CHAPTER 9
CONAN AWOKE WITH a start.
He couldn’t feel his hands. He pulled them from beneath the heavy
aurochs skin that was all but smothering him. They’d become as
large as hams, or at least the cloth wrapping them was. And when he
tried to tense his fingers, he couldn’t move them much, but
something inside the cloth squished and a noxious scent poured
out.
A stick clacked against the foot of the bed. “Boy,
if you pull those poultices apart again, I will let your hands rot off.”
He looked and could only see a silhouette moving
through the hut’s darkened interior. Still, there was no mistaking
the voice. “Grandfather?” Conan meant to ask the question
forcefully—befitting a warrior—but it came out as a croak, and a
weak one at that.
“No other fool would take
you in, Conan.” The old man stirred coals in the hearth, then
tossed on more wood. A little blaze began to flare. Connacht,
leaning heavily on the stick, walked to the bedside and peered down
at the boy. He placed a hand on his forehead. “Good. I think the
fever’s broken. Death wanted you, boy, but we cheated him, we
did.”
“Water?”
The old man helped Conan sit up and drink. He
didn’t let the boy have too much, or drink it quickly. With his
bandaged hands he couldn’t have managed the cup anyway, so Conan
drank at the dictated pace. He nodded when done.
“How long?”
“A week, though now’s the first you’re right in the
head.” Connacht shook his head. “Came in fevered. Burns on your
hands all infected. Had the blood poison. Lucky for you I
remembered what a Shemite healer did for me once. Had to use bear
fat instead of goat. Smells worse, seems to work the same.”
Conan stared at his hands as they lay like lifeless
lumps in his lap. “A week?”
“Came crashing through the bush wild-eyed and
burning up.”
My father burned up . .
.
“Weren’t in your right mind. Went for me with your
sword, you did.”
Conan’s eyes widened. “I didn’t . . . ?”
“Hurt me?” Connacht laughed. “You were too weak to
break an egg with a hammer, boy. How in the name of Crom did you
get here?”
Conan closed his eyes. Is my
father really dead? Are they all dead?
“Conan?”
The young Cimmerian shook himself. “Raiders
destroyed the village. I was the only one who survived.”
Connacht’s face became graven. “I know you didn’t
run, boy.”
“I wasn’t a coward, Grandfather. But . . .” Conan’s
throat closed.
Connacht poured more water. Conan drank, both
because he was thirsty and to soften the lump in his throat. Yet
even when his grandfather took the cup away, he couldn’t say
anything.
The old man nodded slowly. “Seen a lot of people
die. Many of them friends. Had more than one in my arms, just
talking to him, easing the passage. Never an easy thing.”
Conan shook his head.
“My son?”
“I . . . I tried to save him.”
“And he wanted you to live.”
Conan nodded.
“You think he was wrong? You think he was
stupid?”
The young Cimmerian looked up horrified.
“No.”
“If there weren’t no saving him, and there was a
chance of saving you, he did right.” Connacht scratched at his
throat. “Like as not, you won’t see that, but it’s true.”
“I killed some of them, Grandfather.” Conan
remembered the last raider. “One was a big man, cavalry. He was
taking a scalp. I took his knife.”
The old man crossed to where a belt hung on the
wall and drew the dagger from its sheath. “Turanian. Long way from
home.”
“Kushites, too, and Aquilonians. And female
archers.”
“Easy, son. Excite yourself and the fever will come
back.” Connacht’s eyes narrowed. “All those people this far north.
Taller tale than I’ve ever told.”
Conan snarled. “I’m not lying.”
“Didn’t say you were.”
“They wanted something. A piece of a mask. Ashuran,
I think. Is there such a place?”
Connacht returned to the stool by the bed. “Not
Ashuran. Acheron, maybe, but it’s long-ago gone. Thousands of
years.”
“They found it. They found what they wanted.”
“Who?”
Conan frowned. “Klarzin. He has a daughter,
Marique. And there is an Aquilonian named Lucius.”
Connacht laughed. “There’s hundreds of Aquilonians
named Lucius, boy.”
“This one has no nose.”
“Don’t know that narrows it down much.”
“I took his nose. Cut it right off.”
“Did you, now?” His grandfather nodded solemnly.
“Taking the nose off an Aquilonian makes any day a good day.”
Conan smiled, then remembered why it had been so
terrible a day. He shivered and sank down again in the bed.
