The chapter is mainly how things stand in the village, notble thing is, Children, lika any good christian are burning books. The villagers also hiding two aes sedai.
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One of the aes is Verin, so it'll be fine.
It seriously JUST NOW struck the female mages, maybe they could fuck around. This implies they never did, not even before the Breaking of the World!!!:o
Rand's father and Matt's father turns out avoided being captures, and joins.
Fain/Ordeth is converting Children to himself. And yes, HE killed Perrin's family. Otherwise, his plan's progress seems to get a halt. You know, this plan is absurd anyway. Ok, "it is fantasy", but realisticly speaking if you wanned to kill a bunch of people in this setting, you go alone, and kill everyone in their sleep. Mission accomplished.
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nothing much. Next chapter we can encounter Luc!
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Luc has the usual unknown origin, and gigantic arrogance. He has also some advice that looks good, but in the acutality crappy. Enough to gain the trust of the people, but far from real help. Perrinrecognises the strength in the Children, but also their iron fist of control, so suggests the farms surrounding the village(es) to move in the villages, and start bilding defenses, thus the Children will no longer be a must, but an extra resource, and they'll be able tell them later to piss off. This thing is easier after Perrin points out none destroys the harvest, the houses, or like really any resources, only the hoomans.
Team B goin in the Children freeing the hostages. This scene is interresting to compare to the Book 1 scene, where Perrin is freed. This has entirely medieval feeling to it, while THAT had western feeling.
The villagers also hiding two aes sedai.
-------------
One of the aes is Verin, so it'll be fine.
It seriously JUST NOW struck the female mages, maybe they could fuck around. This implies they never did, not even before the Breaking of the World!!!:o
Rand's father and Matt's father turns out avoided being captures, and joins.
Fain/Ordeth is converting Children to himself.
And yes, HE killed Perrin's family.
Otherwise, his plan's progress seems to get a halt. You know, this plan is absurd anyway. Ok, "it is fantasy", but realisticly speaking if you wanned to kill a bunch of people in this setting, you go alone, and kill everyone in their sleep. Mission accomplished.
-------------
nothing much. Next chapter we can encounter Luc!
-------------
Luc has the usual unknown origin, and gigantic arrogance. He has also some advice that looks good, but in the acutality crappy. Enough to gain the trust of the people, but far from real help.
Perrinrecognises the strength in the Children, but also their iron fist of control, so suggests the farms surrounding the village(es) to move in the villages, and start bilding defenses, thus the Children will no longer be a must, but an extra resource, and they'll be able tell them later to piss off.
This thing is easier after Perrin points out none destroys the harvest, the houses, or like really any resources, only the hoomans.
Team B goin in the Children freeing the hostages.
This scene is interresting to compare to the Book 1 scene, where Perrin is freed. This has entirely medieval feeling to it, while THAT had western feeling.
Perrin decides to stay and get rid of the trolls.