Karela tried to meet the dark eyes staring down at her, then closed her own in humiliation. It was clear from the look on Synelle"s face that she had never doubted that the red-haired woman could be brought to heel. Let them free her, Karela prayed, and she would show them the worth of pledge wrung from whips. She would ...
Suddenly the cords binding her were severed. Karela caught a flash of a dagger. She moved to grab it ... and sprawled in boneless agony on the stone floor, muscles stiff from long confinement barely able to do more than twitch. Slowly, painfully, she brought a hand up to drag the gag from her mouth. She wanted to weep. The dagger was gone from sight, and she had neither seen who had held it nor where it was hidden.
Even as she dropped the wadded cloth two of the women pulled her to her feet. She gasped with the pain; had they not supported her she could not have stood. One of the others began drawing an ivory comb through her tangled locks, while the last wiped her sweat away with soft, damp clothes.
Karela worked her mouth for the moisture to speak. "I"ll not sell you to a tavern," she managed. "I"ll tear your heart out with my bare hands."
"Good," Synelle said. "I feared your spirit might have been broken.
Often the journey here, bound, is enough for that. It is well that it was not in your case."
Karela sneered. "You want the pleasure of breaking me yourself, then?
You will not have it, because you cannot do it. And if you want Conan back-"
"Conan!" the n.o.blewoman cut her off, dark eyes widening in surprise.
"How do you come to know of the barbarian?"
"We were once," Karela began, then spluttered to a halt. She was tired, and spoke of things of which she had no wish to speak. "No matter how I know of him. If you want him, you"ll cease your threats and bargain."
Synelle trilled with laughter. "So you think I merely attempt to dispose of a rival. I should be furious that such as you could think of yourself as my rival, but I find it merely amusing. I expect he is a man who has known many women in his time, and if you are one of that number I see he has little discrimination in his choosing. That is at an end, now." She held out a slender palm. "I hold the barbarian there, wench. He will crawl to me on his belly when I call him, dance like a bear for a tin whistle at my command. And you think to be my rival?"
She threw back her head and laughed even harder.
"No woman could treat Conan so," Karela snapped. "I know, for I have tried, and by Derketo, I am ten times the woman you are."
"You are suitable for the rites," the silver-haired woman said coolly, "but I am High Priestess of Al"Kiir. Yet were I not, you would still not be woman enough to serve as my bowermaid. My tirewomen were n.o.bly born in Corinthia, and she who draws my bath and rubs me with oils was a princess in far Vendhya, yet to obey my slightest wish is now the whole of their lives. What can a jade of a bandit be beside such as they, who are but my slaves?"
Karela opened her mouth for another retort, and gasped when a black-armored man in a horned helmet appeared in the entrance to the cavern. For an instant she had thought it was the creature the bronze represented. Foolishness, she berated herself. Such a creature could not exist.
"Has Taramenon come yet?" Synelle demanded of the man. "No, my lady.
Nor any message of him."
"He will suffer for this," Synelle said heatedly. "He defies me, and I will see him suffer for it!" Drawing a deep breath, she smoothed the already taut black silk over her rounded b.r.e.a.s.t.s. "We will proceed without him. When he comes, he is to be seized and bound. There are rites other than the gift of women."
"Taramenon, my lady," the man said in shocked tones.
"You heard my command!" Synelle made a brusque gesture, and the armored figure bowed himself from her presence.
Karela had been listening intently, hoping for some fragment of information that might help her escape, but now she became aware of how the four women were dressing her, the tiny white tarla blossoms woven into her hair, the diaphanous layers of blue silk meant to be removed one by one for the t.i.tillation of a groom.
"What travesty is there?" she growled. "You do think me a rival, but if you mean to rid yourself of me in this way, you are mad! I"ll marry no man! Do you hear me, you pasty-faced trull-"
A cruel smile curled Synelle"s lips, and the look on her face sent a chill through Karela"s blood. "You will marry no man," the haughty n.o.ble-woman said softly. "Tonight you will wed a G.o.d, and I will become ruler of Ophir."
The tall white marker at the crossroads, a square marble pillar inscribed with the distances to the borders of Nemedia and Aquilonia, loomed out of the night ahead of Conan. No sound broke the silence save his labored breath and the steady slap of his running feet on the paving stones. Beyond the marker reared the dark ma.s.s of Tor Al"Kiir, a huge granite outcropping dominating the flat country about it.
The big Cimmerian crouched beside the marble plinth, eyes straining at the blackness. There was so sign of his men. Softly he imitated the cry of a Nemedian nighthawk.
The muted jingle of tight-strapped harness announced the sudden appearance of Machaon and the rest, leading their horses. Memtes, bringing up the rear, gripped the reins of Conan"s big Aquilonian black as well as those of his own mount. Bows and quivers were slung on their backs.
"I thought it best to keep from sight," the tattooed veteran told Conan quietly. "As we arrived, two score men-at-arms pa.s.sed, chasing another band as large, and twice parties of light cavalry have gone by at the gallop. Scouts, the last, no doubt."
"Unless I miss my guess," Narus added in a low voice that would not travel far, "Iskandrian seeks action this night, and the n.o.bles seek to avoid him until their strength is gathered. Never did I think that when the final battle for Ophir occurred, I would be scaling a mountain."
