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Rhythm of War Reread: Chapter One Hundred Four

Lyn: Oh my storms, Cosmere Chickens… we’ve come to it at last. The chapter we’ve all been dreading. (Warning: Spoilers!)

Yes… that’s right. Teft’s death.

Paige: The moment that, for some, was the final act of Moash’s villainy they could stand. Many in the fandom hated Moash as soon as he tried to kill Kaladin in Words of Radiance, but there were some who despite that, despite Elhokar’s death, and despite Jezrien’s death, still held out hope that Moash would be redeemable. Teft’s death changed that for some.

L: I’d go so far as to say that this changed that for most of the remaining holdouts. For me, it was when he made the decision to try to drive Kal to suicide. But let’s delve into his villainy below, shall we? (And then take long showers to rinse all the crem off our souls.)

Reminder: We’ll be discussing spoilers for the entirety of the series up until now. If you haven’t read ALL of the published entries of The Stormlight Archive (this includes Edgedancer and Dawnshard as well as the entirety of Rhythm of War), best to wait to join us until you’re done.

You are safe from Cosmere spoilers in this chapter of the reread.

 

Heralds:

  • Chana, (Chanarach), Herald of the Common Man. Dustbringers (Division, Abrasion). Brave/Obedient. Role: Guard.
  • Nalan (Nale), Herald of Justice. Skybreakers (Gravitation, Division). Just/Confident. Role: Judge.

L: It seems pretty obvious that Chana is representative of Teft; the common man, the brave guard. And of course, that makes Nalan Moash, who believes that he’s bringing justice and peace to the world.

Icon: Bridge Four.

Epigraph:

Humans are a poem. A song.

—Musings of El, on the first of the Final Ten Days

Chapter Recap

WHO: Rlain, Kaladin, Venli, Teft
WHEN: 1175.4.10.4
WHERE: Urithiru (still)
(Note: For the “when” notations, we are using this wonderful timeline provided by the folks at The 17th Shard.)

RECAP: On their way down to find The Sibling, Rlain and Dabbid are intercepted by a group of singer guards and brought to check if they’re allowed to bring water to prisoners. Meanwhile, Kaladin delivers one heck of a speech to an increasingly panicked Pursuer while Venli attempts to figure out how to help him. Teft has a stand-off with Moash over the surviving Radiants, but Moash kills Phendorana… and then Teft himself.

Chapter Chat — Death

L: I have to say… what rotten timing this is, that I have to work on this chapter the day after unexpectedly losing a friend who was only 33 years old…::deep, shuddering sigh:: I suppose it will make the events therein all the more relatable. If I should seem to be more emotionally invested than I should be in this article, this is why.

P: Our deepest condolences on your loss, my friend. May he shelter in the Creator’s palm; the last embrace of the mother welcome him home.

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The Lost Metal

The Lost Metal

L: He would have loved that sentiment. Though as a Discworld fan, he probably had a much funnier mental image of Death, one that SPEAKS ALL IN CAPS LOCK!

“You’ve never faced death.” …

“I’ve faced it every day of my life!” Kaladin shouted, rolling on top of the Fused. “You wonder why I don’t fear you? I’ve lived with the knowledge that death is hounding me. You’re nothing new.” …

“But I’m something you have never known,” Kaladin shouted, slamming the Pursuer down by his shoulders. “Thousands of years of life can’t prepare you for something you’ve never met before, Defeated One! It can’t prepare you for someone who does not fear you!” …

“I am death itself, Defeated One,” Kaladin said. “And I’ve finally caught up to you.”

L: Just putting this out here; Kaladin is the king of kickass stirring speeches. He’s not only inspiring all those who are watching, but bolstering his own confidence while simultaneously crushing his opponent’s. Masterful.

P: If you don’t get a shiver reading this scene, then you have some kind of a dead heart. The way Kaladin boosts his own confidence as he’s verbally destroying the Defeated One is inspiring. The way his boasting infuriates Lezian is such a great strategy. During the scene, he’s again becoming Highmarshal Kaladin Stormblessed, someone we haven’t seen since the rescue of Hearthstone. It does my sappy little heart such good to see Kaladin like this.

Moash, however, casually turned and slashed his Shardblade through the face of a Radiant beneath him. The unconscious woman’s eyes burned.

L: And that’s really all you need to see to know how monstrous he’s become. Killing not only an unarmed prisoner of war, but one who’s unconscious… pretty sure that’s considered a war crime (per the Geneva Conventions) in our world. I know that in battlefields in the past it was common practice to walk the field and kill the wounded, but that doesn’t make it morally right. Moash likes to posture and say that he’s got the moral high ground, but he keeps proving that false every time it’s put to the test.

P: He’s loathsome. Utterly beyond redemption in my mind, in my heart. As if what he did to Lift wasn’t enough? To get Teft to fight him he murders an unconscious woman and threatens Lift’s very life? A child? And some fans think he’s redeemable? I can’t wrap my mind around it.

“I’m not here for Kaladin, Teft,” Moash said softly. “And I’m not here for your surrender.”

L: Of course you’d hold to a “take no prisoners” approach, you…

P: …no good piece of crem. Trying to keep it PG but I always want to storming swear when I talk about this betrayer to Bridge Four’s ideals.

L: It’s ok, I’m your co-author now, and if there’s one thing I’m good at, it’s being a bad influence in regards to swearing!

“But you know what?” Moash said, standing over him. “There was always a part of me that resented how you were so eager to follow him. Right from the start, his little axehound. Licking his feet. He loves you. I thought I’d have to use his father. But I am… satisfied to have found something better.”

“You are a monster,” Teft whispered.

L: Thank you, Teft, for saying it. Not only was Moash trying to push Kaladin to suicide… he was planning on using his own FAMILY, an innocent medical professional, in order to do so. Monster’s too light of a term for him.

