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Conan of Venarium

Page 17

by Harry Turtledove


  Granth and Vulth and Benno and Daverio stared at one another in consternation. “How do you know that?” asked Daverio.

  “How do I know?” said Nopel. “How do I know? By Mitra, I’ll tell you how I know. I’ve just come from talking with Captain Treviranus, and he told me. That’s how I know.” By the way he spoke, he might have had the news from the gods themselves.

  Granth was not prepared to disagree with him. As far as the Gunderman was concerned, Treviranus made as good a garrison commander as anyone could want. If he said a thing was so, so it was likely to be. But cynical Daverio asked the question that had barely occurred to Granth: “Well, how does the captain know?”

  “How does he know?” Sergeant Nopel sounded as if he could not believe his ears. But the Bossonian bowman nodded. Nopel’s frown was fearsome. “Why, because he’s heard, that’s how.”

  “Well, who told him?” persisted Daverio. “It wasn’t anybody from here, or we’d all have heard about it by now.”

  And Granth could hardly disagree with that, either. Anything anyone in the garrison knew, everyone in the garrison knew in a matter of minutes. The Gundermen and Bossonians, a tiny island in a vast, hostile sea, had no secrets from one another.

  “I don’t know who told him. I only know what he told me,” said Nopel. He fixed Daverio with a challenging stare. “You want to go tell him he’s wrong? You want to tell him you know better, and we can all relax? He’ll be glad to hear that. You bet he will.”

  Daverio was a hard and stubborn man, but no common soldier would have been so rash as to beard Captain Treviranus in his den. He shook his head now, saying, “I’m trying to find out what’s going on, that’s all. If the tribes are stirring out there somewhere, what are we supposed to do about it?”

  Exactly how vast was Cimmeria? Granth did not know, not in any detail; he knew only that the corner of it Count Stercus’ army had worried off was just that—a corner. Countless clans of barbarians—clans assuredly uncounted by any Aquilonian, at all odds—still prowled the dark woods in squalid freedom. If they were to band together against the soldiers and settlers from the south—“Aye, Sergeant,” said Granth. “What are we supposed to do about it?”

  “I was coming to that,” said Nopel portentously. “Did you think I wasn’t? We’ve got to push scouts up to the north and see with our own eyes what the damned barbarians are up to.”

  “We can send scouts north, all right,” said Vulth. “We can send ‘em, but will we ever see ’em again if we do?”

  “And why wouldn’t we?” demanded Nopel.

  All the sentries laughed. The laughs were not pleasant. “Why, Sergeant?” said Granth. “On account of the damned Cimmerians will do for them, that’s why. Do you think we can kill ten for one for what happens up there?”

  Nopel grunted. He turned and tramped away without answering. Vulth clapped Granth on the back. “Well done, cousin,” said Vulth. “You made the sergeant shut up, and not everybody can boast of that.”

  Benno had a more practical way of congratulating Granth. He took his water bottle off his belt and offered it to him. When Granth tilted back his head and drank, he wasn’t too surprised to find sweet, strong wine running down his throat. He took another pull at the bottle, and then another, until at last Benno snatched it out of his hand.

  Granth wiped his mouth on his sleeve. Benno glowered. Vulth chuckled. “You see?” he said to the archer. “He’s figuring out what it’s all about.”

  “It’s about him being greedy, that’s what,” said Benno. But even the touchy Bossonian seemed not too put out.

  For his part, Granth looked to the north. He had seen one swarm of Cimmerians bearing down on the army of which he was a small part. In his mind’s eye, he saw another, this one bigger, fiercer, more ferocious. Until that moment, he had not imagined anything more ferocious than the onslaught he and his countrymen had so narrowly survived. Now he discovered his imagination was stronger than he had thought possible.

  “What do we do if the barbarians come down on us, the way Nopel and the captain say they might?” he asked, worry in his voice.

  “Kill ‘em,” Vulth answered stolidly. “Kill ’em till they’re piled so high, they have to climb over their cousins to jump down onto our pikes.”

