Conan the Triumphant Page 3
At that moment the bearded man caught sight of Conan, and a drunken, snaggle-toothed grin split his wizened face. His tunic was patched in a rainbow of colors, and stained with wine and food. “Conan,” he cried, gesturing so hard for the big youth to come closer that he nearly fell from his stool. “Come. Sit. Drink.”
“You look to have had enough, Boros,” Conan said drily, “and I’ll buy you no more.”
“No need to buy,” Boros laughed. He fumbled for the pitcher. “No need. See? Water. But with just a little … .” His voice trailed off into mumbles, while his free hand made passes above the pitcher.
“Crom!” Conan shouted, leaping back from the table. Some in the room looked up, but seeing neither blood nor chance for advantage all went back to their drinking. “Not again while you’re drunk, you old fool!” the Cimmerian continued hastily. “Narus still isn’t rid of those warts you gave him trying to cure his boil.”
Boros cackled and thrust the pitcher toward him. “Taste. ’S wine. Naught to fear here.”
Cautiously Conan took the proffered pitcher and sniffed at the mouth of it. His nose wrinkled, and he handed the vessel back. “You drink first, since it’s your making.”
“Fearful, are you?” Boros laughed. “And big as you are. Had I your muscles … .” He buried his nose in the pitcher, threw back his head, and almost in the same motion hurled the vessel from him, gagging, spluttering and spitting. “Mitra’s mercies,” he gasped shakily, scrubbing the back of a bony hand across his mouth. “Never tasted anything like that in my life. Must have put a gill or more down my gullet. What in Azura’s name is it?”
Conan suppressed a grin. “Milk. Sour milk, by the smell.”
Boros shuddered and retched, but nothing came up. “You switched the pitcher,” he said when he could speak. “Your hands are swift, but not so swift as my eye. You owe me wine, Cimmerian.”
Conan dropped onto a stool across the table from Boros, setting the sack containing the bronze on the floor at his side. He had little liking for wizards, but properly speaking Boros was not such a one. The old man had been an apprentice in the black arts, but a liking for drink that became an all-consuming passion had led him to the gutter rather than down crooked paths of dark knowledge. When sober he was of some use in curing minor ills, or providing a love philtre; drunk, he was sometimes a danger even to himself. He was a good drinking companion, though, so long as he was kept from magic.
“Here!” the tavernkeeper bellowed, wiping his hands on a filthy once-white apron as he hurried toward them. With his spindly limbs and pot belly, he looked like a fat spider. “What’s all this mess on the floor? I’ll have you know this tavern is respectable, and—”
“Wine,” Conan cut him off, tossing coppers to clatter on the floor at his feet. “And have a wench bring it.” He gestured to the strangely aloof doxy. “That one in the corner will do.”
“She don’t work for me,” the tavernkeeper grunted, bending to collect the pitcher and the coins. Then he got down on hands and knees to fetch one copper from under the table and grinned at it in satisfaction. “But you’ll have a girl, never fear.”
He disappeared into the rear of the building, and in short moments a plump girl scurried out, one strip of blue silk barely containing her bouncing breasts and another fastened about her hips, to set a pitcher of wine and a pair of dented tankards before the two men. Wriggling, she moved closer to Conan, a seductive light in her dark eyes. He was barely aware of her; his eyes had gone back to the auburn-haired jade.
“Fool!” the serving wench snapped. “As well take a block of ice in your arms as that one.” And with a roll of her lips she flounced away.
Conan stared after her in amazement. “What is Zandru’s Nine Hells got into her?” he growled.
“Who understands women?” Boros muttered absently. Hastily he filled a tankard and gulped half of it. “Besides,” he went on in bleary tones once he had taken a deep breath, “now Tiberio’s dead, we’ll have too much else to be worrying about … .” The rest of his words were drowned in another mouthful of wine.
“Tiberio dead?” Conan said incredulously. “I spoke of him not too hours gone and heard no mention of this. Black Erlik’s Throne, stop drinking and talk. What of Tiberio?”
Boros set his tankard down with obvious reluctance. “The word is just now spreading. Last night it was. Slit his wrists in his bath. Or so they say.”
