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The Belgariad III: Magician’s Gambit by David Eddings

Wolf sighed again. “There’s nothing we can do,” he said. “Let’s go back to the tents.”

Chapter Eight

THE WEATHER CONTINUED raw and unsettled as they rode for the next two days up the long, sloping rise toward the snow-covered summits of the mountains. The trees became sparser and more stunted as they climbed and finally disappeared entirely. The ridgeline flattened out against the side of one of the mountains, and they rode up onto a steep slope of tumbled rock and ice where the wind scoured continually.

Mister Wolf paused to get his bearings, looking around in the pale afternoon light. “That way,” he said finally, pointing. A saddleback stretched between two peaks, and the sky beyond roiled in the wind. They rode up the slope, their cloaks pulled tightly about them.

Hettar came forward with a worried frown on his hawk face. “That pregnant mare’s in trouble,” he told Wolf. “I think her time’s getting close.”

Without a word Aunt Pol dropped back to look at the mare, and her face was grave when she returned. “She’s no more than a few hours away, father,” she reported.

Wolf looked around. “There’s no shelter on this side.”

“Maybe there’ll be something on the other side of the pass,” Barak suggested, his beard whipping in the wind.

Wolf shook his head. “I think it’s the same as this side. We’re going to have to hurry. We don’t want to spend the night up here.”

As they rode higher, occasional spits of stinging sleet pelted them, and the wind gusted even stronger, howling among the rocks. As they crested the slope and started through the saddle, the full force of the gale struck them, driving a tattered sleet squall before it.

“It’s even worse on this side, Belgarath,” Barak shouted over the wind. “How far is it down to the trees?”

“Miles,” Wolf replied, trying to keep his flying cloak pulled around him.

“The mare will never make it,” Hettar said. “We’ve got to find shelter.”

“There isn’t any,” Wolf stated. “Not until we get to the trees. It’s all bare rock and ice up here.”

Without knowing why he said it – not even aware of it until he spoke – Garion made a shouted suggestion. “What about the cave?”

Mister Wolf turned and looked sharply at him. “What cave? Where?”

“The one in the side of the mountain. It isn’t far.” Garion knew the cave was there, but he did not know how he knew.

“Are you sure?”

“Of course. It’s this way.” Garion turned his horse and rode up the slope of the saddle toward the vast, craggy peak on their left. The wind tore at them as they rode, and the driving sleet half blinded them. Garion moved confidently, however. For some reason every rock about them seemed absolutely familiar, though he could not have said why. He rode just fast enough to stay in front of the others. He knew they would ask questions, and he didn’t have any answers. They rounded a shoulder of the peak and rode out onto a broad rock ledge. The ledge curved along the mountainside, disappearing in the swirling sleet ahead.

“Where art thou taking us, lad?” Mandorallen shouted to him.

“It’s not much farther,” Garion yelled back over his shoulder.

The ledge narrowed as it curved around the looming granite face of the mountain. Where it bent around a jutting cornice, it was hardly more than a footpath. Garion dismounted and led his horse around the cornice. The wind blasted directly into his face as he stepped around the granite outcrop, and he had to put his hand in front of his face to keep the sleet from blinding him. Walking that way, he did not see the door until it was almost within reach of his hands.

The door in the face of the rock was made of iron, black and pitted with rust and age. It was broader than the gate at Faldor’s farm, and the upper edge of it was lost in the swirling sleet.

Barak, following close behind him, reached out and touched the iron door. Then he banged on it with his huge fist. The door echoed hollowly. “There is a cave,” he said back over his shoulder to the others. “I thought that the wind had blown out the boy’s senses.”

“How do we get inside?” Hettar shouted, the wind snatching away his words.

“The door’s as solid as the mountain itself,” Barak said, hammering with his fist again.

“We’ve got to get out of this wind,” Aunt Pol declared, one of her arms protectively about Ce’Nedra’s shoulders.

“Well, Garion?” Mister Wolf asked.

“It’s easy,” Garion replied. “I just have to find the right spot.” He ran his fingers over the icy iron, not knowing just what he was looking for. He found a spot that felt a little different. “Here it is.” He put his right hand on the spot and pushed lightly. With a vast, grating groan, the door began to move. A line that had not even been visible before suddenly appeared like a razor-cut down the precise center of the pitted iron surface, and flakes of rust showered from the crack, to be whipped away by the wind.

Garion felt a peculiar warmth in the silvery mark on the palm of his right hand where it touched the door. Curious, he stopped pushing, but the door continued to move, swinging open, it seemed, almost in reponse to the presence of the mark on his palm. It continued to move even after he was no longer touching it. He closed his hand, and the door stopped moving.

He opened his hand, and the door, grating against stone, swung open even wider.

“Don’t play with it, dear,” Aunt Pol told him. “Just open it.”

It was dark in the cave beyond the huge door, but it seemed not to have the musty smell it should have had. They entered cautiously, feeling at the floor carefully with their feet.

“Just a moment,” Durnik murmured in a strangely hushed voice. They heard him unbuckling one of his saddlebags and then heard the rasp of his flint against steel. There were a few sparks, then a faint glow as the smith blew on his tinder. The tinder flamed, and he set it to the torch he had pulled from his saddlebag. The torch sputtered briefly, then caught. Durnik raised it, and they all looked around at the cave.

It was immediately evident that the cave was not natural. The walls and floor were absolutely smooth, almost polished, and the light of Durnik’s torch reflected back from the gleaming surfaces. The chamber was perfectly round and about a hundred feet in diameter. The walls curved inward at they rose, and the ceiling high overhead seemed also to be round. In the precise center of the floor stood a round stone table, twenty feet across, with its top higher than Barak’s head. A stone bench encircled the table. In the wall directly opposite the door was a circular arch of a fireplace. The cave was cool, but it did not seem to have the bitter chill it should have had.

“Is it all right to bring in the horses?” Hettar asked quietly.

Mister Wolf nodded. His expression seemed bemused in the flickering torchlight, and his eyes were lost in thought.

The horses’ hooves clattered sharply on the smooth stone floor as they were led inside, and they looked around, their eyes wide and their ears twitching nervously.

“There’s a fire laid in here,” Durnik said from the arched fireplace. “Shall I light it?”

Wolf looked up. “What? Oh-yes. Go ahead.”

Durnik reached into the fireplace with his torch, and the wood caught immediately. The fire swelled up very quickly, and the flames seemed inordinately bright.

Ce’Nedra gasped. “The walls! Look at the walls!” The light from the fire was somehow being refracted through the crystalline structure of the rock itself, and the entire dome began to glow with a myriad of shifting colors, filling the chamber with a soft, multihued radiance.

Hettar had moved around the circle of the wall and was peering into another arched opening. “A spring,” he told them. “This is a good place to ride out a storm.”

Durnik put out his torch and pulled off his cloak. The chamber had become warm almost as soon as he had lighted the fire. He looked at Mister Wolf. “You know about this place, don’t you?” he asked.

“None of us has ever been able to find it before,” the old man replied, his eyes still thoughtful. “We weren’t even sure it still existed.”

“What is this strange cave, Belgarath?” Mandorallen asked.

Mister Wolf took a deep breath. “When the Gods were making the world, it was necessary for them to meet from time to time to discuss what each of them had done and was going to do so that everything would fit together and work in harmony – the mountains, the winds, the seasons and so on.” He looked around. “This is the place where they met.”

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