Conan had not reached the secret door when the creak of a hinge behind him made him whirl. The plain door at the opposite end was opening.
Conan sprinted for it as an armed man stepped through.
It was a Hyrkanian like the one Conan had slain earlier. As he sighted Conan rushing upon him, his breath hissed between his teeth and he reached for his scimitar.
With a leap Conan was upon him and drove him back against the closing door with the point of his knife p.r.i.c.king the Hyrkanian"s chest "Silence!" he hissed.
The guard froze, pallor tinging his yellowish skin. Gingerly he drew his hand away from his sword hilt and spread both arms in token of surrender.
"Are there any other guards?" asked Conan.
"Nay, by Tarim! I am the only one."
"Where"s the Iranistani girl, Nanaia?" Conan thought he knew where she was but hoped to learn by indirection whether her escape had been discovered and whether she Bad been recaptured.
"The G.o.ds know!" said the guard. "I was with the party of guards who brought the Zuagir dogs to the dungeon and found our comrade in the cell with his neck half sliced through and the wench gone. Such shouting and rushing to and fro in the palace! But I was told off to guard the Zuagirs, so I cannot tell more."
"Zuagirs?" said Conan.
"Aye, those who wrongly let you up the Stair. For that they will die tomorrow."
"Where are they now?"
"In the other bank of cells, through yonder door. I have just now come from them."
"Then turn around and march back through that door. No tricks!"
The man opened the door and stepped through as if he were treading on naked razors. They came into another corridor lined with cells. At Conan"s appearance, there was a hiss of breath from two of these cells.
Bearded faces crowded the grilles and lean hands gripped the bars. The seven prisoners glared silently at him with venomous hate in their eyes. Conan dragged his prisoner in front of these cells and said:
"You were faithful minions; why are you locked up?"
Antar the son of Adi spat at him. "Because of you, out-land dog! You surprised us on the Stair, and the Magus sentenced us to die even before he learned you were a spy. He said we were either knaves or fools to be caught off guard, so at dawn we die under the knives of Zahak"s slayers, may Hanuman curse him and you!"
"Yet you will attain Paradise," Conan reminded them, "because you have faithfully served the Magus of the Sons of Yezm."
"May the dogs gnaw the bones of the Magus of Yezm!" replied one with whole-hearted venom, and another said: "Would that you and the Magus were chained together in h.e.l.l!" "We spit on his Paradise! It is all lies and tricks with drugs!"
Conan reflected that Virata had fallen short of getting the allegiance his ancestors boasted, whose followers gladly slew themselves at command.
He had taken a bunch of keys from the guard and now weighed them thoughtfully in his hand. The eyes of the Zuagirs fixed upon them with the aspect of men in h.e.l.l who look upon an open door.
"Antar the son of Adi," he said, "your hands are stained with the blood of many men, but when I knew you before, you did not violate your sworn oaths. The Magus has abandoned you and cast you from his service. You are no longer his men, you Zuagirs. You owe him nothing."
Antar"s eyes were those of a wolf. "Could I but send him to Arallu ahead of me, I should die happy!"
All stared tensely at Conan, who said: "Will you swear, each man by the honor of his clan, to follow and serve me until vengeance is accomplished, or death releases you from the vow?" He put the keys behind him so as not to seem to flaunt them too flagrantly before helpless men. "Virata will give you nothing but the death of a dog. I offer you revenge and, at worst, a chance to die with honor."
Antar"s eyes blazed and his sinewy hands quivered as they gripped the bars. "Trust us!" he said.
"Aye, we swear!" clamored the men behind him. "Harken, Conan, we swear, each by the honor of his clan!"
He was turning the key in the lock before they finished swearing. Wild, cruel, turbulent, and treacherous these desert men might be by civilized standards, but they had their code of honor, and it was close enough to that of Conan"s kin in far-distant Cimmeria so that he understood it.
Tumbling out of the cell they laid hold of the Hyrkanian, shouting: "Slay him! He is one of Zahak"s dogs!"
Conan tore the man from their grasp and dealt the most persistent a buffet that stretched him on the floor, though it did not seem to arouse any particular resentment.
