A Memory Of Light: Wheel of Time Book 14

A Memory Of Light: Wheel of Time Book 14 by Robert Jordan, Brandon Sanderson Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: A Memory Of Light: Wheel of Time Book 14 by Robert Jordan, Brandon Sanderson Read Free Book Online
Authors: Robert Jordan, Brandon Sanderson
vision I saw has to do with whatever Rand is planning,” Aviendha said.
    They turned to her.
    “Tomorrow,” she said. “From what you’ve told me, he’s preparing for an important revelation.”
    “The
Car’a’carn
has a… fondness for dramatic presentations,” Bair said, her tone itself fond. “He’s like a crockobur who has toiled all
     night making a nest so that he can sing of it in the morning to all who will listen.”
    Aviendha had been surprised to discover the gathering at Merrilor; she had found it only by using her bond to Rand al’Thor
     to determine where he was. Arriving here to find so many together, the wetlander forces collected, she wondered if this was
     part of what she’d seen. Was this gathering the start of what would become her vision?
    “I feel as if I know more than I should.” She spoke almost to herself.
    “You have had a deep glimpse of what the future may hold,” Kymer said. “It will change you, Aviendha.”
    “Tomorrow is key,” Aviendha said. “His plan.”
    “From what you said,” Kymer replied, “it sounds as if he intends to ignore the Aiel, his own people. Why would he give boons
     to everyone else, but not to those who are most deserving? Does he seek to insult us?”
    “I don’t think that is the reason,” Aviendha said. “I think he intends to make demands of those who attend, not grant them
     gifts.”
    “He did mention a price,” Bair said. “A price he intends to make the others pay. No one has been able to pry the secret of
     this price from him.”
    “He went through a gateway to Tear earlier this evening and returned with something,” Melaine said. “The Maidens report it—he
     keeps his oath to bring them with him, now. When we have inquired after his price, he has said that it is something that the
     Aiel need not worry about.”
    Aviendha scowled. “He is making men pay him in order to do what we all know he must? Perhaps he has been spending too much
     time with that minder the Sea Folk sent him.”
    “No, this is well,” Amys said. “These people demand much of the
Car’a’carn
. He has a right to demand something of them in return. They are soft; perhaps he intends to make them hard.”
    “And so he leaves us out,” Bair said softly, “because he knows that we are already hard.”
    The tent fell silent. Amys, looking troubled, ladled some water onto the kettle’s heated stones. It hissed as the steam rose.
    “That is it,” Sorilea said. “He does not intend to insult us. He intends to do us honor, in his own eyes.” She shook her head.
     “He should know better.”
    “Often,” Kymer agreed, “the
Car’a’carn
gives insult by accident, as if he were a child. We are strong, so his demand—whatever it is—matters not. If it is a price
     the others can pay, so can we.”
    “He would not make these mistakes if he had been trained properly in our ways,” Sorilea murmured.
    Aviendha met their eyes evenly. No, she had not trained him as well as he could have been trained—but they knew that Rand
     al’Thor was obstinate. Besides, she was their equal now. Although she had trouble feeling that way while facing Sorilea’s
     tight-lipped disapproval.
    Perhaps it was spending so much time with wetlanders like Elayne, but suddenly, she did see things as Rand must. To give the
     Aiel an exemption from his price—if, indeed, that was what he intended—was an act of honor. If he
had
made a demand of them with the others, these very Wise Ones might have taken offense at being lumped with the wetlanders.
    What was he planning? She saw hints of it in the visions, but increasingly,she was certain that the next day would start the Aiel on the road to their doom.
    She
must
see that did not happen. This was her first task as a Wise One, and would likely be the most important she was ever given.
     She
would not
fail.
    “Her task was not just to teach him,” Amys said. “What I wouldn’t give to know that he was safely under the

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