TO ABERON
Underneath
Saphira, the pathless forest stretched wide to each white horizon, fading as it
did from the deepest green to a hazy, washed-out purple. M artins, rooks, and
other woodland birds flitted above the gnarled pines, uttering shrieks of alarm
when they beheld Saphira. She flew low to the canopy in order to protect her
two passengers from the arctic temperatures in the upper reaches of the sky.
Except for
when Saphira fled the Ra’zac into the Spine, this was the first time she and
Eragon had had the opportunity to fly together over a great stretch of distance
without having to stop or hold back for companions on the ground. Saphira was
especially pleased with the trip, and she delighted in showing Eragon how
Glaedr’s tutelage had enhanced her strength and endurance.
After his
initial discomfort abated, Orik said to Eragon, “I doubt I could ever be
comfortable in the air, but I can understand why you and Saphira enjoy it so.
Flying makes you feel free and unfettered, like a fierce-eyed hawk hunting his
prey! It sets my heart a-pounding, it does.”
To reduce
the tedium of the journey, Orik played a game of riddles with Saphira.
Eragon
excused himself from the contest as he had never been particularly adept at
riddles; the twist of thought necessary to solve them always seemed to escape
him. In this, Saphira far exceeded him. As most dragons are, she was fascinated
by puzzles and found them quite easy to unravel.
Orik said, “The
only riddles I know are in Dwarvish. I will do mine best to translate them, but
the results may be rough and unwieldy.” Then he asked: Tall I am young.
Short I am
old.
While with
life I do glow,
Urûr’s
breath is my foe.
Not fair, growled Saphira. I know little
of your gods. Eragon had no need to repeat her words, for Orik had granted
permission for her to project them directly into his mind.
Orik
laughed. “Do you give up?”
Never. For a few minutes, the only sound was
the sweep of her wings, until she asked, Is it a candle?
“Right you
are.”
A puff of
hot smoke floated back into Orik’s and Eragon’s faces as she snorted. I do
poorly with such riddles. I’ve not been inside a house since the day I
hatched, and I find enigmas difficult that deal with domestic subjects.
Next she offered: What herb cures all ailments?
This proved
a terrible poser for Orik. He grumbled and groaned and gnashed his teeth in
frustration. Behind him, Eragon could not help but grin, for he saw the answer
plain in Saphira’s mind. Finally, Orik said, “Well, what is it? You have bested
me with this.”
By the black
raven’s crime, and by this rhyme,
the answer
would be thyme.
Now it was
Orik’s turn to cry, “Not fair! This is not mine native tongue. You cannot
expect me to grasp such wordplay!”
Fair is
fair. It was a proper riddle.
Eragon
watched the muscles at the back of Orik’s neck bunch and knot as the dwarf
jutted his head forward. “If that is your stance, O Irontooth, then I’d
have you solve this riddle that every dwarf child knows.”
I am named M
orgothal’s Forge and Helzvog’s Womb.
I veil
Nordvig’s Daughter and bring gray death,
And make the
world anew with Helzvog’s Blood.
What be I?
And so they
went, exchanging riddles of increasing difficulty while Du Weldenvarden sped
past below. Gaps in the thatched branches often revealed patches of silver,
sections of the many rivers that threaded the forest. Around Saphira, the
clouds billowed in a fantastic architecture: vaulting arches, domes, and
columns; crenelated ramparts; towers the size of mountains; and ridges and
valleys suffused with a glowing light that made Eragon feel as if they flew
through a dream.
So fast was
Saphira that, when dusk arrived, they had already left Du Weldenvarden behind
and entered the auburn fields that separated the great forest from the Hadarac
Desert. They made their camp among the grass and hunkered round their small
fire, utterly alone upon the flat face of the earth. They were grim-faced and
said little, for words only emphasized their insignificance in that bare and
empty land.
Eragon took
advantage of their stop to store some of his energy in the ruby that adorned
Zar’roc’s pommel. The gem absorbed all the power he gave it, as well as Saphira’s
when she lent her strength. It would, concluded Eragon, be a number of days
before they could saturate both the ruby and the twelve diamonds concealed
within the belt of Beloth the Wise.
Weary from
the exercise, he wrapped himself in blankets, lay beside Saphira, and drifted
into his waking sleep, where his night phantasms played out against the sea of
stars above.
Soon after
they resumed their journey the following morning, the rippling grass gave way
to tan scrub, which grew ever more scarce until, in turn, it was replaced by
sunbaked ground bare of all but the most hardy plants. Reddish gold dunes
appeared.
From his
vantage on Saphira, they looked to Eragon like lines of waves forever sailing
toward a distant shore.
As the sun
began its descent, he noticed a cluster of mountains in the distant east and
knew he beheld Du Fells Nángoröth, where the wild dragons had gone to mate,
to raise their young, and eventually to die. We must visit there someday,
said Saphira, following his gaze.
