The Other Tales of Conan

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The Other Tales of Conan Page 24

by Howard, R. E.


  “Your sin is pardoned,” he intoned. “Because you were the first to hail your god, you shall henceforth serve me in honor and splendor.”

  She prostrated herself, kissing the carpet before his feet. He clapped his hands. A eunuch entered and bowed.

  “Go quickly to the house of Abdashtarth, the high priest of Pteor,” he said, looking over the servant’s head. “Say to him: ‘This is the word of Akhirom, who is the one true god of the Pelishtim, and shall soon be the god of all the peoples of the earth: that on the morrow shall be the beginning of beginnings. The idols of the false Pteor shall be destroyed, and statues of the true god shall be erected in their stead. The true religion shall be proclaimed, and a sacrifice of one hundred of the noblest children of the Pelishtim shall celebrate it –’”

  Before the temple of Pteor stood Mattenbaal, the first assistant to Abdashtarth. The venerable Abdashtarth, his hands tied, stood quietly in the grip of a pair of brawny Anaki soldiers. His long white beard moved as he prayed. Behind him, other soldiers stoked the fire in the base of the huge, bull-headed idol of Pteor, with his obscenely exaggerated male characteristics. In the background towered the great seven-storied zikkurat of Asgalun, from which the priests read the will of the gods in the stars.

  When the brazen sides of the idol glowed with the heat within, Mattenbaal stepped forward, raised a piece of papyrus, and read:

  “For that your divine king, Akhirom, is of the seed of Yakin-Ya, who was descended from the gods when they walked the earth, so is a god this day among ye! And now I command ye, all loyal Pelishtim, to recognize and bow down to and worship the greatest of all gods, the God of gods, the Creator of the Universe, the Incarnation of Divine Wisdom, the king of gods, who is Akhirom the son of Azurnelek, king of Pelishtia! And inasmuch as the wicked and perverse Abdashtarth, in the hardness of his heart, has rejected this revelation and has refused to bow down before his true god, let him be cast into the fire of the idol of the false Pteor!”

  A soldier tugged open the brazen door in the belly of the statue. Abdashtarth cried:

  “He lies! This king is no god, but a mortal madman! Slay the blasphemers against the true god of the Pelishtim, the mighty Pteor, lest the all-wise one turn his back upon his people.”

  At this point, four Anakim picked up Abdashtarth as if he had been a log of wood and hurled him feet-first through the opening. His shriek was cut off by the clang of the closing door, through which these same soldiers had, in times past, tossed hundreds of the children of the Pelishtim in times of crisis under the direction of this same Abdashtarth. Smoke poured from the vents in the statue’s ears, while a look of smug satisfaction spread over the face of Mattenbaal.

  A great shudder rippled across the throng. Then a frenzied yell broke the stillness. A wild-haired figure ran forward, a half-naked shepherd. With a shriek of “Blasphemer!” he hurled a stone. The missile struck the new high priest in the mouth, breaking his teeth. Mattenbaal staggered, blood streaming down his beard. With a roar, the mob surged forward. High taxes, starvation, tyranny, rapine, and massacre.all these the Pelishtim had endured from their mad king, but this tampering with their religion was the last straw. Staid merchants became madmen; cringing beggars turned into hot-eyed fiends.

  Stones flew like hail, and louder rose the roar of the mob. Hands were clutching at the garments of the dazed Mattenbaal when the armored Anakim closed in around him, beat the mob back with bowstaves and spear shafts, and hustled the priest away.

  With a clanking of weapons and a jingling of bridle chains, a troop of Kushite horse, resplendent in headdresses of ostrich feathers and lions’ manes and corselets of silvered scales, galloped out of one of the streets leading into the great Square of Pteor. Their white teeth shone in their dark faces. The stones of the mob bounced off their bucklers of rhinoceros hide. They urged their horses into the press, slashing with curved blades and thrusting long knees through the bodies of the Asgalunim. Men rolled howling under the stamping hooves. The rioters gave way, fleeing wildly into shops and alleys, leaving the square littered with writhing bodies.

  The black riders leaped from their saddles and began crashing in the doors of shops and dwellings and heaping their arms with plunder. Screams of women sounded from within the houses. A crash of latticework, and a white-clad body struck the street with bone-crushing impact. Another horseman, laughing, passed his lance through the body as it lay.

