Part 25 (1/2)

The other throne was empty, but the man who would have occupied it stood beside the other throne. This was a thin, hawk-faced, brown man, who wore a white robe like the other but, on his head, a jeweled turban instead of the first man's headgear of bones and feathers. Hie lean man was shaking a fist at the fat one and shouting, while a group of throne guards uneasily watched their kings quarrel. As Amalric, following Conan, came closer, he made out the lean one's words:

”You lie! Askia himself sent this sending of serpents, as you call it, to give him an excuse to murder Daura! If you do not stop this 'buffoonery, there will be war! We shall slay you, you black savage, little by little!” The thin man's voice rose to a scream. ”Do as I say!

Stop Askia, or else, by Jhil the Merciless...”

He reached for his scimitar, the guards about the throne s.h.i.+fted their spears. The fat black merely laughed up at the furious face above him.

Conan, having pushed through the lines of spearmen, bounded up the brick steps of the dais and thrust himself between the two monarchs.

”Better take your hand off that sword, Zehbeh,” he growled, and turned to the other. ”What's going on, Sak.u.mbe?”

The black king chuckled. ”Daura thought to get rid of me by a sending of serpents. Ugh! Vipers in my bedding, asps among my robes, mambas dripping from the roof beams. Three of my women have died of their bites, besides several slaves and attendants. Askia learned by divination that Daura was the culprit, and my men surprised him with the evidence in the midst of his incantations. Look yonder, General Conan: Askia has just slain the goat. His demons will arrive any time, now.”

Following Conan's gaze, Amalric looked down into the hollow square towards the stake with its bound victim, in front of which the goat was expiring. Askia was nearing the climax of his incantation. His voice rose to a shriek as he leaped and capered and rattled his bones. The smoke from the tripod thickened, writhed, and glowed with a ghastly radiance of its own.

Overhead, night had fallen. The stars, which had began to s.h.i.+ne out brightly in the clear desert air, turned dim and red; a crimson veil seemed to be drawn across the face of the rising moon. The fires sank and smoldered redly. A crackle of speech, in no human tongue, wafted down from the upper air. There was a sound like the beating of leathery wings.

Askia stood straight and still, with arms outstretched, plumed head thrown back, mouthing a long incantation of strange names. Amalric's hair rose; for, among the rush of meaningless syllables, he caught the name ”Ollam-onga,” repeated thrice.

Then Daura shrieked so loudly as to drown out Askia's incantation. In the flickering firelight, with the weird glow from the tripod blurring Ac sight, Amalric could not be quite sure of what he saw. Something seemed to be happening to Daura, who struggled and screamed.

Around the base of the stake to which the wizard was tied, a pool of blood grew and widened. Ghastly wounds appeared all over the man, although nothing could be seen to deal such injuries. His screams sank to a faint sob and ceased, although his body continued to move in its bindings, as if some invisible presence were tugging at it A faint gleam of white, appeared amidst the dark ma.s.s that had been Daura; then another and another. Amalric realized with a start of horror that these white things were bones...

The moon returned to its normal silvery radiance; the stars shone out again like jewels; the fires in the hollow square blazed up. The waxing light showed a skeleton, still bound to the stake and slumped in a pool of blood. King Sak.u.mbe spoke in his high, musical voice:

”So much for that scoundrel Daura. Now, as for Zeh-beh-By Ajujo's nose, where is the villain?”

Zehbeh had disappeared while all other eyes had been focused on the drama at the stake.

”Conan,” said Sak.u.mbe, ”you had better call up the regiments; for I do not think my brother king will let this night's work pa.s.s without taking a hand in it.”

Conan dragged Amalric forward. ”King Sak.u.mbe, this is Amalric the Aquilonian, a sometime comrade in arms of mine. I need him for an adjutant. Amalric, you and your girl had better stay with the king, since you don't knew your way around the city and would only get yourselves killed if you tried to mix in the fight that's coming.”

”I am pleased to meet a friend of the mighty Amra,” said Sak.u.mbe. ”Put him on the payroll, Conan, and muster the warriors-Derketo, the rascal has not lost any time! Look yonder!”

An uproar arose at the far side of the plaza. Conan sprang from the dais in a flying leap and began shouting orders to the commanders of the black regiments. Messengers dashed off. Somewhere, deep-voiced drums, beaten with the light-brown palms of black hands, began to mutter and mumble.

At the far side of the plaza, a troop of white-clad hors.e.m.e.n burst into view, thrusting with lances and smiting with scimitars at the black ma.s.ses in front of them. Before their onslaught, the lines of black spearmen crumbled into shapeless ma.s.ses. Man after man went down before their flas.h.i.+ng steel. King Sak.u.mbe's bodyguard closed up around the dais with the two thrones, one empty and the other occupied by the ponderous bulk of Sak.u.mbe.

Lissa, trembling, clung to Amalric's arm. ”Who fights whom?” she whispered.

”That would be Zehbeh's Aphaki,” replied Amalric, ”trying to slay the black king, here, to make Zehbeh sole ruler.”

”Will they break through to the throne?” she said, pointing to the struggling ma.s.s of dark figures across the plaza.

Amalric shrugged and glanced at Sak.u.mbe. The Negro king lolled in his throne, apparently unconcerned. He raised a golden cup to his lips and took a swig of wine. Then he handed a similar cup to Amalric.

”You must be thirsty, white man, after coming in from a long patrol without time to wash or rest,” he said. ”Have a drink!”

Amalric shared his drink with Lissa. Across the plaza, the trampling and neighing of horses, the clash of arms, the screams of wounded men merged in an unholy din. Raising his voice to be heard, Amalric said: