Collected fiction, p.95

Collected Fiction, page 95

 

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  “How do you know this?” Raynor snapped.

  “Does that matter? I have certain powers—powers which may aid you, if you wish.”

  “This is sorcery, Prince,” Eblik muttered. “Best run your blade through his hairy gullet.”

  Raynor hesitated, as though almost minded to obey. Ghiar shrugged.

  “Malric’s castle is a strong one; his followers are many. You alone cannot save the girl. Let me aid you.”

  Raynor’s laugh was hotly scornful. “You aid me, old man? How?”

  “Old? Aye, I am older than you think. Yet these oaks, too, are ancient, and they are strong with age. Let me tell you a secret. Malric fears the stars. He was born under the Sign of the Fish of Ea, which serves the Sign of the Black Flower. I, too. was born under the Sign of the Fish of Ea, but to me has been given power to rule, not to serve. The baron knows my power, and in my name you may free the girl.”

  Eblik broke in. “What would you gain by this?”

  For a moment Ghiar was silent. The cold wind ruffled his white beard and tugged at his gray robe.

  “What would I gain? Perhaps vengeance. Perhaps Baron Malric is my enemy. What does that matter to you? If I give you my aid, that should be enough.”

  “True,” Raynor said. “Though this smacks of sorcery to me. However”—he shrugged—“Shaitan knows we need help, if Malric be as strong as you say.”

  “Good!” Ghiar’s somber eyes gleamed with satisfaction. He fumbled in his robe, brought out a small glittering object. “This amulet will be your weapon.”

  Raynor took the thing and scrutinized it with interest. The amulet was perhaps as large as his palm, a disc of silvery metal on which figures were graven clockwise.

  Six signs the amulet bore.

  An arrow and a fish; a serpent and a circle; a flower and a tiny dragonlike creature with a long tail and a row of spines on its back.

  In the amulet’s center was a jewel—cloudy black, with a gleaming star-point in its tenebrous heart.

  “The Sign of Tammuz,” whispered Ghiar. “Which may not be drawn! Yet by the star in the black opal ye may know him, Tammuz, Lord of the Zodiac!”

  Raynor turned the object in his hand. On the amulet’s back was a mirror-disc.

  Ghiar said warningly, “Do not look too long in the steel. Through the Sign of the Mirror the power of the Basilisk is made manifest, and you may need that power. Show Malric the talisman. Order him, in my name, to free the girl. If he obeys, well. If he refuses”—the deep voice sank to an ominous whisper—“if he refuses, turn the amulet. Let him gaze into the Sign of the Mirror!” Ghiar’s hand lifted; he pointed south. “There is your road. The moon is up. Ride south!”

  Raynor grunted, turned to his horse. Silently he vaulted to the saddle and turned the steed’s head into the trail. Eblik was not far behind.

  Once Raynor turned to look over his shoulder. Ghiar was still standing in the clearing, his shaggy head lifted, motionless as an image.

  The warlock stared up at the stars.

  CHAPTER II

  The Sign of the Basilisk

  SO EBLIK and Prince Raynor came to the outlaw’s castle, a great gray pile of stone towering above the gloomy forest. They came out of the woods and stood silent for a time, looking across a broad grassy meadow, beyond which the castle brooded like a crouching beast. Red flame of lamps and flambeaux glittered from the mullioned windows. In the gateway light glistened on armor.

  “Follow!” Raynor snapped, and spurred forward.

  Across the sward they fled, and before the nodding guardsman had sprung to alertness, two muscular figures were almost upon him. Bearded lips opened in a shout that died unuttered. Gleaming steel thrust through a bare throat, slipped free, stained crimson. Choking on his own blood, the guard clawed at the gate and fell slowly, face down, to lie motionless in the moonlight.

  “One guard,” Raynor murmured. “Baron Malric fears few enemies, it seems. Well, that will make our task the easier. Come.”

  They went through the flagged courtyard and entered the castle itself. A bare sentry-room of stone, with a great oak door in the far wall—a room stacked with weapons, sword and mace and iron war-hook. Raynor hesitated, and then slipped quietly to the door. It was not barred. He pushed it gently open and peered through the crack. Eblik saw his master’s figure go tense.

