“There was a man spread-eagled across the doors with
thick spikes through wrists and shoulders.
More spikes had been driven into his eyes to hold his head up. Dark, dried blood made fans down his
cheeks. Scuff marks on the wall behind
his boots showed that he had been alive when it was done. When it began, anyway. Rand’s breath caught. Not a man.
Those black clothes, blacker than black, had never been worn by any
human. The wind flapped an end of the cloak
caught behind the body – which it did not always, he knew too well; the wind
did not always touch those clothes – but there had never been any eyes in that
pale, bloodless face. “Myrddraal,” he
breathed, and it was as if his speaking released all the others.” – The Great
Hunt, p. 186.
The image of a Fade, nailed to a door by Padan Fain,
is perhaps one of the more grotesque images of The Great Hunt, as Robert
Jordan does something to change the tone back to the seriousness which had been
lacking. Immediately after the last
section, there is levity as Rand realizes that he is not going to be gentled or
handed over to the Aes Sedai, and this image brings Rand right back to the
reality. The entire hunt is frozen in
this moment just to take in this horror, a creature which has been responsible for
so much horror in the last book and a half, now dead creates weight. This sequence is part of essentially the
beginning of the hunt where there are a number of things happening. Rand, Mat, and Perrin are for the first time
separated from Egwene and Nynaeve by their own volition while Moiraine and Lan
are gone on their own quest. Separating
the three from what is essentially authority allows for quite a few things to
happen, and allows for new characters to build out the world in quite a few
ways as well as helping the reader understand just what is happening to Rand. Ingtar, a lord from Fal Dara, was introduced
in The Eye of the World and here is essentially the leader of the hunt and
the revelation here is that Rand is made second in command if Ingtar is to fall,
however this is not a public fact and on the surface a warrior called Uno, a
man with one eye and a topknot, is acting second in command.
Rand reacts thusly: “Me!...That’s crazy! I’ve never
led anything but a flock of sheep, Ingtar.
They would not follow me anyway.
Besides, Moiraine can’t tell you who your second is. It’s Uno…Moiraine’s hand was bright and clear
in it, her’s and the Amyrlin’s pushing him along the path they had chosen” – The
Great Hunt, p. 190. This is the
first time Rand is essentially being given any sort of power, all out of his
control, almost paralleling his discovery of the ability to channel, something
he has been avoiding. This is further
driven by the Dragon Banner, found at the end of The Eye of the World,
being in his pack along with several coats which are lavish. Moiraine and Siuan are essentially telling him
that he is no longer allowed to be the farmer and sheepherder from the Two Rivers
without actually telling him he is no longer allowed to be the farmer from the Two
Rivers. They’re on their way back to Tar
Valon, not hunting for the Horn of Valere and the ruby dagger. Rand tries to hide this and outright denies
the possibility of being the Dragon Reborn, though the reader knows that at
least Moiraine and Siuan believe it to be true and it is the reason that Ba’alzamon
was after them in The Eye of the World.
Mat is the first to react in hostility to the discovery of the Dragon
Banner which then begins this exchange: “Anger boiled up in Rand, anger at
Moiraine and the Amyrlin Seat, pushing him, pulling him. He snatched up the banner in both hands and
shook it at Mat, words boiling up uncontrollably, “That’s right! The Dragon’s banner!”
Mat took another step back. “Moiraine
wants me to be a puppet on Tar Valon strings, a false Dragon for the Aes
Sedai. She’s going to push it down my
throat whatever I want. But—I—will—not—be—used!”
Mat had backed up against a tree trunk “A false Dragon?...You? That…that’s crazy.”
Perrin had not retreated. He squatted down
with his arms on his knees and studied Rand with those bright golden eyes… “If
the Aes Sedai want you for a false Dragon…Rand, can you channel?”” – The
Great Hunt, p. 192-193.
Of course, Rand has to tell them the truth, Mat taking
it terribly while Perrin simply tells Mat to shut up. Both are scared of and for their incredibly
close friend which is certainly an understandable fear, but there is at least
an amicable ending there. They
eventually all cool off, but are still uncertain as to how they should be
proceeding. Perrin has perhaps the closest
camaraderie to Rand as he has already been in contact with the wolves and the
physical changes of his eyes. The other
important character here is Hurin, who is a sniffer, a character who is
initially set up as a foil to Perrin, though not explored here. He essentially can follow the scents of
people and doesn’t exactly know how it works.
Now this is something that Robert Jordan perhaps had held over from an
earlier draft where the magic system differed from the way it developed, as it
doesn’t quite sit, it’s just a cool thing that he can do which is excellent.
While the three boys are off having their own
adventure, Egwene and Nynaeve are on their way to Tar Valon where they, and the
reader, get a formal introduction to Verin Mathwin which is important to
explaining their position as older than standard Novices, how the White Tower
structure works (there is a mistress of Novices, Sheriam, who will be
responsible for disciplining them), and how it is odd that they have been able
to channel late. Nynaeve is told she is
frightened and her reaction is to deny it, but that is something she is clearly
afraid of. It is at this point where
Nynaeve actively channels for the first time, and like with Rand at the end of The
Eye of the World, it is of a destructive nature. She channels a flame while the other Aes
Sedai are essentially needling her and Egwene to get information on Rand which
is not happening. There is also the
first dream from Egwene which she shares to Anaiya, the one Aes Sedai who was
at least friends to Moiraine, as they were in the same Ajah, and the idea is
that Egwene may be a dreamer. Finally,
the Aes Sedai don’t actually know where Rand’s party is going, thinking they
are going in the opposite direction. This
is a point where the Hunt has begun and separated from Moiraine, the Two Rivers
folk are going to have to fend for themselves in a dangerous world where danger
is around every corner.
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