CHAPTER XIX - THE TAKING OF
SIRK
Again I rode
through the forest toward Sirk, with Lur at my left hand and Tibur beside her.
At my back were my two captains, Dara and Naral. Close at our heels came
Ouarda, with twelve slim, strong girls, fair skins stained strangely green and
black, and naked except for a narrow belt around their waists. Behind these
rode four score of the nobles with Tibur's friend Rascha at their head. And
behind them marched silently a full thousand of Karak's finest fighting women.
It was night. It
was essential to reach the edge of the forest before the last third of the
stretch between midnight and dawn. The hoofs of the horses were muffled so that
no sharp ears might hear their distant tread, and the soldiers marched in open
formation, noiselessly. Five days had passed since I had first looked on the
fortress.
They had been
five days of secret, careful preparation. Only the Witch-woman and the Smith
knew what I had in mind. Secret as we had been, the rumour had spread that we
were preparing for a sortie against the Rrrllya. I was well content with that.
Not until we had gathered to start did even Rascha, or so I believed, know that
we were headed toward Sirk. This so no word might be carried there to put them
on guard, for I knew well that those we menaced had many friends in Karak -
might have them among the ranks that slipped along behind us. Surprise was the
essence of my plan. Therefore the muffling of the horses' hoofs. Therefore the
march by night. Therefore the silence as we passed through the forest. And
therefore it was that when we heard the first howling of Lur's wolves the
Witch-woman slipped from her horse and disappeared in the luminous green
darkness.
We halted,
awaiting her return. None spoke; the howls were stilled; she came from the
trees and remounted. Like well-trained dogs the white wolves spread ahead of
us, nosing over the ground we still must travel, ruthless scouts which no spy
nor chance wanderer, whether from or to Sirk, could escape.
I had desired to
strike sooner than this, had chafed at the delay, had been reluctant to lay
bare my plan to Tibur. But Lur had pointed out that if the Smith were to be
useful at Sirk's taking he would have to be trusted, and that he would be less
dangerous if informed and eager than if uninformed and suspicious. Well, that
was true. And Tibur was a first-class fighting man with strong friends.
So I had taken
him into my confidence and told him what I had observed when first I had stood
with Lur beside Sirk's boiling moat – the vigorously growing clumps of ferns
which extended in an almost unbroken, irregular line high up and across the
black cliff, from the forest on the hither side and over the geyser-spring, and
over the parapets. It betrayed, I believed, a slipping or cracking of the rock which
had formed a ledge. Along that ledge, steady-nerved, sure-footed climbers might
creep, and make their way unseen into the fortress – and there do for us what I
had in mind.
Tibur's eyes had
sparkled, and he had laughed as I had not heard him laugh since my ordeal by
Khalk'ru. He had made only one comment.
"The first
link of your chain is the weakest, Dwayanu."
"True
enough. But it is forged where Sirk's chain of defence is weakest."
"Nevertheless
- I would not care to be the first to test that link."
For all my lack
of trust, I had warmed to him for that touch of frankness.
"Thank the
gods for your weight then, Anvil-smiter," I had said. "I cannot see
those feet of yours competing for toe-holds with ferns. Otherwise I might have
picked you."
I had looked down
at the sketch I had drawn to make the matter clearer.
"We must
strike quickly. How long before we can be in readiness, Lur?"
I had raised my
eyes in time to see a swift glance pass between the two. Whatever suspicion I
may have felt had been fleeting. Lur had answered, quickly.
"So far as
the soldiers are concerned, we could start to-night. How long it will take to
pick the climbers, I cannot tell. Then I must test them. All that will take
time."
"How long,
Lur? We must be swift."
"Three days
- five days - I will be swift as may be. Beyond that I will not promise."
With that I had
been forced to be content. And now, five nights later, we marched on Sirk. It
was neither dark nor light in the forest; a strange dimness floated over us;
the glimmer of the flowers was our torch. All the fragrances were of life. But
it was death whose errand we were on.