Aye.
That night,
Eragon felt their solitude even more keenly than before, for they were camped
in the emptiest region of the Hadarac Desert, where so little moisture existed
in the air that his lips soon cracked, though he smeared them with nalgask
every few minutes. He sensed little life in the ground, only a handful of
miserable plants interspersed with a few insects and lizards.
As he had
when they fled Gil’ead through the desert, Eragon drew water from the soil to
replenish their waterskins, and before he allowed the water to drain away, he
scryed Nasuada in the pool’s reflection to see if the Varden had been attacked
yet. To his relief, they had not.
On the third
day since leaving Ellesméra, the wind rose up behind them and wafted Saphira
farther than she could have flown on her own, carrying them entirely out of the
Hadarac Desert.
Near the
edge of the waste, they passed over a number of horse-mounted nomads who were
garbed in flowing robes to ward against the heat. The men shouted in their
rough tongue and shook their swords and spears at Saphira, though none of them
dared loose an arrow at her.
Eragon,
Saphira, and Orik bivouacked for the night at the southernmost end of
Silverwood Forest, which lay along Lake Tüdosten and was named so because it was
composed almost entirely of beeches, willows, and trembling poplars. In
contrast to the endless twilight that lay beneath the brooding pines of Du
Weldenvarden, Silverwood was filled with bright sunshine, larks, and the gentle
rustling of green leaves. The trees seemed young and happy to Eragon, and he
was glad to be there.
And though
all signs of the desert had vanished, the weather remained far warmer than he
was accustomed to at that time of year. It felt more like summer than spring.
From there
they flew straight to Aberon, the capital of Surda, guided by directions Eragon
gleaned from the memories of birds they encountered. Saphira made no attempt to
conceal herself along the way, and they often heard cries of amazement and
alarm from the villages she swept over.
It was late
afternoon when they arrived at Aberon, a low, walled city centered around a
bluff in an otherwise flat landscape. Borromeo Castle occupied the top of the
bluff.
The rambling
citadel was protected by three concentric layers of walls, numerous towers,
and, Eragon noted, hundreds of ballistae made for shooting down a dragon.
The rich
amber light from the low sun cast Aberon’s buildings in sharp relief and
illuminated a plume of dust rising from the city’s western gate, where a line
of soldiers sought entrance.
As Saphira
descended toward the inner ward of the castle, she brought Eragon into contact
with the combined thoughts of the people in the capital. The noise overwhelmed
him at first--how was he supposed to listen for foes and still function at the
same time?--until he realized that, as usual, he was concentrating too much on
specifics. All he had to do was sense people’s general intentions. He broadened
his focus, and the individual voices clamoring for his attention subsided into
a continuum of the emotions surrounding him. It was like a sheet of water that
lay draped over the nearby landscape, undulating with the rise and fall of
people’s feelings and spiking whenever someone was racked by extremes of
passion.
Thus, Eragon
was aware of the alarm that gripped the people below as word of Saphira spread.
Careful, he told her. We don’t want them to attack us.
Dirt
billowed into the air with each beat of Saphira’s powerful wings as she settled
in the middle of the courtyard, sinking her claws into the bare ground to
steady herself.
The horses
tethered in the yard neighed with fear, creating such an uproar that Eragon
finally inserted himself in their minds and calmed them with words from the
ancient language.
Eragon
dismounted after Orik, eyeing the many soldiers that lined the parapets and the
drawn ballistae they manned. He did not fear the weapons, but he had no desire
to become engaged in a fight with his allies.
A group of
twelve men, some soldiers, hurried out of the keep toward Saphira. They were
led by a tall man with the same dark skin as Nasuada, only the third person
Eragon had met with such a complexion. Halting ten paces away, the man bowed--as
did his followers--then said, “Welcome, Rider. I am Dahwar, son of Kedar. I am
King Orrin’s seneschal.”
Eragon
inclined his head. “And I, Eragon Shadeslayer, son of none.”
“And I,
Orik, Thrifk’s son.”
And I,
Saphira, daughter of Vervada, said Saphira, using Eragon as her mouthpiece.
Dahwar bowed
again. “I apologize that no one of higher rank than myself is present to greet
guests as noble as you, but King Orrin, Lady Nasuada, and all the Varden have
long since marched to confront Galbatorix’s army.” Eragon nodded. He had
expected as much. “They left orders that if you came here seeking them, you
should join them directly, for your prowess is needed if we are to prevail.”
“Can you
show us on a map how to find them?” asked Eragon.
“Of course,
sir. While I have that fetched, would you care to step out of the heat and
partake of some refreshments?”
