(2)Eldest - Christopher Paolini
Synopsis of Eragon,
Book One of Inheritance
Eragon—a fifteen-year-old farmboy—is shocked when a polished blue stone appears
before him in the range of mountains known as the Spine. Eragon takes the stone to
the farm where he lives with his uncle, Garrow, and his cousin, Roran. Garrow and
his late wife, Marian, have raised Eragon. Nothing is known of his father; his mother,
Selena, was Garrow’s sister and has not been seen since Eragon’s birth.
Later, the stone cracks open and a baby dragon emerges. When Eragon touches her, a
silvery mark appears on his palm, and an irrevocable bond is forged between their
minds, making Eragon one of the legendary Dragon Riders.
The Dragon Riders were created thousands of years earlier in the aftermath of the
elves’ great war with the dragons, in order to ensure that hostilities would never again
afflict their two races. The Riders became peacekeepers, educators, healers, natural
philosophers, and the greatest of spellweavers—since being joined with a dragon
makes one a magician. Under their guidance and protection, the land enjoyed a golden
age.
When humans arrived in Alagaësia, they too were added to this elite order. After
many years of peace, the monstrous and warlike Urgals killed the dragon of a young
human Rider named Galbatorix. Driven mad by the loss and by his elders’ refusal to
provide him with another dragon, Galbatorix set out to topple the Riders.
He stole another dragon—whom he named Shruikan and forced to serve him through
certain black spells—and gathered around himself a group of thirteen traitors: the
Forsworn. With the help of those cruel disciples, Galbatorix threw down the Riders;
killed their leader, Vrael; and declared himself king over Alagaësia. In this,
Galbatorixwas only partly successful, for the elves and dwarves remain autonomous
in their secret haunts, and some humans have established an independent country,
Surda, in the south of Alagaësia. A stalemate has existed between these factions for
twenty years, preceded by eighty years of open conflict brought about by the
destruction of the Riders.
It is into this fragile political situation, then, that Eragon is thrust. He fears he is in
mortal danger—it is common knowledge that Galbatorix killed every Rider who
would not swear loyalty to him—and so Eragon hides the dragon from his family as
he raises her. During this time, Eragon names the creature Saphira, after a dragon
mentioned by the village storyteller, Brom. Soon Roran leaves the farm for a job that
will allow him to earn enough money to marry Katrina, the butcher’s daughter.
When Saphira stands taller than Eragon, two menacing, beetle-like strangers called
the Ra’zac arrive in Carvahall, searching for the stone that was her egg. Frightened,
Saphira kidnaps Eragon and flies into the Spine. Eragon manages to convince her to
turn back, but by then his home has been obliterated by the Ra’zac. Eragon finds
Garrow in the wreckage, tortured and badly wounded.
Garrow dies soon afterward, and Eragon vows to track down and kill the Ra’zac.
Eragon is accosted by Brom, who knows of Saphira’s existence and asks to
accompany Eragon for reasons of his own. After Eragon agrees, Brom gives him the
sword Zar’roc, which was once a Rider’s blade, though he refuses to say how he
acquired it.
Eragon learns much from Brom during their travels, including how to fight with
swords and use magic. Eventually, they lose the Ra’zac’s trail and visit the city of
Teirm, where Brom believes his old friend Jeod can help locate their lair.
In Teirm, the eccentric herbalist Angela tells Eragon’s fortune, predictingmighty
powers struggling to control his destiny; an epic romance with one of noble birth; the
fact that he will one day leave Alagaësia, never to return; and a betrayal from within
his family. Her companion, the werecat Solembum, also gives him some words of
advice. Then Eragon, Brom, and Saphira depart for Dras-Leona, where they hope to
find the Ra’zac.
Brom finally reveals that he is an agent of the Varden—a rebel group dedicated to
overthrowingGalbatorix—and that he had been hiding in Eragon’s village, waiting
for a new Dragon Rider to appear. Brom also explains that twenty years ago, he and
Jeod stole Saphira’s egg from Galbatorix. In the process, Brom killed Morzan, first
and last of the Forsworn. Only two other dragon eggs still exist, both of which remain
in Galbatorix’s possession.
Near Dras-Leona, the Ra’zac waylay Eragon and his companions, and Brom is
mortally wounded while protecting Eragon. The Ra’zac are driven away by a
mysterious youngman named Murtagh, who says he’s been tracking the Ra’zac.
Brom dies the following night. With his last breath, he confesses that he was once a
Rider and his slain dragon was also named Saphira. Eragon buries Brom in a tomb of
sandstone, which Saphira transmutes into pure diamond.
Without Brom, Eragon and Saphira decide to join the Varden. By ill chance, Eragon
is captured at the city of Gil’ead and brought to the Shade Durza, Galbatorix’s righthand
man. With Murtagh’s help, Eragon escapes from prison, bringing alongwith
him the unconscious elf Arya, another captive. By this point, Eragon and Murtagh
have become great friends.
With her mind, Arya tells Eragon that she has been ferrying Saphira’s egg between
the elves and the Varden, in the hopes that it might hatch for one of their children.
However, during her last trip, she was ambushed by Durza and forced to send the egg
elsewhere with magic, which is how it came to Eragon. Now Arya is seriously
wounded and requires the Varden’s medical help. Usingmental images, she shows
Eragon how to find the rebels. An epic chase ensues. Eragon and his friends traverse
almost four hundred miles in eight days. They are pursued by a contingent of Urgals,
who trap them in the towering Beor Mountains. Murtagh, who had not wanted to go
to the Varden, is forced to tell Eragon that he is the son of Morzan.
Murtagh, however, has denounced his father’s deeds and fled Galbatorix’s patronage
to seek his own destiny. He shows Eragon a great scar across his back, inflicted when
Morzan threw his sword, Zar’roc, at him when he was just a child. Thus, Eragon
learns his sword once belonged to Murtagh’s father, he who betrayed the Riders to
Galbatorix and slaughtered many of his former comrades.
Just before they are overwhelmed by the Urgals, Eragon and his friends are rescued
by the Varden, who seem to appear out of the very stone. It turns out that the rebels
are based in Farthen Dûr, a hollow mountain ten miles high and ten miles across. It is
also home to the dwarves’ capital, Tronjheim. Once inside, Eragon is taken to Ajihad,
leader of the Varden, while Murtagh is imprisoned because of his parentage. Ajihad
explains many things to Eragon, including that the Varden, elves, and dwarves had
agreed that when a new Rider appeared, he or she would initially be trained by Brom
and then sent to the elves to complete the instruction. Eragon must now decide
whether to follow this course.
Eragon meets with the dwarf king, Hrothgar, and Ajihad’s daughter, Nasuada; is
tested by the Twins, two bald and rather nasty magicians who serve Ajihad; spars
with Arya once she has recovered; and again encounters Angela and Solembum, who
have joined the Varden. Eragon and Saphira also bless one of the Varden’s orphan
babies.
Eragon’s stay is disrupted by news of an Urgal army approaching through the
dwarves’ tunnels. In the battle that follows, Eragon is separated from Saphira and
forced to fight Durza alone. Far stronger than any human, Durza easily defeats
Eragon, slashing open his back from shoulder to hip. At that moment, Saphira and
Arya break the roof of the chamber—a sixty-foot-wide star sapphire—distracting
Durza long enough for Eragon to stab him through the heart. Freed from Durza’s
spells, the Urgals are driven back into the tunnels.
While Eragon lies unconscious after the battle, he is telepathically contacted by a
beingwho identifies himself as Togira Ikonoka—the CrippleWho Is Whole. He
offers answers to all of Eragon’s questions and urges Eragon to seek him in
Ellesméra, where the elves live.
When Eragon wakes, he finds that, despite Angela’s best efforts, he has been left
with a huge scar similar to Murtagh’s. Dismayed, he also realizes that he only slew
Durza through sheer luck and that he desperately needs more training.
And at the end of Book One, Eragon decides that, yes, he will find this Togira
Ikonoka and learn from him. For gray-eyed Destiny now weaves apace, the first
resounding note of war echoes across the land, and the time fast approaches when
Eragon shall have to step forth and confront his one, true enemy: KingGalbatorix.
CONTENTS
Title Page
Dedication
Map
Synopsis of Eragon
A Twin Disaster
The Council of Elders
Truth Among Friends
Roran
The Hunted Hunters
Saphira’s Promise
Requiem
Fealty
A Sorceress, a Snake, and a Scroll
Hrothgar’s Gift
Hammer and Tongs
Retaliation
Az Sweldn rak Anhûin
Celbedeil
Diamonds in the Night
Under a Darkling Sky
Down the RushingMere-Wash
Drifting
Arya Svit-kona
Ceris
Wounds of the Past
Wounds of the Present
His Enemy’s Face
Arrow to the Heart
The Dagshelgr Invocation
The Pinewood City
Queen Islanzadí
Out of the Past
Conviction
Repercussions
Exodus
On the Crags of Tel’naeír
The Secret Lives of Ants
Under the Menoa Tree
A Maze of Opposition
Hanging by a Thread
Elva
Resurgence
Why Do You Fight?
Black MorningGlory
The Nature of Evil
Image of Perfection
The Obliterator
Narda
The Hammer Falls
The Beginning of Wisdom
Broken Egg and Scattered Nest
The Gift of Dragons
In a Starry Glade
Landfall
Teirm
Jeod Longshanks
An Unexpected Ally
Escape
Child’s Play
Premonition of War
Red Blade, White Blade
Visions Near and Far
Gifts
The Maw of the Ocean
Running the Boar’s Eye
To Aberon
The Burning Plains
The Clouds of War
Nar Garzhvog
Witch’s Brew
The Storm Breaks
Convergence
Eldest
Inheritance
Reunion
Pronunciation Guide and Glossary
A TWIN DISASTER
The songs of the dead are the lamentations of the living.
So thought Eragon as he stepped over a twisted and hacked Urgal, listening to the
keening of women who removed loved ones from the blood-muddied ground of
Farthen Dûr. Behind him Saphira delicately skirted the corpse, her glittering blue
scales the only color in the gloom that filled the hollow mountain.
It was three days since the Varden and dwarves had fought the Urgals for possession
of Tronjheim, the mile-high, conical city nestled in the center of Farthen Dûr, but the
battlefield was still strewn with carnage. The sheer number of bodies had stymied
their attempts to bury the dead. In the distance, a mountainous fire glowed sullenly by
Farthen Dûr’s wall where the Urgals were being burned. No burial or honored resting
place for them.
Since waking to find his wound healed by Angela, Eragon had tried three times to
assist in the recovery effort. On each occasion he had been racked by terrible pains
that seemed to explode from his spine. The healers gave him various potions to drink.
Arya and Angela said that he was perfectly sound. Nevertheless, he hurt. Nor could
Saphira help, only share his pain as it rebounded across their mental link.
Eragon ran a hand over his face and looked up at the stars showing through Farthen
Dûr’s distant top, which were smudged with sooty smoke from the pyre. Three days.
Three days since he had killed Durza; three days since people began calling him
Shadeslayer; three days since the remnants of the sorcerer’s consciousness had
ravaged his mind and he had been saved by the mysterious Togira Ikonoka, the
CrippleWho Is Whole. He had told no one about that vision but Saphira. Fighting
Durza and the dark spirits that controlled him had transformed Eragon; although for
better or for worse he was still unsure. He felt fragile, as if a sudden shock would
shatter his reconstructed body and consciousness.
And now he had come to the site of the combat, driven by a morbid desire to see its
aftermath. Upon arriving, he found nothing but the uncomfortable presence of death
and decay, not the glory that heroic songs had led him to expect.
Before his uncle, Garrow, was slain by the Ra’zac months earlier, the brutality that
Eragon had witnessed between the humans, dwarves, and Urgals would have
destroyed him. Now it numbed him. He had realized, with Saphira’s help, that the
only way to stay rational amid such pain was todo things. Beyond that, he no longer
believed that life possessed inherent meaning—not after seeingmen torn apart by the
Kull, a race of giant Urgals, and the ground a bed of thrashing limbs and the dirt so
wet with blood it soaked through the soles of his boots. If any honor existed in war, he
concluded, it was in fighting to protect others from harm.
He bent and plucked a tooth, a molar, from the dirt. Bouncing it on his palm, he and
Saphira slowly made a circuit through the trampled plain. They stopped at its edge
when they noticed Jörmundur—Ajihad’s second in command in the Varden—
hurrying toward them from Tronjheim. When he came near, Jörmundur bowed, a
gesture Eragon knew he would never have made just days before.
“I’m glad I found you in time, Eragon.†He clutched a parchment note in one hand.
“Ajihad is returning, and he wants you to be there when he arrives. The others are
already waiting for him by Tronjheim’s west gate. We’ll have to hurry to get there in
time.â€
Eragon nodded and headed toward the gate, keeping a hand on Saphira. Ajihad had
been gone most of the three days, hunting down Urgals who had managed to escape
into the dwarf tunnels that honeycombed the stone beneath the Beor Mountains. The
one time Eragon had seen him between expeditions, Ajihad was in a rage over
discovering that his daughter, Nasuada, had disobeyed his orders to leave with the
other women and children before the battle. Instead, she had secretly fought among
the Varden’s archers.
Murtagh and the Twins had accompanied Ajihad: the Twins because it was
dangerous work and the Varden’s leader needed the protection of their magical skills,
and Murtagh because he was eager to continue proving that he bore the Varden no ill
will. It surprised Eragon how much people’s attitudes toward Murtagh had changed,
considering that Murtagh’s father was the Dragon Rider Morzan, who had betrayed
the Riders to Galbatorix. Even though Murtagh despised his father and was loyal to
Eragon, the Varden had not trusted him. But now, no one was willing to waste energy
on a petty hate when so much work remained. Eragon missed talkingwith Murtagh
and looked forward to discussing all that had happened, once he returned.
As Eragon and Saphira rounded Tronjheim, a small group became visible in the pool
of lantern light before the timber gate. Among them were Orik—the dwarf shifting
impatiently on his stout legs—and Arya. The white bandage around her upper arm
gleamed in the darkness, reflecting a faint highlight onto the bottom of her hair.
Eragon felt a strange thrill, as he always did when he saw the elf. She looked at him
and Saphira, green eyes flashing, then continued watching for Ajihad.
By breaking Isidar Mithrim—the great star sapphire that was sixty feet across and
carved in the shape of a rose—Arya had allowed Eragon to kill Durza and so win the
battle. Still, the dwarves were furious with her for destroying their most prized
treasure. They refused to move the sapphire’s remains, leaving them in a massive
circle inside Tronjheim’s central chamber. Eragon had walked through the splintered
wreckage and shared the dwarves’ sorrow for all the lost beauty.
He and Saphira stopped by Orik and looked out at the empty land that surrounded
Tronjheim, extending to Farthen Dûr’s base five miles away in each direction.
“Where will Ajihad come from?†asked Eragon.
Orik pointed at a cluster of lanterns staked around a large tunnel opening a couple of
miles away. “He should be here soon.â€
Eragon waited patiently with the others, answering comments directed at him but
preferring to speak with Saphira in the peace of his mind. The quiet that filled Farthen
Dûr suited him.
Half an hour passed before motion flickered in the distant tunnel. A group of ten men
climbed out onto the ground, then turned and helped up as many dwarves. One of the
men—Eragon assumed it was Ajihad—raised a hand, and the warriors assembled
behind him in two straight lines. At a signal, the formation marched proudly toward
Tronjheim.
Before they went more than five yards, the tunnel behind them swarmed with a flurry
of activity as more figures jumped out. Eragon squinted, unable to see clearly from so
far away.
Those are Urgals!exclaimed Saphira, her body tensing like a drawn bowstring.
Eragon did not question her. “Urgals!†he cried, and leaped onto Saphira, berating
himself for leaving his sword, Zar’roc, in his room. No one had expected an attack
now that the Urgal army had been driven away.
His wound twinged as Saphira lifted her azure wings, then drove them down and
jumped forward, gaining speed and altitude each second. Below them, Arya ran
toward the tunnel, nearly keeping apace with Saphira. Orik trailed her with several
men, while Jörmundur sprinted back toward the barracks.
Eragon was forced to watch helplessly as the Urgals fell on the rear of Ajihad’s
warriors; he could not work magic over such a distance. The monsters had the
advantage of surprise and quickly cut down four men, forcing the rest of the warriors,
men and dwarves alike, to cluster around Ajihad in an attempt to protect him. Swords
and axes clashed as the groups pressed together. Light flashed from one of the Twins,
and an Urgal fell, clutching the stump of his severed arm.
For a minute, it seemed the defenders would be able to resist the Urgals, but then a
swirl of motion disturbed the air, like a faint band of mist wrapping itself around the
combatants. When it cleared, only four warriors were standing: Ajihad, the Twins,
and Murtagh. The Urgals converged on them, blocking Eragon’s view as he stared
with rising horror and fear.
No! No! No!
Before Saphira could reach the fight, the knot of Urgals streamed back to the tunnel
and scrambled underground, leaving only prone forms behind.
The moment Saphira touched down, Eragon vaulted off, then faltered, overcome by
grief and anger. I can’t do this. It reminded him too much of when he had returned to
the farm to find his uncle Garrow dying. Fighting back his dread with every step, he
began to search for survivors.
The site was eerily similar to the battlefield he had inspected earlier, except that here
the blood was fresh.
In the center of the massacre lay Ajihad, his breastplate rent with numerous gashes,
surrounded by five Urgals he had slain. His breath still came in ragged gasps. Eragon
knelt by him and lowered his face so his tears would not land on the leader’s ruined
chest. No one could heal such wounds. Running up to them, Arya paused and stopped,
her face transformed with sorrow when she saw that Ajihad could not be saved.
“Eragon.†The name slipped from Ajihad’s lips—no more than a whisper.
“Yes, I am here.â€
“Listen to me, Eragon… I have one last command for you.†Eragon leaned closer to
catch the dyingman’s words. “You must promise me something: promise that you…
won’t let the Varden fall into chaos. They are the only hope for resisting the Empire…
They must be kept strong. You must promise me.â€
“I promise.â€
“Then peace be with you, Eragon Shadeslayer…â€With his last breath, Ajihad closed
his eyes, setting his noble face in repose, and died.
Eragon bowed his head. He had trouble breathing past the lump in his throat, which
was so hard it hurt. Arya blessed Ajihad in a ripple of the ancient language, then said
in her musical voice, “Alas, his death will cause much strife. He is right, you must do
all you can to avert a struggle for power. I will assist where possible.â€
Unwilling to speak, Eragon gazed at the rest of the bodies. He would have given
anything to be elsewhere. Saphira nosed one of the Urgals and said, This should not
have happened. It is an evil doing, and all the worse for coming when we should be
safe and victorious . She examined another body, then swung her head around. Where
are the Twins and Murtagh? They’re not among the dead.
Eragon scanned the corpses. You’re right! Elation surged within him as he hurried to
the tunnel’s mouth. There pools of thickening blood filled the hollows in the worn
marble steps like a series of black mirrors, glossy and oval, as if several torn bodies
had been dragged down them. The Urgals must have taken them! But why? They don’t
keep prisoners or hostages. Despair instantly returned. It doesn’t matter. We can’t
pursue them without reinforcements; you wouldn’t even fit through the opening.
They may still be alive. Would you abandon them?
What do you expect me to do? The dwarf tunnels are an endless maze! I would only
get lost. And I couldn’t catch Urgals on foot, though Arya might be able to.
Then ask her to.
Arya!Eragon hesitated, torn between his desire for action and his loathing to put her
in danger. Still, if any one person in the Varden could handle the Urgals, it was she.
With a groan, he explained what they had found.
Arya’s slanted eyebrows met in a frown. “It makes no sense.â€
“Will you pursue them?â€
She stared at him for a heavy moment. “Wiol ono.†For you. Then she bounded
forward, sword flashing in her hand as she dove into the earth’s belly.
Burningwith frustration, Eragon settled cross-legged by Ajihad, keepingwatch over
the body. He could barely assimilate the fact that Ajihad was dead and Murtagh
missing. Murtagh . Son of one of the Forsworn—the thirteen Riders who had helped
Galbatorix destroy their order and anoint himself king of Alagaësia—and Eragon’s
friend. At times Eragon had wished Murtagh gone, but now that he had been forcibly
removed, the loss left an unexpected void. He sat motionless as Orik approached with
the men.
When Orik saw Ajihad, he stamped his feet and swore in Dwarvish, swinging his ax
into the body of an Urgal. The men only stood in shock. Rubbing a pinch of dirt
between his callused hands, the dwarf growled, “Ah, now a hornet’s nest has broken;
we’ll have no peace among the Varden after this. Barzûln, but this makes things
complicated. Were you in time to hear his last words?â€
Eragon glanced at Saphira. “They must wait for the right person before I’ll repeat
them.â€
“I see. And where’d be Arya?â€
Eragon pointed.
Orik swore again, then shook his head and sat on his heels.
Jörmundur soon arrived with twelve ranks of sixwarriors each. He motioned for
them to wait outside the radius of bodies while he proceeded onward alone. He bent
and touched Ajihad on the shoulder. “How can fate be this cruel, my old friend? I
would have been here sooner if not for the size of this cursed mountain, and then you
might have been saved. Instead, we are wounded at the height of our triumph.â€
Eragon softly told him about Arya and the disappearance of the Twins and Murtagh.
“She should not have gone,†said Jörmundur, straightening, “but we can do naught
about it now. Guards will be posted here, but it will be at least an hour before dwarf
guides can be found for another expedition into the tunnels.â€
“I’d be willing to lead it,†offered Orik.
Jörmundur looked back at Tronjheim, his gaze distant. “No, Hrothgar will need you
now; someone else will have to go. I’m sorry, Eragon, but everyone importantmust
stay here until Ajihad’s successor is chosen. Arya will have to fend for herself… We
could not overtake her anyway.â€
Eragon nodded, accepting the inevitable.
Jörmundur swept his gaze around before saying so all could hear, “Ajihad has died a
warrior’s death! Look, he slew five Urgals where a lesser man might have been
overwhelmed by one. We will give him every honor and hope his spirit pleases the
gods. Bear him and our companions back to Tronjheim on your shields… and do not
be ashamed to let your tears be seen, for this is a day of sorrow that all will remember.
May we soon have the privilege of sheathing our blades in the monsters who have
slain our leader!â€
As one, the warriors knelt, baring their heads in homage to Ajihad. Then they stood
and reverently lifted him on their shields so he lay between their shoulders. Already
many of the Varden wept, tears flowing into beards, yet they did not disgrace their
duty and allow Ajihad to fall. With solemn steps, they marched back to Tronjheim,
Saphira and Eragon in the middle of the procession.
THE COUNCIL OF ELDERS
Eragon roused himself and rolled to the edge of the bed, looking about the room,
which was suffused with the dim glow of a shuttered lantern. He sat and watched
Saphira sleep. Her muscled sides expanded and contracted as the great bellows of her
lungs forced air through her scaled nostrils. Eragon thought of the raging inferno that
she could now summon at will and send roaring out of her maw. It was an awesome
sight when flames hot enough to melt metal rushed past her tongue and ivory teeth
without harming them. Since she first breathed fire during his fight with Durza—
while plunging toward them from the top of Tronjheim—Saphira had been
insufferably proud of her new talent. She was constantly releasing little jets of flame,
and she took every opportunity to light objects ablaze.
Because Isidar Mithrim was shattered, Eragon and Saphira had been unable to remain
in the dragonhold above it. The dwarves had given them quarters in an old guardroom
on Tronjheim’s bottom level. It was a large room, but with a low ceiling and dark
walls.
Anguish gripped Eragon as he remembered the events of the previous day. Tears
filled his eyes, spilling over, and he caught one on his hand. They had heard nothing
from Arya until late that evening, when she emerged from the tunnel, weary and
footsore. Despite her best efforts—and all her magic—the Urgals had escaped her. “I
found these,†she said. Then she revealed one of the Twins’ purple robes, torn and
bloodied, and Murtagh’s tunic and both his leather gauntlets. “They were strewn
along the edge of a black chasm, the bottom of which no tunnel reaches. The Urgals
must have stolen their armor and weapons and thrown the bodies into the pit. I scryed
both Murtagh and the Twins, and saw naught but the shadows of the abyss.†Her eyes
met Eragon’s. “I’m sorry; they are gone.â€
Now, in the confines of his mind, Eragon mourned Murtagh. It was a dreadful,
creeping feeling of loss and horror made worse by the fact that he had grown ever
more familiar with it in past months.
As he stared at the tear in his hand—a small, glistening dome—he decided to scry the
three men himself. He knew it was a desperate and futile prospect, but he had to try in
order to convince himself that Murtagh was really gone. Even so, he was uncertain if
he wanted to succeed where Arya had failed, if it would make him feel any better to
catch a glimpse of Murtagh lying broken at the base of a cliff deep below Farthen
Dûr.
He whispered, “Draumr kópa.†Darkness enveloped the liquid, turning it into a small
dot of night on his silver palm. Movement flickered through it, like the swish of a bird
across a clouded moon… then nothing.
Another tear joined the first.
Eragon took a deep breath, leaned back, and let calm settle over him. Since
recovering from Durza’s wound, he had realized—humbling as it was—that he had
prevailed only through sheer luck. If I ever face another Shade, or the Ra’zac, or
Galbatorix, I mustbe stronger if I expect to win. Brom could have taught me more, I
know he could have. But without him, I have but one choice: the elves.
Saphira’s breathing quickened, and she opened her eyes, yawning expansively. Good
morning, little one.
Is it? He looked down and leaned on his hands, compressing the mattress. It’s
terrible… Murtagh and Ajihad… Why didn’t sentries in the tunnels warn us of the
Urgals? They shouldn’t have been able to trail Ajihad’s group without being
noticed… Arya was right, it doesn’t make sense.
We may never know the truth,said Saphira gently. She stood, wings brushing the
ceiling. You need to eat, then we must discover what the Varden are planning. We
can’t waste time; a new leader could be chosen within hours.
Eragon agreed, thinking of how they had left everyone yesterday: Orik rushing off to
give KingHrothgar the tidings, Jörmundur takingAjihad’s body to a place where it
would rest until the funeral, and Arya, who stood alone and watched the goings-on.
Eragon rose and strapped on Zar’roc and his bow, then bent and lifted Snowfire’s
saddle. A line of pain sheared through his torso, driving him to the floor, where he
writhed, scrabbling at his back. It felt like he was being sawed in half. Saphira
growled as the ripping sensation reached her. She tried to soothe him with her own
mind but was unable to alleviate his suffering. Her tail instinctually lifted, as if to
fight.
It took minutes before the fit subsided and the last throb faded away, leaving Eragon
gasping. Sweat drenched his face, making his hair stick and his eyes sting. He reached
back and gingerly fingered the top of his scar. It was hot and inflamed and sensitive to
touch. Saphira lowered her nose and touched him on the arm. Oh, little one…
It was worse this time,he said, staggering upright. She let him lean against her as he
wiped off the sweat with a rag, then he tentatively stepped toward the door.
Are you strong enough to go?
We have to. We’re obliged as dragon and Rider to make a public choice regarding
the next head of the Varden, and perhaps even influence the selection. I won’t ignore
the strength of our position; we now wield great authority within the Varden. At least
the Twins aren’t here to grab the position for themselves. That’s the only good in the
situation.
Very well, but Durza should suffer a thousand years of torture for what he did to you.
He grunted. Just stay close to me.
Together they made their way through Tronjheim, toward the nearest kitchen. In the
corridors and hallways, people stopped and bowed to them, murmuring “Argetlam†or
“Shadeslayer.†Even dwarves made the motions, though not as often. Eragon was
struck by the somber, haunted expressions of the humans and the dark clothing they
wore to display their sadness. Many women were dressed entirely in black, lace veils
covering their faces.
In the kitchen, Eragon brought a stone platter of food to a low table. Saphira watched
him carefully in case he should have another attack. Several people tried to approach
him, but she lifted a lip and growled, sending them scurrying away. Eragon picked at
his food and pretended to ignore the disturbances. Finally, trying to divert his
thoughts from Murtagh, he asked, Who do you think has the means to take control of
the Varden now that Ajihad and the Twins are gone?
She hesitated. It’s possible you could, if Ajihad’s last words were interpreted as a
blessing to secure the leadership. Almost no one would oppose you. However, that
does not seem a wise path to take. I see only trouble in that direction.
I agree. Besides, Arya wouldn’t approve, and she could be a dangerous enemy. Elves
can’t lie in the ancient language, but they have no such inhibition in ours—she could
deny that Ajihad ever uttered those words if it served her purposes. No, I don’t want
the position… What about Jörmundur?
Ajihad called him his right-hand man. Unfortunately, we know little about him or the
Varden’s other leaders. Such a short time has passed since we came here. We will
have to make our judgment on our feelings and impressions, without the benefit of
history.
Eragon pushed his fish around a lump of mashed tubers. Don’t forget Hrothgar and
the dwarf clans; they won’t be quiet in this. Except for Arya, the elves have no say in
the succession—a decision will be made before word of this even reaches them. But
the dwarves can’t be—won’t be—ignored. Hrothgar favors the Varden, but if enough
clans oppose him, he might be maneuvered into backing someone unsuited for the
command.
And who might that be?
A person easily manipulated. He closed his eyes and leaned back. It could be anyone
in Farthen Dûr, anyone at all.
For a longwhile, they both considered the issues facing them. Then Saphira said,
Eragon, there is someone here to see you. I can’t scare him away.
Eh? He cracked his eyes open, squinting as they adjusted to the light. A pale-looking
youth stood by the table. The boy eyed Saphira like he was afraid she would try to eat
him. “What is it?†asked Eragon, not unkindly.
The boy started, flustered, then bowed. “You have been summoned, Argetlam, to
speak before the Council of Elders.â€
“Who are they?â€
The question confused the boy even more. “The—the council is… are… people we—
that is, the Varden—choose to speak on our behalf to Ajihad. They were his trusted
advisers, and now they wish to see you. It is a great honor!†He finished with a quick
smile.
“Are you to lead me to them?â€
“Yes, I am.â€
Saphira looked at Eragon questioningly. He shrugged and left the uneaten food,
motioning for the boy to show the way. As they walked, the boy admired Zar’roc with
bright eyes, then looked down shyly.
“What are you called?†asked Eragon.
“Jarsha, sir.â€
“That’s a good name. You carried your message well; you should be proud.†Jarsha
beamed and bounced forward.
They reached a convex stone door, which Jarsha pushed open. The room inside was
circular, with a sky blue dome decorated with constellations. A round marble table,
inlaid with the crest of Dûrgrimst Ingeitum—an upright hammer ringed by twelve
stars—stood in the center of the chamber. Seated there were Jörmundur and two other
men, one tall and one broad; a woman with pinched lips, close-set eyes, and
elaborately painted cheeks; and a second woman with an immense pile of gray hair
above a matronly face, belied by a dagger hilt peeking out of the vast hills of her
bodice.
“You may go,†said Jörmundur to Jarsha, who quickly bowed and left.
Conscious that he was beingwatched, Eragon surveyed the room, then seated himself
in the middle of a swath of empty chairs, so that the council members were forced to
turn in their seats in order to look at him. Saphira hunkered directly behind him; he
could feel her hot breath on the top of his head.
Jörmundur got halfway up to make a slight bow, then reseated himself. “Thank you
for coming, Eragon, even though you have suffered your own loss. This is Umérth,â€
the tall man; “Falberd,†the broad one; “and Sabrae and Elessari,†the two women.
Eragon inclined his head, then asked, “And what of the Twins, were they part of this
council?â€
Sabrae shook her head sharply and tapped a long fingernail on the table. “They had
naught to do with us. They were slime—worse than slime—leeches that worked only
for their own benefit. They had no desire to serve the Varden. Thus, they had no place
in this council.†Eragon could smell her perfume all the way on the other side of the
table; it was thick and oily, like a rotting flower. He hid a smile at the thought.
“Enough. We’re not here to discuss the Twins,†said Jörmundur. “We face a crisis
that must be dealt with quickly and effectively. If we don’t choose Ajihad’s successor,
someone else will. Hrothgar has already contacted us to convey his condolences.
While he was more than courteous, he is sure to be forming his own plans even as we
speak. We must also consider Du Vrangr Gata, the magic users. Most of them are
loyal to the Varden, but it’s difficult to predict their actions even in the best of times.
They might decide to oppose our authority for their own advantage. That is why we
need your assistance, Eragon, to provide the legitimacy required by whoever is to take
Ajihad’s place.â€
Falberd heaved himself up, planting his meaty hands on the table. “The five of us
have already decided whom to support. There is no doubt among us that it is the right
person. But,†he raised a thick finger, “before we reveal who it is, you must give us
your word of honor that whether you agree or disagree with us, nothing of our
discussion will leave this room.â€
Why would they want that?Eragon asked Saphira.
I don’t know,she said, snorting. It might be a trap… It’s a gamble you’ll have to take.
Remember, though, they haven’t asked meto pledge anything. I can always tell Arya
what they say, if needed. Silly of them, forgetting that I’m as intelligent as any human.
Pleased with the thought, Eragon said, “Very well, you have my word. Now, who do
you want to lead the Varden?â€
“Nasuada.â€
Surprised, Eragon dropped his gaze, thinking quickly. He had not considered
Nasuada for the succession because of her youth—she was just a few years older than
Eragon. No real reason existed, of course, for her not to lead, but why would the
Council of Elders want her to? How would they benefit? He remembered Brom’s
advice and tried to examine the issue from every angle, knowing that he had to decide
swiftly.
Nasuada has steel in her,observed Saphira. She would be like her father.
Maybe, but what’s their reason for picking her?
To gain time, Eragon asked, “Why not you, Jörmundur? Ajihad called you his righthand
man. Doesn’t that mean you should take his place now that he’s gone?â€
A current of unease ran through the council: Sabrae sat even straighter, hands clasped
before her; Umérth and Falberd glanced at each other darkly, while Elessari just
smiled, the dagger hilt jiggling on her chest.
“Because,†said Jörmundur, selecting his words with care, “Ajihad was speaking of
military matters then, nothingmore. Also, I am a member of this council, which only
has power because we support one another. It would be foolish and dangerous for one
of us to raise himself above the rest.†The council relaxed as he finished, and Elessari
patted Jörmundur on the forearm.
Ha!exclaimed Saphira. He probably would have taken power if it were possible to
force the others to back him. Just look how they eye him. He’s like a wolf in their
midst.
A wolf in a pack of jackals, perhaps.
“Does Nasuada have enough experience?†inquired Eragon.
Elessari pressed herself against the table’s edge as she leaned forward. “I had already
been here for seven years when Ajihad joined the Varden. I’ve watched Nasuada
grow up from a darling girl to the woman she is. A trifle light-headed occasionally,
but a good figure to lead the Varden. The people will love her. Now I,†she patted
herself affectionately on the bosom, “and my friends will be here to guide her through
these troubled times. She will never be without someone to show her the way.
Inexperience should be no barrier to her taking her rightful position.â€
Understanding flooded Eragon. They want a puppet!
“Ajihad’s funeral will be held in two days,†broke in Umérth. “Directly afterward, we
plan to appoint Nasuada as our new leader. We have yet to ask her, but she will surely
agree. We want you to be present at the appointing—no one, not even Hrothgar, can
complain about it then—and to swear fealty to the Varden. That will give back the
confidence Ajihad’s death has stolen from the people, and prevent anyone from trying
to splinter this organization.â€
Fealty!
Saphira quickly touched Eragon’s mind. Notice, they don’t want you to swear to
Nasuada—just to the Varden.
Yes, and they want to be the ones to appoint Nasuada, which would indicate that the
council is more powerful than she. They could have asked Arya or us to appoint her,
but that would mean acknowledging whoever did it as above everyone in the Varden.
This way, they assert their superiority over Nasuada, gain control over us through
fealty, and also get the benefit of having a Rider endorse Nasuada in public.
“What happens,†he asked, “if I decide not to accept your offer?â€
“Offer?†Falberd asked, seeming puzzled. “Why, nothing, of course. Only it would
be a terrible slight if you’re not present when Nasuada is chosen. If the hero of the
battle of Farthen Dûr ignores her, what can she think but that a Rider has spited her
and found the Varden unworthy to serve?Who could bear such a shame?â€
The message could have been no clearer. Eragon clenched Zar’roc’s pommel under
the table, yearning to scream that it was unnecessary to force him to support the
Varden, that he would have done it anyway. Now, however, he instinctively wanted to
rebel, to elude the shackles they were trying to place on him. “Since Riders are so
highly thought of, I could decide that my efforts would be best spent guiding the
Varden myself.â€
The mood in the room hardened. “That would be unwise,†stated Sabrae.
Eragon combed his mind for a way to escape the situation. With Ajihad gone, said
Saphira, it may be impossible to remain independent of every group, as he wanted us
to. We cannot anger the Varden, and if this council is to control it once Nasuada is in
place, then we must appease them. Remember, they act as much out of selfpreservation
as we do.
But what will they want us to do once we are in their grasp? Will they respect the
Varden’s pact with the elves and send us to Ellesméra for training, or command
otherwise? Jörmundur strikes me as an honorable man, but the rest of the council? I
can’t tell.
Saphira brushed the top of his head with her jaw. Agree to be at this ceremony with
Nasuada; that much I think we must do. As for swearing fealty, see if you can avoid
acquiescing. Perhaps something will occur between now and then that will change
our position… Arya may have a solution.
Without warning, Eragon nodded and said, “As you wish; I shall attend Nasuada’s
appointment.â€
Jörmundur looked relieved. “Good, good. Then we have only one more matter to deal
with before you go: Nasuada’s acceptance. There’s no reason to delay, with all of us
here. I’ll send for her immediately. And Arya too—we need the elves’ approval
before making this decision public. It shouldn’t be difficult to procure; Arya cannot
go against our counciland you, Eragon. She will have to agree with our judgment.â€
“Wait,†commanded Elessari, a steely glint in her eyes. “Your word, though, Rider.
Will you give it in fealty at the ceremony?â€
“Yes, you must do that,†agreed Falberd. “The Varden would be disgraced if we
couldn’t provide you every protection.â€
A nice way to put it!
It was worth a try,said Saphira. I fear you have no choice now.
They wouldn’t dare harm us if I refused.
No, but they could cause us no end of grief. It is not for my own sake that I say
accept, but for yours. Many dangers exist that I cannot protect you from, Eragon.
With Galbatorix set against us, you need allies, not enemies, around you. We cannot
afford to contend with both the Empire and the Varden.
Finally, “I’ll give it.†All around the table were signs of relaxation—even a poorly
concealed sigh from Umérth. They’re afraid of us!
As well they should be, sniped Saphira.
Jörmundur called for Jarsha, and with a few words sent the boy scampering off for
Nasuada and Arya. While he was gone, the conversation fell into an uncomfortable
silence. Eragon ignored the council, focusing instead on working a way out of his
dilemma. None sprang to mind.
When the door opened again, everyone turned expectantly. First came Nasuada, chin
held high and eyes steady. Her embroidered gown was the deepest shade of black,
deeper even than her skin, broken only by a slash of royal purple that stretched from
shoulder to hip. Behind her was Arya, her stride as lithe and smooth as a cat’s, and an
openly awestruck Jarsha.
The boy was dismissed, then Jörmundur helped Nasuada into a seat. Eragon hastened
to do the same for Arya, but she ignored the proffered chair and stood at a distance
from the table. Saphira, he said, let her know all that’s happened. I have a feeling the
council won’t inform her that they’ve compelled me to give the Varden my loyalty.
“Arya,†acknowledged Jörmundur with a nod, then concentrated on Nasuada.
“Nasuada, Daughter of Ajihad, the Council of Elders wishes to formally extend its
deepest condolences for the loss you, more than anyone else, have suffered…†In a
lower voice, he added, “You have our personal sympathies as well. We all know what
it is like to have a family member killed by the Empire.â€
“Thank you,†murmured Nasuada, lowering her almond eyes. She sat, shy and
demure, and with an air of vulnerability that made Eragon want to comfort her. Her
demeanor was tragically different from that of the energetic youngwoman who had
visited him and Saphira in the dragonhold before the battle.
“Although this is your time of mourning, a quandary exists that you must resolve.
This council cannot lead the Varden. And someone must replace your father after the
funeral. We ask that you receive the position. As his heir, it is rightfully yours—the
Varden expect it of you.â€
Nasuada bowed her head with shining eyes. Grief was plain in her voice when she
said, “I never thought I would be called upon to take my father’s place so young.
Yet… if you insist it is my duty… I will embrace the office.â€
TRUTH AMONG FRIENDS
The Council of Elders beamed with triumph, pleased that Nasuada had done what
they wanted. “We do insist,†said Jörmundur, “for your own good and the good of the
Varden.†The rest of the elders added their expressions of support, which Nasuada
accepted with sad smiles. Sabrae threw an angry glance at Eragon when he did not
join in.
Throughout the exchange, Eragon watched Arya for any reaction to either his news
or the council’s announcement. Neither revelation caused her inscrutable expression
to change. However, Saphira told him, She wishes to talk with us afterward.
Before Eragon could reply, Falberd turned to Arya. “Will the elves find this
agreeable?â€
She stared at Falberd until the man fidgeted under her piercing gaze, then lifted an
eyebrow. “I cannot speak for my queen, but I find nothing objectionable to it.
Nasuada has my blessing.â€
How could she find it otherwise, knowing what we’ve told her? thought Eragon
bitterly. We’re all backed into corners.
Arya’s remark obviously pleased the council. Nasuada thanked her and asked
Jörmundur, “Is there anything else that must be discussed? For I am weary.â€
Jörmundur shook his head. “We will make all the arrangements. I promise you won’t
be troubled until the funeral.â€
“Again, thank you. Would you leave me now? I need time to consider how best to
honor my father and serve the Varden. You have given me much to ponder.†Nasuada
splayed her delicate fingers on the dark cloth on her lap.
Umérth looked like he was going to protest at the council being dismissed, but
Falberd waved a hand, silencing him. “Of course, whatever will give you peace. If
you need help, we are ready and willing to serve.†Gesturing for the rest of them to
follow, he swept past Arya to the door.
“Eragon, will you please stay?â€
Startled, Eragon lowered himself back into his chair, ignoring alert looks from the
councilors. Falberd lingered by the door, suddenly reluctant to depart, then slowly
went out. Arya was the last to go. Before she closed the door, she looked at Eragon,
her eyes revealingworry and apprehension that had been concealed before.
Nasuada sat partially turned away from Eragon and Saphira. “So we meet again,
Rider. You haven’t greeted me. Have I offended you?â€
“No, Nasuada; I was reluctant to speak for fear of being rude or foolish. Current
circumstances are unkind to hasty statements.†Paranoia that they might be
eavesdropped on gripped him. Reaching through the barrier in his mind, he delved
into the magic and intoned: “Atra nosu waíse vardo fra eld hórnya… There, now we
may speak without being overheard by man, dwarf, or elf.â€
Nasuada’s posture softened. “Thank you, Eragon. You don’t know what a gift that
is.†Her words were stronger and more self-assured than before.
Behind Eragon’s chair, Saphira stirred, then carefully made her way around the table
to stand before Nasuada. She lowered her great head until one sapphire eye met
Nasuada’s black ones. The dragon stared at her for a full minute before snorting softly
and straightening. Tell her, said Saphira, that I grieve for her and her loss. Also that
her strength must become the Varden’s when she assumes Ajihad’s mantle. They will
need a sure guide.
Eragon repeated the words, adding, “Ajihad was a great man—his name will always
be remembered… There is something I must tell you. Before Ajihad died, he charged
me, commanded me, to keep the Varden from falling into chaos. Those were his last
words. Arya heard them as well.
“I was going to keep what he said a secret because of the implications, but you have a
right to know. I’m not sure what Ajihad meant, nor exactly what he wanted, but I am
certain of this: I will always defend the Varden with my powers. I wanted you to
understand that, and that I’ve no desire to usurp the Varden’s leadership.â€
Nasuada laughed brittlely. “But that leadership isn’t to be me, is it?†Her reserve had
vanished, leaving behind only composure and determination. “I know why you were
here before me and what the council is trying to do. Do you think that in the years I
served my father, we never planned for this eventuality? I expected the council to do
exactly what it did. And now everything is in place for me to take command of the
Varden.â€
“You have no intention of letting them rule you,†said Eragon with wonder.
“No. Continue to keep Ajihad’s instruction secret. It would be unwise to bandy it
about, as people might take it to mean that he wanted you to succeed him, and that
would undermine my authority and destabilize the Varden. He said what he thought
he had to in order to protect the Varden. I would have done the same. My father…â€
She faltered briefly. “My father’s work will not go unfinished, even if it takes me to
the grave. That is whatI want you, as a Rider, to understand. All of Ajihad’s plans, all
his strategies and goals, they are mine now. I will not fail him by beingweak. The
Empirewill be brought down, Galbatorixwill be dethroned, and the rightful
governmentwill be raised.â€
By the time she finished, a tear ran down her cheek. Eragon stared, appreciating how
difficult her position was and recognizing a depth of character he had not perceived
before. “And what of me, Nasuada?What shall I do in the Varden?â€
She looked directly into his eyes. “You can do whatever you want. The council
members are fools if they think to control you. You are a hero to the Varden and the
dwarves, and even the elves will hail your victory over Durza when they hear of it. If
you go against the council or me, we will be forced to yield, for the people will
support you wholeheartedly. Right now, you are the most powerful person in the
Varden. However, if you accept my leadership, I will continue the path laid down by
Ajihad: you will go with Arya to the elves, be instructed there, then return to the
Varden.â€
Why is she so honest with us? wondered Eragon. If she’s right, could we have refused
the council’s demands?
Saphira took a moment to answer. Either way, it’s too late. You have already agreed
to their requests. I think Nasuada is honest because your spell lets her be, and also
because she hopes to win our loyalty from the elders.
An idea suddenly came to Eragon, but before sharing it, he asked, Can we trust her to
hold to what she’s said? This is very important.
Yes, said Saphira. She spoke with her heart.
Then Eragon shared his proposal with Saphira. She consented, so he drew Zar’roc
and walked to Nasuada. He saw a flash of fear as he approached; her gaze darted
toward the door, and she slipped a hand into a fold in her dress and grasped
something. Eragon stopped before her, then knelt, Zar’roc flat in his hands.
“Nasuada, Saphira and I have been here for only a short while. But in that time we
came to respect Ajihad, and now, in turn, you. You fought under Farthen Dûr when
others fled, including the two women of the council, and have treated us openly
instead of with deception. Therefore, I offer you my blade… and my fealty as a
Rider.â€
Eragon uttered the pronouncement with a sense of finality, knowing he would never
have mouthed it before the battle. Seeing so many men fall and die around him had
altered his perspective. Resisting the Empire was no longer something he did for
himself, but for the Varden and all the people still trapped under Galbatorix’s rule.
However long it would take, he had dedicated himself to that task. For the time being,
the best thing he could do was serve.
Still, he and Saphira were taking a terrible risk in pledging themselves to Nasuada.
The council could not object because all Eragon had said was that he would swear
fealty, but not to whom. Even so, he and Saphira had no guarantee that Nasuada
would make a good leader. It’s better to be sworn to an honest fool than to a lying
scholar, decided Eragon.
Surprise flitted across Nasuada’s face. She grasped Zar’roc’s hilt and lifted it—
staring at its crimson blade—then placed the tip on Eragon’s head. “I do accept your
fealty with honor, Rider, as you accept all the responsibilities accompanying the
station. Rise as my vassal and take your sword.â€
Eragon did as he was bidden. He said, “Now I can tell you openly as my master, the
council made me agree to swear to the Varden once you were appointed. This was the
only way Saphira and I could circumvent them.â€
Nasuada laughed with genuine delight. “Ah, I see you have already learned how to
play our game. Very well, as my newest and only vassal, will you agree to give your
fealty to me again—in public, when the council expects your vow?â€
“Of course.â€
“Good, that will take care of the council. Now, until then, leave me. I have much
planning to do, and I must prepare for the funeral… Remember, Eragon, the bond we
have just created is equally binding; I am as responsible for your actions as you are
required to serve me. Do not dishonor me.â€
“Nor you I.â€
Nasuada paused, then gazed into his eyes and added in a gentler tone: “You have my
condolences, Eragon. I realize that others beside myself have cause for sorrow; while
I have lost my father, you have also lost a friend. I liked Murtagh a great deal and it
saddens me that he is gone… Goodbye, Eragon.â€
Eragon nodded, a bitter taste in his mouth, and left the room with Saphira. The
hallway outside was empty along its gray length. Eragon put his hands on his hips,
tilted back his head, and exhaled. The day had barely begun, yet he was already
exhausted by all the emotions that had flooded through him.
Saphira nosed him and said, This way. Without further explanation, she headed down
the right side of the tunnel. Her polished claws clicked on the hard floor.
Eragon frowned, but followed her. Where are we going? No answer. Saphira, please.
She just flicked her tail. Resigned to wait, he said instead, Things have certainly
changed for us. I never know what to expect from one day to the next—except sorrow
and bloodshed.
All is not bad,she reproached. We have won a great victory. It should be celebrated,
not mourned.
It doesn’t help, having to deal with this other nonsense.
She snorted angrily. A thin line of fire shot from her nostrils, singeing Eragon’s
shoulder. He jumped back with a yelp, biting back a string of curses. Oops, said
Saphira, shaking her head to clear the smoke.
Oops! You nearly roasted my side!
I didn’t expect it to happen. I keep forgetting that fire will come out if I’m not careful.
Imagine that every time you raised your arm, lightning struck the ground. It would be
easy to make a careless motion and destroy something unintentionally.
You’re right… Sorry I growled at you.
Her bony eyelid clicked as she winked at him. No matter. The point I was trying to
make is that even Nasuada can’t force you to do anything.
But I gave my word as a Rider!
Maybe so, but if I must break it to keep you safe, or to do the right thing, I will not
hesitate. It is a burden I could easily carry. Because I’m joined to you, my honor is
inherent in your pledge, but as an individual, I’m not bound by it. If I must, I will
kidnap you. Any disobedience then would be no fault of your own.
It should never come to that. If we have to use such tricks to do what’s right, then
Nasuada and the Varden will have lost all integrity.
Saphira stopped. They stood before the carved archway of Tronjheim’s library. The
vast, silent room seemed empty, though the ranks of back-to-back bookshelves
interspersed with columns could conceal many people. Lanterns poured soft light
across the scroll-covered walls, illuminating the reading alcoves along their bases.
Weaving through the shelves, Saphira led him to one alcove, where Arya sat. Eragon
paused as he studied her. She seemed more agitated than he had ever seen her, though
it manifested itself only in the tension of her movements. Unlike before, she wore her
sword with the graceful crossguard. One hand rested on the hilt.
Eragon sat at the opposite side of the marble table. Saphira positioned herself
between them, where neither could escape her gaze.
“What have you done?†asked Arya with unexpected hostility.
“How so?â€
She lifted her chin. “What have you promised the Varden?What have you done? â€
The last part even reached Eragon mentally. He realized just how close the elf was to
losing control. A bit of fear touched him. “We only did what we had to. I’m ignorant
of elves’ customs, so if our actions upset you, I apologize. There’s no cause to be
angry.â€
“Fool! You know nothing about me. I have spent seven decades representingmy
queen here—fifteen years of which I bore Saphira’s egg between the Varden and the
elves. In all that time, I struggled to ensure the Varden had wise, strong leaders who
could resist Galbatorix and respect our wishes. Brom helped me by forging the
agreement concerning the new Rider—you. Ajihad was committed to your remaining
independent so that the balance of power would not be upset. Now I see you siding
with the Council of Elders, willingly or not, to control Nasuada! You have overturned
a lifetime of work!What have you done? â€
Dismayed, Eragon dropped all pretenses. With short, clear words, he explained why
he had agreed to the council’s demands and how he and Saphira had attempted to
undermine them.
When he finished, Arya stated, “So.â€
“So.â€Seventy years. Though he knew elves’ lives were extraordinarily long, he had
never suspected that Arya was that old, and older, for she appeared to be a woman in
her early twenties. The only sign of age on her unlined face was her emerald eyes—
deep, knowing, and most often solemn.
Arya leaned back, studying him. “Your position is not what I would wish, but better
than I had hoped. I was impolite; Saphira… and you… understand more than I
thought. Your compromise will be accepted by the elves, though you must never
forget your debt to us for Saphira. There would be no Riders without our efforts.â€
“The debt is burned into my blood and my palm,†said Eragon. In the silence that
followed, he cast about for a new topic, eager to prolong their conversation and
perhaps learn more about her. “You have been gone for such a long time; do you miss
Ellesméra? Or did you live elsewhere?â€
“Ellesméra was, and always shall be, my home,†she said, looking beyond him. “I
have not lived in my family’s house since I left for the Varden, when the walls and
windows were draped with spring’s first flowers. The times I’ve returned were only
fleeting stays, vanishing flecks of memory by our measurement.â€
He noticed, once again, that she smelled like crushed pine needles. It was a faint,
spicy odor that opened his senses and refreshed his mind. “It must be hard to live
among all these dwarves and humans without any of your kind.â€
She cocked her head. “You speak of humans as if you weren’t one.â€
“Perhaps…†he hesitated, “perhaps I am something else—a mixture of two races.
Saphira lives inside me as much as I live in her. We share feelings, senses, thoughts,
even to the point where we are more one mind than two.†Saphira dipped her head in
agreement, nearly bumping the table with her snout.
“That is how it should be,†said Arya. “A pact more ancient and powerful than you
can imagine links you. You won’t truly understand what it means to be a Rider until
your training is completed. But that must wait until after the funeral. In the meantime,
may the stars watch over you.â€
With that she departed, slipping into the library’s shadowed depths. Eragon blinked.
Is it me, or is everyone on edge today? Like Arya—one moment she’s angry, the next
she’s giving me a blessing!
No one will be comfortable until things return to normal.
Define normal.
RORAN
Roran trudged up the hill.
He stopped and squinted at the sun through his shaggy hair. Five hours till sunset. I
won’t be able to stay long. With a sigh, he continued along the row of elm trees, each
of which stood in a pool of uncut grass.
This was his first visit to the farm since he, Horst, and six other men from Carvahall
had removed everythingworth salvaging from the destroyed house and burned barn.
It had been nearly five months before he could consider returning.
Once on the hilltop, Roran halted and crossed his arms. Before him lay the remains of
his childhood home. A corner of the house still stood—crumbling and charred—but
the rest had been flattened and was already covered with grass and weeds. Nothing
could be seen of the barn. The few acres they had managed to cultivate each year
were now filled with dandelions, wild mustard, and more grass. Here and there, stray
beets or turnips had survived, but that was all. Just beyond the farm, a thick belt of
trees obscured the Anora River.
Roran clenched a fist, jaw muscles knotting painfully as he fought back a
combination of rage and grief. He stayed rooted to the spot for many longminutes,
tremblingwhenever a pleasant memory rushed through him. This place had been his
entire life and more. It had been his past… and his future. His father, Garrow, once
said, “The land is a special thing. Care for it, and it’ll care for you. Not many things
will do that.†Roran had intended to do exactly that up until the moment his world
was ruptured by a quiet message from Baldor.
With a groan, he spun away and stalked back toward the road. The shock of that
moment still resonated within him. Having everyone he loved torn away in an instant
was a soul-changing event from which he would never recover. It had seeped into
every aspect of his behavior and outlook.
It also forced Roran to think more than ever before. It was as if bands had been
cinched around his mind, and those bands had snapped, allowing him to ponder ideas
that were previously unimaginable. Such as the fact that he might not become a
farmer, or that justice—the greatest standby in songs and legends—had little hold in
reality. At times these thoughts filled his consciousness to the point where he could
barely rise in the morning, feeling bloated with their heaviness.
Turning on the road, he headed north through Palancar Valley, back to Carvahall.
The notched mountains on either side were laden with snow, despite the spring
greenery that had crept over the valley floor in past weeks. Overhead, a single gray
cloud drifted toward the peaks.
Roran ran a hand across his chin, feeling the stubble. Eragon caused all this—him
and his blasted curiosity—by bringing that stone out of the Spine. It had taken Roran
weeks to reach that conclusion. He had listened to everyone’s accounts. Several times
he had Gertrude, the town healer, read aloud the letter Brom had left him. And there
was no other explanation. Whatever that stone was, it must have attracted the
strangers. For that alone, he blamed Garrow’s death on Eragon, though not in anger;
he knew that Eragon had intended no harm. No, what roused his fury was that Eragon
had left Garrow unburied and fled Palancar Valley, abandoning his responsibilities to
gallop off with the old storyteller on some harebrained journey. How could Eragon
have so little regard for those left behind? Did he run because he felt guilty? Afraid?
Did Brom mislead him with wild tales of adventure?And why would Eragon listen to
such things at a time like that?… I don’t even know if he’s dead or alive right now.
Roran scowled and rolled his shoulders, trying to clear his mind. Brom’s letter…
Bah! He had never heard a more ridiculous collection of insinuations and ominous
hints. The only thing it made clear was to avoid the strangers, which was common
sense to begin with. The old man was crazy, he decided.
A flicker of movement caused Roran to turn, and he saw twelve deer—including a
young buck with velvet horns—trotting back into the trees. He made sure to note their
location so he could find them tomorrow. He was proud that he could hunt well
enough to support himself in Horst’s house, though he had never been as skilled as
Eragon.
As he walked, he continued to order his thoughts. After Garrow’s death, Roran had
abandoned his job at Dempton’s mill in Therinsford and returned to Carvahall. Horst
had agreed to house him and, in the followingmonths, had provided him with work in
the forge. Grief had delayed Roran’s decisions about the future until two days ago,
when he finally settled upon a course of action.
He wanted to marry Katrina, the butcher’s daughter. The reason he went to
Therinsford in the first place was to earn money to ensure a smooth beginning to their
life together. But now, without a farm, a home, or means to support her, Roran could
not in good conscience ask for Katrina’s hand. His pride would not allow it. Nor did
Roran think Sloan, her father, would tolerate a suitor with such poor prospects. Even
under the best of circumstances, Roran had expected to have a hard time convincing
Sloan to give up Katrina; the two of them had never been friendly. And it was
impossible for Roran to wed Katrina without her father’s consent, not unless they
wished to divide her family, anger the village by defying tradition, and, most likely,
start a blood feud with Sloan.
Considering the situation, it seemed to Roran that the only option available to him
was to rebuild his farm, even if he had to raise the house and barn himself. It would be
hard, starting from nothing, but once his position was secured, he could approach
Sloan with his head held high. Next spring is the soonest we might talk, thought
Roran, grimacing.
He knew Katrina would wait—for a time, at least.
He continued at a steady pace until evening, when the village came into view. Within
the small huddle of buildings, wash hung on lines strung from window to window.
Men filed back toward the houses from surrounding fields thick with winter wheat.
Behind Carvahall, the half-mile-high Igualda Falls gleamed in the sunset as it tumbled
down the Spine into the Anora. The sight warmed Roran because it was so ordinary.
Nothingwas more comforting than having everythingwhere it should be.
Leaving the road, he made his way up the rise to where Horst’s house sat with a view
of the Spine. The door was already open. Roran tromped inside, following the sounds
of conversation into the kitchen.
Horst was there, leaning on the rough table pushed into one corner of the room, his
arms bare to the elbow. Next to him was his wife, Elain, who was nearly five months
pregnant and smilingwith quiet contentment. Their sons, Albriech and Baldor, faced
them.
As Roran entered, Albriech said, “… and I still hadn’t left the forge yet! Thane
swears he saw me, but I was on the other side of town.â€
“What’s going on?†asked Roran, slipping off his pack.
Elain exchanged a glance with Horst. “Here, let me get you something to eat.†She
set bread and a bowl of cold stew before him. Then she looked him in the eye, as if
searching for a particular expression. “How was it?â€
Roran shrugged. “All of the wood is either burnt or rotting—nothingworth using.
The well is still intact, and that’s something to be grateful for, I suppose. I’ll have to
cut timber for the house as soon as possible if I’m going to have a roof over my head
by planting season. Now tell me, what’s happened?â€
“Ha!†exclaimed Horst. “There’s been quite a row, there has. Thane is missing a
scythe and he thinks Albriech took it.â€
“He probably dropped it in the grass and forgot where he left it,†snorted Albriech.
“Probably,†agreed Horst, smiling.
Roran bit into the bread. “It doesn’t make much sense, accusing you. If you needed a
scythe, you could just forge one.â€
“I know,†said Albriech, dropping into a chair, “but instead of looking for his, he
starts grousing that he saw someone leaving his field and that it looked a bit like me…
and since no one else looks like me, I must have stolen the scythe.â€
It was true that no one looked like him. Albriech had inherited both his father’s size
and Elain’s honey-blond hair, which made him an oddity in Carvahall, where brown
was the predominant hair color. In contrast, Baldor was both thinner and dark-haired.
“I’m sure it’ll turn up,†said Baldor quietly. “Try not to get too angry over it in the
meantime.â€
“Easy for you to say.â€
As Roran finished the last of the bread and started on the stew, he asked Horst, “Do
you need me for anything tomorrow?â€
“Not especially. I’ll just be working on Quimby’s wagon. The blasted frame still
won’t sit square.â€
Roran nodded, pleased. “Good. Then I’ll take the day and go hunting. There are a
few deer farther down the valley that don’t look too scrawny. Their ribs weren’t
showing, at least.â€
Baldor suddenly brightened. “Do you want some company?â€
“Sure. We can leave at dawn.â€
When he finished eating, Roran scrubbed his face and hands clean, then wandered
outside to clear his head. Stretching leisurely, he strolled toward the center of town.
Halfway there, the chatter of excited voices outside the Seven Sheaves caught his
attention. He turned, curious, and made his way to the tavern, where an odd sight met
him. Sitting on the porch was a middle-aged man draped in a patchwork leather coat.
Beside him was a pack festooned with the steel jaws of the trappers’ trade. Several
dozen villagers listened as he gestured expansively and said, “So when I arrived at
Therinsford, I went to this man, Neil. Good, honest man; I help in his fields during the
spring and summer.â€
Roran nodded. Trappers spent the winter squirreled away in the mountains, returning
in the spring to sell their skins to tanners like Gedric and then to take up work, usually
as farmhands. Since Carvahall was the northernmost village in the Spine, many
trappers passed through it, which was one of the reasons Carvahall had its own tavern,
blacksmith, and tanner.
“After a few steins of ale—to lubricate my speaking, you understand, after a ‘alf year
with nary a word uttered, except perhaps for blaspheming the world and all beyond
when losing a bear-biter—I come to Neil, the froth still fresh on my beard, and start
exchanging gossip. As our transaction proceeds, I ask him all gregarious-like, what
news of the Empire or the king—may he rot with gangrene and trench mouth. Was
anyone born or died or banished that I should know of? And then guess what? Neil
leaned forward, going all serious ’bout the mouth, and said that word is going around,
there is, from Dras-Leona and Gil’ead of strange happenings here, there, and
everywhere in Alagaësia. The Urgals have fair disappeared from civilized lands, and
good riddance, but not one man can tell why or where. ‘Alf the trade in the Empire
has dried up as a result of raids and attacks and, from what I heard, it isn’t the work of
mere brigands, for the attacks are too widespread, too calculated. No goods are stolen,
only burned or soiled. But that’s not the end of it, oh no, not by the tip of your blessed
grandmother’s whiskers.â€
The trapper shook his head and took a sip from his wineskin before continuing:
“There be mutterings of a Shade haunting the northern territories. He’s been seen
along the edge of Du Weldenvarden and near Gil’ead. They say his teeth are filed to
points, his eyes are as red as wine, and his hair is as red as the blood he drinks. Worse,
something seems to have gotten our fine, mad monarch’s dander up, so it has. Five
days past, a juggler from the south stopped in Therinsford on his lonesome way to
Ceunon, and he said that troops have been moving and gathering, though forwhat was
beyond him.†He shrugged. “As my pap taught me when I was a suckling babe, where
there’s smoke, there’s fire. Perhaps it’s the Varden. They’ve caused old Iron Bones
enough pain in the arse over the years. Or perhaps Galbatorix finally decided he’s had
enough of tolerating Surda. At least he knows where to find it, unlike those rebels.
He’ll crush Surda like a bear crushes an ant, he will.â€
Roran blinked as a babble of questions exploded around the trapper. He was inclined
to doubt the report of a Shade—it sounded too much like a story a drunk woodsman
might invent—but the rest of it all sounded bad enough to be true. Surda… Little
information reached Carvahall about that distant country, but Roran at least knew that,
although Surda and the Empire were ostensibly at peace, Surdans lived in constant
fear that their more powerful neighbor to the north would invade them. For that
reason, it was said that Orrin, their king, supported the Varden.
If the trapper was right about Galbatorix, then it could mean ugly war crouched in the
future, accompanied by the hardships of increased taxes and forced conscription. I
would rather live in an age devoid of momentous events. Upheaval makes already
difficult lives, such as ours, nigh impossible.
“What’s more, there have even been tales of…†Here the trapper paused and, with a
knowing expression, tapped the side of his nose with his forefinger. “Tales of a new
Rider in Alagaësia.†He laughed then, a big, hearty laugh, slapping his belly as he
rocked back on the porch.
Roran laughed as well. Stories of Riders appeared every few years. They had excited
his interest the first two or three times, but he soon learned not to trust such accounts,
for they all came to naught. The rumors were nothingmore than wishful thinking on
the part of those who longed for a brighter future.
He was about to head off when he noticed Katrina standing by the corner of the
tavern, garbed in a long russet dress decorated with green ribbon. She gazed at him
with the same intensity with which he gazed at her. Going over, he touched her on the
shoulder and, together, they slipped away.
They walked to the edge of Carvahall, where they stood looking at the stars. The
heavens were brilliant, shimmeringwith thousands of celestial fires. And arching
above them, from north to south, was the glorious pearly band that streamed from
horizon to horizon, like diamond dust tossed from a pitcher.
Without looking at him, Katrina rested her head on Roran’s shoulder and asked,
“How was your day?â€
“I returned home.†He felt her stiffen against him.
“What was it like?â€
“Terrible.†His voice caught and he fell silent, holding her tightly. The scent of her
copper hair on his cheek was like an elixir of wine and spice and perfume. It seeped
deep inside him, warm and comforting. “The house, the barn, the fields, they’re all
being overrun… I wouldn’t have found them if I didn’t know where to look.â€
She finally turned to face him, stars flashing in her eyes, sorrow on her face. “Oh,
Roran.†She kissed him, lips brushing his for a brief moment. “You have endured so
much loss, and yet your strength has never failed you. Will you return to your farm
now?â€
“Aye. Farming is all I know.â€
“And what shall become of me?â€
He hesitated. From the moment he began to court her, an unspoken assumption that
they would marry had existed between them. There had been no need to discuss his
intentions; they were as plain as the day was long, and so her question unsettled him.
It also felt improper to address the issue in such an open manner when he was not
ready to tender an offer. It washis place to make the overtures—first to Sloan and then
to Katrina—not hers. Still, he had to deal with her concern now that it had been
expressed. “Katrina… I cannot approach your father as I had planned. He would
laugh at me, and rightly so. We have to wait. Once I have a place for us to live and
I’ve collected my first harvest, then he will listen to me.â€
She faced the sky once more and whispered something so faint, he could not make it
out. “What?â€
“I said, are you afraid of him?â€
“Of course not! I—â€
“Then you must get his permission, tomorrow, and set the engagement. Make him
understand that, though you have nothing now, you will give me a good home and be
a son-in-law he can be proud of. There’s no reason we should waste our years living
apart when we feel like this.â€
“I can’t do that,†he said with a note of despair, willing her to understand. “I can’t
provide for you, I can’t—â€
“Don’t youunderstand ?†She stepped away, her voice strained with urgency. “I love
you, Roran, and I want to be with you, but Father has other plans for me. There are far
more eligible men than you, and the longer you delay, the more he presses me to
consent to a match of which he approves. He fears I will become an old maid, and I
fear that too. I have only so much time or choice in Carvahall… If I must take
another, I will.†Tears glistened in her eyes as she gave him a searching glance,
waiting for his response, then gathered up her dress and rushed back to the houses.
Roran stood there, motionless with shock. Her absence was as acute for him as losing
the farm—the world suddenly gone cold and unfriendly. It was as if part of himself
had been torn away.
It was hours before he could return to Horst’s and slip into bed.
THE HUNTED HUNTERS
Dirt crunched under Roran’s boots as he led the way down the valley, which was
cool and pale in the early hours of the overcast morning. Baldor followed close
behind, both of them carrying strung bows. Neither spoke as they studied their
surroundings for signs of the deer.
“There,†said Baldor in a low voice, pointing at a set of tracks leading toward a
bramble on the edge of the Anora.
Roran nodded and started after the spoor. It looked about a day old, so he risked
speaking. “Could I have your advice, Baldor? You seem to have a good understanding
of people.â€
“Of course. What is it?â€
For a long time, the pad of their feet was the only noise. “Sloan wants to marry off
Katrina, and not to me. Every day that passes increases the chance he will arrange a
union to his liking.â€
“What does Katrina say of this?â€
Roran shrugged. “He is her father. She cannot continue to defy his will when no one
shedoes want has stepped forward to claim her.â€
“That is, you.â€
“Aye.â€
“And that’s why you were up so early.†It was no question.
In fact, Roran had been too worried to sleep at all. He had spent the entire night
thinking about Katrina, trying to find a solution to their predicament. “I can’t bear to
lose her. But I don’t think Sloan will give us his blessing, what with my position and
all.â€
“No, I don’t think he would,†agreed Baldor. He glanced at Roran out of the corner of
his eye. “What is it you want my advice on, though?â€
A snort of laughter escaped Roran. “How can I convince Sloan otherwise? How can I
resolve this dilemma without starting a blood feud?†He threw his hands up. “What
should I do?â€
“Have you no ideas?â€
“I do, but not of a sort I find pleasing. It occurred to me that Katrina and I could
simply announce we were engaged—not that we are yet—and hang the consequences.
That would force Sloan to accept our betrothal.â€
A frown creased Baldor’s brow. He said carefully, “Maybe, but it would also create a
slew of bad feelings throughout Carvahall. Few would approve of your actions. Nor
would it be wise to force Katrina to choose between you or her family; she might
resent you for it in years to come.â€
“I know, but what alternative do I have?â€
“Before you take such a drastic step, I recommend you try to win Sloan over as an
ally. There’s a chance you might succeed, after all, if it’s made clear to him that no
one else will want to marry an angry Katrina. Especially when you’re around to
cuckold the husband.†Roran grimaced and kept his gaze on the ground. Baldor
laughed. “If you fail, well then, you can proceed with confidence, knowing that you
have indeed exhausted all other routes. And people will be less likely to spit upon you
for breaking tradition and more likely to say Sloan’s bullheaded ways brought it upon
himself.â€
“Neither course is easy.â€
“You knew that to begin with.†Baldor grew somber again. “No doubt there’ll be
harsh words if you challenge Sloan, but things will settle down in the end—perhaps
not comfortably, but at least bearably. Aside from Sloan, the only people you’ll really
offend are prudes like Quimby, though how Quimby can brew such a hale drink yet
be so starched and bitter himself is beyond me.â€
Roran nodded, understanding. Grudges could simmer for years in Carvahall. “I’m
glad we could talk. It’s been…†He faltered, thinking of all the discussions he and
Eragon used to share. They had been, as Eragon once said, brothers in all but blood. It
had been deeply comforting to know that someone existed who would listen to him,
no matter the time or circumstances. And to know that person would always help him,
no matter the cost.
The absence of such a bond left Roran feeling empty.
Baldor did not press him to finish his sentence, but instead stopped to drink from his
waterskin. Roran continued for a few yards, then halted as a scent intruded on his
thoughts.
It was the heavy odor of seared meat and charred pine boughs. Who would be here
besides us? Breathing deeply, he turned in a circle, trying to determine the source of
the fire. A slight gust brushed past him from farther down the road, carrying a hot,
smoky wave. The aroma of food was intense enough to make his mouth water.
He beckoned to Baldor, who hurried to his side. “Smell that?â€
Baldor nodded. Together they returned to the road and followed it south. About a
hundred feet away, it bent around a copse of cottonwoods and curved out of view. As
they approached the turn, the rise and fall of voices reached them, muffled by the
thick layer of morning fog over the valley.
At the copse’s fringe, Roran slowed to a stop. It was foolish to surprise people when
they too might be out hunting. Still, something bothered him. Perhaps it was the
number of voices; the group seemed bigger than any family in the valley. Without
thinking, he stepped off the road and slipped behind the underbrush lining the copse.
“What are you doing?†whispered Baldor.
Roran put a finger to his lips, then crept along, parallel to the road, keeping his
footsteps as quiet as possible. As they rounded the bend, he froze.
On the grass by the road was a camp of soldiers. Thirty helmets gleamed in a shaft of
morning light as their owners devoured fowl and stew cooked over several fires. The
men were mud splattered and travel stained, but Galbatorix’s symbol was still visible
on their red tunics, a twisting flame outlined in gold thread. Underneath the tunics,
they wore leather brigandines—heavy with riveted squares of steel—mail shirts, and
then padded gambesons. Most of the soldiers bore broadswords, though half a dozen
were archers and another half-dozen carried wicked-looking halberds.
And hunched in their midst were two twisted black forms that Roran recognized from
the numerous descriptions the villagers provided upon his return from Therinsford:
the strangers who had destroyed his farm. His blood chilled. They’re servants of the
Empire! He began to step forward, fingers already reaching for an arrow, when
Baldor grabbed his jerkin and dragged him to the ground.
“Don’t. You’ll get us both killed.â€
Roran glared at him, then snarled. “That’s… they’re the bastards…†He stopped,
noticing that his hands were shaking.“They’ve returned!â€
“Roran,†whispered Baldor intently, “you can’t do anything. Look, they work for the
king. Even if you managed to escape, you’d be an outlaw everywhere, and you’d
bring disaster on Carvahall.â€
“What do they want?Whatcan they want?â€The king. Why did Galbatorix
countenance my father’s torture?
“If they didn’t get what they needed from Garrow, and Eragon fled with Brom, then
they must want you.†Baldor paused, letting the words sink in. “We have to get back
and warn everyone. Then you have to hide. The strangers are the only ones with
horses. We can get there first if we run.â€
Roran stared through the brush at the oblivious soldiers. His heart pounded fiercely
for revenge, clamoring to attack and fight, to see those two agents of misfortune
pierced with arrows and brought to their own justice. It mattered not that he would die
as long as he could wash clean his pain and sorrow in one fell moment. All he had to
do was break cover. The rest would take care of itself.
Just one small step.
With a choked sob, he clenched his fist and dropped his head. I can’t leave Katrina .
He remained rigid—eyes squeezed shut—then with agonizing slowness dragged
himself back. “Home then.â€
Without waiting for Baldor’s reaction, Roran slipped through the trees as fast as he
dared. Once the camp was out of sight, he broke out onto the road and ran down the
dirt track, channeling his frustration, anger, and even fear into speed.
Baldor scrambled behind him, gaining on the open stretches. Roran slowed to a
comfortable trot and waited for him to draw level before saying, “You spread the
word. I’ll talk with Horst.†Baldor nodded, and they pushed on.
After two miles, they stopped to drink and rest briefly. When their panting subsided,
they continued through the low hills preceding Carvahall. The rolling ground slowed
them considerably, but even so, the village soon burst into view.
Roran immediately broke for the forge, leaving Baldor to make his way to the center
of town. As he pounded past the houses, Roran wildly considered schemes to evade or
kill the strangers without incurring the wrath of the Empire.
He burst into the forge to catch Horst tapping a peg into the side of Quimby’s wagon,
singing:
… hey O!
And a ringing and a dinging
Rang from old iron! Wily old iron.
With a beat and a bang on the bones of the land,
I conquered wily old iron!
Horst stopped his mallet in midblow when he saw Roran. “What’s the matter, lad? Is
Baldor hurt?â€
Roran shook his head and leaned over, gasping for air. In short bursts, he reiterated
all they had seen and its possible implications, most importantly that it was now clear
the strangers were agents of the Empire.
Horst fingered his beard. “You have to leave Carvahall. Fetch some food from the
house, then take my mare—Ivor’s pulling stumps with her—and ride into the
foothills. Once we know what the soldiers want, I’ll send Albriech or Baldor with
word.â€
“What will you say if they ask for me?â€
“That you’re out hunting and we don’t know when you’ll return. It’s true enough,
and I doubt they’ll chance blundering around in the trees for fear of missing you.
Assuming it’s you they’re really after.â€
Roran nodded, then turned and ran to Horst’s house. Inside, he grabbed the mare’s
tack and bags from the wall, quickly tied turnips, beets, jerky, and a loaf of bread in a
knot of blankets, snatched up a tin pot, and dashed out, pausing only long enough to
explain the situation to Elain.
The supplies were an awkward bundle in his arms as he jogged east from Carvahall
to Ivor’s farm. Ivor himself stood behind the farmhouse, flicking the mare with a
willow wand as she strained to tear the hairy roots of an elm tree from the ground.
“Come on now!†shouted the farmer. “Put your back into it!†The horse shuddered
with effort, her bit lathered, then with a final surge tilted the stump on its side so the
roots reached toward the sky like a cluster of gnarled fingers. Ivor stopped her
exertion with a twitch of the reins and patted her good-naturedly. “All right… There
we go.â€
Roran hailed him from a distance and, when they were close, pointed to the horse. “I
need to borrow her.†He gave his reasons.
Ivor swore and began unhitching the mare, grumbling, “Always the moment I get a
bit of work done, that’s when the interruption comes. Never before.†He crossed his
arms and frowned as Roran cinched the saddle, intent on his work.
When he was ready, Roran swung onto the horse, bow in hand. “I am sorry for the
trouble, but it can’t be helped.â€
“Well, don’t worry about it. Just make sure you aren’t caught.â€
“I’ll do that.â€
As he set heels to the mare’s sides, Roran heard Ivor call, “And don’t be hiding up
my creek!â€
Roran grinned and shook his head, bending low over the horse’s neck. He soon
reached the foothills of the Spine and worked his way up to the mountains that formed
the north end of Palancar Valley. From there he climbed to a point on the
mountainside where he could observe Carvahall without being seen. Then he picketed
his steed and settled down to wait.
Roran shivered, eyeing the dark pines. He disliked being this close to the Spine.
Hardly anyone from Carvahall dared set foot in the mountain range, and those who
did often failed to return.
Before long Roran saw the soldiers march up the road in a double line, two ominous
black figures at their head. They were stopped at the edge of Carvahall by a ragged
group of men, some of them with picks in hand. The two sides spoke, then simply
faced each other, like growling dogs waiting to see who would strike first. After a
longmoment, the men of Carvahall moved aside and let the intruders pass.
What happens now?wondered Roran, rocking back on his heels.
By evening the soldiers had set up camp in a field adjacent to the village. Their tents
formed a low gray block that flickered with weird shadows as sentries patrolled the
perimeter. In the center of the block, a large fire sent billows of smoke into the air.
Roran had made his own camp, and now he simply watched and thought. He always
assumed that when the strangers destroyed his home, they got what they wanted,
which was the stone Eragon brought from the Spine. They must not have found it, he
decided. Perhaps Eragon managed to escape with the stone… Perhaps he felt that he
had to leave in order to protect it. He frowned. That would go a longway toward
explainingwhy Eragon fled, but it still seemed far-fetched to Roran. Whatever the
reason, that stone must be a fantastic treasure for the king to send so many men to
retrieve it. I can’t understand what would make it so valuable. Maybe it’s magic.
He breathed deeply of the cool air, listening to the hoot of an owl. A flicker of
movement caught his attention. Glancing down the mountain, he saw a man
approaching in the forest below. Roran ducked behind a boulder, bow drawn. He
waited until he was sure it was Albriech, then whistled softly.
Albriech soon arrived at the boulder. On his back was an overfull pack, which he
dropped to the ground with a grunt. “I thought I’d never find you.â€
“I’m surprised you did.â€
“Can’t say I enjoyed wandering through the forest after sundown. I kept expecting to
walk into a bear, or worse. The Spine isn’t a fit place for men, if you ask me.â€
Roran looked back out at Carvahall. “So why are they here?â€
“To take you into custody. They’re willing to wait as long as they have to for you to
return from ‘hunting.’ â€
Roran sat with a hard thump, his gut clenched with cold anticipation. “Did they give
a reason? Did they mention the stone?â€
Albriech shook his head. “All they would say is that it’s the king’s business. The
whole day they’ve been asking questions about you and Eragon—it’s all they’re
interested in.†He hesitated. “I’d stay, but they’ll notice if I am missing tomorrow. I
brought plenty of food and blankets, plus some of Gertrude’s salves in case you injure
yourself. You should be fine up here.â€
Summoning his energy, Roran smiled. “Thanks for the help.â€
“Anyone would do it,†said Albriech with an embarrassed shrug. He started to leave,
then tossed over his shoulder, “By the way, the two strangers… they’re called the
Ra’zac.â€
SAPHIRA’S PROMISE
The morning after meetingwith the Council of Elders, Eragon was cleaning and
oiling Saphira’s saddle—careful not to overexert himself—when Orik came to visit.
The dwarf waited until Eragon finished with a strap, then asked, “Are you better
today?â€
“A little.â€
“Good, we all need our strength. I came partly to see to your health and also because
Hrothgar wishes to speak with you, if you are free.â€
Eragon gave the dwarf a wry smile. “I’m always free for him. He must know that.â€
Orik laughed. “Ah, but it’s polite to ask nicely.†As Eragon put down the saddle,
Saphira uncoiled from her padded corner and greeted Orik with a friendly growl.
“Morning to you as well,†he said with a bow.
Orik led them through one of Tronjheim’s four main corridors, toward its central
chamber and the two mirroring staircases that curved underground to the dwarf king’s
throne room. Before they reached the chamber, however, he turned down a small
flight of stairs. It took Eragon a moment to realize that Orik had taken a side
passageway to avoid seeing the wreckage of Isidar Mithrim.
They came to a stop before the granite doors engraved with a seven-pointed crown.
Seven armored dwarves on each side of the entrance pounded the floor
simultaneously with the hafts of their mattocks. With the echoing thud of wood on
stone, the doors swung inward.
Eragon nodded to Orik, then entered the dim room with Saphira. They advanced
toward the distant throne, passing the rigid statues, hírna, of past dwarf kings. At the
foot of the heavy black throne, Eragon bowed. The dwarf king inclined his silvermaned
head in return, the rubies wrought into his golden helm glowing dully in the
light like flecks of hot iron. Volund, the war hammer, lay across his mail-sheathed
legs.
Hrothgar spoke: “Shadeslayer, welcome to my hall. You have done much since last
we met. And, so it seems, I have been proved wrong about Zar’roc. Morzan’s blade
will be welcome in Tronjheim so long as you bear it.â€
“Thank you,†said Eragon, rising.
“Also,†rumbled the dwarf, “we wish you to keep the armor you wore in the battle of
Farthen Dûr. Even now our most skilled smiths are repairing it. The dragon armor is
being treated likewise, and when it is restored, Saphira may use it as long as she
wishes, or until she outgrows it. This is the least we can do to show our gratitude. If it
weren’t for the war with Galbatorix, there would be feasts and celebrations in your
name… but those must wait until a more appropriate time.â€
Voicing both his and Saphira’s sentiment, Eragon said, “You are generous beyond all
expectations. We will cherish such noble gifts.â€
Clearly pleased, Hrothgar nevertheless scowled, bringing his snarled eyebrows
together. “We cannot linger on pleasantries, though. I am besieged by the clans with
demands that I do one thing or another about Ajihad’s successor. When the Council of
Elders proclaimed yesterday that they would support Nasuada, it created an uproarthe
likes of which I haven’t seen since I ascended to the throne. The chiefs had to decide
whether to accept Nasuada or look for another candidate. Most have concluded that
Nasuada should lead the Varden, but I wish to know where you stand on this, Eragon,
before I lend my word to either side. The worst thing a king can do is look foolish.â€
How much can we tell him?Eragon asked Saphira, thinking quickly.
He’s always treated us fairly, but we can’t know what he may have promised other
people. We’d best be cautious until Nasuada actually takes power.
Very well.
“Saphira and I have agreed to help her. We won’t oppose her ascension. Andâ€â€”
Eragon wondered if he was going too far—“I plead that you do the same; the Varden
can’t afford to fight among themselves. They need unity.â€
“Oeí,†said Hrothgar, leaning back, “you speak with new authority. Your suggestion
is a good one, but it will cost a question: Do you think Nasuada will be a wise leader,
or are there other motives in choosing her?â€
It’s a test,warned Saphira. He wants to know whywe’ve backed her.
Eragon felt his lips twitch in a half-smile. “I think her wise and canny beyond her
years. She will be good for the Varden.â€
“And that is why you support her?â€
“Yes.â€
Hrothgar nodded, dipping his long, snowy beard. “That relieves me. There has been
too little concern lately with what is right and good, and more about what will bring
individual power. It is hard to watch such idiocy and not be angry.â€
An uncomfortable silence fell between them, stifling in the long throne room. To
break it, Eragon asked, “What will be done with the dragonhold?Will a new floor be
laid down?â€
For the first time, the king’s eyes grew mournful, deepening the surrounding lines
that splayed like spokes on a wagon wheel. It was the closest Eragon had ever seen a
dwarf come to weeping. “Much talk is needed before that step can be taken. It was a
terrible deed, what Saphira and Arya did. Maybe necessary, but terrible. Ah, it might
have been better if the Urgals had overrun us before Isidar Mithrim was ever broken.
The heart of Tronjheim has been shattered, and so has ours.†Hrothgar placed his fist
over his breast, then slowly unclenched his hand and reached down to grasp Volund’s
leather-wrapped handle.
Saphira touched Eragon’s mind. He sensed several emotions in her, but what
surprised him the most was her remorse and guilt. She truly regretted the Star Rose’s
demise, despite the fact that it had been required. Little one, she said, help me. I need
to speak with Hrothgar. Ask him: Do the dwarves have the ability to reconstruct
Isidar Mithrim out of the shards?
As he repeated the words, Hrothgar muttered something in his own language, then
said, “The skill we have, but what of it? The task would take months or years, and the
end result would be a ruined mockery of the beauty that once graced Tronjheim! It is
an abomination I will not sanction.â€
Saphira continued to stare unblinkingly at the king. Now tell him: If Isidar Mithrim
were put together again, with not one piece missing, I believe I could make it whole
once more.
Eragon gaped at her, forgettingHrothgar in his astonishment. Saphira! The energy
that would require! You told me yourself that you can’t use magic at will, so what
makes you sure you can do this?
I can do it if the need is great enough. It will be my gift to the dwarves. Remember
Brom’s tomb; let that wash your doubt away. And close your mouth—it’s unbecoming
and the king is watching.
When Eragon conveyed Saphira’s offer, Hrothgar straightened with an exclamation.
“Is it possible? Not even the elves might attempt such a feat.â€
“She is confident in her abilities.â€
“Then we will rebuild Isidar Mithrim, no matter if it takes a hundred years. We will
assemble a frame for the gem and set each piece into its original place. Not a single
chip will be forgotten. Even if we must break the larger pieces to move them, it will
be done with all our skill in working stone, so that no dust or flecks are lost. You will
come then, when we are finished, and heal the Star Rose.â€
“We will come,†agreed Eragon, bowing.
Hrothgar smiled, and it was like the cracking of a granite wall. “Such joy you have
given me, Saphira. I feel once more a reason to rule and live. If you do this, dwarves
everywhere will honor your name for uncounted generations. Go now with my
blessings while I spread the tidings among the clans. And do not feel bound to wait
upon my announcement, for no dwarf should be denied this news; convey it to all
whom you meet. May the halls echo with the jubilation of our race.â€
With one more bow, Eragon and Saphira departed, leaving the dwarf king still
smiling on his throne. Out of the hall, Eragon told Orik what had transpired. The
dwarf immediately bent and kissed the floor before Saphira. He rose with a grin and
clasped Eragon’s arm, saying, “A wonder indeed. You have given us exactly the hope
we needed to combat recent events. There will be drinking tonight, I wager!â€
“And tomorrow is the funeral.â€
Orik sobered for a moment. “Tomorrow, yes. But until then we shall not let unhappy
thoughts disturb us! Come!â€
Taking Eragon’s hand, the dwarf pulled him through Tronjheim to a great feast hall
where many dwarves sat at stone tables. Orik leaped onto one, scattering dishes across
the floor, and in a booming voice proclaimed the news of Isidar Mithrim. Eragon was
nearly deafened by the cheers and shouts that followed. Each of the dwarves insisted
on coming to Saphira and kissing the floor as Orik had. When that was finished, they
abandoned their food and filled their stone tankards with beer and mead.
Eragon joined the revelry with an abandon that surprised him. It helped to ease the
melancholy gathered in his heart. However, he did try to resist complete debauchery,
for he was conscious of the duties that awaited them the following day and he wanted
to have a clear head.
Even Saphira took a sip of mead, and finding that she liked it, the dwarves rolled out
a whole barrel for her. Delicately lowering her mighty jaws through the cask’s open
end, she drained it with three long draughts, then tilted her head toward the ceiling
and belched a giant tongue of flame. It took several minutes for Eragon to convince
the dwarves that it was safe to approach her again, but once he did, they brought her
another barrel—overriding the cook’s protests—and watched with amazement as she
emptied it as well.
As Saphira became increasingly inebriated, her emotions and thoughts washed
through Eragon with more and more force. It became difficult for him to rely upon the
input of his own senses: her vision began to slip over his own, blurringmovement and
changing colors. Even the odors he smelled shifted at times, becoming sharper, more
pungent.
The dwarves began to sing together. Weaving as she stood, Saphira hummed along,
punctuating each line with a roar. Eragon opened his mouth to join in and was
shocked when, instead of words, out came the snarling rasp of a dragon’s voice. That,
he thought, shaking his head, is going too far… Or am I just drunk? He decided it did
not matter and proceeded to sing boisterously, dragon’s voice or not.
Dwarves continued to stream into the hall as word of Isidar Mithrim spread.
Hundreds soon packed the tables, with a thick ring around Eragon and Saphira. Orik
called in musicians who arranged themselves in a corner, where they pulled slipcovers
of green velvet off their instruments. Soon harps, lutes, and silver flutes floated their
gilded melodies over the throng.
Many hours passed before the noise and excitement began to calm. When it did, Orik
once more climbed onto the table. He stood there, legs spread wide for balance,
tankard in hand, iron-bound cap awry, and cried, “Hear, hear! At last we have
celebrated as is proper. The Urgals are gone, the Shade is dead, and we have won!â€
The dwarves all pounded their tables in approval. It was a good speech—short and to
the point. But Orik was not finished. “To Eragon and Saphira!†he roared, lifting the
tankard. This too was well received.
Eragon stood and bowed, which brought more cheers. Beside him, Saphira reared and
swung a foreleg across her chest, attempting to duplicate his move. She tottered, and
the dwarves, realizing their danger, scrambled away from her. They were barely in
time. With a loud whoosh, Saphira fell backward, landing flat on a banquet table.
Pain shot through Eragon’s back and he collapsed insensate by her tail.
REQUIEM
“Wake, Knurlhiem! You cannot sleep now. We are needed at the gate—they won’t
start without us.â€
Eragon forced his eyes open, conscious of an aching head and sore body. He was
lying on a cold stone table. “What?†He grimaced at the sick taste on his tongue.
Orik tugged on his brown beard. “Ajihad’s procession. We must be present for it!â€
“No, what did you call me?†They were still in the banquet hall, but it was empty
except for him, Orik, and Saphira, who lay on her side between two tables. She stirred
and lifted her head, looking around with bleary eyes.
“Stonehead! I called you Stonehead because I’ve been trying to wake you for almost
an hour.â€
Eragon pushed himself upright and slid off the table. Flashes of memory from the
night before jumped through his mind. Saphira, how are you? he asked, stumbling to
her.
She swiveled her head, running her crimson tongue in and out over her teeth, like a
cat that ate something unpleasant. Whole… I think. My left wing feels a bit strange; I
think it’s the one I landed on. And my head is filled with a thousand hot arrows.
“Was anyone hurt when she fell?†asked Eragon, concerned.
A hearty chuckle exploded from the dwarf’s thick chest. “Only those who dropped
off their seats from laughing so hard. A dragon getting drunk and bowing at that! I’m
sure lays will be sung about it for decades.†Saphira shuffled her wings and looked
away primly. “We thought it best to leave you here, since we couldn’t move you,
Saphira. It upset the head cook terribly—he feared you would drink more of his best
stock than the four barrels you already did.â€
And you chastisedmeonce for drinking! If I consumed four barrels, it would kill me!
That’s why you’re not a dragon.
Orik thrust a bundle of clothes into Eragon’s arms. “Here, put these on. They are
more appropriate for a funeral than your own attire. But hurry, we have little time.â€
Eragon struggled into the items—a billowy white shirt with ties at the cuffs, a red vest
decorated with gold braiding and embroidery, dark pants, shiny black boots that
clacked on the floor, and a swirling cape that fastened under his throat with a studded
brooch. In place of the usual plain leather band, Zar’roc was fastened to an ornate
belt.
Eragon splashed his face with water and tried to arrange his hair neatly. Then Orik
rushed him and Saphira out of the hall and toward Tronjheim’s south gate. “We must
start from there,†he explained, movingwith surprising speed on his stocky legs,
“because that is where the procession with Ajihad’s body stopped three days ago. His
journey to the grave cannot be interrupted, or else his spirit will find no rest.â€
An odd custom, remarked Saphira.
Eragon agreed, noting a slight unsteadiness in her gait. In Carvahall, people were
usually buried on their farm, or if they lived in the village, in a small graveyard. The
only rituals that accompanied the process were lines recited from certain ballads and a
death feast held afterward for relatives and friends. Can you make it through the
whole funeral? he asked as Saphira staggered again.
She grimaced briefly. That and Nasuada’s appointment, but then I’ll need to sleep. A
pox on all mead!
Returning to his conversation with Orik, Eragon asked, “Where will Ajihad be
buried?â€
Orik slowed and glanced at Eragon with caution. “That has been a matter of
contention among the clans. When a dwarf dies, we believe he must be sealed in stone
or else he will never join his ancestors… It is complex and I cannot say more to an
outsider… but we go to great lengths to assure such a burial. Shame falls on a family
or clan if they allow any of their own to lie in a lesser element.
“Under Farthen Dûr exists a chamber that is the home of all knurlan, all dwarves,
who have died here. It is there Ajihad will be taken. He cannot be entombed with us,
as he is human, but a hallowed alcove has been set aside for him. There the Varden
may visit him without disturbing our sacred grottos, and Ajihad will receive the
respect he is due.â€
“Your king has done much for the Varden,†commented Eragon.
“Some think too much.â€
Before the thick gate—drawn up on its hidden chains to reveal faint daylight drifting
into Farthen Dûr—they found a carefully arranged column. Ajihad lay at the front,
cold and pale on a white marble bier borne by sixmen in black armor. Upon his head
was a helm strewn with precious stones. His hands were clasped beneath his
collarbone, over the ivory hilt of his bare sword, which extended from underneath the
shield covering his chest and legs. Silver mail, like circlets of moonbeams, weighed
down his limbs and fell onto the bier.
Close behind the body stood Nasuada—grave, sable-cloaked, and strong in stature,
though tears adorned her countenance. To the side was Hrothgar in dark robes; then
Arya; the Council of Elders, all with suitably remorseful expressions; and finally a
stream of mourners that extended a mile from Tronjheim.
Every door and archway of the four-story-high hall that led to the central chamber of
Tronjheim, half a mile away, was thrown open and crowded with humans and
dwarves alike. Between the gray bands of faces, the long tapestries swayed as they
were brushed with hundreds of sighs and whispers when Saphira and Eragon came
into view.
Jörmundur beckoned for them to join him. Trying not to disturb the formation,
Eragon and Saphira picked through the column to the space by his side, earning a
disapproving glare from Sabrae. Orik went to stand behind Hrothgar.
Together they waited, though for what, Eragon knew not.
All the lanterns were shuttered halfway so that a cool twilight suffused the air,
lending an ethereal feel to the event. No one seemed to move or breathe: for a brief
moment, Eragon fancied that they were all statues frozen for eternity. A single plume
of incense drifted from the bier, winding toward the hazy ceiling as it spread the scent
of cedar and juniper. It was the only motion in the hall, a whiplash line undulating
sinuously from side to side.
Deep in Tronjheim, a drum gonged. Boom. The sonorous bass note resonated through
their bones, vibrating the city-mountain and causing it to echo like a great stone bell.
They stepped forward.
Boom. On the second note, another, lower drum melded with the first, each beat
rolling inexorably through the hall. The force of the sound propelled them along at a
majestic pace. It gave each step significance, a purpose and gravity suited to the
occasion. No thought could exist in the throbbing that surrounded them, only an
upwelling of emotion that the drums expertly beguiled, summoning tears and
bittersweet joy at the same time.
Boom.
When the tunnel ended, Ajihad’s bearers paused between the onyx pillars before
gliding into the central chamber. There Eragon saw the dwarves grow even more
solemn upon beholding Isidar Mithrim.
Boom.
They walked through a crystal graveyard. A circle of towering shards lay in the
center of the great chamber, surrounding the inlaid hammer and pentacles. Many
pieces were larger than Saphira. The rays of the star sapphire still shimmered in the
fragments, and on some, petals of the carved rose were visible.
Boom.
The bearers continued forward, between the countless razor edges. Then the
procession turned and descended broad flights of stairs to the tunnels below. Through
many caverns they marched, passing stone huts where dwarven children clutched their
mothers and stared with wide eyes.
Boom.
And with that final crescendo, they halted under ribbed stalactites that branched over
a great catacomb lined with alcoves. In each alcove lay a tomb carved with a name
and clan crest. Thousands—hundreds of thousands—were buried here. The only light
came from sparsely placed red lanterns, pale in the shadows.
After a moment, the bearers strode to a small room annexed to the main chamber. In
the center, on a raised platform, was a great crypt open to waiting darkness. On the
top was carved in runes:
May all, Knurlan, Humans, and Elves,
Remember
This Man.
For he was Noble, Strong, and Wise.
