Contains excerpts from the Great Hunt by Robert Jordan.
Amadaine 2, 998 NE (June 9th)
Hours before dawn
The column would have made an impressive sight under the waxing moon, moving through the Tarabon night to the jangle of harness, had there been anyone to see it. A full two thousand Children of the Light, well mounted, in white tabards and cloaks, armor burnished, with their train of supply wagons, and farriers, and grooms with the strings of remounts. There were villages in this sparsely forested country, but they had left roads behind, and stayed clear of even farmers' crofts. They were to meet someone… at a flyspeck village near the northern border of Tarabon, at the edge of Almoth Plain.
Geofram Bornhald, riding at the head of his men, wondered what it was all about. He remembered too well his interview with Pedron Niall, Lord Captain Commander of the Children of the Light, in Amador, but he had learned little there.
"We are alone, Geofram," the white-haired man had said. His voice was thin and reedy with age. "I remember giving you the oath... what... thirty-six years ago, it must be, now."
Bornhald straightened. "My Lord Captain Commander, may I ask why I was called back from Caemlyn, and with such urgency? A push, and Morgase could be toppled. There are Houses in Andor that see dealing with Tar Valon as we do, and they were ready to lay claim to the throne. I left Eamon Valda in charge, but he seemed intent on following the Daughter-Heir to Tar Valon. I would not be surprised to learn the man has kidnapped the girl, or even attacked Tar Valon." And Dain, Bornhald's son, had arrived just before Bornhald was recalled. Dain was full of zeal. Too much zeal, sometimes. Enough to fall in blindly with whatever Valda proposed.
"Valda walks in the Light, Geofram. But you are the best battle commander among the Children. You will assemble a full legion, the best men you can find, and take them into Tarabon, avoiding any eyes attached to a tongue that may speak. Any such tongue must be silenced, if the eyes see."
Bornhald hesitated. Fifty Children together, or even a hundred, could enter any land without question, at least without open question, but an entire legion... "Is it war, my Lord Captain Commander? There is talk in the streets. Wild rumors, mainly, about Artur Hawkwing's armies come back." The old man did not speak. "The King...."
"Does not command the Children, Lord Captain Bornhald." For the first time there was a snap in the Lord Captain Commander's voice. "I do. Let the King sit in his palace and do what he does best. Nothing. You will be met at a village called Alcruna, and there you will receive your final orders. I expect your legion to ride in three days. Now go, Geofram. You have work to do."
Bornhald frowned. "Pardon, my Lord Captain Commander, but who will meet me? Why am I risking war with Tarabon?"
"You will be told what you must know when you reach Alcruna." The Lord Captain Commander suddenly looked more than his age. Absently he plucked at his white tunic, with the golden sunburst of the Children large on the chest. "There are forces at work beyond what you know, Geofram. Beyond what even you can know. Choose your men quickly. Now go. Ask me no more. And the Light ride with you."
Now Bornhald straightened in his saddle, working a knot out of his back. I am getting old, he thought. A day and a night in the saddle, with two pauses to water the horses, and he felt every gray hair on his head. He would not even have noticed a few years ago. At least I have not killed any innocents. He could be as hard on Darkfriends as any man sworn to the Light—Darkfriends must be destroyed before they pulled the whole world under the Shadow—but he wanted to be sure they were Darkfriends first. It had been difficult avoiding Taraboner eyes with so many men, even in the backcountry, but he had managed it. No tongues had needed to be silenced.
The scouts he had sent out came riding back, and behind them came more men in white cloaks, some carrying torches to ruin the night vision of everyone at the head of the column. With a muttered curse, Bornhald ordered a halt while he studied those who came to meet him.
Their cloaks bore the same golden sunburst on the breast as his, the same as every Child of the Light, and their leader even had golden knots of rank below it equivalent to Bornhald's. But behind their sunbursts were red shepherd's crooks. Questioners. With hot irons and pinchers and dripping water the Questioners pulled confession and repentance from Darkfriends, but there were those who said they decided guilt before ever they began. Geofram Bornhald was one who said it.
I have been sent here to meet Questioners?
"We have been waiting for you, Lord Captain Bornhald," the leader said in a harsh voice. He was a tall, hook-nosed man with the gleam of certainty in his eyes that every Questioner had. "You could have made better time. I am Einor Saren, second to Jaichim Carridin, who commands the Hand of the Light in Tarabon." The Hand of the Light—the Hand that dug out truth, so they said. They did not like the name Questioners. "There is a bridge at the village. Have your men move across. We will talk in the inn. It is surprisingly comfortable."
"I was told by the Lord Captain Commander himself to avoid all eyes."
"The village has been... pacified. Now move your men. I command, now. I have orders with the Lord Captain Commander's seal, if you doubt."
Bornhald suppressed the growl that rose in his throat. Pacified. He wondered if the bodies had been piled outside the village, or if they had been thrown into the river. It would be like the Questioners, cold enough to kill an entire village for secrecy and stupid enough to throw the bodies into the river to float downstream and trumpet their deed from Alcruna to Tanchico. "What I doubt is why I am in Tarabon with two thousand men, Questioner."
Saren's face tightened, but his voice remained harsh and demanding. "It is simple, Lord Captain. There are towns and villages across Almoth Plain with none in authority above a mayor or a Town Council. It is past time they were brought to the Light. There will be many Darkfriends in such places."
Bornhald's horse stamped. "Are you saying, Saren, that I've brought an entire legion across most of Tarabon in secrecy to root a few Darkfriends out of some grubby villages?"
"You are here to do as you are told, Bornhald. To do the work of the Light! Or are you sliding from the Light?" Saren's smile was a grimace. "If battle is what you seek, you may have your chance. The strangers have a great force on Toman Head, more than Tarabon and Arad Doman together may be able to hold, even if they can stop their own bickering long enough to work together. If the strangers break through, you will have all the fighting you can handle. The Taraboners claim the strangers are monsters, creatures of the Dark One. Some say they have Aes Sedai to fight for them. The most foolish claim they have male Aes Sedai. If they are Darkfriends, these strangers, they will have to be dealt with, too. In their turn."
For a moment, Bornhald stopped breathing. "Then the rumors are true. Artur Hawkwing's armies have returned."
"Strangers," Saren said flatly. He sounded as if he regretted having mentioned them. "Strangers, and probably Darkfriends, from wherever they came. That is all we know, and all you need to know. They do not concern you now. We are wasting time. Move your men across the river, Bornhald. I will give you your orders in the village." He whirled his horse and galloped back the way he had come, his torchbearers riding at his heels.
Bornhald closed his eyes to hasten the return of his night sight. We are being used like stones on a board. "Byar!" He opened his eyes as his second appeared at his side, stiffening in his saddle before the Lord Captain. The gaunt-faced man had almost the Questioner's light in his eyes, but he was a good soldier despite. "There is a bridge ahead. Move the legion across the river and make camp. I will join you as soon as I can."
He gathered his reins and rode in the direction the Questioner had taken. Stones on a board. But who is moving us? And why?
