Castle Of Wizardry

Home > Other > Castle Of Wizardry > Page 15
Castle Of Wizardry Page 15

by Eddings, David


  ‘Ariana’s almost positive that he won’t die.’

  ‘Die?’

  ‘I hit him just a little too hard, I think.’

  The others had all disembarked and were preparing to follow Brand and King Anheg up the steep, snow-covered stairs toward the upper levels of the city.

  ‘So that’s why you think Aunt Pol might be cross with you,’ Garion said as he and Lelldorin fell in at the rear of the group.

  ‘Well, that’s not exactly the whole story, Garion,’ Lelldorin admitted. ‘A few other things happened, too.’

  ‘Such as what?’

  ‘Well – they chased us – a little – and I had to kill a few of their horses.’

  ‘I see.’

  ‘I specifically aimed my arrows at the horses and not at the men. It wasn’t my fault that Baron Oltorain couldn’t get his foot clear of the stirrup, was it?’

  ‘How badly was he hurt?’ Garion was almost resigned by now.

  ‘Nothing serious at all – at least I don’t think so. A broken leg perhaps – the one he broke before when Sir Mandorallen unhorsed him.’

  ‘Go on,’ Garion told him.

  ‘The priest did have it coming, though,’ Lelldorin declared hotly.

  ‘What priest?’

  ‘The priest of Chaldan at that little chapel who wouldn’t marry us because Ariana couldn’t give him a document proving that she had her family’s consent. He was very insulting.’

  ‘Did you break anything?’

  ‘A few of his teeth is about all – and I stopped hitting him as soon as he agreed to perform the ceremony.’

  ‘And so you’re married? Congratulations. I’m sure you’ll both be very happy – just as soon as they let you out of prison.’

  Lelldorin drew himself up. ‘It’s a marriage in name only, Garion. I would never take advantage of it – you know me better than that. We reasoned that Ariana’s reputation might suffer if it became known that we were travelling alone like that. The marriage was just for the sake of appearances.’

  As Lelldorin described his disastrous journey through Arendia, Garion glanced curiously at the city of Riva. There was a kind of unrelieved bleakness about its snow-covered streets. The buildings were all very tall and were of a uniform grey color. The few evergreen boughs, wreaths, and brightly-hued buntings hung in celebration of the Erastide season seemed somehow to accentuate the stiff grimness of the city. There were, however, some very interesting smells coming from kitchens where Erastide feasts simmered and roasted under the watchful eyes of the women of Riva.

  ‘That was all of it, then?’ Garion asked his friend. ‘You stole Baron Oltorain’s sister, married her without his consent, broke his leg and assaulted several of his people – and a priest. That was everything that happened?’

  ‘Well – not exactly.’ Lelldorin’s face was a bit pained.

  ‘There’s more?’

  ‘I didn’t really mean to hurt Torasin.’

  ‘Your cousin?’

  Lelldorin nodded moodily. ‘Ariana and I took refuge at my Uncle Reldegin’s house, and Torasin made some remarks about Ariana – she is a Mimbrate after all, and Torasin’s very prejudiced. My remonstrances were quite temperate, I thought – all things considered – but after I knocked him down the stairs, nothing would satisfy him but a duel.’

  ‘You killed him?’ Garion asked in a shocked voice.

  ‘Of course I didn’t kill him. All I did was run him through the leg – just a little bit.’

  ‘How can you run somebody through just a little bit, Lelldorin?’ Garion demanded of his friend in exasperation.

  ‘You’re disappointed in me, aren’t you, Garion?’ The young Asturian seemed almost on the verge of tears.

  Garion rolled his eyes skyward and gave up. ‘No, Lelldorin, I’m not disappointed – a little startled perhaps – but not really disappointed. Was there anything else you can remember? – anything you might have left out?’

  ‘Well, I hear that I’ve sort of been declared an outlaw in Arendia.’

  ‘Sort of?’

  ‘The crown’s put a price on my head,’ Lelldorin admitted, ‘or so I understand.’

  Garion began to laugh helplessly.

  ‘A true friend wouldn’t laugh at my misfortunes,’ the young man complained, looking injured.

  ‘You managed to get into that much trouble in just a week?’

  ‘None of it was really my fault, Garion. Things just got out of hand, that’s all. Do you think Lady Polgara’s going to be angry?’

  ‘I’ll talk to her,’ Garion assured his impulsive young friend. ‘Maybe if she and Mandorallen appeal to King Korodullin, they can get him to take the price off your head.’

