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Chapter no 7 – ANYTHING REASONABLE

The Way of Kings

โ€Œโ€œThey are aflame. They burn. They bring the darkness when they come, and so all you can see is that their skin is aflame. Burn, burn, burnโ€ฆ.โ€โ€Œ

โ€”Collected on Palahishev, 1172, 21 seconds pre-death. Subject was a bakerโ€™s apprentice.

Shallan hurried down the hallway with its burnt-orange colorings, the ceiling and upper walls now stained by the passing of black smoke from Jasnahโ€™s Soulcasting. Hopefully, the paintings on the walls hadnโ€™t been ruined.

Ahead, a small group of parshmen arrived, bearing rags, buckets, and stepladders to use in wiping off the soot. They bowed to her as she passed, uttering no words. Parshmen could speak, but they rarely did so. Many seemed mute. As a child, sheโ€™d found the patterns of their marbled skin beautiful. That had been before her father forbade her to spend any time with the parshmen.

She turned her mind to her task. How was she going to convince Jasnah Kholin, one of the most powerful women in the world, to change her mind about taking Shallan as a ward? The woman was obviously stubborn; she had spent years resisting the devotariesโ€™ attempts at reconciliation.

She reentered the broad main cavern, with its lofty stone ceiling and bustling, well-dressed occupants. She felt daunted, but that brief glimpse of the Soulcaster seduced her. Her family, House Davar, had prospered in recent years, coming out of obscurity. This had primarily been because of her fatherโ€™s skill in politicsโ€”he had been hated by many, but his ruthlessness had carried him far. So had the wealth lent by the discovery of several important new marble deposits on Davar lands.

Shallan had never known enough to be suspicious of that wealthโ€™s origins. Every time the family had exhausted one of its quarries, her father had gone out with his surveyor and discovered a new one. Only after interrogating the surveyor had Shallan and her brothers discovered the truth: Her father, using his forbidden Soulcaster, had beenย creatingย new deposits at a careful rate. Not enough to be suspicious. Just enough to give him the money he needed to further his political goals.

Nobody knew where heโ€™d gotten the fabrial, which she now carried in her safepouch. It was unusable, damaged on the same disastrous evening that her father had died.ย Donโ€™t think about that,ย she told herself forcefully.

Theyโ€™d had a jeweler repair the broken Soulcaster, but it no longer worked. Their house stewardโ€”one of her fatherโ€™s close confidants, an advisor named Lueshโ€”had been trained to use the device, and he could no longer make it function.

Her fatherโ€™s debts and promises were outrageous. Their choices were limited. Her family had some timeโ€”perhaps as long as a yearโ€”before the missed payments became egregious, and before her fatherโ€™s absence became obvious. For once, her familyโ€™s isolated, backcountry estates were an advantage, providing a reason that communications were being delayed. Her brothers were scrambling, writing letters in her fatherโ€™s name, making a few appearances and spreading rumors that Brightlord Davar was planning something big.

All to give her time to make good on her bold plan. Find Jasnah Kholin. Become her ward. Learn where she kept her Soulcaster. Then replace it with the nonfunctional one.

With the fabrial, theyโ€™d be able to make new quarries and restore their wealth. Theyโ€™d be able to make food to feed their house soldiers. With enough wealth in hand to pay off debts and make bribes, they could announce their fatherโ€™s death and not suffer destruction.

Shallan hesitated in the main hallway, considering her next move. What she planned to do was very risky. Sheโ€™d have to escape without implicating herself in the theft. Though sheโ€™d devoted much thought to that, she still didnโ€™t know how sheโ€™d manage it. But Jasnah was known to have many enemies. There had to be a way to pin the fabrialโ€™s โ€œbreakingโ€ on them instead.

That step would come later. For now, Shallanย hadย to convince Jasnah to accept her as a ward. All other results were unacceptable.

Nervously, Shallan held her arms in the sign of need, covered safehand bent across her chest and touching the elbow of her freehand, which was raised with fingers outspread. A woman approached, wearing the well- starched white laced shirt and black skirt that were the universal sign of a master-servant.

The stout woman curtsied. โ€œBrightness?โ€ โ€œThe Palanaeum,โ€ Shallan said.

The woman bowed and led Shallan farther into the depths of the long hallway. Most of the women hereโ€”servants includedโ€”wore their hair bound, and Shallan felt conspicuous with hers loose. The deep red color made her stand out even more.