The weapons of
the soldiers were covered so that there could be no betraying glints;
spear-heads darkened - no shining of metal upon any of us. On the tunics of the
soldiers was the Wheel of Luka, so that friend would not be mistaken for foe
once we were behind the walls of Sirk. Lur had wanted the Black Symbol of
Khalk'ru.
I would not have
it. We reached the spot where we had decided to leave the horses. And here in
silence our force separated. Under leadership of Tibur and Rascha, the others
crept through wood and fern-brake to the edge of the clearing opposite the
drawbridge.
With the
Witch-woman and myself went a scant dozen of the nobles, Ouarda with the naked
girls, a hundred of the soldiers. Each of these had bow and quiver in
well-protected cases on their backs. They carried the short battleaxe, long
sword and dagger. They bore the long, wide rope ladder I had caused to be made,
like those I had used long and long ago to meet problems similar to this of
Sirk - but none with its peculiarly forbidding aspects. They carried another
ladder, long and flexible and of wood. I was armed only with battleaxe and long
sword, Lur and the nobles with the throwing hammers and swords.
We stole toward
the torrent whose hissing became louder with each step.
Suddenly I
halted, drew Lur to me.
"Witch-woman,
can you truly talk to your wolves?"
"Truly,
Dwayanu."
"I am
thinking it would be no bad plan to draw eyes and ears from this end of the
parapet. If some of your wolves would fight and howl and dance a bit there at
the far bastion for the amusement of the guards, it might help us here."
She sent a low
call, like the whimper of a she-wolf. Almost instantly the head of the great
dog-wolf which had greeted her on our first ride lifted beside her. Its hackles
bristled as it glared at me. But it made no sound. The Witch-woman dropped to
her knees beside it, took its head in her arms, whispering. They seemed to
whisper together. And then as suddenly as it had appeared, it was gone. Lur
arose, in her eyes something of the green fire of the wolf's.
"The guards
shall have their amusement."
I felt a little
shiver along my back, for this was true witchcraft. But I said nothing and we
went on. We came to that place from which I had scanned the cliff. We parted
the ferns and peered out upon the fortress.
Thus it was. At
our right, a score of paces away, soared the sheer wall of the cliff which,
continuing over the boiling torrent, formed this nearer bastion. The cover in
which we lurked ran up to it, was thrown back like a green wave from its base.
Between our cover and the moat was a space not more than a dozen paces across,
made barren by the hot spray that fell on it. Here, the walls of the fortress
were not more than a javelin cast distant. The wall and the parapet touched the
cliff, but hardly could they be seen through the thick veils of steam. And this
was what I had meant when I had said that our weakest link would be forged
where Sirk's defences were weakest. For no sentinels stood at this corner. With
the heat and steam and exhalations from the geyser, there was no need - or so
they thought. How, here at its hottest source, could the torrent be crossed?
Who could scale that smooth and dripping cliff? Of all the defences, this spot
was the impregnable one, unnecessary to guard - or so they thought. Therefore
it was the exact point to attack - if it could be done.
I studied it. Not
for full two hundred paces was there a single sentinel. From somewhere behind
the fortress came the glare of a fire. It cast flickering shadows on the
terraces of fallen rock beyond the bastioning cliffs; and that was good, since
if we gained their shelter, we, too, would seem but flickering shadows. I
beckoned Ouarda, and pointed to the rocks which were to be the goal of the
naked girls. They were close to the cliff where it curved inward beyond the
parapet, and they were about the height of twenty tall men above where we hid.
She drew the girls to her and instructed them. They nodded, their eyes dropping
swiftly to the cauldron of the moat, then turning to the glistening precipice.
I saw some of them shudder. Well, I could not hold that against them, no!
We crept back and
found the base of the cliff. Here were enough and to spare of rock holds for
the grapnels of the ladder. We unwound the rope ladder. We set the wooden
ladder against the cliff. I pointed out the ledge that might be the key to
Sirk, counselled the climbers as best I could. I knew that the ledge could not
be much wider than the span of a hand. Yet above it and below it were small
crevices, pockets, where fingers and toes could grip, for clumps of ferns
sprouted there.