  The giant Imbalayo, in flaming silk and polished steel, rode roaring among his men, beating them into order with a heavy leaded ship. They mounted and swung into line behind him. In a canter they swept off down the street, gory human heads bobbing on their lances as an object lesson to the maddened Asgalunim who crouched in their coverts, panting with hate.

  The breathless eunuch who brought news of the uprising to King Akhirom was swiftly followed by another, who prostrated himself and cried: “O divine king, the general Othbaal is dead! His servants found him murdered in his palace, and beside him the ring of Keluka the Sworder. Wherefore the Anakim cry out that he was murdered by the order of the general Imbalayo. They search for Keluka in the Kushites’ quarter and fight with the Kushites!”

  Rufia, listening behind a curtain, stifled a cry. Akhirom’s faraway gaze did not alter. Wrapped in aloofness he replied:

  “Let the Hyrkanians separate them. Shall private quarrels interfere with the destiny of a god? Othbaal is dead, but Akhirom lives forever. Another man shall lead my Anakim. Let the Kushites handle the mob until they realize the sin of their atheism. My destiny is to reveal myself to the world in blood and fire, until all the tribes of the earth know me and bow down before me! You may go.”

  Night was falling on a tense city as Conan, his head wound now healed, strode through the streets adjoining the quarter of the Kushites. In that section, occupied mostly by soldiers, lights shone and stalls were open by tacit agreement. All day, revolt had rumbled in the quarters. The mob was like a thousand-headed serpent; stamp it out here and it broke out there. The hooves of the Kushites had clattered from one end of the city to the other, spattering blood.

  Only armed men now traversed the streets. The great iron-bound wooden gates of the quarters were locked as in times of civil war. Through the lowering arch of the great gate of Simura canned troops of black horsemen, the torchlight crimsoning their naked scimitars. Their silken cloaks flowed in the wind, and their black arms gleamed like polished ebony.

  Conan entered a cookshop where girdled warriors gorged and secretly guzzled forbidden wine. Instead of taking the first place open he stood, head up, his smoldering eyes roaming the place. His gaze came to rest on a far corner where a plainly-dressed man with a kaffia pulled well down over his face sat cross-legged on the floor in a dim alcove. A low table of food stood on the floor in front of the man.

  Conan strode across, swerving around the other tables. He kicked a cushion into the alcove opposite the seated man and dropped down upon it.

  “Greetings, Farouz!” he rumbled. “Or should I say General Mazdak?”

  The Hyrkanian started. “What’s that?”

  Conan grinned wolfishly. “I knew you when we entered the house of Othbaal. No one but the master of the house could know its secrets so well, and that house had once belonged to Mazdak the Hyrkanian.”

  “Not so loud, friend! How did you pick me out when my own men don’t know me in this Zuagir’s headcloth?”

  “I used my eyes. Well, now that our first venture has paid us so well, what shall we do next?”

  “I know not. I should be able to do something with one of your brawn and force. But you know how it is with the dog-brothers.”

  “Aye,” snarled Conan. “I tried to get mercenary service, but your three rival armies hate each other so and strive so fiercely for the rule of the state that none will have me. Each thinks I’m a spy for one of the other two.” He paused to order a joint of beef.

  “What a restless dog you are!” said Mazdak. “Will you then go back to Akkharia?”r />
  Conan spat. “Nay. It’s small, even for one of these little Shemitish fly-specks of a state, and has no great wealth. And the people are as crazily touchy about their racial and national pride as you all are here, so I couldn’t hope to rise very high. Perhaps I’d do better under one of the Hyborian rulers to the north, if I could find one who’d pick men for fighting ability only. But look you, Mazdak, why don’t you seize the rule of this nation for yourself? Now that Othbaal’s gone, you have only to find an excuse for putting a blade into Imbalayo’s guts, and …”

  “Tarim! I’m as ambitious as the next man, but not so headlong as that! Know that Imbalayo, having gotten the confidence of our mad monarch, dwells in the Great Palace, surrounded by his black swordsmen. Not that one could not kill him by a sudden stab during some public function.if one did not mind being cut to bits instantly afterward. And then where’s ambition?”

