor house, but this still smells of a trap to me."
There had been a time when words like "manor" and "house"
sounded awkward on her tongue. She had been a long time in the wetlands
now,
though.
"Nandera
speaks truth." Alivia muttered sullenly, heeling her roan gelding
closer.
Apparently the golden-haired woman still resented the fact that she
would not
be going with him, but her reaction to hearing her native accents in
Tear made
that impossible. She admitted having been shaken, but claimed it had
been the
surprise of the thing. He could not chance it, though. "You cannot
trust
any of the High Blood. especially not a daughter of the Empress, may
she-"
Her mouth snapped shut, and she smoothed her dark blue skirts
unnecessarily,
grimacing at what she had almost said. He trusted her, literally with
his life,
but she had too many deep-buried instincts to risk putting her
face-to-face
with the woman he was going to meet. The bond carried anger with no
effort to
suppress it, now. Min disliked seeing Alivia near him.
"It
smells of a trap to me. too," Bashere said, easing his sinuously curved
sword in its scabbard. He was plainly clad, in burnished helmet and
breastplate, his gray silk coat alone marking him out from the
eighty-one
Saldaean lancers arrayed around the hilltop. His thick. down-curved
mustaches
almost bristled behind the face-bars of his helmet. "I'd give ten
thousand
crowns to know how many soldiers she has out there. And how many
damane. This
Daughter of the Nine Moons is the heir to their throne, man." He had
been
shocked when Alivia revealed that. No one in Ebou Dar had mentioned it
to him,
as if it were of no importance. "They may claim their control ends far
south of here, but you can wager she has at least a small army to see
to her
safety."
"And
if our scouts find this army," Rand replied calmly, "can we be sure
they won't be seen?" Nandera made a scornful sound. "Best not to
assume you're the only one with eyes." he told her. "If they think
we're planning to attack them or kidnap the woman, everything falls
apart." Maybe that was why they had kept their secret. The Imperial
heir
would be a more tempting target for a kidnapping than a mere
high-ranking
noblewoman. "You just keep watch to make sure they don't catch us by
surprise. If it all goes wrong, Bashere, you know what to do. Besides,
she may
have an army, but so do I. and not so small." Bashere had to nod at
that.
Aside
from the Saldaeans and the Maidens, the hilltop was crowded with
Asha'man and
Aes Sedai and Warders, better than twenty-five all told, and as
formidable a
group as any small army. They mingled with surprising ease, and few
outward
signs of tension. Oh, Toveine, a short, coppery-skinned Red, was
scowling at
Logain, but Gabrelle, a dusky Brown with sooty green eyes, was talking
with him
quite companionabiy, perhaps even coquettishly. That might have been
the reason
for Toveine's scowl, though disapproval seemed more likely than
jealousy.
Adrielle and Kurin each had an arm around the other's waist, though she
was
tall enough to overtop the Domani Asha'man, and beautiful where he was
plain
and had gray at his temples. Not to mention that he had bonded the Gray
against
her will. Beldeine, new enough to the shawl that she simply looked like
any
young Saldaean woman with slightly tilted brown eyes, reached out every
now and
then to touch Manfor. and he smiled at her whenever she did. Her
bonding of him
had been a shock, but apparently the yellow-haired man had been more
than
willing. Neither had asked Rand his opinion before the bonding.
Strangest
of all perhaps were Jenare, pale and sturdy in a gray riding dress
embroidered
with red on the skirts, and Kajima, a clerkish fellow in his middle
years who wore
his hair like Narishma, in two braids with silver bells at the ends.
She
laughed at something Kajima said, and murmured something that made him
laugh in
turn. A Red joking with a man who could channel! Maybe Taim had
effected a
change for the better, whatever he had intended. And maybe Rand al'Thor
was
living in a dream, too. Aes Sedai were famous for their dissembling.
But could
a Red dissemble that far?
Not
everyone felt agreeable today. Ayako's eyes seemed almost black as she
glared
at Rand, but then, considering what happened to a Warder when his Aes
Sedai
died, the dark-complected little White had reason to fear Sandomere
going into
possible danger. The Asha'man bond differed from the Warder bond in
some
respects, but in others it was identical, and no one yet knew the
effects of an
Asha'man's death on the woman he had bonded. Elza was frowning at Rand,
too,
one hand on the shoulder of her tall, lean Warder Fearil as if she were
gripping a guard dog's collar and thinking of loosing him. Not against
Rand,
certainly, but he worried for anyone she thought might be threatening
him. He
had given her orders about that, and her oath should see them obeyed,
yet Aes
Sedai could find loopholes in almost anything.
Merise
was speaking firmly to Narishma, with her other two Warders sitting
their
horses a little way off. There was no mistaking the way the stern-faced
woman
gestured as she spoke, leaning close to him so she could speak in a low
voice.
She was instructing him about something. Rand disliked that in the
circumstances, yet there seemed little he could do. Merise had sworn no
oaths,
and she would ignore him when it came to one of her Warders. Or much of
anything else, for that matter.
Cadsuane
was watching Rand, too. She and Nynaeve were wearing all of their
ter'angreal
jewelry. Nynaeve was making a good try at Aes Sedai calm. She seemed to
practice that a great deal since sending Lan wherever she had sent him.
Half
the hilltop separated her plump brown mare from Cadsuane's bay. of
course.
Nynaeve would never admit it. but Cadsuane intimidated her.
Logain
rode up between Rand and Bashere, his black gelding prancing. The horse
was
almost the exact shade of his coat and cloak. "The sun is almost
straight
overhead." he said. "Time we go down?" There was only a mere
hint of question in that. The man chafed at taking orders. He did not
wait on a
reply. "Sandomere!" he called loudly. "Narishma!"
Merise
held Narishma by his sleeve for another moment of instructions before
letting
him ride over, which made Logain scowl. Sun-dark Narishma with his
dark, belled
braids looked years younger than Rand, though he was a few years older
in
truth. Sitting his dun as straight as a sword, he nodded to Logain as
to an
equal, producing another scowl. Sandomere spoke a quiet word to Ayako
before
mounting his dapple, and she touched his thigh once he was in the
saddle.
Wrinkled, with receding hair and a gray-streaked beard trimmed to a
point and
oiled, he made her appear youthful rather than ageless. He wore the
red-and-gold dragon on his high black collar, now, as well as the
silver sword.
Every Asha'man on the hill did, even Manfor. He had only recently been
raised
to Dedicated, but he had been one of the first to come to the Black
Tower,
before there was a Black Tower. Most of the men who had begun with him
were
dead. Even Logain had not denied he deserved it.
Logain
had enough sense not to call Cadsuane or Nynaeve, but they rode to join
Rand
anyway, placing themselves to either side of him, each briefly eyeing
him,
faces so smooth they might have been thinking anything. Their eyes met.
and
Nynaeve looked away quickly. Cadsuane gave a faint snort. And Min came.
too.
His "one more" to balance the honors. A man should never give
promises in bed. He opened his mouth, and she arched an eyebrow,
looking at him
very directly. The bond felt full of… something dangerous.
"You
stay behind me once we get there," he told her, not at all what he had
intended to say.
Danger
faded to what he had come to recognize as love. There was wry amusement
in the
bond, too, for some reason. "I will if I want to, you wool-headed
sheepherder," she said with more than a little asperity, just as il the
bond would not tell him her true feelings. Hard as those might be to
decipher.
"If
we're going to do this fool thing, let's get it done with," Cadsuane
said
firmly, and heeled her dark bay down the hill.
A
short distance from the hill, farms began to appear along a meandering
dirt
road through the forest, hard-packed by long years of use but still
carrying a
slick of mud from the last rainfall. The chimneys of thatched stone
houses
smoked with the midday meal-cooking. Sometimes girls and women sat out
in the
sun at their spinning wheels. Men in rough coats walked in the
stone-walled
fields checking their sprouting crops amid boys hoeing weeds. The
pastures held
brown-and-white cattle or black-tailed sheep, usually watched by a boy
or two
with bows or slings. There were wolves in these forests, and leopards
and other
things that enjoyed the taste of beef and mutton. Some people shaded
their eyes
to peer at the passersby, doubtless wondering who these finely dressed
folk
were who had come to visit the Lady Deirdru. Surely there could be no
other
reason for their presence, heading toward the manor house and so far
from
anywhere important. No one seemed agitated or frightened, though, just
going
about their day's work. Rumors of an army in the region surely would
have upset
them, and rumors of that sort spread like wildfire. Strange. The
Seanchan could
not Travel and arrive without news speeding ahead of them. It was very
strange.
He
felt Logain and the other two men seize saidin, filling themselves with
it.
Logain held almost as much as he could have himself, Narishma and
Sandomere
somewhat less. They were the strongest among the other Asha'man,
though, and
both had been at Dumai's Wells. Logain had proven he could handle
himself in
other places, other battles. If this was a trap, they would be ready,
and the
other side would never know it until too late. Rand did not reach for
the
Source. He could feel Lews Therin lurking in his head. This was no time
to give
the madman a chance to get hold of the Power.
"Cadsuane,
Nynaeve, you'd better embrace the Source now," he said. "We're
getting close."
"I've
been holding saidar since back on that hill," Nynaeve told him.
Cadsuane
snorted and gave him a look that called him an idiot.
Rand
stilled a grimace before it could begin. His skin felt no tingling, no
goosebumps.
They had masked their ability, and with it, shielded him from sensing
the Power
in them. Men had had few advantages over women when it came to
channeling, but
now they had lost those few while women retained all of theirs. Some of
the
Asha'-man were trying to puzzle out how to duplicate what Nacelle had
created,
to find a weave that would allow men to detect women's weaves, but so
far
without success. Well, it would have to be dealt with by someone else.
He had
all he could manage on his plate at the moment.
The
farms continued, some alone in a clearing, others clustered three or
four or
five together. If they followed the road far enough they would reach
the
village of King's Crossing in a few miles, where a wooden bridge
spanned a
narrow river called the Reshalle, but well short of that the road
passed by a
large clearing marked by a pair of tall stone gateposts, though there
were
neither gates nor fence. A hundred paces or more beyond it, at the end
of a
mud-slicked clay lane, lay Lady Deidru's manor, two stories of
thatch-roofed
gray stone saved from looking a large farmhouse only by the gateposts
and the
tall twinned doors at the front. The stables and outbuildings had the
same
practical appearance, sturdy and unornamented. There was no one in
sight, no
stablemen, no servant on her way to fetch eggs, no men in the fields
that
flanked the lane. The house's tall chimneys stood smokeless. It did
smell of a
trap. But the countryside was quiet, the farmers unruffled. There was
only one
way to find out.
Rand
turned Tai'daishar in through the gateposts, and the others followed.
Min did
not heed his warning. She pushed her gray in between Tai'daishar and
Nynaeve's
mare and grinned at him. The bond carried nervousness, but the woman
grinned!
When
he was halfway to the house, the doors opened, and two women came out,
one in
dark gray, the other in blue with red panels on her breast and
ankle-length
skirts. Sunlight glinted off the silvery leash connecting them. Two
more
appeared, and two more, until three pairs stood in a row to either side
of the
door. As he reached the three-quarter point, another woman stepped into
the
doorway, very dark and very small, dressed in pleated white, her head
covered
by a transparent scarf that fell over her face. The Daughter of the
Nine Moons.
She had been described to Bashere right down to her shaven head. A
tension in
his shoulders he had not been aware of melted. That she was actually
here did
away with the possibility of a trap. The Seanchan would not risk the
heir to
their throne in anything so dangerous. He drew rein and dismounted.
"One
of them is channeling.'' Nynaeve said, just loudly enough for him to
hear, as
she climbed down from her saddle. "I can't see anything. so she's
masked
her ability and inverted the weave-and I wonder how the Seanchan
learned
tbatl-but she's channeling. Only one; there isn't enough for it to be
two." Her ter'angreal could not tell whether it was saidin or saidar
being
channeled, but it was unlikely to be a man.
I
told you it was trap. Lews Therin groaned. I told you!
Rand
pretended to check his saddle girth. "Can you tell which one?" he
asked quietly. He still did not reach saidin. There was no telling what
Lews
Therin might do in these circumstances if he managed to grab control
again.
Logain was fiddling with his girth, too, and Narishma was watching
Sandomere
check one of the dapple's hooves. They had heard. The small woman was
waiting
in the doorway, very still but no doubt impatient and likely offended
by their
apparent interest in their horses.
"No,"
Cadsuane replied grimly. "But I can do something about it. Once we're
closer." Her golden hair ornaments swayed as she tossed her cloak back
as
though unmasking a sword.
"Stay
behind me," he told Min, and to his relief, she nodded. Her face wore a
small frown, and the bond carried worry. Not fear, though. She knew he
would
protect her.
Leaving
the horses standing, he started toward the sul'dam and damane with
Cadsuane and
Nynaeve a little distance to either side of him. Logain, hand resting
on his
sword hilt as if that were his real weapon, strode along on the other
side of
Cadsuane, Narishma and Sandomere beyond Nynaeve. The small dark woman
began
walking toward them slowly, holding her pleated skirts up off the damp
ground.
Abruptly,
no more than ten paces away, she… flickered. For an instant, she was
taller than most men. garbed all in black, surprise on her face, and
though she
still wore the veil, her head was covered with short-cut wavy black
hair. Only
an instant before the small woman returned, her step faltering as she
let her
white skirts fall, but another flicker, and the tall dark woman stood
there,
her face twisted in fury behind the veil. He recognized that face,
though he
had never seen it before. Lews Therin had, and that was enough.
"Semirhage."
he said in shock before he could stop the word, and suddenly everything
seemed
to happen at once.
He
reached for the Source and found Lews Therin clawing for it. too. each
of them
jostling the other aside from reaching it. Semirhage flicked her hand,
and a
small ball of fire streaked toward him from her fingertips. She might
have
shouted something, an order. He could not leap aside: Min stood right
behind
him. Frantically trying to seize saidin. he flung up the hand holding
the
Dragon Scepter in desperation. The world seemed to explode in fire.
His
cheek was pressed against the damp ground, he realized. Black flecks
shimmered
in his vision, and everything seemed faintly hazy, as if seen through
water.
Where was he? What had happened? His head felt stuffed with wool.
Something was
prodding him in the ribs. His sword hilt. The old wounds were a hard
knot of
pain just above that. Slowly, he realized he was looking at the Dragon
Scepter,
or what was left of it. The spearpoint and a few inches of charred haft
lay
three paces away. Small, dancing flames were consuming the long tassel.
The
Crown of Swords lay beyond it.
Abruptly
it came to him that he could feel saidin being channeled. His skin was
goose
bumps all over from saidar being wielded. The manor house. Semirhage!
He tried
to push himself up, and collapsed with a harsh cry. Slowly he pulled a
left arm
that seemed all pain up where he could see his hand. See where his hand
had
been. Only a mangled, blackened ruin remained. A stub sticking out of a
cuff
that gave off thin streamers of smoke. But the Power was still being
channeled
around him. His people were fighting for their lives. They might be
dying. Min!
He struggled to rise, and fell again.
As
though thinking of her had summoned her, Min was crouching over him.
Trying to
shield him with her body, he realized. The bond was full of compassion
and
pain. Not physical pain. He would have known if she had the smallest
injury.
She was feeling pain for him. "Lie still," she said. "You've… You've
been hurt."
"I
know," he said hoarsely. Again, he reached for saidin. and for a
wonder,
this time Lews Therin did not try to interfere. The Power filled him,
and that
gave him the strength to push himself to his feet one-handed, preparing
several
very nasty weaves as he did so. Careless of his muddy coat. Min gripped
his
good arm as though she were trying to hold him upright. But the
fighting was
over.
Semirhage
was standing stiffly with her arms at her sides, her skirts pressed
against her
legs, doubtless wrapped up in flows of Air. The hilt of one of Min's
knives
stood out from her shoulder, and she must have been shielded, too, but
her
dark, beautiful face was contemptuous. She had been a prisoner before,
briefly,
during the War of the Shadow. She had escaped from high detention by
frightening her jailers to the point that they actually smuggled her to
freedom.
Others
had been injured more seriously. A short dark sul'dam and tall
pale-haired
damane, linked by an adam, lay sprawled on the ground, staring up at
the sun
with already glazed eyes, and another pair were on their knees and
clinging to
one another, blood running down their faces and matting their hair. The
other
pairs stood as stiffly as Semirhage, and he could see the shields on
three of
the damane. They looked stunned. One of the sul'dam, a slender,
dark-haired
young woman, was weeping softly. Narishma's face was bloodied, too. and
his
coat appeared singed. So did Sandomere's, and a bone jutted through his
left
coatsleeve, white smeared with red, until Nynaeve firmly pulled his arm
straight and guided the bone back into place. Grimacing in pain, he
gave a
guttural groan. She cupped her hands around his arm over the break, and
moments
later he was flexing his arm and moving his fingers and murmuring
thanks.
Logain appeared untouched. as did Nynaeve and Cadsuane, who was
studying
Semirhage the way a Brown might study an exotic animal never before
seen.
Suddenly
gateways began opening all around the manor house, spilling out mounted
Asha'man and Aes Sedai and Warders, veiled Maidens and Bashere riding
at the
head of his horsemen. An Asha'man and Aes Sedai in a ring of two could
make a
gateway considerably larger than those Rand could alone. So someone had
managed
to give the signal, a red sunburst in the sky. Every Asha'man was full
of
saidin, and Rand assumed the Aes Sedai were equally full ofsaidar. The
Maidens
began spreading out into the trees.
"Aghan,
Hamad, search the house!" Bashere shouted. "Matoun, form the lancers!
They'll be on us as soon as they can!" Two soldiers thrust their lances
into the ground and leapt down to run inside drawing their swords while
the
others began arraying themselves in two ranks.
Ayako
flung herself from her saddle and rushed to Sandomere not even
bothering to
hold her skirts out of the mud. Merise rode to Narishma before swinging
down
right in front of him and taking his head in her hands without a word.
He
jerked, his back arching and nearly pulling his head free, as she
Healed him.
She had little facility with Nynaeve's method of Healing.
Ignoring
the turmoil. Nynaeve gathered her skirts in bloodied hands and hurried
to Rand.
"Oh. Rand," she said when she saw his arm, "I'm so sorry. I… I'll do
what I can, but I can't fix it the way it was." Her eyes were
filled with anguish.
Wordlessly,
he held out his left arm. It throbbed with agony. Strangely, he could
still
feel his hand. It seemed he should be able to make a fist with the
fingers that
were no longer there. His goose bumps intensified as she drew more
deeply on
saidar, the tendrils of smoke vanished from his cuff, and she gripped
his arm
above the wrist. His entire arm began tingling, and the pain drained
away.
Slowly, blackened skin was replaced by smooth skin that seemed to ooze
down
until it covered the small lump that had been the base of his hand. It
was a
miraculous thing to see. The scarlet-and-gold scaled dragon grew back,
too, as
much as it could, ending in a bit of the golden mane. He could still
feel the
whole hand.
"I'm
so sorry." Nynaeve said again. "Let me delve you for any other
injuries." She asked, but did not wait, of course. She reached up to
cup
his head between her hands, and a chill ran through him. "There's
something wrong with your eyes," she said with a frown. "I'm afraid
to try fixing that without studying on it. The smallest mistake could
blind
you. How well can you see? How many fingers am I holding up?"
"Two.
I can see fine," he lied. The black flecks were gone, but everything
still
seemed seen through water, and he wanted to squint against a sun that
appeared
to glare ten times brighter than it had. The old wounds in his side
were
knotted with pain.
Bashere
climbed down from his compact bay in front of him and frowned at the
stump of
his left arm. Unbuckling his helmet, he took it off and held it under
his arm.
"Ac least you're alive." he said gruffly. "I've seen men hurt
worse."
"Me,
too," Rand said. "I'll have to learn the sword all over again,
though." Bashere nodded. Most forms required two hands. Rand bene to
pick
up the crown of Illian, but Min released his arm and hurriedly handed
the crown
to him. He settled it on his head. "I'll have to work out new ways to
do
everything."
"You
must be in shock," Nynaeve said slowly. "You've just suffered a
grievous injury. Rand. Maybe you'd better lie down. Lord Davram, have
one your
men bring a saddle to put his feet up."
"He's
not in shock,' Min said sadly. The bond was full of sadness. She had
taken hold
of his arm as if to hold him up again. "He lost a hand, but there's
nothing to do about it. so he's left it behind already."
"Wool-headed
fool.' Nynaeve muttered. Her hand, still smeared with Sandomere's
blood,
drifted toward the thick braid hanging over her shoulder, but she
yanked it
back down. "You've been hurt badly. It's all right to grieve. It's all
right to feel stunned. It's normal!"
"I
don't have time," he told her. Min's sadness threatened to overflow the
bond. Light, he was all right! Why did she feel so sad?
Nynaeve
muttered half under her breath about "woolhead" and "fool"
and "man-stubborn," but she was not finished. "Those old wounds
in your side have broken open," she almost growled. "You aren't
bleeding badly, but you are bleeding. Maybe I can finally do something
about
them."
But
as hard as she tried-and she tried three times-nothing changed. He
still felt
the slow trickle of blood sliding down his ribs. The wounds were still
a
throbbing knot of pain. Finally, he pushed her hand gently away from
his side.
"You've
done what you can. Nynaeve. It's enough."
"Fool."
She did growl, this time. "How can it be enough when you're still
bleeding?"
"Who
is the tall woman?" Bashere asked. He understood, at least. You did not
waste time on what could not be mended. "They didn't try passing her
off
as the Daughter of the Nine Moons, did they? Not after telling me she
was a
little thing."
"They
did," Rand replied, and explained briefly.
"Semirhage?"
Bashere muttered incredulously. "How can you be sure?"
"She's
Anath Dorje, not… not what you called her," a honey-skinned sul'dam
said loudly in a twangy drawl. Her dark eyes were tilted, and her hair
was
streaked with gray. She looked the eldest of the sul'dam. and the least
frightened. It was not that she did not look afraid, but she controlled
it
well. "She's the High Lady's Truthspeaker."
"Be
silent, Falendre," Semirhage said coldly, looking over her shoulder.
Her
gaze promised pain. The Lady of Pain was good at delivering on her
promises.
Prisoners had killed themselves on learning it was she who held them,
men and
women who managed to open a vein with teeth or fingernails.
Falendre
did not seem to see it. though. "You don't command me," she said
scornfully. "You're not even so'jhin."
"How
can you be sure?" Cadsuane demanded. Those golden moons and stars,
birds
and fishes, swung as she moved her piercing gaze from Rand to Semirhage
and
back.
Semirhage
saved him the effort of thinking up a lie. "He's insane," she said
coolly. Standing there stiff as a statue, Min's knife hilt still
sticking out
beside her collarbone and the front of her black dress glistening with
blood,
she might have been a queen on her throne. "Graendal could explain it
better than I. Madness was her specialty. I will try, however. You know
of
people who hear voices in their heads? Sometimes, very rarely, the
voices they
hear are the voices of past lives. Lanfear claimed he knew things from
our own
Age, things only Lews Therin Telamon could know. Clearly, he is hearing
Lews Therin's
voice. It makes no difference that his voice is real, however. In fact,
that
makes his situation worse. Even Graendal usually failed to achieve
reintegration with someone who heard a real voice. I understand the
descent
into terminal madness can be… abrupt." Her lips curved in a smile
that never touched her dark eyes.
Were
they looking at him differently? Logain's face was a carved mask,
unreadable.
Bashere looked as though he still could not believe. Nynaeve's mouth
hung open,
and her eyes were wide. The bond… For a long moment, the bond was full
of… numbness. If Min turned away from him. he did not know whether he
could
stand it. If she turned away, it would be the best thing in the world
for her.
But compassion and determination as strong as mountains replaced
numbness. and
love so bright he thought he could have warmed his hands over it. Her
grip on
his arm tightened, and he tried to put a hand over hers. Too late, he
remembered and snatched the nub of his hand away, but not before it had
touched
her. Nothing in the bond wavered by a hair.
Cadsuane
moved closer to the taller woman and looked up at her. Facing one of
the
Forsaken seemed to faze her no more than facing the Dragon Reborn did.
"You're very calm for a prisoner. Rather than deny the charge, you give
evidence against yourself."
Semirhage
shifted that cold smile from Rand to Cadsuane. "Why should I deny
myself?" Pride dripped from every word. "I am Semirhage."
Someone gasped, and a number of the sul'dam and damane started
trembling and
weeping. One sul'dam, a pretty, yellow-haired woman, suddenly vomited
down the
front of herself, and another, stocky and dark, looked as if she might.
Cadsuane
simply nodded. "I am Cadsuane Melaidhrin. I look forward to long talks
with you." Semirhage sneered. She had never lacked courage.
"We
thought she was the High Lady," Falendre said hurriedly, and haltingly
at
the same time. Her teeth seemed near to chattering, but she forced
words out.
"We thought we were being honored. She took us to a room in the Tarasin
Palace where there was a… a hole in the air, and we stepped through to
this
place. I swear it on my eyes! We thought she was the High Lady."
"So.
no army rushing toward us," Logain said. You could not have told from
his
tone whether he was relieved or disappointed. He bared an inch of his
sword and
thrust it back into its scabbard hard. "What do we do with them?" He
jerked his head toward the sul'dam and damane. "Send them to Caemlyn
like
the others?"
"We
send them back to Ebou Dar." Rand said. Cadsuane turned to stare at
him.
Her face was a perfect mask of Aes Sedai serenity, yet he doubted she
was
anywhere near serene inside. The leashing of damane was an abomination
that Aes
Sedai took personally. Nynaeve was anything but serene. Angry-eyed,
gripping
her braid in a tight, blood-daubed fist, she opened her mouth, but he
spoke
over her. "I need this truce, Nynaeve, and taking these women prisoner
is
no way to get one. Don't argue. That's what they'd call it. including
the
damane, and you know it as well as I do. They can carry word that I
want to
meet the Daughter of the Nine Moons. The heir to the throne is the only
one who
can make a truce stand."
"I
still don't like it,' she said firmly. "We could free the damane. The
others will do as well for carrying messages." The damane who had not
been
weeping before burst into tears. Some of them cried to the sul'dam to
save
them. Nynaeve's face took on sickly cast, but she threw up her hands
and gave
over arguing.
The
two soldiers Bashere had sent into the house came out, young men who
walked
with a rolling motion, more accustomed to saddles than their own feet.
Hamad
had a luxuriant black beard that fell below the edge of his helmet and
a scar
down his face. Aghan wore thick mustaches like Bashere's and carried a
plain
wooden box with no lid under his arm. They bowed to Bashere. free hands
swinging their swords clear.
"The
house is empty, my Lord." Aghan said, "but there's dried blood
staining the carpets in several rooms. Looks like a slaughter yard, my
Lord. 1
think whoever lived here is dead. This was sitting by the front door.
It didn't
look like it belonged, so I brought it along." He held out the box for
inspection. Within lay coiled a'dam and a number of circlets made of
segmented
black metal, some large, some small.
Rand
started to reach in with his left hand before he remembered. Min caught
the
movement and released his right arm so he could scoop up a handful of
the black
metal pieces. Nynaeve gasped.
"You
know what these are?" he asked.
"They're
a'dam for men," she said angrily. "Egeanin said she was going to drop
the thing in the ocean! We trusted her, and she gave it to somebody to
copy!"
Rand
dropped the things back into the box. There were six of the larger
circlets,
and five of the silvery leashes. Semirhage had been prepared no matter
who he
brought with him. "She really thought she could capture all of us."
That thought should have made him shiver. He seemed to feel Lews Therin
shiver.
No one wanted to fall into Semirhage's hands.
"She
shouted for them to shield us," Nynaeve said, "but they couldn't
because we were all holding the Power already. If we hadn't been, if
Cadsuane
and I hadn't had our ter'angreal, I don't know what would have
happened." She
did shiver.
He
looked at the tall Forsaken, and she stared back, utterly composed.
Utterly
cold. Her reputation as a torturer loomed so large that it was easy to
forget
how dangerous she was otherwise. "Tie off the shields on the others so
they'll unravel in a few hours, and send them to somewhere near Ebou
Dar."
For a moment, he thought Nynaeve was going to protest again, but she
contented
herself with giving her braid a strong tug and turning away.
"Who
are you to ask for a meeting with the High Lady?" Falendre demanded.
She
emphasized the title for some reason.
"My
name is Rand al'Thor. I'm the Dragon Reborn." If they had wept at
hearing
Semirhage's name, they wailed at hearing his.
Ashandarei
slanted across his saddle. Mat sat Pips in the darkness among the trees
and
waited, surrounded by two thousand mounted crossbowmen. The sun was not
long
down, and events should be in motion. The Seanchan were going to be hit
hard
tonight in half a dozen places. Some small and some not so small, but
hard in every
case. Moonlight filtering through the branches overhead gave just
enough
illumination for him to make out Tuon's shadowed face. She had insisted
on
staying with him, which meant Selucia was at her side on her dun, of
course,
glaring at him as usual. There were not enough moon-shadows to obscure
that,
unfortunately. Tuon must be unhappy about what was to happen tonight,
yet
nothing showed on her face. What was she thinking? Her expression was
all the
stern magistrate.
"Your
scheme do entail a good deal of luck," Teslyn said, not for the first
time. Even shadowed, her face looked hard. She shifted in her saddle,
adjusting
her cloak. "It be coo late to change everything, but this part can be
abandoned certainly." He would have preferred to have Bethamin or Seta,
neither bound by the Three Oaths and both knowing the weaves damane
used for
weapons, something that horrified the Aes Sedai. Not the weaves; just
that
Bethamin and Seta knew them. At least, he thought he would. Leilwin had
flatly
refused to fight any Seanchan except to defend herself. Bethamin and
Seta might
have done the same, or found at the last minute that they could not act
against
their countrymen. In any case, the Aes Sedai had rejected allowing the
two
women to be involved, and neither had opened her mouth once that was
said. That
pair were too meek around Aes Sedai to say boo to a goose.
"Grace
favor you, Teslyn Sedai. but Lord Mat is lucky," Captain Mandevwin
said.
The stocky one-eyed man had been with the Band since the first days in
Cairhien.
and he had earned the gray streaks in his hair, hidden now beneath his
green-painted helmet, an open-faced footman's helmet, in battles
against Tear
and Andor before that. "I remember times we were outnumbered, with
enemies
on every side, and he danced the Band around them. Not to slip away,
mind, but
to beat them. Beautiful battles."
"A
beautiful battle is one you don't have to fight," Mat said, more
sharply
than he intended. He did not like battles. You could get holes poked in
you in
a battle. He just kept getting caught in them, that was all. Most of
that
dancing around had been trying to slip away. But there would be no
slipping
away tonight, or for many days to come. "Our part of it is important,
Teslyn." What was keeping Aludra, burn her? The attack at the supply
camp
must be under way already, just strong enough that the soldiers
defending it
would think they could hold until help arrived, strong enough to make
them sure
they needed help. The others would be full strength from the start, to
overwhelm
the defenders before they knew what was on them. "I mean to bloody the
Seanchan. bloody them so hard and fast and often that they're reacting
to what
we're doing instead of making their own plans." As soon as the words
left
his tongue he wished he had phrased that another way.
Tuon
leaned close to Selucia. and the taller woman put her scarf-covered
head down
to exchange whispers. It was too dark for their bloody finger-talk, but
he
could not hear a word they were saying. He could imagine. She had
promised not
to betray him. and that had to cover trying to betray his plans, yet
she must
wish she had that promise back. He should have left her with Reimon or
one of
the others. That would have been safer than letting her stay with him.
He could
have if he had tied her up, her and Selucia both. And probably Setalle
as well.
That bloody woman still took Tuon's side every time.
Mandevwin's
bay stamped a hoof, and he patted the animal's neck with a gauntleted
hand.
"You cannot deny there is battle luck, when you find a weakness in your
enemy's lines that you never expected, that should not be there, when
you find
him arrayed to defend against attack from the north only you are coming
from
the south. Battle luck rides on your shoulder, my Lord. I have seen it."
Mat
grunted and resettled his hat on his head irritably. For every time a
banner
got lost and blundered into a bloody chink in the enemy's defenses,
there were
ten when it just was not bloody where you expected when you bloody well
needed
it. That was the truth of battle luck.
"One
green nightflower," a man called from above. "Two! Both green!"
Scrapings told of him climbing down hurriedly.
Mat
heaved a small sigh of relief. The raken was away and headed west. He
had
counted on that-the nearest large body of soldiers loyal to the
Seanchan lay
west-and even cheated by riding as far west as he dared. Just because
you were
sure your opponent would react in a certain way did not mean he would.
Reimon
would be overrunning the supply camp any minute, smothering the
defenders with
ten times their number and securing much-needed provisions.
"Go,
Vanin," he said, and the fat man dug his heels in, sending his dun off
into the night at a canter. He could not outpace the raken, but so long
as he
brought word in time… "Time to move, Mandevwin."
A
lean fellow dropped the last distance from a lower limb, carefully
cradling a
looking glass that he handed up to the Cairhienin.
"Get
mounted, Londraed." Mandevwin said, stuffing the looking glass into the
cylindrical
leather case tied to his saddle. "Connl. form the men by fours."
A
short ride took them to a narrow hard-packed road, winding through low
hills,
that Mat had avoided earlier. There were few farms and fewer villages
in this
area, but he did not want to spread rumors of large parties of armed
men. Not
until he wanted them to spread, anyway. Now he needed speed, and rumor
could
not outrun him in tonight's business. Most of the farmhouses they
trotted by
were dark shapes in the moonlight, lamps and candles already
extinguished. The
thud of hooves and the creak of saddle leather were the only sounds
aside from
the occasional thin, reedy cry of some night bird or an owl's hooting,
but two
thousand or so horses made a fair amount of noise. They passed through
a small
village where only a handful of thatch-roofed houses and the tiny stone
inn
showed any light, but people stuck their heads out of doors and windows
to
gape. Doubtless they thought they were seeing soldiers loyal to the
Seanchan.
There seemed to be few of any other kind remaining in most of Altara.
Somebody
raised a cheer, but he was a lone voice.
Mat
rode alongside Mandevwin with Tuon and the other women behind, and now
and then
he looked over his shoulder. Not to make sure she was still there.
Strange as
it was, he had no doubt she would keep her word not to escape, even
now. And
not to make sure she was keeping up. The razor had an easy stride, and
she rode
well. Pips could not have outrun Akein had he tried. No, he just liked
looking
at her, even by moonlight. Maybe especially by moonlight. He had tried
kissing
her again the night before, and she had punched him in the side so hard
that at
first he thought she had broken one of his shortribs. But she had
kissed him
just before they started out this evening. Only once, and said not to
be greedy
when he attempted a second. The woman melted in his arms while he was
kissing
her, and turned to ice the moment she stepped back. What was he to make
of her?
A large owl passed overhead, wings flapping silently. Would she see
some omen
in that? Probably.
He
should not be spending so much time thinking about her, not tonight. In
truth,
he was depending on luck to some extent. The three thousand lancers
Vanin had
found, mostly Altarans with a few Sean-chan, might or might not be
those Master
Roidelle had marked on his map, though they had not been too far from
where he
placed them, but there was no telling for sure in which direction they
had
moved since. Northeast, almost certainly, toward the Malvide Narrows,
and the
Molvaine Gap beyond. It seemed that except for the last stretch, the
Seanchan
had taken to avoiding the Lugard Road for moving soldiers, doubtless to
conceal
their numbers and destinations in the country roads. Certain was not
absolutely
sure, however. If they had not moved too far, this was the road they
would use
to reach that supply camp. If. But if they had ridden farther than he
expected,
they might use another road. No danger there; just a wasted night.
Their
commander might decide to cut straight across the hills, too. That
could prove
nasty if he decided to join this road at the wrong point.
About
four miles beyond the village, they came to a place where two gently
sloping
hills flanked the road, and he called a halt. Master Roidelle's own
maps were
fine, but those he had from other men were the work of masters, too.
Roidelle
acquired only the best. Mat recognized this spot as if he had seen it
before.
Mandevwin
wheeled his horse around. "Admar, Eyndel, take your men up the north
slope.
Madwin, Dongal, the south slope. One man in four to hold horses."
"Hobble
the horses,' Mat said, "and put the feedbags on to stop whinnying."
They were facing lancers. If it all turned sour and they tried to run,
those
lancers would ride them down like they were hunting wild pigs. A
crossbow was
no good from horseback, especially if you were trying to get away. They
had to
win here.
The
Cairhienin stared at him, any expression hidden by the face-bars of his
helmet,
but he did not hesitate. "Hobble the horses and put on their
nosebags." he ordered. "Every man on the line."
"Tell
off some to keep watch north and south," Mat told him. "Battle luck
can run against you as easily as in your favor." Mandevwin nodded and
gave
the order.
The
crossbowmen divided and rode up the thinly treed slopes, their dark
coats and
dull green armor fading into the shadows. Burnished armor was all very
well for
parades, but it could reflect moonlight as well as sunlight. According
to
Talmanes, the hard part had been convincing the lancers to give up
their bright
breastplates and the nobles their silvering and gilding. The foot had
seen
sense straight off. For a time there was the rustle of men and horses
moving
across the mulch, moving through brush, but finally silence fell. From
the
road, Mat could not have told there was anyone on either slope. Now he
just had
to wait.
Tuon
and Selucia kept him company, and so did Teslyn. A gusting breeze had
sprung up
from the west that tugged at cloaks, but of course, Aes Sedai could
ignore such
things, though Teslyn held hers shut. Selucia let the gusts take her
cloak
where it would, oddly, but Tuon took to holding hers closed with one
hand.
"You
might be more comfortable among the trees," he told her. "They'll cut
the wind.''
For
a moment, she shook with silent laughter. "I'm enjoying watching you
take
your ease on your hilltop," she drawled.
Mat
blinked. Hilltop? He was sitting Pips in the middle of the bloody road
with
flaming gusts cutting through his coat like winter was coming back.
What was
she talking about, hilltop?
"Have
a care with Joline," Teslyn said, suddenly and unexpectedly. "She be…
childish… in some ways, and you do fascinate her the way a shiny new
toy
do fascinate a child. She will bond you if she can decide how to
convince you
to agree. Perhaps even if you do no realize you be agreeing.''
He
opened his mouth to say there was no bloody flaming chance of that, but
Tuon
spoke first.
"She
cannot have him," she said sharply. Drawing a breath, she went on in
amused tones. "Toy belongs to me. Until I am through playing with him.
But
even then, I won't give him to a marath'damane. You understand me,
Tessi? You
tell Rosi that. That's the name I intended to give her. You can tell
her that,
too."
The
sharp gusts might not have affected Teslyn, but she shivered at hearing
her
damane name. Aes Sedai serenity vanished as rage contorted her face.
"What
I do understand-!"
"Give
over!" Mat cut in. "Both of you. I'm in no mood to listen to the pair
of you trying to jab each other with needles." Teslyn stared at him,
indignation plain even by moonlight.
"Why,
Toy," Tuon said brightly, "you're being masterful again."
She
leaned over to Selucia and whispered something that made the bo-somy
woman give
a loud guffaw.
Hunching
his shoulders and pulling his cloak around him, he leaned on the high
pommel of
his saddle and watched the night for Vanin. Women! He would give up all
of his
luck-well, half-if he could understand women.
"What
do you think you can achieve with raids and ambushes?" Teslyn said,
again
not for the first time. "The Seanchan will only send enough soldiers to
hunt you down." She and Joline had kept trying to stick their noses
into
his planning, and so had Edesina to a lesser extent, until he chased
them away.
Aes Sedai thought they knew everything, and while Joline at least did
know
something of war, he had not needed advice. Aes Sedai advice sounded an
awful
lot like telling you what to do. This time, he decided to answer her.
"I'm
counting on them sending more soldiers, Teslyn," he said, still
watching
for Vanin. "The whole army they have in the Molvaine Gap, in fact.
Enough
of it, anyway. They're more likely to use that than any other.
Everything Thom
and Juilin picked up says their big push is aimed at Illian. I think
the army
in the Gap is to guard against anything coming at them out of Murandy
or Andor.
But they're the stopper in the jar for us. I mean to pull that stopper
out so
we can pass through."
After
several minutes of silence, he looked over his shoulder. The three
women were
just sitting their horses and watching him. He wished he had enough
light to
make out their expressions. Why were they bloody staring? He settled
back to
looking for Vanin. yet it seemed he could feel their eyes on his back.
Perhaps
two hours by the shifting of the fat crescent moon went by. with the
wind
slowly picking up strength. It was enough to take the night beyond cool
into
cold. Periodically he tried to make the women take shelter among the
trees, but
they resisted stubbornly. He had to remain, to catch Vanin without
having to
shout-the lancers would be close behind the man; perhaps very close if
their
commander was a fool-but they did not. He suspected that Teslyn refused
because
Tuon and Selucia did. That made no sense, but there it was. As for why
Tuon
refused, he could not have said unless it was because she liked to
listen to
him arguing himself hoarse.
Eventually
the wind brought the sound of a running horse, and he sat up straight
in his
saddle. Vanin's dun cantered out of the night, the bulky man as always
an
improbable sight in a saddle.
Vanin
drew rein and spat through a gap in his teeth. "They're a mile or so
behind me, but there's maybe a thousand more than there was this
morning.
Whoever's in charge knows his business. They're pushing hard without
blowing
their horses."
"If
you be outnumbered two to one." Teslyn said, "perhaps you will
reconsider-"
"I
don't intend to give them a stand-up fight," Mat broke in. "And I
can't afford to leave four thousand lancers loose to make trouble for
me. Let's
join Mandevwin."
The
kneeling crossbowmen on the slope of the northern hill made no sound
when he
rode through their line with the women and Vanin, just shuffled aside
to let
them through. He would have preferred at least two ranks, but he needed
to
cover a wide front. The sparse trees did cut the wind, but not by much,
and
most of the men were huddled in their cloaks. Still, every crossbow he
could
see was drawn, with a bolt in place. Mandevwin had seen Vanin arrive
and knew
what it meant.
The
Cairhienin was pacing just behind the line until Mat appeared and swung
down
from Pips. Mandevwin was relieved to hear that he no longer needed to
keep a
watch to his rear. He merely nodded thoughtfully at hearing of a
thousand more
lancers than expected and sent a man racing off to bring the watchers
down from
the crest to take their places in the line. If Mat Cauthon took it in
stride,
so would he. Mat had forgotten that about the Band. They trusted him
absolutely. Once, that had almost made him break out in a rash.
Tonight, he was
glad of it.
An
owl hooted twice, somewhere behind him, and Tuon sighed.
"Is
there an omen in that?" he asked, just for something to say.
"I'm
glad you are finally taking an interest. Toy. Perhaps I will be able to
educate
you yet." Her eyes were liquid in the moonlight. "An owl hooting
twice means someone will die soon." Well, that put a bloody end to
conversation.
Soon
enough, the Seanchan appeared, four abreast and leading their horses at
a trot,
lances in hand. Vanin had been right about their commander knowing his
job.
Cantered for a time then led at a trot, horses could cover a lot of
ground
quickly. Fools tried to gallop long distances
and ended with dead or crippled horses. Only the first forty or so wore
the
segmented armor and strange helmets of Seanchan. A pity, that. He had
no idea
how the Seanchan would feel about casualties to their Altaran allies.
Losses to
their own would catch notice, though.
When
the middle of the column was right in front of him, a deep voice on the
road
suddenly shouted, "Banner! Halt!" Those two words carried the
familiar slurred drawl of the Seanchan. The men in segmented armor
stopped
sharply. The others straggled to a halt.
Mat
drew breath. Now that had to be ta'veren work. They could hardly have
been
better placed if he had given the order himself. He rested a hand on
Teslyn's
shoulder. She flinched slightly, but he needed to get her attention
quietly.
"Banner!"
the deep voice shouted. "Mount!" Below, soldiers moved to obey.
"Now,"
Mat said quietly.
The
foxhead went cold on his chest, and suddenly a ball of red light was
floating
high above the road, bathing the soldiers below in an unearthly glow.
They had
only a heartbeat to gape. Along the line below Mat, a thousand crossbow
strings
gave what sounded like one loud snap, and a thousand bolts streaked
into the
formation, punching through breastplates at that short range, knocking
men from
their feet, sending horses rearing and screaming, just as a thousand
more
struck from the other side. Not every shot struck squarely, but that
hardly
mattered with a heavy crossbow. Men went down with shattered legs, with
legs
ripped half off. Men clutched at the stumps of ruined arms trying to
stem the
flow of blood. Men screamed as loudly as the horses.
He
watched a crossbowman nearby as the fellow bent to fasten the paired
hooks of
the bulky, boxlike crank, hanging from a strap at the front of his
belt, to his
crossbow string. As the man straightened, the cord streamed out of the
crank,
but once he was erect, he set the crank on the butt of the upended
crossbow,
moved a small lever on the side of the box, and began to work the
handles.
Three quick turns with a rough whirring sound, and the string caught on
the
latch.
'Into
the trees!" the deep voice shouted. "Close with them before they can
reload! Move!"
Some
tried to mount, to ride into the attack, and others dropped reins and
lances to
draw swords. None made it as far as the trees. Two thousand more bolts
slashed
into them, cutting men down, punching through men to kill men behind or
topple
horses. On the hillside, men began working their cranks furiously, but
there
was no need. On the road, a horse kicked feebly here and there. The
only men
moving were frantically trying to use whatever they had to hand for
tourniquets
to keep from bleeding to death. The wind brought the sound of running
horses.
Some might have riders. There were no more shouts from the deep voice.
"Mandevwin,"
Mat shouted, "we're done here. Mount the men. We have places to be."
"You
must stay to offer aid," Teslyn said firmly. "The rules of war do
demand it."
"This
is a new kind of war," he told her harshly. Light, it was silent on the
road, but he could still hear the screaming. "They'll have to wait for
their own to give them aid."
Tuon
murmured something half under her breath. He thought it was, "A lion
can
have no mercy," but that was ridiculous.
Gathering
his men, he led them down the north side of the hill. There was no need
to let
the survivors see how many they were. In a few hours they would join up
with
the men from the other hill, and in a few hours more, with Carlomin.
Before
sunrise they were going to hit the Seanchan again. He intended to make
them run
to pull that bloody stopper for him.
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
In Maiden
Just
before first light, Faile was fastening the wide belt of golden links
around
her waist for the last time when Dairaine entered the small, already
crowded
peaked tent where they all slept. Outside, the sky would be starting to
turn
gray, but inside, it might still have been night. Faile's eyes had
adapted to
the darkness, though. The slender little woman with black hair that
spilled to
her waist in waves was frowning around her yawns. She had stood just
below the
High Seat of her House in Cairhien, but she had been wakened in the
night
because Sevanna could not sleep and wanted to be read to. Sevanna
enjoyed
Dairaine's voice, and likely the tales she carried of supposed misdeeds
among
Sevanna's gai'shain. The Cairhienin woman was never chosen out as one
of those
who had failed to please. Her hands went to her golden collar, then
hesitated
when she took in Faile, Alliandre and Maighdin, already dressed and on
their
feet.
"I
forgot to put the book back in the proper place,'' she said in a voice
like
crystal chimes, turning back toward the tentflap. "Sevanna will have me
beaten if she sees it out of place when she wakes."
"She's
lying." Maighdin growled, and Dairaine darted for outside.
That
was enough to convince Faile. She grabbed the woman's cowl and hauled
her back
into the tent. Dairaine opened her mouth to scream, but Alliandre
clapped her
hand over it, and the three of them wrestled the woman to the
blanket-strewn
ground-cloth. It took all three. Dairaine was small, but she writhed
like a
snake, tried to claw at them, to bite. While the other two held the
woman down,
Faile produced the second knife she had secured, a quite serviceable
dagger
with a ridged steel hilt and a blade longer than her hand, and began
slicing
strips from one of the blankets.
"How
did you know?" Alliandre said, struggling to contain one of Dairaine's
arms while keeping her mouth covered without being bitten. Maighdin had
taken
care of the woman's legs by sitting on them and had her other arm
twisted to
her shoulder blades. Dairaine still managed to twist, if uselessly.
"She
was frowning, but when she spoke, her face went smooth. I could just
make it
out. If she were really worried about being beaten, she'd have frowned
harder,
not stopped." The golden-haired woman was not a very skilled lady's
maid,
yet she was a very observant one.
"But
what made her suspicious?"
Maighdin
shrugged. "Maybe one of us looked surprised, or guilty. Though I can't
say
how she could have noticed without any light."
Soon
enough they had Dairaine trussed up with her ankles and wrists tied
together
behind her back. She would not wriggle far like that. A wadded length
torn from
her shift and tied in place with another piece of blanket served for a
gag that
let her emit only grunts. She twisted her head to glare up at them.
Faile could
not see her face very well, but the woman's expression had to be either
glaring
or pleading, and Dairaine only pleaded with Shaido. She used her
position as
one of Sevanna's gai'shain to bully gai'shain who were not, and her
tale-carrying to bully those who were. The trouble was, they could not
leave
her here. Someone might come at any moment to summon one of them to
serve
Sevanna.
"We
can kill her and hide the body," Alliandre suggested, smoothing her
long
hair. It had become disarrayed in the struggle.
"Where?"
Maighdin said, combing her own sun-gold hair with her fingers. She did
not
sound a lady's maid speaking to a queen. Prisoners were equals in their
captivity or else they aided their captors. It had taken time to teach
Alliandre that. "It has to be somewhere she won't be found for at least
a
day. Sevanna might send men after Galina to bring us back if we're
suspected of
killing one of her belongings." She vested that word with all the scorn
it
would bear. "And I don't trust Galina not to let them bring us back."
Dairaine began struggling against her bonds again and grunting harder
than
ever. Maybe she had decided to plead after all.
"We
aren't going to kill her," Faile told them. She was being neither
squeamish nor merciful. There simply was nowhere they could be sure a
body
would remain hidden long enough, not that they could reach without
being seen.
"I'm afraid our plans have changed a little. Wait here."
Ducking
outside, where the sky was indeed beginning to pearl, she found what
had made
Dairaine suspicious. Bain and Chiad were there in their plain white
robes as
expected, to escort them as far as the meeting place. Rolan and his
friends
might not be done breakfasting yet-she hoped they were not; they might
do
something foolish and ruin everything-and Bain and Chiad had
volunteered to
divert any men who tried to interfere with them. She had not been able
to make
herself ask how they Intended to do that. Some sacrifices deserved a
veil of
secrecy. And all of a heart's gratitude. Two gai'shain holding wicker
baskets
were not enough to rouse suspicion in the Cairhienin woman, but thirty
or forty
gai'shain were, crowding the narrow muddy lane through the gai'shain
tents.
