“Hello, Vordai,” he replied conversationally. “It’s been quite a while, hasn’t it?”
The little creatures that had guided them to the island waded out of the water to gather around the brown-cloaked woman. They chirped and chattered to her, and she looked at them fondly, touching their wet fur with gentle fingers. They were medium-sized animals with short hind legs and little rounded bellies and they walked upright with a peculiar quick shuffle, their forepaws held delicately in front of their furry chests.
“Come inside out of the rain, Belgarath,” the woman said. “Bring your friends.” She turned and walked up a path leading into the willow grove with her fenlings scampering along beside her.
“What do we do?” Garion whispered.
“We go inside,” Belgarath replied, stepping out of the boat onto the island.
Garion was not sure what to expect as he and Silk followed the old man up the path toward the dripping willows, but he was totally unprepared for the neat, thatch-roofed cottage with its small adjoining garden. The house was built of weathered logs, tightly chinked with moss, and a wispy tendril of smoke drifted from its chimney.
At the doorway, the woman in brown carefully wiped her feet on a rush mat and shook the rain out of her cloak. Then she opened the door and went inside without looking back.
Silk’s expression was dubious as he stopped outside the cottage. “Are you sure this is a good idea, Belgarath?” he asked quietly. “I’ve heard stories about Vordai.”
“It’s the only way to find out what she wants,” Belgarath told him, “and I’m fairly sure we aren’t going any farther until we talk with her. Let’s go in. Be sure to wipe your feet.”
The interior of Vordai’s cottage was scrupulously neat. The ceilings were low and heavily beamed. The wooden floor was scrubbed to whiteness, and a table and chairs sat before an arched fireplace where a pot hung in the flames from an iron arm. There were wildflowers in a vase on the table and curtains at the window overlooking the garden.
“Why don’t you introduce your friends to me, Belgarath?” the woman suggested, hanging her cloak on a peg. She smoothed the front of her plain brown dress.
“As you wish, Vordai,” the old man replied politely. “This is Prince Kheldar, your countryman. And this is King Belgarion of Riva.”
“Noble guests,” the woman observed in that strangely neutral voice. “Welcome to the house of Vordai.”
“Forgive me, madame,” Silk said in his most courtly manner, “but your reputation seems to be grossly inaccurate.”
“Vordai, the witch of the fens?” she asked, looking amused. “Do they still call me that?”
He smiled in return. “Their descriptions are misleading, to say the least.”
“The hag of the swamps.” She mimicked the speech of a credulous peasant. “Drowner of travellers and queen of the fenlings.” There was a bitter twist to her lips.
“That’s more or less what they say,” he told her. “I always believed you were a myth conjured up to frighten unruly children.”
“Vordai will get you and gobble you up!” She laughed, but there was no humor in her laughter. “I’ve been hearing that for generations. Take off your cloaks, gentlemen. Sit down and make yourselves comfortable. You’ll be staying for a while.”
One of the fenlings – the one who had led them to the island, Garion thought – chattered at her in a piping little voice, glancing nervously at the pot hanging in the fire.
“Yes,” she answered quite calmly, “I know that it’s boiling, Tupik. It has to boil or it won’t cook.” She turned back to her guests. “Breakfast will be ready in a bit,” she told them. “Tupik tells me you haven’t eaten yet.”
“You can communicate with them?” Silk sounded surprised.
“Isn’t that obvious, Prince Kheldar? Here, let me hang your cloaks by the fire to dry.” She stopped and regarded Garion gravely. “So great a sword for one so young,” she noted, looking at the great hilt rising above his shoulder. “Stand it in the corner, King Belgarion. There’s no one to fight here.”
Garion inclined his head politely, unbuckled the sword belt and handed her his cloak.
Another, somewhat smaller fenling darted out of a comer with a piece of cloth and began busily wiping up the water that had dripped from their cloaks, chattering disapprovingly all the while.
