There were some queer looks the following morning when Polgara served up steaks instead of porridge, but no one chose to say anything about the sudden change of diet.
They rode on for the next two days, with the last wrack and tatter of the dying storm flowing overhead. About noon, they crested a long hill and saw before them the broad blue expanse of a great body of water.
"Lake Cthaka," Urgit said. "Once we circle that, we're only two days from Rak Cthaka itself."
"Sadi," Belgarath said, "have you got your map?"
"Right here, Ancient One," the eunuch replied, reaching inside his robe.
"Let's have a look." The old sorcerer swung down from his horse, took the parchment map from Sadi, and opened it. The wind coming off the lake rattled and fluttered it, threatening to tear it from his grasp. "Oh, stop that," he snapped irritably. Then he stared at the map for several long moments. "I think we're going to have to get off the road," he said finally. "The storm and the wreck delayed us, and we can't be absolutely certain how far the Malloreans have marched since we left Rak Urga. I don't want an army catching us with the lake at our backs. The Malloreans don't have any reason to be on the south side of the lake, so we'll go that way instead." He pointed at a large area on the map covered with a representation of trees. "We'll find out what the situation is in Rak Cthaka," he said, "and if we need to, we'll be able to get into the Great Southern Forest."
"Belgarath," Durnik said urgently, pointing toward the north, "what's that?"
A low smudge of black smoke was streaming low to the horizon in the stiff breeze.
"Grass fire perhaps?" Sadi suggested.
Belgarath began to swear. "No," he said shortly, "it's not the right color." He pulled the map open again. "There are some villages up there," he said. "I think it's one of them."
"Malloreans!" Urgit gasped.
"How could they have gotten this far west?" Silk asked.
"Wait a minute," Garion said as a sudden thought came to him. He looked at Urgit. "Who wins when you fight the Malloreans in the mountains?" he asked.
"We do, of course. We know how to use the mountains to our advantage."
"But when you fight them on the plains, who wins?"
"They do. They've got more people."
"Then your armies are safe only as long as they stay in the mountains?"
"I already said that, Belgarion."
"If I were the one who was fighting you then, I'd try to figure out a way to lure you down onto the plains. If I moved around, making threatening noises at Rak Cthaka, you'd almost have to respond, wouldn't you? You'd send all your troops out of Urga and Morcth to defend the city. But if, instead of attacking the city, I moved my forces north and west, I could intercept and ambush you out in the open on flat ground. I could pick my battlefields and destroy both your armies in a single day."
Urgit's face had grown very pale. "That's what those Mallorean ships were doing in the Gorand Sea!" he exclaimed. "They were there to spy out the movements of my troops coming from Rak Urga. Zakath's setting traps for me." He spun, his eyes wild. "Belgarath, you've got to let me go warn my troops. They're completely unprepared for an attack. The Malloreans will wipe my army out, and they're the only force between here and Rak Urga."
Belgarath tugged at one earlobe, squinting at him.
"Please, Belgarath!"
"Do you think you can move fast enough to get ahead of the Malloreans?"
"I have to. If I don't, Cthol Murgos will fall. Blast it, old man, I've got a responsibility."
"I think you're finally beginning to learn, Urgit," Belgarath told him. "We might make a king out of you, after all. Durnik, give him whatever food we can spare." He turned back to Silk's anxious brother. "Don't take chances," he cautioned. "Stay off the hilltops where you'll be outlined against the sky. Make the best time you can, but don't kill your horse in the process." He stopped, then gruffly grasped the weasel-faced man by the shoulders. "Good luck," he said shortly.
Urgit nodded, then turned toward his horse.
Prala was right behind him.
"What do you think you're doing?" he demanded.
"I'm going with you."
"You most certainly are not!"
"We're wasting time."
"There's probably going to be a battle, girl. Use your head."
"I'm a Murgo, too," she declared defiantly, "I'm descended from the Cthan Dynasty. I'm not afraid of battles!" She caught the reins of her horse and lifted the long black leather case down from her saddle. She untied the fastenings and snapped the case open. Inside lay a sword, its hilt encrusted with rubies. She lifted it from the case and held it aloft. "This is the sword of the last king of the Cthan Dynasty," she announced dramatically. "He took the field with it at Vo Mimbre. Do not dishonor it." She reversed the blade and offered him the hilt across her forearm.
He stared first at her and then at the sword.
"It was to have been my gift to you on our wedding day," she said to him, "but you need it now. Take the sword, King of the Murgos, and get on your horse. We have a battle to win."
He took the sword and held it up. The rubies caught the sun like drops of blood on the hilt. Then he suddenly turned, as if on an impulse. "Cross swords, with me, Belgarion," he said, "for luck."
Garion nodded and drew his great sword. The fire that ran up its blade was a bright blue; when he touched Urgit's extended weapon with it, the smaller man winced as if the hilt of his sword had suddenly burned his hand. Then he stared at it incredulously. The stones on the hilt of his sword were no longer rubies, but bright blue sapphires. "Did you do that?" he gasped.
"No," Garion replied. "The Orb did. It seems to like you for some reason. Good luck, your Majesty."
"Thanks, your Majesty," Urgit answered. "And good luck to you, too—all of you." He started toward his horse again, then turned back and wordlessly caught Silk in a rough embrace. "All right, girl," he said to Prala, "let's go."
"Good-bye, Ce'Nedra," Prala called as she mounted her horse. "Thank you—for everything." The two of them wheeled their horses and raced off toward the north.
Silk sighed. "I'm afraid I'm going to lose him," he said mournfully.
"To the Malloreans, you mean?" Durnik asked.