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slippers. Too terrified to turn back for it, or perhaps even to notice—and well for her that
she was—she clawed the door open and ran. Sending property for discipline should not
bring a sense of satisfaction, but it did. Oh, yes, it did.
Suroth took a moment to control her breathing. To appear to be grieving was one thing, to
appear to be agitated quite another. She was filled with annoyance at Liandrin, jolting
memories of her nightmares, fears for Tuon’s fate and even more so her own, but not
until the face in the mirror displayed utter calm did she follow the da’covale.
The anteroom to her bedchamber was decorated in the garish Ebou Dari fashion, a cloud-
painted blue ceiling, yellow walls and green and yellow floor tiles. Even replacing the
furnishings with her own tall screens, all save two painted by the finest artists with birds
or flowers, did little to relieve the gaudiness. She growled faintly in her throat at sight of
the outer door, apparently left open by Liandrin in her flight, but she dismissed the
da’covale from her mind for the moment and concentrated on the man who stood there
examining the screen that held the image of a kori, a huge spotted cat from the Sen
T’jore. Lanky and graying, in armor striped blue-and-yellow, he pivoted smoothly at the
soft sound of her footsteps and went to one knee, though he was a commoner. The helmet
beneath his arm bore three slender blue plumes, so the message must be important. Of
course, it must be important to disturb her at this hour. She would give him dispensation.
This once.
“Banner-General Mikhel Najirah, High Lady. Captain-General Galgan’s compliments,
and he has received communications from Tarabon.”
Suroth’s eyebrows climbed in spite of herself. Tarabon? Tarabon was as secure as
Seandar. Automatically her fingers twitched, but she had not yet found a replacement for
Alwhin. She must speak to the man herself. Irritation over that hardened her voice, and
she made no effort to soften it. Kneeling instead of prostrate! “What communications? If
I have been wakened for news of Aiel, I will not be pleased, Banner-General.”
Her tone failed to intimidate the man. He even raised his eyes almost to meet hers. “Not
Aiel, High Lady,” he said calmly. “Captain-General Galgan wishes to tell you himself, so
you can hear every detail correctly.”
Suroth’s breath caught for an instant. Whether Najirah was just reluctant to tell her the
contents of these communications or had been ordered not to, this sounded ill. “Lead on,”
she commanded, then swept out of the room without waiting for him, ignoring as best she
could the pair of Deathwatch Guards standing like statues in the hallway to either side of
the door. The “honor” of being guarded by those men in red-and-green armor made her
skin crawl. Since Tuon’s disappearance, she tried not to see them at all.
The corridor, lined with gilded stand-lamps whose flames flickered in errant drafts that
stirred tapestries of ships and the sea, was empty except for a few liveried palace
servants, scurrying on early tasks, who thought deep bows and curtsies sufficient. And
they always looked right at her! Perhaps a word with Beslan? No; the new King of
Tarabon was her equal, now, in law at any rate, and she doubted that he would make his
servants behave properly. She stared straight ahead as she walked. That way, she did not
have to see the servants’ insults.
Najirah caught up to her quickly, his boots ringing on the too-bright blue floor tiles, and
fell in at her side. In truth, she needed no guide. She knew where Galgan must be.
The room had begun as a chamber for dancing, a square thirty paces on a side, its ceiling
painted with fanciful fish and birds frolicking in often confusing fashion among clouds
and waves. Only the ceiling remained to recall the room’s beginnings. Now mirrored
stand-lamps and shelves full of filed reports in leather folders lined the pale red walls.
Brown-coated clerks scurried along the aisles between the long, map-strewn tables that
covered the green-tiled dancing-floor. A young officer, an under-lieutenant with no
plume on her red-and-yellow helmet, raced past Suroth without so much as a move to
prostrate herself. Clerks merely squeezed themselves out of her path. Galgan gave his
people too much leeway. He claimed that what he called excessive ceremony at “the
wrong time” hindered efficiency; she called it effrontery.
Lunal Galgan, a tall man in a red robe richly worked with bright-feathered birds, the hair
of his crest snow white and its tail plaited in a tight but untidy queue that hung to his
shoulders, stood at a table near the center of the room with a knot of other high-ranking
officers, some in breastplates, others in robes and nearly as disheveled as she. It seemed
she was not the first to whom he had sent a messenger. She struggled to keep anger from
her face. Galgan had come with Tuon and the Return, and thus she knew little of him
beyond that his ancestors had been among the first to throw their support to Luthair
Paendrag and that he owned a high reputation as a soldier and a general. Well, reputation
and truth were sometimes the same. She disliked him entirely for himself.
He turned at her approach and formally laid his hands on her shoulders, kissing her on
either cheek, so she was forced to return the greeting while trying not to wrinkle her nose
at the strong, musky scent he favored. Galgan’s face was as smooth as his creases would
allow, but she thought she detected a hint of worry in his blue eyes. A number of the men
and women behind him, mainly low Blood and commoners, wore open frowns.
The large map of Tarabon spread out on the table in front of her and held flat by four
lamps gave reason enough for worry. Markers covered it, red wedges for Seanchan forces
on the move and red stars for forces holding in place, each supporting a small paper
banner inked with their numbers and composition. Scattered across the map, across the
entire map, lay black discs marking engagements, and even more white discs for enemy
forces, many of those without the banners. How could there be any enemies in Tarabon?
It was as secure as….
“What happened?” she demanded.
