Mandorallen couched his lance and spurred his warhorse. The huge armored animal leaped forward, its hooves churning gravel, jumped the fire, and bore down on the astonished Grul. For a moment it looked as if their plan might work. The deadly, steel-pointed lance was leveled at Grul’s chest, and it seemed that nothing could stop it from plunging through his huge body. But the monster’s quickness again astonished them all. He leaped to one side and smashed his spiked club down on Mandorallen’s lance, shattering the stout wood.
The force of Mandorallen’s charge, however, could not be stopped. Horse and man crashed into the great brute with a deafening impact. Grul reeled back, dropping his club, tripping, falling with Mandorallen and his warhorse on top of him.
“Get him!” Barak roared, and they all dashed forward to attack the fallen Grul with swords and axes. The monster, however, levered his legs under Mandorallen’s thrashing horse and thrust the big animal off. A great, flailing fist caught Mandorallen in the side, throwing him for several yards. Durnik spun and dropped, felled by a glancing blow to the head even as Barak, Hettar, and Silk swarmed over the fallen Grul.
“Father!” Aunt Pol cried in a ringing voice.
There was suddenly a new sound directly behind Garion—first a deep, rumbling snarl followed instantly by a hair-raising howl. Garion turned quickly and saw the huge wolf he had seen once before in the forests of northern Arendia. The old gray wolf bounded across the fire and entered the fight, his great teeth flashing and tearing.
“Garion, I need you!” Aunt Pol was shaking off the panic-stricken princess and pulling her amulet out of her bodice. “Take out your medallion—quickly!”
He did not understand, but he drew his amulet out from under his tunic. Aunt Pol reached out, took his right hand, and placed the mark on his palm against the figure of the owl on her own talisman; at the same time, she took his medallion in her other hand. “Focus your will,” she commanded.
“On what?”
“On the amulets. Quickly!”
Garion brought his will to bear, feeling the power building in him tremendously, amplified somehow by his contact with Aunt Pol and the two amulets. Polgara closed her eyes and raised her face to the leaden sky. “Mother!” she cried in a voice so loud that the echo rang like a trumpet note in the narrow valley.
The power surged out of Garion in so vast a rush that he collapsed to his knees, unable to stand. Aunt Pol sank down beside him.
Ce’Nedra gasped.
As Garion weakly raised his head, he saw that there were two wolves attacking the raging Grul—the gray old wolf he knew to be his grandfather, and another, slightly smaller wolf that seemed surrounded by a strange, flickering blue light.
Grul had struggled to his feet and was laying about him with his huge fists as the men attacking him chopped futilely at his armored body. Barak was flung out of the fight and fell to his hands and knees, shaking his head groggily. Grul brushed Hettar aside, his eyes alight with dreadful glee as he lunged toward Barak with both huge arms raised. But the blue wolf leaped snarling at his face. Grul swung his fist and gaped with astonishment as it passed directly through the flickering body. Then he shrieked with pain and began to topple backward as Belgarath, darting in from behind to employ the wolf’s ancient tactic, neatly hamstrung him with great, ripping teeth. The towering Grul, howling, fell and struck the earth like some vast tree.
“Keep him down!” Barak roared, stumbling to his feet and staggering forward.
The wolves were ripping at Grul’s face, and he flailed his arms, trying to beat them away. Again and again his hands passed through the body of the strange, flickering blue wolf. Mandorallen, his feet spread wide apart and holding the hilt of his broadsword with both hands, chopped steadily at the monster’s body, his great blade shearing long rents in Grul’s breastplate. Barak swung huge blows at Grul’s head, his sword striking sparks from the rusty steel helmet. Hettar crouched at one side, eyes intent, sabre ready, waiting. Grul raised his arm to ward off Barak’s blows, and Hettar lunged, thrusting his sabre through the exposed armpit and into the huge chest. A bloody froth spouted from Grul’s mouth as the sabre ripped through his lungs. He struggled to a half sitting position.
Then Silk, who had lurked just at the edge of the fight, darted in, set the point of his dagger against the back of Grul’s neck and smashed a large rock against the dagger’s pommel. With a sickening crunch, the dagger drove through bone, angling up into the monster’s brain. Grul shuddered convulsively. Then he collapsed.
In the moment of silence that followed, the two wolves looked at each other across the monster’s dead face. The blue wolf seemed to wink once; in a voice which Garion could hear quite clearly—a woman’s voice—she said, “How remarkable.” With a seeming smile and one last flicker, she vanished.
The old gray wolf raised his muzzle and howled, a sound of such piercing anguish and loss that Garion’s heart wrenched within him.
Then the old wolf seemed to shimmer, and Belgarath knelt in his place. He rose slowly to his feet and walked back toward the fire, tears streaming openly down his grizzled cheeks.
15
“Is he going to be all right?” Barak asked anxiously, hovering over the still unconscious Durnik as Aunt Pol examined the large purple contusion on the side of the smith’s face.
“It’s nothing serious,” she replied in a voice seeming to droop with a great weariness.
Garion sat nearby with his head in his hands. He felt as if all the strength had been wrenched out of his body.
Beyond the heaped coals of the rapidly dying bonfire, Silk and Hettar were struggling to remove Mandorallen’s dented breastplate. A deep crease running diagonally from shoulder to hip gave mute evidence of the force of Grul’s blow and placed so much stress on the straps beneath the shoulder plates that they were almost impossible to unfasten.
“I think we’re going to have to cut them,” Silk said.
“I pray thee, Prince Kheldar, avoid that if possible,” Mandorallen answered, wincing as they wrenched at the fastenings. “Those straps are crucial to the fit of the armor, and are most difficult to replace properly.”
“This one’s coming now,” Hettar grunted, prying at a buckle with a short iron rod. The buckle released suddenly and the taut breastplate rang like a softly struck bell.
“Now I can get it,” Silk said, quickly loosening the other shoulder buckle.
Mandorallen sighed with relief as they pulled off the dented breastplate. He took a deep breath and winced again.
“Tender right here?” Silk asked, putting his fingers lightly to the right side of the knight’s chest. Mandorallen grunted with pain, and his face paled visibly. “I think you’ve got some cracked ribs, my splendid friend,” Silk told him. “You’d better have Polgara take a look.”
“In a moment,” Mandorallen said. “My horse?”
“He’ll be all right,” Hettar replied. “A strained tendon in his right foreleg is all.”
Mandorallen let out a sigh of relief. “I had feared for him.”
“I feared for us all there for a while,” Silk said. “Our oversized playmate there was almost more than we could handle.”
“Good fight, though,” Hettar remarked.
Silk gave him a disgusted look, then glanced up at the scudding gray clouds overhead. He jumped across the glowing coals of their fire and went over to where Belgarath sat staring into the icy river. “We’re going to have to get off this bar, Belgarath,” he urged. “The weather’s going bad on us again, and we’ll all freeze to death if we stay out here in the middle of the river tonight.”
“Leave me alone,” Belgarath muttered shortly, still staring at the river.
“Polgara?” Silk turned to her.
“Just stay away from him for a while,” she told him. “Go find a sheltered place for us to stay for a few days.”