Eragon: Chapter 53
Eragon: Book One (The Inheritance cycle 1)
ERAGON STRETCHED INÂ the hall; he was stiff from sitting so long. Behind him, the Twins entered Ajihadâs study and closed the door. Eragon looked at Orik. âIâm sorry that youâre in trouble because of me,â he apologized.
âDonât bother yourself,â grunted Orik, tugging on his beard. âAjihad gave me what I wanted.â
Even Saphira was startled by the statement. âWhat do you mean?â said Eragon. âYou canât train or fight, and youâre stuck guarding me. How can that be what you wanted?â
The dwarf eyed him quietly. âAjihad is a good leader. He understands how to keep the law yet remain just. I have been punished by his command, but Iâm also one of Hrothgarâs subjects. Under his rule, Iâm still free to do what I wish.â
Eragon realized it would be unwise to forget Orikâs dual loyalty and the split nature of power within Tronjheim. âAjihad just placed you in a powerful position, didnât he?â
Orik chuckled deeply. âThat he did, and in such a way the Twins canât complain about it. Thisâll irritate them for sure. Ajihadâs a tricky one, he is. Come, lad, Iâm sure youâre hungry. And we have to get your dragon settled in.â
Saphira hissed. Eragon said, âHer name is Saphira.â
Orik made a small bow to her. âMy apologies, Iâll be sure to remember that.â He took an orange lamp from the wall and led them down the hallway.
âCan others in Farthen Dûr use magic?â asked Eragon, struggling to keep up with the dwarfâs brisk pace. He cradled Zarâroc carefully, concealing the symbol on the sheath with his arm.
âFew enough,â said Orik with a swift shrug under his mail. âAnd the ones we have canât do much more than heal bruises. Theyâve all had to tend to Arya because of the strength needed to heal her.â
âExcept for the Twins.â
âOeÃ,â grumbled Orik. âShe wouldnât want their help anyway; their arts are not for healing. Their talents lie in scheming and plotting for powerâto everyone elseâs detriment. Deynor, Ajihadâs predecessor, allowed them to join the Varden because he needed their support ⦠you canât oppose the Empire without spellcasters who can hold their own on the field of battle. Theyâre a nasty pair, but they do have their uses.â
They entered one of the four main tunnels that divided Tronjheim. Clusters of dwarves and humans strolled through it, voices echoing loudly off the polished floor. The conversations stopped abruptly as they saw Saphira; scores of eyes fixed on her. Orik ignored the spectators and turned left, heading toward one of Tronjheimâs distant gates. âWhere are we going?â asked Eragon.
âOut of these halls so Saphira can fly to the dragonhold above Isidar Mithrim, the Star Rose. The dragonhold doesnât have a roofâTronjheimâs peak is open to the sky, like that of Farthen Dûrâso she, that is, you, Saphira, will be able to glide straight down into the hold. It is where the Riders used to stay when they visited Tronjheim.â
âWonât it be cold and damp without a roof?â asked Eragon.
âNay.â Orik shook his head. âFarthen Dûr protects us from the elements. Neither rain nor snow intrude here. Besides, the holdâs walls are lined with marble caves for dragons. They provide all the shelter necessary. All you need fear are the icicles; when they fall theyâve been known to cleave a horse in two.â
, assured Saphira.
.
.
Eragon crossed his arms, unwilling to talk further. He was dazed by the change in circumstances from the day before. Their mad race from Gilâead was finally over, but his body expected to continue running and riding. âWhere are our horses?â
âIn the stables by the gate. We can visit them before leaving Tronjheim.â
They exited Tronjheim through the same gate they had entered. The gold griffins gleamed with colored highlights garnered from scores of lanterns. The sun had moved during Eragonâs talk with Ajihadâlight no longer entered Farthen Dûr through the crater opening. Without those moted rays, the inside of the hollow mountain was velvety black. The only illumination came from Tronjheim, which sparkled brilliantly in the gloom. The city-mountainâs radiance was enough to brighten the ground hundreds of feet away.
Orik pointed at Tronjheimâs white pinnacle. âFresh meat and pure mountain water await you up there,â he told Saphira. âYou may stay in any of the caves. Once you make your choice, bedding will be laid down in it and then no one will disturb you.â
âI thought we were going to go together. I donât want to be separated,â protested Eragon.