That evening
Afternoon shadows gave way to evening as Liandrin Sedai made her way through the women's apartments. Beyond the arrowslits, darkness grew and pressed on the light from the lamps in the corridor. Twilight was a troubled time for Liandrin of late, that and dawn. At dawn the day was born, just as twilight gave birth to night, but at dawn, night died, and at twilight, day. The Dark One's power was rooted in death; he gained power from death, and at those times she thought she could feel his power stirring. Something stirred in the half dark, at least. Something she almost thought she could catch if she turned quickly enough, something she was sure she could see if she looked hard enough.
Serving women in black-and-gold curtsied as she passed, but she did not respond. She kept her eyes fixed straight ahead, and did not see them.
At the door she sought, she paused for a quick glance up and down the hall. The only women in sight were servants; there were no men, of course. She pushed open the door and went in without knocking.
The outer room of the Lady Amalisa's chambers was brightly lit, and a blazing fire on the hearth held back the chill of the Shienaran night. Amalisa and her ladies sat about the room, in chairs and on the layered carpets, listening while one of their number, standing, read aloud to them. It was The Dance of the Hawk and the Hummingbird, by Teven Aerwin, which purported to set forth the proper conduct of men toward women and women toward men. Liandrin's mouth tightened; she certainly had not read it, but she had heard as much as she needed about it. Amalisa and her ladies greeted each pronouncement with gales of laughter, falling against each other and drumming their heels on the carpets like girls.
The reader was the first to become aware of Liandrin's presence. She cut off with a surprised widening of her eyes. The others turned to see what she was staring at, and silence replaced laughter. All but Amalisa scrambled to their feet, hastily smoothing hair and skirts.
The Lady Amalisa rose gracefully, with a smile. "You honor us with your presence, Liandrin. This is a most pleasant surprise. I did not expect you until tomorrow. I thought you would want to rest after your long jour—"
Liandrin cut her off sharply, addressing the air. "I will speak to the Lady Amalisa alone. All of you will leave. Now."
There was a moment of shocked silence, then the other women made their goodbyes to Amalisa. One by one they curtsied to Liandrin, but she did not acknowledge them. She continued to stare straight ahead at nothing, but she saw them, and heard. Honorifics offered with breathy unease at the Aes Sedai's mood. Eyes falling when she ignored them. They squeezed past her to the door, pressing back awkwardly so their skirts did not disturb hers.
As the door closed behind the last of them, Amalisa said, "Liandrin, I do not underst—"
"Do you walk in the Light, my daughter?" There would be none of that foolishness of calling her sister here. The other woman was older by some years, but the ancient forms would be observed. However long they had been forgotten, it was time they were remembered.
As soon as the question was out of her mouth, though, Liandrin realized she had made a mistake. It was a question guaranteed to cause doubt and anxiety, coming from an Aes Sedai, but Amalisa's back stiffened, and her face hardened.
"That is an insult, Liandrin Sedai. I am Shienaran, of a noble House and the blood of soldiers. My line has fought the Shadow since before there was a Shienar, three thousand years without fail or a day's weakness."
Liandrin shifted her point of attack, but she did not retreat. Striding across the room, she took the leather-bound copy of The Dance of the Hawk and the Hummingbird from the mantelpiece and hefted it without looking at it. "In Shienar above other lands, my daughter, the Light must be precious, and the Shadow feared." Casually she threw the book into the fire. Flames leaped as if it were a log of fatwood, thundering as they licked up the chimney. In the same instant every lamp in the room flared, hissing, so fiercely did they burn, flooding the chamber with light. "Here above all. Here, so close to the cursed Blight, where corruption waits. Here, even one who thinks he walks in the Light may still be corrupted by the Shadow."
Beads of sweat glistened on Amalisa's forehead. The hand she had raised in protest for her book fell slowly to her side. Her features still held firm, but Liandrin saw her swallow, and her feet shift. "I do not understand, Liandrin Sedai. Is it the book? It is only foolishness."
There was a faint quaver in her voice. Good. Glass lamp mantles cracked as the flames leaped higher and hotter, lighting the room as bright as unsheltered noon. Amalisa stood as stiff as a post, her face tight as she tried not to squint.
"It is you who are foolish, my daughter. I care nothing for books. Here, men enter the Blight, and walk in its taint. In the very Shadow. Why wonder you that that taint may seep into them? Whether or not against their will, still it may seep. Why think you the Amyrlin Seat herself has come?"
"No." It was a gasp.
"Of the Red am I, my daughter," Liandrin said relentlessly. "I hunt all men corrupted."
"I don't understand."
"Not only those foul ones who try the One Power. All men corrupted. High and low do I hunt."
"I don't..." Amalisa licked her lips unsteadily and made a visible effort to gather herself. "I do not understand, Liandrin Sedai. Please…"
"High even before low."
"No!" As if some invisible support had vanished, Amalisa fell to her knees, and her head dropped. "Please, Liandrin Sedai, say you do not mean Agelmar. It cannot be him."
In that moment of doubt and confusion, Liandrin struck. She did not move, but lashed out with the One Power. Amalisa gasped and gave a jerk, as if she had been pricked with a needle, and Liandrin's petulant mouth perked in a smile.
This was her own special trick from childhood, the first learned of her abilities. It had been forbidden to her as soon as the Mistress of Novices discovered it, but to Liandrin that only meant one more thing she needed to conceal from those who were jealous of her.
She strode forward and pulled Amalisa's chin up. The metal that had stiffened her was still there, but it was baser metal now, malleable to the right pressures. Tears trickled from the corners of Amalisa's eyes, glistening on her cheeks. Liandrin let the fires die back to normal; there was no longer any need for such. She softened her words, but her voice was as unyielding as steel.
"Daughter, no one wants to see you and Agelmar thrown to the people as Darkfriends. I will help you, but you must help."
"H-help you?" Amalisa put her hands to her temples; she looked confused. "Please, Liandrin Sedai, I don't... understand. It is all so... It's all..."
It was not a perfect ability; Liandrin could not force anyone to do what she wanted—though she had tried; oh, how she had tried. But she could open them wide to her arguments, make them want to believe her, want more than anything to be convinced of her rightness.
"Obey, daughter. Obey, and answer my questions truthfully, and I promise that no one will speak of you and Agelmar as Darkfriends. You will not be dragged naked through the streets, to be flogged from the city if the people do not tear you to pieces first. I will not let this happen. You understand?"
"Yes, Liandrin Sedai, yes. I will do as you say and answer you truly."
Liandrin straightened, looking down at the other woman. The Lady Amalisa stayed as she was, kneeling, her face as open as a child's, a child waiting to be comforted and helped by someone wiser and stronger. There was a rightness about it to Liandrin. She had never understood why a simple bow or curtsy was sufficient for Aes Sedai when men and women knelt to kings and queens. What queen has within her my power? Her mouth twisted angrily, and Amalisa shivered.
"Be easy in yourself, my daughter. I have come to help you, not to punish. Only those who deserve it will be punished. Truth only, speak to me."
"I will, Liandrin Sedai. I will, I swear it by my House and honor."
"Moiraine came to Fal Dara with a Darkfriend."
Amalisa was too frightened to show surprise. "Oh, no, Liandrin Sedai. No. That man came later. He is in the dungeons now."
