AlSamCur123 commited on
Commit
df80d63
·
verified ·
1 Parent(s): 58c3773

Upload 5 files

Browse files
Frank Herbert - Children of Dune.txt ADDED
The diff for this file is too large to render. See raw diff
 
Frank Herbert - Dune Messiah.txt ADDED
The diff for this file is too large to render. See raw diff
 
Frank Herbert - Dune.txt ADDED
The diff for this file is too large to render. See raw diff
 
TheHallOfTheDead.txt ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,875 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ Robert E. Howard - The Hall Of The Dead
2
+
3
+ ROBERT E. HOWARD
4
+
5
+ THE HALL OF THE DEAD
6
+
7
+ "The Hall Of The Dead" is a fragment begun in the 1930s but not finished or
8
+ published in Howard's lifetime. It was completed by L. Sprague de Camp and
9
+ published in The Magazine Of Fantasy And Science Fiction in February 1967.
10
+
11
+
12
+
13
+
14
+ Becoming fed up with the City of Thieves (and vice versa) Conan wanders
15
+ westward to the capital of Zamora, Shadizar the Wicked. Here, he hopes, the
16
+ pickings will be richer. For a time he is indeed, more successful in his
17
+ thievery than he had been in Arenjun—although the women of Shadizar quickly
18
+ relieve him of his gains in return for initiating him into the arts of love.
19
+ Rumors of treasure send him to the nearby ruins of ancient Larsha, just ahead
20
+ of the squad of soldiers sent to arrest him.
21
+
22
+
23
+
24
+
25
+ THE GORGE was dark, although the setting sun had left a band of orange and
26
+ yellow and green along the western horizon. Against this band of color, a sharp
27
+ eye could still discern, in black silhouette, the domes and spires of Shadizar
28
+ the Wicked, the city of dark-haired women and towers of spider-haunted
29
+ mystery—the capital of Zamora.
30
+
31
+ As the twilight faded, the first few stars appeared overhead. As if answering
32
+ a signal, lights winked on in the distant domes and spires. While the light of
33
+ the stars was pale and wan, that of the windows of Shadizar was a sultry amber,
34
+ with a hint of abominable deeds.
35
+
36
+ The gorge was quiet save for the chirping of nocturnal insects. Presently,
37
+ however, this silence was broken by the sound of moving men. Up the gorge came
38
+ a squad of Zamorian soldiers—five men in plain steel caps and leather jerkins,
39
+ studded with bronze buttons, led by an officer in a polished bronze cuirass and
40
+ a helmet with a towering horsehair crest. Their bronze-greaved legs swished
41
+ through the long, lush grass that covered the floor of the gorge. Their harness
42
+ creaked and their weapons clanked and tinkled. Three of them bore bows and the
43
+ other two, pikes; short swords hung at their sides and bucklers were slung
44
+ across their backs. The officer was armed with a long sword and a dagger.
45
+
46
+ One of the soldiers muttered: "If we catch this Conan fellow alive, what will
47
+ they do with him?"
48
+
49
+ "Send him to Yezud to feed to the spider god, I'll warrant," said another.
50
+ "The question is, shall we be alive to collect that reward they promised us?"
51
+
52
+ "Not afraid of him, are you?" said a third.
53
+
54
+ "Me?" The second speaker snorted. "I fear naught, including death itself. The
55
+ question is, whose death? This thief is not a civilized man but a wild
56
+ barbarian, with the strength of ten. So I went to the magistrate to draw up my
57
+ will—"
58
+
59
+ "It is cheering to know that your heirs will get the reward," said another. "I
60
+ wish I had thought of that."
61
+
62
+ "Oh," said the first man who had spoken, "they'll find some excuse to cheat us
63
+ of the reward, even if we catch the rascal."
64
+
65
+ "The prefect himself has promised," said another. "The rich merchants and
66
+ nobles whom Conan has been robbing raised a fund. I saw the money—a bag so
67
+ heavy with gold that a man could scarce lift it. After all that public display,
68
+ they'd not dare to go back on their word."
69
+
70
+ "But suppose we catch him not," said the second speaker. "There was something
71
+ about paying for it with our heads." The speaker raised his voice. "Captain
72
+ Nestor! What was that about our heads—"
73
+
74
+ "Hold your tongues, all of you!" snapped the officer. "You can be heard as far
75
+ as Arenjun. If Conan is within a mile, he'll be warned. Cease your chatter, and
76
+ try to move without so much clangor."
77
+
78
+ The officer was a broad-shouldered man of medium height and powerful build;
79
+ daylight would have shown his eyes to be gray and his hair light brown,
80
+ streaked with gray. He was a Gunderman, from the northernmost province of
81
+ Aquilonia, fifteen hundred miles to the west. His mission—to take Conan dead or
82
+ alive—troubled him. The prefect had warned him that, if he failed, he might
83
+ expect severe punishment—perhaps even the headsman's block. The king himself
84
+ had demanded that the outlaw be taken, and the king of Zamora had a short way
85
+ with servants who failed their missions. A tip from the underworld had revealed
86
+ that Conan was seen heading for this gorge earlier that day, and Nestor's
87
+ commander had hastily dis patched him with such troopers as could be found in
88
+ the barracks.
89
+
90
+ Nestor had no confidence in the soldiers that trailed behind him. He
91
+ considered them braggarts who would flee in the face of danger, leaving him to
92
+ confront the barbarian alone. And, although the Gunderman was a brave man, he
93
+ did not deceive himself about his chances with this ferocious, gigantic young
94
+ savage. His armor would give him no more than a slight edge.
95
+
96
+ As the glow in the western sky faded, the darkness deepened and the walls of
97
+ the gorge became narrower, steeper, and rockier. Behind Nestor, the men began
98
+ to murmur again:
99
+
100
+ "I like it not. This road leads to the ruins of Larsha the Accursed, where the
101
+ ghosts of the ancients lurk to devour passers-by. And in that city, 'tis said,
102
+ lies the Hall of the Dead—"
103
+
104
+ "Shut up!" snarled Nestor, turning his head. "If—"
105
+
106
+ At that instant, the officer tripped over a rawhide rope stretched across the
107
+ path and fell sprawling in the grass. There was the snap of a spring pole
108
+ released from its lodgment, and the rope went slack.