Soon, the grand hallway began to slope down steeply. But when the half-hour arrived, she could still hear distant bells ring behind her. Perhaps that was why the people here liked them so much; even in the depths of the Conclave, one could hear the outside world.

The servant led Shallan to a pair of grand steel doors. The servant bowed and Shallan dismissed her with a nod.

Shallan couldnโ€™t help but admire the beauty of the doors; their exterior was carved in an intricate geometric pattern with circles and lines and glyphs. It was some kind of chart, half on each door. There was no time to study the details, unfortunately, and she passed them by.

Beyond the doors was a breathtakingly large room. The sides were of smooth rock and they stretched high; the dim illumination made it impossible to tell just how high, but she saw flickers of distant light. Set into the walls were dozens of small balconies, much like the private box seats of a theater. Soft light shone from many of these. The only sounds were turning pages and faint whispers. Shallan raised her safehand to her breast, feeling dwarfed by the magnificent chamber.

โ€œBrightness?โ€ a young male master-servant said, approaching. โ€œWhat do you need?โ€

โ€œA new sense of perspective, apparently,โ€ Shallan said absently. โ€œHowโ€ฆโ€

โ€œThis room is called the Veil,โ€ the servant explained softly. โ€œThat which comes before the Palanaeum itself. Both were here when the city was founded. Some think these chambers might have been cut by the Dawnsingers themselves.โ€

โ€œWhere are the books?โ€

โ€œThe Palanaeum proper is this way.โ€ The servant gestured, leading her to a set of doors on the other side of the room. Through them, she entered a smaller chamber that was partitioned with walls of thick crystal. Shallan approached the nearest one, feeling it. The crystalโ€™s surface was rough like hewn rock.

โ€œSoulcast?โ€ she asked.

The servant nodded. Behind him, another servant passed leading an elderly ardent. Like most ardents, the aged man had a shaved head and a long beard. His simple grey robes were tied with a brown sash. The servant led him around a corner, and Shallan could vaguely make out their shapes on the other side, shadows swimming through the crystal.

She took a step forward, but her servant cleared his throat. โ€œI will need your chit of admittance, Brightness.โ€

โ€œHow much does one cost?โ€ Shallan asked hesitantly. โ€œA thousand sapphire broams.โ€

โ€œSo much?โ€

โ€œThe kingโ€™s many hospitals require much upkeep,โ€ the man said apologetically. โ€œThe only things Kharbranth has to sell are fish, bells, and information. The first two are hardly unique to us. But the thirdโ€ฆwell, the Palanaeum has the finest collection of tomes and scrolls on Roshar. More, even, than the Holy Enclave in Valath. At last count, there were over seven hundred thousand separate texts in our archive.โ€

Her father had owned exactly eighty-seven books. Shallan had read them all several times over. How much could be contained inย seven hundred thousandย books? The weight of that much information dazzled her. She found herself hungering to look through those hidden shelves. She could spend months just reading their titles.

But no. Perhaps once sheโ€™d made certain her brothers were safeโ€”once her houseโ€™s finances were restoredโ€”she could return. Perhaps.

She felt like she was starving, yet leaving a warm fruit pie uneaten. โ€œWhere might I wait?โ€ she asked. โ€œIf someone I know is inside.โ€

โ€œYou may use one of the reading alcoves,โ€ the servant said, relaxing. Perhaps heโ€™d feared that she would make a scene. โ€œNo chit is required to sit in one. There are parshman porters who will raise you to the higher levels, if that is what you wish.โ€

โ€œThank you,โ€ Shallan said, turning her back on the Palanaeum. She felt like a child again, locked in her room, not allowed to run through the gardens because of her fatherโ€™s paranoid fears. โ€œDoes Brightness Jasnah have an alcove yet?โ€

โ€œI can ask,โ€ the servant said, leading the way back into the Veil, with its distant, unseen ceiling. He hurried off to speak with some others, leaving Shallan standing beside the doorway to the Palanaeum.

She could run in. Sneak throughโ€”

No. Her brothers teased her for being too timid, but it was not timidity that held her back. There would undoubtedly be guards; bursting in would not only be futile, it would ruin any chance she had of changing Jasnahโ€™s mind.

