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Chapter 23: The Testing

Nynaeve undergoes the Accepted test, facing her greatest fears in a series of visions within a three-arched ter’angreal, and earns her new rank despite loudly proclaiming her hatred for Aes Sedai.

Ter'angreal for Accepted testSheriam Sedai is leading Nynaeve down to the chamber where Aes Sedai rituals are held. We have already seen Moiraine take her test to become Aes Sedai here in New Spring, and we also saw her and Siuan take their oaths here the next day. Nynaeve is here to take a test that will raise her to Accepted if she passes. A ter’angreal dominates the room: three silver arches just tall enough to walk through, all fused into one unbroken piece and set evenly around a circular base. Sheriam explains that inside each arch Nynaeve will face her greatest fears about her past, her present, and her future. I don’t like where this is going — if Nynaeve meets any ghosts inside of this thing, I’m throwing the book across the room.

The inside of the Labyrinth mazeInside the first arch, Nynaeve finds herself naked and in a maze whose corridors look exactly like the inside of the maze in Labyrinth (1986). Nynaeve runs through the maze, trying to find a way out before Aginor appears and stands in her way. Embarrassed by her nudity, she runs away, but Aginor keeps pace and makes lewd remarks. Finally, Nynaeve gets mad enough to channel and flips the script—hurling fire and lightning until Aginor is the one running scared. It takes her on a power trip, and she’s ready to overwhelm him when she sees a silver arch off to one side. Recalling that the way out would only appear once, Nynaeve reluctantly abandons her pursuit and steps through the arch.

In the next arch, Nynaeve’s guilt over leaving Emond’s Field takes center stage. It’s a dystopian vision where the new Wisdom has turned out to be a wicked woman who causes misery rather than helping and healing the villagers. Worst of all, Bran al’Vere is dead and Cenn Bui has been elected Mayor. In the third arch, the nation of Malkier has somehow been revived with Lan and Nynaeve ruling the nation as King and Queen. Having to turn her back first on her compatriots and then on a perfect vision of domestic bliss leaves Nynaeve in tears, loudly proclaiming that she hates all Aes Sedai.

Having passed the trial, Nynaeve becomes an Accepted.


Chapter 22: Watchers

Moiraine is in Tifan’s Well researching something. She reveals that Lan’s bond will pass to Myrelle if she should die. Lan saves Moiraine from a Dragkhar.

Moiraine and Lan visit a pair of Aes Sedai sisters in the farming town of Tifan’s Well, where she’s fruitlessly digging through books for some elusive scrap of information. She looks over at Lan and waxes nostalgic about the first time they met. Finally, this is it! I was thinking of this conversation when I wrote about Chapter 19: Pond Water from New Spring. Even after all these years, Moiraine has yet to receive an apology from Lan. She segues into asking him how he feels about being bonded to her, and reveals that she has made arrangements to have his bond passed to another Aes Sedai if she should perish. Which Aes Sedai, you may ask? Myrelle! That’s right — conjure-ice-into-naughty-places, rub-ointment-all-over-her-injured-sisters-naked-bodies Myrelle. Only now it’s Myrelle Sedai of the Green Ajah. Oh, Lan — I hope you still like to party as much as you did back in your Cairhien days!

Lan is understandably uncomfortable with the idea of Moiraine handing his leash off to another Aes Sedai, so he stalks off to do something manly. Moiraine is left to contemplate how Nynaeve has insinuated her way into Lan’s heart, leaving his loyalties in doubt. Of course, as hard as Robert Jordan tries to leave it ambiguous, there is no hard evidence that Moiraine has an intimate relationship with Lan, so should it really come as a surprise that a woman like Nynaeve can swoop in and wrap him around her finger? Frankly, I’m surprised it hasn’t happened sooner.

Moiraine goes out into the garden to contemplate the information she’s seeking. She hears footsteps behind her, and comes face to face with a Dragkhar! In The Eye of the World, we only saw them from a distance, wheeling about in the sky. Here, up close, they’re creepy in an almost Dracula-esque way — but instead of sucking blood, they feed on souls. Unfortunately, despite Moiraine’s talk earlier about transferring Lan’s bond to Myrelle, the situation just doesn’t feel that tense. It’s like in a Saturday morning cartoon where the main character is being lowered into a pit of lava before it fades to black. You don’t spend the whole commercial break biting your nails because you know damn well the show isn’t going to kill them. So yawn, Lan shows up and kills the Dragkhar. You know, dude — you could have just let the Dragkhar have her and gone off to party with Myrelle. I’d be sick of Moiraine’s bullshit after all these years too.


Chapter 21: The Nine Rings

At the inn, Rand does a piss-poor job of maintaining a low profile. He gets a cold bed, a warm meal, and an armed escort to Cairhien in the morning — which may not have his best interests in mind. Selene disappeared in the night.

The Nine RingsWhen Rand walks into The Nine Rings, he has given up on dispelling anyone’s illusions that he is a lord. Selene is his lady, and Loial and Hurin are little more than footmen — which serves all of them just fine. Selene is back to acting cold and distant, as though she and Rand were lovers who had just had an argument.

The proprietress spots Thom’s flute and asks Rand if Hurin would play for them. She apologizes when Rand clarifies he’s the one who plays, but he insists on performing — he’s missed it. The music gets the soldiers in the room singing, and when it is all done, Captain Caldevwin of the Cairhienan royal guard introduces himself. When Caldevwin asks Selene’s name, a serving girl conveniently drops an oil lamp. By the time the fire is put out, Selene asks for her room — her own room, separate from Rand’s. Great job keeping a low profile, everyone.

Caldevwin says that the statue holding the sphere is to be transported to Cairhien as a symbol of King Galladrian’s greatness. On learning that Rand is headed for Cairhien, he insists they travel in the company of soldiers he is rotating back to Cairhien. It’s one of those Cairhienan offers of aid peculiar to Game of Houses politicking — ostensibly benign (but maybe it isn’t!), and there is no way to decline it without coming across as untrusting or downright suspicious.

Rand spends the night in a room with Loial and Hurin. In the morning he receives a note from Selene saying that she doesn’t like Caldevwin and that she will be waiting in Cairhien. You see, Rand — this is what happens when you argue with a woman. Even when you win, you lose, and now look who gets to travel alone with Commander Elricain Tavolin and fifty Cairhienan soldiers, all the while having Loial pretend that this big honking chest is filled with his books. You do, Rand. You do.


Chapter 20: Saidin

Rand rebuffs Selene’s charms, gets hypnotized by a giant crystal ball, freaks out his companions, and leads them into the village of Tremonsien.

Rand keeps his group moving through the night toward Cairhien. They stop at dawn to rest, and Selene doubles down on her “coquettishly petulant” shtick.

SELENE: I want to see the Horn, Loial.

Remarkably, Rand grows a pair.

RAND: No, Loial. I want to keep the dagger sealed.

SELENE: But Lord Rand. I just want to see it. I don’t even have to touch it. Unless you want me to.

But still Rand refuses, earning him a cold shoulder. The terrain eventually levels out and signs of civilization become more frequent. Selene and Rand butt heads over whether to stay at the village inn, and Rand is in the middle of insisting on it when the setting sun glints off something to their left.

The Awakening

The Awakening

A precipitous drop into an excavation site reveals a statue peeking out of the earth. It sounds a lot like The Awakening, except with a gigantic crystal ball held in its hand. The crystal hypnotizes Rand. He feels as though the light inside sings and dances “to the song of saidin.” Selene urges him to come away from the ledge, but he is enchanted, and is only able to break free by uttering an Aiel oath against the Dark One.

Having thoroughly freaked out his traveling companions, Rand leads them into Tremonsien to seek lodging.


Chapter 19: Beneath the Dagger

Egged on by Selene, Rand and Loial sneak into Padan Fain’s camp, steal the Horn and the dagger, and slay several Trollocs as they escape.

While Rand’s group watches for Padan Fain’s passage, Selene flirts with the men mercilessly.

RAND: Selene, why are you digging through my bags?

SELENE: It’s my dress, Lord Rand. I’ve been wearing it too long and I need to take it off and brush it. Perhaps I could wear one of your manly shirts?

Rand gives her a shirt from his saddlebag and gallantly turns around. When she is finished, he immediately begins ogling her legs. Damn, this dude really needs to get laid.

RAND: Ah… I…

SELENE: Oh, thank you, Lord Rand. You are destined for great things.

RAND: Ah… uh…

HURIN: Lord Rand! They– [drops to his knees] Forgive me, my lady. I shall go flog myself.

RAND: Hurin, what is it?

Hurin reports seeing fire a few miles down the slopes. At Selene’s urging, Rand takes Loial to check out the encampment. When they get close enough, it is apparent that everyone is asleep. Even the sentries. Where did they learn to do their jobs? The Saturday Morning Cartoons School of Villainy?

Rand is basically able to stroll into the camp, pluck the dagger from the top of the chest, direct a lumbering Ogier to pick up the chest holding the Horn of Valere, and walk out. They’re a good thirty seconds gone before the alarm is raised, and Rand cuts down all the Trollocs that get in their way like their made of paper mache.

The Great Hunt coverWhen they get back to their comp, Selene knows exactly how to open the chest. She’s about to reach in when Rand plucks the Horn out and holds it above his head to pose for the book’s cover shot. Then he tucks it back in the chest, along with the Shadar Logoth dagger.

The next thing Selene says, I shit you not, is: “And now I mean to finish what is left of my night’s sleep.” Oh, sure. An army of Trollocs commanded by a deranged lunatic is actively searching the area for us, so of course, let’s get some sleep! Luckily, Rand is still capable of independent thought, so he insists on putting as much distance between them and Fain as possible.


Chapter 18: To the White Tower

Just before arriving in Tar Valon, the Amyrlin Seat visits Nynaeve and Egwene in their stateroom aboard the River Queen to give them a lesson in the One Power.

In their stateroom aboard the River Queen, Egwene and Nynaeve are indulging in their own misery. Nynaeve can’t keep her stomach settled, and Egwene keeps having dreams suggesting that Rand is in trouble. If these two really are the most powerful recruits the Aes Sedai have found in years, I think the forces of the Light are in trouble.

Siuan visits and says she’ll give them a lesson in the One Power. This consists primarily of provoking Nynaeve into getting angry enough to channel, until she finally slams Siuan against the wall. When Siuan finally leaves, Nynaeve is so spitting mad that she throws a pillow against the door and calls her a hag. Nice attitude! With diplomacy skills like that, she is surely destined for great things.

The boat arrives at Tar Valon, and Sheriam Sedai shows up to escort Egwene and Nynaeve to the White Tower.


Chapter 17: Choices

Rand uses a Portal Stone to escape a grolm attack. The group returns to their own world, where they realize they have jumped ahead of Fain’s party.

Rand moves to take out the grolm with his bow, but Selene says it’s an unnecessary risk and insists that if he would come with her to the Portal Stone, they could escape. But Rand stubbornly stands his ground and dispatches the monsters, landing an arrow perfectly in each one.

Good job, dude! Now, if only you were half as skilled at dealing with women as you are at archery, you’d know that there are certain arguments you just can’t win. Barely a moment passes before they hear many more grolm headed their way. It is more than Rand could possibly kill, so he capitulates and follows Selene to a Portal Stone nestled into the base of Kinslayer’s Dagger.

Selene singles out a rune on the Portal Stone and says it signifies the real world. Rand concentrates on it, embraces saidin, and manages to transport everyone back to their true reality. Selene believes that what Hurin smelled in the other reality was “future echoes” of where the Horn of Valere is going to be. If that’s true, using the Portal Stone was a masterstroke in dumb luck that catapulted them ahead of Padan Fain. The group hurries to find a place to camp and watch for the Trolloc army.


Chapter 16: In the Mirror of Darkness

The group discovers they’ve landed in a bleak alternate reality that seems twisted toward the Shadow. They rescue a woman named Selene, whose charm and mysterious knowledge quickly cause them to let their guard down.

Rand, Loial, and Hurin press on and spot a spire in the distance. At first they believe it is a spire Artur Hawkwing built hundreds of years ago to commemorate a victory of the Light over the Shadow. The monument has long since crumbled in the real world, but it stands here still. However, coming closer, they realize that it is a raven emblazoned on the top — not a hawk. Uh oh. The Trollocs won in this reality. As if that weren’t disconcerting enough, Loial points out that they are in sight of Kinslayer’s Dagger — a mountain range that should have taken them three days to reach. Hmm… a place where time and distance are funny and nothing seems right. Don’t worry, everybody. I’m sure the resemblance to the Ways is merely superficial!

This happy chain of thought is broken when a woman’s scream shatters the silence. Rand carelessly rushes toward the sound and is met by the sight of a woman barely holding a huge bear/frog thing at bay with a tree branch.

The damsel and the Gleeok

The damsel and the Gleeok

It’s time for a brief aside. When I was a child in the 1980s, Nintendo created a cartoon — The Legend of Zelda — based on the video game of the same name. It was one of those curiosities that never would have been green-lit today, portraying Link as a horny, lazy, sarcastic smart-ass who is always trying to get into Zelda’s pants… or at least get her to kiss him. In one episode, a monster disguised to look like an attractive woman heads into the woods and contrives a situation where she is in danger from a Gleeok. Link’s reputation as a womanizer is well-known, so he won’t be able to resist coming to her aid, thus falling into her trap.

So thanks, Nintendo — even when I first read The Great Hunt in 1995, I knew exactly what this woman’s game was when Rand planted an arrow in the monster’s eye and “saved” the damsel in distress. Unfortunately, Rand never had Saturday morning cartoons.

The woman introduces herself as Selene, and she says the monster Rand killed is called a grolm. Right off the bat I’m suspicious of this woman because her name is — honest to God — the first Robert Jordan character name my spell checker actually recognizes since Mat was first introduced. Selene explains that she is a noblewoman from Cairhien and came to this world accidentally, the same way the men did. And honestly, who cares about the rest, because everyone present is instantly enamored by her womanly charm.

SELENE: Oh, Lord Rand — won’t you help a poor, lost damsel in distress find her way back home?

LOIAL: Uh–

HURIN: [drool]

RAND: Of course, my lady.

SELENE: Who are you tracking?

Hurin, operating in full think-with-his-dick mode, says this verbatim:

HURIN: Darkfriends and Trollocs, my Lady. They did murder in Fal Dara keep and stole the Horn of Valere, my Lady, but Lord Rand will fetch it back.

Thanks, Hurin. Thanks for spilling all of our beans, motherfucker.

SELENE: I’ve always dreamed of holding it with my hands. Promise me, when you have it, you will let me touch it.

LOIAL: Duh–

HURIN: [nods, nearly panting like a dog]

RAND: Of course, my Lady. You can touch it however you like.

After getting Selene mounted on her horse, Rand practically has to slap Hurin upside the head before he will snap to his senses and pick up the trail again.

Selene notices Rand’s injured palm and quickly heals it with a salve, leading Rand to ask if she is Aes Sedai. She is unable to mask her contempt as she refuses to be compared to Aes Sedai. They are cowardly weaklings, she says.

Selene says that the Ways were indeed inspired by worlds like the one they are in. She read this in a book called Mirrors of the Wheel. According to it, time and space work differently in each world, and there is an infinite number of variations. There are even worlds where you can meet a different version of yourself. Wow, OK. This is definitely straight up borrowing the many-worlds theory from quantum mechanics. Physics nerds, enjoy yourselves, because this is probably as close to Einsteinian physics as Wheel of Time is going to get. I think it’s for the best that this remains unexplored, though — this story is complicated enough without bringing infinity into the picture.

Selene continually hints at Rand becoming a legend and achieving greatness, and even though it annoys him, he finds himself infatuated with her. She’s such a beautiful, smart, brave woman — “what more could a man ask from a wife?” Whoa, dude — the W-word. You just met this chick today.

Selene wants Rand to take her to the Portal Stone that brought her to this world, but Hurin says the trail is leading in the other direction. They don’t get to finish hashing out what to do next because a pack of five grolm headed straight for them.


Chapter 15: Kinslayer

Stranded in an alternate reality, Rand, Loial, and Hurin track Fain’s party. Rand is tormented by Ba’alzamon in a nightmare, which ends with a heron-mark brand on his hand.

Rand, Loial, and Hurin are stranded in a world that is eerily devoid of animal life. The water is drinkable but flat, and the whole place feels like it’s been washed in sepia. As the day wears on, Hurin doesn’t inspire confidence that he knows what he is doing. He claims to still have the scent, but keeps talking about how the trail feels vague and faint.

Loial stops to sing to a tree, using his mystical powers to create a quarterstaff from its wood. He explains that it is unusual for Ogier to carry weapons, but this place freaks him out. According to him, the land felt “glad” for a weapon to have been made.

When they make camp for the night, Rand takes the first watch. Fog rolls in, and Ba’alzamon takes the opportunity to torment Rand in what feels just like a standard-issue Wheel of Time nightmare sequence. When all of it vanishes, Rand finds that the hilt of his sword grew so hot that the heron mark has been branded onto the palm of his hand. Ouch! If I were him, I would be wondering whether Ba’alzamon really did visit me, or if I hallucinated it and used the One Power to heat my sword to red-hot temperatures. That’s the tricky thing about going mad — objectivity isn’t really a part of your arsenal anymore.


Chapter 14: Wolfbrother

With Hurin gone, Ingtar reluctantly turns to Perrin’s wolfbrother senses to track Fain — and Verin’s sudden appearance only deepens the mystery.

We haven’t had a Perrin chapter since — ah, hell, I don’t know when, but it wasn’t in this book. This feels like begrudgingly giving Perrin a chapter — with Hurin exiled to an alternate reality, Wolf Boy is Ingtar’s only hope of finding Padan Fain’s.

And boy, does Ingtar need some hope. He’s in utter disbelief that Rand, Loial, and Hurin appear to have simply up and vanished. He commands his men to repeatedly search the area whilst quietly freaking out about how the hell he’s going to know where to go now.

Perrin reaches out to the wolves, and they answer. He learns that killing two Whitecloaks has earned him respect with the wolves, and they have named him Young Bull. The wolves are eager to hunt and kill the Trollocs, so Perrin tells Ingtar about his ability. Fortunately, wolves are seen favorably in the borderlands, and Ingtar even knows Elyas. But not everyone is comfortable with this “wolfbrother” business, so they decide to tell the men that Perrin is a sniffer, like Hurin. Mat is predictably flippant about this, but even he can’t argue with the results as Perrin leads them to the site of the Trollocs’ most recent slaughter.

Just as they come upon the gruesome scene, Verin Sedai gallops up to the group. She says Moiraine sent her, and she asks after Rand. Why did Moiraine send her? More importantly, how the hell was Verin able to find Ingtar’s group so easily?!? If she’s that good at tracking, why not have her point the way to Padan Fain? As usual, burning questions like this go unasked and unanswered.


Chapter 13: From Stone to Stone

Rand, Loial, and Hurin wake up in a dead, sun-bleached knockoff of their world, and Rand realizes he is responsible. They decide to follow Fain in hopes of returning to their own reality.

Rand, Loial, and Hurin awaken to find themselves alone in a place that is eerily like home, but wrong in ways they can’t quite name. They slept near a mysterious stone carved with runes. When they laid down, the stone was toppled and half buried in the ground, but now stands erect. Ingtar and the rest of the men from Fal Dara are nowhere to be seen. The world feels subdued and lifeless. Massive tracts of scorched earth mottle the land, and white contrails scar the sky.

As usual, Loial seems to know something about this place. He says that the Stone is something the Aes Sedai in the Age of Legends could use to travel between “worlds that might be.” Oh, I see where this is going… the gang accidentally fell into an Einstein-Rosen-Podolsky Bridge and is doomed to slide between alternate realities in the multiverse, right? Hopefully this works out better than it did for Jerry O’Connell and friends.

Rand, for his part, seems pretty darn sure that he somehow accidentally channeled in his sleep and brought them here. But since Loial and Hurin aren’t members of the I-Know-Who-The-Dragon-Is Club, he can’t tell them that. Instead, he puts on a brave face and tries to convince his companions that everything will be OK. Unfortunately, he is unable to use the Stone to get them back to reality.

Luckily, Hurin says that he is still able to discern the Trollocs’ trail. He says it is faint and pale like everything else, as though he is remembering having smelled it instead of actually smelling it. So Rand decides that Plan B is to track Fain and company in this Bizarro World and hope that they know how to get back. Hah! Somehow, even the vaguest notion of getting this information from a guy like Fain feels excruciatingly naive. It strikes a chord that feels identical to the moment Bill and Ted first saw the phone booth:

TED: How are you gonna help us?

BILL: Yeah, are you gonna call someone and get the answers?

Go ahead, Rand. Strike up a conversation with Fain and ask him what the trick to using the Stones is. I want to see what happens.


Chapter 12: Woven in the Pattern

On the road to Tar Valon, Nynaeve’s channeling block is overcome by her rage, and Egwene has a premonition of Rand in danger. The chapter ends with the mysterious departure of Moiraine, Liandrin, and Verin.

Nynaeve as the Hulk

Nynaeve Smash!

Egwene and Nynaeve travel with the Aes Sedai toward Tar Valon. One evening, Verin stops by their tent to offer a lesson in channeling. She says that wilders like Nynaeve usually have mental blocks that prevent them from channeling, and Nynaeve discovers that she is able to touch the One Power by becoming angry. Which makes her the mystical version of the Incredible Hulk: Nynaeve mad! Nynaeve smash with One Power!

Egwene has a dream that leaves her with a premonition that Rand is in danger. Strangely, Jordan tells rather than shows. Usually, when a character has a dream, we’re trapped inside it for six pages of cryptic nonsense. This time? One paragraph and done. I’m not complaining — we may have missed details, but we got to keep our sanity. It sounds like Ba’alzamon and Lanfear were probably in the dream. So yeah, bitch — Rand’s in danger. What’s new? The traveling party reaches the River Mora where they will board boats to Tar Valon, Egwene tries to seek out Moiraine to talk about the dream. But Anaiya Sedai says Moiraine, Liandrin, and Verin have all slipped away without so much as a goodbye.


Chapter 11: Glimmers of the Pattern

Rand discovers he is second in command after Ingtar, who hands him a bundle from Moiraine containing the Dragon banner. When Mat and Perrin discover him with it, they learn that he is the Dragon Reborn. Separately, Padan Fain is revealed as the one who killed the Fade, gloating that Rand is now chasing him.

The men make camp early that day, probably to make up for how shaken the tableau in the village left them. It’s not every day you see a Fade pinned to a door like a moth in a schoolchild’s science project, and the mind naturally tries to figure out what could do that. So let’s examine the clues. It has been suggested that the only things more powerful than Fades are the Forsaken and the Dark One himself, and nearly every chapter drops hints about a watcher or a woman who is there one moment and gone the next. Combine that with the prophecy about Lews Therin’s crazy ex-girlfriend escaping Shayol Ghul, and it’s practically a foregone conclusion that Lanfear is about to crash the party.

Unfortunately, Rand doesn’t quite get that far in his analysis. When he asks what could kill a Fade like that, Ingtar dodges the question by handing over a bundle from Moiraine. Ingtar explains that Rand was named as second in command, at Moiraine’s guidance — so if Ingtar should fall, it’s Rand who is leading the men. Uh oh — Ingtar, buddy, I hate to break it to you, but you are definitely gonna die in this book.

Rand carries the bundle into the woods to examine it privately. It turns out to be exactly what he feared — Lews Therin’s banner of the Dragon. Scarcely has it been unwrapped for a minute before Mat and Perrin appear. They’re ready to tease him about people treating him like a lord, but seeing the banner knocks the wind out of their sails.

RAND: Moiraine says I’m the Dragon Reborn. But I won’t let her use me.

PERRIN: Rand, can you channel?

RAND: I can’t help it.

MAT: Holy shit, they’re going to name us Darkfriends and kill us!

As usual, Perrin plays diplomat and tries to get Mat to calm down, but you can feel the shift — Rand isn’t just “Rand from down the road” anymore, he’s the Dragon Reborn. And once your friends find out you’re the messiah, forget it: the last twenty years might as well have been a costume party. Suddenly you’re not the guy they talk sheep prices with; you’re the guy who heals the sick, fulfills ancient prophecies, and accidentally immolates a meadow. Kiss those late night chats about village girls and harvest seasons goodbye. Now it’s going to be, ‘Hey, remember that time you accidentally incinerated a whole village while trying to light a campfire?'”


Meanwhile, Padan Fain is gloating, but not for the reasons you’d think. It turns out I gave him way too much credit by assuming he’d be competent enough to separate the Horn from the Trollocs and the dagger. No, Fain is gloating because now Rand is chasing him, a role reversal that Fain finds absolutely delicious.

He’s got a whole contingent of Trollocs and Darkfriends at his command, all obeying out of sheer, pants-wetting terror. In the last village, it was Fain who murdered the Fade with the dagger and nailed him to the door. It was the ultimate “first day in prison” move, a spectacular show of force that made it clear to everyone just how unhinged he really is. With a resume like that, neither Trolloc nor Darkfriend dares challenge his command.


Chapter 10: The Hunt Begins

Ingtar’s men pursue the Trollocs, while Rand’s friends keep their distance. Rand experiences a terrifying, time-looping moment in a village before Ingtar’s men find a dead Fade nailed to a door.

Mat and Perrin continue to avoid Rand like he has the Black Death. Ingtar pushes hard, and they are constantly changing direction to keep on the Trollocs’ trail, periodically finding abandoned camps or the bodies of victims. It’s almost too perfect, like the Trollocs are running them in circles while the Horn slips away somewhere else — which is exactly how I’d do it if I worked in Evil Logistics.

Honestly, for such a long chapter, there isn’t much to say. There’s an abandoned village, the river Erinin to cross, and a tree where a couple of guys from Fal Dara who were probably Darkfriends are found skinned and hanging from the branches of a tree. Our mystery watcher shows up at one point, vanishing in the next moment.

