Rivan Codex Series

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Rivan Codex Series Page 1

by Eddings, David




  The Rivan Codex Series

  Bu David Eddings

  Prequels

  -- Belgarath the Sorcerer (1996)

  -- Polgara the Sorceress (1999)

  -- The Rivan Codex (1998)

  The Belgariad

  -- Pawn of Prophecy (1982)

  -- Queen of Sorcery (1982)

  -- Magician’s Gambit (1983)

  -- Castle of Wizardry (1984)

  -- Enchanter’s End Game (1984)

  The Mallorean

  -- Guardian of the West (1987)

  -- King of the Murgos (1988)

  -- Demon Lord of Karanda (1989)

  -- Sorceress of Darshiva (1990)

  -- The Seeress of Kell (1991)

  Prequels

  -- Belgarath the Sorcerer (1996) --

  Prologue

  It was well past midnight and very cold. The moon had risen, and her pale light made the frost crystals lying in the snow sparkle like carelessly strewn diamonds. In a peculiar way it seemed to Garion almost as if the snow-covered earth were reflecting the starry sky overhead.

  "I think they're gone now," Durnik said, peering upward. His breath steamed in the icy, dead-calm air.

  "I can't see that rainbow any more."

  "Rainbow?" Belgarath asked, sounding slightly amused.

  "You know what I mean. Each of them has a different-colored light.

  Aldur's is blue, Issa's is green, Chaldan's is red, and the others all have different colors. Is there some significance to that?"

  "It's probably a reflection of their different personalities," Belgarath replied.

  "I can't be entirely positive, though. My Master and I never got around to discussing it." He stamped his feet in the snow.

  "Why don't we go back?" he suggested.

  "It's cold out here."

  They turned and started back down the hill toward the cottage, their feet crunching in the frozen snow. The farmstead at the foot of the hill looked warm and comforting. The thatched roof of the cottage was thick with snow, and the icicles hanging from the eaves glittered in the moon light. The outbuildings Durnik had constructed were dark, but the windows of the cottage were all aglow with golden lamplight that spread softly out over the mounded snow in the yard. A column of blue-grey wood-smoke rose straight and unwavering from the chimney, rising, it seemed, to the very stars.

  It probably had not really been necessary for the three of them to accompany their guests to the top of the hill to witness their departure, but it was Durnik's house, and Durnik was a Sendar. Sendars are meticulous about proprieties and courtesies.

  "Eriond's changed," Garion noted as they neared the bottom of the hill.

  "He seems more certain of himself now."

  Belgarath shrugged.

  "He's growing up. It happens to everybody--except to Belar, maybe. I don't think we can ever expect Belar to grow up."

  "Belgarath!" Durnik sounded shocked.

  "That's no way for a man to speak about his God!"

  "What are you talking about?"

  "What you just said about Belar. He's the God of the Alorns, and you're an Alorn, aren't you?"

  "Whatever gave you that peculiar notion? I'm no more an Alorn than you are."

  "I always thought you were. You've certainly spent enough time with them."

  "That wasn't my idea. My Master gave them to me about five thousand years ago. There were a number of times when I tried to give them back, but he wouldn't hear of it."

  "Well, if you're not an Alorn, what are you?"

  "I'm not really sure. It wasn't all that important to me when I was young. I do know that I'm not an Alorn. I'm not crazy enough for that."

  "Grandfather!" Garion protested.

  "You don't count, Garion. You're only half Alorn."

  They reached the door of the cottage and carefully stamped the snow off their feet before entering. The cottage was Aunt Pol's domain, and she had strong feelings about people who tracked snow across her spotless floors.

  The interior of the cottage was warm and filled with golden lamplight that reflected from the polished surfaces of Aunt Pol's copper-bottomed pots and kettles and pans hanging from hooks on either side of the arched fireplace. Durnik had built the table and chairs in the center of the room out of oak, and the lamplight enhanced the golden color of the wood.

  The three of them immediately went to the fireplace to warm their hands and feet.

