NARGARZHVOG
Eragon
entered the pavilion, Saphira pushing her head through after him. He was met by
a steely rasp as Jörmundur and a half-dozen of Nasuada’s commanders drew their
swords at the intruders. The men lowered their weapons as Nasuada said, “Come
here, Eragon.”
“What is
your bidding?” Eragon asked.
“Our scouts
report that a company of some hundred Kull approach from the northeast.”
Eragon
frowned. He had not expected to encounter Urgals in this battle, since Durza no
longer controlled them and so many had been killed in Farthen Dûr. But if they
had come, they had come. He felt his bloodlust rise and allowed himself a
savage grin as he contemplated destroying Urgals with his new strength.
Clapping his hand to Zar’roc’s hilt, he said, “It will be a pleasure to
eliminate them. Saphira and I can handle it by ourselves, if you want.”
Nasuada
watched his face carefully as she said, “We can’t do that, Eragon. They’re
flying a white flag, and they have asked to talk with me.” Eragon gaped at her.
“Surely you don’t intend to grant them an audience?”
“I will
offer them the same courtesies I would to any foe who arrives under the banner
of truce.”
“They’re
brutes, though. M onsters! It’s folly to allow them into the camp… Nasuada, I
have seen the atrocities Urgals commit. They relish pain and suffering and
deserve no more mercy than a rabid dog. There is no need for you to waste time
over what is surely a trap. Just give the word and I and every last one of your
warriors will be more than willing to kill these foul creatures for you.”
“In this,”
said Jörmundur, “I agree with Eragon. If you won’t listen to us, Nasuada, at
least listen to him.”
First
Nasuada said to Eragon in a murmur low enough that no one else could hear,
“Your
training is indeed unfinished if you are so blinded.” Then she raised her
voice, and in it Eragon heard the same adamantine notes of command that her
father had possessed: “You all forget that I fought in Farthen Dûr, the same
as you, and that I saw the savagery of the Urgals… However, I also saw our
own men commit acts just as heinous. I shall not denigrate what we have endured
at the Urgals’ hands, but neither shall I ignore potential allies when we are
so greatly outnumbered by the Empire.”
“M y Lady,
it’s too dangerous for you to meet with a Kull.”
“Too
dangerous?” Nasuada raised an eyebrow. “While I am protected by Eragon,
Saphira, Elva, and all the warriors around me? I think not.” Eragon gritted his
teeth with frustration. Say something, Saphira. You can convince her
to abandon this harebrained scheme.
No, I won’t.
Your mind is clouded on this issue.
You can’t
agree with her! exclaimed
Eragon, aghast. You were there in Yazuac with me; you know what the
Urgals did to the villagers. And what about when we left Teirm, my
capture at Gil’ead, and Farthen Dûr? Every time we’ve encountered Urgals,
they’ve tried to kill us or worse. They’re nothing more than vicious animals.
The elves
believed the same thing about dragons during Du Fyrn Skulblaka.
At Nasuada’s
behest, her guards tied back the front and side panels of the pavilion, leaving
it open for all to see and allowing Saphira to crouch low next to Eragon. Then
Nasuada seated herself in her high-backed chair, and Jörmundur and the other
commanders arranged themselves in two parallel rows so that anyone who sought
an audience with her had to walk between them. Eragon stood at her right hand,
Elva by her left.
Less than
five minutes later, a great roar of anger erupted from the eastern edge of the
camp. The storm of jeers and insults grew louder and louder until a single Kull
entered their view, walking toward Nasuada while a mob of the Varden peppered
him with taunts. The Urgal--or ram, as Eragon remembered they were called--held
his head high and bared his yellow fangs, but did not otherwise react to the
abuse directed at him. He was a magnificent specimen, eight and a half feet
tall, with strong, proud--
if grotesque--features,
thick horns that spiraled all the way around, and a fantastic musculature that
made it seem he could kill a bear with a single blow. His only clothing was a
knotted loincloth, a few plates of crude iron armor held together with scraps
of mail, and a curved metal disk nestled between his two horns to protect the
top of his head. His long black hair was in a queue.
