“I can’t seem to locate that document,” Yarblek declared, walking back with a wicked grin on his face. He turned the Mallorean he had been speaking to over with his foot. “You didn’t really want to see it anyway, did you?” he asked the dead man.
The Mallorean with the arrow in his throat stared blankly up at the sky, his mouth agape and a trickle of blood running out of his nose. “I didn’t think so.” Yarblek laughed coarsely. He drew back his foot and kicked the dead man back over onto his face. Then he turned to smirk at Silk as his archers came out of the dark green ferns. “You certainly get around, Silk,” he said. “I thought Taur Urgas had finished you back there in stinking Cthol Murgos.”
“He miscalculated,” Silk replied casually.
“How did you manage to get yourself conscripted into the Mallorean army?” Yarblek asked curiously, all traces of his feigned drunkenness gone now.
Silk shrugged. “I got careless.”
“I’ve been following you for the last three days.”
“I’m touched by your concern.” Silk lifted his fettered ankle and jingled the chain. “Would it be too much trouble for you to unlock this?”
“You’re not going to do anything foolish, are you?”
“Of course not.”
“Find the key,” Yarblek told one of his archers.
“What are you going to do with us?” Besher asked nervously, eyeing the dead guards with a certain apprehension.
Yarblek laughed. “What you do once that chain’s off is up to you,” he answered indifferently. “I wouldn’t recommend staying in the vicinity of so many dead Malloreans, though. Somebody might come along and start asking questions.”
“You’re just going to let us go?” Besher demanded incredulously.
“I’m certainly not going to feed you,” Yarblek told him.
The archers went down the chain, unlocking the shackles, and each Nadrak bolted into the bushes as soon as he was free.
“Well, then,” Yarblek said, rubbing his palms together, “now that that’s been taken care of, why don’t we have a drink?”
“That guard spilled all your wine when he fell off his horse,” Silk pointed out.
“That wasn’t my wine,” Yarblek snorted. “I stole it this morning. You should know I wouldn’t offer my own drink to somebody I planned to kill.”
“I wondered about that.” Silk grinned at him. “I thought that maybe your manners had started to slip.”
Yarblek’s coarse face took on a faintly injured expression.
“Sorry,” Silk apologized quickly. “I misjudged you.”
“No harm done.” Yarblek shrugged. “A lot of people misunderstand me.” He sighed. “It’s a burden I have to bear.” He opened a pack on his lead mule and hefted out a small keg of ale. He set it on the ground and broached it with a practiced skill, bashing in its top with his fist. “Let’s get drunk,” he suggested.
“We’d really like to,” Silk declined politely, “but we’ve got some rather urgent business to take care of.”
“You have no idea how sorry I am about that,” Yarblek replied, fishing several cups out of the pack.
“I knew you’d understand.”
“Oh, I understand, all right, Silk.” Yarblek bent and dipped two cups into the ale keg. “And I’m as sorry as I can be that your business is going to have to wait. Here.” He gave Silk one cup and Garion the other. Then he turned and dipped out a cup for himself.
Silk looked at him with one raised eyebrow.
Yarblek sprawled on the ground beside the ale keg, comfortably resting his feet on the body of one of the dead Malloreans. “You see, Silk,” he explained, “the whole point of all this is that Drosta wants you very badly. He’s offering a reward for you that’s just too attractive to pass up. Friendship is one thing, but business is business, after all. Now, why don’t you and your young friend make yourselves comfortable? This is a nice, shady clearing with soft moss to lie on. We’ll all get drunk, and you can tell me how you managed to escape from Taur Urgas. Then you can tell me what happened to that handsome woman you had with you down in Cthol Murgos. Maybe I can make enough money from this to be able to afford to buy her. I’m not the marrying kind, but by Torak’s teeth, that’s a fine-looking woman. I’d almost be willing to give up my freedom for her.”
“I’m sure she’d be flattered,” Silk replied. “What then?”
“What when?”
“After we get drunk. What do we do then?”
“We’ll probably get sick—that’s what usually happens. After we get well, we’ll run on down to Yar Nadrak. I’ll collect the reward for you, and you’ll be able to find out why King Drosta lek Thun wants to get his hands on you so badly.” He looked at Silk with an amused expression. “You might as well sit down and have a drink, my friend. You aren’t going anywhere just now.”
5
Yar Nadrak was a walled city, lying at the juncture of the east and west forks of the River Cordu. The forests had been cleared for a league or so in every direction from the capital by the simple expedient of setting fire to it, and the approach to the city passed through a wilderness of burned black snags and rank-growing bramble thickets. The city gates were stout and smeared with tar. Surmounting them was a stone replica of the mask of Torak. That beautiful, inhumanly cruel face gazed down at all who entered, and Garion suppressed a shudder as he rode under it.
The houses in the Nadrak capital were all very tall and had steeply sloping roofs. The windows of the second storeys all had shutters, and most of the shutters were closed. Any exposed wood on the structures had been smeared with tar to preserve it, and the splotches of the black substance made all the buildings look somehow diseased.
There was a sullen, frightened air in the narrow, crooked streets of Yar Nadrak, and the inhabitants kept their eyes lowered as they hurried about their business. There appeared to be less leather involved in the clothing of the burghers of the capital than had been the case in the back country, but even here most garments were black, and only occasionally was there a splash of blue or yellow. The sole exception to this rule was the red tunic worn by the Mallorean soldiers. They seemed to be everywhere, roaming at will up and down the cobblestoned streets, accosting citizens rudely and talking loudly to each other in their heavily accented speech.
While the soldiers seemed for the most part to be merely swaggering bullies, young men who concealed their nervousness at being in a strange country with an outward show of bluster and braggadocio, the Mallorean Grolims were quite another matter. Unlike the western Grolims Garion had seen in Cthol Murgos, they rarely wore the polished steel mask, but rather assumed a set, grim expression, thin-lipped and narrow-eyed; as they went about the streets in their hooded black robes, everyone, Mallorean and Nadrak alive, gave way to them.
Garion and Silk, closely guarded and mounted on a pair of mules, followed the rangy Yarblek into the city. Yarblek and Silk had kept up their banter during the entire ride downriver, exchanging casual insults and reliving past indiscretions. Although he seemed friendly enough, Yarblek nonetheless remained watchful, and his men had guarded Silk and Garion every step of the way. Garion had covertly watched the forest almost continually during the three-day ride, but he had seen no sign of Belgarath and he entered the city in a state of jumpy apprehension. Silk, however, seemed relaxed and confident as always, and his behavior and attitude grated at Garion’s nerves, for some reason.
After they had clattered along a crooked street for some distance, Yarblek turned down a narrow, dirty alleyway leading toward the river. “I thought the palace was that way,” Silk said to him, pointing toward the center of town.
“It is,” Yarblek replied, “but we aren’t going to the palace. Drosta’s got company there, and he prefers to do business in private.” The alleyway soon opened out into a seedy-looking street where the tall, narrow-looking houses had fallen somewhat into disrepair. The lanky Nadrak clamped his mouth shut as two Mallorean Grolims rounded a corner just ahead and came in their direction. Yarblek’s expression was openly hostile as the two approached.