Preface
So, this is a pet theory I’ve had ever since aMoL, and, since time is rapidly running out for this website, I wanted to go ahead and get it out there for digestion. It’s not well researched, I’m not incredibly verbose, and I don’t spend much time fact-checking myself. So, if I screw up some facts, or get some misremembered dialogue from EotW or tGH wrong, or whatever else, sorry in advance. I’m doing my best! But urgency + juggling coursework + laziness does not a great combo make, so I hope you’ll all be forgiving. So, without further ado, I present my theory on Shaisam.
Part 1 – What was the point of Fain?
If we look back at the books, we find that RJ put in many hints about Fain. He was meant to be a third faction, threatening the Shadow and the Light equally.
Fain first turns against the Shadow, in his own words, during the events of EotW. He grew to hate the myrdraal who were using him as a hunting hound to pursue Rand & co. During the chase, he ended up convincing a myrdraal to take a detachment of trollocs and search Shadar Logoth, and then ended up (somehow) meeting with Mordeth. Eventually, as we know, Fain stole the Horn of Valere and the SL dagger.
However, despite not being able to touch the dagger at the time, he was able to communicate with the Black Wind, something that neither any creature of the Shadow nor Light-sider was ever capable of accomplishing. This is, to me, one of the most telling moments in the series, both for what Fain became, and for what the Black Wind is.
So, we know what Fain is; an amalgamation of Shadow and a power created specifically to fight the Shadow. And we have a hint of what the Black Wind may be. So that leads us to ask the next question.
Unless I am misunderstanding this, and you are contending that Mashadar and Shadar Logoth are also Shadow stuff. Actually, that might make a degree of sense, given what Aginor said about Mat's dagger, when he revealed that he and Baalthamel tracked the Eye by detecting the dagger, and referring to it as if its power was known to them already. I don't recall what exactly RJ said about the difference between their imprisonment and that of the others. Did he say that they were aware of the world and passing events? If he did, that could mean what Aginor meant, that he had observed the fall of Aridhol, and was recalling it. Actually that might make more sense than the Shadar Logoth power dating back before the Breaking, since to a Forsaken who just woke up, it would not have been all that long ago.
All of these hints lead me to one conclusion; Mordeth sought to use the tactics of the Shadow, and the core of those tactics are using the Dark One’s power. Mordeth attempted to create a god,
Maybe entropy, too? That might make sense as both the opposing force of the Shadow that makes them cancel one another out, AND as something that originated with the Shadow in the first place. Maybe SLpower is some inversion or twisting of the ShadowPower into its opposite. Anti-Shadow as in anti-matter, the complementary, or supplementary aspect of the Shadow. I wonder if the philosophical mechanism has to do with the Shadow's habit of self-destruction or self-consumption, that the Dark One concentrated on "positive" ShadowPower of perversion, corruption and destruction, and separated it from the entropic and corrosive aspects of the Shadow, so as to use it actively. There does not appear to be any overt manifestation of the Light and the Creator unless maybe Rand's post-apotheosis shielding from the Taint. Thus, without interference, the Light and Shadow are relatively inactive powers or forces, the Light simply being in perfect balance and harmony, while the Shadow rages against and consumes itself, and thus gets in its own way. Then the Dark One, maybe takes hold of the more useful (in his eyes) and overt aspect of the ShadowPower (I am using that term to differentiate between the True Power as wielded by human beings) to offer to corruptible humans, and exploit the breach into his prison. He uses that just about exclusively to exert his will on the world, because to use the other Dark power would simply undo or interfere with his own works. From his preferred power, he gives his Chosen the True Power to wield and make the Shadowspawn and whatnot, and that is what he uses for his counterstroke against the Sealing by LTT & co., so that is how saidin is tainted.
It could be too, depending on if you believe the One Power is to the Light as the True Power is to the Shadow (I prefer to think of it as an unaligned neutral resource, no more aligned with the Light or Shadow than are fire or gravity, otherwise, there should be some sort of issue with the Forsaken, at the least, using it), that ShadowPower and SLpower are the Dark counterparts to saidin and saidar, except rather than ideally working in tandem and complementing one another, they would cancel and counteract one another, because the Shadow is inherently inimical to everything, even itself.
