The Belgariad 4: Castle of Wizardry by David Eddings

“Yes, dear,” she replied. “Sit down.” She looked at him somewhat critically. “He still doesn’t look much like a king, does he, father?”

“Give him time, Pol,” the old man told her. “He hasn’t been at it for very long.”

“You both knew all along, didn’t you?” Garion accused them. “Who I was, I mean.”

“Naturally,” Aunt Pol answered in that maddening way of hers.

“Well, if you’d wanted me to behave like a king, you should have told me about it. That way I’d have had some time to get used to the idea.”

“It seems to me we discussed this once before,” Belgarath mentioned, “a long time ago. If you’ll stop and think a bit, I’m sure you’ll be able to see why we had to keep it a secret.”

“Maybe.” Garion said it a bit doubtfully. “All this has happened too fast, though. I hadn’t even got used to being a sorcerer yet, and now I have to be a king, too. It’s all got me off balance.”

“You’re adaptable, Garion,” Aunt Pol told him, her needle flickering.

“You’d better give him the amulet, Pol,” Belgarath mentioned. “The princess should be here soon.”

“I was just about to, father,” she replied, laying aside her sewing.

“What’s this?” Garion asked.

“The princess has a gift for you,” Aunt Pol said. “A ring. It’s a bit ostentatious, but act suitably pleased.”

“Shouldn’t I have something to give her in return?”

“I’ve already taken care of that, dear.” She took a small velvet box from the table beside her chair. “You’ll give her this.” She handed the box to Garion.

Inside the box lay a silver amulet, a bit smaller than Garion’s own. Represented on its face in minute and exquisite detail was the likeness of that huge tree which stood in solitary splendor in the center of the Vale of Aldur. There was a crown woven into the branches. Garion held the amulet in his right hand, trying to determine if it had some of the same kind of force about it that he knew was in the one he wore. There was something there, but it didn’t feel at all the same.

“It doesn’t seem to be like ours,” he concluded.

“It isn’t,” Belgarath replied. “Not exactly, anyway. Ce’Nedra’s not a sorceress, so she wouldn’t be able to use one like yours.”

“You said ‘not exactly.’ It does have some kind of power, then?”

“It will give her certain insights,” the old man answered, “if she’s patient enough to learn how to use it.”

“Exactly what are we talking about when we use the word ‘insight’?”

“An ability to see and hear things she wouldn’t otherwise be able to see or hear,” Belgarath specified.

“Is there anything else I should know about it before she gets here?”

“Just tell her that it’s a family heirloom,” Aunt Pol suggested. “It belonged to my sister, Beldaran.”

“You should keep it, Aunt Pol,” Garion objected. “I can get something else for the princess.”

“No, dear. Beldaran wants her to have it.”

Garion found Aunt Pol’s habit of speaking of people long dead in the present tense a trifle disconcerting, so he didn’t pursue the matter. There was a light tap on the door.

“Come in, Ce’Nedra,” Aunt Pol answered.

The little princess was wearing a rather plain green gown open at the throat, and her expression was somewhat subdued.

“Come over by the fire;” Aunt Pol told her. “The evenings are still a bit chilly this time of year.”

“Is it always this cold and damp in Riva?” Ce’Nedra asked, coming to the fire.

“We’re a long ways north of Tol Honeth,” Garion pointed out.

“I’m aware of that,” she said with that little edge in her voice.

“I always thought it was customary to wait until after the wedding to start bickering,” Belgarath observed slyly. “Have the rules changed?”

“Just practicing, Belgarath,” Ce’Nedra replied impishly. “Just practicing for later on.”

The old man laughed. “You can be a charming little girl when you put your mind to it,” he said.

Ce’Nedra bowed mockingly. Then she turned to Garion. “It’s customary for a Tolnedran girl to give her betrothed a gift of a certain value,” she informed him. She held up a heavy, ornate ring set with several glowing stones. “This ring belonged to Ran Horb II, the greatest of all Tolnedran Emperors. Wearing it might help you to be a better king.”