The most eventful part of the chapter comes when the trail leads to yet another abandoned village. Rand steps inside one of the houses and gets… stuck? He seems to be repeatedly reliving a moment in time when the shit hit the fan. A family is peacefully enjoying dinner when they are suddenly stricken by horror as their house is invaded by something frightening. Rand blinks, finding himself back in the room, unable to move. He blinks again and relives the exact same scene as before. Another blink, and he’s held immobile back in the present, only it’s colder and the flies on the food are more numerous. He relives the moment again and again in a hellish pastiche of Groundhog Day, with the room growing colder and the flies multiplying every time. Finally, he can’t take any more and he channels saidin to break himself free. Nobody else seems to have had any such trouble, so Rand wisely keeps his mouth shut and looks on the bright side: this day couldn’t possibly get any worse, right?

That’s when Ingtar’s men discover a dead Fade that has been nailed to a door in the center of town.


Chapter 9: Leavetakings

The Great Hunt for the Horn departs Fal Dara with a sniffer named Hurin, someone tries to kill the Amyrlin (or maybe Rand), and Bayle Domon decides the best way to deal with trouble is to sail in the opposite direction.

Everyone gears up to ride out. Rand, Mat, and Perrin will accompany Ingtar’s men to chase after the Horn and the dagger. Rand tries to apologize to Mat and Perrin, but they just ignore him. Not that you can blame them — nobody ever reacts favorably to “I’ve got a secret, but I can’t tell you, and it’s for your own good.” Loial, on the other hand, is his usual magnanimous self. This dude is such a teddy bear that you could probably cut off one of his fingers on purpose, and he would be forgiving you in his next breath.

Then Lan shows up at Rand’s side. After that gooey, romantic exchange with Nynaeve, he must feel compelled to reassert his manly image as an emotionless slab of rock, so he imparts one final lesson: Sheathing the Sword. He says it’s when you allow the enemy to stab you “when the price is worth the gain.” Uh oh. Someone call Mr. Chekhov — we’ve just mounted a sword on the wall, and I don’t like where this is going.

Before anyone can get underway, an arrow zips in front of Rand’s face, grazes the Amyrlin’s arm, and you can almost hear the Wilhelm scream when it kills a soldier.

EVERYONE PRESENT: Gosh, I hate it when that happens.

It looks like a failed attempt to assassinate the Amyrlin Seat — but Siuan somehow believes Rand was the intended target.

On the way out of town, Ingtar introduces Rand to Hurin, who is a sniffer. This dude can literally smell death and violence, so he can track the Trollocs that stole the Horn. Now, Fain is with them, so arguably, anyone with an olfactory bulb and one working nostril should be able to track this crowd. But Hurin is actually sensing the latent spiritual energy left by acts of violence. Or something. It doesn’t involve channeling, but we’re given nothing else to help us understand the ability. Not unlike the X-Men, it’s just this “superpower” that he has. What shall we call him? The Sniffer? Poor Min and Perrin have been ignored to the point of being secondary characters at this point. I think we should get this Hurin guy together with Perrin “Wolf Dude” Aybara and Min “Future Girl” Farshaw so they can all fight crime together.


Then we’re ripped away from the Great Hunt and into the company of the good Captain Bayle Domon. We haven’t seen him since he dropped Rand and Mat off at Whitebridge in The Eye of the World, but I guess he finished making his way down the river to Illian. Domon was being chased by Trollocs when we first met him, and his life has not improved much since then.

Men from Cairhien meet him in a quiet pub and offer him a big bag of money. They want him to travel to Mayene and deliver a sealed letter to the Port Captain there, where he will receive additional funds and take on a passenger back to Illian. Despite being warned not to open the letter, Domon does it anyway. And yikes — it’s supposedly from the King of Cairhien, saying the bearer of the letter is a Darkfriend who should be killed immediately. So he does what any reasonable man would do, and instructs his crew to sail in the opposite direction, toward Tomon Head. He’s not certain what his enemy’s motives are… but my guess is it might have something to do with that unbroken seal on the Dark One’s prison nestled in Captain Domon’s collection of rare treasure.


Chapter 8: The Dragon Reborn

Rand stands before the Amyrlin, who reveals she knows his secret and confirms his identity as the Dragon Reborn. Meanwhile, Nynaeve and Lan’s relationship progresses as usual — in awkward, stilted jolts.

Rand finally stands before the Amyrlin. She begins softly, saying Mat and Perrin will ride with Agelmar to retrieve the Horn and the dagger. Does Rand wish to accompany them? Of course he does, Rand says. Gosh, that was easy. Well, I’ll just be going now, Ms. Amyrlin Seat…

SIUAN: I know you can channel, boy.

Rand’s head spins as he hears this from the Amyrlin Seat.

SIUAN: You’ll need to learn to control it — you’re the Dragon Reborn.

Moiraine rehashes the events of New Spring and other events that led her to Emond’s Field. They won’t gentle him, says Siuan, because the alternative is to watch the world burn. No pressure, Rand! You do you!


Nynaeve and Lan reconcile. Lan gives her his Malkier signet ring, calling her mashiara — beloved of heart and soul.

Sorsha and Madmartigan from Willow

I think this was the inspiration for the Nynaeve/Lan pairing.

Okay, fine. I guess that makes Nynaeve and Lan kind of sort of an item? If you don’t count the fact that he’s bonded to the woman Nynaeve hates? I don’t know, this whole romance seems to have sprung out of nowhere. But maybe I was just sleep-walking through the relevant material, so let’s review.

In The Eye of the World, Lan is impressed by Nynaeve’s tracking skills in Chapter 16: The Wisdom. Then they bicker in Chapter 19: Shadow’s Waiting, and in Chapter 21: Listen to the Wind Nynaeve sneaks up on Lan and Moiraine’s camp, and she’s extremely smug at Lan not realizing she was there. It’s all so… childish. Does that mean their romance is like Sorsha and Madmartigan from Willow? It sort of makes sense, but here’s the thing: in Willow, Madmartigan’s face gets sprinkled with the Dust of Broken Heart, which is why he becomes infatuated with Sorsha. What’s Lan’s excuse?

Nothing else happens between them for the longest time, and then in Chapter 47: More Tales of the Wheel Nynaeve learns that Lan is king of the dead nation of Malkier. And let’s just say, this seems to change everything. Lan? A king? Now Nynaeve simply must have him, so she stops just short of proposing marriage in Chapter 48: The Blight. Maybe Nynaeve got hit by the Dust of Broken Heart? Or maybe this is just clumsy character development? Either way, this reeks of hand-waving.

But hey, let’s be happy for the couple. At least they are going to get to be together on the way to the White Tower. Rand and Egwene, on the other hand, say a tearful goodbye as everyone prepares to depart Fal Dara.


Chapter 7: Blood Calls Blood

Mat still isn’t cured, and his Shadar Logoth fuck-up could have world-ending consequences if he doesn’t get the dagger back. The Trollocs left a prophecy in the dungeon, hinting at Lanfear being free. Verin deduces that Siuan and Moiraine have discovered the Dragon.

Moiraine, Siuan, and Verin labor tirelessly through the night to rid Mat of his evil curse. Looks like we can finally close the book on this Shadar Logoth plot line, right? Wrong! Mat is still going to die within months unless the dagger is retrieved and the Aes Sedai do a “for reals this time” exorcism. This isn’t even the strongest reason to get the dagger back, either — Verin Sedai says that the evil of Shadar Logoth will infect the dagger’s bearer, who will in turn infect others. Sorry, Beetlejuice, but I think this Mordeth guy might actually be the ghost with the most.

Verin raises an interesting related question: if the dagger curses whoever carries it, then how can it be transported back to Tar Valon? Moiraine is quick on the answer — just send Mat! She was going to send Mat gallivanting off to Illian anyway, so why not send him along with Agelmar to retrieve the dagger? Everyone decides that this plan suits them just fine. What does Mat think about that plan? Who gives a fuck?

Next Verin produces a transcription of a prophecy that was written on the dungeon wall in blood during the raid. And damn, it is long. Did the Dark One commission Homer to write this drivel? My question is, who had time to write this opus on the wall in blood? It would be hard enough if you had a can of spray paint and half an hour to spare.

Most of the prophecy isn’t even worth discussing, at least not here, but Verin notes that the reference to Daughter of the Night can only mean Lanfear. She is one of the Foresaken, and was Lews Therin Telamon’s lover before he married his wife, Ilyena. Oh, fantastic. Imagine getting stalked by your past incarnation’s ex-girlfriend — Rand is in for a treat.

A brief sidebar on Foresaken naming. The chapter claims that most of the Foresaken “had been named by those they betrayed.” What the hell does that mean? Ishamael, Aginor, and Balthamel were named by their victims? “Hey there, I’m about to kill you and your family, but if you could fill out a quick survey first…” Lanfear, on the other hand, supposedly means Daughter of the Night in the Old Tongue. But I know the truth — you just thought it sounded cool, didn’t you, Mr. Jordan? No arguments there.

The prophecy also speaks of a “man who can channel,” whom Verin unflinchingly declares to be either Rand, Mat, or Perrin. Siuan and Moiraine are both aghast, but they both reflexively embrace the Power, so there is no denying their little secret. Verin has been on to them since the very beginning, but fortunately she is far too eager to chronicle the Dragon’s progress to consider turning them in. The time has come for the Dragon to have an audience with the Amyrlin.


Chapter 6: Dark Prophecy

Rand says the Dark One’s name out loud and everything goes to hell: Trollocs invade, the Horn of Valere is stolen, Fain escapes, and Rand finds a bloody note with his name on it.

In Egwene’s room, Rand is having a terrible time in the world of dreams before he wakes up next to Nynaeve, who is knitting. Jesus, what is it with Aes Sedai and knitting? Rand learns that Egwene went to see Fain again, and that there might be a search underway for him.

RAND: Where’s Egwene?

NYNAEVE: She went to see Padan Fain.

RAND: He’s dangerous — she should stay away from him.

NYNAEVE: She wants to help him, Rand.

RAND: Whatever. I’m out of here as soon as they unbar the doors.

NYNAEVE: I don’t know, Rand. Moiraine says you are ta’veren. The Dark One–

RAND: Shai’tan is dead. I saw him die.

Really, Rand? It has been a month since the Eye of the World, and nobody has had a talk with you about this? When I was ten, I unearthed a bone and thought I’d discovered a dinosaur fossil. Turns out it was a squirrel skull. Rand, buddy — I was wrong, and so are you. The Dark One ain’t dead, and he’s listening.

The room seems to lurch when Rand names the Dark One, and alarm bells sound throughout the keep. I suppose this is all part of the plan. Can’t get out of the keep? No problem! This must be like Beetlejuice, right? Just say his name and capitalize on the chaos. Rand straps on his sword and storms out into the corridor. At first, the shouts are about Rand storming through the women’s apartments with a sword. Then the screams stop being about him — the fortress is under attack. Trollocs eviscerate men in the corridors, and Fades face down generals. Concerned about Egwene, Rand hurries on to the dungeon where he finds a message scrawled in blood on the inner door:

WE WILL MEET AGAIN ON TOMAN HEAD.

IT IS NEVER OVER, AL’THOR.

Oh great, it’s the summoning. Not wanting anyone to see his name written in blood on the wall, Rand hurriedly scrubs it off, but Liandrin walks in. She uses her compulsion weave on him, demanding to know who he is and what he is doing. He is just on the edge of embracing saidin when Moiraine also walks in:

MOIRAINE: What in the Light’s name is going on here, bitch?

Amusingly, Liandrin has completely dropped the Yoda act. What, does she only use it when operating in evil-mastermind mode?

Thinking of Egwene, Rand pushes forward into the cell block. Mat and Egwene lie unconscious in front of Fain’s cell. Egwene has a head wound, and Mat is missing his dagger from Shadar Logoth. Moiraine heals Egwene, then goes to rally the other sisters to finally finish the half-assed exorcism she started in The Eye of the World‘s Chapter 41: Old Friends and New Threats.

Fain himself has evidently flown the coop with the dagger, but that is the least of their problems. The treasure room has been looted and the Horn of Valere is missing. Well, that sucks. But hey — if the Horn’s gone, maybe the end of the world’s been rescheduled.


Chapter 5: The Shadow in Shienar

Moiraine and Siuan double down on their risky Dragon Reborn plan, Bornhald arrives to cleanse the Almoth Plain of anything suspiciously alive, Liandrin goes full Sith Lord, and Padan Fain… waits.

The Wheel of Time universe has different terms for permanently severing men and women from the One Power. Do it to a man and he has been gentled. Do it to a woman and she has been stilled. This sounds suspiciously like the distinction between spaying and neutering. Only instead of health benefits and population control, it’s a punishment that leaves the victim hollowed out and barely functional. Like a Dyson vacuum, but even sadder.

I mention it because Siuan is skittish, worried they’ll be discovered for meddling with the Dragon. So Moiraine reminds her of the plan:

MOIRAINE: Nearly twenty years ago, we decided to find the boy, keep him safe, guide him.

SIUAN: In Tar Valon! Not on the Dark One’s doorstep.

MOIRAINE: Did you hear about what happened to the Eye of the World?

Moiraine shows Siuan the broken pieces of a seal on the Dark One’s prison. Throw in the discovery of the legendary Horn of Valere, and what you get is confirmation that Last Battle is practically here. It’s official: the world is ending. The two people responsible for saving it are now in a room, arguing about who’s freaking out more.

So here is Moiraine’s new plan: send Rand, Mat, and Perrin off to Illian. Why? Because Rand is going to present the Horn to the nation’s leaders and somehow gain a massive army. The best part? She can’t go with them! They have to believe they are making their own choices. That’s her brilliant strategy — point them in the general direction of chaos and hope for the best. It’s like a parent telling their kid, “Go play with matches, but make sure you don’t burn the house down.”


Geofram Bornhald has brought an entire legion — two thousand Children of the Light — to the small village of Alcruna near the Almoth Plain. He’s kind of pissed, because he got called away from a perfectly good coup attempt in Andor for a mission so secret, not even he knows what it is.

His contact turns out to be Einor Saren with the Questioners, who are a faction within the Children of the Light that specializes in the use of torture. Even Bornhald, not exactly a poster child for restraint, thinks the Questioners are sadistic creeps. Saren is the kind of guy who gleefully murders an entire village and declares that it has been “pacified,” which is exactly what has befallen Alcruna.

Saren tells Bornhald he is here to go around “rooting out Darkfriends” from “grubby villages” scattered throughout the plain. As an afterthought, Saren suggests that the legion may be called upon to deal with some strangers who have arrived from across the sea. You know, just in case a conquering army shows up.


In Chapter 4, Liandrin came off as a kind of a bitch, but that could have been because of her affiliation with the Red Ajah. In this section, she’s tired of people not worshiping her, so it’s time to go full villain. She barges into Lady Amalisa’s chambers, where Amalisa and her friends are just chilling, reading a book about how men and women should treat each other. Liandrin commands everyone but Amalisa to get out, and in a moment of pure, petty villainy, throws the book into the fire!

I didn’t notice it during Chapter 4, but half the stuff Liandrin says sounds like it came out of Yoda’s mouth:

LIANDRIN: Truth only, speak to me.

LIANDRIN: Of the Black Ajah have you heard?

It almost seems like the more evil she gets, the more scrambled her speech patterns are. Sometimes she even mixes it up:

LIANDRIN: Any Aes Sedai in the halls you pass, a Black sister could be. I cannot tell you which they are, but my protection you can have. If in the Light you walk and me obey.

And me obey? Lady, that’s where I draw the line between quirky speech patterns and baby talk. Liandrin uses a compulsion weave that feels suspiciously like the one the Blues use — just with more malice and less finesse. She uses it to coerce Amalisa into commanding her servants to search for Rand, Mat, and Perrin.

Outside in the corridor, Liandrin feels the same eyes on her that were watching Rand. Shrugging it off, continues about her business she does. A good little Darkfriend, she shall be.


In the depths of the dungeon, Padan Fain receives a visitor.


Chapter 4: Summoned

Moiraine is summoned to the Amyrlin Seat — her old friend Siuan — who’s arrived in Fal Dara after Elaida connected Moiraine to Rand.

Moiraine with her kesiera

Moiraine with her kesiera

Moiraine is in her room dressing for an audience with the Amyrlin. Contrary to what Rand assumed, Moiraine has nothing to do with this visit and is nearly as anxious as he is. She dons her trademark kesiera with its blue gemstone nestled in the middle of her forehead. It helps her cultivate a certain mystique that keeps everyone — especially her fellow sisters — guessing about the true extent of her abilities.

There is an insistent knock at the door. When she answers, Moiraine finds fellow Blue sister, Anaiya, in the company of Liandrin, a Red. Anaiya comes off as very cordial and friendly, whereas Liandrin is cold and clipped. Don’t worry, Moiraine, it’s not like everyone who comes across as a creep is a Darkfriend. Right?

The Amyrlin Seat has summoned Moiraine, and these two sisters have been sent to fetch her. On the way, Liandrin frets about three more false Dragons appearing at once. Moiraine has to work at keeping the amused smirk off her face, especially when she spots Egwene hurrying around a corner with a stooped figure in tow.

Entering the Amyrlin Seat’s chambers, Moiraine sees the box containing the Horn of Valere rests on the table in the room. She addresses the Amyrlin Seat — a position now occupied by Siuan Sanche — in a rigidly formal manner that is nothing like we saw in New Spring. Siuan says he delegation from Tar Valon is here thanks to Elaida. After Rand escaped imprisonment against Elaida’s advice, she went to the Tower telling of a dangerous young man — a ta’veren — who visited the castle. Some sniffing around revealed that Moiraine had spirited him away to Fal Dara.

After some pointless politicking that would bore a tax clerk, Siuan finally clears the room — even booting Leane, her own Keeper of the Chronicles. With a “cone of silence” weave in place, the formal act dissolves, and the two old friends speak the way they used to. And Siuan doesn’t waste time sugarcoating — if anyone discovers their plan, they’ll both be stilled.


Chapter 3: Friends and Enemies

Rand fails to escape, alienates all his friends, visits a predictably disturbing Padan Fain, and ends up hiding in the last place anyone would look: the women’s apartments.

Rand tries to leave Fal Dara on foot, but every gate is closed and guarded. It’s as though the entire fortress has received a memo titled “Do Not, Under Any Circumstances, Let Rand Leave.” So instead, he aimlessly wanders the hallways and tries to keep a low profile. The wind swirls up like it did during his lesson, and Rand can feel someone watching him. Either he’s going crazy, or he’s got a stalker. Neither bodes well.

Rand finds Loial watching some men play dice. Loial doesn’t know any secret exits, but he thinks Rand might be sick, so he waves Mat and Perrin over. Rand tells them just enough truth to justify wanting to leave — something about the wind, and being watched. No mention of channeling, obviously, because it’s better to have your friends think you’re actively unhinged than for them to be afraid of you.

When Mat tries to talk about how they are going to get out of the fortress, Rand starts burning bridges. We aren’t going anywhere, he says. Cue the meltdown, and all the dice players stop to stare. Great job keeping a low profile! Now his friends are confused, pissed off, and more than ready to let him have some space. A lot of space.

Rand moves on — and runs into Egwene. Maybe we can alienate her, too! The difference is, she actually knows what’s going on. Rand tries to shove her away like everyone else, but Egwene doesn’t flinch. She just calmly suggests hiding in the one place no one would think to look: the dungeons.

EGWENE: I go there some evenings to visit Master Fain.

RAND: Master Fain? The dungeon? I thought I was the one who was supposed to go mad.

EGWENE: He’s much better now. He tells funny stories.

RAND: Funny stories? Egwene, he’s a Darkfriend.

Even though Rand’s clearly right, he still lets Egwene drag him to see Fain. This works out exactly the way you might expect, with Fain dropping just enough random creepiness to leave them both feeling rattled. New plan: Rand’s got to hide somewhere even more dangerous than the dungeon: the women’s apartments. Don’t worry, Rand — I’m sure sneaking a male channeler into a building full of Aes Sedai will go just fine.


Chapter 2: The Welcome

Rand tries to escape before the Amyrlin Seat can find him, but someone’s already two steps ahead.

Everyone else in the fortress is buzzing with excitement over the Amyrlin Seat’s arrival. Rand, meanwhile, is quietly shitting bricks. Step one of his escape plan is to hurry back to his room on the pretense that he needs to make himself presentable. When he arrives, the room is already a flurry of activity. Servants are busy throwing out Rand’s old clothes and replacing them with new ones, under Moiraine’s orders. He shoos the servants out of the room, hastily dresses and packs, and heads for the stables.

Rand chooses a route that takes him directly through the courtyard where the Amyrlin Seat is being received. His reasoning? It’s the shortest route — plus, what harm could there be in just looking? Says the guy who once tripped into a royal garden and nearly got arrested while trying to catch a glimpse of Logain.

Rand gets through the courtyard without incident, but the stable is where the plan starts going sideways. The groomsman tells him that an order came through just minutes ago to not allow any horses to leave the stables. Don’t worry, Rand — I’m sure this is just standard stable lockdown procedure, and the pedestrian exits will be wide open.


Chapter 1: The Flame of Tar Valon

Rand is still training with Lan at Fal Dara when the Amyrlin Seat arrives — and it’s probably not a social call.

Connor and Ramirez from train on top of a mountain.

Training is more effective when you do it on top of a dangerously tall structure, right?

Our reluctant hero, Rand, is taking sword fighting lessons from Lan at Fal Dara. A normal person would conduct a session like this on terra firma, but instead the two men are on top of one of the city’s high towers — because as we all learned from Highlander, training is most effective when death is one careless misstep away.

Lan manages to get a jab in that breaks the practice sword and draws blood. Rand’s excuse? “The wind pushed me.” Sure, buddy. Did the dog eat your homework too?

It has been a full month since the events at the Eye of the World, and Rand still hasn’t followed through on his dramatic promise to run off and live in solitude. He admits to dragging his heels because he hopes to learn something from Moiraine that can help with his Dragon situation. But she has been busy, and besides, Lan doubts there is anything more she can do.

The training session ends abruptly when a large procession of Aes Sedai arrives at Fal Dara. It’s the Amyrlin Seat, and it doesn’t take a genius to guess who she’s here to see.


Prologue: In the Shadow

Bors attends an honest-to-God Darkfriend conference where Ba’alzamon names Rand, Mat, and Perrin as threats and gives each attendee private orders.

Welcome to Book 2: The Great Hunt!

Eyes Wide Shut screen capture showing party scene.

Yes, Darkfriends have conferences too.

I’d like you to meet Bors. Lord Bors is attending a Darkfriend convention. Stop laughing — I’m completely serious! I know I joked about it in Chapter 33: The Dark Waits (The Eye of the World), but lo and behold, Darkfriends actually do convene. If you can imagine the party scene from Eyes Wide Shut, only with less sex and much worse ambiance, you won’t be too far off. Sounds terrible, right? If the Dark One wants followers, he’s not exactly selling the lifestyle.

Bors clearly thinks he’s a much better Darkfriend than all these other idiots. I hate to break it to you Bors, buddy — but I’m pretty sure even the forces of evil need to collaborate from time to time, so you’d better set that superiority complex aside and learn how to be a team player.

Bors is still busy sneering when a pair of Trollocs enters the room, followed by a Fade. When Ba’alzamon appears, floating in mid air, Bors and his masked compatriots fall to the floor and grovel. It seems Bors is still having a crisis of faith: his mouth pledges allegiance to the Dark One, but his mind clings to prayers to the Light.

Looks like whatever Rand did to Ba’alzamon at the end of The Eye of the World wasn’t anything too permanent, because he seems to be in top form. He tells everyone that they stand in a place that lies in the shadow of Shayol Ghul, and that the Day of Return is near. But he wants everyone to know their enemy, so likenesses of Rand, Mat, and Perrin appear in the air — they are extremely dangerous, explains Ba’alzamon, and they need to be carefully manipulated.

Each Darkfriend receives private instructions from Ba’alzamon. Then they return to a private room where they can change out of their disguise. Bors, it seems, is a Questioner with the Children of the Light. Given the Children are essentially what you would get if you crossed the Spanish Inquisition with the Ku Klux Klan, it actually makes perfect sense that Bors worships the shadow.


Retrospective

It was great to go on this journey again and stay with it to the end. Robert Jordan finished this journey in 1990. I took it for the first time in 1995, but I wasn’t even an adult at the time. Thirty-five years later, experiencing it again gave me a new perspective. I’ve also come to terms with the fact that if I don’t write shit down, I’m definitely going to misplace and forget it.

This time around, I feel like there was less braid-tugging, arm crossing, and other annoying linguistic quirks than I remembered. I’m not saying that every chapter was a well-balanced work of art, but overall it was a very smooth and well-flowing first installment. Now I’m wondering if those tics don’t really ramp up until the later books. I did get partway through The Fires of Heaven, after all.

Will I make it to the end of the series? Light, if I try to think that far ahead, I’ll never make it. All I can say for now is: hello again, The Great Hunt — I’m coming for you.


Chapter 53: The Wheel Turns

Spring returns, the Shadow retreats, and Rand thinks running away will solve everything. Moiraine, meanwhile, has found what she spent twenty years looking for: the Dragon Reborn.

I guess killing two of the Forsaken left the Shadow reeling, because it’s suddenly a lot easier to leave the Blight than it was to enter. Once the group has traveled far enough south, we see that spring has finally arrived.

Near Fal Dara, men speak of a miraculous victory at Tarwin’s Gap. They believe the Creator intervened, but we know better. So does Lord Agelmar — he witnessed the battle, and has no doubt that he saw a man channel.

Moiraine entrusts the Horn of Valere to Lord Agelmar, with strict instructions to deliver it to Illian.

Rand gets some sword lessons from Lan, and has a talk with Egwene. He says he’s “going away” but won’t say where. Even he doesn’t seem to know, but he doesn’t want to be gentled, and he doesn’t want to bring trouble to Emond’s Field. So… somewhere. He’s also trying to convince himself he won’t channel again. That’s adorable — like a kid swearing he’ll never grow up. Good luck with that.

Moiraine is content. Ever since Gitara’s foretelling, for twenty years, she has been desperately searching for the Dragon, and she has finally found him.

The end.


Chapter 52: There Is Neither Beginning Nor End

Rand wakes up hung over from channeling and thinks he killed the Dark One. The Eye is gone, but they find a broken seal from the Dark One’s prison, the Horn of Valere, and the Dragon’s banner in its place.

