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Conan The Barbarian Red Nails-Howard Robert

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
86 views29 pages

Conan The Barbarian Red Nails-Howard Robert

Uploaded by

ahmeddmdm606
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as TXT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 29

CHAPTER ONE

THE BONES ON THE CRAG

The young woman got down from her tired horse. She tied it to a nearby tree and
looked around. Tall trees with thick undergrowth between them stood by the pool
where she stopped to drink.

She was a tall, strong figure, wearing brown boots, red breeches, a red belt, and a
white shirt. Her long, golden hair was tied back. She had a straight sword and a
long knife in her belt. She was Valeria, one of the famous Red Pirates from the
coast, and her eyes were the colour of the sea.

Turning, she walked beyond the pool to the east. The silent forest made her
uncomfortable. No birds sang in the trees. No small forest animals moved in the
undergrowth. Nothing broke the heavy, unnatural stillness around her.

She was hungry now. So she looked for some fruit to eat. Suddenly, she saw a large
hill of grey rock before her. Its sides narrowed as they went up, and its top went
above the tree branches.

'Maybe up there I can see what lies beyond this forest,' she thought. So she
climbed up the crag. Soon she stood on a wide stone ledge as high as the tallest
tree. A thin finger of rock went up from this into the sky.

Just then, the toe of her boot hit something hard under the dry leaves on the
ledge. She moved these to one side and found the whitened bones of a man
underneath. She looked at these carefully. He had died a natural, not violent
death, she decided. 'But why did he come up here to die?' she wondered.

She climbed up the finger of rock and looked around her. To the north, she saw
hills at the furthest edge of the forest. She had crossed those, escaping from the
town of Sukmet. To the west and east, there were only trees as far as she could
see. But southward, she saw something surprising. There the green forest ended in a
wide yellow desert, full of cactus plants. And in this desert there was a great,
walled city. 'Hmm... it's strange to find a large city so far from the nearest
town,' thought Valeria. 'Maybe it's worth visiting.'

She climbed back down to the ledge. Just then, she heard something behind her. She
turned quickly, her hand going to her sword. Her eyes widened when she saw the man
who was standing on the ledge. He was dressed like her, in pirate's clothes -
boots, breeches, and a shirt open at the neck. He also had a sword and knife in his
belt.

'Conan!' cried Valeria. 'What are you doing here?'

Conan the Barbarian stared at her with fierce blue eyes. 'I thought you guessed how
I felt about you in Sukmet.'
'I noticed,' she replied coolly. 'So you came after me.'

'Yes,' answered Conan. 'The Chief of the Stygian Army went crazy when he heard
you'd killed one of his officers. Suddenly you were an enemy and he sent his men
after you.'

'What could I do? The man attacked me, said he wanted me as his wife. I wasn't
interested. So I used my knife and ran.'

'It was good that you left quickly,' Conan said. 'The man's brother came after you
- to kill you.'

'And?' asked Valeria.

'I killed him, and left his body for the wild animals. That stopped me for a while,
and I nearly lost you. But here I am.'

'Ready to take me back to Sukmet,' Valeria said coldly.

'No,' Conan answered. 'I'm bored with army life.'

'You prefer to be a poor traveller,' Valeria smiled.

'I'm a pirate, like you. Money comes and goes easily for us. Coming south was
clever,' went on Conan, 'The dead officer's brother was the only man to come this
way. So you're safe.'

'And what are you going to do now?' Valeria asked.

'Travel to the coast,' answered Conan.

'Then go,' she said, 'I have other plans.'

'Come with me,' he answered, taking a step toward her.

'Never!' she cried, pulling out her sword.

Just then, they heard loud animal screams far below them, together with the noise
of breaking bones.

'What's that?' cried Valeria.

'Our horses,' answered Conan. 'I left mine next to yours by the pool. Something's
attacking them. But what?'

They climbed slowly down the crag until they were just under the forest roof. In
the green darkness between the vines, they looked toward the place where they had
left both of their horses. They could see nothing.

'Listen,' whispered Conan.


They heard terrible sounds from the undergrowth of great teeth pulling at
horsemeat. Then a gentle wind blew past Conan and Valeria, taking their smell
straight to the nose of the killer among the leaves.