"Later, you say. But it is true that she speaks often with him? She is often in company with this Darkfriend? Alone?"
"S-sometimes, Liandrin Sedai. Only sometimes. She wishes to find out why he came here. Moiraine Sedai is—" Liandrin held up her hand sharply, and Amalisa swallowed whatever else she had been going to say.
"By three young men Moiraine was accompanied. This I know. Where are they? I have been to their rooms, and they are not to be found."
"I—I do not know, Liandrin Sedai. They seem nice boys, and Rand al'Thor a lord. They love each other, if you must know; al'Thor and Moiraine Sedai, even if some say they are fighting. Surely you don't think they are Darkfriends."
"Not Darkfriends, no. Worse. By far more dangerous than Darkfriends, my daughter. The entire world is in danger from them. They must be found. You will command your servants to search the keep, and your ladies, and yourself. Every crack and cranny. To this, you will see personally. Personally! And to no one will you speak of it, save those I name. None else may know. None. From Fal Dara in secrecy these young men must be removed, and to Tar Valon taken. In utter secrecy."
"As you command, Liandrin Sedai. But I do not understand the need for secrecy. No one here will hinder Aes Sedai."
"Of the Black Ajah you have heard?"
Amalisa's eyes bulged, and she leaned back away from Liandrin, raising her hands as though to shield herself from a blow. "A v-vile rumor, Liandrin Sedai. V-vile. There are n-no Aes Sedai who s-serve the Dark One. I do not believe it. You must believe me! Under the Light, I s-swear I do not believe it. By my honor and my House, I swear…"
Coolly Liandrin let her go on, watching the last remaining strength leach out of the other woman with her own silence. Aes Sedai had been known to become angry, very angry, with those who even mentioned the Black Ajah much less those who said they believed in its hidden existence. After this, with her will already weakened by that little childhood trick, Amalisa would be as clay in her hands. After one more blow.
"The Black Ajah is real, child. Real, and here within Fal Dara's walls." Amalisa knelt there, her mouth hanging open. The Black Ajah. Aes Sedai who were also Darkfriends. Almost as horrible to learn the Dark One himself walked Fal Dara keep. But Liandrin would not let up now. "Any Aes Sedai in the halls you pass, a Black sister could be. This I swear. I cannot tell you which they are, but my protection you can have. If in the Light you walk and me obey."
"I will," Amalisa whispered hoarsely. "I will. Please, Liandrin Sedai, please say you will protect my brother, and my ladies..."
"Who deserves protection I will protect. Concern yourself with yourself, my daughter. And think only of what I have commanded of you. Only that. The fate of the world rides on this, my daughter. All else you must forget."
"Yes, Liandrin Sedai. Yes. Yes."
Liandrin turned and crossed the room, not looking back until she reached the door. Amalisa was still on her knees, still watching her anxiously. "Rise, my Lady Amalisa." Liandrin made her voice pleasant, with only a hint of the mocking she felt. Sister, indeed! Not one day as a novice would she last. And power to command she has. "Rise." Amalisa straightened in slow, stiff jerks, as if she had been bound hand and foot for hours. As she finally came upright, Liandrin said, the steel back in full strength, "And if you fail the world, if you fail me, that wretched Darkfriend in the dungeon will be your envy."
From the look on Amalisa's face, Liandrin did not think failure would come from any lack of effort on her part.
Pulling the door shut behind her, Liandrin suddenly felt a prickling across her skin. Breath catching, she whirled about, looking up and down the dimly lit hall. Empty. It was full night beyond the arrowslits. The hall was empty, yet she was sure there had been eyes on her. The vacant corridor, shadowy between the lamps on the walls, mocked her. She shrugged uneasily, then started down the hall determinedly. Fancies take me. Nothing more.
Full night already, and there was much to do before dawn. Her orders had been explicit.
Sometime Later
Pitch-blackness covered the dungeons whatever the hour, unless someone brought in a lantern, but Padan Fain sat on the edge of his cot, staring into the dark with a smile on his face. He could hear the other two prisoners grumbling in their sleep, muttering in nightmares. Padan Fain was waiting for something, something he had been awaiting for a long time. For too long. But not much longer.
The door to the outer guardroom opened, spilling in a flood of light, darkly outlining a figure in the doorway.
Fain stood. "You! Not who I expected." He stretched with a casualness he did not feel. Blood raced through his veins; he thought he could leap over the keep if he tried. "Surprises for everyone, eh? Well, come on. The night's getting old, and I want some sleep sometime."
As a lamp came into the cell chamber, Fain raised his head, grinning at something, unseen yet felt, beyond the dungeon's stone ceiling, to the south. "It isn't over yet," he whispered. "The battle's never over."
That night
Egwene and I stepped out of the Door into a clearing near the al'Thor farm I managed to remember. She dressed us in well-made clothing but not the fancy ones Moiraine liked me to wear. I wore a red linen shirt that I liked and simple dark brown pants and my father's sword sheathed in plain brown leather. Egwene wore a white and blue cotton dress with a square neckline that showed off her collarbone and the small emerald necklace, as she insisted on some jewelry.
Night had already set and in my off-hand I held a branch with a Torchflame weave tied off, a natural-looking flame rather than some strange color or nature I had discovered in my experimentation. Our fingers intertwined we walked maybe ten minutes through the woods, new growth dotting the landscape and flower petals shut giving the Westwood a quiet feeling, the calls of nightbirds trilling through the night. It felt familiar and strange at the same time, but I clung to the feeling of familiarity.
We came out on the far side of the tabac fields, in the north, and I took a moment to gaze on the young plants dotting them, some already a pace high. It seemed Spring had returned with a vengeance in the Two Rivers as well. The barn was burnt, half destroyed from Winternight, but a new one was being built, closer to the tabac fields. Its frame lay set, and walls half-built. The village must have been pitching in to get it built and I felt happy in that moment, that they took care of things when I could not.
Tam must have seen that flame coming through the woods because it wasn't long before I saw him sneak round the side of the farmhouse, limping slightly with a strung Two Rivers longbow and a quiver at his side. He was solid, barrel chested and broad across the shoulders. He was shorter than me by a head or more, and his hair seemed to have gone gray permanently from the injury. He spoke up once we were two dozen paces from the house.
"That's far enough. Why are two folks dressed in clothes nice enough for a feastday walking out of the Westwood at night and onto my farm?"
I raised my hands to show they were empty. "Da, it's me, Rand. I've returned for the evening, with Egwene. We need to talk and I wanted to see you."
Tam looked utterly confused and took a few steps forward, before breaking into a limping jog when he recognized me. I raced to meet his bone-crushing hug, just holding him and basking in the comfort of seeing my father again. We stood there in the grass, under the sickle moon, and for the first time truly I felt safe. My father was safe, I was safe and everything would be okay. I chanted this mantra in my head.
"You're back! And so soon. Where is the rest of the group?" He looked around, presumably for Mat and Perrin.
"Fal Dara in Shienar," Egwene answered truthfully. "We traveled using the One Power."
