CHAPTER 13
THICK AND CLOYING, smoke
swirled through the Messantian alehouse’s dark reaches. Equal parts
the tang of human sweat, the empty promises of opium, and the sharp
scent of spilled ale, the heavy air muted laughter and dulled the
flash of bright eyes. Women swirled, smoky tendrils caressing them,
as they danced free from one pirate’s embrace and into that of
another. Hungers of all manner would be sated there, thirsts
quenched, hearts inflamed, in a celebration of life and
victory.
Two men remained detached. Navarus languished in a
hanging cage once reserved for house slaves. He still wore his
finery and clutched his parasol. He struggled to maintain his
dignity while the women he had enjoyed on the road taunted him and
tempted him. Pirates ridiculed him, tossing him grapes and scraps
of meat with the same carelessness—but less frequency—that they
tossed the same to cautious curs slinking between tables. Navarus
made no attempt to gather the food with which he was pelted, but
occasionally plucked a morsel from a fold in his robe.
Opposite him, in a darkened corner, Conan sat
cloaked in shadow. He’d drunk enough ale to soften his grim
expression—but had not softened it enough to tempt women to join
him. He watched the others abandon all pretense of civilization,
not descending into the savagery they would attribute to a
barbarian such as himself, but regressing into childhood while
coveting adult pleasures. It was not that the Cimmerian could not
understand their abandon, or that he’d not seen barbarian tribesmen
from Nordheim to the Black Kingdoms similarly indulge themselves.
He had on countless occasions, and yet those celebrations had been
different.
They are honest.
Those who did not lay claim to the veneer of
civilization felt no need to justify letting it slip away. Plunder
was for the strong, and there was no vice in taking it. Women were
for the strong, and taking them ensured pleasure and the future.
The strong earned the right to these things through courage and
cunning, speed and daring and skill. Barbarians knew this and
respected it. While there were still the craven who might scheme, a
strong arm and a sharp mind would see through their subterfuge and
put an end to their plotting.
But Conan did not look upon the Hornet’s crew with contempt—instead it was the mild
amusement of an adult watching children at play. Though the
caravan’s guards had largely run off, heading back toward Zingara,
the crew had worked hard and some had died. And the slave women,
now freed, celebrated that freedom by sharing that which would have
been taken from them. Slavery had reduced them to little more than
beasts. Liberation had granted them their humanity again, and the
desire to celebrate that resurrection should have surprised no
one.
Artus rose from his place at the centermost table,
nearly spilling two half-naked women to the floor, and spread his
arms wide. “Is there no one who can best me? Are there no more arms
to wrestle?”
Across from where he had been seated, a burly
pirate sidled away, one shoulder lower than the other. He grabbed a
tankard of ale and downed it quickly while a shipmate grabbed his
wrist and yanked his shoulder back into the socket. The pirate
roared, spewing froth to the rafters, then joined the other in
laughing at his predicament.
Artus pointed at Conan. “Come, Cimmerian. Show
these others what it is to be a man.”
Conan shook his head. Artus needed no other
opponents. He did not need to prove himself to those assembled. The
second someone offered him a tankard, or one of the women began to
nibble on his ear, he’d pursue other delights. Thus had Artus
always been—at least for as long as Conan had known him.
The Zingaran shook his head, his long locks
slithering back and forth across his broad shoulders. “Has the time
away from ice and snow softened you, northerner?”
The Cimmerian sat forward. He knew what Artus was
doing, trying to draw him out. Not in the way of men who have
something to prove, but in the way of men seeking to save a friend.
Conan had always been content to sit quietly and keep his own
counsel, but to Artus’s mind, he had been doing that far too much
since his return.
Is he right? Conan could
not answer that question. He truly felt no different than he had
before. Still, there were times when the quiet did press in on him,
when a sense of something missing stole over him. It did not make
him feel weak, but unbalanced, as if at any moment he could fall
and fall forever. That was not something
that he’d known before he’d met Bêlit and before he lost her; and
it was nothing upon which he wished to dwell.
