“I can’t find any ship captain willing to venture out of the harbor during this storm,” Belgarath replied angrily.
“Well, I’m here now,” Greldik told him. “I’ve got to patch my sail, but that won’t take too long. We can leave in the morning. Is there anything to drink around here?”
“How’s the weather out there?” Belgarath asked.
“A little choppy,” Greldik admitted with an indifferent shrug. He glanced through a window at the twelve-foot waves crashing green and foamy against the icy stone wharves in the harbor below. “Once you get out past the breakwater it isn’t too bad.”
“We’ll leave in the morning then,” Belgarath decided. “You’ll have twenty or so passengers. Have you got room?”
“We’ll make room,” Greldik said. “I hope you’re not planning to take horses this time. It took me a week to get my bilges clean after the last trip.”
“Just one,” Belgarath replied. “A colt that seems to have become attached to Garion. He won’t make that much mess. Do you need anything?”
“I could still use that drink,” Greldik replied hopefully.
The following morning the queen of Sendaria went into hysterics. When she learned that she was going to accompany the party to Riva, Queen Layla went all to pieces. King Fulrach’s plump little wife had an absolute horror of sea travel – even in the calmest weather. She could not so much as look at a ship without trembling. When Polgara informed her that she had to go with them to Riva, Queen Layla promptly collapsed.
“Everything will be all right, Layla,” Polgara kept repeating over and over again, trying to calm the agitated little queen. “I won’t let anything happen to you.”
“We’ll all drown like rats,” Queen Layla wailed in stark terror. “Like rats! Oh, my poor orphaned children.”
“Now stop that at once!” Polgara told her.
“The sea monsters will eat us all up,” the queen added morbidly, “crunching all our bones with their horrid teeth.”
“There aren’t any monsters in the Sea of the Winds, Layla,” Polgara said patiently. “We have to go. We must be in Riva on Erastide.”
“Couldn’t you tell them that I’m sick – that I’m dying?” Queen Layla pleaded. “If it would help, I will die. Honestly, Polgara, I’ll die right here and now on this very spot. Only, please, don’t make me get on that awful ship. Please.”
“You’re being silly, Layla,” Polgara chided her firmly. “You have no choice in the matter – none of us do. You and Fulrach and Seline and Brendig all have to go to Riva with the rest of us. That decision was made long before any of you were born. Now stop all this foolishness and start packing.”
“I can’t!” the queen sobbed, flinging herself into a chair.
Polgara looked at the panic-stricken queen with a kind of understanding sympathy, but when she spoke there was no trace of it in her voice. “Get up, Layla,” she commanded briskly. “Get on your feet and pack your clothes. You are going to Riva. You’ll go even if I have to drag you down to the ship and tie you to the mast until we get there.”
“You wouldn’t!” Queen Layla gasped, shocked out of her hysteria as instantly as if she had just been doused with a pail full of cold water. “You wouldn’t do that to me, Polgara.”
“Wouldn’t I?” Polgara replied. “I think you’d better start packing, Layla.”
The queen weakly struggled to her feet. “I’ll be seasick every inch of the way,” she promised.
“You can if it makes you happy, dear,” Polgara said sweetly, patting the plump little queen gently on the cheek.
Chapter Ten
THEY WERE TWO days at sea from Sendar to Riva, running before a quartering wind with their patched sail booming and the driving spray that froze to everything it touched. The cabin belowdecks was crowded, and Garion spent most of his time topside, trying to stay out of the wind and out from under the sailors’ feet at the same time. Inevitably, he moved finally to the sheltered spot in the prow, sat with his back against the bulwark and his blue hooded cloak tight about him, and gave himself over to some serious thinking. The ship rocked and pitched in the heavy swells and frequently slammed head-on into monstrous black waves, shooting spray in all directions. The sea around them was flecked with whitecaps, and the sky was a threatening, dirty gray.
Garion’s thoughts were almost as gloomy as the weather. His life for the past fifteen months had been so caught up in the pursuit of the Orb that he had not had time to look toward the future. Now the quest was almost over, and he began to wonder what would happen once the Orb had been restored to the Hall of the Rivan King. There would no longer be any reason for his companions to remain together. Barak would return to Val Alorn; Silk would certainly find some other part of the world more interesting; Hettar and Mandorallen and Relg would return home; and even Ce’Nedra, once she had gone through the ceremony of presenting herself in the throne room, would be called back to Tol Honeth. The adventure was almost over, and they would all pick up their lives again. They would promise to get together someday and probably be quite sincere about it; but Garion knew that once they parted, he would never see them all together again.
He wondered also about his own life. The visit to Faldor’s farm had forever closed that door to him, even if it had ever really been open. The bits and pieces of information he had been gathering for the past year and more told him quite plainly that he was not going to be in a position to make his own decisions for quite some time.
“I don’t suppose you’d consider telling me what I’m supposed to do next?” He didn’t really expect any kind of satisfactory answer from that other awareness.
“It’s a bit premature,” the dry voice in his mind replied.
“We’ll be in Riva tomorrow,”Garion pointed out. “As soon as we put the Orb back where it belongs, this part of the adventure will be all finished. Don’t you think that a hint or two might be in order along about now?”
“I wouldn’t want to spoil anything for you.”
“You know, sometimes I think you keep secrets just because you know that it irritates people.”
“What an interesting idea.”
The conversation got absolutely nowhere after that.
It was about noon on the day before Erastide when Greldik’s icecoated ship tacked heavily into the sheltered harbor of the city of Riva on the east coast of the Isle of the Winds. A jutting promentory of wind-lashed rock protected the harbor basin and the city itself. Riva, Garion saw immediately, was a fortress. The wharves were backed by a high, thick city wall, and the narrow, snow-choked gravel strand stretching out to either side of the wharves was also cut off from access to the city. A cluster of makeshift buildings and low, varicolored tents stood on the strand, huddled against the city wall and half buried in snow. Garion thought he recognized Tolnedrans and a few Drasnian merchants moving quickly through the little enclave in the raw wind.
The city itself rose sharply up the steep slope upon which it was built, each succeeding row of gray stone houses towering over the ones below. The windows facing out toward the harbor were all very narrow and very high up in the buildings, and Garion could see the tactical advantage of such construction. The terraced city was a series of successive barriers. Breaching the gates would accomplish virtually nothing. Each terrace would be as impregnable as the main wall. Surmounting the entire city and brooding down at it rose the final fortress, its towers and battlements as gray as everything else in the bleak city of the Rivans. The blue and white sword-banners of Riva stood out stiffly in the wind above the fortress, outlined sharply against the dark gray clouds scudding across the winter sky.
King Anheg of Cherek, clad in fur, and Brand, the Rivan Warder, wearing his gray cloak, stood on the wharf before the city gates waiting for them as Greldik’s sailors rowed the ship smartly up to the wharf. Beside them, his reddish-gold hair spread smoothly out over his greencloaked shoulders, stood Lelldorin of Wildantor. The young Asturian was grinning broadly. Garion took one incredulous look at his friend; then, with a shout of joy, he jumped to the top of the rail and leaped across to the stone wharf. He and Lelldorin caught each other in a rough bear hug, laughing and pounding each other on the shoulders with their fists.
“Are you all right?” Garion demanded. “I mean, did you completely recover and everything?”
“I’m as sound as ever,” Lelldorin assured him with a laugh. Garion looked at his friend’s face dubiously. “You’d say that even if you were bleeding to death, Lelldorin.”