DAVID EDDINGS – SORCERESS OF DARSHIVA

Polgara, in her gray traveling dress, was by her cook-fire. As usual, she hummed softly as she worked. Silk and Belgarath were talking quietly nearby. Silk had, for some reason, changed clothes and he now wore the soft, pearl-gray doublet which marked him as a prosperous businessman. Belgarath, of course, still wore his rust-colored tunic, patched hose, and mismatched boots. Durnik and Toth were fishing, lacing the blue surface of the little mountain lake with their lines, and Eriond was brushing the gleaming chestnut coat of his stallion. The rest of their friends had apparently not arisen yet.

“We thought you were going to sleep all day,” Belgarath said as Garion sat on a log to pull on his boots.

“I gave it some thought,” Garion admitted. He stood up and looked across the sparkling lake. There was a grove of aspens on the far side, their trunks the color of new snow. The leaves had begun to turn and they shimmered in the morning sun like beaten gold. The air was cool and slightly damp. Suddenly he wished that they could stay here for a few days. He sighed and walked over to join his grandfather and Silk near the fire. “Why the fancy clothes?” he asked the rat-faced little Drasnian.

Silk shrugged. “We’re moving into an area where I’m fairly well known,” he replied. “We might be able to take advantage of that—as long as people recognize me. Are you absolutely sure the trail goes toward the southeast?”

Garion nodded. “There was a little confusion right at first, but I got it sorted out.”

“Confusion?” Belgarath asked.

“The Sardion was here, too—a long time ago. For a few moments, the Orb seemed to want to follow both trails at the same time. I had to speak with it rather firmly about that.” Garion draped the sword belt over his shoulder and buckled it. Then he shifted the scabbard slightly until it was more comfortable. The Orb on the pommel of the sword was glowing a sullen red color.

“Why’s it doing that?” Silk asked curiously.

“Because of the Sardion,” Garion told him. He looked over his shoulder at the glowing stone. “Stop that,” he said.

“Don’t hurt its feelings,” Silk warned. “We could be in a great deal of trouble if it decides to start sulking.”

“What lies off to the southeast?” Belgarath asked the little man.

“Voresebo,” Silk replied. “There isn’t much there except some caravan tracks and a few mines up in the mountains. There’s a seaport at Pannor. I land there sometimes on my way back from Melcena.”

“Are the people there Karands?”

Silk nodded. “But they’re even cruder than the ones back in the central kingdoms—if that’s possible.”

The blue-banded hawk came spiraling out of a bright morning sky, flared, and shimmered into the form of Beldin as soon as the talons touched the ground. The hunchbacked little sorcerer was dressed in his usual rags tied on with bits of thong, and twigs and straw clung to his hair and beard. He shivered. “I hate to fly when it’s cold,” he grumbled. “It makes my wings ache.”

“It’s not really that cold,” Silk said.

“Try it a couple thousand feet up.” Beldin pointed toward the sky, then turned, and spat out a couple of soggy gray feathers.

“Grazing again, uncle?” Polgara asked from her cook-fire.

“Just a bite of breakfast, Pol,” he replied. “There was a pigeon that got up too early this morning.”

“You didn’t have to do that, you know.” She tapped meaningfully on the side of her bubbling pot with a long-handled wooden spoon.

Beldin shrugged. “The world isn’t going to miss one pigeon.”

Garion shuddered. “How can you stand to eat them raw like that?”

“You get used to it. I’ve never had much luck trying to build a cook-fire with my talons.” He looked at Belgarath. “There’s some trouble up ahead,” he said, “a lot of smoke and groups of armed men wandering around.”

“Could you see who they were?”

“I didn’t get that close. There’s usually a bored archer or two in any crowd like that, and I’d prefer not to have my tail feathers parted with an arrow just because some idiot wants to show off his skill.”

“Has that ever happened?” Silk asked curiously.

“Once—a long time ago. My hip still aches in cold weather.”

“Did you do something about it?”

“I had a chat with the archer. I asked him not to do it any more. He was breaking his bow across his knee when I left.” He turned back to Belgarath. “Are we sure the trail goes on down to that plain?”

“The Orb is.”

