"Keep watch here," Conan commanded one of the Zuagirs. He threw open the door and strode out into the garden, now empty in the starlight, its blossoms glimmering whitely, its dense trees and shrubbery ma.s.ses of dusky mystery. The Zuagirs, now armed with the swords of the blacks, swaggered after him.
Conan headed for the balcony, which he knew overhung the garden, cleverly masked by the branches of trees. Three Zuagirs bent their backs for him to stand upon. In an instant he had found the window from which he and Virata had looked. The next instant he was through it, making no more noise than a cat.
Sounds came from beyond the curtain that masked the balcony alcove: a woman sobbing in terror and the voice of Virata.
Peering through the hanging, Conan saw the Magus lolling on the throne under the pearl-sewn canopy. The guards no longer stood like ebon images on either side of him. They were squatting before the dais in the middle of the floor, whetting daggers and heating irons in a glowing brazier. Nanaia was stretched out between them, naked, spread-eagled on the floor with her wrists and ankles lashed to pegs driven into holes in the floor. No one else was in the room, and the bronze doors were closed and bolted.
"Tell me how you escaped from the cell," commanded Virata.
"No! Never!" She bit her lip in her struggle to keep her self-control.
"Was it Conan?"
"Did you ask for me?" said Conan as he stepped from the alcove, a grim smile on his dark, scarred face.
Virata sprang up with a cry. The Kus.h.i.tes straightened, snarling and reaching for weapons.
Conan sprang forward and drove his knife through the throat of one before he could get his sword clear. The other lunged toward the girl, lifting his scimitar to slay the victim before he died. Conan caught the descending blow on his knife and, with a lightning riposte, drove the knife to the hilt in the man"s midriff. The Kus.h.i.te"s momentum carried him forward against Conan, who crouched, placed his free hand on the black"s belly, and straightened, raising the Kus.h.i.te over his head. The Kus.h.i.te squirmed and groaned. Conan threw him to one side to fall with a heavy thump and expire.
Conan turned again to the Magus, who, instead of trying to flee, was advancing upon him with a fixed, wide-eyed stare. His eyes developed a peculiar luminous quality, which caught and held Conan"s gaze like a magnet.
Conan, straining forward to reach the wizard with his knife, felt as if he were suddenly laden with chains, or as if he were wading through the slimy swamps of Stygia where the black lotus grows. His muscles stood out like lumps of iron. Sweat beaded his skin as he strained at the invisible bonds.
Virata stalked slowly toward the Cimmerian, hands outspread before him, making little rhythmic gestures with his fingers and never taking his weird gaze from Conan"s eyes. The hands neared Conan"s throat. Conan had a flash of foreboding that, with the help of his arcane arts, this frail-looking man could snap even the Cimmerian"s bullneck like a rotten stick.
Nearer came the spreading hands. Conan strained harder than ever, but the resistance seemed to increase with every inch the Magus advanced toward him.
And then Nanaia screamed a long, high, piercing shriek, as of a soul being flayed in h.e.l.l.
The Magus half-turned, and in that instant his eyes left Conan"s. It was as if a ton had been lifted instantly from Conan"s back. Virata snapped his gaze back to Conan, but the Cimmerian knew better than to meet his eyes again. Peering through narrowed lids at the Magus" chest, Conan made a disembowelling thrust with his knife. The attack met only air as the Kosalan avoided it with a backward bound of superhuman litheness, then turned and ran toward the door, crying:
"Help! Guard! To me!"
Men were yelling and hammering against the door on the far side. Conan waited until the Magus" fingers were clawing at the bolts. Then he threw the knife so that the point struck Virata in the middle of his back and drove through his body, pinning him to the door like an insect to a board.
8. Wolves at Bay
Conan strode to the door and wrenched out his knife, letting the body of the Magus slip to the floor. Beyond the door the clamor grew, and out in the garden the Zuagirs were bawling to know if he was safe and loudly demanding permission to join him. He shouted to them to wait and hurriedly freed the girl, s.n.a.t.c.hing up a piece of silk from a divan to wrap around her. She clasped his neck with a hysterical sob, crying:
"Oh, Conan, I knew you would come! They told me you were dead, but I knew they could not slay you-"
"Save that till later," he said gruffly. Carrying the Kus.h.i.tes" swords, he strode back to the balcony and handed Nanaia down through the window to the Zuagirs, then swung down beside her.
"And now, lord?" said the Zuagirs, eager for more desperate work.
"Back the way we came, through the secret pa.s.sage and out the door to h.e.l.l."
They started at a run across the garden, Conan leading Nanaia by the hand. They had not gone a dozen paces when ahead of them a clang of steel vied with the din in the palace behind them. l.u.s.ty curses mingled with the clangor, a door slammed like a clap of thunder, and a figure came headlong through the shrubbery. It was the Zuagir they had left on guard at the gilded door. He was swearing and wringing blood from a slashed forearm.
"Hyrkanian dog? at the door!" he yelled. "Someone saw us kill the Kus.h.i.tes and ran for Zahak. I sworded one in the belly and slammed the door, but they"ll soon have it down!"
"Is there a way out of this garden that does not lead through the palace, Antar?" asked Conan.
