He smiled a wintry smile. “How little you understand us, Ce’Nedra. Taur Urgas was only the symbol of Murgo fanaticism. Ctuchik is dead, and Taur Urgas is dead, but Murgodom lives on – even as Mallorea will live on when I am gone. Our enmity goes back for eons. At last, how-ever, a Mallorean Emperor is in a position to crush Cthol Murgos once and for all and make himself undisputed overking of Angarak.”
“It’s all for power, then?”
“What else is there?” he asked sadly. “When I was very young, I thought that there might be something else-but events proved that I was wrong.” A brief look of pain crossed his face, and he sighed. “In time you will discover that same truth. Your Belgarion will grow colder as the years pass and the chill satisfaction of power comes more and more to possess him. When it is complete, and only his love of power remains, then he and I will move against each other as inevitably as two great tides. I will not attack him until his education is complete. There is no satisfaction in destroying a man who does not fully comprehend reality. When all of his illusions are gone and only his love of power remains, then he will be a fit opponent.” His face had grown bleak. He looked at her, his eyes as dead and cold as ice. “I think I’ve kept you from your rest too long, Princess,” he said. “Go to bed and dream of love and other absurdities. The dreams will die all too soon, so enjoy them while you can.”
Early the next morning, Ce’Nedra entered the pavilion where Polgara rested, recuperating from the struggle with the Grolims at Thull Mardu. She was alert, but still dreadfully weak.
“He’s every bit as insane as Taur Urgas was,” Ce’Nedra reported. “He’s so obsessed with the idea of becoming overking of Angarak that he isn’t even paying any attention to what we’ve been doing.”
“That may change once Anheg starts sinking his troop ships,” Polgara replied. “There’s nothing we can do at the moment, so just keep listening to him and be polite.”
“Do you think we should try to escape?”
“No.”
Ce’Nedra looked at her, a bit startled.
“What’s happening is supposed to happen. There’s some reason that the four of us – you, Durnik, Errand, and I – are supposed to go to Mallorea. Let’s not tamper with it.”
“You knew this was going to happen?”
Polgara gave her a weary smile. “I knew that’s where we were going. I didn’t know how, exactly. ‘Zakath isn’t interfering in any way, so don’t aggravate him.”
Ce’Nedra sighed in resignation. “Whatever you say, Lady Polgara,” she said.
It was early afternoon of that same day when the first reports of King Anheg’s activities in the Sea of the East reached the Emperor ‘Zakath. Ce’Nedra, who was present when the dispatches were delivered, felt a secret sense of satisfaction as the icy man showed the first hint of irritation she had seen in him.
“Are you certain of this?” he demanded of the trembling messenger, holding up the parchment.
“I only carried the dispatch, dread Lord.” The messenger quailed, cringing back from his Emperor’s anger.
“Were you at Thull Zelik when the ships arnved?”
“There was only one ship, dread Lord.”
“One ship out of fifty?” ‘Zakath’s tone was incredulous. “Weren’t there others – perhaps coming along the coast?”
“The sailors said there weren’t, your Imperial Majesty.”
“What kind of barbarian is this Anheg of Cherek?” ‘Zakath exclaimed to Ce’Nedra. “Each of those ships carried two hundred men.”
“King Anheg is an Alorn, your Majesty,” Ce’Nedra replied coolly. “They’re an unpredictable people.”
With a great deal of effort, ‘Zakath regained his composure. “I see,” he said after a moment’s reflection. “This was your plan from the beginning, wasn’t it, Princess? The entire attack on Thull Mardu was a subterfuge.”
“Not entirely, your Majesty. I was assured that the city had to be neutralized to permit the passage of the fleet.”
“But why is he drowning my soldiers? I bear the Alorns no malice.”
“Torak does – or so I’m told – and it is Torak who will command the combined armies of Angarak. We cannot allow your forces to land on this continent, your Majesty. We cannot give Torak that advantage.”
“Torak is asleep – and he’s likely to remain so for a number of years yet.”
