Guardians of the West

Guardians of the West by David Eddings

Book: Guardians of the West by David Eddings Read Free Book Online
Authors: David Eddings
Ads: Link
between Cthrag Sardius and Cthrag Yaska, wouldn't there? And if there is, maybe we ought to have a look into it."
    Belgarath gave him a long look and then sighed. "I thought that, once Torak was dead, we might get a chance to rest."
    "You've had a year or so." Beldin shrugged. "Much more than that and you start to get flabby."
    "You're a very disagreeable fellow, do you know that?"
    Beldin gave him a tight, ugly grin. "Yes," he agreed. "I thought you might have noticed that."
    The next morning Belgarath began meticulously sorting though a mountainous heap of crackling parchments, trying to impose some kind of order upon centuries of chaos. Errand watched the old man quietly for a time, then drifted over to the window to look out at the sun-warmed meadows of the Vale. Perhaps a mile away, there was another tower, a tall, slender structure that looked somehow very serene.
    "Do you mind if I go outside?" he asked Belgarath.
    "What? No, that's all right. Just don't wander too far away."
    "I won't," Errand promised, going to the top of the stairway that spiraled down into the cool dimness below.
    The early morning sunlight slanted across the dewdrenched meadow, and skylarks sang and spun through the sweet-smelling air. A brown rabbit hopped out of the tall grass and regarded Errand quite calmly. Then it sat on its haunches and began vigorously to scratch its long ears with a busy hind foot.
    Errand had not come out of the tower for random play, however, nor to watch rabbits. He had someplace to go and he set out across the dewy green meadow in the direction of the tower he had seen from Belgarath's window.
    He hadn't really counted on the dew, and his feet were uncomfortably wet by the time he reached the solitary tower.
    He walked around the base of the stone structure several times, his feet squelching in their sodden boots.
    "I wondered how long it would take before you came by," a very calm voice said to him.
    "I was busy helping Belgarath," Errand apologized.
    "Did he really need help?"
    "He was having a little trouble getting started."
    "Would you like to come up?"
    "If it's all right."
    "The door's on the far side."
    Errand went around the tower and found a large stone that had been turned to reveal a doorway. He went into the tower and on up the stairs.
    One tower room was much like another, but there were certain differences between this one and Belgarath's. As in Belgarath's tower, there was a fireplace here with a fire burning in it, but there appeared to be nothing in the flames here for them to feed upon. The room itself was strangely uncluttered, for the owner of this tower stored his parchment scrolls, tools, and implements in some unimaginable place, to be summoned as he required them.
    The owner of the tower sat beside the fire. His hair and beard were white, and he wore a blue, loose-fitting robe.
    "Come over to the fire and dry your feet, boy," he said in his gentle voice.
    "Thank you," Errand replied.
    "How is Polgara?"
    "Very well," Errand said, "And happy. She likes being married, I think." He lifted one foot and held it close to the fire.
    "Don't burn your shoes."
    "I'll be careful."
    "Would you like some breakfast?"
    "That would be nice. Belgarath forgets things like that sometimes."
    "On the table there."
    Errand looked at the table and saw a steaming bowl of porridge that had not been there before.
    "Thank you," he said politely, going to the table and pulling up a chair.
    "Was there something special you wanted to talk about?"
    "Not really," Errand replied, picking up a spoon and starting on the porridge. "I just thought I should come by. The Vale is yours, after all."
    "Polgara's been teaching you manners, I see."
    Errand smiled. "And other things, too."
    "Are you happy with her, Errand?" the owner of the tower asked.
    "Yes, Aldur, I really am," Errand replied and continued to eat his porridge.

CHAPTER THREE
    As the summer progressed, Errand found himself rather naturally more and more in the company of

Similar Books

Ceremony

Glen Cook

Doctor in Love

Richard Gordon

Of Wolves and Men

G. A. Hauser

She'll Take It

Mary Carter

Untimely Death

Elizabeth J. Duncan