“Raken began arriving with reports from Lieutenant-General Turan about three hours
ago,” Galgan began in conversational tones. Pointedly not making a report himself. He
studied the map as he talked, never glancing in her direction. “They aren’t complete—
each new one adds to the lists, and I expect that won’t change for a while—but what I’ve
seen runs this way. Since dawn yesterday, seven major supply camps overrun and burned,
along with more than two dozen smaller camps. Twenty supply trains attacked, the
wagons and their contents put to the torch. Seventeen small outposts have been wiped
out, eleven patrols have failed to report in, and there have been an additional fifteen
skirmishes. Also a few attacks against our settlers. Only a handful of fatalities, mostly
men who tried to defend their belongings, but a good many wagons and stores burned
along with some half-built houses, and the same message delivered everywhere. Leave
Tarabon. All this was done by bands of between two and perhaps five hundred men.
Estimates are a minimum of ten thousand and perhaps twice that, nearly all Taraboners.
Oh, yes,” he finished casually, “and most of them are wearing armor painted with
stripes.”
She wanted to grind her teeth. Galgan commanded the soldiers of the Return, yet she
commanded the Corenne, the Forerunners, and as such, she possessed the higher rank in
spite of his crest and red-lacquered fingernails. She suspected the only reason he did not
claim that the Forerunners had been absorbed into the Return by its very arrival was that
supplanting her meant assuming responsibility for Tuon’s safety. And for that apology,
should it become necessary. “Dislike” was too mild a word. She loathed Galgan.
“A mutiny?” she said, proud of the coolness of her voice. Inside, she had begun to burn.
Galgan’s white queue swung slowly as he shook his head. “No. All reports say our
Taraboners have fought well, and we’ve had a few successes, taken a few prisoners. Not
one of them can be found on the rosters of loyal Taraboners. Several have been identified
as Dragonsworn believed to be up in Arad Doman. And the name Rodel Ituralde has been
mentioned a number of times as the brain behind it all, and the leader. A Domani. He’s
supposed to be one of the best generals this side of the ocean, and if he planned and
carried out all this,” he swept a hand over the map, “then I believe it.” The fool sounded
admiring! “Not a mutiny. A raid on a grand scale. But he won’t get out with nearly as
many men as he brought in.”
Dragonsworn. The word was like a fist clutching Suroth’s throat. “Are there Asha’man?”
“Those fellows who can channel?” Galgan grimaced and made a sign against evil,
apparently unconscious of doing so. “There was no mention of them,” he said dryly, “and
I rather think there would have been.”
Red-hot anger needed to erupt at Galgan, but screaming at another of the High Blood
would lower her eyes. And, as bad, gain nothing. Still, it had to be directed somewhere. It
had to come out. She was proud of what she had done in Tarabon, and now the country
appeared to be halfway back to the chaos she found when she first landed there. And one
man was to blame. “This Ituralde.” Her tone was ice. “I want his head!”
“Never fear,” Galgan murmured, folding his hands behind his back and bending to
examine some of the small banners. “It won’t be long before Turan chases him back to
Arad Doman with his tail between his legs, and with luck, he’ll be with one of the bands
we snap up.”
“Luck?” she snapped. “I don’t trust to luck!” Her anger was open, now, and she did not
consider trying to suppress it again. Her eyes scanned the map as though she could find
Ituralde that way. “If Turan is hunting a hundred bands, as you suggest, he’ll need more
scouts to run them down, and I want them run down. Every last one of them. Especially
Ituralde. General Yulan, I want four in every five—no, nine in every ten—raken in Altara
and Amadicia moved to Tarabon. If Turan can’t find them all with that, then he can see if
his own head will appease me.”
Yulan, a dark little man in a blue robe embroidered with black-crested eagles, must have
dressed in too great a hurry to apply the gum that normally held his wig in place, because
he was constantly touching the thing to make sure it was straight. He was Captain of the
Air for the Forerunners, but the Return’s Captain of the Air was only a Banner-General, a
more senior man having died on the voyage. Yulan would have no trouble with him.
“A wise move, High Lady,” he said, frowning at the map, “but may I suggest leaving the
raken in Amadicia and those assigned to Banner-General Khirgan. Raken are the best
way we have to locate Aiel, and in two days we still haven’t found those Whitecloaks.
That will still give General Turan—”
“The Aiel are less of a problem every day,” she told him firmly, “and a few deserters are
nothing.” He inclined his head in assent, one hand keeping his wig in place. He was only
low Blood, after all.
“I hardly call seven thousand men a few deserters,” Galgan murmured dryly.
“It shall be as I command!” she snapped. Curse those so-called Children of the Light! She
still had not decided whether to make Asunawa and the few thousand who had remained
da’covale. They had remained, yet how long before they offered betrayal, too? And
Asunawa seemed to hate damane, of all things. The man was unbalanced!
Galgan shrugged, utterly unperturbed. A red-lacquered fingernail traced lines on the map
as though he were planning movements of soldiers. “So long as you don’t want the
to’raken, too, I raise no objections. That plan must go forward. Altara is falling into our
hands with barely a struggle, I’m not ready to move on Illian yet, and we need to pacify
Tarabon again quickly. The people will turn against us if we can’t give them safety.”
Suroth began to regret letting her anger show. He would raise no objections? He was not
ready for Illian yet? He was all but saying that he did not have to follow her orders, only
not openly, not so he had to take her responsibility along with her authority.
“I expect this message to be sent to Turan, General Galgan.” Her voice was steady, kept
so by will alone. “He is to send me Rodel Ituralde’s head if he has to hound the man
across Arad Doman and into the Blight. And if he fails to send me that head, I will take
his.”
Galgan’s mouth tightened briefly, and he frowned down at the map. “Turan sometimes