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The Khitan frowned darkly, drawing himself up to his full height as Neesa re-entered the room bearing a silver tray set with a jug of wine and a large pewter tankard.
"He understands you perfectly," said Lady Zelandra.
"So I thought." Conan s.n.a.t.c.hed the jug from the platter with manacled hands and tore the cork out with his teeth. Disdaining the tankard, he drank directly from the bottle, taking several deep swallows before pulling it from his lips with an explosive sigh of satisfaction. He strode to the nearest table and, carelessly pus.h.i.+ng books aside, sat on its edge. Nursing the bottle, he stretched his long legs out before him and gave every sign of being well pleased with himself.
"As soon as you are adequately refreshed, perhaps you would see fit to tell us where you believe Ethram-Fal can be found," said Zelandra sarcastically. Heng s.h.i.+h drew his scimitar casually from his sash and absently began to test its edge with a thumb. None of this served to hurry Conan, who took a last, leisurely swallow from the bottle and set it on the table beside him.
"After you taunted the Stygian and he took on his true aspect, the scenery behind him became as clear as if we looked through a window of gla.s.s into a desert," said the Cimmerian.
"I angered him and his concentration faltered," said Lady Zelandra.
"What of it?"
"When the desert was revealed," went on Conan patiently, "I saw a ridge behind him. It is a row of small peaks that men call the Dragon's Spine."
"You have seen this ridge before?" asked Neesa in amazement.
"I have seen it twice. The last time was two months ago, when I took a caravan across Stygia from the Black Kingdoms. Before that, I saw it on the way to the dead city of demons called Pteion."
"You have been to Pteion?" Zelandra's eyes were wide in the torchlight.
"I was there once," replied Conan. "It is a place best avoided.
Ethram-Fal is in eastern Stygia, a few days' travel from the Shemitish border. From the position of the Dragon's Spine, he is both west and south of Pteion, though what he is doing in that G.o.dforsaken wasteland only Crom knows. I give you my word that all I have said is true. Now, if you will remove these manacles, and give me back my sword, I will return to the house of Shakar the Keshanian. After my visit, I promise that he shall trouble neither you nor anyone else unless it be in h.e.l.l."
At a gesture from Zelandra, Neesa came forward, drawing from within her tunic a small key which she fitted into the Cimmerian's manacles. In a moment they fell from his wrists, clattering to the floor.
"Barbarian..." said Zelandra. She hesitated, a rosy tint suffusing her features, then began again: "Conan, that area of Stygia is little known. I have scant time to find a reliable guide. If you lead me into that territory, your reward will be rich."
"But, milady," burst out Neesa in dismay. Zelandra silenced her with an imperious wave of a hand.
"What else is there for me?" she snapped. "Do I sit here pa.s.sively and wait for madness and death? Or perhaps you would have me submit myself to Ethram-Fal?"
"No, milady," murmured Neesa, lowering her gaze. Heng s.h.i.+h folded his thick arms impa.s.sively; only his bleak eyes revealed his emotion.
"Besides, Conan," Zelandra continued, "Shakar will die shortly for want of the Emerald Lotus. Slaying him would be an act of mercy. I need your aid now and can pay well for it."
The Cimmerian scowled, his blue eyes burning with distrust.
"I have little use for wizards-" he began, but Zelandra cut him off.
"Conan, I swear by Ishtar and Ashtoreth to do you no harm by sorcery or otherwise. Can you not see that my life is in the balance now? Without your aid, Ethram-Fal will claim my life with his lotus just as surely as Shakar would have claimed yours with his amulet. On the journey you could be guide and guard in one; but when we find his sanctuary, I shall confront Ethram-Fal alone. You needn't deal with him at all..." A note of pleading desperation had crept into her voice. Conan s.h.i.+fted in discomfort and suddenly felt Neesa's body pressed warmly against his side. In front of him, Lady Zelandra extended a hand in supplication more eloquent than words.
"Please, barbarian."
"What the h.e.l.l," said Conan gruffly. "I trust that the wages will outstrip those of a mercenary."
"Tenfold," said Zelandra. "By Pteor, Conan, you shall never have reason to regret this." The Cimmerian felt Neesa remove herself from his side.
At the same moment he noticed Heng s.h.i.+h's face had taken on the expression of a man attempting to swallow a mouthful of spoiled meat.
"I'm d.a.m.ned if I don't regret it already," he grumbled. "When do we leave?"
"After sunrise." Zelandra spun about in a swirl of her silken robe. 'I have many preparations to make, and you could doubtless use a little sleep after a night like this. Heng s.h.i.+h, show our guest to one of the bedchambers."
The big Khitan thrust his scimitar once more through his sash and brusquely beckoned the Cimmerian to follow him. Neesa slipped out the door just ahead of them, not glancing at Conan, but heading off down the hallway in the direction opposite that taken by Heng s.h.i.+h and the barbarian.