Aravine's plump plain face watched her from a white cowl, and Lusara's
beautiful one. Alvon was there with his son Theril in their robes of
muddy
tentcloth, and Alainia, a plump Amadician silversmith in dirty coarse
white
linen, and Dormin, a stocky Cairhienin bootmaker, and Corvila, a lean
weaver
from right here in Altara, and… They represented not a tenth part of
those who had sworn to her, but a gathering of gai'shain this large
would have
planted suspicion in a stone. At least when added to the three of them
being
dressed. Dairaine likely had heard who had been summoned to Sevanna
this
morning. How had they learned she was leaving today? It was too late to
worry
about that. If any Shaido knew, they would all have been dragged from
the tent
before this.
"What
are you doing here?" she demanded.
"We
wanted to see you go, my Lady," Theril said in his rough, barely
intelligible accents. "We were very careful to come by ones and
twos." Lusara nodded happily, and she was not the only one.
"Well,
we can say goodbye now," Faile said firmly. No need to tell them how
close
they had come to ruining the escape. "Until I come back for you." If
her father would not give her an army, then Perrin would. His
friendship with
Rand al'Thor would provide it. Light. where was he? No! She had to be
glad he
had not caught up yet. Had not gotten himself killed trying to sneak
into the
camp and rescue her. She had to be glad, and not think of what might be
delaying him. "Now go before someone sees you here and runs to tell
tales.
And don't talk to anyone about this." Her adherents were safe enough,
otherwise she would already be chained, but there were too many like
Dairaine
among the gai'shain, and not only among the long-held Cairhienin. Some
people
naturally set to licking wrists wherever they were.
They
bowed or curtsied or knuckled their foreheads, just as if nobody might
be
poking their heads out to see, and scattered in every direction with
chagrined
expressions. They really had expected to watch her leave! She had no
time to
fritter away on exasperation. Hurrying to Bain and Chiad. she hastily
explained
the situation inside the tent.
They
exchanged glances when she finished and put down the baskets to free
fingers
for Maiden handtalk. She avoided looking at their hands, since they
plainly
wanted privacy. Not that she could have understood much in any case.
Their
hands moved very fast. Flame-haired Bain with her dark blue eyes stood
nearly
half a hand taller than she. gray-eyed Chiad just a finger taller. They
were
her close friends, but they had adopted each other as first-sisters,
and that
created bonds closer than any friendship.
''We
will take care of Dairaine Saighan," Chiad said at last. "But it
means you must go into the town alone.''
Faile
sighed, but there was no helping it. Perhaps Rolan was already awake.
He could
be watching her that minute. He always seemed to appear out of nowhere
when she
needed him. Surely he would not interfere with her leaving, not when he
had
promised to take her when he himself left. Yet he still had hopes, so
long as
she wore white. Him and his kissing games! He might want to keep her in
gai'shain robes a little longer. When men wanted to help, they always
thought
their way was the only way.
Bain
and Chiad ducked into the small peaked tent, and Alliandre and Maighdin
came
out. There really was not room inside for five. Maighdin went around
the side
of the tent and returned with a basket like those the other women had
been
carrying. Dirty gai'shain robes bulged out of the top of each, making
them
appear loads of laundry, but beneath were dresses that came near enough
fitting, a hatchet, a sling, cords for making snares, flint and steel,
packets
of flour, meal, dried beans, salt and yeast, a few coins they had been
able to
find, everything they would need to make their way west to find Perrin.
Galina
would take them out of the camp, but there was no saying which
direction her
"Aes Sedai business" would take her then. They had to be self-reliant
from the start. Faile would not put it past the Aes Sedai to abandon
them as
soon as she was able.
Maighdin
stood over her basket with an air of determination, her jaw set and her
eyes firm,
but Alliandre's face was wreathed in smiles.
"Try
not to look so happy," Faile told her. Wetlander gai'shain seldom
smiled,
and never so joyfully.
Alliandre
tried to moderate her expression, but every time she smoothed her
smiles away,
they crept back. "We're escaping today," she said. "It's hard
not to smile."
"You'll
stop if some Wise One sees you and decides to find out why you're
happy."
"We're
hardly likely to meet a Wise One among the gai'shain tents or in
Maiden,"
the woman said through a smile. Determined or not, Maighdin nodded
agreement.
Faile
gave up. In truth, she felt a little giddy herself in spite of
Dairaine. They
were escaping today.
Bain
came out of the tent, holding the tentflap for Chiad, who was carrying
on her
back a blanket-wrapped bundle just large enough to be a small woman
doubled-up.
Chiad was strong, but she had to lean forward a little to support the
weight.
"Why
is she so still?" Faile asked. She had no fear they had killed
Dairaine.
They were fierce about following the rules for gai'shain, and violence
was
forbidden. But that blanket could have been full of wood for all that
it moved.
Bain
spoke softly, an amused light in her eyes. "I stroked her hair and told
her I would be very upset if I had to hurt her. Simple truth,
considering how
much toh even slapping her would cost me." Chiad chuckled. "I think
Dairaine Saighan thought we were threatening her. I think she will be
very
quiet and very still until we let her go." She shook with silent
laughter.
Aiel humor was still a mystery to Faile. She knew they would be
punished
severely for this, though. Aiding an escape attempt was dealt with as
harshly
as trying to escape.
"You
have all my gratitude," she said, "you and Chiad both, now and
forever. I have great toh." She kissed Bain lightly on the cheek. which
made the woman blush as red as her hair, of course. Aiel were almost
prudishly
restrained in public. In some ways.
Bain
glanced at Chiad, and a faint smile appeared on her lips.
"When
you see Gaul, tell him Chiad is gai'shain to a man with strong hands, a
man
whose heart is fire. He will understand. I need to help her carry our
burden to
a safe place. May you always find water and shade, Faile Bashere." She
touched Faile's cheek lightly with her fingertips. "One day, we will
meet
again."
Going
over to Chiad, she took one end of the blanket, and they hurried away
carrying
it between them. Gaul might understand, but Faile did not. Not the
heart of
fire, anyway, and she doubted that Manderic's hands interested Chiad in
the
slightest. The man had bad breath and started getting drunk as soon as
he woke
unless he was going on a raid or hunting. But she put Gaul and Manderic
out of
her mind and shouldered her basket. They had wasted too much time
already.
The
sky was beginning to take on the appearance of actual daylight, and
gai'shain
were stirring among the wildly diverse tents of the camp close on
Maiden's
walls, scurrying off to be about some chore or at least carrying
something to
give a semblance of working, but none paid any mind to three women in
white
carrying baskets of laundry toward the town's gates. There always
seemed to be
laundry to be done, even for Sevanna's gai'shain. There were far too
many
wetlander gai'shain for Faile to know everyone, and she saw no one she
knew
until they came on Arrela and Lacile. shifting from foot to foot with
baskets
on their shoulders. Taller than most Aiel women and dark, Arrela kept
her black
hair cut as short as any Maiden and strode like a man when she walked.
Lacile
was short and pale and slim, and had red ribbons tied in her hair,
which was
not much longer. Her walk was graceful in robes, and had been a
scandalous sway
when she had worn breeches. Their sighs of relief were nearly
identical,
though.
"We
thought something had happened," Arrela said.
"Nothing
we couldn't handle." Faile told her.
"Where
are Bain and Chiad?" Lacile asked anxiously.
"They
have another task," Faile said. "We go alone."
They
exchanged glances, and their sighs were far from relieved this time. Of
course
Rolan would not interfere. Not with them getting away. Of course not.
The
iron-strapped gates of Maiden stood open, shoved back against the
granite
walls, as they had since the city fell. Rust had turned the broad iron
straps
brown, and the hinges were so rusty that pushing the gates shut again
might be
impossible. Pigeons nested in the gray stone towers flanking them, now.
They
were the first to arrive. At least. Faile could see no one ahead of
them down
the street. As they walked through the gates, she retrieved her dagger
from the
pockec inside her sleeve and held it with the blade pressed against her
wrist,
pointing up her arm.
The
other women made similar motions, if not so deftly. Without Bain and
Chiad. and
hoping that Rolan and his friends were otherwise occupied, they had to
provide
their own protection. Maiden was not as dangerous for a woman-for a
gai'shain
woman; Shaido who tried to prey on their own got short shrift-not as
dangerous
as the Shaido portion of the camp, yet women had been assaulted there,
sometimes by groups of men. The Light send if they were accosted, it
was only
by one or two. One or two they might catch by surprise and kill before
they
realized these gai'shain had teeth. If there were more than two. they
would do
what they could, but an Aiel weaver or potter was as dangerous as most
trained
armsmen. Baskets or no baskets, they walked on their toes, heads
swiveling,
ready to spring in any direction.
This
part of the town had not been burned, yet it had a look of desolation.
Broken
dishes and potter crunched beneath their soft white boots. Bits of
clothing,
cut off men and women made gai'shain. still littered the gray paving
stones.
Those sorry, bedraggled rags had lain first in the snow and then in the
rain for
well over a month, and she doubted any ragpicker would have gathered
them, now.
Here and there lay children's toys, a wooden horse or a doll whose
paint was
beginning to flake, dropped by the very young who had been allowed to
flee,
like the very old, the ill and infirm. Slate-roofed buildings of wood
or stone
along the street showed gaping holes where their doors and windows had
been.
Along with anything the Shaido considered valuable or useful, the town
had been
stripped of every easily removable piece of wood, and only the fact
that
tearing down houses was less efficient than cutting firewood in the
surrounding
forests had spared the wooden structures themselves. Those openings
minded
Faile of eye sockets in skulls. She had walked along this street
countless
times, yet this morning, they seemed to be watching her. They made her
scalp
crawl.
Halfway
across the town, she looked back toward the gates, no more than a
hundred and
fifty paces behind. The street was still empty for the moment, but soon
the first
white-clad men and women would materialize with their water buckets.
Fetching
water was a task that began early and lasted all day. They had to
hurry, now.
Turning down a narrower side street, she started to walk faster,
although she
had trouble keeping her basket balanced. The others must have been
having the
same difficulty, yet no one complained. They had to be out of sight
before
those gai'shain appeared. There was no reason for any gai'shain
entering the
town to leave the main street until they reached the cistern below the
fortress. An attempt to curry favor or just a careless word could send
Shaido
into the town hunting for them, and there was only one way out, short
of
climbing onto the walls and dropping ten paces to the ground hoping
that no one
broke a leg.
At
a now signless inn, three stories of stone and empty windows, she
darted into
the common room followed by the others. Lacile set down her basket and
pressed
herself against the doorframe to keep watch up the street. The
beam-ceilinged
room was bare to the dusty floorboards, and the stone fireplaces were
missing
their andirons and firetools. The railing had been stripped from the
staircase
at the back of the room, and the door to the kitchen was gone. too. The
kitchen
was just as empty. She had checked. Pots and knives and spoons were
useful.
Faile lowered her basket to the floor and hurried to the side of the
staircase.
It was a sturdy piece of work, of heavy timbers and made to last for
generations. Tearing it down would have been nearly as hard as tearing
down a
house. She felt underneath, along the top of the wide outer support,
and her
hand closed on the wrist-thick, not quite glassy rod. It had seemed as
good a
hiding place as she could find, a place no one would have any reason to
look,
but she was surprised to find she had been holding her breath.
Lacile
remained by the doorway, but the others hurried to Faile without their
baskets.
"At
last," Alliandre said, gingerly touching the rod with her fingertips.
"The price of our freedom. What is it?"
"An
angreal" Faile said, "or perhaps a ter'angreal. 1 don't know for
certain, except that Galina wants it very badly, so it must be one or
the
other."
Maighdin
put her hand on the rod boldly. "It could be either," she murmured.
"They often have an odd feel. So I've been told, anyway." She claimed
never to have been to the White Tower, but Faile was not so sure as she
once
had been. Maighdin could channel, but so weakly and with so much
difficulty
that the Wise Ones saw no danger in letting her walk free. Well, as
free as any
gai'shain was. Her denials might well be a matter of shame. Faile had
heard
that women who had been put out of the Tower because they could not
become Aes
Sedai sometimes denied ever having gone in order to hide their failure.
Arrela
gave a shake of her head and backed away a step. She was Tairen, and
despite
traveling with Aes Sedai, she was still uncomfortable over the Power or
anything to do with it. She looked at the smooth white rod as if at a
red adder
and licked her lips. "Galina might be waiting on us. She might get
angry
if we make her wait long."
"Is
the way still clear, Lacile?" Faile asked as she stuck the rod far down
into her basket. Arrela exhaled heavily, clearly as relieved at having
the
thing out of her sight as she had been to see Faile earlier.
"Yes,"
the Cairhienin replied, "but I do not understand why." She still
stood so that one eye could peek around the corner of the doorframe.
"The
first gai'shain should be coming for water by now."
"Maybe
something has happened in the camp," Maighdin said. Suddenly, her face
was
grim and her knife was in her hand, a wooden-handled affair with a
chipped and
pitted blade.
Faile
nodded slowly. Maybe something such as Dairaine having been found
already. She
could not tell where Faile and the others had been going, but she might
have
recognized some among the waiting gai'shain. How long would they hold
out if
put to the question? How long would Alvon hold out if Theril were?
"There's nothing we can do about it, in any case. Galina will get us
out."
Even
so, when they left the inn, they ran, carrying the baskets in front of
them and
trying to hold up their long robes so they did not trip. Faile was not
the only
one to look over her shoulder frequently and stumble. She was not sure
whether
or not she was relieved to finally see gai'shain carrying buckets on
yokes
drift across the crossing of the town's main street. She certainly did
not slow
down.
They
did not have far to run. In moments, the smell of charred wood that had
faded
from the rest of Maiden began to grow. The southern end of Maiden was a
ruin.
They halted at the edge of the devastation and edged around a corner so
they
would not be seen by anyone glancing down the street. From where they
stood to the
southern wall, near two hundred paces, marched roofless shells with
blackened
stone walls interspersed with piles of charred beams washed clean of
ash by the
rains. In places, not even the heaviest timbers remained. Only on the
south
side of this street were there any structures even close to whole. This
was
where the fire that raged after the Shaido took the city had been
finally
stopped. Half a dozen buildings stood without roofs, though the lower
floors
looked intact, and twice as many were leaning piles of black timbers
and
half-burned boards that appeared on the edge of collapse.
"There."
Maighdin said, pointing east along the street. A long length of red
cloth
fluttered in the breeze where she pointed. It was tied to a house that
seemed
ready to fall in. Walking to it slowly, they rested their baskets on
the paving
stones. The red cloth fluttered again.
"Why
would she want to meet us here'." Alliandre muttered. "That could
cave in if anybody sneezed." She rubbed at her nose as though the word
had
given her the urge.
"It
is quite sound. I inspected it." Galina's voice behind them jerked
Faile's
head around. The woman was striding toward them, plainly from one of
the sound
buildings on the north side of the street. After so long seeing her in
that belt
and collar of gold and firedrops, she looked odd without them. She
still wore
her white silk robes, but the absence of the jewelry was convincing.
Galina had
not somehow managed to turn truth on its head. She was leaving today.
"Why
not in one of the sound buildings?" Faile demanded. "Or right
here?"
"Because
I don't want anyone to see it in my hands,' Galina said, walking past
her.
"Because no one will look inside that ruin. Because I say so." She
stepped through what had been a doorway, ducking under a heavy, charred
roof
beam that slanted across the opening, and immediately turned to her
right and
began descending stairs. "Don't dawdle."
Faile
exchanged looks with the other women. This was more than passing
strange.
"If
she'll get us out of here," Alliandre growled, snatching up her basket,
"I'm willing to hand her the thing in a privy." Still, she waited on
Faile to pick up her own basket and lead the way.
Charred
timbers and blackened boards hung low over the stone stairs that led
downward,
but Galina's ease at entering reassured Faile. The woman would not risk
being
buried alive or crushed at the very moment she finally gained the rod.
Bars and
beams of light filtering through gaps in the wreckage gave enough
illumination
to show that the basement was quite clear despite the treacherous
nature of
what lay above. Large barrels stacked along one stone wall, most
scorched and
with staves sprung from the heat, said this had been an inn or a tavern.
Or
perhaps a wine merchant's shop. The area around Maiden had produced a
great
deal of mediocre wine.
Galina
stood in the middle of the grit-covered stone floor, in a small beam of
light.
Her face was all Aes Sedai calm, her agitation of the previous day
completely
subdued. "Where is it?" she said coolly. "Give it to me."
Faile
set her basket down and shoved her hand deep inside. When she brought
out the
white rod, Galina's hands twitched. Faile extended the rod toward her,
and she
reached for it almost hesitantly. If she had not known better, Faile
would have
said she was afraid to touch it. Galina's fingers closed around the
rod, and
she exhaled heavily. She jerked the rod away before Faile could release
it. The
Aes Sedai seemed to be trembling, but her smile was… triumphant.
"How
do you intend to get us away from the camp?" Faile asked. "Should we
change our clothes now?"
Galina
opened her mouth, then suddenly raised her free hand, palm out. Her
head tilted
toward the stairs as if listening. "It may be nothing," she said
softly, "but it's best if I check. Wait here and be quiet. Be quiet,"
she hissed when Faile started to speak. Lifting the hem of her silk
robes, the
Aes Sedai scurried to the stairs and started up like a woman uneasy
about what
she might find at the top. Her feet passed out of sight behind the
sagging
boards and beams.
"Did
any of you hear anything?" Faile whispered. They all shook their heads.
"Maybe she's holding the Power. I've heard that can-"
"She
wasn't," Maighdin interrupted. "I've never seen her embracing-"
Suddenly,
wood groaned overhead, and with a thunderous crash charred beams and
boards
collapsed, sending out blinding billows of black dust and grit that
sent Faile
into paroxysms of coughing. The smell of charring suddenly was as thick
in the
air as it had been the day Maiden burned. Something falling from above
hit her
shoulder hard. and she crouched, trying to protect her head. Someone
cried out.
She heard other falling objects hit the basement's stone floor, boards
or
pieces of boards. Nothing made a loud enough noise to be a roof beam or
a heavy
joist.
Eventually-it
seemed like hours; it might have been minutes- the rain of debris
stopped. The
dust began to thin. Quickly she looked around for her companions, and
found
them all huddling on the floor with their arms around their heads.
There seemed
to be more light than before. A little more. Some of the gaps overhead
were
wider, now. A trickle of blood ran down Alliandre's face from her
scalp.
Everyone was dusted with black from head to foot.
"Is
anyone injured?" Faile asked, finishing with a cough. The dust had not
cleared completely, and her throat and tongue felt coated with it. The
stuff
tasted like charcoal.
"No,"
Alliandre said, touching her scalp gingerly. "A scrape, that's all."
The others denied injury as well, though Arrela seemed to be moving her
right
arm carefully. No doubt they had all suffered bruises, and Faile
thought her
left shoulder was going to be black and blue shortly, but she would not
count
that a real injury.
Then
her eyes fell on the stairs, and she wanted to weep. Wreckage from
above filled
the whole space where the staircase had been. They might have been able
to
squeeze through some of the gaps overhead. Faile thought she could
reach them
standing on Arrela's shoulders, but she doubted she could pull herself
through
with one good arm. Or that Arrela could. And if either managed, she
would be in
the middle of a burned-out ruin and likely as not to make the rest of
the thing
fall in, too.
"No!"
Alliandre moaned. "Not now! Not when we were so close!" Rising, she
rushed as near to the rubble as she could get, almost pressing against
it, and
began to shout. "Galina! Help us! We're trapped! Channel and lift the
boards away! Clear a path for us to get out! Galina! Galina! Galina!"
She
sagged against the tangle of timbers. shoulders shaking. "Galina,'' she
wept. "Galina. help us."
"Galina's
gone," Faile said bitterly. The woman would have answered if she was
still
above or had any intention of aiding them. "With us trapped down here,
maybe
dead, she has the perfect excuse for leaving us behind. Anyway. I don't
know
whether an Aes Sedai could move some of those timbers if she tried."
She
did not want to mention the possibility that Galina had arranged that
excuse
herself. Light, she should never have slapped the woman. It was too
late for
self-recrimination, though.
"What
are we going to do now?" Arrela asked.
"Dig
ourselves out," Faile and Maighdin said at the same instant. Faile
looked
at the other woman in surprise. Her maid's dirty face wore a queen's
resolve.
"Yes."
Alliandre said, straightening. She turned around, and if runnels of
tear-tracks
marked the dust on her face, no new tears appeared. She really was a
queen, and
could not like being shamed by the courage of a lady's maid. "We'll dig
ourselves out. And if we fail… If we fail, I will not die wearing
thh't" Unfastening her golden belt, she flung it contemptuously into a
corner of the basement. Her golden collar followed.
"We'll
need those to make our way through the Shaido camp," Faile said gently.
"Galina may not be taking us out, but I intend leaving today."
Dairaine made that imperative. Bain and Chiad could not keep her hidden
long.
"Or as soon we can dig out, anyway. We'll pretend we've been sent to
pick
berries." She did not want to step on her liege-woman's bold gesture,
though. "However, we don't need to wear them now." Removing her belt
and collar, she righted her basket and set them atop the dirty
gai'shain robes.
The others emulated her. Al-liandre retrieved her own belt and collar
with a
rueful laugh. At least she could laugh again. Faile wished she could.
The
jumble of charred timbers and half-burned boards filling the staircase
resembled one of those blacksmith's puzzles her Perrin enjoyed. Almost
everything seemed to be propping up something else. Worse, the heavier
timbers
might be beyond all of them working together. But if they could clear
enough
for them to be able to crawl through, writhing between the thick beams…
It
would be dangerous, that crawl. But when a dangerous path was your only
route
to safety, you had to take it.
A
few boards came away easily and were piled at the back of the basement,
but
after that everything had to be chosen with care, examined to see
whether
anything would fall if it were removed, hands feeling back as far as
they could
go into the tangle, groping for nails that might have caught, trying
not think
about the whole pile shifting and trapping an arm, crushing it. Only
then could
they begin pulling, sometimes two of them together, tugging harder and
harder
until the piece suddenly gave. That work went slowly, with the great
pile
occasionally groaning, or shifting slightly. Everyone darted back,
holding
their breath, when that happened. Nobody moved again until they were
sure the
snarl of timbers was not going to collapse. The work became the focus
of their
world. Once, Faile thought she heard wolves howling. Wolves generally
made her
think of Perrin, but not this time. The work was all.
Then
Alliandre wrenched a charred board free, and with a great groan, the
mass began
to shift. Toward them. Everyone ran toward the back of the basement as
the pile
fell in with a deafening rumble, sending up more billows of dust.
When
they stopped coughing and could see again, dimly, with dust still
hanging in
the air, perhaps a quarter of the basement was filled. All of their
work
undone, and worse, the jumble was leaning toward them precariously.
Groaning,
it sagged a little more toward them and stopped. Everything about it
said the
first board pulled free would bring the whole mass down on their heads.
Arrela
began to cry softly. Tantalizing gaps admitted sunlight and allowed
them to see
the street, the sky, but nothing anyone could wriggle through, even
Lacile.
Faile could see the red scarf Galina had used to mark the building. It
fluttered for a moment in the breeze.
Staring
at the scarf, she seized Maighdin's shoulder. "I want you to try to
make
that scarf do something the wind wouldn't make it do."
"You
want to attract attention?" Alliandre said hoarsely. "It's far more
likely to be Shaido than anyone else.''
"Better
that than dying down here of thirst," Faile replied, her voice harsher
than she wanted. She would never see Perrin again, then. If Sevanna had
her
chained, she would at least be alive for him to rescue. He would rescue
her;
she knew it. Her duty now was to keep the women who followed her alive.
And if
that meant captivity, so be it. "Maighdin?"
"I
might spend all day trying to embrace the Source and never succeed,"
the sun-haired
woman said in dull tones. She stood slumped, staring at nothing. Her
face
suggested that she saw an abyss beneath her feet. "And if I do embrace
it,
I can almost never weave anything."
Faile
loosened her grip on Maighdin and smoothed her hair instead. "I know
it's
difficult," she said soothingly. "Well, in truth, I don't know. I've
never done it. But you have. And you can do it again. Our lives depend
on you,
Maighdin. I know the strength that's in you. I've seen it time and
again. There
is no surrender in you. I know you can do it, and so do you."
Slowly,
Maighdin's back straightened, and despair slid off her face. She might
still
see the abyss, but if she fell, she would fall without flinching. "I'll
try," she said.
For
a long while she stared up at the scarf, then shook her head
dejectedly.
"The Source is there, like the sun just beyond the edge of sight,"
she whispered, "but every time I try to embrace it, it's like trying to
catch smoke with my fingers."
Faile
hastily pulled the gai'sbain robes from her basket and another.
careless of the
gold belts and collars falling to the stone floor. "Sit down," she
said, arranging the robes in a pile. "Make yourself comfortable. I know
you can do it, Maighdin." Pressing the other woman down, she folded her
legs and sat beside her.
"You
can do it." Alliandre said softly, sitting down on Maighdin's other
side.
"Yes,
you can," Lacile whispered, joining them.
"I
know you can." Arrela said as she lowered herself to the floor.
Time
passed, with Maighdin staring at the scarf. Faile whispered
encouragement and
held onto hope hard. Suddenly the scarf went rigid, as if something had
pulled
it taut. A wondrous smile appeared on Maighdin's face as the scarf
began to
swing back and forth like a pendulum. Six, seven, eight times it swung.
Then it
fluttered in the breeze and fell limp.
"That
was marvelous," Faile said.
"Marvelous,"
Alliandre said. "You re going to save us, Maighdin."
"Yes."
Arrela murmured, "you're going to save us, Maighdin."
There
were many kinds of battle. Sitting on the floor, whispering
encouragement,
Maighdin fighting to find what she could seldom find. they fought for
their
lives while the scarf swung, then fell to the breeze, swung and fell
limp. But
they fought on.
Galina
kept her head down and tried not to hurry as she made her way out of
Maiden,
past the streams of white-clad men and women carrying empty buckets
into the
town and full buckets back out. She did not want to attract attention,
not
without that cursed belt and necklace. She had donned the things when
she
dressed in the night, while Ther-ava was still asleep, but it had been
such a
pleasure to remove them and hide them with the clothes and other things
she had
secreted away for her escape that she could not resist. Besides.
Therava would
have been angered to wake and find her missing. She would have ordered
a watch
for her "little Lina," and everyone marked her by those jewels. Well,
they would pay to help her return to the Tower, now, return to her
rightful
place. That arrogant Faile and the other fools were dead or asgood as,
and she
was free. She stroked the rod, hidden in her sleeve, and shivered with
delight.
Free!
She
did hate leaving Therava alive, but if anyone had entered the woman's
tent and
found her with a knife through her heart. Galina would have been the
first
suspect. Besides… Images rose in her head, of her bending stealthily
over
the sleeping Therava, the woman's own belt knife in hand, of Therava's
eyes
snapping open, meeting hers in the darkness, of her screaming, of her
hand
opening nervelessly to drop the knife, of her begging, of Therava… No.
No! It would not have been that way. Certainly not! She had left
Therava alive
of necessity, not because she was… Not for any other reason.
Suddenly
wolves howled, wolves in every direction, a dozen or more. Her feet
stopped of
their own accord. A motley collection of tents surrounded her, walled
tents,
peaked tents, low Aiel tents. She had walked right through the
gai'shain portion
of the camp without realizing it. Her eyes rose to the ridge west of
Maiden,
and she flinched. Thick fog curled along the whole length of it.
concealing the
trees as far as she could see in either direction. The town walls hid
the ridge
to the east, yet she was sure there would be thick fog there, too. The
man had
come! The Great Lord preserve her, she had been just in time. Well, he
would
not find his fool wife even if he managed to survive whatever he was
about to
try. nor would he find Galina Casban.
Thanking
the Great Lord that Therava had not forbidden her to ride-the woman had
much
preferred dangling the possibility that she might be allowed, if she
groveled
sufficiently-Galina hurried toward her hidden stores. Let the fools who
wanted
to die here, die. She was free. Free!
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
The Last Knot
Perrin
stood just below the ridgetop, near the edge of the fog, and studied
the
encampment and stone-walled town below. Two hundred paces of fairly
steep slope
sparsely dotted with low brush down to level ground, perhaps seven
hundred more
of cleared ground to the first tents, then better than a mile to the
town. It
seemed so close, now. He did not use his looking glass. A glint off the
lens
from the sun just peeking over the horizon, a fingernail edge of
golden-red,
might ruin everything. The grayness around him curled but did not
really move
with the breeze, even when it gusted and made his cloak stir. The dense
mist on
the far ridge, obscuring the windmill there, seemed too still as well,
if you
studied it a while. How long before someone among those tents noticed?
There
was nothing to be done for it. The fog felt like any fog, damp and a
little
cool, but somehow Neald had fixed these mists in place before he went
off to
his other tasks. The sun would not burn them off even at noonday, or so
the
Asha'man claimed. Everything would be done by noon, one way or another.
but
Perrin hoped the man was right. The sky was clear, and the day looked
to be
warm for early spring.
Only
a few Shaido seemed to be outside in the camp, relatively speaking, but
thousands of white-clad figures bustled about among the tents. Tens of
thousands. His eyes ached to find Faile among them, his heart ached to
see her,
but he could as well try to pick out one particular pin from a
barley-basket of
them spilled on the ground. Instead, he stared at the town's gates,
standing
wide open as they had every time he had gazed on them. Invitingly wide.
They
called to him. Soon, Faile and her companions would know it was time to
head
for those gates, and the towered fortress that bulked at the north end
of the
town. She might be at chores, if the Maidens were right about how the
prisoners
would be treated as gai'shain, but she would know to slip away and go
to the
fortress. She and her friends, and likely Alyse as well. Whatever her
scheme
with the Shaido, the Aes Sedai would not want to remain on a
battleground. A
second sister in the fortress might come in handy. The Light send it
did not
come to that.
He
had planned with care for every eventuality he could imagine down to
outright
disaster, yet this was no blacksmith's puzzle however much he wished it
were.
The twisted iron pieces of a blacksmith's puzzle moved only in certain
ways.
Move them in the right way, and the puzzle came apart. People could
move in a
thousand ways, sometimes in directions you never believed possible till
it
happened. Would his plans stand up when the Shaido did something
unexpected?
They would do it, almost certainly, and all he could do in return was
hope it
would not lead to that disaster. With a last, longing look at Maiden's
gates,
he turned and walked back up the ridge.
Inside
the fog, even he could not see ten paces, but he soon found Dannil
Lewin among
the trees on the ridgetop. Lean to the point of skinny, with a pickaxe
for a
nose and thick mustaches in the Taraboner style, Dannil stood out even
when you
could not see his face clearly. Other Two Rivers men were shapes beyond
him,
growing dimmer and dimmer with distance. Most were squatting or sitting
on the
ground, resting while they had the chance. Jori Congar was trying to
entice
some of the others into a game of dice, but he was quiet about it, so
Perrin
let it pass. No one was accepting the offer anyway. Jori was uncommon
lucky
with his dice.
Dannil
made a leg when he saw Perrin and murmured, "My Lord." The man had
been spending too much time with Faile's people. He called it acquiring
polish,
whatever that was supposed to mean. A man was not a piece of brass.
"Make
sure nobody does anything woolhead foolish like I just did, Dannil.
Sharp eyes
below might spot movement near the edge of the fog and send men to
investigate."
Dannil
coughed discreetly into his hand. Light, he was getting as bad as any
of those
Cairhienin and Tairens. "As you say. my Lord. I'll keep everybody
back."
"My
Lord?" Balwer's dry voice said out of the mist. "Ah, there you are,
my Lord." The little stick of a man appeared, followed by two larger
shapes, though one was not much taller. They halted at a gesture from
him.
indistinct forms in the fog, and he came on alone. "Masema has put in
an
appearance below, my Lord," he said quietly, folding his hands. 'I
thought
it best to keep Haviar and Nerion out of his sight, and his men's,
under the
circumstances. I don't believe he is suspicious of them. I think he has
anyone
he is suspicious of killed. But out of sight, out of mind is best."
Perrin's
jaw tightened. Masema was supposed to be beyond the eastern ridge with
his
army, if it could be called that. He had counted those men-and a few
women-as
they shuffled uneasily through gateways made by the two Asha'man, and
they were
twenty thousand if they were one. Masema had always been vague about
their
numbers, and Perrin had not had an accurate count until last night.
Ragged and
dirty, only one here or there wore a helmet much less a breastplate,
but every
hand had gripped sword or spear or axe, halberd or crossbow, the women
included. The women among Masema's followers were worse than the men by
far, and
that was saying something. For the most part the lot of them were only
good for
terrorizing people into swearing to follow the Dragon Reborn-the colors
whirled
in his head and were shattered by his anger-that and murdering them if
they
refused. They had a better purpose today. "Maybe it's time for Haviar
and
Nerion to start staying away from Masema's people for good," he said.
"Jf
you wish it, my Lord, but in my judgment, they still are as safe as any
man can
be doing what they do. and they're eager." Baiwer tilted his head, a
curious sparrow in a branch. "They haven't been corrupted, if that's
what
you fear, my Lord. That's always a danger when you send a man to
pretend to be
what he isn't, but I have a keen nose for the signs."
"Keep
them close, Baiwer." After today, with luck, there might not be much of
Masema's army left to spy on in any case. There might not even be a
Masema to
worry about.
Perrin
scrambled down the brushy reverse slope, past where the Mayener and
Ghealdanin
lancers were waiting beside their horses in the thick mist, streamered
lances
propped on their shoulders or steel heads driven into the ground. The
Winged
Guards' red-painted helmets and breastplates might have been safe
enough on the
ridgetop, but not the Ghealdanin's burnished armor, and since Gallenne
and
Ar-ganda both bristled if one was favored over the other, both waited
here. The
fog extended quite some distance-Neald claimed that was intentional,
but the
man had smelled surprised, and pleased, when he realized what he had
done-so
Perrin was still walking through grayness when he reached the bottom of
the
ridge, where all of the high-wheeled carts stood in a line with horses
hitched.
The dim figures of the Cairhienin cart drivers moved about them,
checking
harness. tightening the ropes that held the canvas covers on.
Masema
was waiting, and Perrin wanted nothing so much as to chew off the man's
arm,
but he spotted the stout shape of Basel Gill beside one of the carts
and headed
that way. Lini was with him, wrapped in a dark cloak, and Breane with
her arm
around the waist of Lamgwin, Perrin's hulking manservant. Master Gill
snatched
off his brimmed hat to reveal thin graying hair combed back over a bald
spot
that it failed to cover. Lini sniffed and pointedly avoided looking at
Perrin
while pretending to adjust her cowl. She smelled of anger and fear.
Master Gill
just smelled of fear.
"It's
time for you to start north, Master Gill," Perrin said. "When you
reach the mountains, follow them until you strike the Jehannah Road.
With luck,
we'll catch you up before you reach the mountains. but if not. send
Alliandre's
servants off to Jehannah, then you head east through the pass, then
north
again. We'll be as close behind you as we can." If his plan did not go
too
far awry. Light, he was a blacksmith, not a soldier. But even Tylee had
finally
agreed it was a good plan.
"I
will not leave this spot until I know that Maighdin is safe." Lini told
the fog, her thin voice a reed of iron. "And the Lady Faile. of
course."
Master
Gill rubbed a hand back over his head. "My Lord. Lamgwin and I were
thinking maybe we could help out. The Lady Faile means a great deal to
us, and
Maighdin… Maighdin is one of our own. I know one end of a sword from
the
other, and so does Lamgwin." He was wearing one belted around his bulk,
yet if he had handled a sword these past twenty years. Perrin would eat
the
whole great length of that belt. Breane's grip on Lamgwin tightened,
but the
big man patted her shoulder and rested his other hand on the hilt of a
shortsword. The fog obscured his scarred face and sunken knuckles.
He
was a tavern brawler, though a good man even so, but never a swordsman.
"You're
my shambayan. Master Gill," Perrin said firmly. "It's your duty to
get the cart drivers and grooms and servants to safety. Yours and
Lamgwin's.
Now go on with you and see to it." The stout man nodded reluctantly.
Breane breathed a small sigh of relief when Lam-gwin knuckled his
forehead in
acquiescence. Perrin doubted that the man could have heard the sigh,
though
Lamgwin put his arm around her and murmured comforting words.
Lini
was not so compliant. Back stiff as a rod, she addressed the fog again.
"I
will not leave this spot until I know-"
Perrin
slapped his hands together with a loud crack, startling her into
looking at him
in surprise. "All you can do here is catch the ague from standing in
the
damp. That and die, if the Shaido manage to break through. I'll bring
Faile
out. I'll bring Maighdin and the others out." He would, or die himself
in
the attempt. There was no point saying that, though, and reason not to.
They
had to believe in their bones that he would be following with Faile and
the
rest. "And you are going north, Lini. Faile will be upset with me if I
let
anything happen to you. Master Gill, you make sure she rides with you
if you
have to tie her up and put her in the back of a cart."
Master
Gill jerked, crumpling his hat between his hands. He smelled of alarm,
suddenly, and Lini of pure indignation. Amusement filled Lamgwin's
scent, and
he rubbed at his nose as though concealing a smile, but strangely,
Breane was
indignant, too. Well, he had never claimed to understand women. If he
could not
understand the woman he was married to, which he could not half the
time, then
it was unlikely he ever would understand the rest of them.
In
the end, Lini actually climbed up beside the driver of a cart without
having to
be forced, though she slapped away Master Gill's hand when he tried to
assist
her. and the line of carts began to trundle off northward though the
fog.
Behind one of the carts, laden with the Wise Ones' tents and
possessions,
marched a cluster of white-clad gai'shain, meek even now, men and women
with
their cowls up and their eyes lowered. They were Shaido. taken at
Cairhien. and
in a few months they would put off white and return to their clan.
Perrin had
had them watched, discreetly, despite the Wise Ones' assurances that
they would
adhere to ji'e'toh in this regard whatever others they abandoned, yet
it
appeared the Wise Ones were right. They still numbered seventeen. None
had
tried to run off and warn the Shaido beyond the ridge. The carts' axles
had
been greased liberally, but they still creaked and squealed to his
ears. With
luck, he and Faile would catch up to them shy of the mountains.
As
the strings of spare horses began to pass him, on long leads held by
mounted
grooms, a Maiden appeared in the mist coming down the line of carts.
Slowly she
resolved into Sulin, shoufa around her neck to bare her short white
hair and
black veil hanging down onto her chest. A fresh slash across her left
cheek
would add another scar to her face unless she accepted Healing from one
of the
sisters. She might not. Maidens seemed to have odd attitudes about Wise
Ones'
apprentices, or maybe it was just that these apprentices were Aes
Sedai. They
even saw Annoura as an apprentice, though she was not.
"The
Shaido sentries to the north are dead. Perrin Aybara," she said. "And
the men who were going out to replace them. They danced well, for
Shaido."
"You
took casualties?" he asked quietly.
"Elienda
and Briain woke from the dream." She might have been speaking of the
weather rather than two deaths among women she knew. "We all must wake
eventually. We had to carry Aviellin the last two miles. She will need
Healing." So. She would accept it.
"I'll
send one of the Aes Sedai with you," he said, looking around in the
fog.
Aside from the line of horses passing him, he could see nothing. "As
soon
as I can find one."
They
found him almost as he spoke, Annoura and Masuri striding out of the
fog
leading their horses with Berelain and Masema, his shaven head
glistening
damply. Even in the mist, there was no mistaking the rumpled nature of
the
man's brown coat, or the crude darn on the shoulder. None of the gold
his
followers looted stuck to his hands. It all went to the poor. That was
the only
good that could be said of Masema. But then, a fair number of the poor
that
gold went to feed had been made poor by having their possessions stolen
and
their shops or farms burned by Masema's people. For some reason,
Berelain was
wearing the coronet of the First of Mayene this morning, the golden
hawk in
flight above her brow, though her riding dress and cloak were plain
dark gray.
Beneath her light, flowery perfume, her scent was patience and anxiety,
as odd
a combination as Perrin had ever smelled. The six Wise Ones were with
them,
too. dark shawls draped over their arms, folded kerchiefs around their
temples
holding back their long hair. With all their necklaces and bracelets of
gold
and ivory, they made Berelain appear simply dressed for once. Aram was
one of
their number as well, the wolfhead pommel of his sword rising above one
red-striped shoulder, and the fog could not hide the absence of his
habitual
glower. The man gravitated toward Masema and seemed almost to bask in
some
light that Masema gave off. Perrin wondered whether he should have sent
Aram
with the carts. But if he had. he was sure Aram would have leaped off
and
sneaked back as soon as he was out of Perrin's sight.
He
explained Aviellin's need to the two Aes Sedai, but to his surprise,
when
Masuri said she would come, fair-haired Edarra raised a hand that
stopped the
slim Brown in her tracks. Annoura shifted uncomfortably. She was no
apprentice,
and uneasy over Seonid and Ma-suri's relationship with the Wise Ones.
They
tried to include her in it, and sometimes succeeded.
"Janina
will see to it." Edarra said. "She has more skill than you, Masuri
Sokawa."
Masuri's
mouth tightened, but she kept silent. The Wise Ones were quite capable
of
switching an apprentice for speaking up at the wrong time, even if she
did
happen to be an Aes Sedai. Sulin led Janina, a flaxen-haired woman who
never
seemed to be ruffled by anything, off into the fog, Janina striding as
quickly
as Sulin despite her bulky skirts. So the Wise Ones had learned
Healing, had
they? That might be useful later in the day; the Light send it was not
needed
often.
Watching
the pair disappear into the murk, Masema grunted. The thick mist hid
the
ever-burning intensity of his deep-set eyes and obscured the triangular
white
scar on his cheek, but his scent was full in Perrin's nose, hard and
sharp as a
freshly stropped razor yet twitching in a frenzy. That smell of madness
sometimes made him think his nose must bleed from breathing it.
"Bad
enough you use these blasphemous women who do what only the Lord
Dragon,
blessed be his name, may do," Masema said, his voice full of the heat
that
the fog concealed in his eyes.
The
colors spinning in Perrin's head turned into a brief image of Rand and
Min and
a tall man in a black coat, an Asha'man, and he felt a shock right down
to his
boots. Rand's left hand was gone! No matter. Whatever had happened, had
happened. And today his business lay elsewhere.
"… but if they know Healing," Masema continued, "it will be that
much harder to kill the savages. A pity you won't let the Seanchan
leash all of
them."
His
sidelong glance at Annoura and Masuri said he included them, despite
the fact
both had visited him in secret more than once. They regarded him with
Aes Sedai
calm, though Masuri's slim hands moved once as if to smooth her brown
skirts.
She said she had changed her mind and now believed the man must be
killed, so
why was she meeting him? Why was Annoura? Why did Masema allow them? He
more
than hated Aes Sedai. Perhaps answers could be found now that Haviar
and Nerion
no longer needed protection.
Behind
Masema, the Wise Ones stirred. Fire-haired Carelle, who looked as if
she possessed
a temper though she did not, actually stroked the hilt of her belt
knife, and
Nevarin, who could have given Nynaeve lessons in getting angry, gripped
hers.
Masema should have felt those eyes boring into his back, but his scent
never
shifted. Insane he might be, but never a coward.
"You
wanted to speak to Lord Perrin, my Lord Prophet," Berelain said gently,
though Perrin could smell the strain of her smile.
Masema
stared at her. "I am simply the Prophet of the Lord Dragon, not a lord.
The Lord Dragon is the only lord, now. His coming has shattered all
bonds and
destroyed all titles. King and queens, lords and ladies, are but dust
beneath
his feet."
Those
whirling hues threatened again, but Perrin crushed them. "What are you
doing here?" he demanded. There was no way to soften moments with
Masema.
The man was as hard as a good file. "You're supposed to be with your
men.
You risked being seen by coming here, and you'll risk it again going
back. I
don't trust your people to hold for five minutes without you there to
stiffen
their spines. They'll run as soon as they see the Shaido coming their
way."
"They
are not my people, Aybara. They are the Lord Dragon's people." Light,
being around Masema meant having to stomp on those colors every few
minutes!
"I left Nengar in charge. He has fought more battles than you have
dreamed
of. Including against the savages. I also gave the women orders to kill
any man
who tries to run and have let it be known that I will hunt down anyone
who
escapes the women. They will hold to the last man, Aybara.''
"You
sound as if you're not going back," Perrin said.
"I
intend to stay close to you." Fog might hide the heat in Masema's eyes,
but Perrin could feel it. "A pity if any misfortune should befall you
just
as you reclaim your wife."
So
a small part of his plan had unraveled already. A hope really, rather
than part
of the plan. If all else went well, the Shaido who managed to flee
would carve
a way through Masema's people without more than slowing a step, but
instead of
taking a Shaido spear through his ribs, Masema would be… keeping an eye
on
him. Without any doubt, the man's bodyguard was not far off in the fog,
two
hundred or so ruffians better armed and better mounted than the rest of
his
army. Perrin did not look at Berelain, but the scent of her worry had
strengthened. Masema had reason to want both of them dead. He would
warn
Gallenne that his primary task today would be protecting Berelain from
Masema's
men. And he would have to watch his own back.
Off
in the fog. a brief flash of silver-blue light appeared, and he
frowned. It was
too early yet for Grady. Two figures coalesced out of the mist. One was
Neald,
not strutting for once. In fact, he stumbled. His face looked tired.
Burn him.
why was he wasting his strength this way? The other was a young
Seanchan in
lacquered armor with a single thin plume on the peculiar helmet he
carried
beneath his arm. Perrin recognized him, Gueye Arabah. a lieutenant
Tylee
thought well of. The two Aes Sedai gathered their skirts as if to keep
him from
brushing against them, though he went nowhere near them. For his part,
he
missed a step when he came close enough to make out their faces, and
Perrin
heard him swallow hard. He smelled skittish, of a sudden.
Arabah's
bow included Perrin and Berelain. and he frowned slightly at Masema as
though
wondering what such a ragged fellow was doing in their company. Masema
sneered,
and the Seanchan's free hand drifted toward his sword hilt before he
stopped
it. They seemed touchy folk, Seanchan did. But Arabah did not waste
time.
"Banner-General Khirgan's compliments, my Lord, my Lady First.
Morat'raken
report those bands of Aiel are moving faster than expected. They will
arrive
some time today, possibly as soon as noon. The group to the west is
perhaps
twenty-five or thirty thousand, the one to the east larger by a third.
About
half of them are wearing white, and there will be children, of course,
but that
is still a lot of spears to have behind you. The Banner-General wishes
to know
if you would like to discuss altering the deployments. She suggests
moving a
few thousand of the Altaran lancers to join you."
Perrin
grimaced. There would be at least three or four thousand algal'd'shwai
with
each of those bands. A lot of spears to have at his back for certain
sure.
Neald yawned. "How are you feeling, Neald?"
"Oh,
I'm ready to do whatever needs doing, I am, my Lord," the man said with
just a hint of his usual jauntiness.
Perrin
shook his head. The Asha'man could not be asked to make one gateway
more than
necessary. He prayed that they would not fall one short. "By noon,
we'll
be done here. Tell the Banner-General we go ahead as planned." And pray
that nothing else went amiss. He did not add that aloud, though.
Out
in the fog, wolves howled, an eerie cry that rose all around Maiden. It
was
truly begun, now.
"You're
doing wonderfully, Maighdin," Faile croaked. She felt lightheaded, and
her
throat was dry from encouraging the woman. Everyone's throat was dry.
By the
slant of the light coming through the gaps overhead, it was near
midmorning,
and they had been talking without cease for most of that. They had
tried
tapping the unbroken barrels, but the wine inside was too rancid even
for
wetting lips. Now they were taking turns with the encouragement. She
was
sitting alongside her sun-haired maid while the others rested against
the back
wall, as far from that leaning jumble of boards and timbers as they
could get.
"You're going to save us, Maighdin."
Above
them, the red scarf was just visible through that narrow gap in the
tangle. It
had hung limply for some time, now, except when the breeze caught it.
Maighdin
stared at it fixedly. Her dirty face glistened with sweat, and she
breathed as
if she had been running hard. Suddenly the scarf went taut and began to
swing,
once, twice, three times. Then the breeze sent it fluttering, and it
fell.
Maighdin continued to stare.
"That
was beautiful," Faile said hoarsely. The other woman was getting tired.
More time was passing between each success, and the successes were
lasting a
shorter time. "It was-"
Abruptly
a face appeared beside the scarf, one hand gripping the length of red.
For a
moment, she thought she must be imagining it. Aravine's face framed by
her
white cowl.
"I
see her!" the woman said excitedly. "I see the Lady Faile and
Maighdin! They're alive!" Voices raised a cheer, quickly stilled.
Maighdin
swayed as if she might fall over, but a beautiful smile wreathed her
face. Faile
heard weeping behind her, and wanted to weep with joy herself. Friends
had
found them, not Shaido. They might escape yet.
Pushing
herself to her feet, she moved closer to the leaning pile of charred
rubble.
She tried to work moisture into her mouth, but it was thick. "We're all
alive," she managed in husky voice. "How in the Light did you find
us?"
"It
was Theril, my Lady," Aravine replied. "The scamp followed you
despite your orders, and the Light bless him for it. He saw Galina
leave, and
the building fall in, and he thought you were dead. He sat down and
cried." A voice protested in rough Amadician accents, and Aravine
turned
her head for a moment. "I know someone who's been crying when I see
him.
boy. You just be thankful you stopped to cry. When he saw the scarf
move, my
Lady, he came running for help."
"You
tell him there's no shame in tears," Faile said. "Tell him I've seen
my husband cry when tears were called for."
"My
Lady," Aravine said hesitantly, "he said Galina pulled on a timber
when she came out. It was set like a lever, he said. He said she made
the
building collapse."
"Why
would she do that?" Alliandre demanded. She had helped Maighdin to her
feet and half supported her to reach Faile's side. Lacile and Arrela
joined
them, alternating between tears and laughter. Alliandre's face was a
thunderhead.
Faile
grimaced. How often in the last few hours had she wished she had that
slap
back? Galina had promised. Could the woman be Black Ajah? "That doesn't
matter now. One way or another, I'll see her repaid." How was another
matter. Galina was Aes Sedai. after all. "Aravine, how many people did
you
bring? Can you-?"
Large
hands took Aravine by the shoulders and moved her aside. "Enough
talk." Rolan's face appeared in the gap, shoufa around his neck and
veil
hanging onto his chest. Rolan! "We cannot clear anything with you
standing
there, Faile Bashere. This thing may fall in when we start. Go to the
other end
and huddle against the far wall."
"What
are you doing here?" she demanded.
The
man chuckled. He chuckled! "You still wear white, woman. Do as you are
told, or when I have you out of there, I will smack your bottom
soundly. And
then maybe we will soothe your tears with a kissing game."
