Garion felt a peculiar sense of incompleteness as he rode and he sometimes caught himself looking around for missing friends. The long journey in search of the Orb had established a sort of pattern in his mind, a sense of rightness and wrongness, and this trip felt wrong. Barak was not with them, for one thing, and the big, red-bearded Cherek’s absence made Garion feel oddly insecure. He also missed the hawk-faced, silent Hettar and the armored form of Mandorallen riding always at the front, with the silver-and-blue pennon snapping from the tip of his lance. He was painfully lonely for Durnik the smith and he even missed Ce’Nedra’s spiteful bickering. What had happened at Riva became less and less real to him, and all the elaborate ceremony that had attended his betrothal to the impossible little princess began to fade in his memory, like some half forgotten dream.
It was one evening, however, after the horses had been picketed and supper was over and they had rolled themselves in their blankets to sleep, that Garion, staring into the dying embers of their fire, came at last to face the central vacancy that had entered his life. Aunt Pol was not with them, and he missed her terribly. Since childhood, he had felt that, so long as Aunt Pol was nearby, nothing could really go wrong that she could not fix. Her calm, steady presence had been the one thing to which he had always clung. As clearly as if she stood before him, Garion could see her face, her glorious eyes, and the white lock at her brow; the sudden loneliness for her was as sharp as the edge of a knife.
Everything felt wrong without her. Belgarath was here, certainly, and Garion was fairly sure that his grandfather could deal with any purely physical dangers, but there were other, less obvious perils that the old man either did not consider or chose to ignore. To whom could Garion turn when he was afraid, for example? Being afraid was not the sort of thing that endangered life or limb, but it was still an injury of sorts and sometimes a deeper and more serious kind of injury. Aunt Pol had always been able to banish his fears, but now she was not here, and Garion was afraid and he could not even admit it. He sighed and pulled his blankets more closely about him and slowly drifted into a troubled sleep.
It was about noon some days later when they reached the east fork of the River Cordu, a broad, dirty brown flow running through a brushy valley in a generally southerly direction toward the capital at Yar Nadrak. The pale green, waist-high brush extended back several hundred yards from either bank of the river and was silt-smeared by the high waters of the spring runoff. The sultry air above the brush was alive with clouds of gnats and mosquitoes.
A sullen boatman ferried them across to the village standing on the far bank. As they led their horses off onto the ferry landing, Belgarath spoke quietly. “I think we’ll want to change direction here,” he told them. “Let’s split up. I’ll go pick up supplies, and the two of you go find the town tavern. See if you can get some information about passes leading up through the north range into the lands of the Morindim. The sooner we get up there, the better. The Malloreans seem to be getting the upper hand here and they could clamp down without much warning. I don’t want to have to start explaining my every move to Mallorean Grolims—not to mention the fact that there’s a great deal of interest in Silk’s whereabouts just now.”
Silk rather glumly agreed. “I’d like to get that matter straightened out, but I don’t suppose we really have the time, do we?”
“No, not really. The summer is very, very short up north, and the crossing to Mallorea is unpleasant, even in the best weather. When you get to the tavern, tell everybody that we want to try our luck in the gold fields of the north range. There’s bound to be somebody around who’ll want to show off his familiarity with trails and passes-particularly if you offer to buy him a few drinks.”
“I thought you said you knew the way,” Silk protested.
“I know one way—but it’s a hundred leagues east of here. Let’s see if there’s something a little closer. I’ll come by the tavern after I get the supplies.” The old man mounted and went off up the dirt street, leading their packhorse behind him.
Silk and Garion had little trouble finding someone in the smelly tavern willing to talk about trails and passes. Quite to the contrary, their first question sparked a general debate.
“That’s the long way around, Besher,” one tipsy gold hunter interrupted another’s detailed description of a mountain pass. “You go left at the falls of the stream. It saves you three days.”
“I’m telling this, Varn,” Besher retorted testily, banging his fist down on the scarred table. “You can tell them about the way you go when I’m finished.”
“It’ll take you all day just like that trail you’re so fond of. They want to go look for gold, not admire scenery.” Varn’s long, stubbled jaw thrust out belligerently.
“Which way do we go when we get to the long meadow up on top?” Silk asked quickly, trying to head off the hostilities.
“You go right,” Besher declared, glaring at Varn.
Varn thought about that as if looking for an excuse to disagree. Finally he reluctantly nodded. “Of course that’s the only way you can go,” he added, “but once you get through the juniper grove, you turn left.” He said it in the tone of a man anticipating contradiction.
“Left?” Besher objected loudly. “You’re a blockhead, Varn. You go right again.”
“Watch who you’re calling a blockhead, you jackass!”
Without any further discussion, Besher punched Varn in the mouth, and the two of them began to pummel each other, reeling about and knocking over benches and tables.
“They’re both wrong, of course,” another miner sitting at a nearby table observed calmly, watching the fight with a clinical detachment. “You keep going straight after you get through the juniper grove.”
Several burly men, wearing loose-fitting red tunics over their polished mail shirts, had entered the tavern unnoticed during the altercation, and they stepped forward, grinning, to separate Varn and Besher as the two rolled around on the dirty floor. Garion felt Silk stiffen beside him.
“Malloreans!” the little man said softly.
“What do we do?” Garion whispered, looking around for a way of escape. But before Silk could answer, a black-robed Grolim stepped through the door.
“I like to see men who are so eager to fight,” the Grolim purred in a peculiar accent. “The army needs such men.”
“Recruiters!” Varn exclaimed, breaking away from the red-garbed Malloreans and dashing toward a side door. For a second it looked as if he might escape; but as he reached the doorway, someone outside rapped him sharply across the forehead with a stout cudgel. He reeled back, suddenly rubber-legged and vacant-eyed. The Mallorean who had hit him came inside, gave him a critical, appraising glance, and then judiciously clubbed him in the head again.
“Well?” the Grolim asked, looking around with amusement. “What’s it to be? Would any more of you like to run, or would you all prefer to come along quietly?”
“Where are you taking us?” Besher demanded, trying to pull his arm out of the grip of one of the grinning recruiters.
“To Yar Nadrak first,” the Grolim replied, “and then south to the plains of Mishrak ac Thull and the encampment of his Imperial Majesty ’Zakath, Emperor of all Mallorea. You’ve just joined the army, my friends. All of Angarak rejoices in your courage and patriotism, and Torak himself is pleased with you.” As if to emphasize his words, the Grolim’s hand strayed to the hilt of the sacrificial knife sheathed at his belt.
The chain clinked spitefully as Garion, fettered at the ankle, plodded along, one in a long line of disconsolate-looking conscripts, following a trail leading generally southward through the brush along the riverbank. The conscripts had all been roughly searched for weapons-all but Garion, who for some reason had been overlooked. He was painfully aware of the huge sword strapped to his back as he walked along; but, as always seemed to happen, no one else paid any attention to it.