At once, the large head of a great reptile looked up on its long neck over the
plants around it. It had rows of fierce-looking, yellow teeth, and its open mouth
was bloody. It stepped out of the undergrowth, and they could see its short legs,
rounded body, and long tail.

'A dragon! Back up the crag - quick!' cried Conan. 'I don't think it can climb, but
maybe it can stand on its back legs.'

They hurried back up the grey rock, while the dragon ran toward them. It hit the
rock face with a crash, and stood on its back legs to attack them. But it could not
reach them, so it sat at the bottom of the crag and waited.

'How long will it stay, do you think?' asked Valeria.

Conan put the toe of his boot to the bones of the man lying on the ledge. 'Well,
this man climbed up to escape from a dragon, and it never left the bottom of the
crag until he died.'

'Can't we move across to a tree and escape that way?' asked Valeria.

'The branches around us aren't thick enough. And that dragon could push down a tree
easily,' answered Conan.

'But can't we climb down when it goes to eat or drink?'

'It's just eaten and drunk blood! It won't be hungry or thirsty for some time now.'

'Then let's die fighting it,' said Valeria. It was hard, as a fighter, to sit
waiting calmly for death.

'No, it's skin is too thick for our swords. And why die for nothing?' said Conan.
'We'll find a way out of this, I'm sure. It's lucky for us that it's not a flying
fire-dragon!'

Just then, Valeria saw some purple fruits on a tree branch near them. It was a tree
with dark green leaves.

'At least we won't die hungry,' she said. 'Look.'

'Don't touch those!' cried Conan. 'They're Apples of Death. Take a bite of one, or
let some of its juice fall on your skin, and you'll die in seconds.'

Suddenly, he smiled at Valeria. 'Hey!' he cried.

'You've just found the answer to our problem!'


CHAPTER TWO

BY FIRESTONE LIGHT

Saying nothing more, Conan went down the crag a little way. He cut long, thin
sticks from the tree branches. Back on the ledge, he tied these together, with his
knife at one end, using forest vines. 'Do you like my spear?' he asked when he was
finished.

'Yes. But will it go through dragon skin?' said Valeria.

'There's more than one way to kill a wild cat!' laughed Conan. He put the end of
the spear into one of the poison-filled apples, moving it around until it was
covered in purple juice. Then he went down the crag again and began shouting at the
reptile, calling it every unpleasant name that he knew.

Angrily, the terrible animal stood on its back legs and opened its mouth to attack.
At once, Conan drove the spear into the side of its tongue. The great animal went
crazy, screaming and moving its head from side to side-in pain, trying without
success to shake out the spear. Then, suddenly, it ran off.

'It's working!' cried Conan. 'The poison's making it thirsty. It's going to the
pool. Now's our chance to escape!'

'There's a walled city in the desert to the south. I saw it from the top of the
crag,' said Valeria quickly. 'Let's go there.'

All right,' answered Conan.

Quickly they climbed down to the forest floor, moving around the pool where the
reptile drank. 'That's good. There's no wind,' whispered Conan. 'With the poison in
its blood, the dragon won't be able to see. But if it smells us, we're finished!'

Soon they reached the edge of the forest. The desert was close by. The sun was
going down now, and night was coming. Just then, a desert wind blew toward them.
They suddenly heard the reptile moving through the trees behind them.

'Run!' cried Conan. They ran for their lives. But the reptile was dying. It crashed
into a tree, fell, and did not get up.

'Let's go on,' said Conan. 'Maybe other dragons will come when they hear its death
cries.'

So Conan and Valeria hurried across the desert. The great city, black in the
silvery light of the moon, seemed very far. After they had walked for hours, they
were only half the way there. So they decided to spend the night safe inside a
circle of desert cactuses. While one of them slept, the other watched.

Early next morning, they had a tasty breakfast - sweet juicy cactus leaves from
which they had cut the thick, hard skin.
After that, they walked on toward the city entrance.

'Strange!' said Conan on the way. 'There are no cows or fields. How do these city
people live?'

Valeria looked at the high city walls, now as red as blood in the morning light. No
heads looked over them, no voices called. All was still and silent. 'I don't like
it,' she said.

Later that morning, they arrived at the great metal city gates. They were closed,
and green with time.

'Nobody has opened these for years!' cried Valeria.