Orik turned to him. âRider Eragon, I will do everything to accommodate you, but it would be best if Saphira waits in the dragonhold while you eat. The tunnels to the banquet halls arenât large enough for her to accompany us.â
âWhy canât you just bring me food in the hold?â
âBecause,â said Orik with a guarded expression, âthe food is prepared down here, and it is a long way to the top. If you wish, a servant could be sent up to the hold with a meal for you. It will take some time, but you could eat with Saphira then.â
, Eragon thought, astonished that they would do so much for him. But the way Orik said it made him wonder if the dwarf was testing him somehow.
, said Saphira.
.
Eragon looked at her thoughtfully, then said to Orik, âIâll eat down here.â The dwarf smiled, seeming satisfied. Eragon unstrapped Saphiraâs saddle so she could lie down without discomfort.
, she said, gathering up the sword and saddle with her claws.
.
, he said, disquieted.
With an explosive leap Saphira swept off the ground and into the still air. The steady whoosh of her wings was the only sound in the darkness. As she disappeared over the rim of Tronjheimâs peak, Orik let out a long breath. âAh boy, you have been blessed indeed. I find a sudden longing in my heart for open skies and soaring cliffs and the thrill of hunting like a hawk. Still, my feet are better on the groundâpreferably under it.â
He clapped his hands loudly. âI neglect my duties as host. I know youâve not dined since that pitiful dinner the Twins saw fit to give you, so come, letâs find the cooks and beg meat and bread from them!â
Eragon followed the dwarf back into Tronjheim and through a labyrinth of corridors until they came to a long room filled with rows of stone tables only high enough for dwarves. Fires blazed in soapstone ovens behind a long counter.
Orik spoke words in an unfamiliar language to a stout ruddy-faced dwarf, who promptly handed them stone platters piled with steaming mushrooms and fish. Then Orik took Eragon up several flights of stairs and into a small alcove carved out of Tronjheimâs outer wall, where they sat cross-legged. Eragon wordlessly reached for his food.
When their platters were empty, Orik sighed with contentment and pulled out a long-stemmed pipe. He lit it, saying, âA worthy repast, though it needed a good draught of mead to wash it down properly.â
Eragon surveyed the ground below. âDo you farm in Farthen Dûr?â
âNo, thereâs only enough sunlight for moss, mushrooms, and mold. Tronjheim cannot survive without supplies from the surrounding valleys, which is one reason why many of us choose to live elsewhere in the Beor Mountains.â
âThen there are other dwarf cities?â
âNot as many as we would like. And Tronjheim is the greatest of them.â Leaning on an elbow, Orik took a deep pull on his pipe. âYou have only seen the lower levels, so it hasnât been apparent, but most of Tronjheim is deserted. The farther up you go, the emptier it gets. Entire floors have remained untouched for centuries. Most dwarves prefer to dwell under Tronjheim and Farthen Dûr in the caverns and passageways that riddle the rock. Through the centuries we have tunneled extensively under the Beor Mountains. It is possible to walk from one end of the mountain range to the other without ever setting foot on the surface.â
âIt seems like a waste to have all that unused space in Tronjheim,â commented Eragon.
Orik nodded. âSome have argued for abandoning this place because of its drain on our resources, but Tronjheim does perform one invaluable task.â
âWhatâs that?â
âIn times of misfortune it can house our entire nation. There have been only three instances in our history when we have been forced to that extreme, but each time it has saved us from certain and utter destruction. That is why we always keep it garrisoned, ready for use.â
âIâve never seen anything as magnificent,â admitted Eragon.
Orik smiled around his pipe. âIâm glad you find it so. It took generations to build Tronjheimâand our lives are much longer than those of men. Unfortunately, because of the cursed Empire, few outsiders are allowed to see its glory.â
âHow many Varden are here?â
âDwarves or humans?â
âHumansâI want to know how many have fled the Empire.â
Orik exhaled a long puff of smoke that coiled lazily around his head. âThere are about four thousand of your kin here. But thatâs a poor indicator of what you want to know. Only people who wish to fight come here. The rest of them are under King Orrinâs protection in Surda.â
thought Eragon with a sinking feeling. The royal army alone numbered nearly sixteen thousand when it was fully marshaled, not counting the Urgals. âWhy doesnât Orrin fight the Empire himself?â he asked.
âIf he were to show open hostility,â said Orik, âGalbatorix would crush him. As it is, Galbatorix withholds that destruction because he considers Surda a minor threat, which is a mistake. Itâs through Orrinâs assistance that the Varden have most of their weapons and supplies. Without him, there would be no resisting the Empire.