Garion sighed. It was going to be one of those meetings. “I’ll be honored to wear the ring,” he replied as inoffensively as possible, “and I’d like for you to wear this.” He handed her the velvet box. “It belonged to the wife of Riva Iron-grip, Aunt Pol’s sister.”

Ce’Nedra took the box and opened it. “Why, Garion,” she exclaimed, “it’s lovely.” She held the amulet in her hand, turning it to catch the firelight. “The tree looks so real that you can almost smell the leaves.”

“Thank you,” Belgarath replied modestly.

“You made it?” The princess sounded startled.

The old man nodded. “When Polgara and Beldaran were children, we lived in the Vale. There weren’t very many silversmiths there, so I had to make their amulets myself. Aldur helped me with some of the finer details.”

“This is a priceless gift, Garion.” The tiny girl actually glowed, and Garion began to have some hope for the future. “Help me with it,” she commanded, handing him the two ends of the chain and turning with one hand holding aside the mass of her deep red hair.

“Do you accept the gift, Ce’Nedra?” Aunt Pol asked her, giving the question a peculiar emphasis.

“Of course I do,” the princess replied.

“Without reservation and of your own free will?” Aunt Pol pressed, her eyes intent.

“I accept the gift, Lady Polgara,” Ce’Nedra replied. “Fasten it for me, Garion. Be sure it’s secure. I wouldn’t want it to come undone.”

“I don’t think you’ll need to worry too much about that,” Belgarath told her.

Garion’s fingers trembled slightly as he fastened the curious clasp.

His fingertips tingled peculiarly as the two ends locked together with a faintly audible click.

“Hold the amulet in your hand, Garion,” Aunt Pol instructed him. Ce’Nedra lifted her chin and Garion took the medallion in his right hand. Then Aunt Pol and Belgarath closed their hands over his. Something peculiar seemed to pass through their hands and into the talisman at Ce’Nedra’s throat.

“Now you are sealed to us, Ce’Nedra,” Aunt Pol told the princess quietly, “with a tie that can never be broken.”

Ce’Nedra looked at her with a puzzled expression, and then her eyes slowly widened and a dreadful suspicion began to grow in them.

“Take it off,” she told Garion sharply.

“He can’t do that,” Belgarath informed her, sitting back down and picking up his tankard again.

Ce’Nedra was tugging at the chain, pulling with both hands.

“You’ll just scratch your neck, dear,” Aunt Pol warned gently. “The chain won’t break; it can’t be cut; and it won’t come off over your head. You’ll never have to worry about losing it.”

“You did this,” the princess stormed at Garion.

“Did what?”

“Put this slave chain on me. It wasn’t enough that I had to bow to you; now you’ve put me in chains as well.”

“I didn’t know,” he protested.

“Liar!” she screamed at him. Then she turned and fled the room, sobbing bitterly.

Chapter Fifteen

GARION WAS IN a sour mood. The prospect of another day of ceremony and tedious conferences was totally unbearable, and he had risen early to escape from the royal bedchamber before the insufferably polite appointment secretary with his endless lists could arrive to nail down the entire day. Garion privately detested the inoffensive fellow, even though he knew the man was only doing his job. A king’s time had to be organized and scheduled, and it was the appointment secretary’s task to take care of that. And so, each morning after breakfast, there came that respectful tapping at the door, and the appointment secretary would enter, bow, and then proceed to arrange the young king’s day, minute by minute. Garion was morbidly convinced that somewhere, probably hidden away and closely guarded, was the ultimate master list that laid out the schedule for the rest of his life- including his royal funeral.

But this day dawned too gloriously for thoughts of stuffy formality and heavy conference. The sun had come boiling up out of the Sea of the Winds, touching the snowfields atop the craggy peaks with a blushing pink, and the morning shadows in the deep valleys above the city were a misty blue. The smell of spring pushed urgently in from the little garden outside his window, and Garion knew he must escape, if only for an hour or so. He dressed quickly in tunic, hose, and soft Rivan boots, rather carefully selecting clothes as unroyal as his wardrobe offered. Pausing only long enough to belt on his sword, he crept out of the royal apartment. He even considered riot taking along his guards, but prudently decided against that.

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