Hai! But they had
courage, those slim girls. We fastened to their belts long strong cords which
would slip through our hands as they crept along. And they looked at one
another's stained faces and bodies and laughed. The first went up the ladder
like a squirrel, got foothold and handhold and began to edge across. In an
instant she had vanished, the green and black with which her body was stained
merging into the dim green and black of the cliff. Slowly, slowly, the first
cord slipped through my fingers.
Another followed
her, and another, until I held six cords. And now the others climbed up and
crept out on the perilous path, their leashes held in the strong hands of the
Witch-woman.
Hai! But that was
queer fishing! With will strained toward keeping these girl-fish out of water!
Slowly - Gods, but how slowly - the cords crept through my fingers! Through the
fingers of the Witch-woman... slowly...
slowly... but ever on and on.
Now that first
slim girl must be over the cauldron... I had swift vision of her clinging to
the streaming rock, the steam of the cauldron clothing her...
That line
slackened in my hand. It slackened, then ran out so swiftly that it cut the
skin... slackened again... a tug upon it as of a great fish racing away... I
felt the line snap. The girl had fallen! Was now dissolving flesh in the
cauldron!
The second cord
slackened and tugged and snapped... and the third... Three of them gone! I
whispered to Lur:
"Three are
gone!"
"And
two!" she said. I saw that her eyes were tightly closed, but the hands
that clutched the cords were steady.
Five of those
slim girls! Only seven left! Luka - spin your wheel!
On and on,
slowly, with many a halt, the remaining cords crept through my fingers. Now the
fourth girl must be over the moat... must be over the parapet... must be well
on her way to the rocks... my heart beat in my throat, half-strangling me...
Gods - the sixth had fallen! "Another!" I groaned to Lur. "And
another!" she whispered, and cast the end of a cord from her hand.
Five left... only
five now... Luka, a temple to you in Karak – all your own, sweet goddess!
What was that? A
pull upon a cord, and twice repeated! The signal! One had crossed! Honour and
wealth to you, slim girl...
"All gone
but one, Dwayanu!" whispered the Witch-woman.
I groaned again,
and glared at her... Again the twitches - upon my fifth cord! Another safe!
"My last is over!" whispered Lur. Three safe! Three hidden among the
rocks. The fishing was done. Sirk had stolen three-fourths of my bait.
But Sirk was
hooked!
Weakness like
none I had known melted bones and muscles. Lur's face was white as chalk, black
shadows under staring eyes.
Well, now it was
our turn. The slim maids who had fallen might soon have company!
I took the cord
from Lur. Sent the signal. Felt it answered.
We cut the cords,
and knotted their ends to heavier strands. And when they had run out we knotted
to their ends a stronger, slender rope.
It crept away -
and away - and away -
And now for the
ladder - the bridge over which we must go.
It was light but
strong, that ladder. Woven cunningly in a way thought out long and long ago. It
had claws at each end which, once they had gripped, were not easily opened.
We fastened that
ladder's end to the slender rope. It slipped away from us... over the ferns...
out into the hot breath of the cauldron... through it.
Invisible within
that breath... invisible against the green dusk of the cliff... on and on it
crept...
The three maids
had it! They were making it fast. Under my hands it straightened and stiffened.
We drew it taut from our end. We fastened our grapnels.
The road to Sirk
was open!
I turned to the
Witch-woman. She stood, her gaze far and far away. In her eyes was the green
fire of her wolves. And suddenly over the hissing of the torrent, I heard the
howling of her wolves - far and far away.
She relaxed; her
head dropped; she smiled at me -”Yes - truly can I talk to my wolves,
Dwayanu!"
I walked to the
ladder, tested it. It was strong, secure.
"I go first,
Lur. Let none follow me until I have crossed. Then do you, Dara and Naral,
climb to guard my back."
Lur's eyes
blazed.
"I follow
you. Your captains come after me."
I considered
that. Well - let it be.
