A Memory Of Light: Wheel of Time Book 14

Read A Memory Of Light: Wheel of Time Book 14 for Free Online

Book: Read A Memory Of Light: Wheel of Time Book 14 for Free Online
Authors: Robert Jordan, Brandon Sanderson
another—who were Aes Sedai did not mean she wanted to be inside a camp full of them. The Warder led
     them to an open area near the middle of the Field of Merrilor. There was a very large camp here, with a great number of small
     tents.
    “Aiel,” Bayle said softly to her. “There do be tens of thousands of them.”
    Interesting. Fearsome stories were told of Aiel, legends that could not all possibly be true. Still, the tales—if exaggerated—suggested
     that these were the finest warriors this side of the ocean. She would have welcomed sparring with one or two of them, had
     the situation been different. She rested a hand on the side of her pack; she’d stowed her cudgel in a long pocket on the side,
     easily within reach.
    They certainly were a
tall
folk, these Aiel. She passed some of them lounging by campfires, seemingly relaxed. Those eyes, however, watched more keenly
     than the Warders’ had. A dangerous people, ready for killing while relaxing beside fires. She could not make out the banners
     that flapped above this camp in the night sky.
    “Which king or queen do rule this camp, Warder?” she called.
    The man turned to her, his features lost in the night shadow. “Your king, Illianer.”
    At her side, Bayle stiffened.
    My…
    The Dragon Reborn. She was proud that she didn’t miss a step as they walked, but it was a near thing. A man who could channel.
     That was worse, far worse, than the Aes Sedai.
    The Warder led them to a tent near the center of the camp. “You are fortunate; her light is on.” There were no guards at the
     tent entrance, so he called in and received permission to enter. He pulled back the flap with one arm and nodded to them,
     yet his other hand was on his sword, and he stood in fighting posture.
    She hated putting that sword to her back, but she entered as ordered. The tent was lit by one of those unnatural globes of
     light, and a familiar woman in a green dress sat at a writing desk, working on a letter. Nynaeve al’Meara was what, back in
     Seanchan, one would call a
telarti
—a woman with fire in her soul. Leilwin had come to understand that Aes Sedai were supposed to be calm as placid waters. Well,
     this woman might be that on occasion–but she was the kind of placid water found one bend away from a furious waterfall.
    Nynaeve continued to write as they entered. She no longer wore braids; her hair was loose around the top of her shoulders.
     It was a sight as strange as a ship with no mast.
    “I’ll be with you in a moment, Sleete,” Nynaeve said. “Honestly, the way you lot have been hovering over me lately makes me
     think of a mother bird who has lost an egg. Don’t your Aes Sedai have work for you to do?”
    “Lan is important to many of us, Nynaeve Sedai,” the Warder–Sleete– said in a calm, gravelly voice.
    “Oh, and he’s not important to me? Honestly, I wonder if we should send you out to chop wood or something. If one more Warder
     comes to see if I need—”
    She glanced up, finally seeing Leilwin. Nynaeve’s face immediately grew impassive. Cold. Burningly cold. Leilwin found herself
     sweating. This woman held her life in her hands. Why couldn’t it have been Elayne that Sleete had brought them to? Perhaps
     they shouldn’t have mentioned Nynaeve.
    “These two demanded to see you,” Sleete said. His sword was out of its sheath. Leilwin hadn’t seen that. Domon muttered softly
     to himself. “They claim that you promised to pay them money, and they have come for it. They did not identify themselves in
     the Tower, however, and found a way to slip through one of the gateways. The man is from Illian. The woman, somewhere else.
     She’s disguising her accent.”
    Well, perhaps she wasn’t as good with the accent as she’d assumed. Leilwin glanced at his sword. If she rolled to the side,
     he’d probably miss a strike, assuming he went for the chest or neck. She could pull the cudgel and—
    She was facing an Aes Sedai. She’d never stand

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