CHAPTER 25
CONAN STOOD ON the main
deck a day later, the sword in his hand whistling through the air.
He’d lost his sword at the Shaipur outpost. The Hornet’s armory boasted a fine selection of weapons
plundered from the world over. As sailors were wont to do, they
wagered on which they thought the Cimmerian might choose.
He tried a half dozen, almost instantly rejecting
anything saberlike that resembled Khalar Zym’s sword. While the
sabers were fine weapons, and curved cutlasses worked well aboard
ship, both served best when the fighting allowed for grand slashes.
He wanted more reach than afforded by an Aquilonian short sword.
The closest blade they had to the one he lost needed a new grip.
Finally he settled on a long sword, which gained in length what it
surrendered in width. Had this been my blade at
Shaipur, I might have spitted him.
Conan studied the blade once more, then turned to
face Artus. “Raise an edge on it, open the toe of my scabbard so it
fits, and I am set.”
Artus smiled and accepted a small pouch of gold
coins from the first mate. “I thought that might be it.”
“And ’twas your teeth that gnawed the grip on the
broadsword.”
The Zingaran shrugged. “Tang was weak and cross
hilt too small.”
“True.” Conan smiled. “Artus, I had him. So very
close.”
“The gods were not amused enough.” The corsair’s
eyes narrowed. “Are you certain you’re well enough to go after
him?”
Conan spread his arms wide, stretching massive
chest muscles. “I will be fine by the time the gods are amused
enough to blow us to the coast. I swear, Artus, you are as bad as
Tamara.”
“I care for you as a brother, Conan. She cares as
well.” Artus smiled easily. “You saved her life.”
“And she mine.” Conan shook his head. “You must
promise me she will be safe, Artus.”
“I will not disappoint you. Still . . .”
“Yes?”
“There is no reason you cannot get her to Hyrkania
and await Khalar Zym there.” Artus held a hand up. “No, Conan, do
not try to convince me this is the only way. He needs her. He will pursue her.”
The Cimmerian shook his head. “I am not one to lie
in wait, Artus, you know that.”
“True, but if a brother may point out the obvious
to a brother, you seem to run faster from
her than toward him.”
Conan growled at Artus, but before he could say
anything, Tamara appeared from belowdecks, adorned in bright red
and blue silks. She wore a broad smile.
The Cimmerian snapped at her. “You look like a
harlot.”
Her eyes flashed. “Yes, and apparently I’m the only
woman you have met who isn’t one!”
Conan stared at her for a heartbeat, then turned
away, his new sword singing through the air. One sailor laughed and
the Cimmerian spun, looking at him over a yard of steel. “Artus,
give her leather and armor. She handles herself better in a fight
than you scum. Keep civil tongues in your heads and you may live
long enough to see the proof.”
TAMARA LOOKED AFTER the
withdrawing barbarian, then to Artus. “I don’t understand.”
Artus perched himself on the rail as Conan climbed
up to the wheel deck and disappeared from sight. “Most people look
at him, a northern barbarian, and they think he’s simple. And ’tis
true that strong currents run through him. When action’s demanded,
he’s the man who acts instead of thinking . . . but he’s cunning,
too. I’ve seen that over my time with him, and it’s that time,
going on a decade here and there, that maybe lets me see.”
She pressed a hand to her throat. “Then perhaps you
can enlighten me. The Conan I’ve seen has the constitution of a
bull and the disposition of a mule. He’s fearsome in combat and yet
capable of . . . Khalar Zym’s aide, the one we captured, Conan
snapped his neck as if it was nothing.”
“From the barbarian point of view, the man was
already dead. After all, had he been any sort of warrior, he never
would have surrendered. He would have died on the battlefield.”
Artus shrugged. “And his willingness to bargain, this unmanned him
further. The man, I’m sure, thought he could pull the wool over
Conan’s eyes. Not the first to make that mistake, and certainly not
the last—though all of them tend to share the same fate.”
