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Authors: Robert Jordan

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The World of Robert Jordan's the Wheel of Time - The Strike at Shayol Ghul

BOOK: The World of Robert Jordan's the Wheel of Time - The Strike at Shayol Ghul
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The Strike at Shayol Ghul

 

 

The Strike at Shayol Ghul

Prequel to The Wheel of Time

Robert Jordan

 

 

 

Foreword by Robert Jordan

Sometimes fans ask me whether I mean to write prequels to The Wheel of Time.

While some requests are for books about The Trolloc Wars or the rise and fall of

the High King, Artur Hawking, or the life histories of various characters, the

most frequent are for books about the AOL and its end in the War of the Power,

and the most often asked question is, I believe, "Why, when the greatest feats

of the Age of Legends were done by men and women working together with the One

Power, was the final attack on Shayol Ghul carried out by men alone?" At present

I do not intend to write any of those books, but I won't say that a story or two

might not creep out eventually. I do not normally do short fiction. My editor

claims that for me, a short story means fifty thousand words. As for the

question, though . . . I hope that those fans (and the rest of you) will be

satisfied for the time with what follows, a fictional bit of "non-fiction," a

piece from an Age called the Third Age by some, an Age yet to come, an Age long

past . . .

 

 

 

 

The Strike at Shayol Ghul

 

(A Preliminary Introduction)

 

 

 

by Jorille Mondevin,

Royal Historian to the Court of

Her Most Illuminated Majesty, Ethenielle Kirukon Materasu,

By the Blessing of the Light,

Queen of Kandor,

Protector of the Land,

Shield of the North,

High Seat of House Materasu.

O ne of the most important finds of recent years, perhaps since the Breaking, is

a partial copy of no less than a history of the world from the drilling of the

Bore into the Dark One's Prison to the End of the Breaking of the world. The

original apparently dated from early in the First Century A.B. Despite the

extreme paucity of material from the entire first millennium after the Breaking,

we can only be thankful that the art of printing survived the Breaking of the

World when so much else did not, and was indeed practiced to some extent during

the Breaking itself, though under severe and restricted conditions. Considering

the widespread destruction of The Trolloc Wars and the War of the Hundred Years,

which although far less than the near totality of the Breaking still saw cities,

nations, and far worse, knowledge, go to the fires, we must marvel at any

writing that has survived more than three thousand years. What we know is based

on fragments, copied and recopied a thousand times, but at least we know

something from them. Even a little knowledge is better than ignorance.

Discovered in a dusty storage room in Chachin, the pages were in a chest full of

old bills and receipts, students' copy books and private diaries, some so foxed

by age and with ink so faded as to be unreadable where the pages themselves had

not crumbled. The fragmentary manuscript was readable, barely, but presented the

usual problems, quite aside from the difficulties of translation and dealing

with centuries of copyists' errors; such a history would no doubt be a vast,

multi-volume work (please see the author's Note at the end), yet of the two

hundred and twelve surviving pages, the largest number of consecutive pages

number six, and nowhere else more than two. Such dates as are given are totally

incomprehensible, as no calendar dating from the Age of Legends has ever been

found. Many references to cataclysmic events (dire battles and cities destroyed

by balefire during the War of the Shadow, whole regions covered by the sea and

mountain ranges raised overnight during the Breaking) and to such minutiae as

the appearance of a certain person are but curiosities. The pages which might

reveal exactly where these things happened, what their special significance was,

the resolution or end result, are usually missing. Why then is this collection

so important? First because, sundered as it is, it contains more information of

the War of the Shadow than any other known single source, perhaps as much as all

other sources combined in some ways. But even more importantly, it gives a great

deal of information available nowhere else. And most importantly of all, the six

consecutive pages and others which must be placed close to them contain the only

known account of events surrounding what surely must be the most far-reaching

single event in the history of the world, in any Age: the sealing of the Bore by

Lews Therin Telamon and the Hundred Companions.

We still cannot be certain how long passed between the creation of the Bore and

the actual beginning of what would come to be called the War of the Shadow, yet

plainly at least fifty years and possibly more than one hundred were marked by a

rapid decline in the social order and an equally rapid increase in a thousand

ills that previously had been either rare or entirely unknown. War itself was a

"new" discovery, it seems, though one quickly learned, some might even say

perfected. The War of the Shadow tilted one way, then another, in fire and

blood, over its course. During the first three years, the Shadow made great

gains, and large parts of the world fell beneath the horror of the Dark One's

dominion, however indirectly through human representatives. And surely, the

presence of Myrddraal and Trollocs cannot be called indirect. Under the

leadership of Lews Therin Telamon, the legendary Dragon of the Prophecies, much

of what had been lost was retaken over the next four years, though not without

reverses. At that point, a stalemate developed, and for nearly a year neither

side was able to effect any gain despite fierce fighting, but when the stalemate

broke, the Shadow began to advance again, slowly at first but with ever

increasing speed. According to the writer of that fragmentary history, "It was

as if every step forward by the Shadow scattered the spores of chaos before it,

and feeding on what grew, the Shadow gained strength, so that its next stride

was longer, and the next step would be longer still."

Huge areas had been devastated to varying degrees by this time as the war surged

back and forth around the world, and it was obvious that while the Shadow was

willing to starve or murder a great percentage of the population in the

conquered territories, the forces of the Light could no longer sustain a

protracted war. They were losing, being pushed toward inevitable defeat with

increasing speed, and if they were to win at all, it must be done quickly.