Conan looked back over a broad shoulder and muttered a curse as he watched the woman round a corner out of sight. When he turned back to Heng s.h.i.+h, the Khitan's round, yellow face was split by a grin that the barbarian found vexing.
In the mansion's opposite wing, the burning tapers were fewer and the rooms seemed unoccupied and unused. The hallway finally ended in a door that Heng s.h.i.+h shoved open roughly. Within was a small, windowless, but elegantly appointed bedchamber. Conan stepped inside, and turned to the Khitan.
"My sword," he said. "Bring me my sword. I shall sleep poorly without it at hand." Heng s.h.i.+h performed an elaborate shrug that seemed to indicate that he found the quality of the Cimmerian's rest of less than paramount concern. With that ambiguous gesture he closed the door upon the barbarian, leaving Conan wondering when he might hold his sword again.
Alone, Conan stretched like a weary panther as fatigue came over him despite what he had said to the Khitan. He examined the door, checked that it could not be locked from the outside, then sat down heavily on the bed. Falling back to sprawl among the velvet blankets, he let himself drift, confident that his senses would awaken him to any danger. He was sleeping soundly when there came a gentle knock at the door.
The Cimmerian snapped from slumber to complete waking clarity with the speed of a wild animal. He sat up on the bed, planted both feet on the floor, and wished that he had a weapon.
"Come," he rasped and waited. The door swung open soundlessly. The first thing that he saw was the proffered hilt of his sword.
"So," Conan began, "you decided..." He fell silent.
It was Neesa who brought him the sword. She stepped tentatively into the room, bare white arms extending from filmy sleeves as she held the hilt of the heavy broadsword out to him. Her only garment was a diaphanous robe that floated about her like a soft cloud of translucent vapor. The room's single taper illumined the long curves of her slender body through the robe's revealing gossamer.
"I-" Neesa's voice faltered. "I was afraid that Heng s.h.i.+h would not bring you your sword and that you would think that we mistrusted you. I thought-" She flushed and thrust the sword out to him. Conan took his blade and held it uncertainly, his gaze fixed upon her. He had come to his feet without thinking and now he became painfully aware of the woman's obvious discomfort.
"Neesa," said Conan hoa.r.s.ely. "I'll take Zelandra's payment in gold."
"What? They don't know I'm..." she stammered. Her face twisted in mingled confusion and anger. "d.a.m.n me for an idiot!" she exclaimed savagely.
With that she lunged forward, throwing her arms around the barbarian and crus.h.i.+ng her mouth against his. The sword was pinned between their bodies. Conan released it, his arms moving automatically around her.
Neesa laid her hands upon his wide chest and thrust him away, breaking the embrace. The sword dropped to the carpet, where it lay unnoticed.
Wild-eyed and panting, Neesa glared at the Cimmerian, who looked on in mute amazement.
"I am not payment," she gritted. "I thought... oh, to h.e.l.l with what I thought!" She whirled and ran from the bedchamber, slamming the door behind her.
Conan stared at the door for a full minute. He glanced down at his sword to be certain that it was really there. Then he sat on the bed again and rubbed his jaw. He reflected that it made little difference how long he lived or how many women he knew, the opposite s.e.x continued to provide surprises. Apparently Neesa had come to him of her own accord and he had managed to drive her off with a few ill-chosen words.
It certainly wouldn't be the first time that he had shown poor judgment where women were concerned.
But there was little point in worrying about it. All and all, this was a superior close to a difficult day. He was employed, free of Shakar's magic, and lying on a fine bed with a belly full of wine. Conan lolled back on the blankets once again and kicked off Ms boots. Things had, indeed, been much worse. In a few moments the barbarian was asleep.
Chapter Ten.
Alone in her bedchamber, Zelandra brooded.
The torches burned as ruddy as dying embers, filling the room with a ruby twilight that matched the sorceress's mood. Her long, silken robes whispered on the marble floor as she moved among her books, studying the unwieldy piles on the tables and then methodically examining her shelves. In a corner, she knelt and pulled an armload of long leather tubes from behind a row of books.
Shoving the tomes aside, she piled the leather tubes on a table, peering at each in turn. Zelandra selected one that was pale and slender, and drew from it a rolled scroll of parchment. It was a map, darkened by age and inscribed in a dead language. The sorceress muttered to herself, smoothing the crackling scroll flat on the dusty tabletop.
The map depicted the eastern regions of what was now Stygia, but the highland areas were sketched in with little detail. Zelandra sighed.
The map seemed all but useless; still, it would have to suffice. She thrust the scroll into the tube and set it beside her bed. Then she hesitated, wrapped in indecision.
Resolution came to Zelandra, sending her striding to the far corner of the chamber. She reached for a torch, twisting it in its sconce, and a section of the bookshelf-lined wall swung open like a door. Within was a tiny, circular room hung with curtains of black velvet. A single chair sat at a round, ebony table that all but filled the little chamber. The sorceress stepped into the secret room, and the door swung shut, sealing her in darkness.