  The door to the bedroom opened, and Poledra came out.

  "Well," she said, "did you see them off?"

  "Yes, dear," Belgarath replied.

  "They were going in a generally northeasterly direction the last time I looked."

  "How's Pol?" Durnik asked.

  "Happy," Garion's tawny-haired grandmother replied.

  "That's not exactly what I meant. Is she still awake?"

  Poledra nodded.

  "She's lying in bed admiring her handiwork."

  "Would it be all right if I looked in on her?"

  "Of course. Just don't wake the babies."

  "Make a note of that, Durnik," Belgarath advised.

  "Not waking those babies is likely to become your main purpose in life for the next several months."

  Durnik smiled briefly and went into the bedroom with Poledra.

  "You shouldn't tease him that way, Grandfather," Garion chided.

  "I wasn't teasing, Garion. Sleep's very rare in a house with twins. One of them always seems to be awake. Would you like something to drink? I think I can probably find Pol's beer barrel."

  "She'll pull out your beard if she catches you in her pantry."

  "She isn't going to catch me, Garion. She's too busy being a mother right now." The old man crossed the room to the pantry and began rummaging around.

  Garion pulled off his cloak, hung it on a wooden peg, and went back to the fireplace. His feet still felt cold. He looked up at the latticework of rafters overhead. It was easy to see that Durnik had crafted them. The smith's meticulous attention to detail showed in everything he did. The rafters were exposed over this central room, but there was a loft over the bedroom and a flight of stairs reaching up to it along the back wall.

  "Found it," Belgarath called triumphantly from the pantry.

  "She tried to hide it behind the flour barrel."

  Garion smiled. His grandfather could probably find a beer cask in the dark at the bottom of a coal mine.

  The old man came out with three brimming tankards, set them down on the table, and moved a chair around until it faced the fireplace. Then he took one of the tankards, sat, and stretched his feet out toward the fire.

  "Pull up a chair, Garion," he invited.

  "We might as well be comfortable."

  Garion did that.

  "It's been quite a night," he said.

  "That it has, boy," the old man replied.

  "That it has."

  "Shouldn't we say good night to Aunt Pol?"

  "Durnik's with her. Let's not disturb them. This is a special sort of time for married people."

  "Yes," Garion agreed, remembering that night two weeks ago when his daughter had been born.

  "Will you be going back to Riva soon?"

  "I probably should," Garion replied.

  "I think I'll wait a few days, though--at least until Aunt Pol's back on her feet again."

  "Don't wait too long," Belgarath advised with a sly grin.

  "Ce'Nedra's sitting on the throne all by herself right now, you know."

  "She'll be all right. She knows what to do."

  "Yes, but do you want her doing things on her own?"

  "Oh, I don't think she'll declare war on anybody while I'm gone."

  "Maybe not, but with Ce'Nedra you never really know, do
you?"

  "Quit making fun of my wife, Grandfather."

  "I'm not making fun of her. I love her dearly, but I do know her. All I'm saying is that she's a little unpredictable." Then the old sorcerer sighed.

  "Is something the matter, Grandfather?"

  "I was just chewing on some old regrets. I don't think you and Durnik realize just how lucky you are. I wasn't around when my twins were born.

  I was off on a business trip."

  Garion knew the story, of course.

  "You didn't have any choice, Grandfather," he said.

  "Aldur ordered you to go to Mallorea. It was time to recover the Orb from Torak, and you had to go along to help Cherek Bear-shoulders and his sons."

  "Don't try to be reasonable about it, Garion. The bald fact is that I abandoned my wife when she needed me the most. Things might have turned out very differently if I hadn't."

  "Are you still feeling guilty about that?"

  "Of course I am. I've been carrying that guilt around for three thousand years. You can hand out all the royal pardons you want, but it's still there."

  "Grandmother forgives you."

  "Naturally she does. Your grandmother's a wolf, and wolves don't hold grudges. The whole point, though, is that she can forgive me, and you can forgive me, and you can get up a petition signed by everybody in the known world that forgives me, but I still won't forgive myself. Why don't we talk about something else?"