  Raynor looked upon the castle’s great hall. High-ceilinged it stretched up to oak rafters, blackened with smoke, that crisscrossed like a spider’s web far above. The room itself was vast. Rich furs and rugs covered the floor; a long T-shaped table stretched almost from wall to wall. Around it, laughing and shouting in vinous mirth as they fed, were the men of Malric, his outlaw band.

  Bearded men, wolf-fierce, gnawing on mutton-bones and swilling from great mugs of heady spiced liquor. At the head of the board, on an ornate throne, sat the baron himself—and he was truly a strange man to lord it over these lawless savages.

  For Malric was slim and dark and smiling, with a gayly youthful face, and long hair that fell loosely about his slim shoulders. He wore a simple brown tunic, with loose, baggy sleeves, and his hands were busy twirling a gilded, filigreed chalice. He looked up as two burly outlaws entered, half dragging the slim form of a girl.

  IT WAS Delphia. She still wore her dinted armor, and her ebony hair, unbound, fell in ringlets about her pale face. There was beauty in that face, wild and lawless beauty, and fire and strength in the jet eyes. She straightened and glared at Malric.

  “Well?” she snapped. “What new insult is this?”

  “Insult?” the baron questioned, his voice calm and soft. “I intend none. Will you eat with us?” He motioned to a chair that stood vacant beside him.

  “I’d sooner eat with wild dogs,” Delphia declared.

  And at her words a low, ominous growl rose from the outlaws. One man, a burly fellow with a cast in one eye and a white scar disfiguring his cheek, leaped up and hurried to the girl’s side. There he turned to face Malric.

  “Have I given you leave to rise, Gunther?” the baron asked gently.

  For answer the other growled an oath. “By Shaitan!” he snarled. “You’ve kept me waiting long enough, Malric. This wench is my own. I captured her, and I’ll have her. If she eats with us, she sits beside me!”

  “So?” Malric’s voice did not change. Ironic laughter gleamed in the dark eyes. “Perhaps you grow tired of my rule, Gunther. Perhaps you wish to sit in my throne, eh?”

  The outlaws watched, waiting. A hush hung over the long table. Involuntarily Raynor’s hand crept to his swordhilt. He sensed death in the air.

  Perhaps Gunther sensed it too. The white scar on his cheek grew livid. He roared an inarticulate oath and whipped out a great blade. Bellowing, he sprang at Malric. The sword screamed through the air.

  The baron scarcely seemed to move, so swift was his rising. Yet suddenly he stood facing Gunther, and his slim hand dipped into his loose sleeve and came out with the light glittering on bright metal.

  Swift as a snake’s striking was Malric’s cast. And a lean knife shot through the air and found its mark unerringly. Through eye and thin shell of bone and into soft, living brain it sped. Gunther screamed hoarsely once and his sword missed its target, digging instead into the wood of the table.

  The outlaw’s body bent back like a drawn bow. Gunther clawed at his face, his nails ripping away skin and flesh in a death agony.

  And he fell, his mail ringing and clashing, to lie silent at Malric’s feet.

  The baron seated himself, sighing. Once more his fingers toyed with the gilded chalice. Seemingly he ignored the shout of approbation that thundered up from the outlaws.

  But after a moment he glanced up at Delphia. He gestured, and the two guards dragged her forward.

  Watching at the door, Raynor decided that it was time to act. Madness, perhaps, walking into a den of armed enemies. But the prince had changed his opinion. He had developed a queer, inexplicable confidence in Ghiar’s talisman. He found the disc in his belt, cupped it in his palm, and with a word to Eblik kicked open the door and stepped into the hall.

  Ten steps he took before he was discovered. Ten steps, with the Nubian at his heels, great battle-ax ready.

  Then the wolves saw him and sprang up, shouting.

  Simultaneously Malric called an order. His voice penetrated knife-keen through the tumult, and silence fell. The baron sat motionless, a little frown between his eyes, watching the two interlopers.

  “Well?” he demanded. “Who are you?” And he cast a swift glance at Delphia, whose slight start had been betraying.

  “My name matters little,” Raynor said. “I bring you a message from a certain Ghiar.”

  “Ghiar!”

  A repressed whisper shuddered through the outlaws. There was fear in it, and bitter hatred.

  “What is this message?” Malric demanded.