Conan grunted. “Who will believe that, and him with the best blood claim to succeed Valdric?”
“Folk believe what they want to believe, Cimmerian. Or what they’re afraid not to believe.”
It had had to come, Conan thought. There had been kidnappings in plenty, wives, sons, daughters. Sometimes demands were made, that an alliance be broken or a secret betrayed; sometimes there was only silence, and fear to paralyze a noble in his castle. Now began the assassinations. He was glad that a third of his Free-Company was always on guard at Timeon’s palace. Losing a patron in that fashion would be ill for a company’s reputation.
“Tis all of a piece,” Boros went on unsteadily. “Someone attempts to resurrect Al’Kiir. I’ve seen lights atop that accursed mountain, heard whispers of black knowledge sought. And this time there’ll be no Avanrakash to seal him up again. We need Moranthes the Great reborn. It would take him to bring order now.”
“What are you chattering at? No matter. Who’s next in line after Tiberio? Valentius, isn’t it?”
“Valentius,” Boris chuckled derisively. “He’ll never be allowed to take the throne. He’s too young.”
“He’s a man grown,” Conan said angrily. He knew little of Valentius and cared less, but the count was a full six years older than he.
Boros smiled. “There’s a difference between you two, Cimmerian. You’ve put two hard lifetimes’ experience into your years. Valentius has led a courtier’s life, all perfumes and courtesies and soft words.”
“You’re rambling,” Conan barked. How had the other man read his thoughts? A fast rise had not lessened his touchiness about his comparative youth, nor his anger at those who thought him too young for the position he held. But he had better to do with his time than sit with a drunken failed mage. There was that auburn-haired wench, for instance. “The rest of the wine is yours,” he said. Snatching up the sack with the bronze in it, he stalked away from the table, leaving Boros chortling into his wine.
The girl had not moved from the corner or changed her stance in all the time Conan had been watching her. Her heart-shaped face did not change expression as he approached, but her downcast eyes, blue as a northland sky at dawn, widened like those of a frightened deer, and she quivered as if prepared for flight.
“Share some wine with me,” Conan said, motioning to a table nearby.
The girl stared at him directly, her big eyes going even wider, if such were possible, and shook her head.
He blinked in surprise. That innocent face might belie it, but if she wanted directness … . “If you don’t want wine, how does two silvers take you?”
The girl’s mouth dropped open. “I don’t … that is, I … I mean … .” Even stammering, her voice was a soprano like silver bells.
“Three silvers, then. A fourth if you prove worth it.” She still stared. Why was he wasting time with her, he wondered, when there were other wenches about? She reminded him of Karela, that was it. This girl’s hair was not so red, nor her cheekbones so high, but she recalled to him the woman bandit who had shared his bed—and managed to disrupt his life—every time their paths had crossed. Karela was a woman fit for any man, fit for a King. But what use raking up old memories? “Girl,” he said gruffly, “if you don’t want my silver, say so, and I’ll take my custom elsewhere.”
“Stay,” she gasped. It was an obvious effort for her to get the word out.
“Innkeeper,” Conan bellowed, “a room!” The wench’s face went scarlet beneath the rouge on her cheeks.
The spidery tapster appeared on the instant, a lo
ng hand extended for coin. “Four coppers,” he growled, and waited until Conan had dropped them into his palm before adding, “Top of the stairs, to the right.”
Conan caught the furiously blushing girl by the arm and drew her up the creaking wooden stairs after him.
The room was what he had expected, a small box with dust on the floor and cobwebs in the corners. A sagging bed with a husk-filled mattress and none-too-clean blankets, a three-legged stool, and a rickety table were all the furnishings. But then, what he was there for went as well in a barn as in a palace, and often better.
Dropping the sack on the floor with a thump, he kicked the door shut and put his hands on the girl’s shoulders. As he drew her to him he peeled her silken robes from her shoulders to her waist. Her breasts were full, but upstanding, and pinknippled. She yelped once before his mouth descended on hers, then went stiff in his arms. He could as well have been kissing a statue.
