The faces of Garion’s companions were awed and puzzled by Aldur’s enigmatic blessing. Each, however, bowed with profound respect and humility.
And then Ce’Nedra emerged from the tent she shared with Aunt Pol. The tiny girl stretched luxuriantly and ran her fingers through the tumbled mass of her flaming hair. She was dressed in a Dryad tunic and sandals.
“Ce’Nedra,” Aunt Pol called her, “come here.”
“Yes, Lady Polgara,” the little princess replied obediently. She crossed to the fire, her feet seeming barely to touch the ground. Then she saw Aldur standing with the others and stopped, her eyes wide.
“This is our Master, Ce’Nedra,” Aunt Pol told her. “He wanted to meet you.”
The princess stared at the glowing presence in confusion. Nothing in her life had prepared her for such a meeting. She lowered her eyelashes and then looked up shyly, her tiny face artfully and automatically assuming its most appealing expression.
Aldur smiled gently. “She’s like a flower that charms without knowing it.” His eyes looked deeply into those of the princess. “There is steel in this one, however. She is fit for her task. My blessings upon thee, my child.”
Ce’Nedra responded with an instinctively graceful curtsey. It was the first time Garion had ever seen her bow to anyone.
Aldur turned then to look full at Garion. A brief, unspoken acknowledgment passed between the God and the consciousness that shared Garion’s thoughts. There was in that momentary meeting a sense of mutual respect and of shared responsibility. And then Garion felt the massive touch of Aldur’s mind upon his own and knew that the God had instantly seen and understood his every thought and feeling.
“Hail, Belgarion,” Aldur said gravely.
“Master,” Garion replied. He dropped to one knee, not really knowing why.
“We have awaited thy coming since time’s beginning. Thou art the vessel of all our hopes.” Aldur raised his hand. “My blessing, Belgarion. I am well pleased with thee.”
Garion’s entire being was suffused with love and gratitude as the warmth of Aldur’s benediction filled him.
“Dear Polgara,” Aldur said to Aunt Pol, “thy gift to us is beyond value. Belgarion has come at last, and the world trembles at his coming.”
Aunt Pol bowed again.
“Let us now go apart,” Aldur said to Belgarath and Aunt Pol. “Your task is well begun, and I must now provide you with that instruction I promised when first I set your steps upon this path. That which was once clouded becomes clearer, and we now can see what lies before us. Let us look toward that day we have all awaited and make our preparations.”
The three of them moved away from the fire, and it seemed to Garion that, as they went, the glowing nimbus which had surrounded Aldur now enclosed Aunt Pol and his grandfather as well. Some movement or sound distracted his eye for a moment, and when he looked back, the three had vanished.
Barak let out his breath explosively. “Belar! That was something to seel”
“We have been favored, I think, beyond all men,” Mandorallen said. They all stood staring at each other, caught up in the wonder of what they had just witnessed.
Ce’Nedra, however, broke the mood. “All right,” she ordered peremptorily, “don’t just stand there gaping. Move away from the fire.”
“What are you going to do?” Garion asked her.
“The Lady Polgara’s going to be busy,” the little girl said loftily, “so I’m going to make breakfast.” She moved toward the fire with a businesslike bustling.
The bacon was not too badly burned, but Ce’Nedra’s attempt to toast slices of bread before the open fire turned out disastrously, and her porridge had lumps in it as solid as clods in a sun-baked field. Garion and the others, however, ate what she offered without comment, prudently avoiding the direct gaze she leveled at them, as if daring them to speak so much as one word of criticism.
“I wonder how long they’re going to be,” Silk said after breakfast. “Gods, I think, have little notion of time,” Barak replied sagely, stroking at his beard. “I don’t expect them back until sometime this afternoon at the earliest.”
“It is a good time to check over the horses,” Hettar decided. “Some of them have picked up a few burrs along the way, and I’d like to have a look at their hooves – just to be on the safe side.”
“I’ll help you,” Durnik offered, getting up.
Hettar nodded, and the two went off to the place where the horses were picketed.
“And I’ve got a nick or two in my sword edge,” Barak remembered, fishing a piece of polishing stone out of his belt and laying his heavy blade across his lap.
Mandorallen went to his tent and brought out his armor. He laid it out on the ground and began a minute inspection for dents and spots of rust.
Silk rattled a pair of dice hopefully in one hand, looking inquiringly at Barak.
“If it’s all the same to you, I think I’d like to enjoy the company of my money for a while longer,” the big man told him.
“This whole place absolutely reeks of domesticity,” Silk complained. Then he sighed, put away his dice, and went to fetch a needle and thread and a tunic he’d torn on a bush up in the mountains.
Ce’Nedra had returned to her communion with the vast tree and was scampering among the branches, taking what Garion felt to be inordinate risks as she jumped from limb to limb with a catlike unconcern. After watching her for a few moments, he fell into a kind of reverie, thinking back to the awesome meeting that morning. He had met the Gods Issa and Mara already, but there was something special about Aldur. The affinity Belgarath and Aunt Pol showed so obviously for this God who had always remained aloof from men spoke loudly to Garion. The devotional activities of Sendaria, where he had been raised, were inclusive rather than exclusive. A good Sendar prayed impartially, and honored all the Gods – even Torak. Garion now, however, felt a special closeness and reverence for Aldur, and the adjustment in his theological thinking required a certain amount of thought.
A twig dropped out of the tree onto his head, and he glanced up with annoyance.
Ce’Nedra, grinning impishly, was directly over his head. “Boy,” she said in her most superior and insulting tone, “the breakfast dishes are getting cold. The grease is going to be difficult to wash off if you let it harden.”
“I’m not your scullion,” he told her.
“Wash the dishes, Garion,” she ordered him, nibbling at the tip of a lock of hair.
“Wash them yourself.”
She glared down at him, biting rather savagely at the unoffending lock.
“Why do you keep chewing on your hair like that?” he asked irritably.
“What are you talking about?” she demanded, removing the lock from between her teeth.
“Every time I look at you, you’ve got your hair stuck in your mouth.”
“I do not, ” she retorted indignantly.
“Are you going to wash the dishes?”
“No.”
He squinted up at her. The short Dryad tunic she was wearing seemed to expose an unseemly amount of leg. “Why don’t you go put on some clothes?” he suggested. “Some of us don’t appreciate the way you run around half naked all the time.”
The fight got under way almost immediately after that.
Finally Garion gave up his efforts to get in the last word and stamped away in disgust.
“Garion!” she screamed after him. “Don’t you dare go off and leave me with all these dirty dishes!”
He ignored her and kept walking.
After a short distance, he felt a familiar nuzzling at his elbow and he rather absently scratched the colt’s ears. The small animal quivered with delight and rubbed against him affectionately. Then, unable to restrain himself any more, the colt galloped off into the meadow to pester a family of docilely feeding rabbits. Garion found himself smiling. The morning was just too beautiful to allow the squabble with the princess to spoil it.
There was, it seemed, something rather special about the Vale. The world around grew cold with the approach of winter and was buffeted by storms and dangers, but here it seemed as if the hand of Aldur stretched protectively above them, filling this special place with warmth and peace and a kind of eternal and magical serenity. Garion, at this trying point in his life, needed all the warmth and peace he could get. There were things that had to be worked out, and he needed a time, however brief, without storms and dangers to deal with them.
He was halfway to Belgarath’s tower before he realized that it had been there that he had been going all along. The tall grass was wet with dew, and his boots were soon soaked, but even that did not spoil the day.