Tam laughed, thinking it a joke, leaving the hug but putting an arm around me. "You even got Egwene doing pranks, Rand," he commented, squeezing my shoulder. "You both have changed so much. You look a year older Rand, you look a man." He smiled proudly. "You wear the sword well. And Egwene, there's a glow about you, your beauty shines. Adventure seems to have been good for you both,"—Tam nodded to himself, as if vindicated in something—"So really, are the others? In the forest hiding for the prank, or maybe up north by Taren Ferry with its nicer inn for the Aes Sedai?"
"My wife tells the truth." I thought it'd be fun to reveal the news that way.
Tam stiffened, his face turning pale. "You leave home for nigh two months and you two immediately get married?! Mistress al'Vere will strip you hide, Egwene, and I won't be able to protect you either Rand, I won't. You did not get her pregnant, did you?"
I flushed with embarrassment and shouted, "No! No, of course not. We married for love and destiny, dad."
"You could say it was fated, father," Egwene teased. "Besides, would you rather Rand be alone out in the world with an Aes Sedai wrapping herself around his little finger, or me by his side to protect him?"
Tam looked worried. "The Aes Sedai did something like that…?"
"I have much to tell you, dad. About the Aes Sedai and about me and about everything. Its been a long month. I don't think you'll much like some of the news."
"Then come inside," he beckoned as he kept an arm round my shoulder. "I'll make some tea, heat some stew, and we can speak of your 'adventures' out in the world beyond the Two Rivers," he said, finishing in a teasing voice.
I snorted. Forgive him, Creator, he knows not what he says.
New wood replaced the old, Trolloc blood having rotted the wood, he explained as I stared at each new part of the home I did not recognize. Most of the chairs had to be replaced in the living room around the hearth, and a new couch sat, looking quite fluffy, stuffed full of goose feathers.
"Thane's cousin in Taren Ferry wanted a third of my tabac for it, but its worth it. Your mother loved the old couch and she would have loved this one. Go on, you two take it," he said, motioning us to it.
And so we sat and ate, and I explained, asking him to hold back questions until I finished. Egwene sat next to me on the couch, while my father sat in a chair I recognized as his reading chair, stuffed with pillows as he settled in for the tale. I started with waking up an amnesiac, in the Eye of the World, watching moth-eaten memories of my life while floating in the void, and meeting the Iridescent Flame, until Tam could not hold back laughter as I spoke of the spirit naming me Dragon Reborn and chastising me for not training.
"I'm sorry, I'm sorry. I'm just laughing at the Whitecloaks. When they learn that their supposed 'Sacred Revelation the Dragon Reborn will have at the hands of a spirit of the Creator' is said spirit complaining he did not channel the One Power enough, they will huff and shout and whine endlessly and turn even against their own prophets."
My father went on to explain that every so often a Whitecloak prophet claims to be visited by a spirit of the Creator, who gifts them revelations. Amongst these revelations is a prophecy that the Dragon Reborn will also be given revelations. It has become widely assumed by the rank and file Whitecloaks that the Dragon will align with them, spreading them to every nation and burning Tar Valon to the ground.
"I'm guessing I should not ally with them," I joked.
Tam frowned. "Absolutely not. IF you are the Dragon Reborn, and not simply…" He could not say the words. Madman. False Dragon. Dead man walking. "Well, then under no circumstances as a son of mine, will you join with the Whitecloaks, except to crush them and absorb the remains." Tam spoke vehemently, his eyes dark with rage. "I've fought those supposed light-blessed bloody villains. They burn villages to the ground, torture women and children, mutilate corpses. They are monsters, not men. Their Questioners are the worst."
I was taken aback. "When did you fight Whitecloaks?"
"When I was a Companion to the King of Illian in my younger, wandering years, before Kari and I settled down with you. I was good at it, as good as I am with the bow," was all he was willing to say on the matter, wanting me to continue. Another time. It explains how he was in the Aiel War, though.
I spoke of refinement and prophecy, of my wounded soul stitched with another, and Egwene spoke up then.
"Do not let Rand tell you he is the dregs, or some broken reflection of your son. He has this silly idea that just because he's changed a bit, sometimes curses in other languages, and has a destiny, that he is somehow lesser than the Rand he was before." I mock glared at her, secretly feeling happy that she cared enough to preempt any self-loathing that lingered. "And I am part of the Prophecy. Do you see the tattoo on my hand?"
The white teardrop Flame of Tar Valon, nestled in a rainbow swirl of the seven colors of the Ajah lay atop her right hand. Tam nodded. "Yes, its just a tattoo though? Nothing special about it. Always thought the banner for the Amyrlin Seat was pretty."
"Look at my right arm, dad." I pulled my sleeve down, revealing the dragon the twisted round my right arm, ending at my wrist, two heraldic shields above and below the body of the beast, one containing the sigil of Tar Valon and the other a white flower on blue.
"Yes? That's just a large tattoo of a strange serpent with legs and… and a copy of Egwene's tattoo above it in a shield? And another shield as well? Does that mean that it's someone else's tattoo?" His voice became disturbed. "You had this made in only two months? This looks almost real, painted on your skin. Wait. Wait. Why do you have a tattoo?" His eyes were wide, as if he just realized how strange the tattoos were. For the first time someone that wasn't one of us or Lan noticed the tattoos as out-of-place. There was no way even the greatest tattooist could have made my dragon.
"When I bound Egwene, they both appeared. They are a symbol of our connection and my destiny, according to Moiraine. Egwene was the first, as was only right."
"A tattoo just appeared on your arm, Rand? And what a strange animal it is. Looks like a serpent with a lion for a father." He peered curiously as the dragon that seemed to shimmer in the firelight on my skin.
"It was burnt into my flesh by a sacred flame, and I have no better explanation, unfortunately."
"Whose is the second tattoo? If the first one is Egwene… Don't tell me the Wisdom somehow fell in love with you!?" Tam sounded worried at the thought of Nynaeve as a daughter-in-law.
Egwene smirked and chirped happily. "It was the Aes Sedai, actually, and she proved herself to be exactly like the stories, the conniving witch. But Rand didn't let her simply walk all over him once he learned. She lost her Rand privileges, and she's quite upset about it. She had slept in his bed every other night, and loved it."
That flabbergasted Tam. "Rand… is married… to you, and the lover of an Aes Sedai… are you not spitting mad? That's not right, Egwene!" I wilted under his harsh glare. He is not wrong. But the women seem to accept it. "Rand, you should be ashamed of yourself."
Egwene sighed. "Fortunately, and unfortunately, he is as good as married to the both of us. This bond counts by my reasoning, we're closer than any couple, know each other's feelings, health and can find each other anywhere. That It may not be right or proper but it is what Rand has to do to survive. And there is the fact there will be four other women beside Moiraine Sedai. There was a prophecy, and if Rand is to fulfill it, he must have six wives."
"Six wives… Not right." my dad muttered, looking at me with sympathy. "Light, Rand. I don't know what's worse. Six wives, or that one's an Aes Sedai."
