“And that’s a lie,” Shallan said, cocking her head. “I would know the truth from you, Gaz.”
“Just turn me over to them,” he said, turning and walking toward the soup. “Ain’t no matter. I’d rather that than be out here, wondering when they’ll find me, anyways.”
Shallan watched him go, then shook her head, turning back to her studies.
Fortunately, Jasnah was very complete in her notes. It appeared that most of the old records spoke of Urithiru as being in the mountains. The Shattered Plains filled a basin.
“Are you well?” Pattern’s voice asked softly. He liked to come out when it was darker, and she did not forbid him. She searched and found him on the table, a complex formation of ridges in the wood.
“Historians,” Shallan said, “are a bunch of liars.”
“Mmmmm,” Pattern said, sounding satisfied.
“That wasn’t a compliment.”
“Oh.”
Shallan slammed her current book closed. “These women were supposed to be scholars! Instead of recording facts, they wrote opinions and presented them as truth. They seem to take great pains to contradict one another, and they dance around topics of import like spren around a fire—never providing heat themselves, just making a show of it.”
Pattern hummed. “Truth is individual.”
“What? No it’s not. Truth is… it’s
“Your truth is what you see,” Pattern said, sounding confused. “What else could it be? That is the truth that you spoke to me, the truth that brings power.”
She looked at him, his ridges casting shadows in the light of her spheres. She’d renewed those in the highstorm last night, while she was cooped up in her box of a wagon. Pattern had started buzzing in the middle of the storm—a strange, angry sound. After that, he’d ranted in a language she didn’t understand, panicking Gaz and the other soldiers she’d invited into the shelter. Luckily, they took it for granted that terrible things happened during highstorms, and none had spoken of it since.
“Pattern,” she said, tapping her pencil—one she’d gotten from the merchants, along with paper. “This table has four legs. Would you not say that is a truth, independent of my perspective?”
Pattern buzzed uncertainly. “What is a leg? Only as it is defined by you. Without a perspective, there is no such thing as a leg, or a table. There is only wood.”
“You’ve told me the table perceives itself this way.”
“Because people have considered it, long enough, as being a table,” Pattern said. “It becomes truth to the table because of the truth the people create for it.”
“Spren,” Shallan said. “If people weren’t here, would spren have thought?”
“Not here, in this realm,” Pattern said. “I do not know about the other realm.”
“You don’t sound concerned,” Shallan said. “Your entire existence might be dependent on people.”
“It is,” Pattern said, again unconcerned. “But children are dependent upon parents.” He hesitated. “Besides, there are others who think.”
“Voidbringers,” Shallan said, cold.
“Yes. I do not think that my kind would live in a world with only them. They have their own spren.”
Shallan sat up sharply. “Their
Pattern shrank on her table, scrunching up, his ridges growing less distinct as they mashed together.
“Well?” Shallan asked.
“We do not speak of this.”
“You might want to start,” Shallan said. “It’s important.”
Pattern buzzed. She thought he was going to insist on the point, but after a moment, he continued in a very small voice. “Spren are… power… shattered power. Power given thought by the perceptions of men. Honor, Cultivation, and… and another. Fragments broken off.”
“Another?” Shallan prodded.