The chapter opens to Rand rolling around in some “oily” charred ashes. The ashes are vaguely Aginor-shaped, complete with bits that resemble his distinctive green cape. It’s impossible to read this and not notice that this feels exactly like waking up in a puddle of vomit after being blackout drunk. What happened last night, Rand? Did things get a little crazy? Did you binge drink that tainted Power and the rest is a blur? Did you come back here after your meeting with Ba’alzamon and partied a little too hard with Aginor? Inquiring minds want to know.

Rand then does what any hung-over person would do — put his head over the cliff’s edge and hurl. Still clearly inebriated, Rand stumbles downhill proclaiming, “Shai’tan is dead! Shai’tan is dead!”

Yikes. Someone needs to get this man a coffee. Shai’tan is, I believe, the Dark One’s proper name, and last time I checked, uttering this aloud tends to get you noticed. So unless you’re absolutely sure that was the Dark One you nuked, maybe it’s best to keep that word out of your vocab, Mr. Dragon.

The fact is, you’ve already got enough trouble without actively inviting more. Those people who call you their friend? They’re gonna be scared of you now, if they know you can channel. Case in point, Nynaeve comes right out and says it: “You’re too dangerous, Rand.” Ouch! At least Egwene doesn’t treat him any differently. Neither does Lan. Moiraine, as usual, simply wants to drag every last detail out of him. The others aren’t asking, and Rand’s not telling.

Rand learns that the Eye is gone, and in its place stands a crystal column with steps leading up to it. The others retrieved artifacts from the cavern:

  • One of the “unbreakable” seals on the Dark One’s prison, shattered into pieces.
  • The Horn of Valere.
  • A banner of the Dragon.

Even as the chapter comes to a close, Rand is still clinging to the notion that he defeated the Dark One. Dude, I hate to break it to you, but we still have thirteen more books to get through.


Chapter 51: Against the Shadow

Rand teleports away from Aginor, nukes the Trollocs at Tarwin’s Gap, and shows Ba’alzamon what he thinks of the Dark One.

Rand scrambles uphill until the ground gives way to a sheer drop — bad news, because Aginor is right behind him. Cornered at the cliff’s edge, Rand has a panic-induced epiphany and opens himself to saidin. He can see Aginor’s connection to the True Source. In desperation, Rand opens his own line to the True Source and teleports away.

His destination? Why, Tarwin’s Gap, of course. You didn’t think Jordan dropped a hopeless battle into the plot just for decoration, did you? Rand sees that the situation is indeed dire. Trolloc armies severely outnumber the human forces. No problem, eh Rand? Nothing a little channeling won’t fix! He send a shockwave of burning, earth-shattering destruction at the Trollocs, instantly causing massive damage and confusion.

Things start getting annoyingly metaphysical here, in that special way that only Robert Jordan can achieve. Stairs appear in the middle of the battlefield, and Rand ascends them. The farther up he goes, the more the world behind him fades away until he reaches a door that leads into a chamber that he had previous visited in a dream. Ba’alzamon is there. He and Rand engage in a verbal pissing contest, but it’s clear the conversation isn’t going anywhere, Rand conjures a lightsaber (not kidding) and uses it to give Ba’alzamon the old heave-ho.

First Palpatine, now a sword made of light. If this story ends with rebels blowing up a fortress, Disney’s lawyers are going to start calling.


Chapter 50: Meetings at the Eye

The Green Man leads the group to the Eye, which turns out to be pure saidin untouched by the Dark One. Moiraine finally explains why they came here — just in time for Aginor and Balthamel, two of the Forsaken, to crash the party. The Green Man dies killing Balthamel, Moiraine throws fire at Aginor, and everyone else bails in a panic. Can’t say I blame them — Aginor’s giving strong “boss fight you’re not leveled up for” energy.

The Green Man leads the way through his garden oasis to an arch set into the side of a hill.

GREEN MAN: I will not follow you in. That thing makes me uneasy. I feel myself being unmade.

Dude, you are definitely gonna die. Alright, Green Man. Go ahead and stand outside alone where the bad guys can shiv you on their way into the chamber.

Everyone else heads into the chamber with a pool that is literally built in the oval shape of an eye.

MOIRAINE: The Eye of the World.

MAT: But what is it?

Ding ding ding ding ding! Somebody give this man a prize! Leave it to the village idiot to finally ask the question that should have been obvious since Chapter 42: Remembrance of Dreams. Well, Moiraine? The time has come to spill it. What is the Eye of the World?

MOIRAINE: It is the essence of saidin, the male half of the True Source, free of the Dark One’s corruption.

RAND: Why did you bring us here?

Oh, man! Ding again! I hope we’re not out of prizes, because now Rand deserves one too.

MOIRAINE: Because you are ta’veren, and you must stop the Dark One when he strikes here.

Great, so, uh… just one question — when is that going to be, exactly? Because it looks like nobody is here. Is the group just going to hang out here for days and weeks and months until the Dark One decides to show up? Moiraine suggests they go back outside, and everyone is so uncomfortable being in a room full of saidin that they eagerly follow.

MAN: I have found you at last.

Picture of Emperor Palpatine

Obviously Aginor’s inspiration.

Either this man has not aged well, or he attended the Emperor Palpatine School of Beauty. Seriously, his character description reads like Jordan had clearly been watching Return of the Jedi, needed to come up with a look for a fugly bad guy, and out came this dude who calls himself Aginor. If you accept this, then you really have to wonder what kind of kinky shit Jordan was watching before he penned the description for Aginor’s companion, Balthamel. According to the text, Balthamel has a “tight, black leather carapace” covering his entire body, a mask that is frozen into a smile, and he never speaks. So we’ve got Emperor Palpatine and BDSM Dude. Where does the Dark One get these guys — Villains R Us?

At the same time, I will admit that Jordan came up with some pretty darn cool names for his villains. Ba’alzamon. Aginor. Balthamel. They just sound menacing. But here’s what I want to know — where did those names come from, in-universe? Admittedly, this is a world where mothers are honest-to-God giving their children weird-ass names like Caniedrin and Gelb. But even so, you can not tell me that anyone is going to name their child Ishamael. I really hope each of these names has a story behind it, because otherwise you have to imagine them sitting down for the most pathetic brainstorming session ever. “Hmm, what should my evil name be, now that I’m so evil? Isaac? No. Ivan? Mmm, no. Ishtar? Meh. I’ve got it! Ishamael!”

Wherever the names came from, everyone knows the Foresaken from the stories. Mat speaks up, insisting that the Foresaken are bound with the Dark One in Shayol Ghul, but Aginor smugly corrects him, declaring that the seals are weakening and the Foresaken are beginning to walk free once more.

Lan flashes forward to attack, but Aginor flicks him away like he’s a tin soldier, and he lands in a crumpled heap. This is not cool with Nynaeve, so she launches herself at Aginor, only for Balthamel to catch her by her face and lift her up into the air. Egwene moves to help, but Rand tackles her to the ground. Mat and Perrin move in, only to be knocked flat on their asses by an invisible barrier.

Balthamel finally tosses Nynaeve aside when the Green Man intervenes. The two grapple in combat. Balthamel scorches the Green Man, but not before the Green Man makes all manner of fungus and lichen and nettles sprout within Balthamel’s body. Vegetation destroys the mute Foresaken from the inside out, causing his dominatrix outfit to burst at the seams. With that, the Green Man dies — called it! — and a massive oak tree sprouts in his place.

Aginor is incensed, but so is Moiraine. She channels and creates a pit of flames under Aginor’s feet, but he just hangs there in mid-air and slowly walks across nothing toward his enemies. Moiraine commands everyone to run, and they’re so scared shitless that they all disappear into the trees, Rand included. Hey, Rand — it’s OK, big man. Moiraine will be fine. I’m sure that guttural shriek just means she’s winning.


Chapter 49: The Dark One Stirs

The Blight comes alive in all the worst ways as the group journeys north. Just when things are looking grim, they find themselves in the Green Man’s oasis, and he leads the way to the Eye of the World.

If Robert Jordan describes the sun as “sullen” one more time, I’m going to throw this book across the room. My teenage daughter is sullen. The family gathering after Grandma’s funeral is sullen. The sun is a giant, energetic thermonuclear reaction — how can it be sullen? The Eye of the World uses the word “sullen” fourteen times, and three of those are describing the sun. I’m not opposed to a little anthropomorphism, but when it stands out like this, someone needs to arrange an intervention. Jordan, buddy, there are other adjectives. Let’s find them together.

Moiraine and Lan erase the last vestiges of the campsite and the group continues north toward the Mountains of Dhoom. Trees begin to move in unnatural ways. One of them bends over to snatch an animal from the ground. Abominations charge them from the treeline, and Moiraine’s connection to the True Source seems to be no deterrent.

Tremors movie posterJust as the attacks grow overwhelming, a sound from behind makes the sickly forest stand still. Lan says it is the cry of a pack of Worms, creatures so lethal they can kill Fades. Yikes! Someone call Kevin Bacon — he’ll know what to do!

Lan says the Worms are afraid of what lives in the mountains, so they ride hard for the peaks. Trees collapse behind them and the sickening wail of the Worms grows louder. They aren’t going to make it in time, but to stand and face them is suicide. In this moment of crisis, the Blight abruptly ends and everyone is standing in a lush, healthy forest.

The Green Man is there. He is another character who has been repeatedly mentioned in the same breath as the Eye without anyone asking who the fuck he is. He seems to be one of those mystical caretaker “forest spirit” types. He is much larger than even Loial, and is composed of living foliage, save for a desiccated brown scar on his cheek. The Green Man identifies Perrin as a Wolfbrother, and calls Rand “Child of the Dragon” — but neither of them is very comfortable with the attention. Moiraine declares they are here to see the Eye of the World, and the Green Man agrees to take them to it.

Now, I admit I read this book before, but that was thirty years ago and I do not remember anything about the end of this book. However — why do I get the strong feeling that the Green Man is about to die? I suppose it’s because of the trope. You know the one — gentle immortal guardian of peace and balance, untouched by evil for millennia, until the plot shows up. Watch your back, Green Man.


Chapter 48: The Blight

The group enters the Blight, which sounds a lot like the Pit of Eternal Stench from Labyrinth. Nynaeve makes a bold romantic move on Lan, and he deflects like a pro.

Why is it that the portion of a fantasy world that has been subsumed by evil always resembles an ecological disaster? Middle Earth’s Mordor looks like the surface of Io. The Lands of Always Winter in Westeros are eternally frozen. And the Blight? The Blight is like an alien jungle planet where every plant is poisonous and the wildlife is just waiting to lay eggs in your stomach.

Moiraine keeps talking about “finding” the Eye of the World, as though it isn’t always in the same place. Loial confirms that the Eye isn’t pinned to a specific point on the map — you find it when you need it, which sounds suspiciously like how you get into Narnia. Maybe they should’ve checked the back of Agelmar’s wardrobe before setting out.

After a day’s journey, Moiraine sets up a nifty weave that makes their campsite invisible to anyone standing outside of it. Egwene does her best to annoy everyone by yammering about how they’ll all go to Tar Valon after this and live happily ever after. But the real star of the show is Nynaeve:

NYNAEVE: I should have known you would be a king.

LAN: I’m not a king. I’m just a man.

NYNAEVE: Some women just want the man.

LAN: You deserve more than that.

NYNAEVE: You know, a Wisdom seldom weds. Looks like I’m not gonna be a Wisdom.

What the actual fuck? Is Nynaeve in heat or something? If this goes any farther, these two are going to have to get a room. She comes within an inch of proposing marriage. Where did that even come from?!?

Um — hey Nynaeve, you do know that Lan is already pretty attached to this Aes Sedai you hate, right? Unless you’re into that sort of thing! Anyway, not to worry, because in his next breath Lan shoots her down and leaves her in tears as he goes to check on the horses. It’s probably for the best — we really don’t have time for weird throuple drama when we’re trying to save the fucking world.


Chapter 47: More Tales of the Wheel

Moiraine interrogates Fain and learns that he has been stalking Rand, Mat, and Perrin for years. Meanwhile, Agelmar gives a TED Talk on how to lose a nation to pettiness. He’s skeptical about sending three farmboys to the Eye of the World, and honestly it’s hard to argue with the man.

To pass the time while Moiraine interrogates talks to Padan Fain, Agelmar tells the story of how the nation of Malkier fell to the blight. Was it because the Dark One was too strong? A cunning Dreadlord general? Some brilliant Shadow plot? Nope — what it all came down to was bickering, jealousy, distrust and infighting. The people of the Light didn’t lose Malkier to the Shadow — the dumb shits handed it over.

When Moiraine reappears, she is so disgusted by having been in contact with Fain that she immediately washes her hands. She says Fain has been a Darkfriend for over forty years, spending the last three helping the Dark One zero in on Rand, Mat, and Perrin. After Baerlon, the Dark One compelled him to hunt the boys. He even followed them into the Ways, and according to Moiraine, Machin Shin took one look at him ran away. Personally, I think it was the man’s BO.

Lord Agelmar still thinks he can help:

AGELMAR: Just give me a day with the beggar, Moiraine Sedai. I will discover what he is hiding.

MOIRAINE: I do not have a day, Lord Agelmar.

AGELMAR: Then at least take some real men with you instead of these three jokers.

RAND: Uh, we’re standing right here.

Moiraine assures Agelmar that these three are ta’veren with the blood of Manetheren, and nobody else can fight the battle at the Eye of the World.

Retiring for the night, their mission remains unchanged. So does the fact that nobody knows what the hell it even is.


Chapter 46: Fal Dara

At Fal Dara, the group receives a royal welcome, thanks to Lan and Moiraine’s good reputation. But just when everyone is enjoying a relaxing evening, Padan Fain shows up to shit all over it.

On the way to Fal Dara, the conversation proceeds thusly.

MAT: Fuck, it’s cold.

LAN: Sissy. It’s a fine spring day.

RAND: Hey Nynaeve, Egwene — maybe the two of you should stay behind while we go to the Eye.

NYNAEVE: We’re coming with you men. By the way, did anyone think to ask what the Eye is or what we’re going to do there?

RAND/PERRIN/MAT/EGWENE: Nope!

MAT: Heh. She called us men.

EGWENE: Rand, I only danced with Aram. I didn’t do anything else.

RAND: Yeah, and I only talked with Min, so let’s drop it.

Jesus Christ. This is like a hellish cross between Boy Meets World and Dawson’s Creek. If I had to travel with these people, I’d go insane. I know Moiraine said Machin Shin is confined to the Ways, but maybe if I ask nicely enough it could reach a tendril out and strangle one of these fuckers?

Mercifully, the group finally arrives at Fal Dara. Entering the city, it’s like a medieval version of Cheers, because everyone there seems to know Lan and Moiraine’s name. Remarkably, they aren’t even afraid of seeing an Ogier, and keep greeting Loial with “Glory to the Builders!” Lan, for his part, seems to also be known by the name “Dai Shan,” and the people of Fal Dara are eager for the Golden Crane to fly again — whatever that means.

Entering the fortress in the middle of the town, the group receives a royal greeting, with servants seeing to their horses. Ingtar, an old acquaintance of Lan’s, takes them to Agelmar, Fal Dara’s leader. It sounds like things at the border between Fal Dara and the Blight are bleak — they’re expecting to fight a big battle at nearby Tarwin’s Gap, and people keep trying to persuade Lan and Moiraine to come fight with them. When it becomes apparent that they have urgent business at the Eye of the World, Agelmar tries to convince them to take men from Fal Dara with them, but Moiraine insists that “low-profile” is the name of the game.

Soon they are dining together and sharing stories, until Ingtar interrupts with news that a man has been caught trying to scale the city walls. When the man is marched in, Rand recognizes the beggar from Caemlyn — and everyone sees it’s a very haggard, wild-eyed Padan Fain. He says the rags are a disguise, and he can show Agelmar how to defeat the Dark One, if he’ll only listen. And hey, maybe while he’s at it he can show everyone how to spin straw into gold!

Moiraine insists on having a talk with him in private. Just her, Lan, Padan, and that Compulsion weave we saw in New Spring.


Chapter 45: What Follows in Shadow

The Ways are crumbling, Machin Shin is hunting them, and the exit is locked — so Moiraine melts it open with a thermonuclear blowtorch. Welcome to Fal Dara.

Rand looks across the chasm and notices the bridge is just… floating there. If this is upsetting to Rand, he doesn’t voice his discontent — that’s Nynaeve’s job. She is still blaming Moiraine for every misfortune, big or small. The bridge is out? Is this what you’ve brought us to, Aes Sedai? Whitecloaks are in town? You’ve put us in danger, Aes Sedai. Getting chased by Fades and Trollocs? What’s the plan now, genius? Honestly, if Moiraine snapped and slapped Nynaeve across her face, that would be understandable. Anyway, the bridge may be out, but there is always more than one route between places in the Ways, so they backtrack and keep going.

When it is time to stop for sleep, Moiraine tells the group that she doesn’t believe Thom is really dead because Min’s visions involved him too. This leads to a conversation where all of the twenty-somethings act like they’re still in high school, talking about who did what with various members of the opposite sex. Rand spoke to Min? How dare he! Egwene danced with Aram? Scandalous! Farmer Grinwell’s daughter, Else, had the hots for Rand? I need to go take a cold shower! I’ll tell you something — if I was Machin Shin, I would be in the mood to murder them, too, after having to listen to this tripe.

Indeed, after they start moving again, Lan tells the group that someone or something is following them. Hearing this, Mat turns around in his saddle and fires an arrow behind them into the darkness, giving us one of the best lines in this book:

LAN: Stop that, you village idiot.

The next Guiding stone they come upon has Trolloc runes carved into it. According to Moiraine, this explains how the Trolloc armies have been getting around so easily. At the foot of one of the bridges, a group of Trollocs appears to have been killed in some strange and painful way, causing them to turn to stone. Moiraine thinks they probably fell victim to a trap left by the male Aes Sedai who created the Ways. Sure, Moiraine. It must be that, and not the evil, invisible presence that is known to haunt the Ways.

RAND: Say, did you feel that breeze?

LOIAL: There is no breeze in the Ways.

It quickly becomes clear that Machin Shin is pursuing them, and they race to the Waygate that leads to Fal Dara. To Moiraine’s horror, the leaf is gone, so essentially it’s a door that is missing its handle. Moiraine switches to Plan B — burn the shit out of it. She channels balefire from the end of her staff and melts her way through the stone of the gate. Let me say that again. She melts a fucking hole in the fucking gate. This gate is a huge slab of stone that is probably a good foot in thickness. If she is able to melt a hole in it within a couple of minutes, that would mean that balefire would have to be at least as hot as the surface of the Sun. And hopefully that is in the form of coherent, directed energy, or else — to quote Sarah Connor — “anybody not wearing two-million sunblock is gonna have a real bad day.”

Once Moiraine melts the stone, Lan charges it with his horse and knocks it over, allowing everyone to escape. Welcome to Fal Dara, everyone. It’s a wintery shithole that is uncomfortably close to the Blight, but hey, at least it isn’t actively trying to kill you. Yet.

 


Chapter 44: The Dark Along the Ways

The gang sneaks through Caemlyn, finds the Waygate, and steps into the dark, creepy hell-road where physics is optional and bridges are missing chunks.

Winding their way through the predawn streets of Caemlyn, Loial guides the group toward a shop. The Waygate is in the cellar, so they head around back and let themselves inside.

The entrance into the Ways is guarded by a gate wrought from living stone. Moiraine seems to have knowledge of these gates, because she is able to discern a specific leaf in the artwork adorning the gate and move it from one place to another. That seemed… too easy. I was expecting she would need to channel, or Loial would need to sing at it, or Lan would perform a secret knock. But just pick up a leaf and move it from one place to another? Good luck keeping that a secret. This is like hiding your house key under the doormat.

The stone gate swings open and reveals the shimmering entrance into the Ways. As each member of the group passes through the mystical veil, we learn that time passes more slowly in the Ways. Apparently, Jordan liked Einstein’s theory of relativity enough to weave it into the Pattern.

The darkness in the Ways is oppressive as Loial guides them along paths and bridges. He uses Guiding stones like they’re mall directories for the world’s worst shopping trip. Everything is proceeding according to plan… until Loial stops dead. The bridge ahead is missing a chunk the size of a Two Rivers sheep pasture. Apparently, even in nightmare realms, infrastructure sucks.


Chapter 43: Decisions and Apparitions

Rand asks about the Ways, not the Eye — so it’s lore dump o’clock. Turns out the Ways are broken, haunted, and lethal, but hey — Moiraine says full speed ahead.

Rand — bless his heart — decides to ask what the Ways are instead of what the Eye of the World is. Cue massive lore drop.

Loial explains that during the time of the Breaking, the Ogier offered sanctuary to the male Aes Sedai. In a stedding, Aes Sedai are completely cut off from the One Power, so it was a way for male channelers to remain safe from the tainted saidin. Despite this, they chose to leave. This might seem illogical, but then again, have you ever seen a heroin addict who could be cured by appealing to reason? Trying to deny an Aes Sedai from touching the True Source is like trying to deny an addict their fix. And so, the male Aes Sedai left the stedding, but in thanks, they gave the Ogier the Ways — a mystical realm where great distances in the real world can be traveled in short time.

But since the Ways were created by men wielding Power fouled by the Dark One, the Ways gradually lost their light. Now it is dark and dangerous in the Ways, and an evil presence known as Machin Shin — the Black Wind — wanders the realm, driving those it touches insane. Why risk everyone’s necks in the Ways? Oh, you’ll love this one:

MOIRAINE: If we bring ta’veren to the Eye of the World, we might — somehow, some way — be able to stop the Dark One from using the Eye of the World for himself.

Gosh, sounds like a good time to ask what the fuck the Eye of the World is, right? Nope!

RAND, MAT, PERRIN, EGWENE, NYNAEVE: Ok, let’s go.

They jot down a supply list, Gill works his ass off, and before dawn the gang heads out — still not asking the one question that matters.


Chapter 42: Remembrance of Dreams

Moiraine can’t break Mat’s curse, but she steadies him long enough for a reunion. The gang shares their horror stories, Moiraine pivots the plan, and Fal Dara becomes the new destination — via the murder maze known as the Ways.

Rand leads the group downstairs to the library, momentarily forgetting that no one has met Loial yet. The shock fades fast, and soon he’s fielding questions about being an Ogier.

Soon Mat joins everyone in the library with Moiraine at his heels. He’s looking a lot better, and definitely has that Ferris Bueller vibe back, with his cheeky grins and smart-ass charm. Mat apologizes for the way he has been acting, and explains that his memory of events has been getting hazier ever since Whitebridge. Everyone is relieved to have the old Mat back, but Moiraine clarifies that she couldn’t take the dagger away without killing him — he’s safe for now, but will need help from the White Tower to be fully healed.

As the group discusses what to do next, the subject of the Eye of the World comes up. The boys tell Moiraine about Ba’alzamon visiting their dreams. Egwene and Perrin share the spearmaiden story they heard from the tuatha’an. Loial talks about a man who came to his stedding at the end of the Aiel War. The message from all of these sources is the same — that the Dark One plans to blind the Eye of the World.

At last! We’re almost done with this goddamn book, and we still don’t know what the fuck the Eye of the World is. Certainly, Mr. Jordan is about to tell us, right?

ROBERT JORDAN: Sorry, fuckers!

Nope, Moiraine is not going to tell us what the Eye of the World is or why it is so important. She says this news changes everything, but nobody demands to know why! Unbelievable. They simply accept it when she says that they must skip Tar Valon and head to Fal Dara instead, where the Eye of the World supposedly waits.

But they can’t simply hit the road in the morning. With dark forces amassing outside Caemlyn, they’ll be overwhelmed by Fades and Trollocs the moment they try to leave. Lucky for them, they’ve got an Ogier, so Moiraine proposes leaving via the Ways. Loial ends the chapter by protesting the idea, saying they’ll all die if they enter the Ways.

Hey Moiraine, I’m going to send you a book to read — it’s called Start With Why by Simon Sinek. He writes books about leadership, and it seems like you could use a few pointers.


Chapter 41: Old Friends and New Threats

Rand returns to The Queen’s Man and tells Master Gill and Loial all about his adventure. They’re interrupted when the Whitecloaks arrive looking for Perrin and Egwene, but Master Gill gets rid of them. A serving maid announces Moiraine’s arrival, and the gang finally reunites — just in time for Mat to fully commit to being demonically possessed. Let the exorcism begin.

Rand hurries back to The Queen’s Man and finds Master Gill playing stones with Loial.

RAND: Master Gill, you won’t believe where I’ve been. I accidentally trespassed on palace grounds, and I ended up meeting Queen Morgase and her children! Elaida was there, too.

MASTER GILL: Holy shit, boy. I told you to stay away from that harpy, not go say hello. You’ve got to get the fuck out of here.

LOIAL: Can I come with you?

RAND: Dude, I already told you no.

LOIAL: Pleeeeeease?

RAND: Ok, fine!

SERVING MAID: Master Gill, there are Whitecloaks in the common room.

MASTER GILL: Fuck my life.

Rand peeks into the common room after Master Gill. The Whitecloaks are hunting a Darkfriend boy from the Two Rivers. Someone needs to tell this guy to take a fucking number. Gill doesn’t blink — with his own guards at his back, he lays into the Whitecloaks and tells them to piss off.

Gill barely catches his breath before the serving girl reappears — now with news of a lady in the kitchen asking for Rand and Mat by name. Figuring it can only mean one thing, Rand rushes into the kitchen and is reunited with Moiraine, Lan, Nynaeve, Egwene, and Perrin.

Everyone heads upstairs ahead of Moiraine to see Mat, who is now operating in full Exorcist mode, rasping out utterances that Beetlejuice would be proud of. It’s all ‘Pretty Nynaeve,’ ‘Pretty Egwene,’ and ‘My, my, Perrin—your eyes have changed.’ But let’s be real — if Jordan weren’t running this novel like it’s a family-friendly theme park, Mat’s comments would have made HBO blush.