She
showed him her teeth, hoping he did not take it for a grin. But he was
right
about them needing to move away, so she led her companions across the
board-strewn stone floor to the far end of the basement where they
crouched
against the wall. She could hear voices muttering outside, likely
discussing exactly
how to go about clearing a path without making the rest of the building
collapse on her head.
"All
this for nothing," Alliandre said bitterly. "How many Shaido do you
suppose are up there?''
Wood
scraped loudly, and with a groan, the leaning pile of rubble leaned
inward a
little more. The voices began again.
"1
haven't any idea," Faile told her. "But they must all be Mera'dhi,
not Shaido." The Shaido did not mingle with the Brotherless. "There
might be some hope in that." Surely Rolan would let her go once he
learned
about Dairaine. Of course, he would. And if he remained stubborn… In
that
case, she would do whatever was necessary to convince him. Perrin would
never
have to find out.
Wood
scraped on wood again, and once more the heap of burned timbers and
boards
tilted inward a little further.
The
fog hid the sun, but Perrin estimated it must be near midmorn-ing.
Grady would
be coming soon. He should have been there by now. If the man had grown
too tired
to make another gateway… No. Grady would come. Soon. But his shoulders
were as tight as if he had been working a forge for a full day and
longer.
"I
tell you, I don't like this one bit," Gallenne muttered. In the thick
mist, his red eyepatch was just another shadow. His heavy-chested bay
nosed his
back, impatient to be moving, and he patted the animal's neck absently.
"If Masema really wants to kill the Lady First, I say we finish him
now.
We outnumber him. We can overwhelm his bodyguard in minutes."
"Fool.''
Arganda growled, glancing off to his right as if he could see Masema
and his
men through the curling grayness. Unlike the Mayener. he had put on his
silvered helmet with its three fat white plumes. It and his
breastplate, worked
in gold and silver, glistened with condensation. Fog or no fog, his
armor
seemed almost to glow. "You think we can kill two hundred men without
making a sound? Shouts will be heard the other side of this ridge. You
have
your ruler where you can surround her with nine hundred men and maybe
get her
away. Alliandre is still in that bloody town, and surrounded by Shaido."
Gallenne
bristled, hand going to his sword hilt, as though he might practice on
Arganda
before moving on to Masema.
"We're
not killing anybody but Shaido today," Perrin said firmly. Gallenne
grunted, but he did not try to argue. He stank of discontent, though.
Protecting Berelain would keep the Winged Guards out of the fighting.
Off
to the left, a bluish flash appeared, dimmed by the thick mist, and the
tightness in Perrin's shoulders loosened. Grady appeared in the fog,
peering
about him. His step picked up when he saw Perrin, but it was unsteady.
Another
man was with him, leading a tall, dark horse. Perrin smiled for the
first time
in a long while.
"It's
good to see you, Tam,'' he said.
"Good
to see you, too, my Lord." Tam al'Thor was still a blocky man who
looked
ready to work from sunup to sundown without slacking, but the hair on
his head
had gone completely gray since Perrin had seen him last, and he had a
few more
lines on his bluff face. He took in Arganda and Gallenne with a steady
gaze.
Fancy armor did not impress him.
"How
are you holding up, Grady?" Perrin asked.
"I'm
holding up, my Lord." The weathered man's voice sounded bone weary.
Shadowed
by the fog as it was, his face still looked older than Tarn's.
"Well,
as soon as you're done here, join Mishima. I want somebody keeping an
eye on
him. Somebody who makes him too nervous to chink they can change what
they
agreed to." He would have liked to tell Grady to tie off this gateway.
It
would make a short path to take Faile back to the Two Rivers. But if
things
went wrong today, it would make a short path for the Shaido, too.
"Don't
know as I could make a cat nervous right now, my Lord, but I'll do what
I
can.''
Frowning,
Tarn watched Grady vanish into the gray murk. "I could wish I'd had
some
other way to get here," he said. "Fellows like him visited the Two
Rivers a while back. One called himself Mazrim Taim, a name we'd all
heard. A
false Dragon. Only now he wears a black coat with fancy embroidery and
calls
himself the M'Hael. They talked everywhere about teaching men to
channel, about
this Black Tower." He freighted the words with sourness. "The Village
Councils tried to put a stop to it, and the Women's Circles, but they
ended up
taking above forty men and boys with them. Thank the Light some
listened to
sense, or I think they'd have had ten times that." His gaze shifted to
Perrin. "Taim said Rand sent him. He said Rand is the Dragon Reborn."
There was a touch of questioning in that, perhaps a hope for denial,
perhaps a
demand to know why Perrin had kept silent.
Those
hues whirled in Perrin's head, but he batted them away and answered by
not
answering. What was, was. "Nothing to be done about it now, Tam."
According to Grady and Neald, the Black Tower did not just let men go
once they
signed on.
Sadness
entered Tam's scent, though he let nothing show on his face. He knew
the fate of
men who could channel. Grady and Neald claimed the male half of the
Source was
clean, now, but Perrin could not see how that could be. What was, was.
You did
the job you were given, followed the road you had to follow, and that
was that.
There was no point complaining about blisters, or rocks underfoot.
Perrin
went on. "This is Bertain Gallenne, Lord Captain of the Winged Guards,
and
Gerard Arganda, First Captain of the Legion of the Wall." Arganda
shrugged
uncomfortably. That name carried political weight in Ghealdan, and
apparently
Alliandre had not felt strong enough to announce that she was
reconstituting
the Legion. Balwer had a nose for sniffing out secrets, though. This
one made
sure Arganda would not go wild trying to reach his queen. "Gallenne.
Arganda,
this is Tam al'Thor. He's my First Captain. You studied the map, Tam,
and my
plan?"
"I
studied them, my Lord," Tam said dryly. Of course he would have. "It
looks a good plan to me. As good as any till the arrows start flying."
Arganda
put a booted foot in his roan's stirrup. "So long as he's your First
Captain, my Lord, I have no objections." He had offered plenty earlier.
Neither he nor Gallenne had been pleased that Perrin was putting
someone over
them.
From
up the slope came a black-winged mocker's shrill cry of alarm. Only
one. If it
had been a real bird, the call would have been repeated.
Perrin
scrambled up the slope as fast he could. Arganda and Gallenne passed
him on
their mounts, but they divided to ride to their men, disappearing into
the
thick gray haze. Perrin continued to the top and beyond. Dannil was
standing
almost at the edge of the fog, peering toward the Shaido encampment. He
pointed, but the reason for the alarm was obvious. A large group of
algai'd'siswai was leaving the tents, maybe four hundred or more. The
Shaido
sent out raiding parties frequently, but this one was aimed straight at
Perrin.
They were just walking, but it would not take them long to reach the
ridge.
"It's
time to let them see us, Dannil," he said, unpinning his cloak and
draping
it over a low bush. He would come back for it later. If he could. It
would only
get in his way, now. Dannil sketched a bow before hurrying back into
the trees
as Aram appeared, sword already in hand. He smelled eager. The cloak
pin Perrin
put into his pocket carefully. Faile had given him that. He did not
want to
lose it. His fingers found the leather cord he had knotted for every
day of her
captivity. Pulling it out, he let it fall to the ground without
glancing at it.
This morning had seen the last knot.
Tucking
his thumbs behind the wide belt that supported his hammer and belt
knife, he
strolled out of the fog. Aram advanced up on his toes, already in one
of those
sword stances. Perrin just walked. The morning sun, indeed halfway to
its noon
peak, was in his eyes. He had considered taking the eastern ridge and
putting
Masema's men here, but it would have meant that much farther to reach
the town
gates. A foolish reason, yet those gates drew him as a lodestone drew
iron
filings. He eased his heavy hammer in its loop on his belt, eased his
belt
knife. That had a blade as long as his hand.
The
appearance of two men, apparently walking idly toward them, was enough
to halt
the Shaido. Well, perhaps not so idly, considering Aram's sword. They
would
have to be blind to miss the sun glinting off his long blade. They must
have
been wondering whether they were watching madmen. Halfway down the
slope, he
stopped.
"Relax,"
he told Aram. "You're going to tire yourself out that way."
The
other man nodded without taking his eyes from the Shaido and planted
his feet
firmly. His scent was that of a hunter after dangerous quarry and
determined to
pull it down.
After
a moment, half a dozen of the Shaido started toward them, slowly. They
had not
veiled. Likely they were hoping he and Aram would not be frightened
into
running. Among the tents, people were pointing at the two fools on the
slope.
The
sound of running boots and hooves and snorting horses made him look
over his
shoulder. Arganda's Ghealdanin appeared out of the fog first, in their
burnished breastplates and helmets, riding behind a rippling red banner
that
bore the three six-pointed silver stars of Ghealdan. and then the
Winged Guards
in their red armor behind the golden hawk on a field of blue of Mayene.
Between
them, Dannil began arraying the Two Rivers men in three ranks. Every
man
carried a pair of bristling quivers at his belt and also a bundle of
shafts
that he stuck point down into the slope before slicing the binding
cords. They
wore their swords and shortswords, but the halberds and other polearms
had been
left on the carts this morning. One of them had brought along the red
wolfhead
banner, but the staff was stuck aslant into the ground behind them. No
one
could be spared to carry the thing. Dannil carried a bow, too.
Masema
and his bodyguard of lancers took position on the Winged Guards' right,
their
poorly handled horses plunging and rearing. Their armor showed patches
of
speckled brown where rust had been scraped away instead of properly
cleaned.
Masema himself was out in front, a sword at his hip but helmetless and
without
a breastplate. No, he did not lack courage. He was glaring at the
Mayeners
where Perrin could just make out Berelain in the middle of that forest
of
lances. He could not get a clear view of her face, but he imagined it
was still
frosty. She had objected strenuously to her soldiers being held back
from the
fighting, and he had needed to be very firm to make her see reason.
Light, the
woman had half suggested she might lead them in a charge!
The
Wise Ones and the two Aes Sedai filed down between the Ghealdanin and
the Two
Rivers men accompanied by the Maidens, each of whom had long strips of
red
cloth tied around her upper arms and dangling to the wrist. He could
not pick
out Aviellin, but by their number she must be among them, newly Healed
or not.
Black veils covered their faces except for their eyes, yet he did not
need to
see their faces or catch their scents to know they were indignant. The
markings
were necessary to avoid accidents, but Edarra had had to put her foot
down to
make them wear the things.
Bracelets
of gold and ivory rattled as Edarra adjusted her dark shawl. With
smooth sun-dark
cheeks that seemed darker because of her pale-yellow hair, she looked
little
older than Perrin, but her blue eyes held an unshakable calm. He
suspected she
was far older than she appeared. Those eyes had seen a great deal. "I
think it will begin soon, Perrin Aybara," she said.
Perrin
nodded. The gates called to him.
The
appearance of near enough two thousand lancers and two hundred-odd
bowmen was
sufficient to make the Shaido below raise their veils and spread out
while more
began rushing from the tents to join them in a thick, lengthening line.
Pointing fingers along that line, pointing spears, made him look back
again.
Tam
was on the slope, now, and more Two Rivers men were pouring out of the
fog with
longbows in hand. Some tried to mingle with the men who had followed
Perrin, to
reunite with brothers, sons, nephews, friends, but Tam chivvied them
away,
trotting his black gelding up and down as he arranged them in three
ever-expanding ranks to either side of the horsemen. Perrin spotted Hu
Barran
and his equally lanky brother Tad, the stablemen from the Winespring
Inn, and
square-faced Bar Dowtry, only a few years older than he himself was,
who was
making a name for himself as a cabinetmaker, and skinny Thad Torfinn,
who
seldom left his farm except to come into Emond's Field. Oren Dautry.
lean and
tall, stood between Jon Ayellin. who was hulking and bald, and Kev
Barstere,
who finally had gotten out from under his mother's thumb if he was
here. There
were Marwins and al'-Dais, al'Seens and Coles. Thanes and al'Caars and
Crawes,
men from every family he knew, men he did not recognize, from down to
Deven
Ride or up to Watch Hill or Taren Ferry, all grim-faced and burdened
with pairs
of bristling quivers and extra sheaves of arrows. And among them stood
others,
men with coppery skins, men with transparent veils across the lower
half of
their faces, fair-skinned men who just did not have the look of the Two
Rivers.
They carried shorter bows, of course-it took a lifetime to learn the
Two Rivers
longbow-but every face he could make out looked as determined as any
Two Rivers
man. What in the Light were the outlanders doing here? On and on the
streams of
running men continued until finally those three long lines held at
least three
thousand men, maybe four.
Tam
walked his horse down the slope to Perrin and sat studying the swelling
Shaido
ranks below, yet he seemed to hear Perrin's unspoken question. "I asked
for volunteers from the Two Rivers men and picked the best bowshots,
but those
you took in started coming forward in groups. You gave them and their
families
homes, and they said they were Two Rivers men too, now. Some of those
bows
won't carry much more than two hundred paces, but the men I chose hit
what they
aim at."
Below,
the Shaido began beating their spears rhythmically against their
bull-hide
bucklers. RAT-tat-tat-tat! RAT-tat-tat-tat! RAT-tat-tat-tat! The sound
rose
like thunder. The flow of veiled shapes running out from the tents
slowed to a
trickle that dwindled further and then ceased. All of the
algai'd'siswai had
been drawn out, it seemed. That was the plan, after all. There must
have been
twenty thousand of them. near enough, all pounding their bucklers.
RAT-tat-tat-tat! RAT-tat-tat-tat! RAT-tat-tat-tat!
"After
the Aiel War. I hoped never to hear that again." Tarn said loudly, to
be
heard. That noise could get on a man's nerves. "Will you give the
command.
Lord Perrin?"
"You
do it." Perrin eased his hammer again, his belt knife. His eyes kept
going
from the Shaido to the town gates, and the dark mass of the fortress
inside the
town. Faile was in there.
"Soon
now we will know," Edarra said. About the tea, she meant. If they had
not
waited long enough, they were all dead. Her voice was calm, though.
Aram
shifted, up on his toes again, sword upright before him in both hands.
Perrin
could hear Tarn calling as he rode along the lines of bowmen.
"Longbows,
nock! Shortbows, hold till you re close! Longbows, nock! Shortbows,
hold till
you're close! Don't draw, you fool! You know better! Longbows… !"
Below,
perhaps a quarter of the Shaido turned and began trotting north,
paralleling
the ridge, still beating their bucklers. Another quarter began trotting
south.
They intended to sweep around and catch the men on the slope from
either side.
Flanking. Tylee called it. A ripple passed through those remaining as
they
began sticking their spears through the harness holding their bowcases,
hanging
their bucklers on their belts, unlimbering their bows.
"Very
soon," Edarra murmured.
A
fireball larger than a man's head arched out from the tents toward the
ridge,
then another, twice the size, and more, streams of them. Sailing high,
the
first turned down. And exploded with loud roars a hundred paces
overhead. In
rapid succession, the others began exploding harmlessly, too, but more
followed, spheres of flame speeding toward the ridge in a continuous
flow.
Forked silver lightning stabbed down from a cloudless sky and erupted
with
booming crashes of thunder and great showers of sparks without ever
coming near
the ground.
"Perhaps
fifteen or twenty Wise Ones escaped the tea," Edarra said, "otherwise
more would have joined in by now. I can see only nine women channeling.
The
rest must be among the tents." She disliked the agreement he had with
the
Seanchan almost as much as the Aes Sedai did, yet her voice was calm.
In her
book, the Shaido had violated ji'e'toh to such a degree that it was
questionable whether they could be called Aiel any longer. To her, they
were
something that had to be cut out of the body of the Aiel, and their
Wise Ones
were the worst of the sickness for allowing it. Masuri drew her arm
back, but
Edarra laid a hand on her shoulder. "Not yet. Masuri Sokawa. We will
tell
you when." Masuri nodded obediently, though she smelled of impatience.
"Well,
I for one feel in danger," Annoura said firmly, drawing her arm back.
Edarra looked at her levelly. After a moment, the Aes Sedai lowered her
arm.
Her beaded braids clicked together as she twisted her head away from
the Wise One's
stare. Her scent was of strong unease. "Perhaps I can wait a little
longer." she muttered.
The
fireballs hurtling across the sky continued to explode far above, the
lightning
jabbed toward the ridge, but the Shaido below were not waiting. With a
shout,
the main mass began trotting quickly toward the ridge. And singing at
the tops
of their lungs. Perrin doubted anyone else on the slope could make out
more
than a roar, but his ears caught words faintly. They were singing in
parts.
Wash
the spears…
… while the sun climbs high. Wash the spears…
… while the sun falls low. Wash the spears…
… who J ears to die? Wash the spears…
… no one 1 know!
He
shut the sound out, ignoring it while his eyes drifted beyond the
onrushing
mass of veiled figures to the gates of Maiden. Iron filings to a
lodestone. The
shapes below seemed to have slowed half a step, though he knew they had
not.
Everything seemed to slow down for him at times like this. How long
before they
came in range? They had covered little more than half the distance to
the
ridge.
"Longbows,
raise! On my signal!" Tarn shouted. "Longbows, raise! On my
signal!"
Perrin
shook his head. It was too soon. Thousands of bowstrings snapped behind
him.
Arrows arced over his head. The sky seemed black with them. Seconds
later
another flight followed, then a third. Fireballs burned swathes through
them,
but it was still thousands of arrows that fell in a deadly hail onto
the
Shaido. Of course. He had forgotten to factor in the bowmen's
elevation. That
gave them a little more distance. Trust Tarn to see it right away. Not
every
arrow struck a man. of course. Many plunged into the ground. Perhaps
half
struck algai'd'siswai, piercing arms or legs, striking bodies. Wounded
Shaido hardly
slowed, even when they had to struggle up from the ground. They left
hundreds
lying still, though, and the second flight put down hundreds more, as
did the
third, with the fourth and fifth already on the way. The Shaido kept
coming,
leaning forward as if trotting into a driving rain while their Wise
Ones' balls
of fire and lightnings exploded far overhead. They were no longer
singing. Some
raised their bows and shot. An arrow grazed Perrin's left arm. but the
rest
fell short. Not by far, though. Another twenty paces, and-
The
sudden sharp sound of Seanchan horns pulled his gaze north and south
just in
time to see the ground erupt in fountains of fire among the flanking
parties.
Spears of lightning stabbed into them. The damane were being kept back
in the
trees, for the time, but they did deadly work. Again and again,
explosions of
fire or lightning hurled men like twigs. Those algai'd'siswai could
have no
idea where the attack was coming from. They began to run toward the
trees,
toward their killers. Some of the fireballs coming out of the camp
began flying
toward the forests where the damane were, and lightnings jabbed toward
the
trees, but with as little effect as they had against the ridge. Tylee
claimed
damane were used for all sorts of tasks, but the truth was, they were
weapons
of war, and they and the sul'dam were very good at it.
"Now,"
Edarra said, and fireballs began raining down on the Shaido below. The
Wise
Ones and Aes Sedai made throwing motions with both arms as fast as they
could,
and every time, a ball of flame seemed to rise from their fingertips.
Many of
those exploded too soon, of course. The Shaido Wise Ones were working
to defend
their own. But the algai'd'siswai were much nearer to the ridge, so
they had
less time to react. Fireballs burst among the Shaido, hurling men
aside,
flinging severed arms and legs into the air. Silver-blue lightning
bolts forked
down, and most of those struck, too. The hair on Perrin's arms stirred.
The
hair on his head tried to stand. The air seemed to crackle with the
lightnings'
discharges.
Even
as they flung death at the men below. Edarra and the others continued
to parry
the Shaido Wise Ones' attacks, and all the while, the Two Rivers men
worked
their bows as fast as they could. A trained man could loose twelve
shafts in a
minute, and the range was shorter now. The Shaido lacked no more than
two
hundred paces of reaching the bottom of the ridge. Their arrows still
fell
short of Perrin, but the Two Rivers arrows were striking home every
time at
this range. Each bowman was picking his own target, of course, so
Perrin saw
algai'd-siswai fall pierced by two, three, even four shafts.
Flesh
could only take so much. The Shaido began to fall back. It was not a
rout. They
did not flee. Many shot arrows back at the ridge despite no hope of
making the
range. But they turned as if on a command and ran, trying to outpace
the Two
Rivers shafts and the rain of fire and lightning that pursued them. The
flankers were falling back, too, as lancers appeared out of the trees
forming
ranks a thousand horses wide, advancing slowly while fire and lightning
harried
the Shaido.
"By
ranks," Tarn shouted, "advance three paces and loose!"
"Advance
at a walk!" Arganda bellowed.
"With
me!" Masema shouted.
Perrin
was supposed to make that slow advance with the others, but he began to
walk
down the slope faster and faster. The gates tugged at him. His blood
was
becoming fire. Elyas claimed it was a natural feeling when you were in
danger
of your life, but he could not see it. He had almost drowned in the
Waterwood
once, and he had felt nothing like this thrill that was surging through
him
now. Someone behind shouted his name, but he trotted on. picking up
speed.
Freeing his hammer from its belt loop, he drew his belt knife with his
left
hand. Aram was running beside him, he realized, but his own focus was
on the
gates, on the Shaido who still stood between him and Faile. Fire,
lightning and
arrows fell among them like hail, and they were no longer turning to
fire their
own arrows, though they often looked over their shoulders. But many
were
supporting wounded, men who dragged a leg or clutched a side with a Two
Rivers
shaft jutting from it, and he was catching up.
Abruptly,
half a dozen veiled men turned back gripping spears and started toward
him and
Aram at the run. Not using their bows meant they had expended their
arrows. He
had heard tales of champions, of men who decided the future by single
combat
between two armies that would abide by the outcome. The Aiel had no
such tales.
He did not slow down, though. His blood was fire. He was fire.
A
Two Rivers shaft took one Shaido in the middle of his chest, and even
as he
fell, three more were feathered with at least a dozen arrows each. But
now he
and Aram were too close to the remaining two. Anyone but the very best
bowshots
would risk hitting him or Aram if he fired. Aram flowed toward one of
the
Shaido as if dancing, his blade a bright blur, but Perrin had no time
to watch
anyone else fight if he had wanted to. A veiled man who overtopped him
by a
head stabbed at him with a short spear held near its base. Blocking the
spear
with his belt knife, Perrin swung his hammer. The Shaido tried to stop
it with
his buckler, but he altered the swing slightly, and heard the bones in
the
man's forearm snap under ten pounds of steel swung by a blacksmith's
arm. He
was inside the spear, now. and without slowing, he slashed across the
man's
throat with his knife. Blood gouted, and he was running again while the
man was
falling. He had to reach Faile. Fire in his blood, fire in his heart.
Fire in
his head. No one and nothing would keep him from Faile.
CHAPTER THIRTY
Outside the Gates
Faile
tried to estimate the time by the slant of light falling through the
gaps in
the ruined building overhead; it seemed still short of noon. All that
had been
cleared was a small space at the very top of the basement stairs. Any
of them
could have passed through it, if they dared to try climbing the
slanting pile
of blackened rubble, but that still looked as though it might fall in
any
moment. The tangled heap still creaked alarmingly at times. The only
good thing
was that it had not started raining on their heads. How long that would
last
was a question. She had been hearing thunder for some time, quite a lot
of it,
and slowly coming closer. The booms were almost continuous. A storm
that fierce
might be enough to make the building finish collapsing. Light, she was
thirsty.
Rolan
suddenly appeared in the opening and lay down on the stone landing. He
was not
wearing the harness that held his bow case. Carefully he wriggled his
way out
onto the rubble. The pile groaned softly under his weight. Kinhuin, a
green-eyed man a good hand or more shorter than he. knelt to grip his
ankles.
There were only three of the Brotherless up there, it seemed, but that
was
three too many.
Head
and shoulders sticking over the edge of the rubble. Rolan lowered one
arm.
"There is no more time, Faile Bashere. Take my hand."
"Maighdin
first." Faile said thickly, waving away the sun-haired woman's weary
protests. Light, but her mouth was coated with grit and too dry to spit
any of
it out. "Arrela and Lacile next. I'll go last." Alliandre nodded
approvingly, but Arrela and Lacile tried to object, too. "Be quiet and
do
as I say," she told them firmly. Thunder crashed and crashed. The storm
that produced that much thunder would bring a deluge, not simple
rainfall.
Rolan
laughed. How could the man laugh at a time like this? He only stopped
when the
charred timbers beneath him groaned again from his shaking. "You still
wear white, woman. So be quiet and do as I say." There was a touch of
mocking in his tone at that, but not when he added, "No one will be
taken
out before you." That sounded like cast iron.
"My
Lady," Alliandre said quietly, hoarsely, "I believe he means it. I
will send the others out in the order you gave."
"Stop
pouting and give me your hand," Rolan commanded.
She
was not pouting! The man could be as infuriatingly stubborn as her
Perrin. Only,
in Perrin, it was intriguing, not really infuriating. Raising her right
hand as
high as it would go, she let Rolan's hand envelope hers. He lifted her
easily,
till her face was just below his.
"Catch
hold of my coat." There was no hint of strain in his voice despite the
awkward angle of his arm. "You will have to climb over me."
She
swung her left hand up and caught a fistful of the rough wool, holding
on hard.
The pain in her shoulder told her it was bruised as badly as she
feared. When
he released her other hand, she gasped at the jolt of agony and quickly
grabbed
his coat with that one, too. Grasping her waist in both hands, he
boosted her
higher, so she was lying on his broad back. Thunder boomed and boomed
without
ceasing. The rain must start falling soon. That would make getting the
others
out more difficult.
"I
like feeling your weight on me. Faile Bashere, but maybe you could
climb a
little faster so I can bring the others out." He pinched her bottom,
and
she laughed in spite of herself. The man just would not stop trying!
The
climb over him was slower than she could have hoped for. She did not
believe
anything was broken in her shoulder, but it hurt. Once, she thought she
kicked
Rolan in the head. Pinch her, would he?
At
last she was outside and past Kinhuin, on her feet under the sky once
more. Her
first sight of the building from outside made her swallow. and then
cough
vigorously as bits of grit entered her throat. The charred timbers were
tilting
to an alarming degree, ready to crash into the basement. The third
Brotherless,
Jhoradin, a blue-eyed man with red-gold hair and a face that fell not
far short
of prettiness, was watching Kinhuin and Rolan, but every so often he
glanced at
the building as if expecting to see it fall. He was squat for an Aiel,
not
quite as tall as Perrin but half again as wide. There must have been at
least a
hundred of her people in the street, staring at her anxiously, some of
their
white robes stained with soot from their efforts at digging her out. A
hundred!
She could not find it in her heart to upbraid them, however. Especially
after
Aravine thrust a plump waterskin into her hands. The first mouthful
went to
wash away grit and dust, though she wanted desperately to swallow it
anyway,
but after that, she held up the skin and all but poured water down her
throat.
Her bruised shoulder protested. She ignored it and drank and drank.
Suddenly
she became aware of lightning striking outside the town to the west and
lowered
the waterskin to stare. Close outside the town. Out of a cloudless sky.
And
sometimes not striking. Many of those forked silvery bolts erupted with
thunderous roars far above the ground. Balls of fire hurtled across the
sky,
sometimes bursting in air with a boom like thunder. Someone was
fighting a battle
with the Power! But who? Could Perrin have found enough Aes Sedai or
Asha'-man
to attack the camp? But something was very odd. She knew how many Wise
Ones in
the camp could channel, and there did not seem to be enough lightning
or
fireballs. Perhaps it was not Perrin after all. There were factions
among the
Wse Ones. Not just between those supporting or opposing Sevanna, but
between
septs with old alliances or animosities. Maybe one of those factions
was
fighting another. That seemed highly unlikely, but less so than Perrin
finding
enough Aes Sedai to attack and the Wise Ones not fighting back with
everything
they could muster.
"When
the lightnings started, Rolan said there was a battle," Aravine said
when
Faile asked her. "That's all. Nobody wanted to go find out more until
we
knew you were safe."
Faile
ground her teeth in frustration. Even if she did not have to deal with
Rolan,
whatever was going on outside the walls might make escaping that much
more
difficult. If only she knew what it was, she might be able to see how
to avoid
it. Or use it. "No one is to go anywhere, Aravine. It might be
dangerous." And they might inadvertently lead Shaido back when they
returned. Light, what was going on?
Maighdin
staggered out past Kinhuin rubbing her hip. "He pinched me!" Her
voice was thick, but indignation came through. Faile felt a stab of…
Not
jealousy. Certainly not that. The bloody man could pinch any woman he
wanted
to. He was not Perrin.
Grimacing,
she handed the sun-haired woman the waterskin, and Maighdin washed out
her
mouth hurriedly before beginning to gulp thirstily. She was not so
sun-haired
at the moment, her curls all sweat-matted and as coated with dust as
her sweaty
face. She was not even pretty at the moment.
Arrela
came out of the ruin rubbing her bottom and looking grim as death, but
she
eagerly took the waterskin that Aldin offered. The tall young
Amadician, a
square-shouldered fellow who looked more a soldier than the bookkeeper
he was,
gazed at her avidly as she drank. Arrela did not like men that way, but
Aldin
refused to accept that he could not convince her to marry him. Lacile
appeared-rubbing her bottom!-and Jhoradin handed her another waterskin,
drawing
a finger down her dirty cheek. She smiled up at him before beginning to
drink.
Already preparing her way back into his blankets if Rolan proved
obstinate. At
least. Faile thought that was what she was doing.
At
last Alliandre stalked past Kinhuin, and if she was not rubbing
herself, her
expression of frosty ire told the tale plainly enough. Kinhuin backed
out of
the opening and stood while Rolan began working his way back across the
dangerous pile of timbers.
"My
Lady,'' Aravine called anxiously, and Faile turned to find the
plump-faced
woman kneeling on the paving stones and lifting Maighdin's head onto
her lap.
Maighdin's eyelids fluttered but never came more than half open. Her
lips moved
weakly, but only mumbles emerged.
"What
happened?" Faile said, hurrying to kneel beside them.
"I
don't know, my Lady. She was drinking as if she intended to empty the
skin, and
suddenly she staggered. The next I knew, she just collapsed." Aravine's
hands fluttered like falling leaves.
"She
must be very tired," Faile said, smoothing her maid's hair and trying
not
to think of how they were to get the woman out of the camp if she could
not
walk. It would be done if they had to carry her. Light, she felt a
touch wobbly
herself. "She saved us. Aravine." The Amadi-cian woman nodded
gravely.
"I
will hide you somewhere safe until tonight, Faile Bashere," Rolan said,
fastening the last buckles of his bow case harness. His brown shoufa
was
already wrapped around his head. "Then I will take you to the
forest." Taking three short spears from Jhoradin, he thrust them up
through the harness behind so the long spearpoints, glinting in the
sun. stuck
up above his head.
Faile
almost collapsed beside Maighdin with relief. There would be no need to
conceal
anything from Perrin. But she could not afford weakness, not now. "Our
supplies." she began, and as if the sound of her voice were the last
straw, the building gave a squealing groan and fell in with a crash
that
drowned out the explosions for a moment.
"I
will see that you have what you need," Rolan told her, raising the
black
veil across his face. Jhoradin handed him another spear and his
buckler, which
he hung on his belt knife before seizing her right arm and drawing her
to her
feer. "'We must move quickly. I do not know who we are dancing the
spears
with, but the Mera'din will dance today."
"Aldin,
will you carry Maighdin?" was all she managed to get out before Rolan
strode away pulling her with him.
She
looked over her shoulder to see Aldin lifting a limp Maighdin in his
arms.
Jhoradin had Lacile by her arm as firmly as Rolan had her. The three
Brotherless were leading a parade of white-garbed men and women. And
one boy.
Theril wore a grim expression. Fumbling in her sleeve, no easy matter
with
Rolan's big hand on her arm. she closed her fingers around the ridged
hilt of
her dagger. Whatever was happening outside the walls, she might have
need of
that blade before nightfall.
Perrin
ran along the winding street through the tents. No one moved in his
sight, but
through the roar of exploding fireballs and lightnings. he could hear
other
sounds of battle. Steel clashing on steel. Men shouting, as they killed
or
died. Men screaming. Blood ran down the left side of his face from a
gash in
his scalp, and he could feel it oozing down his right side from where a
spear
had grazed him, oozing down his left thigh from a spear that had bitten
deeper.
Not all of the blood on him was his own. A face appeared at the opening
to a
low. dark tent and drew back hurriedly. A child's face, and frightened,
not the
first he had seen. The Shaido were being pressed so hard that a good
many
children had been left behind. They would be a problem for later,
though. Over
the tents, he could see the gates little more than a hundred paces
ahead.
Beyond them lay the fortress and Faile.
Two
veiled Shaido darted out from beside a dirty brown wall-tent, spears at
the
ready. But not for him. They were looking at something off to the left.
Without
slowing, he ran into them. Both were larger than he, but the force of
his rush
carried them all to the ground, and he fell already fighting. His
hammer
smashed into the bottom of one man's chin while he stabbed and stabbed
at the
other man, blade biting deep. The hammer rose and crushed the first
man's face,
splashing blood, rose and fell again while he stabbed. The man with the
ruined
face twitched once as Perrin rose. The other lay staring at the sky.
A
hint of motion at the corner of his left eye made him throw himself to
the
right. A sword whisked through the air where his neck would have been.
Aram's
sword. The onetime Tinker had taken wounds, too. Blood coated half his
face
like a strange mask, there were blood-wet rents in his red-striped
coat, and
his eyes looked almost glazed, like those of a corpse, but he still
seemed to
be dancing with that blade in his hands. His scent was the scent of
death, a
death he sought.
"Have
you gone mad?'' Perrin growled. Steel rang against steel as he blocked
that
sword away with the head of his hammer. "What are you doing?" He
blocked another slice of the blade, tried to grapple the other man, and
barely
danced back in time to get away with only a gash across his ribs.
"The
Prophet explained it to me." Aram sounded in a daze, yet his sword
moved
with liquid ease, blows barely diverted with hammer or belt knife as
Perrin backed
away. All he could do was hope he did not trip over a tent rope or come
up
against a tent. "Your eyes. You're really Shadowspawn. It was you who
brought the Trollocs to the Two Rivers. He explained it all. Those
eyes. I
should have known the first time I saw you. You and Elyas with those
Shadowspawn eyes. I have to rescue the Lady Faile from you."
Perrin
gathered himself. He could not keep moving ten pounds of steel as
quickly as
Aram moved a sword that weighed a third of that. Somehow, he had to get
close,
get beyond that blade blurring with the speed of its motion. He could
not do so
without getting cut. and likely badly, but if he waited much longer,
the man
was going to kill him. Something caught his heel, and he staggered
backward,
nearly falling.
Aram
darted in, sword chopping down. Suddenly, he stiffened, eyes going
wide, and
the blade dropped from his hands. He toppled forward to lie on his
face, two
arrows jutting from his back. Thirty paces beyond him, a pair of veiled
Shaido
already had arrows nocked and drawn again. Perrin leaped sideways,
behind a
green, peaked tent, rolling to his feet quickly. At the corner of the
tent, an
arrow poked through the canvas, still quivering. Crouching, he made his
way
past the green tent and then a faded blue one. a low tent of dingy
brown,
hammer in one hand, knife in the other. This was not the first time he
had
played this game today. Cautiously, he peeked around the edge of the
brown
tent. The two Shaido were nowhere to be seen. They might be stalking
him in
turn, or off hunting someone else already. The game had turned both
ways
before. He could see Aram, lying where he had fallen. A scrap of breeze
ruffled
the dark fletchings on the arrows sticking up from his back. Elyas had
been
right. He should never have let Aram pick up that sword. He should have
sent
him away with the carts, or made him go back to the Tinkers. So many
things he
should have done. Too late, now.
The
gates called to him. He glanced over his shoulder. So close, now. Still
crouching,
he began to run again along those twisting streets, wary of those two
Shaido or
any others that might be lurking. The sounds of battle were ahead of
him, now,
coming from north and south, but that did not mean there would be no
stragglers.
Rounding
a corner only a few paces from the wide-open gates, he found them
filled with
people. Most were garbed in dirty white robes, but three were veiled
algai'd'siswai, one of them a hulking fellow who would have dwarfed
Lamgwin.
That one had Faile's arm in his fist. She looked as if she had been
rolled in
the dirt.
With
a roar, Perrin rushed forward raising his hammer, and the huge man
flung Faile
back and ran toward him, spear coming up as he plucked his buckler from
his
belt.
"Perrin!"
Faile screamed.
The
big Shaido seemed to hesitate for a heartbeat, and Perrin took
advantage of it.
His hammer hit the side of the man's head so hard that his feet left
the ground
as he fell. Another was right behind him, though, spear ready to stab.
Suddenly
the man grunted, surprise in the green eyes above his black veil, and
dropped
to his knees peering over his shoulder at Faile. who stood close.
Slowly he
fell forward, revealing a ridged steel hilt rising from his back.
Perrin looked
hastily for the third, and found him also lying on his face, with two
wooden
knife hilts sticking out of his back. Lacile was leaning against
Arrela.
weeping. No doubt she had found actually killing someone not so easy as
she had
supposed.
Alliandre
was at the front of the crowd, too, and Maighdin right behind her,
carried by a
tall young man in white, but Perrin had eyes only for Faile. Letting
knife and
hammer fall, he stepped over the dead men and gathered her in his arms.
The
smell of her filled his nose. It filled his head. She smelled strongly
of
charred wood, of all things, but he could still smell her.
"I've
dreamed of this moment so long," he breathed.
"I
have, too," she said against his chest, hugging him hard. Her scent was
full of joy. but she was trembling.
"Did
they hurt you?" he asked gently.
"No.
They… No, Perrin, they didn't hurt me." There were other smells
mixed in with her joy, though, laced through it inextricably. The dull,
aching
scent of sadness and the greasy aroma of guilt. Shame. like thousands
of
hair-fine needles pricking. Well, the man was dead, and a woman had the
right
to keep her secrets if she wanted.
"All
that matters is that you're alive, and we're together again," he told
her.
"That's all that matters in the world."
"All
that matters," she agreed, hugging him even harder. Hard enough that
she
actually groaned with the effort. But the next instant, she had pushed
back and
was examining his wounds, fingering open tears in his coat to look at
them.
"These don't look too bad." she said briskly, though all of those
emotions still lay tangled in her joy. She reached up to part his hair
and
tugged until he bent his head so she could examine the slash along his
scalp.
"You'll need Healing, of course. How many Aes Sedai did you bring? How
did
you-? No, that's of no matter right now. There are enough of them to
defeat the
Shaido. and that is what's important."
"This
lot of Shaido," he said, straightening to look down at her. Light, dirt
or
no dirt, she was so beautiful. "There'll be another six or seven
thousand
spears here in…" he glanced at the sun; it seemed it should be
higher, "less than two hours, maybe. We need to finish up here and be
moving before then, if we can. What's wrong with Maighdin?" She was
limp
as a feather pillow against the young man's chest. Her eyelids were
fluttering
without opening fully.
"She
tired herself out saving our lives," Faile said, abandoning his
injuries
and turning to the other people in white. "Aravine, all of you, start
gathering up gai'shain. Not just those sworn to me. Everybody in white.
We
leave no one we can reach behind. Perrin. what direction is safest?"
"North."
he told her. "North is safe."
"Start
them moving north," Faile went on. "Gather carts, wagons, pack.horses,
and load them with whatever you think we'll need. Hurry!" People
started
moving. Running. "No. you stay here, Aldin. Maighdin still needs to be
carried. You stay, too, Alliandre. And Ar-rela. Lacile needs a shoulder
to cry
on for a while."
Perrin
grinned. Put his wife down in the middle of a house engulfed in flames,
and she
would calmly set about putting the fire out. She would put it out, too.
Bending, he cleaned his belt knife on the green-eyed man's coat before
sheathing it. His hammer needed a good wiping, too. He tried not to
think about
what he was smearing on the man's coat. The fire was fading from his
blood.
There was no thrill remaining, only tiredness. His wounds were
beginning to
throb. "Will you send someone to he fortress to let Ban and Seonid know
they can come out now?" he said as he slipped the hammer's haft back
through the loop on his belt.
Faile
stared at him in amazement. "They're in the fortress. How? Why?"
"Alyse
didn't tell you?" He had always been slow to anger until Faile was
taken.
Now, he felt fury bubbling up in him. Bubbles like white-hot iron. "She
said she was taking you with her when she left, but she promised to
tell you to
go to the fortress when you saw fog on the ridges and heard wolves howl
by
daylight. I'd swear she said it straight out. Burn me, you can't trust
Aes
Sedai an inch/'
Faile
glanced toward the western ridge, where the fog still clung thickly,
and
grimaced. "Not Alyse, Perrin. Galina. If that wasn't a lie. too. It has
to
be her. And she has to be Black Ajah. Oh, how I wish I knew her real
name." She moved her left arm and winced. She had been hurt. Perrin
found
himself wanting to kill the big Shaido all over again. Faile did not
let her
injury slow her, though. "Theril, come out from there. I see you
peeking
around the gate."
A
skinny young man edged shyly around the corner of the gate. "My father
told me to stay and keep an eye on you, my Lady," he said in an accent
so
rough that Perrin could barely understand.
"That's
as may be," Faile said firmly, "but you run to the fortress as fast
as you can and tell whoever you find there that Lord Perrin says
they're to
come. Run. now." The boy knuckled his forehead and ran.
In
a quarter of an hour or so he reappeared, still running, followed by
Seonid and
Ban and all the others. Ban made a leg to Faile and murmured smoothly
how
pleased he was to see her again before ordering the Two Rivers men to
set up a
guard ring around the gate, bows at the ready and halberds stuck in the
ground.
He used his normal voice for that. He was another who was trying to
acquire
polish. Selande and Faile's other hangers-on rushed around her. all
babbling
with excitement and saying how worried they had been when she failed to
appear
after the wolves howled.
"I'm
going to Masuri," Kirklin announced in tones that dared challenge. He
did
not wait for one, though, simply drawing his sword and running off
along the
wall to the north.
Tallanvor
gave a cry when he saw Maighdin being held by the tall young man and
had to be
convinced that she was only exhausted. He still took her away from the
fellow
and held her against his own chest, whispering to her.
"Where
is Chiad?" Gaul demanded. On learning that she had never been with
them,
he lifted the veil across his face. "The Maidens tricked me," he said
grimly, "but I will find her before them."
Perrin
caught his arm. "There are a lot of men out there who'll take you for a
Shaido."
"I
have to find her first, Perrin Aybara." There was something in the
Aiel's
voice, something in his scent, that Perrin could only call heartache.
He
understood the sorrow of thinking the woman you loved might be lost to
you
forever. He let go of Gaul's sleeve, and the man darted through the
line of
bowmen, spear and buckler in hand.
"I'll
go with him." Elyas grinned. "Maybe I can keep him out of
trouble." Drawing the long knife that had given him his name among the
wolves. Long Tooth, he went running after the tall Aielman. If the two
of them
could not make their way safely out there, then no one could.
"If
you are done jabbering, perhaps you will stand still for Healing,"
Seonid
told Perrin. "You look as if you need it." Furen and Teryl were
heeling her, hands on their sword hilts and eyes trying to watch in
every
direction. The ring of Two Rivers men were all very well, their
attitude seemed
to say, but Seonid's safety was their charge. They looked like leopards
heeling
a house cat. Only she was no house cat.
"See
to Faile first," he said. "Her arm is hurt." Faile was talking
with Alliandre, both of them so angry they should have had tails to
bristle. No
doubt angry over Alyse or Galina or whatever her name was.
"I
do not see her bleeding like a stuck pig." Seonid lifted her hands to
cup
his head, and that too familiar chill hit him, like suddenly being
immersed in
a winter pond on the brink of freezing. He gasped and jerked, arms
flailing out
of his control, and when she released him, his wounds were gone, if not
the
blood smeared on his face and staining his coat and breeches. He also
felt he
could eat a whole deer by himself.
"What
was that?" The diminutive Green turned away from him toward Faile.
"Did you mention Galina Casban?"
"I
don't know her last name," Faile said. "A round-faced Aes Sedai with
a plump mouth and black hair and big eyes. Pretty in a way, but an
unpleasant
woman. Do you know her? I think she must be Black Ajah."
Seonid
stiffened, hands knotting in her skirts. "That sounds like Galina. A
Red,
and decidedly unpleasant. But why would you make such an accusation? It
is not
a charge to bring against a sister lightly, even against one as
disagreeable as
Galina."
As
Faile explained, beginning with the first meeting with Galina, Perrin's
anger
grew again. The woman had blackmailed her, threatened her, lied to her,
then
tried to murder her. His fists clenched so tight that his arms shook.
"I'll break her neck when I get my hands on it," he growled when she
fell silent.
"That
is not your right." Seonid said sharply. "Galina must be tried before
three sisters sitting as a court, and for this charge, they must be
Sitters.
The entire Hall of the Tower might sit for it. If she is found guilty,
she will
be stilled and executed, but justice in this lies with Aes Sedai."
"If?"
he said incredulously. "You heard what Faile said. Can you have any
doubt?"
He must have looked threatening, because Furen and Teryl glided in to
flank
Seonid, their hands resting lightly on sword hilts, their eyes hard on
his
face.
"She's
right, Perrin." Faile said gently. "When Jac Coplin and Len Congar
were accused of stealing a cow, you knew they were thieves, but you
made Master
Thane prove they had stolen it before you let the Village Council have
them
strapped. It's just as important with Galina."
"The
Village Council wouldn't have strapped them without a trial whatever
I'd
said," he muttered. Faile laughed. She laughed! Light, it was good to
hear
again. "Oh. all right. Galina belongs to the Aes Sedai. But if they
don't
take care of her, I will if I ever find her again. I don't like people
hurting
you."
Seonid
sniffed at him, her scent disapproving. "Your arm is injured, my
Lady?"
"See
to Arrela first, please," Faile said. The Aes Sedai rolled her eyes in
exasperation and took Faile's head between her hands. Faile shivered
and
exhaled, hardly more than a heavy sigh. Not a bad injury, then, and
gone now in
any case. She txianked Seonid while leading her to Arrela.
Suddenly
Perrin realized he could not hear the explosions any longer. In fact,
he could
not recall hearing one for some time. That had to be good. "I need to
find
out what's happening. Ban, you keep a close guard on Faile."
Faile
protested his going alone, and by the time he finally agreed to take
ten of the
Two Rivers men. a rider in lacquered armor had appeared rounding the
northern corner
of the town wall. Three thin blue plumes marked her as Tylee. As she
rode
closer, he realized she had a nude woman draped across her tall bay in
front of
the saddle. A woman bound at ankles and knees, wrists and elbows. Her
long
golden hair almost brushed the ground, and there were jeweled necklaces
and
ropes of pearls caught in it. A strand of large green stones and gold
slid free
and fell to the dirt as Tylee reined in. Removing her peculiar helmet
with
gauntleted hands, she rested it on the woman's upturned bottom.
"A
remarkable weapon, those bows of yours," she drawled, eyeing the Two
Rivers men. "I wish we had the like. Kirklin told me where to find you,
my
Lord. They've begun surrendering. Masema's men held to the point of
suicide-most of them are dead or dying, I think-and the damane turned
that
ridge into a deathtrap only a madman would walk into. Best of all, the
sul'dam
have already fitted adam to over two hundred women. That cold tea' of
yours was
enough that most of them could not stand without help. I'll have to
send for
to'raken to fly them all out."
Seonid
made a sound in her throat. Her face was smooth, but her scent was
dagger-sharp
fury. She stared at Tylee as though trying to stare a hole through her.
Tylee
paid her no mind at all except to shake her head slightly.
"After
my people and I are gone," Perrin said. His agreement was with her. He
did
not want to risk testing it with anyone else. "What are our losses
aside
from Masema's men?"
"Light,"
Tylee replied. "Between your archers and the damane, they never really
managed to close with us. I've never seen a battle plan come off so
smoothly.
If we have a hundred dead between us, I'll be surprised."
Perrin
winced. He supposed those were light casualties under the
circumstances, but some
would be Two Rivers men. Whether or not he knew them, they were his
responsibility. "Do you know where Masema is?"
"With
what's left of his army. He's no coward, I'll say that for him. He and
his two
hundred-well, about one hundred, now-cut a path all the way through the
Shaido
to the ridge."
Perrin
ground his teeth. The man was back surrounded by his rabble. It would
be his
word against Masema's about why Aram had tried to kill him, and in any
event,
it was unlikely the man's followers would surrender him for trial. "We
need to start moving before the others get here. If the Shaido think
rescue is
at hand, they might decide to forget they surrendered. Who's your
prisoner?"
"Sevanna."
Faile said in a cold voice. The smell of her hatred was nearly as
strong as it
had been while speaking of Galina.
The
golden-haired woman twisted herself upward, shaking hair out of her
face and
losing several more necklaces in the process. Her eyes, glaring at
Faile, were
green fire above a strip of cloth that had been tied for a gag. She
stank of
rage.
"Sevanna
of the Jumai Shaido." Satisfaction was strong in Tylee's voice. "She
told me so proudly. She's no coward, either. Met us wearing nothing but
a silk
robe and her jewels, but she managed to spear two of my Altarans before
I took
it away from her." Sevanna snarled through her gag and struggled as if
to
throw herself from the horse. Until Tylee smacked her bottom, anyway.
After
that, she contented herself with glaring at everyone in sight. She was
nicely
rounded, though he should not be noticing something like that with his
wife
there. Except that Elyas said she would expect him to notice, so he
made
himself study her openly.
"I
claim the contents of her tent," Faile announced, shooting him a sharp
look. Maybe he was not supposed to be that open. "She has a huge chest
of
jewels in there, and I want them. Don't look at me like a looby,
Perrin. We
have a hundred thousand people to feed, clothe and help get back to
their
homes. A hundred thousand at least."
"I
want to come with you, my Lady, if you'll have me," the young fellow
who
had been holding Maighdin piped up. "I won't be the only one, if you'll
have us."
"Your
lady wife, I presume, my Lord." Tylee said, eyeing Faile.
"She
is. Faile, allow me to present Banner-General Tylee Khirgan, in service
to the
Empress of Seanchan." Perhaps he was acquiring some of that polish
himself. "Banner-General, my wife. Lady Faile ni Bashere't'Aybara."
Tylee bowed in her saddle. Faile made a small curtsy, inclined her head
slightly. Dirty face or no dirty face, she was regal. Which made him
think of
the Broken Crown. Discussion of that little matter would have to come
later. No
doubt it would be a prolonged discussion. He thought he might not find
it so
hard to raise his voice, the way she apparently wanted, this time. "And
this is Alliandre Maritha Kigarin. Queen of Ghealdan. Blessed of the
Light,
Defender of Garen's Wall. And my liege woman. Ghealdan is under my
protection." Fool thing to say, but it had to be said.
"Our
agreement doesn't speak to that, my Lord," Tylee said carefully. "I
don't decide where the Ever Victorious Army goes."
