head. He had made invalid assumptions about her, as she had so poignantly noted. Again and again. It was like a part of him frantically wanted to dislike her.
If only he could find Syl. Everything would be better if he could see her again, if he could know that she was all right. That scream . . .
To distract himself, he moved over to Shallan, then leaned down to see her sketch. Her map was more of a picture, one that looked eerily like the view Kaladin had had, nights ago, when flying above the Shattered Plains.
“Is all that necessary?” he asked as she shaded in the sides of a plateau.
“Yes.”
“But—”
“Yes.”
It took longer than he’d have preferred. The sun passed through the crack overhead, vanishing from sight. Already past noon. They had seven hours until the highstorm, assuming the timing prediction was right—even the best stormwardens got the calculations wrong sometimes.
Seven hours. The hike out here, he thought, took about that long. But surely they’d made some progress toward the warcamps. They’d been walking all morning.
Well, no use rushing Shallan. He left her to it, walking back along the chasm, looking up at the shape of the rift up above and comparing it to her drawing. From what he could see, her map was dead on. She was drawing, from memory, their entire path as if seen from above—and she did it perfectly, every little knob and ledge accounted for.
“Stormfather,” he whispered, jogging back. He’d known she had skill in drawing, but this was something entirely different.
Who was this woman?
She was still drawing when he arrived. “Your picture is amazingly accurate,” he said.
“I may have . . . underplayed my skill a little last night,” Shallan said. “I can remember things pretty well, though to be honest, I didn’t realize how far off our path was until I drew it. A lot of these plateau shapes are unfamiliar to me; we might be into the areas that haven’t been mapped yet.”
He looked to her. “You remember the shapes of all of the plateaus on the maps?”
“Uh . . . yes?”
“That’s incredible.”
She sat back on her knees, holding up her sketch. She brushed aside an unruly lock of red hair. “Maybe not. Something’s very odd here.”
“What?”
“I think my sketch must be off.” She stood up, looking troubled. “I need more information. I’m going to walk around one of the plateaus here.”
“All right . . .”
She started walking, still focused on her sketch, barely paying attention to where she was going as she stumbled over rocks and sticks. He kept up with ease, but didn’t bother her as she turned her eyes toward the rift ahead. She walked them all the way around the base of the plateau to their right.
It took a painfully long time, even walking quickly. They were losing minutes. Did she know where they were or not?
“Now that plateau,” she said, pointing to the next wall. She began walking around the base of that plateau.
“Shallan,” Kaladin said. “We don’t have—”
“This is important.”
“So is not getting crushed in a highstorm.”
“If we don’t find out where we are, we won’t ever escape,” she said, handing him the sheet of paper. “Wait here. I’ll be right back.” She jogged off, skirt swishing.
Kaladin stared at the paper, inspecting the path she’d drawn. Though they’d started the morning going the right way, it was as he’d feared—Kaladin had eventually wound them around until they were going directly south again. He’d even somehow turned them back going east for a while!
That put them even farther from Dalinar’s camp than when they’d begun the night before.
Please let her be wrong, he thought, going around the plateau the other direction to meet her halfway.
But if she was wrong, they wouldn’t know where they were at all. Which option was worse?
He got a short distance down the chasm before freezing. The walls here were scraped free of moss, the debris on the floor pushed around and scratched. Storms, this was fresh. Since the last highstorm at least. The chasmfiend had come this way.
Maybe . . . maybe it had gone past on its way farther out into the chasms.
Shallan, distracted and muttering to herself, appeared around the other side of the plateau. She walked, still staring at the sky, muttering to herself. “. . . I know I said that I saw these patterns, but this is too grand a scale for me to know instinctively. You should have said something. I—”
She cut off abruptly, jumping as