Read Conan and the Death Lord of Thanza Online
Authors: Roland Green
He might even find a frolicsome wench for a night or two.
* * *
Conan was not the easiest of men to forget, but in the quarters where he found refuge, a man was seldom asked his business and a man like Conan was asked hardly at all. He had a brisk set-to with one panderer and his hired bravos when they thought Conan should pay before the woman came with him, and in the end none of the woman’s protectors were in any fit state to receive payment.
With the woman, however, Conan was more than generous. For her own safety, he advised her to leave Shamar. It was to put her aboard a ship downriver that he left the pleasure quarters for the first time, on the morning of his seventh day in Shamar.
On the quay, they embraced—almost chastely, to the casual eye.
“Farewell, Brollya,” Conan said.
“The gods be with you, Sellus—if that is your name.”
Conan’s face might have been a stone mask. The wench had her wits about her—but then, he preferred such women.
“I’m no priest to say where the gods are. But I suppose they can’t be too far from me, or I’d been long dead.”
“Sad for me, had it been so. I knew that Mikros was growing old and foul-tempered, but not bloodthirsty. I am well out of his reach, and you should think on travelling too. Mikros has friends.”
“They’ve poor taste, if they call that heap of ox turds a friend. A good few men have tried to put their daggers in my back and ended with my dagger in their gizzards. I’ll lose no sleep over Mikros’s bullies.”
“Be ye coming or be ye jabbering till sunset?” a harsh voice inquired from the deck above.
“Farewell, then,” Brollya said, and stood on tiptoe to kiss the Cimmerian. He put his arms around her waist and lifted her, while she gripped his shoulders. Then he set her gently back on the quay and urged the porter with her baggage on to the gangplank.
The haze burned off the river as the ship headed downstream. Soon all that Conan could see of Brollya was her red hair, glinting as she stood at the railing amidships. He paid off the porter, generously enough to make the man bow extravagantly, then went in search of something to break his fast.
Since Conan reached Shamar, spring had given way to summer. It was already hot, and the water the apprentices splashed about to clean their masters’ doorsteps dried almost before they could wield their brooms. Markets, stalls, shops, and street vendors were all in full cry, and down one street Conan even saw a band of jugglers and pipers beginning their act.
He bought sausages and watered wine from one of the stalls and continued on up Tanners’ Hill. From the summit of that hill one could see the whole of Shamar, and Conan never spent much time in a new city without doing his best to know his way around it. A few well-greased palms had bought him much useful knowledge; his own eyes would bring him more.
Halfway up the hill, he came to a large wooden board, fresh-planed pine with the ink of its notice barely dry. It hung on the front wall of an inn called the Golden Lion, whose carved sign told Conan that the woodcarver had never seen either a lion or gold in his life.
The Cimmerian stood and read:
COME, YOUNG HEROES!
ALL WHO WISH TO SERVE THEIR REALM AND RULER ARE CALLED TO ENLIST IN THE THANZA RANGERS.
THIS NEW LEVY SEEKS A THOUSAND STOUT HEARTS AND ARMS, TO MARCH INTO THE STRONGHOLDS OF THE BANDITS OF THE THANZA HILLS. FREE THE LAND OF THEIR SCOURGE AND DIVIDE THEIR ILL-GOTTEN GAINS AMONG YOU!
WHILE YOU SERVE, YOU SHALL LEARN THE CRAFT OF ARMS FROM SEASONED VETERANS OF THE HOSTS OF AQUILONIA. YOU SHALL BE CLOTHED, FED, AND ARMED AT THE EXPENSE OF COUNT RALTHON, CHARGED BY HIS MAJESTY KING NUMEDIDES WITH THE RAISING OF THE THANZA RANGERS.
ALL OFFENSES SHALL BE PARDONED FOR THOSE WHO ENLIST FOR A FULL YEAR, AND LIKEWISE ALL DEBTS FORGIVEN.
WHERESOEVER YOU READ THIS SIGN, THERE SITS A MAN READY TO ENLIST BRAVE SPIRITS FOR THE THANZA RANGERS.
COME FORTH, AND BE NAMED AMONG THOSE WHO DESERVE WELL OF YOUR HOMELAND!
