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Authors: David Eddings

BOOK: Demon Lord Of Karanda
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Sadi shrugged. ‘Most assassinations in Cthol Murgos are carried out by the Dagashi. They’re efficient and discreet.’
Zakath’s eyes narrowed in thought. ‘That would seem to point a finger directly at Urgit, then. The Dagashi are expensive, and Urgit has access to the royal treasury.’
Silk grimaced. ‘No,’ he declared. ‘Urgit wouldn’t do that. A knife between your shoulder blades maybe, but not poison.’
‘How can you be so sure, Kheldar?’
‘I know him,’ Silk replied a bit lamely. ‘He’s weak and a little timid, but he wouldn’t be a party to a poisoning. It’s a contemptible way to resolve political differences.’
‘Prince Kheldar!’ Sadi protested.
‘Except in Nyissa, of course,’ Silk conceded. ‘One always needs to take quaint local customs into account.’ He pulled at his long, pointed nose. ‘I’ll admit that Urgit wouldn’t grieve too much if you woke up dead some morning,’ he said to the Mallorean Emperor, ‘but it’s all just a little too pat. If your generals believed that it was Urgit who arranged to have you killed, they’d stay here for the next ten generations trying to obliterate all of Murgodom, wouldn’t they?’
‘I’d assume so,’ Zakath said.
‘Who would benefit the most by disposing of you and rather effectively making sure that the bulk of your army doesn’t return to Mallorea in the foreseeable future? Not Urgit, certainly. More likely it would be somebody in Mallorea who wants a free hand there.’ Silk squared his shoulders. ‘Why don’t you let Liselle and me do a little snooping around before you lock your mind in stone on this? Obvious things always make me suspicious.’
‘That’s all very well, Kheldar,’ Zakath said rather testily, ‘but how can I be sure that my next meal won’t have another dose of exotic spices in it?’
‘You have at your bedside the finest cook in the world,’ the rat-faced man said, pointing grandly at Polgara, ‘and I can absolutely guarantee that she won’t poison you. She might turn you into a radish if you offend her, but she’d never poison you.’
‘All right, Silk, that will do,’ Polgara told him.
‘I’m only paying tribute to your extraordinary gifts, Polgara.’
Her eyes grew hard.
‘I think that perhaps it might be time for me to be on my way,’ Silk said to Garion.
‘Wise decision,’ Garion murmured.
The little man turned and quickly left the room.
‘Is he really as good as he pretends to be?’ Zakath asked curiously.
Polgara nodded. ‘Between them, Kheldar and Liselle can probably ferret out any secret in the world. Silk doesn’t always like it, but they’re almost a perfect team. And now, your Majesty, what would you like for breakfast?’
A curious exchange was taking place in the corner. Throughout the previous conversation, Garion had heard a faint, drowsy purr coming from Zith’s earthenware bottle. Either the little snake was expressing a general sense of contentment, or it may have been one of the peculiarities of her species to purr while sleeping. Zakath’s pregnant, mackerel-striped cat, attracted by that sound, jumped down from the bed and curiously waddled toward Zith’s little home. Absently, probably without even thinking about it, she responded to the purr coming from the bottle with one of her own. She sniffed at the bottle, then tentatively touched it with one soft paw. The peculiar duet of purring continued.
Then, perhaps because Sadi had not stoppered the bottle tightly enough or because she had long since devised this simple means of opening her front door, the little snake nudged the cork out of the bottle with her blunt nose. Both creatures continued to purr, although the cat was now obviously afire with curiosity. For a time Zith did not reveal herself, but lurked shyly in her bottle, still purring. Then, cautiously, she poked out her head, her forked tongue flickering as she tested the air.
The cat jumped straight up to a height of about three feet, giving vent to a startled yowl. Zith retreated immediately back into the safety of her house, though she continued to purr.
Warily, but still burning with curiosity, the cat approached the bottle again, moving one foot at a time.
‘Sadi,’ Zakath said, his voice filled with concern.
‘There’s no immediate danger, your Majesty,’ the eunuch assured him. ‘Zith never bites while she’s purring.’
Again the little green snake slid her head out of the bottle. This time the cat recoiled only slightly. Then, curiosity overcoming her natural aversion to reptiles, she continued her slow advance, her nose reaching out toward this remarkable creature. Zith, still purring, also extended her blunt nose. Their noses touched, and both flinched back slightly. Then they cautiously sniffed at each other, the cat with her nose, the snake with her tongue. Both were purring loudly now.