She glanced up toward the wheel deck but could not
see Conan. “So, he is a man who kills, and that is all?”
“You know that is not true, woman. Conan is a man
of great passions. Wine and women, plunder and adventure; these are
passions of his. But he is fiercely loyal. You’ve saved his life.
He shall never forget that, and never let harm come to you. Know
that as well as you know the sun rises in the east.”
Tamara nodded. Conan was completely unlike the
people she had known growing up. In the monastery, their training
allowed them to channel their emotions into constructive things.
While they did develop martial skills, they studied them to defend
themselves and others. Conan’s passions flowed in the entirely
opposite direction. Master Fassir was a
creature or order, but Conan . . .
The instant she sought to contrast them, she
immediately saw that which they shared. Master Fassir, too, had his
passions. He loved the people of the monastery. In taking her in,
he had proved his love for the people of the world. Master Fassir
had dedicated his life to thwarting Khalar Zym in one way, and so
Conan, in another, was devoting himself to the same task.
Tamara reached out and caught Artus’s forearm. “You
are his friend, Artus. Tell me, his life, is it one that makes him
happy?”
The Zingaran scratched at his chin. “He is one who
may not have been born to ever be happy. Where others first taste
mother’s milk, he had her blood. Born on a battlefield was he, and
never quite so happy is he except when fighting.”
“Never?”
Artus sighed. “Conan and I are not joined at the
hip, little one. There are times he is away. When he returns,
perhaps he is less melancholy. It is not the way of men to ask
after these things.”
“That is foolish.” She turned toward the stairs,
but Artus caught a handful of silks and restrained her. “Let me
go.”
“No, Tamara. You seek to mend that which cannot be
mended. Not now.” The corsair laughed easily. “Get yourself below.
Get yourself into proper dress, battle dress. If that won’t bring a
smile to his face, I sincerely doubt there is anything else that
will.”
IN THE DEEPEST depths of
Khor Kalba, restless waves splashed up through a massive iron grate
filling a cylindrical cavern’s floor. Shadows obscured the upper
reaches. Chains attached to cages filled with skeletons or
skeletally slender prisoners hung down from the darkness. The other
ends attached to massive cleats, allowing attendants to raise and
lower cages as required.
The iron had been worked in a pattern that recalled
the arms of a squid. Marique had liked it from the first because of
its tantalizing symmetry. Her father had seen it as an omen
confirming the rightness of his choice of Khor Kalba. He seemed to
have forgotten that it was Marique who had discovered that the
current construction had been built over Acheronian ruins. And,
indeed, nearby excavations had unearthed much which increased her
knowledge of necromantic lore.
Marique picked her way along a haphazard path like
a child wandering through a garden. She chose carefully the runes
upon which she stepped, and how hard she stepped on them. The
sounds her boots made, the cadence of her steps, and the very notes
produced by each individual rune wove a powerful magick.
Finally she reached the center point. From the
small sack on her belt she withdrew the limp body of a cat—one of
many feral creatures infesting Khor Kalba. She’d lured it with
cheese, then snapped its neck. She disemboweled it, read the liver,
then packed it up with a small bit of the cloth bearing the monk’s
blood and another missive that Marique had written herself. She
looked down through the hole centermost in the grate, then dropped
the cat and watched as it disappeared into the depths.
A minute, perhaps two, passed, then the water
became greatly agitated. It splashed up through the grate, though
it never touched Marique. Then it settled, several feet lower than
it had been, and she walked from the center uncaring what tune her
steps played.
Her father awaited her at the edge. “Well?”
“It is done. Your troops shall reach their ship
unseen, and the girl will soon be yours.”
CONAN STOOD AT the aft
rail, staring at the sea. He felt the breeze and heard the gulls.