'That explains a lot. It's a dead city!' replied Conan. 'But who lived here? When?
And why did they go?'

'And did they leave any treasure behind them?' added Valeria, with a pirate's
interest.

'Let's see about that,' answered Conan. And he put his shoulder to one of the
gates, and pushed it inward. Noisily, the great metal door opened. Taking their
swords in their hands, Conan and Valeria entered the city.

They found themselves not in an open street, but in a great and colourful stone
hall that was tall, long, and wide. The floor was a strange, deep red colour, and
the walls were dark green. The ceiling was midnight blue, and groups of bright
green stones in it shone down poisonously.

'Those are "firestones"!' explained Conan. 'They shine in the dark like cat's eyes.
Let's look around. I think you're right - there's probably treasure here.'

So they walked down the great hall. The floor under their feet shone like fire.
There were no doors from the hall into the open air, only to other rooms. Sometimes
narrow, high windows let in the light of day in different places, but mostly the
firestones shone down, covering everything with their fantastic green light.
Sometimes they saw white stone tables and chairs, or rich red carpets in the rooms.

'There aren't any bones or dead bodies anywhere, so I don't think everyone here
died suddenly from a terrible illness,' said Conan. 'Maybe they just left the city
one day. But why?'

'Who knows?' answered Valeria.

Just then, they saw a mosaic by some stone stairs. It showed tall people with
beautiful faces, dressed in fine clothes, eating, drinking, and laughing together.
'They clearly weren't fighters,' laughed Conan. 'Come on. Let's look upstairs.'

The stairs went up three floors and ended in a large, wide room on the fourth - the
highest floor in the building. On one side, there was a door to a long gallery with
a narrow hall below it. On the other side were more rooms.
Valeria sat down on a green stone seat. 'I think the people here took all their
treasure away when they left,' she said. 'There's nothing that's worth stealing.
I'm tired - and we're lost!'

'Maybe there's a window looking out over the city in that room there,' said Conan.
'That'll help us to find our way.'

'You go and look,' said Valeria. 'I'll rest here.'

Conan was gone for only a few minutes when Valeria heard something moving beyond
the door to the gallery.

CHAPTER THREE

THE BURNING SKULL

Valeria went silently in her soft leather boots through the door, and looked down
from the gallery. She saw a man moving secretively along the narrow hall below her.
What a surprise to see someone living in this dead and silent place!

She watched the figure - so unlike the people in the mosaic at the foot of the
stairs. He was wild looking, thin and short, with long, dirty, black hair. He wore
a leather belt round his middle and a short leather skirt. He carried a wide sword
in his right hand, and he shook fearfully and looked worriedly from side to side as
he moved quietly down the hall. He did not see Valeria watching him from the
gallery above, but disappeared through an open door. Moments later, Valeria heard
the sound of someone choking, and then all was silent.

What had happened? Valeria walked around the gallery until she reached a door. It
was right above the door where the man had disappeared. Quietly, she opened it and
went in.

She found herself standing at one side of a circular gallery. It was lit by
firestones, and the room below was full of dark shadows. She looked downward, her
eyes widening as the darkness began to clear. Below her, she could see the man that
she had last seen in the hall. He lay still, face down on the red carpet that
covered the floor. His sword lay by him.

'Why isn't he moving?' she thought. And then she saw the carpet around him. It was
a darker red. Her blood ran cold.

Just then, another man - very like the first - entered the room through a door
opposite the hall door. He called to the man on the floor, 'Chicmec!' The other did
not move.

The new man went over, took the first by the shoulder, and turned him over. A
choking cry escaped him as the man's head fell back. Someone had cut his throat.
The man let the dead body fall back on the carpet and stood up, shaking like a
leaf. His face was grey with fear. He took out his sword and turned to leave, but
then stopped, unable to move. He looked across the room with widening eyes.

In the shadows under the gallery, a ghostly light began shining and growing
stronger. It was not part of the firestones' light. Valeria felt the hairs on the
back of her neck stand up. In the middle of this ghostly light, a man's skull was
floating, and it was from this that the unnatural light came.