"Just
so you know, Banner-General. And tell those above you they can't have
Ghealdan." Alliandre smiled at him so widely, so gratefully, he almost
wanted to laugh. Light. Faile was smiling, too. A proud smile. He
rubbed the
side of his nose. "We really do need to begin moving before those other
Shaido arrive. I don't want to find myself with them in front of me and
all
those prisoners behind me thinking about picking up a spear again."
Tylee
chuckled. "I have a little more experience with these people than you.
my
Lord. Once they surrender, they won't fight again or try to escape for
three
days. Besides, I have some of my Altarans making bonfires out of their
spears
and bows just to make sure. We have time to make our deployments. My
Lord, I
hope I never have to face you in the field," she said, pulling the
steel-backed gauntlet from her right hand. "I would be honored if you'd
call
me Tylee." She bent over Se-vanna to offer her hand.
For
a moment. Perrin could only stare. It was a strange world. He had gone
to her
thinking he was making a deal with the Dark One, and the Light knew,
some of
what the Seanchan did was beyond repugnant, but the woman was stalwart
and true
to her word.
"I'm
Perrin. Tylee." he said, clasping her hand. A very strange world.
Stripping
off her shift, Galina tossed it down atop the silk robe and bent to
pick up the
riding dress she had pulled from Swift's saddlebags. The thing had been
sewn
for a slightly larger woman, but it would suffice until she could sell
one of
those firedrops.
"Stand
as you are. Lina," came Therava's voice, and suddenly Galina could not
have straightened if the forest around her had been on fire. She could
scream,
though. "Be silent." She choked as her throat swallowed the scream
convulsively. She could still weep, silently, and tears began to fall
on the
mulch of the forest floor. A hand slapped her rudely. "Somehow, you
have
the rod,' Therava said. "You would not be out here, else. Give it to
me,
Lina."
There
was no question even of resisting. Straightening, Galina dug the rod
out of her
saddlebags and handed it to the hawk-eyed woman, tears sliding down her
cheeks.
"Stop
sniveling, Lina. And put on your necklace and collar. I will have to
punish you
for taking them off.''
Galina
flinched. Even Therava's command could not shut off her tears, and she
knew she
would be punished for that, too. Golden necklace and collar came out of
the
saddlebags and went onto her. She stood there wearing only her pale
woolen
stockings and soft laced white boots, and the weight of the
firedrop-studded
collar and belt seemed enough to bear her to the ground. Her eyes
fastened
themselves to the white rod in Therava's hands.
"Your
horse will do for a pack animal, Lina. As for you, you are forbidden to
ride
ever again."
There
had to be some way to get that rod again. There had to be! Therava
turned the
thing over and over in her hands, taunting her.
"Stop
playing with your pet, Therava. What are we going to do?" Belinde, a
slender Wise One with hair bleached almost white by the sun, strode up
to glare
at Therava with pale blue eyes. She was bony, with a face well suited
to
glaring.
That
was the first Galina realized that Therava was not alone. Several
hundred men,
women and children stood among the trees behind them, some of the men
carrying
women slung over their shoulders of all things. She covered herself
with her
hands, her face heating. Those long days of enforced nakedness had not
inured
her to being unclothed in front of men. Then she noticed another
oddity. Only a
handful were algai'd'siswai, with bow cases on their backs and quivers
at their
hips, but every man and every woman except the Wise Ones among them was
carrying at least one spear. They had their faces veiled, too, with a
scarf or
just a scrap of cloth. What could it mean?
"We
are returning to the Three-fold Land." Therava said. "We will send
runners
to find every sept that can be found and tell them to abandon their
wetlander
gai'shain, abandon everything they must, and make their way by stealth
back to
the Three-fold Land. We will rebuild our clan. The Shaido will rise
from the
disaster Sevanna led us to."
"That
will take generations!" Modarra protested. Slim and quite pretty, but
even
taller than Therava. as tall as most Aielmen, she stood up to Therava
unflinchingly. Galina could not understand how she did that. The woman
made her
flinch with a glance.
"Then
we will take generations." Therava said firmly. "We will take
whatever time is necessary. And we will never leave the Three-fold Land
again." Her gaze shifted to Galina. Who flinched. "You will never
touch this again," she said, raising the rod briefly. "And you will
never try to escape me again. She has a strong back. Load her, and let
us be on
our way. They may try to pursue us."
Burdened
with waterskins and pots and kettles till she almost felt decently
covered,
Galina staggered through the forest at Therava's heels. She did not
think of
the rod, or escape. Something had broken in her. She was Galina Casban,
Highest
of the Red Ajah, who sat on the Supreme Council of the Black Ajah, and
she was
going to be Therava's plaything for the rest of her life. She was
Therava's
little Lina. For the rest of her life. She knew that to her bones.
Tears rolled
silently down her face.
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
The House on Full Moon Street
They
must stay together," Elayne said firmly. "The two of you shouldn't be
out by yourselves, for that matter. Always three or four together
anywhere in
Caemlyn. That's the only way to be safe." Just two of the mirrored
stand-lamps were lit, six flames filling the sitting room with a dim
light and
the scent of lilies-so much of the lamp oil had gone bad that it was
always
perfumed, now-but a crackling fire on the hearth was beginning to take
away
some of the early hour's coolness.
"There
are times a woman wants a little privacy," Sumeko replied calmly, as if
yet another Kinswoman had not just died from wanting privacy. Her voice
was
calm, at least, but plump hands smoothed her dark blue skirts.
"If
you won't put the fear of the Light into them, Sumeko, I will," Alise
said, her usually mild face stern. She looked the elder of the two.
with
touches of gray in her hair compared to the glossy black hair that fell
below
Sumeko's stout shoulders, yet she was the younger by better than two
hundred
years. Alise had been intrepid when Ebou Dar fell and they were forced
to flee
the Seanchan, but her hands moved on her brown skirts, too.
It
was long past the bedtime that Essande's niece Melfane had decreed, but
tired
as she was all the time, once Elayne woke, she could never get back to
sleep,
and warm goat's milk did not help. Warm goat's milk tasted worse than
cool. She
was going to make Rand bloody al'Thor
drink
warm bloody goat's milk till it came out of his ears! Right after she
found out
what had hurt him badly enough that she sensed a small jolt of pain
while
everything else in that small knot in the back of her head that was him
remained as vague as a stone. It had been all a stone again ever since,
so he
was all right, yet something had hurt him deeply for her to sense
anything at
all. And why was he Traveling so often? One day, he was far to the
southeast,
the next to the northwest and even more distant, the day after that
somewhere
else. Was he running from whoever had hurt him? But she had her own
worries at
the moment.
Unable
to sleep and restless, she had dressed herself in the first thing that
came to
hand, a dark gray riding dress, and gone for a walk to enjoy the
stillness of
the palace in the small hours of the morning. when even the servants
were abed
and flickering stand-lamps were the only things that moved in the
hallways
aside from her. Her and her bodyguards, but she was learning to ignore
their
presence. She did enjoy the solitude, until the two women encountered
her and
delivered the sad news that would have awaited sunrise otherwise. She
had
brought them back to her smaller sitting room to discuss the matter
behind a
ward against listeners.
Sumeko
shifted her bulk in her armchair to glare at Alise. "Reanne let you
press
boundaries, but as Eldest, I expect-"
"You're
not Eldest, Sumeko,'' the smaller woman said coolly. "You have the
authority here, but by the Rule, the Knitting Circle consists of the
thirteen eldest of us in
Ebou Dar. We aren't in Ebou Dar any longer, so there is no Knitting Circle."
Sumeko's
round face grew hard as granite. "At least you admit I have the
authority."
"And
I expect you to use it to prevent any more of us being murdered.
Suggesting
isn't enough, Sumeko, no matter how strongly you say you suggest. It
isn't
enough."
"Arguing
will get us nowhere." Elayne said. "I know you re on edge. I am,
too." Light, three women murdered with the One Power in the last ten
days,
and very likely seven more before that, were enough to put an anvil on
edge.
"But snapping at each other is the worst thing we can do. Sumeko, you
need
to put your foot down. I don't care how much anyone wants privacy, no
one can
be by herself for a minute. Alise, use your persuasion." Persuasion was
not exactly the word. Alise did not persuade. She simply expected
people to do
as she said, and they nearly always did. "Convince the others that
Sumeko
is right. Between the two of you, you have to-"
The
door opened to admit Deni, who closed it again behind her and bowed,
one hand
on her sword hilt, the other on her long cudgel. The red-lacquered
breastplates
and helmets, trimmed in white, had been delivered only yesterday, and
the
stocky woman had been smiling ever since she donned hers, but she
looked solemn
behind the face-bars now. "Pardon for interrupting, my Lady, but
there's
an Aes Sedai here demanding to see you. A Red, by her shawl. I told her
you
were likely sleeping, but she was ready to come in and wake you
herself."
A
Red. There were reports of Reds in the city from time to time. though
not so
often as once-most Aes Sedai in the city went without their shawls,
concealing
their Ajahs-yet what would a Red want with her? Surely they all knew by
now
that she stood with Egwene and against Elaida. Unless someone was
finally
trying to bring her to book for the bargain with the Sea Folk.
"Tell
her that I'm-"
The
door opened again, bumping Deni's back, pushing her out of the way. The
woman
who entered, vine-woven shawl draped along her arms so the long red
fringe
displayed itself to advantage, was tall and slim and copper-skinned.
She would
have been pretty, except that her mouth was compressed until her full
lips
seemed thin. Her riding dress was so dark it might have been black, but
the
pale light of the stand-mirrors picked up hints of red, and the divided
skirts
were slashed with brighter red. Duhara Basaheen never made any secret
of her
Ajah. Once, Sumeko and Alise would have been on their feet and
curtsying for an
Aes Sedai in a flash, but now they remained seated. studying her. Deni,
normally placid, in appearance at least, scowled and fingered her
cudgel.
"I
see the tales of you gathering wilders are true," Duhara said. "A
great pity, that. The two of you get out. I wish to speak with Elayne
privately. If you're wise, you will leave tonight, heading in different
directions. and tell any others like you to do the same. The White
Tower looks
amiss on wilders gathering together. When the Tower looks on something
amiss,
thrones have been known to tremble." Neither Sumeko nor Alise moved.
Alise
actually arched an eyebrow.
"They
can stay," Elayne said coldly. With the Power in her, her emotions were
not bouncing. They were steady in an icy anger. "They are welcome here.
You, on the other hand… Elaida tried to have me kidnapped, Duhara.
Kidnapped! You can leave."
"A
poor welcome, Elayne, when I came to the palace as soon as I arrived.
And after
a journey that would be as torturous to describe as it was to endure.
Andor has
always had good relations with the Tower. The Tower intends to see they
remain
good. Are you sure you want these wilders to hear everything I have to
say to
you? Very well. If you insist." Gliding to one of the carved
sideboards,
she wrinkled her nose at the silver pitcher holding goat's milk and
poured
herself a cup of dark wine before taking a chair across from Elayne.
Deni made
a move as if to try dragging her out, but Elayne shook her head. The
Domani
sister ignored the Kinswomen as if they had ceased to exist. "The woman
who drugged you has been punished, Elayne. She was flogged in front of
her own
shop with everyone in her village watching." Duhara sipped her wine,
waiting for Elayne to respond.
She
said nothing. She knew very well that Ronde Macura had been flogged for
failure
rather than for feeding her that vile tea, but saying so would make
Duhara
wonder how she knew, and that might lead to things that needed to
remain
hidden.
The
silence stretched, and finally the other woman went on. "You must know
that the White Tower wants very much for you to mount the Lion Throne.
To
achieve that end, Elaida has sent me to be your advisor."
In
spite of herself, Elayne laughed. Elaida had sent her an advisor? It
was
ludicrous! "I have Aes Sedai to advise me when I need advice, Duhara.
You
must know I oppose Elaida. I wouldn't accept a pair of stockings from
that
woman."
"Your
so-called advisors are rebels, child." Duhara said chidingly, with a
heavy
dose of distaste on the word "rebels." She gestured with the silver
winecup. "Why do you think you have so many Houses opposing you, so
many
standing aside? They surely know you don't really have the backing of
the
Tower. With me as your advisor, that changes. I might be able to put
the crown
on your head inside a week. At most, it should take no more than a
month or
two."
Elayne
met the other woman's gaze with a level gaze of her own. Her hands
wanted to
make fists, but she kept them still in her lap. "Even were that so, I'd
refuse you. I expect to hear any day that Elaida has been deposed. The
White
Tower will be whole again, and no one will be able to claim I lack its
backing
then."
Duhara
studied her wine for a moment, her face a mask of Aes Sedai serenity.
"It
won't be entirely smooth going for you," she said as if Elayne had not
spoken. "This is the part I thought you wouldn't want the wilders to
hear.
And that guard. Does she think I'm going to attack you? No matter. Once
you
have the crown firmly on your head, you will have to appoint a regent,
because
you must return to the Tower then, to complete your training and
eventually be
tested for the shawl. You need have no fear of being birched as a
runaway.
Elaida accepts that Siuan Sanche ordered you to leave the Tower. Your
pretense
of being Aes Sedai is another matter. That, you will pay for with
tears."
Sumeko and Alise stirred, and Duhara took notice of them again. "Ah,
you
didn't know that Elayne is really only one of the Accepted?"
Elayne
rose and stared down at Duhara. Usually, someone seated held the
advantage over
someone standing, but she made her stare hard and her voice harder. She
wanted
to slap the woman's face! "I was raised Aes Sedai by Egwene al'Vere on
the
day she herself was raised Amyrlin. I chose the Green Ajah and was
admitted.
Don't you ever say I'm not Aes Sedai, Duhara. Burn me if I'll stand
still for
it!"
Duhara's
mouth pinched down till her lips seemed a gash. "Think, and you will
see
the reality of your situation," she said finally. "Think hard,
Elayne. A blind woman could see how much you need me, and the White
Tower's
blessing. We will talk again later. Have someone show me to my rooms. I
am more
than ready for my bed."
"You'll
have to find a room at an inn, Duhara. Every bed in the palace already
has
three or four people sleeping in it." If dozens of beds had been free,
she
would not have offered Duhara one. Turning her back, she walked to the
fireplace
and stood warming her hands. The gilded pendulum clock on the
scroll-carved
marble mantel chimed three times. Perhaps as many hours remained till
sunrise.
"Deni, have someone escort Duhara to the gates."
"You
won't fend me off so easily, child. No one fends off the White Tower
easily.
Think, and you'll see I'm your only hope." Silk whisked against silk as
she left the room, and the door clicked shut behind her. It seemed very
possible Duhara would cause trouble trying to make herself needed, but
one problem
at a time.
"Did
she put doubts in your minds?" Elayne said, turning from the fire.
"None,"
Sumeko replied. "Vandene and the other two accept you as Aes Sedai, so
you
must be." Conviction was strong in her voice, but then, she had reason
to
want to believe. If Elayne were a liar, her dreams of returning to the
Tower,
of joining the Yellow Ajah, died.
"But
this Duhara believes she was speaking the truth." Alise spread her
hands.
"I'm not saying I doubt you. I don't. But the woman believes."
Elayne
sighed. "The situation is… complicated." That was like saying
water was moist. "I am Aes Sedai, but Duhara doesn't believe. She
can't,
because that would be admitting Egwene al'Vere truly is the Amyrlin
Seat, and
Duhara won't do that until Elaida has been brought down." She hoped
Duhara
would believe then. Accept, at least. The Tower had to be made whole.
"Sumeko, you will order the Kinswomen to stay in groups? Always?" The
stout woman muttered that she would. Unlike Reanne, Sumeko had no flair
for leadership,
or liking for it, either. A pity no older Kinswoman had appeared to
take the
burden from her. "Alise, you'll make sure they obey?" Alise's
agreement was firm and quick. She would have been the perfect candidate
if the
Kin did not determine their rankings by age. "Then we've done what we
can.
It's long past time you were in your beds."
"Long
past time for you, too," Alise said as she stood. "I could send for
Melfane."
"No
need to rob her of sleep, too." Elayne said hastily. And firmly.
Melfane
was short and stout, a merry woman with a ready laugh, and unlike her
aunt in
other ways, as well. Merry or not, the midwife was a tyrant who would
not be
pleased to learn that she was awake. "I'll sleep when I can.''
Once
they left, she released saidar and took up a book from several on the
second
sideboard, yet another history of Andor, but she could not concentrate.
Bereft
of the Power, she felt grumpy. Burn her, she was so weary that her eyes
felt
grainy. She knew that if she lay down, though, she would stare at the
ceiling
till the sun rose. In any case, she had stared at the page for only
minutes
when Deni appeared again.
"Master
Norry is here, my Lady, with that Hark fellow. Said he'd heard you were
up and
wondered if you could spare him a few minutes.''
He
had heard she was up? If he was having her watched… ! The import broke
through her grumpiness. Hark. He had not brought Hark since that first
visit,
ten days ago. No, eleven days, now. Ebullience replaced peevishness.
Telling
Deni to send them in. she followed the woman as far as the anteroom,
where a
patterned carpet covered most of the red-and-white floor tiles. Here,
too, only
a pair of stand-lamps were lit, giving off a dim, wavering light and a
scent of
roses.
Master
Norry looked more than ever a white-crested wading bird with his long,
spindly
shanks, and tufts of hair sticking up behind his ears, but for once, he
almost
seemed excited. He was actually rubbing his hands together. He was not
carrying
his leather folder tonight; even in the dim light, the ink stains on
his
crimson tabard showed. One had turned the tuft of the White Lion's tail
black.
He offered a stiff bow, and the nondescript Hark imitated him
awkwardly, then
knuckled his forehead for good measure. He was wearing a darker brown
than he
had previously, but the same belt and buckle. "Forgive the hour, my
Lady," Norry began in that dry voice.
"How
did you know I was awake?" she demanded, emotions bouncing again.
Norry
blinked, startled by the question. "One of the cooks mentioned sending
up
warm goat's milk for you when I went to get some for myself, my Lady. I
find
warm goat's milk very soothing when I can't sleep. But she mentioned
wine, too,
so I assumed you had visitors and might still be awake."
Elayne
sniffed. She still wanted to snap at someone. Keeping that out of her
voice
required an effort. "I suppose you've success to report, Master
Hark?"
"I
followed him like you said, my Lady, and he's been to the same house
three
nights, counting this one. It's on Full Moon Street in the New City, it
is.
Only place he ever goes except taverns and common rooms. He drinks
some, he
does. Dices a lot, too." The man hesitated, dry-washing his hands
nervously. "I can go now. right, my Lady? You'll take off whatever it
was
you put on me?"
"According
to the tax rolls." Norry said, "the house is owned by the Lady
Shiaine Avarhin. my Lady. She seems to be the last of the House."
"What
else can you tell me about the place, Master Hark? Who else lives there
besides
this Lady Shiaine?"
Hark
rubbed his nose uneasily. "Well, I don't know as they lives there, my
Lady, but there's two Aes Sedai there tonight. I saw one of them
letting Mellar
out while the other was coming in. and the one who was coming in said,
'A pity
there are only two of us, Falion, the way Lady Shiaine works us.' Only,
she
said Lady like she didn't mean it, she did. Funny. She was carrying a
stray
cat, a thing scrawny as she was." He bobbed a sudden, nervous bow.
"Begging your pardon, my Lady. Didn't mean no offence, speaking of an
Aes
Sedai that way, but it took me a minute to realize she was Aes Sedai,
it did.
There was good light from the entry hall, there was, but she was so
thin and
plain, with a wide nose, that nobody would take her for Aes Sedai
without some
study."
Elayne
laid a hand on his arm. Excitement bubbled in her voice, and she let
it.
"What were their accents?"
"Their
accents, my Lady? Well, the one with the cat. she's from right here in
Caemlyn
I'd say. The other… Well, she didn't say above two sentences, but I'd
say
she was Kandori. Called the other Marillin, if that helps, my Lady."
Laughing,
Elayne capered a few steps. She knew who had set Mellar on her now, and
it was
worse than she had feared. Marillin Gemalphin and Falion Bhoda, two
Black
sisters who had fled the Tower after doing murder. That had been to
facilitate
theft, but it was the murders that would see them stilled and beheaded.
It had
been to find them, and the others with them, that she. Egwene and
Nynaeve had
been sent out of the Tower. The Black Ajah had planted Mellar next to
her, to
spy most likely, but still a chilling thought. Worse than she had
feared, and
yet, finding the two now was like completing the circle.
Hark
was staring at her with his mouth hanging open, she realized. Master
Norry was
studiously examining the lion's stained tail. She stopped dancing and
folded
her hands. Fool men! "Where is Mellar now?"
"In
his rooms, I believe," Norry said.
"My
Lady, you'll take it off now?" Hark said. "And I can go? I did what
you asked."
"First
you have to lead us to this house," she said, darting past him to the
twinned doors. "Then we'll talk." Putting her head out into the
corridor, she found Deni and seven more Guardswomen lined up on either
side of
the doors. "Deni, send someone to fetch the Lady Birgitte as fast as
possible, and someone else to wake the Aes Sedai and ask them to come,
too,
with their Warders and prepared to take a ride. Then you go and wake
however
many Guardswomen you think you need to arrest Mellar. You needn't be
too gentle
about it. The charges are murder and being a Darkfriend. Lock him in
one of the
basement storerooms with a strong guard." The stocky woman smiled
broadly
and began giving orders as Elayne went back inside.
Hark
was wringing his hands and shifting from one foot to the other
anxiously.
"My Lady, what do you mean we'll talk? You promised to take this thing
off
me if I followed the man. you did. And I did, so you have to keep your
word."
"I
never said I'd remove the Finder, Master Hark. I said you'd be exiled
to
Baerlon instead of hanging, but wouldn't you rather remain in Caemlyn?"
The
man widened his eyes, trying to look sincere. And failing. He even
smiled.
"Oh, no, my Lady. I've been dreaming about the fresh country air in
Baerlon, I has. I'll wager there's never a worry about getting rotten
meat in
your stew there. Here, you got to sniff careful before you eat
anything. I'm
looking forward to it, I am."
Elayne
put on the stern face her mother had always worn passing judgment.
"You'd
be out of Baerlon two minutes behind the Guardsmen who escorted you
there. And
then you'd hang for breaking your exile. Much better for you to remain
in
Caemlyn and take on a new line of work. Master Norry, could you use a
man with
Hark's talents?"
"I
could, my Lady," Norry replied without even a pause for thought. A
satisfied smile touched his thin lips, and Elayne realized what she had
done.
She had given him a tool to encroach on Mistress Harfor's ground. But
there was
no undoing it, now.
"The
work won't be so remunerative as your former 'trade,' Master Hark, but
you
won't hang for it."
"Not
so what, my Lady?" Hark said, scratching his head.
"It
won't pay so well. What do you say? Baerlon, where you'll surely cut a
purse or
bolt, and hang for either one, or Caemlyn, where you'll have steady
work and no
fear of the hangman. Unless you take up cutting purses again."
Hark
swayed on his feet, scrubbing the back of his hand across his mouth. "I
needs a drink, I does," he muttered hoarsely. Very likely he believed
the
Finder would allow her to know if he cut a purse. If so, she had no
intention
of disabusing him.
Master
Norry scowled at the man, but when he opened his mouth. she said,
"There's
wine in the small sitting room. Let him have one cup, then join me in
the large
sitting room."
The
large sitting room was dark when she walked in. but she channeled to
light the
mirrored stand-lamps against the dark-paneled walls, and the kindling
of the
fires neatly laid on the facing hearths. Then she took a seat in one of
the
low-backed chairs around the scroll-edged table and released saidar
again.
Since her experiment at holding the Power all day, she had not held it
longer
than necessary. Her mood swung from joyful excitement to morose worry
and back.
On the one hand, she was done with having to put up with Mellar, and
soon she
would have her hands on two Black sisters. Questioning them might lead
to the
rest, or at least reveal their plans. And if not, this Shiaine would
have her
own secrets. Anyone who was "working" two Dark-friend sisters would
have secrets worth knowing. On the other hand, what would Duhara do to
try
forcing her acceptance as an advisor? Duhara would try to meddle
somehow, but
she could not see how. Burn her. she did not need any more difficulties
between
her and the throne. With a little luck, tonight would not only snare
two Black
sisters. it might uncover a third, a murderer ten times over. Back and
forth
she went, from Falion and Marillin to Duhara, even after Master Norry
and Hark
joined her.
Hark,
a silver cup in his hand, tried to take a seat at the table, but Master
Norry
tapped him on the shoulder and jerked his head toward a corner.
Sullenly, Hark
went where he was directed. He must have begun drinking as soon as the
cup was
filled, because he emptied it in one long pull then stood turning it
over in
his hands and staring at it. Suddenly he gave a start and directed an
ingratiating grin at her. Whatever he saw on her face made him flinch.
Scuttling
to the long table against the wall, he set the cup down with
exaggerated care,
then scuttled back to his corner.
Birgitte
was the first to arrive, the bond filled with weary discontent. "A
ride?" she said, and when Elayne explained, she began raising
objections.
Well, some of it was objections; the rest was just insults.
"What
hare-brained, crack-pated scheme are you talking about, Birgitte?"
Vandene
said as she entered the room. She wore a riding dress that hung loose
on her.
One of her sister's, it would have fit her perfectly while Adeleas was
alive,
but the white-haired woman had lost weight. Her Jaem, wiry and gnarled,
took
one look at Hark and placed himself where he could watch the man. Hark
ventured
a smile, but it faded when Jaem's expression remained hard as iron. The
Warder's graying hair was thin, but there was nothing soft about him.
"She
intends to try capturing two Black sisters tonight," Birgitte replied,
shooting a hard look at Elayne.
"Two
Black sisters?" Sareitha exclaimed walking through the door. She
gathered
her dark cloak around her as though the words had given a chill.
"Who?" Her Warder Ned. a tall, broad-shouldered young man with yellow
hair, eyed Hark and touched his sword hilt. He chose a spot where he
could
watch the man, too. Hark shifted his feet. He might have been thinking
of
trying to run.
"Falion
Bhoda and Marillin Gemalphin," Elayne said. Sareitha's mouth hardened.
"What
about Falion and Marillin?" Careane asked as she glided into the room.
Her
Warders were disparate men. a tall, gangly Tairen, a blade-slender
Saldaean,
and a broad-shouldered Cairhienin. They exchanged glances, and Tavan,
the
Cairhienin, leaned against the wall watching Hark while Cieryl and Venr
stood
in the doorway. Hark's mouth took on a sickly twist.
There
was nothing for it but to explain again from the beginning. Which
Elayne did
with a rising impatience that had nothing to do with her shifting
moods. The
longer this took, the more chance that Falion and Marillin might be
gone by the
time she reached the house on Full Moon Street. She wanted them. She
intended
to have them! She should have made Birgitte wait until everyone had
gathered.
"A
good plan, I think," Vandene said when she finished. "Yes, it will do
nicely." Others were not so agreeable.
"It
isn't a plan, it's bloody madness!" Birgitte said sharply. Arms folded
beneath her bosom, she scowled down at Elayne, the bond such a turmoil
of
emotions that Elayne could barely make them out. "The four of you enter
the house alone. Alone! That isn't a plan. It's flaming insanity!
Warders are
supposed to guard their Aes Sedai's backs. Let us come with you." The
other Warders put in emphatic agreements, but at least she was not
trying to
stop the whole thing any more.
"There
are four of us." Elayne told her. "We can watch our own backs. And
sisters do not ask their Warders to face other sisters." Birgitte's
face
darkened. "If I need you. I'll shout so loud you'd be able to hear me
if
you were back here in the palace. The Warders remain outside! she added
when
Birgitte opened her mouth. The bond filled with frustration, but
Birgitte's jaw
snapped shut.
"Perhaps
this man can be trusted," Sareitha said, glancing at Hark with no
trust at all, "but even if he
heard correctly, nothing says there are still only two sisters in the
house. Or
any. If they have gone, there's no danger, but if others have joined
them, we
might as well put our necks in a noose and spring the trap ourselves."
Careane
folded her sturdy arms and nodded. "The danger is too great. You
yourself
told us that when they fled the Tower, they stole a number of
ter'angreal. some
very dangerous indeed. I've never been called a coward, but I don't
fancy
trying to sneak up on someone who might have a rod that can make
balefire."
"He
could hardly have misheard something as simple as 'there are only two
of
us,'" Elayne replied firmly. "And they spoke as if they didn't expect
any others." Burn her, considering her standing with respect to them,
they
should have been jumping to obey rather than arguing. "In any case,
this
isn't a discussion." A pity both objected. If only one had, it could
have
been a clue. Unless they both were Black Ajah. A bone-freezing thought,
that,
yet her plan took the possibility into account. "Falion and Marillin
won't
know we are coming until it's too late. If they're gone, we'll arrest
this
Shiaine, but we are going."
It
was a larger party than Elayne had expected that rode out of the
Queen's
Stableyard behind her and Hark. Birgitte had insisted on bringing fifty
Guardswomen, though all they would be doing was missing sleep, a column
of twos
in red-lacquered helmets and breastplates, black in the night, that
snaked
along the palace behind the Aes Sedai and Warders. Reaching the front
of the palace,
they skirted the edge of the Queen's Plaza, the great oval crowded now
with
rude shelters that housed sleeping Guardsmen and nobles' armsmen. Men
were
billeted everywhere room could be found, but there were insufficient
basements
and attics and spare rooms near enough the palace, and the parks where
circles
of Kinswomen would take the men to the places where they were needed.
The
fighting they did was afoot, on the walls, so their horses were all
picketed in
nearby parks and in the larger palace gardens. A few sentries shifted
as they
passed, heads swiveling to follow, but with her hood up, all they could
be sure
of was that a large contingent of Guardswomen were escorting a party
through
the night. The sky to the east was still dark, but it must be less than
two
hours till first light. The Light send dawn would see Falion and
Marillin in
custody. And one more. At least one more.
Winding
streets led over and around the hills past narrow, tile-covered towers
that
would glitter with a hundred colors when the sun rose and glittered
faintly in
the cloud-dappled moonlight, past silent shops and lightless inns,
simple stone
houses with slate roofs and small palaces that might have fit in Tar
Valon. The
ring of horseshoes on the paving stones and the faint creak of saddle
leather
sounded loud in the silence. Except for an occasional dog that slunk
away into
the deeper shadows of alleys, nothing else moved. The streets were
dangerous at
this hour, but no footpad would be mad enough to come in sight of so
large a party.
Half an hour after leaving the Royal Palace, Elayne rode Fireheart
through the
Mondel Gate, a wide, twenty-foot-high arch in the Inner City's tall
white wall.
Once there would have been Guardsmen on duty there, to keep the peace,
but the
Queen's Guards were spread too thin now for that.
Almost
as soon as they were into the New City, Hark turned east into a warren
of
streets that meandered in every direction through the city's hills. He
rode
awkwardly, on a bay mare that had been found for him. Cutpurses seldom
spent
time in the saddle. Some of the streets were quite narrow here, and it
was in
one of those that he finally drew rein, surrounded by stone houses of
two or
three or even four stories. Birgitte raised a hand to halt the column.
The
sudden silence seemed deafening.
"It's
just around that corner there, it is, my Lady, the other side of the
street," Hark said in a near whisper, "but if we go riding out there,
they might hear us or see us. Pardon, my Lady, but if these Aes Sedai
are what
you says they are, I don't want them seeing me." He scrambled down from
his saddle clumsily and looked up her, wringing his hands, his
moonshadowed
face anxious.
Dismounting,
Elayne led Fireheart to the corner and peeked around the corner of a
narrow,
three-story house. The houses along the other street stood dark except
for one,
four substantial stories of stone with the closed gate of a stableyard
beside
it. Not an ornate building, but large enough for a wealthy merchant or
banker.
Bankers and merchants were unlikely to be awake at this hour, however.
"There,"
Hark whispered hoarsely, pointing. He stood far back, so he had to
learn
forward to point. He really did fear being seen. "The one with the
light
on the second floor, it is."
"Best
to find out if anyone else is awake in there." Vandene said. peering
past
Elayne. "Jaem? Don't go inside the house."
Elayne
expected the lean old Warder to sneak across the street, but he just
strolled
out holding his cloak close around him against the early morning chill.
Even
the dangerous grace of a Warder appeared to have deserted him. Vandene
seemed
to sense her surprise.
"Skulking
draws the eye and creates suspicion," she said. "Jaem is just a man
walking, and if it's early to be out in the streets, he isn't sneaking,
so
anyone who sees him will think of some mundane reason for him to be
out."
Reaching
the stableyard gate, Jaem pulled it open and walked through as if he
had a
perfect right. Long minutes passed before he came back out, shutting
the gate
carefully behind him, and strolled back along the street. He rounded
the corner
and the leopard-like grace reappeared in his step.
"All
the windows are dark except that one," he told Vandene quietly. "The
kitchen door is unlatched. So is the back door. That lets onto an
alley.
Trusting, for Darkfriends. Or else dangerous enough they don't worry
about
burglars. There's a big fellow sleeping in the barn, up in the loft.
Big enough
to scare any burglar, but he's so drunk he didn't wake while I was
tying him
up." Vandene raised a questioning eyebrow. "I thought I'd better be
safe. Drunks sometimes wake when you least expect. You wouldn't want
him seeing
you go in and start making noise." She nodded approval.
"It's
time to get ready," Elayne said. Moving back from the corner and
handing
her reins to Birgitte. she tried to embrace the Source. It was like
trying to
catch smoke with her fingers. Frustration and anger welled up, all the
things
you needed to suppress if you were to channel. She tried again, and
failed
again. Falion and Marillin were going to get away. To come this close…
They had to be in that lighted room. She knew it. And they were going
to
escape. Sadness replaced anger, and suddenly saidar flowed into her.
She barely
stifled a sigh of relief. "I'll meld the flows, Sareitha. Vandene, you
meld for Careane."
"I
don't understand why we have to link." the Tairen Brown muttered. but
she
put herself on the edge of embracing the Power. "With two of them and
four
of us, we outnumber them, but linked, it's two and two." A clue?
Perhaps
she wished it to be three and three?
"Two
strong enough to overwhelm them even if they're holding the Power,
Sareitha." Elayne reached through her as if she were an an-greal, and
the
glow of saidar surrounded the other woman as the link was completed. In
truth,
it surrounded both of them, but she could only see the part around
Sareitha-until she wove Spirit around her. Then the glow vanished. She
placed
the same weave on herself and prepared four shields and several other
weaves,
all inverted. She felt almost giddy with excitement, but she did not
intend to
be caught by surprise. Frustration still pulsed along the bond, but for
the
rest, Bir-gitte felt like a drawn arrow. Elayne touched her arm. "We
will
be all right." Birgitte snorted and flung her thick braid back over her
shoulder. "Keep an eye on Master Hark. Birgitte. It would be a shame if
he
had to be hanged because he was tempted to run." Hark squeaked.
She
exchanged glances with Vandene, who said, "We might as well be about
it."
The
four of them walked up Full Moon Street, slowly, as if out for a
stroll, and
slipped into the shadow-shrouded stableyard. Elayne opened the kitchen
door
slowly, but the hinges were well-oiled, emitting not a squeak. The
brick-walled
kitchen was lit only by a tiny fire in the wide stone fireplace where a
kettle
hung steaming, yet that was enough for them to cross the floor without
bumping
into the table or chairs. Someone sighed, and she pressed a warning
finger to
her lips. Vandene frowned at Careane, who looked embarrassed and spread
her
hands.
A
short hall led to stairs at the front of the house. Gathering her
skirts,
Elayne started up, silent on slippered feet. She was careful to keep
Sareitha
where she could see her. Vandene was doing the same with Careane. They
could do
nothing with the Power, but that hardly meant they could do nothing. On
the
second flight of stairs, she began hearing the murmur of voices. Light
spilled
from an open door.
"… don't care what you think." a woman said in that room. "You
leave the thinking to me and do as you're told."
Elayne
moved to the door. It was a sitting room, with gilded stand-lamps and
rich
carpets on the floor and a tall fireplace of blue marble. but she had
eyes only
for the three women in it. Only one, a sharp-faced woman, was seated.
That must
be Shiaine. The other two stood with their backs to the door, heads
bowed like
penitents. The sharp-faced woman's eyes widened when she saw her in the
doorway, but Elayne gave her no time to open her mouth. The two Black
sisters
cried out in alarm as shields went onto them, and flows of Air bound
their arms
to their sides, tightened their skirts around their legs. More flows of
Air
fastened Shiaine to her gilded armchair.
Elayne
drew Sareitha into the room with her and moved to where she could see
all of
their faces. Sareitha tried to step back. She might only have been
trying to
give her the place of prominence, but Elayne caught her sleeve again,
keeping
her in view, too. Vandene and Careane joined them. Marillin's narrow
face held
Aes Sedai calm, but Falion snarled silently.
"What
is the meaning of this?'' Shiaine demanded. "I recognize you. You're
Elayne Trakand. the Daughter-Heir. But that gives you no right to
invade my
home and assault me."
"Falion
Bhoda," Elayne said calmly, "Marillin Gemalphin, Shiaine Avarhin, I
arrest you as Darkfriends." Well, her voice was calm. Inside, she
wanted
to skip with glee. And Birgitte thought this would be dangerous!
"That
is ridiculous." Shiaine said in icy tones. "I walk in the
Light!"
"Not
if you walk with these two," Elayne told her. "To my certain
knowledge they've proven themselves Black Ajah in Tar Valon, Tear and
Tanchico.
You don't hear them denying it. do you? That's because they know I-"
Suddenly
sparks danced all over her from head to toe. She twitched helplessly,
muscles
spasming, saidar slipping from her grasp. She could see Vandene and
Careane and
Sareitha jerking as sparks flickered across them as well. Only a moment
it lasted,
but when the sparks vanished, Elayne felt as if she had been fed
through a
mangle. She had to hold on to Sareitha to stay on her feet, and
Sareitha clung
to her as hard. Vandene and Careane were supporting one another,
swaying, each
with her chin on the other's shoulder. Falion and Marillin wore
startled
expressions, but the light of the Power enveloped them in heartbeats.
Elayne
felt the shield fasten on to her, saw them settle on the other three.
There was
no need for binding. Any of them would have fallen over without
support. She
would have shouted if she could have. If she thought that Birgitte and
the
others could do more than die.
Four
women Elayne recognized entered the room. Asne Zeramene and Temaile
Kinderode.
Chesmal Emry and Eldrith Jhondar. Four Black sisters. She could have
wept.
Sareitha groaned softly.
"Why
did you wait so long?" Asne demanded of Falion and Marillin. The
Saldaean's dark tilted eyes were angry. "I used this so they wouldn't
feel
us embrace saidar. but why did you just stand there?" She waved a
small,
bent black rod, perhaps an inch in diameter, that had a strangely dull
look.
The thing seemed to fascinate her. "A 'gift' from Moghedien. A weapon
from
the Age of Legends. I can kill a man at a hundred paces with this, or
just stun
him if I want to put him to the question."
"I
can kill a man if I can see him." Chesmal said scornfully. Tall and
handsome, she was the image of icy arrogance.
Asne
sniffed. "But my target could be surrounded by a hundred sisters, and
not
one would know what killed him."
"I
suppose it has its uses.'' Chesmal admitted in grudging tones. "Why did
you just stand there?"
"They
had us shielded," Falion said bitterly.
Eldrith's
breath caught, and she put a plump hand to a round cheek. "That's
impossible.
Unless…" Her dark eyes sharpened. "They've discovered a way to
hide the glow, to hide their weaves. Now, that would be most useful."
"You
have my thanks for your timely rescue." Shiaine said, rising, "but do
you have a reason for coming here tonight? Did Moridin send you?"
Asne
channeled a flow of Air that struck Shiaine's cheek with a loud crack,
staggering her. "Keep a civil tongue in your mouth, and perhaps we'll
let
you leave with us. Or we can leave you behind dead." Shiaine's cheek
was
reddened, but her hands remained at her sides. Her face was
expressionless.
"Elayne's
the only one we need." Temaile said. She was pretty in a fox-faced way,
almost a fragile child in appearance despite her ageless face, but her
blue eyes
held an unhealthy light. She touched her lips with the tip of her
tongue.
"I'd enjoy playing with the others, but they'd be a burden we don't
need."
"If
you're going to kill them," Marillin said as though discussing the
price
of bread, "spare Careane. She is one of us."
"A
gift from Adeleas." Vandene murmured, and Careane's eyes went very
wide.
Her mouth opened, but no sound came out. The two women sagged and fell
to the
carpet. Vandene began trying to push herself up, but Careane lay
staring at the
ceiling, the hilt of Vandene's belt knife protruding from beneath her
breastbone.
The
glow surrounded Chesmal, and she touched Vandene with a complex weave
of Fire,
Earth and Water. The white-haired woman collapsed as if her bones had
melted.
The same weave touched Sareitha, and she pulled Elayne down atop her as
she
fell. Sareitha's eyes were already glazing.
"Their
Warders will be coming now," Chesmal said. "A little more killing to
do."
"Run,
Birgitte!" Elayne thought, wishing the bond could carry words. "Run!"
CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO
To Keep
the Bargain
Birgitte
was leaning against the stone wall of the three-story house, thinking
sadly of
Gaidal, when the bundle of emotions and physical sensations in the back
of her
head, her awareness of Elayne, suddenly spasmed. That was the only word
for it.
Whatever it was lasted just a moment, but afterward, the bond was full
of…
limpness. Elayne was conscious, but unsteady. She was unafraid,
however. Still,
Birgitte threw back her cloak and moved to the corner to peer up Full Moon Street.
Elayne could be too brave for her own good. The hardest thing about
being
Elayne's Warder was keeping her from endangering herself beyond need.
Nobody
was indestructible, but the bloody woman thought she bloody well was.
Her sigil
should have been an iron lion rather than a golden lily. That light
shone in
the window, spilling a pale pool into the narrow street, and there was
not a
sound except for a cat yowling somewhere in the night.
"Sareitha
feels… muzzy." Ned Yarman muttered beside her. The tall young
Warder's boyish face was a grim shadowed mask inside the hood of his
cloak.
"She feels weak."
Birgitte
became aware of the other Warders crowding her close, stone-faced and
hard-eyed. That was clear enough even by moonlight. Something had
happened to
all of the Aes Sedai, it seemed. But what? "The Lady Elayne said she'd
shout if she needed us," she told them, as much to reassure herself as
anything else. Even if both Careane and Sarei-tha were Darkfriends,
they would
have been helpless to do anything linked, and apparently whatever had
happened
had happened to them, as well. Burn her, she should have insisted that
she and
the other Warders go along.
"Careane
won't be pleased if we interfere needlessly," Venr Kosaan said quietly.
Blade
slim and dark, with touches of white in his tightly curled black hair
and short
beard, he appeared completely at ease. "I say we wait. She feels
confident, whatever's going on."
"More
so that she did going in," Cieryl Arjuna added, earning him a sharp
glance
from Venr. Still short of his middle years, Cieryl seemed all bones,
though his
shoulders were wide.
Birgitte
nodded. Elayne was confident, too. But then, Elayne would feel
self-assured
walking an unraveling rope stretched over a pit full of sharp stakes. A
dog
began barking in the distance, and the yowling cat went silent, but
other dogs
answered the first in a spreading ripple that faded away as suddenly as
it had
begun.
They
waited, with Birgitte fretting in silence. Suddenly, Venr growled an
oath and
shed his cloak. The next instant, his blade was in his hand and he was
running
up the street followed by Cieryl and Ta-van, cloaks billowing behind,
their
blades bared, too. Before they had gone two steps, Jaem gave a wild
cry.
Unsheathing his sword, he threw his cloak down and raced after the
other three
at a speed that belied his age. Bellowing with rage, Ned ran, too, the
steel in
his fist glittering in the moonlight. Fury stabbed through the bond,
like the
battle fury that took some men. And sadness, too, but still no fear.
Birgitte
heard the soft rasp of swords being unsheathed behind her and spun,
cloak
flaring. "Put those up! They're no use here."
"I
know what the Warders running in means as well as you, my Lady," Yurith
said in courtly accents, obeying smoothly. And with clear reluctance.
Lean and
as tall as most men, the Saldaean denied being nobly born, but whenever
the
conversation came around to what she had done before swearing the oath
as a
Hunter for the Horn, she always gave one of her rare smiles and changed
the
subject. She was skilled with that sword, however. "If the Aes Sedai
are
dying-"
"Elayne
is alive," Birgitte cut in. Alive, and in trouble. "She's our concern,
now, but we'll need a lot more swords to rescue her." And more than
swords. "Somebody collar that man!" Two Guardswomen seized Hark's
coat before he could slip away into the darkness. Apparently he had no
wish to
stay near where Aes Sedai had died. Neither did she. "Gather the… the
extra horses and follow me," she said, swinging into Arrow's saddle.
"And ride like fire!" She suited her words, digging her heels into
the rangy gray gelding's flanks without waiting.
It
was a wild gallop through dark, twisting streets where people were just
beginning to appear. She reined Arrow around the few carts and wagons
out this
early, but men and women had to leap from her path, often shaking fists
and
shouting curses. She only urged the gelding for more speed, her cloak
flapping
behind. Before she reached the Mondel Gate, Elayne was moving. She had
been
uncertain at first, but there could be no mistaking it now. Elayne was
moving
northeast at about walking speed. The bond said she was too wobbly to
walk far,
maybe to walk at all, but a wagon would make the same pace. The sky was
turning
gray. How long before she could gather what was needed? In the Inner
City, the
street spiraled inward, rising past towers glittering in a hundred
colors
toward the golden domes and pale spires of the Royal Palace, atop the
highest
of Caemlyn's hills. As she galloped around the rim of the Queen's
Plaza,
soldiers stared at her. They were being fed from black kettles atop
pushbarrows, cooks ladling some sort of brown stew onto tin plates, and
every
man she could see wore his breastplate and had his helmet hanging from
his
sword hilt. Good. Every moment saved was a moment toward saving Elayne.
Two
lines of Guardswomen were practicing the sword in the Queen's
Stableyard when
she galloped in. but the lath blades stopped rattling when she flung
herself
out of the saddle, let Arrow's reins drop and ran toward the colonnade.
"Hadora. run tell the Windfinders to meet me in the Map Room right
away!" she shouted without slowing. "All of them! Sanetre. you do the
same for Captain Guybon! And have another horse saddled for me!" Arrow
was
played out for today. She was past the columns by that time, but she
did not
look back to see whether they were obeying. They would be.
She
raced through tapestry-hung hallways and up sweeping marble stairs, got
lost
and shouted curses as she retraced her steps at a run. Liveried serving
men and
women gaped as they dodged out of her way. At last she reached the
lion-carved
doors of the Map Room, where she paused only long enough to cell the
two burly
Guardsmen on duty to admit the Windfinders as soon as they appeared,
then went
in. Guybon was alteady there, in his burnished breastplate with the
three
golden knots on his shoulder, and Dyelin delicately holding her blue
silk
skirts up as she moved, the pair of them frowning at the huge mosaic
map, where
well over a dozen red discs marked the city's northern wall. Never
before had
there been so many assaults at once, not even ten, but Birgitte spared
the
discs barely a glance.
"Guybon,
I need every horse and halberd you can muster," she said, unpinning her
cloak and tossing it down on her long writing table. "The crossbowmen
and
archers will have to handle anything that crops up by themselves for a
few
hours. Elayne's been captured by Darkfriend Aes Sedai. and they're
trying to
carry her out of the city." Some of the clerks and messengers began
murmuring, but Mistress Anford silenced them with a sharp order to see
to their
work. Birgitte eyed the colorful map in the floor, measuring distances.
Elayne
seemed to be moving toward the Sunrise Gate and the road to the River
Erinin,
but even if they used one of the smaller gates, they had gone too far
to be
aiming at anything but the eastern wall. "They'll probably have her
through
the gates by the time we're ready to move. We're going to Travel to
just this
side of the ridge east of the city." And take what was going to happen
out
of the streets, away from people's homes. It would be better out in the
open in
any case. In that tangle of streets, with horsemen and halberdmen
jammed
together, there would be too many people to get in the way, too much
chance of
accidents.
Guybon
nodded, already issuing terse orders that brown-clad clerks copied down
hastily
lor him to sign and pass to young messengers in red-and-white who went
running
as soon as the paper was in hand. The boys' faces were frightened.
Birgitte had
no time for her own fear. Elayne felt none, and she was a prisoner.
Sadness,
yes, but no fear.
"We
certainly need to rescue Elayne," Dyelin said calmly, "but she'll
hardly thank you if you give Arymilla Caemlyn by doing it. Not counting
the men
in the towers and holding the gates, almost half the trained soldiers
and
armsmen in the city are on the northern wall. If you strip away the
rest, one
more attack will gain a stretch of the wall. Crossbows and bows alone
won't
stop them. Once they have that, Arymilla's forces will pour into the
city,
enough to overwhelm what you propose to leave. You will have neatly
reversed our
positions, and worsened yours. Arymilla will have Caemlyn. and Elayne
will be
outside without enough armsmen to get back in. Unless these Darkfriends
have
somehow smuggled an army inside Caemlyn, a few hundred men will do as
well as
thousands."
Birgitte
scowled at her. She had never been able to like Dyelin. She did not
know why,
exactly, but Dyelin had just made her bristle at first sight. She was
fairly
certain the other woman felt the same about her. She could never say
"up" without Dyelin saying "down."
"You care about
putting Elayne on the throne, Dyelin. I care about keeping her alive to
mount
that throne. Or not. so long as she's alive. I owe her my life, and I
won't let
hers trickle away in Darkfriend hands." Dyelin sniffed and went back to
studying the red discs as if she could see the soldiers fighting. her
frown
deepening the lines at the corners of her eyes.
Birgitte
clasped her hands behind her back and forced herself to stand still.
She wanted
to pace with impatience. Elayne was still trundling toward the Sunrise
Gate.
"There's something you need to know, Guybon. We'll be facing at least
two
Aes Sedai, likely more, and they may have a weapon, a ter'angreal that
makes
balefire. Have you ever heard of that?"
"Never.
It sounds dangerous, though."
"Oh,
it is. Dangerous enough that it's prohibited for Aes Sedai. In the War
of the
Shadow, even Darkfriends stopped using it." She barked a bitter laugh.
All
she knew of balefire now was what Elayne had told her. It had come from
her in
the first place, yet that only made matters worse. Would all of her
memories
go? She did not think she had lost any recently, but how would she know
if she
had? She could remember bits of the founding of the White Tower, pieces
of what
she and Gaidal had done to help it be founded, but nothing before that.
All of
her earlier memories were yesterday's smoke.
"Well,
at least we'll have Aes Sedai of our own." Guybon said, signing another
order.
