The Belgariad II: Queen of Sorcery by David Eddings

Barak, with a deft backswing of his war axe, caved in the side of the burly knight’s helmet, and the knight half spun and fell to the floor. Hettar feinted a quick move, then drove his sabre point through a slot in the green-armored knight’s visor. The stricken knight stiffened as the sabre ran into his brain.

As the melee surged across the polished floor, the nobles and ladies scurried this way and that to avoid being overrun by the struggling men. Nachak watched with dismay as his knights were systematically destroyed before his eyes. Then, quite suddenly he turned and fled.

“He’s getting away!” Garion shouted, but Hettar was already in pursuit, his dreadful face and blood-smeared sabre melting the courtiers and their screaming ladies out of his path as he ran to cut off Nachak’s flight. The Murgo had almost reached the far end of the hall before Hettar’s long strides carried him through the crowd to block the doorway. With a cry of despair, the ambassador yanked his sword from its scabbard, and Garion felt a strange, momentary pity for him.

As the Murgo raised his sword, Hettar flicked his sabre almost like a whip, lashing him once on each shoulder. Nachak desperately tried to raise his numbed arms to protect his head, but Hettar’s blade dropped low instead. Then, with a peculiar fluid grace, the grim-faced Algar quite deliberately ran the Murgo through. Garion saw the sabre blade come out between Nachak’s shoulders, angling sharply upward. The ambassador gasped, dropped his sword and gripped Hettar’s wrist with both hands, but the hawk-faced man inexorably turned his hand, twisting the sharp, curved blade inside the Murgo’s body. Nachak groaned and shuddered horribly. Then his hands slipped off Hettar’s wrist and his legs buckled under him. With a gurgling sigh, he toppled backward, sliding limply off Hettar’s blade.

Chapter Eleven

A MOMENT OF DREADFUL SILENCE filled the throne room following the death of Nachak. Then the two members of his bodyguard who were still on their feet threw their weapons down on the bloodspattered floor with a sudden clatter. Mandorallen raised his visor and turned toward the throne. “Sire,” he said respectfully, “the treachery of Nachak stands proved by reason of this trial at arms:”

“Truly,” the king agreed. “My only regret is that thy enthusiasm in pursuing this cause hath deprived us of the opportunity to probe more deeply into the full extent of Nachak’s duplicity.”

“I expect that the plots he hatched will dry up once word of what happened here gets around,” Mister Wolf observed.

“Perhaps so,” the king acknowledged. “I would have pursued the matter further, however. I would know if this villainy was Nachak’s own or if I must look beyond him to Taur Urgas himself.” He frowned thoughtfully, then shook his head as if to put certain dark speculations aside. “Arendia stands in thy debt, Ancient Belgarath. This brave company of throe hath forestalled the renewal of a war best forgotten.” He looked sadly at the blood-smeared floor and the bodies littering it. “My throne room hath become as a battlefield. The curse of Arendia extends even here.” He sighed. “Have it cleansed,” he ordered shortly and turned his head so that he would not have to watch the grim business of cleaning up.

The nobles and ladies began to buzz as the dead were removed and the polished stone floor was quickly mopped to remove the pools of sticky blood.

“Good fight,” Barak commented as he carefully wiped his axe blade.

“I am in thy debt, Lord Barak,” Mandorallen said gravely. “Thy aid was fortuitous.”

Barak shrugged. “It seemed appropriate.”

Hettar rejoined them, his expression one of grim satisfaction.

“You did a nice job on Nachak,” Barak complimented him.

“I’ve had a lot of practice,” Hettar answered. “Murgos always seem to make that same mistake when they get into a fight. I think there’s a gap in their training somewhere.”

“That’s a shame, isn’t it?” Barak suggested with vast insincerity.

Garion moved away from them. Although he knew it was irrational, he nevertheless felt a keen sense of personal responsibility for the carnage he had just witnessed. The blood and violent death had come about as the result of his words. Had he not spoken, men who were now dead would still be alive. No matter how justified -how necessary – his speaking out had been, he still suffered the pangs of guilt. He did not at the moment trust himself to speak with his friends. More than anything he wished that he could talk with Aunt Pol, but she had not yet returned to the throne room, and so he was left to wrestle alone with his wounded conscience.