Gûntera Arûna
When the mourners were gathered around, Ajihad was lowered into the crypt, and
those who had known him personally were allowed to approach. Eragon and Saphira
were fifth in line, behind Arya. As they ascended the marble steps to view the body,
Eragon was gripped by an overwhelming sense of sorrow, his anguish compounded
by the fact that he considered this as much Murtagh’s funeral as Ajihad’s.
Stopping alongside the tomb, Eragon gazed down at Ajihad. He appeared far more
calm and tranquil than he ever did in life, as if death had recognized his greatness and
honored him by removing all traces of his worldly cares. Eragon had known Ajihad
only a short while, but in that time he had come to respect him both as a person and
for what he represented: freedom from tyranny. Also, Ajihad was the first person to
grant safe haven to Eragon and Saphira since they left Palancar Valley.
Stricken, Eragon tried to think of the greatest praise he could give. In the end, he
whispered past the lump in his throat, “You will be remembered, Ajihad. I swear it.
Rest easy knowing that Nasuada shall continue your work and the Empire will be
overthrown because of what you accomplished.†Conscious of Saphira’s touch on his
arm, Eragon stepped off the platform with her and allowed Jörmundur to take his
place.
When at last everyone had paid their respects, Nasuada bowed over Ajihad and
touched her father’s hand, holding it with gentle urgency. Uttering a pained groan, she
began to sing in a strange, wailing language, filling the cavern with her lamentations.
Then came twelve dwarves, who slid a marble slab over Ajihad’s upturned face. And
he was no more.
FEALTY
Eragon yawned and covered his mouth as people filed into the underground
amphitheater. The spacious arena echoed with a babble of voices discussing the
funeral that had just concluded.
Eragon sat on the lowest tier, level with the podium. With him were Orik, Arya,
Hrothgar, Nasuada, and the Council of Elders. Saphira stood on the row of stairs that
cut upward through the tiers. Leaning over, Orik said, “Ever since Korgan, each of
our kings has been chosen here. It’s fitting that the Varden should do likewise.â€
It’s yet to be seen,thought Eragon, if this transfer of power will remain peaceful. He
rubbed an eye, brushing away fresh tears; the funeral ceremony had left him shaken.
Lathered over the remnants of his grief, anxiety now twisted his gut. He worried
about his own role in the upcoming events. Even if all went well, he and Saphira were
about to make potent enemies. His hand dropped to Zar’roc and tightened on the
pommel.
It took several minutes for the amphitheater to fill. Then Jörmundur stepped up to the
podium. “People of the Varden, we last stood here fifteen years ago, at Deynor’s
death. His successor, Ajihad, did more to oppose the Empire and Galbatorix than any
before. He won countless battles against superior forces. He nearly killed Durza,
putting a scratch on the Shade’s blade. And greatest of all, he welcomed Rider Eragon
and Saphira into Tronjheim. However, a new leader must be chosen, one who will
win us even more glory.â€
Someone high above shouted, “Shadeslayer!â€
Eragon tried not to react—he was pleased to see that Jörmundur did not even blink.
He said, “Perhaps in years to come, but he has other duties and responsibilities now.
No, the Council of Elders has thought long on this: we need one who understands our
needs and wants, one who has lived and suffered alongside us. One who refused to
flee, even when battle was imminent.â€
At that moment, Eragon sensed comprehension rush through the listeners. The name
came as a whisper from a thousand throats and was uttered by Jörmundur himself:
“Nasuada.â€With a bow, Jörmundur stepped aside.
Next was Arya. She surveyed the waiting audience, then said, “The elves honor
Ajihad tonight… And on behalf of Queen Islanzadí, I recognize Nasuada’s ascension
and offer her the same support and friendship we extended to her father. May the stars
watch over her.â€
Hrothgar took the podium and stated gruffly, “I too support Nasuada, as do the
clans.†He moved aside.
Then it was Eragon’s turn. Standing before the crowd, with all eyes upon him and
Saphira, he said, “We support Nasuada as well.†Saphira growled in affirmation.
Pledges spoken, the Council of Elders lined themselves on either side of the podium,
Jörmundur at their head. Bearing herself proudly, Nasuada approached and knelt
before him, her dress splayed in raven billows. Raising his voice, Jörmundur said,
“By the right of inheritance and succession, we have chosen Nasuada. By merit of her
father’s achievements and the blessings of her peers, we have chosen Nasuada. I now
ask you: Have we chosen well?â€
The roar was overwhelming.“Yes!â€
Jörmundur nodded. “Then by the power granted to this council, we pass the
privileges and responsibilities accorded to Ajihad to his only descendant, Nasuada.â€
He gently placed a circlet of silver on Nasuada’s brow. Taking her hand, he lifted her
upright and pronounced, “I give you our new leader!â€
For ten minutes, the Varden and dwarves cheered, thundering their approbation until
the hall rangwith the clamor. Once their cries subsided, Sabrae motioned to Eragon,
whispering, “Now is the time to fulfill your promise.â€
At that moment, all noise seemed to cease for Eragon. His nervousness disappeared
too, swallowed in the tide of the moment. Steeling himself with a breath, he and
Saphira started toward Jörmundur and Nasuada, each step an eternity. As they
walked, he stared at Sabrae, Elessari, Umérth, and Falberd—noting their half-smiles,
smugness, and on Sabrae’s part, outright disdain. Behind the council members stood
Arya. She nodded in support.
We are about to change history, said Saphira.
We’re throwing ourselves off a cliff without knowing how deep the water below is.
Ah, but what a glorious flight!
With a brief look at Nasuada’s serene face, Eragon bowed and kneeled. Slipping
Zar’roc from its sheath, he placed the sword flat on his palms, then lifted it, as if to
proffer it to Jörmundur. For a moment, the sword hovered between Jörmundur and
Nasuada, teetering on the wire edge of two different destinies. Eragon felt his breath
catch—such a simple choice to balance a life on. And more than a life—a dragon, a
king, an Empire!
Then his breath rushed in, filling his lungs with time once again, and he swung to
face Nasuada. “Out of deep respect… and appreciation of the difficulties facing
you… I, Eragon, first Rider of the Varden, Shadeslayer and Argetlam, give you my
blade and my fealty, Nasuada.â€
The Varden and dwarves stared, dumbstruck. In that same instant, the Council of
Elders flashed from triumphant gloating to enraged impotence. Their glares burned
with the strength and venom of those betrayed. Even Elessari let outrage burst through
her pleasant demeanor. Only Jörmundur—after a brief jolt of surprise—seemed to
accept the announcement with equanimity.
Nasuada smiled and grasped Zar’roc, placing the sword’s tip on Eragon’s forehead,
just as before. “I am honored that you choose to serve me, Rider Eragon. I accept, as
you accept all the responsibilities accompanying the station. Rise as my vassal and
take your sword.â€
Eragon did so, then stepped back with Saphira. With shouts of approval, the crowd
rose to their feet, the dwarves stamping in rhythm with their hobnail boots while
human warriors banged swords across shields.
Turning to the podium, Nasuada gripped it on either side and looked up at all the
people in the amphitheater. She beamed at them, pure joy shining from her face.
“People of the Varden!â€
Silence.
“As my father did before me, I give my life to you and our cause. I will never cease
fighting until the Urgals are vanquished, Galbatorix is dead, and Alagaësia is free
once more!â€
More cheering and applause.
“Therefore, I say to you, now is the time to prepare. Here in Farthen Dûr—after
endless skirmishes—we won our greatest battle. It is our turn to strike back.
Galbatorix is weak after losing so many forces, and there will never again be such an
opportunity.
“Therefore, I say again, now is the time to prepare so that we may once more stand
victorious!â€
After more speeches by various personages—including a still-glowering Falberd—
the amphitheater began to empty. As Eragon stood to leave, Orik grasped his arm,
stopping him. The dwarf was wide-eyed. “Eragon, did you plan all that beforehand?â€
Eragon briefly considered the wisdom of telling him, then nodded. “Yes.â€
Orik exhaled, shaking his head. “That was a bold stroke, it was. You’ve given
Nasuada a strong position to begin with. It was dangerous, though, if the reactions of
the Council of Elders are anything to judge by. Did Arya approve of this?â€
“She agreed it was necessary.â€
The dwarf studied him thoughtfully. “I’m sure it was. You just altered the balance of
power, Eragon. No one will underestimate you again because of it… Beware the
rotten stone. You have earned some powerful enemies today.†He slapped Eragon on
the side and continued past.
Saphira watched him go, then said, We should prepare to leave Farthen Dûr. The
council will be thirsty for revenge. The sooner we’re out of their reach, the better.
A SORCERESS, A SNAKE, AND A SCROLL
That evening, as Eragon returned to his quarters from bathing, he was surprised to
find a tall woman waiting for him in the hall. She had dark hair, startling blue eyes,
and a wry mouth. Wound around her wrist was a gold bracelet shaped like a hissing
snake. Eragon hoped that she wasn’t there to ask him for advice, like so many of the
Varden.
“Argetlam.†She curtsied gracefully.
He inclined his head in return. “Can I help you?â€
“I hope so. I’m Trianna, sorceress of Du Vrangr Gata.â€
“Really? A sorceress?†he asked, intrigued.
“And battle mage and spy and anything else the Varden deem necessary. There aren’t
enough magic users, so we each end up with a half-dozen tasks.†She smiled,
displaying even, white teeth. “That’s why I came today. We would be honored to
have you take charge of our group. You’re the only one who can replace the Twins.â€
Almost without realizing it, he smiled back. She was so friendly and charming, he
hated to say no. “I’m afraid I can’t; Saphira and I are leaving Tronjheim soon.
Besides, I’d have to consult with Nasuada first anyway.â€And I don’t want to be
entangled in any more politics… especially not where the Twins used to lead .
Trianna bit her lip. “I’m sorry to hear that.†She moved a step closer. “Perhaps we
can spend some time together before you have to go. I could show you how to
summon and control spirits… It would beeducational for both of us.â€
Eragon felt a hot flush warm his face. “I appreciate the offer, but I’m really too busy
at the moment.â€
A spark of anger flared within Trianna’s eyes, then vanished so quickly, he wondered
whether he had seen it at all. She sighed delicately. “I understand.â€
She sounded so disappointed—and looked so forlorn—Eragon felt guilty for
rebuffing her. It can’t hurt to talk with her for a few minutes, he told himself. “I’m
curious; how did you learn magic?â€
Trianna brightened. “My mother was a healer in Surda. She had a bit of power and
was able to instruct me in the old ways. Of course, I’m nowhere near as powerful as a
Rider. None of Du Vrangr Gata could have defeated Durza alone, like you did. That
was a heroic deed.â€
Embarrassed, Eragon scuffed his boots against the ground. “I wouldn’t have survived
if not for Arya.â€
“You are too modest, Argetlam,†she admonished. “It wasyou who struck the final
blow. You should be proud of your accomplishment. It’s a feat worthy of Vrael
himself.†She leaned toward him. His heart quickened as he smelled her perfume,
which was rich and musky, with a hint of an exotic spice. “Have you heard the songs
composed about you? The Varden sing them every night around their fires. They say
you’ve come to take the throne from Galbatorix!â€
“No,†said Eragon, quick and sharp. That was one rumor he would not tolerate.
“They might, but I don’t. Whatever my fate may be, I don’t aspire to rule.â€
“And it’s wise of you not to. What is a king, after all, but a man imprisoned by his
duties? That would be a poor reward indeed for the last free Rider and his dragon. No,
for you the ability to go and do what you will and, by extension, to shape the future of
Alagaësia.†She paused. “Do you have any family left in the Empire?â€
What?“Only a cousin.â€
“Then you’re not betrothed?â€
The question caught him off guard. He had never been asked that before. “No, I’m
not betrothed.â€
“Surely there must be someone you care about.†She came another step closer, and
her ribboned sleeve brushed his arm.
“I wasn’t close to anyone in Carvahall,†he faltered, “and I’ve been traveling since
then.â€
Trianna drew back slightly, then lifted her wrist so the serpent bracelet was at eye
level. “Do you like him?†she inquired. Eragon blinked and nodded, though it was
actually rather disconcerting. “I call him Lorga. He’s my familiar and protector.â€
Bending forward, she blew upon the bracelet, then murmured, “Sé orúm thornessa
hávr sharjalví lífs.â€
With a dry rustle, the snake stirred to life. Eragon watched, fascinated, as the creature
writhed around Trianna’s pale arm, then lifted itself and fixed its whirling ruby eyes
upon him, wire tongue whipping in and out. Its eyes seemed to expand until they were
each as large as Eragon’s fist. He felt as if he were tumbling into their fiery depths; he
could not look away no matter how hard he tried.
Then at a short command, the serpent stiffened and resumed its former position. With
a tired sigh, Trianna leaned against the wall. “Not many people understand what we
magic users do. But I wanted you to know that there are others like you, and we will
help if we can.â€
Impulsively, Eragon put his hand on hers. He had never attempted to approach a
woman this way before, but instinct urged him onward, daring him to take the chance.
It was frightening, exhilarating. “If you want, we could go and eat. There’s a kitchen
not far from here.â€
She slipped her other hand over his, fingers smooth and cool, so different from the
rough grips he was accustomed to. “I’d like that. Shall we—†Trianna stumbled
forward as the door burst open behind her. The sorceress whirled around, only to yelp
as she found herself face to face with Saphira.
Saphira remained motionless, except for one lip that slowly lifted to reveal a line of
jagged teeth. Then she growled. It was a marvelous growl—richly layered with scorn
and menace—that rose and fell through the hall for more than a minute. Listening to it
was like enduring a blistering, hackle-raising tirade.
Eragon glared at her the whole time.
When it was over, Trianna was clenching her dress with both fists, twisting the
fabric. Her face was white and scared. She quickly curtsied to Saphira, then, with a
barely controlled motion, turned and fled. Acting as if nothing had happened, Saphira
lifted a leg and licked a claw. It was nearly impossible to get the door open, she
sniffed.
Eragon could not contain himself any longer. Why did you do that? he exploded. You
had no reason to interfere!
You needed my help, she continued, unperturbed.
If I’d needed your help, I would have called!
Don’tyell at me, she snapped, letting her jaws click together. He could sense her
emotions boilingwith as much turmoil as his. I’ll not have you run around with a
slattern who cares more for Eragon as Rider than you as a person.
She wasn’t a slattern,roared Eragon. He pounded the wall in frustration. I’m a man
now, Saphira, not a hermit. You can’t expect me to ignore… ignore women just
because of who I am. And it’s certainly not your decision to make. At the very least, I
might have enjoyed a conversation with her, anything other than the tragedies we’ve
dealt with lately. You’re in my head enough to know how I feel. Why couldn’t you
leave me alone? Where was the harm?
You don’t understand. She refused to meet his eyes.
Don’t understand! Will you prevent me from ever having a wife and children? What
of a family?
Eragon. She finally fixed one great eye on him. We are intimately linked.
Obviously!
And if you pursue a relationship, with or without my blessing, and become…
attached… to someone, my feelings will become engaged as well. You should know
that. Therefore—and I warn you only once—be careful who you choose, because it
will involve both of us.
He briefly considered her words. Our bond works both ways, however. If you hate
someone, I will be influenced likewise… I understand your concern. So you weren’t
just jealous?
She licked the claw once more. Perhaps a little.
Eragon was the one who growled this time. He brushed past her into the room,
grabbed Zar’roc, then stalked away, belting on the sword.
He wandered through Tronjheim for hours, avoiding contact with everyone. What
had occurred pained him, though he could not deny the truth of Saphira’s words. Of
all the matters they shared, this was the most delicate and the one they agreed upon
least. That night—for the first time since he was captured at Gil’ead—he slept away
from Saphira, in one of the dwarves’ barracks.
Eragon returned to their quarters the followingmorning. By unspoken consent, he
and Saphira avoided discussingwhat had transpired; further argument was pointless
when neither party was willing to yield ground. Besides, they were both so relieved to
be reunited, they did not want to risk endangering their friendship again.
They were eating lunch—Saphira tearing at a bloody haunch—when Jarsha trotted
up. Like before, he stared wide-eyed at Saphira, following her movements as she
nibbled off the end of a leg bone. “Yes?†asked Eragon, wiping his chin and
wondering if the Council of Elders had sent for them. He had heard nothing from
them since the funeral.
Jarsha turned away from Saphira long enough to say, “Nasuada would like to see
you, sir. She’s waiting in her father’s study.â€
Sir!Eragon almost laughed. Only a little while ago, he would have been calling
people sir, not the other way around. He glanced at Saphira. “Are you done, or should
we wait a few minutes?â€
Rolling her eyes, she fit the rest of the meat into her mouth and split the bone with a
loud crack. I’m done.
“All right,†said Eragon, standing, “you can go, Jarsha. We know the way.â€
It took almost half an hour to reach the study because of the city-mountain’s size. As
duringAjihad’s rule, the door was guarded, but instead of two men, an entire squad of
battle-hardened warriors now stood before it, alert for the slightest hint of danger.
They would clearly sacrifice themselves to protect their new leader from ambush or
attack. Though the men could not have failed to recognize Eragon and Saphira, they
barred the way while Nasuada was alerted of her visitors. Only then were the two
allowed to enter.
Eragon immediately noticed a change: a vase of flowers in the study. The small
purple blossoms were unobtrusive, but they suffused the air with a warm fragrance
that—for Eragon—evoked summers of fresh-picked raspberries and scythed fields
turning bronze under the sun. He inhaled, appreciating the skill with which Nasuada
had asserted her individuality without obliteratingAjihad’s memory.
She sat behind the broad desk, still cloaked in the black of mourning. As Eragon
seated himself, Saphira beside him, she said, “Eragon.†It was a simple statement,
neither friendly nor hostile. She turned away briefly, then focused on him, her gaze
steely and intent. “I have spent the last few days reviewing the Varden’s affairs, such
as they are. It was a dismal exercise. We are poor, overextended, and low on supplies,
and few recruits are joining us from the Empire. I mean to change that.
“The dwarves cannot support us much longer, as it’s been a lean year for farming and
they’ve suffered losses of their own. Considering this, I have decided to move the
Varden to Surda. It’s a difficult proposition, but one I believe necessary to keep us
safe. Once in Surda, we will finally be close enough to engage the Empire directly.â€
Even Saphira stirred with surprise. The work that would involve! said Eragon. It
could take months to get everyone’s belongings to Surda, not to mention all the
people. And they’d probably be attacked along the way. “I thought KingOrrin didn’t
dare openly oppose Galbatorix,†he protested.
Nasuada smiled grimly. “His stance has changed since we defeated the Urgals. He
will shelter and feed us and fight by our side. Many Varden are already in Surda,
mainly women and children who couldn’t or wouldn’t fight. They will also support
us, else I will strip our name from them.â€
“How,†asked Eragon, “did you communicate with KingOrrin so quickly?â€
“The dwarves use a system of mirrors and lanterns to relay messages through their
tunnels. They can send a dispatch from here to the western edge of the Beor
Mountains in less than a day. Couriers then transport it to Aberon, capital of Surda.
Fast as it is, that method is still too slow when Galbatorix can surprise us with an
Urgal army and give us less than a day’s notice. I intend to arrange something far
more expedient between Du Vrangr Gata and Hrothgar’s magicians before we go.â€
Opening the desk drawer, Nasuada removed a thick scroll. “The Varden will depart
Farthen Dûr within the month. Hrothgar has agreed to provide us with safe passage
through the tunnels. Moreover, he sent a force to Orthíad to remove the last vestiges
of Urgals and seal the tunnels so no one can invade the dwarves by that route again.
As this may not be enough to guarantee the Varden’s survival, I have a favor to ask of
you.â€
Eragon nodded. He had expected a request or order. That was the only reason for her
to have summoned them. “I am yours to command.â€
“Perhaps.†Her eyes flicked to Saphira for a second. “In any case, this is not a
command, and I want you to think carefully before replying. To help rally support for
the Varden, I wish to spread word throughout the Empire that a new Rider—named
Eragon Shadeslayer—and his dragon, Saphira, have joined our cause. I would like
your permission before doing so, however.â€
It’s too dangerous, objected Saphira.
Word of our presence here will reach the Empire anyway,pointed out Eragon. The
Varden will want to brag about their victory and Durza’s death. Since it’ll happen
with or without our approval, we should agree to help.
She snorted softly. I’m worried about Galbatorix. Until now we haven’t made it
public where our sympathies lie.
Our actions have been clear enough.
Yes, but even when Durza fought you in Tronjheim, he wasn’t trying to kill you. If we
become outspoken in our opposition to the Empire, Galbatorix won’t be so lenient
again. Who knows what forces or plots he may have kept in abeyance while he tried to
gain hold of us? As long as we remain ambiguous, he won’t know what to do.
The time for ambiguity has passed,asserted Eragon. We fought the Urgals, killed
Durza, and I have sworn fealty to the leader of the Varden. No ambiguity exists. No,
with your permission, I will agree to her proposal.
She was silent for a longwhile, then dipped her head. As you wish.
He put a hand on her side before returning his attention to Nasuada and saying, “Do
what you see fit. If this is how we can best assist the Varden, so be it.â€
“Thank you. I know it is a lot to ask. Now, as we discussed before the funeral, I
expect you to travel to Ellesméra and complete your training.â€
“With Arya?â€
“Of course. The elves have refused contact with both humans and dwarves ever since
she was captured. Arya is the only beingwho can convince them to emerge from
seclusion.â€
“Couldn’t she use magic to tell them of her rescue?â€
“Unfortunately not. When the elves retreated into Du Weldenvarden after the fall of
the Riders, they placed wards around the forest that prevent any thought, item, or
being from entering it through arcane means, though not from exiting it, if I
understood Arya’s explanation. Thus, Arya must physically visit Du Weldenvarden
before Queen Islanzadí will know that she is alive, that you and Saphira exist, and of
the numerous events that have befallen the Varden these past months.†Nasuada
handed him the scroll. It was stamped with a wax sigil. “This is a missive for Queen
Islanzadí, telling her about the Varden’s situation and my own plans. Guard it with
your life; it would cause a great deal of harm in the wrong hands. I hope that after all
that’s happened, Islanzadí will feel kindly enough toward us to reinitiate diplomatic
ties. Her assistance could mean the difference between victory and defeat. Arya
knows this and has agreed to press our case, but I wanted you aware of the situation
too, so you could take advantage of any opportunities that might arise.â€
Eragon tucked the scroll into his jerkin. “When will we leave?â€
“Tomorrow morning… unless you have something already planned?â€
“No.â€
“Good.†She clasped her hands. “You should know, one other person will be
travelingwith you.†He looked at her quizzically. “KingHrothgar insisted that in the
interest of fairness there should be a dwarf representative present at your training,
since it affects their race as well. So he’s sendingOrik along.â€
Eragon’s first reaction was irritation. Saphira could have flown Arya and him to Du
Weldenvarden, thereby eliminatingweeks of unnecessary travel. Three passengers,
however, were too many to fit on Saphira’s shoulders. Orik’s presence would confine
them to the ground.
Upon further reflection, Eragon acknowledged the wisdom of Hrothgar’s request. It
was important for Eragon and Saphira to maintain a semblance of equality in their
dealings with the different races. He smiled. “Ah, well, it’ll slow us down, but I
suppose we have to placate Hrothgar. To tell the truth, I’m glad Orik is coming.
CrossingAlagaësia with only Arya was a rather daunting prospect. She’s…â€
Nasuada smiled too. “She’s different.â€
“Aye.†He grew serious again. “Do you really mean to attack the Empire? You said
yourself that the Varden are weak. It doesn’t seem like the wisest course. If we wait—
â€
“If we wait,†she said sternly, “Galbatorixwill only get stronger. This is the first time
since Morzan was slain that we have even the slightest opportunity of catching him
unprepared. He had no reason to suspect we could defeat the Urgals—which we did
thanks to you—so he won’t have readied the Empire for invasion.â€
Invasion!exclaimed Saphira. And how does she plan to kill Galbatorix when he flies
out to obliterate their army with magic?
Nasuada shook her head in response when Eragon restated the objection. “From what
we know of him, he won’t fight until Urû‘baen itself is threatened. It doesn’t matter to
Galbatorix if we destroy half the Empire, so long as we come to him, not the other
way around. Why should he bother anyway? If we do manage to reach him, our
troops will be battered and depleted, making it all the easier for him to destroy us.â€
“You still haven’t answered Saphira,†protested Eragon.
“That’s because I can’t yet. This will be a long campaign. By its end you might be
powerful enough to defeat Galbatorix, or the elves may have joined us… and their
spellcasters are the strongest in Alagaësia. No matter what happens, we cannot afford
to delay. Now is the time to gamble and dare what no one thinks we can accomplish.
The Varden have lived in the shadows for too long—we must either challenge
Galbatorix or submit and pass away.â€
The scope of what Nasuada was suggesting disturbed Eragon. So many risks and
unknown dangers were involved, it was almost absurd to consider such a venture.
However, it was not his place to make the decision, and he accepted that. Nor would
he dispute it further. We have to trust in her judgment now.
“But what of you, Nasuada?Will you be safe while we’re gone? I must think of my
vow. It’s become my responsibility to ensure that you won’t have your own funeral
soon.â€
Her jaw tightened as she gestured at the door and the warriors beyond. “You needn’t
fear, I am well defended.†She looked down. “I will admit… one reason for going to
Surda is that Orrin knows me of old and will offer his protection. I cannot tarry here
with you and Arya gone and the Council of Elders still with power. They won’t accept
me as their leader until I prove beyond doubt that the Varden are undermy control, not
theirs.â€
Then she seemed to draw on some inner strength, squaring her shoulders and lifting
her chin so she was distant and aloof. “Go now, Eragon. Ready your horse, gather
supplies, and be at the north gate by dawn.â€
He bowed low, respecting her return to formality, then left with Saphira.
After dinner, Eragon and Saphira flew together. They sailed high above Tronjheim,
where crenulated icicles hung from the sides of Farthen Dûr, forming a great white
band around them. Though it was still hours until night, it was already nearly dark
within the mountain.
Eragon threw back his head, savoring the air on his face. He missed the wind—wind
that would rush through the grass and stir the clouds until everythingwas tousled and
fresh. Wind that would bring rain and storms and lash the trees so they bent. For that
matter, I miss trees as well, he thought. Farthen Dûr is an incredible place, but it’s as
empty of plants and animals as Ajihad’s tomb.
Saphira agreed. The dwarves seem to think that gems take the place of flowers. She
was silent as the light continued to fade. When it was too dark for Eragon to see
comfortably, she said, It’s late. We should return.
All right.
She drifted toward the ground in great, lazy spirals, drawing nearer to Tronjheim—
which glowed like a beacon in the center of Farthen Dûr. They were still far from the
city-mountain when she swung her head, saying, Look.
He followed her gaze, but all he could see was the gray, featureless plain below them.
What?
Instead of answering, she tilted her wings and glided to their left, slipping down to
one of the four roads that radiated from Tronjheim along the cardinal compass points.
As they landed, he noticed a patch of white on a small hill nearby. The patch wavered
strangely in the dusk, like a floating candle, then resolved into Angela, who was
wearing a pale wool tunic.
The witch carried a wicker basket nearly four feet across and filled with a wild
assortment of mushrooms, most of which Eragon did not recognize. As she
approached, he gestured at them and said, “You’ve been gathering toadstools?â€
“Hello,†laughed Angela, putting her load down. “Oh no, toadstool is far too general
a term. And anyway, they really ought to be called frogstools, not toadstools.†She
spread them with her hand. “Thisone is sulphur tuft, andthis is an inkcap, and here’s
navelcap, and dwarf shield, russet tough-shank, blood ring, andthat is a spotted
deceiver. Delightful, isn’t it!†She pointed to each in turn, ending on a mushroom with
pink, lavender, and yellow splashed in rivulets across its cap.
“And that one?†he asked, indicating a mushroom with a lightning-blue stem, moltenorange
gills, and a glossy black two-tiered cap.
She looked at it fondly. “Fricai Andlát, as the elves might say. The stalk is instant
death, while the cap can cure most poisons. It’s what Tunivor’s Nectar is extracted
from. Fricai Andlát only grows in caves in Du Weldenvarden and Farthen Dûr, and it
would die out here if the dwarves started carting their dung elsewhere.â€
Eragon looked back at the hill and realized that was exactly what it was, a dung heap.
“Hello, Saphira,†said Angela, reaching past him to pat Saphira on the nose. Saphira
blinked and looked pleased, tail twitching. At the same time, Solembum padded into
sight, his mouth clamped firmly around a limp rat. Without so much as a flick of his
whiskers, the werecat settled on the ground and began to nibble on the rodent,
studiously ignoring the three of them.
“So,†said Angela, tucking back a curl of her enormous hair, “off to Ellesméra?â€
Eragon nodded. He did not bother asking how she had found out; she always seemed
to know what was going on. When he remained silent, she scowled. “Well, don’t act
so morose. It’s not as if it’s your execution!â€
“I know.â€
“Then smile, because if it’s not your execution, you should be happy! You’re as
flaccid as Solembum’s rat. Flaccid. What a wonderful word, don’t you think?â€
That wrung a grin out of him, and Saphira chortled with amusement deep in her
throat. “I’m not sure it’s quite as wonderful as you think, but yes, I understand your
point.â€
“I’m glad you understand. Understanding is good.â€With arched eyebrows, she
hooked a fingernail underneath a mushroom and flipped it over, inspecting its gills as
she said, “It’s fortuitous we met tonight, as you are about to leave and I… I will
accompany the Varden to Surda. As I told you before, I like to be where things are
happening, and that’s the place.â€
Eragon grinned even more. “Well then, that must mean we’ll have a safe journey,
else you’d be with us.â€
Angela shrugged, then said seriously, “Be careful in Du Weldenvarden. Just because
elves do not display their emotions doesn’t mean they aren’t subject to rage and
passion like the rest of us mortals. What can make them so deadly, though, is how
they conceal it, sometimes for years.â€
“You’ve been there?â€
“Once upon a time.â€
After a pause, he asked, “What do you think of Nasuada’s plans?â€
“Mmm… she’s doomed! You’re doomed! They’re all doomed!†She cackled,
doubling over, then straightened abruptly. “Notice I didn’t specify what kind of doom,
so no matter what happens, I predicted it. How verywise of me.†She lifted the basket
again, setting it on one hip. “I suppose I won’t see you for a while, so farewell, best of
luck, avoid roasted cabbage, don’t eat earwax, and look on the bright side of life!â€
And with a cheery wink, she strolled off, leaving Eragon blinking and nonplussed.
After an appropriate pause, Solembum picked up his dinner and followed, ever so
dignified.
HROTHGAR’S GIFT
Dawn was a half hour away when Eragon and Saphira arrived at Tronjheim’s north
gate. The gate was raised just enough to let Saphira pass, so they hurried underneath
it, then waited in the recessed area beyond, where red jasper pillars loomed above and
carved beasts snarled between the bloody piers. Past those, at the very edge of
Tronjheim, sat two thirty-foot-high gold griffins. Identical pairs guarded each of the
city-mountain’s gates. No one was in sight.
Eragon held Snowfire’s reins. The stallion was brushed, reshod, and saddled, his
saddlebags bulgingwith goods. He pawed the floor impatiently; Eragon had not
ridden him for over a week.
Before longOrik ambled up, bearing a large pack on his back and a bundle in his
arms. “No horse?†asked Eragon, somewhat surprised. Are we supposed to walk all
the way to Du Weldenvarden?
Orik grunted. “We’ll be stopping at Tarnag, just north of here. From there we take
rafts along the Az Ragni to Hedarth, an outpost for tradingwith the elves. We won’t
need steeds before Hedarth, so I’ll use my own feet till then.â€
He set the bundle down with a clang, then unwrapped it, revealing Eragon’s armor.
The shield had been repainted—so the oak tree stood clearly in the center—and all the
dings and scrapes removed. Beneath it was the longmail shirt, burnished and oiled
until the steel gleamed brilliantly. No sign existed of where it had been rent when
Durza cut Eragon’s back. The coif, gloves, bracers, greaves, and helmet were likewise
repaired.
“Our greatest smiths worked on these,†said Orik, “as well as your armor, Saphira.
However, since we can’t take dragon armor with us, it was given to the Varden, who
will guard it against our return.â€
Please thank him for me, said Saphira.
Eragon obliged, then laced on the greaves and bracers, storing the other items in his
bags. Last of all, he reached for his helm, only to find Orik holding it. The dwarf
rolled the piece between his hands, then said, “Do not be so quick to don this, Eragon.
There is a choice you must make first.â€
“What choice is that?â€
Raising the helmet, Orik uncovered its polished brow, which, Eragon now saw, had
been altered: etched in the steel were the hammer and stars of Hrothgar and Orik’s
clan, the Ingeitum. Orik scowled, looking both pleased and troubled, and said in a
formal voice, “Mine king, Hrothgar, desires that I present this helm as a symbol of the
friendship he bears for you. And with it Hrothgar extends an offer to adopt you as one
of Dûrgrimst Ingeitum, as a member of his own family.â€
Eragon stared at the helm, amazed that Hrothgar would make such a gesture. Does
this mean I’d be subjected to his rule?… If I continue to accrue loyalties and
allegiances at this pace, I’ll be incapacitated before long—unable to do anything
without breaking some oath!
You don’t have to put it on, pointed out Saphira.
And risk insulting Hrothgar? Once again, we’re trapped.
It may be intended as a gift, though, another sign of otho, not a trap. I would guess
he’s thanking us for my offer to repair Isidar Mithrim.
That had not occurred to Eragon, for he had been too busy trying to figure out how
the dwarf kingmight gain advantage over them. True. But I think it’s also an attempt
to correct the imbalance of power created when I swore fealty to Nasuada. The
dwarves couldn’t have been pleased with that turn of events. He looked back at Orik,
who was waiting anxiously. “How often has this been done?â€
“For a human? Never. Hrothgar argued with the Ingeitum families for a day and a
night before they agreed to accept you. If you consent to bear our crest, you will have
full rights as clan member. You may attend our councils and give voice on every
issue. And,†he grew very somber, “if you so wish, you will have the right to be
buried with our dead.â€
For the first time, the enormity of Hrothgar’s action struck Eragon. The dwarves
could offer no higher honor. With a swift motion, he took the helm from Orik and
pressed it down upon his head. “I am privileged to join Dûrgrimst Ingeitum.â€
Orik nodded with approval and said, “Then take this Knurlnien, this Heart of Stone,
and cup it between your hands—yes, like so. You must steel yourself now and prick
open a vein to wet the stone. A few drops will suffice… To finish, repeat after me: Os
il dom qirânû carn dûr thargen, zeitmen, oen grimst vor formv edaris rak skilfz. Narho
is belgond…†It was a lengthy recitation and all the longer because Orik stopped to
translate every few sentences. Afterward, Eragon healed his wrist with a quick spell.
“Whatever else the clans may say about this business,†observed Orik, “you have
behaved with integrity and respect. They cannot ignore that.†He grinned. “We are of
the same clan now, eh? You are my foster brother! Under more normal circumstances,
Hrothgar would have presented your helm himself and we would have held a lengthy
ceremony to commemorate your induction into Dûrgrimst Ingeitum, but events move
too swiftly for us to tarry. Fear not that you are being slighted, though! Your adoption
shall be celebrated with the proper rituals when you and Saphira next return to
Farthen Dûr. You shall feast and dance and have many pieces of paper to sign in order
to formalize your new position.â€
“I look forward to the day,†said Eragon. He was still preoccupied with sifting
through the numerous possible ramifications of belonging to Dûrgrimst Ingeitum.
Sitting against a pillar, Orik shrugged off his pack and drew his ax, which he
proceeded to twirl between his palms. After several minutes, he leaned forward,
glaring back into Tronjheim. “Barzûl knurlar! Where are they? Arya said she would
be right here. Ha! Elves’ only concept of time is late and even later.â€
“Have you dealt with them much?†asked Eragon, crouching. Saphira watched with
interest.
The dwarf laughed suddenly. “Eta. Only Arya, and then sporadically because she
traveled so often. In seven decades, I’ve learned but one thing about her: You can’t
rush an elf. Trying is like hammering a file—it might break, but it’ll never bend.â€
“Aren’t dwarves the same?â€
“Ah, but stone will shift, given enough time.†Orik sighed and shook his head. “Of all
the races, elves change the least, which is one reason I’m reluctant to go.â€
“But we’ll get to meet Queen Islanzadí and see Ellesméra and who knows what else?
When was the last time a dwarf was invited into Du Weldenvarden?â€
Orik frowned at him. “Scenery means nothing. Urgent tasks remain in Tronjheim and
our other cities, yet I must tramp across Alagaësia to exchange pleasantries and sit
and grow fat as you are tutored. It could take years!â€
Years!… Still, if that’s what is required to defeat Shades and the Ra’zac, I’ll do it.
Saphira touched his mind: I doubt Nasuada will let us stay in Ellesméra for more
than a few months. With what she told us, we’ll be needed fairly soon.
“At last!†said Orik, pushing himself upright.
Approachingwere Nasuada—slippers flashing beneath her dress, like mice darting
from a hole—Jörmundur, and Arya, who bore a pack like Orik’s. She wore the same
black leather outfit Eragon had first seen her in, as well as her sword.
At that moment, it struck Eragon that Arya and Nasuada might not approve of him
joining the Ingeitum. Guilt and trepidation shot through him as he realized that it had
been his duty to consult Nasuada first. And Arya! He cringed, remembering how
angry she had been after his first meetingwith the Council of Elders.
Thus, when Nasuada stopped before him, he averted his eyes, ashamed. But she only
said, “You accepted.†Her voice was gentle, restrained.
He nodded, still looking down.
“I wondered if you would. Now once again, all three races have a hold on you. The
dwarves can claim your allegiance as a member of Dûrgrimst Ingeitum, the elves will
train and shape you—and their influence may be the strongest, for you and Saphira
are bound by their magic—and you have sworn fealty to me, a human… Perhaps it is
best that we share your loyalty.†She met his surprise with an odd smile, then pressed
a small bag of coins into his palm and stepped away.
Jörmundur extended a hand, which Eragon shook, feeling a bit dazed. “Have a good
trip, Eragon. Guard yourself well.â€
“Come,†said Arya, gliding past them into the darkness of Farthen Dûr. “It is time to
leave. Aiedail has set, and we have far to go.â€
“Aye,†Orik agreed. He pulled out a red lantern from the side of his pack.
Nasuada looked them over once more. “Very well. Eragon and Saphira, you have the
Varden’s blessings, as well as mine. May your journey be safe. Remember, you carry
the weight of our hopes and expectations, so acquit yourselves honorably.â€
“We will do our best,†promised Eragon.
Gripping Snowfire’s reins firmly, he started after Arya, who was already several
yards away. Orik followed, then Saphira. As Saphira passed Nasuada, Eragon saw her
pause and lightly lick Nasuada on the cheek. Then she lengthened her stride, catching
up with him.
As they continued north along the road, the gate behind them shrank smaller and
smaller until it was reduced to a pinprick of light—with two lonely silhouettes where
Nasuada and Jörmundur remained watching.
When they finally reached Farthen Dûr’s base, they found a pair of gigantic doors—
thirty feet tall—open and waiting. Three dwarf guards bowed and moved away from
the aperture. Through the doors was a tunnel of matching proportions, lined with
columns and lanterns for the first fifty feet. After that it was as empty and silent as a
mausoleum.
It looked exactly like Farthen Dûr’s western entrance, but Eragon knew that this
tunnel was different. Instead of burrowing through the mile-thick base to emerge
outside, it proceeded underneath mountain after mountain, all the way to the dwarf
city Tarnag.
“Here is our path,†said Orik, lifting the lantern.
He and Arya crossed over the threshold, but Eragon held back, suddenly uncertain.
While he did not fear the dark, neither did he welcome being surrounded by eternal
night until they arrived at Tarnag. And once he entered the barren tunnel, he would
again be hurling himself into the unknown, abandoning the few things he had grown
accustomed to among the Varden in exchange for an uncertain destiny.
What is it?asked Saphira.
Nothing.
He took a breath, then strode forward, allowing the mountain to swallow him in its
depths.
HAMMER AND TONGS
Three days after the Ra’zac’s arrival, Roran found himself pacing uncontrollably
along the edge of his camp in the Spine. He had heard nothing since Albriech’s visit,
nor was it possible to glean information by observing Carvahall. He glared at the
distant tents where the soldiers slept, then continued pacing.
At midday Roran had a small, dry lunch. Wiping his mouth with the back of his hand,
he wondered, How long are the Ra’zac willing to wait? If it was a test of patience, he
was determined to win.
To pass the time, he practiced his archery on a rotting log, stopping only when an
arrow shattered on a rock embedded in the trunk. After that nothing else remained to
do, except to resume striding back and forth along the bare track that stretched from a
boulder to where he slept.
He was still pacingwhen footsteps sounded in the forest below. Grabbing his bow,
Roran hid and waited. Relief rushed through him when Baldor’s face bobbed into
view. Roran waved him over.
As they sat, Roran asked, “Why hasn’t anyone come?â€
“We couldn’t,†said Baldor, wiping sweat off his brow. “The soldiers have been
watching us too closely. This was the first opportunity we had to get away. I can’t
stay long either.†He turned his face toward the peak above them and shuddered.
“You’re braver than I, staying here. Have you had any trouble with wolves, bears,
mountain cats?â€
“No, no, I’m fine. Did the soldiers say anything new?â€
“One of them bragged to Morn last night that their squad was handpicked for this
mission.†Roran frowned. “They haven’t been too quiet… At least two or three of
them get drunk each night. A group of them tore up Morn’s common room the first
day.â€
“Did they pay for the damage?â€
“‘Course not.â€
Roran shifted, staring down at the village. “I still have trouble believing that the
Empire would go to these lengths to capture me. What could I give them?What do
theythink I can give them?â€
Baldor followed his gaze. “The Ra’zac questioned Katrina today. Someone
mentioned that the two of you are close, and the Ra’zac were curious if she knew
where you’d gone.â€
Roran refocused on Baldor’s open face. “Is she all right?â€
“It would take more than those two to scare her,†reassured Baldor. His next sentence
was cautious and probing. “Perhaps you should consider turning yourself in.â€
“I’d sooner hangmyself and them with me!†Roran started up and stalked over his
usual route, still tapping his leg. “How can you say that, knowing how they tortured
my father?â€
Catching his arm, Baldor said, “What happens if you remain in hiding and the
soldiers don’t give up and leave? They’ll assume we lied to help you escape. The
Empire doesn’t forgive traitors.â€
Roran shrugged off Baldor. He spun around, tapping his leg, then abruptly sat. If
don’t show myself, the Ra’zac will blame the people at hand. If I attempt to lead the
Ra’zac away… Roran was not a skilled enough woodsman to evade thirty men and the
Ra’zac. Eragon could do it, but not me. Still, unless the situation changed, it might be
the only choice available to him.
He looked at Baldor. “I don’t want anyone to be hurt on my behalf. I’ll wait for now,
and if the Ra’zac grow impatient and threaten someone… Well then, I’ll think of
something else to do.â€
“It’s a nasty situation all around,†offered Baldor.
“One I intend to survive.â€
Baldor departed soon afterward, leaving Roran alone with his thoughts on his endless
path. He covered mile after mile, grinding a rut into the earth under the weight of his
ruminations. When chill dusk arrived, he removed his boots—for fear of wearing
them out—and proceeded to pad barefoot.
Just as the waxingmoon rose and subsumed the night shadows in beams of marble
light, Roran noticed a disturbance in Carvahall. Scores of lanterns bobbed through the
darkened village, winking in and out as they floated behind houses. The yellow
specks clustered in the center of Carvahall, like a cloud of fireflies, then streamed
haphazardly toward the edge of town, where they were met by a hard line of torches
from the soldiers’ camp.
For two hours, Roran watched the opposing sides face each other—the agitated
lanterns milling helplessly against the stolid torches. Finally, the lambent groups
dispersed and filtered back into the tents and houses.
When nothing else of interest occurred, Roran untied his bedroll and slipped under
the blankets.
Throughout the next day, Carvahall was consumed with unusual activity. Figures
strode between houses and even, Roran was surprised to see, rode out into Palancar
Valley toward various farms. At noon he saw two men enter the soldiers’ camp and
disappear into the Ra’zac’s tent for almost an hour.
So involved was he with the proceedings, Roran barely moved the entire day.
He was in the middle of dinner when, as he had hoped, Baldor reappeared.
“Hungry?†asked Roran, gesturing.
Baldor shook his head and sat with an air of exhaustion. Dark lines under his eyes
made his skin look thin and bruised. “Quimby’s dead.â€
Roran’s bowl clattered as it struck the ground. He cursed, wiping cold stew off his
leg, then asked, “How?â€
“A couple of soldiers started bothering Tara last night.†Tara was Morn’s wife. “She
didn’t really mind, except the men got in a fight over who she was supposed to serve
next. Quimby was there—checking a cask Morn said had turned—and he tried to
break them up.†Roran nodded. That was Quimby, always interfering to make sure
others behaved properly. “Only thing is, a soldier threw a pitcher and hit him on the
temple. Killed him instantly.â€
Roran stared at the ground with his hands on his hips, struggling to regain control
over his ragged breathing. He felt as if Baldor had knocked the wind out of him. It
doesn’t seem possible… Quimby, gone? The farmer and part-time brewer was as
much a part of the landscape as the mountains surrounding Carvahall, an
unquestioned presence that shaped the fabric of the village. “Will the men be
punished?â€
Baldor held up his hand. “Right after Quimby died, the Ra’zac stole his body from
the tavern and hauled it out to their tents. We tried to get it back last night, but they
wouldn’t talk with us.â€
“I saw.â€
Baldor grunted, rubbing his face. “Dad and Loringmet with the Ra’zac today and
managed to convince them to release the body. The soldiers, however, won’t face any
consequences.†He paused. “I was about to leave when Quimby was handed over.
You know what his wife got? Bones.â€
“Bones!â€
“Every one of them was nibbled clean—you could see the bite marks—and most had
been cracked open for the marrow.â€
Disgust gripped Roran, as well as profound horror for Quimby’s fate. It was well
known that a person’s spirit could never rest until his body was given a proper burial.
Revolted by the desecration, he asked, “What, who, ate him then?â€
“The soldiers were just as appalled. It must have been the Ra’zac.â€
“Why? To what end?â€
“I don’t think,†said Baldor, “that the Ra’zac are human. You’ve never seen them up
close, but their breath is foul, and they always cover their faces with black scarves.
Their backs are humped and twisted, and they speak to each other with clicks. Even
their men seem to fear them.â€
“If they aren’t human, then what kind of creatures can they be?†demanded Roran.
“They’re not Urgals.â€
“Who knows?â€
Fear now joined Roran’s revulsion—fear of the supernatural. He saw it echoed on
Baldor’s face as the youngman clasped his hands. For all the stories of Galbatorix’s
misdeeds, it was still a shock to have the king’s evil roosted among their homes. A
sense of history settled on Roran as he realized he was involved with forces he had
previously been acquainted with only through songs and stories. “Something should
be done,†he muttered.
The air grew warmer through the night, until by afternoon Palancar Valley
shimmered and sweltered with the unexpected spring heat. Carvahall looked peaceful
under the bald blue sky, yet Roran could feel the sour resentment that clenched its
inhabitants with malicious intensity. The calm was like a sheet stretched taut in the
wind.
Despite the aura of expectation, the day proved to be utterly boring; Roran spent most
of his time brushingHorst’s mare. At last he lay to sleep, looking up past the towering
pines at the haze of stars that adorned the night sky. They seemed so close, it felt as if
he hurtled among them, falling toward the blackest void.
The moon was settingwhen Roran woke, his throat raw from smoke. He coughed
and rolled upright, blinking as his eyes burned and watered. The noxious fumes made
it difficult to breathe.
Roran grabbed his blankets and saddled the frightened mare, then spurred her farther
up the mountain, hoping to find clear air. It quickly became apparent that the smoke
was ascendingwith him, so he turned and cut sideways through the forest.
After several minutes spent maneuvering in the dark, they finally broke free and rode
onto a ledge swept clean by a breeze. Purging his lungs with long breaths, Roran
scanned the valley for the fire. He spotted it in an instant.
Carvahall’s hay barn glowed white in a cyclone of flames, transforming its precious
contents into a fountain of amber motes. Roran trembled as he watched the
destruction of the town’s feed. He wanted to scream and run through the forest to help
with the bucket brigade, yet he could not force himself to abandon his own safety.
Now a molten spark landed on Delwin’s house. Within seconds, the thatched roof
exploded in a wave of fire.
Roran cursed and tore his hair, tears streaming down his face. This was why
mishandling fire was a hanging offense in Carvahall. Was it an accident? Was it the
soldiers? Are the Ra’zac punishing the villagers for shielding me?… Am I somehow
responsible for this?
Fisk’s house joined the conflagration next. Aghast, Roran could only avert his face,
hating himself for his cowardice.
By dawn all the fires had been extinguished or burned out on their own. Only sheer
luck and a calm night saved the rest of Carvahall from being consumed.
Roran waited until he was sure of the outcome, then retreated to his old camp and
threw himself down to rest. From morning through evening, he was oblivious to the
world, except through the lens of his troubled dreams.
Upon his return to awareness, Roran simply waited for the visitor he was sure would
appear. This time it was Albriech. He arrived at dusk with a grim, worn expression.
“Come with me,†he said.
Roran tensed. “Why?â€Have they decided to give me up? If hewas the cause of the
fire, he could understand the villagers wanting him gone. He might even agree it was
necessary. It was unreasonable to expect everyone in Carvahall to sacrifice
themselves for him. Still, that did not mean he would allow them to just hand him
over to the Ra’zac. After what the two monsters had done to Quimby, Roran would
fight to the death to avoid being their prisoner.
“Because,†said Albriech, clenching his jaw muscles, “it was the soldiers who started
the fire. Morn banned them from the Seven Sheaves, but they still got drunk on their
own beer. One of them dropped a torch against the hay barn on his way to bed.â€
“Was anyone hurt?†asked Roran.
“A few burns. Gertrude was able to handle them. We tried to negotiate with the
Ra’zac. They spat on our requests that the Empire replace our losses and the guilty
face justice. They even refused to confine the soldiers to the tents.â€
“So why should I return?â€
Albriech chuckled hollowly. “For hammer and tongs. We need your help to…remove
the Ra’zac.â€
“You would do that for me?â€
“We’re not risking ourselves for your sake alone. This concerns the entire village
now. At least come talk to Father and the others and hear their thoughts… I’d think
you would be glad to get out of these cursed mountains.â€
Roran considered Albriech’s proposition long and hard before deciding to
accompany him. It’s this or run for it, and I can always run later . He fetched the
mare, tied his bags to the saddle, then followed Albriech toward the valley floor.
Their progress slowed as they neared Carvahall, using trees and brush for cover.
Slipping behind a rain barrel, Albriech checked to see if the streets were clear, then
signaled to Roran. Together they crept from shadow to shade, constantly on guard for
the Empire’s servants. At Horst’s forge, Albriech opened one of the double doors just
far enough for Roran and the mare to quietly enter.
Inside, the workshop was lit by a single candle, which cast a trembling glow over the
ring of faces that hovered about it in the surrounding darkness. Horst was there—his
thick beard protruded like a shelf into the light—flanked by the hard visages of
Delwin, Gedric, and then Loring. The rest of the group was composed of younger
men: Baldor, Loring’s three sons, Parr, and Quimby’s boy, Nolfavrell, who was only
thirteen.
They all turned to look as Roran entered the assembly. Horst said, “Ah, you made it.
You escaped misfortune while in the Spine?â€
“I was lucky.â€
“Then we can proceed.â€
“With what, exactly?†Roran hitched the mare to an anvil as he spoke.
Loring answered, the shoemaker’s parchment face a mass of contorting lines and
grooves. “We have attempted reason with these Ra’zac… theseinvaders. †He
stopped, his thin frame racked with an unpleasant, metallic wheeze deep in his chest.
“They have refusedreason. They have endangered us all with no sign of remorse
orcontrition. †He made a noise in his throat, then said with pronounced deliberation,
“They…must… go. Such creatures—â€
“No,†said Roran. “Not creatures. Desecrators.â€
The faces scowled and bobbed in agreement. Delwin picked up the thread of
conversation: “The point is, everyone’s life is at stake. If that fire had spread any
farther, dozens of people would have been killed and those who escaped would have
lost everything they own. As a result, we’ve agreed to drive the Ra’zac away from
Carvahall. Will you join us?â€
Roran hesitated. “What if they return or send for reinforcements?We can’t defeat the
entire Empire.â€
“No,†said Horst, grave and solemn, “but neither can we stand silent and allow the
soldiers to kill us and to destroy our property. A man can endure only so much abuse
before he must strike back.â€
Loring laughed, throwing back his head so the flame gilded the stumps of his teeth.
“First we fortify,†he whispered with glee, “then we fight. We’ll make them regret
they ever clapped their festering eyes on Carvahall! Ha ha!â€
RETALIATION
After Roran agreed to their plan, Horst began distributing shovels, pitchforks, flails—
anything that could be used to beat the soldiers and the Ra’zac away.
Roran hefted a pick, then set it aside. Though he had never cared for Brom’s stories,
one of them, the “Song of Gerand,†resonated with him whenever he heard it. It told
of Gerand, the greatest warrior of his time, who relinquished his sword for a wife and
farm. He found no peace, however, as a jealous lord initiated a blood feud against
Gerand’s family, which forced Gerand to kill once more. Yet he did not fight with his
blade, but with a simple hammer.
Going to the wall, Roran removed a medium-sized hammer with a long handle and a
rounded blade on one side of the head. He tossed it from hand to hand, then went to
Horst and asked, “May I have this?â€
Horst eyed the tool and Roran. “Use it wisely.†Then he said to the rest of the group,
“Listen. We want to scare, not kill. Break a few bones if you want, but don’t get
carried away. And whatever you do, don’t stand and fight. No matter how brave or
heroic you feel, remember that they are trained soldiers.â€
When everyone was equipped, they left the forge and wound their way through
Carvahall to the edge of the Ra’zac’s camp. The soldiers had already gone to bed,
except for four sentries who patrolled the perimeter of the gray tents. The Ra’zac’s
two horses were picketed by a smoldering fire.
Horst quietly issued orders, sendingAlbriech and Delwin to ambush two of the
sentries, and Parr and Roran to ambush the other two.
Roran held his breath as he stalked the oblivious soldier. His heart began to shudder
as energy spiked through his limbs. He hid behind the corner of a house, quivering,
and waited for Horst’s signal. Wait.
Wait.
With a roar, Horst burst from hiding, leading the charge into the tents. Roran darted
forward and swung his hammer, catching the sentry on the shoulder with a grisly
crunch.
The man howled and dropped his halberd. He staggered as Roran struck his ribs and
back. Roran raised the hammer again and the man retreated, screaming for help.
Roran ran after him, shouting incoherently. He knocked in the side of a wool tent,
tramplingwhatever was inside, then smashed the top of a helmet he saw emerging
from another tent. The metal rang like a bell. Roran barely noticed as Loring danced
past—the old man cackled and hooted in the night as he jabbed the soldiers with a
pitchfork. Everywhere was a confusion of struggling bodies.
Whirling around, Roran saw a soldier attempting to string his bow. He rushed
forward and hit the back of the bow with his steel mallet, breaking the wood in two.
The soldier fled.
The Ra’zac scrambled free of their tent with terrible screeches, swords in hand.
Before they could attack, Baldor untethered the horses and sent them galloping
toward the two scarecrow figures. The Ra’zac separated, then regrouped, only to be
swept away as the soldiers’ morale broke and they ran.
Then it was over.
Roran panted in the silence, his hand cramped around the hammer’s handle. After a
moment, he picked his way through the crumpled mounds of tents and blankets to
Horst. The smith was grinning under his beard. “That’s the best brawl I’ve had in
years.â€
Behind them, Carvahall jumped to life as people tried to discover the source of the
commotion. Roran watched lamps flare up behind shuttered windows, then turned as
he heard soft sobbing.
The boy, Nolfavrell, was kneeling by the body of a soldier, methodically stabbing
him in the chest as tears slid down his chin. Gedric and Albriech hurried over and
pulled Nolfavrell away from the corpse.
“He shouldn’t have come,†said Roran.
Horst shrugged. “It was his right.â€
All the same, killing one of the Ra’zac’s men will only make it harder to rid ourselves
of the desecrators. “We should barricade the road and between the houses so they
won’t catch us by surprise.†Studying the men for any injuries, Roran saw that Delwin
had received a long cut on his forearm, which the farmer bandaged with a strip torn
from his ruined shirt.
With a few shouts, Horst organized their group. He dispatched Albriech and Baldor
to retrieve Quimby’s wagon from the forge and had Loring’s sons and Parr scour
Carvahall for items that could be used to secure the village.
Even as he spoke, people congregated on the edge of the field, staring at what was
left of the Ra’zac’s camp and the dead soldier. “What happened?†cried Fisk.
Loring scuttled forward and stared the carpenter in the eye. “What happened? I’ll tell
you whathappened. We routed the dung-beardlings… caught them with their boots off
and whipped them like dogs!â€
“I am glad.†The strong voice came from Birgit, an auburn-haired woman who
clasped Nolfavrell against her bosom, ignoring the blood smeared across his face.
“They deserve to die like cowards for my husband’s death.â€
The villagers murmured in agreement, but then Thane spoke: “Have you gone mad,
Horst? Even if you frightened off the Ra’zac and their soldiers, Galbatorixwill just
send more men. The Empire will never give up until they get Roran.â€
“We should hand him over,†snarled Sloan.
Horst raised his hands. “I agree; no one is worth more than all of Carvahall. But if we
surrender Roran, do you really think Galbatorixwill let us escape punishment for our
resistance? In his eyes, we’re no better than the Varden.â€
“Thenwhy did you attack?†demanded Thane. “Who gave you the authority to make
this decision? You’ve doomed us all!â€
This time Birgit answered. “Would you let them kill your wife?†She pressed her
hands on either side of her son’s face, then showed Thane her bloody palms, like an
accusation. “Would you let them burn us?… Where is your manhood, loam breaker?â€
He lowered his gaze, unable to face her stark expression.
“They burned my farm,†said Roran, “devoured Quimby, and nearly destroyed
Carvahall. Such crimes cannot go unpunished. Are we frightened rabbits to cower
down and accept our fate? No! We have a right to defend ourselves.†He stopped as
Albriech and Baldor trudged up the street, dragging the wagon. “We can debate later.
Now we have to prepare. Who will help us?â€
Forty or more men volunteered. Together they set about the difficult task of making
Carvahall impenetrable. Roran worked incessantly, nailing fence slats between
houses, piling barrels full of rocks for makeshift walls, and dragging logs across the
main road, which they blocked with two wagons tipped on their sides.
As Roran hurried from one chore to another, Katrina waylaid him in an alley. She
hugged him, then said, “I’m glad you’re back, and that you’re safe.â€
He kissed her lightly. “Katrina… I have to speak with you as soon as we’re finished.â€
She smiled uncertainly, but with a spark of hope. “You were right; it was foolish of
me to delay. Every moment we spend together is precious, and I have no desire to
squander what time we have when a whim of fate could tear us apart.â€
Roran was tossingwater on the thatching of Kiselt’s house—so it could not catch
fire—when Parr shouted, “Ra’zac!â€
Dropping the bucket, Roran ran to the wagons, where he had left his hammer. As he
grabbed the weapon, he saw a single Ra’zac sitting on a horse far down the road,
almost out of bowshot. The creature was illuminated by a torch in its left hand, while
its right was drawn back, as if to throw something.
Roran laughed. “Is he going to toss rocks at us? He’s too far away to even hit—†He
was cut off as the Ra’zac whipped down its arm and a glass vial arched across the
distance between them and shattered against the wagon to his right. An instant later, a
fireball launched the wagon into the air while a fist of burning air flung Roran against
a wall.
Dazed, he fell to his hands and knees, gasping for breath. Through the roaring in his
ears came the tattoo of galloping horses. He forced himself upright and faced the
sound, only to dive aside as the Ra’zac raced into Carvahall through the burning gap
in the wagons.
The Ra’zac reined in their steeds, blades flashing as they hacked at the people strewn
around them. Roran saw three men die, then Horst and Loring reached the Ra’zac and
began pressing them back with pitchforks. Before the villagers could rally, soldiers
poured through the breach, killing indiscriminately in the darkness.
Roran knew they had to be stopped, else Carvahall would be taken. He jumped at a
soldier, catching him by surprise, and hit him in the face with the hammer’s blade.
The soldier crumpled without a sound. As the man’s compatriots rushed toward him,
Roran wrestled the corpse’s shield off his limp arm. He barely managed to get it free
in time to block the first strike.
Backstepping toward the Ra’zac, Roran parried a sword thrust, then swung his
hammer up under the man’s chin, sending him to the ground. “To me!†shouted
Roran. “Defend your homes!†He sidestepped a jab as five men attempted to encircle
him. “To me!â€
Baldor answered his call first, then Albriech. A few seconds later, Loring’s sons
joined him, followed by a score of others. From the side streets, women and children
pelted the soldiers with rocks. “Stay together,†ordered Roran, standing his ground.
“There are more of us.â€
The soldiers halted as the line of villagers before them continued to thicken. With
more than a hundred men at his back, Roran slowly advanced.
“Attack, you foolsss,†screamed a Ra’zac, dodging Loring’s pitchfork.
A single arrow whizzed toward Roran. He caught it on his shield and laughed. The
Ra’zac were level with the soldiers now, hissingwith frustration. They glared at the
villagers from under their inky cowls. Suddenly Roran felt himself become lethargic
and powerless to move; it was hard to even think. Fatigue seemed to chain his arms
and legs in place.
Then from farther in Carvahall, Roran heard a raw shout from Birgit. A second later,
a rock hurtled over his head and bored toward the lead Ra’zac, who twitched with
supernatural speed to avoid the missile. The distraction, slight though it was, freed
Roran’s mind from the soporific influence. Was that magic? he wondered.
He dropped the shield, grasped his hammer with both hands, and raised it far above
his head—just like Horst did when spreadingmetal. Roran went up on tiptoe, his
entire body bowed backward, then whipped his arms down with ahuh! The hammer
cartwheeled through the air and bounced off the Ra’zac’s shield, leaving a formidable
dent.
The two attacks were enough to disrupt the last of the Ra’zac’s strange power. They
clicked rapidly to each other as the villagers roared and marched forward, then the
Ra’zac yanked on their reins, wheeling around.
“Retreat,†they growled, riding past the soldiers. The crimson-clad warriors sullenly
backed out of Carvahall, stabbing at anyone who came too close. Only when they
were a good distance from the burningwagons did they dare turn their backs.
Roran sighed and retrieved his hammer, feeling the bruises on his side and back
where he had hit the wall. He bowed his head as he saw that the explosion had killed
Parr. Nine other men had died. Already wives and mothers rent the night with their
wails of grief.
How could this happen here?
“Everyone, come!†called Baldor.
Roran blinked and stumbled to the middle of the road, where Baldor stood. A Ra’zac
sat beetle-like on a horse only twenty yards away. The creature crooked a finger at
Roran and said, “You… you sssmell like your cousin. We never forget a sssmell.â€
“What do you want?†he shouted. “Why are you here?â€
The Ra’zac chuckled in a horrible, insectile way. “We want…information. †It
glanced over its shoulder, where its companions had disappeared, then cried, “Release
Roran and you ssshall be sold as ssslaves. Protect him, and we will eat you all. We
ssshall have your answer when next we come. Be sssure it is the right one.â€
AZSWELDN RAKANHÛIN
Light burst into the tunnel as the doors dragged open. Eragon winced, his eyes sorely
unaccustomed to daylight after so long underground. Beside him, Saphira hissed and
arched her neck to get a better view of their surroundings.
It had taken them two days to traverse the subterranean passage from Farthen Dûr,
though it felt longer to Eragon, due to the never-ending dusk that surrounded them
and the silence it had imposed upon their group. In all, he could recall only a handful
of words being exchanged during their journey.
Eragon had hoped to learn more about Arya while they traveled together, but the only
information he had gleaned came simply as a result of observation. He had not supped
with her before and was startled to see that she brought her own food and ate no meat.
When he asked her why, she said, “You will never again consume an animal’s flesh
after you have been trained, or if you do, it will be only on the rarest of occasions.â€
“Why should I give up meat?†he scoffed.
“I cannot explain with words, but you will understand once we reach Ellesméra.â€
All that was forgotten now as he hurried to the threshold, eager to see their
destination. He found himself standing on a granite outcropping, more than a hundred
feet above a purple-hued lake, brilliant under the eastern sun. Like Kóstha-mérna, the
water reached from mountain to mountain, filling the valley’s end. From the lake’s far
side, the Az Ragni flowed north, winding between the peaks until—in the far
distance—it rushed out onto the eastern plains.
To his right, the mountains were bare, save for a few trails, but to his left… to his left
was the dwarf city Tarnag. Here the dwarves had reworked the seemingly immutable
Beors into a series of terraces. The lower terraces were mainly farms—dark curves of
land waiting to be planted—dotted with squat halls, which as best he could tell were
built entirely of stone. Above those empty levels rose tier upon tier of interlocking
buildings until they culminated in a giant dome of gold and white. It was as if the
entire city was nothingmore than a line of steps leading to the dome. The cupola
glistened like polished moonstone, a milky bead floating atop a pyramid of gray slate.
Orik anticipated Eragon’s question, saying, “That is Celbedeil, the greatest temple of
dwarfdom and home of Dûrgrimst Quan—the Quan clan—who act as servants and
messengers to the gods.â€
Do they rule Tarnag?asked Saphira. Eragon repeated the query.
“Nay,†said Arya, stepping past them. “Though the Quan are strong, they are small in
numbers, despite their power over the afterlife… and gold. It is the Ragni Hefthyn—
the River Guard—who control Tarnag. We will stay with their clan chief, Ûndin,
while here.â€
As they followed the elf off the outcropping and through the gnarled forest that
blanketed the mountain, Orik whispered to Eragon, “Mind her not. She has been
arguingwith the Quan for many a year. Every time she visits Tarnag and speaks with
a priest, it produces a quarrel fierce enough to scare a Kull.â€
“Arya?â€
Orik nodded grimly. “I know little of it, but I’ve heard she disagrees strongly with
much that the Quan practice. It seems that elves do not hold with ‘muttering into the
air for help.’ â€
Eragon stared at Arya’s back as they descended, wondering if Orik’s words were
true, and if so, what Arya herself believed. He took a deep breath, pushing the matter
from his mind. It felt wonderful to be back in the open, where he could smell the moss
and ferns and trees of the forest, where the sun was warm on his face and bees and
other insects swarmed pleasantly.
The path took them down to the edge of the lake before rising back toward Tarnag
and its open gates. “How have you hidden Tarnag from Galbatorix?†asked Eragon.
“Farthen Dûr I understand, but this… I’ve never seen anything like it.â€
Orik laughed softly. “Hide it? That would be impossible. No, after the Riders fell, we
were forced to abandon all our cities aboveground and retreat into our tunnels in order
to escape Galbatorix and the Forsworn. They would often fly through the Beors,
killing anyone who they encountered.â€
“I thought that dwarves always lived underground.â€
Orik’s thick eyebrows met in a frown. “Why should we?We may have an affinity for
stone, but we like the open air as much as elves or humans. However, it has only been
in the last decade and a half, ever since Morzan died, that we have dared return to
Tarnag and other of our ancient dwellings. Galbatorixmay be unnaturally powerful,
but even he would not attack an entire city alone. Of course, he and his dragon could
cause us no end of trouble if they wanted, but these days they rarely leave Urû‘baen,
even for short trips. Nor could Galbatorix bring an army here without first defeating
Buragh or Farthen Dûr.â€
Which he nearly did, commented Saphira.
Cresting a small mound, Eragon jolted with surprise as an animal crashed through the
underbrush and onto the path. The scraggly creature looked like a mountain goat from
the Spine, except that it was a third larger and had giant ribbed horns that curled
around its cheeks, making an Urgal’s seem no bigger than a swallow nest. Odder still
was the saddle lashed across the goat’s back and the dwarf seated firmly on it, aiming
a half-drawn bow into the air.
“Hert dûrgrimst? Fild rastn?†shouted the strange dwarf.
“Orik Thrifkz menthiv oen Hrethcarach Eragon rak Dûrgrimst Ingeitum,†answered
Orik. “Wharn, az vanyali-carharûgArya. Né oc Ûndinz grimstbelardn.†The goat
stared warily at Saphira. Eragon noted how bright and intelligent its eyes were,
though its face was rather droll with its frosty beard and somber expression. It
reminded him of Hrothgar, and he almost laughed, thinking how very dwarfish the
animal was.
“Azt jok jordn rast,†came the reply.
With no discernible command on the dwarf’s part, the goat leaped forward, covering
such an extraordinary distance it seemed to take flight for a moment. Then rider and
steed vanished between the trees.
“What was that?†asked Eragon, amazed.
Orik resumed walking. “A Feldûnost, one of the five animals unique to these
mountains. A clan is named after each one. However, Dûrgrimst Feldûnost is perhaps
the bravest and most revered of the clans.â€
“Why so?â€
“We depend upon Feldûnost for milk, wool, and meat. Without their sustenance, we
could not live in the Beors. When Galbatorix and his traitorous Riders were
terrorizing us, it was Dûrgrimst Feldûnost who risked themselves—and still do—to
tend the herds and fields. As such, we are all in their debt.â€
“Do all dwarves ride Feldûnost?†He stumbled slightly over the unusual word.
“Only in the mountains. Feldûnost are hardy and sure-footed, but they are better
suited for cliffs than open plains.â€
Saphira nudged Eragon with her nose, causing Snowfire to shy away. Now those
would be good hunting, better than any I had in the Spine or hence! If I have time in
Tarnag—
No, he said. We can’t afford to offend the dwarves.
She snorted, irritated. I could ask permission first.
Now the path that had concealed them for so long under dark boughs entered the
great clearing that surrounded Tarnag. Groups of observers had already begun to
gather in the fields when seven Feldûnost with jeweled harnesses bounded out from
the city. Their riders bore lances tipped with pennants that snapped like whips in the
air. Reining in his strange beast, the lead dwarf said, “Thou art well-come to this city
of Tarnag. By otho of Ûndin and Gannel, I, Thorv, son of Brokk, offer in peace the
shelter of our halls.†His accent grumbled and rasped with a rough burr quite unlike
Orik’s.
“And by Hrothgar’s otho, we of the Ingeitum accept your hospitality,†responded
Orik.
“As do I, in Islanzadí‘s stead,†added Arya.
Appearing satisfied, Thorv motioned to his fellow riders, who spurred their Feldûnost
into formation around the four of them. With a flourish, the dwarves rode off, guiding
them to Tarnag and through the city gates.
The outer wall was forty feet thick and formed a shadowed tunnel to the first of the
many farms that belted Tarnag. Five more tiers—each of which was defended by a
fortified gate—carried them past the fields and into the city proper.
In contrast to Tarnag’s thickly built ramparts, the buildings within, though of stone,
were shaped with such cunning as to give the impression of grace and lightness.
Strong, bold carvings, usually of animals, adorned the houses and shops. But even
more strikingwas the stone itself: vibrant hues, from bright scarlet to the subtlest of
greens, glazed the rock in translucent layers.
And hung throughout the city were the dwarves’ flameless lanterns, their
multicolored sparks harbingers of the Beors’ long dusk and night.
Unlike Tronjheim, Tarnag had been constructed in proportion to the dwarves, with no
concession for human, elf, or dragon visitors. At the most, doorways were five feet
high, and they were often only four and a half. Eragon was of middling height, but
now he felt like a giant transported onto a puppet stage.
The streets were wide and crammed. Dwarves of various clans hurried about their
business or stood haggling in and around shops. Many were garbed in strange, exotic
costumes, such as a block of fierce black-haired dwarves who wore silver helmets
forged in the likeness of wolf heads.
Eragon stared at the dwarf women the most, as he had only caught brief glimpses of
them while in Tronjheim. They were broader than the men, and their faces were
heavyset, yet their eyes sparkled and their hair was lustrous and their hands were
gentle on their diminutive children. They eschewed frippery, except for small,
intricate brooches of iron and stone.
At the Feldûnost’s piercing footsteps, the dwarves turned to look at the new arrivals.
They did not cheer as Eragon had expected, but rather bowed and murmured,
“Shadeslayer.†As they saw the hammer and stars upon Eragon’s helm, admiration
was replaced by shock and, in many cases, outrage. A number of the angrier dwarves
contracted around the Feldûnost, glaring between the animals at Eragon and shouting
imprecations.
The back of Eragon’s neck prickled. It seems that adopting me wasn’t the most
popular decision Hrothgar could make.
Aye,agreed Saphira. He may have strengthened his hold on you, but at the cost of
alienating many of the dwarves… We’d better get out of sight before blood is shed.
Thorv and the other guards rode forward as if the crowd was nonexistent, clearing the
way through seven additional tiers until only a single gate separated them from the
mass of Celbedeil. Then Thorv turned left, toward a great hall pressed against the side
of the mountain and protected in fore by a barbican with two machicolated towers.
As they neared the hall, a group of armed dwarves streamed out from between the
houses and formed a thick line, blocking the street. Long purple veils covered their
faces and draped over their shoulders, like mail coifs.
The guards immediately reined in their Feldûnost, faces hard. “What is it?†Eragon
asked Orik, but the dwarf only shook his head and strode forward, a hand on his ax.
“Etzil nithgech!†cried a veiled dwarf, raising a fist. “Formv Hrethcarach… formv
Jurgencarmeitder nos eta goroth bahst Tarnag, dûr encesti rak kythn! Jok is warrev az
barzûlegûr dûr dûrgrimst, Az Sweldn rak Anhûin, môgh tor rak Jurgenvren? Né ûdim
etal os rast knurlag. Knurlag ana…†For a longminute, he continued to rant with
growing spleen.
“Vrron!†barked Thorv, cutting him off, then the two dwarves began arguing. Despite
the harsh exchange, Eragon saw that Thorv seemed to respect the other dwarf.
Eragon shifted to the side—trying to get a better view past Thorv’s Feldûnost—and
the veiled dwarf abruptly fell silent, jabbing at Eragon’s helm with an expression of
horror.
“Knurlag qana qirânû Dûrgrimst Ingeitum!†he screamed. “Qarzûl ana Hrothgar oen
volfild—â€
“Jok is frekk dûrgrimstvren?†interrupted Orik quietly, drawing his ax. Worried,
Eragon glanced at Arya, but she was too intent on the confrontation to notice him. He
surreptitiously slid his hand down and around Zar’roc’s wire-wrapped hilt.
The strange dwarf stared hard at Orik, then removed an iron ring from his pocket,
plucked three hairs from his beard, twined them around the ring, and threw it onto the
street with an impervious clink, spitting after it. Without a word, the purple-shrouded
dwarves filed away.
Thorv, Orik, and the other warriors flinched as the ring bounced across the granite
pavement. Even Arya seemed taken aback. Two of the younger dwarves blanched and
reached for their blades, then dropped their hands as Thorv barked, “Eta!â€
Their reactions unsettled Eragon far more than the raucous exchange had. As Orik
strode forward alone and deposited the ring in a pouch, Eragon asked, “What does it
mean?â€
“It means,†said Thorv, “that you have enemies.â€
They hurried through the barbican to a wide courtyard arrayed with three banquet
tables, decorated with lanterns and banners. Before the tables stood a group of
dwarves, foremost among them a gray-bearded dwarf swathed in wolfskin. He spread
his arms, saying, “Welcome to Tarnag, home of Dûrgrimst Ragni Hefthyn. We have
heard much praise of you, Eragon Shadeslayer. I am Ûndin, son of Derûnd and clan
chief.â€
Another dwarf stepped forward. He had the shoulders and chest of a warrior, topped
with hooded black eyes that never left Eragon’s face. “And I, Gannel, son of Orm
Blood-ax and clan chief of Dûrgrimst Quan.â€
“It is an honor to be your guests,†said Eragon, inclining his head. He felt Saphira’s
irritation at being ignored. Patience, he murmured, forcing a smile.
She snorted.
The clan chiefs greeted Arya and Orik in turn, but their hospitality was lost on Orik,
whose only response was to extend his hand, the iron ring on his palm.
Ûndin’s eyes widened, and he gingerly lifted the ring, pinching it between his thumb
and forefinger as if it were a venomous snake. “Who gave this to you?â€
“It was Az Sweldn rak Anhûin. And not to me, but to Eragon.â€
As alarm spread across their faces, Eragon’s earlier apprehension returned. He had
seen lone dwarves face an entire group of Kull without shirking. The ringmust
symbolize something dreadful indeed if it could undermine their courage.
Ûndin frowned as he listened to the muttering of his advisers, then said, “We must
consult on this issue. Shadeslayer, a feast is prepared in your honor. If you would
allow my servants to guide you to your quarters, you can refresh yourself, and then
we might begin.â€
“Of course.†Eragon handed Snowfire’s reins to a waiting dwarf and followed a
guide into the hall. As he passed through the doorway, he glanced back and saw Arya
and Orik bustling away with the clan chiefs, their heads pressed close together. I
won’t be long, he promised Saphira.
After crouching through dwarf-sized corridors, he was relieved that the room
assigned to him was spacious enough to stand freely. The servant bowed and said, “I
will return when Grimstborith Ûndin is ready.â€
Once the dwarf was gone, Eragon paused and took a deep breath, grateful for the
silence. The encounter with the veiled dwarves hovered in his mind, making it
difficult for him to relax. At least we won’t be in Tarnag long. That should prevent
them from hindering us.
Peeling off his gloves, Eragon went to a marble basin set on the floor next to the low
bed. He put his hands in the water, then jerked them out with an involuntary yelp. The
water was almost boiling. It must be a dwarf custom, he realized. He waited until it
cooled a bit, then doused his face and neck, rubbing them clean as steam swirled off
his skin.
Rejuvenated, he stripped out of his breeches and tunic and outfitted himself in the
clothes he had worn to Ajihad’s funeral. He touched Zar’roc, but decided it would
only insult Ûndin’s table and instead belted on his hunting knife.
Then, from his pack, he took the scroll Nasuada had charged him with delivering to
Islanzadí and weighed it in his hand, wonderingwhere to hide it. The missive was too
important to leave out in the open, where it could be read or stolen. Unable to think of
a better place, he slipped the scroll up his sleeve. It’ll be safe there unless I get into a
fight, in which case I’ll have bigger problems to worry about.
When at last the servant returned for Eragon, it was only an hour or so past noon, but
the sun had already vanished behind the loomingmountains, plunging Tarnag into
dusk. Exiting the hall, Eragon was struck by the city’s transformation. With the
premature advent of night, the dwarves’ lanterns revealed their true strength, flooding
the streets with pure, unwavering light that made the entire valley glow.
Ûndin and the other dwarves were gathered in the courtyard, alongwith Saphira, who
had situated herself at the head of a table. No one appeared interested in disputing her
choice.
Has anything happened?asked Eragon, hurrying toward her.
Ûndin summoned extra warriors, then had the gates barred.
Does he expect an attack?
At the very least, he’s concerned about the possibility.
“Eragon, please join me,†said Ûndin, gesturing at the chair to his right. The clan
chief seated himself as Eragon did, and the rest of the company hurriedly followed
suit.
Eragon was happy when Orik ended up beside him with Arya directly across the
table, although both looked grim. Before he could ask Orik about the ring, Ûndin
slapped the table and roared, “Ignh az voth!â€
Servants streamed out of the hall, bearing platters of beaten gold piled high with
meats, pies, and fruit. They divided into three columns—one for each table—and
deposited the dishes with a flourish.
Before them were soups and stews filled with various tubers, roasted venison, long
hot loaves of sourdough bread, and rows of honeycakes dripped with raspberry
preserve. In a bed of greens lay filleted trout garnished with parsley, and on the side,
pickled eel stared forlornly at an urn of cheese, as if hoping to somehow escape back
into a river. A swan sat on each table, surrounded by a flock of stuffed partridges,
geese, and ducks.
Mushrooms were everywhere: broiled in juicy strips, placed atop a bird’s head like a
bonnet, or carved in the shape of castles amid moats of gravy. An incredible variety
was on display, from puffy white mushrooms the size of Eragon’s fist, to ones he
could have mistaken for gnarled bark, to delicate toadstools sliced neatly in half to
showcase their blue flesh.
Then the centerpiece of the feast was revealed: a gigantic roasted boar, glistening
with sauce. At least Eragon thought it was a boar, for the carcass was as large as
Snowfire and took six dwarves to carry. The tusks were longer than his forearms, the
snout as wide as his head. And the smell, it overwhelmed all others in pungent waves
that made his eyes water from their strength.
“Nagra,†whispered Orik. “Giant boar. Ûndin truly honors you tonight, Eragon. Only
the bravest dwarves dare hunt Nagran, and it is only served to those who have great
valor. Also, I think he makes a gesture that he will support you over Dûrgrimst
Nagra.â€
Eragon leaned toward him so no one else could hear. “Then this is another animal
native to the Beors?What are the rest?â€
“Forest wolves big enough to prey on a Nagra and nimble enough to catch Feldûnost.
Cave bears, which we call Urzhadn and the elves call Beorn and for which they
dubbed these peaks, though we do not call them such ourselves. The mountains’ name
is a secret that we share with no race. And—â€
“Smer voth,†commanded Ûndin, smiling at his guests. The servants immediately
drew small curved knives and cut portions of the Nagra, which they set on everyone’s
plates—except for Arya’s— including a weighty piece for Saphira. Ûndin smiled
again, took a dagger, and sliced off a bit of his meat.
Eragon reached for his own knife, but Orik grabbed his arm. “Wait.â€
Ûndin chewed slowly, rolling his eyes and nodding in an exaggerated fashion, then
swallowed and proclaimed, “Ilf gauhnith!â€
“Now,†said Orik, turning to the meal as conversation erupted along the tables.
Eragon had never tasted anything like the boar. It was juicy, soft, and oddly spicy—
as if the meat had been soaked in honey and cider—which was enhanced by the mint
used to flavor the pork. I wonder how they managed to cook something so large.
Very slowly, commented Saphira, nibbling on her Nagra.
Between bites, Orik explained, “It is custom, from days when poisoningwas rampant
among clans, for the host to taste the food first and declare it safe for his guests.â€
During the banquet, Eragon divided his time between sampling the multitude of
dishes and conversingwith Orik, Arya, and dwarves farther down the table. In that
manner, the hours hastened by, for the feast was so large, it was late afternoon before
the last course had been served, the last bite consumed, and the last chalice drained.
As servants removed the tableware, Ûndin turned to Eragon and said, “The meal
pleased you, yes?â€
“It was delicious.â€
Ûndin nodded. “I’m glad you enjoyed it. I had the tables moved outside yesterday so
the dragon might dine with us.†He remained intently focused on Eragon all the while
he spoke.
Eragon went cold inside. Intentionally or not, Ûndin had treated Saphira as no more
than a beast. Eragon had intended to ask about the veiled dwarves in private, but
now—out of a desire to unsettle Ûndin—he said, “Saphira and I thank you.†Then,
“Sir, why was the ring thrown at us?â€
A painful silence crept over the courtyard. Out of the corner of his eye, Eragon saw
Orik wince. Arya, however, smiled as if she understood what he was doing.
Ûndin put down his dagger, scowling thickly. “The knurlagn you met are of a tragic
clan. Before the Riders’ fall, they were among the oldest, richest families of our
kingdom. Their doom was sealed, though, by two mistakes: they lived on the western
edge of the Beor Mountains, and they volunteered their greatest warriors in Vrael’s
service.â€
Anger broke through his voice with sharp cracks. “Galbatorix and his ever-cursed
Forsworn slaughtered them in your city of Urû‘baen. Then they flew on us, killing
many. Of that clan, only Grimstcarvlorss Anhûin and her guards survived. Anhûin
soon died of grief, and her men took the name Az Sweldn rak Anhûin, The Tears of
Anhûin, covering their faces to remind themselves of their loss and their desire for
revenge.â€
Eragon’s cheeks stungwith shame as he fought to keep his face expressionless. “So,â€
said Ûndin, glowering at a pastry, “they rebuilt the clan over the decades, waiting and
hunting for recompense. And now you come, bearingHrothgar’s mark. It is the
ultimate insult to them, no matter your service in Farthen Dûr. Thus the ring, the
ultimate challenge. It means Dûrgrimst Az Sweldn rak Anhûin will oppose you with
all their resources, in every matter, big or small. They have set themselves against you
utterly, declared themselves blood enemies.â€
“Do they mean me bodily harm?†asked Eragon stiffly.
Ûndin’s gaze faltered for a moment as he cast a look at Gannel, then he shook his
head and uttered a gruff laugh that was, perhaps, louder than the occasion warranted.
“No, Shadeslayer! Not even they would dare hurt a guest. It is forbidden. They only
want you gone, gone, gone.†Yet Eragon still wondered. Then Ûndin said, “Please, let
us talk no more of these unpleasant matters. Gannel and I have offered our food and
mead in friendship; is that not what matters?†The priest murmured in concordance.
“It is appreciated,†Eragon finally relented.
Saphira looked at him with solemn eyes and said, They are afraid, Eragon. Afraid
and resentful because they have been forced to accept a Rider’s assistance.
Aye. They may fight with us, but they don’t fight for us.
CELBEDEIL
The dawnless morning found Eragon in Ûndin’s main hall, listening as the clan chief
spoke to Orik in Dwarvish. Ûndin broke off as Eragon approached, then said, “Ah,
Shadeslayer. You slept well?â€
“Yes.â€
“Good.†He gestured at Orik. “We have been considering your departure. I had hoped
you’d be able to spend some time with us. But under the circumstances, it seems best
if you resume your journey early tomorrow morning, when few are in the streets who
might trouble you. Supplies and transportation are being readied even as I speak. It
was Hrothgar’s orders that guards should accompany you as far as Ceris. I have
increased their numbers from three to seven.â€
“And in the meantime?â€
Ûndin shrugged his fur-bound shoulders. “I had intended to show you the wonders of
Tarnag, but it would be foolish now for you to wander mine city. However,
Grimstborith Gannel has invited you to Celbedeil for the day. Accept if you wish.
You’ll be safe with him.†The clan chief seemed to have forgotten his earlier assertion
that Az Sweldn rak Anhûin would not harm a guest.
“Thank you, I might at that.†As Eragon left the hall, he pulled Orik aside and asked,
“How serious is this feud, really? I need to know the truth.â€
Orik answered with obvious reluctance: “In the past, it was not uncommon for blood
feuds to endure for generations. Entire families were driven extinct because of them.
It was rash of Az Sweldn rak Anhûin to invoke the old ways; such a thing has not
been done since the last of the clan wars… Until they rescind their oath, you must
guard against their treachery, whether it be for a year or a century. I’m sorry that your
friendship with Hrothgar has brought this upon you, Eragon. But you are not alone.
Dûrgrimst Ingeitum stands with you in this.â€
Once outside, Eragon hurried to Saphira, who had spent the night coiled in the
courtyard. Do you mind if I visit Celbedeil?
Go if you must. But take Zar’roc. He followed her advice, also tuckingNasuada’s
scroll into his tunic.
When Eragon approached the gates to the hall’s enclosure, five dwarves pushed the
rough-hewn timbers aside, then closed in around him, hands on their axes and swords
as they inspected the street. The guards remained as Eragon retraced yesterday’s path
to the barred entrance of Tarnag’s foremost tier.
Eragon shivered. The city seemed unnaturally empty. Doors were closed, windows
were shuttered, and the few pedestrians in evidence averted their faces and turned
down alleys to avoid walking past him. They’re scared to be seen near me, he
realized. Perhaps because they know Az Sweldn rak Anhûin will retaliate against
anyone who helps me. Eager to escape the open street, Eragon raised his hand to
knock, but before he could, one door grated outward, and a black-robed dwarf
beckoned from within. Tightening his sword belt, Eragon entered, leaving his guards
outside.
His first impression was of color. A burning-green sward splayed around the pillared
mass of Celbedeil, like a mantle dropped over the symmetrical hill that upheld the
temple. Ivy strangled the building’s ancient walls in foot after foot of hairy ropes, dew
still glittering on the pointed leaves. And curving above all but the mountains was the
great white cupola ribbed with chiseled gold.
His next impression was of smell. Flowers and incense mixed their perfumes into an
aroma so ethereal, Eragon felt as if he could live on the scent alone.
Last was sound, for despite clumps of priests strolling alongmosaic pathways and
spacious grounds, the only noise Eragon could discern was the soft thump of a rook
flying overhead.
The dwarf beckoned again and strode down the main avenue toward Celbedeil. As
they passed under its eaves, Eragon could only marvel at the wealth and
craftsmanship displayed around him. The walls were spotted with gems of every color
and cut—though all flawless—and red gold had been hammered into the veins lacing
the stone ceilings, walls, and floor. Pearls and silver provided accents. Occasionally,
they passed a screen partition carved entirely of jade.
The temple was devoid of cloth decorations. In their absence, the dwarves had carved
a profusion of statues, many depictingmonsters and deities locked in epic battles.
After climbing several floors, they passed through a copper door waxy with verdigris
and embossed with intricate, patterned knots into a bare room floored with wood.
Armor hung thickly on the walls, alongwith racks of staff-swords identical to the one
Angela had fought with in Farthen Dûr.
Gannel was there, sparringwith three younger dwarves. The clan chief’s robe was
rucked up over his thighs so he could move freely, his face a fierce scowl as the wood
shaft spun in his hands, unsharpened blades darting like riled hornets.
Two dwarves lunged at Gannel, only to be stymied in a clatter of wood and metal as
he spun past them, rapping their knees and heads and sending them to the floor.
Eragon grinned as he watched Gannel disarm his last opponent in a brilliant flurry of
blows.
At last the clan chief noticed Eragon and dismissed the other dwarves. As Gannel set
his weapon on a rack, Eragon said, “Are all Quan so proficient with the blade? It
seems an odd skill for priests.â€
Gannel faced him. “We must be able to defend ourselves, no? Many enemies stalk
this land.â€
Eragon nodded. “Those are unique swords. I’ve never seen their like, except for one
an herbalist used in the battle of Farthen Dûr.â€
The dwarf sucked in his breath, then let it hiss out between his teeth. “Angela.†His
expression soured. “She won her staff from a priest in a game of riddles. It was a
nasty trick, as we are the only ones allowed to use hûthvírn. She and Arya…†He
shrugged and went to a small table, where he filled two mugs with ale. Handing one
to Eragon, he said, “I invited you here today at Hrothgar’s request. He told me that if
you accepted his offer to become Ingeitum, I was to acquaint you with dwarf
traditions.â€
Eragon sipped the ale and kept silent, eyeing how Gannel’s thick brow caught the
light, shadows dripping down his cheeks from the bony ridge.
The clan chief continued: “Never before has an outsider been taught our secret
beliefs, nor may you speak of them to human or elf. Yet without this knowledge, you
cannot uphold what it means to be knurla. You are Ingeitum now: our blood, our
flesh, our honor. You understand?â€
“I do.â€
“Come.†Keeping his ale in hand, Gannel took Eragon from the sparring room and
conveyed him through five grand corridors, stopping in the archway to a dim chamber
hazy with incense. Facing them, the squat outline of a statue swelled ponderously
from floor to ceiling, a faint light cast across the brooding dwarf face hacked with
uncharacteristic crudeness from brown granite.
“Who is he?†asked Eragon, intimidated.
“Gûntera, King of the Gods. He is a warrior and a scholar, though fickle in his
moods, so we burn offerings to assure his affection at the solstices, before sowing,
and at deaths and births.†Gannel twisted his hand in a strange gesture and bowed to
the statue. “It is to him we pray before battles, for he molded this land from the bones
of a giant and gives the world its order. All realms are Gûntera’s.â€
Then Gannel instructed Eragon how to properly venerate the god, explaining the
signs and words that were used for homage. He elucidated the meaning of the
incense—how it symbolized life and happiness—and spent longminutes recounting
legends about Gûntera, how the god was born fully formed to a she-wolf at the dawn
of stars, how he had battled monsters and giants to win a place for his kin in
Alagaësia, and how he had taken Kílf, the goddess of rivers and the sea, as his mate.
Next they went to Kílf’s statue, which was carved with exquisite delicacy out of pale
blue stone. Her hair flew back in liquid ripples, rolling down her neck and framing
merry amethyst eyes. In her hands, she cupped a water lily and a chunk of porous red
rock that Eragon did not recognize.
“What is that?†he asked, pointing.
“Coral taken from deep within the sea that borders the Beors.â€
“Coral?â€
Gannel took a draught of ale, then said, “Our divers found it while searching for
pearls. It seems that, in brine, certain stones grow like plants.â€
Eragon stared with wonder. He had never thought of pebbles or boulders as alive, yet
here was proof that all they needed was water and salt to flourish. It finally explained
how rocks had continued to appear in their fields in Palancar Valley, even after the
soil had been combed clean each spring. They grew!
They proceeded to Urûr, master of the air and heavens, and his brother Morgothal,
god of fire. At the carmine statue of Morgothal, the priest told how the brothers loved
each other so much, neither could exist independently. Thus, Morgothal’s burning
palace in the sky during the day, and the sparks from his forge that appeared overhead
every night. And also thus, how Urûr constantly fed his sibling so he would not die.
Only two more gods were left after that: Sindri—mother of the earth—and Helzvog.
Helzvog’s statue was different from the rest. The nude god was bowed in half over a
dwarf-sized lump of gray flint, caressing it with the tip of his forefinger. The muscles
of his back bunched and knotted with inhuman strain, yet his expression was
incredibly tender, as if a newborn child lay before him.
Gannel’s voice dropped to a low rasp: “Gûntera may be King of the Gods, but it is
Helzvogwho holds our hearts. It was he who felt that the land should be peopled after
the giants were vanquished. The other gods disagreed, but Helzvog ignored them and,
in secret, formed the first dwarf from the roots of a mountain.
“When his deed was discovered, jealousy swept the gods and Gûntera created elves
to control Alagaësia for himself. Then Sindri brought forth humans from the soil, and
Urûr and Morgothal combined their knowledge and released dragons into the land.
Only Kílf restrained herself. So the first races entered this world.â€
Eragon absorbed Gannel’s words, accepting the clan chief’s sincerity but unable to
quell a simple question: How does he know? Eragon sensed that it would be an
awkward query, however, and merely nodded as he listened.
“This,†said Gannel, finishing the last of his ale, “leads to our most important rite,
which I know Orik has discussed with you… All dwarves must be buried in stone,
else our spirits will never join Helzvog in his hall. We are not of earth, air, or fire, but
ofstone. And as Ingeitum, it is your responsibility to assure a proper resting place for
any dwarf who may die in your company. If you fail—in the absence of injury or
enemies—Hrothgar will exile you, and no dwarf will acknowledge your presence
until after your death.†He straightened his shoulders, staring hard at Eragon. “You
have much more to learn, yet uphold the customs I outlined today and you will do
well.â€
“I won’t forget,†said Eragon.
Satisfied, Gannel led him away from the statues and up a winding staircase. As they
climbed, the clan chief dipped a hand into his robe and withdrew a simple necklace, a
chain threaded through the pommel of a miniature silver hammer. He gave it to
Eragon.
“This is another favor Hrothgar asked of me,†Gannel explained. “He worries that
Galbatorixmay have gleaned an image of you from the minds of Durza, the Ra’zac,
or any number of soldiers who saw you throughout the Empire.â€
“Why should I fear that?â€
“Because then Galbatorix could scry you. Perhaps he already has.â€
A shiver of apprehension wormed down Eragon’s side, like an icy snake. I should
have thought of that, he berated himself.
“The necklace will prevent anyone from scrying you or your dragon, as long as you
wear it. I placed the spell myself, so it should hold before even the strongest mind.
But be forewarned, when activated, the necklace will draw upon your strength until
you either take it off or the danger has passed.â€
“What if I’m asleep? Could the necklace consume all my energy before I was aware
of it?â€
“Nay. It will wake you.â€
Eragon rolled the hammer between his fingers. It was difficult to avert another’s
spells, least of all Galbatorix’s. If Gannel is so accomplished, what other
enchantments might be hidden in his gift? He noticed a line of runes cut along the
hammer’s haft. They spelledAstim Hefthyn. The stairs ended as he asked, “Why do
dwarves write with the same runes as humans?â€
For the first time since they met, Gannel laughed, his voice booming through the
temple as his large shoulders shook. “It is the other way around; humans write
withour runes. When your ancestors landed in Alagaësia, they were as illiterate as
rabbits. However, they soon adopted our alphabet and matched it tothis language.
Some of your words even come from us, likefather, which was originallyfarthen. â€
“So then Farthen Dûr means… ?†Eragon slipped the necklace over his head and
tucked it under his tunic.
“Our Father.â€
Stopping at a door, Gannel ushered Eragon through to a curved gallery located
directly below the cupola. The passageway banded Celbedeil, providing a view
through the open archways of the mountains behind Tarnag, as well as the terraced
city far below.
Eragon barely glanced at the landscape, for the gallery’s inner wall was covered with
a single continuous painting, a gigantic narrative band that began with a depiction of
the dwarves’ creation under Helzvog’s hand. The figures and objects stood in relief
from the surface, giving the panorama a feeling of hyperrealism with its saturated,
glowing colors and minute detail.
Captivated, Eragon asked, “How was this made?â€
“Each scene is carved out of small plates of marble, which are fired with enamel,
then fitted into a single piece.â€
“Wouldn’t it be easier to use regular paint?â€
“It would,†said Gannel, “but not if we wanted it to endure centuries—millennia—
without change. Enamel never fades or loses its brilliancy, unlike oil paint. This first
section was carved only a decade after the discovery of Farthen Dûr, well before elves
set foot on Alagaësia.â€
The priest took Eragon by the arm and guided him along the tableau. Each step
carried them through uncounted years of history.
Eragon saw how the dwarves were once nomads on a seemingly endless plain, until
the land grew so hot and desolate they were forced to migrate south to the Beor
Mountains. That was how the Hadarac Desert was formed, he realized, amazed.