Eragon felt
his lips tighten in a grimace of hate; he had to struggle to keep from drawing
Zar’roc and attacking. Yet despite himself, he could not help but admire the
Urgal’s courage in confronting an entire army of enemies alone and unarmed. To
his surprise, he found the Kull’s mind strongly shielded.
When the
Urgal stopped before the eaves of the pavilion, not daring to come any closer,
Nasuada had her guards shout for quiet to settle the crowd. Everyone looked at
the Urgal, wondering what he would do next.
The Urgal
lifted his bulging arms toward the sky, inhaled a mighty breath, and then
opened his maw and bellowed at Nasuada. In an instant, a thicket of swords
pointed at the Kull, but he paid them no attention and continued his ululation
until his lungs were empty. Then he looked at Nasuada, ignoring the hundreds of
people who, it was obvious, longed to kill him, and growled in a thick,
guttural accent, “What treachery is this, Lady Nightstalker? I was promised
safe passage. Do humans break their word so easily?”
Leaning
toward her, one of Nasuada’s commanders said, “Let us punish him, M istress,
for his insolence. Once we have taught him the meaning of respect, then
you can hear his message, whatever it is.”
Eragon
longed to remain silent, but he knew his duty to Nasuada and the Varden, so he
bent down and said in Nasuada’s ear, “Don’t take offense. This is how they
greet their war chiefs. The proper response is to then butt heads, but I don’t
think you want to try that.”
“Did the
elves teach you this?” she murmured, never taking her eyes off the waiting
Kull.
“Aye.”
“What else
did they teach you of the Urgals?”
“A great
deal,” he admitted reluctantly.
Then Nasuada
said to the Kull and also to her men beyond, “The Varden are not liars like
Galbatorix and the Empire. Speak your mind; you need fear no danger while we
hold council under the conditions of truce.”
The Urgal
grunted and raised his bony chin higher, baring his throat; Eragon recognized
it as a gesture of friendship. To lower one’s head was a threat in their race,
for it meant that an Urgal intended to ram you with his horns. “I am Nar
Garzhvog of the Bolvek tribe. I speak for my people.” It seemed as if he chewed
on each word before spitting it out. “Urgals are hated more than any other
race. Elves, dwarves, humans all hunt us, burn us, and drive us from our halls.”
“Not without
good reason,” pointed out Nasuada.
Garzhvog
nodded. “Not without reason. Our people love war. Yet how often are we attacked
just because you find us as ugly as we find you? We have thrived since the fall
of the Riders. Our tribes are now so large, the harsh land we live in can no
longer feed us.”
“So you made
a pact with Galbatorix.”
“Aye, Lady
Nightstalker. He promised us good land if we killed his enemies. He tricked us,
though. His flame-haired shaman, Durza, bent the minds of our war chiefs and
forced our tribes to work together, as is not our way. When we learned this in
the dwarves’ hollow mountain, the Herndall, the dams who rule us, sent my brood
mate to Galbatorix to ask why he used us so.” Garzhvog shook his ponderous
head. “She did not return. Our finest rams died for Galbatorix, then he
abandoned us like a broken sword. He is drajl and snake-tongued and a
lack-horned betrayer. Lady Nightstalker, we are fewer now, but we will fight
with you if you let us.”
“What is the
price?” asked Nasuada. “Your Herndall must want something in return.”
“Blood.
Galbatorix’s blood. And if the Empire falls, we ask that you give us land, land
for breeding and growing, land to avoid more battles in the future.” Eragon
guessed Nasuada’s decision by the set of her face, even before she spoke. So
apparently did Jörmundur, for he leaned toward her and said in an undertone,
“Nasuada,
you can’t do this. It goes against nature.”
“Nature can’t
help us defeat the Empire. We need allies.”
“The men
will desert before they’ll fight with Urgals.”
“That can be
worked around. Eragon, will they keep their word?”
“Only so
long as we share a common enemy.”
With a sharp
nod, Nasuada again lifted her voice: “Very well, Nar Garzhvog. You and your
warriors may bivouac along the eastern flank of our army, away from the main
body, and we shall discuss the terms of our pact.”
