The Belgariad II: Queen of Sorcery by David Eddings

The wall offered some protection, but the damp chill still crept through his clothes, and his feet were already cold. He shivered and settled down to wait. There was no point in trying to see any distance in the fog, so he concentrated on listening. His ears began to sort out the sounds in the forest beyond the wall, the drip of water from the trees, the occasional sodden thump of snow sliding from the limbs, and the tapping of a woodpecker working on a dead snag several hundred yards away.

“That’s my cow,” a voice said suddenly from somewhere off in the fog.

Garion froze and stood silently, listening.

“Keep her in your own pasture, then,” another voice replied shortly. “Is that you, Lammer?” the first voice asked.

“Right. You’re Detton, aren’t you?”

“I didn’t recognize you. How longs it been?”

“Four or five years, I suppose,” Lammer judged.

“How are things going in your village?” Detton asked.

“We’re hungry. The taxes took all our food.”

“Ours too. We’ve been eating boiled tree roots.”

“We haven’t tried that yet. We’re eating our shoes.”

“How’s your wife?” Detton asked politely.

“She died last year,” Lammer answered in a flat, unemotional voice. “My lord took our son for a soldier, and he was killed in a battle somewhere. They poured boiling pitch on him. After that my wife stopped eating. It didn’t take her long to die.”

“I’m sorry,” Detton sympathized. “She was very beautiful.”

“They’re both better off,” Lammer declared. “They aren’t cold or hungry anymore. Which kind of tree roots have you been eating?”

“Birch is the best,” Detton told him. “Spruce has too much pitch, and oak’s too tough. You boil some grass with the roots to give them a bit of flavor.”

“I’ll have to try it.”

“I’ve got to get back,” Detton said. “My lord’s got me clearing trees, and he’ll have me flogged if I stay away too long.”

“Maybe I’ll see you again sometime.”

“If we both live.”

“Good-bye, Detton.”

“Good-bye, Lammer.”

The two voices drifted away. Garion stood quite still for a long time after they were gone, his mind numb with shock and with tears of sympathy standing in his eyes. The worst part of it was the matter-of fact way in which the two had accepted it all. A terrible anger began to burn in his throat. He wanted suddenly to hit somebody.

Then there was another sound off in the fog. Somewhere in the forest nearby someone was singing. The voice was a light, clear tenor, and Garion could hear it quite plainly as it drew closer. The song was filled with ancient wrongs, and the refrain was a call to battle. Irrationally, Garion’s anger focused on the unknown singer. His vapid bawling about abstract injustices seemed somehow obscene in the face of the quiet despair of Lammer and Detton. Without thinking, Garion drew his sword and crouched slightly behind the shattered wall.

The song came yet nearer, and Garion could hear the step of a horse’s hooves in the wet snow. Carefully he poked his head out from behind the wall as the singer appeared out of the fog no more than twenty paces away. He was a young man dressed in yellow hose and a bright red jerkin. His fur-lined cloak was tossed back, and he had a long, curved bow slung over one shoulder and a well-sheathed sword at his opposite hip. His reddish-gold hair fell smoothly down his back from beneath a pointed cap with a feather rising from it. Although his song was grim and he sang it in a voice throbbing with passion, there was about his youthful face a kind of friendly openness that no amount of scowling could erase. Garion glared at this empty-headed young nobleman, quite certain that the singing fool had never made a meal of tree roots or mourned the passing of a wife who had starved herself to death out of grief. The stranger turned his horse and, still singing, rode directly toward the broken arch of the gateway beside which Garion lurked in ambush.