As they proceeded down the mural, heading toward the back of Celbedeil, Eragon
witnessed everything from the domestication of Feldûnost to the carving of Isidar
Mithrim, the first meeting between dwarves and elves, and the coronation of each new
dwarf king. Dragons frequently appeared, burning and slaughtering. Eragon had
difficulty restraining comment during those sections.
His steps slowed as the painting shifted to the event he had hoped to find: the war
between elves and dragons. Here the dwarves had devoted a vast amount of space to
the destruction wreaked upon Alagaësia by the two races. Eragon shuddered with
horror at the sight of elves and dragons killing each other. The battles continued for
yards, each image more bloody than the last, until the darkness lifted and a young elf
was shown kneeling on the edge of a cliff, holding a white dragon egg.
“Is that… ?†whispered Eragon.
“Aye, it’s Eragon, the First Rider. It’s a good likeness too, as he agreed to sit for our
artisans.â€
Drawn forward by his fascination, Eragon studied the face of his namesake. I always
imagined him older. The elf had angled eyes that peered down a hooked nose and
narrow chin, giving him a fierce appearance. It was an alien face, completely different
from his own… and yet the set of his shoulders, high and tense, reminded Eragon of
how he had felt upon finding Saphira’s egg. We’re not so different, you and I, he
thought, touching the cool enamel. And once my ears match yours, we shall truly be
brothers through time… I wonder, would you approve of my actions? He knew they
had made at least one identical choice; they had both kept the egg.
He heard a door open and close and turned to see Arya approaching from the far end
of the gallery. She scanned the wall with the same blank expression Eragon had seen
her use when confronting the Council of Elders. Whatever her specific emotions, he
sensed that she found the situation distasteful.
Arya inclined her head. “Grimstborith.â€
“Arya.â€
“You have been educating Eragon in your mythology?â€
Gannel smiled flatly. “One should always understand the faith of the society that one
belongs to.â€
“Yet comprehension does not imply belief.†She fingered the pillar of an archway.
“Nor does it mean that those who purvey such beliefs do so for more than… material
gain.â€
“You would deny the sacrifices my clan makes to bring comfort to our brethren?â€
“I deny nothing, only ask what good might be accomplished if your wealth were
spread among the needy, the starving, the homeless, or even to buy supplies for the
Varden. Instead, you’ve piled it into a monument to your own wishful thinking.â€
“Enough!†The dwarf clenched his fists, his face mottled. “Without us, the crops
would wither in drought. Rivers and lakes would flood. Our flocks would give birth to
one-eyed beasts. The very heavens would shatter under the gods’ rage!†Arya smiled.
“Onlyour prayers and service prevent that from happening. If not for Helzvog,
where—â€
Eragon soon lost track of the argument. He did not understand Arya’s vague
criticisms of Dûrgrimst Quan, but he gathered from Gannel’s responses that, in some
indirect way, she had implied that the dwarf gods did not exist, questioned the mental
capacity of every dwarf who entered a temple, and pointed out what she took to be
flaws in their reasoning—all in a pleasant and polite voice.
After a few minutes, Arya raised her hand, stoppingGannel, and said, “That is the
difference between us, Grimstborith. You devote yourself to that which you believe to
be true but cannot prove. There, we must agree to disagree.†She turned to Eragon
then. “Az Sweldn rak Anhûin has inflamed Tarnag’s citizens against you. Ûndin
believes, as do I, that it would be best for you to remain behind his walls until we
leave.â€
Eragon hesitated. He wanted to see more of Celbedeil, but if there was to be trouble,
then his place was by Saphira’s side. He bowed to Gannel and begged to be excused.
“You need not apologize, Shadeslayer,†said the clan chief. He glared at Arya. “Do
what you must, and may the blessings of Gûntera be upon you.â€
Together Eragon and Arya departed the temple and, surrounded by a dozen warriors,
trotted through the city. As they did, Eragon heard shouts from an angry mob on a
lower tier. A stone skipped over a nearby roof. The motion drew his eye to a dark
plume of smoke rising from the city’s edge.
Once in the hall, Eragon hurried to his room. There he slipped on his mail hauberk;
strapped the greaves to his shins and the bracers to his forearms; jammed the leather
cap, coif, and then helm over his head; and grabbed his shield. Scooping up his pack
and saddlebags, he ran back to the courtyard, where he sat against Saphira’s right
foreleg.
Tarnag is like an overturned anthill, she observed.
Let’s hope we don’t get bitten.
Arya joined them before long, as did a group of fifty heavily armed dwarves who
settled in the middle of the courtyard. The dwarves waited impassively, talking in low
grunts as they eyed the barred gate and the mountain that rose up behind them.
“They fear,†said Arya, seating herself by Eragon, “that the crowds may prevent us
from reaching the rafts.â€
“Saphira can always fly us out.â€
“Snowfire as well? And Ûndin’s guards? No, if we are stopped, we shall have to wait
until the dwarves’ outrage subsides.†She studied the darkening sky. “It’s unfortunate
that you managed to offend so many dwarves, but perhaps inevitable. The clans have
ever been contentious; what pleases one infuriates another.â€
He fingered the edge of his mail. “I wish now I hadn’t accepted Hrothgar’s offer.â€
“Ah, yes. As with Nasuada, I think you made the only viable choice. You are not to
blame. The fault, if any, lies with Hrothgar for making the offer in the first place. He
must have been well aware of the repercussions.â€
Silence reigned for several minutes. A half-dozen dwarves marched around the
courtyard, stretching their legs. Finally, Eragon asked, “Do you have any family in Du
Weldenvarden?â€
It was a long time before Arya answered. “None that I’m close to.â€
“Why…why is that?â€
She hesitated again. “They disliked my choice to become the Queen’s envoy and
ambassador; it seemed inappropriate. When I ignored their objections and still had the
yawë tattooed on my shoulder—which indicates that I have devoted myself to the
greater good of our race, as is the case with your ring from Brom—my family refused
to see me again.â€
“But that was over seventy years ago,†he protested.
Arya looked away, concealing her face behind a veil of hair. Eragon tried to imagine
what it must have been like for her—ostracized from her family and sent to live
among two completely different races. No wonder she’s so withdrawn, he realized.
“Are there any other elves outside of Du Weldenvarden?â€
Still keeping her face covered, she said, “Three of us were sent forth from Ellesméra.
Fäolin and Glenwing always traveled with me when we transported Saphira’s egg
between Du Weldenvarden and Tronjheim. Only I survived Durza’s ambush.â€
“What were they like?â€
“Proud warriors. Glenwing loved speaking to birds with his mind. He would stand in
the forest surrounded by a flock of songbirds and listen to their music for hours.
Afterward, he might sing us the prettiest melodies.â€
“And Fäolin?†This time Arya refused to answer, though her hands tightened on her
bow. Undaunted, Eragon cast around for another subject. “Why do you dislike Gannel
so much?â€
She faced him suddenly and touched his cheek with soft fingers. Eragon flinched
with surprise. “That,†she said, “is a discussion for another time.†Then she stood and
calmly relocated herself across the courtyard.
Confused, Eragon stared at her back. I don’t understand, he said, leaning against
Saphira’s belly. She snorted, amused, then curled her neck and tail around him and
promptly fell asleep.
As the valley darkened, Eragon struggled to stay alert. He pulled out Gannel’s
necklace and examined it several times with magic, but found only the priest’s
guarding spell. Giving up, he replaced the necklace under his tunic, pulled his shield
over him, and settled down to wait through the night.
At the first hint of light in the sky overhead—though the valley itself was still in
shadow and would remain so until almost midday—Eragon roused Saphira. The
dwarves were already up, busy muffling their weapons so they could creep through
Tarnagwith utter secrecy. Ûndin even had Eragon tie rags around Saphira’s claws and
Snowfire’s hooves.
When all was ready, Ûndin and his warriors assembled in a large block around
Eragon, Saphira, and Arya. The gates were carefully opened—no sound came from
the oiled hinges—and then they set out for the lake.
Tarnag seemed deserted, the vacant streets lined with houses where its inhabitants lay
oblivious and dreaming. The few dwarves they encountered gazed at them silently,
then padded away like ghosts in the twilight.
At the gate to each tier, a guard waved them through without comment. They soon
left the buildings and found themselves crossing the barren fields at Tarnag’s base.
Beyond those, they reached the stone quay that edged the still, gray water.
Waiting for them were two wide rafts tied alongside a pier. Three dwarves squatted
on the first raft, four on the second. They stood as Ûndin came into view.
Eragon helped the dwarves hobble and blindfold Snowfire, then coax the reluctant
horse onto the second raft, where he was forced to his knees and tied down.
Meanwhile, Saphira slipped off the pier into the lake. Only her head remained above
the surface as she paddled through the water.
Ûndin grasped Eragon’s arm. “Here is where we part. You have my best men; they
will protect you until you reach Du Weldenvarden.†Eragon tried to thank him, but
Ûndin shook his head. “No, it is not a matter for gratitude. It is my duty. I am only
shamed that your stay was darkened by the hatred of Az Sweldn rak Anhûin.â€
Eragon bowed, then boarded the first raft with Orik and Arya. The mooring ropes
were unknotted, and the dwarves pushed away from shore with long poles. As dawn
approached, the two rafts drifted toward the mouth of the Az Ragni, Saphira
swimming between them.
DIAMONDS IN THE NIGHT
The Empire has violated my home.
So thought Roran as he listened to the anguished moans of the men injured during the
previous night’s battle with the Ra’zac and soldiers. Roran shuddered with fear and
rage until his whole body was consumed with feverish chills that left his cheeks
burning and his breath short. And he was sad, so very sad… as if the Ra’zac’s deeds
had destroyed the innocence of his childhood haunts.
Leaving the healer, Gertrude, tending to the wounded, Roran continued toward
Horst’s house, noting the makeshift barriers that filled the gaps between buildings: the
boards, the barrels, the piles of rocks, and the splintered frames of the two wagons
destroyed by the Ra’zac’s explosives. It all seemed pitifully fragile.
The few people who moved through Carvahall were glassy-eyed with shock, grief,
and exhaustion. Roran was tired too, more than he could ever remember being. He
had not slept since the night before last, and his arms and back ached from the
fighting.
He entered Horst’s house and saw Elain standing by the open doorway to the dining
room, listening to the steady burn of conversation that emanated from within. She
beckoned him over.
After they had foiled the Ra’zac’s counterattack, the prominent members of
Carvahall had sequestered themselves in an attempt to decide what action the village
should take and if Horst and his allies should be punished for initiating the hostilities.
The group had been in deliberation most of the morning.
Roran peeked into the room. Seated around the long table were Birgit, Loring, Sloan,
Gedric, Delwin, Fisk, Morn, and a number of others. Horst presided at the head of the
table.
“… and I say that it was stupid and reckless!†exclaimed Kiselt, propping himself
upright on his bony elbows. “You had no cause to endanger—â€
Morn waved a hand. “We’ve been over this before. Whether whathas been
doneshould have been done is beside the point. I happen to agree with it—Quimby
was my friend as much as anyone’s, and I shudder to think what those monsters
would do with Roran—but… but what I want to know is how we can escape this
predicament.â€
“Easy, kill the soldiers,†barked Sloan.
“And then what? More men will follow until we drown in a sea of crimson tunics.
Even if we surrender Roran, it’ll do no good; you heard what the Ra’zac said—they’ll
kill us if we protect Roran and enslave us if we don’t. You may feel differently, but,
as for myself, I would rather die than spend my life as a slave.†Morn shook his head,
his mouth set in a flat grim line. “We cannot survive.â€
Fisk leaned forward. “We could leave.â€
“There’s nowhere to go,†retorted Kiselt. “We’re backed against the Spine, the
soldiers have blocked the road, and beyond them is the rest of the Empire.â€
“It’s all your fault,†cried Thane, stabbing a shaking finger at Horst. “They will torch
our houses and murder our children because of you. You!â€
Horst stood so quickly, his chair toppled over backward. “Where is your honor, man?
Will you let them eat us without fighting back?â€
“Yes,if it means suicide otherwise.†Thane glared around the table, then stormed out
past Roran. His face was contorted by pure, unadulterated fear.
Gedric spotted Roran then and waved him in. “Come, come, we’ve been waiting for
you.â€
Roran clasped his hands in the small of his back as scores of hard eyes inspected him.
“How can I help?â€
“I think,†said Gedric, “we’ve all agreed that it would accomplish nothing to give you
to the Empire at this point. Whether we would if that wasn’t the case is neither here
nor there. The only thingwe can do is prepare for another attack. Horst will make
spearheads—and other weapons if he has time—and Fisk has agreed to construct
shields. Fortunately, his carpentry shop didn’t burn. And someone needs to oversee
our defenses. We would like it to be you. You’ll have plenty of assistance.â€
Roran nodded. “I’ll do my best.â€
Beside Morn, Tara stood, towering over her husband. She was a large woman, with
gray-streaked black hair and strong hands that were just as capable of twisting off a
chicken’s head as separating a pair of brawlers. She said, “Make sure you do, Roran,
else we’ll have more funerals.†Then she turned to Horst. “Before we go any further,
there are men to bury. And there are children who should be sent to safety, maybe to
Cawley’s farm on Nost Creek. You should go as well, Elain.â€
“I won’t leave Horst,†said Elain calmly.
Tara bristled. “This is no place for a woman five months pregnant. You’ll lose the
child running around like you have.â€
“It would do me far more harm to worry in ignorance than remain here. I have borne
my sons; I will stay, as I know you and every other wife in Carvahall will.â€
Horst came around the table and, with a tender expression, took Elain’s hand. “Nor
would I have you anywhere but at my side. The children should go, though. Cawley
will care for them well, but we must make sure that the route to his farm is clear.â€
“Not only that,†rasped Loring, “none of us, not one blasted man jack can have a
thing to do with the families down the valley, ‘side from Cawley, of course. They
can’t help us, and we don’t want thosedesecrators to trouble ’em.â€
Everyone agreed that he was right, then the meeting ended and the attendees
dispersed throughout Carvahall. Before long, however, they recongregated—along
with most of the village—in the small cemetery behind Gertrude’s house. Ten whiteswathed
corpses were arranged beside their graves, a sprig of hemlock on each of
their cold chests and a silver amulet around each of their necks.
Gertrude stood forth and recited the men’s names: “Parr, Wyglif, Ged, Bardrick,
Farold, Hale, Garner, Kelby, Melkolf, and Albem.†She placed black pebbles over
their eyes, then raised her arms, lifted her face to the sky, and began the quavering
death lay. Tears seeped from the corners of her closed eyes as her voice rose and fell
with the immemorial phrases, sighing and moaningwith the village’s sorrow. She
sang of the earth and the night and of humanity’s ageless sorrow from which none
escape.
After the last mournful note faded into silence, family members praised the feats and
traits of those they had lost. Then the bodies were buried.
As Roran listened, his gaze lit upon the anonymous mound where the three soldiers
had been interred. One killed by Nolfavrell, and two by me. He could still feel the
visceral shock of muscle and bone giving… crunching… pulping under his hammer.
His bile rose and he had to struggle not to be sick in full view of the village. I am the
one who destroyed them. Roran had never expected or wanted to kill, and yet he had
taken more lives than anyone else in Carvahall. It felt as if his brow was marked with
blood.
He left as soon as possible—not even stopping to speak with Katrina—and climbed
to a point where he could survey Carvahall and consider how best to protect it.
Unfortunately, the houses were too far apart to form a defensive perimeter by just
fortifying the spaces between buildings. Nor did Roran think it would be a good idea
to have soldiers fighting up against the walls of people’s houses and trampling their
gardens. The Anora River guards our western flank, he thought, but as for the rest of
Carvahall, we couldn’t even keep a child out of it… What can we build in a few hours
that will be a strong enough barrier?
He jogged into the middle of the village and shouted, “I need everyone who is free to
help cut down trees!†After a minute, men began to trickle out of the houses and
through the streets. “Come on, more! We all have to help!†Roran waited as the group
around him continued to grow.
One of Loring’s sons, Darmmen, shouldered to his side. “What’s your plan?â€
Roran raised his voice so they could all hear. “We need a wall around Carvahall; the
thicker the better. I figure if we get some big trees, lay them on their sides, and
sharpen the branches, the Ra’zac will have a pretty hard time getting over them.â€
“How many trees do you think it’ll take?†asked Orval.
Roran hesitated, trying to gauge Carvahall’s circumference. “At least fifty. Maybe
sixty to do it properly.†The men swore and began to argue. “Wait!†Roran counted
the number of people in the crowd. He arrived at forty-eight. “If you each fell a tree in
the next hour, we’ll be almost done. Can you do that?â€
“What do you take us for?†retorted Orval. “The last time I took an hour on a tree, I
was ten!â€
Darmmen spoke up: “What about brambles?We could drape them over the trees. I
don’t know anyone who can climb through a knot of thorny vines.â€
Roran grinned. “That’s a great idea. Also, those of you with sons, have them harness
your horses so we can drag the trees back.†The men agreed and scattered through
Carvahall to gather axes and saws for the job. Roran stopped Darmmen and said,
“Make sure that the trees have branches all along the trunk or else they won’t work.â€
“Where will you be?†asked Darmmen.
“Working on another line of defense.†Roran left him then and ran to Quimby’s
house, where he found Birgit busy boarding up the windows.
“Yes?†she said, looking at him.
He quickly explained his plan with the trees. “I want to dig a trench inside the ring of
trees, to slow down anyone who gets through. We could even put pointed stakes in the
bottom of it and—â€
“What is your point, Roran?â€
“I’d like you to organize every woman and child, and everyone else you can, to dig.
It’s too much for me to handle by myself, and we don’t have long…†Roran looked
her straight in the eyes. “Please.â€
Birgit frowned. “Why ask me?â€
“Because, like me, you hate the Ra’zac, and I know you will do everything possible
to stop them.â€
“Aye,†whispered Birgit, then clapped her hands briskly. “Very well, as you wish.
But I will never forget, Roran Garrowsson, that it was you and your family who
brought about my husband’s doom.†She strode away before Roran could respond.
He accepted her animosity with equanimity; it was to be expected, considering her
loss. He was only lucky she had not started a blood feud. Then he shook himself and
ran to where the main road entered Carvahall. It was the weakest spot in the village
and had to be doubly protected. The Ra’zac can’t be allowed to just blast their way in
again.
Roran recruited Baldor, and together they began excavating a ditch across the road.
“I’ll have to go soon,†warned Baldor between strokes of his pickax. “Dad needs me
in the forge.â€
Roran grunted an acknowledgment without looking up. As he worked, his mind once
again filled with memories of the soldiers: how they had looked as he struck them,
and the feeling, the horriblefeeling of smashing a body as if it were a rotten stump. He
paused, nauseated, and noted the commotion throughout Carvahall as people readied
themselves for the next assault.
After Baldor left, Roran completed the thigh-deep ditch himself, then went to Fisk’s
workshop. With the carpenter’s permission, he had five logs from the stockpile of
seasoned wood pulled by horses back to the main road. There Roran tipped the logs
on end into the trench so that they formed an impenetrable barrier into Carvahall.
As he tamped down the earth around the logs, Darmmen trotted up. “We got the
trees. They’re just being put into place now.†Roran accompanied him to Carvahall’s
northern edge, where twelve men wrestled four lush green pines into alignment while
a team of draft horses under the whip of a young boy returned to the foothills. “Most
of us are helping to retrieve the trees. The others got inspired; they seemed
determined to chop down the rest of the forest when I left.â€
“Good, we can use the extra timber.â€
Darmmen pointed to a pile of dense brambles that sat on the edge of Kiselt’s fields.
“I cut those along the Anora. Use them however you want. I’m going to find more.â€
Roran clapped him on the arm, then turned toward the eastern side of Carvahall,
where a long, curved line of women, children, and men labored in the dirt. He went to
them and found Birgit issuing orders like a general and distributingwater among the
diggers. The trench was already five feet wide and two feet deep. When Birgit paused
for breath, he said, “I’m impressed.â€
She brushed back a lock of hair without looking at him. “We plowed the ground to
begin with. It made things easier.â€
“Do you have a shovel I can use?†he asked. Birgit pointed to a mound of tools at the
other end of the trench. As Roran walked toward it, he spied the copper gleam of
Katrina’s hair in the midst of the bobbing backs. Beside her, Sloan hacked at the soft
loam with a furious, obsessive energy, as if he were attempting to tear open the
earth’s skin, to peel back its clay hide and expose the muscle beneath. His eyes were
wild, and his teeth were bared in a knotted grimace, despite the flecks of dirt and filth
that spotted his lips.
Roran shuddered at Sloan’s expression and hurried past, averting his face so as to
avoid meeting his bloodshot gaze. He grabbed a shovel and immediately plunged it
into the soil, doing his best to forget his worries in the heat of physical exertion.
The day progressed in a continuous rush of activity, without breaks for meals or rest.
The trench grew longer and deeper, until it cupped two-thirds of the village and
reached the banks of the Anora River. All the loose dirt was piled on the inside edge
of the trench in an attempt to prevent anyone from jumping over it… and to make it
difficult to climb out.
The wall of trees was finished in early afternoon. Roran stopped digging then to help
sharpen the innumerable branches—which were overlapped and interlocked as much
as possible—and affix the nets of brambles. Occasionally, they had to pull out a tree
so farmers like Ivor could drive their livestock into the safety of Carvahall.
By evening the fortifications were stronger and more extensive than Roran had dared
hope, though they still required several more hours of work to complete to his
satisfaction.
He sat on the ground, gnawing a hunk of sourdough bread and staring at the stars
through a haze of exhaustion. A hand dropped on his shoulder, and he looked up to
see Albriech. “Here.†Albriech extended a rough shield—made of sawed boards
pegged together—and a six-foot-long spear. Roran accepted them gratefully, then
Albriech proceeded onward, distributing spears and shields to whomever he
encountered.
Roran dragged himself upright, got his hammer from Horst’s house, and thus armed,
went to the entrance to the main road, where Baldor and two others kept watch.
“Wake me when you need to rest,†Roran said, then lay on the soft grass underneath
the eaves of a nearby house. He arranged his weapons so he could find them in the
dark and closed his eyes in eager anticipation.
“Roran.â€
The whisper came from by his right ear. “Katrina?†He struggled into a sitting
position, blinking as she unshuttered a lantern so a key of light struck his thigh. “What
are you doing here?â€
“I wanted to see you.†Her eyes, large and mysterious against her pale face, pooled
with the night’s shadows. She took his arm and led him to a deserted porch far out of
earshot of Baldor and the other guards. There she placed her hands on his cheeks and
softly kissed him, but he was too tired and troubled to respond to her affection. She
drew away and studied him. “What is wrong, Roran?â€
A bark of humorless laughter escaped him. “What’s wrong? The world is wrong; it’s
as askew as a picture frame knocked on its side.†He jammed his fist against his gut.
“And I am wrong. Every time I allow myself to relax, I see the soldiers bleeding
under my hammer. Men Ikilled, Katrina. And their eyes… theireyes ! They knew they
were about to die and that they could nothing do about it.†He trembled in the
darkness. “They knew… I knew…and I still had to do it. It couldn’t—â€Words failed
him as he felt hot tears roll down his cheeks.
Katrina cradled his head as Roran cried from the shock of the past few days. He wept
for Garrow and Eragon; he wept for Parr, Quimby, and the other dead; he wept for
himself; and he wept for the fate of Carvahall. He sobbed until his emotions ebbed
and left him as dry and hollow as an old barley husk.
Forcing himself to take a long breath, Roran looked at Katrina and noticed her own
tears. He brushed them away with his thumb, like diamonds in the night. “Katrina…
my love.†He said it again, tasting the words: “My love. I have naught to give you but
my love. Still… I must ask. Will you marry me?â€
In the dim lantern light, he saw pure joy and wonder leap across her face. Then she
hesitated and troubled doubt appeared. It was wrong for him to ask, or for her to
accept, without Sloan’s permission. But Roran no longer cared; he had to know now if
he and Katrina would spend their lives together.
Then, softly: “Yes, Roran, I will.â€
UNDER A DARKLING SKY
That night it rained.
Layer upon layer of pregnant clouds blanketed Palancar Valley, clinging to the
mountains with tenacious arms and filling the air with heavy, cold mist. From inside,
Roran watched as cords of gray water pelted the trees with their frothing leaves,
muddied the trench around Carvahall, and scrabbled with blunt fingers against the
thatched roofs and eaves as the clouds disgorged their load. Everythingwas streaked,
blurred, and hidden behind the torrent’s inexorable streamers.
By midmorning the storm had abated, although a continuous drizzle still percolated
through the mist. It quickly soaked Roran’s hair and clothes when he took his watch at
the barricade to the main road. He squatted by the upright logs, shook his cloak, then
pulled the hood farther over his face and tried to ignore the cold.
Despite the weather, Roran soared and exulted with his joy at Katrina’s acceptance.
They were engaged! In his mind, it was as if a missing piece of the world had dropped
into place, as if he had been granted the confidence of an invulnerable warrior. What
did the soldiers matter, or the Ra’zac, or the Empire itself, before love such as theirs?
They were nothing but tinder to the blaze.
For all his new bliss, however, his mind was entirely focused on what had become
the most important conundrum of his existence: how to assure that Katrina would
survive Galbatorix’s wrath. He had thought of nothing else since waking. The best
thing would be for Katrina to go to Cawley’s, he decided, staring down the hazy road,
but she would never agree to leave… unless Sloan told her to. I might be able to
convince him; I’m sure he wants her out of danger as much as I do.
As he considered ways to approach the butcher, the clouds thickened again and the
rain renewed its assault on the village, arching down in stingingwaves. Around
Roran, the puddles jumped to life as pellets of water drummed their surfaces,
bouncing back up like startled grasshoppers.
When Roran grew hungry, he passed his watch to Larne—Loring’s youngest son—
and went to find lunch, darting from the shelter of one eave to another. As he rounded
a corner, he was surprised to see Albriech on the house’s porch, arguing violently
with a group of men.
Ridley shouted, “… you’re blind—follow the cottonwoods and they’ll never see!
You took the addle-brain’s route.â€
“Try it if you want,†retorted Albriech.
“I will!â€
“Then you can tell me how you like the taste of arrows.â€
“Maybe,†said Thane, “we aren’t as clubfooted as you are.â€
Albriech turned on him with a snarl. “Your words are as thick as your wits. I’m not
stupid enough to risk my family on the cover of a few leaves that I’ve never seen
before.†Thane’s eyes bulged and his face turned a deep mottled crimson. “What?â€
taunted Albriech. “Have you no tongue?â€
Thane roared and struck Albriech on the cheek with his fist. Albriech laughed. “Your
arm is as weak as a woman’s.†Then he grabbed Thane’s shoulder and threw him off
the porch and into the mud, where he lay on his side, stunned.
Holding his spear like a staff, Roran jumped beside Albriech, preventing Ridley and
the others from laying hands on him. “No more,†growled Roran, furious. “We have
other enemies. An assembly can be called and arbitrators will decide whether
compensation is due to either Albriech or Thane. But until then, wecan’t fight
ourselves.â€
“Easy for you to say,†spat Ridley. “You have no wife or children.†Then he helped
Thane to his feet and departed with the group of men.
Roran stared hard at Albriech and the purple bruise that was spreading beneath his
right eye. “What started it?†he asked.
“I—†Albriech stopped with a grimace and felt his jaw. “I went scoutingwith
Darmmen. The Ra’zac have posted soldiers on several hills. They can see across the
Anora and up and down the valley. One or two of us might, might, be able to creep
past them without notice, but we’ll never get the children to Cawley without killing
the soldiers, and then we might as well tell the Ra’zac where we’re going.â€
Dread clutched at Roran, flooding like poison through his heart and veins. What can I
do? Sick with a sense of impending doom, he put an arm around Albriech’s shoulders.
“Come on; Gertrude should have a look at you.â€
“No,†said Albriech, shrugging him off. “She has more pressing cases than me.†He
took a preparatory breath—as if he were about to dive into a lake—and lumbered off
through the downpour in the direction of the forge.
Roran watched him go, then shook his head and went inside. He found Elain sitting
on the floor with a row of children, sharpening a pile of spearheads with files and
whetstones. Roran gestured to Elain. Once they were in another room, he told her
what had just occurred.
Elain swore harshly—startling him, for he had never heard her use such language—
then asked, “Is there cause for Thane to declare a feud?â€
“Possibly,†admitted Roran. “They both insulted each other, but Albriech’s oaths
were the strongest… However, Thane did strike first. You could declare a feud
yourself.â€
“Nonsense,†asserted Elain, wrapping a shawl around her shoulders. “This is a
dispute for arbitrators to resolve. If we must pay a fine, so be it, as long as bloodshed
is avoided.†She headed out the front door, a finished spear in hand.
Troubled, Roran located bread and meat in the kitchen, then helped the children
sharpen spearheads. Once Felda, one of the mothers, arrived, Roran left the children
in her care and slogged back through Carvahall to the main road.
As he squatted in the mud, a shaft of sunlight burst underneath the clouds and
illuminated the folds of rain so each drop flashed with crystalline fire. Roran stared,
awestruck, ignoring the water streaming down his face. The rift in the clouds widened
until a shelf of massive thunderheads hung over the western three-quarters of Palancar
Valley, facing a strip of pure blue sky. Because of the billowy roof above and the
angle of the sun, the rain-drenched landscape was lit brilliantly on one side and
painted with rich shadows on the other, giving the fields, bushes, trees, river, and
mountains the most extraordinary colors. It was as if the entire world had been
transformed into a sculpture of burnished metal.
Just then, movement caught Roran’s eye, and he looked down to see a soldier
standing on the road, his mail shining like ice. The man gaped with amazement at
Carvahall’s new fortifications, then turned and fled back into the golden mist.
“Soldiers!†shouted Roran, jolting to his feet. He wished that he had his bow, but he
had left it inside to protect it from the elements. His only comfort was that the soldiers
would have an even harder time keeping their weapons dry.
Men and women ran from their houses, gathered along the trench, and peered out
through the wall of overlapping pines. The long branches wept beads of moisture,
translucent cabochons that reflected the rows of anxious eyes.
Roran found himself standing beside Sloan. The butcher held one of Fisk’s makeshift
shields in his left hand, and in his right a cleaver curved like a half-moon. His belt
was festooned with at least a dozen knives, all of them large and honed to a razor
edge. He and Roran exchanged brisk nods, then refocused on where the soldier had
disappeared.
Less than a minute later, the disembodied voice of a Ra’zac slithered out of the mist:
“By continuing to defend Carvahall, you proclaim your choice and ssseal your doom.
You ssshall die!â€
Loring responded: “Show your maggot-riddled faces if you dare, you lily-livered,
bandy-legged, snake-eyedwretches ! We’ll crack your skulls open and fatten our hogs
on your blood!â€
A dark shape floated toward them, followed by the dull thump of a spear embedding
itself in a door an inch from Gedric’s left arm.
“Take cover!†shouted Horst from the middle of the line. Roran knelt behind his
shield and peered through a hairline gap between two of the boards. He was just in
time, for a half-dozen spears hurtled over the wall of trees and buried themselves
among the cowering villagers.
From somewhere in the mist came an agonized scream.
Roran’s heart jumped with a painful flutter. He panted for breath, though he had not
moved, and his hands were slick with sweat. He heard the faint sound of shattering
glass on the northern edge of Carvahall… then the bellow of an explosion and
crashing timbers.
Spinning around, he and Sloan sped through Carvahall, where they found a team of
six soldiers dragging away the splintered remains of several trees. Beyond them, pale
and wraithlike in the glittering shards of rain, sat the Ra’zac on their black horses.
Without slowing, Roran fell upon the first man, jabbing his spear. His first and second
stabs were deflected by an upraised arm, then Roran caught the soldier on the hip, and
when he stumbled, in his throat.
Sloan howled like an enraged beast, threw his cleaver, and split one of the men’s
helms, crushing his skull. Two soldiers charged him with drawn swords. Sloan
sidestepped, laughing now, and blocked their attacks with his shield. One soldier
swung so hard, his blade stuck in the shield’s rim. Sloan yanked him closer and gored
him through the eye with a carving knife from his belt. Drawing a second cleaver, the
butcher circled his other opponent with a maniacal grin. “Shall I gut and hamstring
you?†he demanded, almost prancingwith a terrible, bloody glee.
Roran lost his spear to the next two men he faced. He barely managed to drag out his
hammer in time to stop a sword from shearing off his leg. The soldier who had torn
the spear from Roran’s grip now cast the weapon at him, aiming for his breast. Roran
dropped his hammer, caught the shaft in midair—which astounded him as much as the
soldiers—spun it around, and drove the spear through the armor and ribs of the man
who had launched it. Left weaponless, Roran was forced to retreat before the
remaining soldier. He stumbled over a corpse, cutting his calf on a sword as he fell,
and rolled to avoid a two-handed blow from the soldier, scrabbling frantically in the
ankle-deep mud for something, anything he could use for a weapon. A hilt bruised his
fingers, and he ripped it from the muck and slashed at the soldier’s sword hand,
severing his thumb.
The man stared dumbly at the glistening stump, then said, “This is what comes from
not shieldingmyself.â€
“Aye,†agreed Roran, and beheaded him.
The last soldier panicked and fled toward the impassive specters of the Ra’zac while
Sloan bombarded him with a stream of insults and foul names. When the soldier
finally pierced the shining curtain of rain, Roran watched with a thrill of horror as the
two black figures bent down from their steeds on either side of the man and gripped
the nape of his neck with twisted hands. The cruel fingers tightened, and the man
shrieked desperately and convulsed, then went limp. The Ra’zac placed the corpse
behind one of their saddles before turning their horses and riding away.
Roran shuddered and looked at Sloan, who was cleaning his blades. “You fought
well.†He had never suspected that the butcher contained such ferocity.
Sloan said in a low voice, “They’ll never get Katrina. Never, even if I must skin the
lot of them, or fight a thousand Urgals and the king to boot. I’d tear the sky itself
down and let the Empire drown in its own blood before she suffers so much as a
scratch.†He clamped his mouth shut then, jammed the last of his knives into his belt,
and began dragging the three broken trees back into position.
While he did, Roran rolled the dead soldiers through the trampled mud, away from
the fortifications. Now I have killed five. At the completion of his labor, he
straightened and glanced around, puzzled, for all he heard was silence and the hissing
rain. Why has no one come to help us?
Wonderingwhat else might have occurred, he returned with Sloan to the scene of the
first attack. Two soldiers hung lifelessly on the slick branches of the tree wall, but that
was not what held their attention. Horst and the other villagers knelt in a circle around
a small body. Roran caught his breath. It was Elmund, son of Delwin. The ten-yearold
boy had been struck in his side by a spear. His parents sat in the mud beside him,
their faces as blank as stone.
Something has to be done,thought Roran, dropping to his knees and leaning against
his spear. Few children survived their first five or six years. But to lose your firstborn
sonnow, when everything indicated that he should grow tall and strong to take his
father’s place in Carvahall—it was enough to crush you. Katrina… the children…
they all have to be protected.
But where?… Where?… Where?… Where!
DOWN THE RUSHING MERE-WASH
On the first day from Tarnag, Eragon made an effort to learn the names of Ûndin’s
guards. They were Ama, Tríhga, Hedin, Ekksvar, Shrrgnien—which Eragon found
unpronounceable, though he was told it meant Wolfheart—Dûthmér, and Thorv.
Each raft had a small cabin in the center. Eragon preferred to spend his time seated
on the edge of the logs, watching the Beor Mountains scroll by. Kingfishers and
jackdaws flitted along the clear river, while blue herons stood stiltlike on the marshy
bank, which was planked with splotches of light that fell through the boughs of hazel,
beech, and willow. Occasionally, a bullfrogwould croak from a bed of ferns.
When Orik settled beside him, Eragon said, “It’s beautiful.â€
“That it is.†The dwarf quietly lit his pipe, then leaned back and puffed.
Eragon listened to the creak of wood and rope as Tríhga steered the raft with the long
paddle at the aft. “Orik, can you tell me why Brom joined the Varden? I know so little
about him. For most of my life, he was just the town storyteller.â€
“He neverjoined the Varden; he helped found it.†Orik paused to tap some ashes into
the water. “After Galbatorix became king, Brom was the only Rider still alive, outside
of the Forsworn.â€
“But he wasn’t a Rider, not then. His dragon was killed in the fighting at Doru
Araeba.â€
“Well, a Rider by training. Brom was the first to organize the friends and allies of the
Riders who had been forced into exile. It was he who convinced Hrothgar to allow the
Varden to live in Farthen Dûr, and he who obtained the elves’ assistance.â€
They were silent for a while. “Why did Brom relinquish the leadership?†asked
Eragon.
Orik smiled wryly. “Perhaps he never wanted it. It was before Hrothgar adopted me,
so I saw little of Brom in Tronjheim… He was always off fighting the Forsworn or
engaged in one plot or another.â€
“Your parents are dead?â€
“Aye. The pox took them when I was young, and Hrothgar was kind enough to
welcome me into his hall and, since he has no children of his own, to make me his
heir.â€
Eragon thought of his helm, marked with the Ingeitum symbol. Hrothgar has been
kind to me as well.
When the afternoon twilight arrived, the dwarves hung a round lantern at each corner
of the rafts. The lanterns were red, which Eragon remembered was to preserve night
vision. He stood by Arya and studied the lanterns’ pure, motionless depths. “Do you
know how these are made?†he asked.
“It was a spell we gave the dwarves long ago. They use it with great skill.â€
Eragon reached up and scratched his chin and cheeks, feeling the patches of stubble
that had begun to appear. “Could you teach me more magic while we travel?â€
She looked at him, her balance perfect on the undulating logs. “It is not my place. A
teacher is waiting for you.â€
“Then tell me this, at least,†he said. “What does the name of my sword mean?â€
Arya’s voice was very soft. “Miseryis your sword. And so it was until you wielded
it.â€
Eragon stared with aversion at Zar’roc. The more he learned about his weapon, the
more malevolent it seemed, as if the blade could cause misfortune of its own free will.
Not only did Morzan kill Riders with it, but Zar’roc’s very name is evil. If Brom had
not given it to him, and if not for the fact that Zar’roc never dulled and could not be
broken, Eragon would have thrown it into the river at that very moment.
Before it grew any darker, Eragon swam out to Saphira. They flew together for the
first time since leaving Tronjheim and soared high above the Az Ragni, where the air
was thin and the water below was only a purple streak.
Without the saddle, Eragon gripped Saphira tightly with his knees, feeling her hard
scales rub the scars from their first flight.
As Saphira tilted to the left, rising on an updraft, he saw three brown specks launch
themselves from the mountainside below and ascend rapidly. At first Eragon took
them to be falcons, but as they neared, he realized that the animals were almost
twenty feet long, with attenuated tails and leathery wings. In fact, they looked like
dragons, though their bodies were smaller, thinner, and more serpentine than
Saphira’s. Nor did their scales glitter, but were dappled green and brown.
Excited, Eragon pointed them out to Saphira. Could they be dragons? he asked.
I don’t know. She floated in place, inspecting the newcomers as they spiraled around
them. The creatures seemed puzzled by Saphira. They darted toward her, only to hiss
and swoop overhead at the last moment.
Eragon grinned and reached out with his mind, trying to touch their thoughts. As he
did, the three recoiled and shrieked, opening their maws like hungry snakes. Their
piercing keen was mental as well as physical. It tore through Eragon with a savage
strength, seeking to incapacitate him. Saphira felt it too. Continuing the racking cry,
the creatures attacked with razor claws.
Hold on,warned Saphira. She folded her left wing and spun halfway around, avoiding
two of the animals, then flapped quickly, rising above the other. At the same time,
Eragon worked furiously to block the shriek. The instant his mind was clear, he
reached for the magic. Don’t kill them, said Saphira. I want the experience.
Though the creatures were more agile than Saphira, she had the advantage of bulk
and strength. One of the creatures dove at her. She flipped upside down—falling
backward—and kicked the animal in the chest.
The shriek dropped in intensity as her injured foe retreated.
Saphira flared her wings, looping right side up so she faced the other two as they
converged on her. She arched her neck, Eragon heard a deep rumble between her ribs,
and then a jet of flame roared from her jaws. A molten-blue halo engulfed Saphira’s
head, flashing through her gemlike scales until she sparkled gloriously and seemed to
be lit from within.
The two dragon-beasts squawked in dismay and veered to either side. The mental
assault ceased as they sped away, sinking back toward the mountainside.
You almost threw me off,said Eragon, loosening his cramped arms from around her
neck.
She looked at him smugly. Almost, but not quite.
That’s true, he laughed.
Flushed with the thrill of victory, they returned to the rafts. As Saphira landed amid
two great fins of water, Orik shouted, “Are you hurt?â€
“No,†called Eragon. The icy water whirled around his legs as Saphira swam to the
side of the raft. “Were they another race unique to the Beors?â€
Orik pulled him onto the raft. “We call them Fanghur. They’re not as intelligent as
dragons and they can’t breathe fire, but they are still formidable foes.â€
“So we discovered.†Eragon massaged his temples in an attempt to alleviate the
headache the Fanghur’s attack had brought on. “Saphira was more than a match for
them, however.â€
Of course, she said.
“It’s how they hunt,†explained Orik. “They use their minds to immobilize their prey
while they kill it.â€
Saphira flicked water at Eragon with her tail. It’s a good idea. Maybe I’ll try it next
time I go hunting.
He nodded. It could come in handy in a fight too.
Arya came to the edge of the raft. “I’m glad you did not kill them. Fanghur are rare
enough that those three would have been sorely missed.â€
“They still manage to eat enough of our herds,†growled Thorv from inside the cabin.
The dwarf marched out to Eragon, champing irritably under the twisted knots of his
beard. “Do not fly anymore while in these Beor Mountains, Shadeslayer. It is difficult
enough to keep you unharmed without you and thine dragon fightingwind-vipers.â€
“We’ll stay on the ground until we reach the plains,†promised Eragon.
“Good.â€
When they stopped for the night, the dwarves moored the rafts to aspen trees along
the mouth of a small stream. Ama started a fire while Eragon helped Ekksvar pull
Snowfire onto land. They picketed the stallion on a strip of grass.
Thorv oversaw the erection of six large tents. Hedin gathered firewood to last until
morning, and Dûthmér carried supplies off the second raft and began making dinner.
Arya took up watch on the edge of camp, where she was soon joined by Ekksvar,
Ama, and Tríhga when they finished their tasks.
When Eragon realized he had nothing to do, he squatted by the fire with Orik and
Shrrgnien. As Shrrgnien pulled off his gloves and held his scarred hands over the
flames, Eragon noticed that a polished steel stud—perhaps a quarter of an inch long—
protruded from each of the dwarf’s knuckles, except for on his thumbs.
“What are those?†he asked.
Shrrgnien looked at Orik and laughed. “These are mine Ascûdgamln… mine ‘fists of
steel.’ â€Without standing, he twisted and punched the bole of an aspen, leaving four
symmetrical holes in the bark. Shrrgnien laughed again. “They are good for hitting
things, eh?â€
Eragon’s curiosity and envy were aroused. “How are they made? I mean, how are the
spikes attached to your hands?â€
Shrrgnien hesitated, trying to find the right words. “A healer puts you in a deep sleep,
so you feel no pain. Then a hole is—isdrilled, yes?—is drilled down through the
joints…†He broke off and spoke quickly to Orik in the dwarf language.
“A metal socket is embedded in each hole,†explained Orik. “Magic is used to seal it
in place, and when the warrior has fully recovered, various-sized spikes can be
threaded into the sockets.â€
“Yes, see,†said Shrrgnien, grinning. He gripped the stud above his left index finger,
carefully twisted it free of his knuckle, and then handed it to Eragon.
Eragon smiled as he rolled the sharp lump around his palm. “I wouldn’t mind having
‘fists of steel’ myself.†He returned the stud to Shrrgnien.
“It’s a dangerous operation,†warned Orik. “Few knurlan get Ascûdgamln because
you can easily lose the use of your hands if the drill goes too deep.†He raised his fist
and showed it to Eragon. “Our bones are thicker than yours. It might not work for a
human.â€
“I’ll remember that.†Still, Eragon could not help but imagine what it would be like
to fight with Ascûdgamln, to be able to strike anything he wanted with impunity,
including armored Urgals. He loved the idea.
After eating, Eragon retired to his tent. The fire provided enough light that he could
see the silhouette of Saphira nestled alongside the tent, like a figure cut from black
paper and pasted against the canvas wall.
Eragon sat with the blankets pulled over his legs and stared at his lap, drowsy but
unwilling to sleep quite yet. Unbidden, his mind turned to thoughts of home. He
wondered how Roran, Horst, and everyone else from Carvahall was doing, and if the
weather in Palancar Valley was warm enough for the farmers to start planting their
crops. Longing and sadness suddenly gripped Eragon.
He removed a wood bowl from his pack and, taking his waterskin, filled it to the
brim with liquid. Then he focused on an image of Roran and whispered, “Draumr
kópa.â€
As always, the water went black before brightening to reveal the object being scryed.
Eragon saw Roran sitting alone in a candlelit bedroom he recognized from Horst’s
house. Roran must have given up his job in Therinsford, realized Eragon. His cousin
leaned on his knees and clasped his hands, staring at the far wall with an expression
that Eragon knew meant Roran was grapplingwith some difficult problem. Still,
Roran seemed well enough, if a bit drawn, which comforted Eragon. After a minute,
he released the magic, ending the spell and clearing the surface of the water.
Reassured, Eragon emptied the bowl, then lay down, pulling the blankets up to his
chin. He closed his eyes and sank into the warm dusk that separates consciousness
and sleep, where reality bends and sways to the wind of thought, and where creativity
blossoms in its freedom from boundaries and all things are possible.
Slumber soon took him. Most of his rest was uneventful, but right before he woke,
the usual night phantasms were replaced with a vision as clear and vibrant as any
waking experience.
He saw a tortured sky, black and crimson with smoke. Crows and eagles swirled high
above flights of arrows that arched from one side to another of a great battle. A man
sprawled in the clotted mud with a dented helm and bloody mail—his face concealed
behind an upthrown arm.
An armored hand entered Eragon’s view. The gauntlet was so near it blotted out half
the world with polished steel. Like an inexorable machine, the thumb and last three
fingers curled into a fist, leaving the trunk of the index finger to point at the downed
man with all the authority of fate itself.
The vision still filled Eragon’s mind when he crawled out of the tent. He found
Saphira some distance from the camp, gnawing on a furry lump. When he told her
what he had seen, she paused in midbite, then jerked her neck and swallowed a strip
of meat.
The last time this occurred,she said, it proved to be a true prediction of events
elsewhere. Do you think a battle is in progress in Alagaësia?
He kicked a loose branch. I’m not sure… Brom said you could only scry people,
places, and things that you had already seen. Yet I’ve never seen this place. Nor had I
seen Arya when I first dreamt about her in Teirm.
Perhaps Togira Ikonoka will be able to explain it.
As they prepared to leave, the dwarves seemed much more relaxed now that they
were a good distance from Tarnag. When they started poling down the Az Ragni,
Ekksvar—who was steering Snowfire’s raft—began chanting in his rough bass:
Down the rushingmere-wash
Of Kílf’s welling blood,
We ride the twisting timbers,
For hearth, clan, and honor.
Under the ernes’ sky-vat,
Through the ice-wolves’ forest bowls,
We ride the gory wood,
For iron, gold, and diamond.
Let hand-ringer and bearded gaper fill my grip
And battle-leaf guard my stone
As I leave the halls of my fathers
For the empty land beyond.
The other dwarves joined Ekksvar, slipping into Dwarvish as they continued on to
other verses. The low throb of their voices accompanied Eragon as he carefully made
his way to the head of the raft, where Arya sat cross-legged.
“I had a… vision duringmy sleep,†said Eragon. Arya looked at him with interest,
and he recounted the images he had seen. “If it’s scrying, then—â€
“It’s not scrying,†said Arya. She spoke with deliberate slowness, as if to prevent any
misunderstanding. “I thought for a long time about how you saw me imprisoned in
Gil’ead, and I believe that as I lay unconscious, my spirit was searching for help,
wherever I might find it.â€
“But why me?â€
Arya nodded toward where Saphira undulated through the water. “I grew accustomed
to Saphira’s presence during the fifteen years I guarded her egg. I was reaching out
for anything that felt familiar when I touched your dreams.â€
“Are you really strong enough to contact someone in Teirm from Gil’ead? Especially
if you were drugged.â€
A ghost of a smile touched Arya’s lips. “I could stand on the very gates of Vroengard
and still speak with you as clearly as I am now.†She paused. “If you did not scry me
in Teirm, then you could not have scryed this new dream. It must be a premonition.
They have been known to occur throughout the sentient races, but especially among
magic users.â€
Eragon clutched the netting around a bundle of supplies as the raft lurched. “If what I
sawwill come to pass, then how can we change anything that happens? Do our choices
matter?What if I threw myself off the raft right now and drowned?â€
“But you won’t.†Arya dipped her left forefinger in the river and stared at the single
drop that clung to her skin, like a quivering lens. “Once, long ago, the elf Maerzadí
had a premonition that he would accidentally kill his son in battle. Rather than live to
see it happen, he committed suicide, saving his son, and at the same time proving that
the future isn’t set. Short of killing yourself, however, you can do little to change your
destiny, since you don’t know what choices will lead you to the particular point of
time that you saw.†She flipped her hand and the drop splattered against the log
between them. “We know that it’s possible to retrieve information from the future—
fortunetellers can often sense the paths a person’s life may take—but we’ve been
unable to refine the process to the point where you can choose what, where, or when
you want to see.â€
Eragon found the entire concept of funneling knowledge through time profoundly
disturbing. It raised too many questions about the nature of reality. Whether fate and
destiny really exist, the only thing I can do is enjoy the present and live as honorably
as possible. Yet he could not help asking, “What’s to stop me, though, from scrying
one of my memories? I’ve seen everything in them… so I should be able to view them
with magic.â€
Arya’s gaze darted to meet his. “If you value your life, never attempt it. Many years
ago, several of our spellweavers devoted themselves to defeating time’s enigmas.
When they tried to summon up the past, they only succeeded in creating a blurred
image on their mirror before the spell consumed their energy and killed them. We
made no more experiments on the subject. It is argued that the spell would work if
more magicians participated, but no one is willing to accept the risk and the theory
remains unproven. Even if one could scry the past, it would be of limited use. And to
scry the future, one would have to know exactly what was going to happen and where
and when, which defeats the purpose.
“It’s a mystery, then, how people can have premonitions while sleeping, how they
can do something unconsciously that has defeated our greatest sages. Premonitions
may be linked to the very nature and fabric of magic… or they may function in a
similar way to the dragons’ ancestral memories. We don’t know. Many avenues of
magic have yet to be explored.†She stood in a single fluid movement. “Take care not
to lose yourself among them.â€
DRIFTING
The valley widened throughout the morning as the rafts swept toward a bright gap
between two mountains. They reached the opening at midday and found themselves
looking out of shadow upon a sunny prairie that faded into the north.
Then the current pushed them beyond the frosted crags and the walls of the world
dropped away to reveal a gigantic sky and flat horizon. Almost immediately, the air
grew warmer. The Az Ragni curved to the east, edging the foothills of the mountain
range on one side and the plains on the other.
The amount of open space seemed to unsettle the dwarves. They muttered among
themselves and glanced longingly at the cavernous rift behind them.
Eragon found the sunlight invigorating. It was hard to ever really feel awake when
three-quarters of the day was spent in twilight. Behind his raft, Saphira launched
herself out of the water and flew up over the prairie until she dwindled to a winking
speck in the azure dome above.
What do you see?he asked.
I see vast herds of gazelles to the north and east. To the west, the Hadarac Desert.
That is all.
No one else? No Urgals, slavers, or nomads?
We are alone.
That evening, Thorv chose a small cove for their camp. While Dûthmér fixed dinner,
Eragon cleared a space beside his tent, then drew Zar’roc and settled into the ready
stance Brom had taught him when they first sparred. Eragon knew he was at a
disadvantage compared to the elves, and he had no intention of arriving in Ellesméra
out of practice.
With excruciating slowness, he looped Zar’roc over his head and brought it back
down with both hands, as if to cleave an enemy’s helm. He held the pose for a second.
Keeping his motion under complete control, he pivoted to the right—twisting
Zar’roc’s point to parry an imaginary blow—then stopped with rigid arms.
Out of the corner of his eye, Eragon noticed Orik, Arya, and Thorv watching. He
ignored them and focused only on the ruby blade in his hands; he held it as if it were a
snake that could writhe out of his grip and bite his arm.
Turning again, he commenced a series of forms, flowing from one to another with
disciplined ease as he gradually increased his speed. In his mind, he was no longer in
the shadowy cove, but surrounded by a knot of ferocious Urgals and Kull. He ducked
and slashed, parried, riposted, jumped to the side, and stabbed in a whirl of activity.
He fought with mindless energy, as he had in Farthen Dûr, with no thought for the
safety of his own flesh, dashing and tearing aside his imagined enemies.
He spun Zar’roc around—in an attempt to flip the hilt from one palm to another—
then dropped the sword as a jagged line of pain bisected his back. He staggered and
fell. Above him, he could hear Arya and the dwarves babbling, but all he saw was a
constellation of sparkling red haze, like a bloody veil dropped over the world. No
sensation existed other than pain. It blotted out thought and reason, leaving only a
feral animal that screamed for release.
When Eragon recovered enough to notice his whereabouts, he found that he had been
placed inside his tent and wrapped tightly with blankets. Arya sat beside him, while
Saphira’s head stuck through the entrance flaps.
Was I out long?asked Eragon.
A while. You slept a little at the end. I tried to draw you from your body into mine
and shield you from the pain, but I could do little with you unconscious.
Eragon nodded and closed his eyes. His entire body throbbed. Taking a deep breath,
he looked up at Arya and quietly asked, “How can I train?… How can I fight, or use
magic?… I am a broken vessel.†His face felt heavy with age as he spoke.
She answered just as softly: “You can sit and watch. You can listen. You can read.
And you can learn.â€
Despite her words, he heard a hitch of uncertainty, even fear, in her voice. He rolled
onto his side to avoid meeting her eyes. It shamed him to appear so helpless before
her. “How did the Shade do this to me?â€
“I have no answers, Eragon. I am neither the wisest nor the strongest elf. We all do
our best, and you cannot be blamed for it. Perhaps time will heal your wound.†Arya
pressed her fingers to his brow and murmured, “Sé mor’ranr ono finna,†then left the
tent.
Eragon sat and winced as his cramped back muscles stretched. He stared at his hands
without seeing them. I wonder if Murtagh’s scar ever pained him like mine does.
I don’t know, said Saphira.
A dead silence followed. Then: I’m afraid.
Why?
Because…He hesitated. Because nothing I do will prevent another attack. I don’t
know when or where it will happen, but I do know that it’s inevitable. So I wait, and
every moment I fear that if I lift something too heavy or stretch in the wrong way, the
pain will return. My own body has become the enemy.
Saphira hummed deep in her throat. I have no answers either. Life is both pain and
pleasure. If this is the price you must pay for the hours you enjoy, is it too much?
Yes,he snapped. He pulled off the blankets and shoved past her, stumbling into the
center of the camp, where Arya and the dwarves sat around a fire. “Is there food left?â€
asked Eragon.
Dûthmér wordlessly filled a bowl and handed it to him. With a deferential
expression, Thorv asked, “Are you better now, Shadeslayer?†He and the other
dwarves seemed awed by what they had seen.
“I’m fine.â€
“You bear a heavy burden, Shadeslayer.â€
Eragon scowled and abruptly walked to the edge of the tents, where he seated himself
in darkness. He could sense Saphira nearby, but she left him in peace. He swore under
his breath and jabbed Dûthmér’s stew with dull anger.
Just as he took a bite, Orik said from beside him, “You should not treat them so.â€
Eragon glared at Orik’s shadowed face. “What?â€
“Thorv and his men were sent to protect you and Saphira. They will die for you if
need be, and trust their sacred burial to you. You should remember that.â€
Eragon bit back a sharp retort and gazed at the black surface of the river—always
moving, never stopping—in an attempt to calm his mind. “You’re right. I let my
temper get away from me.â€
Orik’s teeth gleamed in the night as he smiled. “It’s a lesson that every commander
must learn. I had it beaten into me by Hrothgar after I threw my boot at a dwarf who
left his halberd where someone could step on it.â€
“Did you hit him?â€
“I broke his nose,†chuckled Orik.
Despite himself, Eragon laughed as well. “I’ll remember not to do that.†He held the
bowl with both hands to keep them warm.
Eragon heard the jangle of metal as Orik extracted something from a pouch. “Here,â€
said the dwarf, dropping a knot of intertwined gold rings on Eragon’s palm. “It’s a
puzzle we use to test cleverness and dexterity. There are eight bands. If you arrange
them properly, they form a single ring. I’ve found it useful for distractingmyself
when I’m troubled.â€
“Thank you,†murmured Eragon, already entranced by the complexity of the
gleaming nest.
“You can keep it if you can put it together.â€
When he returned to his tent, Eragon lay on his stomach and inspected the rings in
the dim firelight that seeped past the entrance flaps. Four bands looped through four
bands. Each was smooth on the bottom half and an asymmetrical wrigglingmass on
the top, where it would weave through the other pieces.
As Eragon experimented with various configurations, he quickly became frustrated
by a simple fact: it seemed impossible to get the two sets of bands parallel so they
would lie flat together.
Absorbed by the challenge, he forgot the terror he had just endured.
Eragon woke right before dawn. Scrubbing the sleep from his eyes, he exited the tent
and stretched. His breath turned white in the brisk morning air. He nodded to
Shrrgnien, who was keeping guard by the fire, then strolled to the edge of the river
and washed his face, blinking from the shock of the cold water.
He located Saphira with a flick of his mind, belted on Zar’roc, and headed toward her
through the beech trees that lined the Az Ragni. Before long Eragon’s hands and face
were slick with dew from a tangled wall of chokecherry bushes that obstructed his
way. With an effort, he pushed through the net of branches and escaped onto the silent
plains. A round hill rose before him. On its crest—like two ancient statues—stood
Saphira and Arya. They faced east, where a molten glow crept into the sky and
burnished the prairie amber.
As the clear light struck the two figures, Eragon was reminded of how Saphira had
watched the sunrise from his bedpost only a few hours after she hatched. She was like
a hawk or falcon with her hard, sparkling eyes under their bony ridges, the fierce arch
of her neck, and the lean strength etched into every line of her body. She was a
huntress, and endowed with all the savage beauty that the term implied. Arya’s angled
features and panther grace perfectly matched the dragon beside her. No discrepancy
existed between their demeanors as they stood bathed in dawn’s first rays.
A tingle of awe and joy shuddered along Eragon’s spine. This was where he
belonged, as a Rider. Of all the things in Alagaësia, he had been lucky enough to be
joined withthis. The wonder of it brought tears to his eyes and a smile of wild
exultation that dispelled all his doubts and fears in a surge of pure emotion.
Still smiling, he mounted the hill and took his place by Saphira as they surveyed the
new day.
Arya looked at him. Eragon met her gaze, and something lurched within him. He
flushed without knowingwhy, feeling a sudden connection with her, a sense that she
understood him better than anyone other than Saphira. His reaction confused him, for
no one had affected him in that manner before.
Throughout the rest of the day, all Eragon had to do was think back on that moment
to make himself smile and set his insides churningwith a mixture of odd sensations
he could not identify. He spent most of his time seated against the raft’s cabin,
working on Orik’s ring and watching the changing landscape.
Around midday they passed the mouth of a valley, and another river melded into the
Az Ragni, doubling its size and speed until the shores were over a mile apart. It was
all the dwarves could do to keep the rafts from being tossed like flotsam before the
inexorable current and to avoid smashing into the trees that occasionally floated by.
A mile after the rivers joined, the Az Ragni turned north and flowed past a lonely
cloud-wreathed peak that stood separate from the main body of the Beor range, like a
gigantic watchtower built to keep vigil over the plains.
The dwarves bowed to the peak when they saw it, and Orik told Eragon, “There is
Moldûn the Proud. He is the last true mountain we shall see on this journey.â€
When the rafts were moored for the evening, Eragon saw Orik unwrap a long black
box inlaid with mother-of-pearl, rubies, and curved lines of silver. Orik flicked a
clasp, then raised the lid to reveal an unstrung bow nestled in red velvet. The bow’s
reflexed limbs were ebony, which formed the background for intricate patterns of
vines, flowers, animals, and runes, all executed in the finest gold. It was such a
luxurious weapon, Eragon wondered how anyone dared use it.
Orik strung the bow—it was nearly as tall as he was, but still no bigger than a child’s
bow by Eragon’s standards—put the box away, and said, “I’m going to find some
fresh meat. I’ll be back in an hour.â€With that he disappeared into the brush. Thorv
grunted disapprovingly, but made no move to stop him.
True to his word, Orik returned with a brace of long-necked geese. “I found a flock
of them perched in a tree,†he said, tossing the birds to Dûthmér.
As Orik retrieved the bejeweled case, Eragon asked, “What kind of wood is your bow
made of?â€
“Wood?†Orik laughed, shaking his head. “You can’t make a bow this short out of
wood and cast an arrow more than twenty yards; it breaks, or follows the string after a
few shots. No, this is an Urgal horn bow!â€
Eragon eyed him suspiciously, sure that the dwarf was trying to fool him. “Horn isn’t
flexible or springy enough to make a bow.â€
“Ah,†chortled Orik, “that’s because you have to know how to treat it right. We first
learned to do it with Feldûnost horns, but it works just as well with an Urgal’s. It’s
done by cutting the horn in half lengthwise, then trimming the outside coil until it’s
the right thickness. The strip is boiled flat and sanded into the final shape before being
fixed to the belly of an ash stave with glue made from fish scales and the skin from
the roof of trout’s mouths. Then the back of the stave is covered with multiple layers
of sinew; they give the bow itssnap . The last step is decoration. The entire process
can take almost a decade.â€
“I’ve never heard of a bow built like that before,†said Eragon. It made his own
weapon seem no more than a crudely hacked branch. “How far does it shoot?â€
“See for yourself,†said Orik. He let Eragon take the bow, which he held gingerly, for
fear of scuffing its finish. Orik removed an arrow from his quiver and handed it to
him. “You’ll owe me an arrow, though.â€
Eragon fit shaft to string, aimed over the Az Ragni, and pulled back. The bow’s draw
length was less than two feet, but he was surprised to find that its weight far exceeded
that of his own bow; he was barely strong enough to hold the string. He released the
arrow and it vanished with atwang, only to reappear far above the river. Eragon
watched with amazement as the arrow landed in a spray of water halfway across the
Az Ragni.
He immediately reached through the barrier in his mind so that the magic’s power
suffused him and said, “Gath sem oro un lam iet.†After a few seconds, the arrow
darted back through the air to land on his outstretched palm. “And there,†he said, “is
the arrow I owe you.â€
Orik clapped his fist to his chest and then embraced the arrow and bow with obvious
delight. “Wonderful! Now I still have an even two dozen. Otherwise, I would have
had to wait until Hedarth to replenish my stock.†He deftly unstrung the bow and
stored it away, wrapping the case in soft rags to protect it.
Eragon saw Arya watching. He asked her, “Do elves use horn bows as well? You’re
so strong, a wood bow would shatter if it was made heavy enough for you.â€
“We sing our bows from trees that do not grow.†And then she walked away.
For days, they drifted through fields of spring grass while the Beor Mountains faded
into a hazy white wall behind them. The banks were often covered with vast herds of
gazelles and small red deer that watched them with liquid eyes.
Now that the Fanghur were no longer a threat, Eragon flew almost constantly with
Saphira. It was their first opportunity since before Gil’ead to spend so much time
together in the air, and they took full advantage of it. Also, Eragon welcomed the
chance to escape the cramped deck of the raft, where he felt awkward and unsettled
with Arya so near.
ARYASVIT-KONA
Eragon and his company followed the Az Ragni until it joined the Edda River, which
then drifted into the unknown east. At the juncture between the rivers, they visited the
dwarves’ trading outpost, Hedarth, and exchanged their rafts for donkeys. Dwarves
never used horses on account of their size.
Arya refused the steed offered to her, saying, “I willnot return to the land of my
ancestors on the back of a donkey.â€
Thorv frowned. “How will you keep pace with us?â€
“I will run.†And run she did, outstripping Snowfire and the donkeys, only to sit
waiting for them at the next hill or copse. Despite her exertions, she displayed no sign
of weariness when they stopped for the night, nor any inclination to utter more than a
few words between breakfast and supper. With every step, she seemed to grow tenser.
From Hedarth, they trekked north, going up the Edda River toward its point of origin
at Eldor Lake.
Du Weldenvarden came into view within three days. The forest first appeared as a
hazy ridge on the horizon, then quickly expanded into an emerald sea of ancient oaks,
beeches, and maples. From Saphira’s back, Eragon saw that the woods reached
unbroken to the horizon both north and west, and he knew they extended far beyond
that, stretching the entire length of Alagaësia.
To him, the shadows underneath the trees’ arching boughs seemed mysterious and
enticing, as well as dangerous, for there lived the elves. Hidden somewhere in the
dappled heart of Du Weldenvarden lay Ellesméra—where he would complete his
training—as well as Osilon, and other elven cities few outsiders had visited since the
fall of the Riders. The forest was a perilous place for mortals, Eragon felt, certain to
be riddled with strange magic and stranger creatures.
It’s like another world,he observed. A pair of butterflies spiraled around each other as
they rose from the dark interior of the forest.
I hope,said Saphira, there will be room for me within the trees on whatever path the
elves use. I cannot fly the whole time.
I’m sure they found ways to accommodate dragons during the time of the Riders.
Mmm.
That night, just as Eragon was about to seek his blankets, Arya appeared by his
shoulder, like a spirit materializing out of the air. Her stealth made him jump; he
could never understand how she moved so quietly. Before he could ask what she
wanted, her mind touched his and she said, Follow me as silently as you can.
The contact surprised him as much as the request. They had shared thoughts during
the flight to Farthen Dûr—it had been the only way Eragon could speak to her
through her self-induced coma—but since Arya’s recovery, he had made no attempt
to touch her mind again. It was a profoundly personal experience. Whenever he
reached out to another person’s consciousness, it felt as if a facet of his bare soul
rubbed against theirs. It seemed boorish and rude to initiate something so private
without an invitation, as well as a betrayal of Arya’s trust, slender as it was. Also,
Eragon was afraid that such a link would reveal his new and confused feelings for
Arya, and he had no desire to be ridiculed for them.
He accompanied her as she slipped out from the ring of tents, carefully evaded
Tríhga, who had taken the first watch, and passed beyond the dwarves’ hearing.
Within him, Saphira kept a close watch on his progress, ready to leap to his side if
need be.
Arya squatted on a moss-eaten log and wrapped her arms around her knees without
looking at him. “There are things you must know before we reach Ceris and
Ellesméra so that you do not shame yourself or me through your ignorance.â€
“Such as?†He crouched opposite her, curious.
Arya hesitated. “Duringmy years as Islanzadí‘s ambassador, it was my observation
that humans and dwarves are quite similar. You share many of the same beliefs and
passions. More than one human has lived comfortably among the dwarves because he
or she can understand their culture, as they understand yours. You both love, lust,
hate, fight, and create in much the same manner. Your friendship with Orik and your
acceptance into Dûrgrimst Ingeitum are examples of this.†Eragon nodded, although
their differences seemed greater to him than that. “Elves, though, are not like other
races.â€
“You speak as though you weren’t one,†he said, echoing her words from Farthen
Dûr.
“I have lived with the Varden for enough years to become accustomed to their
traditions,†replied Arya in a brittle tone.
“Ah… So then do you mean to say that elves don’t have the same emotions as
dwarves and humans? I find that hard to believe. All living things have the same basic
needs and desires.â€
“That is not what I mean to say!†Eragon recoiled, then frowned and studied her. It
was unusual for her to be so brusque. Arya closed her eyes and placed her fingers on
her temples, taking a long breath. “Because elves live for so many years, we consider
courtesy to be the highest social virtue. You cannot afford to give offense when a
grudge can be held for decades or centuries. Courtesy is the only way to prevent such
hostility from accumulating. It doesn’t always succeed, but we adhere to our rituals
rigorously, for they protect us from extremes. Nor are elves fecund, so it is vital that
we avoid conflict among ourselves. If we shared the same rate of crime as you or the
dwarves, we would soon be extinct.
“There is a proper way to greet the sentinels in Ceris, certain patterns and forms that
you must observe when presented to Queen Islanzadí, and a hundred different
manners in which to greet those around you, if it’s not better to just remain quiet.â€
“With all your customs,†Eragon risked saying, “it seems as though you’ve only
made it easier to offend people.â€
A smile flickered across her lips. “Perhaps. You know as well as I that you will be
judged by the highest standards. If you make a mistake, the elves will think you did it
on purpose. And only harm will come if they discover that it was born of ignorance.
Far better to be thought rude and capable than rude and incapable, else you risk being
manipulated like The Serpent in a match of Runes. Our politics move in cycles that
are both subtle and lengthy. What you see or hear of an elf one day may only be a
slight move in a strategy that reaches back millennia, and may have no bearing on
how that elf will behave tomorrow. It is a game that we all play but few control, a
game that you are about to enter.
“Now perhaps you realize why I say elves are not like other races. The dwarves are
also long-lived, yet they are more prolific than us and do not share our restraint or our
taste for intrigue. And humans…†She let her voice fade into a tactful silence.
“Humans,†said Eragon, “do the best they can with what they are given.â€
“Even so.â€
“Why don’t you tell Orik all this as well? He’ll be staying in Ellesméra, same as me.â€
An edge crept into Arya’s voice. “He is already somewhat familiar with our etiquette.
However, as a Rider, you would do well to appear better educated than him.â€
Eragon accepted her rebuke without protest. “What must I learn?â€
So Arya began to tutor him and, through him, Saphira in the niceties of elven society.
First she explained that when one elf meets another, they stop and touch their first two
fingers to their lips to indicate that “we shall not distort the truth during our
conversation.†This is followed by the phrase “Atra esterní ono thelduin†to which
one replies “Atra du evarínya ono varda.â€
“And,†said Arya, “if you are being especially formal, a third response is made: ‘Un
atra mor’ranr lífa unin hjarta onr,’ which means, ‘And may peace live in your heart.’
These lines were adopted from a blessing that was made by a dragon when our pact
with them was finalized. It goes:
Atra esterní ono thelduin,
Mor’ranr lífa unin hjarta onr,
Un du evarínya ono varda.
“Or: ‘May good fortune rule over you, peace live in your heart, and the stars watch
over you.’â€
“How do you know who is supposed to speak first?â€
“If you greet someone with greater status than yourself or if you wish to honor a
subordinate, then speak first. If you greet someone with less status than yourself,
speak last. But if you are uncertain of your position, give your counterpart a chance to
speak, and if they are silent, speak first. Such is the rule.â€
Does it apply to me as well?asked Saphira.
Arya plucked a dry leaf from the ground and crumpled it between her fingers. Behind
her, the camp faded into shadow as the dwarves banked the fire, dampening the
flames with a layer of dirt so that the coals and embers would survive until morning.
“As a dragon, none are higher than you in our culture. Not even the queen would
claim authority over you. You may do and say as you wish. We do not expect dragons
to be bound by our laws.â€
Next she showed Eragon how to twist his right hand and place it over his sternum in
a curious gesture. “This,†she said, “you will use when you meet Islanzadí. By it you
indicate that you offer her your loyalty and obedience.â€
“Is it binding, like my oath of fealty to Nasuada?â€
“No, only a courtesy, and a small one at that.â€
Eragon struggled to remember the sundry modes of address that Arya instructed them
in. The salutations varied from man to woman, adults to children, boys to girls, as
well as by rank and prestige. It was a daunting list, but one that Eragon knew he had
to memorize perfectly.
When he had absorbed all he could, Arya stood and dusted her hands. “So long as
you do not forget, you’ll do well enough.†She turned to leave.
“Wait,†said Eragon. He reached out to stop her, then snatched back his hand before
she noticed his presumption. She looked over her shoulder with a query in her dark
eyes, and his stomach clenched as he tried to find a way to voice his thoughts. Despite
his best efforts, he ended up just saying, “Are you well, Arya?… You’ve seemed
distracted and out of sorts ever since we left Hedarth.â€
As Arya’s face hardened into a blank mask, he winced inwardly, knowing that he had
chosen the wrong approach, although he could not fathom why the question should
offend her.
“When we are in Du Weldenvarden,†she informed him, “I expect that you will not
speak to me in such a familiar way, unless you wish to cause affront.†She stalked
away.
Run after her!exclaimed Saphira.
What?
We can’t afford to have her angry with you. Go apologize.
His pride rebelled. No! It’s her fault, not mine.
Go apologize, Eragon, or I’ll fill your tent with carrion. It was no idle threat.
How?
Saphira thought for a second, then told him what to do. Without arguing, he jumped
to his feet and darted in front of Arya, forcing her to stop. She regarded him with a
haughty expression.
He touched his fingers to his lips and said, “Arya Svit-kona,†using the honorific he
had just learned for a woman of great wisdom. “I spoke badly, and for that I cry your
pardon. Saphira and I were concerned for your welfare. After all you’ve done for us, it
seemed the least we could do was offer our help in return, if you need it.â€
Finally, Arya relented and said, “Your concern is appreciated. And I too spoke
badly.†She looked down. In the dark, the outline of her limbs and torso was painfully
rigid. “You ask what troubles me, Eragon? Do you truly wish to know? Then I will
tell you.†Her voice was as soft as thistledown floating on the wind. “I am afraid.â€
Dumbfounded, Eragon made no response, and she stepped past, leaving him alone in
the night.
CERIS
On the morning of the fourth day, when Eragon rode alongside Shrrgnien, the dwarf
said, “So tell me, do men really have ten toes, as is said? For truly I have never
traveled beyond our borders before.â€
“Of course we have ten toes!†said Eragon, astonished. He shifted in Snowfire’s
saddle, lifted his foot, removed his right boot and sock, and wiggled his toes under
Shrrgnien’s amazed eyes. “Don’t you?â€
Shrrgnien shook his head. “Nay, we have seven on each foot. It is how Helzvogmade
us. Five is too few and six is the wrong number, but seven… seven is just right.†He
glanced at Eragon’s foot again, then spurred his donkey ahead and began speaking
animatedly to Ama and Hedin, who eventually handed him several silver coins.
I think,said Eragon as he pulled the boot back on, that I was just the source of a bet.
For some reason, Saphira found that immensely amusing.
As dusk fell and the full moon rose, the Edda River drew ever closer to the fringe of
Du Weldenvarden. They rode down a narrow trail through tangled dogwood and
rosebushes in full bloom, which filled the evening air with the flowers’ warm scent.
Eager anticipation swelled within Eragon as he gazed into the dark forest, knowing
they had already entered the elves’ domain and were close to Ceris. He leaned
forward in Snowfire’s saddle, the reins pulled tight between his hands. Saphira’s
excitement was as great as his own; she ranged overhead, flicking her tail back and
forth with impatience.
Eragon felt as if they had wandered into a dream. It doesn’t seem real, he said.
Aye. Here the legends of old still bestride the earth.
At last they came upon a small meadow set between the river and forest. “Stop here,â€
said Arya in a low voice. She walked forward until she stood alone in the midst of the
lush grass, then cried in the ancient language, “Come forth, my brethren! You have
nothing to fear. ‘Tis I, Arya of Ellesméra. My companions are friends and allies; they
mean us no harm.†She added other words as well, ones alien to Eragon.
For several minutes, the only sound was the river rushing behind them, until from
underneath the still leaves came a line of Elvish, so quick and fleeting that Eragon
missed the meaning. Arya responded: “I do.â€
With a rustle, two elves stood on the edge of the forest and two ran lightly out on the
boughs of a gnarled oak. Those on the ground bore long spears with white blades,
while the others held bows. All were garbed in tunics the color of moss and bark
underneath flowing cloaks clasped at the shoulder with ivory brooches. One had
tresses as black as Arya’s. Three had hair like starlight.
The elves dropped from the trees and embraced Arya, laughing in their clear, pure
voices. They joined hands and danced in a circle around her like children, singing
merrily as they spun through the grass.
Eragon watched in amazement. Arya had never given him reason to suspect that
elves liked to—or evencould—laugh. It was a wondrous sound, like flutes and harps
trillingwith delight at their own music. He wished that he could listen to it forever.
Then Saphira drifted over the river and settled beside Eragon. At her approach, the
elves cried out in alarm and aimed their weapons toward her. Arya spoke quickly in
soothing tones, motioning first at Saphira, then at Eragon. When she paused for
breath, Eragon drew back the glove on his right hand, tilted his palm so that the
gedwëy ignasia caught the moonlight, and said, as he once had to Arya so long ago,
“Eka fricai un Shur’tugal.†I am a Rider and friend. Remembering his lesson from
yesterday, he touched his lips, adding, “Atra esterní ono thelduin.â€
The elves lowered their weapons as their angled faces lit up with radiant joy. They
pressed their forefingers to their lips and bowed to Saphira and him, murmuring their
reply in the ancient language.
Then they rose, pointed at the dwarves, and laughed as if at a hidden joke. Drifting
back into the forest, they waved their hands and called, “Come, come!â€
Eragon followed Arya with Saphira and the dwarves, who were grumbling among
themselves. As they passed between the trees, the canopy overhead plunged them into
velvet darkness, except where fragments of moonlight gleamed through chinks in the
shell of overlapping leaves. Eragon could hear the elves whispering and laughing all
around, though he could not see them. Occasionally, they would call directions when
he or the dwarves blundered.
Ahead, a fire glowed through the trees, sending shadows racing like sprites across the
leafy ground. As Eragon entered the radius of light, he saw three small huts clustered
together around the base of a large oak. High in the tree was a roofed platform where
a watchman could observe the river and forest. A pole had been lashed between two
of the huts: from it hung bundles of drying plants.
The four elves vanished into the huts, then returned with their arms piled high with
fruits and vegetables—but no meat—and began preparing a meal for their guests.
They hummed as they worked, flitting from one tune to another as the fancy took
them. When Orik asked their names, the dark-haired elf pointed to himself and said,
“I am Lifaen of House Rílvenar. And my companions are Edurna, Celdin, and Narí.â€
Eragon sat beside Saphira, happy for an opportunity to rest and to watch the elves.
Though all four were male, their faces resembled Arya’s, with delicate lips, thin
noses, and large slanted eyes that shone under their brows. The rest of their bodies
matched, with narrow shoulders and slender arms and legs. Each was more fair and
noble than any human Eragon had seen, albeit in a rarefied, exotic manner.
Who ever thought I would get to visit the elves’ homeland? Eragon asked himself. He
grinned and leaned against the corner of a hut, drowsy with the fire’s warmth. Above
him, Saphira’s dancing blue eyes tracked the elves with unwavering precision.
More magic is in this race,she finally remarked, than either humans or dwarves.
They do not feel as if they come from the earth or the stone, but rather from another
realm, half in, half out, like reflections seen through water.
They certainly are graceful,he said. The elves moved like dancers, their every action
smooth and lithe.
Brom had told Eragon that it was rude for someone to speak with their mind to a
Rider’s dragon without permission, and the elves adhered to that custom, voicing
aloud their comments to Saphira, who would then answer the elves directly. Saphira
usually refrained from touching the thoughts of humans and dwarves and allowed
Eragon to relay her words, since few members of those races had the training to guard
their minds if they wished for privacy. It also seemed an imposition to use such an
intimate form of contact for casual exchanges. The elves had no such inhibitions,
though; they welcomed Saphira into their minds, reveling in her presence.
At last the food was ready and served on carved plates that felt like dense bone,
although wood grain wandered through the flowers and vines decorating the rim.
Eragon was also supplied with a flagon of gooseberry wine—made of the same
unusual material—with a sculpted dragon wrapped around its stem.
As they ate, Lifaen produced a set of reed pipes and began to play a flowingmelody,
his fingers running along the various holes. Soon the tallest silver-haired elf, Narí,
raised his voice and sang:
O!
The day is done; the stars are bright;
The leaves are still; the moon is white!
Laugh at woe and laugh at foe,
Menoa’s scion now is safe this night!
A forest child we lost to strife;
A sylvan daughter caught by life!
Freed of fear and freed of flame,
She tore a Rider from the shadows rife!
Again the dragons rise on wing,
And we avenge their suffering!
Strong of blade and strong of arm,
The time is ripe for us to kill a king!
O!
The wind is soft; the river deep;
The trees are tall; the birds do sleep!
Laugh at woe and laugh at foe,
The hour has arrived for joy to reap!
When Narí finished, Eragon released his pent-up breath. He had never heard such a
voice before; it felt as if the elf had revealed his essence, his very soul. “That was
beautiful, Narí-vodhr.â€
“A rough composition, Argetlam,†demurred Narí. “But I thank you, nevertheless.â€
Thorv grunted. “Very pretty, Master Elf. However, there are matters more serious
than reciting verse that we must attend to. Are we to accompany Eragon farther?â€
“No,†said Arya quickly, drawing looks from the other elves. “You may return home
in the morning. We will assure that Eragon reaches Ellesméra.â€
Thorv dipped his head. “Then our task is complete.â€
As Eragon lay on the bedding the elves had arranged for him, he strained his ears to
catch Arya’s speech, which drifted from one of the huts. Though she used many
unfamiliar words in the ancient language, he deduced that she was explaining to their
hosts how she had lost Saphira’s egg and the events since. A long silence followed
after she stopped, then an elf said, “It is good that you have returned, Arya
Dröttningu. Islanzadí was sorely wounded by grief when you were captured and the
eggwas stolen, and by Urgals no less! She was—and is—sick at heart.â€
“Hush, Edurna… hush,†chided another. “Dvergar are small, but they have sharp
ears, and I am sure these will report to Hrothgar.â€
Then their voices dropped and Eragon could discern no more from the murmur of
voices, which melded into the whisper of leaves as he drifted to sleep, the elf’s song
repeating endlessly through his dreams.
The scent of flowers was heavy in the air when Eragon woke to behold a sundrenched
Du Weldenvarden. Above him arched a mottled panoply of drifting leaves,
supported by the thick trunks that buried themselves in the dry, bare ground. Only
moss, lichen, and a few low shrubs survived in the pervasive green shade. The
scarcity of underbrush made it possible to see for great distances between the knotted
pillars and to walk about freely beneath the dappled ceiling.
Rolling to his feet, Eragon found Thorv and his guards packed and ready to leave.
Orik’s donkey was tied behind Ekksvar’s steed. Eragon approached Thorv and said,
“Thank you, all of you, for protectingme and Saphira. Please convey our gratitude to
Ûndin.â€
Thorv pressed his fist to his chest. “I will carry your words.†He hesitated and looked
back at the huts. “Elves are a queer race, full of light and dark. In the morning, they
drink with you; in the evening, they stab you. Keep thine back to a wall, Shadeslayer.
Capricious, they are.â€
“I will remember that.â€
“Mmm.†Thorv gestured toward the river. “They plan to travel up Eldor Lake in
boats. What will you do with thine horse?We could return him to Tarnagwith us, and
from there, to Tronjheim.â€
“Boats!†cried Eragon with dismay. He had always planned to bring Snowfire to
Ellesméra. It was convenient to have a horse whenever Saphira was away, or in places
too confined for her bulk. He fingered the sparse bristles along his jaw. “That is a kind
offer. Will you make sure Snowfire is well cared for? I couldn’t bear it if anything
were to happen to him.â€
“On mine honor,†pledged Thorv, “you will return to find him fat and sleek.â€
Eragon fetched Snowfire and transferred the stallion, his saddle, and his grooming
supplies into Thorv’s care. He bade each of the warriors farewell, then he, Saphira,
and Orik watched the dwarves ride back along the trail they had arrived on.
Returning to the huts, Eragon and the remainder of his party followed the elves to a
thicket on the edge of the Edda River. There, docked on either side of a boulder, were
two white canoes with vines carved along their sides.
Eragon boarded the nearest boat and stowed his pack beneath his feet. He was
amazed by how light the craft was; he could have lifted it with a single hand. Even
more astounding, the hulls appeared to be composed of birch-bark panels melded into
a seamless whole. Curious, he touched the side. The bark was hard and taut, like
stretched parchment, and cool from its contact with the water. He rapped it with a
knuckle. The fibrous shell reverberated like a muted drum.
“Are all your boats made this way?†he asked.
“All except the very largest,†answered Narí, seating himself at the prow of Eragon’s
vessel. “For those, we sing the finest cedar and oak into shape.â€
Before Eragon could ask what he meant, Orik joined their canoe while Arya and
Lifaen appropriated the second one. Arya turned to Edurna and Celdin—who stood on
the bank—and said, “Guard this way so that none may follow us, and tell no one of
our presence. The queen must be the first to know. I will send reinforcements as soon
as we reach Sílthrim.â€
“Arya Dröttningu.â€
“May the stars watch over you!†she answered.
Bending forward, Narí and Lifaen drew spiked poles ten feet long from inside the
boats and began propelling the vessels upstream. Saphira slid into the water behind
them and clawed her way along the riverbed until they were level. When Eragon
looked at her, she winked lazily, then submerged, forcing the river to swell into a
mound over her jagged back. The elves laughed as she did so and made many
compliments about her size and strength.
After an hour, they reached Eldor Lake, which was rough with small, jagged waves.
Birds and flies swarmed by a wall of trees edging the western shore, while the eastern
shore sloped up into the plains. On that side meandered hundreds of deer.
Once they escaped the river’s current, Narí and Lifaen stowed their poles, then
distributed leaf-bladed paddles. Orik and Arya already knew how to steer a boat, but
Narí had to explain the process to Eragon. “We turn toward whichever side you
paddle on,†said the elf. “So if I paddle on the right and Orik paddles on the left, then
you must paddle first on one side, then the other, else we will drift off course.†In the
daylight, Narí‘s hair shimmered like the finest wire, each strand a fiery line.
Eragon soon mastered the ability, and as the motion became habitual, his mind was
freed to daydream. Thus, he floated up the cool lake, lost in the fantastic worlds
hidden behind his eyes. When he paused to rest his arms, he once again pulled Orik’s
puzzle ring from his belt and struggled to arrange the obstinate gold bands into the
correct pattern.
Narí noticed what he was doing. “May I see that ring?â€
Eragon passed it to the elf, who turned his back. For a few moments, Eragon and
Orik maneuvered the canoe alone as Narí picked at the entwined bands. Then, with a
pleased exclamation, Narí raised his hand, and the completed ring flashed on his
middle finger. “A delightful riddle,†said Narí. He slipped off the ring and shook it, so
that it was in its original state when he returned it to Eragon.
“How did you solve it?†demanded Eragon, dismayed and envious that Narí had been
able to master the puzzle so easily. “Wait… Don’t tell me. I want to figure it out on
my own.â€
“Of course,†said Narí, smiling.
WOUNDS OF THE PAST
For three and a half days, the citizens of Carvahall discussed the latest attack, the
tragedy of young Elmund’s death, and what could possibly be done to escape their
thrice-blasted situation. The debate raged with bitter fury through every room of every
home. In the space of a word, friends turned against friends, husbands against wives,
children against parents, only to reconcile moments later in their frantic attempt to
discover a means of survival.
Some said that since Carvahall was doomed anyway, they might as well kill the
Ra’zac and remaining soldiers so as to at least have their vengeance. Others said that
if Carvahall really was doomed, then the only logical course was to surrender and
trust themselves to the king’s mercy, even if it did mean torture and death for Roran
and enslavement for everyone else. And still others sided with neither opinion, but
rather descended into a sullen black anger directed at everyone who had brought
about this calamity. Many did their best to hide their panic in the depths of a tankard.
The Ra’zac themselves had apparently realized that with eleven soldiers dead they no
longer had a large enough force to attack Carvahall, and thus had retreated farther
down the road, where they were content to post sentinels across Palancar Valley and
wait. “Wait for flea-bitten troops from Ceunon or Gil’ead, if you ask me,†Loring said
at one meeting. Roran listened to that and more, kept his own council, and silently
judged the various schemes. They all seemed dangerously risky.
Roran still had not told Sloan that he and Katrina were engaged. He knew it was
foolish to wait, but he feared how the butcher would react when he learned that Roran
and Katrina had flouted tradition and, in doing so, undermined Sloan’s authority.
Besides, there was plenty of work to divert Roran’s attention; he convinced himself
that strengthening the fortifications around Carvahall was his most important task at
the moment.
Getting people to help was easier than Roran anticipated. After the last fight, the
villagers were more apt to listen and to obey him—that is, those who did not blame
him for causing their predicament. He was mystified by his new authority, until he
realized that it was the result of the awe, respect, and perhaps even fear his kills had
elicited. They called him Stronghammer. Roran Stronghammer.
The name pleased him.
As night engulfed the valley, Roran leaned against a corner of Horst’s dining room,
his eyes closed. Conversation flowed from the men and women seated around the
candlelit table. Kiselt was in the middle of explaining the state of Carvahall’s
supplies. “We won’t starve,†he concluded, “but if we can’t tend to our fields and our
flocks soon, we might as well cut our own throats before next winter. It would be a
kinder fate.â€
Horst scowled. “Dog tripe!â€
“Dog tripe or not,†said Gertrude, “I doubt we’ll have a chance to find out. We
outnumbered the soldiers ten to one when they arrived. They lost eleven men; we lost
twelve, and I’m caring for another nine wounded. What happens, Horst, when they
outnumberus ten to one?â€
“We will give the bards a reason to remember our names,†retorted the smith.
Gertrude shook her head sadly.
Loring banged a fist on the table. “And I say it’s our turn to strike, before weare
outnumbered. All we need are a few men, shields, and spears, and we can wipe out
theirinfestation. It could be done tonight!â€
Roran shifted restlessly. He had heard all this before, and like before, Loring’s
proposal ignited an argument that consumed the group. After an hour, the debate still
showed no sign of being resolved, nor had any new ideas been presented, except for
Thane’s suggestion that Gedric should go tan his own hide, which nearly resulted in a
fistfight.
Finally, when the conversation lulled, Roran limped to the table as quickly as his
injured calf would allow. “I have something to say.†For him it was the equivalent of
stepping on a long thorn and then yanking it out without stopping to consider the pain;
it had to be done, and the faster the better.
All eyes—hard, soft, angry, kind, indifferent, and curious—turned to him, and Roran
took a deep breath. “Indecision will kill us just as surely as a sword or an arrow.â€
Orval rolled his eyes, but the rest still listened. “I don’t know if we should attack or
flee—â€
“Where?†snorted Kiselt.
“—but I do know one thing: our children, our mothers, and our infirm must be
protected from danger. The Ra’zac have barred us from Cawley and the other farms
down the valley. So what?We know this land better than any in Alagaësia, and there
is a place… there is a place where our loved ones will be safe: the Spine.â€
Roran winced as a barrage of outraged voices assaulted him. Sloan was the loudest,
shouting, “I’ll be hanged before I set foot in those cursed mountains!â€
“Roran,†said Horst, overriding the commotion. “You of all people should know that
the Spine is too dangerous—it’s where Eragon found the stone that brought the
Ra’zac! The mountains are cold, and filled with wolves, bears, and other monsters.
Why even mention them?â€
To keep Katrina safe!Roran wanted to scream. Instead, he said, “Because no matter
how many soldiers the Ra’zac summon, they will never dare enter the Spine. Not after
Galbatorix lost half his army in it.â€
“That was a long time ago,†said Morn doubtfully.
Roran jumped on his statement. “And the stories have grown all the more frightening
in the telling! A trail already exists to the top of Igualda Falls. All we have to do is
send the children and others up there. They’ll only be on the fringe of the mountains,
but they’ll still be safe. If Carvahall is taken, they can wait until the soldiers leave,
then find refuge in Therinsford.â€
“It is too dangerous,†growled Sloan. The butcher gripped the edge of the table so
hard that the tips of his fingers turned white. “The cold, the beasts. No sane man
would send his family among those.â€
“But…†Roran faltered, put off-balance by Sloan’s response. Though he knew the
butcher hated the Spine more than most—because his wife had plummeted to her
death from the cliffs beside Igualda Falls—he had hoped that Sloan’s rabid desire to
protect Katrina would be strong enough to overcome his aversion. Roran now
understood he would have to win over Sloan just like everyone else. Adopting a
placating tone, Roran said, “It’s not that bad. The snow is already melting off the
peaks. It’s no colder in the Spine than it was down here a few months ago. And I
doubt that wolves or bears would bother such a large group.â€
Sloan grimaced, twisting his lips up over his teeth, and shook his head. “You will
find nothing but death in the Spine.â€
The others seemed to agree, which only strengthened Roran’s determination, for he
was convinced that Katrina would die unless he could sway them. He scanned the
long oval of faces, searching for a sympathetic expression. “Delwin, I know it’s cruel
of me to say it, but if Elmund hadn’t been in Carvahall, he would still be alive. Surely
you must agree that this is the right thing to do! You have an opportunity to save other
parents from your suffering.â€
No one responded. “And Birgit!†Roran dragged himself toward her, clutching the
backs of chairs to keep himself from falling. “Do you want Nolfavrell to share his
father’s fate? He has to leave. Can’t you see, that is the only way he’ll be safe…â€
Though Roran did his best to fight it, he could feel tears flood his eyes. “It’s for the
children!†he shouted angrily.
The room was silent as Roran stared at the wood beneath his hands, struggling to
control himself. Delwin was the first to stir. “I will never leave Carvahall so long as
my son’s killers remain here. However,†he paused, then continued with painful
slowness, “I cannot deny the truth of your words; the children must be protected.â€
“As I said from the beginning,†declared Tara.
Then Baldor spoke: “Roran is right. We can’t allow ourselves to be blinded by fear.
Most of us have climbed to the top of the falls at one time or another. It’s safe
enough.â€
“I too,†Birgit finally added, “must agree.â€
Horst nodded. “I would rather not do it, but considering the circumstances… I don’t
think we have any other choice.†After a minute, the various men and women began
to reluctantly acquiesce to the proposal.
“Nonsense!†exploded Sloan. He stood and stabbed an accusing finger at Roran.
“How will they get enough food to wait for weeks on end? They can’t carry it. How
will they stay warm? If they light fires, they’ll be seen! How, how, how? If they don’t
starve, they’ll freeze. If they don’t freeze, they’ll be eaten. If they’re not eaten… Who
knows? They may fall!â€
Roran spread his hands. “If we all help, they will have plenty of food. Fire won’t be a
problem if they move farther back into the forest, which they must anyway, since
there isn’t room to camp right by the falls.â€
“Excuses! Justifications!â€
“What would you have us do, Sloan?†asked Morn, eyeing him with curiosity.
Sloan laughed bitterly. “Not this.â€
“Then what?â€
“It doesn’t matter. Only this is the wrong choice.â€
“You don’t have to participate,†pointed out Horst.
“Nor will I,†said the butcher. “Proceed if you want, but neither I nor my blood shall
enter the Spine while I still have marrow in my bones.†He grabbed his cap and left
with a venomous glare at Roran, who returned the scowl in kind.
As Roran saw it, Sloan was endangeringKatrina through his own pigheaded
stubbornness. If he can’t bring himself to accept the Spine as a place of refuge,
decided Roran, then he’s become my enemy and I have to take matters into my own
hands.
Horst leaned forward on his elbows and interlaced his thick fingers. “So… If we are
going to use Roran’s plan, what preparations will be needed?†The group exchanged
wary glances, then gradually began to discuss the topic.
Roran waited until he was convinced that he had achieved his goal before slipping
out of the dining room. Loping through the dusky village, he searched for Sloan along
the inner perimeter of the tree wall. Eventually, he spotted the butcher hunched
underneath a torch, his shield clasped around his knees. Roran spun around on one
foot and ran to Sloan’s shop, where he hurried to the kitchen in the back.
Katrina paused in the middle of setting their table and stared at him with amazement.
“Roran! Why are you here? Did you tell Father?â€
“No.†He came forward and took her arm, savoring the touch. Just being in the same
room with her filled him with joy. “I have a great favor to ask of you. It’s been
decided to send the children and a few others into the Spine above Igualda Falls.â€
Katrina gasped. “I want you to accompany them.â€
With a shocked expression, Katrina pulled free of his grasp and turned to the open
fireplace, where she hugged herself and stared at the bed of throbbing embers. For a
long time, she said nothing. Then: “Father forbade me to go near the falls after
Mother died. Albem’s farm is the closest I’ve been to the Spine in over ten years.â€
She shivered, and her voice grew accusing. “How can you suggest that I abandon both
you and my father? This is my home as much as yours. And why should I leave when
Elain, Tara, and Birgit will remain?â€
“Katrina, please.†He tentatively put his hands on her shoulders. “The Ra’zac are
here for me, and I would not have you harmed because of that. As long as you’re in
danger, I can’t concentrate on what has to be done: defending Carvahall.â€
“Who would respect me for fleeing like a coward?†She lifted her chin. “I would be
ashamed to stand before the women of Carvahall and call myself your wife.â€
“Coward? There is no cowardice in guarding and protecting the children in the Spine.
If anything, it requires greater courage to enter the mountains than to stay.â€
“What horror is this?†whispered Katrina. She twisted in his arms, eyes shining and
mouth set firmly. “The man who would be my husband no longer wants me by his
side.â€
He shook his head. “That’s not true. I—â€
“Itis true! What if you are killed while I’m gone?â€
“Don’t say—â€
“No! Carvahall has little hope of survival, and if we must die, I would rather die
together than huddle in the Spine without life or heart. Let those with children tend to
their own. As will I.†A tear rolled down her cheek.
