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The Belgariad 1: Pawn of Prophecy by David Eddings

“All you had to do was ask,” Anheg said in a slightly injured tone.

“I didn’t want to bother you,” Rhodar said with a shrug. “Besides, it’s more fun to do it the other way.”

“Friends,” King Fulrach said, “the issue before us is too important to chance compromising it. Wouldn’t it be better to be overcautious rather than take any risks?”

King Anheg frowned and then shrugged. “Whatever you wish,” he said. “We’ll continue in private then. Cousin, would you clear old King Eldrig’s hall for us and set guards in the hallways near it?”

“I will, Anheg,” Barak said. He took a dozen warriors and left the hall.

The kings rose from their thrones-all except Cho-Hag. A lean warrior, very nearly as tall as Barak and with the shaved head and flowing scalp lock of the Algars, stepped forward and helped him up.

Garion looked inquiringly at Silk.

“An illness when he was a child,” Silk explained softly. “It left his legs so weak that he can’t stand unaided.”

“Doesn’t that make it kind of hard for him to be king?” Garion asked.

“Algars spend more time sitting on horses than they do standing on their feet,” Silk said. “Once he’s on a horse, Cho-Hag’s the equal of any man in Algaria. The warrior who’s helping him is Hettar, his adopted son.”

“You know him?” Garion asked.

“I know everyone, Garion.” Silk laughed softly. “Hettar and I have met a few times. I like him, though I’d rather he didn’t know that.”

Queen Porenn came over to where they stood. “Islena’s taking Silar and me to her private quarters,” she said to Silk. “Apparently women aren’t supposed to be involved in matters of state here in Cherek.”

“Our Cherek cousins have a few blind spots, your Highness,” Silk said. “They’re arch-conservatives, of course, and it hasn’t occurred to them yet that women are human.”

Queen Porenn winked at him with a sly little grin. “I’d hoped that we might get a chance to talk, Kheldar, but it doesn’t look like it now. Did you get my message to Layla?”

Silk nodded. “She said she’d write to you immediately,” he said. “If we’d known you were going to be here, I could have carried her letter myself.”

“It was Islena’s idea,” she said. “She decided that it might be nice to have a council of queens while the kings were meeting. She’d have invited Layla too, but everyone knows how terrified she is of sea travel.”

“Has your council produced anything momentous, Highness?” Silk asked lightly.

Queen Porenn made a face. “We sit around and watch Islena do tricks – disappearing coins, things up her sleeves, that kind of thing,” she said. “Or she tells fortunes. Silar’s too polite to object, and I’m the youngest, so I’m not supposed to say too much. It’s terribly dull, particularly when she goes into trances over that stupid crystal ball of hers. Did Layla think she could help me?”

“If anyone can,” Silk assured her. “I should warn you, though, that her advice is likely to be quite explicit. Queen Layla’s an earthy little soul, and sometimes very blunt.”

Queen Porenn giggled wickedly. “That’s all right,” she said. “I’m a grown woman, after all.”

“Of course,” Silk said. “I just wanted to prepare you, that’s all.”

“Are you making fun of me, Kheldar?” she asked.

“Would I do that, your Highness?” Silk asked, his face full of innocence.

“I think you would,” she said.

“Coming, Porenn?” Queen Islena asked from not far away.

“At once, your Highness,” the queen of Drasnia said. Her fingers flickered briefly at Silk. What a bore.

Patience, Highness, Silk gestured in reply.

Queen Porenn docilely followed the stately Queen of Cherek and the silent Queen of Algaria from the hall. Silk’s eyes followed her, and his face had that same self mocking expression as before.

“The others are leaving,” Garion said delicately and pointed to the far end of the hall where the Alorn Kings were just going out the door.

“All right,” Silk said and led the way quickly after them.

Garion stayed at the rear of the group as they all made their way through the drafty corridors toward King Eldrig’s hall. The dry voice in his mind told him that if Aunt Pol saw him, she’d probably find a reason to send him away.

