Part 12 (2/2)

Halk's eyes had opened. ”Breca was my s.h.i.+eld-mate. The men were my comrades. You killed them. That was fair enough, since we came against you. But to give them to those vermin for-” He could not finish the sentence. Rage choked him. Incredibly, he came to his feet and was reaching for the Thyran's throat with his bound hands. His wound betrayed him and he fell again, to stare half blind at Stark with such hatred as might kill a man where he sat.

”Prophecies!” Halk said, and sobbed once, a racking sound that shook his whole body. Then he fainted.

Stark wished that he had left Halk and the others in Amnir's wagons, sleeping the sleep of the G.o.ddess.

Hargoth and the priests were watching him, and he could not bear that gaze, either, even though he had never asked for their faith. He asked the Thyran, ”Who are 'they' who gave you the orders, and what are we waiting for?”

The Thyran smiled. ”As to 'they,' you'll meet them soon enough. And we're waiting for men to come up from the city, to take over the post while we go down with you and our wounded. You left us short-handed.”

There was a second gate, in the wall opposite the one through which the Outdwellers had gone. A couple of soldiers were up above, keeping an eye out over whatever country lay beyond. The Thyran glanced at them, and then he laughed.

”You wanted the Outdwellers to show you a way around Thyra. There isn't any way around. We guard every trail, every approach. Not a puff of wind can get past us. Otherwise, anyone could creep in and nibble away our wealth.”

He kicked Stark experimentally, studied the dried blood that showed on him, c.o.c.king his head from side to side. He stepped back, turning to Hargoth.

”I don't believe he's from the stars at all. He's just meat like the rest of us. And none too bright, either, to take up with the Gray Maggots. A fine lot altogether, to make big talk about flying up to heaven!”

His broad face beamed with the scornful smugness of absolutely sublime stupidity. Stark hated him.

”Aren't you even curious?” he asked, ”A million worlds out there with more wonders than I could tell you in a million years, and you don't even want to ask a question?”

The Thyran shrugged, heaving his weight of iron bosses up and down. ”Why should I care what's out there? What more could I find anywhere than I already have here in Thyra?”

He walked away. ”Well,” said Stark, ”and there's no answer to that.” He leaned back against the wall, infinitely tired. ”What do you say now, wise woman?”

Hargoth gave her no chance to speak. ”The only way was south. South! South where the s.h.i.+ps are.” ”The Spring Child told you otherwise.” ”A false augury. A punishment. Because of your l.u.s.t for that woman, you cheated Old Sun of his gift. He sent us a curse instead of a blessing.”

The eight heads of the priests nodded solemnly. Nine pairs of eyes pierced him with malevolence. ”You are not the Promised One.” ”I never claimed to be,” said Stark. ”Was it because of your anger that you didn't use your magic to help us?”

”The G.o.ddess does not send us power like a lightning bolt. It is a slow magic. We had no time.” ”You have time now.”

Impatiently Hargoth said, ”How can we perform the ritual? How stand as we must, and think as we must? You know little of sorcery.”

Stark knew enough of it not to depend on it. He gave up the conversation.

”Have faith,” said Gerrith softly. ”Faith?” said Stark. ”Will it produce us another miracle that leads nowhere?”

The guards above the gate sang out. Stark heard the marching drumbeat in the distance. Presently the gate was opened and the replacements tramped in. A period of ordered chaos followed as the change-over was made. The outgoing force formed ranks. The litters were picked up. Ungently the captives were made to rise. Halk was conscious again. He fell twice trying to get up, with a Thyran boot to help him. Stark swung his hands in a short vicious arc and knocked the soldier clanging against the wall.

”He needs a litter,” said Stark, ”and don't draw that blade. I'm worth double alive and your officers won't thank you for robbing them.”

The sword hesitated, halfway out of the sheath. The officer with the iron torque came up.

”Put that away,” he said to the soldier, and then he hit Stark backhanded across the face. ”You trade overmuch on your value.”

”He needs a litter,” Stark said.

Halk swore that he did not and tried again to get up. He fell a third time. The officer shouted for litter-bearers.

”Now, then,” he said, ”move!” He shoved Stark into line.

The drummers picked up the steady beat. The company marched out through the gate.

The path on this side of the guardpost ran for a time under the flank of a ridge that shut off any view of what lay beyond. Then it swung around a curve and the prospect opened up, suddenly and with spectacular effect.

