Demon Lord of Karanda
Page 85Then Polgara came down the littered aisle, the white lock at her brow gleaming. On one side of her strode Belgarath and on the other Durnik. As they reached him, Garion joined them. They advanced slowly to take up positions flanking Beldin, and Garion became aware that Eriond had also joined them, standing slightly off to one side.
"Well, Demon," Polgara said in a deadly voice, "will you face us all?"
Garion raised his sword and unleashed its fire. "And this as well?" he added, releasing all restraints on the Orb.
The Demon flinched momentarily, then drew itself erect again, its horrid face bathed in that awful green fire. From beneath its robe of shadow, it took what appeared to be a scepter or a wand of some kind that blazed an intense green. As it raised that wand, however, it seemed to see something that had previously escaped its notice. An expression of sudden fear crossed its hideous face, and the fire of the wand died, even as the intense green light bathing its face flickered and grew wan and weak. Then it raised its face toward the vaulted ceiling and howled -a dreadful, shocking sound. It spun quickly, moving toward the terrified Urvon. It reached out with shadowy hands, seized the gold-robed madman, and lifted him easily from the throne. Then it fled, its fire pushing out before it like a great battering ram, blasting out the walls of the House of Torak as it went.
The crown which had surmounted Urvon's brow fell from his head as Nahaz carried him from the crumbling house, and it clanked when it hit the floor with the tinny sound of brass.
PART FOUR - THE MOUNTAINS OF ZAMAD
CHAPTER NINETEEN
Beldin spat out a rancid oath and hurled his glowing hook at the throne. Then he started toward the smoking hole the fleeing demon had blasted out through the wall of the throne room.Belgarath, however, managed to place himself in front of the angry hunchback. "No, Beldin," he said firmly.
"Get out of my way, Belgarath."
"I'm not going to let you chase after a demon who could turn on you at any minute."
"I can take care of myself. Now stand aside."
"You're not thinking, Beldin. There'll be time enough to deal with Urvon later. Right now we need to make some decisions."
"Not entirely. In any event, I'm not going to let you chase after Nahaz in the dark. You know as well as I do that the darkness multiplies his power -and I haven't got so many brothers left that I can afford to lose one just because he's irritated."
Their eyes locked, and the ugly hunchback finally turned away. He stumped back toward the dais, pausing long enough to kick a chair to pieces on his way, muttering curses all the while.
"Is everyone all right?" Silk asked, looking around as he re-sheathed his knife.
"So it would seem," Polgara replied, pushing back the hood of her blue cloak.
"It was a bit tight there for a while, wasn't it?" The little man's eyes were very bright.
"Also unnecessary," she said, giving Garion a hard look. "You'd better take a quick look through the rest of the house, Kheldar. Let's make sure that it's really empty. Durnik, you and Toth go with him."
Silk nodded and started back up the blood-splashed aisle, stepping over bodies as he went, with Durnik and Toth close behind him.
"I don't understand," Ce'Nedra said, staring in bafflement at the gnarled Beldin, who was once again dressed in rags and had the usual twigs and bits of straw clinging to him. "How did you change places with Feldegast -and where is he?"
A roguish smile crossed Beldin's face. "Ah, me little darlin'," he said to her in the juggler's lilting brogue, "I'm right here, don't y' know. An' if yer of a mind, I kin still charm ye with me wit an' me unearthly skill."
"But I liked Feldegast," she almost wailed.
"All ye have t' do is transfer yer affection t' me, darlin'."
Belgarath was looking steadily at the twisted sorcerer. "Have you got any idea of how much that particular dialect irritates me?" he said.
"Why, yes, brother." Beldin grinned. "As a matter of fact I do. That's one of the reasons I selected it."
"I don't entirely understand the need for so elaborate a disguise," Sadi said as he put away his small poisoned dagger.
"Too many people know me by sight in this part of Mallore ," Beldin told him. "Urvon's had my description posted on every tree and fence post within a hundred leagues of Mal Yaska for the last two thousand years, and let's be honest about it, it wouldn't be too hard to recognize me from even the roughest description."
"You are a unique sort of person, Uncle," Polgara said to him, smiling fondly.
"Ah, yer too kind t' say it, me girl," he replied with an extravagant bow.
"Will you stop that?" Belgarath said. Then he turned to Garion. "As I remember, you said that you were going to explain something later. All right -it's later."
"I was tricked," Garion admitted glumly.
"By whom?"
"'Zandramas"
"She's still here?" Ce'Nedra exclaimed.
"Couldn't you tell the difference between a projection and the real thing?" Belgarath demanded.
"I wasn't in any condition to tell the difference when it happened."
"I suppose you can explain that."
Garion took a deep breath and sat down on one of the benches. He noticed that his bloodstained hands were shaking. "She's very clever," he said. "Ever since we left Mal Zeth, I've been having the same dream over and over again."
"Dream?" Polgara asked sharply. "What kind of dream?'
"Maybe dream isn't the right word," he replied, "but over and over again, I kept hearing the cry of a baby. At first I thought that I was remembering the cry of that sick child we saw in the streets back in Mal Zeth, but that wasn't it at all. When Silk and Beldin and I were in that room just above this one, we could see down into the throne room here and we saw Urvon come in with Nahaz right behind him. He's completely insane now. He think's he's a God. Anyway, he summoned Mengha -only Mengha turned out to be Harakan, and then-"
"Wait a minute," Belgarath interrupted him. "Harakan is Mengha?"
Garion glanced over at the limp form sprawled in front of the altar. Zith was still coiled atop the black stone, muttering and hissing to herself. "Well, he was," he said.