One of the plans for ending the war quickly, proposed by Lews Therin, centered

around a direct attack on the Bore itself. Seven "focus points" (there seems no

better translation from the old tongue, although they are obviously the Seals of

Legend) were constructed of cuendillar. A raiding force — so they called it,

though even in the light of recent past events it must still seem a large army

to most people of this day — a raiding force consisting of some twenty thousand

soldiers to provide security and a circle of seven female Aes Sedai and six male

(the minimum number believed necessary, and all the strongest who could be

found) would Travel to Shayol Ghul , the one place on earth where what has been

called "a thinness in the Pattern" makes the Bore detectable, and there to

implant seals held by the focus points which would close up the Bore and shut

the Dark One from the world once more.

This plan was considered risky for a number of reasons. Even today it is known

that the Dark One has a certain degree of effect on the world close around

Shayol Ghul, and it was probable that any attempt to channel there would be

instantly detected and the raiding party destroyed. Lews Therin himself, who

intended to personally lead this huge raid, admitted that even with sucess, he

expected few of the attackers to survive, perhaps none. Worse, several experts

claimed that if the seals were not placed with exact precision, the resulting

strain would, instead of sealing up the Bore, rip it open, freeing the Dark One

completely.

Another plan at the time centered around two huge sa'angreal, one attuned to

saidin and one to saidar, both so powerful that using them required special

ter'angreal, like miniature versions of the great sa'angreal, constructed

especially for the purpose of accessing the sa'angreal. This project had its

detractors, too, for the sa'angreal were planned to be so powerful that either

one might well provide enough of the One Power to destroy the world, while both

together certainly would. Some doubted that so much of the One Power could be

handled safely under the circumstances. Against that was the certainty,

according to the plan's supporters, that used together they would provide

sufficient Power to drive the Shadow's forces back, to defeat them completely

and erect a barrier around Shayol Ghul until a safe method of dealing with the

Bore was assured.

Detractors pointed out that the Bore had enlarged since it was first drilled,

and behind the barricade erected by the sa'angreal it would continue to grow, so

that eventually the Dark One might free himself within the barrier. The barrier

might well contain the Dark One when all he could do was reach through the

relatively small Bore, but could it hold back the Dark One let loose?

The hall of the Servants quickly divided into two camps, and those who favored

one plan derided the other.

Support for the use of the great sa'angreal and opposition to attempting to

implant the seals centered around a woman named Latra Posae Decume. Apparently a

speaker of considerable force and persuasion, she gathered a large bloc around

her, but what assured her victory was an agreement she reached with every female

Aes Sedai of significant strength on the side of the Light. (In the manuscript,

this agreement is called "the Fateful Concord," though it was doubtful that this

was the name it was generally known.) Lews Therin's plan was too rash, too

dangerous, and no woman who agreed to the Concord would take part in it. As

precise placement of the seals was widely thought to require a circle, that

apparently killed the plan, since men cannot create a circle, but can only be

brought into one created by women. Work on the sa'angreal, in the form of two

huge statues, was rushed forward. (1)

Just as the paired sa'angreal were completed, disaster struck. The access

ter'angreal were being made at a place far removed from the sa'angreal

(apparently because of a danger of "uncontrolled resonances during the final

stages," whatever that means), and that region was overrun by forces under

Sammael. The only good point in it was that the ter'angreal themselves had been

hidden and the place where they were made destroyed (its very existence had been

a secret at the highest levels all along) so that neither Sammael nor anyone

else for the Shadow knew that any of these things were now within their grasp.

The side of the Light still had the sa'angreal, but no safe way to access them;

without the ter'angreal it was certain that even the strongest Aes Sedai would

be burned out instantly by the huge flow of the One Power.

Lews Therin argued again for his plan, acknowledging the risks but saying that

was now the only chance, yet Posae maintained her opposition. Belief in the

danger of misplacing the seals had spread, and many more female Aes Sedai had

pledged to the "Fateful Concord," including a great number who were nowhere near

strong enough to qualify for the raiding party circle. Tempers and passions

rose, and an apparently unprecedented division along male-female lines began to

develop among the Aes Sedai in general, if not within the Hall itself. Finally

the Hall decided to continue with Latra Posae's plan, and her people began

working to smuggle the access ter'angreal out of Shadow-controlled territory.

(2)

Almost immediately on the heels of Sammael's advance, armies commanded by

Demandred and Bel'al struck heavily. At this point in the war, halting an

advance by the Shadow was the best that could be hoped for; no conquered

territory had been regained in the past two years. In intense and bloody

fighting, these two drives were barely contained, but Demandred and Bel'al kept

the pressure on. Sammael began a new offensive, also scarcely held, and there is

mention of heavy military activity elsewhere. Apparently both of the great

sa'angreal were threatened by these offensives; in fact, it was possible that

they were the target. Massive riots swept a number of cities still held by the

Light and the "re-emergence of the peace faction" is mentioned, apparently a

group demanding negotiations with the Forsaken. (3) The final defeat was at

hand; the will of the people to resist was fading, and should any one of the

three major offensives commanded by Forsaken break through the end would be only

a matter of time, perhaps as little as months. With Latra Posae's opposition

continuing in the face of these events (4), and the female Aes Sedai holding to

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