“Technically?” Wit asked, plucking at a string, then leaning down to listen as he plucked another. “Yes.”
Kaladin sat back down on the bench in his cell. Wit wore his black-on-black, his thin silver sword undone from his waist and sitting on the bench beside him. A brown sack slumped there as well. Wit leaned down to tune his instrument, one leg crossed over the other. He hummed softly to himself and nodded. “Perfect pitch,” Wit said, “makes this all so much easier than it once was…”
Kaladin sat, waiting, as Wit settled back against the wall. Then did nothing.
“Well?” Kaladin asked.
“Yes. Thank you.”
“Are you going to play music for me?”
“No. You wouldn’t appreciate it.”
“Then why are you here?”
“I like visiting people in prison. I can say whatever I want to them, and they can’t do anything about it.” He looked up at Kaladin, then rested his hands on his instrument, smiling. “I’ve come for a story.”
“What story?”
“The one you’re going to tell me.”
“Bah,” Kaladin said, lying back down on his bench. “I’m in no mood for your games today, Wit.”
Wit plucked a note on his instrument. “Everyone always says that—which, first off, makes it a cliche. I am led to wonder. Is anyone
Kaladin sighed as Wit continued to pluck out notes. “If I play along today,” Kaladin asked, “will that get rid of you?”
“I will leave as soon as the story is done.”
“Fine. A man went to jail. He hated it there. The end.”
“Ah…” Wit said. “So it’s a story about a child, then.”
“No, it’s about—” Kaladin cut off.
“Perhaps a story
“A chick… baby chicken?” Kaladin said. “And a what?”
“Ah, forgot myself for a moment,” Wit said. “Sorry. Let me make it more appropriate for you. A piece of wet slime and a disgusting crab thing with seventeen legs slunk across the rocks together on an insufferably rainy day. Is that better?”
“I suppose. Is the story over?”
“It hasn’t started yet.”
Wit abruptly slapped the strings, then began to play them with ferocious intent. A vibrant, energetic repetition. One punctuated note, then seven in a row, frenzied.
The rhythm got inside of Kaladin. It seemed to shake the entire room.
“What do you see?” Wit demanded.
“I…”
“Close your eyes, idiot!”
Kaladin closed his eyes.
“What do you see?” Wit repeated.
Wit was playing with him. The man was said to do that. He was supposedly Sigzil’s old mentor. Shouldn’t Kaladin have earned a reprieve by helping out his apprentice?
There was nothing of humor to those notes. Those powerful notes. Wit added a second melody, complementing the first. Was he playing that with his other hand? Both at the same time? How could one man, one instrument, produce so much music?
Kaladin saw… in his mind…
A race.
“That’s the song of a man who is running,” Kaladin said.
“In the driest part of the brightest day, the man set off from the eastern sea.” Wit said it perfectly to the beat of his music, a chant that was almost a song. “And where he went or why he ran, the answer comes from you to me.”
“He ran from the storm,” Kaladin said softly.
“The man was Fleet, whose name you know; he’s spoken of in song and lore. The fastest man e’er known to live. The surest feet e’er known to roam. In time long past, in times I’ve known, he raced the Herald Chan-a-rach. He won that race, as he did each one, but now the time for defeat had come.
“For Fleet so sure, and Fleet the quick, to all that heard he yelled his goal: to beat the wind, and race a storm. A claim so brash, a claim too bold. To race the wind? It can’t be done. Undaunted, Fleet was set to run. So to the east, there went our Fleet. Upon the shore his mark was set.
“The storm grew strong, the storm grew wild. Who was this man all set to dash? No man should tempt the God of Storms. No fool had ever been so rash.”
How did Wit play this music with only two hands? Surely another hand had joined him. Should Kaladin look?
In his mind’s eye, he saw the race. Fleet, a barefooted man. Wit claimed all knew of him, but Kaladin had never heard of such a story. Lanky, tall, with tied-back long hair that went to his waist. Fleet took his mark on the shore, leaning forward in a running posture, waiting as the stormwall thundered and crashed across the sea toward him. Kaladin jumped as Wit hit a burst of notes, signaling the race’s start.
Fleet tore off just in front of an angry, violent wall of water, lightning, and wind-blown rocks.
Wit did not speak again until Kaladin prompted him. “At first,” Kaladin said, “Fleet did well.”
“O’er rock and grass, our Fleet did run! He leaped the stones and dodged the trees, his feet a blur, his soul a sun! The storm so grand, it raged and spun, but away from it our Fleet did run! The lead was his, the wind behind, did man now prove that storms could