The man stood still and stared at this ghostly figure, and the skull came out from
the wall. A shadow moved under it, Valeria noticed. Slowly the shadow took the
shape of a man - with a chest, arms, and legs that were deathly white in colour.
The empty eyes of the skull were mysteriously inviting, and the man who was
watching could not look away. He was not only afraid, Valeria realized. Something
in the strange light had put him under a spell. His sword hand was now down at his
side, useless.

Suddenly, he fell to his knees and dropped his sword, covering his eyes with his
hands. The ghostly figure lifted the sword in its hand high, ready to bring it down
on his neck. Like a wild cat, Valeria jumped down from the gallery. She landed on
the carpet, sword in hand, behind the ghostly shape.

The figure turned toward her, but she was too quick for it. She drove the sword
fiercely into its body. It was a living man, she realized, and no ghost. Her sword
cut through the man's chest, and he fell to the floor and died almost at once. The
skull rolled away. He was a man very like the other, who was still on his knees at
Valeria's feet.

Just then, the man who had been under the spell jumped up, staring at Valeria and
crying, 'Who are you? Where are you from? Why are you here?' He didn't wait for
answers, but went on, 'It doesn't matter who you are. You're a friend. You've
killed "The Burning Skull". It was only a man after all! We thought it was a ghost
that they'd called from the catacombs.'

He listened for a moment. Valeria could hear nothing.

'We must hurry. They're west of the Great Hall. Maybe they're coming for us.' He
took her wrist in his hand.

'Who do you mean by "they"?' she asked.

'The people of Xotalanc!' he answered. 'The clan of the man that you killed. The
people who live by the eastern gate!'

'You mean people are living in the city?'

'Yes. But be quick now. We must go to the home of my clan by the western gate!
Come!'

'Who are you, and what brought you here?' cried Valeria.
'My name is Techotl. I came with my friend Chicmec to attack those from Xotalanc.
But I lost him, and when I found him here, his throat was cut. The Burning Skull
did it. And he wanted to kill me, too, before you saved me. But maybe he wasn't
alone. Maybe others from Xotalanc will come. They do terrible things to those that
they take alive!'

Valeria looked at Techotl's grey face and shaking body. What was he talking about?
She did not fully understand. She turned back to the skull on the floor. Was it
really so dangerous?

CHAPTER FOUR

FIVE DEAD DOGS

Valeria touched the still bright skull with the toe of her boot.

'Don't touch it! Don't look at it! It can make you crazy and kill you. The wizards
of the city understand its secret. They found it in the catacombs, where the bones
of the terrible kings who lived here in the dark past are kept. Come with me now.'

The skull shone brighter now. 'Whose skull was it?' Valeria wondered. It stared at
her. Like a skull in a dream, it seemed able to talk. In fact, life was like a
dream, she thought.

'Don't look at the skull!' She heard the cry from far away. Suddenly, Valeria shook
herself out of her heavy, waking sleep. Techotl was standing next to her, speaking
wildly. 'It was the skull of the king of all wizards. It still has life and fire in
it.'

Valeria lifted her sword in both hands and brought it down squarely on the skull.
It broke into several burning pieces. Inside her head, she heard a great and
terrible cry of angry pain.

'You've destroyed it. They cannot mend it now. Come.'

'I can't. I have a friend nearby -' she began.

The frightened expression on Techotl's face made her turn - in time to see four men
enter the room. They were like the others that she had seen, but their chests were
painted with a picture of a white skull. One man attacked Techotl, and the other
three came for Valeria, with eyes as red as the eyes of mad dogs.

She brought her sword down on the head of the first man. He fell dead to the floor.
Then she drove her sword through the belt of the second, who fell to his knees. His
free hand went to the wound in his stomach. After that, the third - taller than the
others - attacked her. Techotl was now sitting on the chest of the fourth man, who
was lying on the floor. The man's hand was round Techotl's wrist, stopping him
driving a knife into his chest.
Valeria and the third man fought bravely, sword to sword. His eyes burned with red
fire, but he could not beat her. After a while, he began fighting more tiredly.
Valeria took a step backward to make him move forward. It was then that she felt a
strong hand around her ankle. She had forgotten the wounded man on the floor.

The tall man in front of her started to fight more fiercely now, and the man at her
feet began biting at her legs like a wild animal. She pulled at the wounded man's
long hair with her free hand, and the tall man saw his chance. But before he could
attack, a large figure came up behind him and brought its sword down, cutting his
skull in two. He died at once.