So he rose and stretched, massive muscles twisting
beneath flesh darkened by the southern sun. Pirates looked up,
muzzles dripping sour ale. Most impressed, more fearful, and a few
with smiles proud and confident. Women also stared, half-lidded
eyes studying him and the fluidity with which he moved. They’d all
seen ample evidence of his power and skill in combat, and wondered
if he had talents of similar magnitude in other areas of
life.
Artus laughed aloud and snagged two ale mugs from a
passing wench. “The lion emerges from his den to learn a
lesson.”
Conan raised an eyebrow.
The Zingaran bowed as if he were a noble and slid
around the table. He offered Conan the seat that would afford the
Cimmerian an easy view of the alehouse doors. The Cimmerian sat and
rested his right elbow on the ale-soaked table. One of the women,
tall and slender, perched herself on his left thigh, her folded
hands capping his shoulder.
Artus took up the spot opposite. “Shall we wager,
Conan?”
All around them the clink of coins newly won and
the whispering of odds being offered and taken encouraged that
idea. “I have nothing to wager.”
Artus reached out and caught a giggling girl around
the waist. He pulled her into his lap. “Mine against yours, winner
take both?”
Conan glanced at the woman on his thigh. He caught
the hint of a smile before she cast her eyes downward. “A fair
bet.”
The two men joined hands and eyed each other. Artus
smiled cautiously. “Are you ready, barbarian?”
Conan grunted.
Muscles bunched as the two men strove against each
other. Artus started hard, aiming for the lightning-fast victory he
favored, but Conan met him strength for strength. The Cimmerian
felt his muscles knot, the burn up and down his arm. He did not
grit his teeth as others might do, but he did lock his jaw and his
eyes narrowed. His lips pressed into a flat line, he exerted
himself.
Bit by bit their quivering hands shifted position.
Artus’s initial burst of strength had forced Conan’s hand down
slightly. Conan brought them back even, then steadily pressured
Artus’s hand toward the tabletop.
Artus’s lips peeled back from his teeth in a snarl.
He pushed, winning an inch. Some men cheered; others groaned. The
women shifted in anticipation. Gold coins rustled and clinked, but
then Artus’s hand began to sink again.
Sink too quickly.
Conan guessed his friend’s intent. Artus had matched his strength against that of many men
that evening. He was bound to be fatigued. The smart money was
against his winning. If he lost, no one would think it
unreasonable. Conan would take the prize and in that night’s
enjoyment might be drawn further back from the abyss.
Conan laughed. “You’re done, Zingaran!” He broke
eye contact with Artus and took a long lick up the throat of the
woman clinging to him. “Better she know me than
disappointment.”
As well as Artus knew Conan, Conan knew Artus. The
man’s dark eyes flashed dangerously. He bellowed angrily, then
heaved mightily. Conan’s hand slammed down hard enough to slosh ale
from tankards. Artus roared, victorious, and rising, thrust both
fists in the air.
Then he realized, as he caught Conan’s smile, what
had happened. His eyes tightened and he pointed a finger at the
Cimmerian. “You always were the clever one.”
Conan worked his right arm around and massaged his
biceps. “And you the strong one.”
Artus sat back down and invited both women to join
him. “When I first met Conan, he was just a scrawny little rat,
picking pockets in Zamora. But even so, it was he who stole the
Elephant’s Heart and slew the sorcerer, Yara.”
The woman Conan had lost to Artus stared at him
with open admiration. “That was you?”
Conan drank, then wiped foam on the back of his
hand. “Go, Artus, you’ve won your prize. Enjoy.”
Artus stood. “I won’t forget this,
barbarian.”
“Just make sure they won’t,
Zingaran.” Conan smiled and looked around. “Who’s next?”
The pirates roared laughter to answer his question,
but none came to take him up on his offer. Then a small man in a
tattered robe and eye patch ducked through the crowd and sat
opposite the Cimmerian, his head bowed. Had it not been for the
heavy clink of chains linking the manacles on the man’s wrists,
Conan would have shoved him away.
