Once more alabaster ornamentations were his roadway along the wall, but behind him he heard cries of alarm. Upward he climbed, grasping a balustrade to pull himself onto a balcony…and stopping with one foot over at the sight of another dozen men in turbaned helms. A thrown spear streaked by his head and he threw himself desperately back as other arms were cocked.
Even with knees bent, the force of landing shook him to the bone. More voices took up the cry of alarm, and the thud of running boots came from both left and right. A spear lanced from above to quiver in the ground not a pace from him. He leaped away from the wall, and another spear shivered where he had stood. Bent double, he ran into the garden between the reflecting pools, becoming one with the shadows.
“Guards!” the cries rose. “Guards!”
“Beat the gardens!”
“Find him!”
From the edge of the trees Conan watched, teeth bared in a snarl. Soldiers milled about the palace like ants about a kicked anthill. There would be no entering that palace again tonight.
Pain ripped through him, muscles spasming, doubling him over. Gasping for breath, he forced himself erect. His hand closed on the silk-shrouded hilt of the strange weapon. “I am not dead yet,” he whispered, “and it will not be over until I am.” With no more sound than the wind in the leaves, he faded into the darkness.
* * *
Naipal stared at the ruin of his bedchamber in shocked disbelief, willing himself not to breathe the smell of decay that hung in the air. The shouts of searching soldiers did not register on his ear. Only the contents of that chamber were real at that moment, and they in a way that turned his stomach with fear and sent blinding pains through his head.
The leather armor held his eye with sickly fascination. A skull grinned up at him from the ancient helm. Bones and dust were all that was left of his warrior. His warrior who could not die. The first of an army that could not die. In the name of all the gods, how had it happened?
With an effort he pulled his gaze from the leather-clad skeleton, but inexorably it fell on the long golden coffer, now lying on its side amid splinters of ebony that had been a table, lying there open and empty. Empty! Shards of elaborately carved ivory were all that was left of the mirror of warning, and naught but a hundred jagged pieces remained of the mirror itself.
Grunting, he bent to pick up half a dozen of the mirror fragments. Each, whatever its size, was filled by an image, an image that would be on all the other pieces as well, an image that would never change now. Wonderingly, he studied that grim face in the fragments, a square-cut black mane held back by a leather cord, strange eyes the color and hardness of sapphire, a feral snarl baring white teeth.
He knew who it had to be. The man who called himself Patil. Karim Singh’s simple barbarian. But the mirror, even now at the last, would show only what threatened his plans. Could a simple barbarian do that? Could a simple barbarian seek him out so quickly? Know to break the mirror and steal the demon-wrought dagger? Slay what could not be slain? The pieces fell from Naipal’s fingers as he whispered the word he did not want to believe. “Pan-kur.”
“What was that?” Karim Singh asked as he entered the room. The wazam carefully kept his eyes from the thing in leather armor on the floor. “You look exhausted, Naipal. Kandar’s servants will clean this mess, and his soldiers will deal with the intruder. You must rest. I will not have you collapse before you can serve me as king.”
“We must go immediately,” Naipal said. He rubbed his temples with the tips of his fingers. The strain of the past days wore at him, and he would not now take the effort to feign servility. “Tell Kandar to gather his soldiers.”
“I have been thinking, Naipal. What will it matter if we wait a few days? Surely it will rain soon, and the stinging flies are said to be better after a rain.”
“Fool!” the wizard howled, and Karim Singh’s jaw dropped. “You will have me serve you as king? Wait and you will not be king, you will be meat for dogs!” Naipal’s eyes went to the scattered fragments of mirror and slid away. “And tell Kandar we must have more soldiers. Tell him to strip the fortress if need be. A simple spell will divert your fearsome flies.”
“The governor is uneasy,” Karim Singh said shakily. “He obeys but I can tell that he does not believe my reasons for ordering the street children arrested. Given the mood of the city, he might refuse such a command and even if he obeys, he will doubtless send riders to Ayodhya, to Bhandarkar.”
“Do not fear Bhandarkar. If you must fear someone…” Naipal’s voice was soft, but his eyes burned so that Karim Singh took a step back and seemed to have trouble breathing. “Tell the governor that if he defies me, I will wither his flesh and put him in the streets as a tongueless beggar to watch his wives and daughters dragged away to brothels. Tell him!” And the wazam of Vendhya fled like a servant. Naipal forced his gaze back to the fragments of mirror, back to the hundred-times repeated image.
“You will not conquer, pan-kur,” he whispered. “I will yet be victorious over you.”
CHAPTER XXI
Hordo had been right about the Street of Dreams, Conan thought when he first saw it in the gray light of dawn. The stallion picked its way along the dirt roadway between muddy pools of offal and piles of rubble overgrown with weeds. The buildings were skulls, with empty windows for eye sockets. Roofs sagged where they had not fallen in. Walls leaned and some had collapsed, spewing clay bricks across the dirt of the street, revealing barren, rat-infested interiors. Occasional ragged, furtive shapes appeared in a doorway or darted across the street behind him. The people of the Street of Dreams were like scurrying rodents, fearful to poke their noses into the light. The stench of decay and mold filled the air. Ill dreams indeed, Conan thought. Ill dreams indeed.
The abandoned temple was not hard to find, a domed structure with pigeons fluttering through gaping holes in the dome. Once eight fluted marble columns had stood across its front, but now three had fallen. Two lay in fragments across the street, weeds growing thickly along their edges. Of the third only a stump remained. Part of the front wall had fallen too, revealing that what must have once seemed to be marble blocks were in truth only a stone facing over clay bricks. The opening widened and heightened the temple door enough for a man to enter on horseback. There was no sign of the smugglers but the gloomy interior could have hidden them easily. Or ten times their number of the area’s denizens. Conan drew his sword. He had to duck his head as he rode through the gap in the wall.
Within was a large dim room, its cracked floor tiles covered with dust and broken bricks. The thick pillars here were of wood, all splintered with rot. At the far end of the chamber there was a marble altar, its edges chipped and cracked, but of whatever god it had been raised to, there was no evidence.
Before the stallion had taken three paces into the room, Hordo appeared from behind a pillar. “It is about time you got here, Cimmerian. I was all but ready to give you up for dead this time.”
Enam and Shamil stepped out, too, with arrows nocked but not drawn. Both had bandages showing. “We did not know it was you,” the young Turanian said. “There are pigeons roasting on a spit in the back, if you are hungry.”
“We try to hide the smell of them,” Enam said, spitting. “The people here are like vermin. They look ready to swarm over anyone with food like a pack of rats.”
Conan nodded as he stepped down from the saddle. Once on the ground, he had to hold onto the stirrup leather for a moment; the pains and dizziness had not returned, but weakness had come in their place. “I have seen nothing like them,” he said. “In Turan or Zamora it is a far cry from palace to beggar, but here it seems two different lands.”
“Vendhya is a country of great contrasts,” Kang Hou said, approaching from the rear of the ruined structure.
“It is like a melon rotting from within,” Conan replied. “A fruit overripe for plucking.” The weakness was lessening. It came in cycles. “Someday perhaps I will return with an army and pluck it.”