"Until we learned what she hid from us, what she tried to do Rand, she really was not that bad. She taught me to channel the One Power, to prepare me to get through the White Tower as quickly as possible so I can return to Rand's side as a Dragonwife. She taught Rand history and geography, she helped him channel, she made sure he didn't get stuck in self-recrimination or spirals of anxiety about his future, she made him accept us as wives, and for all her failures recently, she made him listen." She played with my hair as I spoke and I tried to give my father a long suffering look, but could not help my smile.
"Until recently she really was quite great, I just wish I had never learned what she did," I said in agreement.
"What kind of failures did Rand's Aes Sedai wife have, to make all her good points sour?" Tam asked curiously. He leaned forward in his chair, inquisitive. "And why has she not gentled Rand yet? I really am quite confused how exactly you seduced an Aes Sedai, Rand, if you are a man that can channel. You're not exactly… worldly with girls. Egwene made sure of that."
She beamed, nodding in agreement, hand playing with my hair. "Rand is better naive, it is much cuter. Of course I never let those other Two Rivers girls even think of touching him."
I ignored Egwene. "It's Moiraine's duty to me, as Dragon Reborn, and that means not gentling me. As she tells it, the Amyrlin Seat herself sent Moiraine to find me, and protect me, and guide me."
"To tie you up with Aes Sedai strings and puppet you, more like," Egwene muttered.
"We don't know that. We know she only tried once, but I do worry—"
Tam interrupted my trailing speech. "What exactly did this Aes Sedai do, after she managed to win you both over so well?"
"That has to do with the binding, and the bond I share with Egwene and Moiraine. There are other aspects, secret aspects about the bond that Moiraine did not make myself or Egwene aware of until this last week."
I took a deep breath, to settle myself before I delved into the topic. "To understand you must know that Compulsion is a forbidden art of the One Power, that manipulates the mind of its victim to follow the orders of the channeler. The bond does something similar, so when I bound Moiraine she began to develop a crush on me, an irrational, obvious to her, crush on a young man she did not find overly attractive. She recognized it within a day as Compulsion and in a fit of petty cruelty she attempted to use a secret weave on me, of the Blue Ajah that—."
My father interrupted, he had a frown on his face. "Let me guess, it did something similar to what had been done to her."
I paused and nodded, a little hesitantly. "Yes… it would make me see her as a figure of authority and trust. It would have changed my mind, and if it had worked eventually she could have completely enthralled me." I said fiercely, angry at the very idea of someone trying to take control of me. That Moiraine would. It was silly, she was an Aes Sedai. Of course she would try to control me. And yet…
"It would have, over time." He agreed. "Just like you have apparently enthralled an Aes Sedai into being your wife," came the reply that hit like a hammer blow to my chest. I knew it, of course. I was being a hypocrite.
I squirmed on the couch, feeling anxious from the words. "I know, dad. I know. But she chose the bond!"
"Did she? Sounds to me like it was more her job to watch over you, not anything like affection or love. Sounds to me as if she reacted badly once."
I continued, voice a little rougher, his words hitting home. "When she found she could not even access the One Power while trying to channel the weave, she had discovered something else. The bond protected me from any harmful action any of my wives take. It apparently stops them cold, or ruins the plans somehow. She did not explain why, really, but she tested it to the point of leaving her Warder notes that were an attempt to kill me. I only know because he told me that she has certain ways she communicates when she wants certain actions she cannot take, because of the Three Oaths, done. And until Lan opened the last envelope and the poem about my stormy eyes fell out, he was getting instructions to murder one of the ta'veren for falling to the Shadow."
It still made me shudder to think about it. Who could do such a thing? And why? These thoughts and more ran through my head, Egwene snuggled into my side. After thinking carefully for a long minute, my father spoke.
"She is an Aes Sedai, a woman more powerful than almost any man ever could be, with the backing of a thousand Sisters and a history stretching back three thousand years, Rand. Consider her position. Men are said to be stronger, more powerful in the One Power, that it was how they broke the world. Now she is bound to one, a man who can channel, is more powerful than her, and will go mad and she cannot gentle him. She must share his bed and teach him because he is the Dragon Reborn, and she is bound to him, but that does not change how dangerous he is. When she finds out that the binding affects her as well, changing her mind and making the Dragon Reborn into a man she could love, she reacts badly. I cannot countenance that an Aes Sedai tried to arrange the murder of my son, or one that tried to manipulate his mind, but I can one that tries to make the Dragon Reborn loyal to the White Tower and herself as a defense—I can understand that, it's her duty—one that figures out how far she could take something before the 'defenses' that protect the Dragon Reborn's life stopped her. Everyone's life may depend on that," he said slowly, with regret in his voice. "I'm not happy about that, but I understand it. Where that logic comes from."
After a pause, he continued. "Maybe she meant it while she tested it, maybe she merely considered the benefits, maybe she hated it. I do not know her mind, but I do know yours. I'll bet the first harvest you have not asked her what she thought, merely assumed as an Aes Sedai that she meant to truly harm you. Maybe she did, maybe she did not, but I've found women always have reasons they do things, and sometimes they even make sense. This one makes more sense to me than others."
I wish I could say my mouth hung open in shock that my father thought Moiraine figuring out how to harm me was acceptable because of the fate dealt to me, that her trying to manipulate my mind was understandable. But the bloodiest fucking thing was I could not deny his blasted words. If I truly thought about it, if I truly put myself in Moiraine's position, why would she not try to find some way to make sure I did not run off and Break the World again? If I had gone mad, and could not delay it indefinitely with my shifting, I could ruin everything, let Creation fall to the Shadow. And I never asked how she felt, how she truly felt about any of it, the bond, the compulsion, us, my being the Dragon Reborn. I simply had reacted in anger and betrayal. It was my right to, but still.
Egwene squirmed. "She… Rand, she told me she did such things because she worried about the Enemy in the prophecy figuring out a loophole. She explained how Aes Sedai utilized loopholes in the Oaths constantly, circumventing them with ease."
"Oh. So I've been mad at her and worried over something that didn't matter." I was more than a bit annoyed at her. "Why did you not say this before, Egwene?"
Words spilled from her in a rapid pace, frustrated tears coming to Egwene's eyes. "You were the one following her like a moonstruck calf, following her every word and blushing as she paraded you around the Fortress and Fal Dara, all dressed up in the fancy lord clothing she had made for you. Yes Moiraine, No Moiraine, may I have another Moiraine!" I stared surprised at Egwene. "I just wanted some time with you myself before I had to leave for the Tower. If you knew, you'd have immediately forgiven her, and she would have learnt nothing. Even angry, you still listen to every word she says."
I took a moment to gather my thoughts. "I had promised to reconnect with you, not leave you behind. I apologize for failing that promise enough that you felt hiding this from me was necessary. But when we return, I think we need to have a nice long chat with Moiraine and discuss things before we leave for the south."
Egwene frowned, but nodded. "Okay. I still want to sleep in your bed every night, while I still can." My father shuffled around in his chair, uncomfortably.
I thought of it. "Would you mind the three of us together some night?"
He made to speak, but shut his mouth with a snap, staring wide-eyed at me.
Egwene grimaced at that. "I'd rather keep you to myself, but I was getting a little sore from you every night. Every other night with Moiraine so we can just sleep nicely would work."
