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Daily Caller Feed
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31 w

FACT CHECK: Post Claims Chinese Troops Captured 14 Indian Soldiers
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FACT CHECK: Post Claims Chinese Troops Captured 14 Indian Soldiers

A post shared on Facebook claims China captured 14 Indian soldiers. Verdict: False There is no evidence for this claim. The image is from 2020-2021, not 2024. Fact Check: Social media users are claiming that China captured 14 Indian soldiers. These posts are accompanied by an image of two Chinese troops dragging an unknown man. One […]
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31 w

FACT CHECK: Claim Trump Will Pick Ben Carson For U.S. Surgeon General Is Misleading
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FACT CHECK: Claim Trump Will Pick Ben Carson For U.S. Surgeon General Is Misleading

A post made on X claims that President-elect Donald Trump will nominate former HUD secretary Ben Carson as U.S. Surgeon General. ?BREAKING: President Trump expected to pick Ben Carson as the nation’s top doctor, the U.S. Surgeon General. — Trent Leisy (@realTrentLeisy) November 17, 2024 Verdict: Misleading Carson has already announced that he will not be serving […]
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31 w

FACT CHECK: Was A Vote In New Zealand Parliament Stopped By Maori Haka Dancing?
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FACT CHECK: Was A Vote In New Zealand Parliament Stopped By Maori Haka Dancing?

A post on X claims that the first reading of a bill during a Parliamentary session in New Zealand was cancelled after Māori tribal representatives started doing a traditional Haka dance. First reading vote of the Treaty Principles Bill in NZ parliament didn’t go through after Māori MP Hana-Rawhiti Maipa-Clarke started a haka in the […]
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31 w

Blue State University That Allowed Jewish Exclusion Zones In Need Of ‘Fundamental Structural Change’, Watchdog Finds 
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Blue State University That Allowed Jewish Exclusion Zones In Need Of ‘Fundamental Structural Change’, Watchdog Finds 

'Lacking the ability to react'
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31 w

Several ‘Trump Dance’ Celebrations Break Out Across NFL, And Damn, I Love Living In This America
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Several ‘Trump Dance’ Celebrations Break Out Across NFL, And Damn, I Love Living In This America

Oh man, I'm loving this new America
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31 w

We Can Only Imagine What Went On In Trump’s Closed Door Meeting With Joe And Mika
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We Can Only Imagine What Went On In Trump’s Closed Door Meeting With Joe And Mika

But does anyone believe this is how the meeting really went?
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Pet Life
Pet Life
31 w

When Toys Put Cats in a Trance: Olga’s Transformation
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When Toys Put Cats in a Trance: Olga’s Transformation

The post When Toys Put Cats in a Trance: Olga’s Transformation by Christopher Bays appeared first on Catster. Copying over entire articles infringes on copyright laws. You may not be aware of it, but all of these articles were assigned, contracted and paid for, so they aren't considered public domain. However, we appreciate that you like the article and would love it if you continued sharing just the first paragraph of an article, then linking out to the rest of the piece on Catster.com. Hi, I’m Christopher! Read my introduction to learn more about me and my silly Russian Blue cat, Olga. Cats’ hunting instincts influence how they play with toys, but their play sessions involve more than evolutionary advancements. House cats are predators, and we often assume their behavior is predetermined by genetics. It’s hard to dispute that they love hunting and playing, but most cats are intelligent enough to distinguish between them. Olga the Hunter My cat has only hunted and killed insects in my home; a few years ago, she chased down an anole (Anolis carolinensis), pinned it to the floor, and prevented it from scurrying under my dryer. She didn’t bat it around or bite it in half. Olga is occasionally aggressive but doesn’t have a strong prey drive or desire to torture and eat a small lizard. I’m not claiming that she’s more peaceful than most cats since I haven’t let her outside to chase birds or rodents. She could be a ruthless killer of small animals, but I’ll never know since I think her play behavior isn’t a good indicator of her hunting skills. Olga hits her toys and attacks them, but she also snuggles up to them and sometimes falls into a deep trance. If I let her outside and she treated mice and birds the same way, the animals would injure her and possibly suffocate after she fell asleep on them. Can you see the tag from the catnip mouse hiding in my belly fur? The Toy-Induced Trance When she’s purring and stretched out with a toy nestled against her head, I can rub her belly without getting my hand ripped up. She purrs louder when cuddling with her toys, and I think she enjoys it more than petting. Without a toy, she would latch on to my hand and sink her fangs into it. Except for the Siamese cat I owned, most felines hate it when anyone touches their gut. I used to think that only her plastic plant holder sent her to another world. However, catnip mice, paper balls, and silvervine sticks also calm Olga down and make her less protective. She doesn’t always do it but seems to enjoy sleeping on her toys. In the morning, I sometimes see a paper ball or plush mouse at the foot of my bed. You’re playing with fire, Christopher! Olga’s Comfort Blanket When she was younger, she used to drag her plant holder around the house and drop it at my feet to encourage me to play with it. She acted like Linus with his ragged blue blanket; like him, her favorite inedible object comforted her. When she’s in a toy trance, I can inspect her belly for parasites and bumps, but she eventually gets annoyed and doesn’t allow me to brush her. After Olga’s dental surgery, I thought about giving her a toy to distract her while I squirted the antibiotic into her mouth with a syringe, but I decided against it. She wasn’t very cooperative when she saw the oral medication in my hand, but I didn’t want her to associate one of her toys with a traumatic experience.  She’s happy when she’s in a trance, and since she’s generally a grumpy cat, I like seeing her in a good mood. I can’t place this fragrance. Is it sandalwood? This article is a part of Christopher and Olga's series. Read his previous article: How Cats Respond to the Television: Olga’s Occasional Reactions The post When Toys Put Cats in a Trance: Olga’s Transformation by Christopher Bays appeared first on Catster. Copying over entire articles infringes on copyright laws. You may not be aware of it, but all of these articles were assigned, contracted and paid for, so they aren't considered public domain. However, we appreciate that you like the article and would love it if you continued sharing just the first paragraph of an article, then linking out to the rest of the piece on Catster.com.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
31 w

Wind and Truth Read-Along Discussion: Chapters 31 and 32
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Wind and Truth Read-Along Discussion: Chapters 31 and 32