The tang, their cries, took him back to the Tigress and the time he had spent with Bêlit. He had
tried very hard to avoid those memories, but he could not. Though
Tamara and Bêlit could not have been more different, when he had
wakened from his fever to discover Tamara tending him, he had at
first thought she was Bêlit.
I wanted her to have been
Bêlit.
He shook his head, but his father’s words came to
him. “When you find that one woman, Conan, the one who fires your
heart, who makes you feel alive and makes you want to be a better
man than you are, never let her go.” But he had. He’d lost her to
an ancient evil, and though he knew himself to have been lucky to
have survived at all, guilt restrained him like an anchor
chain.
Artus appeared on his left at the rail. “She means
well, Conan.”
The Cimmerian growled.
“Let me rephrase: she means you no harm.” The
corsair faced him, leaning on the rail. “I actually think she
wishes you well.”
Conan nodded. “I was sharp with her.”
“Were words a sword, there would have been no
healing that wound. It is not my place to ask . . .”
“No, it’s not.”
“So I shall just tell, then. You forget, Cimmerian,
I knew you when you were a sneak thief, and not a very good one.
You made up in audacity what you lacked in skill, and the only
reason fences did not turn you over to the city guard is that you’d
take a tenth of what you could have gotten for the wares you sold
them.”
“If this is meant to cheer me, you are failing,
brother.”
“It is meant to remind you, brother, that I have
seen the youth you were, and the man you have become. No, don’t
give me that look. I don’t presume to know
what goes on in that thick skull of yours, and I don’t pretend to
know what adventures you’ve had outside my company.” Artus spat
into the sea. “I do wish I knew of your previous life as a corsair,
for it was there you changed. Not unexpected, the loss of carefree
youth . . . but something replaced it.”
The Cimmerian stared at the distant horizon. “I was
born to battle. Courage and cunning are what Crom gives us, and I
have made the most of them. Of comrades and companions I have had
legions. Most have died. Many I have mourned. A few, however . . .”
One . . .
Artus remained silent, letting the distant crash of
surf on shore devour Conan’s words. In that one act the Zingaran
revealed that he was a true friend, and likely knew the Cimmerian
better than anyone else alive.
Conan looked sidelong at him, then finally turned
to face him. “I have no fear of death, Artus. I cannot think of a
time when my death concerned me. But I wonder, sometimes, if Death
uses me as bait, much as I used the girl. Does Death allow me to
survive so that others will follow me into his realm? My friends do
not live long. Survive another year and you will have known me
longer than did my father. And my mother, well . . .”
Artus rested scarred hands on Conan’s shoulders. “I
am your brother, Conan. I’ll see you into a grave or the other way
around. It does not matter. If I follow you, it is not because I
believe you will make me immune to Death’s touch, but because you
open the way to adventure. Already, Conan, men sing of you, and of
those who you have known.”
Conan nodded. The Song of
Bêlit had become popular in Shem and he’d even heard it sung
once in Messantia. “There are more pleasant ways to become
immortal.”
“Are there?” Artus laughed and pointed off toward
Khor Kalba to the north. “Immortality is what Khalar Zym desires,
and his way is none too pleasant. His way is decidedly unpleasant
for those who stand between him and his goal. Most men would never
dare oppose him because they fear for their lives. But if they do
not oppose him, they do not have a life.”
“So you have told me.”
“So, perhaps now you will listen.”
Conan nodded. “I will.”
“Good.” Artus ran a hand over his jaw. “One thing
about those we leave behind, Conan. We never know what they would
want, but we can be sure what they would hate.”
“Yes?”
“For their death to become our death. They live in
our memories.” Artus smiled. “Our lives make them more vital. Your
glory is their glory, your victory is their victory. Live as they
would have lived, live as they would have desired you to live, and
you will be worthy of their lives forever.”
The Cimmerian nodded. “Over the years, Artus, you
have become much wiser.”
“No, Conan, I’ve always been this wise.” The
Zingaran’s laughter rose to the stars. “It’s just taken you this
long to realize it.”