  “That you free this girl.”

  THE baron’s youthful face was bland.

  “Is that all?” he asked.

  Raynor was conscious of a feeling of disappointment. He had expected some other reaction—what, he did not know. But Malric’s calm passivity baffled him.

  The baron waited. When no answer came, he made a quick gesture. And up from the board leaped armed men, shouting, blades bared. They poured down upon Raynor and on Eblik crouching behind him, gargoyle face twisted in battle lust.

  So this was what came of warlocks’ promises! Raynor grinned bitterly, whipped out his sword—and remembered the talisman. What had Ghiar said?

  “If he refuses, turn the amulet.

  Let him gaze into the Sign of the Mirror!”

  The foremost man was almost upon him as Raynor flung up his hand, the talisman cupped within it. From the mirror darted a ray of light—needle-thin, blindingly brilliant.

  It struck full in the outlaw’s face. It probed deep—deep!

  Instantly a mask of stark, frightful horror replaced the look of savagery. The man halted, stood frozen and motionless as a statue, his eyes like those of a tortured animal.

  Like a soundless whisper in Raynor’s brain came the memory of Ghiar’s words:

  “The gaze of the Basilisk chills you . . .”

  And now from the mirror in the talisman pale bright rays were streaming, cold as white fires, unearthly as the arrows of the fabled Moon-goddess. And like arrows, too, they flamed swiftly through the air, seeking and finding their marks; and one by one Malric’s men stiffened and stood frozen.

  The last was the baron himself. And then the fires of the talisman died and were gone.

  “Delphia!” Raynor cried. The girl was already running toward him, down the length of the hall.

  “This is sorcery, Prince,” Eblik said. “And it is evil!”

  “It aids us, at least,” Raynor flung at him, and then turned to meet the girl.

  And halted—staring.

  A sudden, icy chill had dropped down upon the great hall. The lamps dimmed swiftly and faded into utter darkness.

  Through the midnight black Raynor heard Delphia scream. He sprang forward, cursing.

  His foot struck a prostrate body. He bent, and searching fingers found a man’s bearded chin.

  “Delphia!” he shouted.

  “Raynor!” she called and her voice seemed to fade and dwindle as though from infinite distances. “Raynor! Help me!”

  The prince’s sword screamed through the dark. He stumbled forward blindly, seeking to penetrate the jet blackness, and quite suddenly one hand gripped hard, leathery flesh.

  He heard an angry voice.

  “Thou meddling fool! You dare to lift steel against the Lord of the Zodiac?”

  The voice of—Ghiar! Ghiar, the warlock, come now to Malric’s castle by some evil sorcery.

  “Lift steel?” Raynor questioned furiously. “I’ll give you a taste of it, skulking wizard!”

  He thrust strongly just as Ghiar pulled free. A pain-filled screech rang out.

  But Raynor had lost the wizard in the darkness, and he pushed forward hurriedly, before the oldster could escape.

  “Thou fool!” Ghiar’s voice whispered, cold with bitter menace. “Blind, rash fool!”

  Raynor, groping in the dark, paused suddenly. A strange, greenish glow was beginning to pervade the hall. But its eerie light gave no illumination. Rather, it served only to reveal the source from which it sprang.

  A gross and hideous bulk, scaled and shining, loomed above the man. It was shaped like a dragon, and Raynor suddenly remembered the symbol that he had seen on the talisman.

  The Sign of the Basilisk!

  Only instinct saved the prince then.

  He knew, with a dreadful certainty, that to meet the dreadful gaze of the horror would mean death. And before he had time to catch but a flashing glimpse of the Basilisk, Raynor whirled, both hands lifted to his eyes. Through them, darting into the secret fortress of his mind, an icy chill had leaped suddenly—a cold beyond cold, a horror beyond life.

  Four strides he took, blinded, his head throbbing with agony. Something soft and heavy caught his foot, and Raynor stumbled and crashed down upon the stones. The world went out in a blanket of merciful oblivion.

  CHAPTER III

  The Sign of the Black Flower

  RAYNOR awoke suddenly. Sunlight was slanting down through the high oaks, and a gruff voice was cursing steadily in several outlandish dialects of Gobi. The prince realized that he was being carried on someone’s back, and recognized the deep voice as Eblik’s.