  When Granth looked toward the village of Duthil, everything seemed tranquil enough. Women carried water from the stream back to their homes. Wood smoke rose from the smoke holes in their roofs. A couple of men stood talking. Neither of them paid the least attention to the Aquilonian encampment. Two years after the fight at Fort Venarium—now the citadel at the heart of the town of Venarium—the villagers might have accepted the camp as part of the landscape. A dog nosed at a mound of garbage. He ignored the encampment, too. He might have been sincere. Granth had his doubts about the Cimmerians.

  If more barbarians swarmed down out of the north, what would the folk of Duthil do? Would they take up arms and fight alongside the Aquilonians against the new invaders? Would they sit quietly and wait to see how the other Cimmerians fared against the men from the south? Or would they grab whatever weapon came to hand and try to murder every Gunderman and Bossonian they could find?

  Granth did not know, of course. Only a god could know the future. But the pikeman had a good idea which way he would bet.

  He said, “We ought to haul some of the villagers out of that place and squeeze them. To hell with me if they don’t know more than they’re letting on.”

  “Not a bad notion,” agreed Vulth. “Some of the women seem plenty squeezable—or they would, if you didn’t think they’d knife you for touching them.”

  “They act that way when others are around to see, sure enough,” said Benno. “But some of them are friendly enough if you can get them off by themselves.”

  “Braggart,” said Granth. Benno preened.

  “Braggart and liar both,” said Vulth. “Before I believe a word he says, I want to know who he means, and I want to know how he knows.”

  “Who? The miller’s wife, for one.” Benno looked toward Duthil and licked his chops. “And how do I know? When the millstones start grinding, the Cimmerian who runs them has to make sure they behave, and then he can’t make sure his lady behaves. And the stones are so noisy, he can’t hear a thing that goes on anywhere close by.”

  After looking at each other, Granth and his cousin both shook their heads. “Braggart,” said the one. “Liar,” said the other. Benno protested, but not, Granth judged, in the way he would have it he really had done the things he claimed to have done. Soldiers, of course, had been telling lies about women ever since Mitra first let there be soldiers and women.

  Then something else occurred to Granth. “Maybe the young one Count Stercus keeps coming back for will stick a knife in him one of these days, and maybe we’ll all be better off if she does.”

  “No.” Vulth shook his head. “Think of the vengeance we’d have to wreak. Have you got the stomach for massacring a whole village?”

  “For Stercus’ sake? For him doing what he’s got no business doing, with somebody he’s got no business doing it with?” Granth did not need to think that over; he knew the answer at once. “Not a bit of it.” But then he hesitated. “To save our own necks, though? That’s a different story.” None of the other Aquilonian soldiers argued with him.

  chapter x

  FOR TARLA’S SAKE

  Few would have called Count Stercus a patient man. In the matter of the weaver’s daughter in Duthil, though, he had been more patient than most of the debauched rogues who had known him down in Aquilonia would have dreamt possible. For one thing, he reckoned the game with Tarla worth the candle. And, for another, he still painfully remembered the consequences of his impatience in Tarantia. If not for that, he never would have found himself reduced to pursuing a chit of a barbarian girl here at the misty northern edge of the world.

  And so, patience—patience to a point, at any rate. But Stercus was no Stygian priest, no mystic from the distant,
legendary land of Khitai, to practice patience for its own dusty sake. He was an Aquilonian to the core: a man of action, a man of deeds. He could bide his time—he had bided his time—with some definite end in view, but if the end remained in view, remained close enough to reach out and touch, he would, sooner or later, reach out and touch it.

  That time, at last, had come.

  He rode forth from Venarium in helm and back-and-breast, more to make a brave show when he came to Duthil than for any other reason. These days, the country north of what had become a booming little town put him more in mind of the Bossonian Marches or Gunderland than of the dark, brooding wilderness Cimmeria had been before the coming of the gold lion on black.

  Fair-haired men and women worked in fields and garden plots carved from primeval wilderness. Smoke rose from the chimneys of sturdy cabins. Garrisons overawed surviving Cimmerian villages. Some of those forts might grow into towns, as Venarium had. The barbarians themselves would surely go to the wall, overwhelmed by the strength and majesty of advancing Aquilonian civilization. Contemplating their fate, Stercus allowed himself a certain delicate melancholy. It was a pity, but the count did not see how it could be helped.