Change Jasnahโ€™s mind, prove herself. Considering it made her sick. Sheย hatedย confrontation. During her youth, sheโ€™d felt like a piece of delicate crystalware, locked in a cabinet to be displayed but never touched. The only daughter, the last memory of Brightlord Davarโ€™s beloved wife. It still felt odd to her thatย sheย been the one to take charge afterโ€ฆAfter the incidentโ€ฆ Afterโ€ฆ

Memories attacked her. Nan Balat bruised, his coat torn. A long, silvery sword in her hand, sharp enough to cut stones as if they were water.

No,ย Shallan thought, her back to the stone wall, clutching her satchel.

No. Donโ€™t think of the past.

She sought solace in drawing, raising fingers to her satchel and reaching for her paper and pencils. The servant came back before she had a chance to get them out, however. โ€œBrightness Jasnah Kholin has indeed asked that a reading alcove be set aside for her,โ€ he said. โ€œYou may wait there for her, if you wish it.โ€

โ€œI do,โ€ Shallan said. โ€œThank you.โ€

The servant led her to a shadowed enclosure, inside of which four parshmen stood upon a sturdy wooden platform. The servant and Shallan stepped onto the platform, and the parshmen pulled ropes that were strung into a pulley above, raising the platform up the stone shaft. The only lights were broam spheres set at each corner of the liftโ€™s ceiling. Amethysts, which had a soft violet light.

She needed a plan. Jasnah Kholin did not seem the type to change her mind easily. Shallan would have to surprise her, impress her.

They reached a level about forty feet or so off the ground, and the servant waved for the porters to stop. Shallan followed the master-servant down a dark hallway to one of the small balconies that extended out over the Veil. It was round, like a turret, and had a waist-high stone rim with a wooden railing above that. Other occupied alcoves glowed with different colors from the spheres being used to light them; the darkness of the huge space made them seem to hover in the air.

This alcove had a long, curving stone desk joined directly into the rim of the balcony. There was a single chair and a gobletlike crystal bowl. Shallan nodded in thanks to the servant, who withdrew, then she pulled out a handful of spheres and dropped them into the bowl, lighting the alcove.

She sighed, sitting down in the chair and laying her satchel on the desk. She undid the laces on her satchel, busying herself as she tried to think of somethingโ€”anythingโ€”that would persuade Jasnah.

First,ย she decided,ย I need to clear my mind.

From her satchel she removed a sheaf of thick drawing paper, a set of charcoal pencils of different widths, some brushes and steel pens, ink, and watercolors. Finally, she took out her smaller notebook, bound in codex form, which contained the nature sketches sheโ€™d done during her weeks aboard theย Windโ€™s pleasure.

These were simple things, really, but worth more to her than a chest full of spheres. She took a sheet off the stack, then selected a fine-pointed charcoal pencil, rolling it between her fingers. She closed her eyes and fixed an image in her mind: Kharbranth as sheโ€™d memorized it in that moment soon after landing on the docks. Waves surging against the wooden posts, a salty scent to the air, men climbing rigging calling one another with excitement. And the city itself, rising up the hillside, homes stacked atop homes, not a speck of land wasted. Bells, distant, tinkling softly in the air.

She opened her eyes and began to draw. Her fingers moved on their own, sketching broad lines first. The cracklike valley the city was situated in. The port. Here, squares to be homes, there a slash to mark a switchback of the grand roadway that led up to the Conclave. Slowly, bit by bit, she added detail. Shadows as windows. Lines to fill out the roadways. Hints of people and carts to show the chaos of the thoroughfares.

She had read of how sculptors worked. Many would take a blank stone block and work it into a vague shape first. Then, theyโ€™d work it over again, carving more detail with each pass. It was the same for her in drawing. Broad lines first, then some details, then more, then down to the finest of lines. She had no formal training in pencils; she simply did what felt right.

The city took shape beneath her fingers. She coaxed it free, line by line, scratch by scratch. What would she do without this? Tension bled from her body, as if released from her fingertips into the pencil.

She lost track of time as she worked. Sometimes she felt like she was entering a trance, everything else fading. Her fingers almost seemed to draw of their own accord. It was so much easier to think while drawing.

Before too long, she had copied her Memory onto the page. She held up the sheet, satisfied, relaxed, her mind clear. The memorized image of Kharbranth was gone from her head; sheโ€™d released it into her sketch. There was a sense of relaxation to that too. As if her mind was put under tension holding Memories until they could be used.