"They're
all dead, except for Elayne," she told him flatly. There was no way to
gild
that. Dyelin gasped, her face growing pale. One of the clerks clasped
her hands
to her mouth, and another knocked over his ink jar. The ink fanned
across the
tabletop in a black stream and began dripping onto the floor. Rather
than
reprimanding the man, Mistress Anford steadied herself with a hand on
another
clerk's writing table. "I hope to make up for that," Birgitte went
on, "but I can't promise anything except that we're going to lose men
today. Maybe a lot of men."
Guybon
straightened. His expression was thoughtful, his hazel eyes steady.
"That
will make for an interesting day," he said finally. "But we'll get
the Daughter-Heir back, whatever the cost." A solid man, Charlz Guybon,
and brave. He had demonstrated that often enough on the walls. Too good
looking
for her taste, of course.
Birgitte
realized she had begun pacing back and forth across the mosaic and
stopped. She
knew nothing of being a general, whatever Elayne thought, but she knew
that
showing nerves could infect others with them. Elayne was alive. That
was all
that was important. Alive and moving farther away by the minute. The
left-hand
door opened, and one of the burly Guardsmen announced that Julanya Fote
and
Keraille Surtovni had returned. Guybon hesitated, looking to her, but
when she
said nothing, he told the man to admit them.
They
were very different women, in appearance at least, though each carried
a wooden
walking staff. Julanya was plump and pretty, with touches of white in
her dark
hair, while Keraille was short and slim, with tilted green eyes and
fiery red
curls. Birgitte wondered whether those were their real names. These
Kinswomen
changed names as easily as other women changed stockings. They wore
plain
woolens suitable for country peddlers, which each had been in the past,
and
each was a keen observer, skilled at taking care of herself. They could
talk
their way out of most situations, but their simple belt knives were not
the
only blades they carried and they could surprise a strong man with what
they
could do with those walking staffs. Both offered curtsies. Julanya's
skirts and
cloak were damp and splashed with mud around the hem.
"Ellorien,
Luan and Abelle began breaking camp early this morning, my Lady," she
said. "I only stayed long enough to make sure of their
direction-north-before
coming to report."
"The
same is true with Aemlyn, Arathelle and Pelivar, my Lady," Keraille
added.
"They're coming for Caemlyn."
Birgitte
did not need to examine the large map spread out on the table with its
markers.
Depending on how muddy the roads were, how much rain they had to
contend with,
they could reach the city by that afternoon. "You've done well, both of
you. Go find yourselves hot baths. Do you think they've had a change of
heart?" she asked Dyelin once the two women had left.
"No,"
the woman replied without hesitation, then sighed and shook her head.
"I
fear the most likely thing is that Ellorien has convinced the others to
support
her for the Lion Throne. They may be thinking to defeat Arymilla and
take over
the siege. They have half again her numbers, and double ours." She let
that hang. There was no need to say the rest. Even using Kinswomen to
shift
men, they would be hard pressed to hold the wall against that many.
"First
we get Elayne back, then we can worry about that lot," Birgitte said.
Where were those bloody Windfinders?
No
sooner did she have the thought than they were padding into the room
behind
Chanelle, a riotous rainbow of silks. Except for Re-naile, last in line
in her
linens, yet a red blouse, green trousers and a deep yellow sash made
her bright
enough, though even Rainyn, a round-cheeked young woman with just half
a dozen
golden medallions dangling onto her cheek, made Renaile's honor chain
look
bare. Re-naile's face wore an expression of stoic endurance.
"I
do not appreciate being threatened!" Chanelle said angrily, sniffing
the
golden scent box on its golden chain around her neck. Her dark cheeks
were
flushed. "That Guardswoman said if we did not run, she would kick-!
Never
mind what she said, exactly. It was a threat, and I will not be-!"
"Elayne
has been captured by Darkfriend Aes Sedai," Birgitte cut in. "I need
you to make a gateway for the men who are going to rescue her." A
murmur
rose among the other Windfinders. Chanelle gestured sharply, but only
Renaile
fell silent. The others just lowered their voices to whispers, to her
obvious
displeasure. By the medallions crowding their honor chains, several of
them
matched Chanelle's rank.
"Why
did you summon all of us for one gateway?' she demanded. "I keep the
bargain, you can see. I brought everyone as you ordered. But why do you
need
more than one?"
"Because
you're all going to form a circle and make a gateway big enough to take
thousands of men and horses." That was one reason.
Chanelle
stiffened, and she was not alone. Kurin, her face like a black stone,
practically quivered with outrage, and Rysael, normally a very
dignified woman,
did quiver. Senine. with her weathered face and old marks indicating
she once
had worn more than six earrings, and fatter ones, fingered the jeweled
dagger
thrust behind her green sash.
"Soldiers?"
Chanelle said indignantly. "That is forbidden! Our bargain says we will
take no part in your war. Zaida din Parede Black Wing commanded it so,
and now
that she is Mistress of the Ships, that command carries even greater
weight.
Use the Kinswomen. Use the Aes Sedai."
Birgitte
stepped close to the dark woman, looking her straight in the eyes. The
Kin were
useless for this. None of them had ever used the Power as a weapon.
They might
not even know how. "The other Aes Sedai are dead," she said softly.
Someone behind her moaned, one of the clerks. "What is your bargain
worth
if Elayne is lost? Arymilla certainly won't honor it." Keeping her
voice
steady saying that took effort. It wanted to shake with anger, shake
with fear.
She needed these women, but she could not let them know why or Elayne
would be
lost. "What will Zaida say if you ruin her bargain with Elayne?"
Chanelle's
tattooed hand half-lifted the piercework scent box to her nose again,
then let
it fall among her many jeweled necklaces. From what Birgitte knew of
Zaida din
Parede, she would be more than displeased with anyone who wrecked that
bargain,
and it was beyond doubtful that Chanelle wished to face the woman's
anger, yet
she only looked pensive. "Very well," she said after a moment.
"For transport only, though. It is agreed?" She kissed the fingertips
of her right hand, prepared to seal the bargain.
"You
only need do what you want," Birgitte said, turning away. "Guybon,
it's time. They must have her to the gate by now."
Guybon
buckled on his sword, took up his helmet and steel-backed gauntlets,
and
followed her and Dyelin out of the Map Room trailed by the Windfinders,
with
Chanelle loudly insisting that they would provide a gateway only.
Birgitte
whispered instructions to Guybon before leaving him striding toward the
front
of the palace while she hurried to the Queen's Stableyard where she
found a
hammer-nosed dun gelding wearing her saddle and waiting, the reins held
by a
young groom with her hair in a braid not much different from her own.
She also
found all hundred and twenty-one Guardswomen armored and mounted.
Climbing into
the dun's saddle, she motioned them to follow her. The sun was a golden
ball clear
of the horizon in a sky with only a few high white clouds. At least
they would
not have rain to contend with. too. Even a wagon might have been able
to slip
away in some of the heavy rainstorms Caemlyn had seen lately.
A
thick snake of men ten and twelve abreast spanned the Queen's Plaza,
now,
stretching out of sight in both directions, horsemen in helmets and
breastplates alternating with men in every sort of helmet imaginable
carrying
shouldered halberds, most wearing mail shirts or jerkins sewn with
steel discs
and only rarely a breastplate, each group large or small headed by the
banner
of its House. Or the banner of a mercenary company. The sell-swords
would have
too many watchers to try slacking off today. Minus the crossbowmen and
archers,
there would be close on twelve thousand men in that column, two thirds
of them
mounted. How many would be dead before noon? She pushed that thought
out of her
mind. She needed every one of them to convince the Sea Folk. Any man
who died
today could die as easily on the wall tomorrow. Every man of them had
come to
Caemlyn prepared to die for Elayne.
At
the head of the column were better than a thousand Guardsmen, helmets
and
breastplates gleaming in the sun. steel-tipped lances slanted
precisely, the
first of them waiting behind the banner of Andor. The rearing White
Lion on a
field of scarlet, and Elayne's banner, the Golden Lily on blue, at the
edge of
one of Caemlyn's many parks. It had been a park, anyway, but oaks
hundreds of
years old had been cut down and hauled away along with all the other
trees and
the flowering bushes, their roots dug out to clear a smooth space a
hundred
paces wide. The graveled paths and grassy ground had long since been
trampled
to mud by hooves and boots. Three other parks around the palace had
received
the same treatment, to make places for weaving gateways.
Guybon
and Dyelin were already there, along with all the lords and ladies who
had
answered Elayne's call, from young Perival Mantear to Brannin Marfan
and his
wife, all mounted. Perival wore helmet and breastplate like every other
male
present. Brannin's were plain and dull and slightly dented where the
armorer's
hammer had failed its task, tools of his trade as surely as the
plain-hiked
sword scabbarded at his side. Perival's were as gilded as Conail's and
Branlet's. worked with the silver Anvil of Mantear where theirs were
lacquered
with Northan's Black Eagles and Gilyard's Red Leopards. Pretty armor,
for being
seen in. Birgitte hoped the women had sense enough to keep those boys
out of
any fighting. Looking at some of those women's faces, grim and
determined, she
hoped they had sense enough to stay clear themselves. At least none was
wearing
a sword. The simple truth was, a woman had to be more skilled than a
man to
face him with a sword. Stronger arms made too much difference,
otherwise. Much
better to use a bow.
The
Windfinders were grimacing as they shifted their bare feet uneasily on
ground
still muddy from yesterday's downpour. Wet, they were more than
accustomed to.
but not mud.
"This
man will not tell me where the gateway is to reach," Chanelle said
furiously, pointing to Guybon as Birgitte dismounted. "I want to be
done
so I can wash my feet."
"My
Lady!" a woman's voice called from back down the street. "My Lady
Birgitte!" Reene Harfor came running up the line of Guardsmen, her red
skirts held high, exposing her stockinged legs to the knee. Birgitte
did not
think she had ever seen the woman so much as trot. Mistress Harfor was
one of
those women who always did everything perfectly. Every time they met
she made
Birgitte conscious of every last mistake she herself had ever made. Two
men in
red-and-white livery were running behind her, carrying a litter between
them.
When they came closer, Birgitte saw that it held a lanky, helmetless
Guardsman
with an arrow piercing his right arm and another jutting from his right
thigh.
Blood trickled down both shafts, so he left a thin trail of drops on
the paving
stones. "He insisted on being brought to you or Captain Guybon
immediately,
my Lady," Mistress Harfor said breathlessly, fanning herself with one
hand.
The
young Guardsman struggled to sit up until Birgitte pressed him back
down.
"Three or four companies of mercenaries are attacking the Far Madding
Gate, my Lady," he said, pain wracking his face and tinging his voice.
"From inside the city, I mean. They placed archers to shoot anyone who
tried to wave the signal flags for help, but I managed to get away, and
my
horse lasted just long enough."
Birgitte
growled an oath. Cordwyn. Gomaisen and Bakuvun would be among them, she
was
ready to wager. She should have pressed Elayne to put them out of the
city as
soon as they made their demands. She did not realize she had spoken
aloud until
the wounded Guardsman spoke up.
"No,
my Lady. Leastwise, not Bakuvun. Him and a dozen or so of his men
dropped by to
toss… uh, to pass the time, and the lieutenant figures they're the only
reason we've managed to hold on. If they are still holding. They were
using
battering rams on the tower doors when I looked back. But there's more,
my
Lady. There's men massing in Low Caemlyn outside the gates. Ten
thousand, maybe
twice that. Hard to tell, the way those streets twist."
Birgitte
winced. Ten thousand men would be enough to carry an assault from the
outside
whether or not the mercenaries were held off unless she sent
everything, and
she could not. What in the Light was she to do? Burn her, she could
plan a raid
to rescue someone from a fortress or scout in country held by the enemy
with confidence
that she knew what she was doing, but this was a battle, with the fate
of
Caemlyn and maybe the throne in the balance. Still, she had it to do.
"Mistress Harfor, take this man back to the palace and see his wounds
tended, please." There was no point in asking the Windfinders for
Healing.
They had already made it clear that was taking part in the war, in
their view.
"Dyelin, leave me all of the horse and a thousand halberdmen. You take
the
rest and all of the crossbowmen and archers available. And every man
you can
scrape together who can hold a sword. If the gate is still holding when
the
Kinswomen get you there, make sure it continues to hold. If it's
fallen, take
it back. And hold that bloody wall till I can get there."
"Very
well," Dyelin said as if those were the easiest orders in the world to
carry out. "Conail. Catalyn. Branlet, Perival, you come with me. Your
foot
will fight better with you there." Conail looked disappointed, no doubt
seeing himself riding in a gallant charge, but he gathered his reins
and
whispered something that made the two younger boys chuckle.
"So
will my horse fight better." Catalyn protested. "I want to help
rescue Elayne."
"You
came to help her secure the throne." Dyelin said sharply, "and you'll
go where you're needed to see to that, or you and I will have another
talk
later." Whatever that meant, Catalyn's plump face reddened, but she
sullenly followed Dyelin and the others when they rode away.
Guybon
looked at Birgitte, yet he said nothing, though likely he was wondering
why she
was not sending more. He would not challenge her publicly. The problem
was. she
did not know how many Black sisters would be with Elayne. She needed
every
Windhnder, needed them to believe they were all necessary. Had there
been time,
she would have stripped the sentries from the outer towers, stripped
even the
gates.
"Make
the gateway," she told Chanelle. "To just this side of the ridge east
of the city, right on top of the Erinin Road and facing away from the
city.''
The
Windfinders gathered in a circle, doing whatever they had to do to link
and
taking their bloody time about it. Suddenly the vertical silver-blue
slash of a
gateway appeared, widening into an opening, five paces tall and
covering the
whole width of the cleared ground, that showed a wide road of
hard-packed clay
climbing the gentle slope of the ten-span high ridge on its way to the
River
Erinin. Arymilla had camps beyond that ridge. Given the news, they
might be
empty-with luck, they were- but she could not concern herself with them
now in
any event.
"Forward
and deploy as ordered!" Guybon shouted, and spurred his tall bay
through
followed by the gathered nobles and the Guardsmen ten abreast. The
Guardsmen
began curling off to the left and out of sight while the nobles took a
position
a little up the ridge. Some began peering toward the city through
looking
glasses. Guybon dismounted and ran, crouching, to peer over the crest
through
his. Birgitte could almost feel the impatience of the Guardswomen
waiting
behind her.
"You
did not need a gateway this large," Chanelle said, frowning at the
column
of horsemen flowing into the gateway. "Why-?"
"Come
with me." Birgitte said, taking the Windfinder by her arm. "I want to
show you something." Pulling the dun along by his reins, she began
drawing
the woman toward the gateway. "You can come back once you've seen
it." If she knew the least thing about Chanelle, she was the one
guiding
the circle. For the rest, she was counting on human nature. She did not
look
back, yet she nearly sighed with relief when she heard the other
Windfinders
murmuring among themselves behind her. Following.
Whatever
Guybon had seen, it was good news, because he straightened up before
running
back down to his horse. Arymilla must have stripped her camps to the
bone. Make
it twenty thousand at the Far Madding Gate, then, if not more. The
Light send
it was holding. The Light send everywhere was holding. But Elayne
first. First
and above all else.
When
she reached Guybon. who was back on his bay, the Guardswomen arrayed
themselves
in three lines behind Caseille off to one side. The whole hundred-pace
width of
the gateway was filled with men and horses now. trotting as they
hurried left
and right to join the others already forming in three ranks that grew
to either
side of the road. Good. There would be no easy way for the Windfinders
to duck
back through for a little while. A wagon with an arched canvas cover
and a
four-horse team, surrounded by a small mounted party, was halted in the
road
just beyond the last buildings of Low Caemlyn. perhaps a mile distant.
Beyond
it, people bustled in the open brick markets that lined the road, going
about
their lives as best they could, but they might as well not have
existed. Elayne
was in that wagon. Birgitte raised her hand without taking her eyes
from the
vehicle, and Guybon put his brass-mounted looking glass in her palm.
Wagon and
riders leaped closer when she raised the tube to her eye.
"What
did you want me to see?" Chanelle demanded.
"In
a moment," Birgitte replied. There were four men, three of them
mounted,
but more important were the seven women on horseback. It was a good
looking
glass, but not good enough for her to make out an ageless face at that
distance. Still, she had to assume all seven were Aes Sedai. Eight
against
seven might have seemed almost even odds, but not when the eight were
linked.
Not if she could make the eight take part.
What
were the Darkfriends thinking, seeing thousands of soldiers and armsmen
appear from
behind what would seem to them a heat haze hanging in the air? She
lowered the
glass. Noblemen were beginning to ride down as their armsmen came out
and went
to join the lines.
However
surprised the Darkfriends were, they did not dither long. Lightning
began
flashing down out of a clear sky, silver-blue bolts that struck the
ground with
thunderous crashes and threw men and horses like splashed mud. Horses
reared
and plunged and screamed, but men fought to control their mounts, to
hold their
places. No one ran. The booming thunder that accompanied those blasts
struck
Birgitte like blows, staggering her. She could feel her hair stirring,
trying
to rise out of her braid. The air smelled… sharp. It seemed to tingle.
Again lightning lashed the ranks. In Low Caemlyn, people were running.
Most
were running away, but some fools actually ran to where they could have
a
better view. The ends of narrow streets opening onto the countryside
began
filling with spectators.
"If
we're going to face that, we might as well be moving and make it harder
for
them," Guybon said, gathering his reins. "With your permission, my
Lady?"
"We'll
lose fewer if you're moving." Birgitte agreed, and he spurred down the
ridge.
Caseille
halted her horse in front of Birgitte and saluted, an arm across her
chest. Her
narrow face was grim behind the face-bars of her lacquered helmet.
"Permission for the Bodyguard to join the line, my Lady?" You could
hear the capital. They were not just any bodyguard, they were the
Daughter-Heir's
Bodyguard and would be the Queen's Bodyguard.
"Granted,"
Birgitte said. If anyone had a right, these women did.
The
Arafellin whirled her horse and galloped down the slope followed by the
rest of
the Bodyguard to take their place in those lightning-torn ranks. A
company of
mercenaries, perhaps two hundred men in black-painted helmets and
breastplates,
riding behind a red banner bearing a running black wolf, halted when
they saw
what they were riding into, but men behind the banners of half a dozen
Houses
pushed past them, and they had no choice but to go on. More noblemen
rode down
to lead their men, Brannin and Kelwin, Laerid and Barel. others. None
hesitated
once he saw his own banner appear. Sergase was not the only woman to
move her
horse a few paces as if she, too, meant to join with her armsmen when
her
banner came out of the gateway.
"At
a walk!" Guybon shouted, to be heard over the explosions. All along the
line, other voices echoed him. "Advance!" Wheeling his bay, he rode
slowly toward the Darkfriend Aes Sedai while lightning boomed and
crashed and
men and horses flew in fountains of earth.
"What
did you want me to see?" Chanelle demanded again. "I want to be away
from this place." Small danger of that for the moment. Men were still
coming out of the gateway, galloping or running to catch up. Fireballs
fell
among the ranks, too. now. adding their own eruptions of dirt, arms,
legs. A
horse's head spun lazily into the air.
"This,"
Birgitte said, gesturing to the scene in front of them. Guy-bon had
begun to
trot, pulling the others with him. the three ranks holding steady in
their
advance, others coming as hard as they could to join them. Abruptly a
leg-thick
bar of what appear to be liquid white fire shot out from one of the
women
beside the wagon. It quite literally carved a gap fifteen paces wide in
the
lines. For a heartbeat, shimmering flecks floated in the air, the
shapes of men
and horses struck, and then were consumed. The bar suddenly jerked up
into the
air, higher and higher, then winked out leaving dim purple lines across
Birgittes vision. Balefire, burning men out of the Pattern so that they
were
dead before it struck them. She swung the looking glass up to her eye
long
enough to spot the woman holding a slim black rod that appeared to be
perhaps a
pace long.
Guybon
began to charge. It was too soon, but his only hope was to close while
he still
had men alive. His only hope but one. Over the thunderous explosions of
fireballs and lightning rose a ragged cry of. "Elayne and Andor!"
Ragged, but full-throated. The banners were all streaming. A brave
sight, if
you could ignore how many were falling. A horse and rider struck
squarely by a
fireball simply disintegrated, men and horses all around them going
down as
well. Some managed to rise again. A riderless horse stood on three
legs, tried
to run and fell over thrashing.
"This?"
Chanelle said incredulously. "I have no desire to watch men die."
Another bar of balefire sliced a breach of nearly twenty paces in the
charging
ranks before knifing down into the ground, cutting a trench halfway
back to the
wagon before it vanished. There were a good many dead, though not so
many as it
seemed there should be. Birgitte had seen the same in battles during
the
Trolloc Wars where the Power had been used. For every man who lay
still, two or
three were staggering to their feet or trying to stem a flow of blood.
For
every horse stiff-legged in death, two more stood on wobbly legs. The
hail of
fire and lightning continued unabated.
"Then
stop it." Birgitte said. "If they kill all the soldiers, or just
enough to make the rest break, then Elayne is lost." Not forever. Burn
her, she would track her for the rest of her life to see her free, but
the
Light only knew what they might do to her in that time. "Zaida's
bargain
is lost. You will have lost it."
The
morning was not warm, yet sweat beaded on Chanelle's forehead.
Fireballs and
lightning erupted among the riders following Guy-bon. The woman holding
the rod
raised her arm again. Even without using the looking glass, Birgitte
was sure
it was pointed straight at Guybon. He had to see it. but he never
swerved a
hair.
Suddenly
another bolt of lightning slashed down. And struck the woman holding
the rod. She
flew in one direction, her mount in another. One of the wagon team
sagged to
the ground while the others danced and reared. They would have run
except for
their dead trace-mate. The other horses around the wagon were rearing
and
plunging. too. The rain of fire and lightning ceased as the Aes Sedai
fought to
control their horses, to maintain their saddles. Rather than trying to
calm his
team, the man on the driver's seat leaped down and drew his sword as he
began
to run toward the charging horsemen. The onlookers in Low Caemlyn were
running
again, too, this time away.
"Take
the others alive!" Birgitte snapped. She did not much care whether they
lived-they would die soon enough for being Dark-friends and
murderers-but
Elayne was in that bloody wagon!
Chanelle
nodded stiffly, and around the wagon, riders began toppling from their
fractious mounts to lie struggling on the ground as if bound hand and
foot.
Which they were, of course. The running man fell on his face and lay
writhing.
"I shielded the women, too,' Chanelle said. Even holding the Power,
they
would have been no match for a circle of eight.
Guybon
raised his hand, slowing the charge to a walk. It was remarkable how
short a
time it all had taken. He was less than halfway to the wagon. Men
mounted and
afoot were still pouring out of the gateway. Swinging into the dun's
saddle,
Birgitte galloped toward Elayne. Bloody woman, she thought. The bond
had never
once carried any hint of fear.
CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE
Nine Out of Ten
The
Darkfriends had taken no chances with Elayne. Aside from shielding her,
Temaile
had taken seemingly malicious pleasure in tying her in a tight knot
with her
head between her knees. Her muscles already ached from the cramped
position.
The gag, a dirty piece of rag with a vile, oily taste, tied so tightly
that it
dug into the corners of her mouth, had been meant to keep her from
shouting for
help at the gates. Not that she would have: all that would have done
was
sentence the men guarding the gates to death. She could feel the six
Black sisters
holding saidar until they were through the gate. But the blindfold had
been an
unnecessary touch. She thought they wanted to add to her sense of
helplessness,
yet she refused to feel helpless. After all, she was perfectly safe
until her
babies were born, and so were her babies. Min had said so.
She
knew she was in a wagon or cart by the sound of harness and the feel of
rough
boards beneath her. They had not bothered to pad the floorboards with a
blanket. A wagon, she thought. There seemed to be more than one horse
pulling
it. The wagon box smelled of old hay so strongly that she wanted to
sneeze. Her
situation seemed hopeless, but Birgitte would not fail her.
She
felt Birgitte leap from somewhere miles behind her to perhaps a mile
ahead, and
she wanted to laugh. The bond said Birgitte was aimed at her target,
and
Birgitte Silverbow never missed. When the channeling started on both
sides of
the wagon, the desire to laugh faded. Determination held rock-steady in
the
bond, but there was something else as well, now, a strong distaste and
a rising… not anger, but close. Men would be dying out there. Instead
of laughing,
Elayne wanted to weep for them. They deserved someone to weep for them,
and
they were dying for her. As Vandene and Sareitha had died. Sadness for
them
welled up in her again. No guilt, though. Only by letting Falion and
Marillin
walk free could they have been spared, and neither would have
countenanced
that. There had been no way to anticipate the arrival of the others, or
that
strange weapon Asne had.
A
thunderous crash came close at hand, and her conveyance was jolted so
violently
that she bounced on the floorboards. Her knees and shins were going to
be
bruised from that. She sneezed in the dust that had risen with her,
sneezed
again. She could feel individual hairs lifting where they were not held
down by
the gag and blindfold. The air smelled peculiar. A lightning strike, it
appeared. She hoped Birgitte had managed to involve the Windfinders,
unlikely
as that seemed. The time would come when the Kin would have to use the
Power as
a weapon-no one could stand aside from Tarmon Gai'don-but let them
preserve
their innocence a little longer. Moments later, the shield on her
vanished.
Unable
to see, she could not channel to any real purpose, but she could sense
weaves
near her, some of Spirit, some of Air. Without seeing the weaves, she
was
unable to know what they were, yet she could make a reasonable guess.
Her
captors were themselves captives now. shielded and bound. And all she
could do
was wait impatiently. Birgitte was coming closer rapidly, yet now she
felt
anxious to have that bloody web of ropes off her.
The
wagon box creaked as someone heaved herself in. Birgitte. The bond
carried a
flash of joy. In moments, the ropes fell away from her and Birgitte's
hands
went to the knot of the gag. Moving a little stiffly, Elayne untied the
blindfold herself. Light, she was going to ache like fury until she
could ask
for Healing. That reminded her that she would have to ask the
Windfinders, and
the sadness rose all over again for Vandene and Sareitha.
Once
she could spit out the gag. she wanted to ask for water to wash away
the oily
taste, but instead, she said, "What kept you?" Her laughter at the
other woman's sudden consternation was cut short by another sneeze.
"Let's
get out of here, Birgitte. The Kin?"
"Windfinders,"
Birgitte answered, holding open the canvas flap at the back of the
wagon.
"Chanelle decided she'd rather not report losing her bargain to
Zaida."
Elayne
sniffed in disdain, a mistake. Sneezing repeatedly, she climbed down
from the
wagon as quickly as she could manage. Her legs were as stiff as her
arms. Burn
her, but she wanted a hot bath. And a hairbrush. Birgitte's
white-collared red
coat looked somewhat rumpled, but Elayne suspected she made her warder
appear
fresh from the dressing room.
When
her feet hit the ground, mounted Guardsmen in a thick ring around the
wagon
raised a loud cheer, shaking their lances in the air. Guardswomen
whooped, too.
apparently almost every last one of them. Two of the men bore Andor's
White
Lion and her Golden Lily. That brought a smile. The Queen's Guards were
sworn
to defend Andor, the Queen and the Daughter-Heir, yet the decision to
carry her
personal banner had to have been Charlz Guybon's. Sitting a tall bay
with his
helmet resting on the saddlebow, he bowed to her, a broad smile on his
lips.
The man was a pleasure to look at. Perhaps he would do for a third
Warder.
Beyond the Guards rose House banners and banners of mercenary
companies, banner
after banner. Light, how many men had Birgitte brought? That could be
answered
later, though. First Elayne wanted to see her prisoners.
Asne
lay spreadeagled on the road, her empty eyes staring at the sky; the
shield on
her was unneeded. The others lay as still, bound with flows of Air that
held
their arms to their sides and snugged their divided skirts against
their legs.
A much more comfortable position than she had been in. Most seemed
remarkably
composed considering their situation, though Temaile scowled at her and
Falion
appeared about to sick up. Shiaine's mud-smeared face would have done
credit to
any Aes Sedai. The three men bound with Air were anything but composed.
They
writhed and struggled, glaring at the riders surrounding them as if
they wanted
nothing more than to attack them all. That was enough to identify them
as
Asne's Warders, though not necessarily as Darkfriends. Whether they
were or
not, they would still have to be imprisoned, to protect others from the
death-rage
that Asne's death had filled them with. They would do anything to kill
whomever
they held responsible.
"How
did they find us?" Chesmal demanded. If she had not been lying in the
road
with a dirty face, no one would have thought her a prisoner.
"My
Warder," Elayne said, smiling at Birgitte. "One of them."
"A
woman Warder?" Chesmal said disdainfully.
Marillin
shook in her bonds with silent laughter for a moment. "I'd heard
that,''
she said when the shaking ceased, "but it seemed too incredible to be
true."
"You
heard this, and you never mentioned it?" Temaile said, twisting around
to
transfer her scowl to Marillin. "You great fool!"
"You
forget yourself," Marillin said sharply, and the next instant they were
arguing about whether Temaile should defer to her! In truth. Temaile
should-Elayne could sense their relative strengths-yet it hardly seemed
a topic
they would argue over now!
"Somebody
gag these women." Elayne ordered. Caseille dismounted. handing her
reins
to another Guardswoman. and strode over to begin cutting a strip from
Temaile's
skirts with her dagger. "Load them into the wagon and cut away that
dead
horse. I want to get back inside the walls before Arymilla's people
beyond the
ridge feel tempted." The last thing she needed now was a pitched
battle.
Whatever the outcome, Arymilla could afford to lose more men than she.
"Where are the Windfinders, Birgitte?"
"Still
on the ridge. I think they believe they can deny taking part if they
don't get
too near the carnage. But you don't have to worry about being attacked
here.
The camps beyond the ridge are empty." Caseille hoisted Temaile over
her
shoulder and staggered over to heave her into the wagon like a sack of
grain.
Guardswomen were picking up the other women, too. They wisely left the
struggling
Warders to the Guardsmen. It required two to handle each of them. A
pair of
tall Guardsmen were unfastening the dead horse's harness.
"All
I saw were camp followers, grooms and the like," Charlz put in.
"I
think all of her camps may be empty," Birgitte went on. "She sent
heavy assaults against the northern wall this morning to draw as many
of our
men as possible, and she has twenty thousand or more in Low Caemlyn
below the
Far Madding Gate. Some of the mercenaries changed colors and are
attacking it
from inside, but I sent Dyelin with everything I could spare. As soon
as you're
safe inside the walls, I'll take the rest to help her. To add to the
good news.
Luan and the rest of that lot are riding north. They could be here this
afternoon."
Elayne's
breath caught. Luan and the rest would have be dealt with when they
appeared,
but the other news… ! "Do you remember what Mistress Harfor reported,
Birgitte? Arymilla and the others all intend to be with the first party
to ride
into Caemlyn. They must be outside the Far Madding Gate, too. How many
men do
you have here?"
"What's
the butcher's bill, Guybon?" Birgitte asked, eyeing Elayne warily. The
bond carried wariness, too. Great wariness.
"I
don't have a full tally yet, my Lady. Some of the bodies…" Charlz
grimaced. "I'd say as many as five or six hundred dead, though, perhaps
a
few more. Twice as many wounded one way and another. As nasty a few
minutes as
I've ever seen."
"Call
it ten thousand, Elayne," Birgitte said, thick braid swaying as she
shook
her head. She tucked her thumbs behind her belt, and determination
filled the
bond. "Arymilla has to have at least twice that at the Far Madding
Gate,
maybe three times if she's really stripped her camps. If you're
thinking what I
think you're thinking… I told Dyelin to retake the gate if it had
fallen,
but it's more likely she's fighting Arymilla inside the city. If, by
some
miracle, the gate is holding, you're talking better than two to one
odds
against us."
"If
they're through the gate," Elayne said stubbornly, "it's unlikely
they closed it behind them. We'll take them in the rear." It was not
all
stubbornness. Not entirely. She had not trained with weapons, but she
had
received all of the other lessons Gawyn had gotten from Gareth Bryne. A
queen
had to understand the battle plans her generals gave her rather than
simply
accept them blindly. "If the gate is holding, we'll have them trapped
between us and the wall. Numbers won't count so much in Low Caemlyn.
Arymilla
won't be able to line up any more men across a street than we can. We
are going
to do it. Birgitte. Now somebody find me a horse."
For
a moment, she thought the other woman was going to refuse, which
ratcheted up
her stubbornness, but Birgitte exhaled heavily. "Tzigan, catch up that
tall gray mare for Lady Elayne."
It
seemed that everyone around them except the Darkfriends sighed. They
must have
thought they were going to see a display of Elayne Trakand's fabled
temper. Knowing
that almost sparked one. Burn her bouncing moods!
Stepping
closer. Birgitte lowered her voice. "But you'll ride surrounded by your
bodyguard. This isn't some fool story with a queen carrying her banner
into
battle to lead her troops. I know one of your ancestors did that, but
you're
not her, and you don't have a broken army to rally.''
"Why,
that was exactly my plan," Elayne said sweetly. "How ever did you
guess?"
Birgitte
snorted with laughter and muttered "Bloody woman" not quite softly
enough to escape detection. Affection flowed in the bond, though.
It
was not so simple, of course. Men had to be told off to help the
wounded. Some
could walk, but many could not. Too many had tourniquets around the
bloody
stump of an arm or a leg. Charlz and the nobles gathered around Elayne
and
Birgitte to hear the plan of attack, which was simple of necessity, but
then
Chanelle refused to change the gateway until Elayne agreed that this
time they
need provide transport only and sealed the agreement; with them both
kissing
their fingertips and pressing them to the other's lips. Only then did
the
gateway dwindle to a vertical silvery slash and widen again into a
hundred-pace-wide view of Caemlyn from the south.
There
were no people in the brick markets lining the wide road that ran north
from
the gateway to the Far Madding Gate, but a great mass of men, mounted
and
aroot. crowded the road out of bowshot from the walls. The first of
them was
only a few hundred paces from the gateway. It appeared that they
spilled into
the side streets, too. The mounted men were to the front with a thicket
of
banners, but cavalry or infantry, they were all looking toward the
gates of
Caemlyn itself. The closed gates. Elayne could have shouted for joy.
She
rode through first, but Birgitte was taking no chances. Her bodyguard
gathered
around her. herding her off to one side. Birgitte was right by her
side, but
somehow they did not seem to be herding her. Fortunately, no one tried
to
object to her pushing the gray forward until only a single line of
Guardswomen
was between her and the road. That line might as well have been a stone
wall.
The gray was indeed tall, however, so she could see without standing in
the
stirrups. She should have lengthened those. They were just a little
short for her.
That made this Chesmal's horse, since she was the only one who came
close to
her own height. A horse could not be tainted by its rider-just because
Chesmal
was Black Ajah did not make the horse evil-but she felt uncomfortable
on the
animal for more than short stirrups. The gray would be sold, the gray
and all
the other horses the Darkfriends had been riding, and the money
distributed to
the poor.
Cavalry
and foot came out of the gateway behind Charlz, enough to fill it from
side to
side. Followed by the White Lion and the Golden Lily, he started up the
road at
a trot with five hundred Guardsmen, spread out to cover the width of
the road.
Other parties of similar size split off and vanished into the streets
of Low
Caemlyn. When the last men exited the gateway, it dwindled and
vanished. Now,
there was no quick escape if anything went wrong. Now, they had to win,
or
Arymilla would as good as have the throne whether or not she had
Caemlyn.
"We
need Mat Cauthon's bloody luck today," Birgitte muttered.
"You
said something like that before." Elayne said. "What do you
mean?"
Birgitte
gave her a peculiar look. The bond carried… amusement! "Have you ever
seen him dicing?"
"I
hardly spend much time in places where there's dicing, Birgitte."
"Let's
just say he's luckier than any other man I've ever met."
Shaking
her head, Elayne put Mat Cauthon out of her mind. Charlz's men were
shutting
off her view as they rode forward. Not charging yet, trying to make no
more
noise than absolutely necessary. With a little luck, her men would have
Arymilla's surrounded before they knew what was happening. And then
they would
hit Arymilla from every side. Mat was the luckiest man Birgitte had
ever met?
In that case, he must be very lucky indeed.
Suddenly
Charlz's Guardsmen were moving faster, their steel-tipped lances
swinging down.
Someone must have looked back. Shouts rose, cries of alarm and one
thunderous
shout she heard repeated from many directions. "Elayne and Andor!"
There
were other cries, as well. "The Moons!" and "The Fox!"
"The Triple Keys!' and "The Hammer!" and "The Black
Banner!" Others, for lesser Houses. But from her side came only the
one,
repeated again and again. "Elayne and Andor!"
Suddenly
she was shaking, half laughing, half weeping. The Light send she was
not
consigning those men to their deaths for nothing.
The
cries faded, largely replaced by the clash of steel on steel, by shouts
and
screams as men killed or died. Abruptly she realized the gates were
swinging
out. And she could not see! Kicking her feet free of the stirrups, she
clambered up to stand on the high-cantled saddle. The gray shifted
nervously,
unaccustomed to being a stepstool. but not enough to disturb her
balance.
Birgitte muttered a particularly pungent oath, but the next moment she
was
standing on her saddle, too. Hundreds of crossbowmen and archers were
pouring
out of the Far Madding Gate, but were they her men, or the renegade
mercenaries?
For
answer, archers began firing at Arymilia's massed cavalry as fast as
they could
nock and draw. The first crossbows went up and loosed a volley.
Immediately
those men began working their cranks to rewind their crossbows, but
others
rushed past them to loose a second flight of bolts that cut down men
and horses
like scythes reaping barley. More archers spilled out of the gate,
firing as
fast as they could. A third rank of crossbowmen ran forward to fire, a
fourth,
a fifth, and then men wielding halberds were pushing past the
crossbowmen still
running out of the gate. A halberd was a fearsome weapon, combining
spear-point
and axe blade with a hook for pulling men out of the saddle. Horsemen
with no
room to charge their lances, their swords out-reached by the halberd's
long
haft, began falling. Men in red coats and burnished breastplates were
galloping
out of the gate now, Guardsmen swinging to left and right to find
another way
to get at Arymilla's ranks. The flow of them went on and on, unceasing.
How in
the Light could Dyelin have so many of the Guards? Unless… Burn the
woman, she must have scooped up the half-trained men! Well,
half-trained or
not. they would be anointed in blood today.
Suddenly
three figures in gilded helmets and breastplates rode through the
gates, swords
in hand. Two of them were very small. The shouts that rose when they
appeared
were thin with distance, but still audible over the din of battle. "The
Black Eagles!" and "The Anvil!" and "The Red
Leopards!" Two mounted women appeared in the gate, struggling until the
taller managed to pull the other's horse back out of sight.
"Blood
and bloody ashes!" Elayne snapped. "Conail's old enough, I suppose,
but Branlet and Perival are boys! Somebody should have kept them out of
that!"
"Dyelin
held them back long enough," Birgitte said calmly. The bond carried
bone-deep calm. "Longer than I thought she could hold Conail. And she
did
manage to keep Catalyn out of it. Anyway, the boys have a few hundred
men
between them and the forefront, and I don't see anyone trying to make
room for
them to squeeze forward." It was true. The three were waving their
swords
impotently at least fifty paces from where men were dying. But then,
fifty
paces was a short range for bow or crossbow.
Men
began appearing on the rooftops, first dozens then hundreds, archers
and
crossbowmen climbing over the roof peaks, working their way across the
slates
like spiders until they could shoot down into the packed mass below.
One
slipped and fell, his body lying atop the men in the street and jerking
as it
was stabbed repeatedly. Another suddenly reared up, a shaft sticking
out of his
side, and toppled from his perch. He also lay atop the men in the
street,
twitching as he was stabbed again and again.
"They're
jammed together too tightly." Birgitte said excitedly. "They can't
raise a bow much less draw one. I'll wager the dead don't even have
room to
fall down. It won't be long, now."
But
the slaughter continued for a good half-hour before the first shouts of
"Quarter!" rose. Men began hanging their helmets on sword hilts and
raising them overhead, risking death in the hope of life. Footmen
stripped off
helmets and held their hands up empty. Horsemen flung down lances,
helmets,
swords, and raised their hands. It spread like a fever, the cry
bellowing from
thousands of throats. "Quarter!"
Elayne
sat down on her saddle properly. It was done. Now to learn how well it
had been
done.
The
fighting did not stop immediately, of course. Some tried to fight on.
but they
fought alone and died or were pulled down by men around them who were
no longer
ready to die. At last, however, even the most diehard began shedding
weapons
and armor, and if not every voice cried for quarter, the roar was still
thunderous. Weaponless men shorn of helmets and breastplates and any
other
armor they might have worn began staggering through the line of
Guardsmen,
hands above their heads. Halberdmen herded them like sheep. They had
something
of the stunned look of sheep in a slaughter yard. The same thing must
have been
being repeated on dozens of Low Caemlyn's narrow streets, and at the
gates,
because the only shouts she heard were for quarter, and those were
beginning to
dwindle as men realized it was being granted.
The
sun lacked no more than an hour of its noonday peak by the time the
nobles were
all separated out. The lesser were escorted inside the city, where they
would
be held for ransom. To be paid once the throne was secure. The first of
the
greater nobles to be brought to her, escorted by Charlz and a dozen
Guardsmen,
were Arymilla, Naean and Elenia. Charlz had a bloody gash down his left
sleeve,
and a dent in his shining breastplate that must have been made by a
hammer
blow, but his features were composed behind the face-bars of his
helmet. She
heaved a huge sigh of relief to see the three women. Among the dead or
among
the captives, the others would be found. She had decapitated her
opposition. At
least until Luan and the others arrived. The Guardswomen in front of
her at
last moved aside so she could confront her prisoners.
The
three were garbed as if they had intended to attend Arymilla's
coronation that
very day. Her red silk dress was sewn with seed pearls on the bosom and
embroidered with rearing white lions marching up the sleeves. Swaying
in her
saddle, she had the same stunned look in her brown eyes that her
soldiers had.
Naean, slim and straight-backed in blue with the silver Triple Keys of
Arawn
climbing her sleeves and silver scrollwork across her bosom, her
gleaming black
hair caught in a silver net set with sapphires, seemed subdued rather
than
numb. She even managed a sneer, though it was weak. Honey-haired
Elenia, in
green elaborately embroidered with gold, shared her glares between
Arymilla and
Elayne. The bond carried equal measures of triumph and disgust.
Birgitte's
dislike of these women was as personal as Elayne's own.
"You
will be my guests in the palace for the time being," Elayne told them.
"I hope your coffers are deep. Your ransoms will pay for this war
you've
caused." That was malicious of her, but she felt spiteful all of a
sudden.
Their coffers were not deep at all. They had borrowed far more than
they could
repay in order to hire mercenaries. And bribe mercenaries. They faced
ruin
without any ransom. With, they faced devastation.
"You
cannot believe it ends this way." Arymilla said hoarsely. She sounded
as
if she were trying to convince herself. "Jarid is still in the field
with
a considerable force. Jarid and others. Tell her, Elenia."
"Jarid
will try to preserve what he can of Sarand from this disaster you've
forced us
into," Elenia snarled. They began shouting at one another, but Elayne
ignored them. She wondered how they would enjoy sharing a bed with
Naean.
Next
to appear under escort was Lir Baryn, and moments later Karind Anshar.
As
slender as a blade, and as strong, Lir wore a thoughtful expression
rather than
defiant or sullen. His green coat. embroidered with the silver Winged
Hammer of
House Baryn on the high collar, bore the marks of the breastplate he
was no
longer wearing. and his dark hair was matted with sweat. More glistened
on his
face. He had not gotten so sweaty watching other men fight. Karind was
garbed
as grandly as the other women, in shimmering blue silk heavy with
silver braid
and pearls in her gray-streaked hair. Her square face looked resigned,
especially after Elayne told them about their ransoms. Neither had
borrowed as
heavily as the other three so far as she knew, but that ransom would
still cut
deep.
Then
two Guardsmen appeared with a woman a little older than Elayne, in
simple blue,
a woman she thought she recognized. A single enameled brooch, a red
star and
silver sword on glittering black, appeared to be her only jewelry. But
why was
Sylvase Caeren being brought to her? A pretty woman with alert blue
eyes that
held steady on Elayne's face, she was Lord Nasin's heir, not the High
Seat of
Caeren.
"Caeren
stands for Trakand," Sylvase said shockingly as soon as she reined in.
The
bond echoed Elayne's startlement. Arymilla gaped at Sylvase as if she
were mad.
"My grandfather suffered a seizure, Arymilla," the young woman said
calmly, "and my cousins fell over themselves affirming me as High Seat.
I
will publish it, Elayne, if you wish."
"That
might be best." Elayne said slowly. Publication would make her support
irrevocable. This would not be the first time a House had switched
sides, even
without the death of a High Seat, but best to be certain. "Trakand
welcomes Caeren warmly, Sylvase." Best not to be too distant, either.
She
knew little of Sylvase Caeren.
Sylvase
nodded, accepting. So she had at least a degree of intelligence. She
knew she
would not be fully trusted until she demonstrated her loyalty by
sending out
the proclamations of support. "If you trust me a little, may I have
custody of Arymilla, Naean and Elenia? In the Royal Palace, of course,
or wherever
you choose to house me. I believe my new secretary. Master Lounalt, may
be able
to convince them to throw their support to you."
For
some reason, Naean gave a loud cry and would have fallen from her
saddle if a
Guardsman had not grabbed her arm to support her. Arymilla and Elenia
both
appeared ready to sick up.
"I
think not," Elayne said. No proposed conversation with a secretary
produced those reactions. It seemed Sylvase had a hard core to her.
"Naean
and Elenia have published their support of Arymilla. They'll hardly
destroy
themselves by recanting." That truly would destroy them. Smaller Houses
sworn to them would begin falling away until their own House dwindled
in
importance. They themselves might not survive as High Seats much beyond
announcing that they now stood for Trakand. And as for Arymilla… Elayne
would not allow Arymilla to change her tune. She would refuse the
woman's
support if it were offered!
Something
grim entered Sylvase's gaze as she glanced at the three women. "They
might,
with the proper persuasion." Oh, yes; a very hard core. "But as you
wish, Elayne. Be very careful of them, though. Treachery is in their
blood and
bones."
"Baryn
stands for Trakand," Lir announced suddenly. "I, too, will publish
it. Elayne."
"Anshar
stands for Trakand." Karind said in firm tones. "I will send the
proclamations out today."
"Traitors!"
Arymilla cried. "I'll see you dead for this!" She fumbled at her
belt, where a dagger's scabbard hung, jeweled and empty, as if she
intended to
see to the matter herself. Elenia began to laugh, but she did not sound
amused.
It sounded almost like weeping.
Elayne
drew a deep breath. Now she had nine of the ten Houses needed. She was
under no
illusions. Whatever Sylvase's reasons, Lir and Karind were trying to
salvage
what they could by cutting themselves loose from a lost cause and
hitching
themselves to one that suddenly appeared to be rising. They would
expect her to
give them preferment for standing for her before she had the throne
while
forgetting that they had ever supported Arymilla. She would do neither.
But
neither could she reject them out of hand. "Trakand welcomes Baryn."
Never warmly. though. Never that. "Trakand welcomes Anshar. Captain
Guybon, get the prisoners into the city as soon as you can. Armsmen for
Caeren,
Baryn and Anshar will be restored their weapons and armor once the
proclamations have been sent out. but they can have their banners back
now." He saluted her and wheeled his bay, already shouting orders.
As
she heeled the gray toward Dyelin, who was riding out of a side street
followed
by Catalyn and the three young fools in their gilded armor, Sylvase,
Lir and
Karind fell in behind her and Birgitte. She felt no disquiet having
them at her
back, not with a hundred Guardswomen at theirs. They would be watched
very
closely until those proclamations were sent. Including Sylvase.
Elayne's mind
was already casting itself ahead.
"You're
awfully quiet," Birgitte said softly. "You've just won a great
victory."
"And
in a few hours," she replied, "I'll learn whether I have to win
another."
CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR
A Cup of Kaf
Furyk
Karede pressed his gauntleted fist to his heart, returning the sentry's
salute,
and ignored the fact that the man spat as he rode past. He hoped the
eighty men
and twenty-one Ogier behind him ignored it, too. They had better, if
they knew
what was good for them. He was here for information, and a killing
would make
getting it more difficult. Since his manservant Ajimbura had planted
his knife
in a Standardbearer's heart over a perceived insult to his master- in
truth, a
real insult, but Ajimbura should have held his temper the way he
himself
had-since then, he had taken to leaving the wiry little hill-tribesman
in the
forest with the sul'dam and damam and some of the Guards to watch over
the
packhorses when he entered a camp. He had come a long way from Ebou Dar
chasing
the wind, almost four weeks of haring after rumors, until the news
brought him
here to this camp in east central Altara.
The
neat rows of pale tents and horselines stood in a forest clearing large
enough
for raken to land, but there was no sign of raken or fliers, no ground
company
with its wagons and raken-grooms. But then, he had not seen a raken in
the
skies for some time now. Supposedly almost all had been sent west. Why,
he did
not know and did not care. The High Lady was his goal and his entire
world. A
tall thin message pole cast its long shadow in the early morning sun,
though,
so there must be raken somewhere about. He thought the camp might
contain a
thousand men, not counting farriers and cooks and the like.
Interestingly,
every last soldier he could see wore familiar armor from home rather
than those
solid breastplates and barred helmets. Practice was to pad out most
forces with
men from this side of the ocean. It was interesting that they were all
armored,
too. A rare commander kept his soldiers in armor unless he expected
action
soon. From the rumors he had picked up, that might be the case here.
Three
flagstaffs marked the command tent, a tall, walled affair of pale
canvas with
air vents along the peak that doubled as smoke holes. No smoke issued
from them
now, for the morning was only a little cool. though the sun hung not
far above
the horizon. On one flagstaff the blue-bordered Imperial Banner hung in
limp
folds, hiding the spread-winged golden hawk clutching lightning in its
talons.
Some commanders hung it from a horizontal staff so it was always
visible in
full, but he thought that ostentatious. The other two banners, on
shorter
flanking staffs, would be of the regiments these men belonged to.
Karede
dismounted in front of that tent and removed his helmet. Captain
Musenge
emulated him, revealing a grim expression on his weathered face. The
other men
climbed down too, to rest their horses, and stood by their animals. The
Ogier
Gardeners leaned on their long-hafted, black-tasseled axes. Everyone
knew they
would not be staying long.
"Keep
the men out of trouble." he told Musenge. "If that means accepting
insults, so be it."
"There'd
be fewer insults if we killed a few of them," Musenge muttered. He had
been in the Deathwatch Guards even longer than Karede. though his hair
was
unbroken black, and he would suffer insults to the Empress, might she
live
forever, as gladly as insults to the Guards.