âDonât despair over the number of humans in Tronjheim. There are many dwarves hereâmany more than you have seenâand all will fight when the time comes. Orrin has also promised us troops for when we battle Galbatorix. The elves pledged their help as well.â
Eragon absently touched Saphiraâs mind and found her busy eating a bloody haunch with gusto. He noticed once more the hammer and stars engraved on Orikâs helm. âWhat does that mean? I saw it on the floor in Tronjheim.â
Orik lifted the iron-bound cap off his head and brushed a rough finger over the engraving. âIt is the symbol of my clan. We are the Ingietum, metalworkers and master smiths. The hammer and stars are inlaid into Tronjheimâs floor because it was the personal crest of Korgan, our founder. One clan to rule, with twelve surrounding. King Hrothgar is Dûrgrimst Ingietum as well and has brought my house much glory, much honor.â
When they returned the platters to the cook, they passed a dwarf in the hall. He stopped before Eragon, bowed, and said respectfully, âArgetlam.â
The dwarf left Eragon fumbling for an answer, flushed with unease, yet also strangely pleased with the gesture. No one had bowed to him before. âWhat did he say?â he asked, leaning closer to Orik.
Orik shrugged, embarrassed. âItâs an elven word that was used to refer to the Riders. It means âsilver hand.ââ Eragon glanced at his gloved hand, thinking of the gedwëy ignasia that whitened his palm. âDo you wish to return to Saphira?â
âIs there somewhere I could bathe first? I havenât been able to wash off the grime of the road for a long time. Also, my shirt is bloodstained and torn, and it stinks. Iâd like to replace it, but I donât have any money to buy a new one. Is there a way I could work for one?â
âDo you seek to insult Hrothgarâs hospitality, Eragon?â demanded Orik. âAs long as you are in Tronjheim, you wonât have to buy a thing. Youâll pay for it in other waysâAjihad and Hrothgar will see to that. Come. Iâll show you where to wash, then fetch you a shirt.â
He took Eragon down a long staircase until they were well below Tronjheim. The corridors were tunnels nowâwhich cramped Eragon because they were only five feet highâand all the lanterns were red. âSo the light doesnât blind you when you leave or enter a dark cavern,â explained Orik.
They entered a bare room with a small door on the far side. Orik pointed. âThe pools are through there, along with brushes and soap. Leave your clothes here. Iâll have new ones waiting when you get out.â
Eragon thanked him and started to undress. It felt oppressive being alone underground, especially with the low rock ceiling. He stripped quickly and, cold, hurried through the door, into total darkness. He inched forward until his foot touched warm water, then eased himself into it.
The pool was mildly salty, but soothing and calm. For a moment he was afraid of drifting away from the door, into deeper water, but as he waded forward, he discovered the water reached only to his waist. He groped over a slippery wall until he found the soap and brushes, then scrubbed himself. Afterward he floated with his eyes closed, enjoying the warmth.
When he emerged, dripping, into the lighted room, he found a towel, a fine linen shirt, and a pair of breeches. The clothes fit him reasonably well. Satisfied, he went out into the tunnel.
Orik was waiting for him, pipe in hand. They climbed the stairs back up into Tronjheim, then exited the city-mountain. Eragon gazed at Tronjheimâs peak and called Saphira with his mind. As she flew down from the dragonhold, he asked, âHow do you communicate with people at the top of Tronjheim?â
Orik chuckled. âThatâs a problem we solved long ago. You didnât notice, but behind the open arches that line each level is a single, unbroken staircase that spirals around the wall of Tronjheimâs central chamber. The stairs climb all the way to the dragonhold above Isidar Mithrim. We call it Vol Turin, The Endless Staircase. Running up or down it isnât swift enough for an emergency, nor convenient enough for casual use. Instead, we use flashing lanterns to convey messages. There is another way too, though it is seldom used. When Vol Turin was constructed, a polished trough was cut next to it. The trough acts as a giant slide as high as a mountain.â
Eragonâs lips twitched with a smile. âIs it dangerous?â
âDo not think of trying it. The slide was built for dwarves and is too narrow for a man. If you slipped out of it, you could be thrown onto the stairs and against the arches, perhaps even into empty space.â
Saphira landed a spearâs throw away, her scales rustling dryly. As she greeted Eragon, humans and dwarves trickled out of Tronjheim, gathering around her with murmurs of interest. Eragon regarded the growing crowd uneasily. âYouâd better go,â said Orik, pushing him forward. âMeet me by this gate tomorrow morning. Iâll be waiting.â
Eragon balked. âHow will I know when itâs morning?â
âIâll have someone wake you. Now go!â Without further protest, Eragon slipped through the jostling group that surrounded Saphira and jumped onto her back.
