As Eragon pushed away his empty bowl, Oromis said, âWould you like to see a fairth of your mother, Eragon?â
Eragon froze for a moment, astonished. âYes, please.â From within the folds of his white tunic, Oromis withdrew a shingle of thin gray slate, which he passed to Eragon.
The stone was cool and smooth between Eragonâs fingers. On the other side of it, he knew he would find a perfect likeness of his mother, painted by means of a spell with pigments an elf had set within the slate many years ago. A flutter of uneasiness ran through Eragon. He had always wanted to see his mother, but now that the opportunity was before him, he was afraid that the reality might disappoint him.
With an effort, he turned the slate over and beheld an imageâclear as a vision seen through a windowâof a garden of red and white roses lit by the pale rays of dawn. A gravel path ran through the beds of roses. And in the middle of the path was a woman, kneeling, cupping a white rose between her hands and smelling the flower, her eyes closed and a faint smile upon her lips. She was very beautiful, Eragon thought. Her expression was soft and tender, yet she wore clothes of padded leather, with blackened bracers upon her forearms and greaves upon her shins and a sword and dagger hanging from her waist. In the shape of her face, Eragon could detect a hint of his own features, as well as a certain resemblance to Garrow, her brother.
The image fascinated Eragon. He pressed his hand against the surface of the fairth, wishing that he could reach into it and touch her on the arm.
Oromis said, âBrom gave me the fairth for safekeeping before he left for Carvahall, and now I give it to you.â
Without looking up, Eragon asked, âWould you keep it safe for me as well? It might get broken during our traveling and fighting.â
The pause that followed caught Eragonâs attention. He wrenched his gaze away from his mother to see that Oromis appeared melancholy and preoccupied. âNo, Eragon, I cannot. You will have to make other arrangements for the preservation of the fairth.â
Eragon wanted to ask, but the sorrow in Oromisâs eyes dissuaded him.
Then Oromis said, âYour time here is limited, and we still have many matters to discuss. Shall I guess which subject you would like to address next, or will you tell me?â
With great reluctance, Eragon placed the fairth on the table and rotated it so that the image was upside down. âThe two times we have fought Murtagh and Thorn, Murtagh has been more powerful than any human ought to be. On the Burning Plains, he defeated Saphira and me because we did not realize how strong he was. If not for his change of heart, we would be prisoners in Urûâbaen right now. You once mentioned that you know how Galbatorix has become so powerful. Will you tell us now, Master? For our own safety, we need to know.â
âIt is not my place to tell you this,â said Oromis.
âThen whose is it?â demanded Eragon. âYou canâtââ
Behind Oromis, Glaedr opened one of his molten eyes, which was as large as a round shield, and said, .
Eragon frowned. âI donât understand. Why would you help Galbatorix? And how could you? There are only four dragons and an egg left in Alagaësia . . . arenât there?â
âStill alive . . . ?â Bewildered, Eragon glanced at Oromis, but the elf remained quiet, his face inscrutable. Even more disconcerting was that Saphira did not seem to share Eragonâs confusion.
The gold dragon turned his head on his paws to better look at Eragon, his scales scraping against one another.
he said, The implications of what Glaedr had said astounded Eragon. Shifting his gaze to Saphira, he asked, The scales on her neck rippled as she made an odd, serpentine motion with her head.
.
demanded Eragon.
she growled, .
Eragon scowled and turned back to the elf and the golden dragon. âWhy didnât you tell us of this sooner?â
Unstoppering the decanter, Oromis refilled his goblet with wine and said, âIn order to protect Saphira.â
âProtect her? From what?â
Glaedr said. Eragon was so surprised and outraged, he failed to regain his composure well enough to protest before Glaedr resumed speaking.
âDo you still have your heart of hearts within you?â Eragon asked.
The grass around the table bent under the blast of hot air that erupted from Glaedrâs nostrils.
.
Although Glaedrâs rebuke made Eragonâs cheeks sting, he still had the wherewithal to respond as he should, with a seated bow and the words âNo, Master.â Then he asked, âWhat . . . what happens if your Eldunarà breaks?â
. With an audible click, Glaedr blinked, his inner and outer eyelids flashing across the rayed orb of his iris.
.