The Witchfires thrust sharply into the sky, throwing back Old Sun's sullen gleaming. At their feet, covering a portion of the foothills and spreading out across a broad valley, was the ruin of a city.

It had probably begun, Stark thought, as a strong fortress in the days when fighting men and caravans moved back and forth through the pa.s.s of the Witchfires, which was like a wide notch between the peaks. Later it had become a city, and then a metropolis, and then a dead and silent corpse, sinking in upon itself with the weight of wind and frost and endless time, until all its original form was lost and it was only a great, dark, many-humped mound beneath the mountains.

Then from somewhere the Thyrans had come, Strayer's men, the People of the Hammer; and the city had taken on a strange new life. Now, in the dim coppery glare of day, the guardian of the pa.s.s appeared more like a doorkeeper at the gate of h.e.l.l. All around the base of the city, and into its ugly flanks, and among its heaped debris, were fumaroles from which came plumes of smoke and red glarings that pulsed and shook.

”The forges are never cold,” said the Thyran officer. ”We are all smiths, even as we are all soldiers. We work and we guard. This is how Strayer taught us.”

It sounded a dull life, but Stark forebore to say so. The inside of his mouth was still bleeding.

Some two hours of marching brought them into the new city.

It lacked beauty. Some of the dwellings were underground, some partly so. Others, built of stone from the hills and debris quarried from the old city, were above ground but squat and low, with few windows to take the cold.

A vast straggle of frozen lanes ran between the dwellings. There were places for pens and livestock, and near them a band of hairy folk leading a string of animals made way for the soldiers, staring out of filthy faces at the prisoners. The animals bore great stacks of dried lichens.

There was a lot of smoke, blowing constantly, and a m.u.f.fled sound of hammering that went on like heartbeats. Huge piles of rusty sc.r.a.p metal bulked here and there, and over all was the old city, a tangled mountain blotting out part of the Witchfires. Over the centuries the Thyrans had chewed and tunneled the mountain ragged round its edges, and dug dwellings into this raggedness like caves, opening dark mouths into the deeper bowels of the ruin. Stark thought of a community of rats living in the biggest junkyard in the world. If the Thyrans were able to reclaim even a small fraction of the countless tons of metal buried in that junkyard, they could keep themselves busy for another thousand years.

The company swung into what was evidently the street that led up from the main gate. It was much wider than the lanes, and it ran almost straight.

The thudding of the drums became sharper, the pace of the men smartened. People were swarming out to see them go by. They were chiefly of the same heavy build, though occasionally there were individuals of a different shape and coloring to attest to outside blood. The women were no more prepossessing than the men. Stark had no idea what the women of the Towers looked like, but they could only have been an improvement. These people shouted to the soldiers, crowding in to stare and push at the captives. The fur-clad children yelled insults and threw things.

The soldiers shoved the people back with bone-breaking good nature. The crisp beat of the drums never faltered. The company marched up the straight street, straight to the Iron House.

The dark walls of the Iron House were burnished like a s.h.i.+eld. The metal sheathing of the roof shone with a dull l.u.s.ter in the light of the ginger star. A guard of twelve men was drawn up before ma.s.sive iron doors that bore the hammer device. The House was rectangular, some eighty feet long by half that many wide, the long way oriented north and south. The doors were in the southern front. At the northern end, close against the ruins, were lower wings of stone and rubble.

The drums sounded a long roll. The heavy doors swung open. The company marched into a great hall.

Fires burned in pits, giving out heat and smoke. At the far end of the hall was a dais, with a high seat and several places of honor. The high seat was made of iron, strong, square, without grace or ornamentation. A man wearing an iron collar and pectoral sat in it; he was also strong and square and without grace. The pectoral on his barrel chest was in the form of a hammer.

There were others on the dais, in the seats of honor, and Stark saw with no surprise at all that the man on the right of the high seat was Gelmar of Skeg.

20.

People came into the hall behind the soldiers. The chief men beat and shouldered their way through the press to crowd up onto the dais or take their places below it, according to rank. Lesser men filled the body of the hall. Women remained outside, and small boys who darted in were pitched out bodily. The iron doors clanged shut. As though that were a signal, the men began shouting, ”Strayer! Strayer and the forges!” They stamped their feet and slapped their weapons. ”Strayer!”

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