Moiraine instantly senses the evil energy when she comes into the room and orders everyone to stand away from Mat. She touches Mat’s knee, and he lashes out with the ruby handled dagger, coming within inches of Moiraine’s face — before Lan snags his wrist mid-swing. Moiraine explains that the dagger is why the Darkfriends had such an easy time finding Rand and Mat on their journey to Caemlyn. Lan adds that it’s why Trollocs are massed outside — either waiting to pounce when they leave or burn Caemlyn to the ground if they stay.

For the time being, Moiraine whips out her angreal and tells everyone to clear out — because the exorcism is about to begin.


Chapter 40: The Web Tightens

That voice belonged to Elayne Trakand, Daughter-Heir of Andor. Her brother, Gawyn, is there with her. After Elayne bandages Rand’s head injury, their half-brother Galad shows up to shit all over their fun. Hearing of the stranger in the palace grounds, Queen Morgase demands to see all three of them. Elaida is at the Queen’s side, eager to tell everyone what a shifty character Rand is. Fortunately for him, Morgase believes his story and allows him to leave the palace grounds.

Elayne Trakand

The book is pretty clear about Elayne’s appearance.

The voice that startled Rand off of the wall belongs to Elayne Trakand, Daughter-Heir to the throne of Andor. Yep, we’re in chapter 40 of 53 — seems like the perfect time to introduce a new major character, if your name happens to be Robert Jordan. Elayne’s mother has ordered her to stay away from the Logain business, but curiosity wins, so she dragged her brother Gawyn out of the palace for an adventure.

Arnold J. Rimmer

Galad’s role model.

Elayne bandages Rand’s bleeding head. Following introductions, Rand realizes he’s in deep shit. Not only has he entered the palace grounds without permission, but he is also in the company of the royal children. At this moment, Galad — Elayne and Gawyn’s half-brother — discovers them. We’re told that Galad is a very just person who never lies and always does what’s right. But he comes off more as a pedantic, snide, self-serving weasel who enjoys ruining everyone else’s day just because he is so pathetically unlikable that nobody wants to be around him — in other words, Galad makes a first impression that is identical to Arnold J. Rimmer from Red Dwarf. And frankly, Rimmer might be more fun at parties.

Thanks to Galad, Elayne, Gawyn, and Rand are marched into the palace to stand before Queen Morgase. Elaida is there too, and she is knitting as though she is a harmless spinster sliding into her golden years. Bitch, let me tell you something: you aren’t fooling anybody. My cat likes to make a show of innocence as well, but that doesn’t stop her from scratching the couch, puking on the rug, and knocking shit off the counter the very next chance she gets.

When the conversation turns to Rand, Elayne argues that interacting directly with citizens of Andor is the best way to come to know the Queen’s subjects. Elaida takes a level of interest in Rand that makes him understandably uncomfortable. She talks about how unusual his physical attributes are for a Two Rivers native, and she discovers that the sword at his waist carries the heron mark. At this, the entire room tenses up. The heronmark sword is the sign of a master swordsman. Nobody in the room is ready to believe it really belongs to Rand until Gareth Bryne, the Captain-General of the Queen’s Guard, pronounces that it fits him so well that it must belong to him.

We then learn that Elaida has the gift of Foretelling. Oh, Elaida — that’s a difficult gift to have, you know. Remember what happened to Gitara in Chapter 2: A Wish Fulfilled from New Spring? Yeah, that was the one where the Amyrlin Seat’s Keeper of the Chronicles felt the rebirth of the Dragon, warned everyone about it, and promptly dropped dead. Fortunately for Elaida, she seems to have a better handle on the talent. She spews a bunch of doom-and-gloom about darkness swallowing the world. Then she cranks up the creep-factor, leaning in close to Rand and whispering to him alone that big changes are coming to the world, and he is the center of it all.

Elaida and Gareth suggest that Morgase throw Rand in jail for a while, but Morgase disagrees. She says that suspicion is smothering Andor, and she won’t be a part of it. Rand swears an oath that falling into the palace grounds wasn’t part of some plot, and she sends him on his way. Elayne and Gawyn come along to the gate. Elayne tells him he’s handsome. Gawyn says he looks like an Aielman. Congratulations, Rand — that makes you exotic eye candy.


Chapter 39: Weaving of the Web

Rand heads out into the city to see the false Dragon, Logain. He gets chased by a beggar and ends up viewing the procession from the top of a wall. Startled by a girl’s voice, Rand falls and is knocked unconscious.

Rand is excited about seeing the false Dragon, Logain, but Mat refuses to even get out of bed. Undeterred, Rand heads down to the common room. Master Gill tells him that a man who looks like a beggar has been asking around for Rand and his friends by name.

Out in town, Rand allows himself to be swept along with the crowd toward a place where Logain will be brought before the Queen. Just when he is situated, the beggar materializes out of the crowd. Rand abandons his spot and flees. Nevertheless, he is still determined to catch a glimpse of Logain, so he climbs a wall that marks the boundary between the inner city and the palace grounds. It works — until a girl’s voice startles him. He tumbles off the wall, smacks his head, and blacks out.

Let’s recap. So far, Rand’s big adventure in Caemlyn consists of ditching Mat, getting stalked by a homeless guy, and knocking himself out cold. Honestly, at this point, Bela has a stronger résumé for the Dragon Reborn gig.


Chapter 38: Rescue

Lan rescues Egwene and Perrin while Nynaeve and Moiraine make a distraction, and the group continues on toward Caemlyn.

In this gripping installment, Moiraine’s rescue plan goes off exactly as planned. Lan rescues Egwene and Perrin, Moiraine channels a bunch of lightning strikes, and the Whitecloaks’ horses escape thanks to Nynaeve’s handiwork. Not a single complication occurs. Zero tension, zero setbacks. Hollywood, take notes.

If I had to pick the most interesting thing about this chapter, it would be the part where Nynaeve rubs an ointment on the bruises Perrin suffered from the Whitecloaks, and they instantly fade away. In moments. Oh, Nynaeve, don’t worry — I’m sure you just really know your herbology, and this had absolutely nothing to do with the One Power. Go ahead and keep criticizing Moiraine — but pretty soon you’re going to have to either sear yourself out on purpose, or admit that she might not be the villain.

Nynaeve and Moiraine also notice that Perrin’s eyes have changed to a golden color. Lan and Moiraine seem to know something about this. In fact, Lan reveals that he is old acquaintances with Elyas. Just when it seems like we’re going to get some explanation about where this whole wolf thing came from, Moiraine becomes predictably reticent and starts mumbling about “the Wheel weaves as the Wheel wills.” Translation: “Shut up and stop asking questions!” Thanks a lot for the info dump, Moiraine. God forbid we get a straight answer before book five. You just nuked a Whitecloak camp — why don’t you go check off “smite zealots” on your to-do list and stop blue-balling us with cryptic nonsense?


Chapter 37: The Long Chase

Moiraine, Lan, and Nynaeve find the Whitecloak encampment and plunge it into chaos and confusion.

We grudgingly turn back to Moiraine, Lan, and Nynaeve. Moiraine loses the AirTag trail at one point, then shortly thereafter regains it. Clearly, this runs parallel to Chapter 30: Children of Shadow where Perrin and Egwene managed to get their dumb asses captured by the Whitecloaks.

When they near the Whitecloak encampment, Moiraine makes a plan. Nynaeve will sneak over to where the camp’s horses are tied up and cut the picket line most of the way through. Moiraine will create a distraction, and Lan will use confusion to mount a rescue.

It’s a refreshing change to see Nynaeve do something other than yank her braid and berate everyone else for daring to even breathe. She steals over to the horses and accomplishes her task like a boss. She also happens to locate Bela (our savior?) just before lightning starts striking the ground near the camp. In the same moment, wolves launch their attack.

Mayhem erupts, and Moiraine itches to check off another box on her to-do list.


Chapter 36: Web of the Pattern

Master Gill gives Rand and Mat a meal before they head up to their room. Cursed people are boring to hang around with, so Rand explores the inn on his own and meets an Ogier named Loial.

Over a scant meal, Rand tells Master Gill a version of how he and Mat came to be in Caemlyn. He doesn’t delve into the parts about the Trollocs and the Fades so much, and just says that some really bad dudes are after them, and that they need to regroup with Moiraine and the rest of their companions so they can seek protection in Tar Valon. Mat is content to sit there and interject pessimistic bullshit into the conversation. Innkeeper duties pull Master Gill away, so the boys finish their meal and are shown to their room. Mat just wants to lie in bed and talk sweetly with his precious dagger, so Rand explores the inn on his own.

The Queen’s Man has a feature that Rand has never seen before — an extensive library, filled with books. It is also filled with a new character. We are in chapter 36, which is roughly 2/3 of the way through the book. The fact that we are still introducing new major characters is testament to the series’ structure and pace. This is a long journey, and as if to prove that we’ve barely even made it out of the opening credits, this chapter introduces us to Loial. As an Ogier, he is massive in size and stature, and his life parallels the Wheel of Time series — it’s really fucking long, and most of it still lies ahead. He tells Rand that he’s “only 90 years old” and technically didn’t have permission from his elders to leave his stedding and go traveling.

A few minutes of conversation with Loial makes it clear that he is very much a student of history. He spent years reading about the world, and seems to know more about the history of Andor than most of its residents do. He asks Rand what brings him so far from home, and Rand finds himself telling Loial everything. The story makes Loial realize Rand and companions are ta’veren — highly influential people who cause major changes in the Pattern. Loial asks to come with them. Rand turns him down because apparently adding a giant to the group would be too obvious. Sure, Rand. It’s the giant that’ll blow your cover—not the best friend with a cursed dagger, the other friend with wolf eyes, the Aes Sedai and her Warder, or your own little habit of randomly channeling the One Power.


Chapter 35: Caemlyn

Rand and Mat head to The Queen’s Man, per Thom’s instructions. Master Gill, the innkeeper, allows them to stay at the inn while they look for their missing companions.

Let’s stick with Rand and Mat this chapter. Screw everyone else. Almen drops them off as soon as they roll into Caemlyn. Mat is acting way more paranoid and negative than you would expect from a happy-go-lucky goofball, but I guess that’s what carrying around a cursed dagger will do to you. Rand insists that they follow Thom’s parting instructions and seek out an inn called The Queen’s Man.

The Court Jester (1955) Movie PosterThe innkeeper — Master Gill —  turns out to be an old friend of Thom’s. According to him, Thom used to be employed by the Queen’s court right there in Caemlyn. Gill says he was Courtbard, but let’s call things what they are — he was the court jester, and now Danny Kaye is beginning to make a solid (if unconvincing) case for replacing Patrick Stewart for the role of Thom Merrilin. Rand and Mat tell Master Gill that Thom is dead, but Gill says he’ll believe that when he sees a corpse.

Evidently, Thom’s name still carries weight — enough for a meal, a bed, and the rare luxury of not sleeping in a hayloft — so they head to the common room for some food.


Chapter 34: The Last Village

Rand and Mat narrowly avoid another Fade and hitch a ride that finally gets them to Caemlyn.

How many chapters have we been stuck with Rand and Mat now? Four in a row. What happened with Perrin and Egwene after they fell into the clutches of the Whitecloaks? Where the hell is Moiraine and company?

ROBERT JORDAN: Who the fuck cares? They aren’t the Dragon Reborn. Let’s continue on with the Rand (and Mat, I guess) show!

Waking up in a haystack one day after almost being murdered in the stables, Rand and Mat see that droves of people are headed to catch a glimpse of Logain. Walking the entire day, dusk finds them in the last town before Caemlyn. Outside the village inn, two men stand conversing in shadows. Rand realizes with a start that one of them is actually a Fade.

The Fade departs, and we learn that the man (and Darkfriend) he was speaking with is the innkeeper, Raimun Holdwin. An elderly man who is preparing his cart nearby, Almen Bunt, comments that Raimun keeps strange friends. Raimun says that his friend is a rich merchant whose heron-mark sword was stolen by two young Darkfriends. Almen doesn’t give him much credit, and is more focused on preparing for a journey through the night into Caemlyn.

When Raimun disappears inside, Rand approaches Almen and asks for a ride. Almen yammers the whole way there. He rambles about Andoran royalty — how the Daughter-Heir, Elayne, will go to study at the White Tower, while her brother Gawyn will train with the Warders. We learn that Moiraine’s half-brother, Taringail Damodred, is Elayne and Gawyn’s father. Also, Elaida is no longer at the White Tower, and is serving as Queen Morgase’s advisor.

Rand soon grows tired of listening to this huge lore dump, and nods off to sleep. He wakes up to Caemlyn’s walls rising in the dawn light — an actual city, after four chapters of barns, hedgerows, and haystacks. About damn time. If the next chapter starts in a stable, I’m calling the Dark One myself.


Chapter 33: The Dark Waits

Rand and Mat deal with the aftereffects of their encounter with Gode, and escape from a couple more Darkfriends as they make their way closer to Caemlyn.

In Chapter 21: Listen to the Wind, Moiraine told Nynaeve about how wilders — women who learn to channel on their own — typically experience a miraculous resolution to a life or death situation, which is quickly followed by a sudden-onset fever that clears up quickly. Hmm… hey Rand, how you doing, buddy?

Immediately after Four Kings, it isn’t Rand who needs help, but rather Mat. Apparently Mat was staring directly at the window when it blew apart, leaving him half-blind. Unfortunately, the boys don’t have the option to hang around Four Kings and find an optometrist, so Rand leads Mat by the hand all the way to the next town.

A meal and a night’s rest at the local inn finds them in considerably better shape. Mat’s vision is much improved, and Rand’s spirits are on the mend. They decide to sit down for a nice breakfast before heading out. Sounds like the perfect time for a Darkfriend to waltz in and take a shit all over everything! Paitr strolls into the common room and approaches Rand and Mat with all the timidity of a rookie Jehovah’s Witness recruit who is still learning to evangelize. Paitr’s approach is actually kind of funny — instead of making a murderous attempt on their lives, he says he “just wants to talk,” stammering out an unconvincing spiel about how the Great Lord of the Dark is too powerful, and how they’ll never get away. Rand gives him a satisfying pop in the nose, and they hurry out of town.

At the next town, the inn is packed with people who are headed for Caemlyn to see Logain. Mat’s vision is improved enough that their plan is to perform again in exchange for room and board, but during their interview with the innkeeper, Rand suddenly comes down with that fever we’ve been waiting for. New plan! Mat convinces the innkeeper to give them some food and let them sleep in the stables in exchange for Rand not stumbling into his common room and coughing all over the place. Mat manages to get Rand comfortable in the stable, and they catch a little sleep. But soon, a well-dressed woman comes into the stable under the pretense of checking on her horse. Surprise! She’s another Darkfriend, and she tries to murder them.

Jesus. Gode, Paitr, the woman in the stables. Just how many people are pledging their eternal souls to the Great Lord of the Dark? It almost seems like they have enough recruits to hold a Darkfriend convention and start handing out yard signs.


Chapter 32: Four Kings in Shadow

Four Kings is a ghetto. Rand and Mat must perform at an inn run by a creepy man who means to rob them, or worse. They are cornered by a Darkfriend who demands they submit to the Dark One, and Rand channels lightning to help them escape.

This chapter begins by describing what a decrepit shithole Four Kings is. The houses are drab and weathered, the ground rutted from all the wagons traffic. And the children are playing in the ruts, for heaven’s sake. Men are *gasp* yelling lewd comments at women! It is difficult to read the description of the town and not think of that scene in Eurotrip where the group finds itself in Eastern Europe.

Despite their misgivings about the town, Rand and Mat spot thunderclouds rolling in and they don’t want to get caught in the rain. All but one inn has already hired entertainment, and the one place that hasn’t — The Dancing Cartman — gives off a vibe that makes the Bates Motel seem inviting by comparison. The proprietor, Saml Hake, is a vile man who treats his wait staff like shit. He retains the services of two bouncers, as though he expects trouble. If this guy lived in modern-day Earth, he’d be the type that walks around with a pistol tucked into the waistband of his pants. Saml grudgingly agrees to feed them and give them a place to sleep in exchange for filling his common room.

Before long, the common room is indeed packed, and the rain comes down in sheets. As they perform, Rand catches Saml eyeing his sword and Thom’s flute covetously, and he warns Mat that Saml is going to try to rob them. He also spots a well-dressed man in the crowd who keeps flashing a creepy “I just might be a Darkfriend” smile in their direction. During their meal break, Rand learns that this man is Howal Gode, a merchant from Whitebridge.

The hour grows late, and eventually the common room empties, with Gode being the last man to disappear upstairs to his room. Hake and his goons take Rand and Mat to their accommodations for the night. When they leave, Rand wedges the door shut. They try to escape through the window, but find metal bars on the outside. Someone tries to open the door — it’s Gode, and he has men with him in the hallway and outside of the window. He makes no attempt to hide the fact that he serves the Dark One, and demands they do the same.

Gode’s men start hammering on the door and it is clear that there is no escape. Suddenly, lightning strikes the metal bars on the window and obliterates most of the wall. With a thunderstorm raging, the obvious conclusion is pure luck. Sure, lightning just happened to hit the exact set of bars on the window Rand was staring at while screaming inside his head. Total coincidence. Ignoring the downpour, the boys bolt into the night.


Chapter 31: Play for Your Supper

It’s just Rand, Mat, and a long dusty road. Can anyone say “buddy road trip?” Along the way, they trade labor and performance art for food and lodging.

Rand and Mat walk east toward Caemlyn, avoiding strangers whenever possible. They don’t have much money left, so Rand once again brings up the idea of selling the ruby dagger, and Mat flips out. Sell his precious? Outrageous! Maybe we should start with something less drastic, like cutting off an arm.

With money tight, the boys often trade farm labor for food and lodging. Rand hates wasting daylight working when they could be covering ground. Plus a lot of the homesteaders are distrustful of strangers, and they often find themselves chased away like vermin. But at one friendly farm — Master Grinwell’s — they actually get invited inside for a meal with his family. Mat juggles for them and Rand plays Thom’s flute. Master Grinwell is absolutely taken by the entertainment, and suggests that men would pay good money to see them perform. He starts getting ideas about Rand and Mat staying for another day, but Mistress Grinwell has noticed her teenage daughter Else eyeing Rand like he’s the last sausage at breakfast and decides this flute-playing thing has gone far enough.

From then on, they spend their nights in relative comfort by performing at inns in exchange for room and board. Since they don’t need daylight to perform, it also maximizes their travel time. All in all, the journey is smooth. But then they reach Four Kings.


Chapter 30: Children of Shadow

Well, turns out a stedding ain’t so safe after all. Not from religious zealotry, at any rate. The Children of the Light march into the area, taking Elyas, Perrin, and Egwene by surprise. Elyas tells them to run, and hightails it out of there. Despite the wolves’ attacks and Perrin taking out two of the Children with his axe, Perrin and Egwene are captured.

Elyas and Perrin exchange some words away from the campfire by the stedding’s pond. When Elyas asks Perrin about Egwene, Perrin admits he loves her. He even says that it’s not brotherly love, and makes it clear that if Rand weren’t in the picture, he’d be making his move. Theory confirmed!

Suddenly, both men receive a telepathic warning from the wolves. They run back to douse the fire, and Elyas tells them to run before vanishing into the night. Despite it being pitch black, Perrin effortlessly finds a hiding spot amidst the ruins of the Artur Hawkwing statue. That’s right — in addition to telepathically communicating with wolves, Perrin now has superhero-grade night vision. These abilities are cool and all, but there had better be some kind of lore and backstory behind them. Like why Perrin, and where do these powers come from? I’m waiting for answers, Mr. Jordan.

Perrin probably could have chosen a better hiding spot if it had been just him and Egwene — but hiding a horse tends to limit your options, and they can’t abandon Bela, right? What if she’s the Dragon Reborn? Perrin and Egwene wait, watching helplessly as men with torches sweep the camp in formation until they are discovered. The soldiers demand that they come out and drop their weapons. Hopper chooses this moment to tear out the throat of one of the mounted men, but a spear skewers and pins him to the ground. For half a heartbeat, Perrin freezes. Then rage takes him, and he charges with an axe in his hands — until a blow from the side sends him sprawling into darkness.

***

Perrin regains consciousness in a Whitecloak tent. He and Egwene are both securely bound, hand and foot. Geofram Bornhald greets them. He is the Lord Captain of the Children, and father to Dain Bornhald, whom we met in Baerlon. Also present is Jaret Byar, a goon who has a penchant for committing acts of violence first and asking questions never. When he is questioned, Perrin makes up a version of the truth that leaves out their involvement with shadowspawn and Aes Sedai. Bornhald doesn’t buy it and decides to keep the Emond’s Fielders captive. The good news? The Children are marching toward Caemlyn. The bad news? Perrin killed two Children — and the gallows are waiting.


Chapter 29: Eyes Without Pity

Elyas, Perrin, and Egwene run away from deadly flocks of ravens. They find a place of peace and safety called a stedding — a place so peaceful even the shadowspawn won’t enter. Elyas tells them about the final days of Artur Hawkwing’s empire.

Elyas guides Perrin and Egwene through rolling hills of wilderness. They move at a pace balanced between urgency and paranoia. Elyas insists on staying below the ridge line whenever possible, and just when it seems like he’s jumping at shadows, a flock of ravens bursts out of a copse of trees. “Oh,” you might say. “A flock of ravens, well that’s not so bad. They’re the eyes and ears of the Dark One and all, but they’re just birds, right?” Then a fox bursts out of the treeline, running as fast as possible, and is swarmed by the ravens until nothing is left but a bloody pulp. Alrighty then, make that a murderous swarm of ravens. Perhaps this situation has become a tad more worrying.

They make haste for some time before they abruptly sense a change. Elyas announces that they have reached a stedding, a place of safety where shadowspawn will not go. It is a place of peace where even Aes Sedai are cut off from the True Source.

In the middle of the stedding is the ruined remains of a statue of Artur Hawkwing. Elyas turns out to be quite the history buff. He tells Perrin and Egwene about how during the final days of his reign, Hawkwing planned to build a capital right here in the stedding, in the center of the continent; but on the day the statue was completed, Hawkwing died. His relatives squabbled amongst themselves, and the land fractured in the War of the Hundred Years. Turns out unifying a continent is easier than keeping your kids from turning it into a generational civil war. Most of his descendants perished, but some voyaged across the Aryth Ocean. I believe this will be relevant later when the Seanchan enter the picture.


Chapter 28: Footprints in Air

Nynaeve is angry — at Moiraine for being right all the time, and at Lan for making her feel all funny inside. In Whitebridge, they learn that Thom likely went downriver, and two of the boys went east toward Caemlyn.

Meanwhile, Nynaeve is still stuck traveling with two of her least favorite people in the world. Moiraine and Lan effortlessly push her buttons. Not that it’s hard to push Nynaeve’s buttons — she’s got so many hair triggers that any stray breeze could easily become the target of her vexation. Nynaeve is one of those characters who began the story thinking she had the entire world figured out, so she’s understandably upset when she realizes that she’s out of her depth — and clings to the idea that she must be right, while everyone else has lost their heads.

I think Nynaeve is also angry with herself for being attracted to Lan. It’s pretty inconvenient falling for a man who is magically tethered to another woman. Unless you’re into that sort of thing, which is not the vibe I get from our sheltered Wisdom from Emond’s Field. This guy has been traveling with Moiraine for the last twenty years, and anyone who has read New Spring is well aware that Lan has a thing for Cairhienan women, so let’s not pretend nothing intimate has happened between them. That’s got to add up to a tangled mess of attraction, jealousy, and suppressed gag reflex… unless she’s into that sort of thing. We’ll have to read on to see.

The chapter finds our heroes reaching the White Bridge. Moiraine keeps waving her hands around, searching for traces of the lost AirTags. By the time they are halfway across the bridge, the acrid scent of burned wood makes it clear that something explosive has recently gone down. Several buildings in the town square have been burned to the ground. Moiraine speaks with the townspeople and Nynaeve senses genuine concern and empathy from the Aes Sedai. But we know what’s really bothering Moiraine. That was her destruction to cause, and someone else already checked it off the list!

According to townspeople, a gleeman was chased out of town by a mob of people, and he fled downriver on a boat. That explains where Thom went — I’m guessing his battle with the Fade somehow caused the destruction, and he became the scapegoat. After a meal in the Wayfarer’s Rest, Moiraine believes the two boys who were with Thom must have continued toward Caemlyn. Wasting no time, they get back on the road.


Chapter 27: Shelter From the Storm

Perrin has another Ba’alzamon dream, so he, Elyas, and Egwene part company with the Tuatha’an.

Over in gypsy-land, Perrin finds that the Tuatha’an make such slow progress that it’s a wonder they ever get anywhere. It makes him nervous because he knows that dark forces are in pursuit. The last thing he wants is to bring harm to such a peaceful people.

The women in the camp take to performing a suggestive dance in front of Perrin. They are amused that it makes his face turn red, so more and more of them join in as the days go on. By day three, it’s less of a dance and more of a coordinated campaign to see if they can get Perrin to faint. Unfortunately, Perrin being Perrin, he does nothing about it. We don’t get to hear about which woman he thinks is most attractive. He doesn’t strike up a conversation with any of them. If this chapter is truly reflecting Perrin’s experience, then all he does is sit, blush, and silently watch the women dance like a boy who wandered into the wrong tavern. If it weren’t for the blushing, I would be ready to question if he’s even attracted to women at all. Does this mean he is introverted and shy to a fault?

Or maybe…

I’m starting to wonder if Perrin is secretly attracted to Egwene. From the start of the book, it was always a forgone notion that Rand and Egwene were crushing on each other. But Min kind of poured water on that fire, didn’t she? Maybe Perrin harbors secret feelings for Egwene that he has pushed to the side out of respect for Rand. But if Egwene is going to run off with some pacifist Tinker freak? Just look at how Perrin goes out of his way to shit all over the good time Egwene is having with Aram. Either he’s jealous that Egwene is way more comfortable with the opposite sex than he is, or he’s upset that she has her sights set on another man.

One night when Perrin has a Ba’alzamon dream, Elyas announces that it is time for them to strike out on their own, and they part ways with Raen’s group.


Chapter 26: Whitebridge

The Spray reaches Whitebridge. Thom, Rand and Mat search for their lost companions, and learn that their enemies have already been here asking about them. When they attempt to leave the city, a Fade appears and Thom bravely charges it to give Rand and Mat the chance to escape.

