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Max teaches Tisaanah how to use Stratagrams, transporting symbols that are used for conjuring and teleportation. Initially, Tisaanah has trouble creating them because they depend on feeling rather than thinking. As she practices, Tisaanah shares stories about her past as an enslaved person. When she describes the beating as Esmaris reminding her of her place, Max praises her courage: â[Y]ou didnât forget what you were. I think you rememberedâ (197).
With only eight weeks to go before her examination, Tisaanah and Max slip into a comfortable routine. Neither has considered what will happen to their relationship once training ends, though Tisaanah realizes that she will lose something when Max is no longer her mentor: âI had been so singularly focused on where I was going that I hadnât stopped to think about what I would be leaving behindâ (200). The day before the test, Max puts Tisaanah through a grueling series of drills and proclaims that she is more than ready. That evening, he gives her a butterfly necklace with three small Stratagrams: one for healing, one for building fires, and one that will lead Tisaanah back to the cottage. She is overwhelmed by the gift because she realizes that Max has just invited her to share his home.
The next day, Max accompanies Tisaanah to the twin towers of the Orders, where her test will be conducted. First, there are group exercises; Tisaanah does far better than the 12-year-old apprentices. Flushed with victory, Tisaanah becomes apprehensive when she is led to a separate chamber for her individual test. As Max watches from an observation gallery above, she is led into a room with three pedestals, each topped with a sphere, and a large basin in the center. Tisaanah must mentally transport the spheres into the central basinâchildâs play for any Wielder. However, Tisaanahâs examiners are Nura and Zeryth. Nura invades Tisaanahâs mind with a series of frightening and painful illusions while Zeryth distracts Tisaanah as well. At first, Tisaanah is hopelessly confused. Finally, reasserting her willpower, Tisaanah regains her focus and casts Nuraâs illusions out of her mind, completing the task. Afterward, Max objects to such an extreme test, but Nura and Zeryth congratulate Tisaanah on her performance.
Later, when Tisaanah asks if Zeryth was able to free her friend Serel, he is apologetic as he leads her to a chamber where someone is waiting.
Instead of Serel, Tisaanah finds Vos, the stablehand who unwittingly allowed her to escape from Threll. He has been tortured because of that mistake: His nose and some fingers have been cut off, and his face bears scars from cuts and burns. Under torture, Vos confessed to Serelâs involvement in Tisaanahâs escape. Serel was sent off to fight in one of Threllâs wars, and Vos assumes that he is dead by now. Vos is so enraged at what he has gone through that he never wants to see Tisaanah again.
Zeryth explains that Esmarisâs son, Ahzeen Mikov, used his fatherâs death as an excuse to start a war with other Threllian Lords. Tisaanah urges Zeryth to do something. When he counsels patience, she becomes angry, but she soon remembers that she canât afford to offend her most powerful ally. She agrees to be patient in furthering her cause to free the enslaved people of Threll.
Later, in the cottage, Tisaanah tells Max that she wants to stop the bloodshed in Threll. Max is still upset at the ordeal of Tisaanahâs examination and wonders why she doesnât feel the same: âWhy arenât you angry?â (234). When she admits that she keeps her rage tamped down because it is boundless, Max is glad: âHe smiled and said, with the viciousness of smoke and steel, âGoodââ (237).
When Tisaanah and Max are invited to a celebration at the Orders headquarters, Tisaanah intends to draw attention. She wears a red gown cut low in the back to display the hideous whip scars left by Esmarisâs beating: âIâd show them what they were ignoring. Iâd show them what their complacency meantâ (240). Sammerin and Moth are both dumbfounded by her attire, especially since Moth didnât know that Tisaanah had been enslaved. The ugly reality of what is happening in Threll confronts everyone at the party. Tisaanah dances with Zeryth, trying to bait him for his unwillingness to end enslavement in Threll, but he smoothly avoids a confrontation.
Max arrives late to the party. He recognizes and approves of Tisaanahâs tactics: âThe first step is to force them to confront the reality [âŚ] People donât like to do that, but I saw it happen tonight. Even in Zerythâ (251-52). Back at the cottage, Max and Tisaanah share an emotionally intimate moment, but both of them recoil at being vulnerable, so they retreat to their respective bedrooms.