"This way!" The Zuagir ran to the north wall, all but hidden in ma.s.ses of foliage. Across the garden they could hear the gilded door splintering under the onslaught of the nomads of the steppes. Antar slashed and tore at the fronds until he disclosed a cunningly-masked door set in the wall. Conan slipped the hilt of his knife into the chain of the antiquated lock and twisted the heavy weapon by the blade.
His muscles knotted: the Zuagirs watched him, breathing heavily, while the clamor behind them grew. With a final heave Conan snapped the chain.
They burst through into another, smaller garden, lit with hanging lanterns, just as the gilded door gave way and a stream of armed figures flooded into the Paradise Garden.
In the midst of the garden into which the fugitives had come stood the tall, slim tower Conan had noticed when he first entered the palace. A latticed balcony extended out a few feet from its second storey. Above the balcony, the tower rose square and slim to a height of over a hundred yards, then widened out into a walled observation platform.
"Is there another way out of here?" asked Conan.
"That door leads into the palace at a place not far from the stair down to the dungeon," said Antar, pointing.
"Make for it, then!" said Conan, slamming the door behind him and wedging it with a dagger. "That might hold it for a few seconds at least."
They raced across the garden to the door indicated, but it proved to be closed and bolted from the inside. Conan threw himself against it but failed to shake it.
Vengeful yells reached a crescendo behind them as the dagger-wedged door splintered inward. The aperture was crowded with wild faces and waving arms as Zahak"s men jammed there in their frantic eagerness.
The tower!" roared Conan. "If we can get in there..."
The Magus often made magics in the upper chamber," panted a Zuagir running after Conan. "He let none other than the Tiger in that chamber, but men say arms are stored there. Guards sleep below-"
"Come on!" bellowed Conan, racing in the lead and dragging Nanaia so that she seemed to fly through the air. The door in the wall gave way altogether, spilling a knot of Hyrkanians into the garden, falling over one another in their haste. From the noise that came from every other direction, it would be only a matter of minutes before men swarmed into the Garden of the Tower from all its apertures.
As Conan neared the tower, the door in the base opened as five bewildered guards came out They yelped in astonishment as they saw a knot of men rushing upon them with teeth bared and eyes blazing in the light of the hanging lanterns. Even as they reached for their blades, Conan was upon them. Two fell to his whirling blade as the Zuagirs swarmed over the remaining three, slashing and stabbing until the glittering figures lay still in puddles of crimson.
But now the Hyrkanians from the Paradise Garden were racing towards the tower too, their armor flashing and their accouterments jingling. The Zuagirs stormed into the tower. Conan slammed the bronze door and shot home a bolt that would have stopped the charge of an elephant, just as the Hyrkanians piled up against the door on the outside.
Conan and his people rushed up the stairs, eyes and teeth gleaming, all but one who collapsed halfway up from loss of blood. Conan carried him the rest of the way, laid him on the floor, and told Nanaia to bandage the ghastly gash made by the sword of one of the guards they had just killed. Then he took stock of their surroundings. They were in an upper chamber of the tower, with small windows and a door opening out on to the latticed balcony. The light from the lanterns in the garden, coming in little twinkles through the lattice and the windows, shone faintly on racks of arms lining the walls: helms, cuira.s.ses, bucklers, spears, swords, axes, maces, bows, and sheaves of arrows. There were enough arms here to equip a troop, and no doubt there were more in the higher chambers. Virata had made the tower his a.r.s.enal and keep as well as his magical oratory.
The Zuagirs chanted gleefully as they s.n.a.t.c.hed bows and quivers from the walls and went out on the balcony. Though several had minor wounds, they began shooting through the holes in the lattice into the yelling mob of soldiery swarming below.
A storm of arrows came back, clattering against the lattice-work and a few coming through. The men outside shot at random, as they could not see the Zuagirs in the shadow. The mob had surged to the tower from all directions. Zahak was not in sight, but a hundred or so of his Hyrkanians were, and a welter of men of a dozen other races. They swarmed about the garden yelling like fiends.
The lanterns, swinging wildly under the impact of bodies stumbling against the slender trees, lit a ma.s.s of twisted faces with white eyeb.a.l.l.s rolling madly upward. Blades flickered lightninglike all over the garden. Bowstrings tw.a.n.ged blindly. Bushes and shrubs were shredded underfoot as the mob milled and eddied. Thump! They had obtained a beam and were using it as a ram against the door.
"Get those men with the ram!" barked Conan, bending the stiffest bow he had been able to find in the racks.
The overhang of the balcony kept the besieged from seeing those at the front end of the ram, but as they picked off those in the rear, those in front had to drop the timber because of its weight Looking around, Conan was astonished to see Nanaia, her sheet of silk wrapped around her waist to make a skirt, shooting with the Zuagirs.
"I thought I told you-" he began, but she only said:
"Curse it, have you nothing I can use as a bracer? The bowstring is cutting my arm to ribbons."
Conan turned away with a baffled sigh and resumed shooting his own bow.
He understood the celerity with which he and his men had been trapped when he heard Olgerd Vladislav"s voice lifted like the slash of a saber above the clamor. The Zaporoskan must have learned of Virata"s death within minutes and taken instant command.