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Castle of Wizardry

Castle of Wizardry

Titel: Castle of Wizardry Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: David Eddings
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suddenly." Ce'Nedra giggled then as a thought suddenly struck her. "Poor Garion." She laughed.
    "Why poor Garion?"
    "I was horrid to him, wasn't I?"
    "Moderately horrid, yes."
    "How were any of you able to stand me?"
    "We clenched our teeth frequently."
    "Do you think he'd be proud of me - if he knew what I'm doing, I mean?"
    "Yes," Polgara told her, "I think he would be."
    "I'm going to make it all up to him, you know," Ce'Nedra promised. "I'm going to be the best wife in the world."
    "That's nice, dear."
    "I won't scold or shout or anything."
    "Don't make promises you can't keep, Ce'Nedra," Polgara said wisely.
    "Well," the little princess amended, "almost never anyway."
    Polgara smiled. "We'll see."
    The Mimbrate knights were encamped on the great plain before the city of Vo Mimbre. Together with their men-at-arms, they comprised a formidable army, glittering in the sunlight.
    "Oh dear," Ce'Nedra faltered as she stared down at the vast gathering from the hilltop where she and the Alorn Kings had ridden to catch the first glimpse of the city.
    "What's the problem?" Rhodar asked her.
    "There are so many of them."
    "That's the whole idea, isn't it?"
    A tall Mimbrate knight with dark hair and beard, wearing a black velvet surcoat over his polished armor, galloped up the hill and reined in some yards before them. He looked from face to face, then inclined his head in a polite bow. He turned to Mandorallen. "Greetings to the Bastard of Vo Mandor from Korodullin, King of Arendia."
    "You still haven't gotten that straightened out, have you?" Barak muttered to Mandorallen.
    "I have not had leisure, my Lord," Mandorallen replied. He turned to the knight. "Hail and well-met, Sir Andorig. I pray thee, convey our greetings to his Majesty and advise him that we come in peace - which he doubtless doth know already."
    "I will, Sir Mandorallen," Andorig responded.
    "How's your apple tree doing, Andorig?" Barak asked, grinning openly.
    "It doth flourish, my Lord of Trellheim," Andorig answered proudly. "My care for it bath been most tender, and I have hopes of a bounteous harvest. I am confident that I have not disappointed Holy Belgarath." He turned and clattered back down the hill, sounding his horn every hundred yards or so.
    "What was that all about?" King Anheg asked his red-bearded cousin with a puzzled frown.
    "We've been here before," Barak replied. "Andorig didn't believe us when we told him who Belgarath was. Belgarath made an apple tree grow up out of the stones of the courtyard, and that sort of convinced him."
    "I pray thee," Mandorallen said then, his eyes clouded with a sudden pain. "I see the approach of dear friends. I shall return presently." He moved his horse at a canter toward a knight and a lady who were riding out from the city.
    "Good man there," Rhodar mused, watching the great knight as he departed. "But why do I get the feeling that when I'm talking to him my words are bouncing off solid bone?"
    "Mandorallen is my knight," Ce'Nedra quickly came to the defense of her champion. "He doesn't need to think. I'll do his thinking for him." She stopped suddenly. "Oh dear," she said. "That sounds dreadful, doesn't it?"
    King Rhodar laughed. "You're a treasure, Ce'Nedra," he said fondly, "but you do tend to blurt things out on occasion."
    "Who are those people?" Ce'Nedra asked, curiously watching as Mandorallen rode to meet the couple who had emerged from the gates of Vo Mimbre.
    "That's the Baron of Vo Ebor," Durnik replied quietly, "and his wife, the Baroness Nerina. Mandorallen's in love with her."
    "What?"
    "It's all very proper," Durnik assured her quickly. "I didn't understand it at first myself, but I guess it's the sort of thing that happens here in Arendia. It's a tragedy, of course. All three of them are suffering terribly." The good man sighed.
    "Oh dear," Ce'Nedra said, biting her lip. "I didn't know - and I've treated him so badly at times."
    "I'm sure he'll forgive you, princess," Durnik told her. "He has a very great heart."
    A short time later, King Korodullin rode out from the city, accompanied by Mandorallen and a score of armored knights. Ce'Nedra had met the young King of Arendia several years before, and she remembered him as a pale, thin young man with a beautiful voice. On this occasion he was dressed in full armor and a crimson surcoat. He raised his visor as he approached. "Your Majesty," he greeted her gravely, "we have awaited thy coming with great anticipation."
    "Your Majesty is too

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