She did Yalb next, standing shirtless in his vest and gesturing to the short porter who had pulled her up to the Conclave. She smiled as she worked, remembering Yalbโ€™s affable voice. Heโ€™d likely returned to theย Windโ€™s Pleasureย by now. Had it been two hours? Probably.

She was always more excited by drawing animals and people than she was by drawing things. There was something energizing about putting a living creature onto the page. A city was lines and boxes, but a person was circles and curves. Could she get that smirk on Yalbโ€™s face right? Could she show his lazy contentedness, the way he would flirt with a woman far above his station? And the porter, with his thin fingers and sandaled feet, his long coat and baggy pants. His strange language, his keen eyes, his plan to increase his tip by offering not just a ride, but a tour.

When she drew, she didnโ€™t feel as if she worked with only charcoal and paper. In drawing a portrait, her medium was the soul itself. There were plants from which one could remove a tiny cuttingโ€”a leaf, or a bit of stem

โ€”then plant it and grow a duplicate. When she collected a Memory of a person, she was snipping free a bud of their soul, and she cultivated and grew it on the page. Charcoal for sinew, paper pulp for bone, ink for blood, the paperโ€™s texture for skin. She fell into a rhythm, a cadence, the scratching of her pencil like the sound of breathing from those she depicted.

Creationspren began to gather around her pad, looking at her work. Like other spren, they were said to always be around, but usually invisible. Sometimes you attracted them. Sometimes you didnโ€™t. With drawing, skill seemed to make a difference.

Creationspren were of medium size, as tall as one of her fingers, and they glowed with a faint silvery light. They transformed perpetually, taking new shapes. Usually the shapes were things they had seen recently. An urn, a person, a table, a wheel, a nail. Always of the same silvery color, always the same diminutive height. They imitated shapes exactly, but moved them in strange ways. A table would roll like a wheel, an urn would shatter and repair itself.

Her drawing gathered about a half-dozen of them, pulling them by her act of creation just as a bright fire would draw flamespren. Sheโ€™d learned to ignore them. They werenโ€™t substantialโ€”if she moved her arm through one, its figure would smear like scattered sand, then reform. She never felt a thing when touching one.

Eventually, she held up the page, satisfied. It depicted Yalb and the porter in detail, with hints of the busy city behind. Sheโ€™d gotten their eyes right. That was the most important. Each of the Ten Essences had an analogous part of the human bodyโ€”blood for liquid, hair for wood, and so forth. The eyes were associated with crystal and glass. The windows into a personโ€™s mind and spirit.

She set the page aside. Some men collected trophies. Others collected weapons or shields. Many collected spheres.

Shallan collected people. People, and interesting creatures. Perhaps it was because sheโ€™d spent so much of her youth in a virtual prison. Sheโ€™d developed the habit of memorizing faces, then drawing them later, after her father had discovered her sketching the gardeners. His daughter? Drawing pictures of darkeyes? Heโ€™d been furious with herโ€”one of the infrequent times heโ€™d directed his infamous temper at his daughter.

After that, sheโ€™d done drawings of people only when in private, instead using her open drawing times to sketch the insects, crustaceans, and plants

of the manor gardens. Her father hadnโ€™t minded thisโ€”zoology and botany were proper feminine pursuitsโ€”and had encouraged her to choose natural history as her Calling.

She took out a third blank sheet. It seemed to beg her to fill it. A blank page was nothing but potential, pointless until it was used. Like a fully infused sphere cloistered inside a pouch, prevented from making its light useful.

Fill me.

The creationspren gathered around the page. They were still, as if curious, anticipatory. Shallan closed her eyes and imagined Jasnah Kholin, standing before the blocked door, the Soulcaster glowing on her hand. The hallway hushed, save for a childโ€™s sniffles. Attendants holding their breath. An anxious king. A still reverence.

Shallan opened her eyes and began to draw with vigor, intentionally losing herself. The less she was in theย nowย and the more she was in theย then, the better the sketch would be. The other two pictures had been warm- ups; this was the dayโ€™s masterpiece. With the paper bound onto the boardโ€” safehand holding thatโ€”her freehand flew across the page, occasionally switching to other pencils. Soft charcoal for deep, thick blackness, like Jasnahโ€™s beautiful hair. Hard charcoal for light greys, like the powerful waves of light coming from the Soulcasterโ€™s gems.