He drew back, but held her still in the circle of his arms. “What sort of doxy are you?” he demanded. “A man would think you’d never kissed a man before.”
“I haven’t,” she snapped, then began to stammer. “That is, I have. I’ve kissed many men. More than you can count. I am very … experienced.” She bared her teeth in what Conan suspected was meant to be an inviting smile; it was more a fearful rictus.
He snorted derisively and pushed her out to arms’ length. Her hands twitched toward her disarrayed garments, then were still. Heavy breathing made her breasts rise and fall in interesting fashion, and her face slowly colored again. “You don’t talk like a farm wench,” he said finally. “What are you? Some merchant’s runaway daughter without sense enough to go home?”
Her face became a frozen mask of arrogant pride. “You, barbarian, will have the honor of taking a noblewoman of Ophir to … to your bed.” Even the stumble did not crack her haughty demeanor.
Taken together with her manner of dress—or undress, rather—it was too much for the Cimmerian. He threw back his head and bellowed his laughter at the fly-specked ceiling.
“You laugh at me?” she gasped. “You dare?”
“Cover yourself,” he snapped back at her, his mirth fading. Anger sprouted from stifled desires; she was a tasty bit, and he had been looking forward to the enjoyment of her. But a virgin girl running away from a noble father was the last thing he needed, or wanted any part of. Nor could he walk away from her if she needed help, either. That thought came reluctantly. Softhearted, he grumbled to himself. That was his trouble. To the girl he growled, “Do it, before I take my belt to your backside.”
For a moment she glared at him, sky-blue eyes warring with icy sapphire. Ice won, and she hastily fumbled her green robes back into place, muttering under her breath.
“Your name,” he demanded. “And no lies, or I’ll pack you to the Marline Cloisters myself. Besides the hungry and the sick, they take in wayward girls and unruly children, and you look to be both.”
“You have no right. I’ve changed my mind. I do not want your silver.” She gestured imperiously. “Stand away from that door.”
Conan gazed back at her calmly, not moving. “You are but a few words away from a stern-faced woman with a switch to teach you manners and proper behavior. Your name?”
Her eyes darted angrily to the door. “I am the Lady Julia,” she said stiffly. “I will not shame my house by naming it in this place, not if you torture me with red-hot irons. Not if you use pincers, and the knout, and … and … .”
“Why are you here, Julia, masquerading as a trull, instead of doing needlework at your mother’s knee?”
“What right have you to demand … ? Erlik take you! My mother is long dead, and my father these three months. His estates were pledged for loans and were seized in payment. I had no relations to take me in, nor friends who had use for a girl with no more than the clothes on her back. And you will call me Lady Julia. I am still a noblewoman of Ophir.”
“You’re a silly wench,” he retorted. “And why this? Why not become a serving girl? Or a beggar, even?”
Julia sniffed haughtily. “I would not sink so low. My blood—”
“So you become a trull?” He noted she had the grace to blush. But then, she did that often.
“I thought,” she began hesitantly, then stopped. When she resumed her voice had dropped to a murmur. “It seemed not so different from my father’s lemans, and they appeared to be ladies.” Her eyes searched his face, and she went on urgently. “But I’ve done nothing. I am still … I mean … Oh, why am I telling any of this to you?”
Conan leaned against the door, the crudely cut boards creaking at his weight. If he were a civilized man, he would abandon her to the path she was following. He would have his will of her and leave her weeping with her coins—or cheat her of them, for that was the civilized way. Anything else would be more bother than she was worth. The gods alone knew what faction she might be attached to by blood, for all they had not helped her so far, or what faction he might offend by aiding her.
His mouth twisted in a grimace, and Julia flinched, thinking it was for her. He was thinking too much of factions of late, spending too much time delving the labyrinthine twists of Ophirean politics. This he would leave to the gods. And the wench.
“I am called Conan,” he said abruptly “and I captain a Free-Company. We have our own cook, for our patron’s kitchens prepare fussed-over viands not fit for a man’s stomach. This cook, Fabio, needs a girl to fetch and serve. The work is yours, an you want it.”
“A pot girl!” she exclaimed. “Me!”