Hartha
scratched one of his long gray mustaches with a finger the size of a
fat
sausage. The First Gardener, commander of all the Ogier in the High
Lady Tuon's
bodyguard, was almost as tall as a man in the saddle, and wide with it.
His
red-and-green lacquered armor contained enough steel to make armor for
three or
four humans. His face was as dour as Musenge's, yet his booming voice
was calm.
Ogier were always calm except in battle. Then they were as cold as deep
winter
in Jer-anem. "After we rescue the High Lady we can kill as many of them
as
need killing, Musenge."
Recalled
to his duty, Musenge flushed for having allowed himself to stray.
"After," he agreed.
Karede
had schooled himself too hard over the years, had been schooled too
hard by his
trainers, to sigh, but had he been other than a Deathwatch Guard, he
might have
done so now. Not because Musenge wanted to kill someone and almost
anyone would
do. Rather it was because the insults he had walked away from these
past weeks
chafed him as much as they did Musenge and Hartha. But the Guards did
whatever
was necessary to carry out their assignments, and if that meant walking
away
from men who spat on the ground at the sight of armor in red and the
dark green
most called black, or dared to murmur about lowered eyes in his
hearing, then
walk away he must. Finding and rescuing the High Lady Tuon was all that
mattered. Everything else was dross beside that.
Helmet
under his arm, he ducked into the tent to find what must have been most
of the
camp's officers gathered around a large map spread out on a folding
camp table.
Half wore segmented breastplates lacquered in horizontal red and blue
stripes,
the other half red and yellow. They straightened and stared when he
walked in.
men from Khoweal or Dalenshar with skin blacker than charcoal,
honey-brown men
from N'Kon, fair-haired men from Mechoacan, pale-eyed men from Alqam,
men from
every part of the Empire. Their stares held not the wariness often
tinged with
admiration that he had always been used to, but very nearly challenges.
It
seemed everyone believed the filthy tale of Guards' involvement with a
girl
pretending to be the High Lady Tuon and extorting gold and jewels from
merchants. Likely they believed that other, whispered tale about the
girl, not
merely vile but horrific. No. That the High Lady was in danger of her
life from
the Ever Victorious Army itself went beyond horrific. That was a world
gone
mad.
"Furyk
Karede," he said coolly. His hand wanted to go to his sword hilt. Only
discipline kept it at his side. Discipline and duty. He had accepted
sword
thrusts for duty. He could accept insults for it. "I wish to speak to
the
commander of this camp." For a long moment the silence stretched.
"Everybody
out," a tall lean man barked at last in the sharp accents of Dalenshar.
The others saluted, gathered their helmets from another table and filed
out.
Not one offered Karede a salute. His right hand twitched once, feeling
a
phantom hilt against his palm, and was still.
"Gamel
Loune." the lean man introduced himself. Missing the top of his right
ear,
he had a slash of solid white there through his tight black curls and
flecks of
white elsewhere. "What do you want?" There was the barest touch of
wariness in that. A hard man. and self-controlled. He would have had to
be to
earn the three red plumes decorating the helmet atop his sword-rack.
Weak men
without mastery of themselves did not rise to Banner-General. Karede
suspected
the only reason Loune was willing to talk to him was that his own
helmet bore
three black plumes.
"Not
to interfere in your command." Loune had cause to fear that. Ranks in
the
Deathwatch Guard stood half a step higher than those outside. He could
have
co-opted the man's command had he needed to. though he would have been
required
to explain his reasons later. They would have had to be good reasons
for him to
avoid losing his head. "I understand there have been… difficulties in
this part of Altara recently. 1 want to know what I am riding into."
Loune
grunted. " 'Difficulties.' That's one word for it."
A
stocky man in a plain brown coat, a narrow beard dangling from the
point of his
chin, entered the tent, carrying a heavily carved wooden tray with a
silver
pitcher and two sturdy white cups, the sort that would not break easily
while
being carried about in wagons. The scent of freshly brewed kaf began to
suffuse
the air.
"Your
kaf Banner-General." Setting the tray on the edge of table holding the
map, he carefully filled one cup with the black liquid while watching
Karede
from the corner of his eye. Somewhere in his middle years, he wore a
pair of
long knives at his belt, and his hands had a knifeman's calluses.
Karede sensed
close kin to Ajimbura, in spirit but not blood. Those dark brown eyes
never
came from the Kaensada Hills. "I waited till the others left since
there's
hardly enough for you any more. Don't know when I'm going to get more,
I
don't."
"Will
you take kaf, Karede?" Loune's reluctance was obvious, but he could
hardly
fail to offer. For an insult that large, Karede would have been forced
to kill
him. Or so the man would think.
"With
pleasure." Karede replied. Placing his helmet alongside the tray, he
doffed his steel-backed gauntlets and laid them beside it.
The
serving man filled the second cup, then started toward a corner of the
tent,
but Loune said. "That will be all for now. Mantual.' The stocky man
hesitated, eyeing Karede. before making a bow to Loune, touching eyes
and lips
with his fingertips, and departing.
"Mantual
is over-protective of me," Loune explained. Clearly he did not want to
explain, but he did want to avoid what might be taken for open insult.
"Odd fellow. Attached himself to me years ago in Pujili, wormed his way
into becoming my manservant. I think he'd stay if I stopped paying
him."
Yes, very close kin to Ajimbura.
For
a time they simply sipped kaf, balancing the cups on fingertips and
enjoying
the pungent bitterness. It seemed to be a pure Ijaz Mountains brew, and
if so.
very expensive. Karede's own supply of black beans, most definitely not
Ijaz
Mountains, had run out a week ago, and he had been surprised at how
much he
missed having kaf. He never used to mind going without anything at
need. The
first cups done, Loune refilled them.
"You
were going to tell me about the difficulties," Karede prompted now that
conversation would not be impolite. He always tried to be polite even
with men
he was going to kill, and rudeness here would dam up the man's tongue.
Loune
set his cup down and leaned his fists on the table, frowning at the
map. Small
red wedges supporting tiny paper banners were scattered across it,
marking
Seanchan forces on the move, and red stars indicating forces holding in
place.
Little black discs marking engagements peppered the map, but strangely,
no
white discs to indicate the enemy. None.
"Over
the last week." Loune said, "there have been four sizeable
engagements and upwards of sixty ambushes, skirmishes and raids, many
quite
large, all spread out across three hundred miles." That encompassed
almost
the entire map. His voice was stiff. Plainly, given a choice, he would
have
told Karede nothing. That half-step gave him none, however. "There must
be
six or eight different armies involved on the other side. The night
after the
first large engagement saw nine major raids, each forty to fifty miles
from the
site of the battle. Not small armies, either, at least not taken
altogether,
but we can't find them, and nobody has any eyeless idea where they came
from.
Whoever they are, they have damane, those Aes Sedai, with them, and
maybe those
cursed Asha'man. Men have been torn apart by explosions our damane say
weren't
caused by the Power."
Karede
sipped his kaf. The man was not thinking. If the enemy had Aes Sedai
and
Asha'man, they could use the thing called Traveling to move as far as
they
wished in a step. But if they could do that, why had they not used it
to step
all the way to safety with their prize? Perhaps
not all Aes Sedai and Asha'man could Travel, yet that begged another
question. Why had they not sent those who could? Maybe the only Aes
Sedai were
the damane stolen from the Tarasin Palace. Reportedly, none of them had
had any
idea how to Travel. That made sense. "What do the prisoners say about
who
sent them?"
Loune's
laugh was bitter. "Before you can have eyeless prisoners, you need an
eyeless victory. What we've had are a string of eyeless defeats."
Picking
up his cup. he took a sip. His voice loosened as if he had forgotten
the colors
of Karede's armor. He was just a soldier talking his trade, now. "Gurat
thought he had some of them two days ago. He lost four banners of horse
and
five of foot almost to the last man. Not all dead, but most of the
wounded are
the next thing to it. Pincushioned with crossbow bolts. Mostly
Taraboners and
Amadicians. but that isn't supposed to matter, is it. Had to be twenty
thousand
or more cross-bowmen to put out that volume. Thirty thousand, maybe.
And yet
they manage to hide from the morat'raken. I know we've killed some-the
reports
claim it, at least-but they don't even leave their dead behind. Some
fools have
begun whispering that we're fighting spirits." Fools he might consider
them, but the fingers of his left hand hooked in a sign to ward off
evil.
"I'll tell you one thing I know. Karede. Their commanders are very
good.
Very, very good. Every man to face them has been fought off his feet,
outmaneuvered and outfought completely."
Karede
nodded thoughtfully. He had speculated that the White Tower must have
tasked
one of its best to kidnap the High Lady Tuon, but he had not been
thinking
along the lines of what people this side of the ocean called the great
captains. Perhaps Thom Merrilin's real name was Agelmar Jagad or Gareth
Bryne.
He looked forward to meeting the man, not least to ask him how he had
known she
would be coming to Ebou Dar. He might hide Suroth's involvement, but
then
again, he might not. On the heights, today's ally could be tomorrow's
sacrifice. Except for the Gardeners, the Deathwatch Guards were da
co-vale to
the Empress herself, might she live forever, yet they lived on the
heights.
"There must be some plan for finding them and pinning them. Are you in
charge of it?"
"No,
praise be to the Light!" Loune said fervently. He took a long drink as
though wishing it were brandy. "General Chisen is bringing his entire
army
back through the Malvide Narrows. Apparently the Tarasin Palace decided
this
was important enough to risk thrusts out of Murandy or Andor, though
from what
I've heard, neither one is capable of striking at anyone at the moment.
I just
have to wait here until Chisen arrives. We'll see a different result
then, I
think. More than half Chisen's men will be veterans from home."
Abruptly
Loune seemed to recall who he was talking to. His face turned to dark
wood, a
hard mask. It did not matter. Karede was convinced this was the work of
Merrilin or whatever his name was. And he knew why the man was doing
what he
was doing. Under different circumstances, he would have told Loune his
reasoning, but the High Lady would not be safe until she was back in
the
Tarasin Palace among those who knew her face. If the man failed to
believe him
on the key point, that she was the High Lady, he would have increased
her
danger for nothing.
"I
thank you for the kaf," he said, setting the cup down and taking up his
helmet and gauntlets. "The Light see you safe, Loune. We will meet in
Seandar someday."
"The
Light see you safe, Karede," Loune said after a moment, plainly
surprised
by the polite farewell. "We will meet in Seandar someday." The man
had shared kaf. and Karede had no quarrel with him. Why should he be
surprised?
Karede
did not speak to Musenge until they had ridden out of the camp, the
Ogier
Gardeners striding along just ahead of the human Guards. Hartha was
walking on
Karede's other side, his long axe propped on his shoulder, his head
nearly
level with theirs.
"We
head northeast." he said, "for the MalvideNarrows."
If he remembered the maps correctly, and he seldom forgot any map he
had more than
glimpsed, they could reach it in four days. "The Light shine on us that
we
arrive before the High Lady." If they did not, the pursuit would
continue,
all the way to Tar Valon if necessary. The thought of turning back
without the
High Lady never occurred to him. If he had to bring her out of Tar
Valon, he
would.
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE
The Importance of Dyelin
They
wanted safe conduct?" Elayne said incredulously. "To enter
Caemlyn?" Lightning flashed outside the windows, and thunder boomed.
Outside, a deluge fell on Caemlyn. a hammering downpour. The sun must
have been
well above the horizon, but the stand-lamps were lit against twilight
darkness.
The
slender young man standing in front of her low-backed chair colored
with
embarrassment, yet he continued to look her in the eye. He was little
more than
a boy. really, his smooth cheeks likely shaved as much for torm as
because he
needed a razor very often. Very properly, Hanselle Renshar, Arathelle's
grandson, wore neither sword nor armor, but the marks or breastplate
straps
remained on his green coat. imprinted by long wear. A large damp spot
on his
left shoulder showed where his cloak had leaked through. Odd, the
things you
noticed at times like this. "I was instructed to ask for it, my
Lady," he said, his voice steady.
Dyelin,
arms folded beneath her breasts, grunted sourly. She was not far from
scowling.
Mistress Harfor, resplendent as always in her crimson tabard with the
White
Lion spotless on her formidable bosom. sniffed audibly. Hanselle
colored again.
They were in Elayne's smaller sitting room, where a small fire on the
marble
hearth took away most of the morning's chill and lamp oil scented the
air with
roses. She wished Birgitte was there. From the mild irritation flowing
through
the bond, she was dealing with reports. Her annoyance was not great
enough for
it to be anything more urgent.
The
arrival of Luan and the others below the city two days ago with their
sixty
thousand armsmen had occasioned more than a little excitement, and
impromptu
celebrations in the streets by the citizens, once it became clear they
were not
going to occupy the camps abandoned when Jarid Sarand left. Taking with
him men
from Houses that now sided with Elayne, though they could not know it
yet. The
Light only knew what trouble that bloody man was going to cause. But
Hanselle's
message put a new complexion on the huge encampment just a mile south
of Low
Caemlyn. If Arathelle, Luan and the others knew about the city being
supplied
from Tear and Illian through gateways, and surely everyone in Andor
knew by
this time, perhaps they had decided a siege would accomplish nothing.
Safe
conduct was a matter of battle lines. Perhaps they intended to call for
Caemlyn's surrender to avoid a grand assault. The proclamations of
support,
carried by Kinswomen rather than riders, had been posted from Aringill
to the
mining villages in the Mountains of Mist, or soon would be, but even
with
Sumeko and other Kinswomen wearing themselves out in Healing, the
armsmen of
Caeren, Anshar and Baryn who had not been carried off by Jarid did not
bring
her numbers anywhere near sixty thousand. Small bands of arms-men were
beginning to flow into the city as word spread that it was safe to
approach
Caemlyn, but not enough yet. It might be a week or more before sizeable
parties
appeared. Those had been staying clear of the city for fear of
Arymilla's army.
The outcome of a massive assault was not a foregone conclusion-men atop
a wall
had considerable advantage over those trying to scale it-but it would
be a near
run thing at best, and no hope for more help soon. Dyelin had paid
another
visit to Danine Candraed in the west, but the woman still dithered.
Elayne had
nine Houses where she needed ten. everything hung in the balance, and
Danine
could not bloody decide whether or not to stand for Trakand.
"'Why
do they wish to speak with me?" She managed to keep Birgitte's
irritation
from tinging her voice. Birgitte's and her own.
Hanselle
reddened yet again. He seemed to do that easily. Burn her, they truly
had sent
a boy! "1 was not informed, my Lady. I was simply told to ask for safe
conduct." He hesitated. "They will not enter Caemlyn without it. my
Lady."
Rising,
she went to her writing desk, removed a smooth sheet of good white
paper from
the rosewood paper-box and dipped a pen in the silver-mounted crystal
ink jar.
Precise letters flowed onto the page without her usual flourishes. She
was
short and to the point.
Lord
Luan Norwelyn. Lady Arathelle Renshar, Lord Pelivar Coelan, Lady Aemlyn
Carand,
Lady Ellorien Traemane and Lord Abelle Pendar may feel safe in entering
Caemlyn
and be assured that they and their retinues may depart the city at any
time
they wish. I will receive them informally this afternoon in the Grand
Hall as
befits their stations. We must speak of the Borderlanders.
Elayne
Trakand Daughter-Heir of Andor High Seat of House Trakand She tried to
maintain
calm, but the steel nib dug into the paper with the last letters. Safe
conduct.
She channeled a sealing candle alight, and her hand trembled as she
dribbled
golden yellow wax onto the page. They implied she would try to hold
them by
force. No, more than implied! They as good as said it! She pressed her
seal, a
blossoming lily, into the wax as if trying to drive it through the
tabletop.
"Here."
she said, handing the sheet to the young man. Her voice was ice, and
she made
no effort to warm it. "If this fails to make them feel safe, perhaps
they
might try wrapping themselves in swaddling." Thunder boomed for
punctuation.
He
colored once more, this time plainly in anger, but wisely confined
himself to
offering thanks as he folded the page. He was carefully tucking it
inside his
coat when Mistress Harfor showed him out. She would escort him to his
horse
personally. A messenger from nobles as powerful as Luan and the others
had to
be given a certain level of honor.
Suddenly
Elayne's anger turned to sadness. She could not have said what she was
sad
over. Her moods often seemed to change without cause. Perhaps for all
those who
had died and all those who would. "Are you certain you don't want to be
queen, Dyelin? Luan and that lot would stand for you in a heartbeat,
and if I
stand for you, those who've stood for me will stand with me. Burn me,
Danine
would probably stand for you."
Dyelin
took a chair, spreading her blue skirts carefully, before answering.
"I'm
absolutely certain. Running my own House is work enough for me without
adding
all of Andor to it. Besides, I disapprove of the throne changing Houses
without
good cause-the lack of a Daughter-Heir, or worse, one who's a fool or
incompetent, cruel or greedy. You're none of those things. Continuity
provides
stability, and stability brings prosperity." She nodded; she liked that
turn of phrase. "Mind, had you died before returning to Caemlyn and
making
your claim, I would have entered my own, but the simple truth is.
you'll make a
better ruler than I would. Better for Andor. In part that's because of
your
connection to the Dragon Reborn." Dyelin's raised eyebrow invited
Elayne
to expound on that connection.'"But in large part," she went on when
Elayne said nothing, "it's you yourself. I watched you grow up, and by
the
time you were fifteen I knew you'd be a good queen, perhaps as good as
Andor
has ever had."
Elayne's
face grew hot, and tears welled in her eyes. Burn her bouncing moods!
Only she
knew she could not blame her pregnancy this time. Praise from Dyelin
was like
praise from her mother, never grudging, but never given unless she felt
it was
deserved.
Her
morning was busy, and she had only Caemlyn and the palace to deal with
rather
than all of Andor. Mistress Harfor reported that the spies in the
palace who
could be confirmed as reporting to Arymilla or her allies had grown
very quiet
and still, like mice that feared a cat might be watching.
"At
least it's safe to dismiss them now, my Lady." Reene said in tones of
great satisfaction. She disliked having spies in the Royal Palace as
much as
Elayne did, perhaps more. Daughter-Heir or Queen might live in the
palace, but
in the First Maid's eyes, it belonged to her. "All of them." Spies
for others had been left in place so that no one would suspect that
Reene knew.
"Keep
them all on and continue to watch them," Elayne told her. "They're
the most likely to take coin from someone else, and we know who they
are."
A spy who was known could be kept from learning anything they should
not, and
you could make sure they learned exactly what you wanted them to. That
went for
the Ajah eyes-and-ears Mistress Harfor had uncovered, too. The Ajahs
had no
right to spy on her, and if she occasionally spoon-fed them false
information,
it would be their own fault if they acted on it. She could not do that
too
often or they would realize she had uncovered their spies, but she
could at
need.
"As
you say, my Lady. The world has changed, hasn't it?"
"I'm
afraid it has, Mistress Harfor."
The
round woman nodded sadly, but she quickly returned to business. "One of
the windows in the Grand Hall has developed a leak, my Lady. I'd have
seen to
anything minor without bothering you, but this is a crack in the glass,
which
means calling in…" The list of problems that needed Elayne's
approval and papers that needed her signature went on.
Master
Norry reported on wagonloads of grain and beans and trade goods in that
dusty
voice of his. and announced with some surprise that the number of
arsons had
not decreased. Seventeen buildings had burned in the night. He had been
sure
the capture of Arymilla would see an end to that, and he was rueful
over being
wrong. He brought death warrants in the names of Rhys a'Balaman and
Aldred
Gomaisen for her to sign and seal. Mercenaries who turned their colors
could
expect no more unless their new masters prevailed. Evard Cordwyn had
died at
the gate or he would have gone to the gallows, too. Hafeen Bakuvun had
sent a
petition asking a reward for his actions at the Far Madding Gate, yet
that was
easy enough to reject. The presence of the Domani mercenary and his men
might
well have been the difference in the gate holding until Dyelin arrived,
but
they had been earning their pay, no more.
"The
prisoners are still being closemouthed, I fear," Norry said, sliding
the
refused petition back into his leather folder. He seemed to feel that
if he did
that quickly enough it was the same as never having removed it. "The
Darkfriend Aes Sedai, I mean, my Lady. And the other two. Very
closemouthed
except for… um… invective. Mellar is the worst with that, shouting
about what he intends to do to the women who arrested him." Deni had
taken
her instuctions literally; the Guardswomen had pummeled Mellar
severely,
leaving him a mass of bruises from head to foot, "but the Aes Sedai can
be
quite… um… vituperative, as well. I fear it may be necessary to put
them to the question if we hope to learn anything useful."
"Don't
call them Aes Sedai," she snapped. Hearing "Aes Sedai" linked
with "Darkfriend" made her stomach writhe. "Those women have
given up any right to be called Aes Sedai." She had taken their Great
Serpent rings herself and had them melted down. That was Eg-wene's
prerogative,
not hers, and she might well be reprimanded for it, but she could not
restrain
herself. "Ask the Lady Sylvase for the use of her secretary." She had
no questioners among her people, and accorddng to Aviendha, an
unskilled questioner
was likely to kill the one being put unsuccessfully to the question.
When was
her sister going to be allowed to visit? Light, she missed Aviendha. "I
suspect he's no such thing.'' Lightning lit up the windows of the
sitting room,
the glassed casements rattling with the boom of its thunder.
Norry
pressed his fingertips together, holding the folder against his
ink-stained
tabard with the heels of his hands and frowning gravely. "Few people
keep
a private questioner, my Lady. It suggests… um… a dark side. But then,
as I understand matters, her grandfather chased away every man who
showed
interest in her until men stopped showing interest, and she has been
virtually
a prisoner since reaching her majority. That would tend to give anyone
a dark
view of the world. She may not… um… be as trustworthy as you could
wish, my Lady."
"Do
you think you can bribe some of her servants to be my eyes-and-ears?"
How
easy it was to ask that. Spies had become a part of her life, as much
as masons
or glaziers.
"That
should be possible, my Lady. 1 will know for certain in a day or two."
Once, he would have been horrified by the very idea of having anything
to do
with spying. All things changed eventually, it seemed. His hands
shifted on the
folder, almost but not quite opening it. "I fear the sewers in the
southern part of the New City need attention urgently."
Elayne
sighed. Not everything changed. Burn her. once she did have all of
Andor, she suspected
she would seldom have an hour to herself. What didLuan and the others
want?
Not
long after midmorning, Melfane Dawlish appeared and had Essande and
Neris strip
Elayne to the skin so she could be weighed in a huge, wooden-armed
balance
scale the midwife had brought along, a daily ritual. The brass pan was
padded
with a blanket, thank the Light! The stout little woman listened to her
heart
though a hollow wooden tube pressed to her chest and back, thumbed back
her
eyelids to examine her eyes, and smelled her breath. She had Elayne
make water,
then held the glass jar up to the light of a stand-lamp to study it.
She
smelled that, too, and even dipped a finger in and licked it! It was
another
daily ritual. Elayne averted her eyes, pulling her flower-embroidered
silk robe
tight around her. but she still shuddered. This time, Melfane noticed.
"I
can tell some sickness from changes in the taste, my Lady.
Anyway,there's worse
things. My boy Jaem, the one who carried the scale for me, his first
paid job
of work was mucking out in a stable. He claimed everything he ate
tasted
like-" Her round belly shook with laughter. "Well, you can imagine,
my Lady." Elayne could, and was glad she was not prone to nausea. She
shuddered again anyway. Essande seemed quite composed, hands folded at
her
waist and watching her niece with approval, but Neris looked about to
sick up.
"Pity he can't learn my craft, but no one would buy herbs from a man.
Or
have a man midwife." Melfane laughed uproariously at that ridiculous
notion. "Wants to be apprenticed to an armorer, of all things. Old for
it,
but there it is. Now, you be sure to read to your babe." She was more
than
doubtful of Elayne's claim that she would have a boy and a girl. She
would not
accept it until she could hear their heartbeats, and that would be some
few
weeks yet. "And have musicians play for her. She'll learn the sound of
your voice. Learn to like reading and music, too. It helps in other
ways
besides. Makes the child brighter."
"You
say that every time, Mistress Dawlish." Elayne said peevishly. "I can
remember, you know. And I am doing it."
Melfane
laughed again, a twinkle in her dark eyes. She accepted Elayne's
bouncing moods
the way she accepted rain and lightning. "You'd be surprised how many
don't believe a babe in the womb can hear, but I can see the difference
in
those who get read to and those who don't. Do you mind if I have a few
words
with my aunt before I go. my Lady? I brought her a pie and an ointment
for her
joints." Es-sande's face reddened. Well, now that her lie was exposed,
she
would accept Healing or Elayne would know the reason why.
At
the end of the midday meal. Elayne brought up the intentions of Luan
and the
others with Birgitte. It was a wonderful meal, and she ate ravenously.
Melfane
had lambasted the cooks and every other woman in earshot for the bland
diet
they had been reeding her. Today there were small pond trout grilled to
perfection, cabbage rolls stuffed with ctumbly white ewe's milk cheese,
broad
beans with pinenuts, and a tangy apple tart. Another reason it was
marvelous
was that nothing had the faintest hint of spoiling. To drink, there was
good
black tea with mint that made her tense for a moment until she realized
it
really was mint. The only thing Melfane had forbidden was wine, however
well
watered. Birgitte had even given up drinking herself, though it seemed
impossible it could have any effect through the bond. Elayne refrained
from
pointing that out. Birgitte had been drinking too much to dull the pain
of
losing her Gaidal. Elayne understood even if she did not approve. She
could not
imagine what she would do if Rand died.
"I
don't know," Birgitte said after wolfing down the last of her tart.
"My best guess is they've come to ask you to help them move against the
Borderlanders. The one bloody thing that's sure is that they didn't
bloody come
to throw their support to you."
"That's
my best guess, too." Elayne picked up crumbs of cheese with a damp
fingertip and popped them into her mouth. She could have eaten as much
again as
had been on her plate, but Melfane had announced her strict intention
to limit
her weight gain. Just enough and not too much. Perhaps a cow being
fattened for
market felt like this. "Unless they're going to demand I surrender
Caemlyn."
"There's
always that," Birgitte said, sounding almost cheerful. The bond said
she
was anything but. "We still have watchers in the towers, though, and
Julanya and Keraille have gotten work as laundresses in their camp, so
we'll
know if they begin to move against the city before the first man sets
out."
Elayne
wished she did not sigh so often. Burn her, she had Arymilla. Naean and
Elenia
under guard and definitely not enjoying sharing a bed-she knew the
thought
should not give her pleasure but it did-and she had gained three more
allies,
if not necessarily the most solid. At least they were tied to her
inextricably,
now. She should have been feeling triumphant.
That
afternoon. Essande and Sephanie dressed her in dark green slashed with
emerald
on the skirts and embroidered with silver across the bosom, down the
sleeves
and around the hem. For jewelry, she wore her Great Serpent ring and a
large
silver pin enameled blue except for the shape of Trakand's Keystone.
The pin
made her morose. Inside the House it was said that Trakand was the
keystone
that held Andor together. She had not done a very good job of it so far.
She
and Birgitte took turns reading aloud to her babes. From histories, of
course;
if Melfane was right, she did not want to direct them to frivolous
tales. Dry stuff,
it was. A plump man in red and white played the flute while a lean
woman in
livery played the twelve-string bittern, producing lively, joyous
tunes. At
least when crashes of thunder did not drown them out. Bards did not
grow on
trees, and Birgitte had been uncertain about allowing anyone from
outside the
palace near Elayne, but Mistress Harfor had found a number of
accomplished
musicians who had leapt at the chance to put on livery. Their pay was
considerably better in the palace than in a common room, and their
clothing was
provided with it. Elayne thought of trying to hire a gleeman. but that
made her
think of Thom. Was he dry? Was he even alive? All she could do was
pray. The
Light send it so. Please.
Mistress
Harfor came to announce the arrival of Luan, Arathelle and the others,
and
Elayne donned the coronet of the Daughter-Heir, a simple gold band that
held a
single golden rose surrounded by thorns above her brows. Caseille,
along with
eight Guardswomen, fell in behind her, Birgitte and Essande as they
left her
apartments, boots thudding loudly on the floor tiles in step. Nine
Guardswomen
had been among the dead when she was rescued from the Darkfriends, and
that
seemed to have bonded the others together even more tightly. They got
lost
twice finding their way to the Grand Hall, but no one so much as
murmured. What
were shifting corridors when you had faced Power-wrought fire and
lightning?
The great arched doors of the Grand Hall, carved with tall lions on
both sides,
stood open, and Caseille took the Guardswomen to stand in front of them
while
she, Birgitte and Essande went in.
The
tall windows in the walls were dark with rain except when lightning
flashed,
but the mirrored stand-lamps, against the walls and around the white
columns
that marched in rows along the sides of the chamber, were all lit. A
loud,
steady plunk-plunk-plunk echoed in the vast space, drops falling into a
prosaic
wooden bucket standing beneath one of the colored windows set in the
ceiling
twenty paces overhead. where one of the rearing White Lions had beads
of water
glistening along a crack, near scenes of battle and the faces of
Andor's
earliest queens. As always in this hall, Elayne felt those women
judging her as
she crossed the red-and-white floor tiles. They had built Andor with
the
sharpness of their minds and the blood of their sons and husbands,
beginning
with a single city and molding a strong nation out of the rubble of
Artur
Hawkwing's empire. They had a right to judge any woman who sat on the
Lion
Throne. She suspected their visages had been placed there so every
queen would
feel her actions judged by history.
The
throne itself sat atop a white marble dais at the far end of the
chamber,
carved and gilded and sized for a woman, yet massive on its lion-pawed
legs. The
White Lion, formed from moonstones set in a field of glittering rubies
on its
tall back, would stand above the head of the tallest woman who sat on
that
throne. Dyelin was already standing at the foot of the dais's steps,
watching
Sylvase converse with Conail and Catalyn while Branlet and Perival
listened
closely. Perival raked his fingers through his hair and nodded. Did
Dyelin have
questions about Sylvase, too? Lir and Karind stood apart from the rest,
and
apart from each other as well. Neither even glanced at the other.
Having been
allies against Elayne, they would not want her to think they were
allied still.
Essande went to join the serving men and women in the liveries of the
eight
other Houses, gathered around a table that held tall silver pitchers of
wine
and tea. That was what informal meant in this context. Each of them
would bring
a single servant in attendance. For a formal meeting, Elayne would have
provided all of the servants, and the Grand Hall would have been
crowded with
every noble in Caemlyn, every noble from the encampment below Caemlyn.
"Ellorien
may well be provocative, Elayne," Dyelin said for about the fifth time
since hearing of the safe conduct request. Her face was cool and calm,
yet she
must have been feeling her nerves. Her hands smoothed unnecessarily at
her
gold-embroidered skirts.
"I
won't let her provoke me," Elayne replied. "Neither will anyone else.
I mean you, Conail. and you, Lir." Conail, in gold-worked blue, colored
as
quickly as Hanselle had. He had gotten into a fight with a mercenary he
thought
had spoken disparagingly of Elayne and almost killed the man. It was
well for
him the other man had begun drawing his sword first. Even mercenaries
deserved
justice, and Andor was not Tear, where nobles could kill commoners with
impunity. Well, before Rand changed so many of their laws. Burn him,
why is he
leaping about so?
"I
stood for you. Elayne, and that means I always stand up for you," Lir
said
smoothly. He looked every inch the self-confident courtier in
silver-embroidered
green silk with House Baryn's silver Winged Hammer on the collar, yet
he was
too smooth by half, Lir was. "But I'll hold my temper whatever Ellorien
says." The bond surged with fleeting contempt. Trying to demonstrate
how
loyal he was to Elayne, Lir had fought with mercenaries three times. In
two
days. The man had to have been searching for fights to manage that.
"If
she tries to goad us, why should we bite our tongues?" Catalyn
demanded.
Her red dress, embroidered with broad bands of gold at the hem and on
the
sleeves, did not suit her coloring, especially when her plump cheeks
were
crimson with anger. Her chin was raised. Perhaps she wore that large
enameled
pin bearing Haevin's Blue Bear where she did so she would be forced to
keep her
chin high and look down her nose at everyone. "I've never allowed
anyone
to poke at me and walk away unscathed."
"An
ox responds to the goad and does as the ox-herd wants," Dyelin said
drily.
"The same way you will be doing what Ellorien wants if you respond to
her goads."
The crimson remained in Catalyn's cheeks, no doubt from embarrassment,
now.
Reene
Harfor appeared in the doorway. "My Ladies," she said loudly, her
voice echoing in the nearly empty chamber. "My Lords."
This
was informality, when two sides met and there was no knowing how far
apart they
were. Mistress Harfor announced the newly arrived lords and ladies in
strict
order of precedence, though among the Houses gathered here, there was
not a
great deal between them. Luan Norwelyn, hard-faced and more gray-haired
than
when Elayne last saw him, his blue coat undecorated except for
Norwelyn's
Silver Salmon on the high collar. Arathelle Renshar, her face creased
and her
brown hair thick with gray, in a red riding dress ornately worked with
gold and
a large ruby-studded pin that displayed the three Golden Hounds.
Peli-var
Coelan, tall and lean, his dark hair receding till he almost looked as
if he
had shaved the front of his head like a Cairhienin. in
silver-embroidered blue
with twinned red roses worked on his collar, the Roses of Coelan.
Aemlyn
Carand, plump in gray silk with the three Golden Arrows climbing her
sleeves
and so thick on her bosom she looked like a bristling quiver. Ellorien
Traemane, not so plump as Elayne recalled but still pretty in
green-slashed
blue embroidered with golden-antlered white stags, the White Stag of
Traemane,
on the sleeves. Abelle Pendar. his angular face stern beneath gray
hair, in
dark gray with the three Golden Stars on his collar. They walked up the
Grand
Hall together, trailed by their servants, but not grouped as announced.
Ellorien and Abelle walked with Luan, Pelivar and Aemlyn with
Arathelle, two
paces between the groups. So. They asked for safe conduct as one, yet
they were
not one. That made a demand for surrender a little less likely. Even
open
enemies could act in concert at times. Divided skirts and snug breeches
glistened damply. The finest cloak could not protect a person
completely in a
downpour like this. They would not be in their best tempers.
"Be
welcome," she told them as their servants peeled away to join the
others.
"Will you take wine, or tea? The wine is hot and spiced. This seems a
wintery day for spring."
Luan
opened his mouth, but Ellorien spoke first. "At least you're not
sitting
on the throne." Her face might have been carved from marble, and her
voice
was that hard and cold. "I half expected you to be." Thunder rolled
overhead.
Luan
looked pained. Arathelle rolled her eyes as if she were hearing
something she
had heard all too often before. Lir stirred, but Elayne fixed him with
a steady
look, and he gave a small, apologetic bow.
"I
have no right to sit on the throne, Ellorien," she replied calmly.
Light,
please let her mood hold steady now. "Yet." There was an unintended
touch of bite in that. Perhaps she was not so calm as she wished to be.
Ellorien
sneered. "If you're waiting for Danine to make your ten, you'll have a
long wait. Danine spent the last Succession visiting her manors. She
never
declared for anyone."
Elayne
smiled, but it was difficult. A Succession was when one House succeeded
another
on the throne. "I will have tea."
Ellorien
blinked, but it sparked the others to announce what they would take.
Only
Elayne. Birgitte, Branlet and Perival took tea. Everyone sniffed at
their cups,
whether silver cups of wine or porcelain teacups, before taking a sip.
Elayne
felt no insult. Food and wine could be fine in the kitchens and tainted
by the
time it reached the table. There was never any telling where or when
spoilage
would strike. The tea had a faint tang of ginger, but not enough to
overwhelm
the taste of good Tremalking black.
"I
see you've gathered most of your support among the children and
Arymilla's
leavings," Ellorien said. Catalyn turned as red as her dress, and
Branlet straightened
angrily, until Perival put a hand on his arm and shook his head. A
level-headed
boy, Perival, and bright beyond his years. Lir managed to restrain
himself this
time, but Conail started to say something sharp before Elayne's firm
look
snapped his teeth shut. Karind merely returned Ellorien's spiteful
stare
stolidly. Karind was not very intelligent, but little ruffled her.
"You
must have had a reason for asking this meeting," Elayne said. "If it
was merely to offer insults…" She let that trail off. She had her
own reasons for wanting this meeting. If they had asked for her to come
to
them, she would have. Without asking for safe conduct. Feeling a pulse
of anger
through the bond, she took a firm rein on hers. Birgitte wore a scowl
directed ac
Ellorien like a dagger. If they began feeding one another's temper…
That
did not bear thinking about, not here, not now.
Ellorien
opened her mouth again, and this time, Luan cut her off. "We've come to
ask for a truce. Elayne." A flash of lightning lit the northern
windows,
and those in the ceiling, but the interval to thunder said it had been
some
distance off.
"A
truce? Are we at war, Luan? Has someone declared for the throne that I
haven't
heard of?" Six sets of eyes swung to Dyelin, who grunted.
"Fools.
I told you and told you, and you wouldn't believe me. Perhaps you'll
believe
this. When Sylvase, Karind and Lir sent their proclamations of support,
I sent
my own. Taravin stands for Trakand, and the whole of Andor will know it
soon
enough."
Ellorien
colored angrily and managed to make even that seem cold. Aemlyn took a
long
drink, looking thoughtful. Arathelle allowed a touch of disappointment
to touch
her face before it returned to a mask nearly as hard as Ellorien's.
"Be
that as it may," Luan said, "we still want… if not a truce, then a
temporary agreement." He drank a small swallow from his winecup and
shook
his head sadly. "Even gathering everything we can, we'll have a
difficult
time defeating the Borderlanders, but if we fail to act together,
they'll carve
up Andor once they decide to move. Frankly, I'm surprised they've
remained in
one place this long. Their men ought to be well rested by now even
after a
thousand-league march." Lightning lit the southern windows brightly,
and
thunder crashed so loudly it seemed the glass panes should shiver.
Close, that
one.
"I
expected them to be into Murandy by now myself." Elayne said. "But I
believe their reason for sitting in one place is a fear of sparking a
war if
they come too near Caemlyn. They seem to be trying to find a way to
Murandy
using country roads. You know what condition those are in this time of
year.
They want no war with us. When I gave them permission to cross Andor,
they told
me they were looking for the Dragon Reborn."
Ellorien
spluttered, and chips of ice should have come from her mouth. "When you
what} You prate of how you have no right to sit on the throne-yet-and
then you
arrogate to yourself the right of-!"
"Of
an Aes Sedai. Ellorien." Elayne held up her right hand so they could
not
miss the golden Great Serpent encircling the third finger. Her own
voice was
frosty despite all she could do. "I did not speak as Daughter-Heir or
even
High Seat of House Trakand. I spoke as Elayne Aes Sedai of the Green
Ajah. Had
I not, they would have come anyway. They were very short of food and
fodder.
Had I tried to stop them, had anyone tried to stop them, there would
have been
war. They are determined to find the Dragon Reborn. It would have been
a war
Andor had faint chance of winning. You speak of acting together, Luan?
Gather
all of Andor's strength, and we could nearly match their numbers, but
two in
three of ours would be men who can handle a halberd or spear but spend
most of
their days behind a plow. Every man of theirs is a long-serving armsman
who
would not be surprised to face Trollocs any day of his life. Instead of
a war
that would soak Andor in blood and cripple her for a generation, we
have the
Borderlanders crossing our nation peacefully. I have them watched. They
pay for
the food and fodder they need, and pay well." Another time, with other
listeners, she would have laughed over that. Andoran farmers would try
to pry
high prices out of the Dark One. "The worst they've done is flog a few
horse-thieves, and if they should have been handed over to a
magistrate, I
can't fault the Borderlanders for it. Now tell me, Ellorien. What would
you
have done differently, and how?"
Ellorien
blinked, icily sullen, then sniffed dismissively and sipped at her wine.
"And
what do you plan for this Black Tower?" Abelle asked quietly. "I…
suspect you have a plan for them, too." Did he suspect her other reason
for letting the Borderlanders cross Andor? Let him, so long as he did
not give
it voice. So long as he kept silent, her motives seemed purely for
Andor's
good. That was hypocritical, no bones about it, but realistic as well.
She had
spoken truthfully concerning her other reasons, but that one, spoken
aloud,
could cost her. She still needed one more House, and it looked as if
Candraed had
to be it, but Danine would never move if she thought Elayne was trying
to force
her into it.
"Nothing,"
she told him. "I send Guardsmen periodically to ride around the Black
Tower grounds and remind them they are in Andor and subject to Andor's
laws, but
aside from that, I can do no more than I could if the White Tower were
somehow
transported to Caemlyn." For a long moment they stared at her, all six
of
them unblinking.
"Pendar
stands for Trakand," Abelle said suddenly, and right atop him, Luan
said.
"Norwelyn stands for Trakand." Lightning flashed overhead,
brightening the colored windows in the ceiling.
Elayne
kept herself from swaying with an effort. Birgitte's face was smooth,
but the bond
carried amazement. It was done. She had eleven, and the throne was hers.
"The
more who stand for her. the better for Andor." Dyelin sounded a touch
dazed herself. "Stand with me for Trakand."
There
was another pause, longer, full of exchanged glances, but then, one by
one.
Arathelle, Pelivar and Aemlyn announced that their Houses stood for
Trakand.
Doing so for Dyelin, though. Elayne would have to remember that.
Perhaps she
could win their loyalty in time, but for the present, they supported
her for Dyelin's
sake.
"She
has the throne." Ellorien said, as cold as ever. "The rest is fluff
and feathers."
Elayne
tried to make her voice warm. "Will you dine with us this evening,
Ellorien? At least remain until the rain abates."
"I
have my own cooks." Ellorien replied, turning away toward the doors.
Her
serving woman came running to take her cup and return it to the table.
"As
soon as the rain stops, I will be leaving for Sheldyn. I've been away
too
long."
"Tarmon
Gai'don is coming soon, Ellorien," Elayne said. "You won't be able to
remain on your estates then."
Ellorien
paused, looking over her shoulder. "When Tarmon Gai'don comes, Traemane
rides for the Last Battle, and we ride behind the Lion of Andor."
Thunder
boomed as she strode out of the Grand Hall with her serving woman at
her heels.
"Will
you all join me in my apartments?'' Elayne asked the others.
Behind
the Lion of Andor, but not a word about behind Elayne Trakand. Nearly
half her
support was suspect one way or another, Jarid Sarand was still on the
loose
with a not inconsiderable force, and she would have trouble from
Ellorien
eventually. It was never this way in stories. In stories, everything
was always
wrapped up neatly by the end. Real life was much… messier. Still, she
had
the throne at last. There was still the coronation, but that was a
formality
now. As she led the procession from the Grand Hall, chatting with Luan
and
Pelivar, thunder rolled overhead like martial drums beating the march
for
Tarmon Gai'don. How long before Andor's banners had to march to the
Last
Battle?
CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX
Under an Oak
The
sun stood well above the mountains as Karede rode through the trees
toward the
so-called MalvideNarrows, perhaps
two
leagues ahead. The five-mile-wide gap in the mountains carried the road
from
Ebou Dar to Lugard, a mile south of him. Well short of the Narrows,
though, he
would find the campAjimbura had
located for
him. Ajimbura had not been fool enough to try entering the camp, so
Karede
still did not know whether he was riding into a deathtrap for nothing.
No, not
for nothing. For the High Lady Tuon. Any Death-watch Guard was ready to
die for
her. Their honor was duty, and duty often meant death. The sky held
only
billowing white clouds with no threat of rain. He had always hoped to
die in
sunlight.
He
had brought just a small party. Ajimbura on his white-footed chestnut
to show
the way, of course. The wiry little man had cut off his white-streaked
red
braid, a measure of his great devotion. The hill tribes took those
braids as
trophies from those they killed in their endless feuds, and to be
without one
was to be disgraced in the eyes of all the tribes and families, a
self-proclaimed coward. That devotion was to Karede rather than the
High Lady
or the Crystal Throne, but Karede's own devotion was such that it came
to the
same thing. Two of the Guards rode at Karede's back, their
red-and-green armor
buffed till it shone, like his own. Hartha and a pair of Gardeners
strode along
with their long-hafted axes on their shoulders, easily keeping pace
with the
horses. Their armor glistened as well. Melitene. the High Lady's
der-sul'dam,
her long, graying hair tied with a bright red ribbon today, was on a
high-stepping gray, the silvery length of an a'dam connecting her left
wrist to
Mylen's neck. There had been little that could be done to make those
two appear
more impressive, but the a'dam and Melitene's blue dress, the red
panels on
skirts and bosom holding silver forked lightning bolts, should draw the
eye.
Taken altogether, no one should notice Ajimbura at all. The rest were
back with
Musenge. in case it truly was a deathtrap.
He
had considered using another damane than Mylen. The tiny woman with the
face he
could never put an age to almost bounced in her saddle with eagerness
to lay eyes
on the High Lady again. She was not properly composed. Still, she could
do
nothing without Melitene, and she was useless as a weapon, a fact that
had made
her hang her head when he pointed it out to the dersul'dam. She had
needed
consoling, her sul'dam petting her and telling her what beautiful Sky
Lights
she made, how wonderful her Healing was. Even thinking about that made
Karede
shudder. Taken in the abstract, it might seem a wonderful thing, wounds
undone
in moments, but he thought he would need to be near death before he
would let
anyone touch him with the Power. And yet. if it could have saved his
wife
Kalia… No, the weapons had been left with Musenge. If there was a
battle
today, it would be of a different sort.
The
first birdcall he heard seemed no different from others he had heard
that
morning, but it was repeated ahead, and then again. Just one call each
time. He
spotted a man up in a tall oak with a crossbow thar tracked him as he
rode.
Seeing him was not easy; his breastplate and open-faced helmet were
painted a
dull green that faded into the tree's foliage. A length of red cloth
tied
around his left arm helped. though. If he really wanted to hide, he
should have
removed that.
Karede
motioned to Ajimbura and the wiry little man grinned at him, a wizened,
blue-eyed rat. before allowing his chestnut to fall back behind the
Guards. His
long knife was under his coat today. He should pass for a servant.
Soon
enough Karede was riding into the camp itself. It had no tents or
shelters of
any kind, but there were long horselines laid out in orderly fashion,
and many
more men in green breastplates. Heads turned to watch his party pass,
but tew
men were on their feet, and fewer held a crossbow. A fair number of
them were
asleep on their blankets, doubtless tired from all the hard riding they
had
been doing by night. So the birdcall had told them he was not enough to
present
a danger. They had the look of well-trained soldiers, but he had
expected as
much. What he had not expected was how few they were. Oh, the trees
might be
hiding some, but surely the camp held no more than seven or eight
thousand men,
far too few to have carried out the campaign Loune had described. He
felt a
sudden tightness in his chest. Where were the rest? The High Lady might
be with
one of the other bands. He hoped Ajimbura was taking note of the
numbers.
Before
he had gone far, a short man mounted on a tall dun met him and reined
in where
he had to stop or ride the man down. The front half of his head was
shaved, and
appeared to be powdered, of all things. He was no popinjay, though. His
dark
coat might be silk, yet he wore the same dull green breastplate as the
common
soldiers. His eyes were hard and expressionless as he scanned Melitene
and
Mylen. the Ogier. His face did not change as his gaze returned to
Karede.
"Lord Mat described that armor to us," he said in accents even
quicker and more clipped than those of the Altarans. "To what do we owe
the honor of a visit from the Deathwatch Guard?"
Lord
Mat? Who under the Light was Lord Mat? "Furyk Karede," Karede said.
"I wish to speak with man who calls himself Thorn Mer-rilin."
"Talmanes
Delovinde," the man said, finding manners. "You want to talk to
Thom't Well, I see no harm in it. I will take you to him."
Karede
heeled Aldazar after Delovinde. The man had made no mention of the
obvious,
that he and the others could not be allowed to leave and carry word of
this
army's location. He had some manners. At least, they would not be
allowed to
leave unless Karede's mad plan worked. Musenge gave him only one chance
in ten
of success, one in five of living. Personally, he himself believed the
odds
longer, but he had to make the attempt. And Merrilin's presence argued
in favor
of the High Lady's presence.
Delovinde
dismounted at an oddly domestic scene among the trees, people on camp
stools or
blankets around a small fire beneath a spreading oak where a kettle was
heating. Karede stepped down from his saddle, motioning the Guards and
Ajimbura
to dismount as well. Melitene and Mylen remained on their mounts for
the
advantage of height. Of all people, Mistress Anan, who had once owned
the inn
where he stayed in Ebou Dar, was sitting on one of the three-legged
stools
reading a book. She no longer wore one of those revealing dresses he
had
enjoyed looking at, but her close-fitting necklace still dangled that
small,
jeweled knife onto her impressive bosom. She closed her book and gave
him a
small nod as if he had returned to the Wandering Woman after an absence
of a
few hours. Her hazel eyes were quite composed. Perhaps the plot was
even more
intricate than the Seeker Mor had thought.
A
tall, lean white-haired man with mustaches nearly as long as Hartha's
was
sitting cross-legged on a striped blanket across a stones board from a
slender
woman with her hair in many beaded braids. He quirked an eyebrow at
Karede,
shook his head and returned to perusing the crosshatched board. She
glared pure
hatred at Karede and those behind him. A gnarled old fellow with long
white
hair was lying on another blanket with a remarkably ugly young boy,
playing
some game or other on a piece of red cloth spiderwebbed with black
lines. They
sat up, the boy studying the Ogier with interest, the man with one hand
hovering as if to reach for a knife beneath his coat. A dangerous man,
and
wary. Perhaps he was Merrilin.
Two
men and two women sitting together on camp stools had been conversing
when
Karede rode up, but as he was stepping down, a stern-faced woman stood
and
fixed her blue eyes on his in very nearly a challenge. She wore a sword
on a
wide leather strap slanting across her chest, the way some sailors did.
Her
hair was close-cropped rather than cut in the style of the low Blood,
her
fingernails were short and none were lacquered, but he was certain she
was Egeanin
Tamarath. A heavy-set man with hair as short as hers and one of those
odd
Illianer beards stood beside her, one hand on the hilt of a shortsword,
staring
at Karede as if he intended to second her challenge. A pretty woman
with dark,
waist-long hair and the same rosebud mouth as the Taraboner stood, and
for a
moment it seemed she might kneel or prostrate herself, but then she
straightened and looked him right in the eyes. The last man, a lean
fellow in a
peculiar red cap who looked carved from dark wood, gave a loud laugh
and flung
his arms around her. The grinning stare he gave Karede could only be
called
triumphant.
"Thom,"
Delovinde said, "this is Furyk Karede. He wants to talk with a man who
'calls himself Thorn Merrilin."
"With
me?" the lean, white-haired man said, rising awkwardly. His right leg
appeared slightly stiff. An old battle injury, perhaps?
"But
1 don't 'call myself Thorn Merrilin. It's my name, though I'm surprised
you
know it. What do you want of me?"