"Can you two seriously not wait to have this conversation?" Tam snorted, "I guess you better be married huh, before Bran hears about his grandchild."
Egwene raised her chin primly, cheeks blushing. "Moiraine Sedai taught me a weave to use. There will be no grandchildren until after… Tarmon Gai'don."
We all shuddered at the mention, even Egwene. We sat in silence for a minute. "You really think Rand will survive," asked Tam, sounding a little lost. "I can barely imagine him wielding fire and lightning, let alone fighting the Dark One."
"If I fight him as a 90 foot dragon, the creature my tattoo is of, wielding fire and lighting, would that image settle better in your mind? Besides, Egwene and Moiraine promised me centuries of love and children beyond number. What else is there to do but survive?"
"You will go mad far too early." Tam's voice was distant. "You will go mad, Rand, and my son will die before me." His eyes welled with tears. "I just realized. It's just hit me."
"I won't go mad, dad. I won't." My voice was impassioned. "The Creator blessed me. I am a chinnar'veren, a shapechanger. The Taint is anathema to my body while I change my shape. It will keep the madness at bay. I won't go mad."
I explained and showed him my so'shan, demonstrated some basic weaves and the smoke generated by channeling. We were beginning to speak of my training with Lan Gaidin when sudden alarm and fear pierced the muted buzzing of Moiraine bond, and then a deep desire, a desire that I felt calling me to return. "Something's wrong and Moiraine is in trouble. We need to return to Fal Dara."
"Go rescue your Aes Sedai wife, adventurer," Tam said, smiling sadly. "But remember to visit. I'll let Bran quietly know that I heard from you and you all are doing okay. The gossip will spread from there."
"I'll come visit at night another time. Maybe I can bring Moiraine Sedai?" I asked hesitantly, as I seized saidin once more. Smoke poured from my nostrils.
"Bring her. We should definitely talk, I did not know taking care of my son meant sleep in his bed! But I should meet my second of six daughter-in-laws." Tam gave a resounding bark of laughter. "Six wives! Light Rand, you do not do things by half do you? Dragon Reborn and six wives and only two months of adventure."
The Door opened in the middle of the living room, slicing through the top layer of a rug. "Shit. Sorry, Doors are dangerously sharp. I'll have to be more careful.."
My father gaped. "What is that thing? Looks like a silver-black window just hanging in the air. You made that?"
"A Door to another place, we travel faster there. I'm sorry to cut this short, but goodbye, dad, and I guess don't go into the clearing north of the tabac fields if you do not wish to be cut. I will try to visit you soon."
I stepped through onto Bela's cart, joining Egwene and began our hour-long trek to Fal Dara.
Egwene spoke up. "He seemed to take all that well enough, even if we did not finish."
"I think he half thought we were mad or pranking him until the tattoos. We will have to see how he seems next time we visit him." I put an arm around Egwene, and though we couldn't feel any heat in the strange realm of Darkspace, she snuggled into my side all the same.
Amadaine ???, 998 NE (June ???th)
The waxing moon lit the humid, night-dark streets of Illian, which still rang with celebration left over from daylight. In only a few more days, the Great Hunt of the Horn would be sent forth with pomp and ceremony that tradition claimed dated to the Age of Legends. The festivities for the Hunters had blended into the Feast of Teven, with its famed contests and prizes for gleemen. The greatest prize of all, as always, would go for the best telling of The Great Hunt of the Horn.
Tonight the gleemen entertained in the palaces and mansions of the city, where the great and mighty disported themselves, and the Hunters come from every nation to ride out and find, if not the Horn of Valere itself, at least immortality in song and story. They would have music and dancing, and fans and ices to dispel the year's first real heat, but carnival filled the streets, too, in the moon-bright muggy night. Every day was a carnival, until the Hunt departed, and every night.
People ran past Bayle Domon in masks and costumes bizarre and fanciful, many showing too much flesh. Shouting and singing they ran, a half dozen together, then scattered pairs giggling and clutching each other, then twenty in a raucous knot. Fireworks crackled in the sky, gold and silver bursts against the black. There were almost as many Illuminators in the city as there were gleemen.
Domon spared little thought for fireworks, or for the Hunt. He was on his way to meet men he thought might be trying to kill him.
He crossed the Bridge of Flowers, over one of the city's many canals, into the Perfumed Quarter, the port district of Illian. The canal smelled of too many chamber pots, with never a sign that there had ever been flowers near the bridge. The quarter smelled of hemp and pitch from the shipyards and docks, and sour harbor mud, all of it made fiercer by heated air that seemed nearly damp enough to drink. Domon breathed heavily; every time he returned from the northcountry he found himself surprised, for all he had been born there, at the early summer heat in Illian.
In one hand he carried a stout cudgel, and the other hand rested on the hilt of the short sword he had often used in defending the decks of his river trader from brigands. No few footpads stalked these nights of revelry, where the pickings were rich and most were deep in wine.
Yet he was a broad, muscular man, and none of those out for a catch of gold thought him rich enough, in his plain-cut coat, to risk his size and his cudgel. The few who caught a clear glimpse of him, when he passed through light spilling from a window, edged back till he was well past. Dark hair that hung to his shoulders and a long beard that left his upper lip bare framed a round face, but that face had never been soft, and now it was set as grimly as if he meant to batter his way through a wall. He had men to meet, and he was not happy about it.
More revelers ran past singing off-key, wine mangling their words. "The Horn of Valere," my aged grandmother! Domon thought glumly. It be my ship I do want to hang on to. And my life, Fortune prick me.
He pushed into an inn, under a sign of a big, white-striped badger dancing on its hind legs with a man carrying a silver shovel. Easing the Badger, it was called, though not even Nieda Sidoro, the innkeeper, knew what the name meant; there had always been an inn of the name in Illian.
The common room, with sawdust on the floor and a musician softly strumming a twelve-stringed bittern in one of the Sea Folk's sad songs, was well lighted and quiet. Nieda allowed no commotion in her place, and her nephew, Bili, was big enough to carry a man out with either hand. Sailors, dockworkers, and warehousemen came to the Badger for a drink and maybe a little talk, for a game of stones or darts. The room was half full now; even men who liked quiet had been lured out by carnival. The talk was soft, but Domon caught mentions of the Hunt, and of the false Dragon the Murandians had taken, and of the one the Tairens were chasing through Haddon Mirk. There seemed to be some question whether it would be preferable to see the false Dragon die, or the Tairens.
Domon grimaced. False Dragons! Fortune prick me, there be no place safe these days. But he had no real care for false Dragons, any more than for the Hunt.
The stout proprietress, with her hair rolled at the back of her head, was wiping a mug, keeping a sharp eye on her establishment. She did not stop what she was doing, or even look at him, really, but her left eyelid drooped, and her eyes slanted toward three men at a table in the corner. They were quiet even for the Badger, almost somber, and their bell-shaped velvet caps and dark coats, embroidered across the chest in bars of silver and scarlet and gold, stood out among the plain dress of the other patrons.
Domon sighed and took a table in a corner by himself. Cairhienin, this time. He took a mug of brown ale from a serving girl and drew a long swallow. When he lowered the mug, the three men in striped coats were standing beside his table. He made an unobtrusive gesture, to let Nieda know that he did not need Bili.