Gratitude and wonder surged through Roran at the strength of her devotion. He
looked deep into her eyes. “It is for that love that I would have you go. I know how
you feel. I know that this is the hardest sacrifice either of us could make, and I ask it
of you now.â€
Katrina shuddered, her entire body rigid, her white hands clenched around her muslin
sash. “If I do this,†she said with a shaking voice, “you must promise me, here and
now, that you will never make such a request again. You must promise that even if we
faced Galbatorix himself and only one of us could escape, you would not ask me to
leave.â€
Roran looked at her helplessly. “I can’t.â€
“Then how can you expect me to do what you won’t!†she cried. “That is my price,
and neither gold nor jewels nor pretty words can replace your oath. If you don’t care
enough for me to make your own sacrifice, RoranStronghammer, then be gone and I
never wish to see your face again!â€
I cannot lose her. Though it pained him almost beyond endurance, he bowed his head
and said, “You have my word.â€
Katrina nodded and sank into a chair—her back stiff and upright—and blotted her
tears on the cuff of her sleeve. In a quiet voice, she said, “Father will hate me for
going.â€
“How will you tell him?â€
“I won’t,†she said defiantly. “He would never let me enter the Spine, but he has to
realize that this is my decision. Anyway, he won’t dare pursue me into the mountains;
he fears them more than death itself.â€
“He may fear losing you even more.â€
“We shall see. If—when—the time comes to return, I expect you to have already
spoken to him about our engagement. That should give him enough time to reconcile
himself to the fact.â€
Roran found himself nodding in agreement, all the while thinking that they would be
lucky if events worked out so well.
WOUNDS OF THE PRESENT
When dawn arrived, Roran woke and lay staring at the whitewashed ceilingwhile he
listened to the slow rasp of his own breathing. After a minute, he rolled off the bed,
dressed, and proceeded to the kitchen, where he procured a chunk of bread, smeared it
with soft cheese, then stepped out onto the front porch to eat and admire the sunrise.
His tranquility was soon disrupted when a herd of unruly children dashed through the
garden of a nearby house, shriekingwith delight at their game of Catch-the-Cat,
followed by a number of adults intent on snaring their respective charges. Roran
watched the cacophonous parade vanish around a corner, then placed the last of the
bread in his mouth and returned to the kitchen, which had filled with the rest of the
household.
Elain greeted him. “Good morning, Roran.†She pushed open the window shutters
and gazed up at the sky. “It looks like it may rain again.â€
“The more the better,†asserted Horst. “It’ll help keep us hidden while we climb
Narnmor Mountain.â€
“Us?†inquired Roran. He sat at the table beside Albriech, who was rubbing the sleep
from his eyes.
Horst nodded. “Sloan was right about the food and supplies; we have to help carry
them up the falls, or else there won’t be enough.â€
“Will there still be men to defend Carvahall?â€
“Of course, of course.â€
Once they all had breakfast, Roran helped Baldor and Albriech wrap spare food,
blankets, and supplies into three large bundles that they slung across their shoulders
and hauled to the north end of the village. Roran’s calf pained him, but not
unbearably. Along the way, they met the three brothers Darmmen, Larne, and
Hamund, who were similarly burdened.
Just inside the trench that circumnavigated the houses, Roran and his companions
found a large gathering of children, parents, and grandparents all busy organizing for
the expedition. Several families had volunteered their donkeys to carry goods and the
younger children; the animals were picketed in an impatient, braying line that added
to the overall confusion.
Roran set his bundle on the ground and scanned the group. He saw Svart—Ivor’s
uncle and, at nearly sixty, the oldest man in Carvahall—seated on a bale of clothes,
teasing a baby with the tip of his longwhite beard; Nolfavrell, who was guarded over
by Birgit; Felda, Nolla, Calitha, and a number of other mothers with worried
expressions; and a great many reluctant people, both men and women. Roran also saw
Katrina among the crowd. She glanced up from a knot she was tying on a pack and
smiled at him, then returned to her task.
Since no one seemed to be in charge, Roran did his best to sort out the chaos by
overseeing the arranging and packaging of the various supplies. He discovered a
shortage of waterskins, but when he asked for more, he ended up with thirteen too
many. Delays such as those consumed the early-morning hours.
In the middle of discussingwith Loring the possible need for extra shoes, Roran
stopped as he noticed Sloan standing at the entrance to an alleyway.
The butcher surveyed the mass of activity before him. Contempt cut into the lines
along his downturned mouth. His sneer hardened into enraged incredulity as he
spotted Katrina, who had shouldered her pack, removing any possibility that she was
there only to help. A vein throbbed down the middle of Sloan’s forehead.
Roran hurried toward Katrina, but Sloan reached her first. He grabbed the top of the
pack and shook it violently, shouting, “Who made you do this?†Katrina said
something about the children and tried to pull free, but Sloan yanked at the pack—
twisting her arms as the straps slid off her shoulders—and threw it on the ground so
that the contents scattered. Still shouting, Sloan grabbed Katrina’s arm and began to
drag her away. She dug in her heels and fought, her copper hair swirling over her face
like a dust storm.
Furious, Roran threw himself at Sloan and tore him from Katrina, shoving the
butcher in the chest so that he stumbled backward several yards. “Stop! I’m the one
who wanted her to go.â€
Sloan glared at Roran and snarled, “You have no right!â€
“I have every right.†Roran looked at the ring of spectators who had gathered around
and then declared so that all could hear: “Katrina and I are engaged to be married, and
I would not have my future wife treated so!†For the first time that day, the villagers
fell completely silent; even the donkeys were quiet.
Surprise and a deep, inconsolable pain sprang onto Sloan’s vulnerable face, along
with the glimmer of tears. For a moment, Roran felt sympathy for him, then a series
of contortions distorted Sloan’s visage, each more extreme than the last, until his skin
turned beet red. He cursed and said, “You two-faced coward! How could you look me
in the eye and speak to me like an honest man while, at the same time, courtingmy
daughter without permission? I dealt with you in good faith, and here I find you
plunderingmy house while my back is turned.â€
“I had hoped to do this properly,†said Roran, “but events have conspired against me.
It was never my intention to cause you grief. Even though this hasn’t gone the way
either of us wanted, I still want your blessing, if you are willing.â€
“I would rather have a maggot-riddled pig for a son than you! You have no farm.
You have no family. And you will have naught to do with my daughter!†The butcher
cursed again. “And she’ll have naught to do with the Spine!â€
Sloan reached for Katrina, but Roran blocked the way, his face as hard as his
clenched fists. Only a handsbreadth apart, they stared directly at each other, trembling
from the strength of their emotions. Sloan’s red-rimmed eyes shone with manic
intensity.
“Katrina, come here,†Sloan commanded.
Roran withdrew from Sloan—so that the three of them formed a triangle—and
looked at Katrina. Tears streamed down her face as she glanced between him and her
father. She stepped forward, hesitated, then with a long, anguished cry, tore at her hair
in a frenzy of indecision.
“Katrina!†exclaimed Sloan with a burr of fear.
“Katrina,†murmured Roran.
At the sound of his voice, Katrina’s tears ceased and she stood straight and tall with a
calm expression. She said, “I’m sorry, Father, but I have decided to marry Roran,â€
and stepped to his side.
Sloan turned bone white. He bit his lip so hard that a bead of ruby blood appeared.
“You can’t leave me! You’re my daughter!†He lunged at her with crooked hands. In
that instant, Roran bellowed and struck the butcher with all his strength, knocking him
sprawling in the dirt before the entire village.
Sloan rose slowly, his face and neck flushed with humiliation. When he saw Katrina
again, the butcher seemed to crumple inward, losing height and stature until Roran
felt as if he were looking at a specter of the original man. In a low whisper, he said,
“It is always so; those closest to the heart cause the most pain. Thou will have no
dowry from me, snake, nor your mother’s inheritance.â€Weeping bitterly, Sloan
turned and fled toward his shop.
Katrina leaned against Roran, and he put an arm around her. Together they clung to
each other as people crowded against them offering condolences, advice,
congratulations, and disapproval. Despite the commotion, Roran was aware of
nothing but the woman whom he held, and who held him.
Just then, Elain bustled up as fast as her pregnancy would allow. “Oh, you poor
dear!†she cried, and embraced Katrina, drawing her from Roran’s arms. “Is it true
you are engaged?†Katrina nodded and smiled, then erupted into hysterical tears
against Elain’s shoulder. “There now, there now.†Elain cradled Katrina gently,
petting her and trying to soothe her, but without avail—every time Roran thought she
was about to recover, Katrina began to cry with renewed intensity. Finally, Elain
peered over Katrina’s quaking shoulder and said, “I’m taking her back to the house.â€
“I’ll come.â€
“No, you won’t,†retorted Elain. “She needs time to calm down, and you have work
to do. Do you want my advice?†Roran nodded dumbly. “Stay away until evening. I
guarantee that she will be as right as rain by then. She can join the others tomorrow.â€
Without waiting for his response, Elain escorted the sobbingKatrina away from the
wall of sharpened trees.
Roran stood with his hands hanging limply by his sides, feeling dazed and helpless.
What have we done? He regretted that he had not revealed their engagement to Sloan
sooner. He regretted that he and Sloan could not work together to shield Katrina from
the Empire. And he regretted that Katrina had been forced to relinquish her only
family for him. He was now doubly responsible for her welfare. They had no
choicebut to get married. I’ve made a terrible mess of this. He sighed and clenched his
fist, wincing as his bruised knuckles stretched.
“How are you?†asked Baldor, coming alongside him.
Roran forced a smile. “It didn’t turn out quite how I hoped. Sloan’s beyond reason
when it comes to the Spine.â€
“And Katrina.â€
“That too. I—†Roran fell silent as Loring stopped before them.
“That was a blastedfool thing to do!†growled the shoemaker, wrinkling his nose.
Then he stuck out his chin, grinned, and bared his stumps of teeth. “But I ‘ope you
and the girl have the best of luck.†He shook his head. “Heh, you’re going to need it,
Stronghammer!â€
“We’re all going to need it,†snapped Thane as he walked past.
Loringwaved a hand. “Bah, sourpuss. Listen, Roran; I’ve lived in Carvahall for
many, many years, and in my experience, it’s better that this happenednow, instead of
when we’re all warm and cozy.â€
Baldor nodded, but Roran asked, “Why so?â€
“Isn’t it obvious? Normally, you and Katrina would be the meat of gossip for the next
nine months.†Loring put a finger on the side of his nose. “Ah, but this way, you’ll
soon be forgotten amid everything else that’s going on, and then the two of you might
even have some peace.â€
Roran frowned. “I’d rather be talked about than have those desecrators camped on
the road.â€
“So would we all. Still, it’s something to be grateful for, and we all need something
to be grateful for—‘specially once you’re married!†Loring cackled and pointed at
Roran. “Your face just turned purple, boy!â€
Roran grunted and set about gatheringKatrina’s possessions off the ground. As he
did, he was interrupted by comments from whoever happened to be nearby, none of
which helped to settle his nerves. “Rotgut,†he muttered to himself after a particularly
invidious remark.
Although the expedition into the Spine was delayed by the unusual scene the
villagers had just witnessed, it was only slightly after midmorningwhen the caravan
of people and donkeys began to ascend the bare trail scratched into the side of
Narnmor Mountain to the crest of the Igualda Falls. It was a steep climb and had to be
taken slowly, on account of the children and the size of the burdens everyone carried.
Roran spent most of his time caught behind Calitha—Thane’s wife—and her five
children. He did not mind, as it gave him an opportunity to indulge his injured calf
and to consider recent events at length. He was disturbed by his confrontation with
Sloan. At least, he consoled himself, Katrina won’t remain in Carvahall much longer.
For Roran was convinced, in his heart of hearts, that the village would soon be
defeated. It was a sobering, yet unavoidable, realization.
He paused to rest three-quarters of the way up the mountain and leaned against a tree
as he admired the elevated view of Palancar Valley. He tried to spot the Ra’zac’s
camp—which he knew was just to the left of the Anora River and the road south—but
was unable to discern even a wisp of smoke.
Roran heard the roar of the Igualda Falls long before they came into sight. The falls
appeared for all the world like a great snowy mane that billowed and drifted off
Narnmor’s craggy head to the valley floor a half mile below. The massive stream
curved in several directions as it fell, the result of different layers of wind.
Past the slate ledge where the Anora River became airborne, down a glen filled with
thimbleberries, and then finally into a large clearing guarded on one side by a pile of
boulders, Roran found that those at the head of the procession had already begun
setting up camp. The forest rangwith the children’s shouts and cries.
Removing his pack, Roran untied an ax from the top, then set about clearing the
underbrush from the site alongwith several other men. When they finished, they
began chopping down enough trees to encircle the camp. The aroma of pine sap filled
the air. Roran worked quickly, the wood chips flying in unison with his rhythmic
swings.
By the time the fortifications were complete, the camp had already been erected with
seventeen wool tents, four small cookfires, and glum expressions from people and
donkeys alike. No one wanted to leave, and no one wanted to stay.
Roran surveyed the assortment of boys and old men clutching spears, and thought,
Too much experience and too little. The grandfathers know how to deal with bears
and the like, but will the grandsons have the strength to actually do it? Then he
noticed the hard glint in the women’s eyes and realized that while they might hold a
babe or be busy tending a scraped arm, their own shields and spears were never far
from reach. Roran smiled. Perhaps… perhaps we still have hope.
He saw Nolfavrell sitting alone on a log—staring back toward Palancar Valley—and
joined the boy, who looked at him seriously. “Are you leaving soon?†asked
Nolfavrell. Roran nodded, impressed by his poise and determination. “You will do
your best, won’t you, to kill the Ra’zac and avenge my father? I would do it, except
that Mama says I must guard my brothers and sisters.â€
“I’ll bring you their heads myself, if I can,†promised Roran.
The boy’s chin trembled. “That is good!â€
“Nolfavrell…†Roran paused as he searched for the right words. “You are the only
one here, besides me, who has killed a man. It doesn’t mean that we are better or
worse than anyone else, but it means that I can trust you to fight well if you are
attacked. When Katrina comes here tomorrow, will you make sure that she’s well
protected?â€
Nolfavrell’s chest swelled with pride. “I’ll guard her wherever she goes!†Then he
looked regretful. “That is… when I don’t have to look after—â€
Roran understood. “Oh, your family comes first. But maybe Katrina can stay in the
tent with your brothers and sisters.â€
“Yes,†said Nolfavrell slowly. “Yes, I think that would work. You can rely on me.â€
“Thank you.†Roran clapped him on the shoulder. He could have asked an older and
more capable person, but the adults were too busy with their own responsibilities to
defend Katrina as he hoped. Nolfavrell, however, would have the opportunity and
inclination to assure that she remained safe. He can hold my place while we are apart.
Roran stood as Birgit approached.
Eyeing him flatly, she said, “Come, it is time.†Then she hugged her son and
continued toward the falls with Roran and the other villagers who were returning to
Carvahall. Behind them, everyone in the small camp clustered against the felled trees
and stared forlornly out through their wooden bars.
HIS ENEMY’S FACE
As Roran proceeded about his work throughout the rest of the day, he felt Carvahall’s
emptiness deep inside. It was as if part of himself had been extracted and hidden in
the Spine. And with the children gone, the village now felt like an armed camp. The
change seemed to have made everyone grim and grave.
When the sun finally sank into the waiting teeth of the Spine, Roran climbed the hill
to Horst’s house. He stopped before the front door and placed a hand on the knob, but
remained there, unable to enter. Why does this frighten me as much as fighting?
In the end, he forsook the front door entirely and went to the side of the house, where
he slipped into the kitchen and, to his dismay, saw Elain knitting on one side of the
table, speaking to Katrina, who was opposite her. They both turned toward him, and
Roran blurted, “Are… are you all right?â€
Katrina came to his side. “I’m fine.†She smiled softly. “It just was a terrible shock
when Father… when…†She ducked her head for a moment. “Elain has been
wonderfully kind to me. She agreed to lend me Baldor’s room for the night.â€
“I’m glad you are better,†said Roran. He hugged her, trying to convey all of his love
and adoration through that simple touch.
Elain wrapped up her knitting. “Come now. The sun has set, and it’s time you were
off to bed, Katrina.â€
Roran reluctantly let go of Katrina, who kissed him on the cheek and said, “I’ll see
you in the morning.â€
He started to follow her out, but stopped when Elain said with a barbed tone,
“Roran.†Her delicate face was hard and stern.
“Yes?â€
Elain waited until they heard the creak of stairs that indicated Katrina was out of
earshot. “I hope that you meant every promise you gave that girl, because if you
didn’t, I’ll call an assembly and have you exiled within a week.â€
Roran was dumbfounded. “Of course I meant them. I love her.â€
“Katrina just surrendered everything she owned or cared about for you.†Elain stared
up at him with unwavering eyes. “I’ve seen men who throw their affection at young
maids, like grain tossed at chickens. The maids sigh and weep and believe that they
are special, yet for the man, it’s only a trifling amusement. You have always been
honorable, Roran, but one’s loins can turn even the most sensible person into a
prancing booby or a sly, wicked fox. Are you one? For Katrina requires neither a fool,
a trickster, nor even love; what she requires above all else is a man who will provide
for her. If you abandon her, she will be the meanest person in Carvahall, forced to live
off her friends, our first and only beggar. By the blood in my veins, I won’t let that
happen.â€
“Nor would I,†protested Roran. “I would have to be heartless, or worse, to do so.â€
Elain jerked her chin. “Exactly. Don’t forget that you intend to marry a woman who
has lost both her dowry and her mother’s inheritance. Do you understand what it
means for Katrina to lose her inheritance? She has no silver, no linens, no lace, nor
any of the things needed for a well-run home. Such items are all we own, passed from
mother to daughter since the day we first settled Alagaësia. They determine our
worth. A woman without her inheritance is like… is like—â€
“Is like a man without a farm or a trade,†said Roran.
“Just so. It was cruel of Sloan to deny Katrina her inheritance, but that can’t be
helped now. Both you and she have no money or resources. Life is difficult enough
without that added hardship. You’ll be starting from nothing and with nothing. Does
the prospect frighten you or seem unbearable? So I ask you once again—and don’t lie
or the two of you will regret it for the rest of your lives—will you care for her without
grudge or resentment?â€
“Yes.â€
Elain sighed and filled two earthen cups with cider from a jug hanging among the
rafters. She handed one to Roran as she seated herself back at the table. “Then I
suggest that you devote yourself to replacingKatrina’s home and inheritance so that
she and any daughters you may have can stand without shame among the wives of
Carvahall.â€
Roran sipped the cool cider. “If we live that long.â€
“Aye.†She brushed back a strand of her blond hair and shook her head. “You’ve
chosen a hard path, Roran.â€
“I had to make sure that Katrina would leave Carvahall.â€
Elain lifted an eyebrow. “So that was it. Well, I won’t argue about it, but why on
earth didn’t you speak to Sloan about your engagement before this morning?When
Horst asked my father, he gave our family twelve sheep, a sow, and eight pairs of
wrought-iron candlesticks before he even knew if my parents would agree. That’s
how it should be done. Surely you could have thought of a better strategy than striking
your father-in-law-to-be.â€
A painful laugh escaped Roran. “I could have, but it never seemed the right time with
all the attacks.â€
“The Ra’zac haven’t attacked for almost six days now.â€
He scowled. “No, but… it was…Oh, I don’t know!†He banged his fist on the table
with frustration.
Elain put down her cup and wrapped her tiny hands around his. “If you can mend this
rift between you and Sloannow, before years of resentment accumulate, your life with
Katrina will be much, much easier. Tomorrow morning you should go to his house
and beg his forgiveness.â€
“I won’t beg! Not to him.â€
“Roran, listen to me. It’s worth a month of begging to have peace in your family. I
know from experience; strife does naught but make you miserable.â€
“Sloan hates the Spine. He’ll have nothing to do with me.â€
“You have to try, though,†said Elain earnestly. “Even if he spurns your apology, at
least you can’t be blamed for not making the effort. If you love Katrina, then swallow
your pride and do what’s right for her. Don’t make her suffer for your mistake.†She
finished her cider, used a tin hat to snuff the candles, and left Roran sitting alone in
the dark.
Several minutes elapsed before Roran could bring himself to stir. He stretched out an
arm and traced along the counter’s edge until he felt the doorway, then proceeded
upstairs, all the while running the tips of his fingers over the carved walls to keep his
balance. In his room, he disrobed and threw himself lengthwise on the bed.
Wrapping his arms around his wool-stuffed pillow, Roran listened to the faint sounds
that drifted through the house at night: the scrabble of a mouse in the attic and its
intermittent squeaks, the groan of wood beams cooling in the night, the whisper and
caress of wind at the lintel of his window, and… and the rustle of slippers in the hall
outside his room.
He watched as the latch above the doorknob was pulled free of its hook, then the door
inched forward with a rasp of protest. It paused. A dark form slipped inside, the door
closed, and Roran felt a curtain of hair brush his face alongwith lips like rose petals.
He sighed.
Katrina.
A thunderclap tore Roran from sleep.
Light flared on his face as he struggled to regain awareness, like a diver desperate to
reach the surface. He opened his eyes and saw a jagged hole blasted through his door.
Six soldiers rushed through the yawning cleft, followed by the two Ra’zac, who
seemed to fill the room with their ghastly presence. A sword was pressed against
Roran’s neck. Beside him, Katrina screamed and pulled the blankets around her.
“Up,â€ordered the Ra’zac. Roran cautiously got to his feet. His heart felt like it was
about to explode in his chest. “Tie his handsss and bring him.â€
As a soldier approached Roran with rope, Katrina screamed again and jumped on the
men, biting and clawing furiously. Her sharp nails furrowed their faces, drawing
streams of blood that blinded the cursing soldiers.
Roran dropped to one knee and grabbed his hammer from the floor, then planted his
feet, swinging the hammer over his head and roaring like a bear. The soldiers threw
themselves at him in an attempt to subdue him through sheer numbers, but to no avail:
Katrina was in danger, and he was invincible. Shields crumpled beneath his blows,
brigandines and mail split under his merciless weapon, and helmets caved in. Two
men were wounded, and three fell to rise no more.
The clang and clamor had roused the household; Roran dimly heard Horst and his
sons shouting in the hall. The Ra’zac hissed to one another, then scuttled forward and
grasped Katrina with inhuman strength, lifting her off the floor as they fled the room.
“Roran!â€she shrieked.
Summoning his energy, Roran bowled past the two remainingmen. He stumbled into
the hall and saw the Ra’zac climbing out a window. Roran dashed toward them and
struck at the last Ra’zac, just as it was about to descend below the windowsill. Jerking
upward, the Ra’zac caught Roran’s wrist in midair and chittered with delight, blowing
its fetid breath onto his face. “Yesss! You are the one we want!â€
Roran tried to twist free, but the Ra’zac did not budge. With his free hand, Roran
buffeted the creature’s head and shoulders—which were as hard as iron. Desperate
and enraged, he seized the edge of the Ra’zac’s hood and wrenched it back, exposing
its features.
A hideous, tortured face screamed at him. The skin was shiny black, like a beetle
carapace. The head was bald. Each lidless eye was the size of his fist and gleamed like
an orb of polished hematite; no iris or pupil existed. In place of a nose, mouth, and
chin, a thick beak hooked to a sharp point that clacked over a barbed purple tongue.
Roran yelled and jammed his heels against the sides of the window frame, struggling
to free himself from the monstrosity, but the Ra’zac inexorably drew him out of the
house. He could see Katrina on the ground, still screaming and fighting.
Just as Roran’s knees buckled, Horst appeared by his side and wrapped a knotted arm
around his chest, locking him in place. “Someone get a spear!†shouted the smith. He
snarled, veins bulging on his neck from the strain of holding Roran. “It’ll take more
than this demon spawn to best us!â€
The Ra’zac gave a final yank, then, when it failed to dislodge Roran, cocked its head
and said, “You areoursss !†It lunged forward with blinding speed, and Roran howled
as he felt the Ra’zac’s beak close on his right shoulder, snipping through the front of
the muscle. His wrist cracked at the same time. With a malicious cackle, the Ra’zac
released him and fell backward into the night.
Horst and Roran sprawled against each other in the hallway. “They have Katrina,â€
groaned Roran. His vision flickered and went black around the edges as he pushed
himself upright on his left arm—his right hung useless. Albriech and Baldor emerged
from his room, splattered with gore. Only corpses remained behind them. Now I have
killed eight. Roran retrieved his hammer and staggered down the hall, finding his way
blocked by Elain in her white sleeping shift.
She looked at him with wide eyes, then took his arm and pushed him down onto a
wood chest set against the wall. “You have to see Gertrude.â€
“But—â€
“You’ll pass out if this bleeding isn’t stopped.â€
He looked down at his right side; it was drenched in crimson. “We have to rescue
Katrina beforeâ€â€”he clenched his teeth as the pain surged—“before they do anything
to her.â€
“He’s right; we can’t wait,†said Horst, looming over them. “Bind him up as best you
can, then we’ll go.†Elain pursed her lips and hurried to the linen closet. She returned
with several rags, which she wrapped tightly around Roran’s torn shoulder and his
fractured wrist. Meanwhile, Albriech and Baldor scavenged armor and swords from
the soldiers. Horst contented himself with just a spear.
Elain put her hands on Horst’s chest and said, “Be careful.†She looked at her sons.
“All of you.â€
“We’ll be fine, Mother,†promised Albriech. She forced a smile and kissed them on
the cheek.
They left the house and ran to the edge of Carvahall, where they found that the wall
of trees had been pulled open and the watchman, Byrd, slain. Baldor knelt and
examined the body, then said with a choked voice, “He was stabbed from behind.â€
Roran barely heard him through the pounding in his ears. Dizzy, he leaned against a
house and panted for breath.
“Ho! Who goes?â€
From their stations along Carvahall’s perimeter, the other watchmen congregated
around their murdered compatriot, forming a huddle of shuttered lanterns. In hushed
tones, Horst described the attack and Katrina’s plight. “Who will help us?†he asked.
After a quick discussion, five men agreed to accompany them; the rest would remain
to guard the breach in the wall and rouse the villagers.
Pushing himself off the house, Roran trotted to the head of the group as it slipped
through the fields and down the valley toward the Ra’zac’s camp. Every step was
agony, yet it did not matter; nothingmattered except Katrina. He stumbled once and
Horst wordlessly caught him.
Half a mile from Carvahall, Ivor spotted a sentry on a hillock, which compelled them
to make a wide detour. A few hundred yards beyond, the ruddy glow of torches
became visible. Roran raised his good arm to slow their advance, then began to dodge
and crawl through the tangled grass, startling a jackrabbit. The men followed Roran’s
lead as he worked his way to the edge of a grove of cattails, where he stopped and
parted the curtain of stalks to observe the thirteen remaining soldiers.
Where is she?
In contrast to when they had first arrived, the soldiers appeared sullen and haggard,
their weapons nicked and their armor dented. Most of them wore bandages that were
rusty with splotches of dried blood. The men were clumped together, facing the two
Ra’zac—both of whom were now hooded—across a low fire.
One man was shouting: “… over half of us killed by a bunch of inbred, cocklebrained
woodrats that can’t tell a pike from a poleax or find the point of a sword even
if it’s lodged in their gut, becauseyou don’t have half the sense my banner boy does! I
don’t care if Galbatorix himself licks your boots clean, we won’t do a thing until we
have a new commander.†The men nodded. “One who’shuman. â€
“Really?†demanded the Ra’zac softly.
“We’ve had enough taking orders from hunchbacks like you, with all your clicking
and teapot whistling—makes us sick! And I don’t know what you did with Sardson,
but if you stay another night, we’ll put steel in you and find out if you bleed like us.
You can leave the girl, though, she’ll be—â€
The man did not get a chance to continue, for the largest Ra’zac jumped across the
fire and landed on his shoulders, like a giant crow. Screaming, the soldier collapsed
under the weight. He tried to draw his sword, but the Ra’zac pecked twice at his neck
with its hidden beak, and he was still.
“We have to fightthat ?†muttered Ivor behind Roran.
The soldiers remained frozen with shock as the two Ra’zac lapped from the neck of
the corpse. When the black creatures rose, they rubbed their knobby hands together,
as if they were washing, and said, “Yesss. We will go. Stay if you wisssh;
reinforsssements are only daysss away.†The Ra’zac threw back their heads and began
to shriek at the sky, the wail becoming increasingly shrill until it passed from hearing.
Roran looked up as well. At first he saw nothing, but then a nameless terror gripped
him as two barbed shadows appeared high over the Spine, eclipsing the stars. They
advanced quickly, growing larger and larger until they obscured half the sky with
their ominous presence. A foul wind rushed across the land, bringingwith it a
sulfurous miasma that made Roran cough and gag.
The soldiers were likewise afflicted; their curses echoed as they pressed sleeves and
scarves over their noses.
Above them, the shadows paused and then began to drift downward, enclosing the
camp in a dome of menacing darkness. The sickly torches flickered and threatened to
extinguish themselves, yet they still provided sufficient light to reveal the two beasts
descending among the tents.
Their bodies were naked and hairless—like newborn mice—with leathery gray skin
pulled tight across their corded chests and bellies. In form they resembled starved
dogs, except that their hind legs bulged with enough muscle to crush a boulder. A
narrow crest extended from the back of each of their attenuated heads, opposite a
long, straight, ebony beak made for spearing prey, and cold, bulbous eyes identical to
the Ra’zac’s. From their shoulders and backs sprang huge wings that made the air
moan under their weight.
Flinging themselves to the ground, the soldiers cowered and hid their faces from the
monsters. A terrible, alien intelligence emanated from the creatures, bespeaking a race
far older and far more powerful than humans. Roran was suddenly afraid that his
mission might fail. Behind him, Horst whispered to the men, urging them to hold their
ground and remain hidden, else they would be slain.
The Ra’zac bowed to the beasts, then slipped into a tent and returned carrying
Katrina—who was bound with ropes—and leading Sloan. The butcher walked freely.
Roran stared, unable to comprehend how Sloan had been captured. His house isn’t
anywhere near Horst’s. Then it struck him. “He betrayed us,†said Roran with
wonder. His fist slowly tightened on his hammer as the true horror of the situation
exploded within him. “He killed Byrd and he betrayed us!†Tears of rage streamed
down his face.
“Roran,†murmured Horst, crouching beside him. “We can’t attack now; they’d
slaughter us. Roran… do you hear me?â€
He heard but a whisper in the distance as he watched the smaller Ra’zac jump onto
one beast above the shoulders, then catch Katrina as the other Ra’zac tossed her up.
Sloan seemed upset and frightened now. He began arguingwith the Ra’zac, shaking
his head and pointing at the ground. Finally, the Ra’zac struck him across the mouth,
knocking him unconscious. Mounting the second beast, with the butcher slung over its
shoulder, the largest Ra’zac declared, “We will return once it isss sssafe again. Kill
the boy, and your livesss are forfeit.†Then the steeds flexed their massive thighs and
leaped into the sky, once again shadows upon the field of stars.
No words or emotions were left to Roran. He was utterly destroyed. All that
remained was to kill the soldiers. He stood and raised his hammer in preparation to
charge, but as he stepped forward, his head throbbed in unison with his wounded
shoulder, the ground vanished in a burst of light, and he toppled into oblivion.
ARROWTO THE HEART
Every day since leaving the outpost of Ceris was a hazy dream of warm afternoons
spent paddling up Eldor Lake and then the Gaena River. All around them, water
gurgled through the tunnel of verdant pines that wound ever deeper into Du
Weldenvarden.
Eragon found travelingwith the elves delightful. Narí and Lifaen were perpetually
smiling, laughing, and singing songs, especially when Saphira was around. They
rarely looked elsewhere or spoke of another subject but her in her presence.
However, the elves were not human, no matter the similarity of appearance. They
moved too quickly, too fluidly, for creatures born of simple flesh and blood. And
when they spoke, they often used roundabout expressions and aphorisms that left
Eragon more confused than when they began. In between their bursts of merriment,
Lifaen and Narí would remain silent for hours, observing their surroundings with a
glow of peaceful rapture on their faces. If Eragon or Orik attempted to talk with them
during their contemplation, they would receive only a word or two in response.
It made Eragon appreciate how direct and forthright Arya was by comparison. In fact,
she seemed uneasy around Lifaen and Narí, as if she were no longer sure how to
behave with her own kind.
From the prow of the canoe, Lifaen looked over his shoulder and said, “Tell me,
Eragon-finiarel… What do your people sing about in these dark days? I remember the
epics and lays I heard in Ilirea—sagas of your proud kings and earls—but it was long,
long ago and the memories are like withered flowers in my mind. What new works
have your people created?†Eragon frowned as he tried to recall the names of stories
Brom had recited. When Lifaen heard them, he shook his head sorrowfully and said,
“So much has been lost. No court ballads survive, and, if you speak truly, nor does
most of your history or art, except for fanciful tales Galbatorix has allowed to thrive.â€
“Brom once told us about the fall of the Riders,†said Eragon defensively. An image
of a deer bounding over rotting logs flashed behind his eyes from Saphira, who was
off hunting.
“Ah, a brave man.†For a minute, Lifaen paddled silently. “We too sing about the
Fall… but rarely. Most of us were alive when Vrael entered the void, and we still
grieve for our burned cities—the red lilies of Éwayëna, the crystals of Luthivíra—and
for our slain families. Time cannot dull the pain of those wounds, not if a thousand
thousand years pass and the sun itself dies, leaving the world to float in eternal night.â€
Orik grunted in the back. “As it is with the dwarves. Remember, elf, we lost an entire
clan to Galbatorix.â€
“And we lost our king, Evandar.â€
“I never heard that,†said Eragon, surprised.
Lifaen nodded as he guided them around a submerged rock. “Few have. Brom could
have told you about it; he was there when the fatal blow was struck. Before Vrael’s
death, the elves faced Galbatorix on the plains of Ilirea in our final attempt to defeat
him. There Evandar—â€
“Where is Ilirea?†asked Eragon.
“It’s Urû‘baen, boy,†said Orik. “Used to be an elf city.â€
Unperturbed by the interruption, Lifaen continued: “As you say, Ilirea was one of our
cities. We abandoned it during our war with the dragons, and then, centuries later,
humans adopted it as their capital after King Palancar was exiled.â€
Eragon said, “King Palancar?Who was he? Is that how Palancar Valley got its
name?â€
This time the elf turned and looked at him with amusement. “You have as many
questions as leaves on a tree, Argetlam.â€
“Brom was of the same opinion.â€
Lifaen smiled, then paused, as if to gather his thoughts. “When your ancestors arrived
in Alagaësia eight hundred years ago, they roamed far across it, seeking a suitable
place to live. Eventually, they settled in Palancar Valley—though it was not called
such then—as it was one of the few defendable locations that we or the dwarves had
not claimed. There your king, Palancar, began to build a mighty state.
“In an attempt to expand his borders, he declared war against us, though we had
offered no provocation. Three times he attacked, and three times we prevailed. Our
strength frightened Palancar’s nobles and they pled with their liege for peace. He
ignored their counsel. Then the lords approached us with a treaty, which we signed
without the king’s knowledge.
“With our help, Palancar was usurped and banished, but he, his family, and their
vassals refused to leave the valley. Since we had no wish to murder them, we
constructed the tower of Ristvak’baen so the Riders could watch over Palancar and
ensure he would never again rise to power or attack anyone else in Alagaësia.
“Before long Palancar was killed by a son who did not wish to wait for nature to take
its course. Thereafter, family politics consisted of assassination, betrayal, and other
depravities, reducing Palancar’s house to a shadow of its former grandeur. However,
his descendants never left, and the blood of kings still runs in Therinsford and
Carvahall.â€
“I see,†said Eragon.
Lifaen lifted one dark eyebrow. “Do you? It has more significance than you may
think. It was this event that convinced Anurin—Vrael’s predecessor as head Rider—
to allow humans to become Riders, in order to prevent similar disputes.â€
Orik emitted a bark of laughter. “That must have caused some argument.â€
“It was an unpopular decision,†admitted Lifaen. “Even now some question the
wisdom of it. It caused such a disagreement between Anurin and Queen Dellanir that
Anurin seceded from our government and established the Riders on Vroengard as an
independent entity.â€
“But if the Riders were separated from your government, then how could they keep
the peace, as they were supposed to?†asked Eragon.
“They couldn’t,†said Lifaen. “Not until Queen Dellanir saw the wisdom of having
the Riders free of any lord or king and restored their access to Du Weldenvarden.
Still, it never pleased her that any authority could supersede her own.â€
Eragon frowned. “Wasn’t that the whole point, though?â€
“Yes…and no. The Riders were supposed to guard against the failings of the
different governments and races, yet who watched the watchers? It was that very
problem that caused the Fall. No one existed who could descry the flaws within the
Riders’ own system, for they were above scrutiny, and thus, they perished.â€
Eragon stroked the water—first on one side and then the other—while he considered
Lifaen’s words. His paddle fluttered in his hands as it cut diagonally across the
current. “Who succeeded Dellanir as king or queen?â€
“Evandar did. He took the knotted throne five hundred years ago—when Dellanir
abdicated in order to study the mysteries of magic—and held it until his death. Now
his mate, Islanzadí, rules us.â€
“That’s—†Eragon stopped with his mouth open. He was going to sayimpossible, but
then realized how ridiculous the statement would sound. Instead, he asked, “Are elves
immortal?â€
In a soft voice, Lifaen said, “Once we were like you, bright, fleeting, and as
ephemeral as the morning dew. Now our lives stretch endlessly through the dusty
years. Aye, we are immortal, although we are still vulnerable to injuries of the flesh.â€
“Youbecame immortal? How?†The elf refused to elaborate, though Eragon pressed
him for details. Finally, Eragon asked, “How old is Arya?â€
Lifaen turned his glittering eyes on him, probing Eragon with disconcerting
acuteness. “Arya?What is your interest in her?â€
“I…†Eragon faltered, suddenly unsure of his intentions. His attraction to Arya was
complicated by the fact that she was an elf, and that her age, whatever it might be,
was so much greater than his own. She must view me as a child. “I don’t know,†he
said honestly. “But she saved both my life and Saphira’s, and I’m curious to know
more about her.â€
“I feel ashamed,†said Lifaen, pronouncing each word carefully, “for asking such a
question. Among our kind, it is rude to pry into one’s affairs… Only, I must say, andI
believe that Orik agrees with me, that you would do well to guard your heart,
Argetlam. Now is not the time to lose it, nor would it be well placed in this instance.â€
“Aye,†grunted Orik.
Heat suffused Eragon as blood rushed to his face, like hot tallow melting through
him. Before he could utter a retort, Saphira entered his mind and said, And now is the
time to guard your tongue. They mean well. Don’t insult them.
He took a deep breath and tried to let his embarrassment drain away. Do you agree
with them?
I believe, Eragon, that you are full of love and that you are looking for one who will
reciprocate your affection. No shame exists in that.
He struggled to digest her words, then finally said, Will you be back soon?
I’m on my way now.
Returning his attention to his surroundings, Eragon found that both the elf and the
dwarf were watching him. “I understand your concern… and I’d still like my question
answered.â€
Lifaen hesitated briefly. “Arya is quite young. She was born a year before the
destruction of the Riders.â€
A hundred!Though he had expected such a figure, Eragon was still shocked. He
concealed it behind a blank face, thinking, She could have great-grandchildren older
than me! He brooded on the subject for several minutes and then, to distract himself,
said, “You mentioned that humans discovered Alagaësia eight hundred years ago. Yet
Brom said that we arrived three centuries after the Riders were formed, which was
thousands of years ago.â€
“Two thousand, seven hundred, and four years, by our reckoning,†declared Orik.
“Brom was right, if you consider a single ship with twenty warriors the ‘arrival’ of
humans in Alagaësia. They landed in the south, where Surda is now. We met while
they were exploring and exchanged gifts, but then they departed and we didn’t see
another human for almost two millennia, or until King Palancar arrived with a fleet in
tow. The humans had completely forgotten us by then, except for vague stories about
hairy men-of-the-mountains that preyed on children in the night. Bah!â€
“Do you know where Palancar came from?†asked Eragon.
Orik frowned and gnawed the tip of his mustache, then shook his head. “Our histories
only say that his homeland was far to the south, beyond the Beors, and that his exodus
was the result of war and famine.â€
Excited by an idea, Eragon blurted, “So there might be countries elsewhere that could
help us against Galbatorix.â€
“Possibly,†said Orik. “But they would be difficult to find, even on dragonback, and I
doubt that you’d speak the same language. Who would want to help us, though? The
Varden have little to offer another country, and it’s hard enough to get an army from
Farthen Dûr to Urû‘baen, much less bring forces from hundreds, if not thousands, of
miles away.â€
“We could not spare you anyway,†said Lifaen to Eragon.
“I still—†Eragon broke off as Saphira soared over the river, followed by a furious
crowd of sparrows and blackbirds intent on driving her away from their nests. At the
same time, a chorus of squeaks and chatters burst from the armies of squirrels hidden
among the branches.
Lifaen beamed and cried, “Isn’t she glorious? See how her scales catch the light! No
treasure in the world can match this sight.†Similar exclamations floated across the
river from Narí.
“Bloody unbearable, that’s what it is,†muttered Orik into his beard. Eragon hid a
smile, though he agreed with the dwarf. The elves never seemed to tire of praising
Saphira.
Nothing’s wrong with a few compliments,said Saphira. She landed with a gigantic
splash and submerged her head to escape a diving sparrow.
Of course not, said Eragon.
Saphira eyed him from underwater. Was that sarcasm?
He chuckled and let it pass. Glancing at the other boat, Eragon watched Arya paddle,
her back perfectly straight, her face inscrutable as she floated through webs of mottled
light beneath the mossy trees. She seemed so dark and somber, it made him want to
comfort her. “Lifaen,†he asked softly so that Orik would not hear, “why is Arya so…
unhappy? You and—â€
Lifaen’s shoulders stiffened underneath his russet tunic and he whispered, so low that
Eragon could barely hear, “We are honored to serve Arya Dröttningu. She has
suffered more than you can imagine for our people. We celebrate out of joy for what
she has achieved with Saphira, and we weep in our dreams for her sacrifice… and her
loss. Her sorrows are her own, though, and I cannot reveal them without her
permission.â€
As Eragon sat by their nightly campfire, petting a swatch of moss that felt like rabbit
fur, he heard a commotion deeper in the forest. Exchanging glances with Saphira and
Orik, he crept toward the sound, drawing Zar’roc.
Eragon stopped at the lip of a small ravine and looked across to the other side, where
a gyrfalcon with a broken wing thrashed in a bed of snowberries. The raptor froze
when it saw him, then opened its beak and uttered a piercing screech.
What a terrible fate, to be unable to fly, said Saphira.
When Arya arrived, she eyed the gyrfalcon, then strung her bow and, with unerring
aim, shot it through the breast. At first Eragon thought that she had done it for food,
but she made no move to retrieve either the bird or her arrow.
“Why?†he asked.
With a hard expression, Arya unstrung her bow. “It was too injured for me to heal
and would have died tonight or tomorrow. Such is the nature of things. I saved it
hours of suffering.â€
Saphira lowered her head and touched Arya on the shoulder with her snout, then
returned to their camp, her tail scraping bark off the trees. As Eragon started to
follow, he felt Orik tug his sleeve and bent down to hear the dwarf say in an
undertone, “Never ask an elf for help; they might decide that you’re better off dead,
eh?â€
THE DAGSHEL GRIN VOCATION
Though he was tired from the previous day, Eragon forced himself to rise before
dawn in an attempt to catch one of the elves asleep. It had become a game with him to
discover when the elves got up—or if they slept at all—as he had yet to see any of
them with their eyes closed. Today was no exception.
“Good morning,†said Narí and Lifaen from above him. Eragon craned back his head
and saw that they each stood on the bough of a pine tree, over fifty feet in the air.
Jumping from branch to branch with feline grace, the elves dropped to the ground
alongside him.
“We have been keepingwatch,†explained Lifaen.
“For what?â€
Arya stepped around a tree and said, “For my fears. Du Weldenvarden has many
mysteries and dangers, especially for a Rider. We have lived here for thousands of
years, and old spells still linger in unexpected places; magic permeates the air, the
water, and the earth. In places it has affected the animals. Sometimes strange creatures
are found roaming the forest, and not all of them friendly.â€
“Are they—†Eragon stopped as his gedwëy ignasia tingled. The silver hammer on
the necklace Gannel had given him grew hot on his chest, and he felt the amulet’s
spell draw upon his strength.
Someone was trying to scry him.
Is it Galbatorix? he wondered, frightened. He clutched the necklace and pulled it out
of his tunic, ready to yank it off should he become too weak. From the other side of
the camp, Saphira rushed to his side, bolstering him with her own reserves of energy.
A moment later, the heat leached out of the hammer, leaving it cold against Eragon’s
skin. He bounced it on his palm, then tucked it back under his clothes, whereupon
Saphira said, Our enemies are searching for us.
Enemies? Could not it be someone in Du Vrangr Gata?
I think Hrothgar would have told Nasuada that he ordered Gannel to enchant you
this necklace… She might have even come up with the idea in the first place.
Arya frowned when Eragon explained what had occurred. “This makes it all the more
important we reach Ellesméra quickly so your training can resume. Events in
Alagaësia move apace, and I fear you won’t have adequate time for your studies.â€
Eragon wanted to discuss it further, but lost the opportunity in the rush to leave camp.
Once the canoes were loaded and the fire tamped out, they continued to forge up the
Gaena River.
They had only been on the water for an hour when Eragon noticed that the river was
growingwider and deeper. A few minutes later, they came upon a waterfall that filled
Du Weldenvarden with its throbbing rumble. The cataract was about a hundred feet
tall, and streamed down a stone face with an overhang that made it impossible to
climb. “How do we get past that?†He could already feel cool spray on his face.
Lifaen pointed at the left shore, some distance from the falls, where a trail had been
worn up the steep ridge. “We have to portage our canoes and supplies for half a
league before the river clears.â€
The five of them untied the bundles wedged between the seats of the canoes and
divided the supplies into piles that they stuffed into their packs. “Ugh,†said Eragon,
hefting his load. It was twice as heavy as what he usually carried when traveling on
foot.
I could fly it upstream for you… all of it,offered Saphira, crawling onto the muddy
bank and shaking herself dry.
When Eragon repeated her suggestion, Lifaen looked horrified. “We would never
dream of using a dragon as a beast of burden. It would dishonor you, Saphira—and
Eragon as Shur’tugal—and it would shame our hospitality.â€
Saphira snorted, and a plume of flame erupted from her nostrils, vaporizing the
surface of the river and creating a cloud of steam. This is nonsense. Reaching past
Eragon with one scaly leg, she hooked her talons through the packs’ shoulder straps,
then took off over their heads. Catch me if you can!
A peal of clear laughter broke the silence, like the trill of a mockingbird. Amazed,
Eragon turned and looked at Arya. It was the first time he had ever heard her laugh;
he loved the sound. She smiled at Lifaen. “You have much to learn if you presume to
tell a dragon what she may or may not do.â€
“But the dishonor—â€
“It is no dishonor if Saphira does it of her free will,†asserted Arya. “Now, let us go
before we waste any more time.â€
Hoping that the strain would not trigger the pain in his back, Eragon picked up his
canoe with Lifaen and fit it over his shoulders. He was forced to rely on the elf to
guide him along the trail, as he could only see the ground beneath his feet.
An hour later, they had topped the ridge and hiked beyond the dangerous white water
to where the Gaena River was once again calm and glassy. Waiting for them was
Saphira, who was busy catching fish in the shallows, jabbing her triangular head into
the water like a heron.
Arya called her over and said to both her and Eragon, “Beyond the next curve lies
Ardwen Lake and, upon its western shore, Sílthrim, one of our greatest cities. Past
that, a vast expanse of forest still separates us from Ellesméra. We will encounter
many elves close to Sílthrim. However, I don’t want either of you to be seen until we
speak with Queen Islanzadí.â€
Why?asked Saphira, echoing Eragon’s thoughts.
In her musical accent, Arya answered: “Your presence represents a great and terrible
change for our kingdom, and such shifts are dangerous unless handled with care. The
queen must be the first to meet with you. Only she has the authority and wisdom to
oversee this transition.â€
“You speak highly of her,†commented Eragon.
At his words, Narí and Lifaen stopped and watched Arya with guarded eyes. Her face
went blank, then she drew herself up proudly. “She has led us well… Eragon, I know
you carry a hooded cape from Tronjheim. Until we are free of possible observers, will
you wear it and keep your head covered so that none can see your rounded ears and
know that you are human?†He nodded. “And, Saphira, you must hide during the day
and catch up with us at night. Ajihad told me that is what you did in the Empire.â€
And I hated every moment of it, she growled.
“It’s only for today and tomorrow. After that we will be far enough away from
Sílthrim that we won’t have to worry about encountering anyone of consequence,â€
promised Arya.
Saphira turned her azure eyes on Eragon. When we escaped the Empire, I swore that I
would always stay close enough to protect you. Every time I leave, bad things happen:
Yazuac, Daret, Dras-Leona, the slavers.
Not in Teirm.
You know what I mean! I’m especially loath to leave since you can’t defend yourself
with your crippled back.
I trust that Arya and the others will keep me safe. Don’t you?
Saphira hesitated. I trust Arya. She twisted away and padded up the riverbank, sat for
a minute, then returned. Very well. She broadcast her acceptance to Arya, adding, But
I won’t wait any longer than tomorrow night, even if you’re in the middle of Sílthrim
at the time.
“I understand,†said Arya. “You will still have to be careful when flying after dark, as
elves can see clearly on all but the blackest nights. If you are sighted by chance, you
could be attacked by magic.â€
Wonderful, commented Saphira.
While Orik and the elves repacked the boats, Eragon and Saphira explored the dim
forest, searching for a suitable hiding place. They settled on a dry hollow rimmed by
crumbling rocks and blanketed with a bed of pine needles that were pleasantly soft
underfoot. Saphira curled up on the ground and nodded her head. Go now. I will be
fine.
Eragon hugged her neck—careful to avoid her sharp spines—and then reluctantly
departed, glancing backward. At the river, he donned his cape before they resumed
their journey.
The air was motionless when Ardwen Lake came into view, and as a result, the vast
mantle of water was smooth and flat, a perfect mirror for the trees and clouds. The
illusion was so flawless, Eragon felt as if he were looking through a window at
another world and that if they continued forward, the canoes would fall endlessly into
the reflected sky. He shivered at the thought.
In the hazy distance, numerous white birch-bark boats darted like water striders along
both shores, propelled to incredible speeds by the elves’ strength. Eragon ducked his
head and tugged on the edge of his hood to ensure that it covered his face.
His link with Saphira grew ever more tenuous the farther apart they became, until
only a wisp of thought connected them. By evening he could no longer feel her
presence, even if he strained his mind to its limits. All of a sudden, Du Weldenvarden
seemed much more lonely and desolate.
As the gloom deepened, a cluster of white lights—placed at every conceivable height
among the trees—sprang into existence a mile ahead. The sparks glowed with the
silver radiance of the full moon, eerie and mysterious in the night.
“There lies Sílthrim,†said Lifaen.
With a faint splash, a dark boat passed them from the opposite direction,
accompanied by a murmur of “Kvetha Fricai†from the elf steering.
Arya brought her canoe alongside Eragon’s. “We will stop here tonight.â€
They made camp a ways from Ardwen Lake, where the ground was dry enough to
sleep on. The ferocious droves of mosquitoes forced Arya to cast a protective spell so
that they could eat dinner in relative comfort.
Afterward, the five of them sat around the fire, staring at the gold flames. Eragon
leaned his head against a tree and watched a meteor streak across the sky. His eyelids
were about to sink shut when a woman’s voice drifted through the woods from
Sílthrim, a faint susurration that brushed the inside of his ear like a down feather. He
frowned and straightened, trying to better hear the tenuous whisper.
Like a thread of smoke that thickens as a newborn fire blazes to life, so the voice rose
in strength until the forest sighed with a teasing, twistingmelody that leaped and fell
with wild abandon. More voices joined the unearthly song, embroidering the original
theme with a hundred variations. The air itself seemed to shimmer with the fabric of
the tempestuous music.
The fey strains sent jolts of elation and fear down Eragon’s spine; they clouded his
senses, drawing him into the velvet night. Seduced by the haunting notes, he jumped
to his feet, ready to dash through the forest until he found the source of the voices,
ready to dance among the trees and moss, anything so that he could join the elves’
revels. But before he could move, Arya caught his arm and yanked him around to face
her.
“Eragon! Clear your mind!†He struggled in a futile attempt to break her grip. “Eyddr
eyreya onr!†Empty your ears! Everything fell silent then, as if he had gone deaf. He
stopped fighting and looked around, wonderingwhat had just occurred. On the other
side of the fire, Lifaen and Narí wrestled noiselessly with Orik.
Eragon watched Arya’s mouth move as she spoke, then sound returned to the world
with apop, though he could no longer hear the music. “What… ?†he asked, dazed.
“Gerr’off me,†growled Orik. Lifaen and Narí lifted their hands and backed away.
“Your pardon, Orik-vodhr,†said Lifaen.
Arya gazed toward Sílthrim. “I miscounted the days; I didn’t want to be anywhere
near a city duringDagshelgr. Our saturnalias, our celebrations, are perilous for
mortals. We sing in the ancient language, and the lyrics weave spells of passion and
longing that are difficult to resist, even for us.â€
Narí stirred restlessly. “We should be at a grove.â€
“We should,†agreed Arya, “but we will do our duty and wait.â€
Shaken, Eragon sat closer to the fire, wishing for Saphira; he was sure she could have
protected his mind from the music’s influence. “What is the point of Dagshelgr?†he
asked.
Arya joined him on the ground, crossing her long legs. “It is to keep the forest
healthy and fertile. Every springwe sing for the trees, we sing for the plants, and we
sing for the animals. Without us, Du Weldenvarden would be half its size.†As if to
emphasize her point, birds, deer, squirrels—red and gray—striped badgers, foxes,
rabbits, wolves, frogs, toads, tortoises, and every other nearby animal forsook their
hiding and began to rush madly about with a cacophony of yelps and cries. “They are
searching for mates,†explained Arya. “All across Du Weldenvarden, in each of our
cities, elves are singing this song. The more who participate, the stronger the spell,
and the greater Du Weldenvarden will be this year.â€
Eragon snatched back his hand as a trio of hedgehogs trundled past his thigh. The
entire forest yammered with noise. I’ve stepped into fairyland, he thought, hugging
himself.
Orik came around the fire and raised his voice above the clamor: “By my beard and
my ax, I’ll not be controlled against my will by magic. If it happens again, Arya, I
swear on Helzvog’s stone girdle that I’ll return to Farthen Dûr and you will have the
wrath of Dûrgrimst Ingeitum to deal with.â€
“It was not my intention for you to experience Dagshelgr,†said Arya. “I apologize
for my mistake. However, though I am shielding you from this spell, you cannot
escape magic in Du Weldenvarden; it permeates everything.â€
“So long as it doesn’t befoul my mind.†Orik shook his head and fingered the haft of
his axwhile eyeing the shadowy beasts that lumbered in the gloom beyond the pool of
firelight.
No one slept that night. Eragon and Orik remained awake because of the frightful din
and the animals that kept crashing by their tents, the elves because they still listened
to the song. Lifaen and Narí took to pacing in endless circles, while Arya stared
toward Sílthrim with a hungry expression, her tawny skin drawn thin and taut over her
cheekbones.
Four hours into the riot of sound and motion, Saphira dove out of the sky, her eyes
sparklingwith a queer aspect. She shivered and arched her neck, panting between her
open jaws. The forest, she said, is alive. And I am alive. My blood burns like never
before. It burns as yours burns when you think of Arya. I… understand!
Eragon put his hand on her shoulder, feeling the tremors that racked her frame; her
sides vibrated as she hummed alongwith the music. She gripped the ground with her
ivory claws, her muscles coiled and clenched in a supreme effort to remain
motionless. The tip of her tail twitched like she was about to pounce.
Arya stood and joined Eragon on the opposite side of Saphira. The elf also put a hand
on Saphira’s shoulder, and the three of them faced the darkness, united into a living
chain.
When dawn broke, the first thing Eragon noticed was that all the trees now had buds
of bright green needles at the ends of their branches. He bent and examined the
snowberries at his feet and found that every plant, large or small, had acquired new
growth during the night. The forest vibrated with the ripeness of its colors; everything
was lush and fresh and clean. The air smelled like it had just rained.
Saphira shook herself beside Eragon and said, The fever has passed; I am myself
again. Such things I felt… It was as if the world were being born anew and I was
helping to create it with the fire in my limbs.
How are you? On the inside, I mean.
I will need some time to understand what I experienced.
Since the music had ceased, Arya removed her spell from Eragon and Orik. She said,
“Lifaen. Narí. Go to Sílthrim and get horses for the five of us. We cannot walk all the
way from here to Ellesméra. Also, alert Captain Damítha that Ceris requires
reinforcements.â€
Narí bowed. “And what shall we say when she asks why we have deserted our post?â€
“Tell her that that which she once hoped for—and feared—has occurred; the wyrm
has bitten its own tail. She will understand.â€
The two elves departed for Sílthrim after the boats were emptied of supplies. Three
hours later, Eragon heard a stick snap and looked up to see them returning through the
forest on proud white stallions, leading four other identical horses. The magnificent
beasts moved among the trees with uncanny stealth, their coats shimmering in the
emerald twilight. None of them wore saddles or harnesses.
“Blöthr, blöthr,†murmured Lifaen, and his steed halted, pawing the ground with its
dark hooves.
“Are all your horses as noble as these?†asked Eragon. He cautiously approached
one, amazed by its beauty. The animals were only a few inches taller than ponies,
which made it easy for them to navigate among the closely placed trunks. They did
not seem frightened by Saphira.
“Not all,†laughed Narí, tossing his silver hair, “but most. We have bred them for
many centuries.â€
“How am I supposed to ride?â€
Arya said, “An elf horse responds instantly to commands in the ancient language; tell
it where you wish to go and it will take you. However, do not mistreat them with
blows or harsh words, for they are not our slaves, but our friends and partners. They
bear you only so long as they consent to; it is a great privilege to ride one. I was only
able to save Saphira’s egg from Durza because our horses sensed that somethingwas
amiss and stopped us from riding into his ambush… They won’t let you fall unless
you deliberately throw yourself off, and they are skilled in choosing the safest,
quickest path through treacherous ground. The dwarves’ Feldûnost are like that.â€
“Right you are,†grunted Orik. “A Feldûnost can run you up a cliff and down without
a single bruise. But how can we carry food and whatnot without saddles? I won’t ride
while wearing a full pack.â€
Lifaen tossed a pile of leather bags at Orik’s feet and indicated the sixth horse. “Nor
will you have to.â€
It took half an hour to arrange their supplies in the bags and heap them into a lumpy
mound on the horse’s back. Afterward, Narí told Eragon and Orik the words they
could use to direct the horses: “Gánga framto go forward, blöthr to stop, hlaupa if
needs you must run, andgánga aptr to go back. You can give more precise
instructions if you know more of the ancient language.†He led Eragon to a horse and
said, “This is Folkvír. Hold out your hand.â€
Eragon did, and the stallion snorted, flaring his nostrils. Folkvír sniffed Eragon’s
palm, then touched it with his muzzle and allowed Eragon to stroke his thick neck.
“Good,†said Narí, appearing satisfied. The elf had Orik do the same with the next
horse.
As Eragon mounted Folkvír, Saphira drew closer. He looked up at her, noting how
troubled she still seemed from the night. One more day, he said.
Eragon…She paused. I thought of something while I was under the influence of the
elves’ spell, something that I have always considered of little consequence, but now
looms within me like a mountain of black dread: Every creature, no matter how pure
or monstrous, has a mate of their own kind. Yet I have none. She shuddered and
closed her eyes. In this regard, I am alone.
Her statements reminded Eragon that she was barely more than eight months old. On
most occasions, her youth did not show—due to the influence of her hereditary
instincts and memories—but, in this arena, she was even more inexperienced than he
was with his feeble stabs at romance in Carvahall and Tronjheim. Pity welled inside
Eragon, but he suppressed it before it could seep across their mental link. Saphira
would have only contempt for the emotion: it could neither solve her problem nor
make her feel better. Instead, he said, Galbatorix still has two dragon eggs. During
our first audience with Hrothgar, you mentioned that you would like to rescue them. If
we can—
Saphira snorted bitterly. It could take years, and even if we did retrieve the eggs, I
have no guarantee that they would hatch, nor that they would be male, nor that we
would be fit mates. Fate has abandoned my race to extinction. She lashed her tail with
frustration, breaking a sapling in two. She seemed perilously close to tears.
What can I say? he asked, disturbed by her distress. You can’t give up hope. You still
have a chance to find a mate, but you have to be patient. Even if Galbatorix’s eggs
don’t work, dragons must exist elsewhere in the world, just like humans, elves, and
Urgals do. The moment we are free of our obligations, I’ll help you search for them.
All right?
All right,she sniffed. She craned back her head and released a puff of white smoke
that dispersed among the branches overhead. I should know better than to let my
emotions get the best of me.
Nonsense. You would have to be made of stone not to feel this way. It’s perfectly
normal… But promise you won’t dwell on it while you’re alone.
She fixed one giant sapphire eye on him. I won’t. He turned warm inside as he felt
her gratitude for his reassurances and companionship. Leaning out from Folkvír, he
put a hand on her rough cheek and held it there for a moment. Go on, little one, she
murmured. I will see you later.
Eragon hated to leave her in such a state. He reluctantly entered the forest with Orik
and the elves, headingwest toward the heart of Du Weldenvarden. After an hour spent
pondering Saphira’s plight, he mentioned it to Arya.
Faint lines creased Arya’s forehead as she frowned. “It is one of Galbatorix’s greatest
crimes. I do not know if a solution exists, but we can hope. We must hope.â€
THE PINEWOOD CITY
Eragon had been in Du Weldenvarden for so long that he had begun to long for
clearings, fields, or even a mountain, instead of the endless tree trunks and meager
underbrush. His flights with Saphira provided no respite as they only revealed hills of
prickly green that rolled unbroken into the distance like a verdant sea.
Oftentimes, the branches were so thick overhead, it was impossible to tell from what
direction the sun rose and set. That, combined with the repetitive scenery, made
Eragon hopelessly lost, no matter how many times Arya or Lifaen troubled to show
him the points of the compass. If not for the elves, he knew that he could wander in
Du Weldenvarden for the rest of his life without ever finding his way free.
When it rained, the clouds and the forest canopy plunged them into profound
darkness, as if they were entombed deep underground. The fallingwater would collect
on the black pine needles above, then trickle through and pour a hundred feet or more
down onto their heads, like a thousand little waterfalls. At such times, Arya would
summon a glowing orb of green magic that floated over her right hand and provided
the only light in the cavernous forest. They would stop and huddle underneath a tree
until the storm abated, but even then water cached in the myriad branches would, at
the slightest provocation, shower them with droplets for hours afterward.
As they rode deeper into the heart of Du Weldenvarden, the trees grew thicker and
taller, as well as farther apart to accommodate the increased span of their branches.
The trunks—bare brown shafts that towered up into the overarching ribbed ceiling,
which was smudged and obscured by shadow—were over two hundred feet tall,
higher than any tree in the Spine or the Beors. Eragon paced out the girth of one tree
and measured it at seventy feet.
He mentioned this to Arya, and she nodded, saying, “It means that we are near
Ellesméra.†She reached out and rested her hand lightly on the gnarled root beside
her, as if touching, with consummate delicacy, the shoulder of a friend or lover.
“These trees are among the oldest living creatures in Alagaësia. Elves have loved
them since first we saw Du Weldenvarden, and we have done everythingwithin our
power to help them flourish.†A faint blade of light pierced the dusty emerald
branches overhead and limned her arm and face with liquid gold, dazzlingly bright
against the murky background. “We have traveled far together, Eragon, but now you
are about to enter my world. Tread softly, for the earth and air are heavy with
memories and naught is as it seems… Do not fly with Saphira today, as we have
already triggered certain wards that protect Ellesméra. It would be unwise to stray
from the path.â€
Eragon bowed his head and retreated to Saphira, who lay curled on a bed of moss,
amusing herself by releasing plumes of smoke from her nostrils and watching them
roil out of sight. Without preamble, she said, There is plenty of room for me on the
ground now. I will have no difficulty.
Good. He mounted Folkvír and followed Orik and the elves farther into the empty,
silent forest. Saphira crawled beside him. She and the white horses gleamed in the
somber half light.
Eragon paused, overcome by the solemn beauty of his surroundings. Everything had
a feeling of wintry age, as if nothing had changed under the thatched needles for a
thousand years and nothing ever would; time itself seemed to have fallen into a
slumber from which it would never wake.
In late afternoon, the gloom lifted to reveal an elf standing before them, sheathed in a
brilliant ray of light that slanted down from the ceiling. He was garbed in flowing
robes, with a circlet of silver upon his brow. His face was old, noble, and serene.
“Eragon,†murmured Arya. “Show him your palm and your ring.â€
Baring his right hand, Eragon raised it so that first Brom’s ring and then the gedwëy
ignasia was visible. The elf smiled, closed his eyes, and spread his arms in a gesture
of welcome. He held the posture.
“The way is clear,†said Arya. At a soft command, her steed moved forward. They
rode around the elf—like water parting at the base of a weathered boulder—and when
they had all passed, he straightened, clasped his hands, and vanished as the light that
illuminated him ceased to exist.
Who is he?asked Saphira.
Arya said, “He is Gilderien theWise, Prince of House Miolandra, wielder of the
White Flame of Vándil, and guardian of Ellesméra since the days of Du Fyrn
Skulblaka, our war with the dragons. None may enter the city unless he permits it.â€
A quarter of a mile beyond, the forest thinned and breaks appeared within the
canopy, allowing planks of mottled sunlight to bar the way. Then they passed
underneath two burled trees that leaned against each other and stopped at the edge of
an empty glade.
The ground was strewn with dense patches of flowers. From pink roses to bluebells
and lilies, spring’s fleeting treasure was heaped about like piles of rubies, sapphires,
and opals. Their intoxicating aromas attracted hordes of bumblebees. To the right, a
stream chuckled behind a row of bushes, while a pair of squirrels chased each other
around a rock.
At first it looked to Eragon like a place where deer might bed for the night. But as he
continued to stare, he began to pick out paths hidden among the brush and trees; soft
warm light where normally there would be auburn shadows; an odd pattern in the
shapes of the twigs and branches and flowers, so subtle that it nearly escaped
detection—clues that what he saw was not entirely natural. He blinked, and his vision
suddenly shifted as if a lens had been placed over his eyes, resolving everything into
recognizable shapes. Those were paths, aye. And those were flowers, aye. But what
he had taken to be clusters of lumpy, twisted trees were in fact graceful buildings that
grew directly out of the pines.
One tree bulged at the base to form a two-story house before sinking its roots into the
loam. Both stories were hexagonal, although the upper level was half as small as the
first, which gave the house a tiered appearance. The roofs and walls were made of
webbed sheets of wood draped over six thick ridges. Moss and yellow lichen bearded
the eaves and hung over jeweled windows set into each side. The front door was a
mysterious black silhouette recessed under an archway wrought with symbols.
Another house was nestled between three pines, which were joined to it through a
series of curved branches. Reinforced by those flying buttresses, the house rose five
levels, light and airy. Beside it sat a bower woven out of willow and dogwood and
hungwith flameless lanterns disguised as galls.
Each unique building enhanced and complemented its surroundings, blending
seamlessly with the rest of the forest until it was impossible to tell where artifice
ended and nature resumed. The two were in perfect balance. Instead of mastering their
environment, the elves had chosen to accept the world as it was and adapt themselves
to it.
The inhabitants of Ellesméra eventually revealed themselves as a flicker of
movement at the fringe of Eragon’s sight, no more than needles stirring in the breeze.
Then he caught glimpses of hands, a pale face, a sandaled foot, an upraised arm. One
by one, the wary elves stepped into view, their almond eyes fixed upon Saphira, Arya,
and Eragon.
The women wore their hair unbound. It rippled down their backs in waves of silver
and sable braided with fresh blossoms, like a garden waterfall. They all possessed a
delicate, ethereal beauty that belied their unbreakable strength; to Eragon, they
seemed flawless. The men were just as striking, with high cheekbones, finely sculpted
noses, and heavy eyelids. Both sexes were garbed in rustic tunics of green and brown,
fringed with dusky colors of orange, russet, and gold.
The Fair Folk indeed,thought Eragon. He touched his lips in greeting.
As one, the elves bowed from the waist. Then they smiled and laughed with
unrestrained happiness. From within their midst, a woman sang:
Gala O Wyrda brunhvitr,
Abr Berundal vandr-fódhr,
Burthro laufsblädar ekar undir,
Eom kona dauthleikr…
Eragon clapped his hands over his ears, fearing that the melody was a spell like the
one he had heard at Sílthrim, but Arya shook her head and lifted his hands. “It is not
magic.†Then she spoke to her horse, saying, “Gánga.†The stallion nickered and
trotted away. “Release your steeds as well. We have no further need of them and they
deserve to rest in our stables.â€
The songwaxed stronger as Arya proceeded along a cobblestone path set with bits of
green tourmaline, which looped among the hollyhocks and the houses and the trees
before finally crossing a stream. The elves danced around their party as they walked,
flitting here and there as the fancy struck them, laughing, and occasionally leaping up
onto a branch to run over their heads. They praised Saphira with names like
“Longclaws†and “Daughter of Air and Fire†and “StrongOne.â€
Eragon smiled, delighted and enchanted. I could live here, he thought with a sense of
peace. Tucked away in Du Weldenvarden, as much outdoors as in, safe from the rest
of the world… Yes, he liked Ellesméra very much indeed, more than any of the dwarf
cities. He pointed to a dwelling situated within a pine tree and asked Arya, “How is
that done?
“We sing to the forest in the old tongue and give it our strength to grow in the shape
that we desire. All our buildings and tools are made in that manner.â€
The path ended at a net of roots that formed steps, like bare pools of earth. They
climbed to a door embedded within a wall of saplings. Eragon’s heart quickened as
the door swung open, seemingly of its own accord, and revealed a hall of trees.
Hundreds of branches melded together to form the honeycombed ceiling. Below,
twelve chairs were arrayed along each wall.
In them reposed four-and-twenty elf lords and ladies.
Wise and handsome were they, with smooth faces unmarked by age and keen eyes
that gleamed with excitement. They leaned forward, gripping the arms of their chairs,
and stared at Eragon’s group with open wonder and hope. Unlike the other elves, they
had swords belted at their waists—hilts studded with beryls and garnets—and circlets
that adorned their brows.
And at the head of the assembly stood a white pavilion that sheltered a throne of
knotted roots. Queen Islanzadí sat upon it. She was as beautiful as an autumn sunset,
proud and imperious, with two dark eyebrows slanted like upraised wings, lips as
bright and red as holly berries, and midnight hair bound under a diamond diadem. Her
tunic was crimson. Round her hips hung a girdle of braided gold. And clasped at the
hollow of her neck was a velvet cloak that fell to the ground in languid folds. Despite
her imposing countenance, the queen seemed fragile, as if she concealed a great pain.
By her left hand was a curved rod with a chased crosspiece. A brilliant-white raven
perched on it, shuffling impatiently from foot to foot. He cocked his head and
surveyed Eragon with uncanny intelligence, then gave a long, low croak and shrieked,
“Wyrda!†Eragon shivered from the force of that single cracked word.
The door closed behind the six of them as they entered the hall and approached the
queen. Arya knelt on the moss-covered ground and bowed first, then Eragon, Orik,
Lifaen, and Narí. Even Saphira, who had never bowed to anyone, not even Ajihad or
Hrothgar, lowered her head.
Islanzadí stood and descended from the throne, her cloak trailing behind her. She
stopped before Arya, placed trembling hands on her shoulders, and said in a rich
vibrato, “Rise.†Arya did, and the queen scrutinized her face with increasing intensity,
until it seemed as if she were trying to decipher an obscure text.
At last Islanzadí cried out and embraced Arya, saying, “O my daughter, I have
wronged you!â€
QUEEN ISLANZADÃ
Eragon knelt before the queen of the elves and her councilors in a fantastic room
made from the boles of living trees in a near-mythic land, and the only thing that
filled his mind was shock. Arya is a princess! It was fitting in a way—she had always
possessed an air of command—but he bitterly regretted the fact, for it placed another
barrier between them when he would have torn them all away. The knowledge filled
his mouth with the taste of ashes. He remembered Angela’s prophecy that he would
love one of noble birth… and her warning that she could not see if it would end for
good or for ill.
He could feel Saphira’s own surprise, then her amusement. She said, It appears that
we have been traveling in the presence of royalty without knowing it.
Why didn’t she tell us?
Perhaps it would have placed her in greater danger.
“Islanzadí Dröttning,†said Arya formally.
The queen withdrew as if she had been stung and then repeated in the ancient
language, “O my daughter, I have wronged you.†She covered her face. “Ever since
you disappeared, I’ve barely slept or eaten. I was haunted by your fate, and feared that
I would never see you again. Banning you from my presence was the greatest mistake
I have ever made… Can you forgive me?â€
The gathered elves stirred with amazement.
Arya’s response was long in coming, but at last she said, “For seventy years, I have
lived and loved, fought and killed without ever speaking to you, my mother. Our lives
are long, but even so, that is no small span.â€
Islanzadí drew herself upright, lifting her chin. A tremor ran her length. “I cannot
undo the past, Arya, no matter how much I might desire to.â€
“And I cannot forget what I endured.â€
“Nor should you.†Islanzadí clasped her daughter’s hands. “Arya, I love you. You are
my only family. Go if you must, but unless you wish to renounce me, I would be
reconciled with you.â€
For a terrible moment, it seemed as if Arya would not answer, or worse, would reject
the offer. Eragon saw her hesitate and quickly look at her audience. Then she lowered
her eyes and said, “No, Mother. I could not leave.†Islanzadí smiled uncertainly and
embraced her daughter again. This time Arya returned the gesture, and smiles broke
out among the assembled elves.
The white raven hopped on his stand, cackling, “And on the door was graven
evermore, what now became the family lore, Let us never do but to adore! â€
“Hush, Blagden,†said Islanzadí to the raven. “Keep your doggerel to yourself.â€
Breaking free, the queen turned to Eragon and Saphira. “You must excuse me for
being discourteous and ignoring you, our most important guests.â€
Eragon touched his lips and then twisted his right hand over his sternum, as Arya had
taught him. “Islanzadí Dröttning. Atra esterní ono thelduin.†He had no doubt that he
was supposed to speak first.
Islanzadí‘s dark eyes widened. “Atra du evarínya ono varda.â€
“Un atra mor’ranr lífa unin hjarta onr,†replied Eragon, completing the ritual. He
could tell that the elves were caught off guard by his knowledge of their customs. In
his mind, he listened as Saphira repeated his greeting to the queen.
When she finished, Islanzadí asked, “Dragon, what is your name?â€
Saphira.
A flash of recognition appeared in the queen’s expression, but she made no comment
on it. “Welcome to Ellesméra, Saphira. And yours, Rider?â€
“Eragon Shadeslayer, Your Majesty.†This time an audible stir rippled among the
elves seated behind them; even Islanzadí appeared startled.
“You carry a powerful name,†she said softly, “one that we rarely bestow upon our
children… Welcome to Ellesméra, Eragon Shadeslayer. We have waited long for
you.†She moved on to Orik, greeted him, then returned to her throne and draped her
velvet cloak over her arm. “I assume by your presence here, Eragon, so soon after
Saphira’s eggwas captured, and by the ring on your hand and the sword on your hip,
that Brom is dead and that your trainingwith him was incomplete. I wish to hear your
full story, including how Brom fell and how you came to meet my daughter, or how
she met you, as it may be. Then I will hear of your mission here, dwarf, and of your
adventures, Arya, since your ambush in Du Weldenvarden.â€
Eragon had narrated his experiences before, so he had no trouble reiterating them
now for the queen. The few occasions where his memory faltered, Saphira was able to
provide an accurate description of events. In several places, he simply left the telling
to her. When they finished, Eragon retrieved Nasuada’s scroll from his pack and
presented it to Islanzadí.
She took the roll of parchment, broke the red wax seal, and, upon completing the
missive, sighed and briefly closed her eyes. “I see now the true depth of my folly. My
grief would have ended so much sooner if I had not withdrawn our warriors and
ignored Ajihad’s messengers after learning that Arya had been ambushed. I should
have never blamed the Varden for her death. For one so old, I am still far too
foolish…â€
A long silence followed, as no one dared to agree or disagree. Summoning his
courage, Eragon said, “Since Arya has returned alive, will you agree to help the
Varden, like before? Nasuada cannot succeed otherwise, and I am pledged to her
cause.â€
“My quarrel with the Varden is as dust in the wind,†said Islanzadí. “Fear not; we
will assist them as we once did, and more, because of you and their victory over the
Urgals.†She leaned forward on one arm. “Will you give me Brom’s ring, Eragon?â€
Without hesitation, he pulled it off his finger and offered it to the queen, who plucked
it from his palm with her slim fingers. “You should not have worn this, Eragon, as it
was not meant for you. However, because of the aid you have rendered the Varden
and my family, I now name you Elf Friend and bestow this ring, Aren, upon you, so
that all elves, wherever you go, will know that you are to be trusted and helped.â€
Eragon thanked her and returned the ring to his finger, acutely aware of the queen’s
gaze, which remained upon him with disturbing perception, studying and analyzing.
He felt as if she knew everything that he might say or do. She said, “Such tidings as
yours, we have not heard the like of in Du Weldenvarden for many a year. We are
accustomed to a slower way of life here than the rest of Alagaësia, and it troubles me
that so much could occur so swiftly without word of it reachingmy ear.â€
“And what of my training?†Eragon snatched a furtive glance at the seated elves,
wondering if any of them could be Togira Ikonoka, the beingwho had reached into
his mind and freed him of Durza’s foul influence after the battle in Farthen Dûr—and
who had also encouraged Eragon to travel to Ellesméra.
“It will begin in the fullness of time. Yet I fear that instructing you is futile so long as
your infirmity persists. Unless you can overcome the Shade’s magic, you will be
reduced to no more than a figurehead. You may still be useful, but only as a shadow
of the hope that we have nurtured for over a century.†Islanzadí spoke without
reproach, yet her words struck Eragon like hammer blows. He knew that she was
right. “Your situation is not your fault, and it pains me to voice such things, but you
must understand the gravity of your disability… I am sorry.â€
Then Islanzadí addressed Orik: “It has been long since one of your race entered our
halls, dwarf. Eragon-finiarel has explained your presence, but do you have aught to
add?â€
“Only royal greetings from my king, Hrothgar, and a plea, now unneeded, for you to
resume contact with the Varden. Beyond that, I am here to see that the pact that Brom
forged between you and the humans is honored.â€
“We keep our promises whether we utter them in this language or in the ancient
language. I accept Hrothgar’s greetings and return them in kind.†Finally, as Eragon
was sure she had longed to do since they first arrived, Islanzadí looked at Arya and
asked, “Now, daughter, what befell you?â€
Arya began to speak in a slow monotone, first of her capture and then of her long
imprisonment and torture in Gil’ead. Saphira and Eragon had deliberately avoided the
details of her abuse, but Arya herself seemed to have no difficulty recountingwhat
she had been subjected to. Her emotionless descriptions roused the same rage within
Eragon as when he first saw her wounds. The elves remained completely silent
throughout Arya’s tale, although they gripped their swords and their faces hardened
into razor lines of cold anger. A single tear rolled down Islanzadí‘s cheek.
Afterward, a lithe elf lord paced along the mossy sward between the chairs. “I know
that I speak for us all, Arya Dröttningu, when I say that my heart burns with sorrow
for your ordeal. It is a crime beyond apology, mitigation, or reparation, and
Galbatorixmust be punished for it. Also, we are in your debt for keeping the locations
of our cities hidden from the Shade. Few of us could have withstood him for so long.â€
“Thank you, Däthedr-vor.â€
Now Islanzadí spoke, and her voice rang like a bell among the trees. “Enough. Our
guests wait tired on their feet, and we have spoken of evil things for far too long. I
will not have this occasion marred by lingering on past injuries.†A glorious smile
brightened her expression. “My daughter has returned, a dragon and her Rider have
appeared, and I will see us celebrate in the proper fashion!†She stood, tall and
magnificent in her crimson tunic, and clapped her hands. At the sound, the chairs and
pavilion were showered with hundreds of lilies and roses that appeared twenty feet
above their heads and drifted down like colorful snowflakes, suffusing the air with
their heady fragrance.
She didn’t use the ancient language, observed Eragon.
He noticed that, while everyone was occupied by the flowers, Islanzadí touched Arya
gently on the shoulder and murmured, almost too softly to hear, “You never would
have suffered so if you had taken my counsel. I was right to oppose your decision to
accept the yawë.â€
“It was my decision to make.â€
The queen paused, then nodded and extended her arm. “Blagden.â€With a flutter of
wings, the raven flew from his perch and landed on her left shoulder. The entire
assembly bowed as Islanzadí proceeded to the end of the hall and threw open the door
to the hundreds of elves outside, whereupon she made a brief declaration in the
ancient language that Eragon did not understand. The elves burst into cheers and
began to rush about.
“What did she say?†whispered Eragon to Narí.
Narí smiled. “To break open our finest casks and light the cook-fires, for tonight shall
be a night of feast and song. Come!†He grabbed Eragon’s hand and pulled him after
the queen as she threaded her way between the shaggy pines and through banks of
cool ferns. During their time indoors, the sun had dropped low in the sky, drenching
the forest with an amber light that clung to the trees and plants like a layer of
glistering oil.
You do realize, don’t you,said Saphira, that the king Lifaen mentioned, Evandar, must
be Arya’s father?
Eragon almost stumbled. You’re right… And that means he was killed by either
Galbatorix or the Forsworn.
Circles within circles.
They stopped on the crest of a small hill, where a team of elves had set out a long
trestle table and chairs. All around them, the forest hummed with activity. As evening
approached, the cheery glow of fires appeared scattered throughout Ellesméra,
including a bonfire near the table.
Someone handed Eragon a goblet made of the same odd wood that he had noticed in
Ceris. He drank the cup’s clear liqueur and gasped as it blazed down his throat. It
tasted like mulled cider mixed with mead. The potion made the tips of his fingers and
ears tingle and gave him a marvelous sense of clarity. “What is this?†he asked Narí.
Narí laughed. “Faelnirv?We distill it from crushed elderberries and spun
moonbeams. If he needs must, a strongman can travel for three days on naught else.â€
Saphira, you have to taste this. She sniffed the goblet, then opened her mouth and
allowed him to pour the rest of the faelnirv down her throat. Her eyes widened and
her tail twitched.
Now that’s a treat! Is there more?
Before Eragon could reply, Orik stomped over to them. “Daughter to the queen,†he
grumbled, shaking his head. “I wish that I could tell Hrothgar and Nasuada. They’d
want to know.â€
Islanzadí seated herself in a high-backed chair and clapped her hands once again.
From within the city came a quartet of elves bearingmusical instruments. Two had
harps of cherrywood, the third a set of reed pipes, and the fourth nothing but her
voice, which she immediately put to use with a playful song that danced about their
ears.
Eragon caught only every third word or so, but what he did understand made him
grin. It was the story of a stagwho could not drink at a pond because a magpie kept
harassing him.
As Eragon listened, his gaze wandered and alighted upon a small girl prowling
behind the queen. When he looked again, he saw that her shaggy hair was not silver,
like many of the elves, but bleached white with age, and that her face was creased and
lined like a dry, withered apple. She was no elf, nor dwarf, nor—Eragon felt—even
human. She smiled at him, and he glimpsed rows of sharp teeth.
When the singer finished, and the pipes and lutes filled the silence, Eragon found
himself approached by scores of elves who wished to meet him and—more
importantly, he sensed—Saphira.
The elves presented themselves by bowing softly and touching their lips with their
first and middle fingers, to which Eragon responded in kind, alongwith endless
repetitions of their greeting in the ancient language. They plied Eragon with polite
questions about his exploits, but they reserved the bulk of their conversation for
Saphira.
At first Eragon was content to let Saphira talk, since this was the first place where
anyone was interested in having a discussion just with her. But he soon grew annoyed
at being ignored; he had become used to having people listen when he spoke. He
grinned ruefully, dismayed that he had come to rely on people’s attention so much
since he had joined the Varden, and forced himself to relax and enjoy the celebration.
Before long the scent of food permeated the glade and elves appeared carrying
platters piled with delicacies. Aside from loaves of warm bread and stacks of small,
round honeycakes, the dishes were made entirely of fruit, vegetables, and berries. The
berries predominated; they were in everything from blueberry soup to raspberry sauce
to thimbleberry jelly. A bowl of sliced apples dripped with syrup and sprinkled with
wild strawberries sat beside a mushroom pie stuffed with spinach, thyme, and
currants.
No meat was to be found, not even fish or fowl, which still puzzled Eragon. In
Carvahall and elsewhere in the Empire, meat was a symbol of status and luxury. The
more gold you had, the more often you could afford steak and veal. Even the minor
nobility ate meat with every meal. To do otherwise would indicate a deficit in their
coffers. And yet the elves did not subscribe to this philosophy, despite their obvious
wealth and the ease with which they could hunt with magic.
The elves rushed to the table with an enthusiasm that surprised Eragon. Soon all were
seated: Islanzadí at the head of the table with Blagden, the raven; Däthedr to her left;
Arya and Eragon by her right hand; Orik across from them; and then all the rest of the
elves, includingNarí and Lifaen. No chair was at the far end of the table, only a huge
carved plate for Saphira.
As the meal progressed, everything dissolved around Eragon into a blur of talk and
mirth. He was so caught up in the festivities, he lost track of time, aware of only the
laughter and the foreign words swirling over his head and the warm glow left in his
stomach by the faelnirv. The elusive harp music sighed and whispered at the edges of
his hearing and sent shivers of excitement down his side. Occasionally, he found
himself distracted by the lazy slit-eyed stare of the woman-child, which she kept
focused on him with single-minded intensity, even when eating.
During a lull in the conversation, Eragon turned toward Arya, who had uttered no
more than a dozen words. He said nothing, only looked and wondered who she really
was.
Arya stirred. “Not even Ajihad knew.â€
“What?â€
“Outside of Du Weldenvarden, I told no one of my identity. Brom was aware of it—
he first met me here—but he kept it a secret at my request.â€
Eragon wondered if she was explaining to him out of a sense of duty or because she
felt guilty for deceiving him and Saphira. “Brom once said that what elvesdidn’t say
was often more important that what they did.â€
“He understood us well.â€
“Why, though? Did it matter if anyone knew?â€
This time Arya hesitated. “When I left Ellesméra, I had no desire to be reminded of
my position. Nor did it seem relevant to my task with the Varden and dwarves. It had
nothing to do with who I became… with who I am.†She glanced at the queen.
“You could have told Saphira and me.â€
Arya seemed to bridle at the reproach in his voice. “I had no reason to suspect that
my standingwith Islanzadí had improved, and telling you that would have changed
nothing. My thoughts are my own, Eragon.†He flushed at her implied meaning:Why
shouldshe— who was a diplomat, a princess, an elf, and older than both his father and
grandfather, whoever they were—confide in him, a sixteen-year-old human?
“At least,†he muttered, “you made up with your mother.â€
She smiled oddly. “Did I have a choice?â€
At that moment, Blagden jumped from Islanzadí‘s shoulder and strutted down the
middle of the table, bobbing his head left and right in a mocking bow. He stopped
before Saphira, uttered a hoarse cough, and then croaked:
Dragons, like wagons,
Have tongues.
Dragons, like flagons,
Have necks.
But while two hold beer,
The other eats deer!
The elves froze with mortified expressions while they waited for Saphira’s reaction.
After a long silence, Saphira looked up from her quince pie and released a puff of
smoke that enveloped Blagden. And little birds too, she said, projecting her thoughts
so that everyone could hear. The elves finally laughed as Blagden staggered back,
cawing indignantly and flapping his wings to clear the air.
“I must apologize for Blagden’s wretched verses,†said Islanzadí. “He has ever had a
saucy tongue, despite our attempts to tame it.â€
Apology accepted, said Saphira calmly, and returned to her pie.
“Where does he come from?†Eragon asked, eager to return to more cordial footing
with Arya but also genuinely curious.
“Blagden,†said Arya, “once saved my father’s life. Evandar was fighting an Urgal
when he stumbled and lost his sword. Before the Urgal could strike, a raven flew at
him and pecked out his eyes. No one knows why the bird did it, but the distraction
allowed Evandar to regain his balance and so win the battle. My father was always
generous, so he thanked the raven by blessing him with spells for intelligence and
long life. However, the magic had two effects that he did not foresee: Blagden lost all
color in his feathers and he gained the ability to predict certain events.â€
“He can see into the future?†asked Eragon, startled.
“See? No. But perhaps he can sense what is to come. In any case, he always speaks in
riddles, most of which are a fair bit of nonsense. Just remember that if Blagden ever
comes to you and tells you something that is not a joke or a pun, you would do well to
heed his words.â€
Once the meal had concluded, Islanzadí stood—causing a flurry of activity as
everyone hastened to do likewise—and said, “It is late, I am tired, and I would return
to my bower. Accompany me, Saphira and Eragon, and I will show you where you
may sleep tonight.†The queen motioned with one hand to Arya, then left the table.
Arya followed.
As Eragon stepped around the table with Saphira, he paused by the woman-child,
caught by her feral eyes. All the elements of her appearance, from her eyes to her
shaggy hair to her white fangs, triggered Eragon’s memory. “You’re a werecat, aren’t
you?†She blinked once and then bared her teeth in a dangerous smile. “I met one of
your kin, Solembum, in Teirm and in Farthen Dûr.â€
Her grin widened. “Aye. A good one he is. Humans bore me, buthe finds it amusing
to travel with the witch Angela.†Then her gaze switched to Saphira and she uttered a
throaty half-growl, half-purr of appreciation.
What is your name?asked Saphira.
“Names be powerful things in the heart of Du Weldenvarden, dragon, yes they are.
However… among the elves, I am known as TheWatcher and as Quickpaw and as
The Dream Dancer, but you may know me as Maud.†She tossed her mane of stiff
white bangs. “You’d better catch up with the queen, younglings; she does not take
lightly to fools or laggards.â€
“It was a pleasure meeting you, Maud,†said Eragon. He bowed, and Saphira inclined
her head. Eragon glanced at Orik, wonderingwhere the dwarf would be taken, and
then pursued Islanzadí.
They overtook the queen just as she reached the base of a tree. The trunk was ridged
by a delicate staircase that spiraled up to a series of globular rooms cupped and
suspended in the tree’s crown by a spray of branches.
Islanzadí lifted an elegant hand and pointed at the eyrie. “You needs must fly there,
Saphira. Our stairs were not grown with dragons in mind.†Then she spoke to Eragon:
“This is where the leader of the Dragon Riders would dwell while in Ellesméra. I give
it to you now, for you are the rightful heir to that title… It is your inheritance.†Before
Eragon could thank her, the queen swept past and departed with Arya, who held his
gaze for a longmoment before vanishing deeper into the city.
Shall we see what accommodations they’ve provided us with? asked Saphira. She
jumped into the air and sailed around the tree in a tight circle, balancing on one wing
tip, perpendicular to the ground.
As Eragon took the first step, he saw that Islanzadí had spoken true; the stairs were
one with the tree. The bark beneath his feet was smooth and flat from the many elves
who had traversed it, but it was still part of the trunk, as were the twisting cobweb
banisters by his side and the curved railing that slid under his right hand.
Because the stairs had been designed with the elves’ strength in mind, they were
steeper than Eragon was used to, and his calves and thighs soon began to burn. He
was breathing so hard when he reached the top—after climbing through a trapdoor in
the floor of one of the rooms—he had to put his hands on his knees and bend over to
pant. Once recovered, he straightened and examined his surroundings.
He stood in a circular vestibule with a pedestal in the center, out of which spiraled a
sculpture of two pale hands and forearms that twined around each other without
touching. Three screen doors led from the vestibule—one to an austere dining room
that might hold ten people at the most, one to a closet with an empty hollow in the
floor that Eragon could think of no discernible use for, and the last to a bedroom
overlooking, and open to, the wide expanse of Du Weldenvarden.
Taking a lantern from its hook in the ceiling, Eragon entered the bedroom, creating a
host of shadows that jumped and swirled like madcap dancers. A teardrop gap large
enough for a dragon pierced the outer wall. Inside the room was a bed, situated so that
he could watch the sky and the moon while lying on his back; a fireplace made of
gray wood that felt as hard and cold as steel when he touched it, as if the timber had
been compressed to unsurpassed density; and a huge low-rimmed bowl set in the floor
and lined with soft blankets where Saphira could sleep.
Even as he watched, she swooped down and landed on the edge of the opening, her
scales twinkling like a constellation of blue stars. Behind her, the last rays of the sun
streaked across the forest, painting the various ridges and hills with a hazy amber that
made the needles glow like hot iron and chased the shadows back toward the violet
horizon. From their height, the city appeared as a series of gaps in the voluminous
canopy, islands of calm in a restless ocean. Ellesméra’s true scope was now revealed;
it extended for several miles to the west and to the north.
I respect the Riders even more if this is how Vrael normally lived,said Eragon. It’s
much simpler than I expected. The entire structure rocked slightly in response to a
breath of wind.
Saphira sniffed her blankets. We have yet to see Vroengard, she cautioned, although
he sensed that she agreed with him.
As Eragon closed the screen to the bedroom, he saw something in the corner that he
had missed during his first inspection: a spiral staircase that wound up a dark wood
chimney. Thrusting the lantern before him, he cautiously ascended, one step at a time.
After about twenty feet, he emerged in a study furnished with a writing desk—stocked
with quills, ink, and paper, but no parchment—and another padded roost for a dragon
to curl up on. The far wall also had an opening to fly through.
Saphira, come see this.
How?she asked.
Through the outside. Eragon winced as layers of bark splintered and cracked under
Saphira’s claws while she crawled out of the bedroom and up the side of the
compound to the study. Satisfied? he asked when she arrived. Saphira raked him with
her sapphire eyes, then proceeded to scrutinize the walls and furniture.
I wonder,she said, how you are supposed to stay warm when the rooms are open to
the elements?
I don’t know. Eragon examined the walls on either side of the breach, running his
hands over abstract patterns that had been coaxed from the tree by the elves’ songs.
He stopped when he felt a vertical ridge embedded in the bark. He tugged on it, and a
diaphanous membrane unspooled from within the wall. Pulling it across the portal, he
found a second groove to hold the hem of the cloth. As soon as it was fastened, the air
thickened and became noticeably hotter. There’s your answer, he said. He released
the cloth and it lashed back and forth as it rewound itself.
When they returned to the bedroom, Eragon unpacked while Saphira coiled upon her
dais. He carefully arranged his shield, bracers, greaves, coif, and helm, then stripped
off his tunic and removed his shirt of leather-backed mail. He sat bare-chested on the
bed and studied the oiled links, struck by their similarity to Saphira’s scales.
We made it, he said, bemused.
A long journey… but yes, we made it. We’re lucky that misfortune did not strike upon
the road.
He nodded. Now we’ll find out if it was worth it. Sometimes I wonder if our time
would have been better spent helping the Varden.
Eragon! You know that we need further instruction. Brom would have wanted it.
Besides, Ellesméra and Islanzadí were certainly worth coming all this way to see.
Maybe. Finally, he asked, What do you make of all this?
Saphira parted her jaws slightly to show her teeth. I don’t know. The elves keep more
secrets than even Brom, and they can do things with magic that I never thought
possible. I have no idea what methods they use to grow their trees into such shapes,
nor how Islanzadí summoned those flowers. It is beyond my ken.
Eragon was relieved that he was not the only one who felt overwhelmed. And Arya?
What about her?
You know, who she really is.
She hasn’t changed, only your perception of her. Saphira chuckled deep in her throat,
where it sounded like stones grinding against each other, and rested her head on her
two front feet.
The stars were bright in the sky now, and the soft hoots of owls drifted through
Ellesméra. All the world was calm and silent as it slumbered away the liquid night.
Eragon clambered underneath his downy sheets and reached to shutter the lantern,
then stopped, his hand an inch from the latch. Here he was in the elves’ capital, over a
hundred feet in the air, lying in what used to be Vrael’s bed.
The thought was too much for him.
Rolling upright, he grabbed the lantern with one hand, Zar’roc with the other, and
surprised Saphira by crawling onto her dais and snuggling against her warm side. She
hummed and dropped a velvet wing over him as he extinguished the light and closed
his eyes.
Together they slept long and deep in Ellesméra.
OUT OF THE PAST
Eragon woke at dawn well rested. He tapped Saphira’s ribs, and she lifted her wing.
Running his hands through his hair, he walked to the room’s precipice and leaned
against one side, bark rough against his shoulder. Below, the forest sparkled like a
field of diamonds as each tree reflected the morning light with a thousand thousand
drops of dew.
He jumped with surprise as Saphira dove past him, twisting like an auger toward the
canopy before she pulled up and circled through the sky, roaringwith joy. Morning,
little one. He smiled, happy that she was happy.
He opened the screen to their bedroom, where he found two trays of food—mostly
fruit—that had been placed by the lintel during the night. By the trays was a bundle of
clothes with a paper note pinned to it. Eragon had difficulty deciphering the flowing
script, since he had not read for over a month and had forgotten some of the letters,
but at last he understood that it said:
Greetings, Saphira Bjartskular and Eragon Shadeslayer.
I, Bellaen of House Miolandra, do humble myself and apologize to you, Saphira, for
this unsatisfactory meal. Elves do not hunt, and no meat is to be had in Ellesméra, nor
in any of our cities. If you wish, you can do as the dragons of old were wont, and
catch what you may in Du Weldenvarden. We only ask that you leave your kills in the
forest so that our air and water remain untainted by blood.
Eragon, these clothes are for you. They were woven by Niduen of Islanzadí‘s house
and are her gift to you.
May good fortune rule over you,
Peace live in your heart,
And the stars watch over you.
Bellaen du Hljödhr
When Eragon told Saphira the message, she said, It does not matter; I won’t need to
eat for a while after yesterday’s meal. However, she did snap up a few seed cakes.
Just so that I don’t appear rude, she explained.
After Eragon finished breakfast, he hauled the bundle of clothes onto his bed and
carefully unfolded them, finding two full-length tunics of russet trimmed with
thimbleberry green, a set of creamy leggings to wrap his calves in, and three pairs of
socks so soft, they felt like liquid when he pulled them through his hands. The quality
of the fabric shamed the weaving of the women of Carvahall as well as the dwarf
clothes he wore now.