For a few extended moments, Shallan was back in that hallway again, watching something that should not be: a heretic wielding one of the most sacred powers in all the world. The power of change itself, the power by which the Almighty had created Roshar. He had another name, allowed to pass only the lips of ardents.ย Elithanathile. He Who Transforms.

Shallan could smell the musty hallway. She could hear the child whimpering. She could feel her own heart beating in anticipation. The boulder would soon change. Sucking away the Stormlight in Jasnahโ€™s gemstone, it would give up its essence, becoming something new. Shallanโ€™s breath caught in her throat.

And then the memory faded, returning her to the quiet, dim alcove. The page now held a perfect rendition of the scene, worked in blacks and greys. The princessโ€™s proud figure regarded the fallen stone, demanding that it give way before her will. Itย wasย her. Shallan knew, with the intuitive certainty of an artist, that this was one of the finest pieces she had ever done. In a very small way, she had captured Jasnah Kholin, something the

devotaries had never managed. That gave her a euphoric thrill. Even if this woman rejected Shallan again, one fact would not change. Jasnah Kholin had joined Shallanโ€™s collection.

Shallan wiped her fingers on her cleaning cloth, then lifted the paper. She noted absently that sheโ€™d attracted some two dozen creationspren now. She would have to lacquer the page with plytree sap to set the charcoal and protect it from smudges. She had some in her satchel. First she wanted to study the page and the figure it contained. Whoย wasย Jasnah Kholin? Not one to be cowed, certainly. She was a woman to the bone, master of the feminine arts, but not by any means delicate.

Such a woman would appreciate Shallanโ€™s determination. Sheย would

listen to another request for wardship, assuming it was presented properly.

Jasnah was also a rationalist, a woman with the audacity to deny the existence of the Almighty himself based on her own reasoning. Jasnah would appreciate strength, but only if it was shaped by logic.

Shallan nodded to herself, taking out a fourth sheet of paper and a fine- tipped brushpen, then shaking and opening her jar of ink. Jasnah had demanded proof of Shallanโ€™s logical and writing skills. Well, what better way to do that than to supplicate the woman with words?

Brightness Jasnah Kholin,ย Shallan wrote, painting the letters as neatly and beautifully as she could. She could have used a reed instead, but a brushpen was for works of art. She intended this page to be just that.ย You have rejected my petition. I accept that. Yet, as anyone trained in formal inquiry knows, no supposition should be treated as axiomatic.ย The actual argument usually read โ€œno suppositionโ€”save for the existence of the Almighty himselfโ€”should be held as axiomatic.โ€ But this wording would appeal to Jasnah.

A scientist must be willing to change her theories if experiment disproves them. I hold to the hope that you treat decisions in a like manner: as preliminary results pending further information.

From our brief interaction, I can see that you appreciate tenacity. You complimented me on continuing to seek you out. Therefore, I presume that you will not find this letter a breach of good taste. Take it as proof of my ardor to be your ward, and not as disdain for your expressed decision.

Shallan raised the end of her brushpen to her lips as she considered her next step. The creationspren slowly faded away, vanishing. There were said

to be logicsprenโ€”in the form of tiny stormcloudsโ€”who were attracted to great arguments, but Shallan had never seen them.

You expect proof of my worthiness,ย Shallan continued.ย I wish I could demonstrate that my schooling is more complete than our interview revealed. Unfortunately, I havenโ€™t the grounds for such an argument. I have weaknesses in my understanding. That is plain and not subject to reasonable dispute.

But the lives of men and women are more than logical puzzles; the context of their experiences is invaluable in making good decisions. My study in logic does not rise to your standards, but even I know that the rationalists have a rule: One cannot apply logic as an absolute where human beings are concerned. We are not beings of thought only.

Therefore, the soul of my argument here is to give perspective on my ignorance. Not by way of excuse, but of explanation. You expressed displeasure that one such as I should be trained so inadequately. What of my stepmother? What of my tutors? Why was my education handled so poorly?

The facts are embarrassing. I have had few tutors and virtually no education. My stepmother tried, but she had no education herself. It is a carefully guarded secret, but many of the rural Veden houses ignore the proper training of their women.