109
+
110
+ With a rumbling roar, a mass of rocks and dirt cascaded down the left-hand
111
+ slope. As Nestor scrambled to his feet, a stone the size of a man's head struck
112
+ his corselet and knocked him down again. Another knocked off his helmet, while
113
+ smaller stones stung his limbs. Behind him sounded a multiple scream and the
114
+ clatter of stone striking metal. Then silence fell.
115
+
116
+ Nestor staggered to his feet, coughed the dust out of his lungs, and turned to
117
+ see what had befallen. A few paces behind him, a rock slide blocked the gorge
118
+ from wall to wall. Approaching, he made out a human hand and a foot projecting
119
+ from the rubble. He called but received no reply. When he touched the
120
+ protruding members, he found no life. The slide, set off by the pull on the
121
+ rope, had wiped out his entire squad.
122
+
123
+ Nestor flexed his joints to learn what harm he had suffered. No bones appeared
124
+ to be broken, although his corselet was dented and he bore several bruises.
125
+ Burning with wrath, he found his helmet and took up the trail alone. Failing to
126
+ catch the thief would have been bad enough; but if he also had to confess to
127
+ the loss of his men, he foresaw a lingering and painful death. His only chance
128
+ now was to bring back Conan—or at least his head.
129
+
130
+ Sword in hand, Nestor limped on up the endless windings of the gorge. A light
131
+ in the sky before him showed that the moon, a little past full, was rising. He
132
+ strained his eyes, expecting the barbarian to spring upon him from behind every
133
+ bend in the ravine.
134
+
135
+ The gorge became shallower and the walls less steep. Gullies opened into the
136
+ gorge to right and left, while the bottom became stony and uneven, forcing
137
+ Nestor to scramble over rocks and underbrush. At last the gorge gave out
138
+ completely. Climbing a short slope, the Gunderman found himself on the edge of
139
+ an upland pleateau, surrounded by distant mountains. A bowshot ahead, bone-
140
+ white in the light of the moon, rose the walls of Larsha. A massive gate stood
141
+ directly in front of him. Time had bitten scallops out of the walls, and over
142
+ it rose half-ruined roofs and towers.
143
+
144
+ Nestor paused. Larsha was said to be immensely old. According to the tales, it
145
+ went back to Cataclysmic times, when the forebears of the Zamorians, the
146
+ Zhemri, formed an island of semi-civilization in a sea of barbarism.
147
+
148
+ Stories of the death that lurked in these ruins were rife in the bazaars of
149
+ Shadizar. As far as Nestor had been able to learn, not one of the many men who,
150
+ in historic times, had invaded the ruins searching for the treasure rumored to
151
+ exist there, had ever returned. None knew what form the danger took, because no
152
+ survivor had lived to carry the tale.
153
+
154
+ A decade before, King Tiridates had sent a company of his bravest soldiers, in
155
+ broad daylight, into the city, while the king himself waited outside the walls.
156
+ There had been screams and sounds of flight, and then—nothing. The men who
157
+ waited outside had fled, and Tiridates perforce had fled with them. That was
158
+ the last attempt to unlock the mystery of Larsha by main force.
159
+
160
+ Although Nestor had all the usual mercenary's lust for unearned wealth, he was
161
+ not rash. Years of soldiering in the kingdoms between Zamora and his homeland
162
+ had taught him caution. As he paused, weighing the dangers of his alternatives,
163
+ a sight made him stiffen. Close to the wall, he sighted the figure of a man,
164
+ slinking toward the gate. Although the man was too far away to recognize faces
165
+ in the moonlight, there was no mistaking that panther-like stride. Conan!
166
+
167
+ Filled with rising fury, Nestor started forward. He walked swiftly, holding
168
+ his scabbard to keep it from clanking. But, quietly though he moved, the keen
169
+ ears of the barbarian warned him. Conan whirled, and his sword whispered from
170
+ its sheath. Then, seeing that only a single foe pursued him, the Cimmerian
171
+ stood his ground.
172
+
173
+ As Nestor approached, he began to pick out details of the other's appearance.
174
+ Conan was well over six feet tall, and his threadbare tunic failed to mask the
175
+ hard lines of his mighty thews. A leathern sack hung by a strap from his
176
+ shoulder. His face was youthful but hard, surmounted by a square-cut mane of
177
+ thick black hair.
178
+
179
+ Not a word was spoken. Nestor paused to catch his breath and cast aside his
180
+ cloak, and in that instant Conan hurled himself upon the older man.
181
+
182
+ Two swords glimmered like lightnings in the moonlight as the clang and rasp of
183
+ blades shattered the graveyard silence. Nestor was the more experienced
184
+ fighter, but the reach and blinding speed of the other nullified this
185
+ advantage. Conan's attack was as elemental and irresistible as a hurricane.
186
+ Parrying shrewdly, Nestor was forced back, step after step. Narrowly he watched
187
+ his opponent, waiting for the other's attack to slow from sheer fatigue. But
188
+ the Cimmerian seemed not to know what fatigue was.
189
+
190
+ Making a backhand cut, Nestor slit Conan's tunic over the chest but did not
191
+ quite reach the skin. In a blinding return thrust, Conan's point glanced off
192
+ Nestor's breastplate, plowing a groove in the bronze.
193
+
194
+ As Nestor stepped back from another furious attack, a stone turned under his
195
+ foot. Conan aimed a terrific cut at the Gunderman's neck. Had it gone as
196
+ intended, Nestor's head would have flown from his shoulders; but, as he
197
+ stumbled, the blow hit his crested helm instead. It struck with a heavy clang,
198
+ bit into the iron, and hurled Nestor to the ground.
199
+
200
+ Breathing deeply, Conan stepped forward, sword ready. His pursuer lay
201
+ motionless with blood seeping from his cloven helmet. Youthful overconfidence
202
+ in the force of his own blows convinced Conan that he had slain his antagonist.
203
+ Sheathing his sword, he turned back toward the city of the ancients.
