INHERITANCE
Murtagh
grinned. Then he said, “Thrysta vindr,” and a hard ball of air coalesced
between them and struck Eragon in the middle of his chest, tossing him twenty
feet across the plateau.
Eragon heard
Saphira growl as he landed on his back. His vision flashed red and white, then
he curled into a ball and waited for the pain to recede. Any delight he felt in
M urtagh’s reappearance was overwhelmed by the macabre circumstances of their
meeting. A unstable mixture of shock, confusion, and anger boiled within him.
Lowering his
sword, M urtagh pointed at Eragon with his steel-encased hand, curling every
finger but his index into a spiny fist. “You never would give up.” A chill
crept along Eragon’s spine, for he recognized the scene from his premonition
while rafting the Az Ragni to Hedarth: 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 and pointed at the
downed man with all the authority of fate itself. Past and future
had converged. Now Eragon’s doom would be decided.
Pushing
himself to his feet, he coughed and said, “M urtagh… how can you be alive?
I watched
the Urgals drag you underground. I tried to scry you but saw only darkness.”
M urtagh
uttered a mirthless laugh. “You saw nothing, just as I saw nothing the times I
tried to scry you during my days in Urû‘baen.”
“You died,
though!” shouted Eragon, almost incoherent. “You died under Farthen Dûr. Arya
found your bloody clothes in the tunnels.” A shadow darkened M urtagh’s face. “No,
I did not die. It was the Twins’ doing, Eragon. They took control of a group of
Urgals and arranged the ambush in order to kill Ajihad and capture me. Then
they ensorcelled me so I could not escape and spirited me off to Urû‘baen.”
Eragon shook
his head, unable to comprehend what had happened. “But why did you agree to
serve Galbatorix? You told me you hated him. You told me—“
“Agree!” M
urtagh laughed again, and this time his outburst contained an edge of madness. “I
did not agree. First Galbatorix punished me for spiting his years of
protection during my upbringing in Urû‘baen, for defying his will and
running away.
Then he
extracted everything I knew about you, Saphira, and the Varden.”
“You
betrayed us! I was mourning you, and you betrayed us!”
“I had no
choice.”
“Ajihad was
right to lock you up. He should have let you rot in your cell, then none of
this—“
“I had no
choice!” snarled M urtagh. “And after Thorn hatched for me, Galbatorix forced
both of us to swear loyalty to him in the ancient language. We cannot disobey
him now.”
Pity and
disgust welled inside of Eragon. “You have become your father.” A strange gleam
leaped into M urtagh’s eyes. “No, not my father. I’m stronger than M orzan ever
was. Galbatorix taught me things about magic you’ve never even dreamed of…
Spells so powerful, the elves dare not utter them, cowards that they are.
Words in the
ancient language that were lost until Galbatorix discovered them. Ways to
manipulate energy… Secrets, terrible secrets, that can destroy your enemies
and fulfill all your desires.”
Eragon
thought back to some of Oromis’s lessons and retorted, “Things that should
remain secrets.”
“If you
knew, you would not say that. Brom was a dabbler, nothing more. And the elves,
bah! All they can do is hide in their forest and wait to be conquered.” M
urtagh ran his eyes over Eragon. “You look like an elf now. Did Islanzadà do
that to you?” When Eragon remained silent, M urtagh smiled and shrugged. “No
matter. I’ll learn the truth soon enough.” He stopped, frowned, then looked to
the east.
Following
his gaze, Eragon saw the Twins standing at the front of the Empire, casting
balls of energy into the midst of the Varden and the dwarves. The curtains of
smoke made it difficult to tell, but Eragon was sure the hairless magicians
were grinning and laughing as they slaughtered the men with whom they once
pledged solemn friendship. What the Twins failed to notice—and what was
clearly visible to Eragon and M urtagh from their vantage point—was that
Roran was crawling toward them from the side.
Eragon’s
heart skipped a beat as he recognized his cousin. You fool! Get away from
them! You’ll be killed .
Just as he
opened his mouth to cast a spell that would transport Roran out of danger—no
matter the cost—M urtagh said, “Wait. I want to see what he’ll do.”
“Why?”
A bleak
smile crossed M urtagh’s face. “The Twins enjoyed tormenting me when I was
their captive.”
Eragon
glanced at him, suspicious. “You won’t hurt him? You won’t warn the Twins?”
“Vell
eïnradhin iet ai Shur’tugal.” Upon my word as a Rider.