"As you say,
Lur. But do not follow until I have crossed. Then let Ouarda send the soldiers.
Ouarda - not more than ten may be on the ladder at a time. Bind cloths over
their mouths and nostrils before they start. Count thirty - slowly, like this -
before each sets forth behind the other. Fasten axe and sword between my
shoulders, Lur. See to it that all bear their weapons so. Watch now, how I use
my hands and feet."
I swung upon the
ladder, arms and legs opened wide. I began to climb it. Like a spider. Slowly,
so they could learn. The ladder swayed but little; its angle was a good one.
And now I was
above the fern-brake. And now I was at the edge of the torrent. Above it. The
stream swirled round me. It hid me. The hot breath of the geyser shrivelled me.
Nor could I see anything of the ladder except the strands beneath me...
Thank Luka for
that! If what was before me was hidden - so was I hidden from what was before
me!
I was through the
steam. I had passed the cliff. I was above the parapet. I dropped from the
ladder, among the rocks - unseen. I shook the ladder. There was a quivering response.
There was weight upon it... more
weight... and more...
I unstrapped axe
and sword -
"Dwayanu -”
I turned. There
were the three maids. I began to praise them – holding back laughter. Green and
black had run and combined under bath of steam into grotesque pattern.
"Nobles you
are, maids! From this moment! Green and black your colours. What you have done
this night will long be a tale in Karak."
I looked toward
the battlements. Between us and them was a smooth floor of rock and sand, less
than half a bow-shot wide. A score of soldiers stood around the fire. There was
a larger group on the parapet close to the towers of the bridge. There were
more at the farther end of the parapet, looking at the wolves.
The towers of the
drawbridge ran straight down to the rocky floor. The tower at the left was
blank wall. The tower at the right had a wide gate. The gate was open,
unguarded, unless the soldiers about the fire were its guards. Down from
between the towers dropped a wide ramp, the approach to the bridge-head.
There was a touch
on my arm. Lur was beside me. And close after her came my two captains. After
them, one by one, the soldiers. I bade them string bows, set arrows. One by one
they melted out of the green darkness, slipped by me. They made ready in the
shadow of the rocks.
One score - two
score... a shriek cut like an arrow through the hissing of the torrent! The
ladder trembled. It shook - and twisted... Again the despairing cry... the
ladder fell slack!
"Dwayanu -
the ladder is broken? At - Ouarda -”
"Quiet, Lur!
They may have heard that shrieking. The ladder could not break...”
"Draw it in,
Dwayanu - draw it in!"
Together we
pulled upon it. It was heavy. We drew it in like a net, and swiftly. And
suddenly it was of no weight at all. It rushed into our hands -
Its ends were
severed as though by knife slash or axe blow.
"Treachery!"
I said.
"But
treachery... how... with Ouarda on guard."
I crept,
crouching, behind the shadow of the rocks.
"Dara -
spread out the soldiers. Tell Naral to slip to the farther end. On the signal,
let them loose their arrows. Three flights only. The first at those around the
fire. The second and the third at those on the walls closest to the towers.
Then follow me. You understand me?"
"It is
understood, Lord."
The word went
along the line; I heard the bowstrings whisper.
"We are
fewer than I like, Lur - yet nothing for us but to go through with it. No way
out of Sirk now but the way of the sword."
"I know. It
is of Ouarda I am thinking...” Her voice trembled.
"She is
safe. If treachery had been wide-spread, we would have heard sounds of
fighting. No more talking, Lur. We must move swiftly. After the third arrow
flight, we rush the tower gate."
I gave the
signal. Up rose the archers. Straight upon those around the fire flew their
shafts. They left few alive. Instantly upon those around the towers of the
bridge whistled a second arrow storm.
Hai! But that was
straight shooting! See them fall! Once more -
Whistle of
feathered shaft! Song of the bow-string! Gods - but this is to live again!
I dropped down
the rocks, Lur beside me. The soldier women poured after us. Straight to the
tower door we sped. We were half-way there before those upon the long parapet
awakened.
Shouts rang.