Given the pseudo-scientific functionality of the powers, I would think it would more likely involve a mentality or outlook, a kind of putting oneself in alignment with the source of the Power. It wouldn't be a ritual as such, with an invocation of another entity, but there might by symbols or phrases or such things to help put one's mind in a frame of thought so as to be compatible with such a power.
Actually, I think that makes a lot of sense. If the Dark One is imprisoned outside the Pattern, and the Pattern is formed of lives, and thus the actions and deeds of people, it makes sense that if a significant portion of the Pattern is directly aligned to the same values and perspectives and outlook as the Shadow, the Dark One could enter the Pattern, or join with it. Atrocity, corruption, defilement and destruction all contribute to an atmosphere or environment into which the Dark One is no longer an intruder, but a natural denizen. Thus Mordeth was doing the same thing in Aridhol as the servants of the Dark One, especially Elan Morin, would have been doing in the AoL during the Collapse, only he was encouraging his own perspective, that fits better with his own power.
This too would explain the attitudes of the cities in which a Forsaken dwells or reigns. They are connected to the Dark One and are already steeped in his evil, so they are vectors who accelerate that saturation of evil into the Pattern. Rahvin, the insecure, caused Caemlyners to start scheming and become furtive. Sammael, the frustrated, caused tempers to flare, and people give rein to violence. Bel'al, the envious, spread despair, which seem to be a logical result of universal envy of each other, the ultimate end of dissatisfaction. Moghedian's personal avarice for material gain and physical cowardice might have contributed in some way to the lawlessness of Tanchico, but it could also be that the chaos concealed the obvious single symptom. It could also be that without her exerting any influence over the rule of the city, she was not having the usual Forsaken effect. And my personal theory, of course, is that Mesaana was causing the tolerance of filth in Tar Valon. Her characteristic was thwarted ambition and inadequacy, so it could translate to people starting to dwell more on their dreams and yearnings, and losing interest in basic daily maintenance of their present environment.
Anyway, back to Mordeth doing something similar to work Aridhol into a mass attitude of anti-Shadow mentality. Because he was the one wielding it, instead of unconsciously contributing to its generation, it would explain how he retained his consciousness and will, while the other minds would have been absorbed into a mindless appetite, which seeks to consume as the Shadow seeks to destroy.
I long had the theory that the Black Wind was Mashadar/Shadar Logoth influence on the Ways through the Waygate in the city, until I saw some comment by RJ that seemed to say otherwise. And now that this has me thinking, overtly bloodthirsty madness is more of the Shadow characteristic. A Shadar Logoth wind would be encouraging hubris or greed on people as well as paranoia, not destruction or cruelty for its own sake. Yes, Fain was mad, but that seemed more of an effect of cumulative trauma and exposure to horrors, than mere supernatural influence. The "professional courtesy" between Fain & the Black Wind might then be related to their mutual heritage of the shadow.
Shaisam showed up to late to the Last Party with the intention of devouring Rand’s soul, and then perhaps destroying the Dark One.
Shaisam wasn’t intended to devour the Dark One, Shaisam was the Pattern’s backup plan to restore Balance, had Rand decided to kill the Dark One instead of re-Sealing him, or, even further back, had Rand been corrupted by the Dark One.
I doubt annihilation was what the Dark One had in mind. He would have been remaking the Pattern in his own image. Shaisam might take his place, and it would be a different brand of Evil, but effectively the same.