Together
they watched as Roran hid behind a mound of bodies. Eragon stiffened as the
Twins looked toward the pile. For a moment, it seemed they had spotted him,
then they turned away and Roran jumped up. He swung his hammer and bashed one
of the Twins in the head, cracking open his skull. The remaining Twin fell to
the ground, convulsing, and emitted a wordless scream until he too met his end
under Roran’s hammer. Then Roran planted his foot upon the corpses of his foes,
lifted his hammer over his head, and bellowed his victory.
“What now?”
demanded Eragon, turning away from the battlefield. “Are you here to kill me?”
“Of course
not. Galbatorix wants you alive.”
“What for?”
M urtagh’s
lips quirked. “You don’t know? Ha! There’s a fine jest. It’s not because of
you; it’s because of her. “ He jabbed a finger at Saphira. “The dragon
inside Galbatorix’s last egg, the last dragon egg in the world, is male.
Saphira is the only female dragon in existence. If she breeds, she will be the
mother of her entire race. Do you see now? Galbatorix doesn’t want to eradicate
the dragons. He wants to use Saphira to rebuild the Riders. He can’t kill you,
either of you, if his vision is to become reality… And what a vision it is,
Eragon. You should hear him describe it, then you might not think so badly of
him. Is it evil that he wants to unite Alagaësia under a single banner,
eliminate the need for war, and restore the Riders?”
“He’s the
one who destroyed the Riders in the first place!”
“And for
good reason,” asserted M urtagh. “They were old, fat, and corrupt. The elves
controlled them and used them to subjugate humans. They had to be removed so
that we could start anew.”
A furious
scowl contorted Eragon’s features. He paced back and forth across the plateau,
his breathing heavy, then gestured at the battle and said, “How can you justify
causing so much suffering on the basis of a madman’s ravings? Galbatorix has
done nothing but burn and slaughter and amass power for himself. He lies. He
murders. He manipulates. You know this! It’s why you refused to work for
him in the first place.” Eragon paused, then adopted a gentler tone: “I can
understand that you were compelled to act against your will and that you aren’t
responsible for killing Hrothgar. You can try to escape, though. I’m sure that
Arya and I could devise a way to neutralize the bonds Galbatorix has laid upon
you… Join me, M urtagh. You could do so much for the Varden. With us, you
would be praised and admired, instead of cursed, feared, and hated.”
For a
moment, as M urtagh gazed down at his notched sword, Eragon hoped he would
accept. Then M urtagh said in a low voice, “You cannot help me, Eragon. No one
but Galbatorix can release us from our oaths, and he will never do that… He
knows our true names, Eragon… We are his slaves forever.”
Though he
wanted to, Eragon could not deny the sympathy he felt for M urtagh’s plight.
With the utmost gravity, he said, “Then let us kill the two of you.”
“Kill us!
Why should we allow that?”
Eragon chose
his words with care: “It would free you from Galbatorix’s control. And it would
save the lives of hundreds, if not thousands, of people. Isn’t that a noble
enough cause to sacrifice yourself for?”
M urtagh
shook his head. “M aybe for you, but life is still too sweet for me to part
with it so easily. No stranger’s life is more important than Thorn’s or my own.”
As much as he hated it—hated the entire situation, in fact—Eragon knew then
what had to be done. Renewing his attack on M urtagh’s mind, he leaped forward,
both feet leaving the ground as he lunged toward M urtagh, intending to stab
him through the heart.
“Letta!”
barked M urtagh.
Eragon
dropped back to the ground as invisible bands clamped around his arms and legs,
immobilizing him. To his right, Saphira discharged a jet of rippling fire and
sprang at M urtagh like a cat pouncing on a mouse.
“Rïsa!”
commanded M urtagh, extending a clawlike hand as if to catch her.
Saphira
yelped with surprise as M urtagh’s incantation stopped her in midair and held
her in place, floating several feet above the plateau. No matter how much she
wriggled, she could not touch the ground, nor could she fly any higher.
How can he
still be human and have the strength to do that? wondered Eragon. Even with
my new abilities, such a task would leave me gasping for air and unable to
walk.
Relying upon
his experience counteracting Oromis’s spells, Eragon said, “Brakka du vanyalÃ
sem huildar Saphira un eka!”
M urtagh
made no attempt to stop him, only gave him a flat stare, as if he found Eragon’s
resistance a pointless inconvenience. Baring his teeth, Eragon redoubled his
efforts. His hands went cold, his bones ached, and his pulse slowed as the
magic sapped his energy. Without being asked, Saphira joined forces with him,
granting him access to the formidable resources of her body.
Five seconds
passed…
Twenty
seconds… A thick vein pulsed on M urtagh’s neck.