'Conan!' cried Valeria. Then she turned to the man at her feet, and cut off his
head with her sword. His body fell back, lifeless. Techotl drove his knife into his
enemy's chest, killing him immediately.

'What's happening?' asked Conan. 'When I went back to your seat, you'd gone. I came
as soon as I heard the sound of fighting. So the city has people in it after all, I
see!'

'Five dead dogs!' cried Techotl. 'Five red nails for the black pillar! I thank the
gods!'

'Who's this?' asked Conan.

'His name's Techotl. His clan lives at the western end of the city, and the clan of
these other men lives at the eastern end. Let's go with him. He seems friendly, and
the others don't,' said Valeria.

'Come,' said Techotl. 'My people, the Tecultli, will welcome you!'

So Conan and Valeria followed him through room after room. 'Why don't we travel
through the streets?' asked Valeria. As a pirate, she usually preferred fighting
outside in the open air to fighting inside a closed building.

'There are no streets in the city of Xuchotl,' Techotl answered, 'No squares open
to the sky. The whole city is like a great palace under one roof. The nearest thing
to a street is the Great Hall that crosses the city from the North Gate to the
South Gate. The only doors to the world outside are the city gates, and no living
man has passed through those for fifty years.'

'How long have you lived here?' asked Conan.

'I was born thirty-five years ago in the castle of Tecultli. I've never been
outside the city But let us go quietly now. Maybe these halls are full of hiding
devils. Olmec will tell you everything when we reach Tecultli.'

They went on in silence. When they arrived at a room that was wider than usual,
Conan spoke again. 'Do you think some of your enemies are waiting in front of us?'

'They walk through these rooms at all hours,' answered Techotl. 'So do we. The
halls and rooms between Tecultli and Xotalanc belong to neither side. We call this
part of the city "The Halls of Silence". Why do you ask?'

'Because there are men in the rooms before us,' answered Conan. 'I heard the sound
of metal against stone.'

Techotl began shaking violently.


'Perhaps they're your friends,' said Valeria.

'We cannot take that chance,' he answered. 'Come.'

He went down some stairs. Conan and Valeria followed.

'These take us down to an unlit corridor,' he explained. 'Maybe the noises upstairs
were a trick, and they'll attack us in the darkness below, but I don't think so.'

CHAPTER FIVE

THE RULERS OF TECULTLI

At the foot of the stairs, they arrived at the dark mouth of the corridor. Inside,
it was as black as night. Techotl, Valeria, and Conan walked into this blackness,
seeing nothing in front or either side of them. The corridor seemed endless.

Suddenly, they heard a noise behind them. It was a door opening softly. Men were
coming after them along the corridor!

'Run!' shouted Techotl, hurrying away like a ghost down the corridor. Valeria and
Conan followed. Behind them, the sound of running feet came closer.

'Quick. Up the stairs,' cried Techotl. Valeria hurried up after him. Conan turned
back to fight, but something not human was following them now, together with the
men. It crawled noisily up the steps, bringing bitterly cold air with it. He
brought his sword down on it, feeling the metal cut through it, and hit stone.
Something as cold as ice touched his foot, and then fell back. A man further down
the stairs cried out. Conan turned and ran up to Valeria and Techotl, who stood by
the door at the top of the stairs. Once Conan was through, Techotl banged the door
shut and bolted it.

They ran from the bolted door. It now began to shake as those behind threw
themselves against it, trying to push it open.

Now they were crossing well-lit rooms, and Techotl seemed braver. But Conan
frightened him again when he asked, 'What was the thing that I fought on the
stairs? It crawled and was ice-cold. I think I cut it in two, and it fell back on
one of the men behind it and killed him!'

Techotl's face went grey. 'That was "The Crawler"! The people of Xotalanc have
brought it from the catacombs to help them. It has killed many of our people. Once
it is following you, it never rests until it catches you. We must hurry!'
Suddenly, at the end of a long hall, Techotl stopped.

They stood before a large metal door. 'This is the entrance to Tecultli!' he said,
knocking on the door. 'Open the door, Excelan!' he cried. 'I bring friends from the
great world outside.'