I had three different tutors when I was very young, but each left after a few months, citing my fatherโ€™s temper or rudeness as her reason. I was left to my own devices in education. I have learned what I could through reading, filling in the gaps by taking advantage of my own curious nature. But I will not be capable of matching knowledge with someone who has been given the benefit of a formalโ€”and expensiveโ€”education.

Why is this an argument that you should accept me? Because everything I have learned has come by way of great personal struggle. What others were handed, I had to hunt. I believe that because of this, my educationโ€”limited though it isโ€”has extra worth and merit. I respect your decisions, but I do ask you to reconsider. Which would you rather have? A ward who is able to repeat the correct answers because an overpriced tutor drilled them into her, or a ward who had to struggle and fight for everything she has learned?

I assure you that one of those two will prize your teachings far more than the other.

She raised her brush. Her arguments seemed imperfect now that she considered them. She exposed her ignorance, then expected Jasnah to welcome her? Still, it seemed the right thing to do, for all the fact that this letter was a lie. A lie built of truths. She hadnโ€™t truly come to partake of Jasnahโ€™s knowledge. She had come as a thief.

That made her conscience itch, and she nearly reached out and crumpled the page. Steps in the hallway outside made her freeze. She leaped to her feet, spinning, safehand held to her breast. She fumbled for words to explain her presence to Jasnah Kholin.

Light and shadows flickered in the hallway, then a figure hesitantly looked into the alcove, a single white sphere cupped in one hand for light. It wasย notย Jasnah. It was a man in his early twenties wearing simple grey robes. An ardent. Shallan relaxed.

The young man noticed her. His face was narrow, his blue eyes keen. His beard was trimmed short and square, his head shaved. When he spoke, his voice had a cultured tone. โ€œAh, excuse me, Brightness. I thought this was the alcove of Jasnah Kholin.โ€

โ€œIt is,โ€ Shallan said.

โ€œOh. Youโ€™re waiting for her too?โ€ โ€œYes.โ€

โ€œWould you mind terribly if I waited with you?โ€ He had a faint Herdazian accent.

โ€œOf course not, Ardent.โ€ She nodded her head in respect, then gathered up her things in haste, preparing the seat for him.

โ€œI canโ€™t take your seat, Brightness! Iโ€™ll fetch another for myself.โ€

She raised a hand in protest, but he had already retreated. He returned a few moments later, carrying a chair from another alcove. He was tall and lean, andโ€”she decided with slight discomfortโ€”rather handsome. Her father had owned only three ardents, all elderly men. They had traveled his lands and visited the villages, ministering to the people, helping them reach Points in their Glories and Callings. She had their faces in her collection of portraits.

The ardent set down his chair. He hesitated before sitting, glancing at the table. โ€œMy, my,โ€ he said in surprise.

For a moment, Shallan thought he was reading her letter, and she felt an irrational surge of panic. The ardent, however, was regarding the three drawings that lay at the head of the table, awaiting lacquer.

โ€œYou did these, Brightness?โ€ he said.

โ€œYes, Ardent,โ€ Shallan said, lowering her eyes.

โ€œNo need to be so formal!โ€ the ardent said, leaning down and adjusting his spectacles as he studied her work. โ€œPlease, I am Brother Kabsal, or just Kabsal. Really, itโ€™s fine. And you are?โ€

โ€œShallan Davar.โ€

โ€œBy Vedeledevโ€™s golden keys, Brightness!โ€ Brother Kabsal said, seating himself. โ€œDid Jasnah Kholin teach you this skill with the pencil?โ€

โ€œNo, Ardent,โ€ she said, still standing.

โ€œStill so formal,โ€ he said, smiling at her. โ€œTell me, am I so intimidating as that?โ€

โ€œI have been brought up to show respect to ardents.โ€

โ€œWell, I myself find that respect is like manure. Use it where needed, and growth will flourish. Spread it on too thick, and things just start to smell.โ€ His eyes twinkled.

Had anย ardentโ€”a servant of the Almightyโ€”just spoken ofย manure? โ€œAn ardent is a representative of the Almighty himself,โ€ she said. โ€œTo show you lack of respect would be to show it to the Almighty.โ€

โ€œI see. And this is how youโ€™d respond if the Almighty himself appeared to you here? All of this formality and bowing?โ€

She hesitated. โ€œWell, no.โ€

โ€œAh, and howย wouldย you react?โ€

โ€œI suspect with screams of pain,โ€ she said, letting her thought slip out too easily. โ€œAs it is written that the Almightyโ€™s glory is such that any who look upon him would immediately be burned to ash.โ€

The ardent laughed at that. โ€œWisely spoken indeed. Please, do sit, though.โ€

She did so, hesitant.