A minute…
A minute and
a half… Involuntary tremors racked Eragon. His quadriceps and hamstrings
fluttered, and his legs would have given way if he were free to move.
Two minutes
passed…
At last
Eragon was forced to release the magic, else he risked falling unconscious and
passing into the void. He sagged, utterly spent.
He had been
afraid before, but only because he thought he might fail. Now he was afraid
because he did not know what M urtagh was capable of.
“You cannot
hope to compete with me,” said M urtagh. “No one can, except for Galbatorix.”
Walking up to Eragon, he pointed his sword at Eragon’s neck, pricking his skin.
Eragon resisted the impulse to flinch. “It would be so easy to take you back to
Urû‘baen.”
Eragon gazed
deep into his eyes. “Don’t. Let me go.”
“You just
tried to kill me.”
“And you
would have done the same in my position.” When M urtagh remained silent and
expressionless, Eragon said, “We were friends once. We fought together.
Galbatorix
can’t have twisted you so much that you’ve forgotten… If you do this, M
urtagh, you’ll be lost forever.”
A long
minute passed where the only sound was the hue and cry of the clashing armies.
Blood trickled down Eragon’s neck from where the sword point cut him.
Saphira
lashed her tail with helpless rage.
Finally, M
urtagh said, “I was ordered to try and capture you and Saphira.” He paused. “I
have tried… M ake sure we don’t cross paths again. Galbatorix will have me
swear additional oaths in the ancient language that will prevent me from
showing you such mercy when next we meet.” He lowered his sword.
“You’re
doing the right thing,” said Eragon. He tried to step back but was still held
in place.
“Perhaps.
But before I let you go…” Reaching out, M urtagh pried Zar’roc from Eragon’s
fist and unbuckled Zar’roc’s red sheath from the belt of Beloth the Wise. “If I
have become my father, then I will have my father’s blade. Thorn is my dragon,
and a thorn he shall be to all our enemies. It is only right, then, that I
should also wield the sword Misery . M isery and Thorn, a fit match.
Besides, Zar’roc should have gone to M orzan’s eldest son, not his youngest. It
is mine by right of birth.” A cold pit formed in Eragon’s stomach. It can’t
be.
A cruel
smile appeared on M urtagh’s face. “I never told you my mother’s name, did I?
And you never told me yours. I’ll say it now: Selena. Selena was my mother and
your mother. M orzan was our father. The Twins figured out the connection while
they were digging around in your head. Galbatorix was quite interested to learn
that particular piece of information.”
“You’re
lying!” cried Eragon. He could not bear the thought of being M orzan’s son.
Did Brom
know? Does Oromis know?… Why didn’t they tell me? He remembered, then, Angela
predicting that someone in his family would betray him. She was right.
M urtagh
merely shook his head and repeated his words in the ancient language, then put
his lips to Eragon’s ear and whispered, “You and I, we are the same, Eragon.
M irror
images of one another. You can’t deny it.”
“You’re
wrong,” growled Eragon, struggling against the spell. “We’re nothing alike.
I don’t have
a scar on my back anymore.”
M urtagh
recoiled as if he had been stung, his face going hard and cold. He lifted Zar’roc
and held it upright before his chest. “So be it. I take my inheritance from
you, brother. Farewell.”
Then he
retrieved his helm from the ground and pulled himself onto Thorn. Not once did
he look at Eragon as the dragon crouched, raised its wings, and flew off the
plateau and into the north. Only after Thorn vanished below the horizon did the
web of magic release Eragon and Saphira.
Saphira’s
talons clicked on the stone as she landed. She crawled over to Eragon and
touched him on the arm with her snout. Are you all right, little one?
I’m fine. But he was not, and she knew it.
Walking to
the edge of the plateau, Eragon surveyed the Burning Plains and the aftermath
of the battle, for the battle was over. With the death of the Twins, the
Varden and dwarves regained lost ground and were able to rout the formations of
confused soldiers, herding them into the river or chasing them back from whence
they came.
Though the
bulk of their forces remained intact, the Empire had sounded the retreat, no
doubt to regroup and prepare for a second attempt to invade Surda. In their
wake, they left piles of tangled corpses from both sides of the conflict,
enough men and dwarves to populate an entire city. Thick black smoke roiled off
the bodies that had fallen into the peat fires.
Now that the
fighting had subsided, the hawks and eagles, the crows and ravens, descended
like a shroud over the field.
Eragon
closed his eyes, tears leaking from under the lids.
They had
won, but he had lost.
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