“Ahgrat
ukmar,” growled the Kull, clapping his fists to his brow. “You are a wise Herndall,
Lady Nightstalker.”
“Why do you
call me that?”
“Herndall?”
“No,
Nightstalker.”
Garzhvog
made a ruk-ruk sound in his throat that Eragon interpreted as laughter.
“Nightstalker
is the name we gave your sire because of how he hunted us in the dark tunnels
under the dwarf mountain and because of the color of his hide. As his cub, you
are worthy of the same name.” With that he turned on his heel and strode out of
the camp.
Standing,
Nasuada proclaimed, “Anyone who attacks the Urgals shall be punished as if he
attacked a fellow human. See that word of this is posted in every company.” No
sooner had she finished than Eragon noticed King Orrin approaching at a quick
pace, his cape flapping around him. When he was close enough, he cried, “Nasuada!
Is it true
you met with an Urgal? What do you mean by it, and why wasn’t I alerted sooner?
I don’t--“
He was
interrupted as a sentry emerged from the ranks of gray tents, shouting, “A
horseman approaches from the Empire!”
In an
instant, King Orrin forgot his argument and joined Nasuada as she hurried
toward the vanguard of the army, followed by at least a hundred people. Rather
than stay among the crowd, Eragon pulled himself onto Saphira and let her carry
him to their destination.
When Saphira
halted at the ramparts, trenches, and rows of sharpened poles that protected
the Varden’s leading edge, Eragon saw a lone soldier riding at a furious clip
across the bleak no-man’s-land. Above him, the birds of prey swooped low to
discover if the first course of their feast had arrived.
The soldier
reined in his black stallion some thirty yards from the breastwork, keeping as
much distance as possible between him and the Varden. He shouted, “By refusing
King Galbatorix’s generous terms of surrender, you choose death as your fate.
No more shall we negotiate. The hand of friendship has turned into the fist of
war! If any of you still hold regard for your rightful sovereign, the
all-knowing, all-powerful King Galbatorix, then flee! None may stand before us
once we set forth to cleanse Alagaësia of every miscreant, traitor, and
subversive. And though it pains our lord--for he knows that most of these
rebellious acts are instigated by bitter and misguided leaders--we shall gently
chastise the unlawful territory known as Surda and return it to the benevolent
rule of King Galbatorix, he who sacrifices himself day and night for the good
of his people. So flee, I say, or suffer the doom of your herald.” With that
the soldier untied a canvas sack and flourished a severed head. He threw it
into the air and watched it fall among the Varden, then turned his stallion,
dug in his spurs, and galloped back toward the dark mass of Galbatorix’s army.
“Shall I
kill him?” asked Eragon.
Nasuada
shook her head. “We will have our due soon enough. I won’t violate the sanctity
of envoys, even if the Empire has.”
“As you--“
He yelped with surprise and clutched Saphira’s neck to keep from falling as she
reared above the ramparts, planting her front legs upon the chartreuse bank.
Opening her
jaws, Saphira uttered a long, deep roar, much like Garzhvog had done, only this
roar was a defiant challenge to their enemies, a warning of the wrath they had
roused, and a clarion call to all who hated Galbatorix.
The sound of
her trumpeting voice frightened the stallion so badly, he jinked to the right,
slipped on the heated ground, and fell on his side. The soldier was thrown free
of the horse and landed in a gout of fire that erupted at that very instant. He
uttered a single cry so horrible, it made Eragon’s scalp prickle, then was
silent and still forevermore.
The birds
began to descend.
The Varden
cheered Saphira’s accomplishment. Even Nasuada allowed herself a small smile.
Then she clapped her hands and said, “They will attack at dawn, I think.
Eragon,
gather Du Vrangr Gata and prepare yourself for action. I will have orders for
you within the hour.” Taking Orrin by the shoulder, she guided him back toward
the center of the compound, saying, “Sire, there are decisions we must make. I
have a certain plan, but it will require…”
Let them
come, said
Saphira. The tip of her tail twitched like that of a cat stalking a rabbit. They
will all burn.
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