âSo then,â said Eragon, âGalbatorix captured the EldunarÃ?â
Contrary to Eragonâs expectations, it was Oromis who replied. âHe did, but not all at once. It had been so long since anyone had truly threatened the Riders, many of our order had become careless about protecting the EldunarÃ. At the time Galbatorix turned against us, it was not uncommon for a Riderâs dragon to disgorge their Eldunarà merely for the sake of convenience.â
âConvenience?â
said Glaedr, âIn addition,â said Oromis, âa magician who possesses an Eldunarà can draw upon the dragonâs strength to bolster his spells, again without regard for where the dragon might be. Whenââ
A brilliantly colored hummingbird interrupted their conversation by darting across the table. Its wings a throbbing blur, the bird hovered over the bowls of fruit and lapped at the liquid oozing from a crushed blackberry, then flitted up and away, vanishing among the trunks of the forest.
Oromis resumed speaking: âWhen Galbatorix killed his first Rider, he also stole the heart of the Riderâs dragon. During the years Galbatorix spent hiding in the wilderness thereafter, he broke the dragonâs mind and bent it to his will, likely with the help of Durza. And when Galbatorix began his insurrection in earnest, with Morzan by his side, he was already stronger than most every other Rider. His strength was not merely magical but mental, for the force of the EldunarÃâs consciousness augmented his own.
âGalbatorix did not just try to kill the Riders and dragons. He made it his goal to acquire as many of the Eldunarà as he could, either by seizing them from Riders or by torturing a Rider until his dragon disgorged its heart of hearts. By the time we realized what Galbatorix was doing, he was already too powerful to stop. It helped Galbatorix that many Riders traveled not only with the Eldunarà of their own dragon but also with Eldunarà of dragons whose bodies were no more, for such dragons often became bored with sitting in an alcove and yearned for adventure. And of course, once Galbatorix and the Forsworn sacked the city of Doru Araeba on the island of Vroengard, he gained possession of the entire hoard of Eldunarà stored therein.
âGalbatorix engineered his success by using the might and wisdom of the dragons against all of Alagaësia. At first he was unable to control more than a handful of the Eldunarà he had captured. It is no easy thing to force a dragon to submit to you, no matter how powerful you might be. As soon as Galbatorix crushed the Riders and had installed himself as king in Urûâbaen, he dedicated himself to subduing the rest of the hearts, one by one.
âWe believe the task preoccupied him for the main part of the next forty years, during which time he paid little attention to the affairs of Alagaësiaâwhich is why the people of Surda were able to secede from the Empire. When he finished, Galbatorix emerged from seclusion and began to reassert his control over the Empire and the lands beyond. For some reason, after two and a half years of additional slaughter and sorrow, he withdrew to Urûâbaen again, and there he has dwelt ever since, not so solitary as before, but obviously focused upon some project known only to him. His vices are many, but he has not abandoned himself to debauchery; that much the Vardenâs spies have determined. More than that, though, we have not been able to discover.â
Lost deep in thought, Eragon stared off into the distance. For the first time, all of the stories he had heard about Galbatorixâs unnatural power made sense. A faint feeling of optimism welled up within Eragon as he said to himself, Unlikely as the prospect seemed, it heartened Eragon to know that the king did have a vulnerability, no matter how slight.
As Eragon continued to muse upon the subject, another question occurred to him. âWhy is it that Iâve never heard mention of the hearts of dragons in the stories of old? Surely if they are so important, the bards and scholars would speak of them.â
Oromis laid a hand flat on the table then and said, âOf all the secrets in Alagaësia, that of the Eldunarà is one of the most closely guarded, even among my own people. Throughout history, dragons have striven to hide their hearts from the rest of the world. They revealed their existence to us only after the magical pact between our races was established, and then only to a select few.â
âBut why?â
said Glaedr, âIs there no way for a dragon to defend themselves through their EldunarÃ?â Eragon asked.
Glaedrâs eye seemed to twinkle brighter than ever.
âWhy would they, then?â asked Eragon.
I said Saphira, the rich thrum of her thoughts running through Eragonâs mind.
âNot on their own,â said Oromis. âNot unless the inspiration to use magic should sweep over the dragon and allow them to break their Eldunarà from within, which to my knowledge has happened but rarely. The only other option would be for the dragon to convince someone else to smash the Eldunarà for them. That lack of control is another reason why dragons were extremely wary of transferring themselves into their heart of hearts, lest they trap themselves in a prison from which there was no escape.â
Eragon could feel Saphiraâs loathing at the thought of that prospect. She did not speak of it, however, but asked, âWe do not know the exact number,â said Oromis, âbut we estimate that his hoard contains many hundreds.â
A wriggle shimmered down Saphiraâs glittering length.