  ‘Is it true that you and Sir Mandorallen destroyed the Murgo Nachak and all his henchmen in the throne room at Vo Mimbre?’ Lelldorin asked suddenly.

  ‘I think the story might have gotten a bit garbled,’ Garion replied. ‘I denounced Nachak, and Mandorallen offered to fight him to prove that what I said was true. Nachak’s men attacked Mandorallen then, and Barak and Hettar joined in. Hettar’s the one who actually killed Nachak. We did manage to keep your name – and Torasin’s – out of it.’

  ‘You’re a true friend, Garion.’

  ‘Here?’ Barak was saying. ‘What’s she doing here?’

  ‘She came with Islena and me,’ King Anheg replied.

  ‘Did she—?’

  Anheg nodded. ‘Your son’s with her – and your daughters. His birth seems to have mellowed her a bit.’

  ‘What does he look like?’ Barak asked eagerly.

  ‘He’s a great, red-haired brute of a boy.’ Anheg laughed. ‘And when he gets hungry, you can hear him yell for a mile.’

  Barak grinned rather foolishly.

  When they reached the top of the stairs and came out in the shallow square before the great hall, two rosy-cheeked little girls in green cloaks were waiting impatiently for them. They both had long, reddish-blond braids and seemed to be only slightly older than Errand. ‘Poppa,’ the youngest of the two squealed, running to Barak. The huge man caught her up in his arms and kissed her soundly. The second girl, a year or so older than her sister, joined them with a show of dignity but was also swept up in her father’s embrace.

  ‘My daughters,’ Barak introduced the girls to the rest of the party. ‘This is Gundred.’ He poked his great red beard into the face of the eldest girl, and she giggled as his whiskers tickled her face. ‘And this is little Terzie.’ He smiled fondly at the youngest.

  ‘We have a little brother, Poppa,’ the elder girl informed him gravely.

  ‘What an amazing thing,’ Barak replied, feigning a great show of astonishment.

  ‘You knew about it already!’ Gundred accused him. ‘We wanted to be the ones to tell you.’ She pouted.

  ‘His name’s Unrak, and he’s got red hair – just the same as you have,’ Terzie announced, ‘but he doesn’t have a beard yet.’

  ‘I expect that will come in time,’ Barak assured her.

  ‘He yells a lot,’ Gundred reported, ‘and he hasn’t got any teeth.’

  Then the broad gateway to the Rivan Citadel swung open and Queen Islena, wearing a dark red cloak, emerged from within, accompanied by a lovely blond Arendish girl and by Merel, Barak’s wife. Merel was dressed all in green and she was carrying a blanket-wrapped bundle in her arms. Her expression was one of pride.

  ‘Hail Barak, Earl of Trellheim and husband,’ she said with great formality. ‘Thus have I fulfilled my ultimate duty.’ She extended the bundle. ‘Behold your son Unrak, Trellheim’s heir.’

  With a strange expression, Barak gently set his daughters down, approached his wife, and took the bundle from her. Very gently, his great fingers trembling, he turned back the blanket to gaze for the first time at his son’s face. Garion could see only that the baby had bright red hair, much the same color as Barak’s.

  ‘Hail, Unrak, heir to Trellheim and my son,’ Barak greeted the infant in his rumbl
ing voice. Then he kissed the child in his hands. The baby boy giggled and cooed as his father’s great beard tickled his face. His two tiny hands reached up and clutched at the beard, and he burrowed his face into it like a puppy.

  ‘He’s got a good strong grip,’ Barak commented to his wife, wincing as the infant tugged at his beard.

  Merel’s eyes seemed almost startled, and her expression was unreadable.

  ‘This is my son Unrak,’ Barak announced to the rest of them, holding the baby up so that they could see him. ‘It may be a bit early to tell, but he shows some promise.’

  Barak’s wife had drawn herself up with pride. ‘I have done well then, my Lord?’

  ‘Beyond all my expectations, Merel,’ he told her. Then, holding the baby in one arm, he caught her in the other and kissed her exuberantly. She seemed even more startled than before.

  ‘Let’s go inside,’ the brutish-looking King Anheg suggested. ‘It’s very cold out here, and I’m a sentimental man. I’d rather not have tears freezing in my beard.’

  The Arendish girl joined Lelldorin and Garion as they entered the fortress.

