The next day dawned cloudy with a threat of approaching rain. As Belgarath stirred up the fire and Silk rummaged through his pack for something suitable for breakfast, Garion stood looking out at the swamp around him. A flight of geese swept by overhead in a ragged V, their wings whistling and their muted cries drifting, lonely and remote. A fish jumped not far from the edge of the hummock, and Garion watched the ripples widening out toward the far shore. He looked for quite some time at that shore before he realized exactly what it was he was seeing. Concerned, then a bit alarmed, he began to peer first this way and then that.
“Grandfather!” he cried. “Look!”
“At what?”
“It’s all changed. There aren’t any channels any more. We’re in the middle of a big pond, and there isn’t any way out of it.” He spun around, desperately trying to see some exit, but the edges of the pond in which they sat were totally unbroken. There were no channels leading out of it, and the brown water was absolutely still, showing no evidence of current.
Then in the center of the pond, without making so much as a ripple, a round, furred head emerged from the water. The animal’s eyes were very large and bright; it had no external ears, and its little nose was as black as a button. It made a peculiar chirping noise, and another head emerged out of the water a few feet away.
“Fenlings!” Silk gasped, drawing his short sword with a steely rustle.
“Oh, put that away,” Belgarath told him disgustedly. “They aren’t going to hurt you.”
“They’ve trapped us, haven’t they?”
“What do they want?” Garion asked.
“Breakfast, obviously,” Silk answered, still holding his sword.
“Don’t be stupid, Silk,” Belgarath told him. “Why would they want to eat a raw Drasnian when there’s a whole swampful of fish available? Put the sword away.”
The first fenling which had poked its head up out of the water lifted one of its webbed forefeet and made a peremptory gesture. The webbed foot was strangely handlike.
“They seem to want us to follow them,” Belgarath said calmly.
“And you’re going to do it?” Silk was aghast. “Are you mad?”
“Do we have any choice?”
Without further discussion, Belgarath began taking down the tent.
“Are they monsters, Grandfather?” Garion asked worriedly as he helped. “Like Algroths or Trolls?”
“No, they’re just animals-like seals or beaver. They’re curious and intelligent and very playful.”
“But they play very nasty games,” Silk added.
After they had stowed all their packs into the boat, they pushed it down the bank into the water. The fenlings watched them curiously with no particular threat or malice in their gaze, but rather a kind of firm determination on their furry little faces. The solid-looking edge of the pond opened then to reveal the channel that had been concealed during the night. The strangely rounded head of the fenling who had gestured to them moved on ahead, leading the way and glancing back often to be certain they were following. Several others trailed after the boat, their large eyes alert.
It began to rain, a few drops at first, and then a steady drizzle that veiled the endless expanse of reed and cattail stretching out on all sides of them.
“Where do you think they’re taking us?” Silk asked, stopping his poling to wipe the rain out of his face. One of the fenlings behind the boat chattered angrily at him until he dug his pole into the muddy bottom of the channel again.
“We’ll just have to wait and see,” Belgarath replied.
The channel continued to open before them, and they poled steadily along, following the round-headed fenling who had first appeared.
“Are those trees up ahead?” Silk asked, peering into the misty drizzle.
“It appears so,” Belgarath answered. “I suspect that’s where we’re going.”
The large cluster of trees slowly emerged from the mist. As they drew closer, Garion could see a gentle rise of ground swelling up out of the reeds and water. The grove which crowned the island appeared to be mostly willows with long, trailing branches.
The fenling who had been leading them swam on ahead. When it reached the island, it emerged half out of the water and gave a strange, whistling cry. A moment or so later, a hooded figure stepped out of the trees and moved slowly down to the bank. Garion did not know what to expect, but he was more than a little startled when the brown-cloaked figure on the shore pushed back the hood to reveal a woman’s face that, though very old, still bore the luminous trace of what had once been an extraordinary beauty.
“Hail, Belgarath,” she greeted the old sorcerer in an oddly neutral voice.
“Hello, Vordai,” he replied conversationally. “It’s been quite a while, hasn’t it?”
The little creatures that had guided them to the island waded out of the water to gather around the brown-cloaked woman. They chirped and chattered to her, and she looked at them fondly, touching their wet fur with gentle fingers. They were medium-sized animals with short hind legs and little rounded bellies and they walked upright with a peculiar quick shuffle, their forepaws held delicately in front of their furry chests.
“Come inside out of the rain, Belgarath,” the woman said. “Bring your friends.” She turned and walked up a path leading into the willow grove with her fenlings scampering along beside her.
“What do we do?” Garion whispered.
“We go inside,” Belgarath replied, stepping out of the boat onto the island.
Garion was not sure what to expect as he and Silk followed the old man up the path toward the dripping willows, but he was totally unprepared for the neat, thatch-roofed cottage with its small adjoining garden. The house was built of weathered logs, tightly chinked with moss, and a wispy tendril of smoke drifted from its chimney.
At the doorway, the woman in brown carefully wiped her feet on a rush mat and shook the rain out of her cloak. Then she opened the door and went inside without looking back.
Silk’s expression was dubious as he stopped outside the cottage. “Are you sure this is a good idea, Belgarath?” he asked quietly. “I’ve heard stories about Vordai.”
“It’s the only way to find out what she wants,” Belgarath told him, “and I’m fairly sure we aren’t going any farther until we talk with her. Let’s go in. Be sure to wipe your feet.”
The interior of Vordai’s cottage was scrupulously neat. The ceilings were low and heavily beamed. The wooden floor was scrubbed to whiteness, and a table and chairs sat before an arched fireplace where a pot hung in the flames from an iron arm. There were wildflowers in a vase on the table and curtains at the window overlooking the garden.
“Why don’t you introduce your friends to me, Belgarath?” the woman suggested, hanging her cloak on a peg. She smoothed the front of her plain brown dress.
“As you wish, Vordai,” the old man replied politely. “This is Prince Kheldar, your countryman. And this is King Belgarion of Riva.”
“Noble guests,” the woman observed in that strangely neutral voice. “Welcome to the house of Vordai.”
“Forgive me, madame,” Silk said in his most courtly manner, “but your reputation seems to be grossly inaccurate.”
“Vordai, the witch of the fens?” she asked, looking amused. “Do they still call me that?”
He smiled in return. “Their descriptions are misleading, to say the least.”
“The hag of the swamps.” She mimicked the speech of a credulous peasant. “Drowner of travellers and queen of the fenlings.” There was a bitter twist to her lips.
“That’s more or less what they say,” he told her. “I always believed you were a myth conjured up to frighten unruly children.”