Books Wind and Truth Wind and Truth Read-Along Discussion: Chapters 31 and 32 A race to stop Ghostbloods, and Wit conducts an experiment… By Paige Vest, Lyndsey Luther, Drew McCaffrey | Published on November 18, 2024 Comment 1 Share New Share Greetings and salutations, Sanderfans! Last week, we discussed Wind and Truth preview chapters 29 and 30 with Renarin and Rlain POVs, which we’ve been jonesing for, right? Then Shallan showed up, asking for their help; what kind of shenanigans is she going to get them into? We also caught up with Lift, who’s being a good friend to poor little Gavinor. This week we’re moving on to chapters 31 and 32—and it’s a wild ride! Be sure to check out the social media section at the end of the article to see if we spotlighted one of your comments!  Note that this post will possibly (likely) contain full Cosmere spoilers, so beware if you aren’t caught up on all Cosmere content. And please remember, when posting or commenting about these preview chapters on social media, follow your platform’s spoiler rules. Your comments here, however, don’t need to be spoiler-tagged, so feel free to comment as you will down below! Paige’s Summary and Commentary Chapter 31 is titled “Experiment” and we’re back with Shallan, Renarin, and Rlain who head down to the Oathgates along with some backup muscle to pop over into Shadesmar and, presumably, intercept Mraize and Iyatil. Shallan is overcome by the stunning sight of the awakened tower from the Shadesmar side and asks Radiant to take over. “Other Shallan!” ::chuckle:: There are three guards in Shadesmar looking after the Oathgate, and the Windrunners Shallan had sent ahead chat with them as Shallan gives way to Radiant. One of the Windrunners tells Radiant that they did a sweep and haven’t seen anyone, and one of the guards states that they’ve been there all day and haven’t seen anybody, either. Renarin and Rlain join Radiant, asking what’s going on, so she tells them about the Ghostbloods, how they’re “seeking to control the balance of power on Roshar.” Rlain thought that was the group that Shallan had captured at the beginning of Rhythm of War and Renarin explains how that was the Sons of Honor. Radiant says that the Ghostbloods are supported by someone from offworld… further offworld than the Fused. She mentions how long Shallan had been mixed up with them, pretending to be one of them, until she realized that they needed to be stopped. “Well, that’s a storming big secret,” Rlain said to a very pronounced rhythm, which Radiant couldn’t place.” I’m guessing it had something to do with irritation? Incredulity? Anyway, Radiant continues, telling them that the Ghostbloods had seemed uninterested in the Unmade but that they had met with Sja-anat and she’d given them some of her spren. Radiant takes a moment to wonder where Renarin’s and Rlain’s spren are, thinking they should have appeared as her two spren and her armor had as soon as they’d entered Shadesmar. Then, back to the conversation, she says that Sja-anat’s spren have an affinity for the Spiritual Realm and that she figured she’d have a better chance of navigating it with Renarin. She expects that the fugitives will show up as Dalinar opens the portal. Renarin points at the tower and Radiant sees a red glow around his hand and wonders if it’s his spren. Rlain does the same and they say they can see Dalinar and Navani descending a lift. Radiant insists they need to go to them, as that’s where the Ghostbloods will be as soon as Dalinar opens the portal. POV shift! Navani is holding Gavinor’s hand as they head to the room where they’ll conduct their experiment with Wit. Gav is afraid and Navani asks him why. He cringes from the gloryspren around her and when she asks them to back away, they move further off. Gav asks if the whole tower is a spren and Navani tries to reassure him that the tower is good, that it’s there to help them. They arrive at the room Wit had chosen for the experiment and Navani hands Gavinor to his governess. They leave guards outside the door and enter a cistern room. Wit says something that Navani can’t hear due to the sound of the water and when she asks what he said, he neglects to answer, clearly pleased that they won’t be overhead. He asks if they’re ready and they say they are. Wit tosses a rock to Navani and explains that it came from Ashyn, where the humans came from before their migration to Roshar. He explains that it came from a holy site and was carried to Roshar, and eventually the original association with these stones were lost, and stones themselves were considered mystical… after much time and numerous cataclysms, the Shin now worship rock and don’t know why. Navani seems appalled by this and asks if Wit has ever told them of this history. He says he keeps meaning to… Oh, my… poor Wit. With so much knowledge and so many memories, even with some of them stored in Breaths, he must have a head just full of information. As someone who deals with racing thoughts, I can certainly empathize with him! Dalinar asks Wit if he stole the rock and he says that he picked it out himself before the migration. Which leads to a question from Navani: “You were there?”Again Wit shrugged. “Look, I can’t be expected to tell you everything that has happened in the last ten thousand years, all right? Yes, I was there. Can we focus on the experiment?” I kind of adore Wit! Wit goes on to explain that they need an anchor to direct them to a specific memory and Navani surmises that the rock will take them to a specific moment and Wit confirms that it should take them to the arrival of humans on Roshar. He instructs Dalinar to tether himself to the room, so Dalinar creates a connection with the floor, and a line of light “anchors” him there. Navani does the same and then Wit instructs them to open a perpendicularity and send their minds in. Dalinar asks how to do that and Wit, our wonderful, wonderful Wit, says he doesn’t know either. He explains how he’s done it in the past, though always at a pool, such as we saw in Elantris. And then he says something truly chilling: “There are few paths in this universe I fear to walk. This is one of them.” Dun-dun-dunnnnn… POV shift! Shallan and company leave three of the Windrunner squires at the Oathgate and, taking the guards that had been at the Oathgate all day, they fly to the tower. They follow the light of Dalinar’s and Navani’s souls toward the room where they’re meeting with Wit. Renarin tells Radiant he needs to speak with Shallan about his vision and Ba-Ado-Mishram and Radiant gives way to her, hoping they won’t get distracted… POV shift! Renarin is overwhelmed by the tower from the Shadesmar side. The light, the “flocks” of spren. It’s overwhelming, like sensory overload. He retrieves two spheres from his pocket and plays with them to distract himself and has to listen to Shallan, who is grinning and freaking out about all of the spren. Finally, she asks what he wanted to talk about and he says that Rlain thinks they saw Mishram in a vision. Shallan says that she has too, and explains about odd things happening with Lightweaving when you’ve bonded two spren. Which is news to Renarin, who considers Testament as Shallan explains. Honestly, the whole time I’m here thinking, “Get ON with it, people! They’re down there about to open the perpendicularity! MOVE!” They don’t listen, though, and keep yammering. Renarin says they should tell Dalinar not to go into the Spiritual Realm and Shallan counters by saying they can’t allow the Ghostbloods to get to Mishram. He asks why she wanted him to come along on this mission and she replies that she thought that he might be able to spot others who have bonded one of Sja-anat’s spren. Renarin asks Glys if he can help them on the other side; the spren says he thinks he could. That he will. They arrive at the room and leave the guards outside. They see three souls, Dalinar, Navani, and Wit, who is shimmering with a great number of odd colors. Of course, Wit’s soul is different. Did we think it would be otherwise? Then they see two souls in the wall and Pattern says that one of them is Lift. Renarin asks what the guards look like so they can keep an eye out for them. Shallan describes them, two men and a woman, two short and one tall, two that wear masks and one, Thaylen, with short eyebrows and scars on his face. Renarin asks if one of them could be a Lightweaver, if they could be disguised. Then it clicks for Shallan and she looks back through the door, which is like crystal, at the two short and one tall guard they had brought with them from the Oathgate and haven’t vetted at all. Shallan really should have known better, don’t you think, Sanderfans? I’m just over here shaking my head. Literally. And tsking. Lots of tsking. Chapter 32 is titled “Cords of Light” and Dalinar forms his perpendicularity, joining the three realms. He and Navani step into the light, directed by Wit, and Navani says she hears the tones of Roshar and that this place has been calling to her. For weeks. Weeks? During the occupation? POV shift! I’m telling you… it’s like a book-long Sanderlanche. Shallan panics. And now Veil chimes in. Oh no, Veil thought. Remind me, what do you do when there’s a guard watching for you?Storms. You became the guard. Didn’t Shallan just do that? Like… literally just did that. She became the guard to infiltrate the Ghostblood meeting. Barely a minute ago. I know, I’m overusing “literally.” Hush. Then Mraize and the others burst into the room, Mraize with a dagger that glows and warps the air. Shallan screams to protect the spren and chaos ensues. There are two Windrunners and their spren, Renarin, Rlain, and then Shallan and her two spren. And three Ghostbloods. Iyatil slits the throat of one of the Windrunners (worry not, he heals) and then the perpendicularity opens. Radiant separates from Shallan and forms in full Shardplate, fighting with Iyatil, who avoids her and pulls out an anti-Stormlight dagger. Radiant tackles Iyatil, who drops the dagger and Shallan picks it up. She can only gloat for a moment though, and then Iyatil shoots her in the freaking eye with a blowgun dart. In the eye! Ouch! Lieke, the other Ghostblood, is killed in the fray and then bam, it’s over.  Then Iyatil taunts them by saying that the three guards whose places they took will be killed unless she gives a signal. Shallan knows it’s true and the Windrunners leave, rushing to save them. Mraize, funnily enough, is lashed to the ceiling, but… he still has his anti-Stormlight dagger. “Have you ever seen a perpendicularity collapse on itself, little knife?” he asked.