"I was only trying to keep her warm, Sadi. You certainly wouldn't want her to get sick, would you?"
"Your concern touches my heart." He turned and went back toward the sleeping rooms with Zith lazily coiled about his wrist.
The following morning, Garion went into the shed attached to the back of the house, saddled his horse, and rode back down to the gravel strand, where the waves rolled endlessly in off the foggy sea to crash against the shore. He stopped, looking first up the beach, then down. He shrugged and turned his horse toward the northeast.
The upper edge of the rock-strewn beach was thick with windrows of white-bleached driftwood. As he rode, he idly ran his eyes along those tangled heaps of branches and broken logs. Occasionally, he noted a squared-off timber lying among the other bits and pieces, mute evidence that some ship had come to grief. The possibility occurred to him that the shipwreck that had set those timbers adrift might have taken place as long as a century ago and that the debris might well have floated half around the world to wash up on this strand of salt-crusted pebbles.
"That's all very interesting," the dry voice in his mind told him, "but you're going the wrong way."
"Where have you been?" Garion asked, reining in.
"Why do we always have to start these conversations with that same question? The answer wouldn't mean anything to you, so why pursue it? Turn around and go back. The trail is on the other side of the village, and you don't have time to ride all the way around the island."
"Is Zandramas still here with my son?" Garion asked quickly, wanting to get that question out in the open before the elusive voice went off again.
"No," the voice replied. "She left about a week ago."
"We're gaining on her then," Garion said aloud, a sudden hope springing up in him.
"That would be a logical assumption."
"Where did she go?"
"Mallorea—but you knew that already, didn't you?"
"Could you get a little more specific? Mallorea's a big place."
"Don't do that, Garion," the voice told him. "UL told you that finding your son was your task. I'm not permitted to do it for you any more than he was. Oh, incidentally, keep an eye on Ce'Nedra."
"Ce'Nedra? What for?"
But the voice had already gone. Garion swore and rode back the way he had come.
A league or so to the south of the village, where a cove sheltered by two jutting headlands ran back into the shore line, the sword strapped across his back tugged at him. He reined in sharply and drew the blade. It turned in his hand to point unerringly due inland.
He trotted his horse up the hill, with the blade of Iron-grip's sword resting on the pommel of his saddle. The trail did not veer. Ahead of him lay a long, grassy slope and then the misty edge of the evergreen forest. He considered the situation for a moment and decided that it might be better to go back and tell the others, rather than pursue Zandramas alone. As he turned his horse toward the village, he glanced down at the shallow waters of the cove. There, lying on its side beneath the water, lay the sunken wreck of a small ship. His face grew bleak. Once again, Zandramas had rewarded those who had aided her by killing them. He kicked his mount into a loping canter and rode back across the foggy meadows lying between the sea and the dark forest toward the village.
It was nearly noon when he reached the house Vard had provided for them, and he swung down out of his saddle, controlling his excitement as best he could.
"Well?" Belgarath, who sat before the fire with a mug in his hand, asked as Garion entered the room.
"The trail's about a league to the south."
Polgara, seated at the table, looked up quickly from the piece of parchment she had been examining. "Are you sure?" she asked.
"The Orb is." Garion unfastened his cloak. "Oh—I had another visit from our friend." He tapped his forehead. "He told me that Zandramas left the island about a week ago and that she's going to Mallorea. That's about all I could get out of him. Where's Ce'Nedra? I want to tell her that we're getting closer."
"She's asleep," Polgara said, carefully folding the parchment.
"Is that part of one of those books Grandfather's been looking for?" he asked.
"No, dear. It's the recipe for that soup we had at supper last night." She turned to Belgarath. "Well, father? Do we take up the trail again?"
He thought about it, staring absently into the fire dancing on the hearth. "I'm not sure, Pol," he answered finally. "We were deliberately brought here to this island for something, and I don't think that locating the trail was the only reason. I think we ought to stay here for another day or so."
"We've gained a great deal of time on Zandramas, father," she reminded him. "Why waste it by just sitting in one place?"
"Call it a hunch, Pol. I've got a very strong feeling that we're supposed to wait here for something—something fairly important."
"I think it's a mistake, father."
"That's your privilege, Pol. I've never told you what to think."
"Only what to do," she added tartly.
"That's my privilege. It's a father's duty to guide His children. I'm sure you understand."
The door opened, and Silk and Velvet came in out of the sunless noon. "Did you find the trail?" Silk asked, removing his cloak.
Garion nodded. "She came ashore a league or so down the beach. Then she sank the boat that brought her. It's lying on the bottom with the full crew aboard, about fifty yards from shore."
"She's running true to form, then," Silk noted.
"What have you been up to this morning?" Garion asked him.
"Snooping."
"The term is 'intelligence gathering,' Kheldar," Velvet said primly, also removing her cloak and smoothing the front of her dress.
"It amounts to the same thing, doesn't it?"
"Of course, but 'snooping' has such a nasty ring to it."
"Did you find out anything?" Garion asked.
"Not much," Silk admitted, coming to the fire to warm himself. "All these people are terribly polite, but they're very good at evading direct questions. I can tell you one thing, though. This place isn't a real village—at least not in the sense that we understand it. It's all very carefully set up to look crude and rustic, and the people here go through the motions of tending crops and herds, but it's all for show. Their tools show almost no signs of use, and their animals are just a bit too well groomed."