The Spray pulls into Whitebridge. The city’s eponymous structure is so impossibly perfect it could only be a relic from the Age of Legends. Captain Domon hands payment to Thom as thanks for boosting crew morale during the trip and tries to convince him to stay on until Illian. It’s a tempting offer, but Thom declines, explaining that they must seek out the people they came to Whitebridge to meet.

Thom leads Rand and Mat to a square in the middle of town where the bridge came down onto the land. At an inn called the Wayfarer’s Rest, they find a secluded part of the common room and chat with the innkeeper. They learn that Logain has been captured and is being paraded back to Tar Valon. They also learn that another hunt for the Horn of Valere is being arranged in Illian.

Thom tries to be circumspect, but the moment he describes their missing companions, the innkeeper’s cordiality turns icy, and he asks them to leave. Both a “weaselly fellow” and a man in a black hooded cloak had already come through asking after the same people, plus a gleeman with white hair. If these were Padan Fain and a Fade, then it’s no wonder that the innkeeper wants nothing more to do with them.

To make matters worse, they hear Gelb in another part of the common room loudly insisting that Thom, Rand, and Mat are Darkfriends. They crawl through a window in to an alley to escape the inn without Gelb noticing them, and Thom takes a brief detour to buy a plain brown cloak. If the Fade is looking for a gleeman, bundling up his colorful cloak and instruments seems to be the most prudent course of action. Unfortunately, this turns out to be too little too late. Scarcely have the three stepped into the square when a Fade appears. People scatter, realizing that something is about to happen. Thom hands Rand and Mat his gleeman cloak bundle and prepares for his very own Gandalf-the-Gray moment — no bridge to stand on, just a grim square and a big bad guy in broad daylight. He tells Rand and Mat to run, then charges the Fade, tumbling to the ground with it in a heap.


Chapter 25: The Traveling People

Elyas, Perrin, and Egwene meet the Tuatha’an. At their camp, they learn about the culture and hear a story about a dire warning from an Aiel spear maiden about the Eye of the World.

Chapter 25 begins by talking about Bela. Bela! This is feeding right into my conspiracy theories, Mr. Jordan. There was no real need to mention the horse by name, was there? Unless, of course, she is a key character. Or perhaps the Dragon Reborn!? </conspiracy theory>

Egwene tries to pester Elyas into riding the Dragon Reborn Bela, but he tells her in no uncertain terms to piss off — simultaneously putting her in her place and emasculating Perrin. Soon they come upon a large copse of trees where three big dogs threaten them, but Elyas does one of his “dog whisperer” tricks to calm them. He says it means that Tuatha’an are here, clarifying that they are also known as the “Traveling People” or “Tinkers.”

Ah, Tinkers! Now Egwene knows what Elyas is talking about. He ought to have used the proper slurs to begin with. Lucky for everyone involved, it just so happens that these two weeks away from Emond’s Field have turned Egwene into a bona fide expert on the cultures and people of the world. She counsels moving on and avoiding contact, because as everyone knows, Tinkers are raging kleptomaniacs. Hey, Egwene, is there any way you could manage to be more of a provincial bigot? You sound like a small-town girl from Iowa warning that Nigerians are all internet scammers, and that you’d better hold your breath around Indians because they smell like curry.

Elyas gently lets Egwene know that her preconceptions are wrong. He might not like the Tuatha’an, but they aren’t thieves, and they do need a place to camp for the night. Heading into the copse, Perrin and Egwene meet Raen, the leader. It’s clear that Elyas has a history with him and his wife, Ila, but we don’t learn anything about it. Their grandson, Aram, makes an appearance. When he’s not busy hitting on Egwene, Aram explains the Way of the Leaf — the pacifist philosophy his people follow. I guess that makes them a cross between Jains and gypsies?

After Aram whisks Egwene away to have dinner with his parents — whoa, this relationship is moving really fast! — Raen tells a story about a band of Tuatha’an who were crossing the Aiel Waste. They came upon a dying spear maiden who had evidently gone hunting Trollocs in the Blight and was barely alive to tell of it. She spoke of the Dark One meaning to blind the Eye of the World.


Chapter 24: Flight Down the Arinelle

Rand, Mat and Thom continue down the Arinelle on the Spray. Gelb is on everyone’s shit list, Rand has another moment of reckless courage, Mat covets his preeeecious dagger, and Thom tries to keep it all from coming apart at the seams.

M. C. Escher's Relativity

The Ways aren’t quite like this. But they’re close enough to make you feel like you need Dramamine.

Rand begins the chapter in tel’aran’rhiod, the world of dreams. Or is he somewhere else entirely? Because it sounds pretty similar to the Ways if you ask me, where “what seemed far away might be reached by turning a corner” and “what appeared close could be out of reach altogether.” From that surreal space, suddenly he is in a maze of thorny hedges and passages paved with human skulls. He pricks his finger and Ba’alzamon chases him through the dream like a demented clown from a low budget horror movie. When he wakes up, he still has the cut on his finger. Dun dun dun!

Back in the world of the wakeful, Gelb is in the dog house. Everyone on the ship knows that he was sleeping through his watch, and the least offensive treatment he receives is a fellow crewman spitting on his foot and telling him to get lost. Between the name and the lack of brain cells, I’m starting to wonder if Gelb and Caniedrin from New Spring share a bloodline. I don’t recall what role Gelb ultimately plays in The Eye of the World, but if the Caniedrin parallel holds, he’s going to end up being a Darkfriend, trying to murder Rand, betraying Rand out of spite, or some combination of these.

A picture of Rand up in the mast of a ship.

I’m the king of the world! Also possibly going insane!

Rand, meanwhile, is still struggling with his latent channeling abilities without even knowing it. He climbs to the top of the mast, then sits there and laughs maniacally as he feels the sway of the ship and does his best Leonardo DeCaprio impression. Thom has to climb up to let him know that everyone is staring at him like he’s insane, so he slides down to the deck, acting like it was all part of being a gleeman’s apprentice.

This is when we get our first glimpse at the ruby-studded dagger. Mat has been withdrawn, and his obsession with treasure has reached cartoonish levels — even for him. He confesses that he took the dagger from Shadar Logoth, but insists that it doesn’t count because Mordeth didn’t give it to him. For fuck’s sake, Mat. What do you think Shadar Logoth is — a bureaucracy? Evil doesn’t operate on technicalities! This is like saying you can’t get food poisoning from a buffet if you weren’t charged for the plate. Rand promises not to tell anyone about the dagger, and the journey continues.


Chapter 23: Wolfbrother

Perrin and Egwene bumble their way through the wilderness. They meet Elyas, a man who can speak with wolves. Elyas tells Perrin that he has the ability as well, and agrees to guide them toward Caemlyn.

This is one of those character-defining chapters. Perrin, you’re up, buddy!

If the trek through the wilderness teaches Perrin and Egwene anything, it’s that they’re shitty hunters. They manage to catch one rabbit, then spend the rest of their time barely subsisting on shoots and tubers. It’s no wonder why — they spend so much time bickering like a married couple that neither of them has time to hunt. Egwene pesters Perrin about taking turns riding Bela, and Perrin pesters Egwene about not trying to channel to start a fire.

One evening, they smell a cookfire. Perrin scouts ahead and meets Elyas, a man who is dressed head to toe in animal skins. He invites Perrin and Egwene to share his food, and hunger makes the decision for them.

When their stomachs are full and darkness falls, Elyas’ “friends” show up. Turns out he doesn’t work well with others, so these friends are of the four-legged lupine variety. With all the trouble Two Rivers folk have had with wolves, you can imagine their terror when four wolves saunter into the camp and casually seat themselves around the fire.

Elyas is as wary of strangers as anyone else, so he asks Perrin and Egwene what brought them out into the middle of nowhere. The fabricated story they deliver lands flat. Elyas knows it’s a load of shit because he can talk to the wolves, and the wolves can essentially read peoples’ minds. Elyas presses them to tell the truth — they might be Darkfriends, after all — and before long they spill everything about what brought them to the wilderness.

Satisfied that Perrin and Egwene aren’t Darkfriends, Elyas introduces them to Dapple, Hopper, Burn, and Wind. He says that Perrin possesses the ability to speak to wolves too. Most of the wolves seem to accept that Elyas wants to help guide them toward Caemlyn, but Burn shows his dissatisfaction by leaving the camp.

 


Chapter 22: A Path Chosen

Perrin finds Egwene, and they decide to head straight to Caemlyn.

This has to be a record short chapter. Some of the other chapters have been nearly four times as long as this one.

Perrin awakes from a fitful night’s rest. He decides to head south toward Whitebridge, but when he stumbles upon horseshoe marks in the dirt, they lead him straight to Egwene.

Somehow, Egwene has managed to get across the river with Bela and all of her supplies. I swear, this chapter alone is enough to spark conspiracy theories about Bela. Like somehow, she’s the main character, the real hero of this book, and everyone else is merely part of the supporting cast. In fact, just how old is Bela, anyway? Was she born on the slopes of Dragonmount?

Their first notion is to head down the Arinelle to Whitebridge, but they figure that is what the shadowspawn will do as well. So instead, they decide to head straight along the hypotenuse toward Caemlyn.


Chapter 21: Listen to the Wind

We have our very first Nynaeve-centric chapter, where she meets up with Moiraine and Lan, then argues with Moiraine as if winning the debate will somehow make their situation less dire. The three decide to travel together, heading south along the Arinelle.

Nynaeve

The dot gave it away.

Nynaeve spends the night nestled in a hollow near the banks of the Arinelle. As it happens, this puts her just a stone’s throw from Moiraine and Lan, so naturally she sneaks up and listens. It sounds like the silver marks Moiraine gave to Rand, Mat and Perrin were the Aes Sedai equivalent of AirTags, so she can sense that one of them made it to the opposite bank while the others went downriver. Of course, since Rand and Mat gave theirs away, they are no longer trackable.

Moiraine is able to sense Nynaeve’s presence, so she gets busted for eavesdropping. Moiraine explains she could do this because Nynaeve can wield the One Power too. Naturally, Nynaeve childishly refuses to believe it, but Moiraine presses on and convinces her that this explains everything mysterious that has happened over the course of her life. Her abilities as a Wisdom to heal injuries and predict the weather didn’t come from “listening to the wind” like everyone had assumed — she was subconsciously reaching out to the True Source. I guess Nynaeve is “growing up” as much as any of the other folks from Emond’s Field. As tempting as it is to blame her for lashing out and pushing this vague, self-righteous crusade where she expects Moiraine to “do something” — the fact that she tears up near the end of the chapter demonstrates that she is as immature as all the other country bumpkins.

Finally, we get lots of hints dropped throughout this chapter about the relationship that will bloom between Nynaeve and Lan. To be honest, I had forgotten about it before starting The Eye of the World, but was reminded when I saw the dot on Nynaeve’s forehead in some fan art. Those two seem to be almost polar opposites — Nynaeve is this seething cauldron of angst and rage, and Lan is cool and calm like the surface of an alpine lake on a windless day. Of course there will be fireworks when these two come together! Thinking back to New Spring where we learned of Lan’s romantic misadventures in Cairhien and the business with his carneira, I wonder what Nynaeve will say when she learns just how many fortresses Lan has stormed.


Chapter 20: Dust on the Wind

In their desperation to flee the shadowspawn and the evil presence of Shadar Logoth, the group becomes fractured. Perrin makes it across the Arinelle River. Rand, Mat, and Thom find passage downriver aboard the Spray. The fate of the other characters remains unknown.

Moving through the haunted city, Lan and Moiraine take the lead and carelessly allow the rest to fall behind. At a yell from Moiraine, the laggards screech to a halt. A thin line of fog crosses their path, growing from a wisp into a tendril, and then thickens into a sinister, smoky vine. Moiraine explains that this is Mashadar, the evil presence that infects Shadar Logoth. She tells them to head east, toward the red star in the sky and the Arinelle River.

Now that they’re separated from anyone who knows what the hell they are doing, the rest of the group — Rand, Mat, Perrin, Thom, Egwene, and Nynaeve — predictably scatters in multiple directions the moment they encounter Trollocs.

Perrin finds Egwene, and they gallop out of the city pursued by Trollocs. Perrin’s mount runs straight off a steep bluff and plunges into the Arinelle. He manages to swim to the other side, but it is unclear what became of Egwene.

Rand quickly finds Mat and Thom. They also make it to the Arinelle, but they find a boat moored there in the night. With Trollocs in pursuit, they have no choice but to toss their belongings into the boat and scramble on board. In his haste, Rand clobbers a sleeping deckhand whose parents hated him enough to name him Gelb. The crew of the boat quickly helps fight off the Trollocs and get the craft moving downriver.

The captain of the Spray is Bayle Domon, who speaks like he just got off the boat from Jamaica. Captain Domon demands payment for passage to Whitebridge and compensation for the Trolloc trouble, so Rand and Mat pony up the silver marks they got from Moiraine. Thom makes some shit up about how they ended up where they did, and in so doing makes Rand and Mat his apprentices.


Chapter 19: Shadow’s Waiting

Mat cajoles Rand and Perrin into slipping away and exploring Shadar Logoth. They meet the evil spirit Mordeth, nearly falling victim to his tricks before escaping back to camp. With Trollocs combing the city, it’s time to move again.

Lan quickly locates a building where the group can take shelter. Moiraine settles down in the corner of a room and consults with Nynaeve about taking an herbal sleep aid. With Lan watching the Wisdom distrustfully, Thom and the boys take the horses into an inner room.

Matthew Broderick as Phillip Gaston in Ladyhawke

This seems like a good time to talk about Mat, because this chapter really cemented my vision of his character. When I first read this book back in 1993, the role of Matrim Cauthon somehow got filled in my mind by Matthew Broderick. This can be attributed partly to Mr. Broderick’s iconic prankster role in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986), but mostly to his turn in Ladyhawke (1985) as Phillipe Gaston. Phillipe is a thief, known as “The Mouse,” who begins the film by escaping from medieval castle dungeons. All the while he mutters things that are both comedic and humble, such as when he squeezed through an impossibly tight hole in some rocks:

PHILLIPE: This is not unlike escaping my mother’s womb. God, what a memory.

Or, later in the film, when weird shit starts happening with his traveling companions:

PHILLIPE: Maybe I’m dreaming. My eyes are open, which means maybe I’m awake dreaming that I’m asleep. Or, or more likely, I’m asleep dreaming that I’m awake wondering if I’m dreaming.

Or the classic:

PHILLIPE: Sir, the truth is, I talk to God all the time, and, no offense, but He never mentioned you.

So many to choose from. The point being that Phillipe, at first glance, is a flippant character who is only capable of causing trouble for himself and others. But he gets swept up in a series of events, and demonstrates that he’s really a rogue with a heart. Sound familiar? I’m looking at you, Matrim Cauthon.

With Lan’s attention focused on Moiraine in the other room, and Thom having gone off to smoke his pipe, Mat is operating in full mischief mode. Actually, it’s Ferris mode, right? Because within moments, he has concocted a plan to sneak out, play hooky from Moiraine and Lan, and explore the city. Does this sound familiar to anyone? Anyone? Anyone? Anyone? Naturally Rand and Perrin are swept along for the ride. Granted, they aren’t cruising around in a Ferrari, and it ain’t the Windy City of Chicago, but the parallel is undeniable once you spot it.

The boys explore a bit. Eventually, when Mat is unable to find any parades to hijack, he suggests they climb one of the nearby spires since it’s as close to the Sears Tower as he’s going to get. Rand and Perrin try to play the voice of reason, noting that it’s nearly sunset, but Mat insists that there is treasure to be found in a ruined city like this. That’s when a funny little man named Mordeth shows up. He says the towers are dangerous, but if it’s treasure they want, Mordeth has already discovered it! He just needs a little help carrying it to his horses — and promises there will be plenty left for the boys to keep.

As if to prove they are tragically gullible and naive, they follow this mystery man down into a dark cellar. Jesus. It’s like watching kids follow a clown into a sewer. If these three were alive in modern-day Earth, they all would have taken candy from a man in a white van and ended up with their pictures on the sides of milk cartons before they were 12 years old. To cut a long story short, Mordeth turns out to be a creepy, evil spirit-thing, and they book it out of the cellar and back to base.

This time, the women in the party are completely justified in telling the boys that they have shit for brains. Mat proves the point when he argues that, since Moiraine said shadowspawn fear entering Shadar Logoth, the logical conclusion is that this ancient, abandoned city must be perfectly safe for them. Fuck no! Mordeth, Moiraine says, was the quintessential Evil Vizier of the city back in the days of Manetheren, and engineered its downfall.

A short while later, Lan returns from scouting and rouses everyone. The Fades are forcing the Trollocs to search Shadar Logoth, so it’s time to move.


Chapter 18: The Caemlyn Road

Trolloc armies close in on the group from both sides, leaving them with no choice but to abandon the Caemlyn Road and head north through the hills. They do battle with a Trolloc army, and escape toward the abandoned city of Shadar Logoth.

Not even two weeks out of Emond’s Field, and Egwene has already forgotten to be grateful that everyone is still fed and alive. She complains about having to eat cheese, then turns to whining about wanting a hot cup of tea. Lan snaps at her and lets her know that the only fire they’ll have on the road will be coming from the charred remains of her corpse if the Trollocs catch up with them.

A hunting horn sounds from the West, and they get moving again. Lan scouts behind and finds at least three Fades coming their way, each commanding an army of 100 Trollocs. Before long, horns sound from the East as well. They’re being pincered from both sides! Since the Taren River lies to the South, the only option remaining is to head north. It’s slow going across the hilly terrain, and soon they crest a hill to find themselves staring at a long line of Trollocs, led by a Fade. Lan tells everyone to stay close and charges the Fade.

The first proper battle of the book has begun! This is where we first see the trademark battle cries in Wheel of Time. During my first read of this book, I was coming straight from having devoured books in the Redwall series, so the battle cries didn’t seem all that strange to me. Your mileage may vary. Lan bellows about the Seven Towers. Rand takes up the cry of “Manetheren! Manetheren!” And Mat? Mat starts yelling a battle cry in a dead language that we have never heard him speak. Setting aside everything that Min said at the Stag and Lion, this is our first glimpse of how there is a lot more to Mat than being a happy-go-lucky prankster.

Lan grapples with the Fade, Moiraine roasts Trollocs with fire weaves, and Rand flails away with his sword. Things are looking bleak, outnumbered as they are, when suddenly the Trollocs all fall screaming to the ground, clawing at their faces. Lan has decapitated the Fade, which apparently decimates the Trollocs under its command as well. Turns out killing the general is a hell of a morale-breaker.

There is no time to celebrate victory. Pressing on, they are soon set upon by three Fades, each with their own Trolloc army. So Moiraine grabs her angreal, channels earth — making the ground ripple beneath their feet — and fire — creating a vast, impenetrable wall of fire.

Moiraine creates a false trail for the army to follow, and they press on. Egwene asks Mat about what he yelled during the battle, and Moiraine translates it, identifying it as an ancient battle cry of Manetheren. She seems pleased that the old blood runs so strongly in their veins — or Mat’s, at least.

At last they arrive at the ruins of a vast city, many times larger than Baerlon. But it is obviously abandoned, and vegetation has overtaken it. Moiraine is not happy about ending up here, but Lan points out that this is a place where even shadowspawn will not tread. Always a good sign when the monsters chasing you would rather not go into the place you’re about to sleep, eh? Welcome to Shadar Logoth.


Chapter 17: Watchers and Hunters

Everyone enjoys a rare moment of jollity, until Rand encounters a Fade and they have to hightail it out of Baerlon.

That evening, nearly everyone in the party is in the common room at the Stag and Lion. Thom is performing, while Rand, Mat, Perrin, Egwene, Moiraine, and even Nynaeve all get swept up in dancing with the other patrons. Their style of dance sounds a lot like line dancing, and it really triggers flashbacks to my elementary school days when square dancing was part of the physical education curriculum. Back then, I hated it for being an entirely too awkward thing to do with my schoolmates — especially the female ones — so I understand the source of Rand’s discomfort when he is briefly partnered with Egwene, Nynaeve and Moiraine. Nevertheless, it seems like they all have a great evening of revelry.

And Lan? Since there is no mention of him dancing, I expect he was standing to the side practicing his “statue” impression and eyeing everyone in the entire room with suspicion.

During all of this, there is a man sitting in the corner whose face is disfigured by a large scar. Both Rand and Mat spot him scowling in their direction during the dances. Lan reports seeing him too, but dismissively says he’s just a spy for the Whitecloaks. At the end of the evening, everyone heads upstairs to sleep and prepare for an early departure, but Rand goes to the kitchen for a glass of milk. On his way back, he encounters a Fade who flees when Lan comes running back downstairs. Uh– if Lan is supposed to be able to sense shadowspawn at a distance, why did he even leave Rand downstairs alone in the first place? Sloppy, Mr. Warder, sloppy.

Since their location is known, leaving immediately is the only option. Back at the Caemlyn Road gate where they entered the city, Lan bribes the guards into opening the gate despite the hour.

DAIN BORNHALD: Well lookie what we have here.

The guards stop opening the gate. Dain Bornhald is one of the Whitecloaks Mat decided to splash with mud, and he has a few fellow Children with him.

BORNHALD: Who but Darkfriends would have cause to leave at such a forsaken hour? If you walk in the Light, you have nothing to hide. And if you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear. Ah, but the Children of the Light can smell the fear. I will take these ruffians to our camp where they may be questioned in the Light.

MOIRAINE: Like hell you will.

To-Do:✅ Emond's Field: Ruined Bel Tine. ✅ Taren Ferry: Doesn't have a ferry anymore! ✅ Stag and Lion: Now they call it Stag and Fryin'.

You better stay the fuck out of Moiraine’s way!

Moiraine fends off Bornhald’s sword attack with her staff. Her entire body appears to grow in size, providing a distraction for her companions to escape through the partially open gate. She even appears to step over the city walls, although it is implied that this was all an illusion. A glow behind them suggests that the Stag and Lion has gone up in flames, no doubt because the proprietor refused to divulge information about them. And so, our intrepid adventurers strike out East, and Moiraine updates her to-do list.

 


Chapter 16: The Wisdom

Yes, Nynaeve really did track them all the way from Emond’s Field to Baerlon. She says she intends to bring Egwene and the boys back, but seems to lack conviction.

MIN: Psst! Hey, Rand!

RAND: Not now, Min.

MIN: Listen. That woman with the braid? She’s part of it.

THOM: Part of what?

MIN: It! There are way more sparks today than yesterday, Rand. Something is about to happen.

PERRIN: Come on, she’s in here.

Entering the private dining room, they see that Nynaeve is, indeed, there. The funny thing about Nynaeve is that even though she can’t be much into her twenties, everyone treats her like an overbearingly strict schoolteacher. None of the men, at least, seems even the least bit comfortable in her presence. And why should they be, with all of the judgment, criticism, mouth-tightening, and braid-tugging?

Moiraine and Nynaeve are seated on opposite sides of the table, practicing the ancient art of staring daggers. With everyone seated, Nynaeve shames Lan’s stealth skills by sharing how she was able to track them all the way to Baerlon. She announces her intention to bring Egwene and the boys back to Emond’s Field. Moiraine asks everyone in the room to leave so she can have a private word with Nynaeve.

When Nynaeve emerges, Lan heads straight back into the room, and Rand finds that everyone else who had been waiting with him has conveniently vanished. But strangely, her usual fiery attitude has calmed for the time being. Nynaeve reveals that back in the room, Moiraine had wanted to know if any of the boys were born outside of Two Rivers — and Rand goes right back to wishing he were a normal boy more fervently than Pinocchio ever did. Not wanting to lie to him, Nynaeve recollects that Tam went adventuring when he was younger, and eventually came back with a red-haired outlander for his wife, and a baby in swaddling clothes.

Still strangely subdued, Nynaeve excuses herself to see to a bath.


Chapter 15: Strangers and Friends

Rand meets Min and talks with her about the things she can see. In the city, Rand encounters a haggard Padan Fain and unsuccessfully tries to come to the Stag and Lion for a meal. Rand meets up with Mat and nearly channels during an encounter with some Whitecloaks. Thom counsels the boys to keep theirs mouths shut about Ba’alzamon and the dreams. Nynaeve is waiting for them in the Stag and Lion.

Rand learns that a bunch of rats have been found at the inn, all with their backs broken, just like in his dream. Downstairs, Thom is performing for the common room. Rand ducks into the kitchen for breakfast and meets Sara, the cook. She says that one of Rand’s friends is still upstairs, not feeling well. Predictably, this turns out to be Perrin, who had the same dream. Unable to convince his friend to get up and see the city, Rand heads down to the stable yard.

This is super close to how I always pictured Min. Full disclosure — I was listening to a ton of Enya when I first read this book. So…

This is where Rand meets Min. The text constantly draws attention to the fact that sports a short haircut and wears men’s clothing, while at the same time emphasizing her feminine features, creating a strong “sexy tomboy” image. Despite not being part of the main cast of characters, Min is interesting as fuck. She explains to Rand that she can see “pieces of the pattern” when she looks at people. For example, she might know that two people with eventually marry despite having only just met.

Thanks to her ability, this conversation has just turned into one massive hint-fest pointing cryptically toward things that are yet to come in the story. She sees shadows and sparks around Rand, Mat, and Perrin when they are together. Despite Rand having a crush on Egwene, Min tells him that they aren’t meant for each other. Lan is pretty boring, with stuff related to Malkier surrounding him. Around Thom is a man (not Thom) juggling fire and the White Tower. Perrin has wolves, a broken crown, and flowering trees. Mat has a red eagle, an eye on a balance scale, a dagger with a ruby, a horn, and a laughing face. Around Rand, she sees a sword that isn’t a sword, a crown of laurel leaves, a beggar’s staff, him pouring water on sand, a bloody hand, a white-hot iron, three women standing over a funeral bier with him on it, a black rock wet with blood, and lightning surrounding him. Sorry for writing all of this shit down, but I cannot tell you how many times during my first read through that I went back to look at the things Min saw, so it makes sense to keep it in a convenient place.