The Cimmerian looked around the room. A half-dozen
men entered in leather armor, wearing an ensign that Conan did not
recognize. They were not of the Messantian Guard or any Argosian
company, yet they carried themselves as if they had that much
authority or more. Out of place in the alehouse, they became
objects of interest, but Conan’s interest in them faded as their
captain entered.
Something struck the Cimmerian as familiar about
the incredibly corpulent man. He didn’t immediately recognize the
face because of the odd mask that covered the man’s nose—or what
should have been his nose. He realized he’d not seen this man per
se, but the man he had once been, only slightly less bulky, and
still possessed of a nose.
A nose I took.
The captain pointed toward the crowd and waved his
men in to search while he himself retreated back into the night. As
the soldiers began to cut through the crowd, the man opposite Conan
made to get up. The Cimmerian clamped his hand over the smaller
man’s, causing that man’s single eye to widen with panic.
“They’ll take us both to the mines if you don’t let
go.”
“Who are they? Who is the man without a
nose?”
“He’s an Aquilonian. Lucan, something . . .”
“Lucius?”
“Yes, yes, I think that’s it.” His other hand
grabbed Conan’s. “Please, let me go.”
“He oversees mines?”
“Lead mines, north of Messantia.” The smaller man
quaked. “Please. The reward for my capture is small, but I will
repay you that and more if you let me go.”
Conan did not release him. “I have business with
Lucius.”
The guards had fanned out through the crowd and
approached the table where Conan sat with the smaller man. The
pirates drew back, fingering their weapons. Conan shook his head,
leaving many of them puzzled.
A guard laid the flat of an Aquilonian short sword
on the small man’s shoulder. “This one is ours. Release him.”
Conan looked up, aware that three of guardsmen had
taken up positions behind him. “A reward.”
The man behind Conan laid a heavy hand on the
Cimmerian’s neck. “You’ve earned ten lashes. Care for more?”
Conan stood abruptly, smashing the back of his head
into a guardsman’s face. Bones cracked and blood gushed from a
shattered nose. The guard opposite the table lunged with his short
sword. Conan twisted to the right. His left hand fell on the
guard’s wrist and plunged the sword into the belly of another
guardsman. The barbarian jacked his elbow back into the face of the
man who had tried to stab him, then backhanded a fist to the side
of another guardsman’s face.
He turned to face the last two of the guards, a
bloodied short sword now in his hands. “I captured him. He said
your captain would pay a reward. Will you cheat me of it as these
men would have?”
The guards’ new leader cleared his throat. “That
would not be my intention.”
Conan sneered. “Your men are weak. Your master
should have more men like me.” He deliberately slowed his speech
and thickened his accent. He recalled the lesson of Venarium, and
allowed the Aquilonian to think him nothing more than a stupid
savage. He even pounded a fist against his chest to emphasize that
impression. “He should make me your captain.”
The Aquilonian held up open hands. “I think you are
quite right, Vanirman. I’ve placed you, haven’t I?”
Conan grunted.
“Well then, with a sign of good faith, I would take
you to our master. I’m certain he will hire you immediately.
Provided you prove good faith.”
The Cimmerian frowned heavily. “Good faith?”
The guard nodded, pointing toward the moaning men
on the floor. “Your capacity for violence speaks well of you, but
this also demands caution.”
Conan nodded slowly, as if considering the words.
Then, smiling, he stabbed the short sword into a rafter. “Good
faith.”
“But you never used the sword on any of these men.”
The Aquilonian sighed. “Such a boon you would be to our master, yet
you would not be allowed to approach if believed a danger. If there
was a way . . .”
The Cimmerian narrowed his eyes. “Your master pays
well?”
“Very.”
Conan crouched and came up with a pair of manacles
pulled from the belt of a moaning man. He snapped one end around
one wrist, held the other out to the Aquilonian. “Take me to this
master who pays well. In good faith.”
The Aquilonian smiled. “A wise decision, Vanirman,
very wise indeed.”