204
+
205
+ The Cimmerian approached the gate. This consisted of two massive valves, twice
206
+ as high as a man, made of foot-thick timbers sheathed in bronze. Conan pushed
207
+ against the valves, grunting, but without effect. He drew his sword and struck
208
+ the bronze with the pommel. From the way the gates sagged, Conan guessed that
209
+ the wood of the doors had rotted away; but the bronze was too thick to hew
210
+ through without spoiling the edge of his blade. And there was an easier way.
211
+
212
+ Thirty paces north of the gate, the wall had crumbled so that its lowest point
213
+ was less than twenty feet above the ground. At the same time, a pile of
214
+ tailings against the foot of the wall rose to within six or eight feet of the
215
+ broken edge.
216
+
217
+ Conan approached the broken section, drew back a few paces, and then ran
218
+ forward. He bounded up the slope of the tailings, leaped into the air, and
219
+ caught the broken edge of the wall. A grunt, a heave, and a scramble, and he
220
+ was over the edge, ignoring scratches and bruises. He stared down into the city.
221
+
222
+ Inside the wall was a cleared space, where for centuries plant life had been
223
+ waging war upon the ancient pavement. The paving slabs were cracked and up-
224
+ ended. Between them, grass, weeds, and a few scrubby trees had forced their way.
225
+
226
+ Beyond the cleared area lay the ruins of one of the poorer districts. Here the
227
+ one-story hovels of mud brick had slumped into mere mounds of dirt. Beyond
228
+ them, white in the moonlight, Conan discerned the better-preserved buildings of
229
+ stone—the temples, the palaces, and the houses of the nobles and the rich
230
+ merchants. As with many ancient ruins, and aura of evil hung over the deserted
231
+ city.
232
+
233
+ Straining his ears, Conan stared right and left. Nothing moved. The only sound
234
+ was the chirp of crickets.
235
+
236
+ Conan, too, had heard the tales of the doom that haunted Larsha. Although the
237
+ supernatural roused panicky, atavistic fears in his barbarian's soul, he
238
+ hardened himself with the thought that, when a supernatural being took material
239
+ form, it could be hurt or killed by material weapons, just like any earthly man
240
+ or monster. He had not come this far to be stopped from a try at the treasure
241
+ by man, beast, or demon.
242
+
243
+ According to the tales, the fabled treasure of Larsha lay in the royal palace.
244
+ Gripping his scabbarded sword in his left hand, the young thief dropped from
245
+ the inner side of the broken wall. An instant later, he was threading his way
246
+ through the winding streets toward the center of the city. He made no more
247
+ noise than a shadow.
248
+
249
+ Ruin encompassed him on every side. Here and there the front of a house had
250
+ fallen into the street, forcing Conan to detour or to scramble over piles of
251
+ broken brick and marble. The gibbous moon was now high in the sky, washing the
252
+ ruins in an eery light. On the Cimmerian's right rose a temple, partly fallen
253
+ but with the portico, upheld by four massive marble columns, still intact.
254
+ Along the edge of the roof, a row of marble gargoyles peered down—statues of
255
+ monsters of bygone days, half demon and half beast.
256
+
257
+ Conan tried to remember the scraps of legend that he had overheard in the
258
+ wineshops of the Maul, concerning the abandonment of Larsha. There was
259
+ something about a curse sent by an angered god, many centuries before, in
260
+ punishment for deeds so wicked that they made the crimes and vices of Shadizar
261
+ look like virtues—
262
+
263
+ He started for the center of the city again but now noticed something
264
+ peculiar. His sandals tended to stick to the shattered pavement, as if it were
265
+ covered with warm pitch. The soles made sucking noises as he raised his feet.
266
+
267
+ He stooped and felt the ground. It was coated with a film of a colorless,
268
+ sticky substance, now nearly dry.
269
+
270
+ Hand on hilt, Conan glared about him in the moon-light But no sound came to
271
+ his ears. He resumed his advance. Again his sandals made sucking noises as he
272
+ raised them. He halted, turning his head. He could have sworn that similar
273
+ sucking noises came to his ears from a distance. For an instant, he thought
274
+ they might be the echoes of his own footsteps. But he had passed the half-
275
+ ruined temple, and now no walls rose on either side of him to reflect the sound.
276
+
277
+ Again he advanced, then halted. Again he heard the sucking sound, and this
278
+ time it did not cease when he froze to immobility. In fact, it became louder.
279
+ His keen hearing located it as coming from directly in front of him. Since he
280
+ could see nothing moving in the street before him, the source of the sound must
281
+ be in a side street or in one of the ruined buildings.
282
+
283
+ The sound increased to an indescribable slithering, gurgling hiss. Even
284
+ Conan's iron nerves were shaken by the strain of waiting for the unknown source
285
+ of the sound to appear.
286
+
287
+ At last, around the next corner poured a huge, slimy mass, leprous gray in the
288
+ moonlight. It glided into the street before him and swiftly advanced upon him,
289
+ silent save for the sucking sound of its peculiar method of locomotion. From
290
+ its front end rose a pair of hornlike projections, at least ten feet long, with
291
+ a shorter pair below. The long horns bent this way and that, and Conan saw that
292
+ they bore eyes on their ends.
293
+
294
+ The creature was, in fact, a slug, like the harmless garden slug that leaves a
295
+ trail of slime in its nightly wanderings. This slug, however, was fifty feet
296
+ long and as thick through the middle as Conan was tall. Moreover, it moved as
297
+ fast as a man could run. The fetid smell of the thing wafted ahead of it.
298
+
299
+ Momentarily paralyzed with astonishment, Conan stared at the vast mass of
300
+ rubbery flesh bearing down upon him. The slug emitted a sound like that of a
301
+ man spitting, but magnified many times over.
302
+
303
+ Galvanized into action at last, the Cimmerian leaped sideways. As he did so, a
304
+ jet of liquid flashed through the night air, just where he had stood. A tiny
305
+ droplet struck his shoulder and burned like a coal of fire.
306
+
307
+ Conan turned and ran back the way he had come, his long legs flashing in the
308
+ moonlight. Again he had to bound over piles of broken masonary. His ears told
309
+ him that the slug was close behind. Perhaps it was gaining. He dared not turn
310
+ to look, lest he trip over some marble fragment and go sprawling; the monster
311
+ would be upon him before he could regain his feet.