For my own conclusion, I think the Dark One preferred one aspect of the Evil power, selecting the pro-active one for its obvious utility, but by their nature, had to use it exclusively. Or maybe he was naturally aligned with that aspect, and one of the differences between the two is that the Consuming Power had less need for, or compatibility with, a sentient mind, being at the base, an appetite. On the other hand, the Destroying Power, would need a mind to guide it in destruction, to provide the motivating hatred. Either one would make a sufficient explanation: the supernatural Evil, or Dark, which is the counterpoint of the Light, has two complementary or contradictory aspects, one of which is a power to destroy and the other a power for consumption. While the benevolent Light rests apart from the Pattern and material world in perfect balance, the Dark which would consume or destroy it, is held in check by its own contradictory natures. Just as the Light proceeds from, or manifests the persona of, a benevolent Creator, the Dark also manifests a persona, who is attuned more closely with the Destroying Power of the Dark, whether by nature of the DP, or by his own preference as the most practicable to effect his hatred of the Light's creation. Because the Light IS harmony, it is impossible for there to be harmony in the Dark, and thus Shaitan, the persona of the Destroying Power, cannot master or balance both the Destroying and the Consuming Power. So the Dark One eventually finds his way to access the Pattern and uses the DP to corrupt and degrade the Pattern and remake portions of it in his own image, while the lives that make up the Pattern flail about in ignorance, trying to contain that damage while being unable to comprehend the scope or nature of what is doing this. The Light does not intervene, not because it is constrained, but by its very nature and the nature of the Dark. Destroying destruction itself would be a paradox, and might very well unleash an unstoppable tide of the Consuming Power without the Destroying Power to thwart it. But the Pattern is a self-correcting feedback mechanism. To the extent that the Light counters the Dark, it is with the built-in feature that allows its creation to resist and work against a threat to the system. And so, with the DP (or "Shadow" as the Power and its user, Shai'tan are collectively known) running rampant, the Pattern opens up a way to introduce the DP's antithesis into the system, and allows a sufficiently vile individual of the appropriate personal characteristics to be compatible in a fashion with the Consuming Power, to come to exist. That is, of course, how it works with ta'veren, by using an individual with the necessary personal qualities to affect many others. Likewise, it threw up the necessary combination of factors to allow the CP to manifest directly in the world as the Forsaken and their compatriots brought the DP. The initial intrusion is sufficient to tip the balance against the Shadow during the period of the Trolloc Wars, but then with its counterpart force receding, and humanity much depleted, in both numbers and moral strength, the CP lacks anything to consume and spread, and lies inert, waiting for the chance to consume more. The odd traveler and adventurer are mere crumbs, and it devours them before it can make use of them to move beyond the place where it came through the Pattern, because that atmosphere of paranoia and antipathy is so rare. There are many ways for destruction to manifest, while consumption by its nature is inherently limited. The avatar of the CP is trapped and bound in a semi-corporeal form to a limited location, just as the partially sealed Ba'alzamon is, and Shaidar Haran will later be. This avatar, Mordeth, seeks to move beyond its physical limits, by joining with a physical form, made compatible by appealing to appetites, at the limits of its ability to manifest. It finds a mortal marked and claimed by the DP, and thus is unable to thoroughly consume him, forcing a merger, but allowing the gestalt entity to resist the Dark One's power in the same way a Shadow-wrought wound and Shadar Logoth inflicted wound cancel each other out to a degree. The dagger, which carried a portion of the taint out of the locale to which it was bound, tips the balance away from the DP in Fain, and allows him to begin asserting himself over Darkfriends and Shadowspawn. His powers grow so that losing the dagger doesn't cripple him, but its recovery still brings him closer to his own apotheosis as Shaisam, avatar of the CP. His hatred of Rand, Mat and Perrin is how his recognition of their utility to spreading HIS version of the Dark manifests, and he seeks to hurt them to satisfy his own broken nature and to break them and harden them so they can turn more people into paranoid, hateful, anything-is-acceptable-against-a-foe, and draw more of the Consuming Power into the Pattern. Note that nearly everything he does is focused on stirring enemies of Rand, and ginning up hostility towards him. He likely had his own version of 13x13 in mind for the ambush in Far Madding, where Rand could not use the Power to harm him. I wonder if maybe Tainted saidin might have been even more effective on Fain. And then Rand cleanses the Taint of the DP on saidin and the taint of the CP on the ruins of Aridhol, by forcing them into contact with each other. As fragment separated from the whole, they were vulnerable to mutual destruction since only a defined & finite quantity of each was involved. Both Powers would necessarily center around the individual who sentience guided them, with the Fain/Mordeth gestalt as the new wellspring of the CP. Shaitan is too powerful, too united with the DP for him to have the same mobility in the world as Ordeith/Fain/Mordeth.
Thus Shaisam can serve as the wild card in the confrontation between Rand and Shaitan. If Rand wins with evil, it brings him into its fold. If Rand is losing to the Dark One, Shaisam might tip the balance enough for him to take advantage and survive. If the Dark One is somehow eliminated, Shaisam is there to take his place, as the new Great Lord of the Dark oriented around the Consuming aspect of the Dark Power.
“Tolerance is the virtue of the man without convictions.” GK Chesteron
Inde muagdhe Aes Sedai misain ye!
Deus Vult!
*MySmiley*