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Belgarath the Sorcerer and Polgara the Sorceress

Page 77

by David Eddings


  ‘I did some prospecting a few years back,’ I replied. ‘My partner and I found a stream that was running bank-full of this stuff.’

  His eyes grew very bright at that point. ‘I’d like to see that stream,’ he said.

  ‘A lot of people would, but I think I’ll just keep its location to myself. Well? Are you going to make a counter-offer?’

  ‘Polanna just did. Twenty bars.’

  ‘Five,’ I countered.

  ‘I could go as low as fifteen, I suppose.’

  ‘Ridiculous!’ I retorted. ‘I could buy this whole tavern and everybody in it for fifteen bars. Let’s be realistic here, friend. She’s only a woman, after all.’

  We haggled about it for an hour or so, and Pol’s eyes got flintier by the moment. We finally settled on twelve. Then we each spit on our hands, smacked our palms together, and the deal was struck. I stood up. ‘All right, girl,’ I said to my daughter, ‘let’s go to Drasnia.’

  ‘I have some things I need to pick up,’ she replied, gathering up her share of the gold.

  ‘Leave them behind.’

  ‘Not on your life, old man. You bought me. You didn’t buy my possessions. It’s just a short way to Gallak’s house. It won’t take me long.’ She turned and strutted out of the tavern with every eye upon her as she went.

  ‘Spirited, isn’t she?’ I noted mildly.

  ‘Indeed she is,’ Gallak agreed. ‘To be honest with you, friend, I’m just as happy to be rid of her. You know your future king better than I do, but you might want to consider some other gift. His gratitude might go downhill after a few weeks with Polanna.’

  ‘She’ll be just fine, Gallak. It’s been a pleasure doing business with you.’ I picked up my much-lighter saddlebags and went back out into the street.

  Polgara’s eyes were steely when she returned. I wasn’t particularly amused by your performance in there, old man,’ she said. ‘It was very insulting.’

  ‘I thought I pulled it off fairly well. Do you want to give me back my gold?’

  ‘Oh, no, father. That gold is mine now.’

  I sighed. ‘All right Pol,’ I gave up. ‘If that’s the way you feel about it. Let’s find a stable. I’ll buy you a horse and we can get started.’

  After we rode out of Yar Nadrak, Pol and I were able to speak more freely. ‘Did you find the people you were looking for?’ I asked her.

  ‘Of course I did,’ she replied. ‘I wouldn’t have sent for you if I hadn’t’

  ‘Who are they?’

  ‘One of them is Drosta lek Thun himself.’

  ‘The Nadrak king?’ That was surprising.

  She nodded. ‘Drosta’s a very complicated fellow, and he seems bent on getting out from under the thumb of the Grolims. He wants to turn his kingdom into a secular society. He’s devious and has no principles whatsoever, but he does want what’s best for his country.’

  ‘Who’s the other one?’

  ‘A fellow named Yarblek. He’s a descendant of someone you used to know, I believe.’

  ‘You mean Rablek?’

  ‘Of course. Nothing ever really happens by chance, father.’

  I made a face. ‘I get so tired of that,’ I said.

  ‘I’d have thought you’d be used to it by now. Yarblek’s a businessman – of sorts. He’s young, but he’s already so unscrupulous that he’s building quite a reputation. I think that when the time comes, he’ll help us – if the price is right. You do have more of that gold, don’t you, father?’

  We followed the North Caravan Route westward toward the Drasnian border. It was autumn by now, and the leaves of the birch and aspen groves had begun to turn golden. That’s always very pretty, but it does sort of hint at the onset of winter, and we still had to go through the mountains up around Yar Gurak.

  Pol and I hurried right along, but when we reached the mountains, our luck ran out. An early blizzard swept down out of Morindland and buried us in about five feet of snow. I put together a crude sort of shelter in a thick grove of jack-pines, and we sat out the storm. It blew itself out after three days, and we set out again. It was very slow going, and Pol’s temper began to deteriorate about mid-morning. ‘This is ridiculous, father!’ she snapped. ‘There are other ways for us to get to where we’re going, you know.’

  I shook my head. ‘We’re in Angarak territory, Pol, and that means Grolims. Let’s not make any noise if we don’t have to. We’ll get through all right – if the weather holds.’