Eragon was grateful for the new raiment. His own tunic and breeches were sadly
travel-worn from their weeks exposed to the rain and sun since Farthen Dûr.
Stripping, he donned one of the luxurious tunics, savoring its downy texture.
He had just laced on his boots when someone knocked on the screen to the bedroom.
“Come in,†he said, reaching for Zar’roc.
Orik poked his head inside, then cautiously entered, testing the floor with his feet. He
eyed the ceiling. “Give me a cave any day instead of a bird’s nest like this. How fared
your night, Eragon? Saphira?â€
“Well enough. And yours?†said Eragon.
“I slept like a rock.†The dwarf chuckled at his own jest, then his chin sank into his
beard and he fingered the head of his ax. “I see you’ve eaten, so I’ll ask you to
accompany me. Arya, the queen, and a host of other elves await you at the base of the
tree.†He fixed Eragon with a testy gaze. “Something is going on that they haven’t
told us about. I’m not sure what they want from you, but it’s important. Islanzadí‘s as
tense as a cornered wolf… I thought I’d warn you beforehand.â€
Eragon thanked him, then the two of them descended by way of the stairs, while
Saphira glided to earth. They were met on the ground by Islanzadí arrayed in a mantle
of ruffled swan feathers, which were like winter snow heaped upon a cardinal’s
breast. She greeted them and said, “Follow me.â€
Her wending course took the group to the edge of Ellesméra, where the buildings
were few and the paths were faint from disuse. At the base of a wooded knoll,
Islanzadí stopped and said in a terrible voice, “Before we go any farther, the three of
you must swear in the ancient language that you will never speak to outsiders of what
you are about to see, not without permission from me, my daughter, or whoever may
succeed us to the throne.â€
“Why should I gagmyself?†demanded Orik.
Why indeed?asked Saphira. Do you not trust us?
“It is not a matter of trust, but of safety. We must protect this knowledge at all
costs—it’s our greatest advantage over Galbatorix—and if you are bound by the
ancient language, you will never willingly reveal our secret. You came to supervise
Eragon’s training, Orik-vodhr. Unless you give me your word, you may as well return
to Farthen Dûr.â€
At last Orik said, “I believe that you mean no harm to dwarves or to the Varden, else
I would never agree. And I hold you to the honor of your hall and clan that this isn’t a
ploy to deceive us. Tell me what to say.â€
While the queen tutored Orik in the correct pronunciation of the desired phrase,
Eragon asked Saphira, Should I do it?
Do we have a choice? Eragon remembered that Arya had asked the same question
yesterday, and he began to have an inkling of what she had meant: the queen left no
room to maneuver.
When Orik finished, Islanzadí looked expectantly at Eragon. He hesitated, then
delivered the oath, as did Saphira. “Thank you,†said Islanzadí. “Now we may
proceed.â€
At the top of the knoll, the trees were replaced by a bed of red clover that ran several
yards to the edge of a stone cliff. The cliff extended a league in either direction and
dropped a thousand feet to the forest below, which pooled outward until it merged
with the sky. It felt as if they stood on the edge of the world, staring across an endless
expanse of forest.
I know this place,realized Eragon, remembering his vision of Togira Ikonoka.
Thud. The air shivered from the strength of the concussion. Thud. Another dull blow
made Eragon’s teeth chatter. Thud. He jammed his fingers in his ears, trying to protect
them from the painful spikes in pressure. The elves stood motionless. Thud. The
clover bent under a sudden gust of wind.
Thud. From below the edge of the cliff rose a huge gold dragon with a Rider on its
back.
CONVICTION
Roran glared at Horst.
They were in Baldor’s room. Roran was propped upright in bed, listening as the
smith said, “What did you expect me to do?We couldn’t attack once you fainted.
Besides, the men were in no state to fight. Can’t blame them either. I nearly bit off my
tongue when I saw those monsters.†Horst shook his wild mane of hair. “We’ve been
dragged into one of the old tales, Roran, and I don’t like it one bit.†Roran retained his
stony expression. “Look, you can kill the soldiers if you want, but you have to get
your strength back first. You’ll have plenty of volunteers; people trust you in battle,
especially after you defeated the soldiers here last night.â€When Roran remained
silent, Horst sighed, patted him on his good shoulder, and left the room, closing the
door behind him.
Roran did not even blink. So far in his life, he had only truly cared about three things:
his family, his home in Palancar Valley, and Katrina. His family had been annihilated
last year. His farm had been smashed and burned, though the land remained, which
was all that really mattered.
But now Katrina was gone.
A choked sob escaped past the iron lump in his throat. He was faced with a quandary
that tore at his very essence: the only way to rescue Katrina would be to somehow
pursue the Ra’zac and leave Palancar Valley, yet he could not abandon Carvahall to
the soldiers. Nor could he forget Katrina.
My heart or my home,he thought bitterly. They were worthless without each other. If
he killed the soldiers it would only prevent the Ra’zac—and perhaps Katrina—from
returning. Anyway, the slaughter would be pointless if reinforcements were nearby,
for their arrival would surely signal Carvahall’s demise.
Roran clenched his teeth as a fresh burst of pain emanated from his bound shoulder.
He closed his eyes. I hope Sloan gets eaten like Quimby. No fate could be too terrible
for that traitor. Roran cursed him with the blackest oaths he knew.
Even if I were free to leave Carvahall, how could I find the Ra’zac? Who would know
where they live? Who would dare inform on Galbatorix’s servants? Despair rolled
over him as he wrestled with the problem. He imagined himself in one of the great
cities of the Empire, searching aimlessly among dirty buildings and hordes of
strangers for a hint, a glimpse, a taste of his love.
It was hopeless.
A river of tears followed as he doubled over, groaning from the strength of his agony
and fear. He rocked back and forth, blind to anything but the desolation of the world.
An endless amount of time reduced Roran’s sobs to weak gasps of protest. He wiped
his eyes and forced himself to take a long, shuddering breath. He winced. His lungs
felt like they were filled with shards of glass.
I have to think, he told himself.
He leaned against the wall and—through the sheer strength of his will—began to
gradually subdue each of his unruly emotions, wrestling them into submission to the
one thing that could save him from insanity: reason. His neck and shoulders trembled
from the violence of his efforts.
Once he regained control, Roran carefully arranged his thoughts, like a master
craftsman organizing his tools into precise rows. There must be a solution hidden
amid my knowledge, if only I’m creative enough.
He could not track the Ra’zac through the air. That much was clear. Someone would
have to tell him where to find them, and of all the people he could ask, the Varden
probably knew the most. However, they would be just as hard to find as the
desecrators, and he could not waste time searching for them. Although… A small
voice in his head reminded him of the rumors he had heard from trappers and traders
that Surda secretly supported the Varden.
Surda. The country lay at the bottom of the Empire, or so Roran had been told, as he
had never seen a map of Alagaësia. Under ideal conditions, it would take several
weeks to reach on horse, longer if he had to evade soldiers. Of course, the swiftest
mode of transportation would be to sail south along the coast, but that would mean
having to travel all the way to the Toark River and then to Teirm to find a ship. It
would take far too long. And he still might be apprehended by soldiers.
“If, could, would, might, †he muttered, repeatedly clenching his left hand. North of
Teirm, the only port he knew of was Narda, but to reach it, he would have to cross the
entire width of the Spine—a feat unheard of, even for the trappers.
Roran swore quietly. The conjecture was pointless. I should be trying to save
Carvahall, not desert it. The problem was, he had already determined that the village
and all who remained in it were doomed. Tears gathered at the corners of his eyes
again. All who remain…
What… what if everyone in Carvahall accompanied me to Narda and then to Surda?
He would achieve both his desires simultaneously.
The audacity of the idea stunned him.
It was heresy, blasphemy, to think that he could convince the farmers to abandon
their fields and the merchants their shops… and yet… and yet what was the
alternative but slavery or death? The Varden were the only group that would harbor
fugitives of the Empire, and Roran was sure that the rebels would be delighted to have
a village’s worth of recruits, especially ones who had proved themselves in battle.
Also, by bringing the villagers to them, he would earn the Varden’s confidence, so
that they would trust him with the location of the Ra’zac. Maybe they can explain why
Galbatorix is so desperate to capture me.
If the plan were to succeed, though, it would have to be implemented before the new
troops reached Carvahall, which left only a few days—if that—to arrange the
departure of some three hundred people. The logistics were frightening to consider.
Roran knew that mere reason could not persuade anyone to leave; it would require
messianic zeal to stir people’s emotions, to make themfeel in the depths of their hearts
the need to relinquish the trappings of their identities and lives. Nor would it be
enough to simply instill fear—for he knew that fear often made those in peril fight
harder. Rather, he had to instill a sense of purpose and destiny, to make the villagers
believe, as he did, that joining the Varden and resistingGalbatorix’s tyranny was the
noblest action in the world.
It required passion that could not be intimidated by hardship, deterred by suffering, or
quenched by death.
In his mind, Roran saw Katrina standing before him, pale and ghostly with solemn
amber eyes. He remembered the heat of her skin, the mulled scent of her hair, and
what it felt like to be with her under the cover of darkness. Then in a long line behind
her appeared his family, friends, and everyone he had known in Carvahall, both dead
and alive. If not for Eragon… and me… the Ra’zac would have never come here. I
must rescue the village from the Empire as surely as I must rescue Katrina from those
desecrators.
Drawing upon the strength of his vision, Roran rose from bed, causing his maimed
shoulder to burn and sting. He staggered and leaned against a wall. Will I ever regain
the use of my right arm ? He waited for the pain to subside. When it did not, he bared
his teeth, shoved himself upright, and marched from the room.
Elain was folding towels in the hallway. She cried out with amazement. “Roran!
What are you—â€
“Come,†he growled, lurching past.
With a worried expression, Baldor stepped out of a doorway. “Roran, you shouldn’t
be walking around. You lost too much blood. I’ll help—â€
“Come.â€
Roran heard them follow as he descended the curved stairs toward the entrance of the
house, where Horst and Albriech stood talking. They looked up with astonishment.
“Come.â€
He ignored the babble of questions, opened the front door, and stepped into the
evening’s faded light. Above, an imposing plume of clouds was laced with gold and
purple.
Leading the small group, Roran stomped to the edge of Carvahall—repeating his
monosyllabic message whenever he passed a man or woman—pulled a torch mounted
on a pole from the graspingmud, wheeled about, and retraced his path to the center of
town. There he stabbed the pole between his feet, then raised his left arm and roared,
“COME!â€
The village rangwith his voice. He continued the summons as people drifted from
the houses and shadowed alleyways and began to gather around him. Many were
curious, others sympathetic, some awed, and some angry. Again and again, Roran’s
chant echoed in the valley. Loring arrived with his sons in tow. From the opposite
direction came Birgit, Delwin, and Fisk with his wife, Isold. Morn and Tara left the
tavern together and joined the crush of spectators.
When most of Carvahall stood before him, Roran fell silent, tightening his left fist
until his fingernails cut into his palm. Katrina. Raising his hand, he opened it and
showed everyone the crimson tears that dripped down his arm. “This,†he said, “is my
pain. Look well, for it will be yours unless we defeat the curse wanton fate has set
upon us. Your friends and family will be bound in chains, destined for slavery in
foreign lands, or slain before your eyes, hewn open by soldiers’ merciless blades.
Galbatorixwill sow our land with salt so that it lies forever fallow. This I have seen.
This I know.†He paced like a caged wolf, glowering and swinging his head. He had
their attention. Now he had to stoke them into a frenzy to match his own.
“My father was killed by the desecrators. My cousin has fled. My farm was razed.
And my bride-to-be was kidnapped by her own father, who murdered Byrd and
betrayed us all! Quimby eaten, the hay barn burned alongwith Fisk’s and Delwin’s
houses. Parr, Wyglif, Ged, Bardrick, Farold, Hale, Garner, Kelby, Melkolf, Albem,
and Elmund: all slain. Many of you have been injured, like me, so that you can no
longer support your family. Isn’t it enough that we toil every day of our lives to eke a
living from the earth, subjected to the whims of nature? Isn’t it enough that we are
forced to pay Galbatorix’s iron taxes, without also having to endure these senseless
torments?†Roran laughed maniacally, howling at the sky and hearing the madness in
his own voice. No one stirred in the crowd.
“I know now the true nature of the Empire and of Galbatorix; they areevil. Galbatorix
is an unnatural blight on the world. He destroyed the Riders and the greatest peace
and prosperity we ever had. His servants are foul demons birthed in some ancient pit.
But is Galbatorix content to grind us beneath his heel? No! He seeks to poison all of
Alagaësia, to suffocate us with his cloak of misery. Our children and their
descendants shall live in the shadow of his darkness until the end of time, reduced to
slaves, worms, vermin for him to torture at his pleasure. Unless…â€
Roran stared into the villagers’ wide eyes, conscious of his control over them. No one
had ever dared say what he was about to. He let his voice rasp low in his throat:
“Unless we have the courage to resist evil.
“We’ve fought the soldiers and the Ra’zac, but it means nothing if we die alone and
forgotten—or are carted away as chattel. We cannot stay here, and I won’t allow
Galbatorix to obliterate everything that’s worth living for. I would rather have my
eyes plucked out and my hands chopped off than see him triumph! I choose to fight! I
choose to step from my grave and let my enemies bury themselves in it!
“I choose to leave Carvahall.
“I will cross the Spine and take a ship from Narda down to Surda, where I will join
the Varden, who have struggled for decades to free us of this oppression.†The
villagers looked shocked at the idea. “But I do not wish to go alone. Come with me.
Come with me and seize this chance to forge a better life for yourselves. Throw off
the shackles that bind you here.†Roran pointed at his listeners, moving his finger
from one target to the next. “A hundred years from now, what names shall drop from
the bards’ lips? Horst… Birgit… Kiselt… Thane; they will recite our sagas. They will
sing â€The Epic of Carvahall,“ for we were the only village brave enough to defy the
Empire.â€
Tears of pride flooded Roran’s eyes. “What could be more noble than cleansing
Galbatorix’s stain from Alagaësia? No more would we live in fear of having our
farms destroyed, or being killed and eaten. The grain we harvest would be ours to
keep, save for any extra that we might send as a gift to the rightful king. The rivers
and streams would run thick with gold. We would be safe and happy and fat!
“It is our destiny.â€
Roran held his hand before his face and slowly closed his fingers over the bleeding
wounds. He stood hunched over his injured arm—crucified by the scores of gazes—
and waited for a response to his speech. None came. At last he realized that
theywanted him to continue; they wanted to hear more about the cause and the future
he had portrayed.
Katrina.
Then as darkness gathered around the radius of his torch, Roran drew himself upright
and resumed speaking. He hid nothing, only labored to make them understand his
thoughts and feelings, so they too could share the sense of purpose that drove him.
“Our age is at an end. We must step forward and cast our lot with the Varden if we
and our children are to live free.†He spoke with rage and honeyed tones in equal
amount, but always with a fervid conviction that kept his audience entranced.
When his store of images was exhausted, Roran looked into the faces of his friends
and neighbors and said, “I march in two days. Accompany me if you wish, but I go
regardless.†He bowed his head and stepped out of the light.
Overhead, the waningmoon glowed behind a lens of clouds. A slight breeze wafted
through Carvahall. An iron weather vane creaked on a roof as it swung in the
direction of the current.
From within the crowd, Birgit picked her way into the light, clutching the folds of her
dress to avoid tripping. With a subdued expression, she adjusted her shawl. “Today
we saw an…†She stopped, shook her head, and laughed in an embarrassed way. “I
find it hard to speak after Roran. I don’t like his plan, but I believe that it’s necessary,
although for a different reason: I would hunt down the Ra’zac and avenge my
husband’s death. I will go with him. And I will take my children.†She too stepped
away from the torch.
A silent minute passed, then Delwin and his wife, Lenna, advanced with their arms
around each other. Lenna looked at Birgit and said, “I understand your need, Sister.
We want our vengeance as well, but more than that, we want the rest of our children
to be safe. For that reason, we too will go.†Several women whose husbands had been
slain came forward and agreed with her.
The villagers murmured among themselves, then fell silent and motionless. No one
else seemed willing to address the subject; it was too momentous. Roran understood.
He was still trying to digest the implications himself.
Finally, Horst strode to the torch and stared with a drawn face into the flame. “It’s no
good talking any more… We need time to think. Every man must decide for himself.
Tomorrow… tomorrow will be another day. Perhaps things will be clearer then.†He
shook his head and lifted the torch, then inverted it and extinguished it against the
ground, leaving everyone to find their way home in the moonlight.
Roran joined Albriech and Baldor, who walked behind their parents at a discreet
distance, giving them privacy to talk. Neither of the brothers would look at Roran.
Unsettled by their lack of expression, Roran asked, “Do you think anyone else will
go?Was I good enough?â€
Albriech emitted a bark of laughter. “Good enough!â€
“Roran,†said Baldor in an odd voice, “you could have convinced an Urgal to become
a farmer tonight.â€
“No!â€
“When you finished, I was ready to grab my spear and dash into the Spine after you.I
wouldn’t have been alone either. The question isn’t whowill leave, it’s whowon’t.
What you said… I’ve never heard anything like it before.â€
Roran frowned. His goal had been to persuade people to accept his plan, not to get
them to follow him personally. If that’s what it takes, he thought with a shrug. Still,
the prospect had caught him unawares. At an earlier time, it would have disturbed
him, but now he was just thankful for anything that could help him to rescue Katrina
and save the villagers.
Baldor leaned toward his brother. “Father would lose most of his tools.†Albriech
nodded solemnly.
Roran knew that smiths made whatever implement was required by the task at hand,
and that these custom tools formed a legacy that was bequeathed from father to son,
or from master to journeyman. One measure of a smith’s wealth and skill was the
number of tools he owned. For Horst to surrender his would be…Would be no harder
than what anyone else has to do, thought Roran. He only regretted that it would entail
deprivingAlbriech and Baldor of their rightful inheritance.
When they reached the house, Roran retreated to Baldor’s room and lay in bed.
Through the walls, he could still hear the faint sound of Horst and Elain talking. He
fell asleep imagining similar discussions taking place throughout Carvahall, deciding
his—and their—fate.
REPERCUSSIONS
The morning after his speech, Roran looked out his window and saw twelve men
leaving Carvahall, heading toward Igualda Falls. He yawned and limped downstairs to
the kitchen.
Horst sat alone at the table, twisting a mug of ale in his hands. “Morning,†he said.
Roran grunted, tore a heel of bread off the loaf on the counter, then seated himself at
the opposite end of the table. As he ate, he noted Horst’s bloodshot eyes and unkempt
beard. Roran guessed that the smith had been awake the entire night. “Do you know
why a group is going up—â€
“Have to talk with their families,†said Horst abruptly. “They’ve been running into
the Spine since dawn.†He put the mug down with acrack. “You have no idea what
you did, Roran, by asking us to leave. The whole village is in turmoil. You backed us
into a corner with only one way out: your way. Some people hate you for it. Of course
a fair number of them already hated you for bringing this upon us.â€
The bread in Roran’s mouth tasted like sawdust as resentment flared inside him.
Eragon was the one who brought back the stone, not me. “And the others?â€
Horst sipped his ale and grimaced. “The others adore you. I never thought I would
see the day when Garrow’s son would stir my heart with words, but you did it, boy,
you did it.†He swung a gnarled hand over his head. “All this? I built it for Elain and
my sons. It took me seven years to finish! See that beam over the door right there? I
broke three toes getting that into place. And you know what? I’m going to give it up
because of what you said last night.â€
Roran remained silent; it was what he wanted. Leaving Carvahall was the right thing
to do, and since he had committed himself to that course, he saw no reason to torment
himself with guilt and regret. The decision is made. I will accept the outcome without
complaint, no matter how dire, for this is our only escape from the Empire.
“But,†said Horst, and leaned forward on one elbow, his black eyes burning beneath
his brow, “just you remember that if reality falls short of the airy dreams you
conjured, there’ll be debts to pay. Give people a hope and then take it away, and
they’ll destroy you.â€
The prospect was of no concern to Roran. If we make it to Surda, we will be greeted
as heroes by the rebels. If we don’t, our deaths will fulfill all debts. When it was clear
that the smith had finished, Roran asked, “Where is Elain?â€
Horst scowled at the change of topic. “Out back.†He stood and straightened his tunic
over his heavy shoulders. “I have to go clear out the smithy and decide what tools I’m
going to take. I’ll hide or destroy the rest. The Empire won’t benefit frommy work.â€
“I’ll help.†Roran pushed back his chair.
“No,†said Horst roughly. “This is a task I can only do with Albriech and Baldor.
That forge has been my entire life, and theirs… You wouldn’t be much help with that
arm of yours anyway. Stay here. Elain can use you.â€
After the smith left, Roran opened the side door and found Elain talkingwith
Gertrude by the large pile of firewood Horst maintained year-round. The healer went
up to Roran and put a hand on his forehead. “Ah, I was afraid that you might have a
fever after yesterday’s excitement. Your family heals at the most extraordinary rate. I
could barely believe my eyes when Eragon started walking about after having his legs
skinned and spending two days in bed.†Roran stiffened at the mention of his cousin,
but she did not seem to notice. “Let’s see how your shoulder is doing, shall we?â€
Roran bowed his neck so that Gertrude could reach behind him and untie the knot to
the wool sling. When it was undone, he carefully lowered his right forearm—which
was immobilized in a splint—until his arm was straight. Gertrude slid her fingers
under the poultice packed on his wound and peeled it off.
“Oh my,†she said.
A thick, rancid smell clogged the air. Roran clenched his teeth as his gorge rose, then
looked down. The skin under the poultice had turned white and spongy, like a giant
birthmark of maggot flesh. The bite itself had been stitched up while he was
unconscious, so all he saw was a jagged pink line caked with blood on the front of his
shoulder. Swelling and inflammation had forced the twisted catgut threads to cut deep
into his flesh, while beads of clear liquid oozed from the wound.
Gertrude clucked her tongue as she inspected him, then refastened the bandages and
looked Roran in the eye. “You’re doingwell enough, but the tissue may become
diseased. I can’t tell yet. If it does, we’ll have to cauterize your shoulder.â€
Roran nodded. “Will my arm work once it heals?â€
“As long as the muscle knits together properly. It also depends on how you want to
use it. You—â€
“Will I be able to fight?â€
“If you want to fight,†said Gertrude slowly, “I suggest that you learn to use your left
hand.†She patted his cheek, then hurried back toward her hut.
My arm. Roran stared at his bound limb as if it no longer belonged to him. Until that
moment, he had not realized how closely his sense of identity was linked to the
condition of his body. Injuring his flesh caused injury to his psyche, as well as the
other way around. Roran was proud of his body, and seeing it mutilated sent a jolt of
panic through him, especially since the damage was permanent. Even if he regained
the use of his arm, he would always bear a thick scar as a memento of his injury.
Taking his hand, Elain led Roran back into the house, where she crumbled mint into a
kettle, then set it on the stove to boil. “You really love her, don’t you?â€
“What?†He looked at her, startled.
Elain rested a hand on her belly. “Katrina.†She smiled. “I’m not blind. I know what
you’ve done for her, and I’m proud of you. Not every man would go as far.â€
“It won’t matter, if I can’t free her.â€
The kettle began to whistle stridently. “You will, I’m sure of it—one way or
another.†Elain poured the tea. “We had better start preparing for the trip. I’m going to
sort through the kitchen first. While I do, can you go upstairs and bringme all the
clothes, bedding, and anything else you think might be useful?â€
“Where should I put it?†asked Roran.
“The dining room will be fine.â€
Since the mountains were too steep—and the forest too dense—for wagons, Roran
realized that their supplies were limited to however much they could carry
themselves, as well as what they could pile onto Horst’s two horses, although one of
those had to be left partially unburdened so that Elain could ride whenever the trail
proved too strenuous for her pregnancy.
Compounding the issue was the fact that some families in Carvahall did not have
enough steeds for both provisions and the young, old, and infirm who would be
unable to keep pace on foot. Everyone would have to share resources. The question,
though, was with whom? They still did not know who else was going, besides Birgit
and Delwin.
Thus, when Elain finished packing the items she deemed essential—mainly food and
shelter—she sent Roran to find out if anyone needed extra storage space and, if not, if
she could borrow some in turn, for there were plenty of nonessential items she wanted
to bring but would otherwise abandon.
Despite the people hurrying through the streets, Carvahall was heavy with a forced
stillness, an unnatural calm that belied the feverish activity hidden within the houses.
Almost everyone was silent and walked with downturned faces, engrossed in their
own thoughts.
When Roran arrived at Orval’s house, he had to pound on the knocker for almost a
minute before the farmer answered the door. “Oh, it’s you, Stronghammer.†Orval
stepped out on the porch. “Sorry for the wait, but I was busy. How can I help you?â€
He tapped a long black pipe against his palm, then began to roll it nervously between
his fingers. Inside the house, Roran heard chairs being shoved across the floor and
pots and pans banging together.
Roran quickly explained Elain’s offer and request. Orval squinted up at the sky. “I
reckon I’ve got enough room for my own stuff. Ask around, an‘ if you still need
space, I have a pair of oxen that could hold a bit more.â€
“So you are going?â€
Orval shifted uncomfortably. “Well, I wouldn’t say that. We’re just… getting ready
in case of another attack.â€
“Ah.†Puzzled, Roran trudged on to Kiselt’s house. He soon discovered that no one
was willing to reveal whether they had decided to leave—even when evidence of their
preparations was in plain sight.
And they all treated Roran with a deference that he found unsettling. It manifested
itself in small gestures: offers of condolences for his misfortune, respectful silence
whenever he spoke, and murmurs of assent when he made a statement. It was as if his
deeds had inflated his stature and intimidated the people he had known since
childhood, distancing him from them.
I am branded,thought Roran, limping through the mud. He stopped at the edge of a
puddle and bent to examine his reflection, curious if he could discern what made him
so different.
He saw a man in ragged, blood-stained clothes, with a humped back and a crooked
arm tied across his chest. His neck and cheeks were scumbled with an impending
beard, while his hair was matted into snarled ropes that writhed in a halo around his
head. Most frightening of all, though, were his eyes, which had sunk deep into the
sockets, giving him a haunted appearance. From within those two morbid caverns, his
gaze boiled like molten steel, full of loss, rage, and an obsessive craving.
A lopsided smile crept across Roran’s face, rendering his visage even more shocking.
He liked how he looked. It matched his feelings. Now he understood how he had
managed to influence the villagers. He bared his teeth. I can use this image. I can use
it to destroy the Ra’zac.
Lifting his head, he slouched up the street, pleased with himself. Just then, Thane
approached him and grasped his left forearm in a hearty grip. “Stronghammer! You
don’t know how glad I am to see you.â€
“You are?†Roran wondered if the whole world had been turned inside out during the
night.
Thane nodded vigorously. “Ever since we attacked the soldiers, everything has
seemed hopeless to me. It pains me to admit it, but so it was. My heart pounded allthe
time, like I was about to fall down a well; my hands shook; and I felt dreadfully ill. I
thought someone had poisoned me! It was worse than death. But what you said
yesterday healed me instantly and let me see purpose and meaning in the world again!
I… I can’t even explain the horror you saved me from. I am in your debt. If you need
or want anything, just ask and I’ll help.â€
Moved, Roran gripped the farmer’s forearm in return and said, “Thank you, Thane.
Thank you.†Thane bowed his head, tears in his eyes, then released Roran and left him
standing alone in the middle of the street.
What have I done?
EXODUS
Awall of thick, smoky air engulfed Roran as he entered the Seven Sheaves, Morn’s
tavern. He stopped beneath the Urgal horns pegged over the door and let his eyes
adjust to the dim interior. “Hello?†he called.
The door to the back rooms banged open as Tara plowed forward, trailed by Morn.
They both glared sullenly at Roran. Tara planted her meaty fists on her hips and
demanded, “What do you want here?â€
Roran stared at her for a moment, trying to determine the source of her animosity.
“Have you decided whether to accompany me into the Spine?â€
“That’s none of your business,†snapped Tara.
Oh yes, it is. He restrained himself, though, and instead said, “Whatever your
intentions are, if youwere to go, Elain would like to know if you have room in your
bags for a few more items, or if you need extra room yourself. She has—â€
“Extra room!†burst out Morn. He waved at the wall behind the bar, which was lined
with oak casks. “I have, packed in straw, twelve barrels of the clearest winter ale,
which have been kept at the perfect temperature for the past five months. They were
Quimby’s last batch! What am I supposed to do with them? Or my hogsheads of lager
and stout? If I leave them, the soldiers will dispose of it in a week, or they’ll spike the
barrels and pour the beer into the ground, where the only creatures who’ll enjoy it will
be grubs and worms. Oh!†Morn sat and wrung his hands, shaking his head. “Twelve
years of work! Ever since Father died I ran the tavern the same way he did, day in and
day out. And then you and Eragon had to cause this trouble. It…†He stopped,
breathingwith difficulty, and wiped his mashed face with the edge of his sleeve.
“There, there now,†said Tara. She put her arm around Morn and jabbed a finger at
Roran. “Who gave you leave to stir up Carvahall with your fancy words? If we go,
how will my poor husband make a living? He can’t take his trade with him like Horst
or Gedric. He can’t squat in an empty field and farm it like you! Impossible!
Everyone will go and we will starve. Or we will go and we willstill starve. You have
ruined us!â€
Roran looked from her flushed, angry face to Morn’s distraught one, then turned and
opened the door. He paused on the threshold and said in a low voice, “I have always
counted you amongmy friends. I would not have you killed by the Empire.†Stepping
outside, he pulled his vest tight around himself and paced away from the tavern,
ruminating the whole way.
At Fisk’s well, he stopped for a drink and found himself joined by Birgit. She
watched him struggle to turn the crank with only one hand, then took it from him and
brought up the water bucket, which she passed to him without drinking. He sipped the
cool liquid, then said, “I’m glad that you are coming.†He handed the bucket back.
Birgit eyed him. “I recognize the force that drives you, Roran, for it propels me as
well; we both wish to find the Ra’zac. Once we do, though, I will have my
compensation from you for Quimby’s death. Never forget that.†She pushed the full
bucket back into the well and let it fall unchecked, the crank spinningwildly. A
second later, the well echoed with a hollow splash.
Roran smiled as he watched her walk away. He was more pleased than upset by her
declaration; he knew that even if everyone else in Carvahall were to forsake the cause
or die, Birgit would still help him to hunt the Ra’zac. Afterward, though—if an
afterward existed—he would have to pay her price or kill her. That was the only way
to resolve such matters.
By eveningHorst and his sons had returned to the house, bearing two small bundles
wrapped in oilcloth. “Is that all?†asked Elain. Horst nodded curtly, lay the bundles on
the kitchen table, and unwrapped them to expose four hammers, three tongs, a clamp,
a medium-sized bellows, and a three-pound anvil.
As the five of them sat to dinner, Albriech and Baldor discussed the various people
they had seen making covert preparations. Roran listened intently, trying to keep track
of who had lent donkeys to whom, who showed no signs of departing, and who might
need help to leave.
“The biggest problem,†said Baldor, “is food. We can only carry so much, and it’ll be
difficult to hunt enough in the Spine to feed two or three hundred people.â€
“Mmm.†Horst shook his finger, his mouth full of beans, then swallowed. “No,
huntingwon’t work. We have to bring our flocks with us. Combined, we own enough
sheep and goats to feed the lot of us for a month or more.â€
Roran raised his knife. “Wolves.â€
“I’m more worried about keeping the animals from wandering off into the forest,â€
replied Horst. “Herding them will be a chore.â€
Roran spent the following day assistingwhomever he could, saying little, and
generally allowing people to see him working for the good of the village. Late that
night, he tumbled into bed exhausted but hopeful.
The advent of dawn pierced Roran’s dreams and woke him with a sense of
momentous expectation. He stood and tiptoed downstairs, then went outside and
stared at the misty mountains, absorbed by the morning’s silence. His breath formed a
white plume in the air, but he felt warm, for his heart throbbed with fear and
eagerness.
After a subdued breakfast, Horst brought the horses to the front of the house, where
Roran helped Albriech and Baldor load them with saddlebags and other bundles of
supplies. Next Roran took up his own pack, hissing as the leather shoulder strap
pressed down on his injury.
Horst closed the door to the house. He lingered for a moment with his fingers on the
steel doorknob, then took Elain’s hand and said, “Let’s go.â€
As they walked through Carvahall, Roran saw somber families gathering by their
houses with their piles of possessions and yammering livestock. He saw sheep and
dogs with bags tied on their backs, teary-eyed children on donkeys, and makeshift
sledges hitched to horses with crates of fluttering chickens hung on each side. He saw
the fruits of his success, and he knew not whether to laugh or to cry.
They stopped at Carvahall’s north end and waited to see who would join them. A
minute passed, then Birgit approached from the side, accompanied by Nolfavrell and
his younger siblings. Birgit greeted Horst and Elain and stationed herself nearby.
Ridley and his family arrived outside the wall of trees, driving over a hundred sheep
from the east side of Palancar Valley. “I figured that it would be better to keep them
out of Carvahall,†shouted Ridley over the animals.
“Good thinking!†replied Horst.
Next came Delwin, Lenna, and their five children; Orval and his family; Loringwith
his sons; Calitha and Thane—who gave Roran a large smile; and then Kiselt’s clan.
Those women who had been recently widowed, like Nolla, clustered around Birgit.
Before the sun had cleared the mountain peaks, most of the village had assembled
along the wall. But not all.
Morn, Tara, and several others had yet to show themselves, and when Ivor arrived, it
was without any supplies. “You’re staying,†observed Roran. He sidestepped a knot
of testy goats that Gertrude was attempting to restrain.
“Aye,†said Ivor, drawing out the word into a weary admission. He shivered, crossed
his bony arms for warmth, and faced the rising sun, lifting his head so as to catch the
transparent rays. “Svart refused to leave. Heh! It was like carving against the grain to
get him into the Spine in the first place. Someone has to look after him, an‘ I don’t
have any children, so…†He shrugged. “Doubt I could give up the farm anyway.â€
“What will you do when the soldiers arrive?â€
“Give them a fight that they’ll remember.â€
Roran laughed hoarsely and clapped Ivor on the arm, doing his best to ignore the
unspoken fate that they both knew awaited anyone who remained.
A thin, middle-aged man, Ethlbert, marched to the edge of the congregation and
shouted, “You’re all fools!â€With an ominous rustle, people turned to look at their
accuser. “I’ve held my peace through this madness, but I’ll not follow a nattering
lunatic! If you weren’t blinded by his words, you’d see that he’s leading you to
destruction! Well, I won’t go! I’ll take my chances sneaking past the soldiers and
finding refuge in Therinsford. They’re our own people at least, not the barbarians
you’ll find in Surda.†He spat on the ground, then spun on his heel and stomped away.
Afraid that Ethlbert might convince others to defect, Roran scanned the crowd and
was relieved to see nothingmore than restless muttering. Still, he did not want to
dawdle and give people a chance to change their minds. He asked Horst under his
breath, “How long should we wait?â€
“Albriech, you and Baldor run around as fast as you can and check if anyone else is
coming. Otherwise, we’ll leave.†The brothers dashed off in opposite directions.
Half an hour later, Baldor returned with Fisk, Isold, and their borrowed horse.
Leaving her husband, Isold hurried toward Horst, shooing her hands at anyone who
got in her way, oblivious to the fact that most of her hair had escaped imprisonment in
its bun and stuck out in odd tufts. She stopped, wheezing for breath. “Iam sorry we’re
so late, but Fisk had trouble closing up the shop. He couldn’t pick which planers or
chisels to bring.†She laughed in a shrill tone, almost hysterical. “It was like watching
a cat surrounded by mice trying to decide which one to chase. First this one, then that
one.â€
A wry smile tugged at Horst’s lips. “I understand perfectly.â€
Roran strained for a glimpse of Albriech, but to no avail. He gritted his teeth.
“Whereis he?â€
Horst tapped his shoulder. “Right over there, I do believe.â€
Albriech advanced between the houses with three beer casks tied to his back and an
aggrieved look that was comic enough to make Baldor and several others laugh. On
either side of Albriech walked Morn and Tara, who staggered under the weight of
their enormous packs, as did the donkey and two goats that they towed behind them.
To Roran’s astonishment, the animals were burdened with even more casks.
“They won’t last a mile,†said Roran, growing angry at the couple’s foolishness.
“And they don’t have enough food. Do they expect us to feed them or—â€
With a chuckle, Horst cut him off. “I wouldn’t worry about the food. Morn’s beer
will be good for morale, and that’s worth more than a few extra meals. You’ll see.â€
As soon as Albriech had freed himself of the casks, Roran asked him and his brother,
“Is that everyone?â€When they answered in the affirmative, Roran swore and struck
his thigh with a clenched fist. Excluding Ivor, three families were determined to
remain in Palancar Valley: Ethlbert’s, Parr’s, and Knute’s. I can’t force them to come.
He sighed. “All right. There’s no sense in waiting longer.â€
Excitement rippled through the villagers; the moment had finally arrived. Horst and
five other men pulled open the wall of trees, then laid planks across the trench so that
the people and animals could walk over.
Horst gestured. “I think that you should go first, Roran.â€
“Wait!†Fisk ran up and, with evident pride, handed Roran a blackened six-foot-long
staff of hawthorn wood with a knot of polished roots at the top, and a blued-steel
ferrule that tapered into a blunt spike at the base. “I made it last night,†said the
carpenter. “I thought that you might have need of it.â€
Roran ran his left hand over the wood, marveling at its smoothness. “I couldn’t have
asked for anything better. Your skill is masterful… Thank you.†Fisk grinned and
backed away.
Conscious of the fact that the entire crowd was watching, Roran faced the mountains
and the Igualda Falls. His shoulder throbbed beneath the leather strap. Behind him lay
his father’s bones and everything he had known in life. Before him the jagged peaks
piled high into the pale sky and blocked his way and his will. But he would not be
denied. And he would not look back.
Katrina.
Lifting his chin, Roran strode forward. His staff knocked against the hard planks as
he crossed the trench and passed out of Carvahall, leading the villagers into the
wilderness.
ON THE CRAGS OF TEL’NAEÃ
Thud.
Bright as a flaming sun, the dragon hung before Eragon and everyone clustered along
the Crags of Tel’naeír, buffeting them with gusts from its mighty wings. The dragon’s
body appeared to be on fire as the brilliant dawn illuminated its golden scales and
sprayed the ground and trees with dazzling chips of light. It was far larger than
Saphira, large enough to be several hundred years old, and proportionally thicker in
its neck, limbs, and tail. Upon its back sat the Rider, robes startlingwhite against the
brilliance of the scales.
Eragon fell to his knees, his face upturned. I’m not alone… Awe and relief coursed
through him. No more would he have to bear the responsibility of the Varden and of
Galbatorix by himself. Here was one of the guardians of old resurrected from the
depths of time to guide him, a living symbol, and a testament to the legends he had
been raised with. Here was his master. Herewas a legend!
As the dragon turned to land, Eragon gasped; the creature’s left foreleg had been
severed by a terrible blow, leaving a helpless white stump in place of the once mighty
limb. Tears filled his eyes.
A whirlwind of dry twigs and leaves enveloped the hilltop as the dragon settled on
the sweet clover and folded its wings. The Rider carefully descended from his steed
along the dragon’s intact front right leg, then approached Eragon, his hands clasped
before him. He was an elf with silver hair, old beyond measure, though the only sign
of age was the expression of great compassion and sadness upon his face.
“Osthato Chetowä,†said Eragon. “The Mourning Sage… As you asked, I have
come.â€With a jolt, he remembered his manners and touched his lips. “Atra esterní
ono thelduin.â€
The Rider smiled. He took Eragon by the shoulders and lifted him upright, staring at
him with such kindness that Eragon could look at nothing else; he was consumed by
the endless depths within the elf’s eyes. “Oromis is my proper name, Eragon
Shadeslayer.â€
“You knew,†whispered Islanzadí with a hurt expression that quickly transformed
into a storm of rage. “You knew of Eragon’s existence and yet you did not tell me?
Why have you betrayed me, Shur’tugal?â€
Oromis released Eragon from his gaze and transferred it onto the queen. “I kept my
peace because it was uncertain if Eragon or Arya would live long enough to come
here; I had no wish to give you a fragile hope that might have been torn away at any
moment.â€
Islanzadí spun about, her cape of swan feathers billowing like wings. “You had no
right to withhold such information from me! I could have sent warriors to protect
Arya, Eragon, and Saphira in Farthen Dûr and to escort them safely here.â€
Oromis smiled sadly. “I hid nothing from you, Islanzadí, but what you had already
chosen not to see. If you had scryed the land, as is your duty, you would have
discerned the source of the chaos that has swept Alagaësia and learned the truth of
Arya and Eragon. That you might forget the Varden and the dwarves in your grief is
understandable, but Brom? Vinr Älfakyn? The last of the Elf Friends? You have been
blind to the world, Islanzadí, and lax upon your throne. I could not risk driving you
further away by subjecting you to another loss.â€
Islanzadí‘s anger drained away, leaving her face pale and her shoulders slumped. “I
am diminished,†she whispered.
A cloud of hot, moist air pressed against Eragon as the gold dragon bent to examine
him with eyes that glittered and sparked. We are well met, Eragon Shadeslayer. I am
Glaedr. His voice—for it was unmistakably male—rumbled and shook through
Eragon’s mind, like the growl of a mountain avalanche.
All Eragon could do was touch his lips and say, “I am honored.â€
Then Glaedr brought his attention to bear on Saphira. She remained perfectly still,
her neck arched stiffly as Glaedr sniffed her cheek and along the line of her wing.
Eragon saw Saphira’s clenched legmuscles flutter with an involuntary tremor. You
smell of humans, said Glaedr, and all you know of your own race is what your
instincts have taught you, but you have the heart of a true dragon.
During this silent exchange, Orik presented himself to Oromis. “Truly, this is beyond
anything that I dared hope or expect. You are a pleasant surprise in these dark times,
Rider.†He clapped his fist over his heart. “If it is not too presumptuous, I would aska
boon on behalf of my king and my clan, as was the custom between our people.â€
Oromis nodded. “And I will grant it if it is within my power.â€
“Then tell me:Why have you remained hidden for all these years? You were sorely
needed, Argetlam.â€
“Ah,†said Oromis. “Many sorrows exist in this world, and one of the greatest is
being unable to help those in pain. I could not risk leaving this sanctuary, for if I had
died before one of Galbatorix’s eggs had hatched, then there would have been no one
to pass on our secrets to the new Rider, and it would have been even harder to defeat
Galbatorix.â€
“Thatwas your reason?†spat Orik. “Those are the words of a coward! The eggs
might have never hatched.â€
Everyone went deathly quiet, except for a faint growl that emanated from between
Glaedr’s teeth. “If you were not my guest here,†said Islanzadí, “I would strike you
down myself for that insult.â€
Oromis spread his hands. “Nay, I am not offended. It is an apt reaction. Understand,
Orik, that Glaedr and I cannot fight. Glaedr has his disability, and I,†he touched the
side of his head, “I am also maimed. The Forsworn broke somethingwithin me when
I was their captive, and while I can still teach and learn, I can no longer control magic,
except for the smallest of spells. The power escapes me, no matter how much I
struggle. I would be worse than useless in battle, I would be a weakness and a
liability, one who could easily be captured and used against you. So I removed myself
from Galbatorix’s influence for the good of the many, even though I yearned to
openly oppose him.â€
“The CrippleWho Is Whole,†murmured Eragon.
“Forgive me,†said Orik. He appeared stricken.
“It is of no consequence.†Oromis placed a hand on Eragon’s shoulder. “Islanzadí
Dröttning, by your leave?â€
“Go,†she said wearily. “Go and be done with you.â€
Glaedr crouched low to the ground, and Oromis nimbly climbed up his leg and into
the saddle on his back. “Come, Eragon and Saphira. We have much to talk about.â€
The gold dragon leaped off the cliff and circled overhead, rising on an updraft.
Eragon and Orik solemnly clasped arms. “Bring honor to your clan,†said the dwarf.
As Eragon mounted Saphira, he felt as if he were about to embark on a long journey
and that he should say farewell to those who remained behind. Instead, he just looked
at Arya and smiled, letting his wonder and joy show. She half frowned, appearing
troubled, but then he was gone, swept into the sky by the eagerness of Saphira’s
flight.
Together the two dragons followed the white cliff northward for several miles,
accompanied only by the sound of their wings. Saphira flew abreast of Glaedr. Her
enthusiasm boiled over into Eragon’s mind, heightening his own emotions.
They landed in another clearing situated on the edge of the cliff, just before the wall
of exposed stone crumbled back into the earth. A bare path led from the precipice to
the doorstep of a low hut grown between the trunks of four trees, one of which
straddled a stream that emerged from the moody depths of the forest. Glaedr would
not fit inside; the hut could have easily sat between his ribs.
“Welcome to my home,†said Oromis as he alighted on the ground with uncommon
ease. “I live here, on the brink of the Crags of Tel’naeír, because it provides me the
opportunity to think and study in peace. My mind works better away from Ellesméra
and the distractions of other people.â€
He disappeared inside the hut, then returned with two stools and flagons of clear,
cold water for both himself and Eragon. Eragon sipped his drink and admired the
spacious view of Du Weldenvarden in an attempt to conceal his awe and nervousness
while he waited for the elf to speak. I’m in the presence of another Rider! Beside him,
Saphira crouched with her eyes fixed on Glaedr, slowly kneading the dirt between her
claws.
The gap in their conversation stretched longer and longer. Ten minutes passed… half
an hour… then an hour. It reached the point where Eragon began to measure the
elapsed time by the sun’s progress. At first his mind buzzed with questions and
thoughts, but those eventually subsided into calm acceptance. He enjoyed just
observing the day.
Only then did Oromis say, “You have learned the value of patience well. That is
good.â€
It took Eragon a moment to find his voice. “You can’t stalk a deer if you are in a
hurry.â€
Oromis lowered his flagon. “True enough. Let me see your hands. I find that they tell
me much about a person.†Eragon removed his gloves and allowed the elf to grip his
wrists with thin, dry fingers. He examined Eragon’s calluses, then said, “Correct me if
I am wrong. You have wielded a scythe and plow more often than a sword, though
you are accustomed to a bow.â€
“Aye.â€
“And you have done little writing or drawing, maybe none at all.â€
“Brom taught me my letters in Teirm.â€
“Mmm. Beyond your choice of tools, it seems obvious that you tend to be reckless
and disregard your own safety.â€
“What makes you say that, Oromis-elda?†asked Eragon, using the most respectful
and formal honorific that he could think of.
“Notelda, †corrected Oromis. “You may call me master in this tongue and ebrithil in
the ancient language, nothing else. You will extend the same courtesy to Glaedr. We
are your teachers; you are our students; and you will act with proper respect and
deference.†Oromis spoke gently, but with the authority of one who expects absolute
obedience.
“Yes, Master Oromis.â€
“As will you, Saphira.â€
Eragon could sense how hard it was for Saphira to unbend her pride enough to say,
Yes, Master.
Oromis nodded. “Now. Anyone with such a collection of scars has either been
hopelessly unfortunate, fights like a berserker, or deliberately pursues danger. Do you
fight like a berserker?â€
“No.â€
“Nor do you seem unfortunate; quite the opposite. That leaves only one explanation.
Unless you think differently?â€
Eragon cast his mind over his experiences at home and on the road, in an attempt to
categorize his behavior. “I would say, rather, that once I dedicate myself to a certain
project or path, I see it through, no matter the cost… especially if someone I love is in
danger.†His gaze flicked toward Saphira.
“And do you undertake challenging projects?â€
“I like to be challenged.â€
“So you feel the need to pit yourself against adversity in order to test your abilities.â€
“I enjoy overcoming challenges, but I’ve faced enough hardship to know that it’s
foolish to make things more difficult than they are. It’s all I can do to survive as it is.â€
“Yet you chose to follow the Ra’zac when it would have been easier to remain in
Palancar Valley. And you came here.â€
“It was the right thing to do… Master.â€
For several minutes, no one spoke. Eragon tried to guess what the elf was thinking,
but could glean no information from his masklike visage. Finally, Oromis stirred.
“Were you, perchance, given a trinket of some kind in Tarnag, Eragon? A piece of
jewelry, armor, or even a coin?â€
“Aye.†Eragon reached inside of his tunic and fished out the necklace with the tiny
silver hammer. “Gannel made this for me on Hrothgar’s orders, to prevent anyone
from scrying Saphira or me. They were afraid that Galbatorixmight have discovered
what I look like… How did you know?â€
“Because,†said Oromis, “I could no longer sense you.â€
“Someone tried to scry me by Sílthrim about a week ago. Was that you?â€
Oromis shook his head. “After I first scryed you with Arya, I had no need to use such
crude methods to find you. I could reach out and touch your mind with mine, as I did
when you were injured in Farthen Dûr.†Lifting the amulet, he murmured several lines
in the ancient language, then released it. “It contains no other spells I can detect. Keep
it with you at all times; it is a valuable gift.†He pressed the tips of his long fingers
together, his nails as round and bright as fish scales, and stared between the arches
they formed toward the white horizon. “Why are you here, Eragon?â€
“To complete my training.â€
“And what do you think that process entails?â€
Eragon shifted uncomfortably. “Learningmore about magic and fighting. Brom
wasn’t able to finish teachingme everything that he knew.â€
“Magic, swordsmanship, and other such skills are useless unless you know how and
when to apply them. This I will teach you. However, as Galbatorix has demonstrated,
power without moral direction is the most dangerous force in the world. My main
task, then, is to help you, Eragon and Saphira, to understand what principles guide
you, so that you do not make the right choices for the wrong reasons. You must learn
more about yourself, who you are and what you are capable of doing. That is why you
are here.â€
When do we begin?asked Saphira.
Oromis began to answer when he stiffened and dropped his flagon. His face went
crimson and his fingers tightened into hooked claws that dragged at his robe like
cockleburs. The change was frightening and instantaneous. Before Eragon could do
more than flinch, the elf had relaxed again, although his entire body now bespoke
weariness.
Concerned, Eragon dared to ask, “Are you well?â€
A trace of amusement lifted the corner of Oromis’s mouth. “Less so than I might
wish. We elves fancy ourselves immortal, but not even we can escape certain
maladies of the flesh, which are beyond our knowledge of magic to do more than
delay. No, do not worry… it isn’t contagious, but neither can I rid myself of it.†He
sighed. “I have spent decades bindingmyself with hundreds of small, weak spells
that, layered one upon another, duplicate the effect of enchantments that are now
beyond my reach. I bound myself with them so that I might live long enough to
witness the birth of the last dragons and to foster the Riders’ resurrection from the
ruin of our mistakes.â€
“How long until…â€
Oromis lifted a sharp eyebrow. “How long until I die?We have time, but precious
little for you or me, especially if the Varden decide to call upon your help. As a
result—to answer your question, Saphira—we will begin your instruction
immediately, and we will train faster than any Rider ever has or ever will, for I must
condense decades of knowledge into months and weeks.â€
“You do know,†said Eragon, struggling against the embarrassment and shame that
made his cheeks burn, “about my…my owninfirmity. †He ground out the last word,
hating the sound of it. “I am as crippled as you are.â€
Sympathy tempered Oromis’s gaze, though his voice was firm. “Eragon, you are only
a cripple if you consider yourself one. I understand how you feel, but you must
remain optimistic, for a negative outlook is more of a handicap than any physical
injury. I speak from personal experience. Pitying yourself serves neither you nor
Saphira. I and the other spellweavers will study your malady to see if we might devise
a way to alleviate it, but in the meantime, your trainingwill proceed as if nothing
were amiss.â€
Eragon’s gut clenched and he tasted bile as he considered the implications. Surely
Oromis wouldn’t make me endure that torment again! “The pain is unbearable,†he
said frantically. “It would kill me. I—â€
“No, Eragon. It will not kill you. That much I know about your curse. However, we
both have our duty; you to the Varden, and I to you. We cannot shirk it for the sake of
mere pain. Far too much is at risk, and we can ill afford to fail.†All Eragon could do
was shake his head as panic threatened to overwhelm him. He tried to deny Oromis’s
words, but their truth was inescapable. “Eragon. You must accept this burden freely.
Have you no one or nothing that you are willing to sacrifice yourself for?â€
His first thought was of Saphira, but he was not doing this for her. Nor for Nasuada.
Nor even for Arya. What drove him, then?When he had pledged fealty to Nasuada,
he had done so for the good of Roran and the other people trapped within the Empire.
But did they mean enough to him to put himself through such anguish?Yes, he
decided. Yes, they do, because I am the only one who has a chance to help them, and
because I won’t be free of Galbatorix’s shadow until they are as well. And because
this is my only purpose in life. What else would I do? He shuddered as he mouthed the
ghastly phrase, “I accept on behalf of those I fight for: the people of Alagaësia—of all
races—who have suffered from Galbatorix’s brutality. No matter the pain, I swear
that I will study harder than any student you’ve had before.â€
Oromis nodded gravely. “I ask for nothing less.†He looked at Glaedr for a moment,
then said, “Stand and remove your tunic. Let me see what you are made of.â€
Wait,said Saphira. Was Brom aware of your existence here, Master? Eragon paused,
struck by the possibility.
“Of course,†said Oromis. “He was my pupil as a boy in Ilirea. I am glad that you
gave him a proper burial, for he had a hard life and few enough ever showed him
kindness. I hope that he found peace before he entered the void.â€
Eragon slowly frowned. “Did you know Morzan as well?â€
“He was my apprentice before Brom.â€
“And Galbatorix?â€
“I was one of the Elders who denied him another dragon after his first was killed, but
no, I never had the misfortune to teach him. He made sure to personally hunt down
and kill each of his mentors.â€
Eragon wanted to inquire further, but he knew that it would be better to wait, so he
stood and unlaced the top of his tunic. It seems, he said to Saphira, that we will never
learn all of Brom’s secrets. He shivered as he pulled off the tunic in the cool air, then
squared his shoulders and lifted his chest.
Oromis circled him, stoppingwith an astonished exclamation as he saw the scar that
crossed Eragon’s back. “Did not Arya or one of the Varden’s healers offer to remove
this weal? You should not have to carry it.â€
“Arya did offer, but…†Eragon stopped, unable to articulate his feelings. Finally, he
just said, “It’s part of me now, just as Murtagh’s scar is part of him.â€
“Murtagh’s scar?â€
“Murtagh bore a similar mark. It was inflicted when his father, Morzan, threw
Zar’roc at him while he was only a child.â€
Oromis stared at him seriously for a long time before he nodded and moved on. “You
have a fair amount of muscle, and you are not as lopsided as most swordsmen. Are
you ambidextrous?â€
“Not really, but I had to teach myself to fight with my left hand after I broke my wrist
by Teirm.â€
“Good. That will save some time. Clasp your hands behind your back and lift them as
high as possible.†Eragon did as he was told, but the posture hurt his shoulders and he
could barely make his hands meet. “Now bend forward while keeping your knees
straight. Try to touch the ground.†This was even harder for Eragon; he ended up
bowed like a hunchback, with his arms hanging uselessly by his head while his
hamstrings twinged and burned. His fingers were still nine or ten inches from the
ground. “At least you can stretch without hurting yourself. I had not hoped for so
much. You can perform a number of exercises for flexibility without overexerting.
Yes.â€
Then Oromis addressed Saphira: “I would know your capabilities as well, dragon.â€
He gave her a number of complex poses that had her contort every foot of her sinuous
length in fantastic ways, culminating in a series of aerial acrobatics the likes of which
Eragon had never seen before. Only a few things exceeded her ability, such as
executing a backward loop while corkscrewing through the air.
When she landed, it was Glaedr who said, I fear that we coddled the Riders. If our
hatchlings had been forced to care for themselves in the wild—as you were, and so
our ancestors were—then perhaps they would have possessed your skill.
“No,†said Oromis, “even if Saphira had been raised on Vroengard using the
established methods, she would still be an extraordinary flier. I’ve rarely seen a
dragon so naturally suited to the sky.†Saphira blinked, then shuffled her wings and
busied herself cleaning one of her claws in a manner that hid her head from view.
“You have room to improve, as do we all, but little, very little.†The elf reseated
himself, his back perfectly straight.
For the next five hours, by Eragon’s reckoning, Oromis delved into every aspect of
his and Saphira’s knowledge, from botany to woodworking to metallurgy and
medicine, although he mainly concentrated on their grasp of history and the ancient
language. The interrogation comforted Eragon, as it reminded him of how Brom used
to quiz him during their long treks to Teirm and Dras-Leona.
When they broke for lunch, Oromis invited Eragon into his house, leaving the two
dragons alone. The elf’s quarters were barren except for those few essentials
necessary for food, hygiene, and the pursuit of an intellectual life. Two entire walls
were dotted with cubbyholes that held hundreds of scrolls. Next to the table hung a
golden sheath—the same color as Glaedr’s scales—and a matching sword with a
blade the color of iridescent bronze.
On the inner pane of the door, set within the heart of the wood, was a flat panel one
span high and two wide. It depicted a beautiful, towering city built against an
escarpment and caught in the ruddy light of a rising harvest moon. The pitted lunar
face was bisected by the horizon and appeared to sit on the ground like a maculated
dome as large as a mountain. The picture was so clear and perfectly detailed, Eragon
at first took it to be a magical window; it was only when he saw that the image was
indeed static that he could accept it as a piece of art.
“Where is this?†he asked.
Oromis’s slanted features tightened for an instant. “You would do well to memorize
that landscape, Eragon, for there lies the heart of your misery. You see what was once
our city of Ilirea. It was burned and abandoned duringDu Fyrn Skulblaka and became
the capital of the BroddringKingdom and now is the black city of Urû‘baen. I made
that fairth on the night that I and others were forced to flee our home before
Galbatorix arrived.â€
“You painted this… fairth?â€
“No, no such thing. A fairth is an image fixed by magic upon a square of polished
slate that is prepared beforehand with layers of pigments. The landscape upon that
door is exactly how Ilirea presented itself to me at the moment I uttered my spell.â€
“And,†said Eragon, unable to stop the flow of questions, “what was the Broddring
Kingdom?â€
Oromis’s eyes widened with dismay. “You don’t know?†Eragon shook his head.
“How can you not? Considering your circumstances and the fear that Galbatorix
wields among your people, I might understand that you were raised in darkness,
ignorant of your heritage. But I cannot credit Brom with being so laxwith your
instruction as to neglect subjects that even the youngest elf or dwarf knows. The
children of your Varden could tell me more about the past.â€
“Brom was more concerned with keepingme alive than teachingme about people
who are already dead,†retorted Eragon.
This drew silence from Oromis. Finally, he said, “Forgive me. I did not mean to
impugn Brom’s judgment, only I am impatient beyond reason; we have so little time,
and each new thing you must learn reduces that which you can master during your
tenure here.†He opened a series of cupboards hidden within the curved wall and
removed bread rolls and bowls of fruit, which he rowed out on the table. He paused
for a moment over the food with his eyes closed before beginning to eat. “The
BroddringKingdom was the human’s country before the Riders fell. After Galbatorix
killed Vrael, he flew on Ilirea with the Forsworn and deposed KingAngrenost, taking
his throne and titles for his own. The BroddringKingdom then formed the core of
Galbatorix’s conquests. He added Vroengard and other lands to the east and south to
his holdings, creating the empire you are familiar with. Technically, the Broddring
Kingdom still exists, though, at this point, I doubt that it is much more than a name on
royal decrees.â€
Afraid to pester the elf with further inquiries, Eragon concentrated on his food. His
face must have betrayed him, though, because Oromis said, “You remind me of Brom
when I chose him as my apprentice. He was younger than you, only ten, but his
curiosity was just as great. I doubt I heard aught from him for a year buthow, what,
when, and, above all else, why. Do not be shy to ask what lies in your heart.â€
“I want to know so much,†whispered Eragon. “Who are you?Where do you come
from?… Where did Brom come from?What was Morzan like? How, what, when, why
? And I want to know everything about Vroengard and the Riders. Maybe then my
own path will be clearer.â€
Silence fell between them as Oromis meticulously disassembled a blackberry, prying
out one plump segment at a time. When the last corpuscle vanished between his portred
lips, he rubbed his hands flat together—“polishing his palms,†as Garrow used to
say—and said, “Know this about me, then: I was born some centuries past in our city
of Luthivíra, which stood in the woods by Lake Tüdosten. At the age of twenty, like
all elf children, I was presented to the eggs that the dragons had given the Riders, and
Glaedr hatched for me. We were trained as Riders, and for near a century, we traveled
the world over, doingVrael’s will. Eventually, the day arrived when it was deemed
appropriate for us to retire and pass on our experience to the next generation, so we
took a position in Ilirea and taught new Riders, one or two at a time, until Galbatorix
destroyed us.â€
“And Brom?â€
“Brom came from a family of illuminators in Kuasta. His mother was Nelda and his
father Holcomb. Kuasta is so isolated by the Spine from the rest of Alagaësia, it has
become a peculiar place, full of strange customs and superstitions. When he was still
new to Ilirea, Brom would knock on a door frame three times before entering or
leaving a room. The human students teased him about it until he abandoned the
practice alongwith some of his other habits.
“Morzan was my greatest failure. Brom idolized him. He never left his side, never
contradicted him, and never believed that he could best Morzan in any venture.
Morzan, I’m ashamed to admit—for it was within my power to stop—was aware of
this and took advantage of Brom’s devotion in a hundred different ways. He grew so
proud and cruel that I considered separating him from Brom. But before I could,
Morzan helped Galbatorix to steal a dragon hatchling, Shruikan, to replace the one
Galbatorix had lost, killing the dragon’s original Rider in the process. Morzan and
Galbatorix then fled together, sealing our doom.
“You cannot begin to fathom the effect Morzan’s betrayal had on Brom until you
understand the depth of Brom’s affection for him. And when Galbatorix at last
revealed himself and the Forsworn killed Brom’s dragon, Brom focused all of his
anger and pain on the one who he felt was responsible for the destruction of his world:
Morzan.â€
Oromis paused, his face grave. “Do you know why losing your dragon, or vice versa,
usually kills the survivor?â€
“I can imagine,†said Eragon. He quailed at the thought.
“The pain is shock enough—although it isn’t always a factor—but what really causes
the damage is feeling part of your mind, part of your identity, die. When it happened
to Brom, I fear that he went mad for a time. After I was captured and escaped, I
brought him to Ellesméra for safety, but he refused to stay, instead marchingwith our
army to the plains of Ilirea, where King Evandar was slain.
“The confusion then was indescribable. Galbatorixwas busy consolidating his power,
the dwarves were in retreat, the southwest was a mass of war as the humans rebelled
and fought to create Surda, and we had just lost our king. Driven by his desire for
vengeance, Brom sought to use the turmoil to his advantage. He gathered together
many of those who had been exiled, freed some who had been imprisoned, and with
them he formed the Varden. He led them for a few years, then surrendered the
position to another so that he was free to pursue his true passion, which was Morzan’s
downfall. Brom personally killed three of the Forsworn, includingMorzan, and he
was responsible for the deaths of five others. He was rarely happy during his life, but
he was a good Rider and a good man, and I am honored to have known him.â€
“I never heard his name mentioned in connection to the Forsworn’s deaths,†objected
Eragon.
“Galbatorix did not want to publicize the fact that any still existed who could defeat
his servants. Much of his power resides in the appearance of invulnerability.â€
Once again, Eragon was forced to revise his conception of Brom, from the village
storyteller that Eragon had first taken him to be, to the warrior and magician he had
traveled with, to the Rider he was at last revealed as, and now firebrand, revolutionary
leader, and assassin. It was hard to reconcile all of those roles. I feel as if I barely
knew him. I wish that we had had a chance to talk about all of this at least once. “He
was a good man,†agreed Eragon.
He looked out one of the round windows that faced the edge of the cliff and allowed
the afternoon warmth to suffuse the room. He watched Saphira, noting how she acted
with Glaedr, seeming both shy and coy. One moment she would twist around to
examine some feature of the clearing, the next she would shuffle her wings and make
small advances on the larger dragon, weaving her head from side to side, the tip of her
tail twitching as if she were about to pounce on a deer. She reminded Eragon of a
kitten trying to bait an old tomcat into playingwith her, only Glaedr remained
impassive throughout her machinations.
Saphira,he said. She responded with a distracted flicker of her thoughts, barely
acknowledging him. Saphira, answer me.
What?
I know you’re excited, but don’t make a fool of yourself.
You’ve made a fool of yourself plenty of times,she snapped.
Her reply was so unexpected, it stunned him. It was the sort of casually cruel remark
that humans often make, but that he had never thought to hear from her. He finally
managed to say, That doesn’t make it any better. She grunted and closed her mind to
his, although he could still feel the thread of her emotions connecting them.
Eragon returned to himself to find Oromis’s gray eyes heavy upon him. The elf’s
gaze was so perceptive, Eragon was sure that Oromis understood what had transpired.
Eragon forced a smile and motioned toward Saphira. “Even though we’re linked, I
can never predict what she’s going to do. The more I learn about her, the more I
realize how different we are.â€
Then Oromis made his first statement that Eragon thought was truly wise: “Those
whom we love are often the most alien to us.†The elf paused. “She is very young, as
are you. It took Glaedr and I decades before we fully understood each other. A
Rider’s bond with his dragon is like any relationship—that is, a work in progress. Do
you trust her?â€
“With my life.â€
“And does she trust you?â€
“Yes.â€
“Then humor her. You were brought up as an orphan. She was brought up to believe
that she was the last sane individual of her entire race. And now she has been proved
wrong. Don’t be surprised if it takes some months before she stops pesteringGlaedr
and returns her attention to you.â€
Eragon rolled a blueberry between his thumb and forefinger; his appetite had
vanished. “Why don’t elves eat meat?â€
“Why should we?†Oromis held up a strawberry and rotated it so that the light
reflected off its dimpled skin and illuminated the tiny hairs that bearded the fruit.
“Everything that we need or want we sing from the plants, including our food. It
would be barbaric to make animals suffer that we might have additional courses on
the table… Our choice will make greater sense to you before long.â€
Eragon frowned. He had always eaten meat and did not look forward to living solely
on fruit and vegetables while in Ellesméra. “Don’t you miss the taste?â€
“You cannot miss that which you have never had.â€
“What about Glaedr, though? He can’t live off grass.â€
“No, but neither does he needlessly inflict pain. We each do the best we can with
what we are given. You cannot help who or what you are born as.â€
“And Islanzadí? Her cape was made of swan feathers.â€
“Loose feathers gathered over the course of many years. No birds were killed to
make her garment.â€
They finished the meal, and Eragon helped Oromis to scour the dishes clean with
sand. As the elf stacked them in the cupboard, he asked, “Did you bathe this
morning?†The question startled Eragon, but he answered that no, he had not. “Please
do so tomorrow then, and every day following.â€
“Every day! The water’s too cold for that. I’ll catch the ague.â€
Oromis eyed him oddly. “Then make it warmer.â€
Now it was Eragon’s turn to look askance. “I’m not strong enough to heat an entire
stream with magic,†he protested.
The house echoed as Oromis laughed. Outside, Glaedr swung his head toward the
window and inspected the elf, then returned to his earlier position. “I assume that you
explored your quarters last night.†Eragon nodded. “And you saw a small room with a
depression in the floor?â€
“I thought that it might be for washing clothes or linens.â€
“It is for washingyou. Two nozzles are concealed in the side of the wall above the
hollow. Open them and you can bathe in water of any temperature. Also,†he gestured
at Eragon’s chin, “while you are my student, I expect you to keep yourself cleanshaven
until you can grow a full beard—if you so choose—and not look like a tree
with half its leaves blown off. Elves do not shave, but I will have a razor and mirror
found and sent to you.â€
Wincing at the blow to his pride, Eragon agreed. They returned outside, whereupon
Oromis looked at Glaedr and the dragon said, We have decided upon a curriculum for
Saphira and you.
The elf said, “You will start—â€
—an hour after sunrise tomorrow, in the time of the Red Lily. Return here then.
“And bring the saddle that Brom made for you, Saphira,†continued Oromis. “Do
what you wish in the meantime; Ellesméra holds many wonders for a foreigner, if you
care to see them.â€
“I’ll keep that in mind,†said Eragon, bowing his head. “Before I go, Master, I want
to thank you for helpingme in Tronjheim after I killed Durza. I doubt that I would
have survived without your assistance. I am in your debt.â€
We are both in your debt, added Saphira.
Oromis smiled slightly and inclined his head.
THE SECRET LIVES OF ANTS
The moment that Oromis and Glaedr were out of sight, Saphira said, Eragon, another
dragon! Can you believe it?
He patted her shoulder. It’s wonderful. High above Du Weldenvarden, the only sign
of habitation in the forest was an occasional ghostly plume of smoke that rose from
the crown of a tree and soon faded into clear air.
I never expected to encounter another dragon, except for Shruikan. Maybe rescue the
eggs from Galbatorix, yes, but that was the extent of my hopes. And now this!She
wriggled underneath him with joy. Glaedr is incredible, isn’t he? He’s so old and
strong and his scales are so bright. He must be two, no, three times bigger than me.
Did you see his claws? They…
She continued on in that manner for several minutes, waxing eloquent about Glaedr’s
attributes. But stronger than her words were the emotions Eragon sensed roiling
within her: eagerness and enthusiasm, twined over what he could only identify as a
longing adoration.
Eragon tried to tell Saphira what he had learned from Oromis—since he knew that
she had not paid attention—but he found it impossible to change the subject of
conversation. He sat silently on her back, the world an emerald ocean below, and felt
himself the loneliest man in existence.
Back at their quarters, Eragon decided against any sightseeing; he was far too tired
from the day’s events and the weeks of traveling. And Saphira was more than content
to sit on her bed and chatter about Glaedr while he examined the mysteries of the
elves’ wash closet.
Morning came, and with it a package wrapped in onionskin paper containing the
razor and mirror that Oromis had promised. The blade was of elvish make, so it
needed no sharpening or stropping. Grimacing, Eragon first bathed in steaming hot
water, then held up the mirror and confronted his visage.
I look older. Older and worn. Not only that, but his features had become far more
angled, giving him an ascetic, hawklike appearance. He was no elf, but neither would
anyone take him to be a purebred human if they inspected him closely. Pulling back
his hair, he bared his ears, which now tapered to slight points, more evidence of how
his bond with Saphira had changed him. He touched one ear, letting his fingers
wander over the unfamiliar shape.
It was difficult for him to accept the transformation of his flesh. Even though he had
known it would occur—and occasionally welcomed the prospect as the last
confirmation that he was a Rider—the reality of it filled him with confusion. He
resented the fact that he had no say in how his body was being altered, yet at the same
time he was curious where the process would take him. Also, he was aware that he
was still in the midst of his own, human adolescence, and its attendant realm of
mysteries and difficulties.
When will I finally know who and what I am?
He placed the edge of the razor against his cheek, as he had seen Garrow do, and
dragged it across his skin. The hairs came free, but they were cut long and ragged. He
altered the angle of the blade and tried again with a bit more success.
When he reached his chin, though, the razor slipped in his hand and cut him from the
corner of his mouth to the underside of his jaw. He howled and dropped the razor,
clapping his hand over the incision, which poured blood down his neck. Spitting the
words past bared teeth, he said, “Waíse heill.†The pain quickly receded as magic
knitted his flesh back together, though his heart still pounded from the shock.
Eragon!cried Saphira. She forced her head and shoulders into the vestibule and nosed
open the door to the closet, flaring her nostrils at the scent of blood.
I’ll live, he assured her.
She eyed the sanguine water. Be more careful. I’d rather you were as ragged as a
molting deer than have you decapitate yourself for the sake of a close shave.
So would I. Go on, I’m fine.
Saphira grunted and reluctantly withdrew.
Eragon sat, glaring at the razor. Finally, he muttered, “Forget this.†Composing
himself, he reviewed his store of words from the ancient language, selected those that
he needed, and then allowed his invented spell to roll off his tongue. A faint stream of
black powder fell from his face as his stubble crumbled into dust, leaving his cheeks
perfectly smooth.
Satisfied, Eragon went and saddled Saphira, who immediately took to the air, aiming
their course toward the Crags of Tel’naeír. They landed before the hut and were met
by Oromis and Glaedr.
Oromis examined Saphira’s saddle. He traced each strap with his fingers, pausing on
the stitching and buckles, and then pronounced it passable handiwork considering
how and when it had been constructed. “Brom was always clever with his hands. Use
this saddle when you must travel with great speed. But when comfort is allowed—â€
He stepped into his hut for a moment and reappeared carrying a thick, molded saddle
decorated with gilt designs along the seat and leg pieces. “—use this. It was crafted in
Vroengard and imbued with many spells so that it will never fail you in time of need.â€
Eragon staggered under the weight of the saddle as he received it from Oromis. It had
the same general shape as Brom’s, with a row of buckles—intended to immobilize his
legs—hanging from each side. The deep seat was sculpted out of the leather in such a
way that he could fly for hours with ease, both sitting upright and lying flat against
Saphira’s neck. Also, the straps encircling Saphira’s chest were rigged with slips and
knots so that they could extend to accommodate years of growth. A series of broad
ties on either side of the head of the saddle caught Eragon’s attention. He asked their
purpose.
Glaedr rumbled, Those secure your wrists and arms so that you are not killed like a
rat shaken to death when Saphira performs a complex maneuver.
Oromis helped Eragon relieve Saphira of her current saddle. “Saphira, you will go
with Glaedr today, and I will work with Eragon here.â€
As you wish,she said, and crowed with excitement. Heaving his golden bulk off the
ground, Glaedr soared off to the north, Saphira close behind.
Oromis did not give Eragon long to ponder Saphira’s departure; the elf marched him
to a square of hard-packed dirt beneath a willow tree at the far side of the clearing.
Standing opposite him in the square, Oromis said, “What I am about to show you is
called the Rimgar, or the Dance of Snake and Crane. It is a series of poses that we
developed to prepare our warriors for combat, although all elves use it now to
maintain their health and fitness. The Rimgar consists of four levels, each more
difficult than the last. We will start with the first.â€
Apprehension for the coming ordeal sickened Eragon to the point where he could
barely move. He clenched his fists and hunched his shoulders, his scar tugging at the
skin of his back as he glared between his feet.
“Relax,†advised Oromis. Eragon jerked open his hands and let them hang limply at
the end of his rigid arms. “I asked you to relax, Eragon. You can’t do the Rimgar if
you are as stiff as a piece of rawhide.â€
“Yes, Master.†Eragon grimaced and reluctantly loosened his muscles and joints,
although a knot of tension remained coiled in his belly.
“Place your feet together and your arms at your sides. Look straight ahead. Now take
a deep breath and lift your arms over your head so that your palms meet… Yes, like
that. Exhale and bend down as far as you can, put your palms on the ground, take
another breath… and jump back. Good. Breathe in and bend up, looking toward the
sky… and exhale, lifting your hips until you form a triangle. Breathe in through the
back of your throat… and out. In… and out. In…â€
To Eragon’s utter relief, the stances proved gentle enough to hold without igniting
the pain in his back, yet challenging enough that sweat beaded his forehead and he
panted for breath. He found himself grinningwith joy at his reprieve. His wariness
evaporated and he flowed through the postures—most of which far exceeded his
flexibility—with more energy and confidence than he had possessed since before the
battle in Farthen Dûr. Maybe I’ve healed!
Oromis performed the Rimgar with him, displaying a level of strength and flexibility
that astounded Eragon, especially for one so old. The elf could touch his forehead to
his toes. Throughout the exercise, Oromis remained impeccably composed, as if he
were doing no more than strolling down a garden path. His instruction was calmer and
more patient than Brom’s, yet completely unyielding. No deviation was allowed from
the correct path.
“Let us wash the sweat from our limbs,†said Oromis when they finished.
Going to the stream by the house, they quickly disrobed. Eragon surreptitiously
watched the elf, curious as to what he looked like without his clothes. Oromis was
very thin, yet his muscles were perfectly defined, etched under his skin with the hard
lines of a woodcut. No hair grew upon his chest or legs, not even around his groin.
His body seemed almost freakish to Eragon, compared to the men he was used to
seeing in Carvahall—although it had a certain refined elegance to it, like that of a
wildcat.
When they were clean, Oromis took Eragon deep into Du Weldenvarden to a hollow
where the dark trees leaned inward, obscuring the sky behind branches and veils of
snarled lichen. Their feet sank into the moss above their ankles. All was silent about
them.
Pointing to a white stump with a flat, polished top three yards across that rested inthe
center of the hollow, Oromis said, “Sit here.†Eragon did as he was told. “Cross your
legs and close your eyes.†The world went dark around him. From his right, he heard
Oromis whisper, “Open your mind, Eragon. Open your mind and listen to the world
around you, to the thoughts of every being in this glade, from the ants in the trees to
the worms in the ground. Listen until you can hear them all and you understand their
purpose and nature. Listen, and when you hear no more, come tell me what you have
learned.â€
Then the forest was quiet.
Unsure if Oromis had left, Eragon tentatively lowered the barriers around his mind
and reached out with his consciousness, like he did when trying to contact Saphira at a
great distance. Initially only a void surrounded him, but then pricks of light and
warmth began to appear in the darkness, strengthening until he sat in the midst of a
galaxy of swirling constellations, each bright point representing a life. Whenever he
had contacted other beings with his mind, like Cadoc, Snowfire, or Solembum, the
focus had always been on the one he wanted to communicate with. But this… this was
as if he had been standing deaf in the midst of a crowd and now he could hear the
rivers of conversation whirling around him.
He felt suddenly vulnerable; he was completely exposed to the world. Anyone or
anything that might want to leap into his mind and control him could now do so. He
tensed unconsciously, withdrawing back into himself, and his awareness of the hollow
vanished. Remembering one of Oromis’s lessons, Eragon slowed his breathing and
monitored the sweep of his lungs until he had relaxed enough to reopen his mind.
Of all the lives he could sense, the majority were, by far, insects. Their sheer number
astounded him. Tens of thousands dwelled in a square foot of moss, teemingmillions
throughout the rest of the small hollow, and uncounted masses beyond. Their
abundance actually frightened Eragon. He had always known that humans were scarce
and beleaguered in Alagaësia, but he had never imagined that they were so
outnumbered by evenbeetles.
Since they were one of the few insects that he was familiar with, and Oromis had
mentioned them, Eragon concentrated his attention on the columns of red ants
marching across the ground and up the stems of a wild rosebush. What he gleaned
from them were not so much thoughts—their brains were too primitive—but urges:
the urge to find food and avoid injury, the urge to defend one’s territory, the urge to
mate. By examining the ants’ instincts, he could begin to puzzle out their behavior.
It fascinated him to discover that—except for the few individuals exploring outside
the borders of their province—the ants knew exactly where they were going. He was
unable to ascertain what mechanism guided them, but they followed clearly defined
paths from their nest to food and back. Their source of food was another surprise. As
he had expected, the ants killed and scavenged other insects, but most of their efforts
were directed toward the cultivation of… ofsomething that dotted the rosebush.
Whatever the life-form was, it was barely large enough for him to sense. He focused
all of his strength on it in an attempt to identify it and satisfy his curiosity.
The answer was so simple, he laughed out loud when he comprehended it: aphids.
The ants were acting as shepherds for aphids, driving and protecting them, as well as
extracting sustenance from them by massaging the aphids’ bellies with the tips of
their antennae. Eragon could hardly believe it, but the longer he watched, the more he
became convinced that he was correct.
He traced the ants underground into their complexmatrix of warrens and studied how
they cared for a certain member of their species that was several times bigger than a
normal ant. However, he was unable to determine the insect’s purpose; all he could
see were servants swarming around it, rotating it, and removing the specks of matter it
produced at regular intervals.
After a time, Eragon decided that he had gleaned all the information from the ants
that he could—unless he was willing to sit there for the rest of the day—and was
about to return to his body when a squirrel jumped into the glade. Its appearance was
like a blast of light to him, attuned as he was to the insects. Stunned, he was
overwhelmed by a rush of sensations and feelings from the animal. He smelled the
forest with its nose, felt the bark give under his hooked claws and the air swish
through his upraised plume of a tail. Compared to an ant, the squirrel burned with
energy and possessed unquestionable intelligence.
Then it leaped to another branch and faded from his awareness.
The forest seemed much darker and quieter than before when Eragon opened his
eyes. He took a deep breath and looked about, appreciating for the first time how
much life existed in the world. Unfolding his cramped legs, he walked over to the
rosebush.
He bent down and examined the branches and twigs. Sure enough, aphids and their
crimson guardians clung to them. And near the base of the plant was the mound of
pine needles that marked the entrance to the ants’ lair. It was strange to see with his
own eyes; none of it betrayed the numerous and subtle interactions that he was now
aware of.
Engrossed in his thoughts, Eragon returned to the clearing, wonderingwhat he might
be crushing under his feet with every step. When he emerged from under the trees’
shelter, he was startled by how far the sun had fallen. I must have been sitting there
for at least three hours.
He found Oromis in his hut, writingwith a goose-feather quill. The elf finished his
line, then wiped the nib of the quill clean, stoppered his ink, and asked, “And what did
you hear, Eragon?â€
Eragon was eager to share. As he described his experience, he heard his voice rise
with enthusiasm over the details of the ants’ society. He recounted everything that he
could recall, down to the minutest and most inconsequential observation, proud of the
information that he had gathered.
When he finished, Oromis raised an eyebrow. “Is that all?â€
“I…†Dismay gripped Eragon as he understood that he had somehow missed the
point of the exercise. “Yes, Ebrithil.â€
“And what about the other organisms in the earth and the air? Can you tell me what
they were doingwhile your ants tended their droves?â€
“No, Ebrithil.â€
“Therein lies your mistake. You must become aware of all things equally and not
blinker yourself in order to concentrate on a particular subject. This is an essential
lesson, and until you master it, you will meditate on the stump for an hour each day.â€
“How will I know when I have mastered it?â€
“When you can watch one and know all.â€
Oromis motioned for Eragon to join him at the table, then set a fresh sheet of paper
before him, alongwith a quill and a bottle of ink. “So far you have made do with an
incomplete knowledge of the ancient language. Not that any of us knows all the words
in the language, but you must be familiar with its grammar and structure so that you
do not kill yourself through an incorrectly placed verb or similar mistake. I do not
expect you to speak our language like an elf—that would take a lifetime—but I do
expect you to achieve unconscious competence. That is, you must be able to use it
without thinking.
“In addition, you must learn to read and write the ancient language. Not only will this
help you to memorize words, it is an essential skill if you need to compose an
especially long spell and you don’t trust your memory, or if you find such a spell
recorded and you want to use it.
“Every race has evolved their own system of writing the ancient language. The
dwarves use their runic alphabet, as do humans. They are only makeshift techniques,
though, and are incapable of expressing the language’s true subtleties as well as our
Liduen Kvaedhí, the Poetic Script. The Liduen Kvaedhí was designed to be as
elegant, beautiful, and precise as possible. It is composed of forty-two different
shapes that represent various sounds. These shapes can be combined in a nearly
infinite range of glyphs that represent both individual words and entire phrases. The
symbol on your ring is one such glyph. The symbol on Zar’roc is another… Let us
start:What are the basic vowel sounds of the ancient language?â€
“What?â€
Eragon’s ignorance of the underpinnings of the ancient language quickly became
apparent. When he had traveled with Brom, the old storyteller had concentrated on
having Eragon memorize lists of words that he might need to survive, as well as
perfecting his pronunciation. In those two areas, he excelled, but he could not even
explain the difference between a definite and indefinite article. If the gaps in his
education frustrated Oromis, the elf did not betray it through word or action, but
labored persistently to mend them.
At a certain point during the lesson, Eragon commented, “I’ve never needed very
many words in my spells; Brom said it was a gift that I could do so much with
justbrisingr. I think the most I ever said in the ancient language was when I spoke to
Arya in her mind and when I blessed an orphan in Farthen Dûr.â€
“You blessed a child in the ancient language?†asked Oromis, suddenly alert. “Do
you remember how you worded this blessing?â€
“Aye.â€
“Recite it for me.†Eragon did so, and a look of pure horror engulfed Oromis. He
exclaimed, “You usedskölir ! Are you sure?Wasn’t itsköliro ?â€
Eragon frowned. “No, skölir. Why shouldn’t I have used it?Skölir meansshielded. ‘…
and may you be shielded from misfortune.’ It was a good blessing.â€
“That was no blessing, but a curse.†Oromis was more agitated than Eragon had ever
seen him. “The suffixo forms the past tense of verbs endingwithr andi. Sköliro
meansshielded, butskölir meansshield. What you said was ‘May luck and happiness
follow you and may you be ashield from misfortune.’ Instead of protecting this child
from the vagaries of fate, you condemned her to be a sacrifice for others, to absorb
their misery and suffering so that they might live in peace.â€
No, no! It can’t be!Eragon recoiled from the possibility. “The effect a spell has isn’t
only determined by the word’s sense, but also by your intent, and I didn’t intend to
harm—â€
“You cannot gainsay a word’s inherent nature. Twist it, yes. Guide it, yes. But not
contravene its definition to imply the very opposite.†Oromis pressed his fingers
together and stared at the table, his lips reduced to a flat white line. “I will trust that
you didnot mean harm, else I would refuse to teach you further. If you were honest
and your heart was pure, then this blessingmay cause less evil than I fear, though it
will still be the nucleus of more pain than either of us could wish.â€
Violent trembling overtook Eragon as he realized what he had done to the child’s life.
“It may not undo my mistake,†he said, “but perhaps it will alleviate it; Saphira
marked the girl on the brow, just like she marked my palm with the gedwëy ignasia.â€
For the first time in his life, Eragon witnessed an elf dumbstruck. Oromis’s gray eyes
widened, his mouth opened, and he clutched the arms of his chair until the wood
groaned with protest. “One who bears the sign of the Riders, and yet is not a Rider,â€
he murmured. “In all my years, I have never met anyone such as the two of you.
Every decision you make seems to have an impact far beyond what anyone could
anticipate. You change the world with your whims.â€
“Is that good or bad?â€
“Neither, it just is. Where is the babe now?â€
It took a moment for Eragon to compose his thoughts. “With the Varden, either in
Farthen Dûr or Surda. Do you think that Saphira’s mark will help her?â€
“I know not,†said Oromis. “No precedent exists to draw upon for wisdom.â€
“There must be ways to remove the blessing, to negate a spell.†Eragon was almost
pleading.
“There are. But for them to be most effective, you should be the one to apply them,
and you cannot be spared here. Even under the best of circumstances, remnants of
your magic will haunt this girl evermore. Such is the power of the ancient language.â€
He paused. “I see that you understand the gravity of the situation, so I will say this
only once: you bear full responsibility for this girl’s doom, and, because of the wrong
you did her, it is incumbent upon you to help her if ever the opportunity should arise.
By the Riders’ law, she is your shame as surely as if you had begotten her out of
wedlock, a disgrace among humans, if I remember correctly.â€
“Aye,†whispered Eragon. “I understand.â€I understand that I forced a defenseless
baby to pursue a certain destiny without ever giving her a choice in the matter. Can
someone be truly good if they never have the opportunity to act badly? I made her a
slave. He also knew that if he had been bound in that manner without permission, he
would hate his jailer with every fiber of his being.
“Then we will speak of this no more.â€
“Yes, Ebrithil.â€
Eragon was still subdued, even depressed, by the end of the day. He barely looked up
when they went outside to meet Saphira and Glaedr upon their return. The trees shook
from the fury of the gale that the two dragons created with their wings. Saphira
seemed proud of herself; she arched her neck and pranced toward Eragon, opening her
chops in a lupine grin.
A stone cracked under Glaedr’s weight as the ancient dragon turned a giant eye—as
large as a dinner platter—on Eragon and asked, What are the rules three to spotting
downdrafts, and the rules five for escaping them?
Startled out of his reverie, Eragon could only blink dumbly. “I don’t know.â€
Then Oromis confronted Saphira and asked, “What creatures do ants farm, and how
do they extract food from them?â€
I wouldn’t know, declared Saphira. She sounded affronted.
A gleam of anger leaped into Oromis’s eyes and he crossed his arms, though his
expression remained calm. “After all the two of you have done together, I would think
that you had learned the most basic lesson of being Shur’tugal: Share everythingwith
your partner. Would you cut off your right arm?Would you fly with only one wing?
Never. Then why would you ignore the bond that links you? By doing so, you reject
your greatest gift and your advantage over any single opponent. Nor should you just
talk to each other with your minds, but rather mingle your consciousnesses until you
act and think as one. I expect both of you to know what either one of you is taught.â€
“What about our privacy?†objected Eragon.
Privacy? said Glaedr. Keep your thoughts to thyself when you leave here, if it pleases
you, but while we tutor you, you have no privacy.
Eragon looked at Saphira, feeling even worse than before. She avoided his gaze, then
stamped a foot and faced him directly. What?
They’re right. We have been negligent.
It’s not my fault.
I didn’t say that it was. She had guessed his opinion, though. He resented the
attention she lavished on Glaedr and how it drew her away from him. We’ll do better,
won’t we?
Of course!she snapped.
She declined to offer Oromis and Glaedr an apology, though, leaving the task to
Eragon. “We won’t disappoint you again.â€
“See that you don’t. You will be tested tomorrow on what the other learned.†Oromis
revealed a round wood bauble nestled in the middle of his palm. “So long as you take
care to wind it regularly, this device will wake you at the proper time each morning.
Return here as soon as you have bathed and eaten.â€
The bauble was surprisingly heavy when Eragon took it. The size of a walnut, it had
been carved with deep whorls around a knob wrought in the likeness of a moss-rose
blossom. He turned the knob experimentally and heard three clicks as a hidden ratchet
advanced. “Thank you,†he said.
UNDER THEMENOA TREE
After Eragon and Saphira had said their farewells, they flew back to their tree house
with Saphira’s new saddle dangling between her front claws. Without acknowledging
the fact, they gradually opened their minds and allowed their connection to widen and
deepen, though neither of them consciously reached for the other. Eragon’s
tumultuous emotions must have been strong enough for Saphira to sense anyway,
though, for she asked, What happened, then?
A throbbing pain built up behind his eyes as he explained the terrible crime he had
committed in Farthen Dûr. Saphira was as appalled by it as he was. He said, Your gift
may help that girl, but what I did is inexcusable and will only hurt her.
The blame isn’t all yours. I share your knowledge of the ancient language, and I
didn’t spot the error any more than you did. When Eragon remained silent, she added,
At least your back didn’t cause any trouble today. Be grateful for that.
He grunted, unwilling to be tempted out of his black mood. And what did you learn
this fine day?
How to identify and avoid dangerous weather patterns. She paused, apparently ready
to share the memories with him, but he was too busy worrying about his distorted
blessing to inquire further. Nor could he bear the thought of being so intimate right
then. When he did not pursue the matter, Saphira withdrew into a taciturn silence.
Back in their bedroom, he found a tray of food by the screen door, as he had the
previous night. Carrying the tray to his bed—which had been remade with fresh
linens—he settled down to eat, cursing the lack of meat. Already sore from the
Rimgar, he propped himself up with pillows and was about to take his first bite when
there came a gentle rapping at the opening to his chamber. “Enter,†he growled. He
took a drink of water.
Eragon nearly choked as Arya stepped through the doorway. She had abandoned the
leather clothes she usually wore in favor of a soft green tunic cinched at the waist with
a girdle adorned with moonstones. She had also removed her customary headband,
allowing her hair to tumble around her face and over her shoulders. The biggest
change, however, was not so much in her dress but her bearing; the brittle tension that
had permeated her demeanor ever since Eragon first met her was now gone.
She seemed to have finally relaxed.
He scrambled to his feet, noticing that her own were bare. “Arya! Why are you
here?â€
Touching her first two fingers to her lips, she said, “Do you plan on spending another
evening inside?â€
“I—â€
“You have been in Ellesméra for three days now, and yet you have seen nothing of
our city. I know that you always wished to explore it. Set aside your weariness this
once and accompany me.†Gliding toward him, she took Zar’roc from where it lay by
his side and beckoned to him.
He rose from the bed and followed her into the vestibule, where they descended
through the trapdoor and down the precipitous staircase that wound around the rough
tree trunk. Overhead, the gathering clouds glowed with the sun’s last rays before it
was extinguished behind the edge of the world.
A piece of bark fell on Eragon’s head and he looked up to see Saphira leaning out of
their bedroom, gripping the wood with her claws. Without opening her wings, she
sprang into the air and dropped the hundred or so feet to the ground, landing in a
thunderous cloud of dirt. I’m coming.
“Of course,†said Arya, as if she expected nothing less. Eragon scowled; he had
wanted to be alone with her, but he knew better than to complain.
They walked under the trees, where dusk already extended its tendrils from inside
hollow logs, dark crevices in boulders, and the underside of knobby eaves. Here and
there, a gemlike lantern twinkled within the side of a tree or at the end of a branch,
casting gentle pools of light on either side of the path.
Elves worked on various projects in and around the lanterns’ radius, solitary except
for a few, rare couples. Several elves sat high in the trees, playingmellifluous tunes
on their reed pipes, while others stared at the sky with peaceful expressions—neither
awake nor asleep. One elf sat cross-legged before a pottery wheel that whirled round
and round with a steady rhythm while a delicate urn took form beneath his hands. The
werecat, Maud, crouched beside him in the shadows, watching his progress. Her eyes
flared silver as she looked at Eragon and Saphira. The elf followed her gaze and
nodded to them without halting his work.
Through the trees, Eragon glimpsed an elf—man or woman, he could not tell—
squatting on a rock in the middle of a stream, muttering a spell over the orb of glass
clutched in its hands. He twisted his neck in an attempt to get an unobstructed view,
but the spectacle had already vanished into the dark.
“What,†asked Eragon, keeping his voice low so as to not disturb anyone, “do most
elves do for a living or profession?â€
Arya answered just as quietly. “Our strength with magic grants us as much leisure as
we desire. We neither hunt nor farm, and, as a result, we spend our days working to
master our interests, whatever they might be. Very little exists that we must strive
for.â€
Through a tunnel of dogwood draped with creepers, they entered the enclosed atrium
of a house grown out of a ring of trees. An open-walled hut occupied the center of the
atrium, which sheltered a forge and an assortment of tools that Eragon knew even
Horst would covet.
An elf woman held a pair of small tongs in a nest of molten coals, working bellows
with her right hand. With uncanny speed, she pulled the tongs from the fire—
revealing a ring of white-hot steel clamped in the pincers’ jaws—looped the ring
through the edge of an incomplete mail corselet hung over the anvil, grasped a
hammer, and welded shut the open ends of the ringwith a blow and a burst of sparks.
Only then did Arya approach. “Atra esterní ono thelduin.â€
The elf faced them, her neck and cheek lit from underneath by the coals’ bloody
light. Like taut wires embedded in her skin, her face was scribed with a delicate
pattern of lines—the greatest display of age Eragon had seen in an elf. She gave no
response to Arya, which he knew was offensive and discourteous, especially since the
queen’s daughter had honored her by speaking first.
“Rhunön-elda, I have brought you the newest Rider, Eragon Shadeslayer.â€
“I heard you were dead,†said Rhunön to Arya. Rhunön’s voice guttered and rasped
unlike any other elf’s. It reminded Eragon of the old men of Carvahall who sat on the
porches outside their houses, smoking pipes and telling stories.
Arya smiled. “When did you last leave your house, Rhunön?â€
“You should know. It was that Midsummer’s Feast you forced me to attend.â€
“That was three years ago.â€
“Was it?†Rhunön frowned as she banked the coals and covered them with a grated
lid. “Well, what of it? I find company trying. A gaggle of meaningless chatter that…â€
She glared at Arya. “Why are we speaking this foul language? I suppose you want me
to forge a sword for him? You know I swore to never create instruments of death
again, not after that traitor of a Rider and the destruction he wreaked with my blade.â€
“Eragon already has a sword,†said Arya. She raised her arm and presented Zar’roc to
the smith.
Rhunön took Zar’roc with a look of wonder. She caressed the wine-red sheath,
lingered on the black symbol etched into it, rubbed a bit of dirt from the hilt, then
wrapped her fingers around the handle and drew the sword with all the authority of a
warrior. She sighted down each of Zar’roc’s edges and flexed the blade between her
hands until Eragon feared it might break. Then, in a single movement, Rhunön swung
Zar’roc over her head and brought it down upon the tongs on her anvil, riving them in
half with a resounding ring.
“Zar’roc,†said Rhunön. “I remember thee.†She cradled the weapon like a mother
would her firstborn. “As perfect as the day you were finished.†Turning her back, she
looked up at the knotted branches while she traced the curves of the pommel. “My
entire life I spent hammering these swords out of ore. Thenhe came and destroyed
them. Centuries of effort obliterated in an instant. So far as I knew, only four
examples of my art still existed. His sword, Oromis’s, and two others guarded by
families who managed to rescue them from theWyrdfell.â€
Wyrdfell?Eragon dared ask Arya with his mind.
Another name for the Forsworn.
Rhunön turned on Eragon. “Now Zar’roc has returned to me. Of all my creations, this
I least expected to hold again, save forhis. How came you to possess Morzan’s
sword?â€
“It was given to me by Brom.â€
“Brom?†She hefted Zar’roc. “Brom… I remember Brom. He begged me to replace
the sword he had lost. Truly, I wished to help him, but I had already taken my oath.
My refusal angered him beyond reason. Oromis had to knock him unconscious before
he would leave.â€
Eragon seized on the information with interest. “Your handiwork has served me well,
Rhunön-elda. I would be long dead were it not for Zar’roc. I killed the Shade Durza
with it.â€
“Did you now? Then some good has come of it.†Sheathing Zar’roc, Rhunön returned
it to him, though not without reluctance, then looked past him to Saphira. “Ah. Well
met, Skulblaka.â€
Well met, Rhunön-elda.
Without bothering to ask permission, Rhunön went up to Saphira’s shoulder and
tapped a scale with one of her blunt fingernails, twisting her head from side to side in
an attempt to peer into the translucent pebble. “Good color. Not like those brown
dragons, all muddy and dark. Properly speaking, a Rider’s sword should match the
hue of his dragon, and this blue would have made a gorgeous blade…†The thought
seemed to drain the energy from her. She returned to the anvil and stared at the
wrecked tongs, as if the will to replace them had deserted her.
