“An evil city,” Hettar said quietly. “I can’t see why any Alorn in his right mind would come here willingly.”
“Money,” Captain Greldik replied shortly. “The Nyissan trade is very profitable.”
“There are more important things than money,” Hettar muttered.
An enormously fat man came into the dim room. “More light,” he snapped at his servant. “You didn’t have to leave them here in the dark.”
“You said that the lamps just made it hotter,” the servant protested in a surly tone. “I wish you’d make up your mind.”
“Never mind what I said; just do as I say.”
“The climate’s making you incoherent, Droblek,” the servant noted acidly. He lit several lamps and left the room muttering to himself.
“Drasnians make the world’s worst servants,” Droblek grumbled.
“Shall we get down to business?” He lowered his vast bulk into a chair. The sweat rolled continually down his face and into the damp collar of his brown silk robe.
“My name’s Greldik,” the bearded seaman said. “I’ve just arrived at your wharves with a shipload of goods belonging to the merchant, Radek of Boktor.” He presented the folded packets of parchment.
Droblek’s eyes narrowed. “I didn’t know that Radek was interested in the southern trade. I thought he dealt mostly in Sendaria and Arendia.”
Greldik shrugged indifferently. “I didn’t ask him. He pays me to carry his goods in my ship, not to ask questions about his business.”
Droblek looked at them all, his sweating face expressionless. Then his fingers moved slightly.-Is everything here what it seems to be? The Drasnian secret language made his fat fingers suddenly nimble.
Can we speak openly here? Aunt Pol’s fingers asked him. Her gestures were stately, somehow archaic. There was a kind of formality to her movements that Garion had not seen in the signs made by others.
As openly as anyplace in this pest-hole – Droblek replied,-You have a strange accent, lady. There’s something about it that it seems I should remember- ‘
I learned the language a very long time ago-she replied.-You know who Radek of Boktor really is, of course-
“Naturally,” Droblek said aloud. “Everyone knows that. Sometimes he calls himself Ambar of Kotu – when he wants to have dealings that are not, strictly speaking, legitimate.”
“Shall we stop fencing with each other, Droblek?” Aunt Pol asked quietly. “I’m quite certain you’ve received instructions from King Rhodar by now. All this dancing about is tiresome.”
Droblek’s face darkened. “I’m sorry,” he said stiffly. “I’ll need a bit more in the way of verification.”
“Don’t be an idiot, Droblek,” Barak rumbled at the fat man. “Use your eyes. You’re an Alorn; you know who the lady is.”
Droblek looked suddenly at Aunt Pol, his eyes going very wide. “It’s not possible,” he gasped.
“Would you like to have her prove it to you?” Hettar suggested. The house shook with a sudden crash of thunder.
“No, no,” Droblek refused hastily, still staring at Aunt Pol. “It just never occurred to me – I mean, I just never-” He floundered with it.
“Have you heard from Prince Kheldar or my father?” Aunt Pol asked crisply.
“Your father? You mean-? Is he involved in this too?”
“Really, Droblek,” she said tartly, “don’t you believe the communications King Rhodar sends you?”
Droblek shook his head like a man trying to clear his mind. “I’m sorry, Lady Polgara,” he said. “You surprised me, that’s all. It takes a moment to get used to. We didn’t think you’d be coming this far south.”
“It’s obvious then that you haven’t received any word from Kheldar or the old man.”
“No, my Lady,” Droblek said. “Nothing. Are they supposed to be here?”
“So they said. They were either going to meet us here or send word.”
“It’s very hard to get messages any place in Nyissa,” Droblek explained. “The people here aren’t very reliable. The prince and your father could be upcountry, and their messenger could very well have gone astray. I sent a messenger to a place not ten leagues from the city once, and it took six months to arrive. The Nyissan who was carrying it found a certain berry patch along the way. We found him sitting in the middle of the patch, smiling.” Droblek made a sour face. “There was moss growing on him,” he added.
“Dead?” Durnik asked.
Droblek shrugged. “No, just very happy. He enjoyed the berries very much. I dismissed him at once, but he didn’t seem to mind. For all I know, he’s still sitting there.”