“Mraize…”“I haven’t either,” he said. “But it’s reportedly spectacular.” He threw the dagger.Shallan leaped for it, but she was in the wrong position. The anti-Light struck the center of the portal.The blast that followed shattered the room. POV shift! Dalinar feels the vision begin to form and then something snaps. Their Connection to the Physical Realm vanished, and something came rushing toward them: power, wind, and screams. Aaaaand that’s all for this week, Sanderfans. Wasn’t it exciting?! Except for that whole bit where Shallan doesn’t even suspect the two short guards and one tall guard to be the two short and one tall Ghostbloods she’s looking for. ::shaking my damn head:: So the perpendicularity was collapsed with anti-Stormlight. Dalinar and Navani are trapped in there? I mean, how will they get out without their tethers? And the screaming? Who was screaming? They wouldn’t be able to hear Shallan and the others screaming in Shadesmar. But… the realms were joined, weren’t they? So much to think about! What a cliffhanger for the week! Tell us all your thoughts in the comments! Lyndsey’s Commentary We’re nearing the end now, Cosmere Chickens, and things are starting to really heat up. After this week’s read-along, we only have two more chapter drops to go before the Big Release! How many of you will Drew and I be seeing at Dragonsteel Nexus? I may or may not have a few special badge ribbons to hand out, so come and find me! I’ll be in my Bridge Four cosplay most of the time, and can be found on Friday in the Dealer’s Room peddling my own book. Drew will be at his own booth for Inking Out Loud, talking literary analysis alongside The Legendarium. What are you most looking forward to? And did you get anything fun for Light Day? Okay, enough socializing—let’s dive into this week’s character arc and cultural analysis… Chapter 31’s Heralds in the arch are the Joker and Battah (Battar), patron of the Elsecallers. Her attributes are Wise/Careful and her role is Counsellor. The Joker is almost certainly here for Hoid, as usual. He’s very prevalent in this chapter. And Battah… I’d take a guess that she’s here as Hoid himself is serving as a counselor to Dalinar and Navani, giving them advice on how to proceed. Chapter 32’s arch has Ishi (Ishar), Herald of Luck, patron of the Bondsmiths. His attributes are Pious/Guiding and his role is Priest. Also making an appearance is Jezrien (Jezerezeh), Herald of Kings, patron of the Windrunners. His attributes are Protecting/Leading, and his role is King. Ishi’s appearance is probably due to both Dalinar and Navani being present. Jezrien could be a couple things; first of all, Dalinar is acting in his capacity as ruler of Urithru. Second, we do have some Windrunners being particularly Windrunner-y at the end of the battle with the Ghostbloods. If I were a betting woman, I’d put my spheres on the former, but it could be either or both. Shallan It was the pinnacle of all artistry. This was the height to which creations could rise. This was what you could… could… Interesting that Shallan loses it to the point where Radiant needs to take control here. I’ve been known to appreciate some fine art, but rarely to the point where it’s made me completely lose control. (Notably the only time I can think of was a certain passage in a book, which made me put it down for a while to collect myself.) So Shallan absolutely losing it here is very, very interesting. What is it about the beauty of Urithiru that enthralls her so? Is this foreshadowing of some kind? Radiant folded her arms, thoughtful. Around her feet, a collection of beads gathered and bounced up and down. “Other Shallan!” they said. This reminds me of IFS (Internal Family Systems) therapy, in which you learn to identify and relate to different “parts” of your personality. Shallan’s other “parts” manifest quite physically, thanks to the magic of stormlight. But the underlying concept is the same; her Radiant persona is her confident, self-assured, and competent “part.” The fact that the little spren that make up her armor actually recognize this is utterly fascinating. He understood. She now felt infinitely more guilty for finding him weird when they first met. Renarin is often treated this way by others, so it’s nice to see this moment of connection between the two of them. There was so much to be studied about the symbiosis between spren and human. Someday when all this was done, that would be her project. Jasnah thought her a whimsical artist, and that was part of her. But so was the scientist. I wonder if this is foreshadowing her working alongside Navani down the line, since this is very much Navani’s wheelhouse. Hoid There are few paths in this universe I fear to walk. This is one of them.” Hoo boy. A path that Hoid himself fears to walk? That’s a scary thought, considering how much Investiture and knowledge he has. It’s hard to imagine Hoid being afraid of anything. Windrunner Squires Both he and Breteh were former bridgemen from Bridge Thirteen, the group that had become Teft’s squires. She thought that was why they wore red glyphwards on their arms—something about a pact relating to Moash and vengeance. And rightfully so. I can’t wait to see Moash get his comeuppance. It’s going to be a lovely day. (Unless Sanderson pulls the rug out from under us and gives him a redemptive arc, but that’s the tallest of tall orders at this point. Before Rhythm of War I might have been able to accept it, but now? No. No thanks. Team #NoRedemption all the way for THIS Windrunner.) Rlain “…every single member of Bridge Four now has an honorspren—except me. Curious, how people’s decisions are an individual matter when they’re confronted about them—but those decisions form blatant patterns.” Daaaaaaaaaaamn. Rlain coming in swinging against the inherent racism he sees every day. Good for him. Renarin Renarin forced himself to keep moving along the short hallway, trying so hard to ignore all the lights, the motion. It was… it was loud. Not loud to the ears, loud to every sense. It made him want to put his hands around his eyes and block out most of the stimuli, to cut down on how much was reaching him. Poor Renarin. Overstimulation is incredibly hard to deal with. It’s very cool how Glys finds a way to help him with it. I do find it interesting that their bond hasn’t “healed” Renarin; according to the lore, this would be because Renarin doesn’t think that his autism is “wrong,” but rather that it’s an integral part of him (which is accurate). It does, however, seem to bother him a great deal on many levels. It’s possible that “healing” his autism will become a part of his character arc, but personally speaking, I hope it doesn’t. It’s not a deficiency, just a different way of viewing the world. Navani His new ways, new teachings, weren’t strictly blasphemous, but things about them did make her uncomfortable. This is the first time I can remember Navani showing misgivings or concern about anything regarding Dalinar. I’m happy to see it; it means she’s viewing him as the flawed human that he is, and not some perfect manifestation. Cultural Observations We create this air of Alethi propriety, promising that we’re up-front and honest. No one can say what they really think, because it would be ‘un-Alethi.’ Then our honesty becomes a lie as we turn to scheming…” Hmm. I’m not entirely sure I follow Renarin on this one. If being honest is an Alethi trait, how is not saying what you really think un-Alethi…? I must be missing something on this. Does anyone have any theories? “Rock from Ashyn,” Wit said lightly. “Like those carried by your ancestors to this world during their migration. They were fragments of a holy site on your homeworld, but stones themselves took on a kind of mystical lore by association.” Ah hah! This explains the Shin reverence of stones. Makes perfect sense, when explained this way. Drew’s Commentary: Invested Arts & Theories Before we get into the explosive conclusion to this week’s set of chapters, let’s talk about a few intriguing curiosities. There are all sorts of spren hanging around Urithiru in the Cognitive Realm, but what are they? But what were the ones that had six arms and gripped the walls, watching with a large drooping mouth that seemed to have eyes in it? The things that were shaped like anemones? The darker shadows, hulking and threatening, that he kept glimpsing through the glass walls? The anemones immediately make me think of anticipationspren, with their “streamers” flowing, but I don’t think I have an immediate idea of the first or third unknown spren listed here. What do you think? As for a different sort of spren: Sja-anat can make any order of Radiant save Bondsmith, assuming the spren are willing. While I don’t think this is necessarily shocking information, it’s at least illuminating. The fact that either Mraize or Iyatil is an Elsecaller is noteworthy enough, since Jasnah is the only other Elsecaller on record at this point. But the potential for Enlightened highspren and honorspren seems a little surprising to me—the highspren have had their own thing going on for so long, carrying forward the Skybreakers under Nale’s watchful eye, and the honorspren are, well… honorspren. None of the honorspren we’ve seen so far have the attitude I’d expect to subject themselves to the influence of an Unmade. Essentially, I think Renarin’s “assuming the spren are willing” is carrying a LOT of weight here. The other revelation here is that, while either Mraize and Iyatil is an Elsecaller, the other is definitely a Lightweaver. This feels like an almost direct counter to Shallan—and would be right in Mraize’s wheelhouse, with his whole hunter mentality. Things have certainly gotten crazy, overall, with these two chapters, as Mraize’s thrown anti-Light dagger collapses the perpendicularity. So much for a test run: it seems as if Dalinar and Navani have been fully cast into the Spiritual Realm. This opens up some serious implications for the rest of the book. For one thing, Hoid stressed how much time works strangely there, and how easily someone can get lost. Dalinar has only eight days until the contest of champions; he doesn’t have any experience with the Spiritual Realm, and he no longer has a Connection to the Physical. Whether or not he can navigate a perpendicularity back from the Spiritual Realm is one question; whether or not he’ll even make the deadline is another. And the Spiritual Realm is the Realm of the Shards. If he breaks the contract, he’s right in Odium’s proverbial front yard, open to a whole host of potential actions from Taravangian. Finally, a note on the epigraphs, and a reminder of what sort of foreshadowing Brandon likes to use. The quotes from The Way of Kings used before each chapter of Day Two have all focused on ideas of leaving, of abdicating… and now, right near the end of the day, Dalinar and Navani are forced to leave behind their thrones in Urithiru, cast into the unknowable fathoms of the Spiritual Realm. Obviously the epigraphs change for each Part (or Day) of a Stormlight Archive book, and Brandon uses them in different ways… but it’s worth keeping an eye on what sort of themes start arising as the book progresses, and new writings pop up in the epigraphs. That said, it’s only a couple weeks from release. The proverbial die has been cast. The story is truly in motion now. Saddle up. Fan Theories Danthemanlee on Reddit (and several others) is convinced that: […] Gavinor as child champion is definitely happening. … I went from “aww Lift is helping a traumatized child” to “omg this 5-year-old already has an overwhelming desire to kill people and mutilate their bodies afterwards” in the span of 10 seconds lol Lyn: That’s a horrible thought. I can see why you’d think it, but BOY do I hope you’re wrong. That poor kid has been through enough! Drew: I’ve always disliked the Gavinor-as-champion theory, so I can still find plenty of ways to reason around it despite these recent scenes… but I totally get the trepidation from readers. There are a whole lot of red flags waving in the wind, for many different characters, after the preview chapters so far. A few people are speculating that Lift is going to wind up in the Spiritual Realm, and might be the one to set BAM free. That would certainly fit in with her “I will remember those who have been forgotten” ideal… This week’s “Reddit quote that made Lyn laugh” award goes to greenfishbluefish for this: I need someone from Scadrial to check that Lyft isn’t just Wayne in a wig. It’s tied, however, with this one by PlausibleApprobation: Can’t believe Sanderson made his autistic character collect Warhammer. Genuinely hilarious. We’ll be keeping an eye on the comment sections of posts about this article on various social media platforms and may include some of your comments/speculation (with attribution) on future weeks’ articles! Keep the conversation going, and PLEASE remember to spoiler-tag your comments on social media to help preserve the surprise for those who choose to wait for the full release. See you next Monday with chapter 33![end-mark] The post <i>Wind and Truth</i> Read-Along Discussion: Chapters 31 and 32 appeared first on Reactor.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
31 w

