Conan thought he felt a rumble from deep in the bowels of the earth, but he had no time to consider it. The creature with Garian’s face stalked him, the wavy-bladed sword darting with preternatural speed. Conan no longer attempted to block it, only to deflect it, yet even the glancing blows he felt to his heels. Once the tip of that ensorceled blade opened a shallow gash in his cheek, sending a thin rivulet of blood trickling. The metallic whine sounded again, but louder, almost drowning out Albanus’ chanting.
The creature swung again, a decapitating blow an it landed, but Conan leaped back. The blade smashed into the iron leg of one of the massive tripod lamps, shearing it in two. Slowly the lamp toppled, and Conan saw the first true expression on the creature’s face. Terror, as it gazed at the fire in that falling lamp.
As if in mortal danger, the false Garian jumped back. Albanus’ voice faltered, then resumed its incantation. The lamp crashed against the wall surrounding the pit, flaming oil pouring down into the pit. Dry straw crackled alight.
Conan risked a glance at the hawk-faced lord. Above Albanus’ head something was forming. A darkness, a thickening of the air. The stones beneath the Cimmerian’s feet shifted, and he thought he heard thunder.
There was no time for more than a glance, though, for the creature grasped one leg of the heavy lamp and heaved it into the now fire-filled pit as easily as a man might throw aside a stick of kindling. The ground trembled continuously now, the tremors growing stronger. From the corner of his eye Conan saw the dark amorphous shape above Albanus’ head lift higher into the dome, grow more solid. The nobleman’s chanting became louder, more insistent. The creature advanced on Conan.
“Run, Ariane!” the Cimmerian shouted, and steadied his feet against the now pitching floor. No man could flee his own death. “Run!”
She did not move, but the simulacrum continued its steady approach, sword lifting for a strike that would smash through the Cimmerian’s blade and split the man in twain.
Desperately Conan leaped aside. The tremendous blow struck sparks from the floor where he had stood. In that instant, when the creature tottered off balance from the force of its own blow and the quaking of the earth, Conan struck. Every muscle from his heels up he put into that blow, blade slamming against the creature’s side. It was like striking stone. Yet, added to the rest, it was enough, for just that one instant. The simulacrum fell.
Conan had seen the speed of the creature, and had no intention of giving it time to recover its feet. Before it struck the stone floor he had dropped his sword and seized the simulacrum by its swordbelt and its tunic. With a tremendous heave the massive Cimmerian lifted the creature into the air.
“Here’s the fire you fear,” he shouted, and hurled it over the wall.
As it fell, a scream ripped from its throat. The sword was hurled away as it twisted in an inhuman effort to find some salvation from the flames. As it struck the burning straw there was a whoosh, as of oil thrown on a fire, and flames engulfed the simulacrum, yet even as a statue of flame its horrible screams would not cease.
As Conan raised his eyes from the pit, they met those of Albanus. The dark lord’s mouth struggled to form the words of his chant, but from his chest projected the blood-hungry sword that had been hurled with such inhuman strength. Beside him Ariane stirred. Sorcerous spells died with the sorcerer, and Albanus was dying.
Conan hurried to her side. As he took her hand, she looked at him dazedly. Albanus fought still to form words, but blood was filling his mouth.
As the Cimmerian turned to lead Ariane from the chamber, his gaze was drawn by what occupied the height of the dome. He had an impression of countless eyes, of tentacles without number. His own eyes refused to take it all in, his mind refused to accept what he saw. From whatever floated horribly above, a ray of light struck down, shattering the blue crystal. Albanus’ eyes glazed in death as the fragments fell from his hand.
Thunder rumbled in the room, and Conan knew it for the laughter of a demon, or a god. The dark shape above gathered itself. Conan scooped up Ariane and ran, as that which was above smashed through the dome. Stones showered down, filling the wolf pit, and dust belched after him. Collapsing walls toppled still other walls. Spreading out in a wave of destruction from the wolf-pit, the ancient portions of the Palace crumbled in on themselves.
Conan was running on polished marble floors before he realized that that floor no longer tossed like a ship in a storm and rubble no longer pelted him. He stopped and looked back through the slowly clearing dust. The corridor behind him was filled from top to bottom with shattered debris, and he could see the sunset sky through a hole in a ceiling that had borne three stories above it. Yet, except for a few cracked walls, there seemed to be remarkably little destruction outside of the ancient parts of the Palace.
Ariane stirred in his arms, and he reluctantly set her down. She was a pleasant armful, even covered in dust and rock chips. Coughing, she stared around her. “Conan? Where did you come from? Is this the Royal Palace? What happened?”
“I’ll explain later,” the Cimmerian said. Or some of it, he thought with another look at the devastation behind them. “Let’s find King Garian, Ariane. I’ve a reward coming.”
XXV
Strolling down the hall of the palace that had once belonged to Albanus—and had for two days now, by degree of King Garian, belonged to him—Conan paused to heft an ivory statuette. Intricately carved, it was light and would fetch a good price in almost any city. He added it to the sack he carried and moved on.
He reached the columned entry hall just as Hordo and Ariane came through the front doors, now standing open. “About time you came back,” the Cimmerian said. “What is it like out there?”
Hordo shrugged. “City Guards and what Golden
Leopards are left are patrolling the streets against looters. Not that many are left. Seems they thought that earthquake was the judgment of the gods against them. Then, too, some claim to have seen a demon hovering over the Royal Palace at the height of the earthquake.” He gave an unconvincing laugh. “Strange what people see, is it not?”
“Strange indeed,” Conan replied in what he hoped was a reassuring tone. Even if he managed to convince Hordo of what had occurred at the wolf pit, the one-eyed man would only moan about being too old for such any longer. “What about the Thestis?” he asked Ariane.
She sighed wearily, not looking at him. “The Thestis is done. Too many of us saw too much of what our fine talk leads to. Garian is releasing Graecus and the others from the mines, but I doubt we will be able to look any of the others in the face for a long time. I … I intend to leave Nemedia.”
“Come with me to Ophir,” Conan said.
“I go to Aquilonia with Hordo,” she replied.
Conan stared. It was not that he objected to losing her to Hordo—well, a little, he admitted grudgingly, even to a friend—but after all, he had saved her life. What sort of gratitude was this?
She shifted defiantly under his gaze, and put an arm around the one-eyed man. “Hordo has a faithful heart, which is more than I can say for some other men. It may not be faithful to me, but it is still faithful. Besides, I told you long ago that I decide who shares my sleeping mat.” Her voice held an exculpatory note; a tightness at her mouth said that she heard it, and refused to admit that she had anything to excuse.
Conan shook his head disgustedly. He remembered an ancient saying. Women and cats are never owned, they just visit for a time. At the moment he thought he would take the cat.