DAVID EDDINGS – GUARDIANS OF THE WEST

“We gathered that,” Polgara said calmly. “How big was he when he was born?”

“Oh-” Hettar looked perplexed. “About so big, I’d say.” He held his hands half a yard apart.

“No one took the trouble to measure him?”

“They might have done that, I suppose. My mother and the other ladies were doing all sorts of things right after he came.”

“And would you care to estimate his weight?”

“Probably about as much as a full-grown hare, I suppose -a fairly good-sized one- or perhaps the weight of one of those red Sendarian cheeses.”

“I see, perhaps a foot and a half long and eight or nine pounds -is that what you’re trying to say?” Her look was steady.

“About that, I suppose.”

“Why didn’t you say so, then?” she demanded in exasperation.

He looked at her, startled. “Is it reallythat important?”

“Yes, Hettar, it really isthat important. Women like to know these things.”

“I’ll have to remember that. About all I was really interested in was whether he had the usual number of arms, legs, ears, noses -things like that- that and making sure that his very first food was mare’s milk, of course.”

“Of course,” she said acidly.

“It’s very important, Polgara,” he assured her. “Every Algar’s first drink is mare’s milk.”

“That makes him part horse, I suppose.”

He blinked. “No, of course not, but it establishes a sort of bond.”

“Did you milk the mare for him? Or did you make him crawl out and find one for himself?”

“You’re taking all this very oddly, Polgara.”

“Blame it on my age,” she said in a dangerous voice.

He caught that tone almost immediately. “No, I don’t think I’d want to do that.”

“Wise decision,” Durnik murmured. “You said that you were going up into the mountains of Ulgoland.”

Hettar nodded. “You remember the Hrulgin?”

“The flesh-eating horses?”

“I have sort of an idea I want to try out. A full-grown Hrulga can’t be tamed, of course, but maybe if I can capture some of their colts.”

“That’s very dangerous, Hettar,” Belgarath warned. “The whole herd will defend the young.”

“There are some ways to separate the colts from the rest of the herd.”

Polgara looked at him disapprovingly. “Even if you succeed, what do you plan to do with the beasts?”

“Tame them,” Hettar replied simply.

“They can’t be tamed.”

“Nobody’ s ever tried it. And even if I can’t tame them, I perhaps I can breed them with ordinary horses.”

Durnik looked puzzled. “Why would you want horses with fangs and claws?”

Hettar looked thoughtfully into the fire. “They’re faster and stronger than ordinary horses,” he replied. “They can jump much farther, and-” His voice drifted off into silence.

“And because you can’t stand the idea of anything that looks like a horse that you can’t ride,” Belgarath finished for him.

“That might be a part of it,” Hettar admitted. “They’d give a man a tremendous advantage in a battle, though.”

“Hettar,” Durnik said, “the most important thing in Algaria is the cattle, right?”

“Yes.”

“Do you really want to start raising a breed of horses that would probably look at a cow as something to eat?”

Hettar frowned and scratched at his chin. “I hadn’t thought about that,” he admitted.

Now that he had the horse, Errand’s range increased enormously . The young stallion’s stamina was virtually inexhaustible, and he could run for most of the day without tiring.

Because Errand was still only a boy, his weight was not enough to burden the enthusiastic animal, and they ran freely over the rolling, grass-covered hills of southern Algaria and down into the tree-dotted expanse of the Vale of Aldur.

The boy rose early each morning and ate his breakfast impatiently, knowing that the chestnut stallion was waiting just outside the cottage and that, as soon as breakfast was over, the two of them could gallop out through the dewdrenched grass glistening green and lush in the slanting, golden rays of the morning sun and pound up the long slopes of the hills lying before them with the cool, sweet morning air rushing past them. Polgara, who seemed to know instinctively why they both had this need to run, said nothing as Errand wolfed down his food, sitting on the very edge of his chair so that at the very instant his plate was clean he could bolt for the door and the day which lay before him. Her eyes were gentle as she watched him, and the smile she gave him when he asked to be excused was understanding.

On a dewy, sun-filled morning in late summer when the grass was golden and heavy with ripe seeds, Errand came out of the door of the cottage and touched the bowed neck of his waiting friend with a gentle, caressing hand. The horse quivered with pleasure and took a few prancing steps, eager to be off. Errand laughed, took a handful of the stallion’s mane, swung his leg and flowed up onto the strong, glossy back in a single, fluid move. The horse was running almost before the boy was in place. They galloped up the long hill, paused to look out over the sun-touched grassland lying open before them, and then circled the small valley where the thatched stone cottage lay and headed south, down into the Vale.

This day’s ride was not, as so many others had been, a random excursion with no particular goal or purpose. For days now, Errand had felt the presence of a strange, awareness emanating from the Vale that seemed to be calling to him and, as he had emerged from the cottage door, he had suddenly resolved to find out exactly what it was that seemed to summon him so quietly.

As they moved down into the quiet Vale, past placidly grazing deer and curious rabbits, Errand could feel that awareness growing stronger. It was a peculiar kind of consciousness, dominated more than anything by an incredible patience -an ability, it seemed, to wait for eons for a response to these occasional quiet calls.

As they crested a tall, rounded hill a few leagues to the west of Belgarath’s tower, a brief shadow flickered across the bending grass. Errand glanced up and saw a blue-banded hawk circling on motionless wings on a rising column of sun-warmed air. Even as the boy watched, the hawk tilted, sideslipped, and then spiraled down in long, graceful circles. When it was no more than inches above the golden tassels of the ripe grass, it flared its wings, thrust down with its taloned feet and seemed somehow to shimmer in the morning air. When the momentary shimmer faded, the hawk was gone and the hunchbacked Beldin stood waist-deep in the tall grass, with one eyebrow cocked curiously. “What are you doing all the way down here, boy?” he asked without any kind of preamble.

“Good morning, Beldin,” Errand said calmly, leaning back to let the horse know that he wanted to stop for a few minutes.

“Does Pol know how far from home you’ve been going?” the ugly man demanded, ignoring Errand’s gesture toward politeness.

“Probably not entirely,” Errand admitted. “She knows that I’m out riding, but she might not know how much ground we can cover.”

“I’ve got better things to do than spend every day watching over you, you know,” the irascible old man growled.

“You don’t have to do that.”

“Yes, as a matter of fact, I do. It’s my month for it.”

Errand looked at him, puzzled.

“Didn’t you know that one of us watches you every time you leave the cottage?”

“Why would you want to do that?”

“Youdo remember Zedar, don’t you?”

Errand sighed sadly. “Yes,” he said.

“Don’t waste your sympathy on him,” Beldin said. “He got exactly what he deserved.”

“Nobody deserves that.”

Beldin gave a snort of ugly laughter. “He’s lucky that it was Belgarath who caught up with him. If it had been me, I’d have done a lot more than just seal him up inside solid rock. But that’s beside the point. You rememberwhy Zedar found you and took you with him?”

“To steal the Orb of Aldur.”

“Right. So far as we know, you’re the only person beside Belgarion who can touch the Orb and keep on living. Other people know that, too, so you might as well get used to the idea of being watched. We arenot going to let you wander around alone where somebody might get his hands on you. Now, you didn’t answer my question.”

“Which question?”

“What are you doing all the way down in this part of the Vale?”

“There’s something I need to see.”

“What’s that?”

“I don’t know. It’s up ahead somewhere. What is it that’s off in that direction?”

“There’s nothing out there but the tree.”

“That must be it, then. It wants to see me.”

“See?”

“Maybe that’s the wrong word.”

Beldin scowled at him. “Are you sure it’s the tree?”

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