"As you wish, miner of my name and destroyer of my house. May you have much joy in it, before Lord Houma"s men burn it over your head."
"Lord Houma may have fewer but wiser men if he tries that," Conan said.
"Now, I want a room tonight, and food and wine for-" He looked at the women.
"One," with a nod to Pyla.
"Two," smiling at Zaria.
Thebia grinned and put her hands behind her back. Her young b.r.e.a.s.t.s rose, quivering. Conan pointed at her bandaged thigh. "You want to be the third, with that? Oh, very well. I"m no great hand at arguing with women."
"Just as well, then, that our northern friend took herself off," Pyla said. "Otherwise, she might be joining us. I much doubt that even a Cimmerian can do justice to four!"
Two.
"THAT"S A BOW in your hands, you son of a cull!" Conan snapped. "It"s not a snake. It won"t bite you. Even if it did, that"s not half of what I"ll do to you if you don"t string it now!"
The gangling youth turned the color of the dust underfoot. He looked at the cerulean sky overhead, as if imploring the G.o.ds for mercy. Conan drew breath for more advice. The youth swallowed, gripped the bow, and managed to string it, gracelessly but without dropping it again.
One by one, Conan took his recruits through the art of stringing the powerful curved Turanian horsebow. Certainly, some were destined to be midden-sweepers. Others already knew everything that Conan proposed to teach them.
He would not ask how they had learned the bow. Among the mercenaries of Turan, the life of a soldier began the day he took the copper coin of enlistment. What he had been before, no one asked. It was a custom that Conan thought wise, and not only because his own past would not have borne the weight of too much curiosity.
At last Conan spat into the dust and scowled at the men. "Why the G.o.ds addled your wits, making you think you could be soldiers, they only know. I don"t. So I have to do what King Yildiz pays me for. That"s turning you into soldiers, whether you like it or not. Sergeant Garsim!
Take them on a run, ten times around the range!"
"You heard the Captain," shouted Garsim, in a voice that could have been heard in King Yildiz"s palace. "Run!" He flourished his stick until it whistled, then fell in behind the recruits with a wink to Conan. Although Garsim could have been grandfather to some of the recruits, he could easily outrun any of them.
As the recruits vanished through the gate, Conan sensed someone behind him. Before he could turn, he heard Khadjar"s voice.
"You talk to those men as though you have heard your own words from others."
"I have. Captain. Sergeant Nikar said much the same when he was teaching me archery."
"So old Nikar was your instructor? I thought I saw his touch in your draw. What happened to him, by the way?"
"He went home on leave, and never reached it. A band of robbers disappeared that same month. I"d wager Nikar won a fine escort."
"Would you wager on your archery against mine? Five arrows a turn, three turns?"
"Well, Captain-"
"Come, come, oh defender of dancing girls. Did I not hear of your winning free hospitality at the Red Falcon two nights ago? Your purse should be ready to burst with the weight of unspent coin!"
Conan was ready to burst with curiosity, as to how the Captain had learned so much so soon. He only said, "It was no dancing girl I defended, at least at the start. It was a northern woman, and a fine fighter if a trifle overmatched against four."
Khadjar laughed. "Most would be, save yourself. I trust the lady was grateful?"
"Not so a man would notice it," Conan said. He grinned. "The dancing girls were, though. So grateful that I much doubt I am fit to shoot against you."
"Conan, you say a mere three dancing girls have drained your strength?
Go back to your hills, then, for Turan is making you old before your time!"
"Take a bow, Captain. Then we shall see who may call whom "old"."
"As you-Mitra! Who let her in?"
Conan whirled at Khadjar"s words. The woman from the Red Falcon was striding toward them from the gate. She walked as she had that night, although the gate guards were openly stripping her with their eyes. If her wound hurt, none could have told it from her gait
She wore the same cut of tunic and trousers, in fine blue linen with vines and trees embroidered in red at the wrists and throat. She also wore a well-sheathed broadsword and a dagger just too short to be called a second sword. A headdress of white silk in the Turanian manner shielded her northern fairness from the sun.
"You look as if you know the wench, Conan," Khadjar said
"No wench she, Captain. That"s the woman from the Red Falcon."
"Oho! Well and good. You learn what brought her here. I shall learn why those camels" b.a.s.t.a.r.ds at the gate let her in!"
Conan unstrung his bow and waited impa.s.sively for the woman"s arrival.
By the time she was within speaking distance, Khadjar was shouting at the guards.
"He will learn that I showed them this," the woman said calmly. Dark against her freckled palm and long fingers lay an ancient gold coin, cast in the reign of King Ibram two centuries ago. Over Ibram"s fork-bearded face were stamped three letters in the Zamoran script.
Such stamped coins were the mark of Mishrak, lord of King Yildiz"s spies, and those who went about his business. It did not occur to Conan to doubt the sign, curious as it might be for this woman to be carrying it. Those who disobeyed the command of Mishrak were wise to be far from Aghrapur by sunrise of the next day.
"So Mishrak sent you. Why?"
"To bring you, Captain Conan."
"To bring me where?"
"To Mishrak, of course."
"I see your tongue is as well guarded as ever."
"Give me one reason why it should be otherwise."
Perhaps this woman knew little, which would be much like Mishrak. The spy lord never told any of his servants enough to let them piece together any of his secrets. Whether she knew much of little, she would clearly tell Conan nothing.
At this moment Khadjar returned, in an evil temper. A look at the coin did nothing to soothe him. He growled like a winter-waked bear and jerked a hand toward the gate.
"Go, Conan. Neither of us is the kind of fool to quarrel with Mishrak.
I"ll have Garsim finish the day"s drill."
"As you wish, Captain. Now, woman, if you"ll let me wash and arm myself-"
"Arm yourself as you wish, Captain Conan. Otherwise, Mishrak says that you will lack nothing if you make haste."
"Nothing?" Conan said with a laugh. His eyes ran lightly over a figure that lacked only garb fit to display it properly. Or perhaps lacking all garb would display it best?