  Durnik came back out of the bedroom.

  "She's asleep," he said softly.

  Then he went to the fireplace and stacked more wood on the embers.

  "It's a cold night out there," he noted.

  "Let's keep this fire going."

  "I should have thought of that," Garion apologized.

  "Are the babies still asleep?" Belgarath asked the smith.

  Durnik nodded.

  "Enjoy it while you can. They're resting up."

  Durnik smiled. Then he too pulled a chair closer to the fire.

  "Do you remember what we were talking about earlier?" he asked, reaching for the remaining tankard on the table.

  "We talked about a lot of things," Belgarath told him.

  "I mean the business of the same things happening over and over again. What happened tonight isn't one of those, is it?"

  "Would it come as a surprise to you if I told you that Pol isn't the first to give birth to twins?"

  "I know that, Belgarath, but this seems different somehow. I get the feeling that this isn't something that's happened before. This seems like something new to me. This has been a very special night. UL himself blessed it. Has that ever happened before?"

  "Not that I know of," the old sorcerer conceded.

  "Maybe this is something new. If it is, it's going to make things a little strange for us."

  "How's that?" Garion asked.

  "The nice thing about repetitions is that you sort of know what to expect. If everything did stop when the "accident" happened, and now it's all moving again, we'll be breaking into new territory."

  "Won't the prophecies give us some clues?"

  Belgarath shook his head.

  "No. The last passage in the Mrin Codex reads,

  "And there shall come a great light, and in that light shall that which was broken be healed, and interrupted Purpose shall proceed again, as was from the beginning intended." All the other prophecies end in more or less the same way. The Ashabine Oracles even use almost exactly the same words. Once that light reached Korim, we were on our own."

  "Will there be a new set of prophecies now?" Durnik asked.

  "Next time you see Eriond, why don't you ask him? He's the one in charge now." Belgarath sighed.

  "I don't think we'll be involved in any new ones, though. We've done what we were supposed to do." He smiled just a bit wryly.

  "To be perfectly frank about it, I'm just as glad to pass it on. I'm getting a little old to be rushing out to save the world.

  It was an interesting career right at first, but it gets exhausting after the first six or eight times."

  "That'd be quite a story," Durnik said.

  "What would?"

  "Everything you've been through--saving the world, fighting Demons, pushing the Gods around, things like that."

  "Tedious, Durnik. Very, very tedious,"

  Belgarath disagreed.

  "There were long periods when nothing was happening. You can't make much of a story out of a lot of people just sitting around waiting."

  "Oh, I'm sure there were enough lively parts to keep it interesting. Someday I'd really like to hear the whole thing--you know, how you met Aldur, what the world was like before Torak cracked it, how you and Cherek Bear-shoulders stole the Orb back--all of it."

  Belgarath laughed.

  "If I start telling that story, we'll still be sitting here a year from now, and we won't even be halfway through by then. We've all got better things to do."

  "Do we really, Grandfather?" Garion asked.

  "You just said that our part of this is over. Wouldn't this be a good time to sum it all up?"

  "What good would it do? You've got a kingdom to run, and Durnik's got this farm to tend. You've got more important things to do than sit around listening to me tell stories."

  "Write it down, then." The notion suddenly caught fire in Garion's mind.

  "You know, Grandfather, the more I think about it, the more I think you ought to do just that. You've been here since the very beginning. You're the only one who knows the whole story. You really should write it down, you know. Tell the world what really happened."

  Belgarath's expression grew pained.

  "The world doesn't care, Garion. All I'd do is offend a lot of people. They've got their own preconceptions, and they're happy with them. I'm not going to spend the next fifty years scribbling on scraps of paper just so that people can travel to the Vale from the other side of the world to argue with me. Besides, I'm not a historian. I don't mind telling stories, but writing them down doesn't appeal to me. If I took on a project like that, my hand would fall off after a couple of years."