  ‘And this is my Ariana,’ Lelldorin told Garion with an expression of total adoration on his face.

  For a moment – for just a moment – Garion had some hope for his impossible friend. Lady Ariana was a slim, practical-looking Mimbrate girl, whose medical studies had given her face a certain seriousness. The look she directed at Lelldorin, however, immediately dispelled any hope. Garion shuddered inwardly at the total lack of anything resembling reason in the gaze these two exchanged. Ariana would not restrain Lelldorin as he crashed headlong into disaster after disaster; she would encourage him; she would cheer him on.

  ‘My Lord hath awaited thy coming most eagerly,’ she said to Garion as they followed the others along a broad stone corridor. The very slight stress she put on ‘My Lord’ indicated that while Lelldorin might think that their marriage was one in name only, she did not.

  ‘We’re very good friends,’ Garion told her. He looked around, a bit embarrassed by the way these two kept staring into each others’ eyes. ‘Is this the Hall of the Rivan King, then?’ he asked.

  ‘’Tis generally called so,’ Ariana replied. ‘The Rivans themselves speak with more precision, however. Lord Olban, youngest son of the Rivan Warder, hath most graciously shown us throughout the fortress, and he doth speak of this as the Citadel. The Hall of the Rivan King is the throne room itself.’

  ‘Ah,’ Garion said, ‘I see.’ He looked away quickly, not wanting to see the way all thought vanished from her eyes when they returned to their contemplation of Lelldorin’s face.

  King Rhodar of Drasnia, wearing his customary red robe, was sitting in the large, low-beamed dining room where a fire crackled in a cavelike fireplace and a multitude of candles gave off a warm, golden light. Rhodar vastly filled a chair at the head of a long table with the ruins of his lunch spread before him. His crown was hung negligently on the back of his chair, and his round, red face was gleaming with perspiration. ‘Finally!’ he said with a grunt. He waddled ponderously to greet them. He fondly embraced Polgara, kissed Queen Silar and Queen Layla, and took the hands of King Cho-Hag and King Fulrach in his own. ‘It’s been a long time,’ he said to them. Then he turned to Belgarath. ‘What took you so long?’ he asked.

  ‘We had a long way to go, Rhodar,’ the old sorcerer replied, pulling off his cloak and backing up to the broad-arched fireplace. ‘You don’t go from here to Rak Cthol in a week, you know.’

  ‘I hear that you and Ctuchik finally had it out,’ the king said.

  Silk laughed sardonically. ‘It was a splendid little get-together, uncle.’

  ‘I’m sorry I missed it.’ King Rhodar looked inquiringly at Ce’Nedra and Adara, his expression openly admiring. ‘Ladies,’ he said to them bowing politely, ‘if someone will introduce us, I’ll be more than happy to bestow a few royal kisses.’

  ‘If Porenn catches you kissing pretty girls, she’ll carve out your tripes, Rhodar.’ King Anheg laughed crudely.

  As Aunt Pol made the introductions, Garion drew back a few paces to consider the havoc Lelldorin had caused in one short week. It was going to take months to unravel it, and there was no guarantee that it would not happen again – indeed, that it would not happen every time the young man got loose.

  ‘What’s the matter with your friend?’ It was the Princess Ce’Nedra, and she was tugging on Garion’s sleeve.

  ‘What do you mean, what’s the matter with him?’

  ‘You mean he’s always like that?’

  ‘Lelldorin—’ Garion hesitated. ‘Well, Lelldorin’s very enthusiastic about things, and sometimes he speaks or acts without stopping to think.’ Loyalty made him want to put the best face on it.

  ‘Garion.’ Ce’Nedra’s gaze was very direct. ‘I know Arends, and he’s the most Arendish Arend I’ve ever met. He’s so Arendish that he’s almost incapacitated.’

  Garion quickly came to the defense of his friend. ‘He’s not that bad.’

  ‘Really? And Lady Ariana. She’s a lovely girl, a skilled physician – and utterly devoid of anything remotely resembling thought.’

  ‘They’re in love,’ Garion said, as if that explained everything.

  ‘What’s that got to do with it?’

  ‘Love does things to people,’ Garion told her. ‘It seems to knock holes in their judgment or something.’

  ‘What a fascinating observation,’ Ce’Nedra replied. ‘Do go on.’

  Garion was too preoccupied with the problem to catch the dangerous lilt in her voice. ‘As soon as somebody falls in love all the wits seem to dribble out of the bottom of his head,’ he continued moodily.

