"It’s a question of fertility, your Highness," Silk said with a delicate cough. "She wants to present my uncle with an heir and she needs to seek your advice in the business. The entire world stands in awe of your gifts in that particular area."
Queen Layla blushed prettily and then laughed.
"I’ll write to her at once," she promised.
Garion by now had carefully worked his way to the door through which King Fulrach had taken Aunt Pol and Mister Wolf. He began a meticulous examination of a tapestry on the wall to conceal the fact that he was trying to hear what was going on behind the closed door. It took him only a moment to begin to pick up familiar voices.
"Exactly what does all this foolishness mean, Fulrach?" Mister Wolf was saying.
"Please don’t judge me too hastily, Ancient One," the King said placatingly. "Some things have happened that you might not be aware of."
"You know that I’m aware of everything that happens," Wolf said.
"Did you know that we are defenseless if the Accursed One awakens? That which held him in check has been stolen from off the throne of the Rivan King."
"As a matter of fact, I was following the trail of the thief when your noble Captain Brendig interrupted me in my search."
"I’m sorry," Fulrach said, "but you wouldn’t have gone much farther anyway. All the Kings of Aloria have been searching for you for three months now. Your likeness, drawn by the finest artists, is in the hands of every ambassador, agent and official of the five kingdoms of the north. Actually, you’ve been followed since you left Darine."
"Fulrach, I’m busy. Tell the Alorn Kings to leave me alone. Why are they suddenly so interested in my movements?"
"They want to have council with you," the king said. "The Alorns are preparing for war, and even my poor Sendaria is being quietly mobilized. If the Accursed One arises now, we’re all doomed. The power that’s been stolen can very possibly be used to awaken him, and his first move will be to attack the west—you know that, Belgarath. And you also know that until the return of the Rivan King, the west has no real defense."
Garion blinked and started violently, then tried to cover the sudden movement by bending to look at some of the finer detail on the tapestry. He told himself that he had heard wrong. The name King Fulrach had spoken could not have really been Belgarath. Belgarath was a fairy-tale figure, a myth.
"Just tell the Alorn Kings that I’m in pursuit of the thief," Mister Wolf said. "I don’t have time for councils just now. If they’ll leave me alone, I should be able to catch up with him before he can do any mischief with the thing he’s managed to steal."
"Don’t tempt fate, Fulrach," Aunt Pol advised. "Your interference is costing us time we can’t afford to lose. Presently I’ll become vexed with you."
The king’s voice was firm as he answered. "I know your power, Lady Polgara," he said, and Garion jumped again. "I don’t have any choice, however," the king continued. "I’m bound by my word to deliver you all up at Val Alorn to the Kings of Aloria, and a king can’t break his word to other kings."
There was a long silence in the other room while Garion’s mind raced through a dozen possibilities.
"You’re not a bad man, Fulrach," Mister Wolf said. "Not perhaps as bright as I might wish, but a good man nonetheless. I won’t raise my hand against you—nor will my daughter."
"Speak of yourself, Old Wolf," Aunt Pol said grimly.
"No, Polgara," he said. "If we have to go to Val Alorn, let’s go with all possible speed. The sooner we explain things to the Alorns, the sooner they’ll stop interfering."
"I think age is beginning to soften your brain, Father," Aunt Pol said. "We don’t have the time for this excursion to Val Alorn. Fulrach can explain to the Alorn Kings."
"It won’t do any good, Lady Polgara," the king said rather ruefully. "As your father so pointedly mentioned, I’m not considered very bright. The Alorn Kings won’t listen to me. If you leave now, they’ll just send someone like Brendig to apprehend you again."
"Then that unfortunate man may suddenly find himself living out the remainder of his days as a toad or possibly a radish," Aunt Pol said ominously.
"Enough of that, Pol," Mister Wolf said. "Is there a ship ready, Fulrach?"
"It lies at the north wharf, Belgarath," the king replied. "A Cherek vessel sent by King Anheg."
"Very well," Mister Wolf said. "Tomorrow then we’ll go to Cherek. It seems that I’m going to have to point out a few things to some thickheaded Alorns. Will you be going with us?"
"I’m obliged to," Fulrach said. "The council’s to be general, and Sendaria’s involved."
"You haven’t heard the last of this, Fulrach," Aunt Pol said.
"Never mind, Pol," Mister Wolf said. "He’s only doing what he thinks is right. We’ll straighten it all out in Val Alorn."
Garion was trembling as he stepped away from the door. It was impossible. His skeptical Sendarian upbringing made him at first incapable of even considering such an absurdity. Reluctantly, however, he finally forced himself to look the idea full in the face.
What if Mister Wolf really was Belgarath the Sorcerer, a man who had lived for over seven thousand years? And what if Aunt Pol was really his daughter, Polgara the Sorceress, who was only slightly younger? All the bits and pieces, the cryptic hints, the half truths, fell together. Silk had been right; she could not be his Aunt. Garion’s orphaning was complete now. He was adrift in the world with no ties of blood or heritage to cling to. Desperately he wanted to go home, back to Faldor’s farm, where he could sink himself in unthinking obscurity in a quiet place where there were no sorcerers or strange searches or anything that would even remind him of Aunt Pol and the cruel hoax she had made of his life.
Part Two
Cherek
12
In the gray first light of early morning they rode through the quiet streets of Sendar to the harbor and their waiting ship. The finery of the evening before had been put aside, and they had all resumed their customary clothes. Even King Fulrach and the Earl of Seline had donned plain garb and now resembled nothing quite so much as two moderately prosperous Sendars on a business trip. Queen Layla, who was not to go with them, rode beside her husband, talking earnestly to him with an expression on her face that seemed almost to hover on the verge of tears. The party was accompanied by soldiers, cloaked against the raw, chill wind off the sea.
At the foot of the street which led down from the palace to the harbor, the stone wharves of Sendar jutted out into the choppy water, and there, rocking and straining against the hawsers which held her, was their ship. She was a lean vessel, narrow of beam and high-prowed, with a kind of wolfish appearance that did little to quiet Garion’s nervousness about his first sea voyage. Lounging about on her deck were a number of savage-looking sailors, bearded and garbed in shaggy garments made of fur. With the exception of Barak, these were the first Chereks Garion had ever seen, and his first impression was that they would probably prove to be totally unreliable.
"Barak!" a burly man halfway up the mast shouted and dropped hand over hand down a steeply slanting rope to the deck and then jumped across to the wharf.
"Greldik!" Barak roared in response, swung down from his horse and clasped the evil-looking sailor in a bear hug.
"It would seem that Lord Barak is acquainted with our captain," the Earl of Seline observed.
"That’s disquieting," Silk said wryly. "I was hoping for a sober, sensible captain of middle years and a conservative disposition. I’m not fond of ships and sea travel to begin with."
"I’m told that Captain Greldik is one of the finest seamen in all of Cherek," the earl assured him.
"My Lord," Silk said with a pained look, "Cherek definitions can be deceptive." Sourly he watched Barak and Greldik toasting their reunion with tankards of ale that had been passed down to them from the ship by a grinning sailor.