‘Astonishing,’ Sadi murmured. ‘I think they actually like each other.’
‘Sadi, please,’ Zakath said plaintively. ‘I don’t know how you feel about your snake, but I’m rather fond of my cat, and she
is
about to become a mother.’
‘I’ll speak with them, your Majesty,’ Sadi assured him. ‘I’m not sure that they’ll listen, but I’ll definitely speak with them.’
Belgarath had once again retired to the library, and Garion found him later that day poring over a large map of northern Mallorea. ‘Ah,’ he said, looking up as Garion entered, ‘there you are. I was just about to send for you. Come over here and look at this.’
Garion went to the table.
‘The appearance of this Mengha fellow might just work to our advantage, you know.’
‘I don’t quite follow that, Grandfather.’
‘Zandramas is here at Ashaba, right?’ Belgarath stabbed his finger at a spot in the representation of the Karandese mountains.
‘Yes,’ Garion said.
‘And Mengha’s moving west and south out of Calida, over here.’ The old man poked at the map again.
‘That’s what Brador says.’
‘He’s got her blocked off from most of the continent, Garion. She’s been very careful here in Cthol Murgos to avoid populated areas. There’s no reason to believe that she’s going to change once she gets to Mallorea. Urvon’s going to be to the south of her at Mal Yaska, and the wastes to the north are virtually impassable—even though it’s nearly summer.’
‘Summer?’
‘In the northern half of the world it is.’
‘Oh. I keep forgetting.’ Garion peered at the map. ‘Grandfather, we don’t have any idea of where “the place which is no more” might be. When Zandramas leaves Ashaba, she could go in any direction.’
Belgarath squinted at the map. ‘I don’t think so, Garion. In the light of all that’s happened in Mallorea—coupled with the fact that by now she knows that we’re on her trail—I think she almost
has
to be trying to get back to her power base in Darshiva. Everybody in the world is after her, and she needs help.’
‘We
certainly aren’t threatening her all that much,’ Garion said moodily. ‘We can’t even get out of Cthol Murgos.’
‘That’s what I wanted to talk to you about. You’ve got to persuade Zakath that it’s vital for us to leave here and get to Mallorea as quickly as possible.’
‘Persuade?’
‘Just do whatever you have to, Garion. There’s a great deal at stake.’
‘Why me?’ Garion said it without thinking.
Belgarath gave him a long, steady look.
‘Sorry,’ Garion muttered. ‘Forget that I said it.’
‘All right. I’ll do that.’
Late that evening, Zakath’s cat gave birth to seven healthy kittens while Zith hovered in anxious attendance, warning off all other observers with ominous hisses. Peculiarly, the only person the protective little reptile would allow near the newborn kittens was Velvet.
Garion had little success during the next couple of days in his efforts to steer his conversations with the convalescing Zakath around to the subject of the necessity for returning to Mallorea. The Emperor usually pleaded a lingering weakness as a result of his poisoning, though Garion privately suspected subterfuge on that score, since the man appeared to have more than enough energy for his usual activities and only protested exhaustion when Garion wanted to talk about a voyage.
On the evening of the fourth day, however, he decided to try negotiation one last time before turning to more direct alternatives. He found Zakath seated in the chair near his bed with a book in his hands. The dark circles beneath his eyes had vanished, the trembling had disappeared entirely, and he seemed totally alert. ‘Ah, Belgarion,’ he said almost cheerfully, ‘so good of you to stop by.’
‘I thought I’d come in and put you to sleep again,’ Garion replied with slightly exaggerated sarcasm.
‘Have I been that obvious?’ Zakath asked.
‘Yes, as a matter of fact you have. Every time I mention the words “ship” and “Mallorea” in the same sentence, your eyes snap shut. Zakath, we’ve got to talk about this, and time is starting to run out.’
Zakath passed one hand across his eyes with some show of weariness.
‘Let me put it this way,’ Garion pressed on. ‘Belgarath’s starting to get impatient. I’m trying to keep our discussions civil, but if he steps in, I can almost guarantee that they’re going to turn unpleasant—very quickly.’
Zakath lowered his hand, and his eyes narrowed. ‘That sounds vaguely like a threat, Belgarion.’
‘No,’ Garion disagreed. ‘As a matter of fact, it’s in the nature of friendly advice. If you want to stay here in Cthol Murgos, that’s up to you, but
we
have to get to Mallorea—and soon.’
‘And if I choose not to permit you to go?’