“You’ll have to forgive Poppi.” Vordai smiled. “She’s obsessed with tidiness. I sometimes think that, if I left her alone, she’d sweep holes in the floor.”
“They’re changing, Vordai,” Belgarath said gravely, seating himself at the table.
“I know,” she replied, going to the fireplace to stir the bubbling pot. “I’ve watched them over the years. They’re not the same as they were when I came here.”
“It was a mistake to tamper with them,” he told her.
“So you’ve said before – you and Polgara both. How is she, by the way?”
“Probably raging by now. We slipped out of the Citadel at Riva without telling her we were leaving, and that sort of thing irritates her.”
“Polgara was born irritable.”
“We agree on that point anyway.”
“Breakfast’s ready.” She lifted the pot with a curved iron hook and set it on the table. Poppi scampered over to a cupboard standing against the far wall and brought back a stack of wooden bowls, then returned for spoons. Her large eyes were very bright, and she chittered seriously at the three visitors.
“She’s telling you not to drop crumbs on her clean floor,” Vordai advised them, removing a steaming loaf of bread from an oven built into the side of the fireplace. “Crumbs infuriate her.”
“We’ll be careful,” Belgarath promised.
It was a peculiar sort of breakfast, Garion thought. The stew that came steaming from the pot was thick, with strange vegetables floating in it, and large chunks of fish. It was delicately seasoned, however, and he found it delicious. By the time he had finished eating, he rather reluctantly concluded that Vordai might even be as good a cook as Aunt Pol.
“Excellent, Vordai,” Belgarath complimented her, finally pushing his bowl away. “Now suppose we get down to business. Why did you have us brought here?”
“To talk, Belgarath,” she replied. “I don’t get much company, and conversation’s a good way to pass a rainy morning. Why have you come into the fens?”
“The Prophecy moves on, Vordai – even if sometimes we don’t. The Rivan King has returned, and Torak stirs in his sleep.”
“Ah,” she said without much real interest.
“The Orb of Aldur stands on the pommel of Belgarion’s sword. The day is not far off when the Child of Light and the Child of Dark must meet. We go toward that meeting, and all mankind awaits the outcome.”
“Except me, Belgarath.” She gave him a penetrating look. “The fate of mankind is a matter of only the mildest curiosity to me. I was excluded from mankind three hundred years ago, you’ll remember.”
“Those people are all long dead, Vordai.”
“Their descendants are no different. Could I walk into any village in this part of Drasnia and tell the good villagers who I am without being stoned or burned?”
“Villagers are the same the world over, madame,” Silk put in. “Provincial, stupid, and superstitious. Not all men are like that.”
“All men are the same, Prince Kheldar,” she disagreed. “When I was young, I tried to involve myself in the affairs of my village. I only wanted to help, but very soon not a cow died or a baby took colic without my being blamed for it. They stoned me finally and tried to drag me back to the village to burn me at the stake. They had quite a celebration planned. I managed to escape, though, and I took refuge here in the fens. After that I had very little interest in the affairs of men.”
“You probably shouldn’t have displayed your talents quite so openly,” Belgarath told her. “People prefer not to believe in that sort of thing. There’s a whole catalogue of nasty little emotions curdling in the human spirit, and anything the least bit out of the ordinary raises the possibility of retribution.”
“My village learned that it was more than a possibility,” she replied with a certain grim satisfaction.
“What happened?” Garion asked curiously.
“It started raining,” Vordai told him with an odd smile.
“Is that all?”
“It was enough. It rained on that village for five years, King Belgarion just on the village. A hundred yards beyond the last house everything was normal, but in the village there was rain. They tried to move twice, but the rain followed them. Finally they gave up and left the area. For all I know, some of their descendants are still wandering.”
“You’re not serious,” Silk scoffed.
“Quite serious.” She gave him an amused look. “Your credulity appears selective, Prince Kheldar. Here you are, going about the world in the company of Belgarath the Sorcerer. I’m sure you believe in his power; but you can’t bring yourself to accept the idea of the power of the witch of the fens.”