A storm gathers on the horizon, one of black and silver clouds that boil without rain and flash with silent lightning. It is a storm felt in the bones of the world. Crops refuse to sprout from the soil, food rots in an instant, and the dead are beginning to walk. For a farmer named Renald, watching the unnatural thunderheads from his porch, the feeling is undeniable. His neighbor, a smith, buries his anvil and prepares his family to march north. “There's a storm coming,” he says, his voice grim. “This ain't the sort of storm you ignore.” He is a Borderlander, and though he has never held a sword, he knows what the storm means. It is the end, and he must be there when it arrives.
Within the White Tower, another kind of storm breaks daily over Egwene al'Vere. Held captive, stripped of her title, and forced into the white dress of a novice, she endures the punishments of the Mistress of Novices, Silviana. The leather strap falls again and again, but with each lashing, Egwene's resolve hardens. The pain is a fire, forging her will. She learns to smile through her tears, for each beating she endures without breaking is a victory. The physical agony is nothing compared to the deeper pain of seeing the Tower she loves fractured by fear and suspicion, its sisters walking the halls in wary, hostile clusters. This is Elaida's legacy, and Egwene vows that it will not stand.
Far to the west, the Dragon Reborn nurses a wound of his own. His left hand is gone, seared away in a blast of fire, but he has captured one of the Forsaken, Semirhage. The loss has left him colder, harder. *I am steel,* he thinks, the voice of the madman Lews Therin whispering in his mind of old sorrows and fresh betrayals. He cannot afford softness. With the Last Battle looming, he must unite the world, and that requires a will of iron. He marches his armies into the chaotic nation of Arad Doman, determined to force peace upon it and forge a truce with the Seanchan invaders. He is the Dragon Reborn. He will not be denied.
Egwene turns her imprisonment into a weapon. Summoned to serve at Elaida's private dinner, she endures the woman's taunts and cruelty with a silent, unnerving subservience. When her own rage threatens to betray her, she deliberately spills a tureen of soup, creating a distraction that allows her to maintain her composure. Her quiet defiance becomes a legend among the novices and a source of unease for the sisters. Day by day, she plants seeds of doubt against Elaida, reminding the Ajahs of their shared history and purpose. She even discovers a secret group of Sitters hunting the Black Ajah from within the Tower, and in a tense confrontation, proves that her claim to be Amyrlin is the only logical path to unity.
Rand's path leads only to further isolation. His plans for Arad Doman are met with resistance, not from his enemies, but from his allies. The Aiel clan chiefs question his methods, and his cold dismissal of their concerns strains their loyalty. He feels himself surrounded by those who would use him, their loyalties and motives clouded. Cadsuane, his advisor, prods and pushes him, trying to teach him to laugh and cry again, but he refuses. “I will not be a puppet,” he snarls, his temper a constant, simmering threat. He decides he can trust no one, and that he alone must bear the weight of the world, no matter how it crushes him.
The night explodes in fire and screams. The Seanchan attack the White Tower, their great flying beasts - to'raken - carrying soldiers and their leashed damane through the sky. For Egwene, the assault is a nightmare made real, a return to the terror of the silver collar. Weakened by forkroot, she can barely channel. But she is the Amyrlin Seat. Rallying the terrified novices, she teaches them to link, drawing on their combined strength. In a desperate race through the burning corridors, she retrieves one of the Tower's most powerful sa'angreal - a fluted white wand - and becomes a fount of power. From a gaping hole in the Tower wall, she unleashes a storm of her own, a tempest of righteous fury that blasts the invaders from the sky.
In the midst of the chaos, she is found by Gawyn Trakand, who has come to rescue her. Exhausted and drained, she cannot fight him as he carries her through a gateway, back to the rebel camp. Her victory has been stolen, her plans in the Tower seemingly ruined. But her stand has not gone unnoticed. A delegation of Sitters rides out from the wounded city and declares that the Hall has raised her to the Amyrlin Seat. She returns not as a rebel, but as a uniter. Standing before the broken Tower, she accepts the apologies of those who followed her into exile. “We have been broken,” she declares, her voice ringing with power. “These next few months will be our re-forming… The White Tower is whole and complete. And no one will see us divided again!”
Rand's hardness finally brings him to the breaking point. Lured by Cadsuane into a meeting with his father, Tam, he feels a flicker of warmth, a memory of the gentle boy he once was. But when he learns that the meeting was a manipulation, a calculated attempt to soften him, the ice around his heart shatters. Rage consumes him. He seizes the One Power, throwing his father to the ground with a blast of Air. “You come from Cadsuane,” he bellows, “pretending to show me affection!” As he weaves balefire, poised to kill the man who raised him, he sees the terror in Tam's eyes and falters. The horror of what he has almost done sends him fleeing through a gateway, away from the one person he truly loves.
He arrives on the peak of Dragonmount, the world spread below him, the access key to the Choedan Kal glowing in his hand. Here, at the site of Lews Therin's suicide, he contemplates his own. He is a monster, a weapon. Why not end it all? Why must the world suffer, live, and die, over and over? He draws a torrent of power, enough to unmake creation itself. But as he prepares to unleash it, a single, lucid thought comes from the voice in his head. *Maybe we live again so that we can have a second chance.* The thought is a revelation. He fights not just because he must, but because he wants to do it right this time. He wants to save them. The rage cools, the power recedes, and as the clouds above him part for the first time in weeks, Rand al'Thor looks up at the sun and begins to laugh.