‘Permit?’ Garion laughed. ‘Zakath, did you grow up in the same world with the rest of us? Have you got even the remotest idea of what you’re talking about?’
‘I think that concludes this interview, Belgarion,’ the Emperor said coldly. He rose stiffly to his feet and turned to his bed. As usual, his cat had deposited her mewling little brood in the center of his coverlet and then gone off to nap alone in her wool-lined box in the corner. The irritated Emperor looked with some exasperation at the furry little puddle on his bed. ‘You have my permission to withdraw, Belgarion,’ he said over his shoulder. Then he reached down with both hands to scoop up the cluster of kittens.
Zith reared up out of the very center of the furry heap, fixed him with a cold eye, and hissed warningly.
‘Torak’s teeth!’ Zakath swore, jerking his hands away. ‘This is going too far! Go tell Sadi that I want his accursed snake out of my room immediately!’
‘He’s taken her out four times already, Zakath,’ Garion said mildly. ‘She just keeps crawling back.’ He suppressed a grin. ‘Maybe she likes you.’
‘Are you trying to be funny?’
‘Me?’
‘Get the snake out of here.’
Garion put his hands behind his back. ‘Not me, Zakath. I’ll go get Sadi.’
In the hallway outside, however, he encountered Velvet, who was coming toward the Emperor’s room with a mysterious smile on her face.
‘Do you think you could move Zith?’ Garion asked her. ‘She’s in the middle of Zakath’s bed with those kittens.’

You
can move her, Belgarion,’ the blond girl said, smiling the dimples into her cheeks. ‘She trusts you.’
‘I think I’d rather not try that.’
The two of them went back into the Emperor’s bedchamber.
‘Margravine,’ Zakath greeted her courteously, inclining his head.
She curtsied. ‘Your Majesty.’
‘Can you deal with this?’ he asked, pointing at the furry pile on his bed with the snake still half-reared out of the center, her eyes alert.
‘Of course, your Majesty.’ She approached the bed, and the snake flickered her tongue nervously. ‘Oh,
do
stop that, Zith,’ the blond girl chided. Then she lifted the front of her skirt to form a kind of pouch and began picking up kittens and depositing them in her improvised basket. Last of all she lifted Zith and laid her in the middle. She crossed the room and casually put them all into the box with the mother cat, who opened one golden eye, made room for her kittens and their bright green nursemaid, and promptly went back to sleep.
‘Isn’t that sweet?’ Velvet murmured softly. Then she turned back to Zakath. ‘Oh, by the way, your Majesty, Kheldar and I managed to find out who it was who poisoned you.’
‘What?’
She nodded, frowning slightly. ‘It came as something of a surprise, actually.’
The Emperor’s eyes had become intent. ‘You’re sure?’
‘As sure as one can be in these cases. You seldom find an eye-witness to a poisoning; but he was in the kitchen at the right time, he left right after you fell ill, and we know him by reputation.’ She smiled at Garion. ‘Have you noticed how people always tend to remember a man with white eyes?’
‘Naradas?’
Garion exclaimed.
‘Surprising, isn’t it?’
‘Who’s Naradas?’ Zakath demanded.
‘He works for Zandramas,’ Garion replied. He frowned. ‘That doesn’t make any sense, Velvet. Why would Zandramas want to kill him? Wouldn’t she want to keep him alive?’
She spread her hands. ‘I don’t know, Belgarion—not yet, anyway.’
‘Velvet?’ Zakath asked in puzzlement.
She smiled the dimples into her cheeks again. ‘Isn’t it silly?’ She laughed. ‘I suppose these little nicknames are a form of affection, though. Belgarion’s question is to the point, however. Can you think of any reason why Zandramas might want to kill you?’
‘Not immediately, but we can wring that answer out of her when I catch her—and I’ll make a point of doing that, even if I have to take Cthol Murgos apart stone by stone.’
‘She isn’t here,’ Garion said absently, still struggling with the whole idea. ‘She’s at Ashaba—in the House of Torak.’
Zakath’s eyes narrowed suspiciously. ‘Isn’t this convenient, Belgarion?’ he said. ‘I
happen
to get poisoned right after your arrival. Belgarath
happens
to cure me. Kheldar and Liselle
happen
to discover the identity of the poisoner, who
happens
to work for Zandramas, who
happens
to be at Ashaba, which
happens
to be in Mallorea—a place which just
happens
to be where you so desperately want to go. The coincidence staggers the imagination, wouldn’t you say?’

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