The Lady Merel opened the door immediately and curtsied respectfully.
“Please, don’t do that,” Garion begged her.
“What’s the trouble, Garion?” Barak asked from the green-covered chair where he sat, bouncing his infant son on his knee.
“I’m looking for Silk,” Garion replied, entering the large, comfortable room that was littered with clothes and children’s toys.
“You’re a little wild around the eyes,” the big man noted. “Is something wrong?”
“I’ve just had some very unsettling news,” Garion told him, shuddering. “I need to talk to Silk. Maybe he can come up with an answer for me.”
“Would you like some breakfast?” Lady Merel suggested.
“I’ve already eaten, thank you,” Garion replied. He looked at her a bit more closely. She had undone the rather severe braids she customarily wore, and her blond hair framed her face softly. She wore her usual green gown, but her carriage seemed not to have the rigidity it had always had. Barak, Garion noted, had also lost a bit of the grim defensiveness that had always been there previously when he was in the presence of his wife.
Barak’s two daughters entered the room then, one on each side of Errand. They all sat down in the corner and began playing an elaborate little game that seemed to involve a great deal of giggling.
“I think my daughters have decided to steal him.” Barak grinned. “Quite suddenly I’m up to my ears in wife and children, and the funny part about it is that I don’t seem to mind it at all.”
Merel threw him a quick, almost shy smile. Then she looked over at the laughing children, “The girls absolutely adore him,” she said, and then turned back to Garion. “Have you ever noticed that you can’t look directly into his eyes for more than a moment or so? He seems to be looking right into your heart.”
Garion nodded. “I think it might have something to do with the way he trusts everybody,” he suggested. He turned back to Barak. “Do you have any idea where I might find Silk?”
Barak laughed. “Walk up and down the halls and listen for the rattle of dice. The little thief’s been gambling ever since we got here. Durnik might know. He’s been hiding out in the stables. Royalty makes him nervous.”
“It does the same thing to me,” Garion said.
“But you are royalty, Garion,” Merel reminded him.
“That makes me even more nervous,” he replied.
There was a series of back hallways that led to the stables, and Garion decided to follow that route rather than pass through the more stately corridors where he might encounter members of the nobility. These narrower passageways were used for the most part by servants going to and from the kitchen, and Garion reasoned that most of the minor household staff would probably not recognize him yet. As he walked quickly along one of the passageways with his head down to avoid any chance recognition, he caught another glimpse behind him of the man who had dogged his steps ever since he had left the royal apartment. Irritated finally to the point where he no longer cared about concealing his identity, Garion turned to confront his pursuer. “I know you’re there,” he declared. “Come out where I can see you.” He waited, tapping his foot impatiently.
The hallway behind him remained empty and silent.
“Come out here at once,” Garion repeated, his voice taking on an unaccustomed note of command. But there was no movement, no sound. Garion thought for a moment of retracing his steps to catch this persistent attendant in the act of creeping along behind him, but just then a servant carrying a tray of dirty dishes came along from the direction Garion had just come.
“Did you see anybody back there?” Garion asked him.
“Back where?” the servant said, obviously not recognizing his king.
“Back along the hall.”
The servant shook his head. “I haven’t seen anyone since I left the apartments of the King of Drasnia,” he replied. “Would you believe that this is his third breakfast? I’ve never seen anybody eat so much.” He looked curiously at Garion. “You shouldn’t be back here, you know,” he warned. “If the head cook catches you, he’ll thrash you. He doesn’t like anybody in this hall who doesn’t have business here.”
“I’m just on my way to the stables,” Garion told him.
“I’d move right along, then. The head cook’s got a vicious temper.”
“I’ll keep that in mind,” Garion assured him.
Lelldorin was coming out of the stable, and he gave Garion a startled look as the two of them approached each other in the snowy courtyard. “How did you manage to escape from all the officials?” he asked. Then, as if remembering, he bowed.
“Please don’t do that, Lelldorin,” Garion told him.
“The situation is a bit awkward, isn’t it?” Lelldorin agreed.
“We’ll behave toward each other the same as we always have behaved,” Garion said firmly. “At least until they tell us we can’t. Have you any idea where Silk might be?”
“I saw him earlier this morning,” Lelldorin replied. “He said he was going to visit the baths. He looked a bit unwell. I think he celebrated last night.”
“Let’s go find him,” Garion suggested. “I’ve got to talk to him.”
They found Silk sitting in a tiled stone room thick with steam. The little man had a towel about his waist and he was sweating profusely.
“Are you sure this is good for you?” Garion asked, waving his hand in front of his face to clear an eddying cloud of steam.
“Nothing would really be good for me this morning, Garion,” Silk replied sadly. He put his elbows on his knees and sank his face miserably into his hands.
“Are you sick?”
“Horribly.”
“If you knew it was going to make you feel this way, why did you drink so much last night?”
“It seemed like a good idea at the time – at least I think it did. I seem to have lost track of several hours.” An attendant brought the suffering man a foaming tankard, and Silk drank deeply.
“Is that really wise?” Lelldorin asked him.
“Probably not,” Silk admitted with a shudder, “but it’s the best I could come up with on short notice.” He shuddered again. “I feel also lutely wretched,” he declared. “Was there anything in particular you wanted?”
“I’ve got a problem,” Garion blurted. He looked quickly at Lelldorin. “I’d rather this didn’t go beyond the three of us,” he said.
“You have my oath on it,” Lelldorin responded instantly.
“Thank you, Lelldorin.” It was easier to accept the oath than to try to explain why it wasn’t really necessary. “I’ve just read the Accords of Vo Mimbre,” he told them. “Actually, I had them read to me. Did you know that I’m supposed to marry Ce’Nedra?”
“I hadn’t actually put that part together yet,” Silk admitted, “but the Accords do mention something about it, don’t they?”
“Congratulations, Garion!” Lelldorin exclaimed, suddenly clapping his friend on the shoulder. “She’s a beautiful girl.”
Garion ignored that. “Can you think of some way I can get out of it?” he demanded of Silk.
“Garion, right now I can’t really think of anything except how awful I feel. My first hunch though, is that there isn’t any way out for you. Every kingdom in the west is signatory to the Accords – and then I think the Prophecy’s involved too.”
“I’d forgotten about that,” Garion admitted glumly.
“I’m sure they’ll give you time to get used to the idea,” Lelldorin said.
“But how much time will they give Ce’Nedra? I talked to her this morning, and she’s not happy about the idea at all.”
“She doesn’t actually dislike you,” Silk told him.
“That’s not what the problem is. She seems to think that I outrank her, and that’s what’s got her upset.”
Silk began to laugh weakly.
“A real friend wouldn’t laugh,” Garion accused him.
“Is rank really that important to your princess?” Lelldorin asked.
“Probably not much more important than her right arm,” Garion replied sourly. “I think she reminds herself that she’s an Imperial Princess six or eight times every hour. She makes a pretty big issue about it. Now I come along from out of nowhere, and suddenly I outrank her. It’s the sort of thing that’s going to set her teeth on edge-permanently, I expect.” He stopped and looked rather closely at Silk. “Do you think there’s any chance of your getting well today?”
“What have you got in mind?”
“Do you know your way around Riva at all?”
“Naturally.”
“I was sort of thinking that I ought to go down into the city – not with trumpets blowing and all that – but just dressed like somebody ordinary. I don’t know anything at all about the Rivans, and now-” He faltered with it.
“And now you’re their king,” Lelldorin finished for him.