"Captain Domon?" They were all three nondescript, but there was an air about the speaker that made Domon take him for their leader. They did not appear to be armed; despite their fine clothes, they looked as if they did not need to be. There were hard eyes in those so very ordinary faces. "Captain Bayle Domon, of the Spray?"
Domon gave a short nod, and the three sat down without waiting for an invitation. The same man did the talking; the other two just watched, hardly blinking. Guards, Domon thought, for all their fine clothes. Who do he be to have a pair of guards to look over him?
"Captain Domon, we have a personage who must be brought from Mayene to Illian."
"Spray be a river craft," Domon cut him off. "Her draft be shallow, and she has no the keel for deep water." It was not exactly true, but close enough for landsmen. At least it be a change from Tear. They be getting smarter.
The man seemed unperturbed at the interruption. "We had heard you were giving up the river trade."
"Maybe I do, and maybe no. I have no decided." He had, though. He would not go back upriver, back to the Borderlands, for all the silk shipped in Tairen bottoms. Saldaean furs and ice peppers were not worth it, and it had nothing to do with the false Dragon he had heard of there. But he wondered again how anyone knew. He had not spoken of it to anyone, yet the others had known, too.
"You can coast to Mayene easily enough. Surely, Captain, you would be willing to sail along the shoreline for a thousand gold marks."
Despite himself, Domon goggled. It was four times the last offer, and that had been enough to make a man's jaw drop. "Who do you want me to fetch for that? The First of Mayene herself? Has Tear finally forced her all the way out, then?"
"You need no names, Captain." The man set a large leather pouch on the table, and a sealed parchment. The pouch clinked heavily as he pushed them across the table. The big red wax circle holding the folded parchment shut bore the many-rayed Rising Sun of Cairhien. "Two hundred on account. For a thousand marks, I think you need no names. Give that, seal unbroken, to the Port Captain of Mayene, and he will give you three hundred more, and your passenger. I will hand over the remainder when your passenger is delivered here. So long as you have made no effort to discover that personage's identity."
Domon drew a deep breath. Fortune, it be worth the voyage if there be never another penny beyond what be in that sack. And a thousand was more money than he would clear in three years. He suspected that if he probed a little more, there would be other hints, just hints, that the voyage involved hidden dealings between Illian's Council of Nine and the First of Mayene. The First's city-state was a province of Tear in all but name, and she would no doubt like Illian's aid. And there were many in Illian who said it was time for another war, that Tear was taking more than a fair share of the trade on the Sea of Storms. A likely net to snare him, if he had not seen three like it in the past month.
He reached to take the pouch, and the man who had done all the talking caught his wrist. Domon glared at him, but he looked back undisturbed.
"You must sail as soon as possible, Captain."
"At first light," Domon growled, and the man nodded and released his hold.
"At first light, then, Captain Domon. Remember, discretion keeps a man alive to spend his money."
Domon watched the three of them leave, then stared sourly at the pouch and the parchment on the table in front of him. Someone wanted him to go east. Tear or Mayene, it did not matter so long as he went east. He thought he knew who wanted it. And then again, I have no a clue to them. Who could know who was a Darkfriend? But he knew that Darkfriends had been after him since before he left Marabon to come back downriver. Darkfriends and Trollocs. Of that, he was sure. The real question, the one he had not even a glimmer of an answer for, was why?
"Trouble, Bayle?" Nieda asked. "You do look as if you had seen a Trolloc." She giggled, an improbable sound from a woman her size. Like most people who had never been to the Borderlands, Nieda did not believe in Trollocs. He had tried telling her the truth of it; she enjoyed his stories, and thought they were all lies. She did not believe in snow, either.
"No trouble, Nieda." He untied the pouch, dug a coin out without looking, and tossed it to her. "Drinks for everyone till that do run out, then I'll give you another."
Nieda looked at the coin in surprise. "A Tar Valon mark! Do you be trading with the witches now, Bayle?"
"No," he said hoarsely. "That I do not!"
She bit the coin, then quickly snugged it away behind her broad belt. "Well, it be gold for that. And I suspect the witches be no so bad as some make them out, anyway. I'd no say so much to many men. I know a money changer who do handle such. You'll no have to give me another, with as few as be here tonight. More ale for you, Bayle?"
He nodded numbly, though his mug was still almost full, and she trundled off. She was a friend, and would not speak of what she had seen. He sat staring at the leather pouch. Another mug was brought before he could make himself open it enough to look at the coins inside. He stirred them with a callused finger. Gold marks glittered up at him in the lamplight, every one of them bearing the damning Flame of Tar Valon. Hurriedly he tied the bag. Dangerous coins. One or two might pass, but so many would say to most people exactly what Nieda thought. There were Children of the Light in the city, and although there was no law in Illian against dealing with Aes Sedai, he would never make it to a magistrate if the Whitecloaks heard of this. These men had made sure he would not simply take the gold and stay in Illian.
While he was sitting there worrying, Yarin Maeldan, his brooding, stork-like second on Spray, came into the Badger with his brows pulled down to his long nose and stood over the captain's table. "Carn's dead, Captain."
Domon stared at him, frowning. Three others of his men had already been killed, one each time he refused a commission that would take him east. The magistrates had done nothing; the streets were dangerous at night, they said, and sailors a rough and quarrelsome lot. Magistrates seldom troubled themselves with what happened in the Perfumed Quarter, as long as no respectable citizens were injured.
"But this time I did accept them," he muttered.
"'Tisn't all, Captain," Yarin said. "They worked Carn with knives, like they wanted him to tell them something. And some more men tried to sneak aboard Spray not an hour gone. The dock watch ran them off. Third time in ten days, and I never knew wharf rats to be so persistent. They like to let an alarm die down before they try again. And somebody tossed my room at the Silver Dolphin last night. Took some silver, so I'd think it was thieves, but they left that belt buckle of mine, the one set with garnets and moonstones, lying right out in plain sight. What's going on, Captain? The men are afraid, and I'm a little nervous myself."
Domon reared to his feet. "Roust the crew, Yarin. Find them and tell them Spray sails as soon as there do be men enough aboard to handle her." Stuffing the parchment into his coat pocket, he snatched up the bag of gold and pushed his second out the door ahead of him. "Roust them, Yarin, for I'll leave any man who no makes it, standing on the quay as he is."
Domon gave Yarin a shove to start him running, then stalked off toward the docks. Even footpads who heard the clinking of the pouch he carried steered clear of him, for he walked now like a man going to do murder.
There were already crewmen scrambling aboard Spray when he arrived, and more running barefoot down the stone quay. They did not know what he feared was pursuing him, or even that anything did pursue him, but they knew he made good profits, and after the Illianer way, he gave shares to the crew.
Spray was eighty feet long, with two masts, and broad in the beam, with room for deck cargo as well as in the holds. Despite what Domon had told the Cairhienin—if they had been Cairhienin—he thought she could stand the open water. The Sea of Storms was quieter in the summer.
"She'll have to," he muttered, and strode below to his cabin.