312
+
313
+ Again came that spitting sound. Conan leaped frantically to one side; again
314
+ the jet of liquid flashed past him. Even if he kept ahead of the slug all the
315
+ way to the city wall, the next shot would probably hit its mark.
316
+
317
+ Conan dodged around a corner to put obstacles between himself and the slug. He
318
+ raced down a narrow zigzag street, then around another corner. He was lost in
319
+ the maze of streets, he knew; but the main thing was to keep turning corners so
320
+ as not to give his pursuer another clear shot at him. The sucking sounds and
321
+ the stench indicated that it was following his trail. Once, when he paused to
322
+ catch his breath, he looked back to see the slug pouring around the last corner
323
+ he had turned.
324
+
325
+ On and on he went, dodging this way and that through the maze of the ancient
326
+ city. If he could not outrun the slug, perhaps he could tire it. A man, he
327
+ knew, could outlast almost any animal in a long-distance run. But the slug
328
+ seemed tireless.
329
+
330
+ Something about the buildings he was passing struck him as familiar. Then he
331
+ realized that he was coming to the half-ruined temple he had passed just before
332
+ he met the slug. A quick glance showed him that the upper parts of the building
333
+ could be reached by an active climber.
334
+
335
+ Conan bounded up a pile of rubbish to the top of the broken wall. Leaping from
336
+ stone to stone, he made his way up the jagged profile of the wall to an
337
+ unruined section facing the street. He found himself on a stretch of roof
338
+ behind the row of marble gargoyles. He approached them, treading softly lest
339
+ the half-ruined roof collapse beneath him and detouring around holes through
340
+ which a man could fall into the chambers below.
341
+
342
+ The sound and smell of the slug came to him from the street. Realizing that it
343
+ had lost his track and uncertain as to which way to turn, the creature had
344
+ evidently stopped in front of the temple. Very cautiously—for he was sure the
345
+ slug could see him in the moonlight—Conan peered past one of the statues and
346
+ down into the street.
347
+
348
+ There lay the great, grayish mass, on which the moon shone moistly. The eye
349
+ stalks wavered this way and that, seeking the creature's prey. Beneath them,
350
+ the shorter horns swept back and forth a little above the ground, as if
351
+ smelling for the Cimmerian's trail.
352
+
353
+ Conan felt certain that the slug would soon pick up his trail. He had no doubt
354
+ that it could slither up the sides of the building quite as readily as he had
355
+ climbed it.
356
+
357
+ He put a hand against a gargoyle—a nightmarish statue with a humanoid body,
358
+ bat's wings, and a reptilian head—and pushed. The statue rocked a trifle with a
359
+ faint crunching noise.
360
+
361
+ At the sound, the horns of the slug whipped upward toward the roof of the
362
+ temple. The slug's head came around, bending its body into a sharp curve. The
363
+ head approached the front of the temple and began to slide up one of the huge
364
+ pillars, directly below the place where Conan crouched with bared teeth.
365
+
366
+ A sword, Conan thought, would be of little use against such a monstrosity.
367
+ Like other lowly forms of life, it could survive damage that would instantly
368
+ destroy a higher creature.
369
+
370
+ Up the pillar came the slug's head, the eyes on their stalks swiveling back
371
+ and forth. At the present rate, the monster's head would reach the edge of the
372
+ roof while most of its body still lay in the street below.
373
+
374
+ Then Conan saw what he must do. He hurled himself at the gargoyle. With a
375
+ mighty heave, he sent it tumbling over the edge of the roof. Instead of the
376
+ crash that such a mass of marble would ordinarily make on striking the
377
+ pavement, there floated up the sound of a moist, squashy impact, followed by a
378
+ heavy thud as the forward part of the slug's body fell back to earth.
379
+
380
+ When Conan risked a glance over the parapet, he saw that the statue had sunk
381
+ into the slug's body until it was almost buried. The great, gray mass writhed
382
+ and lashed like a worm on a fisherman's hook. A blow of the tail made the front
383
+ of the temple tremble; somewhere in the interior a few loose stones fell
384
+ clattering. Conan wondered if the whole structure were about to collapse
385
+ beneath him, burying him in the debris.
386
+
387
+ "So much for you!" snarled the Cimmerian.
388
+
389
+ He went along the row of gargoyles until he found another that was loose and
390
+ directly over part of the slug's body. Down it went with another squashing
391
+ impact. A third missed and shattered on the pavement. A fourth and smaller
392
+ statue he picked bodily up and, muscles cracking with the strain, hurled
393
+ outward so that it fell on the writhing head.
394
+
395
+ As the beast's convulsions slowly subsided, Conan pushed over two more
396
+ gargoyles to make sure. When the body no longer writhed, he clambered down to
397
+ the street. He approached the great, stinking mass cautiously, sword out. At
398
+ last, summoning all his courage, he slashed into the rubbery flesh. Dark ichor
399
+ oozed out, and rippling morions ran through the wet, gray skin. But, even
400
+ though parts might retain signs of independent life, the slug as a whole was
401
+ dead.
402
+
403
+ Conan was still slashing furiously when a voice made him whirl about. It said:
404
+
405
+ "I've got you this time!"
406
+
407
+ It was Nestor, approaching sword in hand, with a bloodstained bandage around
408
+ his head in place of his helmet. The Gunderman stopped at the sight of the
409
+ slug. "Mitra! What is this?"
410
+
411
+ "It's the spook of Larsha," said Conan, speaking Zamorian with a barbarous
412
+ accent "It chased me over half the city before I slew it." As Nestor stared
413
+ incredulously, the Cimmerian continued: "What do you here? How many times must
414
+ I kill you before you stay dead?"
415
+
416
+ "You shall see how dead I am," grated Nestor, bringing his sword up to guard.
417
+
418
+ "What happened to your soldiers?"
419
+
420
+ "Dead in that rock slide you rigged, as you soon shall be—"
421
+
422
+ "Look, you fool," said Conan, "why waste your strength on sword strokes, when
423
+ there's more wealth here than the pair of us can carry away—if the tales are
424
+ true? You are a good man of your hands; why not join me to raid the treasure of
425
+ Larsha instead?"