  ‘What a colorful way to put it,’ Ce’Nedra said.

  Garion even missed that warning. ‘It’s almost as if it were some kind of disease,’ he added.

  ‘Do you know something, Garion?’ the princess said in a conversational, almost casual tone of voice. ‘Sometimes you make me positively sick.’ And she turned and walked away, leaving him staring after her in open-mouthed astonishment.

  ‘What did I say?’ he called after her, but she ignored him.

  After they had all dined, King Rhodar turned to Belgarath. ‘Do you suppose we might have a look at the Orb?’ he asked.

  ‘Tomorrow,’ the old man answered. ‘We’ll reveal it when it’s returned to its proper place in the Hall of the Rivan King at midday.’

  ‘We’ve all seen it before, Belgarath,’ King Anheg asserted. ‘What’s the harm in our having a look now?’

  Belgarath shook his head stubbornly. ‘There are reasons, Anheg,’ he said. ‘I think it may surprise you tomorrow, and I wouldn’t want to spoil it for anyone.’

  ‘Stop him, Durnik,’ Polgara said as Errand slipped from his seat and walked around the table toward King Rhodar, his hand fumbling with the strings of the pouch at his waist.

  ‘Oh no, little fellow,’ Durnik said, catching the boy from behind and lifting him up into his arms.

  ‘What a beautiful child,’ Queen Islena observed. ‘Who is he?’

  ‘That’s our thief,’ Belgarath replied. ‘Zedar found him someplace and raised him as a total innocent. At the moment, he seems to be the only one in the world who can touch the Orb.’

  ‘Is that it in the pouch?’ Anheg asked.

  Belgarath nodded. ‘He’s caused us all some anxiety along the way. He keeps trying to give it to people. If he decides to offer you something, I don’t really advise taking it.’

  ‘I wouldn’t dream of it,’ Anheg agreed.

  As was usually the case, once Errand’s attention had been diverted, he immediately seemed to forget about the Orb. His gaze focused on the infant Barak was holding; as soon as Durnik set him down, he went over to look at the baby. Unrak returned the look and some kind of peculiar recognition seemed to pass between them. Then Errand gently kissed the child in Barak’s arms, and Unrak, smiling, took hold of the strange little boy’s finger. G
undred and Terzie gathered close, and Barak’s great face rose from the garden of children clustered about him. Garion could clearly see the tears glistening in his friend’s eyes as he looked at his wife Merel. The look she returned him was strangely tender; for the first time Garion could remember, she smiled at her husband.

  Chapter Eleven

  That night a sudden, savage storm howled down from the northwest to claw at the unyielding rock of the Isle of the Winds. Great waves crashed and thundered against the cliffs, and a shrieking gale howled among the ancient battlements of Iron-grip’s Citadel. The firm-set rock of the fortress seemed almost to shudder as the seething storm lashed again and again at the walls.

  Garion slept fitfully. There was not only the shriek and bellow of wind and the rattle of sleet against close-shuttered windows to contend with, nor the gusting drafts that blew suddenly down every corridor to set unlatched doors banging, but there were also those peculiar moments of oppressive silence that were almost as bad as the noise. Strange dreams stalked his sleep that night. Some great, momentous, and unexplained event was about to take place, and there were all manner of peculiar things that he had to do in preparation for it. He did not know why he had to do them, and no one would tell him if he were doing them right or not. There seemed to be some kind of dreadful hurry, and people kept rushing him from one thing to the next without ever giving him time to make sure that anything was really finished.

  Even the storm seemed to be mixed up in it – like some howling enemy trying with noise and wind and crashing waves to break the absolute concentration necessary to complete each task.

  ‘Are you ready?’ It was Aunt Pol, and she was placing a long-handled kitchen kettle on his head like a helmet and handing him a pot-lid shield and a wooden stick sword.

  ‘What am I supposed to do?’ he demanded of her.

  ‘You know,’ she replied. ‘Hurry. It’s getting late.’

  ‘No, Aunt Pol, I don’t – really.’

  ‘Of course you do. Now stop wasting time.’

  He looked around, feeling very confused and apprehensive. Not far away, Rundorig stood with that same rather foolish look on his face that had always been there. Rundorig also had a kettle on his head, a pot-lid shield, and a wooden sword. Apparently he and Rundorig were supposed to do this together. Garion smiled at his friend, and Rundorig grinned back.

 

‹ Prev