She shook her head. 'Light send that we can keep Traveling secret from the Seanchan. When they
Sheriam eyed her, skepticism showing. Most of the sisters didn't believe Egwene's Dreaming of the attack. Fools—they wanted to catch the fish, but didn't want to gut it. You didn't raise a woman to Amyrlin, then treat her warnings lightly.
Siuan waited impatiently, tapping her foot, listening to the conversation inside the tent. Just as she was beginning to wonder if she'd need to send another novice, one of Bryne's couriers trotted up to the tent on horseback. The ill-tempered brute he was riding was midnight black with white just above the hooves, and it snorted at Siuan as the rider pulled up short, wearing a neat uniform and close-cropped brown hair. Did he
'Aes Sedai?' the man asked, bowing to her from horseback. 'You have a message for Lord Bryne?'
'Yes,' Siuan said. 'And you'll see it delivered with
The soldier nodded sharply.
'Tell Lord Bryne . . .' Siuan began. 'Tell him to watch his flanks. Our enemy has been taught the method we used to get here.'
'It shall be done.'
'Repeat it back to me,' Siuan said.
'Of course, Aes Sedai,' the slender man said, bowing again. 'Just so you know, I have been a messenger in the general s command for over a decade. My memory—'
'Stop,' Siuan interrupted. 'I don't care how
'Um, yes, Aes Sedai. I'm to tell the Lord General to watch his flanks. Our enemy has been taught the method we used to get here.'
'Good. Go.'
The man nodded.
'Now!'
He reared that awful horse and galloped out of the camp, cloak flapping behind him.
'What was
'Making certain we don't wake up with Elaida's army surrounding us,' Siuan said. 'I'll bet I'm the only one who thought to warn our general that the enemy may have just undone our biggest tactical advantage. So much for a siege.'
Sheriam frowned, as if she hadn't considered that. She wouldn't be alone. Oh, some would think of Bryne, and would be planning to send word to the general eventually. But for many, the catastrophe here
Or perhaps Siuan was just feeling bitter. Someone inside the tent finally thought to call for the meeting to be Sealed to the Flame, and so Siuan withdrew, stepping off the walkway and onto the hard-packed earth. Novices scuttled this way and that, heads bowed to avoid her eyes, though they were quick to curtsy. /
The White Tower was crumbling. The Ajahs weakened one another with petty infighting. Even here, in Egwene's camp, more time was spent politicking than preparing for the coming storm.
And Siuan was partially responsible for those failures.
Elaida and her Ajah certainly bore the lionfish's share of the blame. But would the Tower have split in the first place if Siuan had fostered cooperation between the Ajahs? Elaida hadn't had
The Dragon Reborn was important. But he was only one figure in the weaving of these final days. It was too easy to forget that, too easy to watch the dramatic figure of legend and forget everyone else.
She sighed, picking up her laundry and—out of habit—checking to make certain everything was there. As she did so, a figure in white approached her from one of the branching pathways. 'Siuan Sedai?'
Siuan looked up, frowning. The novice before her was one of the strangest in the camp. Nearly seventy years old, Sharina had the weathered, creased face of a grandmother. She kept her silver hair up in a bun, and while she walked without a stoop, there was a certain distinct
She was strong in the power. Remarkably so; she would wear the shawl for certain, and as soon as she did, she'd be far above Siuan. For now, though, Sharina curtsied deeply. She gave an almost perfect show of deference. Of all of the novices, she was known to complain the least, make the least trouble, and study the most assiduously. As a novice, she understood things that most Aes Sedai had never learned—or had forgotten the moment they took the shawl. How to be humble when necessary, how to take a punishment, how to know when you needed to learn rather than pretend you already knew.
'Yes, child?' Siuan asked. 'What is it?'
'I saw you picking up that wash, Siuan Sedai,' Sharina said. 'And I thought that perhaps I should carry it for you.'
Siuan hesitated. 'I wouldn't want you to tire yourself.'
Sharina raised an eyebrow in a very un-novice-like expression. 'These old arms carried loads twice that heavy back and forth from the river just last year, Siuan Sedai, juggling three grandchildren all the way. I think I'll be all right.' There was something in her eyes, a hint that her offer was not all it seemed to be. This one was adept at more than just Healing weaves, it appeared.
Curious, Siuan let the aged woman take the basket. They began to walk down the pathway toward the novices' tents.
'It's curious,' Sharina said, 'that such a large disturbance could be caused by such a seemingly simple revelation, wouldn't you say, Siuan Sedai?'
'Elaida's discovery of Traveling
'And yet nowhere near as important as the ones rumored to have come during the meeting a few months back, when that man who can channel visited. Odd that this should create such a scene.'
Siuan shook her head. 'The thinking of crowds is often odd at first consideration, Sharina. Everyone is still talking about that Asha'man visit, and they're thirsty for more. So they react with excitement at the chance to hear something else. In that way, the great revelations can come in secret, but then cause lesser ones to be received in an explosion of anxiety.'
'One could put that observation to good use, I should think.' Sharina nodded to a group of novices as they passed. 'If one wanted to cause worry, that is.'
'What are you saying?' Siuan asked, eyes narrowing.
'Ashmanaille reported first to Lelaine Sedai,' Sharina said softly. 'I've heard that Lelaine was the one who let the news slip. She spoke it out loud in the hearing of a family of novices while calling for the Hall to meet. She also deflected several early calls for the meeting to be Sealed to the Flame.'
'Ah,' Siuan said. 'So