426
+
427
+ "I must do my duty and avenge my men! Defend yourself, dog or a barbarian!"
428
+
429
+ "By Crom, I'll fight if you like!" growled Conan, bringing up his sword. "But
430
+ think, man! If you go back to Shadizar, they'll crucify you for losing your
431
+ command—even if you took my head with you, which I do not think you can do. If
432
+ one tenth of the stories are true, you'll get more from your share of the loot
433
+ than you'd earn in a hundred years as a mercenary captain."
434
+
435
+ Nestor had lowered his blade and stepped back. Now he stood mute, thinking
436
+ deeply. Conan added: "Besides, you'll never make real warriors of these
437
+ poltroons of Zamorians!"
438
+
439
+ The Gunderman sighed and sheathed his sword. "You are right, damn you. Until
440
+ this venture is over, we'll fight back to back and go equal shares on the loot,
441
+ eh?" He held out his hand.
442
+
443
+ "Done!" said Conan, sheathing likewise and clasping the other's hand. "If we
444
+ have to run for it and get separated, let's meet at the fountain of Ninus."
445
+
446
+ The royal palace of Larsha stood in the center of the city, in the midst of a
447
+ broad plaza. It was the one structure that had not crumbled with age, and this
448
+ for a simple reason. It was carved out of a single crag or hillock of rock that
449
+ once broke the flatness of the plateau on which Larsha stood. So meticulous had
450
+ been the construction of this building, however, that close inspection was
451
+ needed to show that it was not an ordinary composite structure, lines engraved
452
+ in the black, basaltic surface imitated the joints between building stones.
453
+
454
+ Treading softly, Conan and Nestor peered into the dark interior. "We shall
455
+ need light," said Nestor. "I do not care to walk into another slug like that in
456
+ the dark."
457
+
458
+ "I don't smell another slug," said Conan, "but the treasure might have another
459
+ guardian."
460
+
461
+ He turned back and hewed down a pine sapling that thrust up through the broken
462
+ pavement. Then he lopped its limbs and cut it into short lengths. Whittling a
463
+ pile of shavings with his sword, he started a small fire with flint and steel.
464
+ He split the ends of two of the billets until they were frayed out and then
465
+ ignited them. The resinous wood burned vigorously. He handed one torch to
466
+ Nestor, and each of them thrust half the spare billets through his girdle.
467
+ Then, swords out, they again approached the palace.
468
+
469
+ Inside the archway, the flickering yellow flames of the torches were reflected
470
+ from polished walls of black stone; but underfoot the dust lay inches thick.
471
+ Several bats, hanging from bits of stone carving overhead, squeaked angrily and
472
+ whirred away into deeper darkness.
473
+
474
+ They passed between statues of horrific aspect, set in niches on either side.
475
+ Dark hallways opened on either hand. They crossed a throne room. The throne,
476
+ carved of the same black stone as the rest of the building, still stood. Other
477
+ chairs and divans, being made of wood, had crumbled into dust, leaving a litter
478
+ of nails, metallic ornaments, and semi-precious stones on the floor.
479
+
480
+ "It must have stood vacant for thousands of years," whispered Nestor.
481
+
482
+ They traversed several chambers, which might have been a king's private
483
+ apartments; but the absence of perishable furnishings made it impossible to
484
+ tell. They found themselves before a door. Conan put his torch close to it.
485
+
486
+ It was a stout door, set in an arch of stone and made of massive timbers,
487
+ bound together with brackets of green-filmed copper. Conan poked the door with
488
+ his sword. The blade entered easily; a little shower of dusty fragments, pale
489
+ in the torchlight, sifted down.
490
+
491
+ "It's rotten," growled Nestor, kicking out. His boot went into the wood almost
492
+ as easily as Conan's sword had done. A copper fitting fell to the floor with a
493
+ dull clank.
494
+
495
+ In a moment they had battered down the rotten timbers in a shower of wood
496
+ dust. They stooped, thrusting their torches ahead of them into the opening.
497
+ Light, reflected from silver, gold, and jewels, winked back at them.
498
+
499
+ Nestor pushed through the opening, then backed out so suddenly that he bumped
500
+ into Conan. "There are men in there!" he hissed.
501
+
502
+ "Let's see." Conan thrust his head into the opening and peered right and left.
503
+ "They're dead. Come on!"
504
+
505
+ Inside, they stared about them until their torches burned down to their hands
506
+ and they had to light a new pair. Around the room, seven giant warriors, each
507
+ at least seven feet tall, sprawled in chairs. Their heads lay against the chair
508
+ backs and their mouths hung open. They wore the trappings of a bygone era;
509
+ their plumed copper helmets and the copper scales on their corselets were green
510
+ with age. Their skins were brown and waxy-looking, like those of mummies, and
511
+ grizzled beards hung down to their waists. Copper-bladed bills and pikes leaned
512
+ against the wall beside them or lay on the floor.
513
+
514
+ In the center of the room rose an altar, of black basalt like the rest of the
515
+ palace. Near the altar, on the floor, several chests of treasure had lain. The
516
+ wood of these chests had rotted away; the chests had burst open, letting a
517
+ glittering drift of treasure pour out on the floor.
518
+
519
+ Conan stepped close to one of the immobile warriors and touched the man's leg
520
+ with the point of his sword. The body lay still. He murmured:
521
+
522
+ "The ancients must have mummified them, as they tell me the priests do with
523
+ the dead in Stygia."
524
+
525
+ Nestor looked uneasily at the seven still forms. The feeble flames of the
526
+ torches seemed unable to push the dense darkness back to the sable walls and
527
+ roof of the chamber.
528
+
529
+ The block of black stone in the middle of the room rose to waist height. On
530
+ its flat, polished top, inlaid in narrow strips of ivory, was a diagram of
531
+ interlaced circles and triangles. The whole formed a seven-pointed star. The
532
+ spaces between the lines were marked by symbols in some form of writing that
533
+ Conan did not recognize. He could read Zamorian and write it after a fashion,
534
+ and he had smatterings of Hyrkanian and Corinthian; but these cryptic glyphs
535
+ were beyond him.