Karede
removed his helmet, but before he could open his mouth, a pretty woman
with
large brown eyes rushed up, pursued by two others. All three had those
Aes
Sedai faces, one minute looking twenty, the next twice that, the third
somewhere in the middle. It was very disconcerting.
"That's
Sheraine!" the pretty woman cried, staring at Mylen. "Release
her!"
"You
do no understand, Joline," one of the women with her said angrily.
Thin-lipped, with a narrow nose, she looked as if she could chew rocks.
"She do no be Sheraine any longer. She would have betrayed us, given a
chance."
"Teslyn
is right, Joline,'' the third woman said. Handsome rather than pretty,
she had
long black hair that fell in waves to her waist. "She would have
betrayed
us."
"I
don't believe it, Edesina," Joline snapped. "You will free her
immediately." she told Melitene, "or I'll-" Suddenly she gasped.
"I
did tell you," Teslyn said bitterly.
A
young man in a wide-brimmed black hat galloped up on a dark,
blunt-nosed
chestnut with a deep chest and flung himself out of the saddle. "What's
bloody going on here?" he demanded, striding up to the fire.
Karede
ignored him. The High Lady Tuon had ridden up with the young man, on a
black-and-white horse with markings like none he had ever seen. Selucia
was at
her side, on a dun, her head wrapped in a scarlet scarf, but he had
eyes only
for the High Lady. Short black hair covered her head, but he could
never
mistake that face. She spared him only one expressionless glance before
returning to a study of the young man. Karede wondered whether she
recognized
him. Probably not. It had been a long time since he had served in her
bodyguard. He did not look over his shoulder, but he knew that the
reins of
Ajimbura's chestnut were now held by one of the Guards. Apparently
unarmed and
his distinctive braid gone, he should have no problem leaving the camp.
The
sentries would never see the little man. Ajimbura was a good runner as
well as
stealthy. Soon, Musenge would know that the High Lady was indeed here.
"She
has us shielded, Mat," Joline said, and the young man snatched off his
hat
and strode to Melitene's horse as if he intended to seize the bridle.
He was
long-limbed, though he could not be called tall, and he wore a black
silk scarf
tied around his neck and dangling onto his chest. That made him the one
everyone had called Tylin's Toy, as if being the queen's plaything were
the
most important feature of him. Likely it was. Playthings seldom had
another
side to them. Strange, but he hardly seemed handsome enough for that.
He did
look fit, though.
"Release
the shield," he told her as if he expected obedience. Karede's eyebrows
rose. This was the plaything? Melitene and Mylen gasped almost as one,
and the
young man barked a laugh. "You see. it doesn't work on me. Now you
bloody
well release the shields, or I'll bloody well haul you out of the
saddle and
paddle your bottoms." Melitene's face darkened. Few people dared speak
so
to a der'sul'datn.
"Release
the shields, Melitene." Karede said.
"The
marath 'damane was on the point of embracing saidar." she said instead
of
obeying. "There's no telling what she might have-"
"Release
the shields," he said firmly. "And release the Power."
The
young man gave a satisfied nod, then suddenly spun, pointing a finger
at the
three Aes Sedai. "Now don't you bloody well start! She's let go of the
Power. You do it, too. Go ahead!" Again he nodded, for all the world as
if
he was sure they had obeyed. From the way Melitene was staring at him,
perhaps
he was. Maybe he was an Asha'man? Perhaps Asha'man could detect a
damane's
channeling somehow. That hardly seemed likely, but it was all Karede
could
think of. Yet that hardly squared with how Tylin reportedly had treated
the
young man.
"One
of these days, Mat Cauthon," Joline said acidly, "someone will teach
you to show proper respect to Aes Sedai, and I hope I am there to see
it."
The
High Lady and Selucia laughed uproariously. It was good to see she had
managed
to keep her spirits up in captivity. Doubtless her maid's companionship
had helped.
But it was time to get on, too. Time to take his mad gamble.
"General
Merrilin," Karede said, "you fought a short but remarkable campaign
and achieved miracles at keeping your forces undetected. but your luck
is about
to run out. General Chisen deduced your real purpose. He has turned his
army
around and is marching for the Malvide Narrows as fast as he can. He
will be
here in two days. I have ten thousand men not far from here, enough to
pin you
until he arrives. But the High Lady Tuon would be in danger, and I want
to
avoid that. Let me leave with her, and I will allow you and your men to
depart
unhindered. You can be well the other side of the mountains, into the
Molvaine
Gap, before Chisen arrives, and into Murandy before he can catch you.
The only
other choice is annihilation. Chisen has enough men to wipe you out. It
won't
be a battle. A hundred thousand men against eight thousand will be a
slaughter."
They
heard him out, every face as blank as if they were stunned. They
schooled
themselves well. Or perhaps they were stunned at Merrilin's plan
apparently
unraveling at the last instant.
Merrilin
stroked one of his white mustaches with a long finger. He seemed to
hiding a
smile. "I fear you have mistaken me, Banner-General Karede." For the
space of a sentence his voice became extremely resonant. "I am a
gleeman,
a position higher than court-bard to be sure, but no general. The man
you want
is Lord Matrim Cauthon." He made a small bow toward the young man, who
was
settling his flat-topped hat back on his head.
Karede
frowned. Tylin's Toy was the general? Were they playing a game with him?
"You
have about a hundred men, Deathwatch Guards, and maybe twenty
Gardeners,"
Cauthon said calmly. "From what I hear, that could make an even fight
against five times their number for most soldiers, but the Band aren't
most
soldiers, and I have a sight more than six hundred. As for Chisen, if
that's
the fellow who pulled back through the Narrows, even if he has figured
out what
I was up to, he couldn't get back in less than five days. My scouts'
last
reports had him pushing southwest along the Ebou Dar Road as fast he
could
march. The real question is this, though. Can you get Tuon to the
Tarasin
Palace safely?"
Karede
felt as if Hartha had kicked him in the belly, and not only because the
man had
used the High Lady's name so casually. "You mean to let me take her
away?" he said incredulously.
"If
she trusts you. If you can get her to the palace safely. She's in
danger till
she reaches that. In case you don't know it, your whole bloody Ever
Victorious
flaming Army is ready to slit her throat or bash in her head with a
rock."
"I
know," Karede said, more calmly than he felt. Why would this man just
release the High Lady after the White Tower had gone to all the trouble
of
kidnapping her? Why, after fighting that short, bloody campaign? "We
will
die to the man if that is what is needed to see safe. It will be best
if we set
out immediately." Before the man changed his mind. Before Karede woke
from
this fever-dream. It surely seemed a fever-dream.
"Not
so fast." Cauthon turned toward the High Lady. "Tuon, do you trust
this man to see you safe to the palace in Ebou Dar?" Karede stifled an
impulse to wince. General and lord the man might be, but he had no
right to use
the High Lady's name so!
"I
trust the Deathwatch Guards with my life." the High Lady-replied
calmly,
"and him more than any other." She favored Karede with a smile. Even
as a child, smiles from her had been rare. "Do you by any chance still
have my doll. Banner-General Karede?"
He
bowed to her formally. The manner of her speaking told him she was
still under
the veil. "Forgiveness, High Lady. I lost everything in the Great Fire
of
Sohima."
"That
means you kept it for ten years. You have my commiseration on the loss
of your
wife, and of your son, though he died bravely and well. Few men will
enter a
burning building once. He saved five people before he was overcome."
Karede's
throat tightened. She had followed news of him. All he could do was bow
again,
more deeply.
"Enough
of that," Cauthon muttered. "You're going to knock your head on the
ground if you keep that up. As soon as she and Selucia can get their
things
together, you take them out of here and ride hard. Tal-manes. roust the
Band.
It isn't that I don't trust you, Karede, but I think I'll sleep easier
beyond
the Narrows."
"Matrim
Cauthon is my husband." the High Lady said in a loud, clear voice.
Everyone froze where they stood. "Matrim Cauthon is my husband."
Karede
felt as if Hartha had kicked him again. No, not Hartha. Aldazar. What
madness
was this? Cauthon looked like a man watching an arrow fly toward his
face,
knowing he had no chance to dodge.
"Bloody
Matrim Cauthon is my husband. That is the wording you used, is it not?"
This
had to be a fever-dream.
It
took a minute before Mat could speak. Burn him, it seemed to take a
bloody hour
before he could move. When he could, he snatched off his hat, strode to
Tuon
and seized the razor's bridle. She looked down at him, cool as any
queen on a
bloody throne. All those battles with the flaming dice rattling away in
his
head, all those skirmishes and raids, and they had to stop when she
said a few
words. Well, at least this time he knew what had happened that was
bloody fateful
for Mat bloody Cauthon. "Why? I mean, I knew you were going to sooner
or
later, but why now? I like you, maybe more than like you, and I enjoy
kissing
you,' he thought Karede grunted, "but you haven't behaved like a woman
in
love. You're ice half the time and spend most of the rest digging under
my
skin."
"Love?"
Tuon sounded surprised. "Perhaps we will come to love one another.
Matrim.
but I have always known I would marry to serve the Empire. What do you
mean,
you knew that I was going to speak the words?"
"Call
me Mat." Only his mother had ever called him Matrim, when he was in
trouble, and his sisters when they were carrying tales to get him in
trouble.
"Your
name is Matrim. What did you mean?"
He
sighed. The woman never wanted much. Just her own way. Like just about
every
other woman he had ever known. "I went through a ter'angreal to
somewhere
else, another world maybe. The people there aren't really people-they
look like
snakes-but they'll answer three questions for you. and their answers
are always
true. One of mine was that I'd marry the Daughter of the Nine Moons.
But you
haven't answered my question. Why now?"
A
faint smile on her lips. Tuon leaned down from her saddle. And rapped
him hard
on the top of his head with her knuckles! "Your superstitions are bad
enough, Matrim, but I won't tolerate lies. An amusing lie, true, but
still a
lie."
"It's
the Light's own truth," he protested, clapping his hat on. Maybe it
would
give him some protection. "You could learn for yourself if you could
make
yourself talk to an Aes Sedai. They could tell you about the Aelfinn
and the
Eelfinn."
"It
could be the truth," Edesina piped up as if she were being helpful.
"The Aelfinn can be reached through a ter'angreal in the Stone of Tear,
so
I understand, and supposedly they give true answers." Mat glared at
her. A
fat lot of help she was, with her "so I understands" and
"supposedlies." Tuon continued to stare at him as if Edesina had not
opened her mouth.
"I
answered your question, Tuon, so you answer mine."
"You
know that damane can tell fortunes?" She gave him a stern look, likely
expecting him to call it superstition, but he nodded curtly. Some Aes
Sedai
could Foretell the future. Why not a damane "I asked Lidya to tell mine
just before I landed at Ebou Dar. This is what she said. 'Beware the
fox that
makes the ravens fly, for he will marry you and carry you away. Beware
the man
who remembers Hawkwing's face, for he will marry you and set you free.
Beware
the man of the red hand, for him you will marry and none other.' It was
your
ring that caught my eye first." He thumbed the long ring unconsciously,
and she smiled. A small smile, but a smile. "A fox apparently startling
two ravens into flight and nine crescent moons. Suggestive, wouldn't
you say?
And just now you fulfilled the second part, so I knew for certain it
was
you." Selucia made a sound in her throat, and Tuon waggled fingers at
her.
The bosomy little woman subsided, adjusting her head scarf, but the
look she
shot at Mat should have been accompanied by a dagger in her hand.
He
laughed mirthlessly. Blood and bloody ashes. The ring was a carver's
try-piece,
bought only because it stuck on his finger; he would give up those
memories of Hawkwing's
face along with every other old memory, if it would get the bloody
snakes out
of his head; and yet those things had gained him a wife. The Band of
the Red
Hand would never have existed without those old memories of battles.
"Seems
to me being ta'veren works on me as much as it does on anybody else."
For
a moment, he thought she was going to rap him again. He gave her his
best
smile. "One more kiss before you leave?"
"I'm
not in the mood at the moment." she said coolly. That hanging
magistrate was
back. All prisoners to be condemned immediately. "Perhaps later. You
could
return to Ebou Dar with me. You have an honored place in the Empire,
now."
He
did not hesitate before shaking his head. There was no honored place
waiting
for Leilwin or Domon. no place at all for the Aes Sedai or the Band.
"The
next time I see Seanchan. I expect it will be on the field somewhere.
Tuon." Burn him, it would be. His life seemed to run that way no matter
what he did. "You're not my enemy, but your Empire is."
"Nor
are you my enemy, husband." she said coolly, "but I live to serve the
Empire."
"Well,
I suppose you'd better get your things…" He trailed off at the sound
of a cantering horse approaching.
Vanin
reined in a rangy gray beside Tuon, eyed Karede and the other
Deathwatch
Guards, then spat through a gap in his teeth and leaned on the high
pommel of
his saddle. "There's ten thousand or so soldiers at a little town about
five miles west of here," the fat man told Mat. "Only one man Seanchan,
near as I could learn. Rest are Altarans. Taraboners. Amadicians. All
mounted.
Thing is, they're asking after fellows wearing armor like that." He
nodded
toward Karede. "And rumor says the one of them that kills a girl that
sounds a lot like the High Lady gets himself a hundred thousand crowns
gold.
Their mouths are dripping for it."
"I
can slip past them," Karede said. His bluff face looked fatherly. His
voice sounded like a drawn sword.
"And
if you can't?" Mat asked quietly. "It can't be chance they're this
close. They've caught some sniff of you. One more smell might be all it
takes
to kill Tuon." Karede's face darkened.
"Do
you intend to go back on your word?" A drawn blade that might be used
soon. Worse, Tuon was watching, looking at Mat like that hanging
magistrate in
truth. Burn him, if she died, something would shrivel up inside him.
And the
only way to stop it, to be sure it was stopped, was to do what he hated
worse
than work. Once, he had thought that fighting battles, much as he hated
it, was
still better than work. Near enough nine hundred dead in the space of a
few
days had changed his mind.
"No."
he said. "She goes with you. But you leave me a dozen of your
Deathwatch
Guards and some of the Gardeners. If I'm going to take these people off
your
back, I need them to think I'm you."
Tuon
abandoned most of the clothing Matrim had bought for her. since she
would need
to travel light. The little cluster of red silk rosebuds he had given
her she
tucked away in her saddlebags, folded in a linen cloth, as carefully as
if were
blown glass. She had no farewells to make except for Mistress Anan-she
really
would miss their discussions-so she and Selucia were ready to ride
quickly.
Mylen smiled so broadly at the sight of her that she had to pat the
little
damane. It seemed that word of what had happened had spread, because as
they
rode through the camp with the Deathwatch Guards, men of the Band stood
and
bowed to her. It was very like reviewing regiments in Seandar.
"What
do you make of him?" she asked Karede once they were away from the
soldiers and beginning to canter. There was no need to say which "he"
she meant.
"It
is not my place to make judgments, High Lady," he said gravely. His
head
swivelled, keeping watch on the surrounding trees. "I serve the Empire
and
the Empress, may she live forever."
"As
do we all, Banner-General. But I ask your judgment."
"A
good general. High Lady," he replied without hesitation. "Brave, but
not overly brave. He won't get himself killed just to show how brave he
is, I think.
And he is… adaptable. A man of many layers. And if you will forgive me,
High Lady, a man in love with you. I saw how he looked at you."
In
love with her? Perhaps. She thought she might be able to come to love
him. Her
mother had loved her father, it was said. And a man of many layers?
Matrim
Cauthon made an onion look like an apple! She rubbed a hand over her
head. She
still was not accustomed to the feel of hair on her head. "I will need
a
razor first thing."
"It
may be best to wait until Ebou Dar, High Lady."
"No,"
she said gently. "If I die, I will die as who I am. I have removed the
veil."
"As
you say, Highness." Smiling, he saluted, gauntleted fist striking over
his
heart hard enough that steel clanged on steel. "If we die, we will die
as
who we are."
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
Prince of the Ravens
Leaning
on the tall pommel of his saddle, ashandarei slanted across Pips' neck,
Mat
frowned at the sky. The sun was well past its noon height. If Vanin and
those
Deathwatch Guards did not return soon, he might find himself fighting a
battle
with the sun in the crossbowmen's eyes, or worse, in twilight. Worst of
all,
dark clouds loomed over the mountains to the east. The gusting wind was
out of
the north. No help there. Rain would put the weasel in the henyard.
Bowstrings
fared poorly in rain. Well, any rain was a few hours off, with luck,
but he had
never noticed his luck saving him from getting soaked in a downpour. He
had not
dared wait until tomorrow. Those fellows hunting Tuon might have gotten
another
whiff of Karede's men, and then he would have had to try attacking
them, or
laying an ambush, and carry it out before they could catch Karede.
Better to
have them come to him, at a place of his choosing. Finding the proper
spot had
not been difficult, between Master Roidelle's collection of maps on the
one
hand and Vanin and the other scouts on the other.
Aludra
was fussing over one of her tall, metal-bound lofting tubes, beaded
braids
hiding her face as she examined something at the broad wooden base. He
wished
she had been willing to remain with the pack animals like Thorn and
Mistress
Anan. Even Noal had been willing to stay, if only to help Juilin and
Amathera
make sure Olver did not run off to watch the battle. The boy was dead
eager,
which could soon lead to plain dead. Matters had been bad enough when
only
Harnan and the other three had been corrupting Olver. but now he had
half the
men teaching him how to use a sword or dagger or fight with his hands
and feet,
and apparently filling his head with tales of heroes from the way he
had been
behaving, begging to go on raids with Mat and the like. Aludra was near
as bad.
Anybody could have used one of those strikers to light the fuse once
she had
loaded that tube, but she insisted on doing it herself. She was a
fierce woman,
Aludra was, and none too pleased at finding herself on the same side as
Seanchan, however temporary the arrangement was. It seemed wrong to her
that
they would see some of her handiwork without being on the receiving
end.
Leilwin and Domon sat their horses nearby keeping an eye on her, as
much to
make sure she did nothing foolish as to protect her. Mat hoped Leilwin
did
nothing foolish herself. Since there was apparently only one Seanchan
with the
people they would fight today, she had decided it was all right to be
there,
and the way she glared at Musenge and the other Deathwatch Guards, it
seemed
she might think she had something to prove to them.
The
three Aes Sedai, standing together with their reins in hand, cast dark
looks at
the Seanchan, too, as did Blaeric and Fen. who caressed their sword
hilts
perhaps unconsciously. Joline and her two Warders had been the only
ones aghast
at Sheraine's willing departure with Tuon-what an Aes Sedai felt on any
subject
was usually how her Warders felt on it. too-but the memory of being
leashed had
to be too fresh for Edesina or Teslyn to feel comfortable around
Seanchan
soldiers. Bethamin and Seta stood very meekly, hands folded at their
waists, a
little apart from the sisters. Bethamin's light-colored bay nudged her
shoulder
with his nose, and the tall, dark woman half reached up to stroke the
animal
before snatching her hand back down and resuming her humble pose. They
still
would take no part. Joline and Edesina had made that plain, yet it
seemed they
wanted the two women under their eyes to make sure of it. The Seanchan
women
plainly were looking at anything but the Seanchan soldiers. For that
matter.
Bethamin, Seta and Leilwin might as well not have existed for all of
Musenge
and that lot. Burn him, there were so many tensions in the air he could
almost
feel that hanging rope around his neck again.
Pips
stamped a hoof, impatient at standing in one place so long, and Mat
patted his
neck then scratched the scar forming on his own jaw. Tuon's ointments
had stung
as badly as she had said they would, but they worked. His new
collection of
scars did itch yet, though. Tuon. His wife. He was married. He had
known it was
coming, had known for a long time, but just the same… Married. He
should
have felt… different… somehow, but he still felt like himself. He
intended to keep it that way, burn him if he did not! If Tuon expected
Mat
Cauthon to settle down, to give up gambling or some such, she had
another think
coming. He supposed he would have to give over chasing after women,
much less
catching them, but he would still enjoy dancing with them. And looking
at them.
Just not when he was with her. Burn him if he knew when that would be.
He was
not about to go anywhere she had the upper hand, her and her talk of
cupbearers
and running grooms and marrying to serve the Empire. How was marrying
him
supposed to serve the flaming Empire?
Musenge
left the other ten men and five Ogier in red-and-black armor and
trotted his
black gelding up to Mat. The horse had good lines, built for speed and
endurance both, as far as Mat could tell without a thorough
examination.
Musenge looked built for endurance, a stocky, stolid man, his face worn
but
hard, his eyes like polished stones. "Forgiveness, Highness," he
drawled,
banging a gauntleted fist against his breastplate, "but shouldn't the
men
be back to work?'' He slurred his words worse than Selucia, almost to
unintelligibility. "Their rest break has stretched a long time. I doubt
they can complete the wall before the traitor arrives as it is." Mat
had
wondered how long it would take him to mention that. He had expected it
earlier.
Open-faced
helmets off but breastplates strapped on, the crossbow-men were sitting
on the
ground behind a long curving wall, perhaps a third of a circle made of
earth
thrown up out of the four-foot deep trench fronting it, with a thicket
of
sharpened stakes driven into the ground in front of that and extending
a little
beyond the ends of the trench. They had finished that in short order.
Infantry
needed to be as handy with shovel, mattock and axe as they were with
weapons.
Even cavalry did, but making horsemen believe was harder. Footmen knew
it was
better to have something between you and the enemy if you could. The
tools lay
scattered along the trench, now. Some of the men were dicing, others
just
taking their ease, even napping. Soldiers slept any chance they got. A
few were
reading books, of all things. Reading! Mandevwin moved among them,
fingering
his eyepatch and now and then bending to say a few words to a
bannerman. The
only lancer present, standing beside his horse, every line of him
saying he had
nothing to do with the crossbowmen, held no lance, but rather a long
banner-staff cased for half its length in leather.
It
was perfect terrain for what Mat had in mind. Near two miles of grassy
meadow
dotted with wildflowers and a few low bushes stretched from the wall to
the
tall trees at the western end. To the north was a blackwater swamp,
full of
oaks and odd. white-flowering trees that seemed half thick roots, with
a lake
clinging to its western edge and forest below the lake. A small river
flowed
south out of the swamp, half a mile behind Mat, before curving away to
the west
on his left. A small river, but wide enough and deep enough that horses
would
have to swim it. The far bank lay beyond bowshot. There was only one
way for
any attacker to get at the wall. Come straight for it.
"When
they arrive, I don't want them stopping to count how many men in red
and black
are here," he replied. Musenge winced slightly for some reason. "I
want them to see an unfinished wall and tools thrown down because we
learned
they were close. The promise of a hundred thousand crowns gold has to
have
their blood up, but I want them too excited to think straight. They'll
see us
vulnerable, our defenses incomplete, and with any luck, they'll rush in
straight away. They'll figure close to half of them will die when we
loose, but
that will just raise the chances for one of the others to get that
gold. They'll
only expect us to manage one volley." He slapped his hands together,
and
Pips shifted. "Then the trap closes."
"Still,
Highness, I wish we had more of your crossbowmen. I've heard you may
have as
many as thirty thousand." Musenge had heard him tell Tuon he would
fight
the Seanchan. too. The man was probing for information.
"I
have fewer than I did." Mat said with a grimace. His victories had
hardly
been bloodless, only remarkably close to it. Near four hundred
crossbowmen lay
in Altaran graves, and close to five hundred of the cavalry. A small
enough
butcher's bill, considering, yet he liked it best when the butcher
presented no
bill. "But what I have is enough for the day."
"As
you say. Highness." Musenge's voice was so neutral he could have been
commenting
on the price of beans. Strange. He did not look like a diffident man.
"I
have always been ready to die for her." There was no need for him to
say
which "her" he meant.
"I
guess I am, too. Musenge." Light, he thought he meant that! Yes, he did
mean
it. Did that mean he was in love? "Better to live for her. though,
wouldn't you say?"
"Should
you not be donning your armor. Highness?"
"I
don't intend getting close enough to the fighting to need armor. A
general who
draws his sword has put aside his baton and become a common soldier."
He
was only quoting Comadrin again-he seemed to do that a lot when
discussing
soldiering, but then, the man had known just about everything there was
to know
about the craft-just quoting, yet it appeared to impress the weathered
man, who
saluted him again and asked bloody permission before riding back to his
men.
Mat was tempted to ask what that "Highness" foolishness was about.
Likely it was just some Seanchan way of calling him a lord, but he had
not heard
anything like it in Ebou Dar, and he had been surrounded by Seanchan
there.
Five
figures appeared out of the forest at the foot of the meadow, and he
did not
need a looking glass to know them. The two Ogier in armor striped
bright red
and black would have told him even if Vanin's bulk had not. The mounted
men
were at a flat gallop, yet the Ogier kept pace, long arms swinging,
axes
swinging like a sawmill's drive-shaft.
"Sling-men
get ready!" Mat shouted. "Everybody else go pick up a shovel!"
The appearance had to be just right.
As
most of the crossbowmen scattered to pick up tools and make a show of
working
on the trench and wall, fifty others strapped on their helmets and
lined up in
front of Aludra. Tall men, they still carried the shortswords they
called
cat-gutters, but instead of crossbows, they were armed with four-foot
long
sling-staffs. He would have liked more than fifty, but Aludra only had
so much
of her powders. Each man wore a cloth belt sewn with pockets slung
across his
breastplate, and each pocket held a stubby leather cylinder larger than
a man's
fist with a short length of dark fuse sticking out of the end. Aludra
had not
come up with a fancy name for them yet. She would, though. She was one
for
fancy names. Dragons, and dragons' eggs.
One
by one the men held up long pieces of slow-match for her to light with
a
striker. She did it quickly, using each striker until the long wooden
stick had
burned down nearly to her fingertips, but she never winced, just
dropped the
thing and lit another while telling the sling-men to be faster, she was
getting
low on strikers. Light, but she was tight with the things. She had five
more
boxes that Mat knew of. As each man turned away from her, he put the
smoking
slow-match between his teeth and secured one of the cylinders to his
sling-staff as he walked to the wall. There were wide intervals between
sling-men. They had to cover the whole length of the wall.
"Time
to get your people in place, Musenge." Mat said loudly.
The
Deathwatch Guards formed a single line abreast with the Gardeners on
the end.
Anybody who took one glance through a looking glass would know what
they were.
Light, all they needed was to see Ogier in armor and the sun glinting
off all
that red and black. And if they stopped to think how few of the Guards
there
were, they would still see they had Mat outnumbered, and there would be
only
one way to find out whether Tuon was with him.
Vanin
galloped behind the wall, flung himself out of the saddle and
immediately began
walking his lathered dun to cool the animal down. As soon as he passed
the
wrall, crossbowmen began dropping the tools and running to put on
helmets and
pick up crossbows. Those had been laid so that the men formed three
spaced
ranks with gaps where the sling-men stood. It no longer mattered if
anyone was
watching from the forest. What they saw would seem natural.
Mat
trotted Pips to Vanin and dismounted. The two human Deathwatch Guards
and the
two Ogier went to join the others. The horses' nostrils flared with
their heavy
breathing, but the Ogier were panting no harder. One was Hartha, a
stone-eyed
fellow who apparently ranked very close to Musenge.
Vanin
scowled at the men who had not gotten down to walk their horses. A
horsethief
he might be, reformed or not. but he disliked mistreating horseflesh.
"They went up like one of her nightflowers when they glimpsed us," he
said, nodding toward Aludra. "We made sure they got a good look at that
fancy armor, then high-tailed it as soon as they started getting
mounted.
They're coming hard behind us. Harder than they should." He spat on the
ground. "I didn't get a good look at their animals, but I doubt they're
all good for that run. Some'll founder before they get here.''
"The
more the better," Mat said. "The fewer who make it, the better in my
book." All he needed was to give Tuon a day or two head start on them,
and
if that came from their ruining horses, if they rode out of the trees
and
decided he had too many men to take on, he would take that over a
battle any
day. After today's six-mile gallop, they would need to rest their
horses a few
days before they were fit to travel any distance at all. Vanin directed
that
scowl at him. Others might go around calling him my Lord and Highness,
but not
Chel Vanin.
Mat
laughed and clapped him on the shoulder before swinging back into Pips'
saddle.
It was good there was someone who did not think he was a fool noble, or
at
least, did not care whether or not he was. He rode to join the Aes
Sedai, who
were mounted now.
Blaeric
and Fen. the one on a bay gelding, the other on a black, gave him
stares almost
as dark as those they had directed at Musenge. They still suspected he
had
something to do with what had happened to Joline. He thought of telling
Fen
that his stub of a topknot looked ridiculous. Fen shifted in his saddle
and
stroked his sword hilt. Then again, maybe not.
"… what I told you," Joline was telling Bethamin and Seta, shaking
an
admonitory finger. Her dark bay gelding looked a war-horse, but was
not. The animal
had a good turn of speed, yet its temperament was mild as milk-water.
"If
you even think about embracing saidar, you'll regret it."
Teslyn
grunted sourly. She patted her white-faced chestnut mare, a much more
feisty
creature than Joline's mount, and spoke to the air. "She does train
wilders and expects them to behave once out of her sight. Or perhaps
she does
think the Tower will accept over-age novices." Spots of color appeared
in
Joline's cheeks, but she straightened in her saddle without saying
anything. As
usual when those two got into a conflict, Edesina concentrated on
something
else, in this case brushing imaginary dust from her divided skirts.
Enough
tension to choke on.
Suddenly
riders poured out of the trees at the far end of the meadow in a
torrent that
swelled into a spreading lake of steel-tipped lances as they drew rein,
no
doubt in surprise at what lay before them, h seemed that not as many
horses had
foundered as Mat had hoped for. Pulling the looking glass from its
scabbard
tied to his saddle's pommel, he raised it to his eye. The Taraboners
were easy
to pick out, with mail veils hiding their faces to the eyes, but the
others
wore every sort of helmet, rounded or conical, with face-bars and
without. He
even saw a few ridged Tairen helmets, though that did not mean there
were
Tairens among them. Most men used whatever armor they could find. Don't
think,
he thought. The woman is here. That hundred thousand gold crowns is
waiting.
Don't bloody-
A
shrill Seanchan bugle sounded, thin with the distance, and the horsemen
began
advancing at a walk, already spreading out to extend beyond the wall's
edges.
"Uncase
the banner, Macoll," Mat ordered. So these flaming sons of goats
thought
they were coming to murder Tuon, did they? "This time, we'll let them
know
who's killing them. Mandevwin. you have the command."
Mandevwin
turned his bay to face front. "Stand ready!" he shouted, and
under-officers and bannermen echoed the cry.
Macoll
pulled the leather case off, carefully fastening it to his saddle, and
the
banner streamed on the wind, a red-fringed white square with a large,
open red
hand in the center, and beneath it, embroidered in red, the words
Dovie'andi se
tovya sagain. It's time to toss the dice. Mat thought, translating. And
so it
was. He saw Musenge eyeing it. He seemed very calm for a man with ten
thousand
lances coming toward him.
"Are
you ready. Aludra?" Mat called.
"Of
course I am ready," she replied. "I only wish I had my dragons!"
Musenge shifted his attention to her. Burn her, she needed to watch her
tongue!
Mat wanted those dragons to be a shock when the Seanchan first faced
them.
Perhaps
twelve hundred paces from the wall, the ranks of lancers began to trot,
and at six
hundred they began to gallop, but not as hard as they might have. Those
horses
were tired after a long run already. They lumbered. None of the lances
had come
down. yet. They would not until the last hundred paces. Some of those
carried
streamers that floated behind them in the air, a large knot of red
here, a
clump of green or blue there. They might have been House colors, or
perhaps
they marked mercenary companies. All those hooves made a noise like
distant
thunder rolling.
"Aludra!"
Mat shouted without looking back. A hollow thump and an acrid sulphur
smell
announced the lofting tube sending its nightflower aloft, and a loud
pop the
blooming of a ball of red streaks overhead. Some of the galloping
horsemen
pointed to it as if in amazement. None looked behind them to see
Talmanes
leading the three banners of horse out of the forest below the lake.
Their
lances had been left with the pack animals, but every man would have
his
horsebow out. Spreading out in a single line, they began following the
galloping
riders, increasing speed as they came. Their horses had been ridden far
last
night, but not pressed too hard, and they had been rested all morning.
The
distance between the two groups of riders began to narrow.
"Front
rank!" Mandevwin shouted when the horsemen were four hundred paces
away.
"Loose!" Above a thousand bolts flashed out, dark streaks in the air.
Immediately the front rank bent to fasten their cranks to their
crossbows and
the second rank raised their weapons. "Second rank!" Mandevwin shouted.
"Loose!" Another thousand quarrels streaked for the oncoming
horsemen.
At
that range, they could not punch through a breastplate despite heads
designed
to do just that, but men with shattered legs toppled from their saddles
and men
with ruined arms reined in frantically to try stemming the flow of
blood. And
the horses… Ah. Light, the poor horses. Horses fell by the hundreds,
some
kicking and screaming, struggling to stand, others not moving at all.
many of
them tripping more animals. Catapulted riders tumbled across the meadow
grass
until they were trampled by the riders behind.
"Third
rank! Loose!" Mandevwin shouted, and as soon as those bolts were away,
the
front rank straightened. "Front rank!" Mandevwin called.
"Loose!" And another thousand bolts added to the carnage.
"Second rank! Loose!"
It
was not so one-sided as an ambush, of course. Some of the galloping
horsemen
had flung down their lances and uncased their horsebows. Arrows began
to fall
among the crossbowmen. Shooting accurately from a galloping horse was
no easy
task, and the range was too far at the start for the arrows to kill,
but more
than one man struggled to work his crossbow with a shaft jutting from
an arm.
The wall protected their legs. yet. Too far to kill unless your
target's luck
had run out. Mat saw a man fall with an arrow in his eye, another with
a shaft
taken in the throat. There were other gaps in the ranks, as well. Men
shuffled
forward quickly to fill them.
"You
could join in any time, Joline," he said.
"Third
rank! Loose!"
The
Aes Sedai shook her head irritably. "I must be in danger. I don't feel
in
danger yet." Teslyn nodded. She was watching the charge as if it were a
parade, and a not very interesting one at that.
"If
you would allow Seta and me," Bethamin began, but Joline looked over
her
shoulder coldly, and the Seanchan woman subsided and dropped her eyes
to her
hands on the reins. Seta smiled nervously, but it slid off her face
under
Joline's stare.
"Front
rank! Loose!"
Mat
rolled his eyes to the heavens and muttered a prayer that was half
curse. The
bloody women did not feel in danger! He felt as though his bloody head
was on
the chopping block!
"Second
rank! Loose!'
Talmanes
had come in range, now, and announced himself with a volley from four
thousand
bows at three hundred paces that cleared saddles. Closing the distance,
they
fired again. Again. The enemy ranks seemed to ripple with the shock.
Some men
whirled about and charged at Talmanes' line with lances coming down.
Others
began returning his hail of arrows with their own. Most continued on,
though.
"Form
square!" Mandevwin shouted a heartbeat before Mat could. He hoped the
man
had not left it too bloody late.
The
Band was well-trained, though. The men on the flanks fell back at the
run. as calmly
as if arrows were not pelting them, clanging off breastplates and
helmets. And
sometimes not. Men fell. The three ranks never lost cohesion, though,
as they
bent into a hollow box with Mat at its center. Musenge and the other
human
Deathwatch Guards had their swords out, and the Ogier were hefting
their long
axes.
"Sling-men!"
Mandevwin shouted. "Loose at will! Front rank, west! Loose!"
Sling-men along the western rank shifted their sling-staffs so they
could touch
the fuses coming from the stubby cylinders to the slow-matches held in
their
teeth and, as the volley lanced out from the crossbows, whipped cheir
slings
back and then forward. The dark cylinders flew more than a hundred
paces to
land among the on-rushing horsemen. The sling-men were already fitting
more of
the cylinders to their slings before the first fell. Aludra had marked
each
fuse with pieces of thread to indicate different burning times, and
each
cylinder erupted with a roar in a burst of flame, some on the ground,
some as
high as a mounted man's head. The explosion was not the real weapon,
though a
man struck in the face was suddenly headless. He stayed upright in the
saddle
for three strides before toppling. No, Aludra had wrapped a layer of
hard
pebbles around the powder inside each cylinder, and those pierced flesh
deeply
when they hit. Shrieking horses fell to thrash on the ground. Riders
fell to
lie still.
An
arrow tugged at Mat's left sleeve, another pierced his right sleeve,
only the
fletchings keeping it from going through cleanly, and a third ripped
open the
right shoulder of his coat. He put a finger behind the scarf around his
neck
and tugged. The bloody thing felt awfully tight of a sudden. Maybe he
should
consider wearing armor at times like this. The enemy flanks were
beginning to
curl in, now, preparing to envelop the crossbowmen behind the wall.
Talmanes'
men still peppered their rear with arrows, but several hundred men had
been
forced to drop their bows to defend themselves with swords, and it was
unlikely
that all of the horses with empty saddles out there had belonged to
Taraboners
or Amadicians. He had left a gap in the center of his line, a path for
anyone
who decided to flee, yet no one was taking the offering. They could
smell that
hundred thousand crowns gold.
"I
think," Joline said slowly. "Yes. I feel in danger, now." Teslyn
simply drew back her hand and threw a sphere of fire larger than a
horse's
head. The explosion hurled dirt and pieces of men and horses into the
air. It
was about bloody time!
Facing
in three directions, the Aes Sedai began hurling fireballs as fast as
they
could swing their arms, but the devastation they wrought did nothing to
slow
the attack. Those men should have been able to see there was no woman
matching
Tuon's description inside the square by this time, but their blood was
no doubt
on fire, the scent of riches in their nostrils. A man could live the
rest of
his life like a noble with a hundred thousand crowns gold. The square
was
encircled, and they fought to close on it, fought and died as volleys
from the
crossbows lashed them and sling-men killed them. Another wall began to
rise,
made of dead and dying men and horses, a wall that some tried to ride
over and
joined in the attempt. More scrambled down from their saddles and tried
to clamber
over. Crossbow bolts hurled them back. This close, bolts penetrated
breastplates like hot knives going into butter. On they came, and died.
The
silence seemed to come suddenly. Not quite silence. The air was full of
the
sound of panting men who had been working those cranks as fast as they
could.
And there was moaning from the wounded. A horse was still shrieking,
somewhere.
But Mat could see no one on his feet between the wall of dead and
Talmanes, no
one in the saddle except men in green helmets and breastplates. Men who
had
lowered their bows and swords. The Aes Sedai folded their hands on the
high
pommels of their saddles. They were breathing hard, too.
"It
is done, Mat!" came Talmanes' shout. "Those who are not dead are
dying. Not one of the fools tried to escape."
Mat
shook his head. He had expected them to be half-mad with the lust for
gold.
They had been completely mad with it.
It
would be necessary to haul away dead men and horses for Mat and the
others to
get out, and Talmanes set men to work, fastening ropes to horses to
drag them
aside. No one wanted to climb over that. No one but the Ogier.
"I
want to see if I can find the traitor," Hartha said, and he and the
other
six Gardeners shouldered their axes and walked over the mound of bodies
as if
it were dirt.
"Well,
at least we settled this," Joline said, patting her face with a
lace-edged
handkerchief. Sweat dotted her forehead. "You owe a debt, Mat. Aes
Sedai
do not become involved in private wars as a rule. I shall have to think
on how
you can pay it." Mat had a pretty good idea what she would come up
with.
She was mad herself if she thought he would agree.
"Crossbows
settled this, marath'damane" Musenge said. His helmet, breastplate and
coat were orf, his left shirt-sleeve ripped away so one of the other
Guards
could wrap a bandage around where an arrow had gone through. The sleeve
had
come away very neatly, as if the stitching had been weak. He had a
raven
tattooed on his shoulder. "Crossbows and men with heart. You never had
more
than this, did you, Highness." That was not a question. "This and
whatever losses you suffered."
"I
told you," Mat said. "I had enough." He was not going to reveal
anything more to the man than he could not avoid, but Musenge nodded as
if he
had confirmed everything.
By
the time an opening could be cleared so that Mat and the others could
ride
through, Hartha and the Gardeners had returned. "I found the
traitor," Hartha said, holding up a severed head by its hair.
Musenge's
eyebrows climbed at the sight of that dark, hook-nosed face. "She will
be
very interested to see this," he said softly. Softly as the sound of
sword
being drawn is soft. "We must carry it to her."
"You
know him?" Mat asked.
"We
know him. Highness." Musenge's face, suddenly seeming carved from
stone,
said he would say no more on the subject.
"Look,
would you stop calling me that? My name is Mat. After today, I'd say
you have a
right to use it." Mat surprised himself by sticking out his hand.
That
stone mask crumpled in astonishment. "I could not do that, Highness,"
he said in scandalized tones. "When she married you. you became Prince
of
the Ravens. To speak your name would lower my eyes forever."
Mat
took off his hat and scrubbed fingers through his hair. He had told
everyone
who would listen that he did not like nobles, did not want to be one.
and he
had meant it. He still meant it. And now he bloody was one! He did the
only
thing he could. He laughed until his sides ached.
CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT
Remember the Old Saying
The
red-walled room, its ceiling painted fancifully with birds and fish
cavorting
among clouds and waves, bustled with brown-clad clerks scurrying along
the
aisles between the long tables that covered the floor. None seemed to
be trying
to listen-most seemed stunned, with cause-but Suroth disliked their
presence.
They had to overhear some of what was being said, and it was
potentially dire
news. Galgan had insisted, though. They needed to work to keep their
minds off
the disastrous news from home, and they were all trusted men and women.
He
insisted! At least the white-haired old man was not dressed as a
soldier, this
morning. His voluminous blue trousers and short, high-collared red coat
with
rows of gold buttons embossed with his sigil were the height of Seandar
fashion, which meant the height of fashion for the Empire. When he wore
armor,
or even just his red uniform, he sometimes looked at her as if she were
a
soldier under his command!
Well,
once Elbar brought word that Tuon was dead, she could have Galgan
killed. His
cheeks were smeared with ashes, as were hers. The ship Semirhage had
promised
had brought word of the Empress's death and the Empire was racked by
rebellion
in every quarter. There was no Empress, no Daughter of the Nine Moons.
To
commoners, the world trembled on the brink of destruction. To some of
the
Blood, too. With Galgan and a few more dead, there would be none to
object to
Suroth Sabelle Meldarath proclaiming herself Empress. She tried not to
think of
the new name she would take. Thinking on a new name beforehand was bad
luck.
A
frown creasing his face. Galgan looked down at the map spread out
before them,
and placed a red-lacquered fingernail atop mountains on the southern
coast of Arad Doman. Suroth did not
know what the mountains were
called. The map showed all of Arad Doman and held three markers, one
red wedge
and two white circles, spaced out in a long line north to south. "Has
Turan gotten an accurate count of how many men came out of these
mountains to
join Ituralde when he crossed into Arad Doman, Yamada?"
Efraim
Yamada wore the ashes, too, since he was of the Blood, if only the low
Blood,
his hair cut in the bowl-and-tail rather than a narrow crest across an
otherwise shaved scalp. Only the commoners around the table, whatever
their
rank, were without. Graying and tall in a blue-and-gold breastplate,
with broad
shoulders and lean hips, Yamada still held some of the beauty of his
youth.
"He reports at least one hundred thousand, Captain-General. Perhaps
half
again that."
"And
how many came out after Turan crossed the border?"
"Possibly
two hundred thousand, Captain-General."
Galgan
sighed and straightened. "So Turan has one army ahead of him and
another behind,
very likely the whole of Arad Doman's strength, and between them he is
outnumbered." The fool! Stating the blindingly obvious.
"Turan
should have stripped Tarabon of every sword and lance!" Suroth snapped.
"If he survives this debacle, I will have his head!"
Galgan
quirked a white eyebrow at her. "I hardly think Tarabon is loyal enough
to
support that just yet," he said drily. "Besides, he has damane and
raken. They should offset his lesser numbers. Speaking of damane and
raken,
I've signed the orders raising Tylee Khirgan to Lieutenant-General and
the low
Blood, since you've dithered over it, and orders to return most of
those raken
to Amadicia and Altara. Chisen still hasn't found whoever created that
little
mess in the north. and I don't like the notion that whoever it was is
lying in
wait to spring out as soon as Chisen returns to the Molvaine Gap."
Suroth
hissed, gripping her pleated blue skirts in her fists before she could
stop her
hands. She would not let the man make her show emotion! "You overstep
yourself, Galgan," she said coldly. "I command the Forerunners. For
the time being, I command the Return. You will sign no orders without
my
approval."
"You
commanded the Forerunners, who have been subsumed into the Return," he
replied calmly, and Suroth tasted bitterness. The news from the Empire
had
emboldened him. With the Empress dead, Gal-gan intended to make himself
the
first Emperor in nine hundred years. It seemed he would have to die by
tonight.
"As for you commanding the Return-" He cut off at the sound of heavy
boots from the corridor.
Suddenly
Deathwatch Guards filled the doorway, armored and hands on their sword
hilts.
Hard eyes stared out of their red-and-green helmets to survey the room.
Only
when they were satisfied did they step aside to reveal that the
corridor was
filled with Deathwatch Guards, human and Ogier. Suroth barely noticed
them. She
had eyes only for the small dark woman in pleated blue with a shaven
head and
ashes on her cheeks. The news was all over the city. She could not have
reached
the palace without hearing of her mother's death, her family's deaths,
but her
face was a stern mask. Suroth's knees hit the floor automatically.
Around her
the Blood knelt, the commoners prostrated themselves.
"The
Light's blessings for your safe return. Highness," she said in chorus
with
the rest of the Blood. So Elbar had failed. No matter. Tuon would not
take a
new name or become empress until the mourning was finished. She could
still
die, clearing the way for a new empress.
"Show
them what Captain Musenge brought me, Banner-General Karede." Tuon said.
A
tall man with three dark plumes on his helmet bent to carefully empty a
large
lump from a canvas bag onto the green floor tiles. The gagging smell of
decay
began to permeate the room. Dropping the bag, he strode across the
floor to
stand beside Suroth.
It
took her a moment to recognize Elbar's hook-nosed face in that rotting
mass,
but as soon as she did. she fell forward, prostrating herself, kissing
the
floor tiles. Not in desperation, though. She could recover from this.
Unless
they had put Elbar to the question. "My eyes are lowered, Highness,
that
one of mine has offended you so deeply that you took his head."
"Offended
me." Tuon seemed to be weighing the words. "It might be said he
offended me. He tried to kill me."
Gasps
filled the room, and before Suroth could more than open her mouth, the
Deathwatch Guard Banner-General planted a boot on her bottom, seized
her crest
in his fist, and hauled her upper body clear of the floor. She did not
struggle. That would only have added to the indignity.
"My
eyes are deeply lowered that one of mine should be a traitor,
Highness,"
she said hoarsely. She wished she could have spoken naturally. but the
cursed
man had her back arched till it was a wonder she could speak at all.
"Had
I even suspected, I would have had him put to the question myself. But
if he
tried to implicate me, Highness, he lied to protect his true master. I
have
some thoughts on that which 1 would share with you in private, if I may
be
allowed." With a little luck, she could lay this to Galgan. His
usurpation
of her authority would help.
Tuon
looked over Suroth's head. She met Galgan's eyes, and Abal-dar's and
Yamada's,
and those of everyone of the Blood, but not Suroth's. "It is well known
that Zaired Elbar was Suroth's man completely. He did nothing that she
did not
order. Therefore Suroth Sabelle Meldarath is no more. This da'covale
will serve
the Deathwatch Guard as they wish until her hair has grown enough for
her to be
decent when she is sent to the block for sale."
Suroth
never thought of the knife she had intended to use to open her veins, a
knife
beyond reach in her apartments. She could not think at all. She started
screaming,
a wordless howl, before they even began cutting her clothing off.
The
Andoran sun was warm after Tar Valon. Pevara removed her cloak and
began tying
it behind her saddle as the gateway winked shut, hiding the view of the
Ogier
grove in Tar Valon. None of them had wanted anyone to see them leaving.
They
would return to the grove for the same reason, unless matters went very
badly.
In which case, they might never return. She had thought this task must
be
carried out by someone who combined the highest diplomatic skills with
the
courage of a lion. Well, she was no coward, at least. She could say
that much
of herself.
"Where
did you learn the weave for bonding a Warder?" Javindhra asked
abruptly,
stowing her own cloak in similar fashion.
"You
should recall that I once suggested Red sisters would be well served by
having
Warders." Pevara snugged her red riding gloves, showing no concern for
the
question. She had expected it before this. "Why would you be surprised
I
know the weave?" In truth, she had needed to ask Yukiri, and had been
hard
pressed to dissemble her reason for asking. She doubted that Yukiri was
suspicious, though. A Red bonding a Warder was as likely as a woman
flying.
Except, of course, that that was why she had come to Andor. Why they
had all
come.
Javindhra
was there only at Tsutama's command, given when Pe-vara and Tarna could
not
come up with enough names to suit the Highest. The angular Sitter did
not
bother to hide her displeasure over that, not from Pevara. although she
had buried
it deeply around Tsutama. Tarna was there, of course, pale-haired and
icy cold,
her Keeper's stole left behind but her divided gray skirts embroidered
in red
to the knee. For Elaida's Keeper to have a Warder would be difficult,
though
the men were to be housed in the city, away from the Tower, yet it had
all been
her idea in the first place, and she was. if not eager, then determined
to take
part in this first experiment. Besides, the need for numbers was
paramount,
because they had found only three other sisters willing to entertain
the idea.
The primary task of the Red for so long, finding men who could channel
and
bringing them to the Tower to be gentled, tended to sour women on all
men, so
the clues had been few and far between. Jezrail was a square-faced
Tairen who
kept a painted miniature of the boy she had almost married instead of
coming to
the Tower. His grandchildren would be grandparents now, but she still
spoke of
him fondly. Desala, a beautiful Cairhienin with large dark eyes and an
unfortunate
temper, when given the chance would dance any number of men to
exhaustion in a
night. And Melare, plump and witty, with a love of conversation, sent
money to
Andor to pay for her grandnephews' education as she had for her nephews
and
nieces.
Weary
of searching out such tiny clues, weary of probing delicately to learn
whether
they meant what they might. Pevara had convinced Tsutama that six would
be
enough to begin. Too, a larger party might cause some unfortunate
reaction.
After all, the whole Red Ajah appearing at this so-called Black Tower,
or even
half, might well make the men think themselves under attack. There was
no
telling how sane they all still were. That was one thing they had
agreed on,
behind Tsutama's back. They would bond no men who showed any signs of
madness.
That was, if they were allowed to bond any.