Trumpets blared, and the air was filled with the brazen clangour of a great
gong bellowing the alarm to Sirk asleep behind the gap. We sped on. Javelins
dropped among us, arrows whistled. From other gates along the inner walls
guards began to emerge, racing to intercept us.
We were at the
door of the bridge towers - and through it!
But not all. A
third had fallen under javelin and arrow. We swung the stout door shut. We
dropped across it the massive bars that secured it. And not an instant too
soon. Upon the door began to beat the sledges of the tricked guards.
The chamber was
of stone, huge and bare. Except for the door through which we had come, there
was no opening. I saw the reason for that - never had Sirk expected to be
attacked from within. There were arrow slits high up, looking over the moat,
and platforms for archers. At one side were cogs and levers which raised and
lowered the bridge.
All this I took
in at one swift glance. I leaped over to the levers, began to manipulate them.
The cogs revolved.
The bridge was
falling!
The Witch-woman
ran up to the platform of the archers; she peered out; set horn to lips; she
sent a long call through the arrow slit – summoning signal for Tibur and his
host.
The hammering
against the door had ceased. The blows against it were stronger, more
regular-timed. The battering of a ram. The stout wood trembled under them; the
bars groaned, Lur called to me:
"The bridge
is down, Dwayanu! Tibur is rushing upon it. It grows lighter. Dawn is breaking.
They have brought their horses!"
I cursed.
"Luka, sent
him wit not to pound across that bridge on horse!"
"He is doing
it... he and Rascha and a handful of others only... the rest are
dismounting...”
"Hai - they
are shooting at them from the arrow slits... the javelins rain among them... Sirk
takes toll...”
There was a
thunderous crash against the door. The wood split...
A roaring tumult.
Shouts and battle cries. Ring of sword upon sword and the swish of arrows. And
over it all the laughter of Tibur.
No longer was the
ram battering at the door.
I threw up the
bars, raised axe in readiness, opened the great gate a finger's breadth and
peered out.
The soldiers of
Karak were pouring down the ramp from the bridge-head.
I opened the door
wider. The dead of the fortress lay thick around tower base and bridge-head.
I stepped through
the door. The soldiers saw me.
"Dwayanu!"
rang their shout.
From the fortress
still came the clamour of the great gong - warning Sirk.
Sirk - no longer sleeping!
CHAPTER XX - "TSANTAWU-FAREWELL!"
There was a
humming as of a disturbed gigantic hive beyond Sirk's gap. Trumpet blasts and
the roll of drums. Clang of brazen gongs answering that lonely one which beat
from the secret heart of the raped fortress. And ever Karak's women-warriors
poured over the bridge until the space behind the fortress filled with them.
The Smith wheeled
his steed - faced me. "Gods - Tibur! But that was well done!"
"Never done
but for you, Dwayanu! You saw, you knew - you did. Ours the least part."
Well, that was
true. But I was close to liking Tibur then. Life of my blood! It had been no
play to lead that charge against the bridge end. The Smith was a soldier! Let
him be only half loyal to me - and Khalk'ru take the Witch-woman!
"Sweep the
fortress clean, Anvil-smiter. We want no arrows at our backs."
"It is being
swept, Dwayanu."
By brooms of
sword and spear, by javelin and arrow, the fortress was swept dean.
The clamour of
the brazen gong died on a part stroke.
My stallion
rested his nose on my shoulder, blew softly against my ear.
"You did not
forget my horse! My hand to you, Tibur!"
"You lead
the charge, Dwayanu!" I leaped upon the stallion. Battleaxe held high I
wheeled and galloped toward the gap. Like the point of a spear I sped, Tibur at
my left, the Witch-woman at my right, the nobles behind us, the soldiers
sweeping after us.
We hurled
ourselves through the cliffed portal of Sirk.
A living wave
lifted itself to throw us back. Hammers flew, axes hewed, javelins and spears
and feathered shafts sleeted us. My horse tottered and dropped, screaming, his
hinder hocks cut through. I felt a hand upon my shoulder, dragging me to my
feet. The Witch-woman smiled at me. She sliced with her sword the arm drawing
me down among the dead. With axe and sword we cleared a ring around us. I threw
myself on the back of a grey from which a noble had fallen, bristling with
arrows.
