Update time! It's Midnight Tides's
Chapter 2...
In which we meet the Beddict brothers.
Since it's early MT yet it feels like Erikson is taking his sweet time in introducing the reader to the new setting and cast before making any particularly relevant plot movement, so I'm not gonna say much about "what happens" because it's technically very short.
I'll do say, however, that it is really compelling. I love how the three Beddict brothers are completely different (and feel thus) so the reader doesn't get lost trying to figure out which one's which: Hull, solemn, taciturn, guilt-wracked, a man of few words; Brys, duty-bound, loyal, eager to impress, seems most "in tune" with the ideals of Lether; Tehol, crafty, deceitful, has a big mouth, puts up a facade of apathy and poverty but is actually quite clever and secretly filthy rich. And between those three we have quite the cast of characters that support them, each with a particular flavor.
Is it wrong that I feel already more invested in (or at least, heavily intrigued by) these people compared to the "actual" introduction to the main cast in GOTM? It probably shows how much Erikson had evolved from when he first wrote GOTM to that point in his life, because even when he's showing us characters we've never met and places we're just learning they exist, he manages to pull us in right from the start.
So we have the Sengar brothers in the Tiste Edur side, and the Beddict brothers in the Letherii side. Seems like a nice way of showing us both faces of the impending conflict, and I can't wait to see when/if/how they end up interacting.
Because, as we learn, at least a couple of brothers want the Great Meeting to fail. Goddamn, that's one hell of a hook for a first chapter: Hull, as revenge for what his own country did to him (he was basically used, without his knowledge or consent, as 'bait' for the tribes to get conquered by Lether) and Tehol is gonna help the half-blood ladies to, basically, bankrupt the entire Lether kingdom (well
damn) in some sort of scheme as those ladies' revenge for what Lether did to *them*. I'm not knowledgeable about economics so the conversation about how Tehol made his fortune and what he did with it kinda flew right past me (I assume it's kinda vague, so far? I didn't get any specifics from the text) and so did their plan, but what I think is the gist of it is essentially trying to win so much money in a short time and then make it disappear from the market so the whole thing comes crashing down. If I'm wrong please feel free to correct me :P
Anyway, Tehol's little speech about money feels pretty spot-on to me (
"Even when money's just an idea, it has power. Only it's not real power. Just the promise of power. But that promise is enough so long as everyone keeps pretending it's real. Stop pretending and it all falls apart.") and I'm really interested in seeing if their not-so-little scheme actually succeeds or flounders along the way. I love how Tehol has pretty much everybody fooled except for these half-blood ladies who see right through his shtick.
So, considering that, it suddenly makes the three brothers enter into conflict without any of them knowing (yet), even if Brys suspects Hull might try something and that Buruk the Pale is probably having some secret instructions (from where? from whom?) that might run counter to the King's.
We also learn (during Brys' section) that the Seventh Closure (whatever that is) is actually pretty damn significant since whoever is King by the time that happens "will be transformed" and become "the First Emperor reborn" - Lether was a colony of the First Empire (human, I'm assuming, not the T'lan Imass one) and so their beliefs are kinda tied to that. And that "First Emperor", is that Dessimbelackis? Someone different? Whatever it is, sounds ominous and obviously something that a power-hungry ruler might be interested in.
So, of course, we now know there's a ruler in each side who's making power-grab moves to fuck over the corresponding neighbor. That meeting doesn't look good at all.
Random stuff:
- Binadas seems like the perfect Tiste Edur in terms of demeanor to hang out with someone like Hull Beddict. It seems they're friends? Wouldn't surprise me.
- The Letherii royal court seems like a nest of snakes. As it should, of course. Brys is right in the middle of some heavy politcking there and I definitely want to see more of that (between "his" group and the Queen's group... who also has a Consort apart from the King? Did I get that wrong?)
- I have no idea what the divination scenes mean either in this chapter or the last one.
- Hull's backstory *might* be based on a professor Erikson had - I read his answers to readers' questions about House of Chains in the Tor.com reread series and in one of those answers he told the story about how a professor he had in college usually had an annual breakdown when recounting the story about how "a certain law enforcement agency" had used his academic research about a community in a South American country developing certain routes for trading a plant product that when processed might be used for creating an illegal drug, to basically swoop down and prosecute the poor people from that community he had befriended and had lived with. Knowing that his good-faith academic research had essentially been used in *very* bad faith to prosecute poor people had broken him and he felt he had betrayed their trust and betrayed his own profession. When I read that section in this chapter of MT that story immediately jumped to mind.
- Tehol and Bugg, a duo that I've read about in the interwebs, seems to be a highlight *already*. Can't wait for more of them. Erikson has a knack for writing memorable pairings.
- I think it's interesting that Hull seems to be the only one from the three brothers to *not* get a POV in this chapter: his section is actually Peren Sedac's section. She also feels guilty AF for having apparently taken advantage of him when he was at a very low point. So what we learn about Hull in this chapter is all second-hand knowledge, filtered by other people's biases. Wonder if we'll learn what he actually thinks in the future.
Thanks for reading this stuff and I hope I didn't miss any particularly important detail, lmao