Eragon felt that it would be wrong to end the conversation on such a depressing note,
but he could not think of a tactful way to change the subject. The glimmering corselet
caught his attention and, as he studied it, he was astonished to see that every ringwas
welded shut. Because the tiny links cooled so quickly, they usually had to be welded
before being attached to the main piece of mail, which meant that the finest mail—
such as Eragon’s hauberk—was composed of links that were alternately welded and
riveted closed. Unless, it seemed, the smith possessed an elf’s speed and precision.
Eragon said, “I’ve never seen the equal of your mail, not even among the dwarves.
How do you have the patience to weld every link?Why don’t you just use magic and
save yourself the work?â€
He hardly expected the burst of passion that animated Rhunön. She tossed her shortcropped
hair and said, “And rob myself of all pleasure in this task? Aye, every other
elf and I could use magic to satisfy our desires—and some do—but then what
meaning is there in life? How would you fill your time? Tell me.â€
“I don’t know,†he confessed.
“By pursuing that which you love the most. When you can have anything you want
by uttering a few words, the goal matters not, only the journey to it. A lesson for you.
You’ll face the same dilemma one day, if you live long enough… Now begone! I am
weary of this talk.â€With that Rhunön plucked the lid off the forge, retrieved a new
pair of tongs, and immersed a ring in the coals while she worked the bellows with
single-minded intensity.
“Rhunön-elda,†said Arya, “remember, I will return for you on the eve of the Agaetí
Blödhren.†A grunt was her only reply.
The rhythmic peal of steel on steel, as lonely as the cry of a death bird in the night,
accompanied them back through the dogwood tunnel and onto the path. Behind them,
Rhunön was no more than a black figure bowed over the sullen glow of her forge.
“She made all the Riders’ swords?†asked Eragon. “Every last one?â€
“That and more. She’s the greatest smith who has ever lived. I thought that you
should meet her, for her sake and yours.â€
“Thank you.â€
Is she always so brusque?asked Saphira.
Arya laughed. “Always. For her, nothingmatters except her craft, and she’s famously
impatient with anything—or anyone—that interferes with it. Her eccentricities are
well tolerated, though, because of her incredible skill and accomplishments.â€
While she spoke, Eragon tried to work out the meaning ofAgaetí Blödhren. He was
fairly sure thatblödh stood forblood and, as a result, thatblödhren wasblood-oath, but
he had never heard ofagaetí .
“Celebration,â€explained Arya when he asked. “We hold the Blood-oath Celebration
once every century to honor our pact with the dragons. Both of you are fortunate to be
here now, for it is nigh upon us…†Her slanted eyebrows met as she frowned. “Fate
has indeed arranged a most auspicious coincidence.â€
She surprised Eragon by leading them deeper into Du Weldenvarden, down paths
tangled with nettles and currant bushes, until the lights around them vanished and they
entered the restless wilderness. In the darkness, Eragon had to rely on Saphira’s keen
night vision so as to not lose his way. The craggy trees increased in width, crowding
closer and closer together and threatening to form an impenetrable barrier. Just when
it appeared that they could go no farther, the forest ended and they entered a clearing
washed with moonlight from the bright sickle low in the eastern sky.
A lone pine tree stood in the middle of the clearing. No taller than the rest of its
brethren, it was thicker than a hundred regular trees combined; in comparison, they
looked as puny as windblown saplings. A blanket of roots radiated from the tree’s
massive trunk, covering the ground with bark-sheathed veins that made it seem as if
the entire forest flowed out from the tree, as if it were the heart of Du Weldenvarden
itself. The tree presided over the woods like a benevolent matriarch, protecting its
inhabitants under the shelter of her branches.
“Behold the Menoa tree,†whispered Arya. “We observe the Agaetí Blödhren in her
shade.â€
A cold tingle crawled down Eragon’s side as he recognized the name. After Angela
told his fortune in Teirm, Solembum had come up to him and said, When the time
comes and you need a weapon, look under the roots of the Menoa tree. Then, when all
seems lost and your power is insufficient, go to the rock of Kuthian and speak your
name to open the Vault of Souls . Eragon could not imagine what kind of weapon
might be buried under the tree, nor how he would go about finding it.
Do you see anything?he asked Saphira.
No, but then I doubt that Solembum’s words will make sense until our need is clear.
Eragon told Arya about both parts of the werecat’s counsel, although—as he had with
Ajihad and Islanzadí—he kept Angela’s prophecy a secret because of its personal
nature, and because he feared that it might lead Arya to guess his attraction to her.
When he finished, Arya said, “Werecats rarely offer help, and when they do, it’s not
to be ignored. So far as I know, no weapon is hidden here, not even in song or legend.
As for the Rock of Kuthian… the name echoes in my head like a voice from a halfforgotten
dream, familiar yet strange. I’ve heard it before, though I cannot recall
where.â€
As they approached the Menoa tree, Eragon’s attention was caught by the multitude
of ants crawling over the roots. Faint black smudges were all he could see of the
insects, but Oromis’s assignment had sensitized him to the currents of life around
him, and he could feel the ants’ primitive consciousness with his mind. He lowered
his defenses and allowed his awareness to flood outward, lightly touching Saphira and
Arya and then expanding beyond them to see what else lived in the clearing.
With unexpected suddenness, he encountered an immense entity, a sentient being of
such a colossal nature, he could not grasp the limits of its psyche. Even Oromis’s vast
intellect, which Eragon had been in contact with in Farthen Dûr, was dwarfed in
comparison to this presence. The very air seemed to thrum with the energy and
strength that emanated from…the tree?
The source was unmistakable.
Deliberate and inexorable, the tree’s thoughts moved at a measured pace as slow as
the creep of ice over granite. It took no notice of Eragon nor, he was sure, of any
single individual. It was entirely concerned with the affairs of things that grow and
flourish in the bright sunlight, with the dogbane and the lily, the evening primrose and
the silky foxglove and the yellow mustard tall beside the crabapple with its purple
blossoms.
“It’s awake!†exclaimed Eragon, shocked into speaking. “I mean… it’s intelligent.â€
He knew that Saphira felt it too; she cocked her head toward the Menoa tree, as if
listening, then flew to one of its branches, which were as thick as the road from
Carvahall to Therinsford. There she perched with her tail hanging free, waving the tip
of it back and forth, ever so gracefully. It was such an odd sight, a dragon in a tree,
that Eragon almost laughed.
“Of course she’s awake,†said Arya. Her voice was low and mellow in the night air.
“Shall I tell you the story of the Menoa tree?â€
“I’d like that.â€
A flash of white streaked across the sky, like a banished specter, and resolved itself
beside Saphira in the form of Blagden. The raven’s narrow shoulders and crooked
neck gave him the appearance of a miser basking in the radiance of a pile of gold. The
raven lifted his pallid head and uttered his ominous cry, “Wyrda!â€
“This is what happened. Once there lived a woman, Linnëa, in the years of spice and
wine before our war with the dragons and before we became as immortal as any
beings still composed of vulnerable flesh can be. Linnëa had grown old without the
comfort of a mate or children, nor did she feel the need to seek them out, preferring to
occupy herself with the art of singing to plants, of which she was a master. That is,
she did until a youngman came to her door and beguiled her with words of love. His
affections woke a part of Linnëa that she had never suspected existed, a craving to
experience the things that she had unknowingly sacrificed. The offer of a second
chance was too great an opportunity for her to ignore. She deserted her work and
devoted herself to the youngman and, for a time, they were happy.
“But the youngman was young, and he began to long for a mate closer to his own
age. His eye fell upon a youngwoman, and he wooed and won her. And for a time,
they too were happy.
“When Linnëa discovered that she had been spurned, scorned, and abandoned, she
went mad with grief. The youngman had done the worst possible thing; he had given
her a taste of the fullness of life, then torn it away with no more thought than a rooster
flitting from one hen to the next. She found him with the woman and, in her fury, she
stabbed him to death.
“Linnëa knew that what she had done was evil. She also knew that even if she was
exonerated of the murder, she could not return to her previous existence. Life had lost
all joy for her. So she went to the oldest tree in Du Weldenvarden, pressed herself
against it, and sang herself into the tree, abandoning all allegiance to her own race.
For three days and three nights she sang, and when she finished, she had become one
with her beloved plants. And through all the millennia since has she kept watch over
the forest… Thus was the Menoa tree created.â€
At the conclusion of her tale, Arya and Eragon sat side by side on the crest of a huge
root, twelve feet off the ground. Eragon bounced his heels against the tree and
wondered if Arya had intended the story as a warning to him or if it was merely an
innocent piece of history.
His doubt hardened into certainty when she asked, “Do you think that the youngman
was to blame for the tragedy?â€
“I think,†he said, knowing that a clumsy reply could turn her against him, “that what
he did was cruel… and that Linnëa overreacted. They were both at fault.â€
Arya stared at him until he was forced to avert his gaze. “They weren’t suited for
each other.â€
Eragon began to deny it but then stopped himself. She was right. And she had
maneuvered him so that he had to say it out loud, so that he had to say it toher.
“Perhaps,†he admitted.
Silence accumulated between them like sand piling into a wall that neither of them
was willing to breach. The high-pitched hum of cicadas echoed from the edge of the
clearing. At last he said, “Being home seems to agree with you.â€
“It does.â€With unconscious ease, she leaned over and picked up a thin branch that
had fallen from the Menoa tree and began to weave the clumps of needles into a small
basket.
Hot blood rushed to Eragon’s face as he watched her. He hoped that the moon was
not bright enough to reveal that his cheeks had turned mottled red. “Where… where
do you live? Do you and Islanzadí have a palace or castle… ?â€
“We live in Tialdarí Hall, our family’s ancestral buildings, in the western part of
Ellesméra. I would enjoy showing our home to you.â€
“Ah.†A practical question suddenly intruded in Eragon’s muddled thoughts, driving
away his embarrassment. “Arya, do you have any siblings?†She shook her head.
“Then you are the sole heir to the elven throne?â€
“Of course. Why do you ask?†She sounded bemused by his curiosity.
“I don’t understand why you were allowed to become an ambassador to the Varden
and dwarves, as well as ferry Saphira’s egg from here to Tronjheim. It’s too
dangerous an errand for a princess, much less the queen-in-waiting.â€
“You mean it’s too dangerous for ahuman woman. I told you before that I am not one
of your helpless females. What you fail to realize is that we view our monarchs
differently than you or the dwarves. To us, a king or queen’s highest responsibility is
to serve their people however and wherever possible. If that means forfeiting our lives
in the process, we welcome the opportunity to prove our devotion to—as the dwarves
say—hearth, hall, and honor. If I had died in the course of my duty, then a
replacement successor would have been chosen from among our various Houses.
Even now I would not be required to become queen if I found the prospect distasteful.
We do not choose leaders who are unwilling to devote themselves wholeheartedly to
their obligation.†She hesitated, then hugged her knees against her chest and propped
her chin on them. “I had many years to perfect those arguments with my mother.†For
a minute, thewheet-wheet of the cicadas went undisturbed in the clearing. Then she
asked, “How go your studies with Oromis?â€
Eragon grunted as his foul temper returned on a wave of unpleasant memories,
souring his pleasure at beingwith Arya. All he wanted to do was crawl into bed, go to
sleep, and forget the day. “Oromis-elda,†he said, working each word around his
mouth before letting it escape, “is quite thorough.â€
He winced as she gripped his upper arm with bruising strength. “What has gone
amiss?â€
He tried to shrug her hand off. “Nothing.â€
“I’ve traveled with you long enough to know when you’re happy, angry… or in pain.
Did something happen between you and Oromis? If so, you have to tell me so that it
can be rectified as soon as possible. Or was it your back?We could—â€
“It’s not my training!†Despite his pique, Eragon noticed that she seemed genuinely
concerned, which pleased him. “Ask Saphira. She can tell you.â€
“I want to hear it from you,†she said quietly.
The muscles in Eragon’s jaw spasmed as he clenched his teeth. In a low voice, no
more than a whisper, he first described how he had failed at his meditation in the
glade, then the incident that poisoned his heart like a viper coiled in his chest: his
blessing.
Arya released his arm and clutched at the root of the Menoa tree, as if to steady
herself. “Barzûl.†The dwarf curse alarmed him; he had never heard her use profanity
before, and this one was particularly apt, for it meantill fate. “I knew of your act in
Farthen Dûr, for sure, but I never thought… I neversuspected that such a thing could
occur. I cry your pardon, Eragon, for forcing you to leave your rooms tonight. I did
not comprehend your discomfort. You must want to be alone.â€
“No,†he said. “No, I appreciate the company and the things you’ve shown me.†He
smiled at her, and after a moment, she smiled back. Together they sat small and still at
the base of the ancient tree and watched the moon arch high over the peaceful forest
before it hid behind the gathering clouds. “I only wonder what will become of the
child.â€
High above their heads, Blagden ruffled his bone-white feathers and shrieked,
“Wyrda!â€
A MAZE OF OPPOSITION
Nasuada crossed her arms without bothering to conceal her impatience as she
examined the two men before her.
The one on the right had a neck so thick, it forced his head to jut forward at nearly
right angles to his shoulders, giving him a stubborn, dim-witted appearance. This was
intensified by his heavy brow with its two cliffs of matted hair—almost long enough
to pull over his eyes—and bulbous lips that remained puckered into a pink mushroom,
even when he spoke. She knew better than to put stock in his repulsive looks, though.
No matter its rough housing, his tongue was as clever as a jester’s.
The only identifying feature of the second man was his pale skin, which refused to
darken under Surda’s relentless sun, even though the Varden had been in Aberon, the
capital, for some weeks now. From his coloring, Nasuada guessed he had been born in
the northern reaches of the Empire. He held a knit wool cap that he wrung into a hard
rope between his hands.
“You,†she said, pointing at him. “How many of your chickens did he kill again?â€
“Thirteen, Ma’am.â€
Nasuada returned her attention to the ugly man. “An unlucky number, by all
accounts, Master Gamble. And so it has proved for you. You are guilty of both theft
and destroying someone else’s property without offering proper recompense.â€
“I never denied it.â€
“I only wonder how you ate thirteen chickens in four days. Are youever full, Master
Gamble?â€
He gave her a jocular grin and scratched the side of his face. The rasp of his
untrimmed fingernails over his stubble annoyed her, and it was only with an effort of
will that she kept from asking him to stop. “Well, not to be disrespectful, Ma’am, but
fillingmy stomach wouldn’t be a problem if you fed us properly, what with all the
work we do. I’m a large man, an‘ I need a bit o’ meat in my belly after half a day
breaking rocks with a mattock. I did my best to resist temptation, I did. But three
weeks of short rations and watching these farmers drive around fat livestock they
wouldn’t share even if a body were starving… Well, I’ll admit, it broke me. I’m not a
strongman when it comes to food. I like it hot and I like plenty of it. An‘ I don’t
fancy I’m the only one willing to help himself.â€
And that’s the heart of the problem,reflected Nasuada. The Varden could not afford
to feed its members, not even with Surda’s king, Orrin, helping. Orrin had opened his
treasury to them, but he had refused to behave as Galbatorixwas wont to do when
moving his army across the Empire, which was to appropriate supplies from his
countrymen without paying for them. A noble sentiment, but one that only makes my
task harder. Still, she knew that acts like those were what separated her, Orrin,
Hrothgar, and Islanzadí from Galbatorix’s despotism. It would be so easy to cross that
divide without noticing it.
“I understand your reasons, Master Gamble. However, although the Varden aren’t a
country and we answer to no one’s authority but our own, that doesnot give you or
anyone else leave to ignore the rule of law as laid down by my predecessors or as it’s
observed here in Surda. Therefore, I order you to pay a copper for each chicken you
stole.â€
Gamble surprised her by accedingwithout protest. “As you wish, Ma’am,†he said.
“That’s it?†exclaimed the pale man. He wrung his cap even tighter. “That’s no fair
price. If I sold them in any market, they’d—â€
She could not contain herself any longer. “Yes! You’d get more. But I happen to
know that Master Gamble cannot afford to give you the chickens’ full price, as I’m
the one who provides his salary! As I do yours. You forget that if I decided to acquire
your poultry for the good of the Varden, you’d get no more than a copper a chicken
and be lucky at that. Am I understood?â€
“He can’t—â€
“Am I understood?â€
After a moment, the pale man subsided and muttered, “Yes, Ma’am.â€
“Very well. You’re both dismissed.â€With an expression of sardonic admiration,
Gamble touched his brow and bowed to Nasuada before backing out of the stone
room with his sullen opponent. “You too,†she said to the guards on either side of the
door.
As soon as they were gone, she slumped in her chair with an exhausted sigh and
reached for her fan, batting it over her face in a futile attempt to dissipate the
pinpricks of sweat that accumulated on her forehead. The constant heat drained her
strength and made even the smallest task arduous.
She suspected she would feel tired even if it were winter. Familiar as she was with
the innermost secrets of the Varden, it still had taken more work than she expected to
transport the entire organization from Farthen Dûr, through the Beor Mountains, and
deliver them to Surda and Aberon. She shuddered, remembering long, uncomfortable
days spent in the saddle. Planning and executing their departure had been exceedingly
difficult, as was integrating the Varden into their new surroundings while
simultaneously preparing for an attack on the Empire. I don’t have enough time each
day to solve all these problems, she lamented.
Finally, she dropped the fan and rang the bellpull, summoning her handmaid, Farica.
The banner hanging to the right of the cherrywood desk rippled as the door hidden
behind it opened. Farica slipped out to stand with downcast eyes by Nasuada’s elbow.
“Are there any more?†asked Nasuada.
“No, Ma’am.â€
She tried not to let her relief show. Once a week, she held an open court to resolve
the Varden’s various disputes. Anyone who felt that they had been wronged could
seek an audience with her and ask for her judgment. She could not imagine a more
difficult and thankless chore. As her father had often said after negotiatingwith
Hrothgar, “A good compromise leaves everyone angry.†And so it seemed.
Returning her attention to the matter at hand, she told Farica, “I want that Gamble
reassigned. Give him a job where his talent with words will be of some use.
Quartermaster, perhaps, just so long as it’s a job where he’ll get full rations. I don’t
want to see him before me for stealing again.â€
Farica nodded and went to the desk, where she recorded Nasuada’s instructions on a
parchment scroll. That skill alone made her invaluable. Farica asked, “Where can I
find him?â€
“One of the work gangs in the quarry.â€
“Yes, Ma’am. Oh, while you were occupied, KingOrrin asked that you join him in
his laboratory.â€
“What has he done in there now, blind himself?†Nasuada washed her wrists and
neck with lavender water, then checked her hair in the mirror of polished silver that
Orrin had given her and tugged on her overgown until the sleeves were straight.
Satisfied with her appearance, she swept out of her chambers with Farica in tow. The
sun was so bright today that no torches were needed to illuminate the inside of
Borromeo Castle, nor could their added warmth have been tolerated. Shafts of light
fell through the crossletted arrow slits and glowed upon the inner wall of the corridor,
striping the air with bars of golden dust at regular intervals. Nasuada looked out one
embrasure toward the barbican, where thirty or so of Orrin’s orange-clad cavalry
soldiers were setting forth on another of their ceaseless rounds of patrols in the
countryside surroundingAberon.
Not that they could do much good if Galbatorix decided to attack us himself,she
thought bitterly. Their only protection against that was Galbatorix’s pride and, she
hoped, his fear of Eragon. All leaders were aware of the risk of usurpation, but
usurpers themselves were doubly afraid of the threat that a single determined
individual could pose. Nasuada knew that she was playing an exceedingly dangerous
game with the most powerful madman in Alagaësia. If she misjudged how far she
could push him, she and the rest of the Varden would be destroyed, alongwith any
hope of endingGalbatorix’s reign.
The clean smell of the castle reminded her of the times she had stayed there as a
child, back when Orrin’s father, King Larkin, still ruled. She never saw much of Orrin
then. He was five years older than her and already occupied with his duties as a
prince. Nowadays, though, she often felt as if she were the elder one.
At the door to Orrin’s laboratory, she had to stop and wait for his bodyguards, who
were always posted outside, to announce her presence to the king. Soon Orrin’s voice
boomed out into the stairwell: “Lady Nasuada! I’m so glad you came. I have
something to show you.â€
Mentally bracing herself, she entered the laboratory with Farica. A maze of tables
laden with a fantastic array of alembics, beakers, and retorts confronted them, like a
glass thicket waiting to snag their dresses on any one of its myriad fragile branches.
The heavy odor of metallic vapors made Nasuada’s eyes water. Lifting their hems off
the floor, she and Farica wended their way in single file toward the back of the room,
past hourglasses and scales, arcane tomes bound with black iron, dwarven astrolabes,
and piles of phosphorescent crystal prisms that produced fitful blue flashes.
They met Orrin by a marble-topped bench, where he stirred a crucible of quicksilver
with a glass tube that was closed at one end, open at the other, and must have
measured at least three feet in length, although it was only a quarter of an inch thick.
“Sire,†said Nasuada. As befitted one of equal rank to the king, she remained upright
while Farica curtsied. “You seem to have recovered from the explosion last week.â€
Orrin grimaced good-naturedly. “I learned that it’s not wise to combine phosphorus
and water in an enclosed space. The result can be quite violent.â€
“Has all of your hearing returned?â€
“Not entirely, but…†Grinning like a boy with his first dagger, he lit a taper with the
coals from a brazier, which she could not fathom how he endured in the stifling
weather, carried the flaming brand back to the bench, and used it to start a pipe
packed with cardus weed.
“I didn’t know that you smoked.â€
“I don’t really,†he confessed, “except that I found that since my eardrum hasn’t
completely sealed up yet, I can do this…†Drawing on the pipe, he puffed out his
cheeks until a tendril of smoke issued from his left ear, like a snake leaving its den,
and coiled up the side of his head. It was so unexpected, Nasuada burst out laughing,
and after a moment, Orrin joined her, releasing a plume of smoke from his mouth.
“It’s the most peculiar sensation,†he confided. “Tickles like crazy on the way out.â€
Growing serious again, Nasuada asked, “Was there something else that you wished to
discuss with me, Sire?â€
He snapped his fingers. “Of course.†Dipping his long glass tube in the crucible, he
filled it with quicksilver, then capped the open end with one finger and showed the
whole thing to her. “Would you agree that the only thing in this tube is quicksilver?â€
“I would.â€Is this why he wanted to see me?
“And what about now?â€With a quick movement, he inverted the tube and planted the
open end inside the crucible, removing his finger. Instead of all pouring out, as
Nasuada expected, the quicksilver in the tube dropped about halfway, then stopped
and held its position. Orrin pointed to the empty section above the suspended metal.
He asked, “What occupies that space?â€
“It must be air,†asserted Nasuada.
Orrin grinned and shook his head. “If that were true, how would the air bypass the
quicksilver or diffuse through the glass? No routes are available by which the
atmosphere can gain admission.†He gestured at Farica. “What’s your opinion, maid?â€
Farica stared at the tube, then shrugged and said, “It can’t be nothing, Sire.â€
“Ah, but that’s exactly what I think it is: nothing. I believe that I’ve solved one of the
oldest conundrums of natural philosophy by creating and proving the existence of a
vacuum! It completely invalidates Vacher’s theories and means that Ládin was
actually a genius. Blasted elves always seem to be right.â€
Nasuada struggled to remain cordial as she asked, “What purpose does it serve,
though?â€
“Purpose?†Orrin looked at her with genuine astonishment. “None, of course. At least
not that I can think of. However, this will help us to understand the mechanics of our
world, how and why things happen. It’s a wondrous discovery. Who knows what else
it might lead to?â€While he spoke, he emptied the tube and carefully placed it in a
velvet-padded box that held similar delicate instruments. “The prospect that truly
excites me, though, is of usingmagic to ferret out nature’s secrets. Why, just
yesterday, with a single spell, Trianna helped me to discover two entirely new gases.
Imagine what could be learned if magic were systematically applied to the disciplines
of natural philosophy. I’m considering learningmagic myself, if I have the talent for
it, and if I can convince some magic users to divulge their knowledge. It’s a pity that
your Dragon Rider, Eragon, didn’t accompany you here; I’m sure that he could help
me.â€
Looking at Farica, Nasuada said, “Wait for me outside.†The woman curtsied and
then departed. Once Nasuada heard the door to the laboratory close, she said, “Orrin.
Have you taken leave of your senses?â€
“Whatever do you mean?â€
“While you spend your time locked in here conducting experiments that no one
understands—endangering your well-being in the process—your country totters on
the brink of war. A myriad issues await your decision, and you stand here blowing
smoke and playingwith quicksilver?â€
His face hardened. “I am quite aware of my duties, Nasuada. You may lead the
Varden, but I’m still king of Surda, and you would do well to recall that before you
speak so disrespectfully. Need I remind you that your sanctuary here depends on my
continued goodwill?â€
She knew it was an idle threat; many of the Surdan people had relatives in the
Varden, and vice versa. They were too closely linked for either of them to abandon
the other. No, the real reason that Orrin had taken offense was the question of
authority. Since it was nigh impossible to keep large groups of armed warriors at the
ready over extended periods of time—as Nasuada had learned, feeding that many
inactive people was a logistical nightmare—the Varden had begun taking jobs,
starting farms, and otherwise assimilating into their host country. Where will that
leave me eventually? As the leader of a nonexistent army? A general or councilor
under Orrin? Her position was precarious. If she moved too quickly or with too much
initiative, Orrin would perceive it as a threat and turn against her, especially now that
she was cloaked in the glamour of the Varden’s victory in Farthen Dûr. But if she
waited too long, they would lose their chance to exploit Galbatorix’s momentary
weakness. Her only advantage over the maze of opposition was her command of the
one element that had instigated this act of the play: Eragon and Saphira.
She said, “I don’t seek to undermine your command, Orrin. That was never my
intention, and I apologize if it appeared that way.†He bowed his neck with a stiff bob.
Unsure of how to continue, she leaned on her fingertips against the lip of the bench.
“It’s only… so many things must be done. I work night and day—I keep a tablet
beside my bed for notes—and yet I never catch up; I feel as if we are always balanced
on the brink of disaster.â€
Orrin picked up a pestle stained black from use and rolled it between his palms with a
steady, hypnotic rhythm. “Before you came here… No, that’s not right. Before your
Rider materialized fully formed from the ethers like Moratensis from his fountain, I
expected to live my life as my father and grandfather before me. That is, opposing
Galbatorix in secret. You must excuse me if it takes a while to accustom myself to
this new reality.â€
It was as much contrition as she could expect in return. “I understand.â€
He stopped the pestle in its path for a brief moment. “You are newly come to your
power, whereas I have held mine for a number of years. If I may be arrogant enough
to offer advice, I’ve found that it’s essential for my sanity to allocate a certain portion
of the day for my own interests.â€
“I couldn’t do that,†objected Nasuada. “Every moment I waste might be the moment
of effort that’s needed to defeat Galbatorix.â€
The pestle paused again. “You do the Varden a disservice if you insist on
overworking yourself. No one can function properly without occasional peace and
quiet. They don’t have to be long breaks, just five or ten minutes. You could even
practice your archery, and then you would still serve your goals, albeit in a different
manner… That’s why I had this laboratory constructed in the first place. That’s why I
blow smoke and play with quicksilver, as you put it—so that I don’t scream with
frustration throughout the rest of the day.â€
Despite her reluctance to surrender her view of Orrin as a feckless layabout, Nasuada
could not help but acknowledge the validity of his argument. “I will keep your
recommendation in mind.â€
Some of his former levity returned as he smiled. “That’s all I ask.â€
Walking to the window, she pushed the shutters farther open and gazed down upon
Aberon, with its cries of quick-fingered merchants hawking their wares to
unsuspecting customers, the clotted yellow dust blowing from the western road as a
caravan approached the city gates, the air that shimmered over clay tile roofs and
carried the scent of cardus weed and incense from the marble temples, and the fields
that surrounded Aberon like the outstretched petals of a flower.
Without turning around, she asked, “Have you received copies of our latest reports
from the Empire?â€
“I have.†He joined her at the window.
“What’s your opinion of them?
“That they’re too meager and incomplete to extract any meaningful conclusions.â€
“They’re the best we have, though. Give me your suspicions and your hunches.
Extrapolate from the known facts like you would if this were one of your
experiments.†She smiled to herself. “I promise that I won’t attach meaning to what
you say.â€
She had to wait for his reply, and when it came, it was with the dolorous weight of a
doomsday prophecy. “Increased taxes, emptied garrisons, horses and oxen confiscated
throughout the Empire… It seems that Galbatorix gathers his forces in preparation to
confront us, though I cannot tell whether he means to do it in offense or defense.â€
Revolving shadows cooled their faces as a cloud of starlings whirled across the sun.
“The question that weighs upon my mind now is, how longwill it take him to
mobilize? For that will determine the course of our strategies.â€
“Weeks. Months. Years. I cannot predict his actions.â€
He nodded. “Have your agents continued to spread tidings of Eragon?â€
“It has become increasingly dangerous, but yes. My hope is that if we inundate cities
like Dras-Leona with rumors of Eragon’s prowess, when we actually reach the city
and they see him, they will join us of their own accord and we can avoid a siege.â€
“War is rarely so easy.â€
She let the comment pass uncontested. “And how fares the mobilization of your own
army? The Varden, as always, are ready to fight.â€
Orrin spread his hands in a placating gesture. “It’s difficult to rouse a nation,
Nasuada. There are nobles who I must convince to back me, armor and weapons to be
constructed, supplies to be gathered…â€
“And in the meantime, how do I feed my people?We need more land than you
allotted us—â€
“Well, I know it,†he said.
“—and we’ll only get it by invading the Empire, unless you fancy making the Varden
a permanent addition to Surda. If so, you’ll have to find homes for the thousands of
people I brought from Farthen Dûr, which won’t please your existing citizens.
Whatever your choice, choose quickly, because I fear that if you continue to
procrastinate, the Varden will disintegrate into an uncontrollable horde.†She tried not
to make it sound like a threat.
Nevertheless, Orrin obviously did not appreciate the insinuation. His upper lip curled
and he said, “Your father never let his men get out of hand. I trust you won’t either, if
you expect to remain leader of the Varden. As for our preparations, there’s a limit to
what we can do in so short a time; you’ll just have to wait until we are ready.â€
She gripped the windowsill until veins stood out on her wrists and her fingernails
sank into the crevices between the stones, yet she allowed none of her anger to color
her voice: “In that case, will you lend the Varden more gold for food?â€
“No. I’ve given you all the money I can spare.â€
“How will we eat, then?â€
“I would suggest that you raise the funds yourself.â€
Furious, she gave him her widest, brightest smile—holding it long enough to make
him shift with unease—and then curtsied as deeply as a servant, never letting her
demented grimace waver. “Farewell then, Sire. I hope that the rest of your day is as
enjoyable as our conversation was.â€
Orrin muttered an unintelligible response as she swept back to the laboratory’s
entrance. In her anger, Nasuada caught her right sleeve on a jade bottle and knocked it
over, cracking the stone and releasing a flood of yellow liquid that splattered her
sleeve and soaked her skirt. She flicked her wrist in annoyance without stopping.
Farica rejoined her in the stairwell, and together they traversed the warren of
passageways to Nasuada’s chambers.
HANGING BY A THREAD
Throwing open the doors to her rooms, Nasuada strode to her desk, then dropped into
a chair, blind to her surroundings. Her spine was so rigid that her shoulders did not
touch the back. She felt frozen by the insoluble quandary the Varden faced. The rise
and fall of her chest slowed until it was imperceptible. I have failed, was all she could
think.
“Ma’am, your sleeve!â€
Jolted from her reverie, Nasuada looked down to find Farica beating at her right arm
with a cleaning rag. A wisp of smoke rose from the embroidered sleeve. Alarmed,
Nasuada pushed herself out of the chair and twisted her arm, trying to find the cause
of the smoke. Her sleeve and skirt were disintegrating into chalky cobwebs that
emitted acrid fumes.
“Get me out of this,†she said.
She held her contaminated arm away from her body and forced herself to remain still
as Farica unlaced her overgown. The handmaid’s fingers scrabbled against Nasuada’s
back with frantic haste, fumblingwith the knots, and then finally loosening the wool
shell that encased Nasuada’s torso. As soon as the overgown sagged, Nasuada yanked
her arms out of the sleeves and clawed her way free of the robe.
Panting, she stood by the desk, clad only in her slippers and linen chemise. To her
relief, the expensive chainsil had escaped harm, although it had acquired a foul reek.
“Did it burn you?†asked Farica. Nasuada shook her head, not trusting her tongue to
respond. Farica nudged the overgown with the tip of her shoe. “What evil is this?â€
“One of Orrin’s foul concoctions,†croaked Nasuada. “I spilled it in his laboratory.â€
Calming herself with long breaths, she examined the ruined gown with dismay. It had
been woven by the dwarf women of Dûrgrimst Ingeitum as a gift for her last birthday
and was one of the finest pieces in her wardrobe. She had nothing to replace it, nor
could she justify commissioning a new dress, considering the Varden’s financial
difficulties. Somehow I will have to make do without.
Farica shook her head. “It’s a shame to lose such a pretty dress.†She went round the
desk to a sewing basket and returned with a pair of etched scissors. “We might as well
save as much of the cloth as we can. I’ll cut off the ruined parts and have them
burned.â€
Nasuada scowled and paced the length of the room, seethingwith anger at her own
clumsiness and at having another problem added to her already overwhelming list of
worries. “What am I going to wear to court now?†she demanded.
The scissors bit into the soft wool with brisk authority. “Mayhap your linen dress.â€
“It’s too casual to appear in before Orrin and his nobles.â€
“Give me a chance with it, Ma’am. I’m sure that I can alter it so it’s serviceable. By
the time I’m done, it’ll look twice as grand as this one ever did.â€
“No, no. It won’t work. They’ll just laugh at me. It’s hard enough to command their
respect when I’m dressed properly, much less if I’m wearing patched gowns that
advertise our poverty.â€
The older woman fixed Nasuada with a stern gaze. “Itwill work, so long as you don’t
apologize for your appearance. Not only that, I guarantee that the other ladies will be
so taken with your new fashion that they’ll imitate you. Just you wait and see.†Going
to the door, she cracked it open and handed the damaged fabric to one of the guards
outside. “Your mistress wants this burned. Do it in secret and breathe not a word of
this to another soul or you’ll have me to answer to.†The guard saluted.
Nasuada could not help smiling. “How would I function without you, Farica?â€
“Quite well, I should think.â€
After donning her green hunting frock—which, with its light skirt, provided some
respite from the day’s heat—Nasuada decided that even though she was ill disposed
toward Orrin, she would take his advice and break with her regular schedule to do
nothingmore important than help Farica rip out stitches from the overgown. She
found the repetitive task an excellent way to focus her thoughts. While she pulled on
the threads, she discussed the Varden’s predicament with Farica, in the hope that she
might perceive a solution that had escaped Nasuada.
In the end, Farica’s only assistance was to observe, “Seems most matters in this
world have their root in gold. If we had enough of it, we could buy Galbatorix right
off his black throne… might not even have to fight his men.â€
Did I really expect that someone else would do my job for me? Nasuada asked
herself. I led us into this blind and I have to lead us out.
Intending to cut open a seam, she extended her arm and snagged the tip of her knife
on a fringe of bobbin lace, slicing it in half. She stared at the ragged wound in the
lace, at the frayed ends of the parchment-colored strands that wriggled across the
overgown like so many contorted worms, stared and felt a hysterical laugh claw at her
throat even as a tear formed in her eye. Could her luck be any worse?
The bobbin lace was the most valuable part of the dress. Even though lace required
skill to make, its rarity and expense were mainly due to its central ingredient: vast,
copious, mind-numbing, and deadening amounts of time. It took so long to produce
that if you attempted to create a lace veil by yourself, your progress would be
measured not in weeks but in months. Ounce for ounce, lace was worth more than
gold or silver.
She ran her fingers over the band of threads, pausing on the rift that she had created.
It’s not as if lace takes that much energy, just time. She hated making it herself.
Energy… energy… At that moment, a series of images flashed through her mind:
Orrin talking about usingmagic for research; Trianna, the woman who had helmed
Du Vrangr Gata since the Twins’ deaths; looking up at one of the Varden’s healers
while he explained the principles of magic to Nasuada when she was only five or six
years old. The disparate experiences formed a chain of reasoning that was so
outrageous and unlikely, it finally released the laugh imprisoned in her throat.
Farica gave her an odd look and waited for an explanation. Standing, Nasuada
tumbled half the overgown off her lap and onto the floor. “Fetch me Trianna this
instant,†she said. “I don’t care what she’s doing; bring her here.â€
The skin around Farica’s eyes tightened, but she curtsied and said, “As you wish,
Ma’am.†She departed through the hidden servants’ door.
“Thank you,†Nasuada whispered in the empty room.
She understood her maid’s reluctance; she too felt uncomfortable whenever she had
to interact with magic users. Indeed, she only trusted Eragon because he was a
Rider—although that was no proof of virtue, as Galbatorix had shown—and because
of his oath of fealty, which Nasuada knew he would never break. It scared her to
consider magicians’ and sorcerers’ powers. The thought that a seemingly ordinary
person could kill with a word; invade your mind if he or she wished; cheat, lie, and
steal without being caught; and otherwise defy society with near impunity…
Her heart quickened.
How did you enforce the law when a certain segment of the population possessed
special powers? At its most basic level, the Varden’s war against the Empire was
nothingmore than an attempt to bring to justice a man who had abused his magical
abilities and to prevent him from committing further crimes. All this pain and
destruction because no one had the strength to defeat Galbatorix. He won’t even die
after a normal span of years!
Although she disliked magic, she knew that it would play a crucial role in removing
Galbatorix and that she could not afford to alienate its practitioners until victory was
assured. Once that occurred, she intended to resolve the problem that they presented.
A brazen knock on her chamber door disturbed her thoughts. Fixing a pleasant smile
on her face and guarding her mind as she had been trained, Nasuada said, “Enter!†It
was important that she appear polite after summoning Trianna in such a rude manner.
The door thrust open and the brunette sorceress strode into the room, her tousled
locks piled high above her head with obvious haste. She looked as if she had just been
roused from bed. Bowing in the dwarven fashion, she said, “You asked for me,
Lady?â€
“I did.†Relaxing into a chair, Nasuada let her gaze slowly drift up and down Trianna.
The sorceress lifted her chin under Nasuada’s examination. “I need to know:What is
the most important rule of magic?â€
Trianna frowned. “That whatever you do with magic requires the same amount of
energy as it would to do otherwise.â€
“And what youcan do is only limited by your ingenuity and by your knowledge of
the ancient language?â€
“Other strictures apply, but in general, yes. Lady, why do you ask? These are basic
principles of magic that, while not commonly bandied about, I am sure you are
familiar with.â€
“I am. I wished to ensure that I understood them properly.â€Without moving from her
chair, Nasuada reached down and lifted the overgown so that Trianna could see the
mutilated lace. “So then, within those limits, you should be able to devise a spell that
will allow you to manufacture lace with magic.â€
A condescending sneer distorted the sorceress’s dark lips. “Du Vrangr Gata has more
important duties than repairing your clothes, Lady. Our art is not so common as to be
employed for mere whims. I’m sure that you will find your seamstresses and tailors
more than capable of fulfilling your request. Now, if you will excuse me, I—â€
“Be quiet, woman,†said Nasuada in a flat voice. Astonishment muted Trianna in
midsentence. “I see that I must teach Du Vrangr Gata the same lesson that I taught the
Council of Elders: I may be young, but I am no child to be patronized. I ask about lace
because if you can manufacture it quickly and easily with magic, then we can support
the Varden by selling inexpensive bobbin and needle lace throughout the Empire.
Galbatorix’s own people will provide the funds we need to survive.â€
“But that’s ridiculous,†protested Trianna. Even Farica looked skeptical. “You can’t
pay for a war withlace. â€
Nasuada raised an eyebrow. “Why not?Women who otherwise could never afford to
own lace will leap at the chance to buy ours. Every farmer’s wife who longs to appear
richer than she is will want it. Even wealthy merchants and nobles will give us their
gold because our lace will be finer than any thrown or stitched by human hands. We’ll
garner a fortune to rival the dwarves‘. That is, if you are skilled enough in magic to do
what I want.â€
Trianna tossed her hair. “You doubt my abilities?â€
“Can it be done!â€
Trianna hesitated, then took the overgown from Nasuada and studied the lace strip
for a longwhile. At last she said, “It should be possible, but I’ll have to conduct some
tests before I know for certain.â€
“Do so immediately. From now on, this is your most important assignment. And find
an experienced lace maker to advise you on the patterns.â€
“Yes, Lady Nasuada.â€
Nasuada allowed her voice to soften. “Good. I also want you to select the brightest
members of Du Vrangr Gata and work with them to invent other magical techniques
that will help the Varden. That’s your responsibility, not mine.â€
“Yes, Lady Nasuada.â€
“Nowyou are excused. Report back to me tomorrow morning.â€
“Yes, Lady Nasuada.â€
Satisfied, Nasuada watched the sorceress depart, then closed her eyes and allowed
herself to enjoy a moment of pride for what she had accomplished. She knew that no
man, not even her father, would have thought of her solution. “This ismy contribution
to the Varden,†she told herself, wishing that Ajihad could witness it. Louder, she
asked, “Did I surprise you, Farica?â€
“You always do, Ma’am.â€
ELVA
“Ma’am?… You’re needed, Ma’am.â€
“What?†Reluctant to move, Nasuada opened her eyes and saw Jörmundur enter the
room. The wiry veteran pulled off his helm, tucked it in the crook of his right arm,
and made his way to her with his left hand planted on the pommel of his sword.
The links of his hauberk clinked as he bowed. “My Lady.â€
“Welcome, Jörmundur. How is your son today?†She was pleased that he had come.
Of all the members of the Council of Elders, he had accepted her leadership the most
easily, serving her with the same dogged loyalty and determination as he had Ajihad.
If all my warriors were like him, no one could stop us.
“His cough has subsided.â€
“I’m glad to hear it. Now, what brings you?â€
Lines appeared on Jörmundur’s forehead. He ran his free hand over his hair, which
was tied back in a ponytail, then caught himself and pushed his hand back down to his
side. “Magic, of the strangest kind.â€
“Oh?â€
“Do you remember the babe that Eragon blessed?â€
“Aye.†Nasuada had seen her only once, but she was well aware of the exaggerated
tales about the child that circulated among the Varden, as well as the Varden’s hopes
for what the girl might achieve once she grew up. Nasuada was more pragmatic about
the subject. Whatever the infant became, it would not be for many years, by which
time the battle with Galbatorixwould already be won or lost.
“I’ve been asked to take you to her.â€
“Asked? By whom? And why?â€
“A boy on the practice field told me that you should visit the child. Said that you
would find it interesting. He refused to give me his name, but he looked like what that
witch’s werecat is supposed to turn into, so I thought… Well, I thought you should
know.†Jörmundur looked embarrassed. “I asked my men questions about the girl, and
I heard things… that she’sdifferent. â€
“In what way?â€
He shrugged. “Enough to believe that you should do what the werecat says.â€
Nasuada frowned. She knew from the old stories that ignoring a werecat was the
height of folly and often led to one’s doom. However, his companion—Angela the
herbalist—was another magic user that Nasuada did not entirely trust; she was too
independent and unpredictable. “Magic,†she said, making it a curse.
“Magic,†agreed Jörmundur, though he used it as a word of awe and fear.
“Very well, let us go visit this child. Is she within the castle?â€
“Orrin gave her and her caretaker rooms on the west side of the keep.â€
“Take me to her.â€
Gathering up her skirts, Nasuada ordered Farica to postpone the rest of the day’s
appointments, then left the chambers. Behind her, she heard Jörmundur snap his
fingers as he directed four guards to take up positions around her. A moment later, he
joined her side, pointing out their course.
The heat within Borromeo Castle had increased to the point where they felt as if they
were trapped within a giant bread oven. The air shimmered like liquid glass along the
windowsills.
Though she was uncomfortable, Nasuada knew that she dealt with the heat better
than most people because of her swarthy skin. The ones who had the hardest time
enduring the high temperatures were men like Jörmundur and her guards, who had to
wear their armor all day long, even if they were stationed out under the lidless gaze of
the sun.
Nasuada kept close watch on the five men as sweat gathered on their exposed skin
and their breathing became ever more ragged. Since they had arrived in Aberon, a
number of the Varden had fainted from heatstroke—two of whom died an hour or two
later—and she had no intention of losingmore of her subjects by driving them beyond
their physical limits.
When she deemed they needed to rest, she bade them to stop—overriding their
objections—and get drinks of water from a servant. “I can’t have you toppling like
ninepins.â€
They had to break twice more before they reached their destination, a nondescript
door recessed in the inner wall of the corridor. The floor around it was littered with
gifts.
Jörmundur knocked, and a quavering voice from inside asked, “Who is it?â€
“Lady Nasuada, come to see the child,†he said.
“Be you of true heart and steadfast resolve?â€
This time Nasuada answered, “My heart is pure and my resolve is as iron.â€
“Cross the threshold, then, and be welcome.â€
The door swung open to an entryway lit by a single red dwarf lantern. No one was at
the door. Proceeding inward, Nasuada saw that the walls and ceilingwere swathed
with layers of dark fabric, giving the place the appearance of a cave or lair. To her
surprise, the air was quite cold, almost chilly, like a brisk autumn night. Apprehension
sank its poisonous claws into her belly. Magic.
A black mesh curtain blocked her way. Brushing it aside, she found herself in what
was once a sitting room. The furniture had been removed, except for a line of chairs
pushed against the shrouded walls. A cluster of faint dwarf lanterns were hung in a
dimple of the sagging fabric overhead, castingweird multicolored shadows in every
direction.
A bent crone watched her from the depths of one corner, bracketed by Angela the
herbalist and the werecat, who stood with his hackles raised. In the center of the room
knelt a pale girl that Nasuada took to be three or four years old. The girl picked at a
platter of food on her lap. No one spoke.
Confused, Nasuada asked, “Where is the baby?â€
The girl looked up.
Nasuada gasped as she saw the dragon mark bright upon the child’s brow and as she
peered deep into her violet eyes. The girl quirked her lips with a terrible, knowing
smile. “I am Elva.â€
Nasuada recoiled without thinking, clutching at the dagger she kept strapped to her
left forearm. It was an adult’s voice and filled with an adult’s experience and
cynicism. It sounded profane coming from the mouth of a child.
“Don’t run,†said Elva. “I’m your friend.†She put the platter aside; it was empty
now. To the crone, she said, “More food.†The old woman hurried from the room.
Then Elva patted the floor beside her. “Please, sit. I have been waiting for you ever
since I learned to talk.â€
Keeping her grip on her dagger, Nasuada lowered herself to the stones. “When was
that?â€
“Last week.†Elva folded her hands in her lap. She fixed her ghastly eyes on
Nasuada, pinning her in place through the unnatural strength of her gaze. Nasuada felt
as if a violet lance had pierced her skull and was twisting inside her mind, tearing
apart her thoughts and memories. She fought the desire to scream.
Leaning forward, Elva reached out and cupped Nasuada’s cheek with one soft hand.
“You know, Ajihad could not have led the Varden better than you have. You chose
the correct path. Your name will be praised for centuries for having the courage and
foresight to move the Varden to Surda and attack the Empire when everyone else
thought it was insane to do so.â€
Nasuada gaped at the girl, stunned. Like a key matched to a lock, Elva’s words
perfectly addressed Nasuada’s primal fears, the doubts that kept her awake at night,
sweating in the darkness. An involuntary surge of emotion rushed through her,
bolstering her with a sense of confidence and peace that she had not possessed since
before Ajihad’s death. Tears of relief burst from her eyes and rolled down her face. It
was as if Elva had known exactly what to say in order to comfort her.
Nasuada loathed her for it.
Her euphoria warred against her distaste for how this moment of weakness had been
induced and by whom. Nor did she trust the girl’s motivation.
“Whatare you?†she demanded.
“I am what Eragon made me.â€
“He blessed you.â€
The dreadful, ancient eyes were obscured for a moment as Elva blinked. “He did not
understand his actions. Since Eragon ensorcelled me, whenever I see a person, I sense
all the hurts that beset him and are about to beset him. When I was smaller, I could do
nothing about it. So I grew bigger.â€
“Why would—â€
“The magic in my blood drives me to protect people from pain… no matter the injury
to myself or whether I want to help or not.†Her smile acquired a bitter twist. “It costs
me dearly if I resist the urge.â€
As Nasuada digested the implications, she realized that Elva’s unsettling aspect was a
by-product of the suffering that she had been exposed to. Nasuada shivered at the
thought of what the girl had endured. It must have torn her apart to have this
compulsion and yet be unable to act on it. Against her better judgment, she began to
feel a measure of sympathy for Elva.
“Why have you told me this?â€
“I thought that you should know who and what I am.†Elva paused, and the fire in her
gaze strengthened. “And that I will fight for you however I can. Use me as you would
an assassin—in hiding, in the dark, and without mercy.†She laughed with a high,
chilling voice. “You wonder why; I see you do. Because unless this war ends, and
sooner rather than later, it will drive me insane. I find it hard enough to deal with the
agonies of everyday life without also having to confront the atrocities of battle. Use
me to end it and I’ll ensure that your life is as happy as any human has had the
privilege to experience.â€
At that moment, the crone scurried back into the room, bowed to Elva, and handed
her a new platter of food. It was a physical relief to Nasuada as Elva looked down and
attacked a leg of mutton, cramming the meat into her mouth with both hands. She ate
with the ravenous intensity of a gorgingwolf, displaying a complete lack of decorum.
With her violet eyes hidden and her dragon mark covered by black bangs, she once
again appeared to be nothingmore than an innocent child.
Nasuada waited until it became apparent that Elva had said all she was going to.
Then—at a gesture from Angela—she accompanied the herbalist through a side door,
leaving the pale girl sitting alone in the center of the dark, cloth-bound room, like a
dire fetus nestled in its womb, waiting for the right moment to emerge.
Angela made sure that the door was closed and whispered, “All she does is eat and
eat. We can’t sate her appetite with the current rations. Can you—â€
“She’ll be fed. You needn’t worry about it.†Nasuada rubbed her arms, trying to
eradicate the memory of those awful, horrible eyes…
“Thank you.â€
“Has this ever happened to anyone else?â€
Angela shook her head until her curly hair bounced on her shoulders. “Not in the
entire history of magic. I tried to cast her future, but it’s a hopeless quagmire—lovely
word, quagmire—because her life interacts with so many others.â€
“Is she dangerous?â€
“We’re all dangerous.â€
“You know what I mean.â€
Angela shrugged. “She’s more dangerous than some and less than others. The one
she’s most likely to kill, though, is herself. If she meets someone who’s about to be
hurt and Eragon’s spell catches her unawares, then she’ll take the doomed person’s
place. That’s why she stays inside most of the time.â€
“How far in advance can she foretell events?â€
“Two or three hours at the most.â€
Leaning against the wall, Nasuada considered the newest complication in her life.
Elva could be a potent weapon if she were applied correctly. Through her, I can
discern my opponents’ troubles and weaknesses, as well as what will please them and
make them amenable to my wishes. In an emergency, the girl could also act as an
infallible guard if one of the Varden, like Eragon or Saphira, had to be protected.
She can’t be left unsupervised. I need someone to watch her. Someone who
understands magic and is comfortable enough with their own identity to resist Elva’s
influence… and who I can trust to be reliable and honest. She immediately discounted
Trianna.
Nasuada looked at Angela. Though she was wary of the herbalist, she knew that
Angela had helped the Varden with matters of the utmost delicacy and importance—
like healing Eragon—and had asked for nothing in return. Nasuada could think of no
one else who had the time, inclination, and expertise to look after Elva.
“I realize,†said Nasuada, “that this is presumptuous of me, as you aren’t under my
command and I know little of your life or duties, but I have a favor to ask of you.â€
“Proceed.†Angela waved a hand.
Nasuada faltered, disconcerted, then forged ahead. “Would you be willing to keep an
eye on Elva for me? I need—â€
“Of course! And I’ll keep two eyes on her, if I can spare them. I relish the
opportunity to study her.â€
“You’ll have to report to me,†warned Nasuada.
“The poison dart hidden in the raisin tart. Ah, well, I suppose I can manage.â€
“I have your word, then?â€
“You have my word.â€
Relieved, Nasuada groaned and sank into a nearby chair. “Oh, what a mess. What
aquagmire. As Eragon’s liegelord, I’m responsible for his deeds, but I never imagined
that he would do anything as dreadful as this. It’s a blight on my honor as much as
his.â€
A ripple of sharp pops filled the room as Angela cracked her knuckles. “Yes. I intend
to speak to him about it once he returns from Ellesméra.â€
Her expression was so fierce, it alarmed Nasuada. “Well, don’t hurt him. We need
him.â€
“I won’t… permanently.â€
RESURGENCE
Ablast of raveningwind tore Eragon from his sleep.
Blankets flapped over him as a tempest clawed at his room, hurling his possessions
into the air and knocking the lanterns against the walls. Outside, the sky was black
with thunderheads.
Saphira watched as Eragon staggered upright and fought to keep his balance as the
tree swayed like a ship at sea. He lowered his head against the gale and made his way
around the room, clutching at the wall until he reached the teardrop portal through
which the storm howled.
Eragon looked past the heaving floor to the ground below. It appeared to rock back
and forth. He swallowed and tried to ignore the churning in his stomach.
By touch he found the edge of the cloth membrane that could be pulled out of the
wood to cover the opening. He prepared to launch himself from one side of the gap to
the next. If he slipped, nothingwould stop him from falling onto the roots of the tree.
Wait, said Saphira.
She backed off the low pedestal where she slept and laid her tail alongside him so
that he could use it as a handrail.
Holding the cloth with just his right hand, which took all his strength, Eragon used
the line of spikes on Saphira’s tail to pull himself across the portal. As soon as he
reached the far side, he grabbed the cloth with both hands and pressed its edge into
the groove that locked it in place.
The room went silent.
The membrane bulged inward under the force of the angry elements but showed no
sign of giving. Eragon poked it with his finger. The fabric was as taut as a drum.
It’s amazing what the elves can do, he said.
Saphira cocked her head, then lifted it so that her head was flat against the ceiling
while she listened. You’d better close up the study; it’s being wrecked.
As he headed toward the stairs, the tree jolted and his leg buckled, sending him down
hard on one knee.
“Blast it,†he growled.
The study was a whirlwind of paper and quills, darting about as if they had a mind of
their own. He dove into the flurry with his arms wrapped around his head. It felt like
he was being pelted with stones when the tips of the quills struck him.
Eragon struggled to close the upper portal without Saphira’s help. The moment he
did, pain—endless, mind-numbingpain— ripped open his back.
He screamed once and went hoarse from the strength of his cry. His vision flashed
with red and yellow, then faded to black as he toppled to his side. Below, he heard
Saphira howl with frustration; the staircase was too small and, outside, the wind was
too ferocious for her to reach him. His connection with her receded. He surrendered to
the waiting darkness as a release from his agony.
A sour taste filled Eragon’s mouth when he woke. He did not know how long he had
been lying on the floor, but the muscles in his arms and legs were knotted from being
curled into a tight ball. The storm still assailed the tree, accompanied by a thudding
rain that matched the pounding in his head.
Saphira… ?
I’m here. Can you come down?
I’ll try.
He was too weak to stand on the pitching floor, so he crawled to the stairs and slid
down one at a time, wincingwith each impact. Halfway down, he encountered
Saphira, who had jammed her head and neck as far up the stairs as she could, gouging
the wood in her frenzy.
Little one. She flicked out her tongue and caught him on the hand with its rough tip.
He smiled. Then she arched her neck and tried to pull back, but to no avail.
What’s wrong?
I’m stuck.
You’re…He could not help it; he laughed even though it hurt. The situation was too
absurd.
She snarled and heaved her entire body, shaking the tree with her efforts and
knocking him over. Then she collapsed, panting. Well, don’t just sit there grinning
like an idiot fox. Help me!
Fighting the urge to giggle, he put his foot on her nose and pushed as hard as he
dared while Saphira twisted and squirmed in an attempt to free herself.
It took more than ten minutes before she succeeded. Only then did Eragon see the full
extent of the damage to the stairwell. He groaned. Her scales had cut through the bark
and obliterated the delicate patterns grown out from the wood.
Oops, said Saphira.
At leastyoudid it, not me . The elves might forgive you. They’d sing dwarf love
ballads night and day if you asked them to.
He joined Saphira on her dais and huddled against the flat scales of her belly,
listening as the storm roared about them. The wide membrane became translucent
whenever lightning pulsed in jagged shards of light.
What time do you think it is?
Several hours before we must meet Oromis. Go on, sleep and recover. I will keep
guard.
He did just that, despite the tree’s churning.
WHY DO YOU FIGHT?
Oromis’s timepiece buzzed like a giant hornet, blaring in Eragon’s ears until he
retrieved the bauble and wound the mechanism.
His bashed knee had turned purple, he was sore both from his attack and the elves’
Dance of Snake and Crane, and he could do no more than croak with his ragged
throat. The worst injury, though, was his sense of foreboding that this would not be
the last time Durza’s wound would trouble him. The prospect sickened him, draining
his strength and will.
So many weeks passed between attacks,he said, I began to hope that maybe, just
maybe, I was healed… I suppose sheer luck is the only reason I was spared that long.
Extending her neck, Saphira nuzzled him on the arm. You know you aren’t alone,
little one. I’ll do everything I can to help. He responded with a weak smile. Then she
licked his face and added, You should get ready to leave.
I know. He stared at the floor, unwilling to move, then dragged himself to the wash
closet, where he scrubbed himself clean and used magic to shave.
He was in the middle of drying himself when he felt a presence touch his mind.
Without pausing to think, Eragon began to fortify his mind, concentrating on an
image of his big toe to the exclusion of all else. Then he heard Oromis say,
Admirable, but unnecessary. Bring Zar’roc with you today . The presence vanished.
Eragon released a shaky breath. I need to be more alert, he told Saphira. I would have
been at his mercy if he were an enemy.
Not with me around.
When his ablutions were complete, Eragon unhooked the membrane from the wall
and mounted Saphira, cradling Zar’roc in the crook of his arm.
Saphira took flight with a rush of air, angling toward the Crags of Tel’naeír. From
their high vantage point, they could see the damage that the storm had wreaked on Du
Weldenvarden. No trees had fallen in Ellesméra, but farther away, where the elves’
magic was weaker, numerous pines had been knocked over. The remainingwind
made the crossed branches and trees rub together, producing a brittle chorus of creaks
and groans. Clouds of golden pollen, as thick as dust, streamed out from the trees and
flowers.
While they flew, Eragon and Saphira exchanged memories of their separate lessons
from the day before. He told her what he had learned about ants and the ancient
language, and she told him about downdrafts and other dangerous weather patterns
and how to avoid them.
Thus, when they landed and Oromis interrogated Eragon about Saphira’s lessons and
Glaedr interrogated Saphira about Eragon’s, they were able to answer every question.
“Very good, Eragon-vodhr.â€
Aye. Well played, Bjartskular, added Glaedr to Saphira.
As before, Saphira was sent off with Glaedr while Eragon remained on the cliffs,
although this time he and Saphira were careful to maintain their link so as to absorb
each other’s instruction.
As the dragons departed, Oromis observed, “Your voice is rougher today, Eragon.
Are you sick?â€
“My back hurt again this morning.â€
“Ah. You have my sympathy.†He motioned with one finger. “Wait here.â€
Eragon watched as Oromis strode into his hut and then reappeared, looking fierce and
warlike with his silver mane rippling in the wind and his bronze sword in hand.
“Today,†he said, “we shall forgo the Rimgar and instead cross our two blades,
Naegling and Zar’roc. Draw thy sword and guard its edge as your first master taught
you.â€
Eragon wanted nothingmore than to refuse. However, he had no intention of
breaking his vow or letting his resolve waver in front of Oromis. He swallowed his
trepidation. This is what it means to be a Rider, he thought.
Drawing upon his reserves, he located the nub deep within his mind that connected
him to the wild flow of magic. He delved into it, and the energy suffused him.
“Gëuloth du knífr,†he said, and a winking blue star popped into existence between
his thumb and forefinger, jumping from one to the next as he ran it down Zar’roc’s
perilous length.
The instant their swords met, Eragon knew that he was as out-matched by Oromis as
by Durza and Arya. Eragon was an exemplary human swordsman, but he could not
compete with warriors whose blood ran thick with magic. His arm was too weak and
his reflexes too slow. Still, that did not stop him from trying to win. He fought to the
limits of his abilities, even if, in the end, it was a futile prospect.
Oromis tested him in every conceivable manner, forcing Eragon to utilize his entire
arsenal of blows, counterblows, and underhand tricks. It was all for naught. He could
not touch the elf. As a last resort, he tried altering his style of fighting, which could
unsettle even the most hardened veteran. All it got him was a welt on his thigh.
“Move your feet faster,†cried Oromis. “He who stands like a pillar dies in battle. He
who bends like a reed is triumphant!â€
The elf was glorious in action, a perfect blend of control and untamed violence. He
pounced like a cat, struck like a heron, and bobbed and wove with the grace of a
weasel.
They had been sparring for almost twenty minutes when Oromis faltered, his narrow
features clamped in a brief grimace. Eragon recognized the symptoms of Oromis’s
mysterious illness and lashed out with Zar’roc. It was a low thing to do, but Eragon
was so frustrated, he was willing to take advantage of any opening, no matter how
unfair, just to have the satisfaction of markingOromis at least once.
Zar’roc never reached its target. As Eragon twisted, he overextended and strained his
back.
The pain was upon him without warning.
The last thing he heard was Saphira shouting, Eragon!
Despite the intensity of the fit, Eragon remained conscious throughout his ordeal. Not
that he was aware of his surroundings, only the fire that burned in his flesh and
prolonged each second into an eternity. The worst part was that he could do nothingto
end his suffering but wait…
… and wait…
Eragon lay panting in the cold mud. He blinked as his vision came into focus and he
saw Oromis sitting on a stool next to him. Pushing himself onto his knees, Eragon
surveyed his new tunic with a mixture of regret and disgust. The fine russet cloth was
caked with dirt from his convulsions on the ground. Muck filled his hair as well.
He could sense Saphira in his mind, radiating concern as she waited for him to notice
her. How can you continue like this? she fretted. It’ll destroy you.
Her misgivings undermined Eragon’s remaining fortitude. Saphira had never before
expressed doubt that he would prevail, not at Dras-Leona, Gil’ead, or Farthen Dûr,
nor with any of the dangers they had encountered. Her confidence had given him
courage. Without it he was truly afraid.
You should concentrate on your lesson, he said.
I should concentrate on you.
Leave me alone!He snapped at her like a wounded animal that wants to nurse its
injuries in silence and in dark. She fell silent, leaving just enough of their connection
intact so that he was vaguely aware of Glaedr teaching her about fireweed, which she
could chew to help her digestion.
Eragon combed the mud from his hair with his fingers, then spat out a globule of
blood. “Bit my tongue.â€
Oromis nodded as if it were to be expected. “Do you require healing?â€
“No.â€
“Very well. Tend to your sword, then bathe and go to the stump in the glade and
listen to the thoughts of the forest. Listen, and when you hear no more, come tell me
what you have learned.â€
“Yes, Master.â€
As he sat on the stump, Eragon found that his turbulent thoughts and emotions
prevented him from mustering the concentration to open his mind and sense the
creatures in the hollow. Nor was he interested in doing so.
Still, the peaceful quality of his surroundings gradually ameliorated his resentment,
confusion, and stubborn anger. It did not make him happy, but it did bring him a
certain fatalistic acceptance. This is my lot in life, and I’d better get used to it because
it’s not about to improve in the foreseeable future.
After a quarter of an hour, his faculties had regained their usual acuity, so he resumed
studying the colony of red ants that he had discovered the day before. He also tried to
be aware of everything else that was happening in the glade, as Oromis had instructed.
Eragon met with limited success. If he relaxed and allowed himself to absorb input
from all the consciousnesses nearby, thousands of images and feelings rushed into his
head, piling on top of one another in quick flashes of sound and color, touch and
smell, pain and pleasure. The amount of information was overwhelming. Out of pure
habit, his mind would snatch one subject or another from the torrent, excluding all the
rest before he noticed his lapse and wrenched himself back into a state of passive
receptivity. The cycle repeated itself every few seconds.
Despite that, he was able to improve his understanding of the ants’ world. He got his
first clue as to their genders when he deduced that the huge ant in the heart of their
underground lair was laying eggs, one every minute or so, which made it—her—a
female. And when he accompanied a group of the red ants up the stem of their
rosebush, he got a vivid demonstration of the kind of enemies they faced: something
darted out from underneath a leaf and killed one of the ants he was bound to. It was
hard for him to guess exactly what the creature was, since the ants only saw fragments
of it and, in any case, they placed more emphasis on smell than vision. If they had
been people, he would have said that they were attacked by a terrifyingmonster the
size of a dragon, which had jaws as powerful as the spiked portcullis at Teirm and
could move with whiplash speed.
The ants ringed in the monster like grooms working to capture a runaway horse. They
darted at it with a total lack of fear, nipping at its knobbed legs and withdrawing an
instant before they were caught in the monster’s iron pincers. More and more ants
joined the throng. They worked together to overpower the intruder, never faltering,
even when two were caught and killed and when several of their brethren fell off the
stem to the ground below.
It was a desperate battle, with neither side willing to give quarter. Only escape or
victory would save the combatants from a horrible death. Eragon followed the fray
with breathless anticipation, awed by the ants’ bravery and how they continued to
fight in spite of injuries that would incapacitate a human. Their feats were heroic
enough to be sung about by bards throughout the land.
Eragon was so engrossed by the contest that when the ants finally prevailed, he
loosed an elated cry so loud, it roused the birds from their roosts among the trees.
Out of curiosity, he returned his attention to his own body, then walked to the
rosebush to view the dead monster for himself. What he saw was an ordinary brown
spider with its legs curled into a fist being transported by the ants down to their nest
for food.
Amazing.
He started to leave, but then realized that once again he had neglected to keep watch
over the myriad other insects and animals in the glade. He closed his eyes and whirled
through the minds of several dozen beings, doing his best to memorize as many
interesting details as he could. It was a poor substitute for prolonged observation, but
he was hungry and he had already exhausted his assigned hour.
When Eragon rejoined Oromis in his hut, the elf asked, “How went it?â€
“Master, I could listen night and day for the next twenty years and still not know
everything that goes on in the forest.â€
Oromis raised an eyebrow. “You have made progress.†After Eragon described what
he had witnessed, Oromis said, “But still not enough, I fear. You must work harder,
Eragon. I know you can. You are intelligent and persistent, and you have the potential
to be a great Rider. As difficult as it is, you have to learn to put aside your troubles
and concentrate entirely on the task at hand. Find peace within yourself and let your
actions flow from there.â€
“I’m doingmy best.â€
“No, this isn’t your best. We shall recognize your best when it appears.†He paused
thoughtfully. “Perhaps it would help if you had a fellow student to compete with.
Then we might see your best… I will think on the matter.â€
From his cupboards, Oromis produced a loaf of freshly baked bread, a wood jar of
hazelnut butter—which the elves used in place of actual butter—and a pair of bowls
that he ladled full of a vegetable stew that had been simmering in a pot hung over a
bed of coals in the corner fireplace.
Eragon looked at the stew with distaste; he was sick of the elves’ fare. He longed for
meat, fish, or fowl, something hearty that he could sink his teeth into, not this endless
parade of plants. “Master,†he asked to distract himself, “why do you have me
meditate? Is it so that I will understand the doings of the animals and insects, or is
there more to it than that?â€
“Can you think of no other motive?†Oromis sighed when Eragon shook his head.
“Always it is thus with my new students, and especially with the human ones; the
mind is the last muscle they train or use, and the one that they regard the least. Ask
them about swordplay and they can list every blow from a duel a month old, but ask
them to solve a problem or make a coherent statement and… well, I would be lucky to
get more than a blank stare in return. You are still new to the world of gramarye—as
magic is properly called—but you must begin to consider its full implications.â€
“How so?â€
“Imagine for a moment that you are Galbatorix, with all of his vast resources at your
command. The Varden have destroyed your Urgal army with the help of a rival
Dragon Rider, who you know was educated—at least in part—by one of your most
dangerous and implacable foes, Brom. You are also aware that your enemies are
massing in Surda for a possible invasion. Given that, what would be the easiest way to
deal with these various threats, short of flying into battle yourself?â€
Eragon stirred his stew to cool it while he examined the issue. “It seems to me,†he
said slowly, “that the easiest thingwould be to train a corps of magicians—they
wouldn’t even have to be that powerful—force them to swear loyalty to me in the
ancient language, then have them infiltrate Surda to sabotage the Varden’s efforts,
poison wells, and assassinate Nasuada, KingOrrin, and other key members of the
resistance.â€
“And why hasn’t Galbatorix done this yet?â€
“Because until now, Surda was of negligible interest to him, and because the Varden
have dwelled in Farthen Dûr for decades, where they were able to examine every
newcomer’s mind for duplicity, which they can’t do in Surda since its border and
population are so large.â€
“Those are my very conclusions,†said Oromis. “Unless Galbatorix forsakes his lair
in Urû‘baen, the greatest danger you’re likely to encounter during the Varden’s
campaign will come from fellow magicians. You know as well as I how difficult it is
to guard against magic, especially if your opponent has sworn in the ancient language
to kill you, no matter the cost. Instead of attempting to first conquer your mind, sucha
foe will simply cast a spell to obliterate you, even though—in the instant before you
are destroyed—you will still be free to retaliate. However, you cannot fell your
murderer if you don’t know who or where he is.â€
“So sometimes you don’t have to bother taking control of your opponent’s mind?â€
“Sometimes, but it’s a risk to avoid.†Oromis paused to consume a few spoonfuls of
stew. “Now, to address the heart of this issue, how do you defend yourself against
anonymous enemies who can contravene any physical precautions and slay with a
muttered word?â€
“I don’t see how, unless…†Eragon hesitated, then smiled. “Unless I was aware of
the consciousnesses of all the people around me. Then I could sense if they meant me
harm.â€
Oromis appeared pleased by his answer. “Even so, Eragon-finiarel. And that’s the
answer to your question. Your meditations condition your mind to find and exploit
flaws in your enemies’ mental armor, no matter how small.â€
“But won’t another magic user know if I touch their mind?â€
“Aye, they will know, but most people won’t. And as for the magicians, they will
know, they will be afraid, and they will shield their minds from you out of their fear,
and you will know them because of it.â€
“Isn’t it dangerous to leave your consciousness unguarded? If you’re attacked
mentally, you could easily be overwhelmed.â€
“It’s less dangerous than being blind to the world.â€
Eragon nodded. He tapped his spoon against his bowl in a measured meter of time,
engrossed in his thoughts, then said, “It feels wrong.â€
“Oh? Explain yourself.â€
“What about people’s privacy? Brom taught me to never intrude in someone’s mind
unless it was absolutely necessary… I guess I’m uncomfortable with the idea of
prying into people’s secrets… secrets that they have every right to keep to
themselves.†He cocked his head. “Why didn’t Brom tell me about this if it’s so
important?Why didn’t he train me in it himself?â€
“Brom told you,†said Oromis, “what was appropriate to tell you under the
circumstances. Dipping into the pool of minds can prove addictive to those with a
malicious personality or a taste for power. It was not taught to prospective Riders—
though we had them meditate as you do throughout their training—until we were
convinced that they were mature enough to resist temptation.
“Itis an invasion of privacy, and you will learn many things from it that you never
wanted to. However, this is for your own good and the good of the Varden. I can say
from experience, and from watching other Riders experience the same, that this,
above all else, will help you to understand what drives people. And understanding
begets empathy and compassion, even for the meanest beggar in the meanest city of
Alagaësia.â€
They were quiet for a while, eating, then Oromis asked, “Can you tell me, What is
the most important mental tool a person can possess?â€
It was a serious question, and Eragon considered it for a reasonable span before he
ventured to say, “Determination.â€
Oromis tore the loaf in half with his longwhite fingers. “I can understand why you
arrived at that conclusion—determination has served you well in your adventures—
but no. I meant the tool most necessary to choose the best course of action in any
given situation. Determination is as common amongmen who are dull and foolish as
it is among those who are brilliant intellects. So, no, determination cannot be what
we’re looking for.â€
This time Eragon treated the question as he would a riddle, counting the number of
words, whispering them out loud to establish whether they rhymed, and otherwise
examining them for hidden meaning. The problem was, he was no more than a
mediocre riddler and had never placed very high in Carvahall’s annual riddle contest.
He thought too literally to work out the answers to riddles that he had not heard
before, a legacy of Garrow’s practical upbringing.
“Wisdom,†he finally said. “Wisdom is the most important tool for a person to
possess.â€
“A fair guess, but, again, no. The answer is logic. Or, to put it another way, the
ability to reason analytically. Applied properly, it can overcome any lack of wisdom,
which one only gains through age and experience.â€
Eragon frowned. “Yes, but isn’t having a good heart more important than logic? Pure
logic can lead you to conclusions that are ethically wrong, whereas if you are moral
and righteous, that will ensure that you don’t act shamefully.â€
A razor-thin smile curled Oromis’s lips. “You confuse the issue. All I wanted to
know was the most usefultool a person can have, regardless of whether that person is
good or evil. I agree that it’s important to be of a virtuous nature, but I would also
contend that if you had to choose between giving a man a noble disposition or
teaching him to think clearly, you’d do better to teach him to think clearly. Too many
problems in this world are caused by men with noble dispositions and clouded minds.
“History provides us with numerous examples of people who were convinced that
they were doing the right thing and committed terrible crimes because of it. Keep in
mind, Eragon, that no one thinks of himself as a villain, and few make decisions they
think are wrong. A person may dislike his choice, but he will stand by it because,
even in the worst circumstances, he believes that it was the best option available to
him at the time.
“On its own, being a decent person is no guarantee that you will act well, which
brings us back to the one protection we have against demagogues, tricksters, and the
madness of crowds, and our surest guide through the uncertain shoals of life: clear
and reasoned thinking. Logic will never fail you, unless you’re unaware of—or
deliberately ignore—the consequences of your deeds.â€
“If elves are so logical,†said Eragon, “then you must all agree on what to do.â€
“Hardly,†averred Oromis. “Like every race, we adhere to a wide range of tenets,
and, as a result, we often arrive at differing conclusions, even in identical situations.
Conclusions, I might add, that make logical sense from each person’s point of view.
And although I wish it were otherwise, not all elves have trained their minds
properly.â€
“How do you intend to teach me this logic?â€
Oromis’s smile broadened. “By the oldest and most effective method: debating. I will
ask you a question, then you will answer and defend your position.†He waited while
Eragon refilled his bowl with stew. “For example, why do you fight the Empire?â€
The sudden change of topic caught Eragon off guard. He had a feeling that Oromis
had just reached the subject that he had been driving toward all along. “As I said
before, to help those who suffer from Galbatorix’s rule and, to a lesser extent, for
personal vengeance.â€
“Then you fight for humanitarian reasons?â€
“What do you mean?â€
“That you fight to help the people who Galbatorix has harmed and to stop him from
hurting any more.â€
“Exactly,†said Eragon.
“Ah, but answer me this, my young Rider:Won’t your war with Galbatorix cause
more pain than it will ever prevent? The majority of people in the Empire live normal,
productive lives untouched by their king’s madness. How can you justify invading
their land, destroying their homes, and killing their sons and daughters?â€
Eragon gaped, stunned that Oromis could ask such a question—Galbatorixwasevil
—and stunned because no easy reply presented itself. He knew that he was in the
right, but how could he prove it? “Don’t you believe that Galbatorix should be
overthrown?â€
“That is not the question.â€
“Youmust believe it, though,†persisted Eragon. “Look what he did to the Riders.â€
Dunking his bread in his stew, Oromis resumed eating, letting Eragon fume in
silence. When he finished, Oromis folded his hands in his lap and asked, “Have I
upset you?â€
“Yes, you have.â€
“I see. Well then, continue to ponder the matter until you find an answer. I expect it
to be a convincing one.â€
BLACK MORNING GLORY
They cleared the table and took the dishes outside, where they cleaned them with
sand. Oromis crumbled what remained of the bread around his house for the birds to
eat, then they returned inside.
Oromis brought out pens and ink for Eragon, and they resumed his education of the
Liduen Kvaedhí, the written form of the ancient language, which was so much more
elegant than the humans’ or dwarves’ runes. Eragon lost himself in the arcane glyphs,
happy to have a task that required nothingmore strenuous than rote memorization.
After hours spent bent over the paper sheets, Oromis waved a hand and said,
“Enough. We will continue this tomorrow.†Eragon leaned back and rolled his
shoulders while Oromis selected five scrolls from their nooks in the wall. “Two of
these are in the ancient language, three are in your native tongue. They will help you
to master both alphabets, as well as give you valuable information that would be
tedious for me to vocalize.â€
“Vocalize?â€
With unerring accuracy, Oromis’s hand darted out and plucked a massive sixth scroll
from the wall, which he added to the pyramid in Eragon’s arms. “This is a dictionary.
I doubt you can, but try to read it all.â€
When the elf opened the door for him to leave, Eragon said, “Master?â€
“Yes, Eragon?â€
“When will we start workingwith magic?â€
Oromis leaned on one arm against the doorway, caving in on himself as if he no
longer possessed the will to remain upright. Then he sighed and said, “You must trust
me to guide your training, Eragon. Still, I suppose it would be foolish of me to delay
any longer. Come, leave the scrolls on the table, and let us go explore the mysteries of
gramarye.â€
On the greensward before the hut, Oromis stood looking out over the Crags of
Tel’naeír, his back to Eragon, his feet shoulder width apart, and his hands clasped in
the small of his back. Without turning around, he asked, “What is magic?â€
“The manipulation of energy through the use of the ancient language.â€
There was a pause before Oromis responded. “Technically, you are correct, and many
spellcasters never understand more than that. However, your description fails to
capture the essence of magic. Magic is the art ofthinking, not strength or language—
you already know that a limited vocabulary is no obstacle to usingmagic. As with
everything else you must master, magic relies on having a disciplined intellect.
“Brom bypassed the normal training regimen and ignored the subtleties of gramarye
to ensure that you had the skills you needed to remain alive. I too must distort the
regimen in order to focus on the skills that you will likely require in the coming
battles. However, whereas Brom taught you the crude mechanics of magic, I will
teach you its finer applications, the secrets that were reserved for the wisest of the
Riders: how you can kill with no more energy than moving your finger, the method by
which you can instantaneously transport an item from one point to another, a spell
that will allow you to identify poisons in your food and drink, a variation on scrying
that allows you to hear as well as to see, how you can draw energy from your
surroundings and thus preserve your own strength, and how you can maximize your
strength in every possible way.
“These techniques are so potent and dangerous, they were never shared with novice
Riders such as yourself, but circumstances demand that I divulge them and trust that
you won’t abuse them.†Raising his right arm to his side, his hand a hooked claw,
Oromis proclaimed, “Adurna!â€
Eragon watched as a sphere of water coalesced from the brook by the hut and floated
through the air until it hovered between Oromis’s outstretched fingers.
The brook was dark and brown under the branches of the forest, but the sphere,
removed from it, was as colorless as glass. Flecks of moss, dirt, and other bits of
detritus floated inside the orb.
Still gazing toward the horizon, Oromis said, “Catch.†He tossed the sphere back
over his shoulder toward Eragon.
Eragon tried to grab the ball, but as soon as it touched his skin, the water lost
cohesion and splashed across his chest.
“Catch it with magic,†said Oromis. Again, he cried, “Adurna!†and a sphere of water
gathered itself from the surface of the brook and leaped into his hand like a trained
hawk obeying its master.
This time Oromis threw the ball without warning. Eragon was prepared, though, and
said, “Reisa du adurna,†even as he reached for the ball. It slowed to a halt a
hairsbreadth from the skin of his palm.
“An awkward word choice,†said Oromis, “but workable, nevertheless.â€
Eragon grinned and whispered, “Thrysta.â€
The ball reversed its course and sped toward the base of Oromis’s silver head.
However, the sphere did not land where Eragon had intended, but rather shot past the
elf, whipped around, and flew back at Eragon with increased velocity.
The water remained as hard and solid as polished marble when it struck Eragon,
producing a dullthunk as it collided with his skull. The blow knocked him sprawling
on the turf, where he lay stunned, blinking as pulsing lights swam across the sky.
“Yes,†said Oromis. “A better word might beletta orkodthr. †He finally turned to
look at Eragon and raised an eyebrow with apparent surprise. “Whatever are you
doing? Get up. We can’t lay about all day.â€
“Yes, Master,†groaned Eragon.
When Eragon got back on his feet, Oromis had him manipulate the water in various
ways—shaping it into complex knots, changing the color of light that it absorbed or
reflected, and freezing it in certain prescribed sequences—none of which proved
difficult for him.
The exercises continued for so long that Eragon’s initial interest faded and was
replaced by impatience and puzzlement. He was chary of offendingOromis, but he
saw no point to what the elf was doing; it was as if Oromis were avoiding any spells
that would require him to use more than a minimal amount of strength. I’ve already
demonstrated the extent of my skills. Why does he persist in reviewing these
fundamentals? He said, “Master, I know all of this. Can we not move on?â€
The muscles in Oromis’s neck hardened, and his shoulders were like chiseled granite
for all they moved; even the elf’s breathing halted before he said, “Will you never
learn respect, Eragon-vodhr? So be it!†Then he uttered four words from the ancient
language in a voice so deep that their meaning escaped Eragon.
Eragon yelped as he felt each of his legs enveloped by pressure up to the knee,
squeezing and constricting his calves in such a way that made it impossible for him to
walk. His thighs and upper body were free to move, but other than that, it was as if he
had been cast in lime mortar.
“Free yourself,†said Oromis.
Here now was a challenge that Eragon had never dealt with before: how to counter
someone else’s spells. He could sever his invisible bonds using one of two different
methods. The most effective would be if he knewhow Oromis had immobilized him—
whether by affecting his body directly or using an external source—for then he could
redirect the element or force to disperse Oromis’s power. Or he could use a generic,
vague spell to block whatever Oromis was doing. The downside to the tactic was that
it would lead to a direct contest of strength between them. It had to happen sometime,
thought Eragon. He entertained no hope of prevailing against an elf.
Assembling the required phrase, he said, “Losna kalfya iet.†Release my calves.
The surge of energy that deserted Eragon was greater than he had anticipated; he
went from beingmoderately tired from the day’s pains and exertions to feeling as if
he had hiked over rough terrain since morn. Then the pressure vanished from his legs,
causing him to stagger as he regained his balance.
Oromis shook his head. “Foolish,†he said, “very foolish. If I had committed more to
maintainingmy spell, that would have killed you. Never use absolutes.â€
“Absolutes?â€
“Never word your spells so that only two outcomes are possible: success or death. If
an enemy had trapped your legs and if he were stronger than you, then you would
have expended all of your energy trying to break his spell. You would have died with
no chance to abort the attempt once you realized that it was futile.â€
“How do I avoid that?†asked Eragon.
“It’s safer to make the spell aprocess that you can terminate at your discretion.
Instead of sayingrelease my calves, which is an absolute, you could sayreduce the
magic imprisoning my calves. A bit wordy, but you could then decide how much you
wanted your opponent’s spell decreased and if it were safe to remove it entirely. We
will try again.â€
The pressure returned to Eragon’s legs as soon as Oromis mouthed his inaudible
invocation. Eragon was so tired, he doubted that he could provide much opposition.
Nevertheless, he reached for the magic.
Before the ancient language left Eragon’s mouth, he became aware of a curious
sensation as the weight constraining his legs lessened at a steady rate. It tickled and
felt like he was being pulled out of a mire of cold, slick mud. He glanced at Oromis
and saw the elf’s face scribed by passion, as if he clung to something precious that he
could not bear to lose. A vein throbbed at one of Oromis’s temples.
When Eragon’s arcane fetters ceased to exist, Oromis recoiled as if he had been
pricked by a wasp and stood with his gaze fixed on his two hands, his thin chest
heaving. For perhaps a minute, he remained thus, then he drew himself upright and
walked to the very edge of the Crags of Tel’naeír, a lone figure outlined against the
pale sky.
Regret and sorrow welled in Eragon—the same emotions that had gripped him when
he first saw Glaedr’s mutilated foreleg. He cursed himself for being so arrogant with
Oromis, so oblivious to his infirmities, and for not placingmore confidence in the
elf’s judgment. I’m not the only one who must deal with past injuries. Eragon had not
fully comprehended what it meant when Oromis said that all but the slightest magic
escaped his grasp. Now he appreciated the depths of Oromis’s situation and the pain
that it must cause him, especially for one of his race, who was born and bred with
magic.
Eragon went to Oromis, knelt, and bowed in the fashion of the dwarves, pressing his
bruised forehead against the ground. “Ebrithil, I beg your pardon.â€
The elf gave no indication that he had heard.
The two of them lingered in their respective positions while the sun declined before
them, the birds sang their evening songs, and the air grew cool and moist. From the
north came the faint offbeat thumps of Saphira and Glaedr’s wing strokes as they
returned for the day.
In a low, distant voice, Oromis said, “We will begin anew tomorrow, with this and
other subjects.†From his profile, Eragon could tell that Oromis had regained his
customary expression of impassive reserve. “Is that agreeable to you?â€
“Yes, Master,†said Eragon, grateful for the question.
“I think it best if, from now on, you endeavor to speak only in the ancient language.
We have little time at our disposal, and this is the fastest way for you to learn.â€
“Even when I talk to Saphira?â€
“Even then.â€
Adopting the elven tongue, Eragon vowed, “Then I will work ceaselessly until I not
only think, but dream, in your language.â€
“If you achieve that,†said Oromis, replying in kind, “our venture may yet succeed.â€
He paused. “Instead of flying directly here in the morning, you will accompany the elf
I send to guide you. He will take you to where those of Ellesméra practice swordplay.
Stay for an hour, then continue on as normal.â€
“Won’t you teach me yourself?†asked Eragon, feeling slighted.
“I have naught to teach. You are as good a swordsman as ever I have met. I know no
more of fighting than you, and that which I possess and you do not, I cannot give you.
All that remains for you is to preserve your current level of skill.â€
“Why can’t I do that with you… Master?â€
“Because I do not appreciate beginning the day with alarum and conflict.†He looked
at Eragon, then relented and added, “And because it will be good for you to become
acquainted with others who live here. I am not representative of my race. But enough
of that. Look, they approach.â€
The two dragons glided across the flat disk of the sun. First came Glaedr with a roar
of wind, blotting out the sky with his massive bulk before he settled on the grass and
folded his golden wings, then Saphira, as quick and agile as a sparrow beside an
eagle.
As they had that morning, Oromis and Glaedr asked a number of questions to ensure
that Eragon and Saphira had paid attention to each other’s lessons. They had not
always, but by cooperating and sharing information between themselves, they were
able to answer all of the questions. Their only stumbling block was the foreign
language they were required to communicate in.
Better,rumbled Glaedr afterward. Much better. He bent his gaze toward Eragon. You
and I will have to train together soon.
“Of course, Skulblaka.â€
The old dragon snorted and crawled alongside Oromis, half hoppingwith his front
leg to compensate for his missing limb. Darting forward, Saphira nipped at the end of
Glaedr’s tail, tossing it into the air with a flip of her head, like she would to break the
neck of a deer. She recoiled as Glaedr twisted round and snapped at her neck,
exposing his enormous fangs.
Eragon winced and, too late, covered his ears to protect them from Glaedr’s roar. The
speed and intensity of Glaedr’s response suggested to Eragon that this was not the
first time Saphira had annoyed him throughout the day. Instead of remorse, Eragon
detected an excited playfulness in her—like a child with a new toy—and a near-blind
devotion to the other dragon.
“Contain yourself, Saphira!†said Oromis. Saphira pranced backward and settled on
her haunches, though nothing in her demeanor expressed contrition. Eragon muttered
a feeble excuse, and Oromis waved a hand and said, “Begone, both of you.â€
Without arguing, Eragon scrambled onto Saphira. He had to urge her to take flight,
and once she did, she insisted on circling over the clearing three times before he got
her to angle toward Ellesméra.
What possessed you to bite him? he demanded. He thought he knew, but he wanted
her to confirm it.
I was only playing.
It was the truth, since they spoke in the ancient language, yet he suspected that it was
but a piece of a larger truth. Yes, and at what game? She tensed underneath him. You
forget your duty. By… He searched for the right word. Unable to find it, he reverted to
his native speech, By provoking Glaedr, you distract him, Oromis, and me—and
hinder what we must accomplish. You’ve never been so thoughtless before.
Do not presume to be my conscience.
He laughed then, heedless for a moment of where he sat among the clouds, rolling to
his side until he almost dropped from the peak of her shoulders. Oh, rich irony that,
after the times you’ve told me what to do. I amyour conscience, Saphira, as much as
you are mine. You’ve had good reason to chastise and warn me in the past, and now I
must do the same for you: stop pestering Glaedr with your attentions.
She remained silent.
Saphira?
I hear you.
I hope so.
After a minute of peaceful flying, she said, Two seizures in one day. How are you
now?
Sore and ill. He grimaced. Some of it’s from the Rimgar and sparring, but mostly it’s
the aftereffects of the pain. It’s like a poison, weakening my muscles and clouding my
mind. I just hope that I can remain sane long enough to reach the end of this training.
Afterward, though… I don’t know what I’ll do. I certainly can’t fight for the Varden
like this.
Don’t think about it,she counseled. You can do nothing about your condition, and
you’ll only make yourself feel worse. Live in the present, remember the past, and fear
not the future, for it doesn’t exist and never shall. There is only now.
He patted her shoulder and smiled with resigned gratitude. To their right, a goshawk
rode a warm air current while it patrolled the broken forest for signs of furred or
feathered quarry. Eragon watched it, pondering the question that Oromis had given
him: How could he justify fighting the Empire when it would cause so much grief and
agony?
I have an answer, said Saphira.
What is it?
That Galbatorix has…She hesitated, then said, No, I won’t tell you. You should figure
this out for yourself.
Saphira! Be reasonable.
I am. If you don’t know why what we do is the right thing, you might as well
surrender to Galbatorix for all the good you’ll do. No matter how eloquent his pleas,
he could extract nothingmore from her, for she blocked him from that part of her
mind.
Back in their eyrie, Eragon ate a light supper and was just about to open one of
Oromis’s scrolls when a knock on the screen door disturbed his quiet.
“Enter,†he said, hoping that Arya had returned to see him.
She had.
Arya greeted Eragon and Saphira, then said, “I thought that you might appreciate an
opportunity to visit Tialdarí Hall and the adjacent gardens, since you expressed
interest in them yesterday. That is, if you aren’t too tired.†She wore a flowing red
kirtle trimmed and decorated with intricate designs wrought in black thread. The color
scheme echoed the queen’s robes and emphasized the strong resemblance between
mother and daughter.
Eragon pushed aside the scrolls. “I’d be delighted to see them.â€
He meanswe’dbe delighted, added Saphira.
Arya looked surprised when both of them spoke in the ancient language, so Eragon
explained Oromis’s command. “An excellent idea,†said Arya, joining them in the
same language. “And it is more appropriate to speak thus while you stay here.â€
When all three of them had descended from the tree, Arya directed them westward
toward an unfamiliar quadrant of Ellesméra. They encountered many elves on the
path, all of whom stopped to bow to Saphira.
Eragon noticed once again that no elf children were to be seen. He mentioned this to
Arya, and she said, “Aye, we have few children. Only two are in Ellesméra at the
present, Dusan and Alanna. We treasure children above all else because they are so
rare. To have a child is the greatest honor and responsibility that can be bestowed
upon any living being.â€
At last they arrived at a ribbed lancet arch—grown between two trees—which served
as the entrance for a wide compound. Still in the ancient language, Arya chanted,
“Root of tree, fruit of vine, let me pass by this blood of mine.â€
The two archway doors trembled, then swung outward, releasing five monarch
butterflies that fluttered toward the dusky sky. Through the archway lay a vast flower
garden arranged to look as pristine and natural as a wild meadow. The one element
that betrayed artifice was the sheer variety of plants; many of the species were
blooming out of season, or came from hotter or colder climates and would never have
flourished without the elves’ magic. The scene was lit with the gemlike flameless
lanterns, augmented by constellations of swirling fireflies.
To Saphira, Arya said, “Mind your tail, that it does not sweep across the beds.â€
Advancing, they crossed the garden and pressed deep into a line of scattered trees.
Before Eragon quite knew where he was, the trees became more numerous and then
thickened into a wall. He found himself standing on the threshold of a burnished
wood hall without ever being conscious of having gone inside.
The hall was warm and homey—a place of peace, reflection, and comfort. Its shape
was determined by the tree trunks, which on the inside of the hall had been stripped of
their bark, polished, and rubbed with oil until the wood gleamed like amber. Regular
gaps between the trunks acted as windows. The scent of crushed pine needles
perfumed the air. A number of elves occupied the hall, reading, writing, and, in one
dark corner, playing a set of reed pipes. They all paused and inclined their heads to
acknowledge Saphira’s presence.
“Here you would stay,†said Arya, “were you not Rider and dragon.â€
“It’s magnificent,†replied Eragon.
Arya guided him and Saphira everywhere in the compound that was accessible to
dragons. Each new room was a surprise; no two were alike, and each chamber found
different ways to incorporate the forest in its construction. In one room, a silver brook
trickled down the gnarled wall and flowed across the floor on a vein of pebbles and
back out under the sky. In another, creepers blanketed the entire room, except for the
floor, in a leafy green pelt adorned with trumpet-shaped flowers with the most
delicate pink and white colors. Arya called it the Lianí Vine.
They saw many great works of art, from fairths and paintings to sculptures and
radiant mosaics of stained glass—all based on the curved shapes of plants and
animals.
Islanzadí met with them for a short time in an open pavilion joined to two other
buildings by covered pathways. She inquired about the progress of Eragon’s training
and the state of his back, both of which he described with brief, polite phrases. This
seemed to satisfy the queen, who exchanged a few words with Saphira and then
departed.
In the end, they returned to the garden. Eragon walked beside Arya—Saphira trailing
behind—entranced by the sound of her voice as she told him about the different
varieties of flowers, where they originated, how they were maintained, and, in many
instances, how they had been altered with magic. She also pointed out the flowers that
only opened their petals during the night, like a white datura.
“Which one is your favorite?†he asked.
Arya smiled and escorted him to a tree on the edge of the garden, by a pond lined
with rushes. Around the tree’s lowest branch coiled a morning glory with three
velvety black blossoms that were clenched shut.
Blowing on them, Arya whispered, “Open.â€
The petals rustled as they unfurled, fanning their inky robes to expose the hoard of
nectar in their centers. A starburst of royal blue filled the flowers’ throats, diffusing
into the sable corolla like the vestiges of day into night.
“Is it not the most perfect and lovely flower?†asked Arya.
Eragon gazed at her, exquisitely aware of how close they were, and said, “Yes… it
is.†Before his courage deserted him, he added, “As are you.â€
Eragon!exclaimed Saphira.
Arya fixed her eyes upon him, studying him until he was forced to look away. When
he dared face her again, he was mortified to see her wearing a faint smile, as if
amused by his reaction. “You are too kind,†she murmured. Reaching up, she touched
the rim of a blossom and glanced from it to him. “Fäolin created this especially for me
one summer solstice, long ago.â€
He shuffled his feet and responded with a few unintelligible words, hurt and offended
that she did not take his compliment more seriously. He wished he could turn
invisible, and even considered trying to cast a spell that would allow him to do just
that.
In the end, he drew himself upright and said, “Please excuse us, Arya Svit-kona, but
it is late, and we must return to our tree.â€
Her smile deepened. “Of course, Eragon. I understand.†She accompanied them to
the main archway, opened the doors for them, and said, “Good night, Saphira. Good
night, Eragon.â€
Good night, replied Saphira.
Despite his embarrassment, Eragon could not help asking, “Will we see you
tomorrow?â€
Arya tilted her head. “I think I shall be busy tomorrow.†Then the doors closed,
cutting off his view of her as she returned to the main compound.
Crouching low on the path, Saphira nudged Eragon in the side. Stop daydreaming
and get on my back. Climbing up her left foreleg, he took his usual place, then
clutched the neck spike in front of him as Saphira rose to her full height. After a few
steps: How can you criticize my behavior with Glaedr and then go and do something
like that? What were you thinking?
You know how I feel about her, he grumbled.
Pah! If you are my conscience and I am yours, then it’s my duty to tell you when
you’re acting like a deluded popinjay. You’re not using logic, like Oromis keeps
telling us to. What do you really expect to happen between you and Arya? She’s a
princess!
And I’m a Rider.
She’s an elf; you’re a human!
I look more like an elf every day.
Eragon, she’s over a hundred years old!
I’ll live as long as her or any elf.
Ah, but you haven’t yet, and that’s the problem. You can’t overcome such a vast
difference. She’s a grown woman with a century of experience, while you’re—
What? What am I?he snarled. A child? Is that what you mean?
No, not a child. Not after what you have seen and done since we were joined. But you
are young, even by the reckoning of your short-lived race—much less by that of the
dwarves, dragons, and elves.
As are you.
His retort silenced her for a minute. Then: I’m just trying to protect you, Eragon.
That’s all. I want you to be happy, and I’m afraid you won’t be if you insist on
pursuing Arya.
The two of them were about to retire when they heard the trapdoor in the vestibule
bang open and the jingle of mail as someone climbed inside. Zar’roc in hand, Eragon
threw back the screen door, ready to confront the intruder.