Read Wind and Truth by Brandon Sanderson: Chapters 31 and 32
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Read Wind and Truth by Brandon Sanderson: Chapters 31 and 32

Excerpts Wind and Truth Read Wind and Truth by Brandon Sanderson: Chapters 31 and 32 Read new chapters from the new Stormlight Archive book every Monday, leading up to its release on December 6th By Brandon Sanderson | Published on November 18, 2024 Comment 0 Share New Share Brandon Sanderson’s epic Stormlight Archive fantasy series will continue with Wind and Truth, the concluding volume of the first major arc of this ten-book series. A defining pillar of Sanderson’s “Cosmere” fantasy book universe, this newest installment of The Stormlight Archive promises huge developments for the world of Roshar, the struggles of the Knights Radiant (and friends!), and for the Cosmere at large. Reactor is serializing the new book from now until its release date on December 6, 2024. A new installment will go live every Monday at 11 AM ET, along with read-along commentary from Stormlight beta readers and Cosmere experts Lyndsey Luther, Drew McCaffrey, and Paige Vest. You can find every chapter and commentary post published so far in the Wind and Truth index. We’re thrilled to also include chapters from the audiobook edition of Wind and Truth, read by Michael Kramer and Kate Reading. Click here to jump straight to the audio excerpt! Note: Title art is not final and will be updated as soon as the final cover is revealed. Chapter 31: Experiment So think, my dear reader. As a soldier retreats from a battle he cannot win. As a woman rejects a home that shows her only violence. As a family finds hope in walking away from dying fields during a season of too much rain. —From The Way of Kings, fourth parable Shallan had brought some of the Windrunners from the raiding party, so she, Renarin, and Rlain quickly reached the Oathgates. From there, Shallan sent one Windrunner to find Dalinar and Navani to explain, as she worried her spanreed message hadn’t been received. She then brought the group into Shadesmar via Oathgate. Mraize and Iyatil were on the move; she needed to be too. On the other side—with Testament and Pattern appearing in full-sized form next to her—Shallan got her first sight of the tower there, after its awakening. It was brilliant. Before, the tower had manifested as a shimmer of light, but now that light had coalesced—like false dawn becoming true sunlight. It formed a tower that was a clone of the one in the Physical Realm, but as if created from glowing glass. A sphere infused, but on the scale of a mountain. Though the light did not overpower her, her eyes watered, trying to take in the entire structure. It glowed with the fractured variety of a thousand colors—an artist’s bounty of effulgent shades. Changing, each moment a different hue, as if the tower were too exuberant, too joyous and alive to be confined to mere color. It was magnetic, taking not only her breath and attention, but her soul and mind, which longed to just once create something so beautiful. It was the pinnacle of all artistry. This was the height to which creations could rise. This was what you could… could… Do you need me to take control? Radiant asked. Please! Shallan said, tears in her eyes. Radiant took a deep breath, acknowledged the pretty tower, and moved on. Two Windrunners—Isasik and Breteh—waited in here with their spren and their squires. Together, the group was chatting with the Shadesmar guards. Though she’d left the bulk of her strike force to watch the captives, she’d sent these Windrunners on ahead to try to see if they could find Mraize and Iyatil while Shallan fetched Renarin. They didn’t seem to have learned anything, judging by their postures as they talked with the three guards that were posted on this side just in case. Radiant looked around, hoping for some sign of the Ghostbloods. Here near the tower, the ten Oathgates manifested as tall pillars—each with its own set of lofty inkspren. Ramps ringed each pillar, spiraling down to the beads far below. With the restoration of the Sibling, glowing walkways had appeared connecting the pillars, as well as leading to the tower itself, which now stood upon a large glowing platform of its own. Seeing nothing amiss, she trotted to the Windrunners on one of the walkways. “Brightness,” Isasik the Windrunner said. This wasn’t the cartographer, but the other Isasik: a shorter man with an excitable demeanor. Both he and Breteh were former bridgemen from Bridge Thirteen, the group that had become Teft’s squires. She thought that was why they wore red glyphwards on their arms—something about a pact relating to Moash and vengeance. Radiant appreciated their regard for a fallen companion. Over time, tower soldiers had moved away from wearing Kholin blue, and toward a uniform representing their new kingdom. It appeared white uniforms with gold trim had finally been settled upon, as it was one of the distinctive color combinations that wasn’t associated with an Alethi or Veden princedom. “We did a sweep of the area and found no sign of the fugitives,” Breteh said, hovering a few feet off the ground. “The guards haven’t seen them either.” “We’ve been posted here all day,” said a guard with a faint Bavland accent he was obviously trying to mask. “Nobody transferred in until these Windrunners arrived.” Radiant folded her arms, thoughtful. Around her feet, a collection of beads gathered and bounced up and down. “Other Shallan!” they said. The Windrunners seemed to find that quite amusing. Had she been wrong? Would Mraize and Iyatil flee, instead of trying to continue their plan? “They entered Shadesmar on the Shattered Plains, thousands of miles away,” she said. “They’d need to have found their way here via Oathgate.” Could Mraize and Iyatil be waiting before arriving? Would they jump here at the moment Dalinar opened his portal? Making a break for it? Renarin and Rlain joined her, having overcome their awe. “Radiant,” Renarin said, “could you please explain better what’s going on? I’m still confused.” “Sorry,” Radiant said. “Shallan is inefficient with words at times. There is a secretive group known as the Ghostbloods, who are seeking to control the balance of power on Roshar.” “Again?” Rlain asked. “Didn’t you round them up right before the invasion?” “Those were the Sons of Honor,” Renarin said. “Amaram’s former cohort. You know, I wonder if we ask for this sort of thing. We create this air of Alethi propriety, promising that we’re up-front and honest. No one can say what they really think, because it would be ‘un-Alethi.’ Then our honesty becomes a lie as we turn to scheming…” “It’s kind of how you all ended up with a kingdom in the first place,” Radiant agreed. “Dalinar, Gavilar, Navani, Sadeas, Ialai… frustrated that they were considered outsiders from the backwaters, they plotted to found an empire. Unfortunately for us, the Ghostbloods are supported by some very powerful individuals from offworld.” “You mean the Fused?” Rlain asked. “Further offworld,” Radiant said. “Shallan was recruited by them when she was new to her powers. She kept pretending to be a member, hoping to learn more. It came to a head recently, and she realized she had to stop them from reaching their goals.” “Well, that’s a storming big secret,” Rlain said to a very pronounced rhythm, which Radiant couldn’t place. Renarin just met her eyes, then nodded. Damnation. He understood. She now felt infinitely more guilty for finding him weird when they first met. “They’ve been keenly interested in the Unmade,” Radiant said. “They’ve met with Sja-anat, and… Renarin, I think she’s given them spren to bond. Like she did to you and Rlain.” Speaking of which… where were their spren? Shouldn’t they have appeared when Pattern, Testament, and her armor had? “She… plays both sides,” Renarin admitted. “She’s told me as much.” “Her spren accepted me,” Rlain said, “when none of the honorspren would.” “That’s unfair,” Breteh’s honorspren said, glowing blue with hands on her hips. “Lots of humans weren’t chosen either, Rlain. It comes down to individual decisions.” “And yet,” Rlain said, “every single member of Bridge Four now has an honorspren—except me. Curious, how people’s decisions are an individual matter when they’re confronted about them—but those decisions form blatant patterns.” “Sja-anat,” Radiant said, drawing their attention back to the topic, “cannot be trusted—but she’s also not our enemy. She said her spren have an affinity for the Spiritual Realm. I think the Ghostbloods are planning to use those spren to help them navigate it. I determined I’d have a much better chance of figuring