He tossed the sack of gold on his bed, built neatly against the hull like everything else in the stern cabin, and dug out the parchment. Lighting a lantern, hanging in its swivel from the overhead, he studied the sealed document, turning it as if he could read what was inside without opening it. A rap on the door made him frown.
"Come."
Yarin stuck his head in. "They're all aboard but three I couldn't find, Captain. But I've spread the word through every tavern, hell, and crib in the quarter. They'll be aboard before it's light enough to start upriver."
"Spray do sail now. To sea." Domon cut off Yarin's protests about light and tides, and Spray not being built for the open sea. "Now! Spray can clear the bars at dead low tide. You've no forgotten how to sail by the stars, have you? Take her out, Yarin. Take her out now, and come back to me when we be beyond the breakwater."
His second hesitated—Domon never let a tricky bit of sailing pass without him on deck giving orders, and taking Spray out in the night would be all of that, shallow draft or no—then nodded and vanished. In moments, the sounds of Yarin shouting orders and bare feet thumping on the decks overhead penetrated Domon's cabin. He ignored them, even when the ship lurched, catching the tide.
Finally he lifted the mantle of the lantern and stuck a knife into the flame. Smoke curled up as oil burned off the blade, but before the metal could turn red, he pushed charts out of the way and pressed the parchment flat on his desk, working the hot steel slowly under the sealing wax. The top fold lifted.
It was a simple document, without preamble or salutation, and it made sweat break out on his forehead.
The bearer of this is a Darkfriend wanted in Cairhien for murders and other foul crimes, least among them, theft from Our Person. We call upon you to seize this man and all things found in his keeping, to the smallest. Our representative will come to carry away what he has stolen from Us. Let all he possesses, save what We claim, go to you as reward for taking him. Let the vile miscreant himself be hanged immediately, that his Shadow-spawned villainy no longer taint the Light.
Sealed by Our Hand
Galldrian su Riatin Rie
King of Cairhien
Defender of the Dragonwall
In thin red wax below the signature were impressed the Rising Sun seal of Cairhien and the Five Stars of House Riatin.
"Defender of the Dragonwall, my aged grandmother," Domon croaked. "Fine right the man do have to call himself that any longer."
He examined the seals and signature minutely, holding the document close to the lamp, with his nose all but brushing the parchment, but he could find no flaw in the one, and for the other, he had no idea what Galldrian's hand looked like. If it was not the King himself who had signed it, he suspected that whoever had had made a good imitation of Galldrian's scrawl. In any case, it made no real difference. In Tear, the letter would be instantly damning in the hands of an Illianer. Or in Mayene, with Tairen influence so strong. There was no war now, and men from either port came and went freely, but there was as little love for Illianers in Tear as the other way round. Especially with an excuse like this.
For a moment he thought of putting the parchment into the lantern's flame—it was a dangerous thing to have, in Tear or Illian or anywhere he could imagine—but finally he tucked it carefully into a secret cubbyhole behind his desk, concealed by a panel only he knew how to open.
"My possessions, eh?"
He collected old things, as much as he could living on shipboard. What he could not buy, because it was too expensive or too large, he collected by seeing and remembering. All those remnants of times gone, those wonders scattered around the world that had first pulled him aboard a ship as boy. He had added four to his collection in Maradon this last trip, and it had been then that the Darkfriend pursuit began. And Trollocs, too, for a time. He had heard that Whitebridge had been burned to the ground right after he sailed from there, and there had been rumors of Myrddraal as well as Trollocs. It was that, all of it together, that had first convinced him he was not imagining things, that had had him on guard when that first odd commission was offered, too much money for a simple voyage to Tear, and a thin tale for a reason.
Digging into his chest, he set out on the desk what he had bought in Maradon. A lightstick, left from the Age of Legends, or so it was said. Certainly no one knew the making of them any longer. Expensive, that, and rarer than an honest magistrate. It looked like a plain glass rod, thicker than his thumb and not quite as long as his forearm, but when held in the hand it glowed as brightly as a lantern. Lightsticks shattered like glass, too; he had nearly lost Spray in the fire caused by the first he had owned. A small, age-dark ivory carving of a man holding a sword. The fellow who sold it claimed if you held it long enough you started to feel warm. Domon never had, and neither had any of the crew he let hold it, but it was old, and that was enough for Domon. The skull of a cat as big as a lion, and so old it was turned to stone. But no lion had ever had fangs, almost tusks, a foot long. And a thick disk the size of a man's hand, half white and half black, a sinuous line separating the colors. The shopkeeper in Maradon had said it was from the Age of Legends, thinking he lied, but Domon had haggled only a little before paying, because he recognized what the shopkeeper did not: the ancient symbol of Aes Sedai from before the Breaking of the World. Not a safe thing to have, precisely, but neither a thing to be passed up by a man with a fascination for the old.
And it was heartstone. The shopkeeper had never dared add that to what he thought were lies. No riverfront shopkeeper in Maradon could afford even one piece of cuendillar.
The disk felt hard and smooth in his hand, and not at all valuable except for its age, but he was afraid it was what his pursuers were after. Lightsticks, and ivory carvings, and even bones turned to stone, he had seen other times, other places. Yet even knowing what they wanted—if he did know—he still had no idea why, and he could no longer be sure who his pursuers were. Tar Valon marks, and an ancient Aes Sedai symbol. He scrubbed a hand across his lips; the taste of fear lay bitter on his tongue.
A knock at the door. He set the disk down and pulled an unrolled chart over what lay on his desk. "Come."
Yarin entered. "We're beyond the breakwater, Captain."
Domon felt a flash of surprise, then anger with himself. He should never have gotten so engrossed that he failed to feel Spray lifting on the swells. "Make west, Yarin. See to it."
"Ebou Dar, Captain?"
No far enough. No by five hundred leagues. "We'll put in long enough for me to get charts and top the water barrels, then we do sail west."
"West, Captain? Tremalking? The Sea Folk are tight with any traders but their own."
"The Aryth Ocean, Yarin. Plenty of trade between Tarabon and Arad Doman, and hardly a Taraboner or Domani bottom to worry about. They do no like the sea, I have heard. And all those small towns on Toman Head, every one holding itself free of any nation at all. We can even pick up Saldaean furs and ice peppers brought down to Bandar Eban."
Yarin shook his head slowly. He always looked at the dark side, but he was a good sailor. "Furs and peppers'll cost more there than running upriver for them, Captain. And I hear there's some kind of war. If Tarabon and Arad Doman are fighting, there may be no trade. I doubt we'll make much off the towns on Toman Head alone, even if they are safe. Falme's the largest, and it is not big."
"The Taraboners and the Domani have always squabbled over Almoth Plain and Toman Head. Even if it has come to blows this time, a careful man can always find trade. West, Yarin."
When Yarin had gone topside, Domon quickly added the black-and-white disk to the cubbyhole, and stowed the rest back in the bottom of his chest. Darkfriends or Aes Sedai, I'll no run the way they want me. Fortune prick me, I'll no.
Feeling safe for the first time in months, Domon went on deck as Spray heeled to catch the wind and put her bow west into the night-dark sea.