His hand dropped as he saw Orik on the floor. The dwarf took a hearty draught from
the bottle he wielded in his left hand, then squinted at Eragon. “Bricks and bones,
where be you? Ah, there you shtand. I wondered where you were. Couldn’t find you,
so I thought that given this fine dolorous night, I might go find you… and here you
are! What shall we talk about, you and I, now that we’re together in this delectable
bird’s nest?â€
Taking hold of the dwarf’s free arm, Eragon pulled him upright, surprised, as he
always was, by how dense Orik was, like a miniature boulder. When Eragon removed
his support, Orik swayed from one side to the other, achieving such precarious angles
that he threatened to topple at the slightest provocation.
“Come on in,†said Eragon in his own language. He closed the trapdoor. “You’ll
catch cold out here.â€
Orik blinked his round, deep-set eyes at Eragon. “I’ve not sheen you round my leafy
exile, no I haven’t. You’ve abandoned me to the company of elves…and misherable,
dull company they are, yesh indeed.â€
A touch of guilt made Eragon disguise himself with an awkward smile. Hehad
forgotten the dwarf amid the goings-on. “I’m sorry I haven’t visited you, Orik, but my
studies have kept me busy. Here, give me your cloak.†As he helped the dwarf out of
his brown mantle, he asked, “What are you drinking?â€
“Faelnirv,†declared Orik. “A mosht wonderful, ticklish potion. The besht and
greatest of the elves’ tricksty inventions; it gives you the gift of loquacion. Words
float from your tongue like shoals of flappingminnows, like flocks of breathlessh
hummingbirds, like rivers of writhing shnakes.†He paused, apparently taken by the
unique magnificence of his similes. As Eragon ushered him into the bedroom, Orik
saluted Saphira with his bottle and said, “Greetings, O Irontooth. May your shcales
shine as bright as the coals of Morgothal’s forge.â€
Greetings, Orik,said Saphira, laying her head on the rim of her bed. What has put you
in this state? It is not like you. Eragon repeated her question.
“What has put me in mine shtate?†repeated Orik. He dropped into the chair that
Eragon provided—his feet dangling several inches above the ground—and began to
shake his head. “Red cap, green cap, elves here and elves there. I drown in elvesh and
their thrice-damned courtesy. Bloodless they be. Taciturn they are. Yesh sir, no shir,
three bagsh full, sir, yet nary a pip more can I extract.†He looked at Eragon with a
mournful expression. “What am I to do while you meander through your instruction?
Am I to sit and twiddle mine thumbs while I turn to shtone and join the shpirits of
mine anshestors? Tell me, O sagacious Rider.â€
Have you no skills or hobbies that you might occupy yourself with? asked Saphira.
“Aye,†said Orik. “I’m a fair enough smith by any who’d care to judge. But why
should I craft bright armsh and armor for those who treasure them not? I’m usheless
here. As usheless as a three-legged Feldûnost.â€
Eragon extended a hand toward the bottle. “May I?†Orik glanced between him and
the bottle, then grimaced and gave it up. The faelnirv was cold as ice as it ran down
Eragon’s throat, stinging and smarting. He blinked as his eyes watered. After he
indulged in a second quaff, he passed the bottle back to Orik, who seemed
disappointed by how little of the concoction remained.
“And what mischief,†asked Orik, “have you two managed to ferret out of Oromis
and yon bucolic woods?â€
The dwarf alternately chuckled and groaned as Eragon described his training, his
misplaced blessing in Farthen Dûr, the Menoa tree, his back, and all else that had
filled the past few days. Eragon ended with the topic that was dearest to him at the
moment: Arya. Emboldened by the liqueur, he confessed his affection for her and
described how she had dismissed his advance.
Wagging a finger, Orik said, “The rock beneath you is flawed, Eragon. Don’t tempt
fate. Arya…†He stopped, then growled and took another gulp of faelnirv. “Ah, it’s
too late for thish. Who am I to say what is wisdom and what isn’t?â€
Saphira had closed her eyes a while ago. Without opening them, she asked, Are you
married, Orik? The question surprised Eragon; he had never stopped to wonder about
Orik’s personal life.
“Eta,†said Orik. “Although I’m promished to fair Hvedra, daughter of Thorgerd
One-eye and Himinglada. We were to be wed thish spring, until the Urgals attacked
and Hrothgar sent me on this accursed trip.â€
“Is she of Dûrgrimst Ingeitum?†asked Eragon.
“Of coursh!†roared Orik, pounding his fist on the side of the chair. “Thinkest thou I
would marry outside my clan? She’s the granddaughter of mine aunt Vardrûn,
Hrothgar’s coushin twice removed, with white, round calves as smooth as satin,
cheeks as red as apples, and the prettiesht dwarf maid who ever did exist.â€
Undoubtedly, said Saphira.
“I’m sure it won’t be long before you see her again,†said Eragon.
“Hmph.†Orik squinted at Eragon. “Do you believe in giants? Tall giants, shtrong
giants, thick and bearded giants with fingers like spadeses?â€
“I’ve never seen nor heard of them,†said Eragon, “except in stories. If they do exist,
it’s not in Alagaësia.â€
“Ah, but they do! They do!†exclaimed Orik, waving the bottle about his head. “Tell
me, O Rider, if a fearshome giant were to meet you on the garden path, what might he
call you, if not dinner?â€
“Eragon, I would presume.â€
“No, no. He’d call you a dwarf, for dwarf you’d be to him.†Orik guffawed and
nudged Eragon in the ribs with his hard elbow. “See you now? Humans and elvesh are
the giants. The land’s full of them, here, there, and everywhere, stomping about with
their big feet and casting us in endless shadowses.†He continued laughing, rocking
back in his chair until it tipped over and he fell to the floor with a solid thump.
Helping him upright, Eragon said, “I think you’d better stay here for the night.
You’re in no condition to go down those stairs in the dark.â€
Orik agreed with cheery indifference. He allowed Eragon to remove his mail and
bundle him onto one side of the bed. Afterward, Eragon sighed, covered the lights,
and lay on his side of the mattress.
He fell asleep hearing the dwarf mutter, “… Hvedra… Hvedra… Hvedra…â€
THE NATURE OF EVIL
Bright morning arrived all too soon.
Jolted to awareness by the buzz of the vibrating timepiece, Eragon grabbed his
hunting knife and sprang out of bed, expecting an attack. He gasped as his body
shrieked with protest from the abuse of the past two days.
Blinking away tears, Eragon rewound the timepiece. Orik was gone; the dwarf must
have slipped away in the wee hours of the morning. With a groan, Eragon hobbled to
the wash closet for his daily ablutions, like an old man afflicted by rheumatism.
He and Saphira waited by the tree for ten minutes before they were met by a solemn,
black-haired elf. The elf bowed, touched two fingers to his lips—which Eragon
mirrored—and then preempted Eragon by saying, “May good fortune rule over you.â€
“And may the stars watch over you,†replied Eragon. “Did Oromis send you?â€
The elf ignored him and said to Saphira, “Well met, dragon. I am Vanir of House
Haldthin.†Eragon scowled with annoyance.
Well met, Vanir.
Only then did the elf address Eragon: “I will show you where you may practice with
your blade.†He strode away, not waiting for Eragon to catch up.
The sparring yard was dotted with elves of both sexes fighting in pairs and groups.
Their extraordinary physical gifts resulted in flurries of blows so quick and fast, they
sounded like bursts of hail striking an iron bell. Under the trees that fringed the yard,
individual elves performed the Rimgar with more grace and flexibility than Eragon
thought he would ever achieve.
After everyone on the field stopped and bowed to Saphira, Vanir unsheathed his
narrow blade. “If you will guard your sword, Silver Hand, we can begin.â€
Eragon eyed the inhuman swordsmanship of the other elves with trepidation. Why do
I have to do this? he asked. I’ll just be humiliated.
You’ll be fine,said Saphira, yet he could sense her concern for him.
Right.
As he prepared Zar’roc, Eragon’s hands trembled with dread. Instead of throwing
himself into the fray, he fought Vanir from a distance, dodging, sidestepping, and
doing everything possible to avoid triggering another fit. Despite Eragon’s evasions,
Vanir touched him four times in rapid succession—once each on his ribs, shin, and
both shoulders.
Vanir’s initial expression of stoic impassivity soon devolved into open contempt.
Dancing forward, he slid his blade up Zar’roc’s length while at the same time twirling
Zar’roc in a circle, wrenching Eragon’s wrist. Eragon allowed Zar’roc to fly out of his
hand rather than resist the elf’s superior strength.
Vanir dropped his sword onto Eragon’s neck and said, “Dead.†Shrugging off the
sword, Eragon trudged over to retrieve Zar’roc. “Dead,†said Vanir. “How do you
expect to defeat Galbatorix like this? I expected better, even from a weakling human.â€
“Then why don’t you fight Galbatorix yourself instead of hiding in Du
Weldenvarden?â€
Vanir stiffened with outrage. “Because,†he said, cool and haughty, “I’m not a Rider.
And if I were, I would not be such a coward as you.â€
No one moved or spoke on the field.
His back to Vanir, Eragon leaned on Zar’roc and craned his neck toward the sky,
snarling to himself. He knows nothing. This is just one more test to overcome.
“Coward, I say. Your blood is as thin as the rest of your race’s. I think that Saphira
was confused by Galbatorix’s wiles and made the wrong choice of Rider.†The
spectating elves gasped at Vanir’s words and muttered among themselves with open
disapproval for his atrocious breach of etiquette.
Eragon ground his teeth. He could stand insults to himself, but not to Saphira. She
was already movingwhen his pent-up frustration, fear, and pain burst within him and
he whirled around, the tip of Zar’roc whistling through the air.
The blow would have killed Vanir had he not blocked it at the last second. He looked
surprised by the ferocity of the attack. Holding nothing in reserve, Eragon drove
Vanir to the center of the field, jabbing and slashing like a madman—determined to
hurt the elf however he could. He nicked Vanir on the hip with enough force to draw
blood, even with Zar’roc’s blunted edge.
At that instant, Eragon’s back ruptured in an explosion of agony so intense, he
experienced it with all five senses: as a deafening, crashingwaterfall of sound; a
metallic taste that coated his tongue; an acrid, eye-watering stench in his nostrils,
redolent of vinegar; pulsing colors; and, above all, the feeling that Durza had just laid
open his back.
He could see Vanir standing over him with a derisive sneer. It occurred to Eragon
that Vanir was very young.
After the seizure, Eragon wiped the blood from his mouth with his hand and showed
it to Vanir, asking, “Thin enough?†Vanir did not deign to respond, but rather
sheathed his sword and walked away.
“Where are you going?†demanded Eragon. “We have unfinished business, you and
I.â€
“You are in no fit condition to spar,†scoffed the elf.
“Try me.†Eragon might be inferior to the elves, but he refused to give them the
satisfaction of fulfilling their low expectations of him. He would earn their respect
through sheer persistence, if nothing else.
He insisted on completingOromis’s assigned hour, after which Saphira marched up
to Vanir and touched him on the chest with the point of one of her ivory talons. Dead,
she said. Vanir paled. The other elves edged away from him.
Once they were in the air, Saphira said, Oromis was right.
About what?
You give more of yourself when you have an opponent.
At Oromis’s hut, the day resumed its usual pattern: Saphira accompanied Glaedr for
her instruction while Eragon remained with Oromis.
Eragon was horrified when he discovered that Oromis expected him to do the Rimgar
in addition to his earlier exercises. It took all of his courage to obey. His apprehension
proved groundless, though, for the Dance of Snake and Crane was too gentle to injure
him.
That, coupled with his meditation in the secluded glade, provided Eragon with his
first opportunity since the previous day to order his thoughts and consider the
question that Oromis had posed him.
While he did, he observed his red ants invade a smaller, rival anthill, overrunning the
inhabitants and stealing their resources. By the end of the massacre, only a handful of
the rival ants were left alive, alone and purposeless in the vast and hostile pine-needle
barrens.
Like the dragons in Alagaësia,thought Eragon. His connection to the ants vanished as
he considered the dragons’ unhappy fate. Bit by bit, an answer to his problem
revealed itself to him, an answer that he could live with and believe in.
He finished his meditations and returned to the hut. This time Oromis seemed
reasonably satisfied with what Eragon had accomplished.
As Oromis served the midday meal, Eragon said, “I know why fightingGalbatorix is
worth it, though thousands of people may die.â€
“Oh?†Oromis seated himself. “Do tell me.â€
“Because Galbatorix has already caused more suffering over the past hundred years
than we ever could in a single generation. And unlike a normal tyrant, we cannot wait
for him to die. He could rule for centuries or millennia—persecuting and tormenting
people the entire time—unless we stop him. If he became strong enough, he would
march on the dwarves and you here in Du Weldenvarden and kill or enslave both
races. And…†Eragon rubbed the heel of his palm against the edge of the table, “…
because rescuing the two eggs from Galbatorix is the only way to save the dragons.â€
The strident warble of Oromis’s teakettle intruded, escalating in volume until
Eragon’s ears rang. Standing, Oromis hooked the kettle off the cookfire and poured
the water for blueberry tea. The creases around his eyes softened. “Now,†he said,
“you understand.â€
“I understand, but I take no pleasure in it.â€
“Nor should you. But now we can be confident that you won’t shrink from the path
when you are confronted by the injustices and atrocities that the Varden will
inevitably commit. We cannot afford to have you consumed by doubts when your
strength and focus are most needed.†Oromis steepled his fingers and gazed into the
dark mirror of his tea, contemplatingwhatever he saw in its tenebrous reflection. “Do
you believe that Galbatorix is evil?â€
“Of course!â€
“Do you believe that he considers himself evil?â€
“No, I doubt it.â€
Oromis tapped his forefingers against each other. “Then you must also believe that
Durza was evil?â€
The fragmented memories Eragon had gleaned from Durza when they fought in
Tronjheim returned to him now, reminding him how the young Shade—Carsaib,
then—had been enslaved by the wraiths he had summoned to avenge the death of his
mentor, Haeg. “He wasn’t evil himself, but the spirits that controlled him were.â€
“And what of the Urgals?†asked Oromis, sipping his tea. “Are they evil?â€
Eragon’s knuckles whitened as he gripped his spoon. “When I think of death, I see an
Urgal’s face. They’re worse than beasts. The things they have done…†He shook his
head, unable to continue.
“Eragon, what kind of opinion would you form of humans if all you knew of them
were the actions of your warriors on the field of battle?â€
“That’s not…†He took a deep breath. “It’s different. Urgals deserve to be wiped out,
every last one of them.â€
“Even their females and children? The ones who haven’t harmed you and likely
never will? The innocents?Would you kill them and condemn an entire race to the
void?â€
“They wouldn’t spare us, given the chance.â€
“Eragon!†exclaimed Oromis in biting tones. “I never want to hear you use that
excuse again, that because someone else has done—or would do—somethingmeans
that you should too. It’s lazy, repugnant, and indicative of an inferior mind. Am I
clear?â€
“Yes, Master.â€
The elf raised his mug to his lips and drank, his bright eyes fixed on Eragon the entire
time. “What do you actually know of Urgals?â€
“I know their strengths, weaknesses, and how to kill them. It’s all I need to know.â€
“Why do they hate and fight humans, though?What about their history and legends,
or the way in which they live?â€
“Does it matter?â€
Oromis sighed. “Just remember,†he said gently, “that at a certain point, your
enemies may have to become your allies. Such is the nature of life.â€
Eragon resisted the urge to argue. He swirled his own tea in its mug, accelerating the
liquid into a black whirlpool with a white lens of foam at the bottom of the vortex. “Is
that why Galbatorix enlisted the Urgals?â€
“That is not an example I would have chosen, but yes.â€
“It seems strange that he befriended them. After all, they were the ones who killed his
dragon. Look what he did to us, the Riders, and we weren’t even responsible for his
loss.â€
“Ah,†said Oromis, “mad Galbatorixmay be, but he’s still as cunning as a fox. I
guess that he intended to use the Urgals to destroy the Varden and the dwarves—and
others, if he had triumphed in Farthen Dûr—thereby removing two of his enemies
while simultaneously weakening the Urgals so that he could dispose of them at his
leisure.â€
Study of the ancient language devoured the afternoon, whereupon they took up the
practice of magic. Much of Oromis’s lectures concerned the proper way in which to
control various forms of energy, such as light, heat, electricity, and even gravity. He
explained that since these forces consumed strength faster than any other type of spell,
it was safer to find them already in existence in nature and then shape them with
gramarye, instead of trying to create them from nothing.
Abandoning the subject, Oromis asked, “How would you kill with magic?â€
“I’ve done it many ways,†said Eragon. “I’ve hunted with a pebble—moving and
aiming it with magic—as well as using the wordjierda to break Urgals’ legs and
necks. Once, withthrysta, I stopped a man’s heart.â€
“There are more efficient methods,†revealed Oromis. “What does it take to kill a
man, Eragon? A sword through the chest? A broken neck? The loss of blood? All it
takes is for a single artery in the brain to be pinched off, or for certain nerves to be
severed. With the right spell, you could obliterate an army.â€
“I should have thought of that in Farthen Dûr,†said Eragon, disgusted with himself.
Not just Farthen Dûr either, but also when the Kull chased us from the Hadarac
Desert. “Again, why didn’t Brom teach me this?â€
“Because he did not expect you to face an army for months or years to come; it is not
a tool given to untested Riders.â€
“If it’s so easy to kill people, though, what’s the point of us or Galbatorix raising an
army?â€
“To be succinct, tactics. Magicians are vulnerable to physical attack when they are
embroiled in their mental struggles. Therefore, they need warriors to protect them.
And the warriors must be shielded, at least in part, from magical attacks, else they
would be slain within minutes. These limitations mean that when armies confront one
another, their magicians are scattered throughout the bulk of their forces, close to the
edge but not so close as to be in danger. The magicians on both sides open their minds
and attempt to sense if anyone is using or is about to use magic. Since their enemies
might be beyond their mental reach, magicians also erect wards around themselves
and their warriors to stop or lessen long-range attacks, such as a pebble sent flying
toward their head from a mile away.â€
“Surely one man can’t defend an entire army,†said Eragon.
“Not alone, but with enough magicians, you can provide a reasonable amount of
protection. The greatest danger in this sort of conflict is that a clever magician may
think of a unique attack that can bypass your wards without tripping them. That itself
could be enough to decide a battle.
“Also,†said Oromis, “you must keep in mind that the ability to use magic is
exceedingly rare among the races. We elves are no exception, although we have a
greater allotment of spellweavers than most, as a result of oaths we bound ourselves
with centuries ago. The majority of those blessed with magic have little or no
appreciable talent; they struggle to heal even so much as a bruise.â€
Eragon nodded. He had encountered magicians like that in the Varden. “But it still
takes the same amount of energy to accomplish a task.â€
“Energy, yes, but lesser magicians find it harder than you or I do to feel the flow of
magic and immerse themselves in it. Few magicians are strong enough to pose a
threat to an entire army. And those who are usually spend the bulk of their time
during battles evading, tracking, or fighting their opposites, which is fortunate from
the standpoint of ordinary warriors, else they would all soon be killed.â€
Troubled, Eragon said, “The Varden don’t have many magicians.â€
“That is one reason why you are so important.â€
A moment passed as Eragon reflected on what Oromis had told him. “These wards,
do they only drain energy from you when they are activated?â€
“Aye.â€
“Then, given enough time, you could acquire countless layers of wards. You could
make yourself…†He struggled with the ancient language as he attempted to express
himself. “… untouchable?… impregnable?… impregnable to any assault, magical or
physical.â€
“Wards,†said Oromis, “rely upon the strength of your body. If that strength is
exceeded, you die. No matter how many wards you have, you will only be able to
block attacks so long as your body can sustain the output of energy.â€
“And Galbatorix’s strength has been increasing each year… How is that possible?â€
It was a rhetorical question, yet when Oromis remained silent, his almond eyes fixed
on a trio of swallows pirouetting overhead, Eragon realized that the elf was
considering how best to answer him. The birds chased each other for several minutes.
When they flitted from view, Oromis said, “It is not appropriate to have this
discussion at the present.â€
“Then you know?†exclaimed Eragon, astonished.
“I do. But that information must wait until later in your training. You are not ready
for it.†Oromis looked at Eragon, as if expecting him to object.
Eragon bowed. “As you wish, Master.†He could never prize the information out of
Oromis until the elf was willing to share it, so why try? Still, he wondered what could
be so dangerous that Oromis dared not tell him, and why the elves had kept it secret
from the Varden. Another thought presented itself to him, and he said, “If battles with
magicians are conducted like you said, then why did Ajihad let me fight without
wards in Farthen Dûr? I didn’t even know that I needed to keep my mind open for
enemies. And why didn’t Arya kill most or all of the Urgals? No magicians were there
to oppose her except for Durza, and he couldn’t have defended his troops when he
was underground.â€
“Did not Ajihad have Arya or one of Du Vrangr Gata set defenses around you?â€
demanded Oromis.
“No, Master.â€
“And you fought thus?â€
“Yes, Master.â€
Oromis’s eyes unfocused, withdrawing into himself as he stood motionless on the
greensward. He spoke without warning: “I have consulted Arya, and she says that the
Twins of the Varden were ordered to assess your abilities. They told Ajihad you were
competent in all magic, includingwards. Neither Ajihad nor Arya doubted their
judgment on that matter.â€
“Those smooth-tongued, bald-pated, tick-infested, treacherous dogs,†swore Eragon.
“They tried to get me killed!†Reverting to his own language, he indulged in several
more pungent oaths.
“Do not befoul the air,†said Oromis mildly. “It ill becomes you… In any case, I
suspect the Twins allowed you into battle unprotectednot so you would be killed, but
so that Durza could capture you.â€
“What?â€
“By your own account, Ajihad suspected that the Varden had been betrayed when
Galbatorix began persecuting their allies in the Empire with near-perfect accuracy.
The Twins were privy to the identities of the Varden’s collaborators. Also, the Twins
lured you to the heart of Tronjheim, thereby separating you from Saphira and placing
you within Durza’s reach. That they were traitors is the logical explanation.â€
“If theywere traitors,†said Eragon, “it doesn’t matter now; they’re long dead.â€
Oromis inclined his head. “Even so. Arya said that the Urgals did have magicians in
Farthen Dûr and that she fought many of them. None of them attacked you?â€
“No, Master.â€
“More evidence that you and Saphira were left for Durza to capture and take to
Galbatorix. The trap was well laid.â€
Over the next hour, Oromis taught Eragon twelve methods to kill, none of which took
more energy than lifting an ink-laden pen. As he finished memorizing the last one, a
thought struck Eragon that caused him to grin. “The Ra’zac won’t stand a chance the
next time they cross my path.â€
“You must still be wary of them,†cautioned Oromis.
“Why? Three words and they’ll be dead.â€
“What do ospreys eat?â€
Eragon blinked. “Fish, of course.â€
“And if a fish were slightly faster and more intelligent than its brethren, would it be
able to escape a hunting osprey?â€
“I doubt it,†said Eragon. “At least not for very long.â€
“Just as ospreys are designed to be the best possible hunters of fish, wolves are
designed to be the best hunters of deer and other large game, and every animal is
gifted to best suit its purpose. So too are the Ra’zac designed to prey upon humans.
They are the monsters in the dark, the dripping nightmares that haunt your race.â€
The back of Eragon’s neck prickled with horror. “What manner of creatures are
they?â€
“Neither elf; man; dwarf; dragon; furred, finned, or feathered beast; reptile; insect;
nor any other category of animal.â€
Eragon forced a laugh. “Are they plants, then?â€
“Nor that either. They reproduce by laying eggs, like dragons. When they hatch, the
young—or pupae—grow black exoskeletons that mimic the human form. It’s a
grotesque imitation, but convincing enough to let the Ra’zac approach their victims
without undo alarm. All areas where humans are weak, the Ra’zac are strong. They
can see on a cloudy night, track a scent like a bloodhound, jump higher, and move
faster. However, bright light pains them and they have a morbid fear of deep water,
for they cannot swim. Their greatest weapon is their evil breath, which fogs the minds
of humans—incapacitatingmany—though it is less potent on dwarves, and elves are
immune altogether.â€
Eragon shivered as he remembered his first sight of the Ra’zac in Carvahall and how
he had been unable to flee once they noticed him. “It felt like a dream where I wanted
to run but I couldn’t move, no matter how hard I tried.â€
“As good a description as any,†said Oromis. “Though the Ra’zac cannot use magic,
they are not to be underestimated. If they know that you hunt them, they will not
reveal themselves but keep to the shadows, where they are strong, and plot to ambush
you as they did by Dras-Leona. Even Brom’s experience could not protect him from
them. Never grow overconfident, Eragon. Never grow arrogant, for then you will be
careless and your enemies will exploit your weakness.â€
“Yes, Master.â€
Oromis fixed Eragon with a steady gaze. “The Ra’zac remain pupae for twenty years
while they mature. On the first full moon of their twentieth year, they shed their
exoskeletons, spread their wings, and emerge as adults ready to hunt all creatures, not
just humans.â€
“Then the Ra’zac’s mounts, the ones they fly on, are really…â€
“Aye, their parents.â€
IMAGE OF PERFECTION
At last I understand the nature of my enemies,thought Eragon. He had feared the
Ra’zac ever since they first appeared in Carvahall, not only because of their villainous
deeds but because he knew so little about the creatures. In his ignorance, he credited
the Ra’zac with more powers than they actually possessed and regarded them with an
almost superstitious dread. Nightmares indeed. But now that Oromis’s explanation
had stripped away the Ra’zac’s aura of mystery, they no longer seemed quite so
formidable. The fact that they were vulnerable to light and water strengthened
Eragon’s conviction that when next they met, he would destroy the monsters that had
killed Garrow and Brom.
“Are their parents called Ra’zac as well?†he asked.
Oromis shook his head. “Lethrblaka, we named them. And whereas their offspring
are narrow-minded, if cunning, Lethrblaka have all the intelligence of a dragon. A
cruel, vicious, and twisted dragon.â€
“Where do they come from?â€
“From whatever land your ancestors abandoned. Their depredations may have been
what forced King Palancar to emigrate. When we, the Riders, became aware of the
Ra’zac’s foul presence in Alagaësia, we did our best to eradicate them, as we would
leaf blight. Unfortunately, we were only partially successful. Two Lethrblaka escaped,
and they alongwith their pupae are the ones who have caused you so much grief.
After he killed Vrael, Galbatorix sought them out and bargained for their services in
return for his protection and a guaranteed amount of their favorite food. That is why
Galbatorix allows them to live by Dras-Leona, one of the Empire’s largest cities.â€
Eragon’s jaw tightened. “They have much to answer for.â€And they will, if I have my
way.
“That they do,†Oromis agreed. Returning to the hut, he stepped through the black
shadow of the doorway, then reappeared carrying a half-dozen slate tablets about a
half-foot wide and a foot high. He presented one to Eragon. “Let us abandon such
unpleasant topics for a time. I thought you might enjoy learning how to make a fairth.
It is an excellent device for focusing your thoughts. The slate is impregnated with
enough ink to cover it with any combination of colors. All you need do is concentrate
upon the image that you wish to capture and then say, ‘Let that which I see in my
mind’s eye be replicated on the surface of this tablet.’ †As Eragon examined the claysmooth
slate, Oromis gestured at the clearing. “Look about you, Eragon, and find
somethingworth preserving.â€
The first objects that Eragon noticed seemed too obvious, too banal to him: a yellow
lily by his feet, Oromis’s overgrown hut, the white stream, and the landscape itself.
None were unique. None would give an observer an insight into the subject of the
fairth or he who had created it. Things that change and are lost, that is what’s worth
preserving, he thought. His eye alighted upon the pale green nubs of spring growth at
the tip of a tree’s branches and then the deep, narrow wound that seamed the trunk
where a storm had broken a bough, tearing off a rope of bark with it. Translucent orbs
of sap encrusted the seam, catching and refracting the light.
Eragon positioned himself alongside the trunk so that the rotund galls of the tree’s
congealed blood bulged out in silhouette and were framed by a cluster of shiny new
needles. Then he fixed the scene in his mind as best he could and uttered the spell.
The surface of the gray tablet brightened as splashes of color bloomed across it,
blending and mixing to produce the proper array of hues. When the pigments at last
stopped moving, Eragon found himself looking at a strange copy of what he had
wanted to reproduce. The sap and needles were rendered with vibrant, razor-sharp
detail, while all else was slurred and bleary, as if seen through half-opened eyes. It
was far removed from the universal clarity of Oromis’s fairth of Ilirea.
At a sign from Oromis, Eragon handed the tablet to him. The elf studied it for a
minute, then said, “You have an unusual way of thinking, Eragon-finiarel. Most
humans have difficulty achieving the proper concentration to create a recognizable
image. You, on the other hand, seem to observe nearly everything about whatever
interests you. It’s a narrow focus, though. You have the same problem here that you
do with your meditation. You must relax, broaden your field of vision, and allow
yourself to absorb everything around you without judgingwhat is important or not.â€
Setting aside the picture, Oromis took a second, blank tablet from the grass and gave
it to Eragon. “Try again with what I—â€
“Hail, Rider!â€
Startled, Eragon turned and saw Orik and Arya emerge side by side from the forest.
The dwarf raised his arm in greeting. His beard was freshly trimmed and braided, his
hair was pulled back into a neat ponytail, and he wore a new tunic—courtesy of the
elves—that was red and brown and embroidered with gold thread. His appearance
gave no indication of his condition the previous night.
Eragon, Oromis, and Arya exchanged the traditional greeting, then, abandoning the
ancient language, Oromis asked, “To what may I attribute this visit? You are both
welcome to my hut, but as you can see, I am in the midst of workingwith Eragon, and
that is of paramount importance.â€
“I apologize for disturbing you, Oromis-elda,†said Arya, “but—â€
“The fault is mine,†said Orik. He glanced at Eragon before continuing: “I was sent
here by Hrothgar to ensure that Eragon receives the instruction he is due. I have no
doubt that he is, but I am obliged to see his trainingwith my own eyes so that when I
return to Tronjheim, I may give my king a true account of events.â€
Oromis said, “That which I teach Eragon is not to be shared with anyone else. The
secrets of the Riders are for him alone.â€
“And I understand that. However, we live in uncertain times; the stone that once was
fixed and solid is now unstable. We must adapt to survive. So much depends on
Eragon, we dwarves have a right to verify that his training proceeds as promised. Do
you believe our request is an unreasonable one?â€
“Well spoken, Master Dwarf,†said Oromis. He tapped his fingers together,
inscrutable as always. “May I assume, then, that this is a matter of duty for you?â€
“Duty and honor.â€
“And neither will allow you to yield on this point?â€
“I fear not, Oromis-elda,†said Orik.
“Very well. You may stay and watch for the duration of this lesson. Will that satisfy
you?â€
Orik frowned. “Are you near the end of the lesson?â€
“We have just begun.â€
“Then yes, I will be satisfied. For the moment, at least.â€
While they spoke, Eragon tried to catch Arya’s eye, but she kept her attention
centered on Oromis.
“… Eragon!â€
He blinked, jolted out of his reverie. “Yes, Master?â€
“Don’t wander, Eragon. I want you to make another fairth. Keep your mind open,
like I told you before.â€
“Yes, Master.†Eragon hefted the tablet, his hands slightly damp at the thought of
havingOrik and Arya there to judge his performance. He wanted to do well in order
to prove that Oromis was a good teacher. Even so, he could not concentrate on the
pine needles and sap; Arya tugged at him like a lodestone, drawing his attention back
to her whenever he thought of something else.
At last he realized that it was futile for him to resist the attraction. He composed an
image of her in his head—which took but a heartbeat, since he knew her features
better than his own—and voiced the spell in the ancient language, pouring all of his
adoration, love, and fear of her into the currents of fey magic.
The result left him speechless.
The fairth depicted Arya’s head and shoulders against a dark, indistinct background.
She was bathed in firelight on her right side and gazed out at the viewer with knowing
eyes, appearing not just as she was but as he thought of her: mysterious, exotic, and
the most beautiful woman he had ever seen. It was a flawed, imperfect picture, but it
possessed such intensity and passion that it evoked a visceral response from Eragon.
Is this how I really see her? Whoever this woman was, she was so wise, so powerful,
and so hypnotic, she could consume any lesser man.
From a great distance, he heard Saphira whisper, Be careful…
“What have you wrought, Eragon?†demanded Oromis.
“I… I don’t know.†Eragon hesitated as Oromis extended his hand for the fairth,
reluctant to let the others examine his work, especially Arya. After a long, terrifying
pause, Eragon pried his fingers off the tablet and released it to Oromis.
The elf’s expression grew stern as he looked at the fairth, then back at Eragon, who
quailed under the weight of his stare. Without a word, Oromis handed the tablet to
Arya.
Her hair obscured her face as she bowed over the tablet, but Eragon saw cords and
veins ridge her hands as she clenched the slate. It shook in her grip.
“Well, what is it?†asked Orik.
Raising the fairth over her head, Arya hurled it against the ground, shattering the
picture into a thousand pieces. Then she drew herself upright and, with great dignity,
walked past Eragon, across the clearing, and into the tangled depths of Du
Weldenvarden.
Orik picked up one of the fragments of slate. It was blank. The image had vanished
when the tablet broke. He tugged his beard. “In all the decades I’ve known her, Arya
has never lost her temper like that. Never. What did you do, Eragon?â€
Dazed, Eragon said, “A portrait of her.â€
Orik frowned, obviously puzzled. “A portrait?Why would that—â€
“I think it would be best if you left now,†said Oromis. “The lesson is over, in any
case. Come back tomorrow or the day after if you want a better idea of Eragon’s
progress.â€
The dwarf squinted at Eragon, then nodded and brushed the dirt from his palms.
“Yes, I believe I’ll do that. Thank you for your time, Oromis-elda. I appreciate it.†As
he headed back toward Ellesméra, he said over his shoulder to Eragon, “I’ll be in the
common room of Tialdarí Hall, if you want to talk.â€
When Orik was gone, Oromis lifted the hem of his tunic, knelt, and began to gather
up the remains of the tablet. Eragon watched him, unable to move.
“Why?†he asked in the ancient language.
“Perhaps,†said Oromis, “Arya was frightened by you.â€
“Frightened? She never gets frightened.†Even as he said it, Eragon knew that it was
not true. She just concealed her fear better than most. Dropping to one knee, he took a
piece of the fairth and pressed it into Oromis’s palm. “Why would I frighten her?†he
asked. “Please, tell me.â€
Oromis stood and walked to the edge of the stream, where he scattered the fragments
of slate over the bank, letting the gray flakes trickle through his fingers. “Fairths only
show what you want them to. It’s possible to lie with them, to create a false image,
but to do so requires more skill than you yet have. Arya knows this. She also knows,
then, that your fairth was an accurate representation of your feelings for her.â€
“But why would that frighten her?â€
Oromis smiled sadly. “Because it revealed the depth of your infatuation.†He pressed
his fingertips together, forming a series of arches. “Let us analyze the situation,
Eragon. While you are old enough to be considered a man among your people, in our
eyes, you are no more than a child.†Eragon frowned, hearing echoes of Saphira’s
words from the previous night. “Normally, I would not compare a human’s age to an
elf’s, but since you share our longevity, you must also be judged by our standards.
“And you are a Rider. We rely upon you to help us defeat Galbatorix; it could be
disastrous for everyone in Alagaësia if you are distracted from your studies.
“Now then,†said Oromis, “how should Arya have responded to your fairth? It’s clear
that you see her in a romantic light, yet—while I have no doubt Arya is fond of you—
a union between the two of you is impossible due to your own youth, culture, race,
and responsibilities. Your interest has placed Arya in an uncomfortable position. She
dare not confront you, for fear of disrupting your training. But, as the queen’s
daughter, she cannot ignore you and risk offending a Rider—especially one upon
which so much depends… Even if you were a fit match, Arya would refrain from
encouraging you so that you could devote all of your energy to the task at hand. She
would sacrifice her happiness for the greater good.†Oromis’s voice thickened: “You
must understand, Eragon, that slayingGalbatorix is more important than any one
person. Nothing else matters.†He paused, his gaze gentle, then added, “Given the
circumstances, is it so strange Arya was frightened that your feelings for her could
endanger everythingwe have worked for?â€
Eragon shook his head. He was ashamed that his behavior had caused Arya distress,
and dismayed by how reckless and juvenile he had been. I could have avoided this
entire mess if I’d just kept better control of myself.
Touching him on the shoulder, Oromis guided him back inside the hut. “Think not
that I am devoid of sympathy, Eragon. Everyone experiences ardor like yours at one
point or another during their lives. It’s part of growing up. I also know how hard it is
for you to deny yourself the usual comforts of life, but it’s necessary if we are to
prevail.â€
“Yes, Master.â€
They sat at the kitchen table, and Oromis began to lay out writingmaterials for
Eragon to practice the Liduen Kvaedhí. “It would be unreasonable of me to expect
you to forget your fascination with Arya, but I do expect you to prevent it from
interferingwith my instruction again. Can you promise me that?â€
“Yes, Master. I promise.â€
“And Arya?What would be the honorable thing to do about her predicament?â€
Eragon hesitated. “I don’t want to lose her friendship.â€
“No.â€
“Therefore… I will go to her, I will apologize, and I will reassure her that I never
intend to cause her such hardship again.†It was difficult for him to say, but once he
did, he felt a sense of relief, as if acknowledging his mistake cleansed him of it.
Oromis appeared pleased. “By that alone, you prove that you have matured.â€
The sheets of paper were smooth underneath Eragon’s hands as he pressed them flat
against the tabletop. He stared at the blank white expanse for a moment, then dipped a
quill in ink and began to transcribe a column of glyphs. Each barbed line was like a
streak of night against the paper, an abyss into which he could lose himself and try to
forget his confused feelings.
THE OBLITERATOR
The followingmorn, Eragon went looking for Arya in order to apologize. He
searched for over an hour without success. It seemed as if she had vanished among the
many hidden nooks within Ellesméra. He caught a glimpse of her once as he paused
by the entrance to Tialdarí Hall and called out to her, but she slipped away before he
could reach her side. She’s avoiding me, he finally realized.
As the days rolled by, Eragon embraced Oromis’s trainingwith a zeal that the elder
Rider praised, devoting himself to his studies in order to distract himself from
thoughts of Arya.
Night and day, Eragon strove to master his lessons. He memorized the words of
making, binding, and summoning; learned the true names of plants and animals; and
studied the perils of transmutation, how to call upon the wind and the sea, and the
myriad skills needed to understand the forces of the world. At spells that dealt with
the great energies—such as light, heat, and magnetism—he excelled, for he possessed
the talent to judge nigh exactly how much strength a task required and whether it
would exceed that of his body.
Occasionally, Orik would come and watch, standingwithout comment by the edge of
the clearingwhile Oromis tutored Eragon, or while Eragon struggled alone with a
particularly difficult spell.
Oromis set many challenges before him. He had Eragon cook meals with magic, in
order to teach him finer control of his gramarye; Eragon’s first attempts resulted in a
blackened mess. The elf showed Eragon how to detect and neutralize poisons of every
sort and, from then on, Eragon had to inspect his food for the different venoms
Oromis was liable to slip into it. More than once Eragon went hungry when he could
not find the poison or was unable to counteract it. Twice he became so sick, Oromis
had to heal him. And Oromis had Eragon cast multiple spells simultaneously, which
required tremendous concentration to keep the spells directed at their intended targets
and prevent them from shifting among the items Eragon wanted to affect.
Oromis devoted long hours to the craft of imbuingmatter with energy, either to be
released at a later time or to give an object certain attributes. He said, “This is how
Rhunön charmed the Riders’ swords so they never break or dull; how we sing plants
into growing as we desire; how a trap might be set in a box, only to be triggered when
the box is opened; how we and the dwarves make the Erisdar, our lanterns; and how
you may heal one who is injured, to name but a few uses. These are the most potent of
spells, for they can lie dormant for a thousand years or more and are difficult to
perceive or avert. They permeate much of Alagaësia, shaping the land and the destiny
of those who live here.â€
Eragon asked, “You could use this technique to alter your body, couldn’t you? Or is
that too dangerous?â€
Oromis’s lips quirked in a faint smile. “Alas, you have stumbled upon elves’ greatest
weakness: our vanity. We love beauty in all its forms, and we seek to represent that
ideal in our appearance. That is why we are known as the Fair Folk. Every elf looks
exactly as he or she wishes to. When elves learn the spells for growing and molding
living things, they often choose to modify their appearance to better reflect their
personalities. A few elves have gone beyond mere aesthetic changes and altered their
anatomy to adapt to various environments, as you will see during the Blood-oath
Celebration. Oftentimes, they are more animal than elf.
“However, transferring power to a living creature is different from transferring power
to an inanimate object. Very few materials are suitable for storing energy; most either
allow it to dissipate or become so charged with force that when you touch the object,
a bolt of lightning drives through you. The best materials we have found for this
purpose are gemstones. Quartz, agates, and other lesser stones are not as efficient as,
say, a diamond, but any gem will suffice. That is why Riders’ swords always have a
jewel set in their pommels. It is also why your dwarf necklace—which is entirely
metal—must sap your strength to fuel its spell, since it can hold no energy of its
own.â€
When not with Oromis, Eragon supplemented his education by reading the many
scrolls the elf gave him, a habit he soon became addicted to. Eragon’s rearing—
limited as it was by Garrow’s scant tutelage—had exposed him only to the knowledge
needed to run a farm. The information he discovered on the miles of paper flooded
into him like rain on parched desert, sating a previously unknown thirst. He devoured
texts on geography, biology, anatomy, philosophy, and mathematics, as well as
memoirs, biographies, and histories. More important than mere facts was his
introduction to alternative ways of thinking. They challenged his beliefs and forced
him to reexamine his assumptions about everything from the rights of an individual
within society to what caused the sun to move across the sky.
He noticed that a number of scrolls concerned Urgals and their culture. Eragon read
them and made no mention of it, nor did Oromis broach the topic.
From his studies, Eragon learned much about the elves, a subject that he avidly
pursued, hoping that it would help him to better understand Arya. To his surprise, he
discovered that the elves did not practice marriage, but rather took mates for however
long they wanted, whether it be for a day or a century. Children were rare, and having
a child was considered by the elves to be the ultimate vow of love.
Eragon also learned that since their two races had first met, only a handful of elfhuman
couples had existed: mainly human Riders who found appropriate mates
among the elves. However, as best he could tell from the cryptic records, most such
relationships ended in tragedy, either because the lovers were unable to relate to one
another or because the humans aged and died while the elves escaped the ravages of
time.
In addition to nonfiction, Oromis presented Eragon with copies of the elves’ greatest
songs, poems, and epics, which captured Eragon’s imagination, for the only stories he
was familiar with were the ones Brom had recited in Carvahall. He savored the epics
as he might a well-cooked meal, lingering overThe Deed of Gëda orThe Lay of
Umhodan so as to prolong his enjoyment of the tales.
Saphira’s own training proceeded apace. Linked as he was to her mind, Eragon got to
watch as Glaedr put her through an exercise regimen every bit as strenuous as his. She
practiced hovering in the air while lifting boulders, as well as sprints, dives, and other
acrobatics. To increase her endurance, Glaedr had her breathe fire for hours upon a
natural stone pillar in an attempt to melt it. At first Saphira could only maintain the
flames for a few minutes at a time, but before long the blistering torch roared from her
maw for over a half hour uninterrupted, heating the pillar white-hot. Eragon was also
privy to the dragon lore Glaedr imparted to Saphira, details about the dragons’ lives
and history that complemented her instinctual knowledge. Much of it was
incomprehensible to Eragon, and he suspected that Saphira concealed even more from
him, secrets of her race that dragons shared with no one but themselves. One thing he
did glean, and that Saphira treasured, was the name of her sire, Iormúngr, and her
dam, Vervada, which meant Storm-cleaver in the old speech. While Iormúngr had
been bound to a Rider, Vervada was a wild dragon who had laid many eggs but
entrusted only one to the Riders: Saphira. Both dragons perished in the Fall.
Some days Eragon and Saphira would fly with Oromis and Glaedr, practicing aerial
combat or visiting crumbling ruins hidden within Du Weldenvarden. Other days they
would reverse the usual order of things, and Eragon would accompany Glaedr while
Saphira remained on the Crags of Tel’naeír with Oromis.
Each morning Eragon sparred with Vanir, which, without exception, ignited one or
more of Eragon’s seizures. To make matters worse, the elf continued to treat Eragon
with haughty condescension. He delivered oblique slights that, on the surface, never
exceeded the bounds of politeness, and he refused to be drawn to anger no matter how
Eragon needled him. Eragon hated him and his cool, mannered bearing. It seemed as
if Vanir was insulting him with every movement. And Vanir’s companions—who, as
best Eragon could tell, were of a younger generation of elves—shared his veiled
distaste for Eragon, though they never displayed aught but respect for Saphira.
Their rivalry came to a head when, after defeating Eragon six times in a row, Vanir
lowered his sword and said, “Dead yet again, Shadeslayer. How repetitive. Do you
wish to continue?†His tone indicated that he thought it would be pointless.
“Aye,†grunted Eragon. He had already suffered an episode with his back and was in
no mood to bandy words.
Still, when Vanir said, “Tell me, as I am curious: How did you kill Durza when you
are so slow? I cannot fathom how you managed it,†Eragon felt compelled to reply: “I
caught him by surprise.â€
“Forgive me; I should have guessed trickery was involved.â€
Eragon fought the impulse to grind his teeth. “If I were an elf or you a human, you
would not be able to match my blade.â€
“Perhaps,†said Vanir. He assumed his ready position and, within the span of three
seconds and two blows, disarmed Eragon. “But I think not. You should not boast to a
better swordsman, else he may decide to punish your temerity.â€
Eragon’s temper broke then, and he reached deep within himself and into the torrent
of magic. He released the pent-up energy with one of the twelve minor words of
binding, crying “Malthinae!†to chain Vanir’s legs and arms in place and hold his jaw
shut so that he could not utter a counterspell. The elf’s eyes bulged with outrage.
Eragon said, “And you should not boast to one who is more skilled in magic than
you.â€
Vanir’s dark eyebrows met.
Without warning or a whisper of a sound, an invisible force clouted Eragon on the
chest and threw him ten yards across the grass, where he landed upon his side, driving
the wind from his lungs. The impact disrupted Eragon’s control of the magic and
freed Vanir.
How did he do that?
Advancing upon him, Vanir said, “Your ignorance betrays you, human. You do not
know whereof you speak. To think that you were chosen to succeed Vrael, that you
were given his quarters, that you have had the honor to serve the Mourning Sage…â€
He shook his head. “It sickens me that such gifts are bestowed upon one so unworthy.
You do not even understand what magic is or how it works.â€
Eragon’s anger resurged like a crimson tide. “What,†he said, “have I ever done to
wrong you?Why do you despise me so?Would you prefer it if no Rider existed to
oppose Galbatorix?â€
“My opinions are of little consequence.â€
“I agree, but I would hear them.â€
“Listening, as Nuala wrote inConvocations, is the path to wisdom only when the
result of a conscious decision and not a void of perception.â€
“Straighten your tongue, Vanir, and give me an honest answer!â€
Vanir smiled coldly. “As you command, O Rider.†Drawing near so that only Eragon
could hear his soft voice, the elf said, “For eighty years after the fall of the Riders, we
held no hope of victory. We survived by hiding ourselves through deceit and magic,
which is but a temporary measure, for eventually Galbatorixwill be strong enough to
march upon us and sweep aside our defenses. Then, long after we had resigned
ourselves to our fate, Brom and Jeod rescued Saphira’s egg, and once again a chance
existed to defeat the foul usurper. Imagine our joy and celebration. We knew that in
order to withstand Galbatorix, the new Rider had to be more powerful than any of his
predecessors, more powerful than even Vrael. Yet how was our patience rewarded?
With another human like Galbatorix. Worse… a cripple. You doomed us all, Eragon,
the instant you touched Saphira’s egg. Do not expect us to welcome your presence.â€
Vanir touched his lips with his first and second finger, then sidestepped Eragon and
walked off the sparring field, leaving Eragon rooted in place.
He’s right,thought Eragon. I’m ill suited for this task. Any of these elves, even Vanir,
would make a better Rider than me.
Emanating outrage, Saphira broadened the contact between them. Do you think so
little of my judgment, Eragon? You forget that when I was in my egg, Arya exposed
me to each and every one of these elves—as well as many of the Varden’s children—
and that I rejected them all. I wouldn’t have chosen someone to be my Rider unless
they could help your race, mine, and the elves, for the three of us share an intertwined
fate. You were the right person, at the right place, at the right time. Never forget that.
If ever that were true,he said, it was before Durza injured me. Now I see naught but
darkness and evil in our future. I won’t give up, but I despair that we may not prevail.
Perhaps our task is not to overthrow Galbatorix but to prepare the way for the next
Rider chosen by the remaining eggs.
At the Crags of Tel’naeír, Eragon found Oromis at the table in his hut, painting a
landscape with black ink along the bottom edge of a scroll he had finished writing.
Eragon bowed and knelt. “Master.â€
Fifteen minutes elapsed before Oromis finished limning the tufts of needles on a
gnarled juniper tree, laid aside his ink, cleaned his sable brush with water from a clay
pot, and then addressed Eragon, saying, “Why have you come so early?â€
“I apologize for disturbing you, but Vanir abandoned our contest partway through
and I did not know what to do with myself.â€
“Why did Vanir leave, Eragon-vodhr?â€
Oromis folded his hands in his lap while Eragon described the encounter, ending
with: “I should not have lost control, but I did, and I looked all the more foolish
because of it. I have failed you, Master.â€
“You have,†agreed Oromis. “Vanir may have goaded you, but that was no reason to
respond in kind. You must keep a better hold over your emotions, Eragon. It could
cost you your life if you allow your temper to sway your judgment during battle.
Also, such childish displays do nothing but vindicate those elves who are opposed to
you. Our machinations are subtle and allow little room for such errors.â€
“I am sorry, Master. It won’t happen again.â€
As Oromis seemed content to wait in his chair until the time when they normally
performed the Rimgar, Eragon seized the opportunity to ask, “How could Vanir have
worked magic without speaking?â€
“Did he? Perhaps another elf decided to assist him.â€
Eragon shook his head. “Duringmy first day in Ellesméra, I also saw Islanzadí
summon a downpour of flowers by clapping her hands, nothingmore. And Vanir said
that I didn’t understand how magic works. What did he mean?â€
“Once again,†said Oromis, resigned, “you grasp at knowledge that you are not
prepared for. Yet, because of our circumstances, I cannot deny it to you. Only know
this: that which you ask for was not taught to Riders—and is not taught to our
magicians—until they had, and have, mastered every other aspect of magic, for this is
the secret to the true nature of magic and the ancient language. Those who know it
may acquire great power, yes, but at a terrible risk.†He paused for a moment. “How
is the ancient language bound to magic, Eragon-vodhr?â€
“The words of the ancient language can release the energy stored within your body
and thus activate a spell.â€
“Ah. Then you mean that certain sounds, certain vibrations in the air, somehow tap
into this energy? Sounds that might be produced at random by any creature or thing?â€
“Yes, Master.â€
“Does not that seem absurd?â€
Confused, Eragon said, “It doesn’t matter if it seems absurd, Master; it just is. Should
I think it absurd that the moon wanes and waxes, or that the seasons turn, or that birds
fly south in the winter?â€
“Of course not. But how could mere sound do so much? Can particular patterns of
pitch and volume really trigger reactions that allow us to manipulate energy?â€
“But they do.â€
“Sound has no control over magic. Saying a word or phrase in this language is not
what’s important, it’sthinking them in this language.â€With a flick of his wrist, a
golden flame appeared over Oromis’s palm, then disappeared. “However, unless the
need is dire, we still utter our spells out loud to prevent stray thoughts from disrupting
them, which is a danger to even the most experienced magic user.â€
The implications staggered Eragon. He thought back to when he almost drowned
under the waterfall of the lake Kóstha-mérna and how he had been unable to access
magic because of the water surrounding him. If I had known this then, I could have
saved myself, he thought. “Master,†he said, “if sound does not affect magic, why,
then, do thoughts?â€
Now Oromis smiled. “Why indeed? I must point out that we ourselves are not the
source of magic. Magic can exist on its own, independent of any spell, such as the
werelights in the bogs by Aroughs, the dream well in Mani’s Caves in the Beor
Mountains, and the floating crystal on Eoam. Wild magic such as this is treacherous,
unpredictable, and often stronger than any we can cast.
“Eons ago, all magic was thus. To use it required nothing but the ability to sense
magic with your mind—which every magician must possess—and the desire and
strength to use it. Without the structure of the ancient language, magicians could not
govern their talent and, as a result, loosed many evils upon the land, killing thousands.
Over time they discovered that stating their intentions in their language helped them
to order their thoughts and avoid costly errors. But it was no foolproof method.
Eventually, an accident occurred so horrific that it almost destroyed every living
being in the world. We know of the event from fragments of manuscripts that
survived the era, but who or what cast the fatal spell is hidden from us. The
manuscripts say that, afterward, a race called the Grey Folk—not elves, for we were
young then—gathered their resources and wrought an enchantment, perhaps the
greatest that was or ever shall be. Together the Grey Folk changed the nature of magic
itself. They made it so that their language, the ancient language, could control what a
spell does… could actually limit the magic so that if you saidburn that door and by
chance looked at me and thought of me, the magic would still burn the door, not me.
And they gave the ancient language its two unique traits, the ability to prevent those
who speak it from lying and the ability to describe the true nature of things. How they
did this remains a mystery.
“The manuscripts differ on what happened to the Grey Folk when they completed
their work, but it seems that the enchantment drained them of their power and left
them but a shadow of themselves. They faded away, choosing to live in their cities
until the stones crumbled to dust or to take mates among the younger races and so
pass into darkness.â€
“Then,†said Eragon, “it is still possible to use magic without the ancient language?â€
“How do you think Saphira breathes fire? And, by your own account, she used no
word when she turned Brom’s tomb to diamond nor when she blessed the child in
Farthen Dûr. Dragons’ minds are different from ours; they need no protection from
magic. They cannot use it consciously, aside from their fire, but when the gift touches
them, their strength is unparalleled… You look troubled, Eragon. Why?â€
Eragon stared down at his hands. “What does this mean for me, Master?â€
“It means that you will continue to study the ancient language, for you can
accomplish much with it that would be too complex or too dangerous otherwise. It
means that if you are captured and gagged, you can still call upon magic to free
yourself, as Vanir did. It means that if you are captured and drugged and cannot recall
the ancient language, yes, even then, you may cast a spell, though only in the gravest
circumstances. And it means that if you would cast a spell for that which has no name
in the ancient language, you can.†He paused. “But beware the temptation to use these
powers. Even the wisest among us hesitate to trifle with them for fear of death or
worse.â€
The next morning, and every morning thereafter so long as he stayed in Ellesméra,
Eragon dueled with Vanir, but he never lost his temper again, no matter what the elf
did or said.
Nor did Eragon feel like devoting energy to their rivalry. His back pained him more
and more frequently, driving him to the limits of his endurance. The debilitating
attacks sensitized him; actions that previously had caused him no trouble could now
leave him writhing on the ground. Even the Rimgar began to trigger the seizures as he
advanced to more strenuous poses. It was not uncommon for him to suffer three or
four such episodes in one day.
Eragon’s face grew haggard. He walked with a shuffle, his movements slow and
careful as he tried to preserve his strength. It became hard for him to think clearly or
to pay attention to Oromis’s lessons, and gaps began to appear in his memory that he
could not account for. In his spare time, he took up Orik’s puzzle ring again,
preferring to concentrate upon the baffling interlocked rings rather than his condition.
When she was with him, Saphira insisted that he ride upon her back and did
everything that she could to make him comfortable and to save him effort.
One morning, as he clung to a spike on her neck, Eragon said, I have a new name for
pain.
What’s that?
The Obliterator. Because when you’re in pain, nothing else can exist. Not thought.
Not emotion. Only the drive to escape the pain. When it’s strong enough, the
Obliterator strips us of everything that makes us who we are, until we’re reduced to
creatures less than animals, creatures with a single desire and goal: escape.
A good name, then.
I’m falling apart, Saphira, like an old horse that’s plowed too many fields. Keep hold
of me with your mind, or I may drift apart and forget who I am.
I will never let go of you.
Soon afterward, Eragon fell victim to three bouts of agony while fightingVanir and
then two more during the Rimgar. As he uncurled from the clenched ball he had rolled
into, Oromis said, “Again, Eragon. You must perfect your balance.â€
Eragon shook his head and growled in an undertone, “No.†He crossed his arms to
hide his tremors.
“What?â€
“No.â€
“Get up, Eragon, and try again.â€
“No! Do the pose yourself; I won’t.â€
Oromis knelt beside Eragon and placed a cool hand on his cheek. Holding it there, he
gazed at Eragon with such kindness, Eragon understood the depth of the elf’s
compassion for him, and that, if it were possible, Oromis would willingly assume
Eragon’s pain to relieve his suffering. “Don’t abandon hope,†said Oromis. “Never
that.†A measure of strength seemed to flow from him to Eragon. “We are the Riders.
We stand between the light and the dark, and keep the balance between the two.
Ignorance, fear, hate: these are our enemies. Deny them with all your might, Eragon,
or we will surely fail.†He stood and extended a hand toward Eragon. “Now rise,
Shadeslayer, and prove you can conquer the instincts of your flesh!â€
Eragon took a deep breath and pushed himself upright on one arm, wincing from the
effort. He got his feet underneath himself, paused for a moment, then straightened to
his full height and looked Oromis in the eye.
The elf nodded with approval.
Eragon remained silent until they finished the Rimgar and went to bathe in the
stream, whereupon he said, “Master.â€
“Yes, Eragon?â€
“Why must I endure this torture? You could use magic to give me the skills I need, to
shape my body as you do the trees and plants.â€
“I could, but if I did, you would not understand how you got the body you had, your
own abilities, nor how to maintain them. No shortcuts exist for the path you walk,
Eragon.â€
Cold water rushed over the length of Eragon’s body as he lowered himself into the
stream. He ducked his head under the surface, holding a rock so that he would not
float away, and lay stretched out along the streambed, feeling like an arrow flying
through the water.
NARDA
Roran leaned on one knee and scratched his new beard as he looked down at Narda.
The small town was dark and compact, like a crust of rye bread tamped into a
crevasse along the coast. Beyond it, the wine-red sea glimmered with the last rays of
the dying sunset. The water fascinated him; it was utterly different from the landscape
he was accustomed to.
We made it.
Leaving the promontory, Roran walked back to his makeshift tent, enjoying deep
breaths of the salty air. They had camped high in the foothills of the Spine in order to
avoid detection by anyone who might alert the Empire as to their whereabouts.
As he strode among the clumps of villagers huddled beneath the trees, Roran
surveyed their condition with sorrow and anger. The trek from Palancar Valley had
left people sick, battered, and exhausted; their faces gaunt from lack of food; their
clothes tattered. Most everyone wore rags tied around their hands to ward off frostbite
during the frigid mountain nights. Weeks of carrying heavy packs had bowed onceproud
shoulders. The worst sight was the children: thin and unnaturally still.
They deserve better,thought Roran. I’d be in the clutches of the Ra’zac right now if
they hadn’t protected me.
Numerous people approached Roran, most of whom wanted nothingmore than a
touch on the shoulder or a word of comfort. Some offered him bits of food, which he
refused or, when they insisted, gave to someone else. Those who remained at a
distance watched with round, pale eyes. He knew what they said about him, that he
was mad, that spirits possessed him, that not even the Ra’zac could defeat him in
battle.
Crossing the Spine had been even harder than Roran expected. The only paths in the
forest were game trails, which were too narrow, steep, and meandering for their
group. As a result, the villagers were often forced to chop their way through the trees
and underbrush, a painstaking task that everyone despised, not least because it made it
easy for the Empire to track them. The one advantage to the situation was that the
exercise restored Roran’s injured shoulder to its previous level of strength, although
he still had trouble lifting his arm at certain angles.
Other hardships took their toll. A sudden storm trapped them on a bare pass high
above the timberline. Three people froze in the snow: Hida, Brenna, and Nesbit, all of
whom were quite old. That night was the first time Roran was convinced that the
entire village would die because they had followed him. Soon after, a boy broke his
arm in a fall, and then Southwell drowned in a glacier stream. Wolves and bears
preyed upon their livestock on a regular basis, ignoring the watchfires that the
villagers lit once they were concealed from Palancar Valley and Galbatorix’s hated
soldiers. Hunger clung to them like a relentless parasite, gnawing at their bellies,
devouring their strength, and sapping their will to continue.
And yet they survived, displaying the same obstinacy and fortitude that kept their
ancestors in Palancar Valley despite famine, war, and pestilence. The people of
Carvahall might take an age and a half to reach a decision, but once they did, nothing
could deter them from their course.
Now that they had reached Narda, a sense of hope and accomplishment permeated
the camp. No one knew what would happen next, but the fact that they had gotten so
far gave them confidence.
We won’t be safe until we leave the Empire,thought Roran. And it’s up to me to
ensure that we aren’t caught. I’ve become responsible for everyone here… A
responsibility that he had embraced wholeheartedly because it allowed him to both
protect the villagers from Galbatorix and pursue his goal of rescuingKatrina. It’s been
so long since she was captured. How can she still be alive? He shuddered and pushed
the thoughts away. True madness awaited him if he allowed himself to brood over
Katrina’s fate.
At dawn Roran, Horst, Baldor, Loring’s three sons, and Gertrude set out for Narda.
They descended from the foothills to the town’s main road, careful to stay hidden
until they emerged onto the lane. Here in the lowlands, the air seemed thick to Roran;
it felt as if he were trying to breathe underwater.
Roran gripped the hammer at his belt as they approached Narda’s gate. Two soldiers
guarded the opening. They examined Roran’s group with hard eyes, lingering on their
ragged clothes, then lowered their poleaxes and barred the entrance.
“Where’d you be from?†asked the man on the right. He could not have been older
than twenty-five, but his hair was already pure white.
Swelling his chest, Horst crossed his arms and said, “Roundabouts Teirm, if it please
you.â€
“What brings you here?â€
“Trade. We were sent by shopkeepers who want to buy goods directly from Narda,
instead of through the usual merchants.â€
“That so, eh?What goods?â€
When Horst faltered, Gertrude said, “Herbs and medicine on my part. The plants I’ve
received from here have either been too old or moldy and spoiled. I have to procure a
fresh supply.â€
“And my brothers and I,†said Darmmen, “came to bargain with your cobblers. Shoes
made in the northern style are fashionable in Dras-Leona and Urû‘baen.†He
grimaced. “At least they were when we set out.â€
Horst nodded with renewed confidence. “Aye. And I’m here to collect a shipment of
ironwork for my master.â€
“So you say. What about that one?What does he do?†asked the soldier, motioning
toward Roran with his ax.
“Pottery,†said Roran.
“Pottery?â€
“Pottery.â€
“Why the hammer, then?â€
“How do you think the glaze on a bottle or jar gets cracked? It doesn’t happen by
itself, you know. You have to hit it.†Roran returned the white-haired man’s stare of
disbelief with a blank expression, daring him to challenge the statement.
The soldier grunted and ran his gaze over them again. “Be as that may, you don’t
look like tradesmen to me. Starved alley cats is more like it.â€
“We had difficulty on the road,†said Gertrude.
“That I’d believe. If you came from Teirm, where be your horses?â€
“We left them at our camp,†supplied Hamund. He pointed south, opposite where the
rest of the villagers were actually hidden.
“Don’t have the coin to stay in town, eh?â€With a scornful chuckle, the soldier raised
his ax and gestured for his companion to do likewise. “All right, you can pass, but
don’t cause trouble or you’ll be off to the stocks or worse.â€
Once through the gate, Horst pulled Roran to the side of the street and growled in his
ear, “That was a fool thing to do, making up something as ridiculous as that. Cracking
the glaze! Do youwant a fight?We can’t—†He stopped as Gertrude plucked at his
sleeve.
“Look,†murmured the healer.
To the left of the entrance stood a six-foot-wide message board with a narrow shingle
roof to protect the yellowing parchment underneath. Half the board was devoted to
official notices and proclamations. On the other half hung a block of posters
displaying sketches of various criminals. Foremost among them was a drawing of
Roran without a beard.
Startled, Roran glanced around to make sure that no one in the street was close
enough to compare his face to the illustration, then devoted his attention to the poster.
He had expected the Empire to pursue them, but it was still a shock to encounter proof
of it. Galbatorix must be expending an enormous amount of resources trying to catch
us. When they were in the Spine, it was easy to forget that the outside world existed. I
bet posters of me are nailed up throughout the Empire. He grinned, glad that he had
stopped shaving and that he and the others had agreed to use false names while in
Narda.
A reward was inked at the bottom of the poster. Garrow never taught Roran and
Eragon to read, but he did teach them their figures because, as he said, “You have to
know how much you own, what it’s worth, and what you’re paid for it so you don’t
get rooked by some two-faced knave.†Thus, Roran could see that the Empire had
offered ten thousand crowns for him, enough to live in comfort for several decades. In
a perverse way, the size of the reward pleased him, giving him a sense of importance.
Then his gaze drifted to the next poster in line.
It was Eragon.
Roran’s gut clenched as if he had been struck, and for a few seconds he forgot to
breathe.
He’s alive!
After his initial relief subsided, Roran felt his old anger about Eragon’s role in
Garrow’s death and the destruction of their farm take its place, accompanied by a
burning desire to know why the Empire was hunting Eragon. It must have something
to do with that blue stone and the Ra’zac’s first visit to Carvahall. Once again, Roran
wondered what kind of fiendish machinations he and the rest of Carvahall had
become entangled in.
Instead of a reward, Eragon’s poster bore two lines of runes. “What crime is he
accused of?†Roran asked Gertrude.
The skin around Gertrude’s eyes wrinkled as she squinted at the board. “Treason, the
both of you. It says Galbatorixwill bestow an earldom on whoever captures Eragon,
but that those who try should take care because he’s extremely dangerous.â€
Roran blinked with astonishment. Eragon? It seemed inconceivable until Roran
considered how he himself had changed in the past few weeks. The same blood runs
in our veins. Who knows, Eragon may have accomplished as much or more than I
have since he left.
In a low voice, Baldor said, “If killingGalbatorix’s men and defying the Ra’zac only
earns you ten thousand crowns—large as that is—what makes you worth an
earldom?â€
“Buggering the king himself,†suggested Larne.
“That’s enough of that,†said Horst. “Guard your tongue better, Baldor, or we’ll end
up in irons. And, Roran, don’t draw attention to yourself again. With a reward like
that, people are bound to be watching strangers for anyone who matches your
description.†Running a hand through his hair, Horst pulled up his belt and said,
“Right. We all have jobs to do. Return here at noon to report on your progress.â€
With that their party split into three. Darmmen, Larne, and Hamund set out together
to purchase food for the villagers, both to meet present needs and to sustain them
through the next stage of their journey. Gertrude—as she had told the guard—went to
replenish her stock of herbs, unguents, and tinctures. And Roran, Horst, and Baldor
headed down the sloping streets to the docks, where they hoped to charter a ship that
could transport the villagers to Surda or, at the very least, Teirm.
When they reached the weathered boardwalk that covered the beach, Roran halted
and stared out at the ocean, which was gray from low clouds and dotted with
whitecaps from erratic wind. He had never imagined that the horizon could be so
perfectly flat. The hollow boom of water knocking against the piles beneath his feet
made it feel as if he stood upon the surface of a huge drum. The odor of fish—fresh,
gutted, and rotting—overwhelmed every other smell.
Glancing from Roran to Baldor, who was likewise entranced, Horst said, “Quite a
sight, isn’t it?â€
“Aye,†said Roran.
“Makes you feel rather small, doesn’t it?â€
“Aye,†said Baldor.
Horst nodded. “I remember when I first saw the ocean, it had a similar effect on me.â€
“When was that?†asked Roran. In addition to the flocks of seagulls whirling over the
cove, he noticed an odd type of bird perched upon the piers. The animal had an
ungainly body with a striped beak that it kept tucked against its breast like a pompous
old man, a white head and neck, and a sooty torso. One of the birds lifted its beak,
revealing a leathery pouch underneath.
“Bartram, the smith who came before me,†said Horst, “died when I was fifteen, a
year before the end of my apprenticeship. I had to find a smith who was willing to
finish another man’s work, so I traveled to Ceunon, which is built along the North
Sea. There I met Kelton, a vile old man but good at what he did. He agreed to teach
me.†Horst laughed. “By the time we were done, I wasn’t sure if I should thank him or
curse him.â€
“Thank him, I should think,†said Baldor. “You never would have married Mother
otherwise.â€
Roran scowled as he studied the waterfront. “There aren’t many ships,†he observed.
Two craft were berthed at the south end of the port and a third at the opposite side
with nothing but fishing boats and dinghies in between. Of the southern pair, one had
a broken mast. Roran had no experience with ships but, to him, none of the vessels
appeared large enough to carry almost three hundred passengers.
Going from one ship to the next, Roran, Horst, and Baldor soon discovered that they
were all otherwise engaged. It would take a month or more to repair the ship with the
broken mast. The vessel beside it, theWaverunner, was rigged with leather sails and
was about to venture north to the treacherous islands where the Seithr plant grew. And
theAlbatross, the last ship, had just arrived from distant Feinster and was getting its
seams recaulked before departingwith its cargo of wool.
A dockworker laughed at Horst’s questions. “You’re too late and too early at the
same time. Most of the spring ships came and left two, three weeks ago. An‘ another
month, the nor’westers will start gusting, an’ then the seal and walrus hunters will
return and we’ll get ships from Teirm and the rest of the Empire to take the hides,
meat, and oil. Then you might have a chance of hiring a captain with an empty hold.
Meanwhile, we don’t see much more traffic than this.â€
Desperate, Roran asked, “Is there no other way to get goods from here to Teirm? It
doesn’t have to be fast or comfortable.â€
“Well,†said the man, hefting the box on his shoulder, “if it doesn’t have to be fast
an‘ you’re only going to Teirm, then you might try Clovis over there.†He pointed to a
line of sheds that floated between two piers where boats could be stored. “He owns
some barges that he ships grain on in the fall. The rest of the year, Clovis fishes for a
living, like most everybody in Narda.†Then he frowned. “What kind of goods do you
have? The sheep have already been shorn, an’ no crops are in as of yet.â€
“This and that,†said Horst. He tossed the man a copper.
The dockworker pocketed it with a wink and a nudge. “Right you are, sir. This an‘
that. I know a dodge when I see one. But no need to fear old Ulric; mum’s th’ word, it
is. Be seeing you, then, sir.†He strolled off, whistling.
As it turned out, Clovis was absent from the docks. After getting directions, it took
them a half hour to walk to his house on the other side of Narda, where they found
Clovis planting iris bulbs along the path to his front door. He was a stout man with
sunburned cheeks and a salt-and-pepper beard. An additional hour passed before they
could convince the mariner that they really were interested in his barges, despite the
season, and then troop back to the sheds, which he unlocked to reveal three identical
barges, theMerrybell, Edeline, andRed Boar.
Each barge was seventy-five feet long, twenty feet wide, and painted rust red. They
had open holds that could be covered with tarpaulins, a mast that could be erected in
the center for a single square sail, and a block of above-decks cabins at the rear—or
aft, as Clovis called it—of the craft.
“Their draft be deeper than that of an inland scow,†explained Clovis, “so you
needn’t fear them capsizing in rough weather, though you’d do well to avoid being
caught in a real tempest. These barges aren’t meant for the open sea. They’re meant to
stay within sight of land. And now be the worst time to launch them. By my honor,
we’ve had nothing but thunderstorms every afternoon for a month.â€
“Do you have crews for all three?†asked Roran.
“Well now… see, there’s a problem. Most of the men I employ left weeks ago to
hunt seals, as they’re wont to do. Since I need them only after the harvest, they’re free
to come and go as they please for the rest of the year… I’m sure you fine gentlemen
understand my position.†Clovis tried to smile, then glanced between Roran, Horst,
and Baldor as if uncertain whom to address.
Roran walked the length of theEdeline, examining it for damage. The barge looked
old, but the wood was sound and the paint was fresh. “If we replace the missingmen
in your crews, how much would it cost to go to Teirm with all three barges?â€
“That depends,†said Clovis. “The sailors earn fifteen coppers per day, plus as much
good food as they can eat and a dram of whisky besides. What your men earn be your
own business. I won’t put them on my payroll. Normally, we also hire guards for each
barge, but they’re—â€
“They’re off hunting, yes,†said Roran. “We’ll provide guards as well.â€
The knob in Clovis’s tanned throat jumped as he swallowed. “That’d be more than
reasonable… so it would. In addition to the crew’s wages, I charge a fee of two
hundred crowns, plus recompense for any damage to the barges on account of your
men, plus—as both owner and captain—twelve percent of the total profit from sale of
the cargo.â€
“Our trip will have no profit.â€
That, more than anything, seemed to unnerve Clovis. He rubbed the dimple in his
chin with his left thumb, began to talk twice, stopped, then finally said, “If that be the
case, another four hundred crowns upon completion of the voyage. What—if I may
make so bold as to inquire—do you wish to transport?â€
We frighten him, thought Roran. “Livestock.â€
“Be it sheep, cattle, horses, goats, oxen… ?â€
“Our herds contain an assortment of animals.â€
“And why do you want to take them to Teirm?â€
“We have our reasons.†Roran almost smiled at Clovis’s confusion. “Would you
consider sailing past Teirm?â€
“No! Teirm’s my limit, it is. I don’t know the waters beyond, nor would I want to be
gone any longer from my wife and daughter.â€
“When could you be ready?â€
Clovis hesitated and executed two little steps. “Mayhap five or six days. No… no,
you’d better make it a week; I have affairs that I must attend to before departing.â€
“We’d pay an additional ten crowns to leave day after tomorrow.â€
“I don’t—â€
“Twelve crowns.â€
“Day after tomorrow it is,†vowed Clovis. “One way or another, I’ll be ready by
then.â€
Trailing his hand along the barge’s gunwale, Roran nodded without looking back at
Clovis and said, “May I have a minute alone to confer with my associates?â€
“As you wish, sir. I’ll just go for a turn about the docks until you’re done.†Clovis
hurried to the door. Just as he exited the shed, he asked, “I’m sorry, but what’d be
your name again? I fear I missed it earlier, an‘ my memory can be something
dreadful.â€
“Stronghammer. My name is Stronghammer.â€
“Ah, of course. A good name, that.â€
When the door closed, Horst and Baldor converged on Roran. Baldor said, “We can’t
afford to hire him.â€
“We can’t affordnot to,†replied Roran. “We don’t have the gold to buy the barges,
nor do I fancy teachingmyself to handle them when everyone’s lives depend on it.
It’ll be faster and safer to pay for a crew.â€
“It’s still too expensive,†said Horst.
Roran drummed his fingers against the gunwale. “We can pay Clovis’s initial fee of
two hundred crowns. Once we reach Teirm, though, I suggest that we either steal the
barges using the skills we learn during the trip or incapacitate Clovis and his men
until we can escape through other means. That way, we avoid paying the extra four
hundred crowns, as well as the sailors’ wages.â€
“I don’t like cheating a man out of honest work,†said Horst. “It goes against my
fiber.â€
“I don’t like it either, but can you think of an alternative?â€
“How would you get everyone onto the barges?â€
“Have them meet Clovis a league or so down the coast, out of sight of Narda.â€
Horst sighed. “Very well, we’ll do it, but it leaves a bad taste in my mouth. Call
Clovis back in, Baldor, and we’ll seal this pact.â€
That evening, the villagers gathered around a small banked fire in order to hear what
had transpired in Narda. From where he knelt on the ground, Roran stared at the
pulsing coals while he listened to Gertrude and the three brothers describe their
separate adventures. The news about Roran’s and Eragon’s posters caused murmurs
of unease among the audience.
When Darmmen finished, Horst took his place and, with short, brisk sentences,
related the lack of proper ships in Narda, how the dockworker recommended Clovis,
and the deal that was brokered thereafter. However, the moment Horst mentioned the
wordbarges, the villagers’ cries of ire and discontent blotted out his voice.
Marching to the forefront of the group, Loring raised his arms for attention.
“Barges?†said the cobbler. “Barges?We don’t want nostinking barges!†He spat by
his foot as people clamored with agreement.
“Everyone, be quiet!†said Delwin. “We’ll be heard if we keep this up.â€When the
crackling fire was the loudest noise, he continued at a slower pace: “I agree with
Loring. Barges are unacceptable. They’re slow and vulnerable. And we’d be crammed
together with a complete lack of privacy and no shelter to speak of for who knows
how long. Horst, Elain is sixmonths pregnant. You can’t expect her and others who
are sick and infirm to sit under the blazing sun for weeks on end.â€
“We can lash tarpaulins over the holds,†replied Horst. “It’s not much, but it’ll shield
us from the sun and the rain.â€
Birgit’s voice cut through the crowd’s low babble: “I have another concern.†People
moved aside as she walked to the fire. “What with the two hundred crowns Clovis is
due and the money Darmmen and his brothers spent, we’ve used up most of our coin.
Unlike those in cities, our wealth lies not in gold but in animals and property. Our
property is gone and few animals are left. Even if we turn pirate and steal these
barges, how can we buy supplies at Teirm or passage farther south?â€
“The important thing,†rumbled Horst, “is to get to Teirm in the first place. Once
we’re there, then we can worry about what to do next… It’s possible that we may
have to resort to more drastic measures.â€
Loring’s bony face crumpled into a mass of wrinkles. “Drastic?What do you mean,
drastic? We’ve already done drastic. This wholeventure is drastic. I don’t care what
you say; I won’t use those confounded barges, not after what we’ve gone through in
the Spine. Barges are for grain and animals. What we want is a ship with cabins and
bunks where we can sleep in comfort. Why not wait another week or so and see if a
ship arrives that we can bargain passage on?Where’s the harm in that, eh? Or why
not—†He continued to rail for over fifteen minutes, amassing a mountain of
objections before ceding to Thane and Ridley, who built upon his arguments.
The conversation halted as Roran unfolded his legs and rose to his full height,
silencing the villagers through his presence. They waited, breathless, hoping for
another of his visionary speeches.
“It’s this or walk,†he said.
Then he went to bed.
THE HAMMER FALLS
The moon floated high among the stars when Roran left the makeshift tent he shared
with Baldor, padded to the edge of the camp, and replaced Albriech on watch.
“Nothing to report,†whispered Albriech, then slipped off.
Roran strung his bow and planted three goose-feather arrows upright in the loam,
within easy reach, then wrapped himself in a blanket and curled against the rockface
to his left. His position afforded him a good view down and across the dark foothills.
As was his habit, Roran divided the landscape into quadrants, examining each one for
a full minute, always alert for the flash of movement or the hint of light that might
betray the approach of enemies. His mind soon began to wander, drifting from subject
to subject with the hazy logic of dreams, distracting him from his task. He bit the
inside of his cheek to force himself to concentrate. Staying awake was difficult in
such mild weather…
Roran was just glad that he had escaped drawing lots for the two watches preceding
dawn, because they gave you no opportunity to catch up on lost sleep afterward and
you felt tired for the rest of the day.
A breath of wind ghosted past him, tickling his ear and making the skin on the back
of his neck prickle with an apprehension of evil. The intrusive touch frightened
Roran, obliterating everything but the conviction that he and the rest of the villagers
were in mortal danger. He quaked as if with the ague, his heart pounded, and he had
to struggle to resist the urge to break cover and flee.
What’s wrong with me? It required an effort for him to even nock an arrow.
To the east, a shadow detached itself from the horizon. Visible only as a void among
the stars, it drifted like a torn veil across the sky until it covered the moon, where it
remained, hovering. Illuminated from behind, Roran could see the translucent wings
of one of the Ra’zac’s mounts.
The black creature opened its beak and uttered a long, piercing shriek. Roran
grimaced with pain at the cry’s pitch and frequency. It stabbed at his eardrums, turned
his blood to ice, and replaced hope and joy with despair. The ululation woke the entire
forest. Birds and beasts for miles around exploded into a yammering chorus of panic,
including, to Roran’s alarm, what remained of the villagers’ herds.
Staggering from tree to tree, Roran returned to the camp, whispering, “The Ra’zac
are here. Be quiet and stay where you are,†to everyone he encountered. He saw the
other sentries moving among the frightened villagers, spreading the same message.
Fisk emerged from his tent with a spear in hand and roared, “Are we under attack?
What’s set off those blasted—†Roran tackled the carpenter to silence him, uttering a
muffled bellow as he landed on his right shoulder and pained his old injury.
“Ra’zac,†Roran groaned to Fisk.
Fisk went still and in an undertone asked, “What should I do?â€
“Help me to calm the animals.â€
Together they picked their way through the camp to the adjacent meadow where the
goats, sheep, donkeys, and horses were bedded. The farmers who owned the bulk of
the herds slept with their charges and were already awake and working to soothe the
beasts. Roran thanked his paranoia that he had insisted on having the animals
scattered along the edge of the meadow, where the trees and brush helped to
camouflage them from unfriendly eyes.
As he tried to pacify a clump of sheep, Roran glanced up at the terrible black shadow
that still obscured the moon, like a giant bat. To his horror, it began to move toward
their hiding place. If that creature screams again, we’re doomed.
By the time the Ra’zac circled overhead, most of the animals had quieted, except for
one donkey, who insisted upon loosing a gratinghee-haw. Without hesitation, Roran
dropped to one knee, fit arrow to string, and shot the ass between the ribs. His aim
was true, and the animal dropped without a sound.
He was too late, though; the braying had already alerted the Ra’zac. The monster
swung its head in the direction of the clearing and descended toward it with
outstretched claws, preceded by its fetid stench.
Now the time has come to see if we can slay a nightmare,thought Roran. Fisk, who
was crouched beside him in the grass, hefted his spear, preparing to hurl it once the
brute was in range.
Just as Roran drew his bow—in an attempt to begin and end the battle with a wellplaced
shaft—he was distracted by a commotion in the forest.
A mass of deer burst through the underbrush and stampeded across the meadow,
ignoring villagers and livestock alike in their frantic desire to escape the Ra’zac. For
almost a minute, the deer bounded past Roran, mincing the loam with their sharp
hooves and catching the moonlight with their white-rimmed eyes. They came so
close, he heard the soft gasps of their labored breathing.
The multitude of deer must have hidden the villagers because, after one last circuit
over the meadow, the winged monster turned to the south and glided farther down the
Spine, melding into the night.
Roran and his companions remained frozen in place, like hunted rabbits, afraid that
the Ra’zac’s departure might be a ruse to flush them into the open or that the
creature’s twin might be close behind. They waited for hours, tense and anxious,
barely moving except to string a bow.
When the moon was about to set, the Ra’zac’s bone-chilling shriek echoed far in the
distance… then nothing.
We were lucky,decided Roran when he woke the next morning. And we can’t count
on luck to save us the next time.
After the Ra’zac’s appearance, none of the villagers objected to traveling by barge.
On the contrary, they were so eager to be off, many of them asked Roran if it was
possible to set sail that day instead of the next.
“I wish we could,†he said, “but too much has to be done.â€
Forgoing breakfast, he, Horst, and a group of other men hiked into Narda. Roran
knew that he risked being recognized by accompanying them, but their mission was
too important for him to neglect. Besides, he was confident that his current
appearance was different enough from his portrait on the Empire’s poster that no one
would equate one with the other.
They had no difficulty gaining entrance, as a different set of soldiers guarded the
town gate, whereupon they went to the docks and delivered the two hundred crowns
to Clovis, who was busy overseeing a gang of men as they readied the barges for sea.
“Thank’ee, Stronghammer,†he said, tying the bag of coins to his belt. “There be
nothing like yellow gold to brighten a man’s day.†He led them to a worktable and
unrolled a chart of the waters surroundingNarda, complete with notations on the
strength of various currents; locations of rocks, sandbars, and other hazards; and
decades’ worth of soundingmeasurements. Drawing a line with his finger from Narda
to a small cove directly south of it, Clovis said, “Here’s where we’ll meet your
livestock. The tides are gentle this time o‘ year, but we still don’t want to fight them
an’ no bones about it, so we’ll have to be on our way directly after the high tide.â€
“High tide?†said Roran. “Wouldn’t it be easier to wait until low tide and let it carry
us out?â€
Clovis tapped his nose with a twinkle in his eye. “Aye, it would, an‘ so I’ve begun
many a cruise. What I don’t want, though, is to be slung up on the beach, loading your
animals, when the tide comes a-rushing back in and pushes us farther inland. There be
no danger of that this way, but we’ll have to move smart so as we’re not left high an’
dry when the waters recede. Assumingwe do, the sea’ll work for us, eh?â€
Roran nodded. He trusted Clovis’s experience. “And how many men will you need to
fill out your crews?â€
“Well, I managed to dig up seven lads—strong, true, an‘ good seamen all—who have
agreed to this venture, odd as it is. Mind you, most of the boys were at the bottom of
their tankards when I cornered them last night, drinking off the pay from their last
voyage, but they’ll be sober as spinsters come morn; that I promise you. Seeing as
seven were all I could find, I’d like four more.â€
“Four it is,†said Roran. “My men don’t know much about sailing, but they’re ablebodied
and willing to learn.â€
Clovis grunted. “I usually take on a brace of new lads each trip anyway. So long as
they follow orders, they’ll do fine; otherwise, they’ll get a belaying pin upsides the
head, mark my words. As for guards, I’d like to have nine—three per boat. An‘ they’d
better not be as green as your sailors, or I won’t budge from the dock, not for all the
whisky in the world.â€
Roran allowed himself a grim smile. “Every man who rides with me has proved
himself in battle many times over.â€
“An‘ they all answer to you, eh, young Stronghammer?†said Clovis. He scratched
his chin, eyeingGedric, Delwin, and the others who were new to Narda. “How many
are with you?â€
“Enough.â€
“Enough, you say. I wonder.†He waved a hand. “Never you mind me; my tongue
runs a league before my own common sense, or so my father used to tell me. My first
mate, Torson, is at the chandler’s now, overseeing the purchase of goods and
equipment. I understand you have feed for your livestock?â€
“Among other things.â€
“Then you’d best fetch them. We can load them into the holds once the masts are
up.â€
Throughout the rest of the morning and afternoon, Roran and the villagers with him
labored to ferry the supplies—which Loring’s sons had procured—from the
warehouse where it was stored into the sheds with the barges.
As Roran trudged across the gangplank to theEdeline and lowered his bag of flour to
the sailor waiting in the hold, Clovis observed, “Most of this t’aint feed,
Stronghammer.â€
“No,†said Roran. “But it’s needed.†He was pleased that Clovis had the sense not to
inquire further.
When the last item had been stored away, Clovis beckoned to Roran. “You might as
well go. Me and the boys will handle the rest. Just you remember to be at the docks
three hours after dawn with every man jack you promised me, or we’ll lose the tide.â€
“We’ll be there.â€
Back in the foothills, Roran helped Elain and the others prepare for departure. It did
not take long, as they were accustomed to breaking camp each morning. Then he
picked twelve men to accompany him to Narda the next day. They were all good
fighters, but he asked the best, like Horst and Delwin, to remain with the rest of the
villagers in case soldiers found them or the Ra’zac returned.
Once night fell, the two groups parted. Roran crouched on a boulder and watched
Horst lead the column of people down through the foothills toward the cove where
they would wait for the barges.
Orval came up beside him and crossed his arms. “Do you think they’ll be safe,
Stronghammer?†Anxiety ran through his voice like a taut bowstring.
Though he too was worried, Roran said, “I do. I’d bet you a barrel of cider that
they’ll still be asleep when we put ashore tomorrow. You can have the pleasure of
waking up Nolla. How does that sound?†Orval smiled at the mention of his wife and
nodded, appearing reassured.
I hope I’m right. Roran remained on the boulder, hunched like a bleak gargoyle, until
the dark line of villagers vanished from his sight.
They woke an hour before sunrise, when the sky had just begun to brighten with pale
green and the damp night air numbed their fingers. Roran splashed his face with water
and then outfitted himself with his bow and quiver, his ever-present hammer, one of
Fisk’s shields, and one of Horst’s spears. The others did likewise, with the addition of
swords obtained during the skirmishes in Carvahall.
Running as fast as they dared down the hummocky hills, the thirteen men soon
arrived at the road to Narda and, shortly after that, the town’s main gate. To Roran’s
dismay, the same two soldiers who had troubled them earlier stood guard by the
entrance. As before, the soldiers lowered their poleaxes to block the way.
“There be quite a bit more of you this time,†observed the white-haired man. “And
not all the same ones either. Except for you.†He focused on Roran. “I suppose you
expect me to believe that the spear and shield be for pottery as well?â€
“No. We’ve been hired by Clovis to protect his barges from attack on the way to
Teirm.â€
“You? Mercenaries?†The soldiers burst out laughing. “You said you were
tradesmen.â€
“This pays better.â€
The white-haired man scowled. “You lie. I tried my hand at being a gentleman of
fortune once. I spent more nights hungry than not. How large be your company
oftradesmen anyway? Seven yesterday and twelve today—thirteen counting you. It
seems too large for an expedition from a bunch of shopkeepers.†His eyes narrowed
as he scrutinized Roran’s face. “You look familiar. What’d be your name, eh?â€
“Stronghammer.â€
“It wouldn’t happen to beRoran, would—â€
Roran jabbed forward with his spear, catching the white-haired soldier in the throat.
Scarlet blood fountained. Releasing the spear, Roran drew his hammer and twisted
round as he blocked the second soldier’s poleaxwith his shield. Swinging his hammer
up and around, Roran crushed the man’s helm.
He stood panting between the two corpses. Now I have killed ten.
Orval and the other men stared at Roran with shock. Unable to bear their gazes,
Roran turned his back on them and gestured at the culvert that ran beneath the road.
“Hide the bodies before anyone sees,†he ordered, brusque and harsh. As they hurried
to obey, he examined the parapet on top of the wall for sentries. Fortunately, no one
was visible there or in the street through the gate. He bent and pulled his spear free,
wiping the blade clean on a tuft of grass.
“Done,†said Mandel, clambering out of the ditch. Despite his beard, the youngman
appeared pale.
Roran nodded and, steeling himself, faced his band. “Listen. We will walk to the
docks at a quick but reasonable pace. We will not run. When the alarm is sounded—
and someone may have heard the clash just now—act surprised and interested but not
afraid. Whatever you do, give people no reason to suspect us. The lives of your
families and friends depend on it. If we are attacked, your only duty is to see the
barges launched. Nothing else matters. Am I clear?â€
“Aye, Stronghammer,†they answered.
“Then follow me.â€
As he strode through Narda, Roran felt so tense, he feared he might snap and explode
into a thousand pieces. What have I made of myself? he wondered. He glanced from
man to woman, child to man, man to dog in an effort to identify potential enemies.
Everything around him appeared unnaturally bright and filled with detail; it seemed as
if he could see the individual threads in people’s clothing.
They reached the docks without incident, whereupon Clovis said, “You be early,
Stronghammer. I like that in a man. It’ll give us the opportunity to put things nice an‘
shipshape before we head out.â€
“Can we leave now?†asked Roran.
“You should know better’n that. Have to wait till the tide’s finished coming in, so we
do.†Clovis paused then, taking his first good look at the thirteen of them, and said,
“Why, what’d be the matter, Stronghammer? The lot of you look as if you saw the
ghost of old Galbatorix himself.â€
“Nothing a few hours of sea air won’t cure,†said Roran. In his current state, he could
not smile, but he did let his features assume a more pleasant expression in order to
reassure the captain.
With a whistle, Clovis summoned two sailors from the boats. Both men were tanned
the color of hazelnuts. “This’d be Torson, my first mate,†said Clovis, indicating the
man to his right. Torson’s bare shoulder was decorated with a coiled tattoo of a flying
dragon. “He’ll be skipper of theMerrybell. And this black dog is Flint. He’s in
command of theEdeline. While you are on board, their word is law, as is mine on
theRed Boar. You’ll answer to them and me, not Stronghammer… Well, give me a
properaye, aye if you heard me.â€
“Aye, aye,†said the men.
“Now, which of you be my hands and which be my men-at-arms? For the life of me,
I can’t tell you apart.â€
Ignoring Clovis’s admonishment that he was their commander, not Roran, the
villagers looked at Roran to see if they should obey. He nodded his approval, and they
divided into two factions, which Clovis proceeded to partition into even smaller
groups as he assigned a certain number of villagers to each barge.
For the next half hour, Roran worked alongside the sailors to finish preparing theRed
Boar for departure, ears open for the first hint of alarm. We’re going to be captured or
killed if we stay much longer, he thought, checking the height of the water against the
piers. He mopped sweat from his brow.
Roran started as Clovis gripped his forearm.
Before he could stop himself, Roran pulled his hammer halfway out of his belt. The
thick air clogged his throat.
Clovis raised an eyebrow at his reaction. “I’ve been watching you, Stronghammer,
and I’d be interested to know how you won such loyalty from your men. I’ve served
with more captains than I care to recall, an‘ not one commanded the level of
obedience you do without raising his pipes.â€
Roran could not help it; he laughed. “I’ll tell you how I did it; I saved them from
slavery and from being eaten.â€
Clovis’s eyebrows rose almost to his hairline. “Did you now? There’s a story I’d like
to hear.â€
“No, you wouldn’t.â€
After a minute, Clovis said, “No, maybe I wouldn’t at that.†He glanced overboard.
“Why, I’ll be hanged. I do believe we can be on our way. Ah, and here’s my little
Galina, punctual as ever.â€
The burly man sprang onto the gangplank and, from there, onto the docks, where he
embraced a dark-haired girl of perhaps thirteen and a woman who Roran guessed was
her mother. Clovis ruffled the girl’s hair and said, “Now, you’ll be good while I’m
gone, won’t you, Galina?â€
“Yes, Father.â€
As he watched Clovis bid his family farewell, Roran thought of the two soldiers dead
by the gate. They might have had families as well. Wives and children who loved them
and a home they returned to each day… He tasted bile and had to wrench his thoughts
back to the pier to avoid being sick.
On the barges, the men appeared anxious. Afraid that they might lose their nerve,
Roran made a show of walking about the deck, stretching, and doingwhatever he
could to seem relaxed. At last Clovis jumped back onto theRed Boar and cried, “Cast
off, me lads! It’s the briny deep for us.â€
In short order, the gangplanks were pulled aboard, the mooring ropes untied, and the
sails raised on the three barges. The air rangwith shouted orders and chants of heaveho
as the sailors pulled on ropes.
Behind them, Galina and her mother remained watching as the barges drew away,
still and silent, hooded and grave.
“We’re lucky, Stronghammer,†said Clovis, clapping him on the shoulder. “We’ve a
bit o‘ wind to push us along today. We may not have to row in order to reach the cove
before the tide changes, eh!â€
When theRed Boar was in the middle of Narda’s bay and still ten minutes from the
freedom of the open sea, that which Roran dreaded occurred: the sound of bells and
trumpets floated across the water from among the stone buildings.
“What’s that?†he asked.
“I don’t rightly know,†said Clovis. He frowned as he stared at the town, his hands
planted on his hips. “It could be a fire, but no smoke is in the air. Maybe some Urgals
were discovered in the area…†Concern grew upon his face. “Did you perchance spy
anyone on the road this morning?â€
Roran shook his head, not trusting himself to speak.
Flint drew alongside them and shouted from the deck of theEdeline, “Should we turn
back, sir?†Roran gripped the gunwale so hard that he drove splinters under his nails,
ready to intercede but afraid to appear too anxious.
Tearing his gaze from Narda, Clovis bellowed in return, “No. We’d miss the tide
then.â€
“Aye, aye, sir! But I’d give a day’s pay to find out what caused that clamor.â€
“So would I,†muttered Clovis.
As the houses and buildings shrank behind them, Roran crouched at the rear port of
the barge, wrapped his arms around his knees, and leaned against the cabins. He
looked at the sky, struck by its depth, clarity, and color, then into theRed Boar ‘s
roiling green wake, where ribbons of seaweed fluttered. The pitch of the barge lulled
him like the rock of a cradle. What a beautiful day it is, he thought, grateful he was
there to observe it.
After they escaped the cove—to his relief—Roran climbed the ladder to the poop
deck behind the cabins, where Clovis stood with his hand on the tiller, guiding their
course. The captain said, “Ah, there’s something exhilarating about the first day of a
voyage, before you realize how bad the food is an‘ start longing for home.â€
Mindful of his need to learn what he could about the barge, Roran asked Clovis the
names and functions of various objects on board, at which point he was treated to an
enthusiastic lecture on the workings of barges, ships, and the art of sailing in general.
Two hours later, Clovis pointed at a narrow peninsula that lay before them. “The
cove be on the far side of that.†Roran straightened off the railing and craned his neck,
eager to confirm that the villagers were safe.
As theRed Boar rounded the rocky spit of land, a white beach was revealed at the
apex of the cove, upon which were assembled the refugees from Palancar Valley. The
crowd cheered and waved as the barges emerged from behind the rocks.
Roran relaxed.
Beside him, Clovis uttered a dreadful oath. “I knew somethingwere amiss the
moment I clapped eyes upon you, Stronghammer. Livestock indeed. Bah! You played
me like a fool, you did.â€
“You wrongme,†replied Roran. “I did not lie; this is my flock and I am their
shepherd. Is it not within my right to call them ‘livestock’ if I want?â€
“Call them what you will, I didn’t agree to haul people to Teirm. Why you didn’t tell
me the true nature of your cargo, I might wonder, an‘ the only answer on the horizon
is that whatever venture you’re engaged in means trouble… trouble for you an’
trouble for me. I should toss the lot of you overboard an‘ return to Narda.â€
“But you won’t,†said Roran, deadly quiet.
“Oh? An‘ why not?â€
“Because I need these barges, Clovis, and I’ll do anything to keep them. Anything.
Honor our bargain and you’ll have a peaceful trip and you’ll get to see Galina again.
If not…†The threat sounded worse than it was; Roran had no intention of killing
Clovis, though if he had to, he would abandon him somewhere along the coast.
Clovis’s face reddened, but he surprised Roran by grunting and saying, “Fair enough,
Stronghammer.†Pleased with himself, Roran returned his attention to the beach.
Behind him, he heard asnick.