“Be silent, wench!” he roared, and she rocked back on her heels. He waited to be certain she would obey, then nodded in satisfaction when she settled with her hands clasped at her throat. And her mouth shut. “Do you decide it is not too far beneath you, present yourself at Baron Timeon’s palace before sunfall. If not, then know well what your future will be.”
She let out one startled squeak as he took the step necessary to crush her to his chest. He tangled his free hand in her long hair, and his mouth took its pleasure with hers. For a time her bare feet drummed against his shins, then slowly her kicking stopped. When he let her heels thud to the floor once more, she stood trembling and silent, tremulous azure eyes locked on his face.
“And I was gentle compared to some,” he said. Scooping up the sack containing the bronze, he left her standing there.
3
Boros was gone from the common room when Conan returned below, for which the Cimmerian was just as glad.
The spidery innkeeper rushed forward, though, rubbing his hands avariciously. “Not long with the girl, noble sir. I could have told you she’d not please. My Selina, now … .”
Conan snarled, and the fellow retreated hastily. Crom! What a day, he thought. Go out searching for a wench and end up trying to rescue a fool girl from her own folly. He had thought he had outgrown such idiocy long ago.
Outside the street was narrow and crooked, little more than an alley dotted with muddy potholes where the cracked paving stones had been pried up and carried away, yet even here were there beggars. Conan tossed a fistful of coppers into the nearest out-thrust bowl and hurried on before the score of others could flock about him. A stench of rotted turnip and offal hung in the air, held by stone buildings that seemed to lean out over the way.
He had not gone far when it dawned on him that the mendicants, rather than chasing after him crying for more, had disappeared. Such men had the instincts of feral animals. His hand went to his sword even as three men stepped into the cramped confines of the street before him. The leader had a rag tied over where his right eye had been. The other two wore beards, one no more than a straggly collection of hairs. All three had swords in hand. A foot grated on paving stone behind the Cimmerian.
He did not wait for them to take another step. Hurling the bag containing the bronze at the one-eyed man, he drew his ancient broadsword and dropped to a crouch in one continuous motion. A blade whistled over his head as
he pivoted, then his own steel was biting deep into the side of the man behind. Blood spurting, the man screamed, and his legs buckled.
Conan threw himself into a dive past the collapsing man, tucking his shoulder under, and rolled to his feet with his sword at the ready just in time to spit one-eye as he rushed forward with blade upraised. For an instant Conan stared into a lone brown eye filling with despair and filming with death, then one of the others was crowding close, attempting to catch the big Cimmerian while his sword was hung up in the body. Conan snatched the poignard from one-eye’s belt and slammed it into his other attacker’s throat. The man staggered back with a gurgling shriek, blood pumping through the fingers clutching his neck to soak his filthy beard in crimson.
All had occurred so quickly that the man impaled on Conan’s blade was just now beginning to fall. The Cimmerian jerked his blade free as one-eye dropped. The first attacker gave a last quiver and lay still in a widening sanguinary pool.
The man with the straggly beard had not even had time to join the fight. Now he stood with sword half-raised, dark eyes rolling from one corpse to another and thin nose twitching. He looked like a rat that had just discovered it was fighting a lion. “Not worth it,” he muttered. “No matter the gold, it’s not worth dying.” Warily he edged backwards until he came abreast of a crossing alley; with a last frightened glance he darted into it. In moments even the pounding of his feet had faded.
Conan made no effort to follow. He had no interest in footpads, of which the city had an overabundance. These had made their try and paid the price. He bent to wipe his sword, and froze as a thought came to him. The last man had mentioned gold. Only nobles carried gold on their persons, and he was far from looking that sort. Gold might be paid for a killing, though the life of a mercenary, even a captain, was not usually considered worth more than silver. Few indeed were the deaths that would bring gold. Except … assassination. With a shout that rang from the stone walls Conan snatched up the sack-wrapped statuette and was running in the same motion, encarmined blade still gripped in his fist. With him out of the way it might be easier to get through his company to Timeon. And that sort of killing had already begun. His massive legs pumped harder, and he burst out of the alley onto a main street.