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Perspiration beaded the Zuagir's narrow forehead. The man on the throne did not seem to hear his voice. Zahak struck Antar savagely in the mouth with his open hand. "Dog, be silent until the Magus deigns to command your speech!"
Antar reeled, blood starting down his beard, and looked black murder at the Hyrkanian, but said nothing. The Magus moved his hand languidly, saying:
"Take the Zuagirs away. Keep them under guard until further orders.
Even if a man is expected, the Watchers should not be surprised. Conan did not know the Sign, yet he climbed the Stair unhindered. If they had been vigilant, not even Conan could have done this. He is no wizard.
You may go. I will talk to Conan alone."
Zahak bowed and led his glittering swordsmen away between the silent files of warriors lined on each side of the door, herding the shivering Zuagirs before them. These turned as they pa.s.sed and fixed their burning eyes on Conan in a silent glare of hatred.
Zahak pulled the bronze doors shut behind them. The Magus spoke in Iranistani to Conan: "Speak freely. These black men do not understand Iranistani."
Conan, before replying, kicked a divan up before the dais and settled himself comfortably on it, with his feet propped up on a velvet footstool. The Magus showed no surprise that his visitor should seat himself unbidden. His first words showed that he had had much dealings with Westerners and had, for his own purposes, adopted some of their directness. He said: "I did not send for you."
"Of course not. But I had to tell those fools something or else slay them all."
"What do you want here?"
"What does any man want who comes to a nest of outlaws?"
"He might come as a spy."
Conan gave a rumbling laugh. "For whom?"
"How did you know the Road?"
"I followed the vultures; they always lead me to my goal."
"They should; you have fed them full often enough. What of the Khitan who watched the cleft?"
"Dead; he wouldn't listen to reason."
"The vultures follow you, not you the vultures," commented the Magus.
"Why sent you no word to me of your coming?"
"By whom? Last night in the Gorge of Ghosts a band of your fools fell upon my party, slew one, and carried another away. The fourth man was frightened and fled, so I came on alone when the moon rose."
They were Sabateans, whose duty it is to watch the Gorge of Ghosts.
They did not know you sought me. They limped into the city at dawn, with one dying and most of the others wounded, and swore they had slain a rich Vendhyan merchant and his servants in the Gorge of Ghosts.
Evidently they feared to admit that they ran away leaving you alive.
They shall smart for their lie, but you have not told me why you came here."
"For refuge. The King of Iranistan and I have fallen out."
The Magus shrugged. "I know about that Kobad Shah will not molest you for some time, if ever. He was wounded by one of our agents. However, the squadron he sent after you is still on your trail."
Conan felt the p.r.i.c.kling at his nape that magic aroused in him. "Crom!
You keep up to date on your news."
The Magus gave a tiny nod towards the crystal. "A toy, but not without its uses. However, we have kept our secret well. Therefore, since you knew of Yanaidar and the Road to Yanaidar, you must have been told of it by one of the Brotherhood. Did the Tiger send you?"
Conan recognized the trap. "I know no Tiger," he answered. "I need not be told secrets; I learn them for myself. I came here because I had to have a hiding place. I'm out of favor at Anshan, and the Turanians would impale me if they caught me."
The Magus said something in Stygian. Conan, knowing he would not change the language of their conversation without a reason, feigned ignorance.
The Magus spoke to one of the blacks, and that giant drew a silver hammer from his girdle and smote a golden gong hanging by the tapestries. The echoes had scarcely died away when the bronze doors opened long enough to admit a slim man in plain silken robes, who bowed before the dais-a Stygian from his shaven head. The Magus addressed him as "Khaza" and questioned him in the tongue he had just tested on Conan. Khaza replied in the same language.
"Do you know this man?" said the Magus.
"Aye, my lord."
"Have our spies included him in their reports?"
"Aye, my lord. The last dispatch from Anshan bore word of him. On the night that your servant tried to execute the king, this man talked with the king secretly an hour or so before the attack. After leaving the palace hurriedly he fled from the city with his three hundred hors.e.m.e.n and was last seen riding along the road to Kushaf. He was pursued by hors.e.m.e.n from Anshan, but whether these gave up the chase or still seek him I know not."
"You have my leave to go."
Khaza bowed and departed, and the Magus meditated for a s.p.a.ce. Then he lifted his head and said: "I believe you speak the truth. You fled from Anshan to Kushaf, where no friend of the king would be welcome. Your enmity toward the Turanians is well-known. We need such a man. But I cannot initiate you until the Tiger pa.s.ses on you. He is not now in Yanaidar but will be here by tomorrow's dawn. Meanwhile I should like to know how you learned of our society and our city."