Acting on instinct, Roran recoiled, crouching, twisting, and covering his head with
his shield. His arm vibrated as a belaying pin broke across the shield. He lowered the
shield and gazed at a dismayed Clovis, who retreated across the deck.
Roran shook his head, never taking his eyes off his opponent. “You can’t defeat me,
Clovis. I’ll ask you again:Will you honor our bargain? If you don’t, I’ll put you
ashore, commandeer the barges, and press your crew into service. I don’t want to ruin
your livelihood, but I will if you force me… Come now. This can be a normal,
uneventful voyage if you choose to help us. Remember, you’ve already been paid.â€
Drawing himself up with great dignity, Clovis said, “If I agree, then you must do me
the courtesy of explainingwhy this ruse were necessary, an‘ why these people are
here an’ where they’re from. No matter how much gold you offer me, I won’t assist
an undertaking that contradicts my principles; no, I won’t. Are you bandits? Or do
you serve the blasted king?â€
“The knowledge may place you in greater danger.â€
“I insist.â€
“Have you heard of Carvahall in Palancar Valley?†asked Roran.
Clovis waved a hand. “Once or twice. What of it?â€
“You see it now on the beach. Galbatorix’s soldiers attacked us without provocation.
We fought back and, when our position became untenable, we crossed the Spine and
followed the coast to Narda. Galbatorix has promised that every man, woman, and
child from Carvahall will be killed or enslaved. Reaching Surda is our only hope of
survival.†Roran left out mention of the Ra’zac; he did not want to frighten Clovis too
badly.
The weathered seaman had gone gray. “Are you still pursued?â€
“Aye, but the Empire has yet to discover us.â€
“An‘ are you why the alarm was sounded?â€
Very softly, Roran said, “I killed two soldiers who recognized me.†The revelation
startled Clovis: his eyes widened, he stepped back, and the muscles in his forearms
rippled as he clenched his fists. “Make your choice, Clovis; the shore draws near.â€
He knew he had won when the captain’s shoulders drooped and the bravado faded
from his bearing. “Ah, the plague take you, Stronghammer. I’m no friend of the king;
I’ll get you to Teirm. But then I want nothingmore to do with you.â€
“Will you give me your word that you won’t attempt to slip away in the night or any
similar deception?â€
“Aye. You have it.â€
Sand and rocks grated across the bottom of theRed Boar ‘s hull as the barge drove
itself up onto the beach, followed on either side by its two companions. The
relentless, rhythmic surge of water dashing itself against the land sounded like the
breathing of a gigantic monster. Once the sails were furled and the gangplanks
extended, Torson and Flint both strode over to theRed Boar and accosted Clovis,
demanding to know what was going on.
“There’s been a change of plans,†said Clovis.
Roran left him to explain the situation—skirting the exact reasons why the villagers
left Palancar Valley—and jumped onto the sand, whereupon he set out to find Horst
among the milling knots of people. When he spotted the smith, Roran pulled him
aside and told him about the deaths in Narda. “If it’s discovered that I left with Clovis,
they may send soldiers on horses after us. We have to get everyone onto the barges as
fast as possible.â€
Horst met his eye for a longminute. “You’ve become a hard man, Roran, harder than
I’ll ever be.â€
“I’ve had to.â€
“Mind that you don’t forget who you are.â€
Roran spent the next three hours moving and packing the villagers’ belongings in
theRed Boar until Clovis expressed his satisfaction. The bundles had to be secured so
that they would not shift unexpectedly and injure someone, as well as distributed so
that the barge rode level in the water, which was no easy task as the bundles were of
irregular size and density. Then the animals were coaxed on board much to their
displeasure—and immobilized by tethers lashed to iron rings in the hold.
Last of all came the people, who, like the rest of the cargo, had to be organized into a
symmetrical pattern within the barge to keep from capsizing it. Clovis, Torson, and
Flint each ended up standing at the fore of their barges, shouting directions to the
mass of villagers below.
What now? thought Roran as he heard an argument break out on the beach. Pushing
his way to the source of the disturbance, he saw Calitha kneeling beside her
stepfather, Wayland, trying to calm the old man.
“No! I won’t go on thatbeast ! You can’t make me,†cried Wayland. He thrashed his
withered arms and beat his heels in an attempt to free himself from Calitha’s embrace.
Spittle flew from his lips. “Let mego, I say. Let me go!â€
Wincing from his blows, Calitha said, “He’s been unreasonable ever since we made
camp last night.â€
It would have been better for all concerned if he had died in the Spine, what with the
trouble he’s caused,thought Roran. He joined Calitha, and together they managed to
sootheWayland so that he no longer screamed and hit. As a reward for his good
behavior, Calitha gave him a piece of jerky, which occupied his entire attention.
WhileWayland concentrated on gumming the meat, she and Roran were able to guide
him onto theEdeline and get him settled in a deserted corner where he would not be a
nuisance.
“Move your backsides, you lubbers,†shouted Clovis. “The tide’s about to turn. Hop
to, hop to.â€
After a final flurry of activity, the gangplanks were withdrawn, leaving a cluster of
twenty men standing on the beach before each barge. The three groups gathered
around the prows and prepared to push them back into the water.
Roran led the effort on theRed Boar. Chanting in unison, he and his men strained
against the weight of the huge barge, the gray sand giving beneath their feet, the
timbers and cables creaking, and the smell of sweat in the air. For a moment, their
efforts seemed to be in vain, then theRed Boar lurched and slid back a foot.
“Again!†shouted Roran. Foot by foot, they advanced into the sea, until the frigid
water surged about their waists. A breaker crashed over Roran, filling his mouth with
seawater, which he spat out vigorously, disgusted by the taste of salt; it was far more
intense than he expected.
When the barge lifted free of the seabed, Roran swam alongside theRed Boar and
pulled himself up with one of the ropes draped over the gunwale. Meanwhile, the
sailors deployed long poles that they used to propel theRed Boar into ever deeper
water, as did the crews of theMerrybell andEdeline.
The instant they were a reasonable distance from shore, Clovis ordered the poles
stowed away and oars broken out, with which the sailors aimed theRed Boar‘s prow
toward the cove’s entrance. They hoisted the sail, aligned it to catch the light wind,
and, at the vanguard of the trio of barges, set forth for Teirm upon the uncertain
expanse of the boundingmain.
THE BEGINNING OF WISDOM
The days Eragon spent in Ellesméra blended together without distinction; time
seemed to have no hold in the pinewood city. The season aged not, even as the
afternoons and evenings lengthened, barring the forest with rich shadows. Flowers of
all months bloomed at the urging of the elves’ magic, nourished by the enchantments
spun through the air.
Eragon came to love Ellesméra with its beauty and its quiet, the graceful buildings
that flowed out of the trees, the haunting songs that echoed at twilight, the works of
art hidden within the mysterious dwellings, and the introspection of the elves
themselves, which they mixed with outbursts of merriment.
The wild animals of Du Weldenvarden had no fear of hunters. Often Eragon would
look from his eyrie to see an elf petting a stag or a gray fox or murmuring to a shy
bear that trundled along the edge of a clearing, reluctant to expose himself. Some
animals had no recognizable form. They appeared at night, moving and grunting in
the bushes and fleeing if Eragon dared approach. Once he glimpsed a creature like a
furred snake and once a white-robed woman whose body wavered and disappeared to
reveal a grinning she-wolf in her place.
Eragon and Saphira continued to explore Ellesméra when they had the chance. They
went alone or with Orik, for Arya no longer accompanied them, nor had Eragon
spoken to her since she broke his fairth. He saw her now and then, flitting between the
trees, but whenever he approached—intending to apologize—she withdrew, leaving
him alone among the ancient pines. At last Eragon realized that he had to take the
initiative if he were to ever have a chance of mending his relationship with her. So
one evening, he picked a bouquet from the flowers along the path by his tree and
hobbled to Tialdarí Hall, where he asked directions to Arya’s quarters from an elf in
the common room.
The screen door was open when he reached her chambers. No one answered when he
knocked. He stepped inside, listening for approaching footsteps as he glanced around
the spacious vine-covered living room, which opened to a small bedroom on one side
and a study on the other. Two fairths decorated the walls: a portrait of a stern, proud
elf with silver hair, who Eragon guessed was King Evandar, and that of a younger
male elf whom he did not recognize.
Eragon wandered through the apartment, looking but not touching, savoring his
glimpse into Arya’s life, gleaningwhat he could about her interests and hobbies. By
her bed, he saw a glass sphere with a preserved blossom of the black morning glory
embedded within it; on her desk, neat rows of scrolls with titles likeOsilon: Harvest
Report andActivity Noted by Gil’ead Watchtower; on the sill of an open bay window,
three miniature trees grown in the shape of glyphs from the ancient language, the
glyphs forpeace, strength, andwisdom ; and by the trees, a scrap of paper with an
unfinished poem, covered with crossed-out words and scribbled marks. It read:
Under the moon, the bright white moon,
Lies a pool, a flat silver pool,
Among the brakes and brambles,
And black-heart pines.
Falls a stone, a living stone,
Cracks the moon, the bright white moon,
Among the brakes and brambles,
And black-heart pines.
Shards of light, swords of light,
Ripple ‘cross the pool,
The quiet mere, the still tarn,
The lonely lake there.
In the night, the dark and heavy night,
Flutter shadows, confused shadows,
Where once…
Going to the small table by the entrance, Eragon laid his bouquet upon it and turned
to leave. He froze as he saw Arya standing in the doorway. She looked startled by his
presence, then concealed her emotions behind an impassive expression.
They stared at each other in silence.
He lifted the bouquet, half offering it to her. “I don’t know how to make a blossom
for you, like Fäolin did, but these are honest flowers and the best I could find.â€
“I cannot accept them, Eragon.â€
“They’re not… they’re not that sort of gift.†He paused. “It’s no excuse, but I didn’t
realize beforehand that my fairth would put you in such a difficult situation. For that,
I’m sorry, and I cry your pardon… I was just trying to make a fairth, not cause
trouble. I understand the importance of my studies, Arya, and you needn’t fear I will
neglect them in order to moon after you.†He swayed and leaned against the wall, too
dizzy to remain on his feet without support. “That’s all.â€
She regarded him for a longmoment, then slowly reached out and took the bouquet,
which she held beneath her nose. Her eyes never left his. “They are honest flowers,â€
she conceded. Her gaze flickered down to his feet and back up again. “Have you been
ill?â€
“No. My back.â€
“I had heard, but I did not think…â€
He pushed himself away from the wall. “I should go.â€
“Wait.†Arya hesitated, then guided him to the bay window, where he sat on the
padded bench that curved from the wall. Removing two goblets from a cupboard,
Arya crumbled dried nettle leaves into them, then filled the goblets with water and—
saying “Boilâ€â€”heated the water for tea.
She gave a goblet to Eragon, who held it with both hands so the warmth seeped into
him. He glanced out the window to the ground twenty feet below, where elves walked
among the royal gardens, talking and singing, and fireflies floated through the dusky
air.
“I wish…†said Eragon, “I wish it could always be like this. It’s so perfect and quiet.â€
Arya stirred her tea. “How fares Saphira?â€
“The same. And you?â€
“I have been preparing to return to the Varden.â€
Alarm shot through him. “When?â€
“After the Blood-oath Celebration. I have tarried here far too long as it is, but I have
been loath to leave and Islanzadí wished me to stay. Also… I have never attended a
Blood-oath Celebration and it is the most important of our observances.†She
considered him over the rim of her goblet. “Is there nothingOromis can do for you?â€
Eragon forced a weary shrug. “He tried everything he knows.â€
They sipped their tea and watched the groups and couples meander along the garden
paths. “Your studies go well, though?†she asked.
“They do.†In the lull that followed, Eragon picked up the scrap of paper from
between the trees and examined her stanzas, as if reading them for the first time. “Do
you often write poetry?â€
Arya extended her hand for the paper and, when he gave it to her, rolled it into a tube
so that the words were no longer visible. “It is custom that everyone who attends the
Blood-oath Celebration should bring a poem, a song, or some other piece of art that
they have made and share it with those assembled. I have but begun to work on
mine.â€
“I think it’s quite good.â€
“If you had read much poetry—â€
“I have.â€
Arya paused, then dipped her head and said, “Forgive me. You are not the person I
first met in Gil’ead.â€
“No. I…†He stopped and twisted the goblet between his hands while he searched for
the right words. “Arya… you’ll be leaving soon enough. I would count it a shame if
this is the last I see of you between now and then. Could we not meet occasionally, as
we did before, and you could show Saphira and me more of Ellesméra?â€
“It would not be wise,†she said in a gentle but firm voice.
He looked up at her. “Must the price of my indiscretion be our friendship? I cannot
help how I feel toward you, but I would rather suffer another wound from Durza than
allow my foolishness to destroy the companionship that existed between us. I value it
too highly.â€
Lifting her goblet, Arya finished the last of her tea before responding. “Our
friendship shall endure, Eragon. As for us spending time together…†Her lips curved
with a hint of a smile. “Perhaps. However, we shall have to wait and see what the
future brings, for I am busy and can promise nothing.â€
He knew her words were the closest thing to a conciliation he was likely to receive,
and he was grateful for them. “Of course, Arya Svit-kona,†he said, and bowed his
head.
They exchanged a few more pleasantries, but it was clear that Arya had gone as far as
she was willing to go that day, so Eragon returned to Saphira, his hope restored by
what he had accomplished. Now it’s up to fate to decide the outcome, he thought as he
settled before Oromis’s latest scroll.
Reaching into the pouch at his belt, Eragon withdrew a soapstone container of
nalgask—beeswaxmelted with hazelnut oil—and smeared it over his lips to protect
them against the cold wind that scoured his face. He closed the pouch, then wrapped
his arms around Saphira’s neck and buried his face in the crook of his elbow to reduce
the glare from the wimpled clouds beneath them. The tireless beat of Saphira’s wings
dominated his hearing, higher and faster than that of Glaedr’s, whom she followed.
They flew southwest from dawn until early afternoon, often pausing for enthusiastic
sparring bouts between Saphira and Glaedr, duringwhich Eragon had to strap his
arms onto the saddle to prevent himself from being thrown off by the stomach-turning
acrobatics. He then would free himself by pulling on slipknots with his teeth.
The trip ended at a cluster of four mountains that towered over the forest, the first
mountains Eragon had seen in Du Weldenvarden. White-capped and windswept, they
pierced the veil of clouds and bared their crevassed brows to the beating sun, which
was heatless at such altitude.
They look so small compared to the Beors, said Saphira.
As had become his habit duringweeks of meditation, Eragon extended his mind in
every direction, touching upon the consciousnesses around him in search of any who
might mean him harm. He felt a marmot warm in her burrow, ravens, nuthatches, and
hawks, numerous squirrels running among the trees, and, farther down the mountain,
rock snakes undulating through the brush in search of the mice that were their prey, as
well as the hordes of ubiquitous insects.
When Glaedr descended to a bare ridge on the first mountain, Saphira had to wait
until he folded his massive wings before there was enough room for her to land. The
field of boulder-strewn talus they alighted upon was brilliant yellow from a coating of
hard, crenulated lichen. Above them loomed a sheer black cliff. It acted as buttress
and dam for a cornice of blue ice that groaned and split under the wind, loosing
jagged slabs that shattered on the granite below.
This peak is known as Fionula,said Glaedr. And her brothers are Ethrundr,
Merogoven, and Griminsmal. Each has its own tale, which I shall recount on the
flight back. But for now, I shall address the purpose of this trip, namely the nature of
the bond forged between dragons and elves and, later, humans. You both know
something of it—and I have hinted at its full implications to Saphira—but the time has
come to learn the solemn and profound meaning of your partnership so that you may
uphold it when Oromis and I are no more.
“Master?†asked Eragon, wrapping his cloak around himself to stay warm.
Yes, Eragon.
“Why is Oromis not here with us?â€
Because,rumbled Glaedr, it is my duty—as was always the duty of an elder dragon in
centuries past—to ensure that the newest generation of Riders understands the true
importance of the station they have assumed. And because Oromis is not as well as he
appears.
The rocks cracked with muffled reports as Glaedr coiled up, nestling himself among
the scree and placing his majestic head upon the ground lengthwise to Eragon and
Saphira. He examined them with one gold eye as large as a polished roundshield and
twice as brilliant. A gray smudge of smoke drifted from his nostrils and was blown to
tatters by the wind. Parts of what I am about to reveal were common knowledge
among the elves, Riders, and learned humans, but much of it was known only to the
leader of the Riders, a mere handful of elves, the humans’ current potentate, and, of
course, the dragons.
Listen now, my hatchlings. When peace was made between dragons and elves at the
end of our war, the Riders were created to ensure that such conflict would never
again arise between our two races. Queen Tarmunora of the elves and the dragon
who had been selected to represent us, whose name—he paused and conveyed a series
of impressions to Eragon: long tooth, white tooth, chipped tooth; fights won, fights
lost; countless eaten Shrrg and Nagra; seven-and-twenty eggs sired and nineteen
offspring grown to maturity—cannot be expressed in any language, decided that a
common treaty would not suffice. Signed paper means nothing to a dragon. Our blood
runs hot and thick and, given enough time, it was inevitable that we would clash with
the elves again, as we had with the dwarves over the millennia. But unlike with the
dwarves, neither we nor the elves could afford another war. We were both too
powerful, and we would have destroyed each other. The one way to prevent that and
to forge a meaningful accord was to link our two races with magic.
Eragon shivered, and with a touch of amusement, Glaedr said, Saphira, if you are
wise, you will heat one of these rocks with the fire from your belly so that your Rider
does not freeze.
Thereupon Saphira arched her neck, and a jet of blue flame emanated from between
her serrated fangs and splashed against the scree, blackening the lichen, which
released a bitter smell as it burned. The air grew so hot that Eragon was forced to turn
away. He felt the insects underneath the rocks being crisped in the inferno. After a
minute, Saphira clapped shut her jaws, leaving a circle of stones five feet across
glowing cherry red.
Thank you,Eragon said to her. He hunched by the edge of the scorched rocks and
warmed his hands over them.
Remember, Saphira, to use your tongue to direct the stream,admonished Glaedr.
Now… it took nine years for the elves’ wisest magicians to devise the needed spell.
When they had, they and the dragons gathered together at Ilirea. The elves provided
the structure of the enchantment, the dragons provided the strength, and together they
melded the souls of elves and dragons.
The joining changed us. We dragons gained the use of language and other trappings
of civilization, while the elves shared in our longevity, since before that moment, their
lives were as short as humans‘. In the end, the elves were the most affected. Our
magic, dragons’ magic—which permeates every fiber of our being—was transmitted
to the elves and, in time, gave them their much-vaunted strength and grace. Humans
have never been influenced as strongly, since you were added to the spell after its
completion and it has not had as much time to work upon you as with the elves. Still—
and here Glaedr’s eye gleamed—it has already gentled your race from the rough
barbarians who first landed in Alagaësia, though you have begun to regress since the
Fall.
“Were dwarves ever part of this spell?†asked Eragon.
No, and that is why there has never been a dwarf Rider. They do not care for
dragons, nor we for them, and they found the idea of being joined with us repellent.
Perhaps it is fortunate that they did not enter into our pact, for they have escaped the
decline of humans and elves.
Decline, Master? queried Saphira in what Eragon would have sworn was a teasing
tone of voice.
Aye, decline. If one or another of our three races suffer, so do they all. By killing
dragons, Galbatorix harmed his own race as well as the elves. The two of you have
not seen this, for you are new to Ellesméra, but the elves are on the wane; their power
is not what it once was. And humans have lost much of their culture and been
consumed by chaos and corruption. Only by righting the imbalance between our three
races shall order return to the world.
The old dragon kneaded the scree with his talons, crumbling it into gravel so that he
was more comfortable. Layered within the enchantment Queen Tarmunora oversaw
was the mechanism that allows a hatchling to be linked with his or her Rider. When a
dragon decides to give an egg to the Riders, certain words are said over the egg—
which I shall teach you later—that prevent the dragon inside from hatching until it is
brought into contact with the person with whom it decides to bond. As dragons can
remain in their eggs indefinitely, time is of no concern, nor is the infant harmed. You
yourself are an example of this, Saphira.
The bond that forms between a Rider and dragon is but an enhanced version of the
bond that already exists between our races. The human or elf becomes stronger and
fairer, while some of the dragon’s fiercer traits are tempered by a more reasoned
outlook… I see a thought biting at your tongue, Eragon. What is it?
“It’s just…†He hesitated. “I have a hard time imagining you or Saphira being any
fiercer. Not,†he added anxiously, “that that’s a bad thing.â€
The ground shook as if with an avalanche as Glaedr chuckled, rolling his great big
staring eye behind its horny lid and back again. If ever you met an unbonded dragon,
you would not say so. A dragon alone answers to no one and no thing, takes whatever
pleases it, and bears no thought of kindness for aught but its kith and kin. Fierce and
proud were the wild dragons, even arrogant… The females were so formidable, it was
accounted a great accomplishment among the Riders’ dragons to mate with one.
The lack of this bond is why Galbatorix’s partnership with Shruikan, his second
dragon, is such a perverted union. Shruikan did not choose Galbatorix as his partner;
he was twisted by certain black magics into serving Galbatorix’s madness. Galbatorix
has constructed a depraved imitation of the relationship that you, Eragon, and you,
Saphira, possess and that he lost when the Urgals murdered his original dragon.
Glaedr paused and looked between the two of them. His eye was all that moved. That
which links you exceeds any simple connection between minds. Your very souls, your
identities—call it what you will—have been welded on a primal level. His eye flicked
to Eragon. Do you believe that a person’s soul is separate from his body?
“I don’t know,†said Eragon. “Saphira once took me out of my body and let me see
the world through her eyes… Itseemed like I was no longer connected to my body.
And if the wraiths that a sorcerer calls upon can exist, then maybe our consciousness
is independent of flesh as well.â€
Extending the needle-sharp tip of his foreclaw, Glaedr flipped over a rock to expose a
woodrat cowering in its nest. He snapped up the rat with a flash of his red tongue;
Eragon winced as he felt the animal’s life extinguished.
When the flesh is destroyed, so is the soul, said Glaedr.
“But an animal isn’t a person,†protested Eragon.
After your meditations, do you truly believe that any of us are so different from a
woodrat? That we are gifted with a miraculous quality that other creatures do not
enjoy and that somehow preserves our beings after death?
“No,†muttered Eragon.
I thought not. Because we are so closely joined, when a dragon or Rider is injured,
they must harden their hearts and sever the connection between them in order to
protect each other from unnecessary suffering, even insanity. And since the soul
cannot be torn from the flesh, you must resist the temptation to try to take your
partner’s soul into your own body and shelter it there, as that will result in both your
deaths. Even if it were possible, it would be an abomination to have multiple
consciousnesses in one body.
“How terrible,†said Eragon, “to die alone, separate even from the one who is closest
to you.â€
Everyone dies alone, Eragon. Whether you are a king on a battlefield or a lowly
peasant lying in bed among your family, no one can accompany you into the void…
Now I will have you practice separating your consciousnesses. Start by…
Eragon stared at the tray of dinner left in the anteroom of the tree house. He
cataloged the contents: bread with hazelnut butter, berries, beans, a bowl of leafy
greens, two hard-boiled eggs—which, in accordance with the elves’ beliefs, were
unfertilized—and a stoppered jug of fresh springwater. He knew that each dish was
prepared with the utmost care, that the elves lavished all of their culinary skill upon
his meals, and that not even Islanzadí ate better than him.
He could not bear the sight of the tray.
I want meat,he growled, stomping back into the bedroom. Saphira looked up at him
from her dais. I’d even settle for fish or fowl, anything besides this never-ending
stream of vegetables. They don’t fill up my stomach. I’m not a horse; why should I be
fed like one?
Saphira unfolded her legs, walked to the edge of the teardrop gap overlooking
Ellesméra, and said, I have needed to eat these past few days. Would you like to join
me? You can cook as much meat as you like and the elves will never know.
That I would, he said, brightening. Should I get the saddle?
We won’t go that far.
Eragon fetched his supply of salt, herbs, and other seasonings from his bags and then,
careful not to overexert himself, climbed into the gap between the spikes along
Saphira’s spine.
Launching herself off the ground, Saphira let an updraft waft her high above the city,
whereupon she glided off the column of warm air, slipping down and sideways as she
followed a braided stream through Du Weldenvarden to a pond some miles thence.
She landed and hunched low to the ground, making it easier for Eragon to dismount.
She said, There are rabbits in the grass by the edge of the water. See if you can catch
them. In the meantime, I go to hunt deer.
What, you don’t want to share your own prey?
No, I don’t,she replied grumpily. Though I will if those oversized mice elude you.
He grinned as she took off, then faced the tangled clumps of grass and cow parsnip
that surrounded the pond and set about procuring his dinner.
Less than a minute later, Eragon collected a brace of dead rabbits from their nest. It
had taken him but an instant to locate the rabbits with his mind and then kill them
with one of the twelve death words. What he had learned from Oromis had drained
the challenge and excitement from the chase. I didn’t even have to stalk them, he
thought, remembering the years he had spent honing his tracking abilities. He
grimaced with sour amusement. I can finally bag any game I want and it seems
meaningless to me. At least when I hunted with a pebble with Brom, it was still a
challenge, but this… this is slaughter.
The warning of the sword-shaper Rhunön returned to him then: “When you can have
anything you want by uttering a few words, the goal matters not, only the journey to
it.â€
I should have paid more attention to her, realized Eragon.
With practiced movements, he drew his old hunting knife, skinned and gutted the
rabbits, and then—putting aside the hearts, lungs, kidneys, and livers—buried the
viscera so that the scent would not attract scavengers. Next he dug a pit, filled it with
wood, and lit a small blaze with magic, since he had not thought to bring his flint and
steel. He tended the fire until he had a bed of coals. Cutting a wand of dogwood, he
stripped the bark and seared the wood over the coals to burn off the bitter sap, then
spitted the carcasses on the wand and suspended them between two forked branches
pounded into the ground. For the organs, he placed a flat stone upon a section of the
coals and greased it with fat for a makeshift frying pan.
Saphira found him crouched by the fire, slowly turning the wand to cook the meat
evenly. She landed with a limp deer hanging from her jaws and the remains of a
second deer clutched in her talons. Measuring her length out in the fragrant grass, she
proceeded to gorge upon her prey, eating the entire deer, including the hide. Bones
cracked between her razor teeth, like branches snapping in a gale.
When the rabbits were ready, Eragon waved them in the air to cool them, then stared
at the glistening, golden meat, the smell of which he found almost unbearably
enticing.
As he opened his mouth to take the first bite, his thoughts turned unbidden to his
meditations. He remembered his excursions into the minds of birds and squirrels and
mice, how full of energy they felt and how vigorously they fought for the right to
exist in the face of danger. And if this life is all they have…
Gripped by revulsion, Eragon thrust the meat away, as appalled by the fact that he
had killed the rabbits as if he had murdered two people. His stomach churned and
threatened to make him purge himself.
Saphira paused in her feast to eye him with concern.
Taking a long breath, Eragon pressed his fists against his knees in an attempt to
master himself and understand why he was so strongly affected. His entire life he had
eaten meat, fish, and fowl. Heenjoyed it. And yet it now made him physically ill to
consider dining upon the rabbits. He looked at Saphira. I can’t do it, he said.
It is the way of the world that everything eats everything else. Why do you resist the
order of things?
He pondered her question. He did not condemn those who did partake of flesh—he
knew that it was the only means of survival for many a poor farmer. But he could no
longer do so himself unless faced with starvation. Having been inside of a rabbit and
having felt what a rabbit feels… eating one would be akin to eating himself. Because
we can better ourselves, he answered Saphira. Should we give in to our impulses to
hurt or kill any who anger us, to take whatever we want from those who are weaker,
and, in general, to disregard the feelings of others? We are made imperfect and must
guard against our flaws lest they destroy us. He gestured at the rabbits. As Oromis
said, why should we cause unnecessary suffering?
Would you deny all of your desires, then?
I would deny those that are destructive.
You are adamant on this?
Aye.
In that case,said Saphira, advancing upon him, these will make a fine dessert. In a
blink, she gulped down the rabbits and then licked clean the stone with the organs,
abrading the slate with the barbs on her tongue. I, at least, cannot live on plants
alone—that is food for prey, not a dragon. I refuse to be ashamed about how I must
sustain myself. Everything has its place in the world. Even a rabbit knows that.
I’m not trying to make you feel guilty,he said, patting her on the leg. This is a
personal decision. I won’t force my choice upon anyone.
Very wise, she said with a touch of sarcasm.
BROKEN EGG AND SCATTERED NEST
“Concentrate, Eragon,†said Oromis, though not unkindly.
Eragon blinked and rubbed his eyes in an attempt to focus on the glyphs that
decorated the curling parchment paper before him. “Sorry, Master.â€Weariness
dragged upon him like lead weights tied to his limbs. He squinted at the curved and
spiked glyphs, raised his goose-feather quill, and began to copy them again.
Through the window behind Oromis, the green shelf on top of the Crags of Tel’naeír
was streaked with shadows from the descending sun. Beyond, feathery clouds banded
the sky.
Eragon’s hand jerked as a line of pain shot up his leg, and he broke the nib of the
quill and sprayed ink across the paper, ruining it. Across from him, Oromis also
started, clutching his right arm.
Saphira!cried Eragon. He reached for her with his mind and, to his bewilderment,
was deflected by impenetrable barriers that she had erected around herself. He could
barely feel her. It was as if he were trying to grasp an orb of polished granite coated
with oil. She kept slipping away from him.
He looked at Oromis. “Something’s happened to them, hasn’t it?â€
“I know not. Glaedr returns, but he refuses to talk to me.†Taking his blade,
Naegling, from the wall, Oromis strode outside and stood upon the edge of the crags,
head uplifted as he waited for the gold dragon to appear.
Eragon joined him, thinking of everything—probable and improbable—that might
have befallen Saphira. The two dragons had left at noon, flying north to a place called
the Stone of Broken Eggs, where the wild dragons had nested in ages past. It was an
easy trip. It couldn’t be Urgals; the elves don’t allow them into Du Weldenvarden, he
told himself.
At last Glaedr came into view high above as a winking speck among the darkening
clouds. As he descended to land, Eragon saw a wound on the back of the dragon’s
right foreleg, a tear in his lapped scales as wide as Eragon’s hand. Scarlet blood laced
the grooves between the surrounding scales.
The moment Glaedr touched the ground, Oromis rushed toward him, only to stop
when the dragon growled at him. Hopping on his injured leg, Glaedr crawled to the
edge of the forest, where he curled up beneath the outstretched boughs, his back to
Eragon, and set about licking clean his wound.
Oromis went and knelt in the clover by Glaedr, keeping his distance with calm
patience. It was obvious that he would wait as long as need be. Eragon fidgeted as the
minutes elapsed. Finally, by some unspoken signal, Glaedr allowed Oromis to draw
near and inspect his leg. Magic glowed from Oromis’s gedwëy ignasia as he placed
his hand over the rent in Glaedr’s scales.
“How is he?†asked Eragon when Oromis withdrew.
“It looks a fearsome wound, but it is no more than a scratch for one so large as
Glaedr.â€
“What about Saphira, though? I still can’t contact her.â€
“You must go to her,†said Oromis. “She is hurt, in more ways than one. Glaedr said
little of what transpired, but I have guessed much, and you would do well to hurry.â€
Eragon glanced about for any means of transportation and groaned with anguish
when he confirmed that none existed. “How can I reach her? It’s too far to run, there’s
no trail, and I can’t—â€
“Calm thyself, Eragon. What was the name of the steed who bore you hence from
Sílthrim?â€
It took Eragon a moment to recall. “Folkvír.â€
“Then summon him with your skill at gramarye. Name him and your need in this, the
most powerful of languages, and he will come to your assistance.â€
Letting the magic suffuse his voice, Eragon cried out for Folkvír, sending his plea
echoing over the forested hills toward Ellesméra with all the urgency he could muster.
Oromis nodded, satisfied. “Well done.â€
Twelve minutes later, Folkvír emerged like a silver ghost from the dark shadows
among the trees, tossing his mane and snortingwith excitement. The stallion’s sides
heaved from the speed of his journey.
Throwing a leg over the small elven horse, Eragon said, “I’ll return as soon as I can.â€
“Do what you must,†said Oromis.
Then Eragon touched his heels to Folkvír’s ribs and shouted, “Run, Folkvír! Run!â€
The horse leaped forward and bounded into Du Weldenvarden, threading his way
with incredible dexterity between the gnarled pines. Eragon guided him toward
Saphira with images from his mind.
Lacking a trail through the underbrush, a horse like Snowfire would have taken three
or four hours to reach the Stone of Broken Eggs. Folkvír managed the trip in a bit
over an hour.
At the base of the basalt monolith—which ascended from the forest floor like a
mottled green pillar and stood a good hundred feet higher than the trees—Eragon
murmured, “Halt,†then slid to the ground. He looked at the distant top of the Stone of
Broken Eggs. Saphira was up there.
He walked around the perimeter, searching for a means to achieve the pinnacle, but
in vain, for the weathered formation was impregnable. It possessed no fissures,
crevices, or other faults near enough to the ground that he could use to climb its sides.
This might hurt, he thought.
“Stay here,†he told Folkvír. The horse looked at him with intelligent eyes. “Graze if
you want, butstay here, okay?†Folkvír nickered and, with his velvet muzzle, nudged
Eragon’s arm. “Yes, good boy. You’ve done well.â€
Fixing his gaze on the crest of the monolith, Eragon gathered his strength, then said
in the ancient language, “Up!â€
He realized later that if he had not been accustomed to flyingwith Saphira, the
experience might have proved unsettling enough to cause him to lose control of the
spell and plunge to his death. The ground dropped away beneath his feet at a swift
clip, while the tree trunks narrowed as he floated toward the underside of the canopy
and the fading evening sky beyond. Branches clung like grasping fingers to his face
and shoulders as he pushed through into the open. Unlike during one of Saphira’s
dives, he retained his sense of weight, as if he still stood upon the loam below.
Rising above the edge of the Stone of Broken Eggs, Eragon moved himself forward
and released his grip on the magic, alighting upon a mossy patch. He sagged with
exhaustion and waited to see if the exertion would pain his back, then sighed with
relief when it did not.
The top of the monolith was composed of jagged towers divided by deep and wide
gullies where naught but a few scattered wildflowers grew. Black caves dotted the
towers, some natural, others clawed out of the basalt by talons as thick as Eragon’s
leg. Their floors were blanketed with a deep layer of lichen-ridden bones, remnants of
the dragons’ ancient kills. Birds now nested where dragons once had—hawks and
falcons and eagles, who watched him from their perches, ready to attack if he should
threaten their eggs.
Eragon picked his way across the forbidding landscape, careful not to twist an ankle
on the loose flakes of stone or to get too close to the occasional rifts that split the
column. If he fell down one, it would send him tumbling out into empty space.
Several times he had to climb over high ridges, and twice more he had to lift himself
with magic.
Evidence of the dragons’ habitation was visible everywhere, from deep scratches in
the basalt to puddles of melted rock to a number of dull, colorless scales caught in
nooks, alongwith other detritus. He even stepped upon a sharp object that, when he
bent to examine it, proved to be a fragment of a green dragon egg.
On the eastern face of the monolith stood the tallest tower, in the center of which,
like a black pit turned on its side, was the largest cave. It was there that Eragon finally
beheld Saphira, curled in a hollow against the far wall, her back to the opening.
Tremors ran her length. The walls of the cave bore fresh scorch marks, and the piles
of brittle bones were scattered about as if from a fight.
“Saphira,†said Eragon, speaking out loud since her mind was closed to him.
Her head whipped up, and she stared at him as if he were a stranger, her pupils
contracting to thin black slits as her eyes adjusted to the light from the setting sun
behind him. She snarled once, like a feral dog, and then twisted away. As she did, she
lifted her left wing and exposed a long, ragged gash along her upper thigh. His heart
caught at the sight.
Eragon knew that she would not let him approach, so he did as Oromis had with
Glaedr; he knelt among the crushed bones and waited. He waited without word or
motion until his legs were numb and his hands were stiff with cold. Yet he did not
resent the discomfort. He paid the price gladly if it meant he could help Saphira.
After a time, she said, I have been a fool.
We are all fools sometimes.
That makes it no easier when it is your turn to play dunce.
I suppose not.
I have always known what to do. When Garrow died, I knew it was the right thing to
pursue the Ra’zac. When Brom died, I knew that we should go to Gil’ead and thence
to the Varden. And when Ajihad died, I knew that you should pledge yourself to
Nasuada. The path has always been clear to me. Except now. In this issue alone, I am
lost.
What is it, Saphira?
Instead of answering, she turned the subject and said, Do you know why this is called
the Stone of Broken Eggs?
No.
Because during the war between dragons and elves, the elves tracked us to this
location and killed us while we slept. They tore apart our nests, then shattered our
eggs with their magic. That day, it rained blood in the forest below. No dragon has
lived here since.
Eragon remained silent. That was not why he was here. He would wait until she
could bring herself to address the situation at hand.
Say something!demanded Saphira.
Will you let me heal your leg?
Leave well enough alone.
Then I shall remain as mute as a statue and sit here until I turn to dust, for I have the
patience of a dragon from you.
When they came, her words were halting, bitter, and self-mocking: It shames me to
admit it. When we first came here and I saw Glaedr, I felt such joy that another
member of my race survived besides Shruikan. I had never even seen another dragon
before, except in Brom’s memories. And I thought… I thought that Glaedr would be
as pleased by my existence as I was by his.
But he was.
You don’t understand. I thought that he would be the mate I never expected to have
and that together we could rebuild our race. She snorted, and a burst of flame
escaped her nostrils. I was mistaken. He does not want me.
Eragon chose his response with care to avoid offending her and to provide a
modicum of comfort. That’s because he knows you are destined for someone else: one
of the two remaining eggs. Nor would it be proper for him to mate with you when he
is your mentor.
Or perhaps he does not find me comely enough.
Saphira, no dragon is ugly, and you are the fairest of dragons.
I am a fool,she said. But she raised her left wing and kept it in the air as permission
for him to tend to her injury.
Eragon limped to Saphira’s side, where he examined the crimson wound, glad that
Oromis had given him so many scrolls on anatomy to read. The blow—by claw or
tooth, he was not sure—had torn the quadriceps muscle beneath Saphira’s hide, but
not so much as to bare the bone. Merely closing the surface of the wound, as Eragon
had done so many times, would not be enough. The muscle had to be knitted back
together.
The spell Eragon used was long and complex, and even he did not understand all its
parts, for he had memorized it from an ancient text that offered little explanation
beyond the statement that, given no bones were broken and the internal organs were
whole, “this charm will heal any ailment of violent origins, excepting that of grim
death.†Once he uttered it, Eragon watched with fascination as Saphira’s muscle
writhed beneath his hand—veins, nerves, and fibers weaving together—and became
whole once more. The wound was big enough that, in his weakened state, he dared
not heal it with just the energy from his body, so he drew upon Saphira’s strength as
well.
It itches, said Saphira when he finished.
Eragon sighed and leaned his back against the rough basalt, looking at the sunset
through his eyelashes. I fear that you will have to carry me off this rock. I’m too tired
to move.
With a dry rustle, she twisted in place and laid her head on the bones beside him. I
have treated you poorly ever since we came to Ellesméra. I ignored your advice when
I should have listened. You warned me about Glaedr, but I was too proud to see the
truth in your words… I have failed to be a good companion for you, betrayed what it
means to be a dragon, and tarnished the honor of the Riders.
No, never that,he said vehemently. Saphira, you haven’t failed your duty. You may
have made a mistake, but it was an honest one, and one that anyone might have
committed in your position.
That does not excuse my behavior toward you.
He tried to meet her eye, but she avoided his gaze until he touched her upon the neck
and said, Saphira, family members forgive one another, even if they don’t always
understand why someone acts in a certain way… You are as much my family as
Roran—more. Nothing you can do will ever change that. Nothing. When she did not
respond, he reached behind her jaw and tickled the patch of leathery skin below one
of her ears. Do you hear me, eh? Nothing!
She coughed low in her throat with reluctant amusement, then arched her neck and
lifted her head to escape his dancing fingers. How can I face Glaedr again? He was in
a terrible rage… The entire stone shook with the force of his anger.
At least you held your own when he attacked you.
It was the other way around.
Caught by surprise, Eragon raised his eyebrows. Well, in any case, the only thing to
do is to apologize.
Apologize!
Aye. Go tell him that you are sorry, that this won’t happen again, and that you want
to continue your training with him. I’m sure he will be sympathetic if you give him the
chance.
Very well, she said in a low voice.
You’ll feel better once you do. He grinned. I know from experience.
She grunted and padded to the edge of the cave, where she crouched and surveyed
the rolling forest. We should go. Soon it will be dark. Gritting his teeth, he forced
himself upright—every movement costing him effort—and climbed onto her back,
taking twice the time he usually did. Eragon?… Thank you for coming. I know what
you risked with your back.
He patted her on the shoulder. Are we one again?
We are one.
THE GIFT OF DRAGONS
The days leading up to the Agaetí Blödhren were the best and worst of times for
Eragon. His back troubled him more than ever, battering down his health and
endurance and destroying his calm of mind; he lived in constant fear of triggering an
episode. Yet, in contrast, he and Saphira had never been so close. They lived as much
in each other’s minds as in their own. And every now and then Arya would visit the
tree house and walk through Ellesméra with Eragon and Saphira. She never came
alone, though, always bringing either Orik or Maud the werecat.
Over the course of their wanderings, Arya introduced Eragon and Saphira to elves of
distinction: great warriors, poets, and artists. She took them to concerts held under the
thatched pines. And she showed them many hidden wonders of Ellesméra.
Eragon seized every opportunity to talk with her. He told her about his upbringing in
Palancar Valley, about Roran, Garrow, and his aunt Marian, stories of Sloan, Ethlbert,
and the other villagers, and his love of the mountains surrounding Carvahall and the
flaming sheets of light that adorned the winter sky at night. He told her about the time
a vixen fell into Gedric’s tanning vats and had to be fished out with a net. He told her
about the joy he found in planting a crop, weeding and nurturing it, and watching the
tender green shoots grow under his care—a joy that he knew she, of all people, could
appreciate.
In turn, Eragon gleaned occasional insights into her own life. He heard mentions of
her childhood, her friends and family, and her experiences among the Varden, which
she spoke about most freely, describing raids and battles she participated in, treaties
she helped to negotiate, her disputes with the dwarves, and the momentous events she
witnessed during her tenure as ambassador.
Between her and Saphira, a measure of peace entered Eragon’s heart, but it was a
precarious balance that the slightest influence might disrupt. Time itself was an
enemy, for Arya was destined to leave Du Weldenvarden after the Agaetí Blödhren.
Thus, Eragon treasured his moments with her and dreaded the arrival of the
forthcoming celebration.
The entire city bustled with activity as the elves prepared for the Agaetí Blödhren.
Eragon had never seen them so excited before. They decorated the forest with colored
bunting and lanterns, especially around the Menoa tree, while the tree itself was
adorned with a lantern upon the tip of each branch, where they hung like glowing
teardrops. Even the plants, Eragon noticed, took on a festive appearance with a
collection of bright new flowers. He often heard the elves singing to them late at
night.
Each day hundreds of elves arrived in Ellesméra from their cities scattered
throughout the woods, for no elf would willingly miss the centennial observance of
their treaty with the dragons. Eragon guessed that many of them also came to meet
Saphira. It seems as if I do nothing but repeat their greeting, he thought. The elves
who were absent because of their responsibilities would hold their own festivities
simultaneously and would participate in the ceremonies at Ellesméra by scrying
through enchanted mirrors that displayed the likeness of those watching, so that no
one felt as if they were being spied upon.
A week before the Agaetí Blödhren, when Eragon and Saphira were about to return
to their quarters from the Crags of Tel’naeír, Oromis said, “You should both think
about what you can bring to the Blood-oath Celebration. Unless your creations require
magic to make or to function, I suggest that you avoid using gramarye. No one will
respect your work if it’s the product of a spell and not of your own hands. I also
suggest you each make a separate piece. That too is custom.â€
In the air, Eragon asked Saphira, Do you have any ideas?
I might have one. But if you don’t mind, I’d like to see if it works before I tell you. He
caught part of an image from her of a bare knuckle of stone protruding from the forest
floor before she concealed it from him.
He grinned. Won’t you give me a hint?
Fire. Lots of fire.
Back in their tree house, Eragon cataloged his skills and thought, I know more about
farming than anything else, but I don’t see how I can turn that to my advantage. Nor
can I hope to compete with the elves with magic or match their accomplishments with
the crafts I am familiar with. Their talent exceeds that of the finest artisans in the
Empire.
But you possess one quality that no one else does,said Saphira.
Oh?
Your identity. Your history, deeds, and situation. Use those to shape your creation
and you will produce something unique. Whatever you make, base it upon that which
is most important to you. Only then will it have depth and meaning, and only then will
it resonate with others.
He looked at her with surprise. I never realized that you knew so much about art.
I don’t,she said. You forget I spent an afternoon watching Oromis paint his scrolls
while you flew with Glaedr. Oromis discussed the topic quite a bit.
Ah, yes. I had forgotten.
After Saphira left to pursue her project, Eragon paced along the edge of the open
portal in the bedroom, ponderingwhat she had said. What’s important to me? he
asked himself. Saphira and Arya, of course, and being a good Rider, but what can I
say about those subjects that isn’t blindingly obvious? I appreciate beauty in nature,
but, again, the elves have already expressed everything possible on that topic.
Ellesméra itself is a monument to their devotion. He turned his gaze inward and
scrutinized himself to determine what struck the deepest, darkest chords within him.
What stirred him with enough passion—of either love or hate—that he burned to
share it with others?
Three things presented themselves to him: his injury at the hands of Durza, his fear of
one day fightingGalbatorix, and the elves’ epics that so engrossed him.
A rush of excitement flared within Eragon as a story combining those elements took
form in his mind. Light on his feet, he ran up the twisting stairs—two at a time—to
the study, where he sat before the writing desk, dipped quill in ink, and held it
trembling over a pale sheet of paper.
The nib rasped as he made the first stroke:
In the kingdom by the sea,
In the mountains mantled blue…
The words flowed from his pen seemingly of their own accord. He felt as if he were
not inventing his tale, but merely acting as a conduit to transport it fully formed into
the world. Having never composed a work of his own before, Eragon was gripped by
the thrill of discovery that accompanies new ventures—especially since, previously,
he had not suspected that he might enjoy being a bard.
He labored in a frenzy, not stopping for bread or drink, his tunic sleeves rolled past
his elbows to protect them from the ink flicked from his quill by the wild force of his
writing. So intense was his concentration, he heard nothing but the beat of his poem,
saw nothing but the empty paper, and thought of nothing but the phrases etched in
lines of fire behind his eyes.
An hour and a half later, he dropped the quill from his cramped hand, pushed his
chair away from the desk, and stood. Fourteen pages lay before him. It was the most
he had ever written at one time. Eragon knew that his poem could not match those of
the elves’ and dwarves’ great authors, but he hoped it was honest enough that the
elves would not laugh at his effort.
He recited the poem to Saphira when she returned. Afterward, she said, Ah, Eragon,
you have changed much since we left Palancar Valley. You would not recognize the
untested boy who first set out for vengeance, I think. That Eragon could not have
written a lay after the style of the elves. I look forward to seeing who you become in
the next fifty or a hundred years.
He smiled. If I live that long.
“Rough but true,†was what Oromis said when Eragon read him the poem.
“Then you like it?â€
“‘Tis a good portrait of your mental state at the present and an engaging read, but no
masterpiece. Did you expect it to be?â€
“I suppose not.â€
“However, I am surprised that you can give voice to it in this tongue. No barrier
exists towriting fiction in the ancient language. The difficulty arises when one
attempts to speak it, for that would require you to tell untruths, which the magic will
not allow.â€
“I can say it,†replied Eragon, “because I believe it’s true.â€
“And that gives your writing far more power… I am impressed, Eragon-finiarel.
Your poem will be a worthy addition to the Blood-oath Celebration.†Raising a finger,
Oromis reached within his robe and gave Eragon a scroll tied shut with ribbon.
“Inscribed on that paper are nine wards I want you to place about yourself and the
dwarf Orik. As you discovered at Sílthrim, our festivities are potent and not for those
with constitutions weaker than ours. Unprotected, you risk losing yourself in the web
of our magic. I have seen it happen. Even with these precautions, you must take care
you are not swayed by fancies wafted on the breeze. Be on your guard, for during this
time, we elves are apt to go mad—wonderfully, gloriously mad, but mad all the
same.â€
On the eve of the Agaetí Blödhren—which was to last three days—Eragon, Saphira,
and Orik accompanied Arya to the Menoa tree, where a host of elves were assembled,
their black and silver hair flickering in the lamplight. Islanzadí stood upon a raised
root at the base of the trunk, as tall, pale, and fair as a birch tree. Blagden roosted on
the queen’s left shoulder, while Maud, the werecat, lurked behind her. Glaedr was
there, as well as Oromis garbed in red and black, and other elves Eragon recognized,
such as Lifaen and Narí and, to his distaste, Vanir. Overhead, the stars glittered in the
velvet sky.
“Wait here,†said Arya. She slipped through the crowd and returned leading Rhunön.
The smith blinked like an owl at her surroundings. Eragon greeted her, and she
nodded to him and Saphira. “Well met, Brightscales and Shadeslayer.†Then she spied
Orik and addressed him in Dwarvish, to which Orik replied with enthusiasm,
obviously delighted to converse with someone in the rough speech of his native land.
“What did she say?†asked Eragon, bending down.
“She invited me to her home to view her work and discuss metal working.†Awe
crossed Orik’s face. “Eragon, she first learned her craft from Fûthark himself, one of
the legendary grimstborithn of Dûrgrimst Ingeitum! What I would give to have met
him.â€
Together they waited until the stroke of midnight, when Islanzadí raised her bare left
arm so that it pointed toward the new moon like a marble spear. A soft white orb
gathered itself above her palm from the light emitted by the lanterns that dotted the
Menoa tree. Then Islanzadí walked along the root to the massive trunk and placed the
orb in a hollow in the bark, where it remained, pulsing.
Eragon turned to Arya. “Is it begun?â€
“It is begun!†She laughed. “And it will end when the werelight expends itself.â€
The elves divided themselves into informal camps throughout the forest and clearing
that encircled the Menoa tree. Seemingly out of nowhere, they produced tables laden
high with fantastic dishes, which from their unearthly appearance were as much the
result of the spellweavers’ handiwork as the cooks‘.
Then the elves began to sing in their clear, flutelike voices. They sangmany songs,
yet each was but part of a larger melody that wove an enchantment over the dreamy
night, heightening senses, removing inhibitions, and burnishing the revels with fey
magic. Their verses concerned heroic deeds and quests by ship and horse to forgotten
lands and the sorrow of lost beauty. The throbbingmusic enveloped Eragon, and he
felt a wild abandon take hold of him, a desire to run free of his life and dance through
elven glades forever more. Beside him, Saphira hummed alongwith the tune, her
glazed eyes lidded halfway.
What transpired afterward, Eragon was never able to adequately recall. It was as if he
had a fever and faded in and out of consciousness. He could remember certain
incidents with vivid clarity—bright, pungent flashes filled with merriment—but it was
beyond him to reconstruct the order in which they occurred. He lost track of whether
it was day or night, for no matter the time, dusk seemed to pervade the forest. Nor
could he ever say if he had slumbered, or needed sleep, during the celebration…
He remembered spinning in circles while holding the hands of an elf-maid with
cherry lips, the taste of honey on his tongue and the smell of juniper in the air…
He remembered elves perched on the outstretched branches of the Menoa tree, like a
flock of starlings. They strummed golden harps and called riddles to Glaedr below
and, now and then, pointed a finger at the sky, whereupon a burst of colored embers
would appear in various shapes before fading away…
He remembered sitting in a dell, propped against Saphira, and watching the same elfmaid
sway before a rapt audience while she sang:
Away, away, you shall fly away,
O’er the peaks and vales
To the lands beyond.
Away, away, you shall fly away,
And never return to me.
Gone! Gone you shall be from me,
And I will never see you again.
Gone! Gone you shall be from me,
Though I wait for you evermore.
He remembered endless poems, some mournful, others joyful—most both. He heard
Arya’s poem in full and thought it fine indeed, and Islanzadí‘s, which was longer but
of equal merit. All the elves gathered to listen to those two works…
He remembered the wonders the elves had made for the celebration, many of which
he would have deemed impossible beforehand, even with the assistance of magic.
Puzzles and toys, art and weapons, and items whose function escaped him. One elf
had charmed a glass ball so that every few seconds a different flower bloomed within
its heart. Another elf had spent decades travelingDu Weldenvarden and memorizing
the sounds of the elements, the most beautiful of which he now played from the
throats of a hundred white lilies.
Rhunön contributed a shield that would not break, a pair of gloves woven from steel
thread that allowed the wearer to handle molten lead and other such items without
harm, and a delicate sculpture of a wren in flight chiseled from a solid block of metal
and painted with such skill that the bird seemed alive.
A tiered wood pyramid eight inches high and constructed of fifty-eight interlocking
pieces was Orik’s offering, much to the elves’ delight, who insisted upon
disassembling and reassembling the pyramid as often as he would allow. “Master
Longbeard,†they called him, and said, “Clever fingers mean a clever mind.â€â€¦
He remembered Oromis pulling him aside, away from the music, and asking the elf,
“What’s wrong?â€
“You need to clear your mind.†Oromis guided him to a fallen log and had him sit.
“Stay here for a few minutes. You will feel better.â€
“I’m fine. I don’t need to rest,†protested Eragon.
“You are in no position to judge yourself right now. Stay here until you can list the
spells of changing, great and minor, and then you may rejoin us. Promise me this.â€â€¦
He remembered creatures dark and strange, drifting in from the depths of the forest.
The majority were animals who had been altered by the accumulated spells in Du
Weldenvarden and were now drawn to the Agaetí Blödhren as a starvingman is
drawn to food. They seemed to find nourishment in the presence of the elves’ magic.
Most dared reveal themselves only as pairs of glowing eyes on the outskirts of the
lantern light. One animal that did expose itself was the she-wolf—in the form of a
white-robed woman—that Eragon had encountered before. She lurked behind a
dogwood bush, dagger teeth bared in an amused grin, her yellow eyes darting from
point to point.
But not all the creatures were animals. Some few were elves who had altered their
original forms for functionality or in pursuit of a different ideal of beauty. An elf
covered in brindled fur leaped over Eragon and continued to gambol about, as often
on all fours as on his feet. His head was narrow and elongated with ears like a cat, his
arms hung to his knees, and his long-fingered hands had rough pads on the palm.
Later, two identical elf women presented themselves to Saphira. They moved with
languid grace and, when they touched their hands to their lips in the traditional
greeting, Eragon saw that their fingers were joined by translucent webbing. “We have
come far,†they whispered. As they spoke, three rows of gills pulsed on each side of
their slender necks, exposing pink flesh underneath. Their skin glistened as if with oil.
Their lank hair hung past their narrow shoulders.
He met an elf armored in imbricated scales like a dragon, with a bony crest upon his
head, a line of spikes that ran down his back, and two pallid flames that ever flickered
in the pits of his flared nostrils.
And he met others who were not so recognizable: elves whose outlines wavered as if
seen through water; elves who, when motionless, were indistinguishable from trees;
tall elves with eyes of black, even where the whites should have been, who possessed
an awful beauty that frightened Eragon and, when they chanced to touch something,
passed through it like shadows.
The ultimate example of this phenomenon was the Menoa tree, which was once the
elf Linnëa. The tree seemed to quicken with life at the activity in the clearing. Its
branches stirred, though no breeze touched them, at times the creaks of its trunk could
be heard to match the flow of music, and an air of gentle benevolence emanated from
the tree and lay upon those in the vicinity…
And he remembered two attacks from his back, screaming and groaning in the
shadows while the mad elves continued their revels around him and only Saphira
came to guard over him…
On the third day of the Agaetí Blödhren, or so Eragon later learned, he delivered his
verses to the elves. He stood and said, “I am no smith, nor skilled at carving or
weaving or pottery or painting or any of the arts. Nor can I rival your
accomplishments with spells. Thus, all that remains to me are my own experiences,
which I have attempted to interpret through the lens of a story, though I am also no
bard.†Then, in the manner that Brom had performed lays in Carvahall, Eragon
chanted:
In the kingdom by the sea,
In the mountains mantled blue,
On frigid winter’s final day
Was born a man with but one task:
To kill the foe in Durza,
In the land of shadows.
Nurtured by the kind and wise
Under oaks as old as time,
He ran with deer and wrestled bears,
And from his elders learned the skills,
To kill the foe in Durza,
In the land of shadows.
Taught to spy the thief in black
When he grabs the weak and strong;
To block his blows and fight the fiend
With rag and rock and plant and bone;
And kill the foe in Durza,
In the land of shadows.
Quick as thought, the years did turn,
‘Til the man had come of age,
His body burned with fevered rage,
While youth’s impatience seared his veins.
Then he met a maiden fair,
Who was tall and strong and wise,
Her brow adorned with Gëda’s Light,
Which shone upon her trailing gown.
In her eyes of midnight blue,
In those enigmatic pools,
Appeared to him a future bright,
Together, where they would not have
To fear the foe in Durza,
In the land of shadows.
So Eragon told of how the man voyaged to the land of Durza, where he found and
fought the foe, despite the cold terror within his heart. Yet though at last he
triumphed, the man withheld the fatal blow, for now that he had defeated his enemy,
he did not fear the doom of mortals. He did not need to kill the foe in Durza. Then the
man sheathed his sword and returned home and wed his love on summer’s eve. With
her, he spent his many days content until his beard was long and white. But:
In the dark before the dawn,
In the room where slept the man,
The foe, he crept and loomed above
His mighty rival now so weak.
From his pillow did the man
Raise his head and gaze upon
The cold and empty face of Death,
The king of everlasting night.
Calm acceptance filled the man’s
Aged heart; for long ago,
He’d lost all fear of Death’s embrace,
The last embrace a man will know.
Gentle as a morning breeze,
Bent the foe and from the man
His glowing, pulsing spirit took,
And thence in peace they went to dwell,
Forevermore in Durza,
In the land of shadows.
Eragon fell quiet and, conscious of the eyes upon him, ducked his head and quickly
found his seat. He felt embarrassed that he had revealed so much of himself.
The elf lord, Däthedr, said, “You underestimate yourself, Shadeslayer. It seems that
you have discovered a new talent.â€
Islanzadí raised one pale hand. “Your work shall be added to the great library in
Tialdarí Hall, Eragon-finiarel, so that all who wish can appreciate it. Though your
poem is allegory, I believe that it has helped many of us to better understand the
hardships you have faced since Saphira’s egg appeared to you, for which we are, in no
small way, responsible. You must read it to us again so we may think upon this
further.â€
Pleased, Eragon bowed his head and did as she commanded. Afterward was time for
Saphira to present her work to the elves. She flew off into the night and returned with
a black stone thrice the size of a large man clutched in her talons. Landing on her hind
legs, she placed the stone upright in the middle of the bare greensward, in full view of
everyone. The glossy rock had been melted and somehow molded into intricate curves
that wound about each other, like frozen waves. The striated tongues of rock twisted
in such convoluted patterns that the eye had difficulty following a single piece from
base to tip, but rather flitted from one coil to the next.
As it was his first time seeing the sculpture, Eragon gazed at it with as much interest
as the elves. How did you make this?
Saphira’s eyes twinkled with amusement. By licking the molten rock. Then she bent
and breathed fire long upon the stone, bathing it in a golden pillar that ascended
toward the stars and clawed at them with lucent fingers. When Saphira closed her
jaws, the paper-thin edges of the sculpture glowed cherry red, while small flames
flickered in the dark hollows and recesses throughout the rock. The flowing strands of
rock seemed to move under the hypnotic light.
The elves exclaimed with wonder, clapping their hands and dancing about the piece.
An elf cried, “Well wrought, Brightscales!â€
It’s beautiful, said Eragon.
Saphira touched him on the arm with her nose. Thank you, little one.
Then Glaedr brought out his offering: a slab of red oak that he had carved with the
point of one talon into a likeness of Ellesméra as seen from high above. And Oromis
revealed his contribution: the completed scroll that Eragon had often watched him
illustrate during their lessons. Along the top half of the scroll marched columns of
glyphs—a copy of “The Lay of Vestarí the Marinerâ€â€”while along the bottom half
ran a panorama of a fantastic landscape, rendered with breathtaking artistry, detail,
and skill.
Arya took Eragon’s hand then and drew him through the forest and toward the
Menoa tree, where she said, “Look how the werelight dims. We have but a few hours
left to us before dawn arrives and we must return to the world of cold reason.â€
Around the tree, the host of elves gathered, their faces bright with eager anticipation.
With great dignity, Islanzadí emerged from within their midst and walked along a root
as wide as a pathway until it angled upward and doubled back on itself. She stood
upon the gnarled shelf overlooking the slender, waiting elves. “As is our custom, and
as was agreed upon at the end of The Dragon War by Queen Tarmunora, the first
Eragon, and the white dragon who represented his race—he whose name cannot be
uttered in this or any language—when they bound the fates of elves and dragons
together, we have met to honor our blood-oath with song and dance and the fruits of
our labor. Last this celebration occurred, many long years ago, our situation was
desperate indeed. It has improved somewhat since, the result of our efforts, the
dwarves‘, and the Varden’s, though Alagaësia still lies under the black shadow of the
Wyrdfell and we must still live with our shame of how we have failed the dragons.
“Of the Riders of eld, only Oromis and Glaedr remain. Brom and many others
entered the void this past century. However, new hope has been granted to us in the
form of Eragon and Saphira, and it is only right and proper that they should be here
now, as we reaffirm the oath between our races three.â€
At the queen’s signal, the elves cleared a wide expanse at the base of the Menoa tree.
Around the perimeter, they staked a ring of lanterns mounted upon carved poles,
while musicians with flutes, harps, and drums assembled along the ridge of one long
root. Guided by Arya to the edge of the circle, Eragon found himself seated between
her and Oromis, while Saphira and Glaedr crouched on either side of them like gemstudded
bluffs.
To Eragon and Saphira, Oromis said, “Watch you carefully, for this is of great
importance to your heritage as Riders.â€
When all the elves were settled, two elf-maids walked to the center of the space in the
host and stood with their backs to each other. They were exceedingly beautiful and
identical in every respect, except for their hair: one had tresses as black as a forgotten
pool, while the other’s hair gleamed like burnished silver wire.
“The Caretakers, Iduna and Nëya,†whispered Oromis.
From Islanzadí‘s shoulder, Blagden shrieked,“Wyrda!â€
Moving in unison, the two elves raised their hands to the brooches at their throats,
unclasped them, and allowed their white robes to fall away. Though they wore no
garments, the women were clad in an iridescent tattoo of a dragon. The tattoo began
with the dragon’s tail wrapped around the left ankle of Iduna, continued up her leg
and thigh, over her torso, and then across Nëya’s back, endingwith the dragon’s head
on Nëya’s chest. Every scale on the dragon was inked a different color; the vibrant
hues gave the tattoo the appearance of a rainbow.
The elf-maids twined their hands and arms together so that the dragon appeared to be
a continuous whole, rippling from one body to the next without interruption. Then
they each lifted a bare foot and brought it down on the packed ground with a
softthump.
And again: thump.
On the thirdthump, the musicians struck their drums in rhythm. Athump later, the
harpists plucked the strings of their gilt instruments, and a moment after that, those
elves with flutes joined the throbbingmelody.
Slowly at first, but with gathering speed, Iduna and Nëya began to dance, marking
time with the stamp of their feet on the dirt and undulating so that it was not they who
seemed to move but the dragon upon them. Round and round they went, and the
dragon flew endless circles across their skin.
Then the twins added their voices to the music, building upon the pounding beat with
their fierce cries, their lyrics verses of a spell so complex that its meaning escaped
Eragon. Like the risingwind that precedes a storm, the elves accompanied the
incantation, singingwith one tongue and one mind and one intent. Eragon did not
know the words but found himself mouthing them alongwith the elves, swept along
by the inexorable cadence. He heard Saphira and Glaedr hum in concordance, a deep
pulse so strong that it vibrated within his bones and made his skin tingle and the air
shimmer.
Faster and faster spun Iduna and Nëya until their feet were a dusty blur and their hair
fanned about them and they glistened with a film of sweat. The elf-maids accelerated
to an inhuman speed and the music climaxed in a frenzy of chanted phrases. Then a
flare of light ran the length of the dragon tattoo, from head to tail, and the dragon
stirred. At first Eragon thought his eyes had deceived him, until the creature blinked,
raised his wings, and clenched his talons.
A burst of flame erupted from the dragon’s maw and he lunged forward and pulled
himself free of the elves’ skin, climbing into the air, where he hovered, flapping his
wings. The tip of his tail remained connected to the twins below, like a glowing
umbilical cord. The giant beast strained toward the black moon and loosed an
untamed roar of ages past, then turned and surveyed the assembled elves.
As the dragon’s baleful eye fell upon him, Eragon knew that the creature was no
mere apparition but a conscious being bound and sustained by magic. Saphira and
Glaedr’s humming grew ever louder until it blocked all other sound from Eragon’s
ears. Above, the specter of their race looped down over the elves, brushing them with
an insubstantial wing. It came to a stop before Eragon, engulfing him in an endless,
whirling gaze. Bidden by some instinct, Eragon raised his right hand, his palm
tingling.
In his mind echoed a voice of fire: Our gift so you may do what you must.
The dragon bent his neck and, with his snout, touched the heart of Eragon’s gedwëy
ignasia. A spark jumped between them, and Eragon went rigid as incandescent heat
poured through his body, consuming his insides. His vision flashed red and black, and
the scar on his back burned as if branded. Fleeing to safety, he fell deep within
himself, where darkness grasped him and he had not the strength to resist it.
Last, he again heard the voice of fire say, Our gift to you.
IN A STARRY GLADE
Eragon was alone when he woke.
He opened his eyes to stare at the carved ceiling in the tree house he and Saphira
shared. Outside, night still reigned and the sounds of the elves’ revels drifted from the
glittering city below.
Before he noticed more than that, Saphira leaped into his mind, radiating concern and
anxiety. An image passed to him of her standing beside Islanzadí at the Menoa tree,
then she asked, How are you?
I feel… good. Better than I’ve felt in a long time. How long have I—
Only an hour. I would have stayed with you, but they needed Oromis, Glaedr, and me
to complete the ceremony. You should have seen the elves’ reaction when you fainted.
Nothing like this has occurred before.
Did you cause this, Saphira?
It was not my work alone, nor Glaedr’s. The memories of our race, which were given
form and substance by the elves’ magic, anointed you with what skill we dragons
possess, for you are our best hope to avoid extinction.
I don’t understand.
Look in a mirror,she suggested. Then rest and recover and I shall rejoin you at dawn.
She left, and Eragon got to his feet and stretched, amazed by the sense of well-being
that pervaded him. Going to the wash closet, he retrieved the mirror he used for
shaving and brought it into the light of a nearby lantern.
Eragon froze with surprise.
It was as if the numerous physical changes that, over time, alter the appearance of a
human Rider—and which Eragon had already begun to experience since bondingwith
Saphira—had been completed while he was unconscious. His face was now as smooth
and angled as an elf’s, with ears tapered like theirs and eyes slanted like theirs, and his
skin was as pale as alabaster and seemed to emit a faint glow, as if with the sheen of
magic. I look like a princeling. Eragon had never before applied the term to a man,
least of all himself, but the only word that described him now wasbeautiful. Yet he
was not entirely an elf. His jaw was stronger, his brow thicker, his face broader. He
was fairer than any human and more rugged than any elf.
With trembling fingers, Eragon reached around the nape of his neck in search of his
scar.
He felt nothing.
Eragon tore off his tunic and twisted in front of the mirror to examine his back. It was
as smooth as it had been before the battle of Farthen Dûr. Tears sprang to Eragon’s
eyes as he slid his hand over the place where Durza had maimed him. He knew that
his back would never trouble him again.
Not only was the savage blight he had elected to keep gone, but every other scar and
blemish had vanished from his body, leaving him as unmarked as a newborn babe.
Eragon traced a line upon his wrist where he had cut himself while sharpening
Garrow’s scythe. No evidence of the wound remained. The blotchy scars on the
insides of his thighs, remnants from his first flight with Saphira, had also disappeared.
For a moment, he missed them as a record of his life, but his regret was short-lived as
he realized that the damage from every injury he had ever suffered, no matter how
small, had been repaired.
I have become what I was meant to be,he thought, and took a deep breath of the
intoxicating air.
He dropped the mirror on the bed and garbed himself in his finest clothes: a crimson
tunic stitched with gold thread; a belt studded with white jade; warm, felted leggings;
a pair of the cloth boots favored by the elves; and upon his forearms, leather
vambraces the dwarves had given him.
Descending from the tree, Eragon wandered the shadows of Ellesméra and observed
the elves carousing in the fever of the night. None of them recognized him, though
they greeted him as one of their own and invited him to share in their saturnalias.
Eragon floated in a state of heightened awareness, his senses thrummingwith the
multitude of new sights, sounds, smells, and feelings that assailed him. He could see
in darkness that would have blinded him before. He could touch a leaf and, by touch
alone, count the individual hairs that grew upon it. He could identify the odors
wafting about him as well as a wolf or a dragon. And he could hear the patter of mice
in the underbrush and the noise a flake of bark makes as it falls to earth; the beating of
his heart was as a drum to him.
His aimless path led him past the Menoa tree, where he paused to watch Saphira
among the festivities, though he did not reveal himself to those in the glade.
Where go you, little one?she asked.
He saw Arya rise from her mother’s side, make her way through the gathered elves,
and then, like a forest sprite, glide underneath the trees beyond. I walk between the
candle and the dark, he replied, and followed Arya.
Eragon tracked Arya by her delicate scent of crushed pine needles, by the feathery
touch of her foot upon the ground, and by the disturbance of her wake in the air. He
found her standing alone on the edge of a clearing, poised like a wild creature as she
watched the constellations turn in the sky above.
As Eragon emerged in the open, Arya looked at him, and he felt as if she saw him for
the first time. Her eyes widened, and she whispered, “Is that you, Eragon?â€
“Aye.â€
“What have they done to you?â€
“I know not.â€
He went to her, and together they wandered the dense woods, which echoed with
fragments of music and voices from the festivities. Changed as he was, Eragon was
acutely conscious of Arya’s presence, of the whisper of her clothes over her skin, of
the soft, pale exposure of her neck, and of her eyelashes, which were coated with a
layer of oil that made them glisten and curl like black petals wet with rain.
They stopped on the bank of a narrow stream so clear, it was invisible in the faint
light. The only thing that betrayed its presence was the throaty gurgle of water
pouring over rocks. Around them, the thick pines formed a cave with their branches,
hiding Eragon and Arya from the world and muffling the cool, still air. The hollow
seemed ageless, as if it were removed from the world and protected by some magic
against the withering breath of time.
In that secret place, Eragon felt suddenly close to Arya, and all his passion for her
sprang to the fore of his mind. He was so intoxicated with the strength and vitality
coursing through his veins—as well as the untamed magic that filled the forest—he
ignored caution and said, “How tall the trees, how bright the stars… and how
beautiful you are, O Arya Svit-kona.†Under normal circumstances, he would have
considered his deed the height of folly, but in that fey, madcap night, it seemed
perfectly sane.
She stiffened. “Eragon…â€
He ignored her warning. “Arya, I’ll do anything to win your hand. I would follow
you to the ends of the earth. I would build a palace for you with nothing but my bare
hands. I would—â€
“Will you stop pursuingme? Can you promise me that?â€When he hesitated, she
stepped closer and said, low and gentle, “Eragon, this cannot be. You are young and I
am old, and that shall never change.â€
“Do you feel nothing for me?â€
“My feelings for you,†she said, “are those of a friend and nothingmore. I am
grateful to you for rescuingme from Gil’ead, and I find your company pleasant. That
is all… Relinquish this quest of yours—it will only bring you heartache—and find
someone your own age to spend the long years with.â€
His eyes brimmed with tears. “How can you be so cruel?â€
“I am not cruel, but kind. You and I are not meant for each other.â€
In desperation, he suggested, “You could give me your memories, and then I would
have the same amount of experience and knowledge as you.â€
“It would be an abomination.†Arya lifted her chin, her face grave and solemn and
brushed with silver from the glimmering stars. A hint of steel entered her voice: “Hear
me well, Eragon. This cannot, nor ever shall be. And until you master yourself, our
friendship must cease to exist, for your emotions do nothing but distract us from our
duty.†She bowed to him. “Goodbye, Eragon Shadeslayer.†Then she strode past and
vanished into Du Weldenvarden.
Now the tears spilled down Eragon’s cheeks and dropped to the moss below, where
they lay unabsorbed, like pearls strewn across a blanket of emerald velvet. Numb,
Eragon sat upon a rotting log and buried his face in his hands, weeping that his
affection for Arya was doomed to remain unrequited, and weeping that he had driven
her further away.
Within moments, Saphira joined him. Oh, little one. She nuzzled him. Why did you
have to inflict this upon yourself? You knew what would happen if you tried to woo
Arya again.
I couldn’t stop myself. He wrapped his arms around his belly and rocked back and
forth on the log, reduced to hiccuping sobs by the strength of his misery. Putting one
warm wing over him, Saphira drew him close to her side, like a mother falcon with
her offspring. He curled up against her and remained huddled there as night passed
into day and the Agaetí Blödhren came to an end.
LANDFALL
Roran stood upon the poop deck of theRed Boar, his arms crossed over his chest and
his feet planted wide apart to steady himself on the rolling barge. The salty wind
ruffled his hair and tugged at his thick beard and tickled the hairs on his bare
forearms.
Beside him, Clovis manned the tiller. The weathered sailor pointed toward the
coastline at a seagull-covered rock silhouetted on the crest of a rolling hill that
extended into the ocean. “Teirm be right on the far side of that peak.â€
Roran squinted into the afternoon sun, which reflected off the ocean in a blindingly
bright band. “We’ll stop here for now, then.â€
“You don’t want to go on into the city yet?â€
“Not all of us at once. Call over Torson and Flint and have them run the barges up on
that shore. It looks like a good place to camp.â€
Clovis grimaced. “Arrgh. I was hoping t‘ get a hot meal tonight.†Roran understood;
the fresh food from Narda had long since been eaten, leaving them with naught but
salt pork, salted herring, salted cabbage, sea biscuits the villagers had made from their
purchased flour, pickled vegetables, and the occasional fresh meat when the villagers
slaughtered one of their few remaining animals or managed to catch game when they
landed.
Clovis’s rough voice echoed over the water as he shouted to the skippers of the other
two barges. When they drew near, he ordered them to pull ashore, much to their
vociferous displeasure. They and the other sailors had counted on reaching Teirm that
day and lavishing their pay on the city’s delights.
After the barges were beached, Roran walked among the villagers and helped them
by pitching tents here and there, unloading equipment, fetchingwater from a nearby
stream, and otherwise lending his assistance until everyone was settled. He paused to
give Morn and Tara a word of encouragement, for they appeared despondent, and
received a guarded response in turn. The tavern owner and his wife had been aloof to
him ever since they left Palancar Valley. On the whole, the villagers were in better
condition than when they arrived at Narda due to the rest they had garnered on the
barges, but constant worry and exposure to the harsh elements had prevented them
from recuperating as well as Roran hoped.
“Stronghammer, will you sup at our tent tonight?†asked Thane, coming up to Roran.
Roran declined with as much grace as he could and turned to find himself confronted
by Felda, whose husband, Byrd, had been murdered by Sloan. She bobbed a quick
curtsy, then said, “May I speak with you, Roran Garrowsson?â€
He smiled at her. “Always, Felda. You know that.â€
“Thank you.â€With a furtive expression, she fingered the tassels that edged her shawl
and glanced toward her tent. “I would ask a favor of you. It’s about Mandel—†Roran
nodded; he had chosen her eldest son to accompany him into Narda on that fateful trip
when he killed the two guards. Mandel had performed admirably then, as well as in
the weeks since while he crewed theEdeline and learned what he could about piloting
the barges. “He’s become quite friendly with the sailors on our barge and he’s started
playing dice with those lawless men. Not for money—we have none—but for small
things. Things we need.â€
“Have you asked him to stop?â€
Felda twisted the tassels. “I fear that, since his father died, he no longer respects me
as he once did. He has grown wild and willful.â€
We have all grown wild,thought Roran. “And what would you have me do about it?â€
he asked gently.
“You have ever dealt generously with Mandel. He admires you. If you talk with him,
he will listen.â€
Roran considered the request, then said, “Very well, I will do what I can.†Felda
sagged with relief. “Tell me, though, what has he lost at dice?â€
“Food mostly.†Felda hesitated and then added, “But I know he once risked my
grandmother’s bracelet for a rabbit those men snared.â€
Roran frowned. “Put your heart at ease, Felda. I will tend to the matter as soon as I
can.â€
“Thank you.†Felda curtsied again, then slipped away between the makeshift tents,
leaving Roran to mull over what she had said.
Roran absently scratched his beard as he walked. The problem with Mandel and the
sailors was a problem that cut both ways; Roran had noticed that during the trip from
Narda, one of Torson’s men, Frewin, had become close to Odele—a young friend of
Katrina. They could cause trouble when we leave Clovis.
Taking care not to attract undue attention, Roran went through the camp and gathered
the villagers he trusted the most and had them accompany him to Horst’s tent, where
he said, “The five we agreed upon will leave now, before it gets much later. Horst will
take my place while I’m gone. Remember that your most important task is to ensure
Clovis doesn’t leave with the barges or damage them in any way. They may be our
only means to reach Surda.â€
“That, and make sure we aren’t discovered,†commented Orval.
“Exactly. If none of us have returned by nightfall day after tomorrow, assume we
were captured. Take the barges and set sail for Surda, but don’t stop in Kuasta to buy
provisions; the Empire will probably be lying in wait there. You’ll have to find food
elsewhere.â€
While his companions readied themselves, Roran went to Clovis’s cabin on theRed
Boar. “Just the five of you be going?†demanded Clovis after Roran explained their
plan.
“That’s right.†Roran let his iron gaze bore into Clovis until the man fidgeted with
unease. “And when I get back, I expect you, these barges, and every one of your men
to still be here.â€
“You dare impugn my honor after how I’ve kept our bargain?â€
“I impugn nothing, only tell you what I expect. Too much is at stake. If you commit
treachery now, you condemn our entire village to death.â€
“That I know,†muttered Clovis, avoiding his eyes.
“My people will defend themselves duringmy absence. So long as breath remains in
their lungs, they’ll not be taken, tricked, or abandoned. And if misfortunewere to
befall them, I’d avenge them even if I had to walk a thousand leagues and fight
Galbatorix himself. Heed my words, Master Clovis, for I speak the truth.â€
“We’re not so fond of the Empire as you seem to believe,†protested Clovis. “I
wouldn’t do them a favor more than the next man.â€
Roran smiled with grim amusement. “Men will do anything to protect their families
and homes.â€
As Roran lifted the door latch, Clovis asked, “And what will you do once you reach
Surda?â€
“We will—â€
“Not we: you. What will you do? I’ve watched you, Roran. I’ve listened to you. An‘
you seem a good enough sort, even if I don’t care for how you dealt with me. But I
cannot fit it in my head, you dropping that hammer of yours and taking up the plow
again, just because you’ve arrived in Surda.â€
Roran gripped the latch until his knuckles turned white. “When I have delivered the
village to Surda,†he said in a voice as empty as a blackened desert, “then I shall go
hunting.â€
“Ah. After that redheaded lass of yours? I heard some talk of that, but I didn’t put—â€
The door slammed behind Roran as he left the cabin. He let his anger burn hot and
fast for a moment—enjoying the freedom of the emotion—before he began to subdue
his unruly passions. He marched to Felda’s tent, where Mandel was throwing a
hunting knife at a stump.
Felda’s right; someone has to talk some sense into him. “You’re wasting your time,â€
said Roran.
Mandel whirled around with surprise. “Why do you say that?â€
“In a real fight, you’re more likely to put out your own eye than injure your enemy. If
you don’t know the exact distance between you and your target…†Roran shrugged.
“You might as well throw rocks.â€
He watched with detached interest as the younger man bristled with pride. “Gunnar
told me about a man he knew in Cithrí who could hit a flying crow with his knife
eight times out of ten.â€
“And the other two times you get killed. It’s usually a bad idea to throw away your
weapon in battle.†Roran waved a hand, forestallingMandel’s objections. “Get your
kit together and meet me on the hill past the stream in fifteen minutes. I’ve decided
you should come with us to Teirm.â€
“Yes, sir!â€With an enthusiastic grin, Mandel dove into the tent and began packing.
As Roran left, he encountered Felda, her youngest daughter balanced on one hip.
Felda glanced between him and Mandel’s activity in the tent, and her expression
tightened. “Keep him safe, Stronghammer.†She set her daughter on the ground and
then bustled about, helping to gather the items Mandel would need.
Roran was the first to arrive at the designated hill. He squatted on a white boulder
and watched the sea while he readied himself for the task ahead. When Loring,
Gertrude, Birgit, and Nolfavrell, Birgit’s son, arrived, Roran jumped off the boulder
and said, “We have to wait for Mandel; he’ll be joining us.â€
“What for?†demanded Loring.
Birgit frowned as well. “I thought we agreed no one else should accompany us.
Especially not Mandel, since he was seen in Narda. It’s dangerous enough having you
and Gertrude along, and Mandel only increases the odds that someone will recognize
us.â€
“I’ll risk it.†Roran met each of their eyes in turn. “He needs to come.†In the end,
they listened to him, and, with Mandel, the six of them headed south, toward Teirm.
TEIRM
In that area, the coastline was composed of low, rolling hills verdant with lush grass
and occasional briars, willows, and poplars. The soft, muddy ground gave under their
feet and made walking difficult. To their right lay the glittering sea. To their left ran
the purple outline of the Spine. The ranks of snowcapped mountains were laced with
clouds and mist.
As Roran’s company wended past the properties surrounding Teirm—some freehold
farms, others massive estates—they made every effort to go undetected. When they
encountered the road that connected Narda to Teirm, they darted across it and
continued farther east, toward the mountains, for several more miles before turning
south again. Once they were confident they had circumnavigated the city, they angled
back toward the ocean until they found the southern road in.
During his time on theRed Boar, it had occurred to Roran that officials in Narda
might have deduced that whoever killed the two guards was among the men who left
upon Clovis’s barges. If so, messengers would have warned Teirm’s soldiers to watch
for anyone matching the villagers’ descriptions. And if the Ra’zac had visited Narda,
then the soldiers would also know that they were looking not just for a handful of
murderers but Roran Stronghammer and the refugees from Carvahall. Teirm could be
one huge trap. Yet they could not bypass the city, for the villagers needed supplies
and a new mode of transportation.
Roran had decided that their best precaution against capture was to send no one into
Teirm who had been seen in Narda, except for Gertrude and himself—Gertrude
because only she understood the ingredients for her medicines, and Roran because,
though he was the most likely to be recognized, he trusted no one else to do what was
required. He knew he possessed the will to act when others hesitated, like the time he
slew the guards. The rest of the group was chosen to minimize suspicion. Loringwas
old but a tough fighter and an excellent liar. Birgit had proven herself canny and
strong, and her son, Nolfavrell, had already killed a soldier in combat, despite his
tender age. Hopefully, they would appear as nothingmore than an extended family
traveling together. That is, if Mandel doesn’t throw the scheme awry, thought Roran.
It was also Roran’s idea to enter Teirm from the south, and thus make it seem even
more unlikely that they had come from Narda.
Eveningwas nigh when Teirm came into view, white and ghostly in the gloaming.
Roran stopped to inspect what lay before them. The walled city stood alone upon the
edge of a large bay, self-contained and impregnable to any conceivable attack.
Torches glowed between the merlons on the battlements, where soldiers with bows
patrolled their endless circuits. Above the walls rose a citadel, and then a faceted
lighthouse, which swept its hazy beam across the dark waters.
“It’s so big,†said Nolfavrell.
Loring bobbed his head without taking his eyes off Teirm. “Aye, that it is.â€
Roran’s attention was caught by a ship moored at one of the stone piers jutting from
the city. The three-masted vessel was larger than any he had seen in Narda, with a
high forecastle, two banks of oarlocks, and twelve powerful ballistae mounted along
each side of the deck for shooting javelins. The magnificent craft appeared equally
suited for either commerce or war. Even more importantly, Roran thought that it
might—might—be able to hold the entire village.
“That’s what we need,†he said, pointing.
Birgit uttered a sour grunt. “We’d have to sell ourselves into slavery to afford
passage on that monster.â€
Clovis had warned them that Teirm’s portcullis closed at sunset, so they quickened
their pace to avoid spending the night in the countryside. As they neared the pale
walls, the road filled with a double stream of people hurrying to and from Teirm.
Roran had not anticipated so much traffic, but he soon realized that it could help
shield his party from unwanted attention. Beckoning to Mandel, Roran said, “Drop
back a ways and follow someone else through the gate, so the guards don’t think
you’re with us. We’ll wait for you on the other side. If they ask, you’ve come here
seeking employment as a seaman.â€
“Yes, sir.â€
As Mandel fell behind, Roran hunched one shoulder, allowed a limp to creep into his
walk, and began to rehearse the story Loring had concocted to explain their presence
at Teirm. He stepped off the road and ducked his head as a man drove a pair of
lumbering oxen past, grateful for the shadows that concealed his features.
The gate loomed ahead, washed in uncertain orange from the torches placed in
sconces on each side of the entrance. Underneath stood a pair of soldiers with
Galbatorix’s twisting flame stitched onto the front of their crimson tunics. Neither of
the armed men so much as glanced at Roran and his companions as they shuffled
underneath the spiked portcullis and through the short tunnel beyond.
Roran squared his shoulders and felt some of his tension ease. He and the others
clustered by the corner of a house, where Loringmurmured, “So far, so good.â€
When Mandel rejoined them, they set out to find an inexpensive hostel where they
could let a room. As they walked, Roran studied the layout of the city with its fortified
houses—which grew progressively higher toward the citadel—and the gridlike
arrangement of streets. Those north to south radiated from the citadel like a starburst,
while those east to west curved gently across and formed a spiderweb pattern, creating
numerous places where barriers could be erected and soldiers stationed.
If Carvahall had been built like this,he thought, no one could have defeated us but the
king himself.
By dusk they had acquired lodging at the Green Chestnut, an exceedingly vile tavern
with atrocious ale and flea-infested beds. Its sole advantage was that it cost next to
nothing. They went to sleep without dinner to save their precious coin, and huddled
together to prevent their purses from being filched by one of the tavern’s other guests.
The next day, Roran and his companions left the Green Chestnut before dawn to
search for provisions and transportation.
Gertrude said, “I have heard tell of a remarkable herbalist, Angela by name, who
lives here and is supposed to work the most amazing cures, perhaps even a touch of
magic. I would go see her, for if anyone has what I seek, it would be she.â€
“You shouldn’t go alone,†said Roran. He looked at Mandel. “Accompany Gertrude,
help her with her purchases, and do your best to protect her if you are attacked. Your
nerve may be tested at times, but do nothing to cause alarm, unless you would betray
your friends and family.â€
Mandel touched his forelock and nodded his obedience. He and Gertrude departed at
right angles down a cross street, while Roran and the rest resumed their hunt.
Roran had the patience of a stalking predator, but even he began to thrum with
restlessness when morning and afternoon slipped by and they still had not found a
ship to carry them to Surda. He learned that the three-masted ship, the Dragon Wing,
was newly built and about to be launched on her maiden voyage; that they had no
chance of hiring it from the Blackmoor Shipping Company unless they could pay a
roomful of the dwarves’ red gold; and indeed, that the villagers lacked the coin to
engage even the meanest vessel. Nor would taking Clovis’s barges solve their
problems, because it still left unanswered the question of what they would eat on their
trek.
“It would be hard,†said Birgit, “very hard, to steal goods from this place, what with
all the soldiers and how close together the houses are and the watchmen at the gate. If
we tried to cart that much stuff out of Teirm, they’d want to know what we were
doing.â€
Roran nodded. That too.
Roran had suggested to Horst that if the villagers were forced to flee Teirm with
naught but their remaining supplies, they could raid for their food. However, Roran
knew that such an act would mean they had become as monstrous as those he hated.
He had no stomach for it. It was one thing to fight and kill those who served
Galbatorix—or even to steal Clovis’s barges, since Clovis had other means of
supporting himself—but it was quite another to take provisions from innocent farmers
who struggled to survive as much as the villagers had in Palancar Valley. That would
be murder.
Those hard facts weighed upon Roran like stones. Their venture had always been
tenuous at best, sustained in equal parts by fear, desperation, optimism, and lastminute
improvisation. Now he feared that he had driven the villagers into the den of
their enemies and bound them in place with a chain forged of their own poverty. I
could escape alone and continue my search for Katrina, but what victory would that
be if I left my village to be enslaved by the Empire? Whatever our fate in Teirm, I will
stand firm with those who trusted me enough to forsake their homes upon my word.
To relieve their hunger, they stopped at a bakery and bought a loaf of fresh rye bread,
as well as a small pot of honey to slather it with. While he paid for the items, Loring
mentioned to the baker’s assistant that they were in the market for ships, equipment,
and food.
At a tap on his shoulder, Roran turned. A man with coarse black hair and a thick slab
of belly said, “Pardon me for overhearing your parley with the youngmaster, but if
it’s ships and such you be after, and at a fair price, then I should guess you’d want to
attend the auction.â€
“What auction is this?†asked Roran.
“Ah, it’s a sad story, it is, but all too common nowadays. One of our merchants,
Jeod—Jeod Longshanks, as we call him out of hearing—has had the most abominable
run of bad luck. In less than a year, he lost four of his ships, an‘ when he tried to send
his goods over land, the caravan was ambushed and destroyed by some thieving
outlaws. His investors forced him to declare bankruptcy, and now they’re going to sell
his property to recoup their losses. I don’t know ’bout food, but you’d be sure to find
most everything else you’re looking to buy at the auction.â€
A faint ember of hope kindled in Roran’s breast. “When will the auction be held?â€
“Why, it’s posted on every message board throughout the city. Day after tomorrow,
to be sure.â€
That explained to Roran why they had not learned of the auction before; they had
done their best to avoid the message boards, on the off chance that someone would
recognize Roran from the portrait on his reward poster.
“Thank you much,†he said to the man. “You may have saved us a great deal of
trouble.â€
“My pleasure, so it is.â€
Once Roran and his companions filed out of the shop, they huddled together on the
edge of the street. He said, “Do you think we should look into this?â€
“It’s all wehave to look into,†growled Loring.
“Birgit?â€
“You needn’t ask me; it’s obvious. We cannot wait until the day after tomorrow,
though.â€
“No. I say we meet with this Jeod and see if we can strike a bargain with him before
the auction opens. Are we agreed?â€
They were, and so they set out for Jeod’s house, armed with directions from a
passerby. The house—or rather, mansion—was set on the west side of Teirm, close to
the citadel, among scores of other opulent buildings embellished with fine scrollwork,
wrought-iron gates, statues, and gushing fountains. Roran could scarcely comprehend
such riches; it amazed him how different the lives of these people were from his own.
Roran knocked on the front door to Jeod’s mansion, which stood next to an
abandoned shop. After a moment, the door was pulled open by a plump butler
garnished with overly shiny teeth. He eyed the four strangers upon his doorstep with
disapproval, then flashed his glazed smile and asked, “How may I help you, sirs and
madam?â€
“We would talk with Jeod, if he is free.â€
“Have you an appointment?â€
Roran thought the butler knew perfectly well that they did not. “Our stay in Teirm is
too brief for us to arrange a proper meeting.â€
“Ah, well, then I regret to say that your time would have been better spent elsewhere.
My master has many matters to tend. He cannot devote himself to every group of
ragged tramps that bangs on his door, asking for handouts,†said the butler. He
exposed even more of his glassy teeth and began to withdraw inside.
“Wait!†cried Roran. “It’s not handouts we want; we have a business proposition for
Jeod.â€
The butler lifted one eyebrow. “Is that so?â€
“Aye, it is. Please ask him if he will hear us. We’ve traveled more leagues than you’d
care to know, and it’s imperative we see Jeod today.â€
“May I inquire as to the nature of your proposition?â€
“It’s confidential.â€
“Very well, sir,†said the butler. “I will convey your offer, but I warn you that Jeod is
occupied at the moment, and I doubt he will wish to bother himself. By what name
shall I announce you, sir?â€
“You may call me Stronghammer.†The butler’s mouth twitched as if amused by the
name, then slipped behind the door and closed it.
“If his head were any larger, ‘e couldn’t fit in the privy,†muttered Loring out the side
of his mouth. Nolfavrell uttered a bark of laughter at the insult.
Birgit said, “Let’s hope the servant doesn’t imitate the master.â€
A minute later, the door reopened and the butler announced, with a rather brittle
expression, “Jeod has agreed to meet you in the study.†He moved to the side and
gestured with one arm for them to proceed. “This way.†After they trooped into the
sumptuous entryway, the butler swept past them and down a polished wood hallway
to one door amongmany, which he opened and ushered them through.
JEOD LONG SHANKS
If Roran had known how to read, he might have been more impressed by the treasure
trove of books that lined the study walls. As it was, he reserved his attention for the
tall man with graying hair who stood behind an oval writing desk. The man—who
Roran assumed was Jeod—looked about as tired as Roran felt. His face was lined,
careworn, and sad, and when he turned toward them, a nasty scar gleamed white from
his scalp to his left temple. To Roran, it bespoke steel in the man. Long and buried,
perhaps, but steel nevertheless.
“Do sit,†said Jeod. “I won’t stand on ceremony in my own house.†He watched them
with curious eyes as they settled in the soft leather armchairs. “May I offer you
pastries and a glass of apricot brandy? I cannot talk for long, but I see you’ve been on
the road for many a week, and I well remember how dusty my throat was after such
journeys.â€
Loring grinned. “Aye. A touch of brandy would be welcome indeed. You’re most
generous, sir.â€
“Only a glass of milk for my boy,†said Birgit.
“Of course, madam.†Jeod rang for the butler, delivered his instructions, then leaned
back in his chair. “I am at a disadvantage. I believe you have my name, but I don’t
have yours.â€
“Stronghammer, at your service,†said Roran.
“Mardra, at your service,†said Birgit.
“Kell, at your service,†said Nolfavrell.
“And I’d beWally, at your service,†finished Loring.
“And I at yours,†responded Jeod. “Now, Rolf mentioned that you wished to do
business with me. It’s only fair that you know I’m in no position to buy or sell goods,
nor have I gold for investing, nor proud ships to carry wool and food, gems and spices
across the restless sea. What, then, can I do for you?â€
Roran rested his elbows on his knees, then knitted his fingers together and stared
between them as he marshaled his thoughts. A slip of the tongue could kill us here, he
reminded himself. “To put it simply, sir, we represent a certain group of people
who—for various reasons—must purchase a large amount of supplies with very little
money. We know that your belongings will be auctioned off day after tomorrow to
repay your debts, and we would like to offer a bid now on those items we need. We
would have waited until the auction, but circumstances press us and we cannot tarry
another two days. If we are to strike a bargain, it must be tonight or tomorrow, no
later.â€
“What manner of supplies do you need?†asked Jeod.
“Food and whatever else is required to outfit a ship or other vessel for a long voyage
at sea.â€
A spark of interest gleamed in Jeod’s weary face. “Do you have a certain ship in
mind? For I know every craft that’s plied these waters in the last twenty years.â€
“We’ve yet to decide.â€
Jeod accepted that without question. “I understand now why you thought to come to
me, but I fear you labor under a misapprehension.†He spread his gray hands,
indicating the room. “Everything you see here no longer belongs to me, but to my
creditors. I have no authority to sell my possessions, and if I did so without
permission, I would likely be imprisoned for cheatingmy creditors out of the money I
owe them.â€
He paused as Rolf backed into the study, carrying a large silver tray dotted with
pastries, cut-crystal goblets, a glass of milk, and a decanter of brandy. The butler
placed the tray on a padded footstool and then proceeded to serve the refreshments.
Roran took his goblet and sipped the mellow brandy, wondering how soon courtesy
would allow the four of them to excuse themselves and resume their quest.
When Rolf left the room, Jeod drained his goblet with a single draught, then said, “I
may be of no use to you, but I do know a number of people in my profession who
might…might… be able to help. If you can give me a bit more detail about what you
want to buy, then I’d have a better idea of who to recommend.â€
Roran saw no harm in that, so he began to recite a list of items the villagershad to
have, things they might need, and things they wanted but would never be able to
afford unless fortune smiled greatly upon them. Now and then Birgit or Loring
mentioned something Roran had forgotten—like lamp oil—and Jeod would glance at
them for a moment before returning his hooded gaze to Roran, where it remained with
growing intensity. Jeod’s interest concerned Roran; it was as if the merchant knew, or
suspected, what he was hiding.
“It seems to me,†said Jeod at the completion of Roran’s inventory, “that this would
be enough provisions to transport several hundred people to Feinster or Aroughs… or
beyond. Admittedly, I’ve been rather occupied for the past few weeks, but I’ve heard
of no such host in this area, nor can I imagine where one might have come from.â€
His face blank, Roran met Jeod’s stare and said nothing. On the inside, he seethed
with self-contempt for allowing Jeod to amass enough information to reach that
conclusion.
Jeod shrugged. “Well, be as it may, that’s your own concern. I’d suggest that you see
Galton on Market Street about your food and old Hamill by the docks for all else.
They’re both honest men and will treat you true and fair.†Reaching over, he plucked
a pastry from the tray, took a bite, and then, when he finished chewing, asked
Nolfavrell, “So, youngKell, have you enjoyed your stay in Teirm?â€
“Yes, sir,†said Nolfavrell, and grinned. “I’ve never seen anything quite so large, sir.â€
“Is that so?â€
“Yes, sir. I—â€
Feeling that they were in dangerous territor
Public Last updated: 2011-10-11 07:38:22 PM
