New 'Stormlight' Story
Today, a new Stormlight story was unveiled. Is it a short story / novella / etc? Is it from Book 3 (or another book yet to come)? Either way, if you have not yet read Words of Radiance, here be spoilers after the jump.
Jasnah Kholin opened her eyes and
gasped, fingers rigid, clawing at the obsidian ground. A knife in her
chest! She could feel it grinding on her bones as it slipped
between two ribs, glancing off her sternum. She spasmed, rolling into
a ball, quivering.
“Jasnah.”
No. She could not lay prone. She fought
to her knees, but then found herself raking her fingers across the
ground, trembling, heaving breaths in and out. Moving—even
breathing—was perversely difficult, not because of pain or
incapacity, but because of the overwhelming sense of tension. It made
her shake, made her made her want to run, fight, do anything she
could to not die.
She shouted, stumbling to her feet, and
spun about, hand on her chest.
Wet blood. Her blood. A dress
cut with a single knife hole.
“Jasnah.” A figure all in black. A
landscape of obsidian ground reflecting a bizarre sky and a sun that
did not change locations.
She darted her head from side to side,
taking in everything but registering very little of it.
Storms. She could sense that
knife again, sliding into her flesh. She felt that same
helplessness, that same panic—emotions which had accompanied the
knife’s fall. She remembered the darkness consuming her,
her hearing fading, the end.
She closed her eyes and shivered, trying
to banish the memories. Yet the effort of trying to do so only seemed
to solidify them.
She knew that she would remember dying
for as long as it took the darkness to claim her again.
“You did well,” Ivory said. “Well,
Jasnah.”
“The knife,” she whispered, opening
her eyes, angry at how her voice trembled, “the knife was
unexpected.” She breathed in and out, trying to calm herself. That
puffed out the last of her Stormlight, which she had drawn in at the
last possible moment, then used like a lash to pull herself into this
place. It had kept her alive, healed her.
Ivory said that while a person held
enough Stormlight, only a crushing blow to the head itself would
kill. She’d believed him, but storms that hadn’t made it
any easier to lay there before the knife. Who would have expected
them to stab her? Shouldn’t they have assumed that a blow to the
head would be enough to—
Wait. Shallan!
“We have to go back,” Jasnah said,
spinning. “Ivory, where is the junction?”
“It is not.”
She was able to locate the ship with
ease. In Shadesmar, land and sea were reversed, so she stood on solid
ground—but in the Physical Realm, Shallan and the sailors would
still be in their ship. They manifest here as lights, similar to
candle flames, and Jasnah thought of them as the representation of
the person’s soul—despite Ivory telling her that was an extreme
simplification.
They spotted the air around her,
standing up on deck. That solitary flame would be Shallan herself.
Many smaller lights darted beneath the ground—faintly visible
through the obsidian. Fish and other sea life.
Nerves still taut, Jasnah searched
around for the junction: a faint warping of the air that marked the
place of her passage into Shadesmar. She could use it return to the
ship, to...
One of the lights up above winked out.
Jasnah froze. “They’re being
executed. Ivory! The junction.”
“A junction is not, Jasnah,” Ivory
repeated. He stood with hands clasped behind his back, wearing a
sharp—yet somehow alien—suit, all black. Here in Shadesmar, it
was easier to distinguish the mother-of-pearl sheen to his skin, like
the colors made by oil on water.
“Not?” Jasnah said, trying to parse
his meaning. She’d missed his explanation the first time. Despite
their years together, his language constructions still baffled her on
occasion. “But there’s always a junction...”
“Only when a piece of you is there,”
Ivory said. “Today, that is not. You are here, Jasnah. I
am...sorry.”
“You brought me all the way into
Shadesmar,” she asked. “Now?”
He bowed his head.
For years she’d been trying to get him
to bring her into his world. Though she could peek into Shadesmar on
her own—and even slip one foot in, so to speak—entering fully
required Ivory’s help. How had it happened? The academic wanted to
record her experiences and tease out the process, so that perhaps she
could replicate it. She’d used Stormlight, hadn’t she? An
outpouring of it, thrust into Shadesmar. A lash which had pulling
her, like gravitation from a distant place, unseen...
Memories of what happened mixed with the
terror of those last minutes. She shoved both emotions and memories
aside. How could she help the people on the ship? Jasnah stepped up
to the light, hovering before her, lifting a hand to cup one.
Shallan, she assumed, though she could not be certain. Ivory said
that there wasn’t always a direct correlation between objects their
manifestation in Shadesmar.
She couldn’t touch the soul before
her, not completely. Its natural power repelled her hand, as if she
were trying to push two pieces of magnetized stone against one
another.
A sudden screech broke Shadesmar’s
silence.
Jasnah jumped, spinning. It sounded a
trumping beast, only overlaid by the sounds of glass breaking. The
terrible noise drove a shiver up her spine. It sounded like it had
come from someplace nearby.
Ivory gasped. He leaped forward,
grabbing Jasnah by the arm. “We must go.”
“What is that?” Jasnah asked.
“Grinder,” Ivory said. “You call
them painspren.”
“Painspren are harmless.”
“On your side, harmless. Here,
harmmore. Very harmmore. Come.” He yanked on her arm.
“Wait.”
The ship’s crew would die
because of her. Storms! She had not thought that the Ghostbloods
would be so bold. But what to do? She felt like a child here,
newborn. Years of study had told her so little. Could she do anything
to those souls above her? She couldn’t even distinguish which were
the assassins and which were the crew.
The screech sounded again, coming
closer. Jasnah looked up, growing tense. This place was so alien,
with ridges and mountains of pure black obsidian, a landscape that
was perpetually dim. Small beads of glass rolled about her
feet—representations of inanimate objects in the physical realm.
Perhaps...
She fished among them, and these she
could identify immediately by touch. Three plates from the galley,
one bead each. A trunk holding clothing.
Several of her books.
Her hand hesitated. Oh storms, this was
a disaster. Why hadn’t she prepared better? Her contingency plan in
case of an assassination attempt had been to play dead, using faint
amounts of stormlight from gems sewn into her hem to stay alive. But
she’d foolishly expected assassins to appear in the night, strike
her down, then flee. She’d not prepared for a mutiny, an
assassination led by a member of the crew.
They would murder everyone on board.
“Jasnah!” Ivory said, sounding more
desperate. “We must not be in this place! Emotions from
the ship draw them!”
She dropped the spheres representing her
books and ran her fingers through the other spheres, seeking...
there. Ropes—the bonds tying the sailors as they were executed. She
found a group of them and seized the spheres.
She drew in the last of her Stormlight,
a few gemstones’ worth. So little.
The landscape reacted immediately. Beads
on the ground nearby shivered and rolled toward her, seeking the
stormlight. The calls of the painspren intensified. It was even
closer now. Ivory breathed in sharply, and high above, several long
ribbons of smoke descended out of the clouds and began to circle
about her.
Stormlight was precious here. It was
power, currency, even—perhaps—life. Without it, she’d be
defenseless.
“Can I use this Light to return?”
she asked him.
“Here?” He shook his head. “No. We
must find a stable junction. Honor’s Perpendicularity, perhaps,
though it is very distant. But Jasnah, the grinders will soon be!”
Jasnah gripped the beads in her hand.
“You,” she command, “will change.”
“I am a rope,” one of them said. “I
am—”
“You will change.”
The ropes shivered, transforming—one
by one—into smoke in the physical realm.
.
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