As he loitered along at the rear of the procession, a furtive movement flickered briefly far down one of the side corridors. He caught only one glimpse of the man, an ordinary-looking Cherek warrior wearing a dark green cloak, and then they had moved past that corridor. Garion stopped and stepped back to look again, but the man in the green cloak was gone.

At the door to King Eldrig’s hall, Aunt Pol stood waiting with her arms crossed. “Where have you been?” she asked.

“I was just looking,” he said as innocently as possible.

“I see,” she said. Then she turned to Barak. “The council’s probably going to last for a long time,” she said, “and Garion’s just going to get restless before it’s over. Is there someplace where he can amuse himself until suppertime?”

“Aunt Pol!” Garion protested.

“The armory, perhaps?” Barak suggested.

“What would I do in an armory?” Garion demanded.

“Would you prefer the scullery?” Aunt Pol asked pointedly.

“On second thought, 1 think I might like to see the armory.”

“I thought you might.”

“It’s at the far end of this corridor, Garion,” Barak said. “The room with the red door.”

“Run along, dear,” Aunt Pol said, “and try not to cut yourself on anything.”

Garion sulked slowly down the corridor Barak had pointed out to him, keenly feeling the injustice of the situation. The guards posted in the passageway outside King Eldrig’s hall even made eavesdropping impossible. Garion sighed and continued his solitary way toward the armory.

The other part of his mind was busy, however, mulling over certain problems. Despite his stubborn refusal to accept the possibility that Mister Wolf and Aunt Pol were indeed Belgarath and Polgara, the behavior of the Alorn Kings made it obvious that they at least did believe it. Then there was the question of the rose Aunt Pol had given to Queen Islena. Setting aside the fact that roses do not bloom in the winter, how had Aunt Pol known that Islena would present her with that green jewel and therefore prepared the rose in advance? He deliberately avoided the idea that his Aunt had simply created the rose on the spot.

The corridor along which he passed, deep in thought, was dim, with only a few torches set in rings on the walls to light the way. Side passages branched out from it here and there, gloomy, unlighted openings that stretched back into the darkness. He had almost reached the armory when he heard a faint sound in one of those dark passages. Without knowing exactly why, he drew back into one of the other openings and waited.

The man in the green cloak stepped out into the lighted corridor and looked around furtively. He was an ordinary-looking man with a short, sandy beard, and he probably could have walked anywhere in the palace without attracting much notice. His manner, however, and his stealthy movements cried out louder than words that he was doing something he was not supposed to be doing. He hurried up the corridor in the direction from which Garion had come, and Garion shrank back into the protective darkness of his hiding place. When he carefully poked his head out into the corridor again, the man had disappeared, and it was impossible to know down which of those dark side passageways he had gone.

Garion’s inner voice told him that even if he told anyone about this, they wouldn’t listen. He’d need more than just an uneasy feeling of suspicion to report if he didn’t want to appear foolish. All he could do for the time being was to keep his eyes open for the man in the green cloak.

Chapter Fourteen

IT WAS SNOWING the following morning, and Aunt Pol, Silk, Barak, and Mister Wolf again met for council with the kings, leaving Garion in Durnik’s keeping. The two sat near the fire in the huge hall with the thrones, watching the two dozen or so bearded Cherek warriors who lounged about or engaged in various activities to pass the time. Some of them sharpened their swords or polished their armor; others ate or sat drinking-even though it was still quite early in the morning; several were engaged in a heated dice game; and some simply sat with their backs against the wall and slept.

“These Chereks seem to be very idle people,” Durnik said quietly to Garion. “I haven’t seen anyone actually working since we arrived, have you?”

Garion shook his head. “I think these are the king’s own warriors,” he said just as quietly. “I don’t think they’re supposed to do anything except sit around and wait for the king to tell them to go fight someone.”

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Categories: Eddings, David
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