He reached one of the embrasures formed by the buttresses along the south wall of the throne room and stood alone in somber reflection until a girl, perhaps two years older than he, glided across the floor toward him, her stiff, crimson brocade gown rustling. The girl’s hair was dark, even black, and her skin was creamy. Her bodice was cut quite low, and Garion found some difficulty in finding a safe place for his eyes as she bore down on him.

“I would add my thanks to the thanks of all Arendia, Lord Garion,” she breathed at him. Her voice was vibrant with all kinds of emotions, none of which Garion understood. “Thy timely revelation of the Murgo’s plotting hath in truth saved the life of our sovereign.”

Garion felt a certain warmth at that. “I didn’t do all that much, my lady,” he replied with a somewhat insincere attempt at modesty. “My friends did all the fighting.”

“But it was thy brave denunciation which uncovered the foul plot,” she persisted, “and virgins will sing of the nobility with which thou protected the identity of thy nameless and misguided friend.”

Virgin was not a word with which Garion was prepared to deal. He blushed and floundered helplessly.

“Art thou in truth, noble Garion, the grandson of Eternal Belgarath?”

“The relationship is a bit more distant. We simplify it for the sake of convenience.”

“But thou art in his direct line?” she persisted, her violet eyes glowing.

“He tells me I am.”

“Is the Lady Polgara perchance thy mother?”

“My aunt.”

“A close kinship nonetheless,” she approved warmly, her hand coming to rest lightly on his wrist. “Thy blood, Lord Garion, is the noblest in the world. Tell me, art thou perchance as yet unbetrothed?”

Garion blinked at her, his ears growing suddenly redder.

“Ah, Garion,” Mandorallen boomed in his hearty voice, striding into the awkward moment, “I had been seeking thee. Wilt thou excuse us, Countess?”

The young lady shot Mandorallen a look filled with sheer venom, but the knight’s firm hand was already drawing Garion away.

“We will speak again, Lord Garion,” she called after him.

“I hope so, my Lady,” Garion replied back over his shoulder. Then he and Mandorallen merged with the crowd of courtiers near the center of the throne room.

“I wanted to thank you, Mandorallen,” Garion said finally, struggling with it a little.

“For what, lad?”

“You knew whom I was protecting when I told the King about Nachak, didn’t you?”

“Naturally,” the knight replied in a rather offhand way.

“You could have told the king,- actually it was your duty to tell him, wasn’t it?”

“But thou hadst given thy pledge.”

“You hadn’t, though.”

“Thou art my companion, lad. Thy pledge is as binding upon me as it is upon thee. Didst thou not know that?”

Garion was startled by Mandorallen’s words. The exquisite involvement of Arendish ethics were beyond his grasp. “So you fought for me instead.”

Mandorallen laughed easily. “Of course,” he answered, “though I must confess to thee in all honesty, Garion, that my eagerness to stand as thy champion grew not entirely out of friendship. In truth I found the Murgo Nachak offensive and liked not the cold arrogance of his hirelings. I was inclined toward battle before thy need of championing presented itself. Perhaps it is I who should thank thee for providing the opportunity.”

“I don’t understand you at all, Mandorallen,” Garion admitted. “Sometimes I think you’re the most complicated man I’ve ever met.”

“I?” Mandorallen seemed amazed. “I am the simplest of men.” He looked around then and leaned slightly toward Garion. “I must advise thee to have a care in thy speech with the Countess Vasrana,” he warned. “It was that which impelled me to draw thee aside.”

“Who?”

“The comely young lady with whom thou wert speaking. She considers herself the greatest beauty in the kingdom and is seeking a husband worthy of her.”

“Husband?” Garion responded in a faltering voice.

“Thou art fair game, lad. Thy blood is noble beyond measure by reason of thy kinship to Belgarath. Thou wouldst be a great prize for the countess.”

“Husband?” Garion quavered at.in, his knees beginning to tremble. “Me?”

“I know not how things stand in misty Sendaria,” Mandorallen declared, “but in Arendia thou art of marriageable age. Guard well thy speech, lad. The most innocent remark can be viewed as a promise, should a noble choose to take it so.”

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