  But of course, it didn’t. Another blizzard came along right on the heels of the first one, and I had to build us another shelter.

  It must have been about mid-morning of the following day when we had a visitor. The gale was howling around our makeshift shelter, and the snow was coming down so thickly that we couldn’t see ten feet. Then a voice came out of the snow. ‘Hello, the camp,’ it said. ‘I’m coming in. Don’t get excited.’

  He seemed to be a fairly old man, lean and stringy, and his tangled hair was as white as the snow around him. He was bundled to the ears in furs, and his face was tanned, weather-beaten, and deeply wrinkled. His blue eyes didn’t seem to be all that old, however. ‘Got yourself in trouble, didn’t you?’ he observed as he came trudging through the driving snow. ‘Didn’t you smell this storm coming?’

  I shrugged. ‘We thought we could outrun it.’

  ‘Not much chance of that up in these mountains. Which way were you bound?’

  ‘Toward Drasnia.’

  ‘You’ll never make it. You started out too late. I expect you’ll have to winter up here.’

  ‘That’s impossible,’ Pol told him.

  ‘I know these mountains, girl. This is just about as far as you’re going to get until spring.’ He squinted at us. Then he sighed. ‘I guess there’s no help for it. You’d better come with me.’ He didn’t sound too happy about it.

  ‘Where are we going?’ I asked him.

  ‘I’m wintering in a cave about a mile from here. It’s not much of a cave, but it’s better than this lean-to you’ve got here. I guess I can put up with a little company for one winter. At least it’ll give me somebody to talk to. My donkey listens pretty good, but he don’t answer very often when I say something to him.’

  I’m sure that Garion and Silk remember that old fellow. We ran across him in those same mountains years later while we were on our way to Cthol Mishrak.

  He never did tell us what his name was. I’m sure that he’d had a name at some time, but it’s entirely possible that he’d forgotten it. He talked a great deal during that seemingly endless winter, but there was very little in the way of information in what he said. I gathered that he’d spent his life looking for gold up in these mountains, but I got the impression that he didn’t really look that hard for it. He just liked being in the mountains.

  I don’t think I’ve ever known anybody who could see as much in a single glance as that old man did. He’d realized almost as soon as he saw us that Pol and I weren’t ordinary people, but if he had any opinions about that, he kept them to himself.

  I liked him, and I think Polgara did, too. She didn’t like the fact that he kept his donkey and our horses in the cave with us, though. They talked about that quite a bit that winter, as I recall.

  As he’d predicted, the blizzards kept rolling in out of Morindland, and the snowdrifts just kept growing. He and I hunted, of course, and I grew more than a little tired of a steady diet of venison. Pol had taken over the cooking, but even Pol began to run out of recipes before winter was over.

  I didn’t say anything about it, but despite Pol’s aversion to the little beast, the old man’s donkey grew very fond of her, and he showed his affection by butting at her with his head, usually when she wasn’t expecting it. Maybe he thought it was funny to surprise her.

  Then, after it seemed that the winter would last forever, our host went to the mouth of the cave one morning and sniffed at the air. ‘It’s just about over,’ he told us. ‘We’ll get a warm wind out of Drasnia be
fore the day’s out, and it’ll cut off all this snow before you know it. The river’ll run bank-full for a few days, but it’ll be safe to travel by the end of the week. I’ve enjoyed your company, you two, but it’s coming on time for us to go our separate ways.’

  ‘Which way will you go after the weather clears?’ Pol asked him.

  He scratched at his head. ‘Haven’t decided yet,’ he replied. ‘South maybe, or maybe back up toward Morindland. Maybe I’ll just see which way the wind’s blowing when the time comes to start out – or maybe I’ll just let the donkey decide. It don’t really matter none to me – as long as we stay in the mountains.’

  His prediction about the change in the weather turned out to be very accurate, and about at the end of that week, Pol and I said good bye and set out again. There were still snowbanks back in under the trees, but the trails were mostly clear. We reached the Drasnian border in about four days, and a week later we reached Boktor.