P: Nothing’s too abhorrent for Moash to do to try to get Kaladin to kill himself. Nothing. And you know he wouldn’t have stopped at killing Kaladin’s father, he would have taken out the whole family without even blinking.

L: You’re not wrong, and I hate him all the more for it.

“I am no monster. I am merely silence. The quiet that eventually takes all men.”

L: You know… I do think that Moash believes that of himself. I think he’s told himself that long enough now that he can’t see the truth any longer. And this is what makes him such a great villain. The best villains are those who think their actions are 100% justified.

I still hate his guts though.

P: It’s a testament to Brandon’s writing that he’s skilled enough to create both characters we love and characters we hate with equal vehemence.

“Tell yourself that lie, Moash,” Teft growled, gripping the hand that held him, his own hand clawlike from the horrible pain. “But know this. You can kill me, but you can’t have what I have. You can never have it. Because I die knowing I’m loved.”

L: Storms yes, Teft. You let him have it. Not that I think that Moash will actually listen or be affected by it, of course, but you let him have it regardless.

P: No, Moash won’t be affected by it, but readers will be.

Confident, and somehow still full of hope, Teft died.

L: ::sigh:: On the one hand… should we all be so lucky as to pass from this world to the next full of hope. On the other, storm it, Moash. After all Teft had been through. He didn’t deserve to die.

P: He absolutely deserved to live. Rest well, Sergeant.

L: To borrow a beautiful phrase from another of my favorite books… May he find peace in the clearing at the end of the path.

Spren and Shadesmar

Teft leaped for her, howling, watching in horror as she shrank, writhing as Moash’s dagger pinned her to the floor. Her essence burned, flaring outward like an explosion. Something ripped inside Teft. Something deeper than his own heart. A part of his soul, his being, was torn away.

L: This one hurts so badly. Not only did Moash kill Teft, he tore away that incredibly strong connection first. If he destroyed Phendorana, which it certainly looks like he did, then that’s a permanent destruction. No peaceful transition of her soul from one plane to another. Not even a life spent in Shadesmar with scratched out eyes, wandering from place to place. No. Utter and complete destruction, body and soul. The monster.

P: Yes what he and, ultimately, Raboniel did to Phendorana is unconscionable.

Singers/Fused

“Let the human do that kind of work, friend. You are meant for greater things.” …

“Who assigned axehounds’ work to a singer?” she demanded. “Come with me. You strike an imposing figure in warform. I’ll teach you the sword. We’re recruiting for our squad.”

L: I mean… I get it. They’ve spent so long enslaved that it must be nice to turn the tables. Still… you’d think that they’d have learned how awful racism and slavery feel, and not buy into it themselves. And yet… here we are.

P: Here we are, indeed. The singers even let the Fused enslave them again.

“That’s what I realized about you, Defeated One.”

L: I love how Kaladin just straight-up renamed him. Paige pointed this out last week, but it bears repeating because good lord the balls on Kaladin.

P: It’s AMAZING! Kaladin went into this fight looking for blood and he got the first hit in the last chapter by renaming Lezian. And he just drives it in further and further. It’s glorious!

She found, as she searched, that she genuinely wanted to. Not because Timbre was pushing her, and not because this was merely the path she was on. But because of the songs of the stones. And the whispers of those who had come before her.

L: It’s about time Venli had her face turn.

P: And she grows ever closer to having her words accepted.

Humans

“Never known a man to turn traitor as hard as you did,” Teft called to Moash. “What was it that got you? What made you willing to kill your own?”

“Peace,” Moash said, halting in the middle of the room. “It was peace, Teft.”

L: Here we are again with Moash really believing he’s the good guy. Gods know people have done some terrible things in the name of peace. But it’s hard to see Moash’s aim as anything but posturing and attempts to justify his own monstrosity by any means possible.

P: He’s really put the blinders on his own eyes here. By giving his pain and his hate, his guilt and his love to Odium, by abandoning all emotion and completely dissociating, he truly thinks he’s in the right. He’s pathetic.

L: It would be sad if he weren’t so utterly loathsome.

Brilliant Buttresses

L: Hooboy. After that gut punch, I think we could all use a few chuckles. And thankfully Teft gave us a couple good zingers in this chapter to close out on…

“Every good sergeant is a coward! And proud of it! Someone needs to talk sense to the officers!”

 

“Fight me! I’ll show you who the better man is!”

Moash landed beside the body and walked straight toward Teft. “We both know who the better warrior is, Teft.”

“I didn’t say better warrior, you idiot,” Teft said.

P: Honor love you, Teft.

 

We’ll be leaving further speculation and discussion to you in the comments, and hope to join you there! Next week, we’ll be back with chapter 105, in which the battle for Urithiru continues (this is getting worse than a series arc of Dragonball Z).

Paige resides in New Mexico, of course. She very much misses baseball and is counting the days until Spring Training. Links to her other writing are available in her profile.

Lyndsey will miss her friend Joshua dearly. If you’d like to listen to some of his beautiful music or watch some silly videos, check out his TikTok here. He’d have loved nothing more than to bring a smile to some of your faces, and after this chapter, that may be much needed.

About the Author

Lyndsey Luther

Author

Lyndsey lives in Connecticut. She’s in the process of closing on a house (yes, in this dreadful market) so please wish her the best of luck, and follow her on Facebook or TikTok!
Learn More About Lyndsey

About the Author

Paige Vest

Author

Paige resides in New Mexico, of course. Between work and school and the SA5 beta read, she’s trying to work on book 3 of a YA/Crossover trilogy with just a hint of the supernatural. Links to her other writing are available in her profile.
Learn More About Paige
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