She had survived that. She could survive this.
These men, they would be of the same group Kabsal had been from—the assassins Jasnah feared. They had finally gotten her.
Oh, Jasnah . . .
Jasnah was dead.
Grieve later. What was Shallan going to do about armed men taking over the ship? How would she find a way out?
She felt her way out into the passageway. There was a little light here, from torches above on the deck. The yells she heard there grew more panicked.
“Killing,” a voice suddenly said.
She jumped, though of course it was only Pattern.
“What?” Shallan hissed.
“Dark men killing,” Pattern said. “Sailors tied in ropes. One dead, bleeding red. I . . . I do not understand. . . .”
Oh, Stormfather . . . Above, the shouting heightened, but there was no scramble of boots on the deck, no clanging of weapons. The sailors had been captured. At least one had been killed.
In the darkness, Shallan saw shaking, wiggling forms creep up from the wood around her. Fearspren.
“What of the men who chased after my image?” she asked.
“Looking in water,” Pattern said.
So they thought she’d jumped overboard. Heart thumping, Shallan felt her way to Jasnah’s cabin, expecting at any moment to trip over the woman’s corpse on the floor. She didn’t. Had the men dragged it above?
Shallan entered Jasnah’s cabin and closed the door. It wouldn’t latch shut, so she pulled a box over to block it.
She had to do something. She felt her way to one of Jasnah’s trunks, which had been thrown open by the men, its contents—clothing—scattered about. In the bottom, Shallan found the hidden drawer and pulled it open. Light suddenly bathed the cabin. The spheres were so bright they blinded Shallan for a moment, and she had to look away.
Pattern vibrated on the floor beside her, form shaking in worry. Shallan looked about. The small cabin was a shambles, clothing on the floor, papers strewn everywhere. The trunk with Jasnah’s books was gone. Too fresh to have soaked in, blood was pooled on the bed. Shallan quickly looked away.
A shout suddenly sounded above, followed by a thump. The screaming grew louder. She heard Tozbek bellow for the men to spare his wife.
Almighty above . . . the assassins were executing the sailors one at a time. Shallan had to do something. Anything.
Shallan looked back at the spheres in their false bottom, lined with black cloth. “Pattern,” she said, “we’re going to Soulcast the bottom of the ship and sink it.”
“What!” His vibrating increased, a buzz of sound. “Humans . . . Humans . . . Eat water?”
“We drink it,” Shallan said, “but we cannot breathe it.”
“Mmmm . . . Confused . . .” Pattern said.
“The captain and the others are captured and being executed. The best chance I can give them is chaos.” Shallan placed her hands on the spheres and drew in the Light with a sharp breath. She felt afire with it inside of her, as if she were going to burst. The Light was a living thing, trying to press out through the pores of her skin.
“Show me!” she shouted, far more loudly than she’d intended. That Stormlight urged her to action. “I’ve Soulcast before. I must do it again!” Stormlight puffed from her mouth as she spoke, like breath on a cold day.
“Mmmmm . . .” Pattern said anxiously. “I will intercede. See.”
“See what?”
“See!”
Shadesmar. The last time she’d gone to that place, she’d nearly gotten herself killed. Only, it wasn’t a place. Or was it? Did it matter?
She reached back through recent memory to the time when she’d last Soulcast and accidentally turned a goblet into blood. “I need a truth.”
“You have given enough,” Pattern said. “Now. See.”
The ship vanished.
Everything . . . popped. The walls, the furniture, it all shattered into little globes of black glass. Shallan prepared herself to fall into the ocean of those glass beads, but instead she dropped onto solid ground.
She stood in a place with a black sky and a tiny, distant sun. The ground beneath her reflected light. Obsidian? Each way she turned, the ground was made of that same blackness. Nearby, the spheres—like those that would hold Stormlight, but dark and small—bounced to a rest on the ground.
Trees, like growing crystal, clustered here and there. The limbs were spiky and glassy, without leaves. Nearby, little lights hung in the air, flames without their candles. People, she realized. Those are each a person’s mind, reflected here in the Cognitive Realm. Smaller ones were scattered about