The following morning, Tisaanah receives a note from Zeryth asking her to come to the Towers for a meeting, and Max agrees to take her to the Capital. On the way, Tisaanah mentions that Zeryth intended the severe examination as a test. At the word âtest,â Max becomes worried. He makes Tisaanah promise not to agree to anything Zeryth proposes but refuses to explain why. Instead, Max volunteers to help her liberate Threll, even without the support of the Orders. Tisaanah argues that she needs the magic of the Orders to back her.
Zeryth and Nura are waiting in his office tensely. They congratulate Tisaanah on passing her examination, which has proven that she is capable of being the Host for the most powerful weapon possessed by the Orders: âa form of raw magic [âŚ] many times more powerful than any natural power of any Wielder that walks Ara, or beyondâ (266). They need this weapon to win the war against the Ryvenai rebels. This magical weapon will enter her bloodstream, and she will wield it until it is removed. The weapon is selective about its Host and has chosen Tisaanah.
Nura hints that Max was the last Wielder until he became uncooperative. Zeryth points out that this power is all Tisaanah will need to liberate the enslaved people in Threll, but he also promises the help of the Orders. Tisaanah hesitates, recalling Maxâs words. However, she agrees as long as Zeryth swears a blood pactâan unbreakable oath.
Tisaanah insists on specific wording for the oath, which takes hours to hammer out. She agrees to five years as the Wielder in exchange for two demands: Max must be freed of all his obligations to the Order and the record of his crimes expunged, and Vos is to be given money and medical attention for the rest of his life. There will be a preliminary two-week mission to Threll for Tisaanahâs training; during this time, Tisaanah can free Serel if she finds him. The full assault to remove the Threllian Lords from power will take place after she wins the Ryvenai War. Everything is set down in writing: âThree inky pages detailing everything that I have ever wanted [âŚ] three pages that sold me back into slaveryâ (272).
Zeryth then leads Tisaanah to a small room containing two hospital beds. A comatose man lies on one. His arms bear scars from many previous blood pact cuts, but he seems oblivious. Zeryth explains that pact magic is brutal: âThis is going to hurt like hell. But I promise that youâre not going to die, even if it feels like itâ (275). He slices into the manâs arm, does the same to Tisaanah, and performs a spell that causes blood and magic to transfer from the unconscious man to Tisaanah. Before she passes out from the excruciating pain, Tisaanah repeats the word âhome.â
These chapters predominantly focus on The Desire for Power. As Tisaanah completes her training, she becomes increasingly obsessed with gaining more magical abilities as a Wielder, justifying this ambition as the only way to free the powerless enslaved people in Threll: âthousands who hurt and loved and grieved [âŚ] there were hundreds of other Threllian Lords who threw bodies into wars and beds and beneath whips like they were nothing but sacks of fleshâ (229-30). Tisaanahâs rage at the injustices meted out to her motivates her to change the world for the better, but she is driven to prove herself to the Orders because she believes that they alone possess the power she needs to help her people. Other characters are also power hungry. After assessing Tisaanahâs fitness to become Reshayeâs Host, Zeryth and Nura want to use her to fight a war on their behalf. Zeryth, already a high-ranking member of Araâs government who only wants to climb higher, sees Tisaanah as a useful tool that he can control. As his right hand, Nura clearly aspires for higher station as well; the way she wields her telepathic power suggests her ruthlessness. The only character who isnât intent on gaining power is Max. He begs Tisaanah not to take any deal Zeryth offers, aware of the consequences of such bad choices from his past agreement to be the Host.
Tisaanah is also driven by self-blame: She escaped enslavement while her mother, Vos, and Serel suffered. Because of this survivorâs guilt, she can only think well of herself if she spends her life focused on the welfare of others. Selflessness is her way of dodging self-loathing. Similarly, when she agrees to become Host, it is partly because she feels she owes something to her handlers: âSuch heavy sacrifices had already been made for me. How could I not return them? How could I stop at anything that would ever repay them? That was all I was worthâ (261). Having spent so much of her life enslaved, Tisaanah is more comfortable making transactional exchanges than believing herself worthy of othersâ resources.
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