out how they’d do that, or even what the Ghostbloods plan to do, with your help.” “Spiritual Realm,” Renarin said. “Where you said…” “A certain thing is hidden,” Radiant continued, not wanting to say too much in front of the guards. Shallan had given this explanation earlier. Renarin nodded. “So… your spren,” Radiant said. “Do they have any insights? I’m certain the Ghostbloods are going to show up here, likely right when Dalinar opens the portal. The fugitives might make a dash for it.” “It would help,” Renarin said, “to know where this portal will be.” He narrowed his eyes, then pointed at the tower. Radiant had the strangest impression as he did so—that his arm and hand were outlined by a soft red glow while in motion, as if he was overlapping some second version of himself. This light, possibly his spren, moved just before he did. It was an afterimage, in reverse. “There,” Renarin said. “Can you see them?” “I can,” Rlain said, pointing as well—and his body had exactly the same precursor image. “They’re in the tower. Both Bondsmiths. Their souls glow powerfully.” “Spren revolve around Aunt Navani,” Renarin said, “the way winds move through a chasm, sculpted by it. They’re coming down in a lift.” “So we go to them,” Radiant said. “Because that’s where Mraize and his team will need to be, once the portal opens.” * * * It was starting to grow dark outside as Navani finally led the group down a lift, through Urithiru, to find an appropriate place to perform their experiment. Storms. The entire second day had passed that quickly? She didn’t feel tired, a blessing from the Sibling, though she did see some signs of fatigue in Dalinar. The way he clasped his hands behind him, forcing himself to stand tall. They reached the ground floor, light fading in the sky outside the great atrium window as the sun set on the opposite side of Urithiru. She led them through a swarm of gloryspren to a stairwell, holding Gav’s hand all the way. The boy needed more attention from both of them—and fortunately, he had managed a nap during the many meetings. As they reached the bottom of the steps, entering a long hallway, she trailed her other hand along the wall, layered with strata in lines and patterns. She could feel the tower thrumming. A thousand different mechanisms working in concert, like the organs of a human body. Dalinar and Wit strode behind her. Behind them were the characteristic host of attendants and guards. Navani could almost ignore them as she walked. “Gram?” Gav asked softly. “I’m scared.” She stopped and knelt, letting several of the others pass by. “Why, Gav?” He looked up toward the gloryspren bobbing around her. Then he cringed. “Could you back away, please,” Navani said, lifting her head and speaking to the spren. They did, many of them vanishing and the others moving to the very top of the corridor. Gav relaxed. The spren that had tormented him in the Kholinar palace had been of a completely different variety, but that didn’t matter in the face of trauma. “Was that it?” she asked. “Not just that,” he whispered. “The tower… I saw it earlier… and Gram, it’s a spren? The whole thing?” “The tower is good, Gav,” she said. “It cares for us.” He nodded, but didn’t seem convinced. So she gently took his hand and held it to the wall. “Can you feel that?” she asked him. “I’m not sure,” he said, scrunching up his face. “Close your eyes,” she said, “and listen.” He did so. “It’s… humming?” “That’s right,” she said. “There’s a tunnel nearby where boxes flow along on a belt. They’re carrying laundry from all through the tower down here, where it can be washed. It’s not fully up and running yet—we need many more boxes—but this is one of the ways we know the tower is good.” “Because… it has boxes?” “Because it makes everyone’s lives better,” Navani said. “With this mechanism, no one will need to climb stairs with heavy bags of clothing. Beyond this are vast rooms where fresh water is cycled and cleaned, so no one has to carry water. The tower is doing that for us all, not only for kings and queens. It is good, Gav. I promise.” “I feel it, Gram!” Gav said, his hand beside hers. “I really feel it. The tower is alive…” “All things are,” she said. “Whether it’s the cup you drink from, the home you live in, or the air you breathe. All of it is part of this world given us by the Almighty, and everything in this world is alive. It is one of the ways we know God loves us.” And surely He did. Even if the person who had held the power was dead, that was merely an avatar, a Vessel—not God. It was that Vessel Dalinar hoped to replace. If he did, would he then return to conventional belief as she hoped? His new ways, new teachings, weren’t strictly blasphemous, but things about them did make her uncomfortable. Dalinar and Wit had reached a door at the end of the hallway. They stepped in, then a moment later Dalinar looked out and waved for her. She rose and joined him, and he lifted Gav and handed the boy to his governess, who stood with the guards. “Nobody enters,” Dalinar said. “Pardon, Brightlord,” one of the guards asked, “but why are we here? What are we doing?” “It’s an experiment that could be dangerous,” Dalinar said. “It could take us as long as an hour or so.” They nodded. Dalinar and Navani shut the thick door behind them, standing in one of the tower’s water cistern rooms. Wit strolled through the room, noting where water poured out of pipes in the walls to crash down into the cistern. He said something, but she couldn’t make it out over the cascading water. “What was that?” Navani said. “You didn’t hear?” Wit said, strolling closer. “Excellent. We are unlikely to be overheard, and this place is acceptably remote and secure.” “Yes, but what did you say?” Navani asked. Wit smiled, then turned to Dalinar. “You’re certain you want to try this?” “I am,” Dalinar said. Wit turned to Navani. “As am I,” she said. “Very well,” Wit said, fishing in his pocket. “I’ve thought of the perfect vision for your experiment.” He tossed Navani a small rock, which she caught, frowning. It wasn’t cremstone, but perhaps a kind of granite. The type you either had to quarry for, or had to Soulcast. She held up the rock for Dalinar. “And this is?” Dalinar asked. “Rock from Ashyn,” Wit said lightly. “Like those carried by your ancestors to this world during their migration. They were fragments of a holy site on your homeworld, but stones themselves took on a kind of mystical lore by association. That sort of thing happens when the world undergoes repeated cataclysms and society gets knocked back to the stone age a few dozen times. Some seven thousand years later, everyone in Shinovar worships rocks, and has no idea why.” Navani gaped at him. “What?” he asked. “Have you told them?” she asked. “Shared their heritage, their history with them? Have you written this down?” “I keep meaning to…” Wit said, and shrugged. Dalinar turned the rock over in his fingers. “You just have one of these? Did you steal it?” “Hmm?” Wit said. “No, I picked it out myself, right before the migration.” “To Roshar,” Navani said. “Yes.” “You were there?” Again Wit shrugged. “Look, I can’t be expected to tell you everything that has happened in the last ten thousand years, all right? Yes, I was there. Can we focus on the experiment?” He pointed at the rock. “We want an easy vision as a test. A particular event chosen by us, not preselected by Honor or the Stormfather.” “Yes,” Navani said. “That’s correct. We need to observe historical events as they truly happened.” “Specifically,” Wit said, “you will eventually need to be able to find the history I missed in order to determine what led to Honor’s demise, and see if you can find why the power refuses Vessels now. First, we should start with something familiar to me. Hence the rock.” “The… rock,” Dalinar said. “Wit, I still don’t follow.” “I explained this,” he said. “If you go into the Spiritual Realm without some kind of anchor or guide, there’s no telling what you will see. Events that you think about, that are a focus of individual or collective trauma or passion, are most likely—but really it could be anything. You could dip in there and end up being shown an extended vision of a kindly old man feeding his axehounds. For hours.” Wit pointed at the rock again. “So…” Navani said, sorting through the flood of information he’d given her. “This rock is an anchor to Connect us to a specific moment, and draw us to that specific vision?” “That’s correct,” Wit said. “Namely: the arrival of humankind upon Roshar.” “That’s what we’re going to see?” Dalinar asked softly. “Storms.” “If it works, yes,” Wit said. “Ideally, only your minds will be taken, your bodies