Conan shrugged. "I hear the secrets the wind sings as it blows through the branches of the dry tamarisks, and the tales the men of the caravans whisper about the dung-fires in the serais."
"Then you know our purpose? Our ambition?"
"I know what you call yourselves." Conan, groping his way, made his answer purposely ambiguous.
"Do you know what my t.i.tle means?" asked the Magus.
"Magus of the Sons of Yezm-magician-in-chief of the Yezmites. In Turan they say the Yezmites were a pre-Catastrophic race who lived on the sh.o.r.es of the Vilayet Sea and practiced strange rites, with sorcery and cannibalism, before the coming of the Hyrkanians, who destroyed the last remnants of them."
"So they say," sneered the Magus. "But their descendants still dwell in the hills of Shem."
"So I suspected," said Conan. "I've heard tales of them, but until now I scorned them as legends."
"Aye! The world deems them legends-but since the Beginning of Happenings the Fire of Yezm has not been wholly extinguished, though for centuries it smoldered to glowing embers. The Society of the Hidden Ones is the oldest cult of all. It lies behind the worship of Mitra, Ishtar, and Asura. It recognizes no difference in race or religion. In the ancient past its branches extended all over the world, from Crondar to Valusia. Men of many lands and races belong and have belonged to the society of the Hidden Ones. In the long, long ago the Yezmites were only one branch, though from their race the priests of the cult were chosen.
"After the Catastrophe, the cult reestablished itself. In Stygia, Acheron, Koth, and Zamora were bands of the cult, cloaked in mystery and only half-suspected by the races among which they dwelt But, as the millennia pa.s.sed, these groups became isolated and fell apart, each branch going its separate way and each dwindling in strength because of lack of unity.
"In olden days, the Hidden Ones swayed the destinies of empires. They did not lead armies in the field, but they fought by poison and fire and the flame-bladed dagger that bit in the dark. Their scarlet-cloaked emissaries of death went forth to do the bidding of the Magus of the Sons of Yezm, and kings died in Luxur, in Python, in Kuthchemes, in Dagon.
"And I am a descendant of that one who was Magus of Yezm in the days of Tuthamon, he whom all the world feared!" A fanatical gleam lit the dark eyes. "Throughout my youth I dreamed of the former greatness of the cult, into which I was initiated as a child. Wealth that flowed from the mines of my estate made the dream a reality. Virata of Kosala became the Magus of the Sons of Yezm, the first to hold the t.i.tle in five hundred years.
"The creed of the Hidden ones is broad and deep as the sea, uniting men of opposing sects. Strand by strand I drew together and united the separate branches of the cult: the Zugites, the Jhilites, the Erlikites, the Yezudites. My emissaries traveled the world seeking members of the ancient society and finding them-in teeming cities, among barren mountains, in the silence of upland deserts. Slowly, surely, my band has grown, for I have not only united all the various branches of the cult but have also gained new recruits among the bold and desperate spirits of a score of races and sects. All are one before the Fire of Yezm; I have among my followers worshippers of Gullah, Set, and Mitra; of Derketo, Ishtar, and Yun.
Ten years ago, I came with my followers to this city, then a crumbling ma.s.s of ruins, unknown to the hillmen because their superst.i.tious legends made them shun this region. The buildings were crumbled stone, the ca.n.a.ls filled with rubble, and the groves grown wild and tangled.
It took six years to rebuild it Most of my fortune went into the labor, for bringing material hither in secret was tedious and dangerous work.
We brought it out of Iranistan, over the old caravan route from the South and up an ancient ramp on the western side of the plateau which I have since destroyed. But at last I looked upon forgotten Yanaidar as it was in the days of old.
"Look!"
He rose and beckoned. The giant blacks closed in on each side of the Magus as he led the way into an alcove hidden behind a tapestry. They stood in a latticed balcony looking down into a garden enclosed by a fifteen-foot wall. This wall was almost completely masked by thick shrubbery. An exotic fragrance rose from ma.s.ses of trees, shrubs, and blossoms, and silvery fountains tinkled. Conan saw women moving among the trees, scantily clad in filmy silk and jewel-crusted velvet-slim, supple girls, mostly Vendhyan, Iranistani, and Shemite. Men, looking as if they were drugged, lay under the trees on silken cushions. Music wailed melodiously.