Oromis hesitated, and it was Glaedr who answered.
he said, startling Eragon with the use of the epithet, .
The base of Eragonâs skull began to throb, and he became increasingly aware of his weariness from the past four days of traveling. His exhaustion made it difficult to keep hold of thoughts for more than a few moments; at the slightest distraction, they slipped out of his grasp.
The tip of Saphiraâs tail twitched.
.
âThat is true,â said Oromis, âbut they are as much Galbatorixâs captives as Murtagh and Thorn.â
said Saphira.
âIt is something for us both to strive for,â said Eragon. âWe are their only hope.â He rubbed his brow with his right thumb, then said, âThere is still something I donât understand.â
âOh?â asked Oromis. âWherein lies your confusion?â
âIf Galbatorix draws his power from these hearts, how do they produce the energy he uses?â Eragon paused, searching for a better way to phrase his question. He gestured at the swallows flitting about in the sky. âEvery living thing eats and drinks to sustain itself, even plants. Food provides the energy our bodies need to function properly. It also provides the energy we need to work magic, whether we rely upon our own strength to cast a spell or make use of the strength of others. How can that be, though, with these EldunarÃ? They donât have bones and muscles and skin, do they? They donât eat, do they? So then, how do they survive? Where does their energy come from?â
Oromis smiled, his longish teeth glossy as enameled porcelain. âFrom magic.â
âMagic?â
âIf one defines magic as the manipulation of energy, which properly it is, then yes, magic. Where exactly the Eldunarà acquire their energy is a mystery to both us and the dragons; no one has ever identified the source. It may be they absorb sunlight, as do plants, or that they feed off the life forces of the creatures closest to them. Whatever the answer, it has been proven that when a dragon undergoes body death and their consciousness takes up sole residence in their heart of hearts, they bring with them however much spare strength was available within their body when it ceased to function. Thereafter, their store of energy increases at a steady pace for the next five to seven years, until they attain the full height of their power, which is immense indeed. The total amount of energy an Eldunarà can hold depends upon the size of the heart; the older a dragon, the larger their Eldunarà and the more energy it can absorb before becoming saturated.â
Thinking back to when he and Saphira had battled Murtagh and Thorn, Eragon said, âGalbatorix must have given Murtagh several EldunarÃ. Thatâs the only explanation for his increase in strength.â
Oromis nodded. âYou are fortunate Galbatorix did not lend him any more hearts, else it would have been easy for Murtagh to overwhelm you, Arya, and all the other spellcasters with the Varden.â
Eragon remembered how, both times he and Saphira had encountered Murtagh and Thorn, Murtaghâs mind had felt as if it contained multiple beings. Eragon shared his recollection with Saphira and said, .
said Saphira.
Hearts, heart.
. Inhaling, Eragon loosened the knot between his shoulder blades and leaned back in his chair. âAside from Saphiraâs heart of hearts, and Glaedrâs, are there any Eldunarà that Galbatorix hasnât captured?â
Faint lines appeared around the corners of Oromisâs down-turned mouth. âNone that we know of. After the fall of the Riders, Brom went searching for Eldunarà that Galbatorix might have overlooked, but without success. Nor, in all my years of scouring Alagaësia with my mind, have I detected so much as a whisper of a thought from an EldunarÃ. Every Eldunarà was well accounted for when Galbatorix and Morzan initiated their attack on us, and none of them vanished without explanation. It is inconceivable that any great store of Eldunarà might be lying hidden somewhere, ready to help us if we could but locate them.â
Although Eragon had expected no other answer, he still found it disappointing. âOne last question. When either a Rider or a Riderâs dragon dies, the surviving member of the pair would often waste away or commit suicide soon afterward. And those that didnât usually went mad from the loss. Am I right?â
said Glaedr.
âWhat would happen, though, if the dragon transferred their consciousness to their heart and then their body died?â
Through the soles of his boots, Eragon felt a faint tremor shake the ground as Glaedr shifted his position. The gold dragon said, said Saphira. Eragon nodded but stayed silent, for he was busy pondering all that had been said.