Belgarath grunted.
“Where did you say Torak is?”
“Cthol Mishrak—in Mallorea.”
“I’ve never been there.”
“I have—a few times. It’s not a very attractive place.”
“Maybe time has improved it.”
“That’s not very likely.”
Silk shrugged. “Maybe we ought to go with him—show him the way, that sort of thing. It’s time I left Riva anyway. Some ugly rumors are starting to go around about me.”
“It is rather a good time of year for travelling,” Belgarath admitted, giving Garion a sly, sidelong glance.
Garion felt better already. He knew from their bantering tone that they had already made up their minds. He would not have to go in search of Torak alone. For now that was enough: there’d be time for worrying later. “All right,” he said, “what do we do?”
“We creep out of Riva very quietly,” Belgarath replied. “There’s nothing to be gained by getting into any long discussions with your .Aunt Pol about this.”
“The wisdom of ages,” Silk agreed fervently. “When do we start?” His ferret eyes were very bright.
“The sooner the better.” Belgarath shrugged.
“Did you have any plans for tonight?”
“Nothing I can’t postpone.”
“All right then. We’ll wait until everyone goes to bed, and then we’ll pick up Garion’s sword and get started.”
“Which way do we go?” Garion asked him.
“Sendaria first,” Belgarath replied, “and then across Drasnia to Gar og Nadrak. Then north to the archipelago that leads to Mallorea. It’s a long way to Cthol Mishrak and the tomb of the one-eyed God.”
“And then?”
“Then, Garion, we settle this once and for all.”
Part Three
Drasnia
17
“Dear Aunt Pol,” Garion’s note began, “I know this is going to make you angry, but there’s no other way. I’ve seen the Mrin Codex, and now I know what I have to do. The—” He broke off, frowning. “How do you spell ‘Prophecy’?” he asked.
Belgarath spelled it out for him. “Don’t drag it out too much, Garion,” the old man advised. “Nothing you say is going to make her happy about this, so stick to the point.”
“Don’t you think I ought to explain why we’re doing this?” Garion fretted.
“She’s read the Codex, Garion,” Belgarath replied. “She’ll know why without your explanation.”
“I really ought to leave a note for Ce’Nedra, too,” Garion considered.
“Polgara can tell her what she needs to know,” Belgarath said. “We have things to do and we can’t afford to spend the whole night on correspondence.”
“I’ve never written a letter before,” Garion remarked. “It’s not nearly as easy as it looks.”
“Just say what you have to say and then stop,” the old man advised. “Don’t labor at it so much.”
The door opened and Silk came back in. He was dressed in the nondescript clothing he had worn on the road, and he carried two bundles.
“I think these should fit you,” he said, handing one of the bundles to Belgarath and the other to Garion.
“Did you get the money?” the old man asked him.
“I borrowed some from Barak.”
“That’s surprising,” Belgarath replied. “He isn’t notorious for generosity.”
“I didn’t tell him I was borrowing it,” the little man returned with a broad wink. “I thought it would save time if I didn’t have to go into long explanations.”
One of Belgarath’s eyebrows shot up.
“We are in a hurry, aren’t we?” Silk asked with an innocent expression. “And Barak can be tedious when it comes to money.”
“Spare me the excuses,” Belgarath told him. He turned back to Garion. “Have you finished with that yet?”
“What do you think?” Garion asked, handing him the note.
The old man glanced at it. “Good enough,” he said. “Now sign it and we’ll put it where somebody’ll find it sometime tomorrow.”
“Late tomorrow,” Silk suggested. “I’d like to be well out of Polgara’s range when she finds out that we’ve left.”
Garion signed the note, folded it and wrote, “For Lady Polgara,” across the outside.
“We’ll leave it on the throne,” Belgarath said. “Let’s change clothes and go get the sword.”
“Isn’t the sword going to be a bit bulky?” Silk asked after Garion and Belgarath had changed.
“There’s a scabbard for it in one of the antechambers,” Belgarath answered opening the door carefully and peering out into the silent hall. “He’ll have to wear it slung across his back.”
“That glow is going to be a bit ostentatious,” Silk said.
“We’ll cover the Orb,” Belgarath replied. “Let’s go.”
The three of them slipped out into the dimly lighted corridor and crept through the midnight stillness toward the throne room. Once, a sleepy servant going toward the kitchen almost surprised them, but an empty chamber provided them with a temporary hiding place until he had passed. Then they moved on.
“Is it locked?” Silk whispered when they reached the door to the Hall of the Rivan King.
Garion took hold of the large handle and twisted, wincing as the latch clacked loudly in the midnight stillness. He pushed, and the door creaked as it swung open.
“You ought to have somebody take care of that,” Silk muttered.
The Orb of Aldur began to glow faintly as soon as the three of them entered the Hall.
“It seems to recognize you,” Silk observed to Garion.
When Garion took down the sword, the Orb flared, filling the Hall of the Rivan King with its deep blue radiance. Garion looked around nervously, fearful that someone passing might see the light and come in to investigate. “Stop that,” he irrationally admonished the stone. With a startled flicker, the glow of the Orb subsided back into a faint, pulsating light, and the triumphant song of the Orb stilled to a murmur.
Belgarath looked quizzically at his grandson, but said nothing. He led them to an antechamber and removed a long, plain scabbard from a case standing against the wall. The belt attached to the scabbard had seen a certain amount of use. The old man buckled it in place for Garion, passing it over the young man’s right shoulder and down across his chest so that the scabbard, attached to the belt in two places, rode diagonally down his back. There was also a knitted tube in the case, almost like a narrow sock. “Slide this over the hilt,” Belgarath instructed.
Garion covered the hilt of his great sword with the tube and then took hold of the blade itself and carefully inserted the tip into the top of the scabbard. It was awkward, and neither Silk nor Belgarath offered to help him. All three of them knew why. The sword slid home and, since it seemed to have no weight, it was not too uncomfortable. The crosspiece of the hilt, however, stood out just at the top of his head and tended to poke him if he moved too quickly.
“It wasn’t really meant to be worn,” Belgarath told him. “We had to improvise.”
Once again, the three of them passed through the dimly lighted corridors of the sleeping palace and emerged through a side door. Silk slipped on ahead, moving as soundlessly as a cat and keeping to the shadows. Belgarath and Garion waited. An open window perhaps twenty feet overhead faced out into the courtyard. As they stood together beneath it, a faint light appeared, and the voice that spoke down to them was very soft. “Errand?” it said.
“Yes,” Garion replied without thinking. “Everything’s all right. Go back to bed.”
“Belgarion,” the child said with a strange kind of satisfaction. Then he added, “Good-bye,” in a somewhat more wistful tone, and he was gone.
“Let’s hope he doesn’t run straight to Polgara,” Belgarath muttered.
“I think we can trust him, Grandfather. He knew we were leaving and he just wanted to say good-bye.”
“Would you like to explain how you know that?”