Eragon shook
his head. “We have no time to waste. Besides, it is not I who needs to see the
map but Saphira, and I doubt she would fit in your halls.” That seemed to catch
the seneschal off guard. He blinked and ran his eyes over Saphira, then said, “Quite
right, sir. In either case, our hospitality is yours. If there is aught you and
your companions desire, you have but to ask.” For the first time, Eragon
realized that he could issue commands and expect them to be followed. “We need
a week’s worth of provisions. For me, only fruit, vegetables, flour, cheese,
bread--things like that. We also need our waterskins refilled.” He was
impressed that Dahwar did not question his avoidance of meat. Orik added his
requests then for jerky, bacon, and other such products.
Snapping his
fingers, Dahwar sent two servants running back into the keep to collect the
supplies. While everyone in the ward waited for the men to return, he asked, “May
I assume by your presence here, Shadeslayer, that you completed your training
with the elves?”
“M y
training shall never end so long as I’m alive.”
“I see.”
Then, after a moment, Dahwar said, “Please excuse my impertinence, sir, for I
am ignorant of the ways of the Riders, but are you not human? I was told you
were.”
“That he is,”
growled Orik. “He was… changed. And you should be glad he was, or our
predicament would be far worse than it is.” Dahwar was tactful enough not to
pursue the subject, but from his thoughts Eragon concluded that the seneschal
would have paid a handsome price for further details--any information about
Eragon or Saphira was valuable in Orrin’s government.
The food,
water, and map were soon brought by two wide-eyed pages. At Eragon’s word, they
deposited the items beside Saphira, looking terribly frightened as they did,
then retreated behind Dahwar. Kneeling on the ground, Dahwar unrolled the map--
which
depicted Surda and the neighboring lands--and drew a line northwest from Aberon
to CithrÃ. He said, “Last I heard, King Orrin and Lady Nasuada stopped here
for provender. They did not intend to stay, however, because the Empire is
advancing south along the Jiet River and they wished to be in place to confront
Galbatorix’s army when it arrives. The Varden could be anywhere between CithrÃ
and the Jiet River. This is only my humble opinion, but I would say the best
place to look for them would be the Burning Plains.”
“The Burning
Plains?”
Dahwar smiled.
“You may know them by their old name, then, the name the elves use: Du Völlar
Eldrvarya.”
“Ah, yes.”
Now Eragon remembered. He had read about them in one of the histories Oromis
assigned him. The plains--which contained huge deposits of peat--lay along the
eastern side of the Jiet River where Surda’s border crossed it and had been the
site of a skirmish between the Riders and the Forsworn. During the fight, the
dragons inadvertently lit the peat with the flames from their mouths and the fire
had burrowed underground, where it remained smoldering ever since. The land had
been rendered uninhabitable by the noxious fumes that poured out of the glowing
vents in the charred earth.
A shiver
crawled down Eragon’s left side as he recalled his premonition: banks of
warriors colliding upon an orange and yellow field, accompanied by the harsh
screams of gore-crows and the whistle of black arrows. He shivered again. Fate
is converging upon us, he said to Saphira. Then, gesturing at the
map: Have you seen enough?
I have.
In short
order, he and Orik packed the supplies, remounted Saphira, and from her back
thanked Dahwar for his service. As Saphira was about to take off again, Eragon
frowned; a note of discord had entered the minds he was monitoring. “Dahwar,
two grooms in the stables have gotten into an argument and one of them, Tathal,
intends to commit murder. You can stop him, though, if you send men right away.”
Dahwar widened his eyes in an expression of astonishment, and even Orik twisted
round to look at Eragon. The seneschal asked, “How do you know this,
Shadeslayer?” Eragon merely said, “Because I am a Rider.”
Then Saphira
unfurled her wings, and everyone on the ground ran back to avoid being battered
by the rush of air as she flapped downward and soared into the sky. As Borromeo
Castle dwindled behind them, Orik said, “Can you hear my thoughts, Eragon?”
“Do you want
me to try? I haven’t, you know.”
“Try.”
Frowning,
Eragon concentrated his attention on the dwarf’s consciousness and was
surprised to find Orik’s mind well protected behind thick mental barriers. He
could sense Orik’s presence, but not his thoughts and feelings. “Nothing.” Orik
grinned. “Good. I wanted to make sure I hadn’t forgotten my old lessons.” By
unspoken consent, they did not stop for the night, but rather forged onward
through the blackened sky. Of the moon and stars they saw no sign, no flash or
pale gleam to breach the oppressive gloom. The dead hours bloated and sagged
and, it seemed to Eragon, clung to each second as if reluctant to surrender to
the past.
When the sun
finally returned--bringing with it its welcome light--Saphira landed by the
edge of a small lake so Eragon and Orik could stretch their legs, relieve
themselves, and eat breakfast without the constant movement they experienced on
her back.
They had
just taken off again when a long, low brown cloud appeared on the edge of the
horizon, like a smudge of walnut ink on a sheet of white paper. The cloud grew
wider and wider as Saphira approached it, until by late morning it obscured the
entire land beneath a pall of foul vapors.
They had
reached the Burning Plains of AlagaÊsia.
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