Ajah
eyes-and-ears in Caemlyn had sent copious reports on the Black Tower,
and some
had even found employment inside it, so they had no difficulty locating
the
well-worn dirt track that led down from the city to a grandiose
double-arched
black gate, near fifty feet tall and ten spans wide, topped by
crenelations
over a down-pointing central spike of stone and flanked by a pair of
thick,
crenelated black towers that stood at least fifteen spans high. There
were no
actual gates to close up the opening, and the black stone wall that
stretched
out of sight east and west, marked at intervals by the foundations of
bastions
and towers, was nowhere higher than four or five paces that she could
see. Weeds
grew along the uneven top, and grasses ruffled by the breeze. Those
unfinished
walls, looking as if they might never be finished, made the gate seem
ludicrous.
The
three men who stepped out into the opening were not at all ludicrous,
however.
They wore long black coats, and swords at their hips. One, a lean young
fellow
with curled mustaches, had a silver pin in the shape of a sword on his
high
collar. One of the Dedicated. Pevara resisted the instinct to think of
him as
equivalent to an Accepted and the other two as novices. Novices and
Accepted
were kept safe and guided until they knew enough of the Power to become
Aes
Sedai. By all reports, Soldiers and Dedicated were considered ready for
battle
almost as soon as they learned to channel. And they were forced from
the first
day, pressed to seize as much of saidin as they could, made to use it
almost
continually. Men died from that, and they called it "training
losses," as if they could hide death behind bland words. The thought of
losing novices or Accepted in that fashion curdled Pevara's stomach.
but it
seemed that the men took it in stride.
"A
fine morning to you, Aes Sedai," the Dedicated said with a small bow as
they reined in before him. A very small bow, never taking his eyes from
them.
His accents were those of Murandy. "Now what would six sisters be
wanting
here at the Black Tower this fine morning?"
"To
see the M'Hael," Pevara replied, managing to avoid choking on the word.
It
meant "leader" in the Old Tongue, but the implication of taking that
alone as a title gave the word much stronger meaning, as if he led
everyone and
everything.
"Ah,
to see the M'Hael. is it? And of what Ajahs should I say?"
"The
Red," Pevara replied and watched him blink. Very satisfying. But not
very
helpful.
"The
Red," he said flatly. He had not remained startled very long. "Well.
then. Enkazin, al'Seen, you keep watch while I see what the M'Hael has
to say
to this."
He
turned his back, and the vertical silvery slash of a gateway appeared
in front
of him, widening into an opening no larger than a door. Was that as
large as he
could make? There had been some discussion
about whether to bond men who were as strong as possible or those who
were weak. The weak might be more easily controlled, while the strong
might-would
definitely-be more useful. They had reached no consensus; each sister
would
have to decide for herself. He darted through the gateway and closed it
before
she had a chance to see more than a white stone platform with steps
leading up
one side and a squared-off black stone that might have been one of the
building
blocks for the wall, polished till it shone in the sun, sitting atop it.
The
two who remained stayed in the middle of the double arch as if to bar
the
sisters from riding in. One was a Saldaean, a skinny broad-nosed man
just short
of his middle years who had something of the look of a clerk about him,
a bit
of a stoop as from hunching for long hours over a writing table, the
other a
boy, little more than a child, who raked dark hair out of his eyes with
his
fingers though the breeze quickly put it back again. Neither seemed the
slightest uneasy over confronting six sisters alone. If they were
alone. Were
there others in those towers? Pevara refrained from glancing at the
tower tops.
"You
there, boy,'' Desala said in a voice like chimes. Chimes tinged with
anger. The
surest way to set off her temper was to harm a child. "You should be at
home with your mother studying your letters. What are you doing here?"
The
boy flushed bright red and raked hair from his face again.
"Saml's
all right, Aes Sedai," the Saldaean said, patting the boy's shoulder.
"He's a quick learner, and you don't need to show him anything twice
before he knows it." The boy stood up very straight, pride on his face,
and tucked his thumbs behind his sword belt. A sword, at his age! True,
a
noble's son would have been learning the sword for several years at
Saml
al'Seen's age, but he would not be allowed to wear the thing about!
"Pevara,"
Tarna said coolly, "no children. I knew they had children here, but no
children."
"Light!"
Melare breathed. Her white mare sensed her agitation and tossed her
head.
"Certainly no children!''
"That
would be an abomination," Jezrail said.
"No
children," Pevara agreed quickly. "I think we should wait to say more
until we see Master… the M'Hael." Javindhra sniffed.
"No
children what, Aes Sedai?" Enkazin asked, frowning. "No children
what?" he said again when no one answered.
He
no longer appeared so much like a clerk. The stoop remained, but
something in
his tilted eyes suddenly seemed… dangerous. Was he holding the male
half
of the Power? The possibility sent a chill down Pevara's spine, but she
resisted the desire to embrace saidar. Some men who could channel
seemed able
to sense when a woman was holding the Power. Enkazin looked like he
might be
hasty, now.
They
waited in silence except for the occasional stamp of a hoof, Pevara
schooling
herself to patience, Javindhra grumbling under her breath. Pevara could
not
make out the words, but she knew grumbling when she heard it. Tama and
Jezrail
took books from their saddlebags and read. Good. Let these Asha'man see
that
they were unconcerned. Only, not even the boy seemed impressed. He and
the
Saldaean just stood there in the middle of the gate watching, hardly
blinking.
After
perhaps half an hour, a larger gateway opened and the Muran-dian strode
through. "The M'Hael will be receiving you at the palace, Aes Sedai. Go
on
through." He jerked his head toward the opening.
"You
will show us the way?" Pevara said, dismounting. The gateway was
larger,
but she would have had to crouch to ride through.
"There'll
be someone the other side to guide you." He barked a laugh. "The
M'Hael doesn't associate with the likes of me." Pevara filed that away
to
chew over later.
As
soon as the last of them was through, near the white stone platform
with its
mirror-bright black stone, the gateway winked shut, but they were not
alone.
Four men and two women in rough woolens took the reins of their horses,
and a
dark, heavyset man with both the silver sword and a sinuous
red-and-gold
figure, a dragon, on his tall black collar gave them a minimal bow.
"Follow
me," he said curtly in a Tairen accent. His eyes were like augers.
The
palace the Murandian had spoken of was just that, two stories of white
marble
topped with pointed domes and spires in the style of Saldaea, separated
from a
large space of bare, hard-packed ground by the white platform. It was
not large
among palaces, but most nobles lived in buildings far smaller and less
grand.
Broad stone stairs rose to a wide landing in front of tall twinned
doors. Each
bore a gauntleted fist gripping three lightning bolts, carved large and
gilded.
Those doors swung open before the Tairen reached them, but there were
no
servants in evidence. The man must have channeled. Pevara felt that
chill
again. Javindhra muttered under her breath. With a sound of prayer,
this time.
The
palace might have belonged to any noble with a taste for tapestries
showing
battles and red-and-black floor tiles, except that there were no
servants in
evidence. He had servants, though unfortunately no Red Ajah
eyes-and-ears among
them, but did he expect them to remain out of sight when not needed or
had he
ordered them from the halls? Perhaps to avoid having anyone see six Aes
Sedai
arrive. That line of reasoning ran toward thoughts she would rather not
consider. She had acknowledged the dangers before leaving the White
Tower.
There was no point dwelling on them.
The
chamber the Tairen led them to was a throne room, where a ring of
spiral-cut
black columns supported what must have been the palace's largest dome,
its
interior layered with gilt and half filled with gilded lamps hanging on
gilded
chains. Tall mirrored stand-lamps stood along the curved walls, too.
Perhaps a
hundred men in black coats were standing to either side of the room.
Every man
she could see wore the sword and the dragon, men with hard faces,
leering
faces, cruel faces. Their eyes focused on her and the other sisters.
The
Tairen did not announce them, but rather simply joined the mass of
Asha'man and
left them to make their own way across the room. The floor tiles were
red and
black here, too. Taim must particularly like those colors. The man
himself was
lounging on what could only be called a throne, a massive chair as
heavily
carved and gilded as any throne she had seen, atop a white marble dais.
Pevara
focused on him, and not only to avoid feeling all those eyes of men who
could
channel following her. Mazrim Taim drew the eye. He was tall, with a
strongly
hooked nose and an air of physical strength about him. An air of
darkness, too.
He sat there with his ankles crossed and one arm hanging over the heavy
arm of
the throne, yet he seemed ready to explode into violence.
Interestingly, though
his black coat was embroidered with blue-and-gold dragons that twined
around
the sleeves from elbows to cuffs, he did not wear the collar pins.
"Six
sisters of the Red Ajah," he said when they stopped short of the dais.
His
eyes… She had only thought the Tairen's eyes were augers. "Plainly
you didn't come to try gentling us all." Chuckles rippled around the
room.
"Why did you come asking to speak to me?"
"I
am Pevara Tazanovni, Sitter for the Red," she said. "This is
Javindhra Doraille, also a Red Sitter. The others are Tarna Feir,
Desala
Nevanche-"
"I
didn't ask your names," Taim cut in coldly. "I asked why you came
here."
This
was not going well. She managed not to take a deep breath, but she
wanted to.
Outwardly, she was cool and calm. Inside, she wondered whether she
would end
the day forcibly bonded. Or dead. "We want to discuss bonding Asha'man
as
Warders. After all, you've bonded fifty-one sisters. Against their
will."
As well to let him know they were aware of that from the start. "We do
not
propose bonding any man against his will, however."
A
tall, golden-haired man standing near the dais sneered at her. "Why
should
we allow Aes Sedai to take any m-" Something unseen struck the side of
his
head so hard that his feet left the floor tiles before he fell in a
heap, eyes
closed and blood trickling from his nostrils.
A
lean man with receding gray-streaked hair and a forked beard bent to
touch a
finger to the fallen man's head. "He's alive," he said as he
straightened, "but his skull's cracked and his jaw's broken." He
might have been talking about the weather. None of the men made any
move to
offer Healing. Not one!
"I
have some small skill in Healing." Melare said, gathering her skirts
and
already moving toward the fallen man. "Enough for this, I think. With
your
permission."
Taim
shook his head. "You do not have my permission. If Mishraile survives
till
nightfall, he'll be Healed. Perhaps the pain will teach him to guard
his
tongue. You say you want to bond Warders? Reds?"
That
last word carried a great deal of contempt, which Pevara chose to
ignore.
Tarna's eyes could have turned the sun to an icicle, though. Pevara
laid a
cautionary hand on the other woman's arm as she spoke. "Reds have
experience
with men who can channel." Mutters rose among the watching Asha'man.
Angry
mutters. She ignored that, too. "We are not afraid of them. Custom can
be
as hard to change as law, harder at times, but it has been decided to
change
ours. Henceforth, Red sisters may bond Warders, but only men who can
channel.
Each sister may bond as many as she feels comfortable with. Given the
Green,
for example, I think that is unlikely to be more than three or four."
"Very
well."
Pevara
blinked in spite of herself. "'Very well'?" She must have
misunderstood him. He could not have been convinced so easily.
Taim's
eyes seemed to bore into her head. He spread his hands, and it was a
mocking
gesture. "What would you have me say? Fair is fair? Equal shares?
Accept 'very
well' and ask who will let you bond them. Besides, you must remember
the old
saying. Let the lord of chaos rule." The chamber erupted with men's
laughter.
Pevara
had never heard any saying like that. The laughter made the hair on the
back of
her neck try to stand.
The
End of the Eleventh Book of The Wheel of Time
GLOSSARY
A
Note on Dates in This Glossary. The Toman Calendar (devised by Toma dur
Ahmid)
was adopted approximately two centuries after the death of the last
male Aes
Sedai, recording years After the Breaking of the World (AB). So many
records
were destroyed in the Trolloc Wars that at their end there was argument
about
the exact year under the old system. A new calendar, proposed by Tiam
of Gazar,
celebrated freedom from the Trolloc threat and recorded each year as a
Free
Year (FY). The Gazaran Calendar gained wide acceptance within twenty
years
after the Wars' end. Artur Hawkwing attempted to establish a new
calendar based
on the founding of his empire (FF, From the Founding), but only
historians now
refer to it. After the death and destruction of the War of the Hundred
Years, a
third calendar was devised by Uren din Jubai Soaring Gull, a scholar of
the Sea
Folk, and promulgated by the Panarch Farede of Tarabon. The Farede
Calendar,
dating from the arbitrarily decided end of the War of the Hundred Years
and
recording years of the New Era (NE), is currently in use. Aelfinn:
A race of beings, largely human in appearance but with
snake-like
characteristics, who will give true answers to three questions.
Whatever the
question, their answers are always correct, if frequently given in
forms that
are not clear, but questions concerning the Shadow can be extremely
dangerous.
Their true location is unknown, but they can be visited by passing
through a
terangreaL once a possession of Mayene but in recent years held in the
Stone of
Tear. There are reports that they can also be reached by entering the
Tower of
Ghenjei. They speak the Old Tongue, mention treaties and agreements,
and ask if
those entering carry iron, instruments of music or devices that can
make fire.
See also Eelfinn. Amayar,
the: The land-dwelling inhabitants of the Sea Folk islands.
Known to few people
other than the Atha'an Miere, the Amayar are the craftsmen who make
what is
known as Sea Folk porcelain. Followers of the Water Way, which prizes
acceptance of what is rather than what might be wished for, they are
very
uncomfortable at sea and only venture onto the water in small boats for
fishing, never leaving sight of land. Their way of life is very
peaceful, and
requires very little oversight from the governors appointed from among
the
Atha'an Miere. Since Atha'an Miere governors have little desire to go
far from
the sea, the Amayar essentially run their villages according to their
own rules
and customs. Arad
Doman: A nation on the Aryth Ocean, currently racked by civil
war and by wars
against those who have declared for the Dragon Reborn. Its capital is
Bandar
Eban. In Arad Doman, those who are descended from the nobility at the
time of
the founding of the nation, as opposed to those raised later, are known
as the
bloodborn. The ruler (king or queen) is elected by a council of the
heads of
merchant guilds (the Council of Merchants), who are almost always
women. He or
she must be from the noble class, not the merchant, and is elected for
life.
Legally the king or queen has absolute authority, except that he or she
can be
deposed by a three-quarter vote of the Council. The current ruler is
King
Alsalam Saeed Al-madar, Lord of Almadar, High Seat of House Almadar.
His
present whereabouts are much shrouded in mystery. Area,
units of: (1) Land: 1 ribbon = 20 paces X 10 paces (200 square
paces); 1 cord =
20 paces X 50 paces (1000 square paces); 1 hide = 100 paces X 100 paces
(10,000
square paces); 1 rope = 100 paces X 1000 paces (100,000 square paces);
1 march
= 1000 paces X 1000 paces ('A square mile). (2) Cloth: 1 pace = 1 pace
and 1
hand X 1 pace and 1 hand. armsmen: Soldiers who owe allegiance or
fealty to a
particular lord or lady. Asha'man:
(1) In the Old Tongue. "Guardian" or "Guardians," but
always a guardian of justice and truth. (2) The name given, both
collectively
and as a rank, to the men who have come to the Black Tower, near
Caemlyn in
Andor. in order to learn to channel. Their training largely
concentrates on the
ways in which the One Power can be used as a weapon, and in another
departure
from the usages of the White Tower, once they learn to seize saidin,
the male
half of the Power, they are required to perform all chores and labors
with the
Power. When newly enrolled, a man is termed a Soldier; he wears a plain
black
coat with a high collar, in the Andoran fashion. Being raised to
Dedicated
brings the right to wear a silver pin, called the Sword, on the collar
of his
coat. Promotion to Asha'man brings the right to wear a Dragon pin, in
gold and
red enamel, on the collar opposite the Sword. Although many women,
including
wives, flee when they learn that their men actually can channel, a fair
number
of men at the Black Tower are married, and they use a version of the
Warder
bond to create a link with their wives. This same bond, altered to
compel
obedience, has recently been used to bond captured Aes Sedai as well.
Some
Asha'man have been bonded by Aes Sedai, although the traditional Warder
bond is
used. The Asha'man are led by Mazrim Taim, who has styled himself the
M'Hael,
Old Tongue for "leader." Balwer,
Sebban: Formerly secretary to Pedron Niall (the Lord Captain
Commander of the
Children of the Light) in public, and secretly Niall's spymaster. After
Niall's
death, Balwer aided the escape of Morgase (once Queen of Andor) from
the
Seanchan in Amador for his own reasons, and was employed as secretary
to Perrin
t'Bashere Aybara and Faile ni Bashere't'Aybara. His duties expanded,
however,
and he now directs Cba Faile in their activities, acting as a spymaster
for
Perrin, though Perrin doesn't think of him so. See Cha Faile. Band
of the Red Hand: See Shen an Calhar. Blood,
the: Term used by the Seanchan to designate the nobility. There
are four
degrees of nobility, two of the High Blood and two of the low. or
lesser.
Blood. The High Blood let their fingernails grow to a length of one
inch and
shave the sides of their heads. leaving a crest down the center,
narrower for
men than for women. The length of this crest varies according to
fashion. The
low Blood also grow their fingernails long, but they shave the sides
and back
of the head leaving what appears to be a bowl of hair, with a wide tail
at the
back allowed to grow longer, often to the shoulder for men or to the
waist for
women. Those of the highest level of the High Blood are called High
Lady or
High Lord and lacquer the first two fingernails on each hand. Those of
the next
level of the High Blood are called simply Lord or Lady and lacquer only
the
nails of the forefingers. Those of the low Blood also are called simply
Lady or
Lord, but those of the higher rank lacquer the nails of the last two
fingers on
each hand, while those on the lowest level lacquer only the nails of
the little
fingers. The Empress and immediate members of the Imperial family shave
their
heads entirely and lacquer all of their fingernails. One can be raised
to the
Blood as well as born to it, and this is frequently a reward for
outstanding
accomplishment or service to the Empire. calendar: There are 10 days to
the
week, 28 days to the month and 13 months to the year. Several feast
days are
not part of any month; these include Sunday (the longest day of the
year), the
Feast of Thanksgiving (once every four years at the spring equinox) and
the
Feast of All Souls Salvation, also called All Souls Day (once every ten
years
at the autumn equinox). While the months have names- Taisham, Jumara.
Saban,
Aine. Adar, Saven, Amadaine, Tammaz. Maigdhal, Choren, Shaldine, Nesan
and
Danu-these are seldom used except in official documents and by
officials. For
most people, using the seasons is good enough. Captain-General:
(1) The military rank of the leader of the Queen's Guard. This position
is
currently held by Lady Birgitte Trahelion. (2) The title given to the
head of
the Green Ajah, though known only to members of the Green. This
position is
currently held by Adelorna Bastine in the Tower, and Myrelle Berengari
among
the rebel Aes Sedai contingent under Egwene al'Vere. (3) A
Seanchan rank, the highest in the Ever Victorious Army
except for Marshal-General, which is a temporary rank sometimes given
to a
Captain-General put in charge of a war. Cha
Faile: (1) In the Old Tongue, "the Falcon's Talon." (2) Name
taken by
the young Cairhienin and Tairen nobles, attempted followers of
ji'e'toh, who
have sworn fealty to Faile ni Bashere't'Ay-bara. In secret, they act as
her
personal scouts and spies. Since her capture by the Shaido, they
continue their
activities under the guidance of Sebban Balwer. Children
of the Light: Society of strict ascetic beliefs, owing
allegiance to no nation
and dedicated to the defeat of the Dark One and the destruction of all
Darkfriends. Founded during the War of the Hundred Years by Lothair
Mantelar to
proselytize against an increase in Darkfriends, they evolved during the
war
into a completely military society. They are extremely rigid in their
beliefs,
and certain that only they know the truth and the right. They consider
Aes
Sedai and any who support them to be Darkfriends. Known disparagingly
as
Whitecloaks. a name they themselves despise, they were formerly
headquartered
in Amador, Amadicia, but were forced out when the Seanchan conquered
the city.
Their sign is a golden sunburst on a field of white. See also
Questioners. Corenne:
In the Old Tongue, "the Return." The name given by the Seanchan both
to the fleet of thousands of ships and to the hundreds of thousands of
soldiers, craftsmen and others carried by those ships, who came behind
the
Forerunners to reclaim the lands stolen from Artur Hawkwing's
descendants. The
Corenne is led by Captain-General Lunal Galgan. See also Hailene,
Rhyagelle.
ctiendillar. A supposedly indestructible substance created during the
Age of
Legends. Any known force used in an attempt to break it, including the
One
Power, is absorbed, making ctiendillar stronger. Although the making of
ctiendillar was thought lost forever, new objects made from it have
surfaced.
It is also known as heartstone. currency: After many centuries of
trade, the
standard terms for coins are the same in every land: crowns (the
largest coin
in size), marks and pennies. Crowns and marks can be minted of gold or
silver.
while pennies can be silver or copper, the last often called simply a
copper.
In different lands, however, these coins are of different sizes and
weights.
Even in one nation, coins of different sizes and weights have been
minted by
different rulers. Because of trade, the coins of many nations can be
found
almost anywhere, and for that reason, bankers, moneylenders and
merchants all
use scales to determine the value of any given coin. Even large numbers
of
coins are weighed.
The
heaviest coins come from Andor and Tar Valon, and in those two places
the
relative values are: 10 copper pennies = 1 silver penny: 100 silver
pennies = 1
silver mark; 10 silver marks = 1 silver crown; 10 silver crowns = 1
gold mark;
10 gold marks = 1 gold crown. By contrast, in Altara, where the larger
coins
contain less gold or silver, the relative values are: 10 copper pennies
= 1
silver penny: 21 silver pennies = 1 silver mark: 20 silver marks = 1
silver
crown: 20 silver crowns = 1 gold mark; 20 gold marks = 1 gold crown.
The
only paper currency is "letters-of-rights," which are issued by
bankers, guaranteeing to present a certain amount of gold or silver
when the
letter-of-rights is presented. Because of the long distances between
cities,
the length of time needed to travel from one to another, and the
difficulties
of transactions at long distance. a letter-of-rights may be accepted at
full
value in a city near to the bank which issued it. but it may be
accepted only
at a lower value in a city farther away. Generally, someone intending
to be
traveling for a long time will carry one or more letters-of-rights to
exchange
for coin when needed. Letters-or-rights are usually accepted only by
bankers or
merchants, and would never be used in shops. da'covale: (1) In the Old
Tongue,
"one who is owned," or "person who is property." (2) Among
the Seanchan. the term often used, along with property, for slaves.
Slavery has
a long and unusual history among the Seanchan, with slaves having the
ability
to rise to positions of great power and open authority, including
authority
over those who are free. It is also possible for those in positions of
great
power to be reduced to da'covale. See also so'jbin. Deathwatch
Guard, the: The elite military formation of the Sean-chan
Empire, including
both humans and Ogier. The human members of the Deathwatch Guard are
all
da'covale, born as property and chosen while young to serve the
Empress, whose
personal property they are. Fanatically loyal and fiercely proud, they
often
display the ravens tattooed on their shoulders, the mark of a da
co-vale of the
Empress. The Ogier members are known as Gardeners, and they are not
da'covah.
The Gardeners are as fiercely loyal as the human Deathwatch Guards,
though, and
are even more feared. Human or Ogier. the Deathwatch Guards not only
are ready
to die for the Empress and the Imperial family, but believe that their
lives
are the property of the Empress, to be disposed of as she wishes. Their
helmets
and armor are lacquered in dark green (so dark that it is often
mistakenly
called black) and blood-red, their shields are lacquered black, and
their swords,
spears, axes and halberds carry black tassels. See also da'covale. Defenders
of the Stone, the: The elite military formation of Tear. The
current Captain of
the Stone (commander of the Defenders) is Rodrivar Tihera. Only Tairens
are
accepted into the Defenders, and officers are usually of noble birth,
though
often from minor Houses or minor branches of strong Houses. The
Defenders are
tasked to hold the great fortress called the Stone of Tear, in the city
of
Tear, to defend the city, and to provide police services in place of
any City
Watch or the like. Except in times of war. their duties seldom take
them far
from the city. Then, as with other such elite formations, they are the
core
around which the army is formed. The uniform of the Defenders consists
of a
black coat with padded sleeves striped black-and-gold with black cuffs,
a
burnished breastplate and a rimmed helmet with a faceguard of steel
bars. The
Captain of the Stone wears three short white plumes on his helmet, and
on the
cuffs of his coat three intertwined golden braids on a white band.
Captains
wear two white plumes and a single line of golden braid on white cuffs,
lieutenants one white plume and a single line of black braid on white
cuffs,
and under-lieutenants one short black plume and plain white cuffs.
Bannermen
have gold-colored cuffs on their coats, and squadmen have cuffs striped
black-and-gold. Delving:
(1) Using the One Power to diagnose physical condition and illness. (2)
Finding
deposits of metal ores with the One Power. That this has long been a
lost
ability among Aes Sedai may account for the name becoming attached to
another
ability. Depository:
A division of the Tower Library. There are twelve publicly know
Depositories,
each having books and records pertaining to a particular subject, or to
related
subjects. A Thirteenth Depository, known only to some Aes Sedai.
contains
secret documents, records and histories which may be accessed only by
the
Amyrlin Seat, the Keeper of the Chronicles and the Sitters in the Hall
of the Tower.
And. of course, by that handful of librarians who maintain the
depository.
der'morat-: (1) In the Old Tongue, "master handler." (2) Among the
Seanchan, the prefix applied to indicate a senior and highly skilled
handler of
one of the exotics, one who trains others, as in der'-morat'raken.
Der'morat
can have a fairly high social status, the highest of all held by
der'sul'dam,
the trainers of'sul'dam, who rank with fairly high military officers.
See also
morat-. Eelfinn:
A race of beings, largely human in appearance but with foxlike
characteristics,
who will grant three wishes, although they ask for a price in return.
If the
person asking does not negotiate a price, the Eelfinn choose it. The
most
common price in such circumstances is death, but they still fulfill
their part
of the bargain, although the manner in which they fulfill it is seldom
the
manner the one asking expects. Their true location is unknown, but it
was
possible to visit them by means of a terangreal that was located in
Rhuidean.
That terangreal was taken by Moiraine Damodred to Cairhien. where it
was
destroyed. It is also reported that they may be reached by entering the
Tower
of Ghenjei. They ask the same questions as the Aelfinn regarding fire,
iron and
musical instruments. See also Aelfinn. Fain,
Padan: Former Darkfriend, now more and worse than a Dark-friend,
and an enemy
of the Forsaken as much as he is of Rand al'Thor. whom he hates with a
passion.
Last seen in Far Madding in company with Toram Riatin, who died there. Fel,
Herid: The author of Reason and Unreason and other books. Fel
was a student
(and teacher) of history and philosophy at the Academy of Cairhien. He
was
discovered in his study torn limb from limb. First
Reasoner: The title given to the head of the White Ajah. This
position is
currently held by Ferane Neheran. an Aes Sedai in the White Tower.
Ferane Sedai
is one of only two Ajah heads to sit in the Hall of the Tower at
present. First
Weaver: The title given to the head of the Yellow Ajah. This
position is
currently held by Suana Dragand in the White Tower. Suana Sedai is one
of only
two Ajah heads to sit in the Hall of the Tower at present. Among the
rebel Aes
Sedai, Romanda Cassin holds this position. forcing; forced: When
someone with
the ability to channel handles as much of the One Power as they can
over long
periods of time and channels continually, they learn faster and gain
strength
more rapidly. This is called forcing, or being forced, by Aes Sedai.
who abjure
the practice with novices and Accepted because of the danger of death
or being
burned out. Forerunners,
the: See Hailene. Forsaken,
the: The name given to thirteen powerful Aes Sedai, men and
women both, who
went over to the Shadow during the Age of Legends and were trapped in
the sealing
of the Bore into the Dark One's prison. While it has long been believed
that
they alone abandoned the Light during the War of the Shadow, in fact
others did
as well; these thirteen wete only the highest-ranking among them. The
Forsaken
(who call themselves the Chosen) are somewhat reduced in number since
their
awakening in the present day. Some of those killed have been
reincarnated in
new bodies and given new names, but much is as yet unknown about their
identities and locations. Hailene:
In the Old Tongue. "Forerunners," or "Those Who Come
Before." The term applied by the Seanchan to the massive expeditionary
force sent across the Aryth Ocean to scout out the land where Artur
Hawkwing once ruled. Now under the command of the High Lady Suroth.
its numbers swollen by recruits from conquered lands, the Hailene has
gone far
beyond its original goals. and has in fact been succeeded by the
Corenne. See
Corenne, Rhyagelle. Hand:
In Seanchan, Hand refers to a primary assistant or one of a
hierarchy of
imperial functionaries. A Hand of the Empress is of the First Rank, and
Lesser
Hands will be found at lower ranks. Some Hands operate in secret, such
as those
who guide the Seekers and Listeners; others are known and display their
rank by
wearing the appropriate number of golden hands embroidered on their
clothing. Hanlon,
Daved: A Darkfriend, formerly commander of the White Lions in
service to the
Forsaken Rahvin while he held Caemlyn using the name Lord Gaebril. From
there,
Hanlon took the White Lions to Cairhien under orders to further the
rebellion
against the Dragon Reborn. The White Lions were destroyed by a "bubble
of
evil," and Hanlon was ordered back to Caemlyn and, under the name
Doilin
Mellar, ingratiated himself with Elayne, the Daughter-Heir. According
to rumor,
he did considerably more than ingratiate himself. heart: The basic unit
of
organization in the Black Ajah. In effect, a cell. A heart consists of
three
sisters who know each other, with each member of the heart knowing one
additional
sister of the Black who is unknown to the other two of her heart. Illuminators,
Guild of: A society that held the secret of making fireworks. It
guarded this
secret very closely, even to the extent of doing murder to protect it.
The
Guild gained its name from the grand displays, called Illuminations,
that it
provided for rulers and sometimes for greater lords. Lesser fireworks
were sold
for use by others, but with dire warnings of the disaster that could
result
from attempting to learn what was inside them. The Guild once had
chapter
houses in Cairhien and Tanchico, but both are now destroyed. In
addition, the
members of the Guild in Tanchico resisted the invasion by the Seanchan
and were
made da'covale, and the Guild as such no longer exists. However,
individual
Illuminators still exist outside of Seanchan rule and work to make sure
that
the Guild will be remembered. See also da'covale. Ishara:
The first Queen of Andor (circa FY 994-1020). At the death of
Artur Hawkwing,
Ishara convinced her husband, one of Hawk-wing's foremost generals, to
raise
the siege of Tar Valon and accompany her to Caemlyn with as many
soldiers as he
could break away from the army. Where others tried to seize the whole
of
Hawk-wing's empire and failed, Ishara took a firm hold on a small part
and
succeeded. Today, nearly every noble House in Andor contains some of
Ishara's
blood, and the right to claim the Lion Throne depends both on direct
descent
from her and on the number of lines of connection to her that can be
established. Kaensada:
An area of Seanchan that is populated by less-than-civilized
hill tribes. These
tribes fight a great deal among themselves, as do individual families
within
the tribes. Each tribe has its own customs and taboos, the latter of
which
often make no sense to anyone outside that tribe. Most of the tribesmen
avoid
the more civilized residents of Seanchan. Kin,
the: Even during the Trolloc Wars, more than two thousand years
ago (circa
1000-1350 AB), the WhiteTower continued to
maintain its standards, putting out women who failed to measure up. One
group
of these women, fearing to return home in the midst of the wars, fled
to
Barashta (near the present-day site of Ebou Dar), as far from the
fighting as
was possible to go at that time. Calling themselves the Kin, and
Kinswomen,
they kept in hiding and offered a safe haven for others who had been
put out.
In time, their approaches to women told to leave the Tower led to
contacts with
runaways, and while the exact reasons may never be known, the Kin began
to
accept runaways, as well. They made great efforts to keep these girls
from
learning anything about the Kin until they were sure that Aes Sedai
would not
swoop down and retake them. After all, everyone knew that runaways were
always
caught sooner or later, and the Kin knew that unless they held
themselves
secret, they themselves would be punished severely.
Unknown
to the Kin, Aes Sedai in the Tower were aware of their existence almost
from
the very first, but prosecution of the wars left no time for dealing
with them.
By the end of the wars, the Tower realized that it might not be in
their best
interests to snuff out the Kin. Prior to that time, a majority of
runaways
actually had managed to escape, whatever the Tower's propaganda, but
once the
Kin began helping them, the Tower knew exactly where any runaway was
heading,
and they began retaking nine out often. Since Kinswomen moved in and
out of
Barashta (and later Ebou Dar) in an effort to hide their existence and
their
numbers, never staying anywhere more than ten years lest someone notice
that
they did not age at a normal speed, the Tower believed they were few,
and they
certainly were keeping themselves low. In order to use the Kin as a
trap for
runaways, the Tower decided to leave them alone, unlike any other
similar group
in history, and to keep the very existence of the Kin a secret known
only to
full Aes Sedai.
The
Kin do not have laws, but rather rules (called "the Rule") based in
large part on the rules for novices and Accepted in the White Tower,
and in
part on the necessity of maintaining secrecy. As might be expected
given the
origins of the Kin, all of their members maintain their rules very
firmly.
Recent
open contacts between Aes Sedai and Kinswomen, while known only to a
handful of
sisters, have produced a number of shocks, including the facts that
there are
twice as many Kinswomen as Aes Sedai and that some have lived more than
a
hundred years longer than any Aes Sedai since before the Trolloc Wars.
The
effect of these revelations, both on Aes Sedai and on Kinswomen, is as
yet a
matter for speculation. See also Knitting Circle, the. Knitting
Circle, the: The leaders of the Kin. Since no member of the Kin
has ever known
how Aes Sedai arrange their own hierarchy-knowledge passed on only when
an
Accepted has passed her test for the shawl-they put no store in
strength in the
Power but give great weight to age, with the older woman always
standing above
the younger. The Knitting Circle (a title chosen, like the Kin, because
it is
innocuous) thus consists of the thirteen oldest Kinswomen resident in
Ebou Dar,
with the oldest given the title of Eldest. By the rules, all will have
to step
down when it is time for them to move on, but so long as they are
resident in
Ebou Dar, they have supreme authority over the Kin, to a degree that
any
Amyrlin Seat would envy. Since the Kin have left Ebou Dar, the Knitting
Circle
does not technically exist. See also Kin, the. Lance-Captain:
In most lands, noblewomen do not personally lead their armsmen
into battle under
normal circumstances. Instead, they hire a professional soldier, almost
always
a commoner, who is responsible both for training and leading their
armsmen.
Depending on the land, this man can be called a Lance-Captain.
Sword-Captain,
Master of the Horse or Master of the Lances. Rumors of closer
relationships
than Lady and servant often spring up, perhaps inevitably. Sometimes
they are
true. Legion
of the Dragon, the: A large military formation, all infantry,
giving allegiance
to the Dragon Reborn, trained by Davram Bashere along lines worked out
by
himself and Mat Cauthon, lines which depart sharply from the usual
employment
of foot. While many men simply walk in to volunteer, large numbers of
the
Legion are scooped up by recruiting parties from the Black Tower, who
first
gather all of the men in an area who are willing to follow the Dragon
Reborn,
and only after taking them through gateways near Caemlyn winnow out
those who
can be taught to channel. The remainder, by far the greater number, are
sent to
Bashere's training camps. Legion
of the Wall: Formerly an elite military formation of Ghealdan
which provided
not only a core to any army that was raised from the Ghealdanin
nobilty's
armsmen but also provided a bodyguard for the ruler of Ghealdan, and
policed
Jehannah, the capital, in place of a City Watch. After they were
slaughtered
and the survivors dispersed by the followers of the Prophet Masema. the
nobles
of the Crown High Council decided that without the Legion, their own
power and
their influence over any ruler was increased, so they managed to stop
the
Legion from being re-formed. The current Queen. Alliandre Maritha
Kigarin, has
plans to do just that, however; plans which would have an explosive
effect if
they became known to the Crown High Council. Length,
units of: 10 inches = 1 foot: 3 feet = 1 pace; 2 paces = 1 span;
1000 spans = 1
mile; 4 miles = 1 league. Listeners:
A Seanchan spy organization. Almost anyone in the household of a
Seanchan
noble, merchant or banker may be a Listener, including da'covale
occasionally,
though seldom so'jhin. They take no active role, merely watching,
listening and
reporting. Their reports are sent to Lesser Hands who control both them
and the
Seekers and decide what should be passed on to the Seekers for further
action.
See also Seekers, Hand. ttiaratb'dantane: In the Old Tongue, "those who
must be leashed," and also "one who must be leashed." The term
applied by the Seanchan to any woman capable of channeling who has not
been
collared as a damane. march: See Area, units of Master of the Horse;
Master of
the Lances: See Lance-Captain. Mellar,
Doilin: See Hanlon. Daved. Mera'din:
In the Old Tongue, "the Brotherless." The name adopted, as a
society,
by those Aiel who abandoned clan and sept and went to the Shaido
because they
could not accept Rand al'Thor, a wet-lander. as the Car a earn, or
because they
refused to accept his revelations concerning the history and origins of
the
Aiel. Deserting clan and sept for any reason is anathema among the
Aiel.
therefore their own warrior societies among the Shaido were unwilling
to take
them in, and they formed this society, the Brotherless. tnorat-: In the
Old
Tongue, "handler." Among the Seanchan, it is used for those who
handle exotics, such as tnorat'raken, a raken handler or rider, also
informally
called a flier. See also der tnorat-. Prophet,
the: More formally, the Prophet of the Lord Dragon. Once known
as Masema Dagar.
a Shienaran soldier, he underwent a revelation and decided that he had
been
called to spread the word of the Dragon's Rebirth. He believes that
nothing (nothing!) is more important than acknowledging the Dragon
Reborn as the
Light made flesh and being ready when the Dragon Reborn calls, and he
and his
followers will use any means to force others to sing the glories of the
Dragon
Reborn. Those who refuse are marked for death, and those who are slow
may find
their homes and shops burned and themselves flogged. Forsaking any name
but
"the Prophet," he has brought chaos to much of Ghealdan and
Amadi-cia, large parts of which he controlled, although with him gone,
the
Seanchan are reestablishing order in Amadicia and the Crown High
Council in
Ghealdan. He joined with Perrin Aybara, who was sent to bring him to
Rand, and
has, for reasons unknown, stayed with him even though this delays his
going to
the Dragon Reborn. He is followed by men and women of the lowest sort;
if they
were not so when they were pulled in by his charisma, they have become
so under
his influence.
Queen's Guards, the: The
elite military formation in Andor. In
peacetime the Guard is responsible for upholding the Queen's law and
keeping
the peace across Andor. The uniform of the Queen's Guard include a red
undercoat, gleaming mail and plate armor, a brilliant red cloak and a
conical
helmet with a barred faceguard. High-ranking officers wear knots of
rank on
their shoulder and golden lion-head spurs. A recent addition to the
Queen's
Guards is the Daughter-Heir's personal bodyguard, which is composed
entirely of
women with the sole exception of its captain. Doilin Mel-lar. These
Guardswomen
wear much more elaborate uniforms than their male counterparts,
including
broad-brimmed hats with white plumes, red-lacquered breastplates and
helmets
trimmed in white and lace-edged sashes bearing the White Lion of Andor.
Questioners, the: An order
within the Children of the Light. They refer to
themselves as the Hand of the Light-they intensely dislike being called
Questioners-and their avowed purposes are to discover the truth in
disputations
and uncover Darkfriends. In the search for truth and the Light, their
normal
method of inquiry is torture; their normal their avowed purposes are to
discover the truth in disputations and uncover Darkfriends. In the
search for
truth and the Light, their normal method of inquiry is torture; their
normal
manner is that they know the truth already and must only make their
victim
confess to it. At times they act as if they are entirely separate from
the
Children and the Council of the Anointed, which commands the Children.
The head
of the Questioners is the High Inquisitor, at present Rhadam Asunawa,
who sits
on the Council of the Anointed. Their sign is a blood-red shepherd's
crook. Redarms:
Soldiers of the Band of the Red Hand, who have been chosen out
for temporary
police duty to make sure that other soldiers of the Band cause no
trouble or
damage in a town or village where the Band has stopped. So named
because, while
on duty, they wear very broad red armbands that reach from cuff to
elbow.
Usually chosen from among the most experienced and reliable men. Since
any
damages must be paid for by the men serving as Redarms, they work hard
to make
sure all is quiet and peaceful. A number of former Redarms were chosen
to
accompany Mat Cauthen to Ebou Dar. See also Sben an Calhar. Return,
the: See Coremie. Rbyage/le,
the: Old Tongue for "Those Who Come Home." Another name for the
Seanchan who have returned to the lands once held by Artur Hawkwing.
See also
Corenne, Hailene. Sea
Folk hierarchy: The Atha'an Miere. the Sea Folk, are ruled by
the Mistress of
the Ships to the Atha'an Miere. She is assisted by the Windfinder to
the
Mistress of the Ships, and by the Master of the Blades. Below this come
the
clan Wavemistresses, each assisted by her Windfinder and her
Swordmaster. Below
each Wavemistress are the Sailmistresses (ship captains) of her clan,
each
assisted by her Windfinder and her Cargomaster. The Windfinder to the
Mistress
of the Ships has authority over all Windfinders to clan Wavemistresses.
who in
turn have authority over all the Windfinders of her clan. Likewise, the
Master
of the Blades has authority over all Swordmasters, and they in turn
over the
Cargomasters of their clans. Rank is not hereditary among the Sea Folk.
The
Mistress of the Ships is chosen, for life, by the First Twelve of the
Atha'an
Miere, the twelve most senior clan Wavemistresses. A clan Wavemistress
is
elected by the twelve seniormost Sailmistresses of her clan, called
simply the
First Twelve, a term which is also used to designate the senior
Sailmistresses
present anywhere. She can also be removed by a unanimous vote of her
clan's
First Twelve. In fact, anyone other than the Mistress of the Ships can
be
demoted, even all the way down to deckhand, for malfeasance, cowardice
or other
crimes. Also, the Windfinder to a Wavemistress or Mistress of the Ship
who dies
will, of necessity, have to serve a lower ranking woman, and her own
rank thus
decreases to the lowest level, equivalent to one who was first raised
from
apprentice to Windfinder on the day she herself put off her higher
honors. The
Atha'an Miere, who have until recently kept their distance from Aes
Sedai by
various means and diversions, are aware that women who can channel have
much
longer lifespans than other people, though life at sea is dangerous
enough that
they seldom live out their entire lifespan, and thus they know that a
Windfinder may rise to a height and fall to the depths to begin again
many
times before she dies. Seandar:
The Imperial capital of Seanchan, located in the northeast of the
Seanchan
continent. It is also the largest city in the empire. Seekers:
More formally, Seekers for Truth, they are a police/spy organization of
the
Seanchan Imperial Throne. Although most Seekers are da'covale and the
property
of the Imperial family, they have wide-ranging powers. Even one of the
Blood
can be arrested for failure to answer any question put by a Seeker, or
for
failure to cooperate fully with a Seeker, this last defined by the
Seekers
themselves, subject only to review by the Empress. Their reports are
sent to
Lesser Hands, who control both them and the Listeners. Most Seekers
feel that
the Hands do not pass on as much information as they should. Unlike the
Listeners', the Seekers' role is active. Those Seekers who are
da'covale are
marked on either shoulder with a raven and a tower. Unlike the
Deathwatch
Guards. Seekers are seldom eager to show their ravens, in part because
it
necessitates revealing who and what they are. See also Hand, Listeners.
sei'mosiev: In the Old Tongue, "lowered eyes," or "downcast
eyes." Among the Seanchan, to say that one has "become
sei'mosiev" means that one has "lost face." See also sei'taer.
sei'taer. In the Old Tongue, "straight eyes," or "level
eyes." Among the Seanchan, it refers to honor or face, to the ability
to
meet someone's eyes. It is possible to "be" or "have"
sei'taer, meaning that one has honor and face, and also to "gain" or
"lose" sei'taer. See also sei'mosiev. Shara:
A mysterious land to the east of the Aiel Waste which is the
source of silk and
ivory, among other trade goods. The land is protected both by
inhospitable
natural features and by man-made walls. Little is known about Shara, as
the
people of that land work co keep their culture secret. The Sharans deny
that the
Trolloc Wars touched them, despite Aiel statements to the contrary.
They deny
knowledge of Artur Hawkwing's attempted invasion, despite the accounts
of
eyewitnesses from the Sea Folk. The little information that has leaked
out
reveals that the Sharans are ruled by a single absolute monarch, a
Sh'boan if a
woman and a Sh'botay if a man. That monarch rules for exactly seven
years, then
dies. The rule then passes to the mate of that ruler, who rules for
seven years
and then dies. This pattern has repeated itself since the time of the
Breaking
of the World. The Sharans believe that the deaths are the "Will of the
Pattern."
There
are channelers in Shara, known as the Ayyad, who are tattooed on their
faces at
birth. The women of the Ayyad enforce the Ayyad laws stringently. A
sexual
relationship between Ayyad and non-Ayyad is punishable by death for the
non-Ayyad, and the Ayyad is also executed if force on his or her part
can be
proven. If a child is born of the union, it is left exposed to the
elements,
and dies. Male Ayyad are used as breeding stock only. They are not
educated in
any fashion, not even how to read or write, and when they reach their
twenty-first year or begin to channel, whichever comes first, they are
killed
and the body cremated. Supposedly, the Ayyad channel the One Power only
at the
command of the Sh'boan or Sh'botay, who is always surrounded by Ayyad
women.
Even
the name of the land is in doubt. The natives have been known to call
it many different
names, including Shamara. Co'-dansin, Tomaka, Kigali and Shibouya. Shen
an Calhar: In the Old Tongue, "the Band of the Red Hand." (1) A
legendary group of heroes who had many exploits, finally dying in the
defense
of Manetheren when that land was destroyed during the Trolloc Wars. (2)
A
military formation put together almost by accident by Mat Cauthon and
organized
along the lines of military forces during what is considered the height
of the
military arts, the days of Artur Hawkwing and the centuries immediately
preceding. Sisnera,
Darlin: A High Lord in Tear, he was formerly in rebellion
against the Dragon
Reborn, but now serves as Steward for the Dragon Reborn in Tear. Snakes
and Foxes: A game that is much loved by children until they
mature enough to
realize that it can never be won without breaking the rules. It is
played with
a board that has a web of lines with arrows indicating direction. There
are ten
discs inked with triangles to represent the foxes, and ten discs inked
with
wavy lines to represent the snakes. The game is begun by saying
"Courage
to strengthen, fire to blind, music to dazzle, iron to bind." while
describing a triangle with a wavy line through it with one's hand. Dice
are
rolled to determine moves for the players and the snakes and foxes. If
a snake
or fox lands on a player's piece, he is out of the game, and as long as
the
rules are followed, this always happens. so'jhin: The closest
translation from
the Old Tongue would be "a height among lowness," though some
translate it as meaning "both sky and valley" among several other
possibilities. So'jhin is the term applied by the Seanchan to
hereditary upper
servants. They are da'covale, property, yet occupy positions of
considerable
authority and often power. Even the Blood step carefully around so'jhin
of the
Imperial family, and speak to so'jhin of the Empress herself as to
equals. See
also Blood, the; da'covale. Standardbearer:
A Seanchan rank equivalent to Bannerman. Stump:
A public meeting among the Ogier. The meeting can be within or
between
stedding. It is presided over by the Council of Elders of a sledding,
but any
adult Ogier may speak, or may choose an advocate to speak for him. A
Stump is
often held at the largest tree stump in a stedding. and may last for
several years.
When a question arises that affects all Ogier, a Great Stump is held,
and Ogier
from all stedding meet to address the question. The various stedding
take turns
hosting the Great Stump. Succession:
In general, when one House succeeds another on the throne. In Andor,
the term
is widely used for the struggle for the throne that arose upon
Mordrellen's
death. Tigraine's disappearance had left Mantear without a
Daughter-Heir, and
two years passed before Morgase. of House Trakand, took the throne.
Outside of
Andor. this conflict was known as the Third War of An-doran Succession. Sword-Captain:
See Lance-Captain. Taborwin,
Breane: Once a bored noblewoman in Cairhien, she lost her wealth
and status and
is now not only a servant, but in a serious romantic relationship with
a man
whom once she would have scorned. Taborwin,
Dobraine: A lord in Cairhien. He presently serves as Steward for
the Dragon
Reborn in Cairhien. Tarabon:
A nation on the ArythOcean. Once a
great
trading nation, a source of rugs, dyes and the Guild of Illuminators'
fireworks
among other things, Tarabon has fallen on hard times. Racked by anarchy
and
civil war compounded by simultaneous wars against Arad Doman and the
Dragonsworn, it was ripe for the picking when the Seanchan arrived. It
is now
firmly under Seanchan control, the chapter house of the Guild of
Illuminators
has been destroyed and the Illuminators themselves have been made
cla'covale.
Most Taraboners appear grateful that the Seanchan have restored order,
and
since the Seanchan allow them to continue living their lives with
minimal
interference, they have no desire to bring on more warfare by trying to
chase
the Seanchan out. There are, however, some lords and soldiers who
remain
outside the Seanchan sphere of influence and are fighting to reclaim
their
land. weight, units of: 10 ounces = 1 pound; 10 pounds = 1 stone: 10
stone = 1
hundredweight; 10 hundredweight = 1 ton. Winged
Guards, the: The personal bodyguards of the First of Mayene, and
the elite
military formation of Mayene. Members of the Winged Guards wear
red-painted
breastplates and helmets shaped like rimmed pots that come down to the
nape of
the neck in the back, and carry red-streamered lances. Officers have
wings
worked on the sides of their helmets, and rank is denoted by slender
plumes. Wise
Woman: Honorific used in Ebou Dar for women famed for their
incredible
abilities at healing almost any injury. A Wise Woman is traditionally
marked by
a red belt. Some have noted that many, indeed most. Ebou Dari Wise
Women are
not even from Altara, much less Ebou Dar, but only few have recently
learned
that all Wise Women are in fact Kinswomen and use various versions of
Healing,
giving out herbs and poultices largely as a cover. With the flight of
the Kin
from Ebou Dar after the Seanchan took the city, no Wise Women remain
there. See
also Kin, the.
About
the Author
Robert Jordan was born in 1948 in Charleston. South Carolina,
where he now lives with his
wife, Harriet, in a house built in 1797. He taught himself to read when
he was
four with the incidental aid of a twelve-years-older brother, and was
tackling
Mark Twain and Jules Verne by five. He is a graduate of the Citadel,
the
Military College of South Carolina, with a degree in physics. He served
two
tours in Vietnam
with the U.S. Army, among his decorations are the Distinguished Flying
Cross
with bronze oak leaf cluster, the Bronze Star with "V" and bronze oak
leaf cluster, and two Vietnamese Gallantry Crosses with Palm. A history
buff,
he has also written dance and theater criticism. He enjoys the outdoor
sports
of hunting and fishing.