536
+
537
+ In any case, he was more interested in the things that lay on top of the
538
+ altar. On each point of the star, winking in the ruddy, wavering light of the
539
+ torches, lay a great green jewel, larger than a hen's egg. At the center of the
540
+ diagram stood a green statuette of a serpent with up-reared head, apparently
541
+ carved from jade.
542
+
543
+ Conan moved his torch close to the seven great, glowing gems. "I want those,"
544
+ he grunted. "You can have the rest."
545
+
546
+ "No, you don't!" snapped Nestor. "Those are worth more than all the other
547
+ treasure in this room put together. I will have them!"
548
+
549
+ Tension crackled between the two men, and their free hands stole toward their
550
+ hilts. For a space they stood silently, glaring at each other. Then Nestor said:
551
+
552
+ "Then let us divide them, as we agreed to do."
553
+
554
+ "You cannot divide seven by two," said Conan. "Let us flip one of these coins
555
+ for them. The winner takes the seven jewels, while the other man has his pick
556
+ of the rest. Does that suit you?"
557
+
558
+ Conan picked a coin out of one of the heaps that marked the places where the
559
+ chests had lain. Although he had acquired a good working knowledge of coins in
560
+ his career as a thief, this was entirely unfamiliar. One side bore a face, but
561
+ whether of a man, a demon, or an owl he could not tell. The other side was
562
+ covered with symbols like those on the altar.
563
+
564
+ Conan showed the coin to Nestor. The two treasure hunters grunted agreement.
565
+ Conan flipped the coin into the air, caught it, and slapped it down on his left
566
+ wrist. He extended the wrist, with the coin still covered, toward Nestor.
567
+
568
+ "Heads," said the Gunderman.
569
+
570
+ Conan removed his hand from the coin. Nestor peered and growled: "Ishtar curse
571
+ the thing! You win. Hold my torch a moment."
572
+
573
+ Conan, alert for any treacherous move, took the torch. But Nestor merely
574
+ untied the strap of his cloak and spread the garment on the dusty floor. He
575
+ began shoveling handfuls of gold and gems from the heaps on the floor into a
576
+ pile on the cloak.
577
+
578
+ "Don't load yourself so heavily that you can't run," said Conan. "We are not
579
+ out of this yet, and it's a long walk back to Shadizar."
580
+
581
+ "I can handle it," said Nestor. He gathered up the comers of the cloak, slung
582
+ the improvised bag over his back, and held out a hand for his torch.
583
+
584
+ Conan handed it to him and stepped to the altar. One by one he took the great,
585
+ green jewels and thrust them into the leathern sack that hung from his
586
+ shoulders.
587
+
588
+ When all seven had been removed from the altar top, he paused, looking at the
589
+ jade serpent. "This will fetch a pretty price," he said. Snatching it up, he
590
+ thrust it, too, into his booty bag.
591
+
592
+ "Why not take some of the remaining gold and jewels, too?" asked Nestor. "I
593
+ have all I can carry."
594
+
595
+ "You've got the best stuff," said Conan. "Besides, I don't need any more. Man,
596
+ with these I can buy a kingdom! Or a dukedom, anyway, and all the wine I can
597
+ drink and women I—"
598
+
599
+ A sound caused the plunderers to whirl, staring wildly. Around the walls, the
600
+ seven mummified warriors were coming to life. Their heads came up, their mouths
601
+ closed, and air hissed into their ancient, withered lungs. Their joints creaked
602
+ like rusty hinges as they picked up their pikes and bills and rose to their
603
+ feet.
604
+
605
+ "Run!" yelled Nestor, hurling his torch at the nearest giant and snatching out
606
+ his sword.
607
+
608
+ The torch struck the giant in the chest, fell to the floor, and went out.
609
+ Having both hands free, Conan retained his torch while he drew his sword. The
610
+ light of the remaining torch flickered feebly on the green of the ancient
611
+ copper harness as the giants closed in on the pair.
612
+
613
+ Conan ducked the sweep of a bill and knocked the thrust of a pike aside.
614
+ Between him and the door, Nestor engaged a giant who was moving to block their
615
+ escape. The Gunderman parried a thrust and struck a fierce, backhanded blow at
616
+ his enemy's thigh. The blade bit, but only a little way; it was like chopping
617
+ wood. The giant staggered, and Nestor hewed at another. The point of a pike
618
+ glanced off his dented cuirass.
619
+
620
+ The giants moved slowly, or the treasure hunters would have fallen before
621
+ their first onset. Leaping, dodging, and whirling, Conan avoided blows that
622
+ would have stretched him senseless on the dusty floor. Again and again his
623
+ blade bit into the dry, woody flesh of his assailants. Blows that would have
624
+ decapitated a living man only staggered these creatures from another age. He
625
+ landed a chop on the hand of one attacker, maiming the member and causing the
626
+ giant to drop his pike.
627
+
628
+ He dodged the thrust of another pike and put every ounce of strength into a
629
+ low forehand cut at the giant's ankle. The blade bit half through, and the
630
+ giant crashed to the floor.
631
+
632
+ "Out!" bellowed Conan, leaping over the fallen body.
633
+
634
+ He and Nestor raced out the door and through halls and chambers. For an
635
+ instant Conan feared they were lost, but he caught a glimpse of light ahead.
636
+ The two dashed out the main portal of the palace. Behind them came the clatter
637
+ and tramp of the guardians. Overhead, the sky had paled and the stars were
638
+ going out with the coming of dawn.
639
+
640
+ "Head for the wall," panted Nestor. "I think we can outrun them."
641
+
642
+ As they reached the far side of the plaza, Conan glanced back. "Look!" he cried.
643
+
644
+ One by one, the giants emerged from the palace. And one by one, as they came
645
+ into the growing light, they sank to the pavement and crumbled into dust,
646
+ leaving their plumed copper helmets, their scaled cuirasses, and their other
647
+ accouterments in heaps on the ground.
648
+
649
+ "Well, that's that," said Nestor. "But how shall we get back into Shadizar
650
+ without being arrested? It will be day-light long before we get there."