His grandfather brushed a lock of black hair from
his forehead. “You’ve told me enough for now. You’ll be telling me
the rest later. We’ll figure it all out.”
“Good.” Conan stared at his hands. “When we do, I’m
going to kill them all.”
CONNACHT REPACKED THE
poultices over the next week and a half, and Conan didn’t fight
him. He didn’t have the strength. The boy wanted to be up and
tracking his enemies, but it was all he could do to throw off the
auroch hide and sit up when his grandfather brought him broth.
After several days of that, the old man switched him to stew.
Aside from eating, all Conan could do was sleep.
Sometimes nightmares had him crying out in the middle of the night,
but Connacht was always there by his side. He’d listen to Conan,
then tell him a story. Not quite the same stories he used to tell
during his visits to the village—these were a bit more gentle—but
the sound of his voice was enough to allow Conan to drift back into
sleep.
A couple of times Conan woke up during the day, and
on one of those occasions, he thought he heard his grandfather
talking to someone outside the hut. Later that afternoon he asked
if he’d been right.
Connacht nodded. “Aiden came up from the south to
tell me your village is gone. The tribes had some skirmishes with
your horde. They backtracked to the village. They burned all the
bodies, hauled what they could away. They brought me some things of
your father’s; said they didn’t find you among the dead.”
“Did you tell them I was alive?”
“He didn’t ask, but likely knew. No matter. No one
else will.”
“Good. They won’t expect me.”
“Conan, you are not even certain who they
are.”
“How many march under the crest of the tentacled
mask?”
“None.”
Conan frowned. “What?”
“I have traveled the lands, Conan. No nation bears
such a crest.”
“What of this Acheron?”
Connacht brought his grandson a bowl of stew and
loosened enough of the bandages to slip the poultice out, but left
enough to cover the burns. “Feed yourself and I’ll tell you of
Acheron.”
“You’ve been there?”
The older man laughed. “I’m not that old, Conan.
Acheron fell in ancient days, before there was a Cimmeria. It was
an evil place, so they say. Swing a dead cat, you’d hit a
necromancer or three. Put four of them in a hut together and you’d
have a dozen plots hatched. An evil people wanting to take over the
world. So they went and concentrated and made this thing of power.
A mask. And they gave it to their god-king or whatever they called
him. He and his hordes cut a swath . . . well, from what you and
Aidan said, you know. But imagine kingdoms falling, Conan. Nations
just wiped from the face of creation.”
The boy nodded, watching his grandfather’s face for
any hint of a lie. He spooned stew into his mouth, chewing
unconsciously, wiping the spillage on the back of his hand.
“As the tales would have it, men from the north
took exception to the rise of Acheron. Was a close thing, but
armies from across the world banded together, and led by
northerners, they shattered Acheron’s power. They took the mask and
broke it into parts. Each contingent got one and hid it away. They
hoped no one would ever be able to assemble it and create such
misery again.”
Conan crunched a piece of gristle. “How could
anyone know of the mask?”
“You’ll find, boy, that there are always people
nosing about in places they shouldn’t, learning things not meant to
be learned, and then developing quite a problem keeping their
mouths shut.” The old man grew silent for a moment, then grunted.
“You’ll run afoul of a number of them in your life.”
Conan’s spoon froze halfway to his mouth. “Are you
now a seer?”
“No, I just benefit from having seen much.”
Connacht shook his head. “People seek power, and there are some who
hunt for Acheron’s secrets. Your Klarzin might be one. Have to hope
if he’s up to deviltry, the devils will take him before he can shed
more blood.”
“Not devils he has to worry about.” Conan handed
the empty bowl to his grandfather. “More, please. And a
favor.”
Connacht returned from the hearth with more stew.
“I’m your grandfather. What would you be having me do?”
Conan took a deep breath. “I cannot go and kill
Klarzin.”
“Now you’ve returned to your senses.”
“I need your help. My father taught me much. You
taught him more. I need to know it all.”
Connacht raised an eyebrow. “Even knowing all I
taught him didn’t keep your father alive.”
“If you will not teach me, I will find another
swordmaster.”
The old man thought for a moment. “There is no
dissuading you?”
“I will have my vengeance.”
“You’ll do everything I say, as I tell you to do
it?”
Conan sighed, hearing his father’s words come out
of his grandfather’s mouth. “Exactly.”