  He wriggled free, dropped to the ground, and the Nubian turned swiftly, his ugly face twisted with delight.

  “Shaitan!” he growled. “The god. be praised! So you’re alive, eh?”

  “Just about,” Raynor said wryly. “What’s happened?”

  “How should I know? When the lights went out back in Malric’s castle, I blundered out of the hall in the dark, and when I got back Delphia was gone and you were lying on your face with a bump as large as World-Mountain on your head. So I picked you up and headed east.”

  “Why east?” Raynor asked. “You have my thanks, but it might have been better to have remained in the castle. Delphia—”

  “She’s to the east,” Eblik grunted. “At least, our best chance is to go in that direction. I picked up one of Malric’s men and brought him with us. He woke up an hour ago, and I choked some information from the dog. Ghiar has a citadel in Mirak Forest, in that direction.” He nodded toward the rising sun. “You were cursing the warlock in your sleep, so I guessed a little of what had happened. What now?”

  “We go to Ghiar’s citadel,” Raynor decided. “You did well, Eblik.” Swiftly he explained what had happened. “Where are our horses?”

  “Shaitan knows. They took fright and ran off. It isn’t far, however.”

  “So? Well, I’m beginning to understand now, Eblik. Ghiar used me as a cat’s-paw. Though just how I still cannot understand.”

  Raynor pondered. No doubt Ghiar had abducted the girl, but why had not the warlock stolen her by means of his magic, without seeking Raynor’s aid? Could it be that the wizard had been unable to enter Malric’s castle until someone had opened a gateway for him?

  The prince had heard of such beings—creatures that could not enter a house unless they were lifted across the threshold, alien things that could never cross running water. Perhaps the amulet itself had given Ghiar power to materialize in the castle.

  Reminded of the talisman, Raynor fumbled in his belt and found the disc there. He examined it with renewed curiosity. In the black jewel the star-point glowed with pale brilliance.

  “Well, we go east, then,” Raynor decided. “Come.”

  Without further words he set off at a steady, effortless lope that ate up the miles. The giant Nubian paced him easily, swinging his great ax as though in anticipation.

  The oak forest stretched far and far, beyond their horizon. Overhead the sun grew hotter, pouring down its rays that would still be blasting upon Gobi when the empire would be not even a memory in the minds of men. But at last, hours later, the trees thinned and the two men found themselves at the top of a long slope that stretched down to the dark waters of a lake.

  In the lake’s center was an islet. And on the islet—Ghiar’s citadel.

  A citadel of darkness! Blacker than the nighted gulf of Abaddon was the great block of shining stone that towered up to the sky, a single, gigantic, polished oblong of jet, with neither tower nor window to break its grim monotony. No bridge spanned the lake.

  The waters were steel-gray; frigid as polar seas they seemed.

  On the islet, about the citadel, the ground was carpeted with darkness. The nature of this shadowy stain was a riddle; it was not stone, for now and again a long ripple would shudder across it as the wind sighed past.

  The citadel lay in the shelter of a valley, and over all seemed to hang a slumbrous, eerie quiet. No sound stirred, save for the wind’s occasional murmuring. And even that was oddly hushed.

  Thus might sleep the fabled Elysian Fields, where the dead who have tasted Lethe wander to and fro, with a half-incurious yearning for lost delights, amid the eternal hush of the shadowland.

  With a little shiver Raynor shook off the spell. He strode forward, the Nubian at his side. Eblik said nothing, but his keen barbaric senses guessed that sorcery dwelt in this valley. The black’s eyes were distended; his nostrils twitched as though seeking to scent something that dwelt beyond the threshold of his realization.

  As the two went down the slope a dim, unreal perfume seemed to rise and drift about them, an odor sensed rather than actually scented. And a drowsy langour made Raynor’s eyes heavy.

  TRULY dark magic guarded Ghiar’s citadel!

  They reached the lake’s shore. They circled swiftly, and discovered there was no means of crossing to the islet.

  “Short of building a raft,” Raynor observed., “which would take too long, I see nothing to it but a swim.”

  “Aye,” Eblik assented, readily enough, but his somber eyes dwelt on the motionless gray waters. “Yet it would be well to have our blades ready, Prince.”

 

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