  The pestilence I mentioned earlier had run its course in western Drasnia, but among its victims were Rhodar’s father and Silk’s mother. The king died, but Silk’s mother didn’t. The disease had horribly disfigured her, but it had also taken her sight from her, so she couldn’t look into a mirror to see her ruined face. Silk and his father could; neither of them ever mentioned it to her, though.

  Pol and I stayed in Boktor to attend Rhodar’s coronation, and then I bought a boat so that we could go on down the Mrin River and through the fens. I don’t really like the fens, but the Great North Road had too many travelers on it at this time of year for my comfort.

  Winters can be miserable, but there are times when spring’s even worse – particularly in the fens. It started raining on the day when Pol and I set out from Boktor, and it rained steadily for at least a week. I started to wonder if there might have been another eclipse to disturb the weather patterns.

  At one time or another, most of you have probably gone through the fens, since you almost have to if you want to get to Boktor from the west. For those of you who haven’t, though, all you really need to know about them is the fact that it’s all one vast marsh lying between the Mrin and Aldur rivers. It’s filled with rushes, cattails, and stringy willow trees that trail their limbs in the water. The two rivers that feed it insure that the water’s not stagnant, but their currents are so slow that it comes fairly close. The customary way to get a boat through the fens is to pole it along. Rowing doesn’t really work very well, since many of those channels are too narrow to give oars much play. I don’t like poling boats, but in the fens there isn’t much choice.

  ‘I think we should have booked passage on some merchantman in Boktor,’ I said moodily one rainy morning. ‘We could be half-way to Darine by now.’

  ‘Well, it’s too late to turn back now, father,’ Pol said. ‘Just keep poling.’

  We began to see fenlings – quite a few of them – and then to my absolute amazement, we came around bend in the channel we were following, and there was a house!

  Actually, it was more in the nature of a cottage built of weathered logs and surmounted by a thatched roof. It stood in the middle of a grove of sad-looking willows on a small island that rose in a gentle slope out of the surrounding water.

  As I poled the boat closer, one of the fenlings we’d noticed swam on ahead, climbed up on the muddy bank of that little island and loped like an otter up to the door of the cottage, clittering urgently.

  Then the door opened, and a woman stood there looking gravely out at us through the drizzling rain. ‘Welcome to the house of Vordai,’ she said to my daughter and me, but there wasn’t much welcome in her tone of voice.

  ‘I’m a little surprised to see anyone living in a place like this,’ I called to her.

  ‘There are reasons,’ she replied. ‘You might as well come inside – at least until the rain lets up.’

  I’ve had more gracious invitations in my time, but something seemed to come together in my head, and it told me that I was supposed to accept this one, no matter how ungracious it was.

  I poled our boat up to the island, and Pol and I stepped out on the shore.

  ‘So you’re Vordai,’ Polgara said to the woman at the cottage door.

  ‘And you would be Polgara,’ the woman replied.

  ‘I seem to be missing something here,’ I told them.

  ‘We know each other by reputation, father,’ Pol told me. ‘Vordai’s the one they call the witch of the fens. She’s an outcast, and this is the only place in all of Drasnia that’s safe for her.’

  ‘Probably because the firewood here is too wet to make burning people at the stake practical,’ the owner of the cottage added with a certain bitterness. ‘Come in out of the rain, both of you.’ The witch of the fens was a very old woman, but there were still traces of what must have been a luminous beauty in her face – marred, I’ll admit, by the bitter twist to her lips. Life hadn’t been good to Vordai the witch.

  No one who’s spent any time in Drasnia hasn’t heard of the witch of the fens, but I’d always assumed that the stories I’d heard were no more than fairy-tales, and most of them probably were. She was most definitely not a hag, for one thing, and I’m fairly sure that she didn’t go out of her way to lure unwary travelers into quicksand bogs, for another. Certain events in her past had made her absolutely indifferent to other humans.

  The interior of her cottage was scrupulously neat. The ceiling was low and heavily beamed, and the wooden floor had been scrubbed until it was white. There was a pot hanging in her fireplace, there were wildflowers in a vase on her table, and curtains at the window.

  Vordai wore a plain brown dress, and she limped slightly. She looked worn and tired. ‘So this is the famous Belgarath,’ she said, taking our wet cloaks and hanging them on pegs near her fire.