โ€œYou still appear conflicted,โ€ he said, holding up her portrait of Jasnah. โ€œWhat must I do to put you at ease? Shall I step up onto this desk here and do a jig?โ€

She blinked in surprise.

โ€œNo objection?โ€ Brother Kabsal said. โ€œWell, thenโ€ฆโ€ He set down the portrait and began to climb up on his chair.

โ€œNo, please!โ€ Shallan said, holding out her freehand.

โ€œAre you certain?โ€ he glanced at the desk appraisingly.

โ€œYes,โ€ Shallan said, imagining the ardent teetering and making a misstep, then falling off the balcony and plunging dozens of feet to the ground below. โ€œPlease, I promise not to respect you any longer!โ€

He chuckled, hopping down and seating himself. He leaned closer to her, as if conspiratorially. โ€œThe table jig threat almost always works. Iโ€™ve only ever had to go through with it once, due to a lost bet against Brother Lhanin. The master ardent of our monastery nearly keeled over in shock.โ€

Shallan found herself smiling. โ€œYouโ€™re an ardent; youโ€™re forbidden to have possessions. What did you bet?โ€

โ€œTwo deep breaths of a winter roseโ€™s fragrance,โ€ said Brother Kabsal, โ€œand the sunlightโ€™s warmth on your skin.โ€ He smiled. โ€œWe can be rather creative at times. Years spent marinating in a monastery can do that to a man. Now, you were about to explain to me where you learned such skill with a pencil.โ€

โ€œPractice,โ€ Shallan said. โ€œI should suspect that is how everyone learns, eventually.โ€

โ€œWise words again. I am beginning to wonder which of us it the ardent. But surely you had a master to teach you.โ€

โ€œDandos the Oilsworn.โ€

โ€œAh, a true master of pencils if there ever was one. Now, not that I doubt your word, Brightness, but Iโ€™m rather intrigued how Dandos Heraldin could have trained you in arts, asโ€”last I checkedโ€”heโ€™s suffering a rather terminal and perpetual ailment. Namely, that of beingย dead. For three hundred years.โ€

Shallan blushed. โ€œMy father had a book of his instruction.โ€

โ€œYou learned this,โ€ Kabsal said, lifting up her drawing of Jasnah, โ€œfrom aย book.โ€

โ€œErโ€ฆyes?โ€

He looked back at the picture. โ€œI need to read more.โ€

Shallan found herself laughing at the ardentโ€™s expression, and she took a Memory of him sitting there, admiration and perplexity blending on his face as he studied the picture, rubbing his bearded chin with one finger.

He smiled pleasantly, setting down the picture. โ€œYou have lacquer?โ€

โ€œI do,โ€ she said, getting it out of her satchel. It was contained in a bulb sprayer of the type often used for perfume.

He accepted the small jar and twisted the clasp on the front, then gave the bottle a shake and tested the lacquer on the back of his hand. He nodded

in satisfaction and reached for the drawing. โ€œA piece such as this should not be allowed to risk smudging.โ€

โ€œI can lacquer it,โ€ Shallan said. โ€œNo need to trouble yourself.โ€

โ€œIt is no trouble; itโ€™s an honor. Besides, I am an ardent. We donโ€™t know what to do with ourselves when we arenโ€™t busying about, doing things others could do for themselves. It is best just to humor me.โ€ He began to apply the lacquer, dusting the page with careful puffs.

She had trouble keeping herself from reaching to snatch the sketch away. Fortunately, his hands were careful, and the lacquer went on evenly. Heโ€™d obviously done this before.

โ€œYou are from Jah Keved, I presume?โ€ he asked.

โ€œFrom the hair?โ€ she asked, raising a hand to her red locks. โ€œOr from the accent?โ€

โ€œFrom the way you treat ardents. The Veden Church is by far the most traditional. I have visited your lovely country on two occasions; while your food sits well in my stomach, the amount of bowing and scraping you show ardents made me uncomfortable.โ€

โ€œPerhaps you should have danced on a few tables.โ€

โ€œI considered it,โ€ he said, โ€œbut my brother and sister ardents from your country would likely have dropped dead of embarrassment. I would hate to have that on my conscience. The Almighty is not kind toward those who kill his priests.โ€

โ€œI should think that killing in general would be frowned upon,โ€ she responded, still watching him apply the lacquer. It felt odd to let someone else work on her art.