staying here. You’ll witness the migration, then return and tell me about it. Since I was there, I can authenticate that this has worked.” “A control for the experiment,” Navani said. “Exactly,” Wit said. “And with Dalinar’s clock already attuned, you shouldn’t get too wildly affected by time dilation. You should avoid coming out having aged twenty years—though be careful, it still might be easy to lose track of the days. With that, you can see how much time is passing here, so keep an eye on it. Enjoy the vision for an hour or so, then I’ll call you back.” Dalinar nodded firmly. “Wait,” Navani said. “How do we come back? How do we even initiate this? What are the mechanics?” “Tether yourselves here with a line of power,” Wit said. “Dalinar, you’ve done it before.” Navani observed as he drew in Stormlight, then knelt and infused the ground with it. When he stood, a line of light anchored him there. With his coaching she was able to draw strength from the tower, then press it into the ground. Like an experiment with osmosis and diffusion. “That line of light will act like a rope,” Wit explained. “So you can be pulled back should you slip in too deep. You should be able to see those lines of light in the vision, and pull on them to come back yourselves. In an emergency, I can contact you through them.” “All right…” Navani said, shivering. “Now what?” “Now,” Wit said, “you open a perpendicularity, and combine all three realms in a single point. You pass through, sending only your mind.” “How though?” Dalinar asked. Wit folded his arms, standing at the edge of the rippling reservoir. Light danced on the ceiling, reflected from the glowing gemstones set in the walls, just beneath the surface. Looking at him, she sensed something primordial about the man. His smile faded, his eyes profound, as if holding the darkness of the cosmere before light sparked. “I don’t know,” Wit said softly. “You don’t know?” Dalinar said. “You said—” Navani laid a hand on his arm, quieting him, and looked to Wit. The deity who insisted he was not. “Every time I’ve done this,” Wit said, “I’ve been at one of the pools. Wells of power that grow around the presence of gods, a kind of… natural spring, grown of their power. When you step into such a well, you can feel the bond that gods have to the Spiritual Realm. You can see a little into the plane where they exist—where their thoughts move at many times the speed of mortals’. I can feel that place calling me. Perhaps it knows I rejected it once; I am the fish that escaped the hook. “I can share that feeling, rather than a specific list of instructions, Dalinar. At times I have stepped into that power and have followed the call—emerging into a realm where gods dwell. I do it by instinct, as should work for you. It is not much, but you’ve asked for my help, and I give what I have.” He met their eyes. “I warned you of the danger. There are few paths in this universe I fear to walk. This is one of them.” Navani met Dalinar’s eyes. He sighed, but then nodded. “Let’s open the perpendicularity,” he said, “and feel it out.” * * * At Radiant’s urging, the group flew toward the Bondsmiths. They left Breteh’s three squires behind to watch and give warning if someone came through one of the gateways. They soared through the halls of Urithiru, and as they did, Radiant reached out to brush the wall. It felt solid. This corridor was populated by hundreds of tiny candle flames hovering in the air: the souls of the people living and working in Urithiru. There were also a great number of spren, which on this side were like wildlife—the fauna that populated Shadesmar, attracted to, perhaps feeding on, the emotions and experiences of the humans on the other side. They were only visible in the Physical Realm when something intense let them manifest. Perhaps it was the bond that drew them. The bond to people—like Radiant spren, or the spren of her armor, which kept up with them somehow, rolling across the ground and sometimes flying between gaps. There was something to the bond that drew spren, invigorated them. Like cremlings hiding in shalebark, Shallan thought, smiling, remembering drawings she’d done during a more innocent time. There was so much to be studied about the symbiosis between spren and human. Someday when all this was done, that would be her project. Jasnah thought her a whimsical artist, and that was part of her. But so was the scientist. She dreamed of creating a grand illustrated tome explaining the intricate details of the bond. Shallan’s ultimate triumph in proving that art and science were actually one. The Windrunners landed them at a stairwell heading down. The Bondsmiths had gone this way—indeed, they shone through the glass floor up ahead. The three guards and one of the Windrunners went first to check the way, leaving Renarin to step over to her and whisper. “I saw a vision,” he said, “right before you arrived. Rlain thinks it’s Ba-Ado-Mishram. What we’re doing here is dangerous, and I need to talk to Shallan about it.” So, reluctantly, Radiant stepped back. And hoped they wouldn’t get too distracted by whatever he had to say. * * * The tower on this side was overwhelming to Renarin. While Rlain hummed to the place’s beauty, Renarin kept focusing on how many things were moving all at once. The walls of shimmering crystal, light catching on corners like it did on a prism. Then there were the spren. Flocks of them, many the size of minks or even axehounds, scurrying down every hallway, hanging from the ceiling, making shadows that reflected through walls, adding to the visual cacophony. Though spren looked different on this side, he was pretty sure those many-legged ones were fearspren, like eels with feet and one big bulging eye on the front. Gloryspren flitted around on wings, with glowing spheres for heads. But what were the ones that had six arms and gripped the walls, watching with a large drooping mouth that seemed to have eyes in it? The things that were shaped like anemones? The darker shadows, hulking and threatening, that he kept glimpsing through the glass walls? Storms. As he pulled Shallan aside, he searched his pockets for something to fiddle with. He came out with a couple of spheres, which he spun in his palm, and he tried to focus on the clicking sound the glass made. Shallan undid her hair band and fanned out her hair before replacing her hat. Her lips parted as she glanced one way, then the other. It was nice to know he wasn’t the only one to find this terrible and overwhelming… She grinned like a madwoman. “This is amazing,” she said. “I can’t believe I haven’t come in here before!” “Didn’t you just get back yesterday?” “I should have made time,” she said, pointing. “Storms! What are those! I should sketch those. The ones with the spines? They don’t look like any spren on our side. Usually there’s some physical clue to what they are.” Despite her words, she didn’t get out a sketchbook. They started down the steps, a Windrunner and Rlain ahead of them. Renarin kept the spheres in his hand, clicking them together, and went over what he wanted to say. Spelling it out in his mind. “So, you wanted to talk?” Shallan asked, eyeing another spren above them, through the transparent ceiling. “Yes,” he said, deliberate. “Ba-Ado-Mishram. Rlain thinks we saw her in a vision.” “I think I did too,” Shallan said. “What?” “Odd things happen with Lightweaving,” she said. “Particularly if you’ve bonded two spren at the same time.” Two spren. “Wait. That’s not just some… friend of Pattern’s?” “The deadeye?” Deadeye? He peered ahead at the other Cryptic. Was that what the bent tines in the head meant? He hadn’t looked closely, as… well… this place was so demanding and exhausting. He simply couldn’t help but see everything. “Two spren,” he said, fixating on that. “You have two spren. I didn’t even know it was possible. Why would you bond a second on your trip?” “It’s a long story,” Shallan said. That seemed like a promise of more, but then she didn’t continue. “Anyway,” Renarin said eventually—again organizing and focusing his thoughts as a group of strange purple spren rolled down the steps next to them. “You said this Unmade was in the Spiritual Realm. And you said my father is opening a perpendicularity to travel there.” “Which the Ghostbloods know about,” she said. “So we tell him not to!” “I sent messages,” she said, “but it’s a busy day, and he’s been on the move. Besides, Renarin, when has your father ever reconsidered because any of us made an objection?” She focused on the lights ahead. It appeared that his father and Aunt Navani had entered a large chamber at the end of the corridor. “I can finally stop