“You must do the killing first,” Conan said. And he must set a fire. Soon. He circled, trying to get the tables out from between them. Reach was the S’tarra’s advantage. Sitha moved in the opposite direction, spear held warily.
Abruptly the bronze gong began to toll. Sitha’s red eyes flickered away for just a moment; Conan bent, caught the edge of a long table with his shoulder, and heaved it over. Sitha leaped back as the heavy table crashed where his feet had been. Beakers of strange powder and flagons of multicolored liquids shattered on the floor. Acrid fumes rose from their mixing. The tolling continued, and now could be heard the faint sounds of shouting from the walls. Could Haranides or Hordo have decided not to wait, he wondered.
“My master sent me hence for powders,” Sitha hissed. “Powders he thinks will increase the fear in the sacrifice.” On the last word he lunged, the spear point darting for Conan’s head.
The Cimmerian’s broadsword beat the thrust aside, and his riposte slashed open the creature’s scaled chin. Sitha leaped back from the blow, putting an elongated hand to the bloody gash and letting out a string of vile oaths.
“You still don’t seem to have killed me,” Conan laughed.
Sitha’s sibilant voice became low and grating. “The sacrifice, Cimmerian, is that girl you came to this valley for. Velita. I will watch your face before I kill you, knowing you know she dies.”
A berserker rage rose in the Cimmerian. Velita alive. But to remain that way only if he got there in time. “Where is she, Sitha?”
“The chamber of sacrifice, human.”
“Where’s this chamber of sacrifice?” Conan demanded.
Sitha bared his fangs in a derisive laugh. With a roar Conan attacked. The berserker was on him. He jumped up, caught a foot on the edge of the overturned table, and leaped down on the S‘tarra’s side. The spearpoint slashed his thigh while he was in midair, but his slashing sword, driven by the fury of a man who meant to kill or die, but to do it now, sliced through the haft. Conan screamed like a hunting beast as he attacked without pause, without thought for his own defense, without allowing time for Sitha to do else but stumble back in panic. His second cut, almost a continuation of the first, severed the S’tarra’s right arm. Black blood spurted; a shriek ripped through those fangs. The third blow bit into Sitha’s thick neck, slicing through. Those red eyes glared at him, life still in them, for a bare moment as that head toppled from the mailed shoulders. Blood fountained, and the body fell.
Panting with reaction, Conan looked about him. There was still the fire to … . Where the arcane powders and liquids had mixed among shattered fragments of stone and crystal, yellow flames leapt up, emitting an acrid cloud. In seconds the fire had seized on the overturned table, igniting it as though the wood had been soaked in oil from a lamp.
Choking and coughing, Conan stumbled from the chamber. Behind him flames roared; air stirred already in the body of the tower, drifting upward. Soon that necromanical chamber would be a furnace, and the tower top would flare for the signal. The tollings of the bronze gong rolled forth. If the signal were still needed.
Quickly the Cimmerian found his way from the tower, to a room with a window overlooking the keep and the valley beyond. His jaw dropped. On the ramparts S’tarra scurried with their weapons like ants in a stirred hill, and to good reason, for the valley floor swarmed with near a thousand turbanned hillmen, mounted and armed with lance and tulwar.
Where Haranides and Hordo were, Conan had no idea. Their plan was gone by the wayside, but he might still save Velita if he could find the sacrificial chamber. But where in the huge black keep to begin? Even the donjon alone would take a day to search room by room. A sudden thought struck him. A chance, a small, bare chance, for her.
Pantherine strides took him down alabaster halls and marble stairs, past startled S’tarra scurrying on appointed tasks and so afraid to stop him. Like a hawk he sped, straight to the plain stone arch and the sloping passage beyond that Amanar had falsely claimed led to his thaumaturgical chambers.
Conan ran down that passage leading into the very heart of the mountain, arms and legs pumping, deep muscled chest working like a bellows. Death rode in his steely blue eyes, and he cared not if it was his death so long as Amanar preceded him into the shadows.
The gray walls of the passage, lit by flickering torches, began to be carved with serpents, and then there were tall doors ahead, also carved with serpents in intricate arabesques. Conan flung the two doors wide and strode in.
Amanar stood in his black, serpent-embroidered robe, chanting before a black marble altar, on which lay Velita, naked and bound. Behind the altar a mist of lambent fire swirled; beyond the mist was an infinity of blackness. Conan stalked down the curving row of shadowed columns, his teeth bared in a silent snarl.
The dark sorcerer seemed to reach a resting place in his chant, for without looking around he said, “Bring it here, Sitha. Hurry!”
Conan had reached a point a dozen paces from the altar. From there he examined the evil mage with great care. The man had not his golden staff, but what had he in its place? “I am not Sitha,” Conan said.
Amanar started convulsively, whirling to stare at Conan, who stood in the shadows of the columns. “Is that you, Cimmerian? How have you come … . No matter. Your soul will feed the Eater of Souls somewhat early, that is all.” Velita peered past Amanar at Conan with dark eyes full of hope and desperation. The fiery mists thickened.
“Release the girl,” Conan demanded. Amanar laughed. The Cimmerian dug the pendant from his belt, let it dangle from one massive finger by its chain. “I have this, mage!”
The cold-eyed sorcerer’s laugh died. “You have nothing,” he snapped, but he touched his lips with his tongue and glanced nervously at the constantly deepening mists. Something stirred in their depths. “Still, it might cause … difficulties. Give it to me, and I will—”
“It is his soul!” a voice boomed, seeming to come from every direction. Among the shadows along the columns on the far side of the chamber, one shadow suddenly split, folded, and thickened. And there before them stood Imhep-Aton.
The Stygian sorcerer wore a golden chaplet set with a square-cut emerald, and a severe black robe that fell to his ankles. He moved slowly toward Amanar and the altar.
“You,” Amanar spat. “I should have known when those two S’tarra died without wounds that it was you.”
“The pendant, Conan of Cimmeria,” the Stygian said intently. “It contains Amanar’s soul, to keep it safe from the Eater of Souls. Destroy the pendant, and you destroy Amanar.”
Conan raised his hand to smash the black stone against a column. And the will was not there to make h
is arm move so. To no avail he strained, then let his arm down slowly.
Amanar’s laugh came shrilly. “Fool! Think you I placed no protection in that which is so important to me? No one who touches or beholds the pendant can damage it in any way.” Suddenly he drew himself up to his full height. “Slay him!” he shouted, each syllable a command.