KLARNIDES
CAPTAIN OF FOOT IN THE HOST OF AQUILONIA
Conan read the sign with a bemused look on his face, and not because he found the reading difficult. No man to sit down with a scroll unless he needed the knowledge it held, the Cimmerian could still make himself understood in half a dozen tongues and understand as many more. Aquilonian he had learned early, as the realm’s might made its tongue a language a traveller might encounter on any road from Vendhya to Vanaheim.
Bemusement gave way to a broad grin, then to laughter. Conan had seen such appeals in other lands, and even responded to some. He knew perfectly well what this sign most likely meant.
Some local noble was paying overdue taxes or perhaps a bribe to the court, by raising the so-called Thanza Rangers. The men would be the scourings and sweepings of Shamar and the country about it, debtors, fugitives, and every other sort of man who likely deserved naught but a swift knock on the head
The food and wine would be of the poorest, the clothing rags, the weapons cast-offs that no smith would own to having made. The men would have no pay, and nothing to show for their work (if they did any) unless they not only reached the hills but defeated the bandits, reached their strongholds, and received a decent share of loot that was most commonly stolen by their captains.
Conan wondered who Klarnides, Captain of Foot, might be. If he was some relative of the count lending himself to this bad jest for gain, Conan would not even waste time spitting on the man if their paths crossed.
If Klarnides was in truth a captain in the formidable host of Aquilonia, he had Conan’s sympathy. That and no more, for the Cimmerian did not intend to be found within a league of the Thanza Rangers if he could avoid it. But certainly no less sympathy, as any man deserved, if he was marching to his death or disgrace in the name of duty.
Briefly, Conan wondered why Klarnides was not, marching out with his own company. Was King Numedides’s host short-handed of late? There had been rumours that the king’s weakening hand had begun to affect his host. Old veterans were said to be retiring in disgust and new recruits buying themselves free, even if this left them in thrall to the moneylenders.
Not his affair, Conan decided. He would be long gone from Aquilonia before it made any difference to him whether the whole host of the realm dropped dead in the streets. Indeed, such chaos as that would unleash might profit a man with a quick eye and a sure hand—
Conan’s instincts hinted of the gathering at the end of the street before his eyes assured him of its certainty. He shifted his gaze, and recognized two of the men in the gathering.
One was Mikros the Shamaran panderer. A second was Levites the Argossean merchant. Conan could not put names to the others, but he knew their look. They were the hardest sort of professional thief-takers, probably former soldiers turned bravo—and he had little doubt as to what thief they had been ordered to take.
Conan had learned more than a few of the hunter’s tricks well before he left Cimmeria. One of the foremost among these was never to show you knew that your prey or your enemy had sighted you. So the gaze of the ice-blue eyes passed lightly and swiftly over Levites, Mikros, and their men, as if they were merely a dead dog or a pile of offal lying in the street.
The simplest solution would be to march into the Golden Lion and enlist, shielding himself behind the promised pardon. The most wretched, starveling levies still offered a seasoned warrior more opportunities than any prison cell!
What stood between Conan and that solution was something even simpler: the Golden Lion’s doors were all locked, its windows shuttered. If he broke in, he might still find no one there to enlist him in the Thanza Rangers, and he would have committed a crime for which a man might be hanged, in broad daylight before more witnesses than he could count on his two hands.
It would therefore be well to find some other way of staying ahead of the thief-takers.
Behind the men was the cross street that Conan had used to reach the Golden Lion. It ran uphill and down, and would let the Cimmerian vanish into any of a half-dozen quarters of the city where thief-takers went at their peril.
If he could pass that way safely. The thief-takers might have only a description of him, and Mikros had been drunk the night of their quarrel. But Levites knew Conan’s countenance far too well for the wanderer’s comfort.
It was a pity that Levites was not the sort of merchant to count his money in safety while others dirtied their hands in his service.
Going the other way, the street branched swiftly into a maze of alleys. Conan knew little of what lay within that maze, but wagered that the thief-takers knew hardly more.
Conan turned, with ease and grace, as if turning his back on a dozen armed enemies was no more serious than sending back a jug of poor wine. Only a keen-eyed observer could have known from the set of the Cimmerian’s broad shoulders and the hands only a finger’s length from the hilts of sword and dagger that he was as ready to fight as a hungry panther to leap upon prey.