  “We should be able to think up something,” said Conan, eyes narrowed.

  “We, eh? I suppose you’d expect a reward for your part?”

  “Of course. What sort of fool do you think me?”

  “No more foolish than the next. I see no immediate prospect of such an enterprise, but I’ll bear your words in mind. And fear not but that you’d be well repaid. Now fare you well, for I must go back into the toils of politics.”

  Conan’s joint arrived as Mazdak left. Conan dug his teeth into the meat with even more than his usual gusto, for the success of his vengeance had made his spirits soar. While devouring a mass that would have satisfied a lion, he listened to the talk around him.

  “Where are the Anakim?” demanded a mustached Hyrkanian, cramming his jaws with almond cakes.

  “They sulk in their quarter,” answered another. “They swear the Kushites slew Othbaal and show Keluka’s ring to prove it. Keluka has disappeared, and Imbalayo swears he knows naught of it. But there’s the ring, and a dozen had been slain in brawls when the king ordered us to beat them apart. By Asura, this has been a day of days!”

  “Akhirom’s madness brought it on,” declared another In a lowered voice. “How soon before this lunatic dooms us all by some crazy antic?”

  “Careful,” cautioned his mate. “Our swords are his as long as Mazdak orders. But if revolt breaks out again, the Anakim are more likely to fight against the Kushites than with them. Men say Akhirom has taken Othbaal’s concubine Rufia into his harem. That angers the Anakim the more, for they suspect that Othbaal was slain by the king’s orders, or at least with his consent. But their anger is naught beside that of Zeriti, whom the king has put aside. The rage of the witch, they say, makes the sandstorm of the desert seem like a spring breeze.”,

  Conan’s moody blue eyes blazed as he digested this news. The memory of the red-haired wench had stuck in his mind during the last few days. The thought of stealing her out from under the nose of the mad king, and keeping her out of sight of her former owner Mazdak, gave spice to life. And, if he had to leave Asgalun, she would make a pleasant companion on the long road to Koth. In Asgalun there was one person who could best help him in this enterprise: Zeriti the Stygian, and if he could guess human motives she would be glad to do so.

  He left the shop and headed towards the wall of the inner city. Zeriti’s house, he knew, was in this part of Asgalun. To get to it he would have to pass the great wall, and the only way he knew of doing this without discovery was through the tunnel that Mazdak had shown him.

  Accordingly, he approached the canal and made his way to the grove of palms near the shore. Groping in the darkness among the marble ruins, he found and lifted the skb. Again he advanced through blackness and dripping water, stumbled on the other stair, and mounted it. He found the catch and emerged into the corridor, now dark. The house was silent, but the reflection of lights elsewhere showed that it was still occupied, doubtless by the slain general’s servants and women.

  Uncertain as to which way led to the outer stair, he set off at random, passed through a curtained archway and confronted six black slaves who sprang up glaring. Before he could retreat, he heard a shout and a rush of feet behind him. Cursing his luck, he ran straight at the blacks. A whirl of steel and he was through, leaving a writhing form on the floor behind him, and dashed through a doorway on the other side of the room. Curved blades sought his back as he slammed the door behind him. Steel rang on the wood and glittering points showed through the panels. He shot the bolt and whirled, glaring about for an exit. His gaze found a gold-barred window.

  With a headlong rush, he launched himself full at the window. The soft bars tore out with a crash, taking half the casement with them, before the impact of his hurtling body. He shot through space as the door crashed inward and howling figures flooded into the room.

  In the Great East Palace, where slave-girls and eunuchs glided on bare feet, no echo reverberated of the hell that seethed outside the walls. In a chamber whose dome was of gold-filagreed ivory, King Akhirom, clad in a white silken robe that made him look even more ghostly, sat cross-legged on a couch of gemmed ivory and stared at Rufia kneeling before him.

  Rufia wore a robe of crimson silk and a girdle of satin sewn with pearls. But amidst all this splendor, the Ophirean’s eyes were shadowed. She had inspired Akhirom’s latest madness, but she had not mastered him. Now he seemed withdrawn, with an expression in his cold eyes that made her shudder. Abruptly he spoke:

  “It is not meet for a god to mate with mortals.”

