I do. I first heard the term from you. I kept my curiosity on a tight leash, refusing to ask any more questions. When Chade
had first begun to show me writings about the White Prophet, I had regarded them as
yet another odd religion from a faraway place. Eda and El I understood well enough.
El, the sea god, was a god best left alone, merciless and demanding. Eda, the goddess
of the farmlands and the pastures, was generous and maternal. But even for those Six
Duchies gods, Chade had taught me small reverence, and even less for Sa, the two-faced
and double-gendered god of Jamaillia. So his fascination with the legends of the White
Prophet had mystified me. The scrolls foretold that to every generation was born a
colorless child who would be gifted with prescience and the ability to influence the
course of the world by the manipulation of events great and small. Chade had been
intrigued by the idea, and with the legendary accounts of White Prophets who had prevented
wars or toppled kings by triggering tiny events that cascaded into great ones. One
account claimed a White Prophet had lived thirty years by a river simply so he could
warn a single traveler on a certain night that the bridge would give way if he tried
to cross it during a storm. The traveler, it revealed, went on to be the father of
a great general who was instrumental in winning a battle in some distant country.
I had believed it all charming nonsense until I met the Fool.
When he had declared himself a White Prophet, I had been skeptical, and even more
so when he declared that I would be his Catalyst who would change the course of history.
And yet undoubtedly we had done so. Had he not been at Buckkeep during my lifetime,
I would have died. More than once, some intervention of his had preserved my life.
In the Mountains, when I lay fevered and dying in the snow, he had carried me to his cottage there and nursed me back to health.
He had kept me alive so that dragons might be restored to their rightful place in
the world. I was still not sure that was beneficial to humanity, but there was no
denying that without him, it would not have happened.
I only realized how deeply I had retreated into my memories when Chade’s thoughts
jolted me back to awareness of him.
Well, we had some odd folk come through Buckkeep Town recently. About twenty days
ago. I did not hear of them until after they had departed, or I would have found a
way to learn more about them. The fellow who told me about them said they claimed
to be traveling merchants, but the only wares they had were cheap gewgaws and very
common bartering items, glass jewelry, brass bracelets, that sort of thing. Nothing
of any real value, and though they claimed to have come a long way, my fellow said
that it all looked to him as if it were the sort of common wares that a city merchant
might take to a village fair, to be sure he had something for a lad or lass with only
a half-copper to spend. No spices from a distant land or unique gemstones. Just tinker’s
trash.
So your spy thought they were only pretending to be merchants. I tried not to be impatient. Chade believed in thorough reporting, for the truth
could only be found in details. I knew he was right but wished he would jump to the
heart of the matter and embroider it later.