“Our information indicates that it will not be nearly so long. Belgarath himself is convinced that the time is near at hand.”
His eyes narrowed slightly. “I must hand you all over to the Grolims, then,” he said. “I’d hoped to wait until Polgara had regained her strength before subjecting her to the journey; but if what you say is true, there is little time to waste. Advise your friends to make their preparations, Princess. You will depart for Thull Zelik tomorrow morning.”
“As your Majesty wishes,” Ce’Nedra replied, a chill going down her spine as she bowed her head in acquiescence.
“I am a secular man, Princess,” he said by way of explanation. “I bow to the altar of Torak when the occasion demands it, but I make no pretence at excessive piety. I will not involve myself in a religious dispute between Belgarath and Zedar, and I most certainly will not stand between Torak and Aldur when they confront each other. I would strongly advise you to follow the same course.”
“That decision is not mine to make, your Majesty. My part in this was decided for me long before I was born.”
He looked amused. “The Prophecy, you mean? We Angaraks have one also, Princess, and I don’t imagine yours is any more reliable than ours. Prophecy is no more than a trick of the priesthood to maintain its grip on the gullible.”
“Then you believe in nothing, my Lord?”
“I believe in my own power. Nothing else makes any sense.”
The Grolims who escorted them in easy stages northward across the summer-browned plains of Mishrak ac Thull toward Thull Zelik were coldly proper. Ce’Nedra could not be sure if their behavior was the result of warnings from the Emperor of Mallorea or their fear of Polgara. The stifling heat was past now, and the air smelled faintly of the dusty end of summer. The Thullish plain was dotted with villages, random collections of thatch-roofed cottages and dirt streets. The villagers watched, sullen and afraid, as the priests of Torak rode through the little towns, their faces cold and aloof.
The plain to the west of Thull Zelik was covered with the red tents of the vast staging area that had been erected for the Mallorean army. With the exception of caretaker detachments, however, the huge camp was empty. The troops already in Mishrak ac Thull were with ‘Zakath near Thull Mardu, and the steady stream of new arrivals had been quite suddenly cut off.
Thull Zelik itself was like any port town in the world, smelling of salt water, fish, tar, and rotting seaweed. The gray stone buildings were low and squat, almost like the Thulls themselves, and the cobblestoned streets all sloped down to the harbor, which lay in the curve of a broad estuary and faced a somewhat similar harbor on the other side.
“What city is that?” Ce’Nedra curiously asked one of the Grolims as she looked across the dirty water toward the far shore.
“Yar Marak,” the black-robed priest answered curtly.
“Ah,” she said, remembering now her tedious geography lessons. The two cities, one Thullish, the other Nadrak, faced each other across the estuary at the mouth of the River Cordu, and the boundary between Mishrak ac Thull and Gar og Nadrak ran down the precise center of the river.
“When the Emperor returns from Thull Mardu, I imagine he’ll take steps to eradicate that place over there,” one of the other Grolims added. “He was not pleased with the behavior of King Drosta on the battlefield, and some chastisement seems in order.”
They proceeded directly down a cobbled avenue to the harbor, where but a few ships were moored to the wharves.
“My crew absolutely refuses to put to sea,” the Mallorean captain of the ship upon which they were to embark reported to the Grolims. “The Chereks out there are like a pack of wolves, burning and sinking everything afloat.”
“The Cherek fleet is farther south,” the priest in charge of the detachment of Grolims declared.
“The Cherek fleet is everywhere, revered priest,” the captain disagreed. “Two days ago they burned four coastal towns two hundred leagues to the south of here, and yesterday they sank a dozen ships a hundred leagues to the north. You wouldn’t believe how fast they can move. They don’t even take the time to loot the towns they burn.” He shuddered. “They’re not men! They’re a natural disaster.”
“We will set sail within the hour,” the Grolim insisted.
“Not unless your priests know how to man oars and handle the rigging,” the captain told him. “My men are terrified. They won’t sail.”