“I think we’ll be able to fix it,” Garion assured him. “Your uncle will forgive you, and Torasin probably will, too. He likes you too much to stay angry for long. Baron Oltorain is probably very put out with you, but he’s a Mimbrate Arend. He’ll forgive anything if it’s done for love. We might have to wait until his leg heals up again, though. That was the part that was a real blunder, Lelldorin. You shouldn’t have broken his leg.”
“Next time I’ll try to avoid that,” Lelldorin promised quickly.
“Next time?”
They both laughed then and talked on as their candle flickered in the vagrant drafts stirred by the raging storm. After an hour or so, the worst of the gale seemed to pass, and the two of them found their eyes growing heavy once more.
“Why don’t we try to sleep again?” Garion suggested.
“I’ll blow out the candle,” Lelldorin agreed. He got up out of bed and stepped to the table. “Are you ready?” he asked Garion.
Garion slept again almost immediately, and almost immediately heard a sibilant whisper in his ear and felt a dry, cold touch. “Are you ready?” the whispering voice hissed, and he turned to look with uncomprehending eyes at the face of Queen Salmissra, a face that shifted back and forth from woman to snake to something midway between.
Then he stood beneath the shimmering dome of the cave of the Gods and moved without thought to touch the unblemished, walnut-colored shoulder of the stillborn colt, thrusting his hand into the absolute silence of death itself.
“Are you ready?” Belgarath asked quite calmly.
“I think so.”
“All right. Put your will against it and push.”
“It’s awfully heavy, Grandfather.”
“You don’t have to pick it up, Garion. Just push it. It will roll over if you do it right. Hurry up. We have a great deal more to do.”
Garion began to gather his will.
And then he sat on a hillside with his cousin Adara. In his hand he held a dead twig and a few wisps of dry grass.
“Are you ready?” the voice in his mind asked him.
“Is this going to mean anything?” Garion asked. “I mean, will it make any difference?”
“That depends on you and how well you do it.”
“That’s not a very good answer.”
“It wasn’t a very good question. If you’re ready, turn the twig into a flower.”
Garion did that and looked critically at the result. “It’s not a very good flower, is it?” he apologized.
“It will have to do,” the voice told him.
“Let me try it again.”
“What are you going to do with this one?”
“I’ll just—” Garion raised his hand to obliterate the defective bloom he had just created.
“That’s forbidden, you know,” the voice reminded him.
“I made it, didn’t I?”
“That has nothing to do with it. You can’t unmake it. It will be fine. Come along now. We have to hurry.”
“I’m not ready yet.”
“That’s too bad. We can’t wait any longer.”
And then Garion woke up. He felt oddly light-headed, as if his troubled sleep had done him more harm than good. Lelldorin was still deep in slumber, and Garion found his clothes in the dark, pulled them on and quietly left the room. The strange dream nagged at his mind as he wandered in the dimly lighted corridors of Iron-grip’s Citadel. He still felt that pressing urgency and the peculiar sense that everyone was waiting impatiently for him to do something.
He found a windswept courtyard where snow had piled up in the corners and the stones were black and shiny with ice. Dawn was just breaking, and the battlements surrounding the courtyard were etched sharply against a sky filled with scudding cloud.
Beyond the courtyard lay the stables—warm, smelling of fragrant hay and of horses. Durnik had already found his way there. As was so frequently the case, the smith was uncomfortable in the presence of nobility, and he sought the company of animals instead. “Couldn’t you sleep either?” he asked as Garion entered the stable.
Garion shrugged. “For some reason sleep just made things worse. I feel as if my head’s stuffed full of straw.”
“Joyous Erastide, Garion,” Durnik said then.
“That’s right. It is, isn’t it?” In all the rush, the holiday seemed to have crept up on him. “Joyous Erastide, Durnik.”
The colt, who had been sleeping in a back stall, nickered softly as he caught Garion’s scent, and Garion and Durnik went back to where the small animal stood.
“Joyous Erastide, horse,” Garion greeted him a bit whimsically. The colt nuzzled at him. “Do you think that the storm has blown over completely?” Garion asked Durnik as he rubbed the colt’s ears. “Or is there more on the way?”
“It has the smell of being over,” Durnik answered. “Weather could smell differently here on this island, though.”
Garion nodded his agreement, patted the colt’s neck and turned toward the door. “I suppose I’d better go find Aunt Pol,” he said. “She was saying something last night about wanting to check my clothes. If I make her look for me, she’ll probably make me wish I hadn’t.”
“Age is bringing you wisdom, I see.” Durnik grinned at him. “If anyone wants me, I’ll be here.”
Garion put his hand briefly on Durnik’s shoulder and then left the stable to go looking for Aunt Pol.
He found her in the company of women in the apartment that appeared to have been set aside for her personal use centuries before. Adara was there and Taiba, Queen Layla and Ariana, the Mimbrate girl; in the center of the room stood Princess Ce’Nedra.
“You’re up early,” Aunt Pol observed, her needle flickering as she made some minute modification to Ce’Nedra’s creamy gown.
“I had trouble sleeping,” he told her, looking at the princess with a certain puzzlement. She looked different somehow.
“Don’t stare at me, Garion,” she told him rather primly.
“What have you done to your hair?” he asked her.
Ce’Nedra’s flaming hair had been elaborately arranged, caught at brow and temples by a gold coronet in the form of a band of twined oak leaves. There was some rather intricate braiding involved at the back and then the coppery mass flowed smoothly down over one of her tiny shoulders. “Do you like it?” she asked him.
“That’s not the way you usually wear it,” he noted.
“We’re all aware of that, Garion,” she replied loftily. Then she turned and looked rather critically at her reflection in the mirror. “I’m still not convinced about the braiding, Lady Polgara,” she fretted. “Tolnedran ladies don’t braid their hair. This makes me look like an Alorn.”
“Not entirely, Ce’Nedra,” Adara murmured.
“You know what I mean, Adara—all those buxom blondes with their braids and their milk-maid complexions.”
“Isn’t it a little early to be getting ready?” Garion asked. “Grandfather said that we weren’t going to take the Orb to the throne room until noon.”
“That’s not really that far off, Garion,” Aunt Pol told him, biting a thread and stepping back to look critically at Ce’Nedra’s dress. “What do you think, Layla?”
“She looks just like a princess, Pol,” Queen Layla gushed.
“She is a princess, Layla,” Aunt Pol reminded the plump little queen. Then she turned to Garion. “Get some breakfast and have someone show you the way to the baths,” she instructed. “They’re in the cellars under the west wing. After you’ve bathed, you’ll need a shave. Try not to cut yourself. I don’t want you bleeding all over your good clothes.”
“Do I have to wear all that?”
She gave him a look that immediately answered that question—as well as several others he might have asked.
“I’ll go find Silk,” he agreed quickly. “He’ll know where the baths are.”
“Do that,” she told him quite firmly. “And don’t get lost. When the time comes, I want you to be ready.”
Garion nodded and left. Her words had somehow strangely echoed the words of his dream, and he wondered about that as he went looking for Silk.