He turned to Conan and Valeria. 'They are watching through "The Eye". Maybe they're
surprised to see you,' he explained. 'But they'll open the door soon.'

'I hope so,' answered Conan, 'because I can hear something crawling across the
floor beyond this hall.'

Techotl hit the door. 'Hurry! The Crawler is after us!'

At once, the great metal door opened. Four guards stood behind them with spears in
their hands. Techotl, Valeria, and Conan ran in. Looking back, Conan saw for a
moment a great serpent with a bloody head that was crawling up the long hall toward
them. Then the guards quickly shut the door and pushed strong bolts into place.

On the wall by the door, there was a strange device that was made of mirrors. This,
Conan guessed, was the Eye. The people inside Tecultli could secretly use this to
watch anybody at the entrance to their castle.

'Come with me,' said Techotl.

Conan looked back at the bolted entrance. 'Won't they try to break down the door?'
he asked.

'No,' answered Techotl. 'They cannot break down "The Door of the Eagle". They will
return to Xotalanc, taking their crawling devil with them. Let's meet the rulers of
Tecultli.'

One of the guards opened a door at the far end of the entrance hall, and Techotl
took his two new friends through it.

They found themselves in a long corridor with fine mosaics on the green walls, and
thick carpets on the red floors. Walking to the end of this corridor, Techotl
opened a door and Conan and Valeria followed him into a wide hall.

The thirty men and women there jumped up from rich couches with cries of surprise
when the visitors entered. They wore light shoes, golden breastplates, and short
skirts with belts that were covered in jewels. Their long, black hair was cut
squarely across the shoulders, and it was held in place by a thin circle of silver
on each head.

Up some green stone steps, two figures sat on a wide throne of ivory. They were
different from the others. The man was tall and strong looking. Unlike the other
men there, he was bald and had a blue-black beard that came down to his belt. He
wore a purple coat that shone with different colours when he moved, and the circle
of gold on his head was heavy with jewels.
The woman was tall and beautiful. She wore a skirt, and jewels shone from the
circle of gold on her head, and from her golden breastplate. She stood up in
surprise when Techotl and his friends entered the room. The man on the ivory throne
next to her stayed sitting.

'Prince Olmec,' began Techotl, bowing. 'I bring two friends from outside the city.
They killed the Burning Skull!'

'The Burning Skull!' cried the people of Tecultli.

'It was only a man from Xotalanc with white body paint and the wizard's skull on
his head,' went on Techotl. 'But this woman killed him and broke the skull. Then
four more Xotalancas attacked us, but this man arrived and together we killed them.
We must put five new nails in the pillar of the feud.' He looked at the pillar
behind the throne. It had many red nails in it, shining in the black wood. Olmec
turned and stared down at Conan and Valeria.

CHAPTER SIX

THE PEOPLE OF THE FEUD

'Where are you from, and what brings you here?' asked Olmec.

'I'm Conan, and this is Valeria,' answered the barbarian. 'We come from the north,
and we're travelling to the coast.'

'You'll never reach it,' said the woman next to Olmec. 'Nobody leaves Xuchotl!'

'Are we prisoners?' asked Conan, his hand on his sword.

'No,' answered Prince Olmec hurriedly. 'You're our friends. But maybe different
things will keep you here.' He looked at the woman beside him, and said, 'This is
Princess Tascela. But come. You must be hungry after your journey. Let's eat.'

They went to one side of the room, and sat at a table that was covered with strange
fruit. During the meal, Conan often looked at Tascela, but the princess was busily
staring at Valeria.

'So how did you come through the forest?' asked Olmec.

'Well, a dragon gave us some trouble there,' answered Conan. 'But once we'd killed
it, we were fine.'

'You killed a dragon-god!' Techotl cried.

'Why not? It wanted to eat us.'


'But no man can kill a dragon,' said Olmec.

'They can if they put a poisoned spear in its mouth,' laughed Conan between
mouthfuls of food.

Olmec looked at him in surprise, and then explained:

Our ancestors came to this city fifty years ago to escape the forest dragons. The
city of Xuchotl was old when they arrived. The sickly people living here then were
the descendants of the city's builders. But even they did not know how old Xuchotl
was. When our people first arrived, the city people closed the gates, and shot
arrows at them. Our ancestors could not return to the dragons in the forest, so
they stayed in the desert.