  Even now, so soon after the initial conquest, most of the traffic on the road was Aquilonian: more settlers’ wagons coming into this new land; soldiers who helped keep the settlers safe; merchants and peddlers of all sorts, intent on taking what profit they could from the land in which they found themselves. And, coming the other way, down toward Venarium, farmers who had more closely followed the army were bringing first fruits and vegetables to market. An oxcart full of onions might not seem such a wonderful thing at first glance, but Stercus smiled as he rode past it, for those were Aquilonian onions.

  Only a handful of Cimmerians were on the road. Except for the sake of a drunken carouse or luxuries they could not make for themselves, the barbarians seldom went to Venarium. They wanted little to do with the Aquilonian presence swelling in their midst. That they wanted little to do with it was in Stercus’ eyes yet another harbinger of their eventual extinction. If they could not see they were in the presence of something greater than themselves, that went a long way toward proving they did not deserve to survive.

  Axes rang in the forest. Trees fell. More cabins full of settlers from Gunderland rose every day. Stercus smiled to himself, for it was good.

  But, by the time he got most of the way to Duthil, the road had become a track once more, and the woods pressed close on either side. This far north, few settlers had yet come. The land remained in its state of primitive barbarism.

  Another horseman on the track, this one riding south, caused Stercus to rein in. The roadway was especially narrow here; they would have to go slowly as they edged past each other. By the crimson crest on his helm, the other man was a captain. “Your Excellency!” he called, recognizing Stercus. “Well met, by Mitra! I was on my way to Venarium to bring word to you.”

  “Word of what, Treviranus?” asked Stercus, his voice a little chilly; his mind was on other things than duty.

  The commander of the garrison by Duthil pointed back over his shoulder to the village and beyond. “The tribes are stirring, your Excellency. Out beyond where our arms have reached, Cimmeria begins to bubble and boil like a pot of stew left too long over too hot a fire.”

  Stercus’ laugh was loud and long and scornful. “If the barbarians want another go at us, they are welcome to it, as far as I am concerned. We smashed them once. We can do it again.”

  “Sir, we smashed three or four clans,” said Treviranus worriedly. “If three or four more rise against us, we’ll smash them again, aye. But Cimmeria has clans by the score. If thirty or forty rise against us, that is a very different business. How could we throw back such a swarm of men?”

  “If you have not the courage for the work, Captain, belike I can find a man who has,” said Stercus.

  Treviranus flushed angrily. “You misunderstand me, your Excellency.”

  “Good. I hoped I did,” said Stercus. “Have you got any true notion how many barbarians may be in motion against our frontier? With the way the Cimmerians squabble among themselves, isn’t it likelier to be three or four clans than thirty or forty?”

  “Most of the time, your Excellency, I would say yes to that,” replied Treviranus. “But not now.”

  “Oh? And why not?” Again, Stercus laced his voice with scorn.

  The junior officer said, “Why not, sir? Because most of the time, as you say, Cimmerians fight Cimmerians, and they break up into factions. But we know one thing about them: they all hate us. I worry that they will sink all their own feuds until they have driven us from their soil.”

  Count Stercus yawned. “You grow tedious, Captain. If you want to keep an eye on the barbarians beyond the border, you may do so. But if you start at shadows like a brat waking up in its crib in the middle of the night, then you do yourself no good, you do King Numedides no good, and you do Aquilonia no good. Do you understand me?”

  “Yes, sir,” said Treviranus tonelessly. He saluted with mechanical precision, then yanked his horse’s head around and rode back up the track toward Duthil. He did not look over his shoulder to see whether Stercus followed. By his stiff, outraged posture, he was doing his best to pretend Stercus did not exist.

  Laughing, the Aquilonian nobleman urged his own mount into motion once more. Thirty or forty clans of Cimmerians getting together for any reason, any reason whatsoever? Count Stercus laughed again. The notion was absurd on the face of it. He would have had trouble believing even three or four clans could unite, if not for the fight at Fort Venarium. If three or four more clans came, he had no doubt the Aquilonians would indeed crush them and send them off howling.