We thrust forward
against the living wave. It gave, curling round us.
On and on! Cut
sword and hew axe! Cut and slash and batter through!
The curling wave
that tore at us was beaten down. We were through the gap. Sirk lay before us.
I reined in my
horse. Sirk lay before us - but too invitingly!
The city nestled
in a hollow between sheer, unscalable black walls. The lip of the gap was
higher than the roof of the houses. They began an arrow flight away. It was a
fair city. There was no citadel nor forts; there were no temples nor palaces.
Only houses of stone, perhaps a thousand of them, flat roofed, set wide apart,
gardens around them, a wide street straying among them, tree-bordered. There
were many lanes. Beyond the city fertile field upon field, and flowering
orchards.
And no battle
ranks arrayed against us. The way open.
Too open!
I caught the
glint of arms on the housetops. There was the noise of axes above the blaring
of trumpets and the roll of the kettle-drums.
Hai! They were
barricading the wide street with their trees, preparing a hundred ambushes for
us, expecting us to roll down in force.
Spreading the net
in the sight of Dwayanu!
Yet they were
good tactics. The best defence I had met with it in many a war against the
barbarians. It meant we must fight for every step, with every house a fort,
with arrows searching for us from every window and roof. They had a leader here
in Sirk, to arrange such reception on such brief notice! I had respect for that
leader, whoever he might be. He had picked the only possible way to victory -
unless those against whom he fought knew the countermove.
And that, hard
earned, I did know.
How long could
this leader keep Sirk within its thousand forts? There, always, lay the danger
in this defence. The overpowering impulse of a pierced city is to swarm out
upon its invaders as ants and bees do from their hills and nests. Not often is
there a leader strong enough to hold them back. If each house of Sirk could
remain linked to the other, each ever an active part of the whole - then Sirk
might be unconquerable. But how, when they began to be cut off, one by one? Isolated?
The leader's will severed?
Hai! Then it is that
despair creeps through every chink! They are drawn out by fury and despair as
though by ropes. They pour out - to kill or to be killed. The cliff crumbles,
stone by stone. The cake is eaten by the attackers, crumb by crumb.
I divided our
soldiers, and sent the first part against Sirk in small squads, with orders to
spread and to take advantage of all cover. They were to take the outer fringe
of houses, at all costs, shooting their arrows up in the high curved flight
against the defenders while others hammered their way into those houses. Still
others were to attack farther on, but never getting too far from their comrades
nor from the broad way running through the city.
I was casting a
net over Sirk and did not want its meshes broken.
By now it was broad
daylight.
The soldiers
moved forward. I saw the arrows stream up and down, twisting among each other
like serpents... I heard the axe-blows on the doors... By Luka! There floats a
banner of Karak from one of the roofs! And another.
The hum of Sirk
shot higher, became louder, in it a note of madness. Hai! I knew they could not
long stand this nibbling! And I knew that sound! Soon it would rise to frenzy.
Drone from that into despair!
Hai! Not long now
before they came tumbling out...
Tibur was cursing
at my elbow. I looked at Lur, and she was trembling. The soldiers were
murmuring, straining at the leash, mad to join battle. I looked at their blue
eyes, hard and cold; their faces beneath the helmet-caps were not those of
women but of young warriors... those who sought in them for woman's mercy would
have rude awakening!
"By Zarda!
But the fight will be done before we can dip blade!" I laughed.
"Patience,
Tibur! Patience is our strong weapon. Sirk's strongest – if they but knew it.
Let them be first to lose that weapon."
The turmoil grew
louder. At the head of the street appeared half a hundred of Karak's soldiers,
struggling against more than equal number which steadily, swiftly, was swelled
by others of Sirk pouring from side lanes and dropping from roofs and windows
of the beleaguered houses.
It was the moment
for which I had waited!