Before she could take off, an old woman stepped forward and grasped Eragonâs foot with a fierce grip. He tried to pull away, but her hand was like an iron talon around his ankleâhe could not break her tenacious hold. The burning gray eyes she fixed on him were surrounded by a lifetimeâs worth of wrinklesâthe skin was folded in long creases down her sunken cheeks. A tattered bundle rested in the crook of her left arm.
Frightened, Eragon asked, âWhat do you want?â
The woman tilted her arm, and a cloth fell from the bundle, revealing a babyâs face. Hoarse and desperate, she said, âThe child has no parentsâthere is no one to care for her but me, and I am weak. Bless her with your power, Argetlam. Bless her for luck!â
Eragon looked to Orik for help, but the dwarf only watched with a guarded expression. The small crowd fell silent, waiting for his response. The womanâs eyes were still fastened on him. âBless her, Argetlam, bless her,â she insisted.
Eragon had never blessed anyone. It was not something done lightly in Alagaësia, as a blessing could easily go awry and prove to be more curse than boonâespecially if it was spoken with ill intent or lack of conviction.
he wondered.
âBless her, Argetlam, bless her.â
Suddenly decided, he searched for a phrase or expression to use. Nothing came to mind until, inspired, he thought of the ancient language. This would be a true blessing, spoken with words of power, by one of power.
He bent down and tugged the glove off his right hand. Laying his palm on the babeâs brow, he intoned, âAtra gülai un ilian tauthr ono un atra ono waÃse skölir frá rauthr.â The words left him unexpectedly weak, as if he had used magic. He slowly pulled the glove back on and said to the woman, âThat is all I can do for her. If any words have the power to forestall tragedy, it will be those.â
âThank you, Argetlam,â she whispered, bowing slightly. She started to cover the baby again, but Saphira snorted and twisted until her head loomed over the child. The woman grew rigid; her breath caught in her chest. Saphira lowered her snout and brushed the baby between the eyes with the tip of her nose, then smoothly lifted away.
A gasp ran through the crowd, for on the childâs forehead, where Saphira had touched her, was a star-shaped patch of skin as white and silvery as Eragonâs gedwëy ignasia. The woman stared at Saphira with a feverish gaze, wordless thanks in her eyes.
Immediately Saphira took flight, battering the awestruck spectators with the wind from her powerful wing strokes. As the ground dwindled away, Eragon took a deep breath and hugged her neck tightly.
he asked softly.
.
Loneliness suddenly flowered within Eragon, despite Saphiraâs presence. Their surroundings were so foreignâit struck him for the first time exactly how far he was from home. A destroyed home, but still where his heart lay.
he asked.
â
.
Saphira took a long time to answer, but her words were gentle when they came.
â
.
, he protested.
.
.
Eragon bowed his head.
â
.
, said Saphira.
â
.
, said Eragon, shaking his head.
. â¦
Saphira said firmly, .
, he said glumly.
.
, acknowledged Saphira, which surprised him because she rarely seemed perturbed. They were above Tronjheim now. Eragon looked down through the opening in its peak and saw the floor of the dragonhold: Isidar Mithrim, the great star sapphire. He knew that beneath it was nothing but Tronjheimâs great central chamber. Saphira descended to the dragonhold on silent wings. She slipped over its rim and dropped to Isidar Mithrim, landing with the sharp clack of claws.
asked Eragon.
. Eragon slid off her back and slowly turned in a circle, absorbing the unusual sight. They were in a round roofless room sixty feet high and sixty feet across. The walls were lined with the dark openings of caves, which differed in size from grottoes no larger than a man to a gaping cavern larger than a house. Shiny rungs were set into the marble walls so that people could reach the highest caves. An enormous archway led out of the dragonhold.
Eragon examined the great gem under his feet and impulsively lay down on it. He pressed his cheek against the cool sapphire, trying to see through it. Distorted lines and wavering spots of color glimmered through the stone, but its thickness made it impossible to discern anything clearly on the floor of the chamber a mile below them.
Saphira shook her enormous head.
. She turned and, without opening her wings, jumped twenty feet into the air, landing in a medium-sized cave. He clambered up after her.
The cave was dark brown on the inside and deeper than he had expected. The roughly chiseled walls gave the impression of a natural formation. Near the far wall was a thick cushion large enough for Saphira to curl up on. Beside it was a bed built into the side of the wall. The cave was lit by a single red lantern equipped with a shutter so its glow could be muted.
, said Eragon.
.
. Saphira curled up on the cushion, watching him. With a sigh he sank onto the mattress, weariness seeping through him.
â
.
She shuffled her wings into a more comfortable position.
.