“Then we’ll have to chance it.” The little man looked around. “I thought you’d have struck the tents by now.”

“I decided it might not hurt to let everybody get some sleep. We’ve been traveling hard and we’re going to have to do it some more, I think.”

“You always want to pick these idyllic spots for your rest stops, Belgarath,” Beldin observed. “I think you’re secretly a romantic.”

Belgarath shrugged. “Nobody’s perfect.”

“Garion,” Polgara called.

“Yes, Aunt Pol?”

“Why don’t you wake the others? Breakfast’s almost ready.”

“Right away, Aunt Pol.”

After breakfast, they broke camp and started out about midmorning with Beldin flying on ahead to scout out possible trouble. It was pleasantly warm now, and there was the pungent smell of evergreens in the air. Ce’Nedra was strangely quiet as she rode along beside Garion with her dark gray cloak pulled tightly around her.

“What’s the matter, dear?” he asked her.

“She didn’t have Geran with her,” the little queen murmured sadly.

“Zandramas, you mean? No, she didn’t, did she?”

“Was she really there, Garion?”

“In a way, but in a way she wasn’t. It was sort of the way Cyradis was here and not here at the same time.”

“I don’t understand.”

“It was more man a projection, but less than actually being there. We talked it over last night, and Beldin explained it. I didn’t understand very much of what he said. Beldin’s explanations get a little obscure sometimes.”

“He’s very wise, isn’t he?”

Garion nodded. “But he’s not a very good teacher. He gets impatient with people who can’t keep up with him. Anyway, this business of being somewhere between a projection and the real thing makes Zandramas very dangerous. We can’t hurt her, but she can hurt us. She came very close to killing you yesterday, you know—until Poledra stopped her. She’s very much afraid of Poledra.”

“That’s the first time I’ve ever seen your grandmother.”

“No, actually it’s not. She was there at Aunt Pol’s wedding, remember? And she helped us in Ulgoland when we had to fight the Eldrak.”

“But one time she was an owl, and the other time she was a wolf.”

“In Poledra’s case, I don’t think that really matters.”

Ce’Nedra suddenly laughed.

“What’s so funny?”

“When this is all over and we’re back home with our baby, why don’t you change into a wolf for a while?” she suggested.

“Why?”

“It might be nice having a big gray wolf lying before the fire. And then on cold nights, I could burrow my feet into your fur to keep them warm.”

He gave her a long steady look.

“I’d scratch your ears for you, Garion,” she offered by way of inducement, “and get you nice bones from the kitchen to chew on.”

“Never mind,” he said flatly.

“But my feet get cold.”

“I’ve noticed.”

Just ahead of them as they rode up through a shady mountain pass, Silk and Sadi were engaged in a heated discussion. “Absolutely not,” Silk said vehemently.

“I really think you’re being unreasonable about this, Kheldar,” Sadi protested. The eunuch had discarded his iridescent silk robe and now wore western-style tunic and hose and stout boots. “You have the distribution system already in place, and I have access to unlimited supplies. We could make millions.”

“Forget it, Sadi. I won’t deal in drugs.”

“You deal in everything else, Kheldar. There’s a market out there just waiting to be tapped. Why let scruples stand in the way of business?”

“You’re Nyissan, Sadi. Drugs are a part of your culture, so you wouldn’t understand.”

“Lady Polgara uses drugs when she treats the sick,” Sadi pointed out defensively.

“That’s different.”

“I don’t see how.”

“I could never explain it to you.”

Sadi sighed. “I’m very disappointed in you, Kheldar. You’re a spy, an assassin, and a thief. You cheat at dice, you counterfeit money, and you’re unscrupulous with married women. You swindle your customers outrageously and you soak up ale like a sponge. You’re the most corrupt man I’ve ever known, but you refuse to transport a few harmless little compounds that would make your customers very happy.”

“A man has to draw the line somewhere,” Silk replied loftily.

Velvet shifted in her saddle to look back at them. “That was one of the more fascinating conversations I’ve ever heard, gentlemen,” she complimented them. “The implications in the field of comparative morality are absolutely staggering.” She gave them a sunny smile with her dimples flashing into view.

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