  Rufia started, opened her mouth, then feared to speak.

  “Love is a human weakness,” he continued. “I will cast it from me. Gods are beyond love. Weakness assails me when I lie in your arms.”

  “What do you mean, my lord?” she ventured.

  “Even the gods must sacrifice, and therefore I give you up, lest my divinity weaken.” He clapped his hands, and a eunuch entered on all fours. “Send in the general Imbalayo,” ordered Akhirom, and the eunuch banged his head against the floor and crawled out backwards. These were the most recently instituted customs of the court.

  “No!” Rufia sprang up. “You cannot give me to that beast.” She fell to her knees, catching at his robe, which he drew back from her.

  “Woman!” he thundered. “Are you mad? Would you assail a god?”

  Imbalayo entered uncertainly. A warrior of barbaric Darfar, he had risen to his present high estate by wild fighting and crafty intrigue. But shrewd, brawny, and fearless though the Negro was, he could not be sure of the mad Akhirom’s intentions from moment to moment.

  The king pointed to the woman cowering at his feet. ‘Take her!”

  Imbalayo grinned and caught up Rufia, who writhed and screamed in his grasp. She stretched her arms towards Akhirom as Imbalayo bore her from the chamber. But Akhirom answered not, sitting with hands folded and gaze detached.

  Another heard. Crouching in an alcove, a slim brown-skinned girl watched the grinning Kushite carry his captive up the hall. Scarcely had he vanished when she fled in another direction.

  Imbalayo, the favored of the king, alone of the generals dwelt in the Great Palace. This was really an aggregation of buildings united into one great structure and housing the three thousand servants of Akhirom. Following winding corridors, crossing an occasional court paved with mosaics, he came to his own dwelling in the southern wing. But even as he came in sight of the door of teak, banded with arabesques of copper, a supple form barred his way.

  “Zeriti!” Imbalayo recoiled in awe. The hands of the handsome, brown-skinned woman clenched and unclenched in controlled passion.

  “A servant brought me word that Akhirom has discarded the red-haired slut,” said the Stygian. “Sell her to me! I owe her a debt that I would pay.”

  “Why should I?” said the Kushite, fidgeting impatiently. “The king has given her to me. Stand aside, lest I hurt you.”

  “Have you heard what the Anakim shout in the streets?”

  “What is that to me?”

  “They howl for the head of Imbalayo, because of the
murder of Othbaal. What if I told them their suspicions were true?”

  “I had naught to do with it!” he shouted.

  “I can produce men to swear they saw you help Keluka cut him down.”

  “I’ll kill you, witch!”

  She laughed. “You dare not! Now will you sell me the red-haired jade, or will you fight the Anakim?”

  Imbalayo let Rufia slip to the floor. “Take her and begone!” he snarled.

  Take your pay!” she retorted and hurled a handful of coins into his face. Imbalayo’s eyes burned red and his hands opened and closed with suppressed blood-lust

  Ignoring him, Zeriti bent over Rufia, who crouched, dazed with the hopeless realization that against this new possessor the wiles she played against men were useless. Zeriti gathered the Ophirean’s red locks in her fingers and forced her head back, to stare fiercely into her eyes. Then she clapped her hands. Four eunuchs entered.

  “Take her to my house,” Zeriti ordered, and they bore the shrinking Rufia away. Zeriti followed, breathing softly between her teeth.

  When Conan plunged through the window, he had no idea of what lay in the darkness ahead of him. Shrubs broke his crashing fall. Springing up, he saw his pursuers crowding through the window he had just shattered. He was in a garden, a great shadowy place of trees and ghostly blossoms. His hunters blundered among the trees while he reached the wall unopposed. He sprang high, caught the coping with one hand, and heaved himself up and over.

  He halted to locate himself. Though he had never been in the inner city, he had heard it described often enough so that he carried a mental map of it. He was in the Quarter of the Officials. Ahead of him, over the flat roofs, loomed a structure that must be the Lesser West Palace, a great pleasure house giving into the famous Garden of Abibaal. Sure of his ground, he hurried along the street into which he had dropped and soon emerged on the broad thoroughfare that traversed the inner city from north to south.

 

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