Mraize—for once I know exactly where he’s going to be. I just have to be there watching for him.” “But this spren,” Renarin said. “Shallan, I think she’s something terrible. Worse than the Unmade that caused the Alethi to hunger to kill each other in battle for centuries. Worse than the one that killed Aesudan and consumed Amaram. Worse than… anything.” “So we absolutely need to stop the Ghostbloods from getting to her.” “Or maybe we shouldn’t be involved at all,” Renarin said. “What if by meddling, we lead to her being freed. All the effort we took to lock away the Thrill? Someone took that effort and more to lock Mishram away. If she’s in the Spiritual Realm… maybe your enemies can’t find her, Shallan. Maybe the prison is strong enough.” “I can’t simply let Mraize do whatever he wants, Renarin.” “And me?” Renarin said, feeling Glys thrum within him. “Shallan, you specifically fetched me.” “Because you might be able to spot others who have bonded corrupt… um… reborn? Remade? Sja-anat’s spren.” “I think you can do that as well as anyone could,” Renarin said. “You told me Mraize had bonded one of Sja-anat’s Enlightened spren because they could guide him in the Spiritual Realm. Then you came to find me. Why, Shallan? Why really?” She kept her eyes forward. “Mishram’s prison is compromised. The Ghostbloods knew precisely where to send agents to get the information, and have intel on how to reach the Spiritual Realm. And their spren… their Enlightened spren… can lead them through that realm.” “So you are going to try to find the prison,” Renarin said. “That’s why I’m here. You hope Glys can guide you!” “I don’t think I thought it through that much,” Shallan said. “I’m working on instinct. Look, we should catch up to the others.” She quickened her step. Renarin forced himself to keep moving along the short hallway, trying so hard to ignore all the lights, the motion. It was… it was loud. Not loud to the ears, loud to every sense. It made him want to put his hands around his eyes and block out most of the stimuli, to cut down on how much was reaching him. I will help? Glys said. I will try? The spren… darkened things. Dampening the lights at the perimeter of Renarin’s sight, like what happened in a vision, where everything went black. It did help, and he was able to pull himself together and make his way forward after Shallan and the others. But storms. What was he letting her pull him into? Shallan could be a little like a sudden river after a highstorm. A flood that could carry you until it ran out, leaving you stranded. Adolin just went along with it. Is she right? Renarin asked Glys. Could you help us on the other side, in the Spiritual Realm? …Yes, Glys said, sounding hesitant as he pulsed. Yes. I think I could. I will. That was a small comfort, but Shallan did seem frightened of these Ghostbloods. Renarin didn’t think they could do anything to his father—human souls appeared as glowing flames on this side, but there was no way to interact with them. But they didn’t know all the permutations of what anti-Light could do, and… …and he kept going, despite knowing he was trapped in a Shallan flood. Because if he turned back, then Rlain probably would too, which would mean leaving Shallan completely without access to common sense. Don’t be unfair, he told himself. She’s done a lot of good for your family. A year of having her as a sister-in-law had shown him she could be a deeply sensitive and caring person, and she loved Adolin with an enthusiasm that none of the other women ever had. Beyond that, she had a remarkable handle on life, considering the way her fragmented mind sometimes presented challenges. In short, despite first impressions, he had grown fond of her. However, that didn’t mean he liked the way that she worked by instinct. Accidentally joining a secret organization bent on ruling Roshar, then never finding a time to mention it to anyone until it became a crisis? In his experience, that was the most Shallan thing she could have done. Unfortunately, a glow was building ahead of them at the end of the hallway; his father was preparing the perpendicularity. But… there wasn’t anyone here. The room they reached was a perfect replica of the one in the Physical Realm, only made of the same shimmering glass as everything else. He could make out the souls of Aunt Navani and his father, glowing brightly from their Connections to powerful spren—and another soul, which had to be Wit, shimmering with a great number of odd colors. Glys confirmed it. Otherwise, the room was empty… Wait. What were those two souls over at the side, in the walls? Shallan set the three guards at the door and stepped in with the spren, Rlain, and the Windrunners. There, she stood with her hands on her hips. “It seems impregnable. A hallway ending here? Walls we can see through, and no other humans in sight? Did I misjudge?” “Those two souls over there might be spying on Father and Navani,” Renarin said. “Could that be them?” Shallan spun to follow his gesture. “Storms, maybe the Ghostbloods slipped past in the Physical Realm? It’s possible they transferred with a group of soldiers on the Shattered Plains.” “What do these Ghostbloods look like?” Rlain said, inspecting the souls. “Maybe we can identify them.” “We were expecting three people,” Shallan said. “Two short, one tall. One woman, two men. Two wear strange masks most of the time, and are foreigners. The third is Thaylen, though he dyes his eyebrows and keeps them short. He has scars across his face, and…” She paused, then glanced at Renarin. “They would have spren with them. Maybe hiding within their hosts, as yours do?” “Tumi says that is likely,” Rlain told her. “Any spren can learn to do it, even on this side.” “And their powers?” Renarin pushed. “Sja-anat can make any order of Radiant save Bondsmith, assuming the spren are willing. And a lot of them are, Shallan. She offers a different option, a third option. So what powers should we be watching for?” “Well, one can transfer between Shadesmar and the Physical Realm,” Shallan said. “So they might be waiting on the other side for the perpendicularity to open, then plan to pop in here and enter it from this side.” “Good,” Rlain said. “That gives us something to prepare for.” He knelt beside the wall. “These two souls… they seem to be hiding in an air duct. And what is that green spot…” “Mmm…” Pattern said. “Cultivationspren. That is Lift.” “Spying as usual,” Shallan said, folding her arms. “So maybe that’s not them.” “What else should we be looking for?” Renarin asked. “Could one of them be a Lightweaver? Could they be disguised?” She glanced at him, then her eyes widened and she looked back through the clear crystalline door. At the three soldiers—two short, one tall—who they’d brought here and posted out front. Chapter 32: Cords of Light As a king leaves a people with the gift of his absence, so that they may grow and solve their own problems, without his hand to always guide them. —From The Way of Kings, fourth parable A glowing rift tore reality apart before Dalinar, a melding of three realms. It took the form of a pillar of light emerging from his clasped hands, gloryspren exploding into existence around him. The light soon washed out everything else, and power flowed like water in a mighty river—forming a puncture in reality that defied natural laws… or no, this was an expression of natural laws too. Simply ones that were higher, more fundamental. “All right,” Dalinar said. “It’s open.” “Step in,” Wit said, though Dalinar had lost track of him in the omnipresent light. “Both of you. Let the light bathe you, then seek the Spiritual Realm.” Dalinar moved forward, holding the portal open as one might part drapes at a window. “Dalinar,” Navani said, joining him, “I can hear the tones of Roshar… They’re familiar to me now. This place… it’s been calling to me for weeks.” She took Dalinar’s hand in her safehand, then reached out toward the sound with her fingers, which he could see making streaks in the light. He could feel that realm too. Could feel her welcoming it… as they stretched toward another place. * * * Panic speared Shallan. Those people outside… Oh no, Veil thought. Remind me, what do you do when there’s a guard watching for you? Storms. You became the guard. Unfortunately, Mraize saw her looking through the wall at him, and knew they’d been spotted. A second later the three Ghostbloods burst through the door, still wearing their false faces—though Mraize had pulled a dagger out. One that glowed and warped the air. “Protect the spren!” Shallan shouted, pointing. “Those three guards are the enemy!” The room became chaos. Three Ghostbloods pretending to be