Min tells Rand that they will meet again, strongly implying the two of them will be involved in some capacity. Spooked by the conversation, Rand runs out into the city.

In the crowd, Rand spots the Darkfriend peddler who was in Emond’s Field, Padan Fain.  Cornering Fain in an alley, he sees that the man’s clothes are in tatters.

RAND: Master Fain! It’s me, Rand. From Emond’s Field. We all thought the Trollocs had taken you. We’re staying at the Stag and Lion. Come back with me and we’ll get you cleaned up.

FAIN: That Aes Sedai is with you, isn’t she? Don’t tell her you saw me! Promise me!

RAND: I promise. But please, let me help you.

FAIN: The Stag and Lion, you say?

RAND: Yeah, we’re there until tomorrow.

FAIN: Heh heh. Sucker.

Fain bolts, and Rand runs right into Mat. They decide to head back to the inn to discuss last night’s dream with Perrin. But on the way they cross paths with some Whitecloaks, and Mat, being Mat, cannot resist a prank. He runs off to arrange for an “accident” involving barrels to occur, splashing the Whitecloaks’ pristine garments with mud. Rand can’t help but laugh and this draws their attention. The Whitecloaks accost him, and he acts more cocky than normal. In fact, all throughout this exchange we keep reading about how Rand feels like he has a fever, and is full of energy. It’s not too much of a leap to see that he is most likely preparing to touch the male half of the True Source, saidin. Lamentably, the town watch shows up and diffuses the situation, and the two friends make their way back to the inn.

They encounter Thom along the way and begin telling him about the dream. When they inquire about Ba’alzamon, Thom pulls them aside and admonishes them about speaking a name like that out loud. He recommends the boys do not tell Moiraine about the dream, and they all hurry back to the inn to make sure Perrin keeps his mouth shut.

Perrin meets them at the inn and lets them know that they’ve got a bigger problem now — Nynaeve is in the Stag and Lion.


Chapter 14: The Stag and Lion

At the Stag and Lion, baths are the first order of business, and Lan expresses displeasure with how carelessly the boys speak. After dinner, Ba’alzamon invades Rand’s dream and lets him know that he’s still being pursued.

Lan heads to the common room to gather news. For the rest of the party, baths are the first order of business. Can you imagine how rank these people must be after traveling for over a week without bathing? Books never emphasize this point, but it must be downright vile.

In the bathing room of the Stag and Lion, more than just the bathwater reaches a boil.

BATH ATTENDANT: I heard there are Trollocs in Saldaea…

MAT: Heh. Let me tell you all about Trollocs.

RAND: Shut up, Mat.

THOM: Aye, best be quiet, lad. You always get the stories wrong when you try to tell them.

MAT: What? I was just going to tell him about Emond’s Fi–

PERRIN: Shut up, Mat.

MAT: Look, he brought it up first. I–

Lan bursts into the room and kicks the attendant out, then focuses his rage on Mat.

LAN: Idiot sheepherder. Don’t talk about Trollocs, don’t even think about Trollocs. What part of this do you not understand?

RAND: Gosh, that bath attendant seemed to be worried about something…

PERRIN: I’ll bet it’s the Trollocs.

LAN: God damn it!

Soon the entire contingent is seated in a private dining room, enjoying a meal together. Moiraine proves that she is still human after all by suggesting they stay for two nights in Baerlon. Oh boy — let the country bumpkins run around unsupervised in a big city for a day. Clearly, Moiraine does not realize that this is the fantasy equivalent of feeding a mogwai after midnight. 

That night Rand is back in tel’aran’rhiod, and this time he has a proper meeting with Ba’alzamon, which means “heart of the dark” in the old tongue. But I don’t speak the old tongue, so I’ll just call him Ballzy. Naturally, the dream leads to nothing but cryptic talk and vague threats, although Ballzy does strongly imply a physical connection between dreams and the real world when he breaks a rat’s back in the dream.


Chapter 13: Choices

A lengthy journey brings the group to Baerlon, where a bribed gatekeeper is happy to let them in. We learn that the Children of the Light have set up camp outside the city. Moiraine and Lan have arranged lodging at an inn called the Stag and Lion.

Everyone settles down to rest at the campsite Lan prepared ahead of time. Moiraine does some hocus pocus on her traveling companions, and everyone is completely refreshed after sleeping for only an hour.

The next stop on their journey is Baerlon, but it takes them a week to get there because of the meandering route Lan chooses for them. Not to put too fine a point on it, but this segment could belong to a zombie apocalypse book for how careful he is to avoid contact with anything humanoid. Along the way, cue a musical montage as Moiraine continues her sessions with Egwene, Lan attempts to impart some knowledge about combat to the boys, and Thom even teaches juggling.

Baerlon finally comes into view, and the Emond’s Fielders realize that they’ve never seen a real city until now. Moiraine assumes her old pseudonym, Lady Alys, and she tells everyone that Lan is to be known as Andra.

LAN: Listen up, you three. When we’re in Baerlon, don’t mention Trollocs, Fades, Darkfriends or anything like that. Comprende?

RAND/MAT/PERRIN: Got it, chief.

The gatekeeper who lets them into Baerlon will not shut up. He lets Moiraine know that the Children of the Light have a camp set up outside of the city, but the mayor refuses to let more than ten of them inside the walls at once. The Children of the Light, for those who do not know, is a military organization that is sort of what you would get if you crossed the Ku Klux Klan with the Spanish Inquisition and adjusted the religious backstory to be universe-appropriate. Like most religious zealots, they specialize in advancing their own agenda under the guise of acting in the interest of a greater good.

As they walk through the streets of Baerlon, Rand and Thom chitchat about the gatekeeper’s news. A false Dragon raising an army to march on Tear? Rand wonders aloud how the prophecy involving the fall of the Stone of Tear is even achievable.

Their conversation is cut short when they reach their accommodations for the night: the Stag and Lion.


Chapter 12: Across the Taren

Once the group is across the Taren, they make camp for the night. Moiraine guides Egwene through touching the True Source for the first time.

Soon, everyone is on the other side of the Taren. Lan counts gold coins into the ferryman’s hands.

LAN: Here is the rest of the payment, as promised.

MOIRAINE: [impassively] Oh no, your ferry.

There’s a crack of splintering wood as the ferry abruptly breaks away from its moorings and floats downstream.

MOIRAINE: How unfortunate. Must have been a freak whirlpool.

LAN: Yes, most unfortunate. Here is some extra compensation for your trouble.

Lan leads the party to a campsite he prepared ahead of time. The men listen uneasily as Moiraine explains the True Source and the One Power to Egwene. Rand, in particular, is horrified at the idea of Egwene learning to channel, which is understandable — the only way for men to touch the One Power is through a layer of corruption created by the Dark One that drives them mad and kills them. But Egwene is delighted when Moiraine guides her in touching the True Source for the first time, and is excited to become an Aes Sedai.


Chapter 11: The Road to Taren Ferry

The group makes it to Watch Hill, quickly moving on to Taren Ferry where they rouse the ferryman to take them across the Taren.

Setting a breakneck pace, the group makes it to Watch Hill in what Rand figures must be a record time. Several members of the party speak longingly about getting some rest and refreshments, but Lan says they can’t stop until they are across the Taren River. Rand protests that the horses have been run to the point of exhaustion, but Moiraine lays hands on them, and suddenly they’re all good as new. The scream of the Draghkar splits the night — the horses panic, and it is difficult to keep them reined in. Moiraine conjures a thick fog to throw off their pursuers, and soon the group reaches Taren Ferry. The ferryman is understandably upset to be woken in the middle of the night, but the glint of gold coins — the universal alarm clock — easily convinces him to take the group across the Taren.


Chapter 10: Leavetaking

A small “Me Too!” party happens in the stables as Egwene and Thom join the group of bold adventurers who are eager to leave Emond’s Field. Seeing a Draghkar in the sky lets them know they are still being hunted.

With the angry mob dispersed, Moiraine and Lan can finally get on the road with the boys.

Looks pretty fucking dangerous to me, and this one doesn’t have a spike on it like Perrin’s.

Perrin is already in the stables with his trademark half-moon axe. Here’s the thing about Perrin’s axe — I never understood how he doesn’t cut himself on the damn thing! The book describes it as “a broad half-moon blade on one side of the head and a curved spike on the other.” If this thing is hanging from a loop on his belt, as the book describes, then what the fuck is stopping Perrin’s hand or arm from accidentally brushing against the blade or the spike? Rand’s sword has a scabbard. Mat’s arrows rest in a quiver. What is stopping Perrin from suffering severe lacerations every time he needs to scratch his balls? Dumb luck?

Suddenly Egwene waltzes into the stable, announcing that she is coming with them, because as she shared with Rand earlier, she naively wants to see the world. Once the group gets past arguing about whether or not Egwene is coming, Thom hops down from the hayloft announcing that he’s also getting the hell out of Two Rivers, and would be happy to perform in Tar Valon. If any more characters come out of the woodwork to join the adventure, they’re going to need a god damn party bus instead of horses.

But amazingly, they really do get underway. Not far outside of the village, they spot a Draghkar wheeling about in the air, searching for them. Moiraine declares that they must make haste toward Taren Ferry if they are going to reach it before the Trolloc army.


Chapter 9: Tellings of the Wheel

Rand has a bad dream and says goodbye to Tam. A mob accuses Moiraine of being the cause of the town’s misfortunes, and she gives a TED Talk about Manetheren to let them know what a shitty job they’re doing of living up to their ancestors’ legacy.

Blah blah blah, Rand has a nightmare, blah blah blah blah blah. Yes, I know — Tel’aran’rhiod, the world of dreams, is important in the Wheel of Time series. But these paragraphs are simultaneously fluffy like an overstuffed pillow, and yet denser than a box of Clif Bars. I have no patience for tripe like this unless it is material to the story.

Rand finally wakes up and gets to speak with Tam, who has also regained consciousness. Tam warns Rand about Aes Sedai, but does not try to dissuade him from going.

Outside, an angry mob has gathered around Moiraine, complete with torches and pitchforks. They are urging her to leave the village, convinced that it was she who brought the attack upon them. Bran approaches the crowd and castigates them for showing no gratitude toward Moiraine for her services rendered.

But let’s face it — Bran is a fucking teddy bear, and nobody is going to take this kind of talk from him seriously. As an outsider, Moiraine sees this more clearly than anyone, so she gives the mob of men a taste of what truly motivates them: a lambasting from a powerful woman.

Emond’s Field, says Moiraine, owes its namesake to Aemon al Caar al Thorin, a man who two thousand years ago was the King of a land called Manetheren, which included all of Two Rivers and then some. Aemon was renowned for his courage, and his army played a pivotal role in battles during the Trolloc Wars. One day, Manetheren needed help from other nations to combat a Trolloc invasion. Sadly, help never came, but the brave people of Manetheren fought to the bitter end, making their last stand precisely where Emond’s Field is today. When the battle was finally lost, Aemon’s Queen, Eldrene unleashed a fireball that burned the Trolloc armies alive.

Those who fled their home found nothing of their farms, villages or cities remaining. So they picked up the pieces and carried on. And this sorry lot of superstitious, xenophobic, ignorant, petty excuses for villagers was is now what remains of the once-great Kindgom of Manetheren. Moiraine didn’t actually say this to the crowd confronting her on the village green, but it was strongly implied. Cowed and embarrassed, the mob disperses with muttered apologies.


Chapter 8: A Place of Safety

Moiraine heals Tam while Rand chats with Lan. Rand learns that he, Mat and Perrin were the targets of the attack, so he reluctantly agrees that he must leave Emond’s Field to keep it safe.

One of Superman III‘s many problems.

Moiraine kicks everyone out of the room except Rand and Lan, then kneels over Tam to perform healing. Rand sits on the other bed, where Lan joins him and tells him that the heron symbol on his sword is the mark of a master swordsman — adding that it is curious that it should end up in the possession of a sheepherder. Moiraine pauses from exhaustion, declaring that Tam is still afflicted by the evil of the blade that wounded him. It will get worse if left untreated, she says, so Rand pulingly pleads with Moiraine to do more. It’s a moment that feels exactly like the scene in Superman III where Ricky Lane, the most annoying character in the whole movie, watches Evil Superman emerge drunk from a bar and insists that Superman is just sick. “You can help him, I just know you can,” says Rand, nailing the Ricky Lane impression. To get him to shut the fuck up, Moiraine enlists the help of her angreal to channel enough of the Power to finish healing Tam.

RAND: Thank you so much, Moiraine Sedai. How can I ever repay you?

MOIRAINE: It’ll be time to leave soon, so we’ll talk on the road.

RAND: Leave?

MOIRAINE: Oopsies.

Moiraine has spilled the beans about her intentions for Rand, Mat and Perrin. She explains that the Trolloc army specifically targeted the places where those three live. There is something about them that the Dark One fears, and his forces won’t stop trying to kill the three boys. That’s why they’ll all be coming with her, she says — for the good of Emond’s Field. She wants to bring them to Tar Valon, and her reasoning is sound — after all, Trollocs won’t dare attack the home of the White Tower and the Aes Sedai. Perhaps the city will even provide clues about why the Dark One is interested in them.

Moiraine insists that Rand get some sleep, because they must leave that very night.

 


Chapter 7: Out of the Woods

Rand brings Tam to Nynaeve, but there is nothing she can do. Bran al’Vere recommends asking Moiraine to heal Tam, so Rand goes and fetches her.

Rand reaches Emond’s Field.

RAND: Master Luhan! The Trollocs attacked the farm, and my father is in bad shape.

RAND: He needs the Wisdom!

LUHAN: Come on, lad. Let’s get him to the Wisdom. She’ll know what to do.

NYNAEVE: Sorry, Rand. There’s nothing I can do. Byyyye.

RAND: Fuck me.

Bran al’Vere gives Tam a bed at the inn and recommends asking Moiraine to heal him. Rand puts his “sheltered country boy” hat on full display, acting surprised that such a kind and composed woman could be one of those monstrous Aes Sedai from the stories. Setting his reservations aside, he asks Moiraine for help. Despite being exhausted from defending the village, she agrees to try, so they head back to the inn.


Chapter 6: The Westwood

Rand drags Tam toward Emond’s Field, avoiding Trollocs and Fades. Tam’s fever makes him babble about the Aiel War and finding Rand as an infant laying on the slopes of Dragonmount.

The most interesting thing about this chapter is Tam having fever dreams and ranting about the Aiel War 20 years ago. I believe this is the same conflict that ended at the beginning of New Spring. I remember reading in New Spring that it was one of Moiraine’s asshole uncles who started the Aiel War, so my guess is this “Laman” character that Tam keeps babbling about has the surname Damodred. It sounds like the war started when Laman chopped down a tree named Avendesora, also known as the Tree of Life, which had been a peace offering from the Aiel many hundreds of years ago.

Tam’s babbling shifts to describing how hellish it was fighting on the slopes of Dragonmount. He desperately needed to escape from the death and carnage. When he finally found a quiet spot, there was a crying baby. According to Tam’s remarkably coherent and informative speech, he and his wife adopted the child and named him Rand. This means that Rand’s true lineage lies with the Aiel — and amusingly, the possibility that the Dragon would be born of the Aiel was a one that never seemed to cross Moiraine’s mind at all during the events of New Spring. Rand, for his part, also refuses to indulge this possibility, and goes on trying to convince himself that he has misunderstood.


Chapter 5: Winternight

Tam and Rand return to find the farm untouched, so they take care of chores. But a bunch of Trollocs show up and let everyone know that they can’t stand a lovely evening. Rand acquires Tam’s sword.

Tam and Rand return to find the farm untouched. Tam decides they should use the remaining daylight to take care of chores, but both men are clearly on edge. Night closes in and they move indoors. Tam locks the doors — unheard of! Nobody does that in Two Rivers! — and retrieves an ancient sword from storage. They prepare to sup on the stew Tam made when the door splinters into pieces and shit kicks into high gear. In the blink of an eye, Trollocs are clambering to get in the farmhouse and extinguish human life. While Tam holds them off, Rand escapes through a back window.

My father figure just got mortally injured, but on the plus side, I get to use his sword!

Tam manages to get away from the Trollocs and the farmhouse as well — but when he reunites with Rand, it is evident that he has suffered injuries and is in no condition to strain himself any farther. This gives Rand his Link to the Past moment where he acquires a fancy sword that he has no idea how to use. But oh, does it make him feel like a man!

Unlike Link’s uncle, Rand’s father isn’t actually dead — just severely injured, and in need of care that only a Wisdom can offer. After gathering together some supplies and killing his very first Trolloc using nothing more than dumb luck and a weapon he has not earned, Rand drags Tam toward Emond’s Field on a makeshift sled.


Chapter 4: The Gleeman

We meet Thom Merrilin, who briefly performs on the village green before Moiraine’s appearance casts ice water upon the whole affair. Now that Tam believes that Rand and other young men in the village really did see a stranger on horseback, they head back to keep the farm safe for the night.

If I may indulge in an aside, Thom Merrilin is a fun character. As I read this chapter, I could not help but double down on my casting opinion of him — Patrick Stewart circa 1990 would have been a perfect way to portray him. Also, I recognized something in him that must have influenced me as a teenager: this guy, being a skilled performer and magician, is able to effortlessly make objects appear and disappear. In this chapter, it is his pipe, but I am certain that in subsequent chapters it will be daggers. When I was in high school, I always used a mechanical pencil as my writing implement. I got tired of misplacing it all the time, so I got myself a roll of elastic and sewed it into a loop that fit comfortably around my left upper arm, a bit above where the sleeve of my t-shirt would hang. This is where I carried my pencil at all times during the school day. When I needed to write something, I would simply reach my right hand up into my left sleeve and pull it out. When I was done writing, I would easily slip it back under my sleeve. The retaining arm on the pencil would snap over/off the elastic in such a satisfying way. I thought it worked rather well, and in case it wasn’t apparent by now, I wasn’t the sort of teenager who gave two shits about how strange my peers may have thought I looked. In restrospect, I credit the character of Thom Merrilin with sparking that idea.

As we begin the chapter, poor Thom can’t believe how he has been treated in Two Rivers. Misinformed, harshly greeted, impetuously prodded, and finally chased out of the inn by an angry Nynaeve. A gleeman, he says, should be treated with higher regard when he has taken the trouble to travel to a backwater locale like this. But as people begin to gather around him, his crowd pleasing nature can’t resist putting on a bit of a show for the onlookers.

Until, that is, Moiraine shows up. Upon noticing her, Thom abruptly stops his show. Despite greeting her courteously, it is clear that he is not happy to see her. Before Thom can continue his show, the Village Council emerges from the inn, and Thom is happy to finally partake of the common room.

Tam surprises Rand by saying that they need to return to the farm. Rand is puzzled because they had originally planned to stay the night in town. But on the way back, Tam explains that several other young men in the villages saw the man on horseback too, and if a stranger it lurking about, their farm must not go undefended.


Mustache tugging/knuckling: Thom x 2


Chapter 3: The Peddler

Padan Fain rolls into town and stirs things up with news of wars and false Dragons. Egwene’s hair is braided. Thom Merrilin finally wakes up.

In this chapter we’re introduced to the titular Padan Fain, peddler extraordinaire. Not only does Mr. Fain bring all manner of wondrous items to sell, but he’s also a dyed-in-the-wool Darkfriend! Remarkably, the townsfolk don’t seem to notice that he’s a creep. Or perhaps they don’t want to notice that he’s a creep, because who else is going to bring goods and gossip to Emond’s Field?

Rand and Mat meet up with their friend Perrin as the crowd closes in to hear what news Padan Fain brings from the outside world.

PADAN FAIN: Greetings, Emond’s Field. You simple-minded plebeians think you’ve had it rough?

PADAN FAIN: Wolves are eating your sheep?

PADAN FAIN: Oh, somebody call the whaaaambulance. Fuck your wolves. Your wolves are nothing! Men are going to war under the standard of the Dragon.

BRAN AL’VERE: A false Dragon, I’m sure.

CENN BUIE: No it isn’t. Beware — the sky is falling!

PADAN FAIN: He’s right! False or not, this man can wield the One Power, so the Aes Sedai are being sent to deal with him when he’s defeated. If he is defeated.

Bran realizes that things are getting out of hand, so he invites Fain to converse privately with the Village Council.

The crowd disperses, but the three boys linger in the village green, bandying about all kinds of hearsay, from the Dragon to the Dark One. Nynaeve, the Wisdom of Emond’s Field, is not happy to overhear talk of this nature. Then again, if you go by what everyone has been saying, Nynaeve doesn’t seem to be happy about much of anything. Egwene — Bran al’Vere’s daughter and Rand’s crush — is with her, pointedly crossing her arms beneath her breasts to show solidarity with Nynaeve’s remonstrations. Upon learning that the Village Council (idiots, by her estimation) has taken to questioning Padan Fain in private, she storms off to intervene.

Mat and Perrin give Rand and Egwene some space. Egwene reveals that the Women’s Circle has deemed her old enough to braid her hair, and that she’s thinking of studying under Nynaeve to become a Wisdom, possibly for another village. She is rightfully indignant when Rand strongly implies moving away and seeing the world is a silly fantasy. Mat and Perrin choose that moment to come back — talking about silver coins and seeing men on horseback — and suddenly Egwene has all the ammunition she needs to scold Rand in turn himself for being ridiculous.

Before their argument can escalate any further, Thom Merrilin bursts out of the inn.


Crossed arms: 1 x Egwene


Chapter 2: Strangers

Moiraine meets Mat and Rand, gives each of them a Tar Valon silver mark, and promises to speak with them later.

It’s still part of the slow beginning phase of the book. Lots of scene-setting, not much actually happening.

After Rand and Mat finish unloading the casks of booze in the Winespring Inn’s cellar, they head out onto the village green, where they are watched by a raven. Moiraine appears and introduces herself as a student of history who is interested in learning more about Emond’s Field’s past. She gives each young man a Tar Valon silver mark and promises to have a word with them later.


Chapter 1: An Empty Road

Tam and Rand al’Thor haul casks of booze to Emond’s field, catching up on the news of the town when they arrive. Rand and his friend Mat both saw a dreadful horseman.

Hello my baby,
Hello my Honey,
Hello my ragtime gal!

Tam al’Thor and his son Rand travel from their farm in the Westwood to the town of Emond’s field. They are on edge — with winter hanging on late this season, a wolf attack is a very real possibility. In a moment that feels inspired by Michigan J. Frog, Rand spots a different sort of threat: a man on horseback, watching him and radiating hatred. Of course Tam doesn’t see it, and of course Tam doesn’t believe him that the man was really there, so he gaslights his son into thinking that he’s imagining things. Gosh, thanks a lot, Pops.

As father and son finally roll into town, we taste a slice of life in the sleepy country village of Emond’s field. Ah yes, you can almost smell that bucolic idealism. Dogs running around, children playing, nosy neighbors, “goodwives” keeping up the insides of houses, “goodmen” maintaining the exteriors, and joyful preparations for the Bel Tine festival. I’m not sure which one makes me want to vomit more — Gandalf rolling into the Shire at the beginning of Lord of the Rings, the rustic Nelwyn midget village from Willow, or this.

Luckily, if you read at a steady clip, it doesn’t last too long. Rumors are flying around about fireworks, a gleeman, and strangers who have come to town. Mat tries to rope Rand into some of his trademark mischief, but instead is himself roped into helping Rand unload the barrels as the men from the Village Council confer in the Winespring Inn’s common room.

 


Preliminary Notes

I’m excited to be starting on the proper series of books now! I managed to get partway through Lord of Chaos during the 1990s before I finally ended up putting it down for too long and never figuring out how to pick it back up again. After all, you lose your way in a series this long, and reading it turns into a chore. So why did I put it down? Maybe I used to be more OCD. Maybe I used to be a less skilled reader. Maybe I used to think that you needed to process every fucking word that Mr. Jordan wrote.

But here’s what I realized — you can’t do that and maintain your sanity at the same time. It’s kind of like trying to open yourself to saidin — just don’t do it, because otherwise you’ll go nuts. Some of the longer description-heavy paragraphs can easily be skimmed. I don’t need to hang on every word, especially when the words are about Thom stroking his mustache, or Nynaeve tugging her fucking braid.

Which leads me to the other thing I realized: Mr. Jordan overused certain words and phrases. Whether it’s about knuckling backs, women derisively “sniffing” the air, Nynaeve tugging her braid, any female character folding her arms beneath her breasts, or probably a whole host of other common Jordanisms — these phrasing stuck in my head and gave my brain a BSOD every time I read them, seriously hampering my progress. Now? I’m prepared to have as much fun with them as possible.

That’s really what this journal is about, having fun. And note taking. If I have a forum for writing down all of the sarcastic thoughts that run through my mind when I’m reading these books, I will have something to motivate me when the action gets slow or the characters start behaving stupidly. Plus the notes can help get me back on track when I take a break to read something else.

I don’t want to make it sound like I hated the books or the story or the characters. I didn’t. But I didn’t used to have anything to keep me afloat when I got bogged down — and now I very much do. I will kick this main series reading off by saying that I am excited to get to know these characters again, especially after seeing this artist’s rendition of some of them. They are so close to how I pictured them. Especially Mat with the hat, the dice and that shit-eating grin on is face; Perrin with his curly hair and golden eyes; and Naynaeve tugging on that fucking braid.

Let’s read The Eye of the World!

 


Prologue: Dragonmount

Lews Therin Telamon, having murdered all his friends and family, transmogrifies himself into a volcano, creating Dragonmount.

Oh hello there, Lews Therin Telamon. Your name sure gets dropped a lot during the course of these books, from what I can recall. With a claim to fame like yours, why shouldn’t it? You defeated and imprisoned the Dark One, but this time he struck back and poisoned the fucking well. Yes, the male half of the True Source, the sweet nectar of power and creation that you drink from regularly, is now covered with vile film of yuckity-yuck. I guess it’s a little bit like the poison darts in Assassin’s Creed games: it makes you lose your mind, attack your friends, and before too long it is fatal.