  "Don't be coy, Grandfather. Durnik and I both know that you don't have to do it by hand. You can think the words onto paper without ever picking up a pen."

  "Forget it," Belgarath said shortly.

  "I'm not going to waste my time on something as ridiculous as that."

  "You're lazy, Belgarath," Durnik accused.

  "Are you only just noticing that? I thought you were more observant."

  "You won't do it then?" Garion demanded.

  "Not unless somebody comes up with a better reason than you two have so far."

  The bedroom door opened, and Poledra came out into the kitchen.

  "Are you three going to talk all night?" she demanded in a quiet voice.

  "If you are, go do it someplace else. If you wake the babies . . ." She left it hanging ominously.

  "We were just thinking about going to bed, dear," Belgarath lied blandly.

  "Well, do it then. Don't just sit there and talk about it."

  Belgarath stood up and stretched--perhaps just a bit theatrically.

  "She's right, you know," he said to his two friends.

  "It'll be daylight before long, and the twins have been resting up all night. If we're going to get any sleep, we'd better do it now."

  Later, after the three of them had climbed up into the loft and rolled themselves into blankets on the pallets Durnik kept stored up there, Garion lay looking down at the slowly waning firelight and the flickering shadows in the room below. He thought of Ce'Nedra and his own children, of course, but then he let his mind drift back over the events of this most special of nights. Aunt Pol had always been at the very center of his life, and with the birth of her twins, her life was now fulfilled.

  Near to sleep, the Rivan King found his thoughts going back over the conversation he had just had with Durnik and his grandfather. He was honest enough with himself to admit that his desire to read
Belgarath's history of the world was not entirely academic. The old sorcerer was a very strange and complex man, and his story promised to provide insights into his character that could come from no other source. He'd have to be pushed, of course. Belgarath was an expert at avoiding work of any kind.

  Garion, however, thought he knew of a way to pry the story out of his grandfather. He smiled to himself as the fire burned lower and lower in the room below. He knew he could find out how it all began.

  And then, because it was really quite late, Garion fell asleep, and, perhaps because of all the familiar things in Aunt Pol's kitchen down below, he dreamed of Faldor's farm, where his story had begun.

  Part 1 - THE VALE

  CHAPTER ONE

  The problem with any idea is the fact that the more it gets bandied about, the more feasible it seems to become.

  What starts out as idle speculation --something mildly entertaining to wile away a few hours before going to bed--can become, once others are drawn into it, a kind of obligation. Why can't people understand that just because I'm willing to talk about something, it doesn't automatically follow that I'm actually willing to do it?

  As a case in point, this all started with Durnik's rather inane remark about wanting to hear the whole story. You know how Durnik is, forever taking things apart to see what makes them work. I can forgive him in this case, however. Pol had just presented him with twins, and new fathers tend to be a bit irrational. Garion, on the other hand, should have had sense enough to leave it alone. I curse the day when I encouraged that boy to be curious about first causes. He can be so tedious about some things. If he'd have just let it drop, I wouldn't be saddled with this awful chore.

  But no. The two of them went on and on about it for day after day as if the fate of the world depended on it. I tried to get around them with a few vague promises--nothing specific, mind you--and fervently hoped that they'd forget about the whole silly business.

  Then Garion did something so unscrupulous, so underhanded, that it shocked me to the very core. He told Polgara about the stupid idea, and when he got back to Riva, he told Ce'Nedra. That would have been bad enough, but would you believe that he actually encouraged those two to bring Poledra into it?

  I'll admit right here that it was my own fault. My only excuse is that I was a little tired that night. I'd inadvertently let something slip that I've kept buried in my heart for three eons. Poledra had been with child, and I'd gone off and left her to fend for herself. I've carried the guilt over that for almost half of my life. It's like a knife twisting inside me. Garion knew that, and he coldly, deliberately, used it to force me to take on this ridiculous project. He knows that under these circumstances, I simply cannot refuse anything my wife asks of me.

 

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