common Alethi guards faced two Windrunners and their spren, along with Renarin, Rlain, Radiant, Pattern, and Testament. So many figures suddenly moving, responding, or panicking. Mraize raised his dagger and stayed back, though when the dagger got too close to his side, it made the Lightweaving spark and rip apart. Iyatil and Lieke leaped for Breteh, perhaps identifying the Windrunner as the strongest. Radiant moved, shoving past Pattern and trying to get to Breteh, who clashed with Lieke, holding back his dagger. Nearby, Isasik—the other Windrunner—tackled Iyatil. Storms, no, Radiant thought, pulling to a stop. There was no way Isasik could handle Iyatil. Indeed, the woman spun expertly and grabbed the younger Windrunner by the arm, slashing in a single smooth motion. She tossed him aside, blood spraying from a slit across his neck. Right then, Dalinar’s perpendicularity opened. Power thrummed through the room, pulsing with the energy of storms, and Shallan felt it surge through her like hot water in her veins. She gasped in awe, and outside the room spren began to scramble and scratch at the door. Iyatil jumped for her, knife—fortunately a conventional one—bloody. Radiant separated from Shallan then, fully armored despite being in Shadesmar—formed of Lightweaving given physical weight. Radiant snatched Iyatil straight from the air, then slammed her to the glowing crystalline ground. Iyatil grunted and slashed at Radiant, the weapon bouncing ineffectively off the Shardplate. It wasn’t real, but was anything real on this side? What had made this entire tower, if not raw Investiture from the Sibling? Radiant pinned Iyatil down by one arm—but the Ghostblood performed an expert wrestling twist and slipped away. She spun around Radiant—who tried and failed to grab her. The woman’s Lightweaving began to evaporate, letting her mask show through, and her eyes—rimmed by wood—fixated on Shallan. If she has an anti-Stormlight dagger, Shallan realized, dancing backward by instinct, she’ll use it against me. That kills both me and Radiant, and likely negates Pattern and Testament. Not that either were very useful. Testament hid behind Pattern, who stood with one hand to his chest, pattern spinning, like a woman whose garden party had just been spoiled by unexpected rain. As Iyatil struck, Shallan dodged backward, blessing Adolin for his insistence on training her in knife combat. As she had expected though, this was a feint—Iyatil slid another knife from her sheath and kept her hand back as if to hide it. This one warped the air. Shallan had been wrong about them only having a little bit of anti-Light—there had been one bolt, but at least two daggers. Shallan continued to dodge, passing Isasik, whom Renarin was helping sit up after healing. A second later, Breteh—careening in an uncontrolled Lashing—came crashing past. Iyatil dodged, and Shallan saw her chance, bringing Radiant in to tackle the woman, forcing her to drop the dagger—which went skidding across the floor. While Iyatil quickly slipped out of Radiant’s grip again, Shallan was able to scoop up the dagger. She glanced up, met Iyatil’s furious gaze, then smiled in triumph. A second later, Shallan took a blowgun dart to the eye. She stumbled back and barely managed to dodge—through the pain—as Iyatil sent more darts after her. When had the woman gotten out that blowgun? Shallan scrambled away, making illusions of herself to distract, and pulled the dart free. Puffing, she assessed the situation. Isasik had been healed but still sat on the floor, right hand to his bloodied neck. Lieke was facing Rlain and one of the Windrunner honorspren. The female who had spoken earlier, wearing a uniform and carrying a light dueling sword—which she wielded effectively to force the outsider up against the wall, then run him through. Shallan nodded in appreciation—so far, Maya and Notum were the sole spren she’d known with the air of soldiers. But it stood to reason there would be others, particularly among the honorspren who had chosen to come and form bonds rather than hide in Lasting Integrity. The Ghostbloods were losing this fight. They might be better individual warriors, but they faced five Radiants, plus the spren and Shallan’s illusions. Radiant backed Iyatil into a corner, and Lieke—who didn’t appear to have a spren—died in the attack, falling limp and covered in blood. As quickly as the ruckus had begun, it was over. As Adolin had warned her so many months ago, combat was often short, brutal, and overwhelming. Years of training came down to a few key clashes. Shallan had even missed important parts while fixated on Iyatil; she only now noticed that Mraize was on the ceiling, having apparently been Lashed there by Breteh. The honorspren and Rlain joined Radiant in holding Iyatil at bay, while Shallan and Isasik—regaining his feet—turned weapons on Mraize, trapped on the ceiling. “Wait,” Isasik said. “Where did that other Knight Radiant come from? And… how did she get Shardplate in Shadesmar?” Breteh looked at Radiant, then frowned. “Another Lightweaver?” he guessed. “Shallan?” “Well,” she said. “It’s kind of complicated—” “You haven’t asked,” Iyatil whispered from the corner, “what happened to the guards whose places we took.” Isasik turned toward her. “What did you do to them?” “They’re being held at the base of the pillar where you arrived,” Iyatil said. “As insurance. They will be executed unless I give a signal. Or you get to them first.” “She’s toying with you, Isasik,” Shallan said. “Don’t let her get inside your head.” “It’s true,” Mraize said from the ceiling. “You know I wouldn’t lie about this, little knife. You can save them, but you only have a few minutes.” “Is he lying?” Isasik demanded. “Shallan?” She gazed up at Mraize. Who smiled. Confident. Damnation. “He’s probably not,” she admitted. “But—” Both Windrunners dashed away, their spren following. “Windrunners,” Iyatil said dismissively. “So easy to play with.” “We still have you all,” Shallan said. Mraize on the ceiling, Lieke down, Iyatil trapped in the corner, holding her blowgun but apparently out of darts. “You’re captured. We win.” “Ah,” Iyatil said softly, “but Mraize still has his dagger.” Shallan looked up at him, her eyes locking on to the dagger. It was difficult to make anything out as the perpendicularity raged—washing out the room with brilliant white light. Spren in the distance were going haywire, a thousand shadows dancing up on the ground floor. But she could make out that warping. That light that somehow repelled natural light—including that of the perpendicularity—in a bubble around Mraize’s hand. It stood out like a single dot on an otherwise white canvas. “Mraize,” Shallan said, suddenly filled with dread. “Mraize, what are you doing?” “Have you ever seen a perpendicularity collapse on itself, little knife?” he asked. “Mraize…” “I haven’t either,” he said. “But it’s reportedly spectacular.” He threw the dagger. Shallan leaped for it, but she was in the wrong position. The anti-Light struck the center of the portal. The blast that followed shattered the room. * * * It was working. Dalinar could feel the vision begin to form, slowly at first, as if the Spiritual Realm was resisting. He and Navani pushed forward, as through a thick tar, holding hands—trailing cords of light to Connect to the Physical Realm. Images began to form around him from swirling light. Visions of places, people—ephemeral, winking away in seconds. The tones thrummed through him. It was working. He looked at Navani, grinning. Then, behind them, something snapped. Their Connection to the Physical Realm vanished, and something came rushing toward them: power, wind, and screams. Excerpted from Wind and Truth, copyright © 2024 Dragonsteel Entertainment. Join the Read-Along Discussion Here Find All the Excerpts Here Listen to Chapters 31 and 32 MacmillanAudio · Chapter 31 – WIND AND TRUTH by Brandon Sanderson, narrated by Kate Reading and Michael Kramer MacmillanAudio · Chapter 32 – WIND AND TRUTH by Brandon Sanderson, narrated by Kate Reading and Michael Kramer Buy the Book Wind and Truth Brandon Sanderson Book Five of The Stormlight Archive Buy Book Wind and Truth Brandon Sanderson Book Five of The Stormlight Archive Book Five of The Stormlight Archive Buy this book from: AmazonBarnes and NobleiBooksIndieBoundTarget The post Read <i>Wind and Truth</i> by Brandon Sanderson: Chapters 31 and 32 appeared first on Reactor.
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Democrats and Regime Media Still Incapable of Reading the Room

Democrats and Regime Media Still Incapable of Reading the Room
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