  ‘Disappointing, isn’t he?’ Pol said.

  ‘No,’ Vordai replied, ‘not really. He’s about what I’d have expected.’ She gestured toward her table. ‘Seat yourselves. I think there’s enough in the pot for us all.’

  ‘You knew that we were coming, didn’t you, Vordai?’ Pol suggested.

  ‘Naturally. I am a witch, after all.’

  A fenling came in through the open door and stood up on its short hind legs. It made that peculiar chittering sound that fenlings all make.

  ‘Yes,’ Vordai said to the little creature, ‘I know.’

  ‘It’s true, then,’ Pol said cryptically, eyeing the fenling.

  ‘Many unusual things are true, Polgara,’ Vordai replied.

  ‘You shouldn’t really have tampered with them, you know.’

  ‘I didn’t hurt them, and I’ve found that tampering with humans can be very dangerous. All in all, I much prefer the company of fenlings to that of my fellow man.’

  ‘They’re cleaner, if nothing else,’ Pol agreed.

  ‘That’s because they bathe more often. The rain should let up soon, and you and your father will be able to continue your journey. In the meantime, I’ll offer breakfast. That’s about as far as I’d care to stretch my hospitality.’

  There were a lot of things going on that I didn’t completely understand. Evidently, Polgara’s studies had taken her into an examination of witchcraft, an area I’d neglected, and there were things passing back and forth between Pol and the witch of the fens that were incomprehensible to me. The one thing that I did perceive, however, was the fact that this lonely old woman had been treated very badly at some time in the past.

  All right, Garion, don’t beat it into the ground. Yes, as a matter of fact, I did feel sorry for Vordai – almost as sorry as I’d felt for Illessa. I’m not a monster, after all. Why do you think I did what I did when you and Silk and I passed through the fens on our way to Cthol Mishrak? It certainly wasn’t because I couldn’t think of any alternatives.

  As Vordai had suggested it might, the sky cleared along about noon, and Pol and I put on our now-dry cloaks and went back to our boat.

  Vordai didn’t even bother to see us off.


  I poled the boat around another bend in that twisting channel we’d been following, and as soon as we were out of sight of that lonely cottage there in the middle of that vast swamp, Pol’s eyes filled with tears. I didn’t really think it would have been appropriate for me to ask her why. When the occasion demands it, Pol can be absolutely ruthless, but she’s not inhuman.

  We came out of the fens near Aldurford and continued on foot along the eastern border of Sendaria until we reached the rutted track that led to Annath. It was mid-afternoon when we crossed the frontier, and Geran was waiting for us near the stone-quarry on the outskirts of town when we finally arrived. ‘Thank the Gods!’ he said fervently. ‘I was afraid you wouldn’t make it back in time for the wedding!’

  ‘What wedding?’ Pol asked sharply

  ‘Mine,’ Geran replied. ‘I’m getting married next week.’

  Chapter 49

  The wedding of Geran and Ildera took place in the late spring of the year 5348, and the entire village of Annath took the day off work to attend. Not to be outdone, Ildera’s leather-clad clansmen also came across the border to participate.

  There’d been a certain amount of squabbling about who was going to officiate at the ceremony. Since Illdera was an Algar, the priest of Belar who attended to the spiritual needs of her clan assumed that he should be the one to conduct the ceremony, but the local Sendarian priest had objected strenuously. Polgara had stepped in at that point and smoothed things over – on the surface, at least – by suggesting the simple expedient of having two ceremonies instead of one. It didn’t matter to me one way or the other, so I kept my nose out of it.

  Some frictions had arisen between Geran’s mother, Alara, and Ildera’s mother, Olane. Ildera’s father, Grettan, was a clan-chief, after all, and that’s about as close as you’re going to get to nobility in Algar society. Geran, on the other hand, was the son of an ordinary stone-cutter, so Olane didn’t make any secret of the fact that she felt that her daughter was marrying beneath her. That didn’t set at all well with Alara, and Pol had been obliged to speak with her firmly to prevent her from blurting out some things about her son’s heritage that others didn’t need to know about. These periodic outbreaks of animosity between mothers have caused Pol more concern over the centuries than Chamdar himself, I think.

 

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