Page 67 of A Memory of Light (The Wheel of Time 14)
“I agree,” Darlin said. “Lord Dragon, we should have the mandate to defend land that is rightfully ours!”
“I,” Egwene said, cutting through the arguments, “am more interested to hear his other two requirements.”
“You know one of them,” Rand said.
“The seals,” Egwene said.
“Signing this document would mean nothing to the White Tower,” Rand said, apparently ignoring the comment. “I can’t very well forbid all of you to influence the others; that would be foolishness.”
“It’s already foolishness,” Elayne said.
Elayne was not feeling so proud of him any longer, Egwene thought.
“And as long as there are political games to be played,” Rand continued to Egwene, “the Aes Sedai will master them. In fact, this document benefits you. The White Tower always has believed war to be, as they say, shortsighted. Instead, I demand something else of you. The seals.”
“I am their Watcher.”
“In name only. They were only just discovered, and I possess them. It is out of respect for your traditional title that I approached you about them first.”
“Approached me? You didn’t make a request,” she said. “You didn’t make a demand. You came, told me what you were going to do and walked away.”
“I have the seals,” he repeated. “And I will break them. I won’t allow anything, not even you, to come between me and protecting this world.”
All around them arguments over the document continued, rulers muttering with their confidants and neighbors. Egwene stepped forward, facing Rand across the small table, the two of them ignored for the moment. “You won’t break them if I stop you, Rand.”
“Why would you want to stop me, Egwene? Give me a single reason why it would be a bad idea.”
“A single reason other than that it will let the Dark One loose on the world?”
“He was not loose during the War of Power,” Rand said. “He could touch the world, but the Bore being opened will not loose him. Not immediately.”
“And what was the cost of letting him touch the world? What are they now? Horrors, terrors, destruction. You know what is happening to the land. The dead walking, the strange twisting of the Pattern. This is what happens with the seals only weakened! What happens if we actually break them? The Light only knows.”
“It is a risk that must be taken.”
“I don’t agree. Rand, you don’t know what releasing his seals will do—you don’t know if it might let him escape. You don’t know how close he was to getting out when the Bore was last secured. Shattering those seals could destroy the world itself! What if our only hope lies in the fact that he’s hindered this time, not completely free?”
“It won’t work, Egwene.”
“You don’t know that. How can you?”
He hesitated. “Many things in life are uncertain.”
“So you don’t know,” she said. “Well, I have been looking, reading, listening. Have you read the works of those who have studied this, thought about it?”
“Aes Sedai speculation.”
“The only information we have, Rand! Open the Dark One’s prison and all could be lost. We have to be more careful. This is what the Amyrlin Seat is for, this is part of why the White Tower was founded in the first place!”
He actually hesitated. Light, he was thinking. Could she be getting through to him?
“I don’t like it, Egwene,” Rand said softly. “If I go up against him and the seals are not broken, my only choice will be to create another imperfect solution. A patch, even worse than the one last time—because with the old, weakened seals there, I’ll just be spreading new plaster over deep cracks. Who knows how long the seals would last this time? In a few centuries, we could have this same fight all over again.”
“Is that so bad?” Egwene said. “At least it’s sure. You sealed the Bore last time. You know how to do it.”
“We could end up with the taint again.”
“We’re ready for it, this time. No, it wouldn’t be ideal. But Rand… do we really want to risk this? Risk the fate of every living being? Why not take the simple path, the known path? Mend the seals again. Shore up the prison.”
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