651
+
652
+ Conan grinned. "There's a way of getting in that we thieves know. Near the
653
+ northeast corner of the wall stands a clump of trees. If you poke around among
654
+ the shrubs that mask the wall, you will find a kind of culvert—I suppose to let
655
+ the water out of the city in heavy rains. It used to be closed by an iron
656
+ grating, but that has rusted away. If you are not too fat, you can worm your
657
+ way through it. You come out in a lot where people dump rubbish from houses
658
+ that have been torn down."
659
+
660
+ "Good," said Nestor. "I'll—"
661
+
662
+ A deep rumble cut off his words. The earth heaved and rocked and trembled,
663
+ throwing him to the ground and staggering the Cimmerian.
664
+
665
+ "Look out!" yelled Conan.
666
+
667
+ As Nestor started to scramble up, Conan caught his arm and dragged him back
668
+ toward the center of the plaza. As he did so, the wall of a nearby building
669
+ fell over into the plaza. It smashed down just where the two had been standing,
670
+ but its mighty crash was lost in the thunder of the earthquake.
671
+
672
+ "Let's get out of here!" shouted Nestor.
673
+
674
+ Steering by the moon, now low in the western sky, they ran zigzag through the
675
+ streets. On either side of them, walls and columns leaned, crumbled, and
676
+ crashed. The noise was deafening. Clouds of dust arose, making the fugitives
677
+ cough.
678
+
679
+ Conan skidded to a halt and leaped back to avoid being crushed under the front
680
+ of a collapsing temple. He staggered as fresh tremors shook the earth beneath
681
+ him. He scrambled over piles of ruin, some old and some freshly made. He leaped
682
+ madly out from under a falling column drum. Fragments of stone and brick struck
683
+ him; one laid open a cut along his jaw. Another glanced from his shin, making
684
+ him curse by the gods of all the lands he had visited.
685
+
686
+ At last he reached the city wall. It was a wall no longer, having been shaken
687
+ down to a low ridge of broken stone.
688
+
689
+ Limping, coughing, and panting, Conan climbed the ridge and turned to look
690
+ back. Nestor was no longer with him. Probably, he thought, the Gunderman had
691
+ been caught under a falling wall. Conan listened but could hear no cry for help.
692
+
693
+ The rumble of quaking earth and falling masonry died away. The light of the
694
+ low moon glistened on the vast cloud of dust that covered the city. Then a dawn
695
+ breeze sprang up and slowly wafted the dust away.
696
+
697
+ Sitting on the crest of the ridge of ruin that marked the site of the wall,
698
+ Conan stared back across the site of Larsha. The city bore an aspect entirely
699
+ different from when he had entered it. Not a single building remained upright
700
+ Even the monolithic palace of black basalt, where he and Nestor had found their
701
+ treasure, had crumbled into a heap of broken blocks. Conan gave up thoughts of
702
+ going back to the palace on some future occasion to collect the rest of the
703
+ treasure. An army of workmen would have to clear away the wreckage before the
704
+ valuables could be salvaged.
705
+
706
+ All of Larsha had fallen into heaps of rubble. As far as he could see in the
707
+ growing light, nothing moved in the city. The only sound was the belated fall
708
+ of an occasional stone.
709
+
710
+ Conan felt his booty bag, to make sure that he still had had his loot, and
711
+ turned his face westward, towards Shadizar. Behind him, the rising sun shot a
712
+ spear of light against his broad back.
713
+
714
+ The following night, Conan swaggered into his favorite tavern, that of
715
+ Abuletes, in the Maul. The low, smoke-stained room stank of sweat and sour
716
+ wine. At crowded tables, thieves and murderers drank ale and wine, diced,
717
+ argued, sang, quarreled, and blustered. It was deemed a dull evening here when
718
+ at least one customer was not stabbed in a brawl.
719
+
720
+ Across the room, Conan sighted his sweetheart of the moment, drinking alone at
721
+ a small table. This was Semiramis, a strongly-built, black-haired woman several
722
+ years older than the Cimmerian.
723
+
724
+ "Ho there, Semiramis!" roared Conan, pushing his way across. "I've got
725
+ something to show you! Abuletes! A jug of your best Kyrian! I'm in luck
726
+ tonight!"
727
+
728
+ Had Conan been older, caution would have stopped him from openly boasting of
729
+ his plunder, let alone displaying it. As it was, he strode up to Semiramis'
730
+ table and up-ended the leathern sack containing the seven great, green gems.
731
+
732
+ The jewels cascaded out of the bag, thumped the wine-wet table top—and
733
+ crumbled instantly into fine green powder, which sparkled in the candlelight.
734
+
735
+ Conan dropped the sack and stood with his mouth agape, while nearby drinkers
736
+ burst into raucous laughter.
737
+
738
+ "Crom and Mannanan!" the Cimmerian breathed at last. "This time, it seems, I
739
+ was too clever for my own good." Then he bethought him of the jade serpent,
740
+ still in the bag. "Well, I have something that will pay for a few good
741
+ carousals, anyway."
742
+
743
+ Moved by curiosity, Semiramis picked up the sack from the table. Then she
744
+ dropped it with a scream.
745
+
746
+ "It's—it's alive!" she cried.
747
+
748
+ "What—" began Conan, but a shout from the doorway cut him off :
749
+
750
+ "There he is, men! Seize him!"
751
+
752
+ A fat magistrate had entered the tavern, followed by a squad of the night
753
+ watch, armed with bills. The other customers fell silent, staring woodenly into
754
+ space as if they knew nothing of Conan or of any of the other riffraff who were
755
+ Abuletes' guests.
756
+
757
+ The magistrate pushed toward Conan's table. Whipping out his sword, the
758
+ Cimmerian put his back against the wall. His blue eyes blazed dangerously, and
759
+ his teeth showed in the candle light.
760
+
761
+ "Take me if you can, dogs!" he snarled. "I've done nothing against your stupid
762
+ laws!" Out of the side of his mouth, he muttered to Semiramis: "Grab the bag
763
+ and get out of here. If they get me, if's yours."
764
+
765
+ "I—I'm afraid of it!" whimpered the woman.