"Go to Tauria.n.u.s, then," Conan growled, "if you seek glory!" Irritably he shook his black-maned head. Such edginess was not his usual manner, but his thoughts scarcely seemed his own. With a desperation foreign to him he fought to cling to his purpose of mind, struggled against images of Synelle and l.u.s.t that threatened to overwhelm him.
"Is that the famous staff?" Machaon asked. "It has no look of magic to me."
"It is," the Cimmerian replied, "and it has." He hoped he did not lie.
Unfastening the strips of cloth that held the length of wood, he clutched it in one hand and drew his sword with the other. "This is the last chance to change your minds. Let any man unsure of what he does step aside." The soft and deadly susuration of steel sliding from scabbards was his answer. Conan nodded grimly. "Then hide the horses in yon copse of trees and follow me."
"Your armor," Machaon said. " "Tis on your saddle."
"There is no time," Conan said, and without waiting for the others he started up the stony slope.
Crom was not a G.o.d men prayed to; he gave nothing beyond his first gift. But now Conan offered a prayer to any G.o.d that would listen. If he died for it, let him be in time.
A silent file of purposeful men fell in behind him in his climb, on their way to beard a G.o.d in his den.
The lash struck across her shoulders again, and Karela gritted her teeth against the howl she wanted to let pa.s.s. Bound between posts topped with the obscene head of Al"Kiir, she knelt, all but the last layer of thin blue silk torn away from her sweat-slick body. It was not the pain from the incessant bite of leather that made her want to cry out, or not alone; she would have died before giving her tormentors the satisfaction of acknowledging that. But the burning stripes that made scarlet lattices on her body were as pin-p.r.i.c.ks beside the flaming desire the ointment with which Synelle had anointed her brought unbidden. Uncontrollably Karela writhed, and wept for the humiliation of it.
The silvery-haired n.o.ble-woman danced before her, spinning and dipping, chanting words that defied hearing in rhythm to haunting flutes and the pounding of scabbarded swords on the stone floor of the vaulting cavern. Between Synelle and Karela stood the bronze she had stolen from Conan, but its evil was overpowered by the waves of horror that radiated from the huge sanguinary image that dominated the chamber.
Three ebon eyes that seemed to drink in light held her own. She tried to tear her eyes from that h.e.l.lborn gaze, she prayed for the strength to pull away, but like a bird hypnotized by a serpent she had no will left.
The lashes struck, again and again. Her hands quivered in her bonds with the effort of not shrieking, for that demonic scarlet figure had begun to vibrate, giving off a hum that blended with the flutes and wrenched at the core of her that made her a woman. Conan, she cried silently, where are you?
Stirring where neither time nor s.p.a.ce existed, where endless nihility was all. Awakening, almost full, as pleasure overwhelming lanced through the impenetrable shield. Irritation, vaster than the minds of all men together could encompa.s.s, flared. Would these torments never cease, these returnings of ancient memories near gone and better forgotten? Would not.... Full awareness for the first time in eons, awareness cold enough to freeze suns and stay worlds in their motion.
There was direction. A single pristine strand of crystalline desire and pain stretching into the infinite. Slowly, with a wariness born of long centuries of disappointment, from the midst of nothingness the gleaming thread of worship was followed.
Conan peered around the edge of a huge, moss-covered block of marble which had once been intended for construction. Crickets chirped in the dark, and a nightbird gave a haunting cry. All else was still.
Roofless walls of niveous stone and truncated alabaster columns, never completed and now wreathed by thick vines, covered the leveled top of the mountain. Among the columns were more than a score of men in black armor and horned helms, the torches a third of them carried casting flickering shadows over the weather-beaten ruins. He wanted to sigh with relief at the symbol picked out in scarlet on their chests. It was clearly the head of the image Karela had stolen, the head of Al"Kiir.
Not until that moment had he allowed himself to fear he might be coming to the wrong place.
The black-armored man had to be guarding an entrance to chambers below, Conan thought, where the horrible rite was to take place. Boros had said the tomb lay buried in the heart of the mountain. At least, then were supposed to be standing guard. The sinister reputation of Tor Al"Kiir made it unlikely anyone would come there, most especially in the night, and that made them careless. Some leaned against pale fluted marble. Others sat and talked among themselves. No eye was directed outward to watch for intruders.
Conan signaled with his hands; long practiced, the nine men behind him slid soundlessly away. The Cimmerian counted silently, knowing how long it would take each man to reach his place.
"Now!" he shouted, and burst from concealment to hurl himself at the guards. As he had known it would, his shout and the appearance of a lone man charging froze them for an instant, long enough for nine bowstrings to tw.a.n.g, for nine feathered shafts to drink life.
The guards of Al"Kiir had been chosen for their skill, though, and even as their comrades were falling the survivors darted for cover behind the columns. But then Conan was among them. Thrusting the staff like a lance he took a man under the chin; throat cartiledge snapped loudly, and blood spilled from a mouth that could no longer scream.
"For Conan!" he heard behind him. "Conan!"
A blade thrust at him, and his ancient steel severed the arm that held it. He ducked beneath a decapitating cut and, wielding his broadsword like an axe, chopped through his attacker"s mid-section almost to the spine. Kicking the body away, he straightened to find no black-armored man standing. His mercenaries stood among the bodies, gripping b.l.o.o.d.y swords and warily watching for more of the enemy.
"Are they all dead"" Conan demanded.
Machaon shook his head. "Two managed to run down there." He pointed to a dark opening where steps had led down into the mountain.