I want their minds on the possibility of assassins, not on the duel.”
“Is he really going to fight two men at once?”
“Yeah.”
“Can he possibly win that?”
“I don’t know, and I don’t really care. Our job is to watch for other threats.”
Sigzil nodded, and moved to leave. He hesitated, however, taking Kaladin by the arm. “You could join them, Kal,” he said softly. “If the king’s refounding the Knights Radiant, you have an excuse to show what you are. Dalinar is trying, but so many think of the Radiants as an evil force, forgetting the good they did before they betrayed mankind. But if you showed your powers, it could change minds.”
Join. Under Amaram. Not likely.
“Go pass my orders,” Kaladin said, gesturing, then pulled his arm free of Sigzil’s grip and jogged after the king and his retinue. At least the sun was out today, the spring air warm.
Syl bobbed along behind Kaladin. “Amaram is ruining you, Kaladin,” she whispered. “Don’t let him.”
He gritted his teeth and didn’t reply. Instead, he moved up beside Moash, who was in charge of a team who would watch Brightness Navani—she preferred to watch the duels from down below, in the preparation rooms.
A part of him wondered if he should let Moash guard anyone other than Dalinar, but storm it, Moash had sworn to him that he’d take no more actions against the king. Kaladin trusted him on that count. They were Bridge Four.
I’ll get you out of this, Moash, Kaladin thought, pulling the man aside. We’ll fix this.
“Moash,” Kaladin said, speaking softly. “Starting tomorrow, I’m putting you on patrol duty.”
Moash frowned. “I thought you always wanted me guarding . . .” His expression grew hard. “This is about what happened. In the tavern.”
“I want you to take a deep patrol,” Kaladin said. “Head out toward New Natanan. I don’t want you here when we move against Graves and his people.” It had been too long already.
“I’m not leaving.”
“You will, and it’s not subject to—”
“What they’re doing is right, Kal!”
Kaladin frowned. “Have you still been meeting with them?”
Moash looked away. “Only once. To assure them that you’d come around.”
“You still disobeyed an order!” Kaladin said. “Storm it, Moash!”
The noise inside the arena was building.
“Almost time for the match,” Moash said, pulling his arm free of Kaladin’s grip. “We can talk about this later.”
Kaladin ground his teeth, but unfortunately, Moash was right. This wasn’t the time.
Should have grabbed him this morning, Kaladin thought. No, what I should have done was make a decision on this days ago.
It was his own fault. “You will go on that patrol, Moash,” he said. “You don’t get to be insubordinate just because you’re my friend. Go on.”
The man jogged ahead, collecting his squad.
* * *
Adolin knelt beside his sword in the preparation room and found he didn’t know what to say.
He looked at his reflection in the Blade. Two Shardbearers at once. He’d never even tried that outside of the practice grounds.
Fighting multiple opponents was tough. In the histories, if you heard of a man fighting six men at once or whatnot, the truth was probably that he managed to take them one at a time somehow. Two at once was hard, if they were prepared and careful. Not impossible, but really hard.
“It comes down to this,” Adolin said. He had to say something to the sword. It was tradition. “Let’s go be spectacular. Then let’s wipe that smile off Sadeas’s face.”
He stood up, dismissing his Blade. He left the small preparation room, walking down the tunnel with carved, painted duelists. In the room beyond, Renarin sat in his Kholin uniform—he wore that to official functions like this, instead of the blasted Bridge Four uniform—waiting anxiously. Aunt Navani was screwing the lid off a jar of paint to do a glyphward.
“No need,” Adolin said, taking one from his pocket. Painted in Kholin blue, it read “excellence.”
Navani cocked an eyebrow. “The girl?”
“Yeah,” Adolin said.
“The calligraphy isn’t bad,” Navani said, grudgingly.
“She’s quite wonderful, Aunt,” Adolin said. “I wish you’d give her more of a chance. And she does want to share her scholarship with you.”
“We’ll see,” Navani said. She sounded more thoughtful than she had before, regarding Shallan. A good sign.
Adolin placed the glyphward in the brazier, then bowed his head as it burned. A prayer to the Almighty for aid. His combatants for the day would probably be burning their own prayers. How did the Almighty decide whom to help?
I can’t believe, Adolin thought, raising his head from the prayer, that