Kaladin felt at his legs, then his ribs. He found aches and scrapes, but nothing broken or ripped. That Stormlight he’d held at the end… it had protected him, perhaps even healed him, before running out. He finally reached into his pouch and fished out spheres, but found those all drained. He tried his pocket, then froze as he heard something scraping nearby.
He leaped to his feet and spun, wishing he had a weapon. The chasm bottom grew
Then someone wandered around the corner, wearing a silk dress and carrying a pack over her shoulder. Shallan Davar.
She screamed when she saw him, throwing the pack to the ground and stumbling backward, hands to her sides. She even dropped her sphere.
Rolling his arm in its socket, Kaladin stepped closer into the light. “Calm down,” he said. “It’s me.”
“Stormfather!” Shallan said, scrambling to grab the sphere off the ground again. She stepped forward, thrusting the light toward him. “It
“I don’t know,” he lied, looking upward. “I’ve got a wicked crick in my neck and my elbow hurts like thunder. What happened?”
“Someone threw the emergency latch on the bridge.”
“What emergency latch?”
“It topples the bridge into the chasm.”
“Sounds like a storming
“Depends,” Shallan said. “What if your men have retreated over the bridge and enemies are pouring across it after you? The emergency latch is supposed to have some kind of safety lock so it can’t be thrown by accident, but you can release it in a hurry if you need to.”
He grunted as Shallan shone her sphere past him toward where the two halves of the bridge had smashed into the ground of the chasm. There were the bodies he’d expected.
He looked. He
Except Shallan. Kaladin didn’t remember grabbing her as he fell, but he didn’t remember much of that fall beyond Syl’s scream. That
Well, he must have managed to grab Shallan by reflex, infusing her with Stormlight to slow her fall. She looked disheveled, her blue dress scuffed and her hair a mess, but she was apparently otherwise unharmed.
“I woke up down here in the darkness,” Shallan said. “It’s been a while since we fell.”
“How can you tell?”
“It’s almost dark up there,” Shallan said. “It will be night soon. When I woke I heard echoes of yelling. Fighting. I saw something glowing from around that corner. Turned out to be a soldier who had fallen, his sphere pouch ripped.” She shivered visibly. “He’d been killed by something before the fall.”
“Parshendi,” Kaladin said. “Just before the bridge collapsed, I heard horns from the vanguard. We got attacked.” Damnation. That probably meant that Dalinar had retreated, assuming he’d actually survived. There was nothing worth fighting for out here.
“Give me one of those spheres,” Kaladin said.
She handed one over, and Kaladin went searching among the fallen. For pulses, ostensibly, but really for any equipment or spheres.
“You think any of these might be alive?” Shallan asked, voice sounding small in the otherwise silent chasm.
“Well,
“How do you think that happened?” Shallan said, looking upward toward the gap far, far above.
“I saw some windspren just before we fell,” Kaladin said. “I’ve heard folktales of them protecting a person as he falls. Perhaps that’s what happened.”
Shallan went silent as he searched the bodies. “Yes,” she finally said. “That sounds logical.”
She seemed convinced. Good. So long as she didn’t start wondering about the stories told of “Kaladin Stormblessed.”
Nobody else was alive, but he verified for certain that neither Dalinar nor Adolin were among the corpses.
The corpses had little of value. A handful of spheres, some writing implements that Shallan greedily snatched up and stuffed into her satchel. No maps. Kaladin had no specific idea where they were. And with night imminent…
“What do we do?” Shallan asked softly, staring at the darkened realm, with its unexpected shadows, its gently moving frills, vines, polyplike staccatos, their tendrils out and wafting in the air.