766
+
767
+ "Oh-ho!" chortled the magistrate, coming forward. "Nothing, eh? Nothing but to
768
+ rob our leading citizens blind! There's evidence enough to lop your head off a
769
+ hundred times over! And then you slew Nestor's soldiers and persuaded him to
770
+ join you in a raid on the ruins of Larsha, eh? We found him earlier this
771
+ evening, drunk and boasting of his feat. The villain got away from us, but you
772
+ shan't!"
773
+
774
+ As the watachmen formed a half-circle around Conan, bills pointing toward his
775
+ breast, the magistrate noticed the sack on the table. "Whaf's this, your latest
776
+ loot? We'll see—"
777
+
778
+ The fat man thrust a hand into the sack. For an instant he fumbled. Then his
779
+ eyes widened; his mouth opened to emit an appalling shriek. He jerked his hand
780
+ out of the bag. A jade-green snake, alive and writhing, had thrown a loop
781
+ around his wrist and had sunk its fangs into his hand.
782
+
783
+ Cries of horror and amazement arose. A watchman sprang back and fell over a
784
+ table, smashing mugs and splashing liquors. Another stepped forward to catch
785
+ the magistrate as he tottered and fell. A third dropped his bill and, screaming
786
+ hysterically, broke for the door.
787
+
788
+ Panic seized the customers. Some jammed themselves into the door, struggling
789
+ to get out. A couple started fighting with knives, while another thief, locked
790
+ in combat with a watchman, rolled on the floor. One of the candles was knocked
791
+ over; then another, leaving the room but dimly lit by the little earthenware
792
+ lamp over the counter.
793
+
794
+ In the gloom, Conan caught Semiramis' wrist and hauled her to her feet. He
795
+ beat the panic-stricken mob aside with the flat of his sword and forced his way
796
+ through the throng to the door. Out in the night, the two ran, rounding several
797
+ corners to throw off pursuit. Then they stopped to breathe. Conan said:
798
+
799
+ "This city will be too cursed hot for me after this. I'm on my way. Good-bye,
800
+ Semiramis."
801
+
802
+ "Would you not care to spend a last night with me?"
803
+
804
+ "Not this time. I must try to catch that rascal Nestor. If the fool hadn't
805
+ blabbed, the law would not have gotten on my trail so quickly. He has all the
806
+ treasure a man can carry, while I ended up with naught. Maybe I can persuade
807
+ him to give me half; if not—" He thumbed the edge of his sword.
808
+
809
+ Semiramis sighed. "There will always be a hideout for you in Shadizar, while I
810
+ live. Give me a last kiss."
811
+
812
+ They embraced briefly. Then Conan was gone, like a shadow in the night.
813
+
814
+ On the Corinthian Road that leads west from Shadizar, three bowshots from the
815
+ city walls, stands the fountain of Ninus. According to the story, Ninus was a
816
+ rich merchant who suffered from a wasting disease. A god visited him in his
817
+ dreams and promised him a cure if he would build a fountain on the road leading
818
+ to Shadizar from the west, so that travelers could wash and quench their thirst
819
+ before entering the city. Ninus built the fountain, but the tale does not tell
820
+ whether he recovered from his sickness.
821
+
822
+ Half an hour after his escape from Abuletes' tavern, Conan found Nestor,
823
+ sitting on the curbing of Ninus' fountain.
824
+
825
+ "How did you make out with your seven matchless gems?" asked Nestor.
826
+
827
+ Conan told what had befallen his share of the loot "Now," he said,
828
+ "since—thanks to your loose tongue—I must leave Shadizar, and since I have none
829
+ of the treasure left, it would be only right for you to divide your remaining
830
+ portion with me."
831
+
832
+ Nestor gave a barking, mirthless laugh. "My share? Boy, here is half of what I
833
+ have left." From his girdle he brought out two pieces of gold and tossed one to
834
+ Conan, who caught it. "I owe it to you for pulling me away from that falling
835
+ wall."
836
+
837
+ "What happened to you?"
838
+
839
+ "When the watch cornered me in the dive, I managed to cast a table and bowl a
840
+ few over. Then I picked up the bright stuff in my cloak, slung it over my back,
841
+ and started for the door. One who tried to halt me I cut down; but another
842
+ landed a slash on my cloak. The next thing I knew, the whole mass of gold and
843
+ jewels spilled out on the floor, and everybody—watchmen, magistrate, and
844
+ customers—joined in a mad scramble for them." He held up the cloak, showing a
845
+ two-foot rent in the fabric. "Thinking that the treasure would do me no good if
846
+ my head were adorning a spike over the West Gate, I left while the leaving was
847
+ good. When I got outside the city, I looked in my mantle, but all I found were
848
+ those two coins, caught in a fold. You're welcome to one of them."
849
+
850
+ Conan stood scowling for a moment. Then his mouth twitched into a grin. A low
851
+ laugh rumbled in his throat; his head went back as he burst into a thunderous
852
+ guffaw. "A fine pair of treasure-seekers we are! Crom, but the gods have had
853
+ sport with us! What a joke!" Nestor smiled wryly. "I am glad you see the
854
+ amusing side of it. But after this I do not think Shadizar will be safe for
855
+ either of us."
856
+
857
+ "Whither are you bound?" asked Conan.
858
+
859
+ "I'll head east, to seek a mercenary post in Turan. They say King Yildiz is
860
+ hiring fighters to whip his raggle-taggle horde into a real army. Why not come
861
+ with me, lad? You're cut out for a soldier."
862
+
863
+ Conan shook his head. "Not for me, marching back and forth on the drill ground
864
+ all day while some fatheaded officer bawls: "Forward, march! Present, pikes!' I
865
+ hear there are good pickings in the West; I'll try that for a while."
866
+
867
+ "Well, may your barbarous gods go with you," said Nestor. "If you change your
868
+ mind, ask for me in the barracks at Aghrapur. Farewell!"
869
+
870
+ "Farewell," replied Conan. Without further words, he stepped out on the
871
+ Corinthian Road and soon was lost to view in the night.
872
+
873
+
874
+
875
+ THE END
pg120.txt ADDED
The diff for this file is too large to render. See raw diff