Demon Lord Of Karanda (40 page)

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Authors: David Eddings

BOOK: Demon Lord Of Karanda
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‘These offerings are pleasing to mine eyes,’ the enthroned Disciple declared in a shrill voice. ‘Let others come forth to make also their offerings unto the new God of Angarak.’
There was a certain amount of consternation among the Chandim and a few hasty consultations.
The next group of offerings were in plain wooden boxes; when they were opened, they revealed only pebbles and twigs. Each of the Chandim who bore those boxes to the altar surreptitiously removed one of the gilded chests after depositing his burden on the black stone.
Urvon gloated over the chests and boxes, apparently unable to distinguish between gold and gravel, as the line continued to move toward the altar, each priest laying one offering on the altar and removing another before returning to the end of the line.
‘I am well pleased with ye, my priests,’ Urvon said in his shrill voice when the charade had been played out. ‘Truly, ye have brought before me the wealth of nations.’
As the Chandim, Karands, and Guardsmen rose to their feet, the shadowy figure at Urvon’s shoulder continued to whisper.
‘And now will I receive Lord Mengha,’ the madman announced, ‘most favored of all who serve me, for he has delivered unto me this familiar spirit who revealed my high divinity unto me.’ He indicated the shadow behind him.
‘Summon the Lord Mengha that he may pay homage to the God Urvon and be graciously received by the new God of Angarak.’ The voice that boomed that command was as hollow as a voice issuing from a tomb.
From the door at the back of the hall came another fanfare of trumpets, and another hollow voice responded. ‘All hail Urvon, new God of Angarak,’ it intoned. ‘Lord Mengha approacheth to make his obeisance and to seek counsel with the living God.’
Again there came the booming of drums, and a man robed in Grolim black paced down the broad aisle toward the altar and the dais. As he reached the altar, he genuflected to the madman seated on Torak’s throne.
‘Look now upon the awesome face of Lord Mengha, most favored servant of the God Urvon and soon to become First Disciple,’ the hollow voice boomed.
The figure before the altar turned and pushed back his hood to reveal his face to the throng.
Garion started, suppressing a gasp of surprise. The man standing before the altar was Harakan.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
‘Belar!’ Silk swore under his breath.
‘All bow down to the First Disciple of your God!’ Urvon declaimed in his shrill voice. ‘It is my command that ye honor him.’
There was a murmur of amazement among the assembled Chandim, and Garion, peering down from above, thought that he could detect a certain reluctance on the faces of some of them.
‘Bow to him!’ Urvon shrieked, starting to his feet. ‘He is my Disciple!’
The Chandim looked first at the frothing madman on the dais and then at the cruel face of Harakan. Fearfully they sank to their knees.
‘I am pleased to see such willing obedience to the commands of our God,’ Harakan observed sardonically. ‘I shall remember it always.’ There was a scarcely veiled threat in his voice.
‘Know ye all that my Disciple speaks with my voice,’ Urvon announced, resuming his seat upon the throne. ‘His words are my words, and ye will obey him even as ye obey me.’
‘Hear the words of our God,’ Harakan intoned in that same sardonic voice, ‘for mighty is the God of Angarak, and swift to anger should any fail to heed him. Know further that I, Mengha, am now the sword of Urvon as well as his voice, and that the chastisement of the disobedient is in
my
hands.’ The threat was no longer veiled, and Harakan swept his eyes slowly across the faces of the assembled priests as if challenging each of them to protest his elevation.
‘Hail Mengha, Disciple of the living God!’ one of the mailed Guardsmen shouted.
‘Hail Mengha!’ the other Guardsmen responded, smashing their fists against their shields in salute.
‘Hail Mengha!’ the Karands shrieked.
‘Hail Mengha!’ the kneeling Chandim said at last, cowed finally into submission. And then the great Hounds crept forward on their bellies to fawn about Harakan’s feet and to lick his hands.
‘It is well,’ the enthroned madman declared in his shrill voice. ‘Know that the God of Angarak is pleased with ye.’
And then another figure appeared in the throne room below, coming through the same rotted drapes which had admitted Urvon. The figure was slender and dressed in a robe of clinging black satin. Its head was partially covered by a black hood, and it was carrying something concealed beneath its robe. When it reached the altar, it tipped back its head in a derisive laugh, revealing a face with at once an unearthly beauty and an unearthly cruelty all cast in marble white. ‘You poor fools,’ the figure rasped in a harsh voice. ‘Think you to raise a new God over Angarak without my permission?’