โ€œWhat does Brightness Jasnah think of your skill?โ€ he asked as he worked.

โ€œI donโ€™t think she cares,โ€ Shallan said, grimacing and remembering her conversation with the woman. โ€œShe doesnโ€™t seem terribly appreciative of the visual arts.โ€

โ€œSo I have heard. Itโ€™s one of her few faults, unfortunately.โ€ โ€œAnother being that little matter of her heresy?โ€

โ€œIndeed,โ€ Kabsal said, smiling. โ€œI must admit, I stepped in here expecting indifference, not deference. How did you come to be part of her entourage?โ€

Shallan started, realizing for the first time that Brother Kabsal must have assumed her to be one of the Brightlady Kholinโ€™s attendants. Perhaps a

ward.

โ€œBother,โ€ she said to herself. โ€œHum?โ€

โ€œIt appears Iโ€™ve inadvertently misled you, Brother Kabsal. Iโ€™m not associated with Brightness Jasnah. Not yet, anyway. Iโ€™ve been trying to get her to take me on as a ward.โ€

โ€œAh,โ€ he said, finishing his lacquering. โ€œIโ€™m sorry.โ€

โ€œFor what? You did nothing wrong.โ€ He blew on the picture, then turned it for her to see. It was perfectly lacquered, without any smears. โ€œIf you would do me a favor, child?โ€ he said, setting the page aside.

โ€œAnything.โ€

He raised an eyebrow at that. โ€œAnything reasonable,โ€ she corrected. โ€œBy whose reason?โ€

โ€œMine, I guess.โ€

โ€œPity,โ€ he said, standing. โ€œThen I will limit myself. If you would kindly let Brightness Jasnah know that I called upon her?โ€

โ€œShe knows you?โ€ What business had a Herdazian ardent with Jasnah, a confirmed atheist?

โ€œOh, I wouldnโ€™t say that,โ€ he replied. โ€œIโ€™d hope sheโ€™s heard my name, though, since Iโ€™ve requested an audience with her several times.โ€

Shallan nodded, rising. โ€œYou want to try to convert her, I presume?โ€

โ€œShe presents a unique challenge. I donโ€™t think I could live with myself if I didnโ€™t at leastย tryย to persuade her.โ€

โ€œAnd we wouldnโ€™t want you to be unable to live with yourself,โ€ Shallan noted, โ€œas the alternative harks back to your nasty habit of almost killing ardents.โ€

โ€œExactly. Anyway, I think a personal message from you might help where written requests have been ignored.โ€

โ€œIโ€ฆdoubt that.โ€

โ€œWell, if she refuses, it only means that Iโ€™ll be back.โ€ He smiled. โ€œThat would meanโ€”hopefullyโ€”that we shall meet each other again. So I look forward to it.โ€

โ€œI as well. And Iโ€™m sorry again about the misunderstanding.โ€ โ€œBrightness! Please. Donโ€™t take responsibility forย myย assumptions.โ€

She smiled. โ€œI should hesitate to take responsibility for you inย any

manner or regard, Brother Kabsal. But I still feel bad.โ€

โ€œIt will pass,โ€ he noted, blue eyes twinkling. โ€œBut Iโ€™ll do my best to make you feel well again. Is there anything youโ€™re fond of? Other than respecting ardents and drawing amazing pictures, that is?โ€

โ€œJam.โ€

He cocked his head.

โ€œI like it,โ€ she said, shrugging. โ€œYou asked what I was fond of. Jam.โ€ โ€œSo it shall be.โ€ He withdrew into the dark corridor, fishing in his robe

pocket for his sphere to give him light. In moments, he was gone.

Why didnโ€™t he wait for Jasnah to return himself? Shallan shook her head, then lacquered her other two pictures. She had just finished letting them dryโ€”packing them in her satchelโ€”when she heard footsteps in the hallway again and recognized Jasnahโ€™s voice speaking.

Shallan hurriedly gathered her things, leaving the letter on the desk, then stepped up to the side of the alcove to wait. Jasnah Kholin entered a moment later, accompanied by a small group of servants.

She did not look pleased.

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