Garion was not normally a belligerent boy, and under other circumstances he might have approached the situation differently. The gaudy young stranger, however, had presented himself at precisely the wrong time. Garion’s quickly devised plan had the advantage of simplicity. Since there was nothing to complicate it, it worked admirably – up to a point. No sooner had the lyric young man passed through the gate than Garion stepped from his hiding place, grasped the back of the rider’s cloak and yanked him bodily out of the saddle. With a startled outcry and a wet splat, the stranger landed unceremoniously on his back in the slush at Garion’s feet. The second part of Garion’s plan, however, fell completely apart. Even as he moved in to take the fallen rider prisoner at sword point, the young man rolled, came to his feet, and drew his own sword, seemingly all in one motion. His eyes were snapping with anger, and his sword weaved threateningly.

Garion was not a fencer, but his reflexes were good and the chores he had performed at Faldor’s farm had hardened his muscles. Despite the anger which had moved him to attack in the first place, he had no real desire to hurt this young man. His opponent seemed to be holding his sword lightly, almost negligently, and Garion thought that a smart blow on the blade might very well knock it out of his hand. He swung quickly, but the blade flicked out of the path of his heavy swipe and clashed with a steely ring down on his own sword. Garion jumped back and made another clumsy swing. The swords rang again. Then the air was filled with clash and scrape and bell-like rattle as the two of them banged and parried and feinted with their blades. It took Garion only a moment to realize that his opponent was much better at this than he was but that the young man had ignored several opportunities to strike at him. In spite of himself he began to grin in the excitement of their noisy contest. The stranger’s answering grin was open, even friendly.

“All right, that’s enough of that!” It was Mister Wolf. The old man was striding toward them with Barak and Silk close on his heels. “Just exactly what do you two think you’re doing?”

Garion’s opponent, after one startled glance, lowered his sword. “Belgarath-” he began.

“Lelldorin,” Wolf’s tone was scathing, “have you lost what little sense you had to begin with?”

Several things clicked into place in Garion’s mind simultaneously as Wolf turned on him coldly. “Well, Garion, would you like to explain this?”

Garion instantly decided to try guile. “Grandfather,” he said, stressing the word and giving the younger stranger a quick warning look, “you didn’t think we were really fighting, did you? Lelldorin here was just showing me how you block somebody’s sword when he attacks, that’s all.”

“Really?” Wolf replied skeptically.

“Of course,” Garion said, all innocence now. “What possible reason could there be for us to be trying to hurt each other?”

Lelldorin opened his mouth to speak, but Garion deliberately stepped on his foot.

“Lelldorin’s really very good,” he rushed on, putting his hand in a friendly fashion on the young man’s shoulder. “He taught me a lot in just a few minutes.”

-Let it stand-Silk’s fingers flickered at him in the minute gestures of the Drasnian secret language. Always keep a lie simple.

“The lad is an apt pupil, Belgarath,” Lelldorin said lamely, finally understanding.

“He’s agile, if nothing else,” Mister Wolf replied dryly. “What’s the idea behind all the frippery?” He indicated Lelldorin’s gaudy clothes. “You look like a maypole.”

“The Mimbrates had started detaining honest Asturians for questioning,” the young Arend explained, “and I had to pass several of their strongholds. I thought that if I dressed like one of their toadies I wouldn’t be bothered.”

“Maybe you’ve got better sense than I thought,” Wolf conceded grudgingly. He turned to Silk and Barak. “This is Lelldorin, son of the Baron of Wildantor. He’ll be joining us.”

“I wanted to talk to you about that, Belgarath,” Lelldorin put in quickly. “My father commanded me to come here and I can’t disobey him, but I’m pledged in a matter of extremest urgency.”

“Every young nobleman in Asturias pledged in at least two or three such matters of urgency,” Wolf replied. “I’m sorry, Lelldorin, but the matter we’re involved in is much too important to be postponed while you go out to ambush a couple of Mimbrate tax collectors.”

Aunt Pol approached them out of the fog then, with Durnik striding protectively at her side. “What are they doing with the swords, father?” she demanded, her eyes flashing.

“Playing,” Mister Wolf replied shortly. “Or so they say. This is Lelldorin. I think I’ve mentioned him to you.”

Aunt Pol looked Lelldorin up and down with one raised eyebrow. “A very colorful young man.”

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