Chapter Twenty-Two
BARAK AND GARION slid back down into the gully with the gravel rattling down the steep bank around them.
"They've got Silk," Barak reported quietly. "Brill's there. It looks as if he and his men caught Silk while he was trying to leave. They turned him over to Taur Urgas,"
Belgarath stood up slowly, a sick look on his face. "Is he-" He broke off.
"No," Barak answered. "He's still alive. It looks as if they roughed him up a little, but he seemed to be all right."
Belgarath let out a long, slow breath. "That's something, anyway."
"Taur Urgas seemed to know him," Barak continued. "It sounded as if Silk had done something that offended the king pretty seriously, and Taur Urgas looks like the kind of man who holds grudges."
"Are they holding him someplace where we can get to him?" Durnik asked.
"We couldn't tell," Garion answered. "They all talked for a while, and then several soliders took him around behind that building down there. We couldn't see where they took him from there."
"The Murgo who runs the place said something about a pit," Barak added.
"We have to do something, father," Aunt Pol said.
"I know, Pol. We'll come up with something." He turned to Barak again. "Haw many soldiers did Taur Urgas bring with him?"
"A couple of regiments at least. They're all over the place down there."
"We can translocate him, father," Aunt Pol suggested.
"That's a long way to lift something, Pol," he objected. "Besides, we'd have to know exactly where he's being held."
"I'll find that out." She reached up to unfasten her cloak.
"Better wait until after dark," he told her. "There aren't many owls in Cthol Murgos, and you'd attract attention in the daylight. Did Taur Urgas have any Grolims with him?" he asked Garion.
"I think I saw a couple."
"That's going to complicate things. Translocation makes an awful noise. We'll have Taur Urgas right on our heels when we leave."
"Do you have any other ideas, father?" Aunt Pol asked.
"Let me work on it," he replied. "At any rate, we can't do anything until it gets dark."
A low whistle came from some distance down the gully.
"Who's that?" Barak's hand went to his sword.
"Ho, Alorns." It was a hoarse whisper.
"Methinks it is the Nadrak Yarblek," Mandorallen said.
"How did he know we're here?" Barak demanded.
There was the crunching sound of footsteps, in the gravel, and Yarblek came around a bend in the gully. His fur cap was low over his face, and the collar of his felt overcoat was pulled up around his ears. "There you are," he said, sounding relieved.
"Are you alone?" Barak's voice was heavy with suspicion.
"Of course I'm alone," Yarblek snorted. "I told my servants to go on ahead. You certainly left in a hurry."
"We didn't feel like staying to greet Taur Urgas," Barak replied.
"It's probably just as well. I'd have had a great deal of trouble getting you out of that mess back there. The Murgo soldiers inspected every one of my people to be sure they were all Nadraks before they'd let me leave. Taur Urgas has Silk."
"We know," Barak said. "How did you find us?"
"You left the pegs pulled up at the back of my tent, and this hill's the closest cover on this side of the fair. I guessed which way you'd go, and you left a track here and there to confirm it." The Nadrak's coarse face was serious, and he showed no signs of his extended bout at the ale barrel. "We're going to have to get you out of here," he said. "Taur Urgas will be putting out patrols soon, and you're almost in his lap."
"We must rescue our companion first," Mandorallen told him.
"Silk? You'd better forget that. I'm afraid my old friend has switched his last pair of dice." He sighed. "I liked him, too."
"He's not dead, is he?" Durnik's voice was almost sick.
"Not yet," Yarblek replied, "but Taur Urgas plans to correct that when the sun comes up in the morning. I couldn't even get close enough to that pit to drop a dagger to him so he could open a vein. I'm afraid his last morning's going to be a bad one."
"Why are you trying to help us?" Barak asked bluntly.
"You'll have to excuse him, Yarblek," Aunt Pol said. "He's not familiar with Nadrak customs." She turned to Barak. "He invited you into his tent and offered you his ale. That makes you the same as his brother until sunrise tomorrow."
Yarblek smiled briefly at her. "You seem to know us quite well, girl," he observed. "I never got to see you dance, did I?"
"Perhaps another time," she replied.
"Perhaps so." He squatted and pulled a curved dagger from beneath his overcoat. He smoothed a patch of sand with his other hand and began sketching rapidly with his dagger point. "The Murgos are going to watch me," he said, "so I can't add half a dozen or so more people to my party without having them all over me. I think the best thing would be for you to wait here until dark. I'll move out to the east and stop a league or so on up the caravan track. As soon as it gets dark, you slip around and catch up with me. We'll work something out after that."
"Why did Taur Urgas tell you to leave?" Barak asked him.
Yarblek looked grim. "There's going to be a large accident tomorrow. Taur Urgas will immediately send an apology to Ran Borune - something about inexperienced troops chasing a band of brigands and mistaking honest merchants for bandits. He'll offer to pay reparation, and things will all be smoothed over. Pay is a magic word when you're dealing with Tolnedrans."
"He's going to massacre the whole camp?" Barak sounded stunned.
"That's his plan. He wants to clean all the westerners out of Cthol Murgos and he seems to think that a few such accidents will do the job for him."
Relg had been standing to one side, his large eyes lost in thought. Suddenly he stepped across the gully to where Yarblek's sketch was. He smoothed it out of the sand. "Can you show me exactly where this pit in which they're holding our friend is located?" he asked.
"It won't do you any good," Yarblek told him. "It's guarded by a dozen men. Silk's got quite a reputation, and Taur Urgas doesn't want him to get away."
"Just show me," Relg insisted.
Yarblek shrugged. "We're here on the north side." He roughed in the fair and the caravan route. "The supply station is here." He pointed with his dagger. "The pit's just beyond it at the base of that big hill on the south side."
"What kind of walls does it have?"
"Solid stone."
"Is it a natural fissure in the rock, or has it been dug out?"
"What difference does it make?"
"I need to know."
"I didn't see any tool marks," Yarblek replied, "and the opening at the top is irregular. It's probably just a natural hole."
Relg nodded. "And the hill behind it - is it rock or dirt?"
"Mostly rock. All of stinking Cthol Murgos is mostly rock."
Relg stood up. "Thank you," he said politely.
"You're not going to be able to tunnel through to him, if that's what you're thinking," Yarblek said, also standing and brushing the sand off the skirts of his overcoat. "You don't have time."
Belgarath's eyes were narrowed with thought. "Thanks, Yarblek," he said. "You've been a good friend."
"Anything to irritate the Murgos," the Nadrak said. "I wish I could do something for Silk."
"Don't give up on him yet."
"There isn't much hope, I'm afraid. I'd better be going. My people will wander off if I'm not there to watch them."
"Yarblek," Barak said, holding out his hand, "someday we'll have to get together and finish getting drunk."
Yarblek grinned at him and shook his hand. Then he turned and caught Aunt Pol in a rough embrace. "If you ever get bored with these Alorns, girl, my tent flap is always open to you."
"I'll keep that in mind, Yarblek," she replied demurely.
"Luck," Yarblek told them. "I'll wait for you until midnight." Then he turned and strode off down the gully.
"That's a good man there," Barak said. "I think I could actually get to like him."
"We must make plans for Prince Kheldar's rescue," Mandorallen declared, beginning to take his armor out of the packs strapped to one of the horses. "All else failing, we must of necessity resort to main force."
"You're backsliding again, Mandorallen," Barak said.