I gave the
command. I raised the battle-cry. We drove down upon them. Our skirmishers
opened to let us through, melting into the shouting ranks behind. We ripped into
the defenders of Sirk. Down they went, but as they fell they fought, and many a
saddle of the nobles was empty, and many were the steeds lost before we won to
the first barricade.
Hai! But how they
fought us there from behind the hastily felled trees - women and men and
children hardly big enough to bend the bow or wield the knife!
Now the soldiers
of Karak began to harry them from the sides; the soldiers of Karak shot into
them from the tops of the houses they had abandoned; we fought Sirk as it had
planned to fight us. And those who fought against us soon broke and fled, and
we were over the barricade. Battling, we reached the heart of Sirk, a great and
lovely square in which fountains played and flowers blossomed. The spray of the
fountains was crimson and there were no flowers when we left that square.
We paid heavy toll there. Full half of the nobles
were slain. A spear had struck my helmet and well-nigh dropped me. Bare-headed,
blood-flecked I rode, shouting, sword dripping red. Naral and Dara both bore
wounds, but still guarded my back. The Witch-woman, and the Smith and his
scarred familiar fought on, untouched.
There was a
thunder of hoofs. Down upon us swept a wave of horsemen. We raced toward them.
We struck like two combers. Surged up. Mingled. Flash swords! Hammers smite!
Axes cleave! Hai! But now it was hand-to-hand in the way I knew best and best
loved!
We swirled in a
mad whirlpool. I glanced at right and saw the Witch-woman had been separated
from me. Tibur, too, was gone. Well, they were giving good account of
themselves no doubt - wherever they were.
I swung to right
and to left with my sword. In the front of those who fought us, over the caps
of Karak which had swirled between us, was a dark face... a dark face whose
black eyes looked steadily into mine - steadily... steadily. At the shoulder of
that man was a slighter figure whose clear, brown eyes stared at me...
steadily... steadily. In the black eyes was understanding and sorrow. The brown
eyes were filled with hate.
Black eyes and
brown eyes touched something deep and deep within me... They were rousing that
something... calling to it... something that had been sleeping.
I heard my own
voice shouting command to cease fighting, and at that shout abruptly all sound
of battle close by was stilled. Sirk and Karak alike stood silent, amazed,
staring at me. I thrust my horse through the press of bodies, looked deep into
the black eyes.
And wondered why
I had dropped my sword... why I stood thus... and why the sorrow in those eyes
racked my heart... The dark-faced man spoke - two words -
"Leif!...
Degataga!"
That something
which had been asleep was wide awake, rushing up through me... rocking my
brain... tearing at it... shaking every nerve...
I heard a cry -
the voice of the Witch-woman.
A horse burst
through the ring of the soldiers. Upon it was Rascha, lips drawn back over his
teeth, cold eyes glaring into mine. His arm came up. His dagger gleamed, and
was hidden in the back of the man who had called me - Degataga!
Had called me -
God - but I knew
him!
Tsantawu! Jim!
The sleeping
thing that had awakened was all awake... it had my brain... it was myself...
Dwayanu forgotten!
I threw my horse
forward.
Rascha's arm was
up for second stroke - the brown-eyed rider was swinging at him with sword, and
Jim was falling, settling over his horse's mane.
I caught Rascha's
arm before the dagger could descend again. I caught his arm, bent it back, and
heard the bone snap. He howled - like a wolf.
A hammer hummed
by my head, missing it by a hair. I saw Tibur drawing it back by its thong.
I leaned and
lifted Rascha from his saddle. His sound arm swept up, hand clutching at my
throat. I caught the wrist and twisted that arm back. I snapped it as I had the
other.
My horse swerved.
With one hand at Rascha's throat, the other arm holding him, I toppled from the
saddle bearing him down with me. I fell upon him. I twisted, and threw him over
the bar of my knee. My hand slipped from his throat to his chest. My right leg
locked over his.
A swift downward
thrust - a sound like the breaking of a faggot. The Back-breaker would break no
more backs. His own was broken.
