"I might believe you if I knew what it was."
"It marks you as vowed to me, as this marks me the same to you."
"This" was a stout band of what appeared to be snakeskin about the Cimmerian"s left wrist. By some quirk of the light, or perhaps of magic, it was in the same colors as Valeria"s wreath.
"I see. Or at least I see what you are wearing. Will you tell me what you might win or lose, or leave me to guess it for myself?"
Conan frowned. "It"s not easy to tell it quickly-"
"Then take as much time as you need, and half the night besides. I have nothing better to do, of course, than listen to a Cimmerian"s tales."
"No, you don"t," Conan agreed with infuriating cheerfulness. Again the urge to geld him warred with the urge to laugh, and laughter won.
They sat on a fallen log that seemed to have once been roughly carved but was now half-rotted and altogether covered with moss and ferns.
Conan drew a borrowed whetstone from a borrowed pouch at his borrowed belt and began to work on the edge of his sword. The blade, at least, was not borrowed.
It seemed that Conan was to submit to the G.o.ds" judgment of him by challenging an Ichiribu warrior to various contests. They would throw spears and tridents, duel with club and shield, run, jump, climb, swim, paddle canoes-
"No bedding wenches?"
"I doubt they could find enough, and a G.o.dless man is taboo to the women about here anyway."
"Is a G.o.dless woman taboo to the men?"
"You"re not as G.o.dless as I am, it seems."
Valeria could think of no sufficient reply, so let the Cimmerian continue.
"I need not win every contest, but I must meet a picked warrior in every one and show skill in all. Otherwise, they may name me a man lacking the G.o.ds" favor, or even a coward."
"Small fear of that." Valeria had a sense of much left unsaid, and perhaps to remain so.
But the Cimmerian was honest, she would give him that. He frowned.
"If the G.o.ds favor me through the other contests, we end on the dance-drum. There the winner has the final blessing of the G.o.ds. The loser dies. If I win, all is well. If I lose-" he shrugged "-I suppose I"ll not be king of a Hyborian realm, but that"s not so great a loss."
"Not to be a king?" Had Dobanpu conjured away the Cimmerian"s wits?
"A throne, woman, is something a man sits on.
You"re an archer. You know how easy it is to shoot a sitting bird-or a sitting king."
"I"ve not been in the habit of shooting at kings, but you may have the right of it." Then her light tone broke. "So, Conan-if you lose-"
"I die. You live. If you don"t fight to save me or avenge me-"
"I did not come here from an Iranistani harem!"
"Nor are you going to one. You must vow yourself to a new man, but you may choose him. I also think you may ask the help of Dobanpu and his daughter Emwaya. Seyganko, too, knows the warriors of the Ichiribu and seems to have a good head and heart. I"m glad I"m not to fight him. His folk will need him in the coming war."
"So who are you fighting?"
"Some stout fellow named Aondo. They say he"s larger than I am-"
"They"ve matched you with an ape?"
"The ape would be the loser," Conan said. That again hinted of past battles against uncommon foes, but Valeria took no heart from it. What she wanted was a.s.surance that she would not be at the mercy of the Ichiribu if Conan lost-and that a.s.surance, she realized, was not to be forthcoming.
She took more comfort from an undoubted truth- that Aondo was not likely to best the Cimmerian in a fair battle. Was there anything she could do or leave undone to keep the fight fair?
Precious little, she realized, and some of the comfort washed away with the rain on her skin. Silently she cursed her folly in fleeing south when she had left the fort. The next time she had to flee from unwanted embraces, she would look where she was going and try not to end in a land where she knew neither law, tongue, nor custom... and was at the mercy of another"s knowledge of all of them!
Ryku had not recognized the First Speaker among the circle of eight who had sought to conjure the Living Wind into the globe. Yet now the First Speaker showed signs of vast weariness in the way he slumped on his gilded stool. His eyes were cast on the lion"s skin on the floor, but they seemed as vacant as if he had at last become truly blind.
-Or had seen what even those who were called G.o.d-Men were not meant to see.
As custom demanded of a Silent Brother, Ryku was prostrate before the First Speaker. He lay thus until the chill of the stone floor began to creep through his limbs toward his heart. It had to be only his fancy, but the stone seemed colder than ever before. It was as if the Living Wind had leeched the warmth of the earth from all about it.
It was as well that his face was to the floor when that thought pa.s.sed through his mind.
"Arise, Ryku."
Ryku could not scramble to his feet quickly enough. The chill stone had stiffened his limbs, but he contrived to rise without loss of either balance or dignity.
"I have summoned you here because the Speakers to the Living Wind have need of you."
"This is an honor I have not dared hope-"
The First Speaker held up a hand. Ryku saw that the hand was thinner and paler than it had been the last time he had seen the man. It also seemed to tremble slightly.
"Spare me your modesty. You are not unknown to Chabano, Paramount Chief of the Kwanyi." It was not a question.
Ryku judged that this moment held opportunity as well as danger. He also judged that he should hold his tongue.
"Have you promised him anything in the name of the Speakers?" This time it was a question that demanded an answer.
"I have not." Which was entirely true, Ryku not being a fool.
"Will he believe you if you promise now?"
Ryku"s confusion was not altogether feigned. "What am I to promise?
Chabano is no fool, as I am sure you do not need telling, First Speaker."
"Indeed, I do not need to be told what I already know. You may promise him, in my name, some part of what he has asked for but not been granted."
"What must he give us?"
"You are bold, bargaining with me."