“How extensive is your network here in Sthiss Tor?” Aunt Pol asked.
Droblek spread his pudgy hands modestly. “I manage to pick up a bit of information here and there. I’ve got a few people in the palace and a minor official at the Tolnedran embassy. The Tolnedrans are very thorough.” He grinned impishly. “It’s cheaper to let them do all the work and then buy the information after they’ve gathered it.”
“If you can believe what they tell you,” Hettar suggested.
“I never take what they say at face value,” Droblek said. “The Tolnedran ambassador knows that I’ve bought his man. He tries to trip me up with false leads now and then.”
“Does the ambassador know that you know?” Hettar asked.
“Of course he does.” The fat man laughed. “But he doesn’t think that I’m aware of the fact that he knows that I know.” He laughed again. “It’s all terribly complicated, isn’t it?”
“Most Drasnian games usually are,” Barak observed.
“Does the name Zedar mean anything to you?” Aunt Pol asked.
“I’ve heard it, naturally,” Droblek said.
“Has he been in touch with Salmissra?”
Droblek frowned. “I couldn’t say for sure. I haven’t heard that he has, but that doesn’t mean that he hasn’t. Nyissa’s a murky sort of place, and Salmissra’s palace is the murkiest spot in the whole country. You wouldn’t believe some of the things that go on there.”
“I’d believe them,” Aunt Pol said, “and probably things you haven’t even begun to guess.” She turned back to the others. “I think we’re at a standstill. We can’t make any kind of move until we hear from Silk and the Old Wolf.”
“Could I offer you my house?” Droblek asked.
“I think we’ll stay on board Captain Greldik’s ship,” she told him. “As you say, Nyissa’s a murky place, and I’m sure that the Tolnedran ambassadors bought a few people in your establishment.”
“Naturally,” Droblek agreed. “But I know who they are.”
“We’d better not chance it,” she told him. “There are several reasons for our avoiding Tolnedrans just now. We’ll stay aboard the ship and keep out of sight. Let us know as soon as Prince Kheldar gets in touch with you.”
“Of course,” Droblek said. “You’ll have to wait until the rain lets up, though. Listen to it.” There was the thundering sound of a downpour on the roof overhead.
“Will it last long?” Durnik asked.
Droblek shrugged. “An hour or so usually. It rains every afternoon during this season.”
“I imagine it helps to cool the air,” the smith said.
“Not significantly,” the Drasnian told him. “Usually it just makes things worse.” He mopped the sweat from his fat face.
“How can you live here?” Durnik asked.
Droblek smiled blandly. “Fat men don’t move around all that much. I’m making a great deal of money, and the game I’m playing with the Tolnedran ambassador keeps my mind occupied. It’s not all that bad, once you get used to it. It helps if I keep telling myself that.”
They sat quietly then, listening to the pounding rain.
Chapter Twenty-five
FOR THE NEXT SEVERAL DAYS they all remained aboard Greldik’s ship, waiting for word from Silk and Mister Wolf. Ce’Nedra recovered from her indisposition and appeared on deck wearing a palecolored Dryad tunic which seemed to Garion to be only slightly less revealing than the gowns worn by Nyissan women. When he rather stiffly suggested that she ought to put on a few more clothes, however, she merely laughed at him. With a single-mindedness that made him want to grind his teeth, she returned to the task of teaching him to read and write. They sat together in an out-of the-way spot on deck, poring over a tedious book on Tolnedran diplomacy. The whole business seemed to Garion to be taking forever, though in fact his mind was very quick, and he was learning surprisingly fast. Ce’Nedra was too thoughtless to compliment him, though she seemed to await his next mistake almost breathlessly, delighting it seemed in each opportunity to ridicule him. Her proximity and her light, spicy perfume distracted him as they sat close beside each other, and he perspired as much from their occasional touch of hand or arm or hip as he did from the climate. Because they were both young, she was intolerant and he was stubborn. The sticky, humid heat made them both short-tempered and irritable, so the lessons erupted into bickering more often than not.