I leaped to my
feet. Looked up into the face of the brown-eyed rider... Evalie!...
I cried out to
her -”Evalie!"
Abruptly, all about
me the battle broke out afresh. Evalie turned to meet the charge. I saw Tibur's
great shoulders rise behind her... saw
him snatch her from her horse... saw from his left hand a flash of light... It
sped toward me... I was hurled aside. None too soon - not soon enough -
Something caught
me a glancing blow upon the side of my head. I went down upon my knees and
hands, blind and dizzy. I heard Tibur laughing; I strove to conquer blind
dizziness and nausea, felt blood streaming down my face.
And crouching,
swaying on knees and hands, heard the tide of battle sweep around and over and
past me.
My head steadied.
The blindness was passing. I was still on my hands and knees. Under me was the
body of a man - a man whose black eyes were fixed on mine with understanding -
with love!
I felt a touch on
my shoulder; with difficulty I looked up. It was Dara.
"A hair
between life and death. Lord. Drink this."
She put a phial
to my lips. The bitter, fiery liquid coursed through me, brought steadiness,
brought strength. I could see there was a ring of soldier-women around me,
guarding me - beyond them a ring of others, on horses.
"Can you
hear me, Leif?... I haven't much time...”
I lurched aside
and knelt.
"Jim! Jim!
Oh, God - why did you come here? Take this sword and kill me!"
He reached for my
hand, held it tight.
"Don't be a
damned fool, Leif! You couldn't help it... but you've got to save Evalie!"
"I've got to
save you, Tsantawu - get you out of here -”
"Shut up and
listen. I've got mine, Leif, and I know it. That blade went through the mail
right into the lungs... I'm trickling out - inside... hell, Leif - don't take
it so hard... It might have been in the war... It might have been any time...
It's not your fault...”
A sob shook me,
tears mingled with the blood upon my face.
"But I
killed him, Jim - I killed him!"
"I know,
Leif... a neat job... I saw you... but there's something I've got to tell
you...” his voice faltered.
I put the phial
to his lips - it brought him back.
"Just now...
Evalie... hates you! You have to save her... Leif ... whether she does or not.
Listen. Word came to us from Sirk through the Little People that you wanted us
to meet you there. You were pretending to be Dwayanu... pretending to remember
nothing but Dwayanu... to allay suspicion and to gain power. You were going to slip
away... come to Sirk, and lead it against Karak. You needed me to stand beside
you... needed Evalie to persuade the pygmies...”
"I sent you
no message, Jim!" I groaned.
"I know you
didn't - now... But we believed it... You saved Sri from the wolves and defied
the Witch-woman -”
"Jim - how
long was it after Sri's escape that the lying message came?"
"Two days...
What does it matter? I'd told Evalie what was - wrong - with you... gone over
your story again and again. She didn't understand... but she took me on
faith... Some more of that stuff, Leif... I'm going...”
Again the fiery
draught revived him.
"We reached
Sirk... two days ago... across the river with Sri and twenty pygmies... it was
easy... too easy... not a wolf howled, although I knew the beasts were watching
us... stalking us... and the others did, too. We waited... then came the
attack... and then I knew we had been trapped... How did you get over those geysers...
Big Fellow... never mind... but... Evalie believes you sent the message...
you... black treachery...”
His eyes closed.
Cold, cold were his hands.
"Tsantawu -
brother - you do not believe! Tsantawu - come back... speak to me...”
His eyes opened,
but hardly could I hear him speak -
"You're not
Dwayanu - Leif? Not now - or ever again?"
"No,
Tsantawu... don't leave me!"
"Bend...
your head... closer, Leif... keep fighting... save Evalie."
Fainter grew his
voice:
"Good-bye...
Degataga... not your fault...”
A ghost of the
old sardonic smile passed over the white face.
"You didn't
pick your... damned... ancestors!... Worse luck... We've had... hell of good
times... together... Save... Evalie...”
There was a gush
of blood from his mouth.
Jim was dead...
was dead.
Tsantawu - no
more!