  No doubt because of his outrage, Captain Treviranus rode faster than Stercus. The garrison commander had already gone back into his little fortress by the time Stercus emerged from the trees into the clearing surrounding Duthil. The count rode past the palisade toward the village. One of the Aquilonian sentries pointed his way. He saw as much out of the corner of his eye, but did not deign even to turn his head. That he was recognized gratified him. That he acknowledge being recognized never entered his mind. His notion of nobility did not include obliging.

  When he came into Duthil, he did slow his horse so he would not trample any of the boys playing ball in the street. He cared nothing for them; seeing them go down under his horse’s hooves would have made him rejoice. But it would have angered and grieved Tarla, and Stercus was not a man to frighten his quarry before he brought it down.

  He did not see the blacksmith’s son among the shouting boys. That left him oddly relieved. The hatred in Conan’s blazing blue eyes could not be disguised. And the Cimmerian, though still smooth-cheeked, was already six feet tall, with powerful shoulders and chest a man twice his age might have envied. When thinking of Conan, Stercus was not at all sorry he rode a charger and wore armor.

  And here was the house of Balarg the weaver. Count Stercus swung down off his steed, and his armor clattered about him. Then, feeling foolish, he mounted again, for he saw Tarla coming up the street carrying a bucket of water from the stream that ran by the village. He rode up to her, saying, “Good day, my sweet.”

  “Good day,” she answered, and looked down at the ground.

  Eyeing her, Stercus wondered how he had contented himself with Ugaine even for a moment. This was what he really wanted: unspoiled, lovely, and young, so young. But he had been patient for a long time—a very, very long time, to his way of thinking. Every heartbeat left Tarla older. Soon, too soon, she would no longer be his image of perfection, only what might have been.

  Thinking of that made all Stercus’ hard-kept patience blow away like the mist. “We’ve already waited too long, my darling,” he said urgently. “Come away with me now.”

  She shook her head. “I cannot. I will not. I belong here.”

  Rage rose up like black smoke from the fire that burned inside Stercus. Had she be
en playing him along all this time, playing him for a fool? She would be sorry—sorrier—if she had. “You belong with me,” the nobleman said. “You belong to me.”

  At that. Tarla’s chin came up in defiance. She shook her head again, more firmly this time. “No. I belong to myself, and to no one else,” she declared, as full of native love of freedom as any other Cimmerian ever born.

  Count Stercus cared nothing for the freedom of Cimmerians. “By Mitra, you are mine!” he cried, and, leaning down, snatched her up onto his saddlebow. The bucket went flying, water splattering the already muddy street. Tarla shrieked. Stercus cuffed her. She shrieked again. He hit her once more, harder this time.

  One of the boys playing ball in the street threw a rock at Stercus. It clanged off his backplate and did him no harm. Another youngster ran toward Count Stercus with a stick of firewood—the first weapon he could find—in his hand. Stercus’ sword sprang free. He swung it in a shining arc of death. The Cimmerian boy tried to block it with the wood, but to no avail. The blade bit. The boy fell, spouting blood, his head all but severed from his body.

  “Wirp!” cried Tarla. But Wirp would never answer.

  The rest of the barbarians in the street roared. They ran not away from Stercus but toward him, intent on pulling him from the saddle. He set spurs to the destrier. Snorting, the great horse sprang forward. Lashing out with its hooves, it stretched another boy dead in the street, his skull smashed. Left arm encircling Tarla’s supple waist, Stercus thundered out of Duthil and into the woods.

  Granth son of Biemur knelt on one knee in a soldiers’ hut. The dice had been going his way—he was up twelve lunas, and hoped to make it more on his next cast. Before he could throw, though, a trumpeter blew the assembly call. “Damnation!” he said, scooping up the silver he had won. “Why did the captain have to decide to hold a drill now?”

  “We’ll get back to the game soon enough,” said Vulth, “and then I’ll clean you out.”

 

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