‘I have not summoned thee, Zandramas!’ Urvon shouted at her.
‘I feel no constraint to heed thy summons, Urvon,’ she replied in a voice filled with contempt, ‘nor its lack. I am not thy creature, as are these dogs. I serve the God of Angarak, in whose coming shalt thou be cast down.’

I
am the God of Angarak!’ he shrieked.
Harakan had begun to come around the altar toward her.
‘And wilt thou pit thy puny will against the Will of the Child of Dark, Harakan?’ She asked coolly. ‘Thou mayest change thy name, but thy power is no greater.’ Her voice was like ice.
Harakan stopped in his tracks, his eyes suddenly wary.
She turned back to Urvon. ‘I am dismayed that I was not notified of thy deification, Urvon,’ she continued, ‘for should I have known, I would have come before thee to pay thee homage and seek thy blessing.’ Then her lip curled in a sneer that distorted her face. ‘Thou?’ she said. ‘
Thou
, a God? Thou mayest sit upon the throne of Torak for all eternity whilst this shabby ruin crumbles about thee, and thou wilt never become a God. Thou mayest fondle dross and call it gold, and thou wilt never become a God. Thou mayest bask in the canine adulation of thy cringing dogs, who even now befoul thy throne room with their droppings, and thou wilt never become a God. Thou mayest hearken greedily to the words of thy tame demon, Nahaz, who even now whispers the counsels of madness in thine ear, and thou wilt never become a God.’
‘I
am
a God!’ Urvon shrieked, starting to his feet again.
‘So? It may be even as thou sayest, Urvon,’ she almost purred. ‘But if thou
art
a God, I must tell thee to enjoy thy Godhood whilst thou may, then, for even as maimed Torak, thou art doomed.’
‘Who hath the might to slay a God?’ he foamed at her.
Her laugh was dreadful. ‘Who hath the might? Even he who reft Torak of
his
life. Prepare thyself to receive the mortal thrust of the burning sword of Iron-grip, which spilled out the life of thy master, for
thus
I summon the Godslayer!’
And then she reached forward and placed the cloth-wrapped bundle which she had been concealing beneath her robe on the black altar. She raised her face and looked directly at the crack through which Garion was staring in frozen disbelief. ‘Behold thy son, Belgarion,’ she called up to him, ‘and hear his crying!’ She turned back the cloth to reveal the infant Geran. The baby’s face was contorted with fear, and he began to wail, a hopeless, lost sound.
All thought vanished from Garion’s mind. The wailing was the sound he had been hearing over and over again since he had left Mal Zeth. It was
not
the wail of that doomed child in those plague-stricken streets that had haunted his dreams. It was the voice of his own son! Powerless to resist that wailing call, he leaped to his feet. It was as if there were suddenly sheets of flame before his eyes, flames that erased everything from his mind but the desperate need to go to the child wailing on the altar below.
He realized dimly that he was running through the shadowy, leaf-strewn halls, roaring insanely even as he ripped Iron-grip’s sword from its sheath.
The moldering doors of long-empty rooms flashed by as he ran full tilt along the deserted corridor. Dimly behind him, he heard Silk’s startled cry. ‘Garion! No!’ Heedless, his brain afire, he ran on with the great Sword of Riva blazing in his hand before him as he went.
Even years later, he did not remember the stairs. Vaguely, he remembered emerging in the lower hall, raging.
There were Temple Guardsmen and Karands there, flinching before him and trying feebly to face him, but he seized the hilt of his sword in both hands and moved through them like a man reaping grain. They fell in showers of blood as he sheared his way through their ranks.
The great door to the dead God’s throne room was closed and bolted, but Garion did not even resort to sorcery. He simply destroyed the door—and those who were trying desperately to hold it closed—with his burning sword.
The fire of madness filled his eyes as he burst into the throne room, and he roared at the terrified men there, who gaped at the dreadful form of the Godslayer, advancing on them, enclosed in a nimbus of blue light. His lips were peeled back from his teeth in a snarl, and his terrible sword, all ablaze, flickered back and forth before him like the shears of fate.