At first, Lews Therin’s mind is so divorced from reality that he can’t even acknowledge that anything bad has happened, even though the bodies of his friends and family litter the ground, slain by his own hand. Then Ishamael shows up, who I believe is going to play the role of the Big Bad in this book, if memory serves. Ishmael can also channel the One Power, but he is aligned with the Dark One. It sounds like there is some really bad blood between him and Lews Therin, and Ishmael has shown up to gloat. But that’s kind of hard to do when your enemy’s mind is so far gone that he doesn’t even realize what happened. Luckily, a little channeling sets Lews Therin’s mind straight.

Ishmael wants to break Lews Therin so completely that he will turn to the Dark One as well. But when he realizes the enormity of what the madness has driven him to do, Lews Therin teleports away and thwarts that plan — committing suicide in a most spectacular way, he single-handedly causes the formation of Dragonmount and the island that will one day be Tar Valon, the home of the White Tower.


Epilogue

Turns out the woman on the list wasn’t the mother of the Dragon Reborn. Moiraine realizes that the Black Ajah doesn’t know when the Dragon was reborn, so they have been murdering men of any age who display signs that they might be the Dragon. Moiraine shares everything about her quest with Lan, and he agrees to become her Warder.

This was a handy way to cut to the denouement. When the book set up the Lady Edeyn plot line, I thought for sure it was going to lead to a conflict between her and Lan — at least over the matter of her arranging to have him marry her daughter. Instead, Robert Jordan took the wind out of her sails by killing off her daughter. Ouch!

Moiraine returns to her chambers. Siuan shares definitive proof that Rahien can’t be the Dragon. Then the two friends puzzle out a key piece of intel — the Black Ajah knows that the Dragon was reborn, but they don’t know when he was reborn. All they know is that men who can channel exhibit unexplained luck and inexplicable success. So while it’s good on the one hand that they aren’t targeting babies, this does mean that the Black Ajah is essentially murdering any man who is experiencing a modicum of good fortune.

The two friends decide that Siuan can best serve their cause in Tar Valon under Cetalia’s employ, where she can send intel to Moiraine, and Moiraine rides off to continue her search for–

Hey, wait one goddamn minute! Lan isn’t Moiraine’s Warder yet. Shit, we’d better fix that. Moiraine finds Lan north of the city, burning his daori before heading into the Blight to get himself killed fighting shadowspawn. Moiraine decides to tell him everything — about the search for the Dragon, and the Black Ajah. He agrees to join her cause and become her Warder.

It’s a little depressing to realize that since the events of The Eye of the World don’t take place until Rand is approaching 20 years old, that means Moiraine is doomed to wander endlessly for two decades before she finally makes any progress in her quest. Ah well, c’est la vie.

The end.

 


Chapter 26: When to Surrender

Ryne murders Bukama and assists Merean in cornering members of the royal family. Lan and Moiraine battle Ryne and Merean. Lan eventually bests Ryne, and Moiraine kills Merean, but not before Merean manages to toss her victims to their deaths.

The final chapter opens with Lan moving through the corridors of the palace like he’s Solid Snake. Long hours spent with ko’di have convinced him that the only way to avoid an arranged marriage with Iselle is to get as far away from Edeyn as fast as fucking possible. But he can’t leave Bukama behind — not after Bukama saved him from the Blight so many years ago.

Suddenly, Lan happens upon Merean and Iselle walking together. I suppose when Moiraine told her to bother another Aes Sedai about the White Tower, Merean was the next most logical choice. Once they’re gone, Lan carries on looking for his friend.

In a very un-Lan-like move, he takes a spill down a flight of stairs — one nasty enough to kill most men. He quickly concludes that someone channeling the Power caused his fall, but raised voices leave no time for reflection. Bukama has been found with a dagger in his back.

***

Lan bursts into Moiraine’s chambers without knocking. Having concluded that Merean couldn’t have been the one who pushed him, he accuses Moiraine instead — and strongly implies that she was involved in Bukama’s death. But Moiraine, now convinced that Merean is of the Black Ajah, warns him to not be so easily deceived. She insists Iselle is not safe with her, but Lan is unconcerned, having just seen her walking with Brys and Diryk.

Suddenly connecting the dots, Moiraine realizes that Merean must have used Iselle to lure Brys and Diryk to a secluded part of the palace. Racing against time, she and Lan find the the royal family members on a bridge with sickeningly high drops on either side. Merean has them restrained with flows of the One Power, and praises Ryne for killing Bukama.

In an instant, Lan is crossing swords with Ryne, and Moiraine desperately tries to out-channel Merean. Both have met their match. Lan takes multiple wounds, and Moiraine is eventually bested — thrown onto her back and cut off from the Power by a spirit shield. As she lies dazed, Merean first drops young Diryk over the edge, who screams in terror on his way down. Then she tosses Brys over the edge, who remains silent as he falls. As Merean lifts Iselle into the air and toward the edge, Moiraine finally recovers enough to drive her dagger into the wicked sister’s back. Iselle teeters on edge of the bridge, and Moiraine rushes over to grab her for one of those classic Cliffhanger moments.

Unfortunately, today is not a good day to be a member of the royal family of Kandor. Moiraine is still too dazed to embrace the Power, and Iselle also falls to her death. Lan, having narrowly defeated Ryne, grabs Moiraine just in time to keep her from going over as well.

Wow! What a body count. Bukama, Brys, Iselle, Merean, Ryne, Caniedrin, Tamra, Meilyn… I know I’m leaving some out, but this was a pretty fucking brutal book. I guess that marriage isn’t happening after all, eh, Lan?


Chapter 25: An Answer

Moiraine runs into Merean and becomes convinced that she is, in fact, a member of the Black Ajah.

Lady Moiraine is still flabbergasted that Siuan would flirt with a lowly footman, but she allows herself to be led off to meet Prince Brys and his children. His second son, Diryk, gushes about how great Lan is, extolling his virtues as the King of Malkier. Moiraine, having dismissed the rumors she’d been hearing, is stunned to learn who Lan really is. With the risk rising that someone might “introduce” her to Lan as Lady Moiraine Damodred, she fakes an illness and bolts back to her chambers.

That’s when she almost literally runs into Merean. Strangely, Larelle is nowhere to be seen, and Merean says she decided to head south. Merean doesn’t spare much time for Moiraine, but Moiraine’s conspiracy theories come flooding back full force — with Merean right at the center.

Moiraine heads straight to Lan’s chambers, where he’s shirtless and practicing sword forms like the bubbling vat of pure testosterone that he is. She briefly thinks he’s been mauled by a wild animal, but then realizes the marks on his back were made by a woman. Lady Edeyn, it seems, has been busy. Moiraine invokes an old alliance between Malkier and the White Tower and asks him to spy on Merean.

Thanks to her run-in with Merean, everyone in the palace now knows that Moiraine is an Aes Sedai. Upon returning to her chambers, she finds Iselle — Edeyn’s daughter — waiting for her in Siuan’s company. Iselle, you’ll recall, is one awkward conversation away from starring in a mother/daughter three-way with Lan. While “Suki” stands off to the side and folds her arms beneath her breasts, Iselle explains that she has the potential to channel and intends to become a member of the Green Ajah one day. Moiraine recommends she bother some other Aes Sedai about it and sends her on her way.

MOIRAINE: So, what did you learn?

SIUAN: That footman is a really good kisser. You?

MOIRAINE: Well, let’s see… Merean is here, I am super fucking paranoid, and I got Lan to agree to spy on her.

SIUAN: What part of “undercover” didn’t make sense to you?

MOIRAINE: Look, we’re running out of time. You have to reach the Lady Ines ASAP.

SIUAN: I know. I’m working on him. I mean, uhit. I’m working on it.

That evening, Siuan returns with news: Bukama saw Merean spending the day with Prince Brys before retiring to her chambers. She also casts doubt on Lady Ines being Dragon Mother material by reporting that the footman placed Rahien’s birth a day after Gitara’s foretelling, but promises to keep searching for a definitive answer, even if it means sleeping her way through Lady Ines’ entire staff.


Chapter 24: Making Use of Invisibility

Moiraine decides to visit the palace as herself, since she hails from a noble Cairhien house. Siuan poses as Moiraine’s servant.

SIUAN: This is a horrible plan.

MOIRAINE: This is the best plan.

SIUAN: This is never gonna work.

MOIRAINE: C’mon, let’s go to the bank!

At the bank, they cash in one of the letters of rights that Moiraine got from Door Mail, then visit the seamstress. In just two days’ time, Moiraine proves that there is nothing more to posing as nobility than hemorrhaging large amounts of money over a short period of time. Perhaps “posing” is the wrong word to use. Moiraine really is Cairhienan nobility, after all, but she so thoroughly disavows her lineage that it certainly feels like pretense.

Casting off her assumed identity of “Lady Alys” — because that wouldn’t convince anybody — it is the Lady Moiraine Damodred whose livery arrives at the Aesdaishar Palace. Apparently the House of Damodred is somehow credited with starting the Aiel War, so her arrival is certain to make a statement and get her an audience with Lady Ines.

Unfortunately, as is the case with so many otherwise healthy and fortunate men recently, Lady Ines’ husband dropped dead over breakfast one day, and she is secluded in mourning. That means it is up to Siuan — in the role of “Suki,” Lady Moiraine’s humble and unseen serving maid — to rub shoulders Lady Ines’ servants. And from the way Siuan talks about a young footman named Cal, she clearly intends to rub more than just shoulders.


Chapter 23: The Evening Star

Moiraine searches the worst parts of Chachin for Siuan, which gives Moiraine a golden opportunity to show what a badass she is. Once the women are reunited, they realize that the next woman on their list resides in the palace.

Back in the city, Moiraine’s mission is to locate Siuan. Knowing Siuan is a world-class cheapskate, that means rooting through the grimiest, sketchiest slums Chachin has to offer. Naturally, the dregs of society set upon her from all directions, attempting all manner of crime against her — from assault to theft to kidnapping. Their reward? An opportunity to see another “trick of the Power” that is known only to Blues: the ability to induce fear and compel. This sounds suspiciously similar to the Scarecrow villain from the Batman universe, but I’m going to give it a pass because it’s a really cool ability. And it made for the most awesome scene in the entire book so far, where Moiraine forced a barmaid to drink a roofie that was meant for her. She truly is gaining a reputation as an Aes Sedai who is not to be fucked with.

Amusingly, Siuan actually ended up with more respectable accommodations than Moiraine had assumed. After settling down in Siuan’s room, the friends discuss the matter of Ines Demain. She named her child Rahien because she saw the sun rise over Dragonmount after giving birth. Sounds like solid “Mother of the Dragon” material, but the problem is that they need to get into the palace to speak with her. Sounds like the perfect excuse to run into Lan again!


Chapter 22: Keeping Custom

Once the group reaches Chachin, Lan tells Moiraine to get lost. At the palace, we meet Lady Edeyn. It seems that her history with Lan gives her a measure of power and control over him, and she is eyeing him to become her daughter’s husband.

Once the group crosses the bridge into Chachin, Lan promptly declares that their obligation to “Lady Alys” is fulfilled, so she can kindly piss off and get out of their lives. Oh Lan, we both know that isn’t going to happen. You’ve obviously got a thing for Cairhienan women and you clearly can’t get her out of your head. But first, we need to find out what “keeping custom” means.

At Aesdaishar Palace, Lady Edeyn wastes no time sending a note to Lan’s chambers:

Come to me, sweetling. Come to me now.

I was hoping we could avoid this, but it looks like we’re going to have to talk about this concept of carneira. Back in Chapter 16: The Deeps, when Lady Edeyn was introduced, so was this word. The book says it refers to one’s “first lover.” But let’s call it like it is: it’s the person who took your v-card. This chapter notes that whereas young women chose their carneira, young men were instead chosen by their carneira. Fine. That fits with the matriarchal theme of this world.

So Lady Edeyn is more than a cougar who made Lan into her boy-toy for a few years, because Borderland society has institutionalized this sort of relationship and a whole shitload of baggage that comes along with it. This includes creating a daori — a braided lock of the boy’s hair — which, in keeping with custom, a carneira will present to the woman the boy eventually marries. You want to call it custom, Lan? I’ll call it a ritualized loss of agency wrapped in a bow of tradition.

The chapter closes thusly:

EDEYN: Look out that window, boy. Do you see my daughter Iselle? She is all grown up now.

LAN: She is as beautiful as her mother, I am sure.

EDEYN: She needs a husband, and since you have no surviving female relatives, your marriage is up to me to arrange.

LAN: You can’t be serious.

EDEYN: Oh, I am. But first, let us fuck.

Dear Mr. Jordan:

When I am wrong, I admit it. And I was wrong to have declared that every single character in the Wheel of Time is puritanical to a fault. The last page of Chapter 22 reads like the setup for a porn scene. I had no idea when I was reading The Eye of the World that Lan’s ship had visited so many ports! I was like 12 years old at the time, and I didn’t realize he was this irresistible stud of a ladies man, but Lan’s bachelor days are speaking for themselves! Barmaids and noblewomen alike line up to throw themselves at him. He has a story to tell about a massive ten-day bender he went on in Cairhien. He is truly a man who has sowed his wild oats! So maybe I would sort of understand Lan being eager to begin a new chapter in his life. We’ll see.

For now, Lady Edeyn still has her hands wrapped firmly around Lan’s balls. Will Lan choose to become Moiraine’s Warder out of sheer desperation?


Chapter 21: Some Tricks of the Power

As the group journeys toward Chachin, Moiraine uses the One Power to keep them safe. Caniedrin, our unfortunately-named friend from the earlier chapters, attempts to assassinate Moiraine.

Continuing on toward Chachin, Moiraine continues to search along the way for Avene Sahera. They are on the road during severe weather, but it doesn’t matter:

Trick of the Power #1: Invisible barriers to keep everyone from getting soaked in rainstorms.

Later, they are set upon by a large group of bandits. No worries!

Trick of the Power #2: Low frequency noise combined with the megaphone weave, pyrotechnics and the mere mention of Aes Sedai turns bandits into scared little girls.

But even when the bandits run away, Moiraine is not satisfied, having convinced herself that she could single-handedly have defeated an entire army. But that’s Moiraine’s problem, isn’t it? She has never really known defeat… except in her quest to extract an apology from Lan for dunking her in the pond.

Trick of the Power #3: Impress your friends and annoy your enemies with childish antics like causing insomnia, soiling clothes with sand, commanding insects to swarm and bite, and conjuring poison ivy in the most inconvenient places!

Moiraine finally locates Avene Sahera in the village of Ravinda, but she is annoyed to learn that the woman’s child doesn’t meet the criteria and her name never should have been on the list to begin with. As they continue the journey, Lan suddenly takes an arrow in his shoulder.

Trick of the Power #4: Invisible handcuffs!

The marksman hiding in the treeline is held motionless by weaves of Air until return fire from Ryne and Bukama dispatches him. Upon closer inspection, Lan is surprised to see who it is:

LAN: Caniedrin?

RYNE: Who? What’s a Canadian?

BUKAMA: Poor fucker. His own mother did this to him, naming him like that.

CANIEDRIN: Please, Aes Sedai, heal me. I’m… not… dead y–

[BUKAMA shoots him in the head with a crossbow.]

BUKAMA: Yes, you are.

Inside Caniedrin’s purse they find Cairhienan coins, suggesting that Moiraine was the target of the assassination attempt. Lan accepts healing, and the group continues toward Chachin.


Chapter 20: Breakfast in Manala

Lan, Bukama, and Ryne agree to escort Moiraine as far as Chachin. En route, Moiraine continues seeking out and interviewing women on her list.

Moiraine introduces herself as Lady Alys, because she attended the Mr. Garvey School of appellations. Bukama chides Lan for not following the example he set in pledging an oath to protect Moiraine on her way to Chachin. But Lan is wary of promising her anything, because while he suspects that Moiraine is merely a childish, prank-loving wilder posing as an Aes Sedai, he isn’t about to stake his freedom upon it. No sirree. Only fool men allow themselves to become bonded as an Aes Sedai’s Warder.

But Lan is no fool. Right? I mean… yes! Yes, there was the business with Lady Edeyn Arrel when he was 15 years old. And now she was building an army using his name and potentially trying to have him assassinated. But how could he have known that it would come to that? And yes! Yes, there was that business in Cairhien — he spent ten days there cavorting with Cairhienan women, resulting in multiple brushes with death, two marriage proposals, and most likely some bastard children. But he’s wiser for it. Right? No more letting women yank him around, especially not ones from Cairhien.

Meanwhile, Ryne is throwing all caution to the wind:

RYNE: Ms. Alys, may I… tend to your mare?

MOIRAINE: [stepping closer] Certainly, it’s right over there.

RYNE: And your saddle. Would you like me to… polish it?

MOIRAINE: Oh, that sounds lovely. Please. [smirks] Polish my saddle.

RYNE: My lady, your radiance has so dazzled my senses that I feel blind. Would you indulge my curiosity by telling me from whence you have come?

MOIRAINE: From the noble houses of Cairhien.

LAN: [under his breath] Fuck me.

Moiraine insists on stopping at Manala, supposedly for breakfast. But mostly she is trying to locate the next name in her little book of “Women Who Might Have Given Birth To The Dragon.” When Lan realizes “Lady Alys” has slipped away, he finds her a few streets away asking after a certain Avene Sahera. However, she refuses to accept help or divulge any related information.


Chapter 19: Pond Water

Moiraine, thinking that Lan knows something about what the Aes Sedai in the city are up to, follows him, Bukama and Ryne. After some time spent traveling, Lan goes off on his own into the woods and makes camp. Moiraine attempts to surprise him, but Lan’s lightning reflexes land Moiraine in the waters of a freezing cold pond.

I’m trying to remember if it was ever mentioned in the rest of the books that I read in the series precisely what the circumstances of Lan and Moiraine’s first encounter was. Did they, at some point, tell an amusing story involving a sharp-witted young Lan, a dauntless young Moiraine, and a pond whose waters were still freezing cold in the new spring of Kandor? It’s possible I will encounter this eventually, but for the time being I don’t recall.

When Moiraine reaches the city gates in the morning, they are still barred against the terrors of nighttime in the Borderlands. She notices Lan and his companions waiting impatiently to depart. She had seen them at the inn speaking with some of the Aes Sedai there. As a crowd gathers at the gate waiting for it to open, Moiraine gets the idea that she wants to ask the men about their dealings with the Aes Sedai. So she tails them for the entire day as if they aren’t going to notice. They stop briefly, and Lan breaks off to trek into the woods while Bukama and Ryne continue on.

Lan sits at the edge of a pond when Moiraine finds him, sword on the ground by his side. He is doubtless in meditation when Moiraine reaches out with the One Power to pull his sword away from him. But Lan moves with his trademark lightning reflexes, grabs both the scabbard and the front of Moiraine’s dress, then flips her through the air and into the water. Ever the gentleman, Lan lifts her from the pond and builds a fire to help her dry off, but Moiraine’s pride is severely bruised.

Ryne and Bukama return a short while later and the group settles in for the evening. Moiraine gives them Tar Valon marks in return for seeing her safely to Chachin. Frustratingly, she is able to learn absolutely nothing about the sisters back in Canluum. Upon hearing Lan make a remark implying that he doesn’t trust her, Moiraine’s inner pot of rage boils over and she channels a flow of water out of the pond and straight at Lan, soaking him wet and outing herself as an Aes Sedai.

Ah, what a “first meeting” story to tell — it must have been a question asked and answered at some point during the rest of the books. I’ll be watching for it.


Chapter 18: A Narrow Passage

Moiraine encounters Siuan, who brings news that strongly suggests the Black Ajah is behind the death of the Amyrlin Seat, as well as the demise of several other sisters. Moiraine resolves to travel alone to the capital city of Chachin, and sends Siuan ahead of her.

Still reeling from her meeting with Cadsuane, Moiraine does a double take as she catches a glimpse of Siuan outside of the inn. She hurries after her pillow-friend until they reach the privacy of a side street. Siuan brings news that all of the Aes Sedai whom Tamra tasked to find the Dragon have died under circumstances that can be described as unusual at best, or suspicious at worst. Before long, the two friends have decided that the rumored Black Ajah must be involved, that Tamra’s death was similarly suspect, and that they could trust nobody!

With the next stop on her Dragon Quest being the capital city of Chachin, Moiraine sends Siuan off ahead of her and returns to the inn. After laying low and letting everyone think what they want for the evening, Moiraine sneaks out of the inn during the wee hours of the morning. You’d think sneaking away from Aes Sedai would be more difficult, given their reputation, but Moiraine has already managed to do it twice in this book!


Chapter 17: An Arrival

Moiraine is on the run from the White Tower, and is in Kandor interviewing women from the list. She bumps into Merean and Larelle, and then into one of the most powerful Aes Sedai alive, Cadsuane Melaidhrin. Cadsuane orders Moiraine to travel with Merean and Larelle.

Enough of the Lan and Bukama story, right? Booooring.

Back with Moiraine, she has been away from the White Tower for three months. Where has she ended up? Kandor, of course! She is meeting with a woman whose teenage girls have apparently begun to channel subconsciously. One of them went and burned down the family barn with their father and newborn son inside. Whoopsie daisy! But look on the bright side: at least the little tyke wasn’t the Dragon Reborn, amiright?

Yes, never mind the fact that the White Tower most likely has Moiraine’s face on a wanted poster — she has decided to travel around with her list of names and search for the Dragon. Making her way back to the inn where she is staying, it becomes clear that Moiraine has been conducting her trip under the guise of a noblewoman. Unfortunately for her, accommodations in the city were difficult to find, and she ended up staying at a place that is crawling with Aes Sedai.

And not just any Aes Sedai. In addition to five sisters that Moiraine does not know, Merean is there. The former Mistress of Novices, having been relieved of her Tower office following Tamra’s death, is in the company of Larelle. The two are amused to discover that Moiraine has managed, despite the first oath, to deceive the five sisters into believing she is a wilder — a woman who navigated the perils of learning to channel on her own.

When her acquaintances indulge her pretense, Moiraine feels pretty good about the encounter… until she hears the voice of Cadsuane Melaidhrin. She must be the titular arrival of this chapter, and is said to be so strong with the One Power that even among Aes Sedai she can essentially do whatever she wants and get away with it. Because of the power dynamic, nobody dares to contradict her, and I have a feeling that Moiraine internally refers to her as Mistress Bossypants.

Cadsuane brings Moiraine, Merean and Larelle to a private sitting room at the inn. Only she doesn’t allow Moiraine to sit, and quickly reveals that she knows exactly what Moiraine is. Cadsuane interviews Larelle and Merean about Moiraine, and we finally learn what came of Siuan’s proposed prank at the end of Chapter 10: It Finishes: the pair was busted and sent to Merean for punishment on the eve of becoming Aes Sedai.

Moiraine is indignant at Merean having referred to Siuan as her “pillow-friend” — whatever that means — and attempts to take her leave. But Cadsuane orders her to stay, starts rambling about how the women in the White Tower have been getting weaker and weaker over the centuries, and about how Moiraine is apt to get herself killed by gallivanting around the way she is. So she orders Merean and Larelle to accompany Moiraine to her next destination of Chachin, as they are all traveling that way anyway. None of them is happy about it.


Chapter 16: The Deeps

Lan and Bukama find accommodations at an inn where they run into Ryne, and old acquaintance. He brings news that Lan’s old flame, Lady Edeyn Arrel, has been stirring up trouble. After six men attempt to murder Lan, he realizes that Lady Edeyn might be responsible.

Lan and Bukama have to check three inns before finally finding accommodations at the fourth.

It turns out that Bukama knows the proprietress, Racelle. She was both glad to see Bukama and pissed at him for not coming back to see her sooner. Racelle violently alternates between kissing Bukama and punching him, and we’re left with the distinct impression that she is actually a Klingon woman who was dropped into the Wheel of Time universe by accident. Writing timelines being what they are, this isn’t entirely impossible that Mr. Jordan was thinking the same thing.

They also find Ryne there, an old friend of Lan’s, so everyone sits down for a drink together. The waitress who brings the drinks hits on Lan with all of the subtlety of a sledgehammer, as if to prove the book’s point that Lan is quite the ladies’ man, with women lining up to throw themselves at him. Ryne tells Lan about how a certain Lady Edeyn Arrel has been using Lan’s name to rally troops.

Lan takes some time to himself in the stables, embracing ko’di (a.k.a. “The Void”) and ruminating on his place in the world as a king without a nation. What a legacy his parents handed him!

el’Leanna Mandragoran: Welcome to the world, sweet boy!

al’Akir Mandragoran: Now, here’s a sword and a ring.

el’Leanna: You’re King of Malkier now.

al’Akir: Sworn to take this nation back one day.

Perhaps this wouldn’t seem so cliche if Superman hadn’t done it first.

The book brazenly recounts how this Lady Arrel is an unrepentant cougar who had made 15-year-old Lan into her boy-toy many years back, and it sounds like he didn’t entirely mind.

Bukama shows up and inquires what Lan intends to do about her. They decide to go back into the common room to talk about it. Crossing the courtyard and casually discussing how properly laid they are both going to get that night, six men show up and make Lan’s spidey sense tingle.

When the group tries to kill Lan, he dispatches all six men. As his wounds are attended, everyone realizes rumors of Lan’s death fighting the Aiel had spurred Lady Arrel to rally men under his name. She used it to gain power. Did she also send the assassins? Lan needs to pay her a visit.


Chapter 15: Into Canluum

Lan and Bukama are crossing through Kandor, and they make a stop in the city of Canluum.

In this chapter, Robert Jordan suddenly realizes that he has been ignoring Lan entirely for the first half of this book. If I were Lan, I would be more pissed off than Daniel Henney was when the TV show got cancelled. So what happened to Lan? I guess he and Bukama finally told Caniedrin to fuck off and find a new name, and the two men are back in the borderlands. Kandor to be specific.

At long last, we hear someone call him by the name al’Lan Mandragoran. Oh I see what you did there Mister Jordan. al’Lan. Allan. That’s cute. You are lucky I like the way Lan sounds so much, because if I didn’t, I would be calling this dude Allan, for the entire rest of the series.

Lan and his mentor Bukama are headed to… uh, I don’t really know where they’re headed. Well, Into Canluum, duh, but I don’t know why. The guards at the gates remind us that Lan would have been king of the nation of Malkier, had it not succumbed to the Blight. Lan tells the guards that they are here to rest for a few days before riding north. Instead of brushing shoulders with the local aristocracy, Lan and Bukama decide to head into the common part of the city.