It took more than usual self-command for Conan not to look back. But he had seen no bows among the thief-takers, the street was growing too crowded for archery regardless, and as long as those behind could see only his hair and back—
“Stop him!”
Even now, Conan did not break into a run. His hearing was not as keen in a noisy city street as it was in a forest or mountain fastness. It would still give warning of an enemy before the man could reach striking distance.
So Conan continued to walk with the careless air of a country lad in the great city for the first time, bemused by its sights, until he heard booted feet running behind him, drawing closer. Only then did he whirl, his sword out, striking with the flat of the blade at the nearest thief-taker.
The man had a shield on his back and a short sword in his belt. They might have been grave goods in a Stygian tomb for all the use he had from them. The flat of Conan’s blade took the man across the throat, flinging him backward into the path of the bravo closest behind him. The two men tangled, toppled, and crashed on to the cobblestones. The first writhed, trying to claw breath into his throat, while the second lay stunned by the fall.
Others came on, but now Conan was running, beginning with a good lead as well. His long legs increased the lead, until he reached a vendor with a small green-wheeled cart of honey-glazed winter apples.
Conan snatched the cart out of the vendor’s hands and pushed fiercely. The cart rattled over the cobblestones and overturned squarely in the path of the remaining thief-takers. One vaulted it at the run but came down on a fallen apple, so that his feet flew out from under him. Others piled up behind the cart or slowed to go around it.
That gave the Cimmerian the time he needed, to vanish into the alleys. Once well-hidden in the shadows of the alleys, Conan faced another choice. Go on, out of Shamar and perhaps on out of Aquilonia? Or double back and leave Shamaran one of the Thanza Rangers?
He had to admit that the notice had piqued his curiosity. He had never explored the Border Range between Aquilonia and Nemedia and seldom turned down an opportunity to see a new land. Also, travelling in company he had a better chance to pocket bandit loot if there was any or slip unpursued out of Aquilonia if there was none.
Conan found a momentarily deserted stretch of alley and began climbing the nearest wall. It had even more handholds than the timbers of Sirdis’s hull, but was in considerably worse repair. Bricks and tiles lay scattered in the muck of the unpaved alley before Conan pulled himself on to the roof.
All that remained was to cross a few rooftops to throw off the last hardy pursuers. Then he would find himself a secure refuge until the Golden Lion opened.
Conan looked up at the sun. For all that he and Brollya had been awake before dawn (having, in truth, slept little during the night), it was well into the morning. Unless the Golden Lion’s customers were all late sleepers, the inn should be open long before Mikros’s thief-takers thought of taking to the rooftops in search of their prey.
The day grew hot, then scorching, until most men would have been driven to shelter. But most men were not the Cimmerian, whose mighty frame had endured the damp heat of Vendhya and the Black Coast, the blazing heat of a dozen deserts, and the cold of Hyperborean lands and seas. Conan sat with his back braced against one chimney and his feet against another, listening to the din of Shamar going about its daily business.
At last he heard the sound that he had been awaiting.
“Come one, come all, good folk. The Golden Lion awaits your thirst with fine wine, your hunger with hot pasties, your weariness with the softest beds in Shamar.”
This went on for some while, as Conan scrambled from rooftop to rooftop, leaping across the narrow alleys with a cat’s agility. He would wager everything in his purse that the crier’s patter bore small resemblance to the truth, but he did not care. His business with the Golden Lion had little to do with the quality of its hospitality.
Conan made a swift passage across the rooftops of the maze, but came to a halt at its edge. The gap between the roof where he crouched now (amid billows of reeking smoke from some shop far below, which smelled worse than a tannery) and the Golden Lion was too wide for even him to leap.
Also, it would be in plain sight of a score of passers-by below—and of two of the thief-catchers, who stood sentinel, one to either side of the inn’s door. A slight youth wearing a red tunic with the badge of the Thanza Rangers stood a little to one side, casting sour looks when he thought the armed men would not notice.
It seemed that Levites’s wits were as active as his body. No slipping down to the ground unseen and sauntering in to the recruiting sergeant for Conan.
But the huddled buildings and narrow alleys of the maze extended well to the north, to the rear of the Golden Lion. Keeping low, Conan made his way across roofs of timber and tiles, of slate and shingle, and even a few crumbling layers of brick that might once have been the floors of rooms in towers on the walls of ancient Shamar.