A Grolim jumped in front of him with one arm upraised as Garion gathered his will with an inrushing sound he scarcely heard. Garion did not stop, and the other Grolims in the throne room recoiled in horror as the point of his flaming sword came sliding out from between the rash priest’s shoulder blades. The mortally wounded Grolim stared at the sizzling blade sunk into his chest. He tried with shaking hands to clutch at the blade, but Garion kicked him off the sword and continued his grim advance.
A Karand with a skull-surmounted staff stood in his path, desperately muttering an incantation. His words cut off abruptly, however, as Garion’s sword passed through his throat.
‘Behold the Godslayer, Urvon!’ Zandramas exulted. ‘Thy life is at an end, God of Angarak, for Belgarion hath come to spill it out, even as he spilled out the life of Torak!’ Then she turned her back on the cringing madman. ‘All hail the Child of Light!’ she announced in ringing tones. She smiled her cruel smile at him. ‘Hail, Belgarion,’ she taunted him. ‘Slay once again the God of Angarak, for that hath ever been thy task. I shall await thy coming in the Place Which Is No More.’ And then she took up the wailing babe in her arms, covered it with her cloak again, shimmered, and vanished.
Garion was suddenly filled with chagrin as he realized that he had been cruelly duped. Zandramas had not actually been here with his son, and all his overpowering rage had been directed at an empty projection. Worse than that, he had been manipulated by the haunting nightmare of the wailing child which he now realized
she
had put into his mind to force him to respond to her taunting commands. He faltered then, his blade lowering and its fire waning.
‘Kill him!’ Harakan shouted. ‘Kill the one who slew Torak!’
‘Kill him!’ Urvon echoed in his insane shriek. ‘Kill him and offer his heart up to me in sacrifice!’
A half-dozen Temple Guardsmen began a cautious, clearly reluctant, advance. Garion raised his sword again; its light flared anew, and the Guardsmen jumped back.
Harakan sneered as he looked at the armored men. ‘Behold the reward for cowardice,’ he snapped. He extended one hand, muttered a single word, and one of the Guardsmen shrieked and fell writhing to the floor as his mail coat and helmet turned instantly white-hot, roasting him alive.
‘Now obey me!’ Harakan roared. ‘Kill him!’
The terrified Guardsmen attacked more fervently then, forcing Garion back step by step. Then he heard the sound of running feet in the corridor outside. He glanced quickly over his shoulder and saw the others come bursting into the throne room.
‘Have you lost your mind?’ Belgarath demanded angrily.
‘I’ll explain later,’ Garion told him, still half-sick with frustration and disappointment. He returned his attention to the armored men before him and began swinging his great sword in wide sweeps, driving them back again.
Belgarath faced the Chandim on one side of the central aisle, concentrated for an instant, then gestured shortly. Suddenly a raging fire erupted from the stones of the floor all along the aisle.
Something seemed to pass between the old man and Polgara. She nodded, and quite suddenly the other side of the aisle was also walled off by flame.
Two of the Guardsmen had fallen beneath Garion’s sword, but others, accompanied by wild-eyed Karands, were rushing to the aid of their comrades, though they flinched visibly from the flames on either side of the aisle up which they were forced to attack.
‘Combine your wills!’ Harakan was shouting to the Chandim. ‘Smother the flames!’
Even as he closed with the Guardsmen and the Karands, beating down their upraised swords and hacking at them with Iron-grip’s blade, Garion felt the rush and surge of combined will. Despite the efforts of Belgarath and Polgara, the fires on either side of the aisle flickered and grew low.
One of the huge Hounds came loping through the ranks of the Guardsmen facing Garion. Its eyes were ablaze, and its tooth-studded muzzle agape. It leaped directly at his face, snapping and growling horribly, but fell twitching and biting at the floor as he split its head with his sword.
And then Harakan thrust his way through the Guardsmen and Karands to confront Garion. ‘And so we meet again, Belgarion,’ he snarled in an almost doglike voice. ‘Drop your sword, or I will slay your friends—and your wife. I have a hundred Chandim with me, and not even you are a match for so many.’ And he began to draw in his will.
Then, to Garion’s amazement, Velvet ran forward past him, her arms stretched toward the dread Grolim. ‘Please!’ she wailed. ‘Please don’t kill me!’ And she threw herself at Harakan’s feet, clutching at his black robe imploringly as she cringed and groveled before him.

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