"Have done!" he growled. "This is my man, to do with as I like." He thrust the cowering Hyrkanian before him down the corridor and back into the other dungeon corridor, followed by the Zuagirs. Having sworn allegiance, they followed blindly without questions. In the other corridor, Conan ordered the Hyrkanian to strip. The man did, shivering in fear of torture.
"Change clothes with him," was Conan"s next command to Antar. As the fierce Zuagir began to obey, Conan said to another man: "Step through that door at the end of the corridor-"
"But the devil-ape!" cried the man addressed. "h.e.l.l tear me to pieces!"
"He"s dead. I slew him with this. Outside the door, behind a rock, you"ll find a dead man. Take his dagger, and also fetch the sword you"ll see lying near there."
The desert Shemite gave Conan an awed glance and departed. Conan handed his dagger to another Zuagir and the Hyrkanian"s wavy-edged dagger to still another. Others at his direction bound and gagged the guard and thrust him through the secret door, which Conan opened, into the tunnel. Antar stood up in the spired helmet, long-sleeved coat, and silken trousers of the Hyrkanian. His features were oriental enough to fool anyone who was expecting to see a Hyrkanian in that garb. Conan meanwhile pulled Antar"s kaffia over his own head, letting it hang well down in front to hide his features.
"Two still unarmed," said Conan, running his eyes over them. "Follow me."
He reentered the tunnel, stepped over the body of the bound guardsman, and strode along the tunnel, past the peepholes and into the darker stretch beyond. At the foot of the stair he halted.
"Nanaia!" he called softly. There was no response.
Scowling in the dark, Conan groped his way up the stair. There was no sign of Nanaia, although at the top of the stair, just inside the masked panel, he found the two swords he had left there earlier. Now each of the eight men had a weapon of some sort.
A glance through a peephole in the masked panel showed the chamber where Conan had slept to be empty. Conan opened the panel, a crack at first, then all the way.
"They must have found the girl," he whispered to An-tar. "Where would they take her if not back to the cells?"
"The Magus has girls who have committed faults chastised in his throne room, where he gave you audience this morning."
"Then lead-what"s that?"
Conan whirled at the sound of the slow drumming that he had heard earlier, in the ravines. Again it seemed to come out of the earth. The Zuagirs looked at one another, paling under their swarthy skins.
"None knows," said Antar with a visible shudder. "The sound started months ago and since then has become stronger and comes more and more often. The first time, the Magus turned the city upside down looking for the source. When he found none he desisted and ordered that no man should pay heed to the drumming or even speak of it. Gossip says he has been busy of nights in his oratory, striving with spells and divinations to learn the < source="" of="" the="" sound,="" but="" the="" gossip="" does="" not="" say="" he="" has="" found="">
The sound had ceased while Antar was speaking. Conan said: "Well, lead me to this chamber of chastis.e.m.e.nt. The rest of you close up and walk as if you owned the place, but quietly. We may fool some of the palace dogs."
"Through the Paradise Garden would be the best way," said Antar. "A strong guard of Stygians would be posted before the main door to the throne room at night."
The corridor outside the chamber was empty. The Zuagirs took the lead.
With nightfall, the atmosphere of silence and mystery had thickened over the palace of the Magus. Lights burned more dimly; shadows hung thickly, and no breeze stole in to ruffle the dully shimmering tapestries.
The Zuagirs knew the way well. A ragged-looking gang, with furtive feet and blazing eyes, they stole swiftly along the dim, richly-decorated hallways like a band of midnight thieves. They kept to pa.s.sages little frequented at that time of night. The party had encountered no one when they came suddenly to a door, gilded and barred, before which stood two giant black Kus.h.i.tes with naked tulwars.
The Kus.h.i.tes silently lifted their tulwars at the sight of the unauthorized invaders; they were mutes. Eager to begin their vengeance, the Zuagirs swarmed over the two blacks, the man with swords engaging them while the others grappled and dragged them down and stabbed them to death in a straining, sweating, swearing knot of convulsing effort It was butchery, but necessary.