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The Belgariad III: Magician’s Gambit by David Eddings

Brill dove forward suddenly, both hands extended, but Silk sidestepped the lunge and smashed his hand sharply down in the middle of Brill’s back. Brill grunted again, but rolled clear farther out on the stones atop the wall. “You might be just as good as they say,” he admitted grudgingly.

“Try me, Kordoch,” Silk invited, with a nasty grin. He moved out from the wall of the tower, his hands in constant motion. Garion watched the two circling each other with his heart in his mouth.

Grill jumped again, with both feet lashing out, but Silk dove under him. They both rolled to their feet again. Silk’s left hand flashed out, even as he came to his feet, catching Brill high on the head. Brill reeled from the blow, but managed to kick Silk’s knee as he spun away. “Your technique’s defensive, Kheldar,” he grated, shaking his head to clear the effects of Silk’s blow. “That’s a weakness.”

“Just a difference of style, Kordoch,” Silk replied.

Grill drove a gouging thumb at Silk’s eye, but Silk blocked it and slammed a quick counterblow to the pit of his enemy’s stomach. Brill scissored his legs as he fell, sweeping Silk’s legs out from under him. Both men tumbled across the frosty stones and sprang to their feet again, their hands flickering blows faster than Garion’s eyes could follow them.

The mistake was a simple one, so slight that Garion could not even be sure it was a mistake. Brill flicked a jab at Silk’s face that was an ounce or two harder than it should have been and traveled no more than a fraction of an inch too far. Silk’s hands flashed up and caught his opponent’s wrist with a deadly grip and he rolled backward toward the parapet, his legs coiling, even as the two of them fell. Jerked off balance, Brill seemed almost to dive forward. Silk’s legs straightened suddenly, launching the cast-eyed man up and forward with a tremendous heave. With a strangled exclamation Brill clutched desperately at one of the stone blocks of the parapet as he sailed over, but he was too high and his momentum was too great. He hurtled over the parapet, plunging out and down into the darkness below the wall. His scream faded horribly as he fell, lost in the sound of yet another shriek from the Temple of Torak.

Silk rose to his feet, glanced once over the edge, and then came back to where Garion stood trembling in the shadows by the tower wall.

“Silk!” Garion exclaimed, catching the little man’s arm in relief.

“What was that?” Belgarath asked, coming back around the corner.

“Brill,” Silk replied blandly, pulling his Murgo robe back on.

“Again?” Belgarath demanded with exasperation. “What was he doing this time?”

“Trying to fly, last time I saw him.” Silk smirked.

The old man looked puzzled.

“He wasn’t doing it very well,” Silk added.

Belgarath shrugged. “Maybe it’ll come to him in time.”

“He doesn’t really have all that much time.” Silk glanced out over the edge.

From far below – terribly far below – there came a faint, muffled crash; then, after several seconds, another. “Does bouncing count?” Silk asked.

Belgarath made a wry face. “Not really.”

“Then I’d say he didn’t learn in time.” Silk said blithely. He looked around with a broad smile. “What a beautiful night this is,” he remarked to no one in particular.

“Let’s move along,” Belgarath suggested, throwing a quick, nervous glance at the eastern horizon. “It will start to lighten up over there any time now.”

They joined the others in the deep shadows beside the high wall of the Temple some hundred yards farther down the wall and waited tensely for Relg and Durnik to catch up.

“What kept you?” Barak whispered as they waited.

“I met an old friend of ours,” Silk replied quietly. His grin was a flash of white teeth in the shadows.

“It was Brill,” Garion told the rest of them in a hoarse whisper. “He and Silk fought with each other, and Silk threw him over the edge.”

Mandorallen glanced toward the frosty parapet. “‘Tis a goodly way down,” he observed.

“Isn’t it, though?” Silk agreed.

Barak chuckled and put his big hand wordlessly on Silk’s shoulder. Then Durnik and Relg came along the top of the wall to join them in the shadows.

“We have to go through the Temple,” Belgarath told them in a quiet voice. “Pull your hoods as far over your faces as you can and keep your heads down. Stay in single file and mutter to yourselves as if you were praying. If anybody speaks to us, let me do the talking; and each time the gong sounds, turn toward the altar and bow.” He led them then to a thick door bound with weathered iron straps. He looked back once to be sure they were all in line, then put his hand to the latch and pushed the door open.

The inside of the Temple glowed with smoky red light, and a dreadful, charnel-house reek filled it. The door through which they entered led onto a covered balcony that curved around the back of the dome of the Temple. A stone balustrade ran along the edge of the balcony, with thick pillars at evenly spaced intervals. The openings between the pillars were draped with the same coarse, heavy cloth from which the Murgo robes were woven. Along the back wall of the balcony were a number of doors, set deep in the stone. Garion surmised that the balcony was largely used by Temple functionaries going to and fro on various errands.

As soon as they started along the balcony, Belgarath crossed his hands on his chest and led them at a slow, measured pace, chanting in a deep, loud voice.

A scream echoed up from below, piercing, filled with terror and agony. Garion involuntarily glanced through the parted drapery toward the altar. For the rest of his life he wished he had not.

The circular walls of the Temple were constructed of polished black stone, and directly behind the altar was an enormous face forged of steel and buffed to minor brightness-the face of Torak and the original of the steel masks of the Grolims. The face was beautiful – there was no question of that – yet there was a kind of brooding evil in it, a cruelty beyond human ability to comprehend the meaning of the word. The Temple floor facing the God’s image was densely packed with Murgos and Grolim priests, kneeling and chanting an unintelligible rumble in a dozen dialects. The altar stood on a raised dais directly beneath the glittering face of Torak. A smoking brazier on an iron post stood at each front corner of the blood-smeared altar, and a square pit opened in the floor immediately in front of the dais. Ugly red flames licked up out of the pit, and black, oily smoke rolled from it toward the dome high above.

A half dozen Grolims in black robes and steel masks were gathered around the altar, holding the naked body of a slave. The victim was already dead, his chest gaping open like the chest of a butchered hog, and a single Grolim stood in front of the altar, facing the image of Torak with raised hands. In his right, he held a tong, curved knife; in his left, a dripping human heart. “Behold our offering, Dragon God of Angarak!” he cried in a huge voice, then turned and deposited the heart in one of the smoking braziers. There was a burst of steam and smoke from the brazier and a hideous sizzle as the heart dropped into the burning coals. From somewhere beneath the Temple floor, the huge iron gong sounded, its vibration shimmering in the air. The assembled Murgos and their Grolim overseers groaned and pressed their faces to the floor.

Garion felt a hand nudge his shoulder. Silk, already turned, was bowing toward the bloody altar. Awkwardly, sickened by the horror below, Garion also bowed.

The six Grolims at the altar lifted the lifeless body of the slave almost contemptuously and cast it into the pit before the dais. Flames belched up and sparks rose in the thick smoke as the body fell into the fire below.

A dreadful anger welled up in Garion. Without even thinking, he began to draw in his will, fully intent upon shattering that vile altar and the cruel image hovering above it into shards and fragments in a single, cataclysmic unleashing of naked force.

“Belgarion!” the voice within his mind said sharply. “Don’t interfere. This isn’t the time. ”

“I can’t stand it, ” Garion raged silently. “I’ve got to do something. ”

“You can’t. Not now. You’ll rouse the whole city. Unclench your will, Belgarion.”

“Do as he says, Garion, “Aunt Pol’s voice sounded quietly in his mind. The unspoken recognition passed between Aunt Pol’s mind and that strange other mind as Garion helplessly let the anger and the will drain out of him.

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