Mistborn Trilogy - Brandon Sanderson [716]
“Why did you come to camp?” she said, shaking off her panic.
“I am human,” he said with his slow, deliberate tone.
“You’re koloss,” she said. “You know that.”
“I should have a house,” Human said. “Like those.”
“Those are tents, not houses,” Vin said. “You can’t come to camp like this. You have to stay with the other koloss.”
Human turned, glancing toward the south, where the koloss army waited, separate from the humans. They remained under Elend’s control, twenty thousand in number, now that they’d picked up the ten thousand that had been waiting with the main bulk of the army. It made more sense to leave them under Elend’s control, since—in terms of raw power—he was a much stronger Allomancer than Vin.
Human looked back at Vin. “Why?”
“Why do you have to stay with the others?” Vin asked. “Because you make the people in the camp uncomfortable.”
“Then they should attack me,” Human said.
“That’s why you’re not a human,” Vin said. “We don’t attack people just because they make us uncomfortable.”
“No,” Human said. “You make us kill them instead.”
Vin paused, cocking her head. Human, however, just looked away, staring at the human camp again. His beady red eyes made his face hard to read, but Vin almost sensed a . . . longing in his expression.
“You’re one of us,” Human said.
Vin looked up. “Me?”
“You’re like us,” he said. “Not like them.”
“Why do you say that?” Vin asked.
Human looked down at her. “Mist,” he said.
Vin felt a momentary chill, though she had no real idea why. “What do you mean?”
Human didn’t respond.
“Human,” she said, trying another tactic. “What do you think of the mists?”
“They come at night.”
Vin nodded. “Yes, but what do you think of them. Your people. Do they fear the mists? Does it ever kill them?”
“Swords kill,” Human said. “Rain doesn’t kill. Ash doesn’t kill. Mist doesn’t kill.”
Fairly good logic, Vin thought. A year ago, I would have agreed with it. She was about to give up on the line of reasoning, but Human continued.
“I hate it,” he said.
Vin paused.
“I hate it because it hates me,” Human said. He looked at her. “You feel it.”
“Yes,” Vin said, surprising herself. “I do.”
Human regarded her, a line of blood trailing out of the ripped skin near his eye, running stark down his blue skin, mixing with flakes of ash. Finally, he nodded, as if giving approval to her honest reply.
Vin shivered. The mist isn’t alive, she thought. It can’t hate me. I’m imagining things.
But . . . once, years ago, she had drawn upon the mists. When fighting the Lord Ruler, she had somehow gained a power over them. It had been as if she’d used the mist itself to fuel her Allomancy instead of metals. It was only with that power that she’d been able to defeat the Lord Ruler.
That had been a long time ago, and she’d never been able to replicate the event. She’d tried time and again over the years, and after so many failures, she was beginning to think that she must have been mistaken. Certainly, in more recent times, the mists had been unfriendly. She tried to keep telling herself that there was nothing supernatural about it, but she knew that wasn’t true. What of the mist spirit, the thing that had tried to kill Elend—and then had saved him by showing her how to make him into an Allomancer? It was real, of that she was certain, even if she hadn’t seen it in over a year.
What of the hesitance she felt toward the mists, the way they pulled away from her? The way they stayed out of buildings, and the way they killed. It all seemed to point to what Human had said. The mists—the Deepness—hated her. And, finally, she acknowledged what she had been resisting for so long.
The mists were her enemy.
They are called Allomantic savants. Men or women who flare their metals so long, and so hard, that the constant influx of Allomantic power transforms their very physiology.
In most cases, with most metals, the effects of this are very slight. Bronze burners, for instance, often become bronze savants without knowing it. Their range is expanded from burning the metal so long. Becoming