“Very well. In another week we’ll begin.” Connacht
stood. “Finish your stew, then sleep. Sleep as much as you can.
When you become my student, you’ll have no time at all for that
nonsense.”
Had Conan entertained the thought that his
grandfather was joking, the old man disabused him of the notion
immediately. He established a routine that had Conan waking before
dawn, crawling into bed well into the evening, and if the boy stood
still at all, it would only be during some odd exercise to build
strength or maintain balance. Very little of his training actually
included holding a sword in hand, which irked the boy until he
figured out what his grandfather was doing.
For the first two weeks, things focused on his
getting his strength and endurance back, as well as keeping his
hands healthy. Conan had always been slender, but his illness had
reduced him to skin and bones. Connacht had him hauling water,
shifting stones, running ever-longer distances, then having him
sprint—all the while increasing his weight by adding rock-filled
pouches or bits and pieces of old armor to his attire.
The greatest care was lavished on Conan’s hands.
The blisters had long since burst and the infection had been
defeated. His grandfather mixed up a foul-smelling unguent out of
fish meat, bear grease, and a variety of dried roots and leaves,
then had the boy work it into his palms. Conan continued to wrap
his hands and don gloves for anything involving lifting. Connacht
also forced him to flex his hands hundreds of times throughout the
day.
“You’ll always carry scars from that day, Conan,
but you can’t be crippled by them.”
The combat drills Conan hungered for came at last,
but not in the way he’d been expecting. His grandfather still
wouldn’t let him touch a sword. “Sword’s just a metal sting. A
warrior’s weapon is his body. Can’t use that, doesn’t matter how
sharp the sword.”
The old man then proceeded to teach his grandson
every aspect of infighting that he’d learned from a lifetime of
adventuring and brawling—and Conan suspected that he made up a few
on the spot. Connacht, despite being four times his grandson’s age,
tossed him around as if he were a raggedy doll. Conan vaguely
remembered having accused his father of not fighting fairly, but
Corin had been the soul of sportsmanship compared to his father.
Kicks, punches, head butts, and elbow strikes knocked Conan all
over the yard before the hut.
Connacht even bit him once!
Conan would have protested, but he remembered
Klarzin parrying his sword cut, then kicking him full in the chest.
Corin had been right. Fighters might talk about fighting fairly,
but in their storytelling they left out certain details. He
couldn’t remember a single of his grandfather’s stories that
included his having bitten anyone, but the old man was a bit too
practiced at it to even suggest that it had never happened.
Conan gave back as much as he could, and
occasionally landed a fist or a kick on his grandfather. He never
hurt him, though, but not because he pulled his punches. Connacht
still moved quickly enough to slip most blows, and certainly knew
enough to anticipate Conan’s next moves. Still, as the weeks wore
on, Conan’s hits became more consistent than misses, and his
ability to block attacks improved greatly.
One day Connacht called a sudden halt to their
fighting. “Good. You’ve learned well.”
Conan, doubled over, catching his breath, glanced
up. “Is this how you taught my father?”
“Corin, the size of him? No. I had a different way
with him.” The old man straightened up. “I want you to haul twenty
buckets of water from the river to fill the cistern, then I have
one more thing for you. Accomplish that task, and tomorrow we begin
working with a sword.”
Conan smiled and ran off. The sooner he perfected
his sword fighting, the sooner he’d be able to avenge his village.
While thoughts of revenge filled his mind, he hauled water and saw
nothing of his grandfather. He did hear some pounding from within
the hut, but attached no significance to it.
Finally the cistern brimmed over and Conan returned
the buckets to their place near the small forge his grandfather
maintained. The young Cimmerian stepped into the hut and found his
grandfather sitting by the hearth. The meager furnishings had been
cleared out of the center. An iron plate had been bolted to the
floor and four feet of heavy chain attached to it. The chain ended
in an iron shackle.
Connacht nodded to it. “Put your right ankle in
there. Lock it shut.”
The young man sat on the floor and secured the
shackle around his ankle.
His grandfather got up, took Conan’s sword from
where it hung on the wall, and stood beside the doorway. “You’re a
good fighter, Conan. You learn quickly. You’re determined to go
after Klarzin, aren’t you?”
Conan nodded.
“There’s nothing anyone could do to stop you, is
there?”
The boy shook his head.
Connacht tossed Conan’s sword out into the yard.
“Go get your sword. When you get it, you’ll be ready to get
Klarzin.”