Chapter 14: Changes

Tamra, the Amyrlin Seat, dies. Her replacement makes it clear that she intends to use Moiraine for her connection to Cairhienan nobility, so Moiraine escapes aboard a river boat.

Wow, what an apt title for this chapter. Whatever else you want to say about it, you have to agree: stuff finally happens. It’s like Robert Jordan sat down one day, realized that he was halfway done writing this novella and nothing much had happened whatsoever, so it was time to change that.

But the chapter begins innocently enough. You can almost imagine the musical montage as Siuan and Moiraine get used to life as Aes Sedai, which is as full of petty politics as any other sector of society. For example, Blue sisters are by and large forbidden from wearing the color red, owing to their enmity with the Red Ajah. A host of similar allegiances and ancient feuds makes Moiraine realize that Cairhienan nobility is not the only place where Machiavellian maneuvering is a useful skill to have.

Oh! And we finally learn the secret to the oft-mentioned Aes Sedai quality of being unaffected by hot and cold conditions, which is…? breathing! Yes, that’s right. The Aes Sedai are using the Wim Hoff method. Not convinced? Go read about it and you tell me.

So Moiraine and Siuan quickly become expert practitioners of yogic breathing. Gosh, I guess it isn’t all about the One Power… the Aes Sedai really do work quite hard to have earned their reputation as a bunch of ferocious, austere stuck-up bitches.

Some of Moiraine’s dresses arrive just in time for a festive time of year that sounds suspiciously like Christmas. But Moiraine is too worried about being used by the White Tower to attend any of the parties.

One of the accepted, Ellid, disappears during her own trial for the shawl. Apparently, if you test to become Aes Sedai, it is possible for you to not emerge from the ter’angreal. Like no body, no trace, just poof gone. Fuck, I used to think this was like that scene in Contact (1997) where it’s like, “Did she really interstellar travel, or didn’t she? Like, maybe she’s just crazy because look at her, she’s fine!” But sometimes you don’t come out? Gosh, that might have made Chapter 9: It Begins a little more full of dramatic suspense, don’t you think? But we’re only learning about it here, five chapters later.

Anyway, the period of mourning is short, because Siuan joins the perky breasts club! Yes, we already suspected as much, but just so we all know: Siuan folds her arms beneath her breasts, ok?

Just when this chapter is starting to feel like it is a mish-mash of too many different things, Tamra — the current Amyrlin Seat — kicks the bucket in her sleep. Hmm, ok. That sounds suspicious, especially given the reputation Aes Sedai have for living abnormally long lives owning to the rejuvenating effects of recurring contact with the One Power. But ok! I will simply accept it. Shortly thereafter, this dreadful Gray sister named Sierin, who by all rights sounds like she should have chosen Red, takes the seat. Moiraine asks to be relieved of her duty to distribute the baby bounties, and although this request is granted, the new Amyrlin Seat directly orders her to not leave the Tower, with the strong implication that Moiraine is still very much being treated as a game piece, destined to become the Puppet Queen of Cairhien.

Moiraine will have none of it. She says some hasty goodbyes, gets the rest of her dresses from the seamstress, obtains some funding from Door Mail, and hurries to the harbor to abscond aboard a swift moving river boat.


Chapter 13: Business in the City

Moiraine and Siuan receive their yearly stipend of 1,000 gold pieces. Moiraine sees her banker and realizes she has to escape Tar Valon before she is used as a puppet in Cairhien politics, so she drags Siuan with her to buy dresses.

Siuan and Moiraine eagerly attend their very first meal in the Aes Sedai dining hall. Upon arriving in their resplendent Blue shawls, they find that it is not the norm for Aes Sedai to take their meals wearing the color of their Ajah. But they stick out like the fresh-faced noobs that they are: Siuan shrugs off the looks and smiles, and Moiraine… blushes and looks down to make sure she wasn’t in one of those dreams where she forgot to put on clothes.

After a luxuriant table service experience, Eadyth summons the two friends to give them their yearly stipend of 1,000 gold pieces. Siuan is over the moon, never having seen that amount of wealth before in her life, and promptly decides to deposit it in the White Tower’s bank.

Moiraine, on the other hand? We’ve been told that she is a member of one of the noble houses in Cairhien, but to see the way she yawns at the trifling sum of 1,000 gold pieces is a superior demonstration that she was indeed born with a silver rod shoved up her ass. So naturally, staying true to her entitled roots, Moiraine hires a litter to bear her to a bank in Tar Valon where she has apparently been stashing her considerable wealth.

At the bank, we see that Moiraine is on friendly terms with Mistress Dormaile, the proprietress of the branch, whom I will forthwith refer to as Door Mail. As the two ladies are making chit-chat, Moiraine learns that the White Tower has most definitely not forgotten about wanting to transform her into their very own puppet Queen of Cairhien: a man had been by nine days prior bearing a letter — supposedly from the Amyrlin Seat herself — ordering Door Mail to hand over information about Moiraine’s finances. Naturally, Door Mail is far too discreet to have complied, but Moiraine realizes that she needs to redouble her efforts to escape the White Tower.

MOIRAINE: Siuan, listen, we need to buy some dresses so we can get the fuck out of here!

SIUAN: Don’t we have enough already?

MOIRAINE: No! No, we don’t. Now get in this litter. We’re going to see the Mistress Alkohima.

SIUAN: Are you crazy? They’re charging a silver penny each! We’ll walk. I’m the leader, remember?

MOIRAINE: Not when I’m spooked, you’re not. Now I’m the bloody leader. Get in the litter!

At the seamstress’ workshop, Moiraine consults with Tamore about requirements for her dresses.

MOIRAINE: Let’s see… I’m going to need twenty dresses.

SIUAN: Twenty dresses! Where are you going to put them all? How will you carry them? Blood and ashes, is this the price tag? Is that in gold or silver?

MOIRAINE: Listen, bitch. You’re in my world now. You want it cheap? You’ll get it cheap. And much like Cairhien nobility, Aes Sedai do not wear cheap things.

With that out of the way, Moiraine feels better.


Chapter 12: Entering Home

Moiraine and Siuan are disappointed to discover how little freedom they have as Aes Sedai. Lan and Bukama head back to the North.

Moiraine and Siuan are shown to their new home in the ΓΘΨ sorority house Blue quarters. Kairen Sedai greets them along with many other Blue sisters, and soon they meet Eadyth.

Oh for fuck’s sake. Eadyth? Really?

Fine, Mr. Jordan. I was going to let Kairen go, but then came Eadyth, so let’s talk about names. You wanted to name those characters Karen and Edith, didn’t you? But those spellings weren’t weird and exotic enough for you, were they? So you decided to get cute. What’s next? Arynn? Aeryck? Psaira? Mykl? Mat almost seems to be an outlier, until you learn that it’s short for Matrim instead of Matthew! Who was your editor — Mr. Garvey?

Once Siuan and Moiraine settle in, they go to see Eadyth, who is basically the leader of the Blue Ajah.

EADYTH: Listen up. Just because you’re Aes Sedai now doesn’t mean you’re among equals. If another sister stands higher than you in the Power, you are her bitch.

Spooked, they head back to their chambers.

MOIRAINE: Siuan, we’ve got to get the fuck out of here and start searching for the Dragon before they eat us alive!

CETALIA: Oh look, fresh meat.

MOIRAINE: I beg your pardon?

CETALIA: Fret not, my pretty little porcelain doll. And you, Siuan, have a reputation for being good at puzzles. Come, you are now my dog.

Siuan reluctantly allows herself to be led away. A short while later Moiraine is summoned by the Amyrlin Seat herself and is charged with distributing the funds that the Tower promised to the new mothers. Suddenly, neither one of them can foresee escaping from the Tower’s gravity well any time soon.


Meanwhile: Lan and company watch the Aiel retreat into the mountains.

CANIEDRIN: Why are we just standing here?

BUKAMA: Show me one other aspiration you’re fit to achieve with a name like that, boy, and I’ll follow you wherever you want to go. Until then, shut the fuck up.

LAN: Well boys, looks like this war is over and we’ve earned a little time off. I could head down to Tear and spend some time with the wind and the waves and the sandy beach… but nah! I’m heading back north so I can freeze my ass off like the proper Blighter that I am. I sure hope I don’t run into any Aes Sedai!


Chapter 11: Just Before Dawn

Moiraine and Siuan take their Aes Sedai oaths. They choose the Blue Ajah.

Whatever happens with Siuan and the mice is strangely not discussed at all. Instead, we pick back up the next morning when a group of Aes Sedai gather first Moiraine and then Siuan and march them down to the testing room for the oath ceremony.

First, a word about ter’angreal. Imagine that 500 years from now, our descendants have lost the capacity to produce integrated circuits. All they know how to do is make electricity flow through wires again. Sounds pretty far-fetched, right? Like even if knowledge about how to build integrated circuits somehow faded into obscurity, you would think that with a little bit of time on their hands those electrical engineers would rediscover how to build them again. “No!” says Mr. Jordan. “No, no, NO! They built them during the Age of Legends! They don’t know how to build them anymore, you get it?!?” Alrighty then, Mr. Jordan. They’re too dumb to reverse-engineer a glorified magic flashlight. Fine.

Not only is a ter’angreal central to the Aes Sedai test, but it is also a pivotal part of their induction into the order: inductees are required to hold the ter’angreal known as the Oath Rod and recite three oaths:

  1. I vow that I will speak no word that is not true.
  2. I vow that I will make no weapon for one man to kill another.
  3. I vow that I will never use the One Power as a weapon except against Shadowspawn, or in the last extreme of defending my life or that of my Warder or another sister.

Light, these rules are so mechanical, they read like Asimov’s Three Laws of Robotics. They’re so similar, it’s like Jordan jotted them down in a fit of jealousy after finishing I, Robot.

Much has been made of the first vow. What could be more core to the identity of an Aes Sedai than having to perform all of their lying by omission? Instead of glossing over this point, let’s call it what it really is: a loophole. In the Wheel of Time world it is common knowledge that the Aes Sedai are bound to this vow, so they regularly use it to mollify the public into believing that they are trustworthy, when in fact nothing could be further from the truth.

With loopholes in mind, let’s talk about vow #2. Looks like it’s perfectly fine for Aes Sedai to create weapons for men to kill women, for women to kill women, and for women to kill men. You can practically hear George Carlin rattling off this list, and it appears to fit quite well with the matriarchal societal modeling that appears to be prevalent in this world. Women killing others? Fine!

Also, what if it’s a weapon that is not intended to be fatal? This opens all kinds of doors to pepper spray, stun guns, batons, rubber bullets, bean bag rounds, sound canons, flashbangs and tranquilizer darts. I’m going to be keeping this one in mind, Mr. Jordan.

As Moiraine and Siuan spoke these oaths, I also could not help but wonder:

  • What if the oath taker makes up a completely different oath, like I vow that I will never wear slippers on Tuesday?
  • What if the oath taker vows to do something that is impossible, like I vow that I will manufacture a brand new ter’angreal within seven days?
  • What happens if the oath taker forgets the oath, or misspeaks? Does this ter’angreal have an UNDO button, or is that going to turn into an Army of Darkness moment?

Bruce Campbell receives instructions from the wise man in Army of the Dead.

Bruce Campbell completely forgets what the wise man told him.

Setting aside all of my unanswered questions, the ceremony goes off without a hitch, and both Moiraine and Siuan choose the Blue Ajah, also known as “Seekers after Causes.” Oh, no wonder Moiraine is so bent on finding the Dragon. She’s an activist. That explains so much.


Chapter 10: It Finishes

Moiraine and Siuan both pass their Aes Sedai tests.

Remarkably, Moiraine’s 100th weave breaks the theme of nudity and/or bodily harm. Instead it goes for an emotional gut punch involving her father, but here’s the thing — Moiraine has been dealing with her own personal demons for her entire life, so she is already well-equipped for all of this stuff, daddy issues and all. If they had really wanted to challenge her, they should have put her in a room with Elaida. Why the hell wasn’t that the test?

Anyway, yay, SPOILER ALERT, Moiraine passed the test and will be admitted to the sorority Aes Sedai sisterhood. Maybe something we weren’t expecting can happen now?

Once she is healed and back in her room, Moiraine finds that Siuan has been taken for testing herself. Again, it is difficult to share in Moiraine’s situational angst because we know goddamn well that Siuan will also pass the test. The next morning is when the two of them will take the oaths and become Aes Sedai, but instead of being happy with that, Siuan insists on using some mice she obtained from a groomsman to prank Elaida and exact revenge for the beatings.


Chapter 9: It Begins

Moiraine begins her trial for the shawl.

Oh, I see. “It begins.” Everything up to this point was like the opening credits sequence of a movie for Mr. Jordan, wasn’t it? To him, New Spring is merely a novella — an inconsequential side story, a trifling piece of pocket fluff, a Christmas television special — and everything we’ve read so far has been prelude.

So yay, the story is finally beginning. Buckle up!

Merean leads Moiraine down into the bowels of the White Tower.

MOIRAINE: [under her breath] Oh fuck oh fuck oh fuck oh fuckity fuck.

Merean gives her a pointed look and leads Moiraine to the testing room where a sister representing each Ajah is already present. Moiraine does a strip tease and steps naked into the ter’angreal that is used to facilitate testing.

What follows can only be described as a dreamscape that serves as a vehicle for Moiraine to perform the 100 weaves she has been practicing. She keeps finding clothes to wear and then they keep dissolving into the wind. Each weave involves a scenario that is nightmarish to Moraine in some kind of personal way, and although we aren’t given the specifics of all of them, it seems that her insecurities primarily revolve around physical harm and arriving at school only to realize that she has forgotten to wear clothes.

The chapter ends before all of the weaves have been completed, leaving the reader to wonder how Moiraine will fare. Or actually, wait a second, it doesn’t do that at all because we already fucking know Moiraine becomes an Aes Sedai. Nice try, Mr. Jordan. Nice try.


Chapter 8: Shreds of Serenity

Elaida tries to help Moiraine and Siuan prepare for their Aes Sedai test, and they shit all over her.

This chapter demonstrates that Moiraine is actually a hot mess of contradictions, obsession and angst inside: Aren’t the Aes Sedai searching for the Dragon? Why aren’t they searching for the Dragon? I can’t tell them I’ve spent every sleeping and waking moment since I witnessed the prophecy thinking about finding the Dragon. I can’t tell them that, I can’t tell them or they’ll think I’m insane, and then I’ll never become an Aes Sedai, and THEN WHO WILL FIND THE DRAGON???

Moiraine, Siuan and Myrelle keep having naughty slumber parties practice sessions. And what a practice session it is… until Elaida waltzes in and folds her arms beneath her breasts.

Oh yes, here it is!

Arms. Folded. Beneath. Her Breasts.

Dear Mr. Jordan:

Thank you. Thank you for telling me precisely where Elaida’s arms were positioned in relation to her mammary glands. Why, every time my wife crosses her arms, I don’t know where the fuck they’re going to end up! Sometimes they go behind her back, to the side, up above, over her head, behind or between her legs, and only occasionally beneath her breasts. So THANK YOU SIR for specifying. Elaida’s tits are perky enough that her arms may be crossed under, rather than over them. I will be watching your language closely in the future.

Message received, sir. Message received.

Elaida says she wants to observe, so Siuan and Myrelle do their best to distract Moiraine as she weaves.

ELAIDA: Is that the best you girls can do? What are you trying to do, distract her or give her a fucking back massage? Stand aside!

Elaida proceeds to pummel Moiraine and Siuan so severely that she feels the need to note that the injuries will not, in fact, be fatal. Sort of like that scene in Terminator 2.

ELAIDA: See you tomorrow night, bitches. [Leaves the room.]

MYRELLE: Oh thank the Light. I know just what to do. Sheriam, Ellid, get in here, girls. We’re going to rub this ointment all over Siuan and Moiraine’s naked bodies, then tuck these sluts into bed together! Now help me get their clothes off!

This goes on for three nights, much to Myrelle’s delight, before Merean finds out and puts a stop to it. At first, not unlike little girls, Siuan and Moiraine assume that someone “told on” Elaida for torturing them.

MEREAN: Oh heavens, no. The only thing Elaida did wrong was to give you ladies an unfair advantage when you take the trial for the shawl.

Yes, apparently Elaida legitimately was trying to help these women prepare for the test, and what did she get for thanks? Someone (obviously not Myrelle) ratted her out, and Moiraine realizes that it has so filled Elaida with resentment that she has made an enemy for life.

MOIRAINE: Well, I’m glad all that’s over!

MEREAN: Moiraine Damodred, you are summoned to be hazed tested for the shawl of an Aes Sedai. The Light keep you whole and see you safe.

MOIRAINE: Oh, fuck me.


Chapter 7: The Itch

Moiraine and Siuan happily continue copying names. The Amyrlin Seat assembles Aes Sedai to search for the Dragon.

The Amyrlin Seat is growing suspicious of Siuan and Moiraine after they have voluntarily spent copious amounts of time copying lists of circumstances under which babies were born on the battlefield. Moiraine is sent to deliver a message to a sister belonging to the Green Ajah. After Moiraine completes her mission and escapes the reverse harem of the Green Tower, she catches up with Siuan who is just getting back from delivering a similar message to the Gray Tower. Moiraine concludes that the Amyrlin Seat is assembling a group to search for the Dragon, a theory that is only bolstered the next day when three more messages go out.


Chapter 6: Surprises

The next day, Merean forces Moiraine and Siuan to stay in the White Tower and recopy names of potential Dragon mothers rolling in from the field. Siuan points out that they are in a unique position to create their own list of Women Who Just Might Be the Mother of the Dragon.

The next morning, everyone is hustling to go back out for another fine day of interviewing entitled new mothers.

SHERIAM: OMG you guys, listen to this: my best friend’s sister’s boyfriend’s brother’s girlfriend heard from this guy who knows this kid who’s going with this girl who saw the Aiel retreating. I guess it’s– what are you two grinning about?

SIUAN: Oh, nothing. [Smirks.]

Sheriam walks away.

MOIRAINE: Can you believe our luck, Siuan? With the Aiel retreating, now we can go to Dragonmount. Guess who’s gonna find the Dragon. We’re gonna find the Dragon. Who’s gonna find the Dragon? We’re gonna find the Dragon. C’mon, let’s go!

Moiraine collides with Merean, the Mistress of Novices, on the way out.

MEREAN: Not so fast, child. I know you said you did not care for your uncles, but clearly you are not in your right mind, so you will remain at the tower today and do busywork.

SIUAN: What a brilliant idea, Merean. [Dancing behind Merean’s back, whispering, “I’m gonna find the Dragon, I’m gonna find the Dragon!”]

MEREAN: And you can keep her company, Siuan.

SIUAN: Awwww!

Merean leaves the room.

MOIRAINE: What the actual fuck, bitch?

SIUAN: Calm down. This is better than going out and taking names ourselves! We can just stay here and copy everyone’s work!

It quickly becomes apparent that the power vacuum in Cairhien created by the Three Assholes Damodred dying has taken the notice of the Aes Sedai. Members of each Ajah come by to gauge, with varying levels of subtlety, how easily Moiraine could be groomed into pursuing a position of power in Cairhienan politics, and Moiraine wants no part of it. After all, how could she find the Dragon if she were playing the Game of Houses? Suddenly she can’t wait to undergo the Aes Sedai test so she can flee the White Tower.


Chapter 5: The Human Heart

Moiraine and Siuan interview women and record names at an encampment. Back at the White Tower, Moiraine learns that her asshole uncles died in battle.

Finally something interesting happens! The gaggle of women at the camp refuses to come to order, so Siuan whips out her trusty megaphone spell and shouts at everyone to shut the fuck up.

Even with order restored, it is an unfortunate fact that offering 100 gold coins to every woman who recently gave birth will have the effect of creating a long line of Karens, and Moiraine wonders how she could have ever fooled herself into thinking that she could be the one to discover the Dragon Reborn.

When they decide to take a meal break, a couple of Aes Sedai show up for no apparent reason other than to ruin their day by informing Siuan and Moiraine that they have a curfew, so they take down the rest of the names before making a mad dash back to Tar Valon. Once there, Moiraine learns that three of her uncles have been killed in the war, but it’s OK because they were assholes.


Chapter 4: Leaving the Tower

Moiraine and Siuan leave Tar Valon to find and interview women who gave birth during the final battle.

In a flurry of activity, the Accepted follow the Amyrlin Seat’s orders, quickly packing and heading out of the bustling city, escorted by armed Tar Valon guardsmen. Siuan tries to persuade the guardsman escorting her and Moiraine that it would be best to start with the farthest camps on the slopes of Dragonmount, but he will not be dissuaded from following the orders he has already received, which is to start with the closest camps. And so, heading away from Dragonmount, Siuan and Moiraine find a nearby camp and begin the process of interviewing the women who are there.

Sweet Jesus. I couldn’t even think of anything sarcastic to say about this chapter, it was that dull. And it took Jordan 31 pages to convey this.


Chapter 3: Practice

Moiraine and Siuan practice their weaves for their Aes Sedai test. The Amyrlin Seat announces that the White Tower will give each woman who birthed a child during the final battle of the Aiel War 100 gold pieces.

MOIRAINE: Gosh, that whole DEATH business was shocking and disturbing. I’mma get a little shut-eye.

SIUAN: Like hell you are, slacker. We’ve got a pop quiz coming up any day to be inducted into the Aes Sedai SISTERHOOD. So fuck your sleep. We don’t need sleep. We’re just going to stay awake all the time and practice. It’ll be like channeling while drunk, only more fun.

MOIRAINE: Fiiine. You’re the leader, even though I’m descended from nobility.

SIUAN: Fucking right I am. Let’s go to my room. We’re gonna run through the Aes Sedai bar exam. You go first because you suck at channeling. I’ll be over here distracting you by talking about the Dragon being Reborn! and seeing how much Sapphic innuendo we can cram into this chapter by using the One Power to touch you inappropriately! Oh look, here’s Myrelle. She has a reputation for conjuring ice straight into naughty places under people’s clothing. This is going to be epic — like a sorority hazing, only way better!

TARNA: Never mind that now! The Amyrlin Seat is going to make an announcement!

SIUAN and MYRELLE: Awwww!

AMYRLIN SEAT: Listen up, all of you “Accepted” Aes Sedai wannabes. The White Tower’s critics claim that we never do anything that doesn’t somehow benefit us. We will show them that they are fools! Go forth and find all of the women who gave birth during the battle. We shall give each of them 100 gold pieces, because… umm… because they supported the men during the battle? Look, don’t worry your pretty little heads about why we’re giving away money, OK? The Accepted don’t ask questions! We’re doing it because we’re NICE. Got it?

AMYRLIN SEAT: Oh, and be sure to gather details about the name and sex of the infants, as well as where they were born. For, uh… for recordkeeping purposes. Heh heh.


Chapter 2: A Wish Fulfilled

Moiraine and Siuan are Aes Sedai undergrads working for Tamra, the current Amyrlin Seat. The Amyrlin’s secretary has a vision of the Dragon having been reborn, then promptly drops dead.

Oh hello Moiraine. How cute, you aren’t an Aes Sedai yet! This is like your college years. I hope you knew how to party. And look at you, still figuring out whether you want to join the Green Ajah with their quasi-polyamory-multiple-warders vibe or the cold and logical Blue Ajah, laser focused on trapping just one special man into that oh-so-tantalizingly-codependent relationship with a Warden. Which to choose, which to choose!

Oh hello to you too Siuan. Siuan Sanche. I always thought that was a cool name, so very alliterative and pronounceable! Siuan, let me tell you, there was a character in Chapter 1 whose name was Caniedrin. No, I wasn’t trying to spell Canadian and just fat-fingered it. Caniedrin! First of all, how much do you have to hate your child to name them that? And second, I can tell you one thing: nobody named Caniedrin is ever going to become Amyrlin Seat, am I right? But Siuan Sanche! Memorable, strong, easy to say. That’s the start of a beautiful political career! And those raised-by-a-sailor sensibilities are never going to totally leave you, are they, you adorable thing?

Moiraine and Siuan are bored, getting blasted by drafts of cold air, and suppressing yawns. And for how little is happening in this chapter, this actually made it the most immersive scene in the book yet, because it evoked the exact same feelings of torturous ennui that these two ladies felt. I truly empathized.

The current Amyrlin Seat is apparently… worried about something? Horns are blaring? And then her, uh… secretary? Her secretary starts like having visions and speaking in tongues, spewing a proclamation of the Dragon having been Reborn!, before promptly dropping dead Looney-Tunes-style. And Moiraine catches a Novice reading a romance novel – oh, how scandalous.

Yes, it really did take 25 pages for the novel to express the events described in the above paragraph.


Chapter 1: The Hook

Lan is participating in the end of the Aiel War.

Oh hello Lan. I see you are not yet magically shackled into a creepy, never-gonna-let-you-go, you-die-we-both-die relationship to an ice queen, but I know you crave the masochism since you constantly remind us that you hail from the frozen wastelands of the north, where people sleep on slabs of chilled marble, fashion snow into bedpillows, and chomp on icicles for hydration.

Between you and me, this whole warder arrangement doesn’t seem like it’s all that different from what the Seanchan do with their the a’dam collars. Don’t be tempted by the cloak of invisibility. It’s a raw deal! That cloak is never gonna work as well as you would hope. Not to mention, you do know that this woman will know exactly where you are at all times, right? Like you won’t ever get to stop sharing your location – this is Every Breath You Take in the most disturbing possible way, and I would strongly urge you to run the fucking other way when you finally meet Moiraine. But hey, they’re your balls, so I guess if you want to put them in a box and give it to an Aes Sedai, that’s your business, but don’t say I didn’t warn you.

A messenger comes from some dude leading an army, strongly suggesting that Lan’s army assist in a pincer attack against the Aiel, who have apparently crossed the spine and have been busting up Tar Valon’s ‘hood.

When Lan’s army is in place to help ambush the Aiel army, which by the way was WAY bigger than anyone expected, it emerges from the forest. Lan watches, presumably slack jawed, as the Aiel army just goes around and continues east, back toward the spine.