“Is there a war someplace?” Silk asked him.
“Likely to beer so they say. Someplace down in Mishrak ac Thull.”
Silk snorted. “I’ve never met a Thull worth fighting.”
“It’s not the Thulls. It’s supposed to be the Alorns. They’ve got a queen—if you can imagine such a thing—and she’s moving to invade the Thulls.”
“A queen?” Silk scoffed. “Can’t be much of an army, then. Let the Thulls fight her themselves.”
“Tell that to the Mallorean recruiters,” the Nadrak suggested.
“Did you have to brew that ale?” Silk demanded of the servingman, who was returning with four large cups.
“There are other taverns, friend,” the servingman replied. “If you don’t like this one, go find another. That’ll be twelve pennies.”
“Three pennies a cup?” Silk exclaimed.
“Times are hard.”
Grumbling, Silk paid him.
“Thanks,” the Nadrak they were sitting with said, taking one of the cups.
“Don’t mention it,” Silk said sourly.
“What are the Malloreans doing here?” Belgarath asked.
“Rounding up everyone who can stand up, see lightning, and hear thunder. They do their recruiting with leg-irons, so it’s a little hard to refuse. They’ve got Grolims with them too, and the Grolims keep their gutting knives out in plain sight as a sort of a hint about what might happen to anybody who objects too much.”
“Maybe you were right when you said we picked a bad time to come down out of the mountains,” Silk said.
The Nadrak nodded. “The Grolims say that Torak’s stirring in his sleep.”
“That’s not very good news,” Silk replied.
“I think we could all drink to that.” The Nadrak lifted his ale cup. “You find anything worth digging for up there in the mountains?”
Silk shook his head. “A few traces is all. We’ve been working the streambeds for free gold. We don’t have the equipment to drive shafts back into the rock.”
“You’ll never get rich squatting beside a creek and sifting gravel.”
“We get by.” Silk shrugged. “Someday maybe we’ll hit a good pocket and we’ll be able to pick up enough to buy some equipment.”
“And someday maybe it will rain beer, too.”
Silk laughed.
“You ever thought about taking in another partner?”
Silk squinted at the unshaven Nadrak. “Have you been up there before?” he asked.
The Nadrak nodded. “Often enough to know that I don’t like it—but I think I’d like a stint in the army a lot less.”
“Let’s have another drink and talk about it,” Silk suggested.
Garion leaned back, putting his shoulders against the rough log wall. Nadraks didn’t seem to be so bad, once you got past the crudity of their nature, They were a blunt-spoken people and a bit sour-faced, but they did not seem to have that icy animosity toward outsiders he had noted among the Murgos.
He let his mind drift back to what the Nadrak had said about a queen. He quickly dismissed the notion that any of the queens staying at Riva might, under any circumstances, have assumed such authority. That left only Aunt Pol. The Nadrak’s information could have been garbled a bit; but in Belgarath’s absence, Aunt Pol might have taken charge of things—although that was not like her, at all. What could possibly have happened back there to force her to go to such extremes?
As the afternoon wore on, more and more of the men in the tavern grew reeling drunk, and occasional fights broke out—although the fights usually consisted of shoving matches, since few in the room were sober enough to aim a good blow. Their companion drank steadily and eventually laid his head down on his arms and began to snore.
“I think we’ve got just about everything we can use here,” Belgarath suggested quietly. “Let’s drift on out. From what our friend here says, I don’t think it’d be a good idea to sleep in town.”
Silk nodded his agreement, and the three of them rose from the table and made their way through the crowd to the side door.
“Did you want to pick up any supplies?” the little man asked.
Belgarath shook his head. “I have a feeling that we want to get out of here as soon as possible.”
Silk gave him a quick look, and the three of them untied their horses, mounted and rode back out into the red dirt street. They moved at a walk to avoid arousing suspicion, but Garion could feel a sort of tense urgency to put this raw, mud-smeared village behind them. There was something threatening in the air, and the golden late afternoon sun seemed somehow shadowed, as if by an unseen cloud. As they were passing the last rickety house on the downhill edge of the village, they heard an alarmed shout from somewhere back near the center of town. Garion turned quickly and saw a party of perhaps twenty mounted men in red tunics plunging at a full gallop toward the tavern the three of them had just left. With a practiced skill, the scarlet-clad strangers swung down from their horses and immediately covered all the doors to cut off an escape for those inside.
“Malloreans!” Belgarath snapped. “Make for the trees!” And he drove his heels into his horse’s flanks.
They galloped across the weedy, stump-cluttered clearing that surrounded the village, toward the edge of the forest and safety, but there was no outcry or pursuit. The tavern appeared to contain enough fish to fill the Mallorean net. From a safe vantage point beneath spreading tree limbs, Garion, Silk, and Belgarath watched as a disconsolate-looking string of Nadraks, chained together at the ankle, were led out of the tavern into the red dust of the street to stand under the watchful eyes of the Mallorean recruiters.
“It looks like our friend has joined the army, after all,” Silk observed.
“Better him than us,” Belgarath replied. “We might be just a little out of place in the middle of an Angarak horde.” He squinted at the ruddy disk of the setting sun. “Let’s move out. We’ve got a few hours before dark. It looks as if military service might be contagious in this vicinity, and I wouldn’t want to catch it.”
3
The Forest of Nadrak was unlike the Arendish forest lying far to the south. The differences were subtle, and it took Garion several days to put his finger on them. For one thing, the trails they followed had no sense of permanence about them. They were so infrequently traveled that they were not beaten into the loamy soil of the forest floor. In the Arendish forest, the marks of man were everywhere, but here man was an intruder, merely passing through. Moreover, the forest in Arendia had definite boundaries, but this ocean of trees went on to the farthest edge of the continent, and it had stood so since the beginning of the world.
The forest teemed with life. Tawny deer flickered among the trees, and vast, shaggy bison, with curved black horns shiny as onyx, grazed in clearings. Once a bear, grumbling and muttering irritably, lumbered across the trail in front of them. Rabbits scurried through the undergrowth and partridges exploded into flight from underfoot with a heartstopping thunder of wings. The ponds and streams abounded with fish, muskrat, otter, and beaver. There were also, they soon discovered, smaller forms of life. The mosquitoes seemed only slightly smaller than sparrows, and there was a nasty little brown fly that bit anything that moved.
The sun rose early and set late, dappling the dark forest floor with golden light. Although it was midsummer now, it was never exactly hot, and the air was rich with that smell of urgent growth common to the lands of the north, where summer was short and winter very long.
Belgarath seemed not to sleep at all once they entered the forest. Each evening, as Silk and Garion wearily rolled themselves in their blankets, the old sorcerer threaded his way back into the shadowy trees and disappeared. Once, several hours past dusk on a night filled with starlight, Garion awoke briefly and heard the loping touch of paws skittering lightly across a leaf carpeted clearing; even as he drifted back to sleep, he understood. The great silver wolf who was his grandfather roamed the night, scouring the surrounding forest for any hint of pursuit or danger.