One night, a city slave secretly visited them. He'd come to the city years before,
with soldiers from our country, through the forest. The dragons had killed his
friends, but he managed to reach the city, where he became a slave. His name was
Tolkemec.

Prince Olmec's eyes shone as he said this, and many in the room whispered angry
words when they heard the name Tolkemec. The prince went on:

Tolkemec promised to open the city gates to our ancestors. He asked only for all
prisoners to be his. Our ancestors agreed. The next morning, he opened the gates.
Our people entered Xuchotl, and most of the city people died in the fighting.

Tolkemec knew slaves had built the city. They brought gold, jewels, and stones from
far away, and worked day and night on the building. The first rulers of Xuchotl
were wizards, and they found old reptile bones in the ground. They gave these life
and made dragons, which they kept in the forest around the desert.

Tolkemec also explained how the wizards made wonderful fruits that grew in the air,
and how the city people let their fields go dry and their farm animals die.

But this was centuries before our people came. The descendants of the first
Xuchotlans had forgotten how to fight and make spells by the time that our
ancestors arrived. So our soldiers killed all the city people except a hundred.
These hundred prisoners were given to Tolkemec. For days, he tortured and then
killed them one by one.
The chiefs of our ancestors in those days were two brothers - Tecultli and
Xotalanc. They asked Tolkemec to be the third ruler of the city with them. He had
opened the city gates, after all. He married a woman from among our people. And he
taught the secrets of the air-growing fruit and other things to the new rulers of
Xuchotl.

The killing of the Xuchotlans broke the spells that kept the dragons in the forest.
So they ran hungrily about the city walls at night, fighting and killing each
other. It was then that -

Olmec stopped talking suddenly. Valeria thought he had almost said something that
he preferred to keep a secret. Then he went on: 'For five years, our ancestors
lived here happily together, with no problems. Then Xotalanc took a woman as his
wife.' Olmec looked for a moment at the silent woman beside him.

Both Tecultli and old Tolkemec wanted her, too. Crazy with love, Tecultli stole her
from her husband. Tolkemec helped Tecultli in order to hurt Xotalanc. Naturally,
Xotalanc wanted his wife back. Both clans asked the council of our people what to
do, and the councillors said the woman must decide. She chose to stay with
Tecultli. Xotalanc tried to take her back, and so the two clans fought fiercely in
the Great Hall. Many lives were lost.

Soon the fighting became a war. Xotalanc, Tecultli, and Tolkemec divided the city.
Xotalanc's men took the part near the eastern gate, Tecultli's men took the part
near the western gate, and Tolkemec's family took the part near the southern gate.
Each clan made its part into a castle to be safe from attack.

While the two brothers' clans fought, Tolkemec took sides first with one brother,
and then with the other. He was a devil of a man, and he knew many secrets about
the catacombs that he'd told nobody.

Then twelve years ago, the people of Tecultli attacked Tolkemec's castle, killed
his people, and took him prisoner. He was tortured, and left to die. But he managed
to escape, and crawled down to the catacombs. There - I'm sure - he died. We've
never seen him since. But his bones were never found, and some of our people say
his ghost walks the catacombs today.

All of us here - except for Tascela - were born into this feud. It began fifty
years ago and will never end...

CHAPTER SEVEN

THE SMELL OF BLACK LOTUS


Prince Olmec's eyes shone strangely, as he continued his story:

'Our time here is nearly over. When the feud began, each clan had hundreds of
people. Now only forty men and women of Tecultli live. We don't know the number of
the Xotalancas, but they can't have many more. For fifteen years, we've had no
children, and we've seen none among the Xotalancas. So we'll die soon, but before
we do, we'll kill as many Xotalancas as we can.'

It was a sad story. Xotalanc himself had died long ago, killed in a battle on the
stairs. Tecultli too was dead. He was torn to pieces by the enemies who caught him.

Olmec also spoke of wizards, of magic, and of dark creatures that helped in the
war. The Xotalancas were lucky. The bones of the great wizard kings of Xuchotl lay
in the eastern catacombs and their secrets were kept there, too.

As Valeria listened, she felt Tascela staring at her.

'We never leave the city,' the prince went on. 'For fifty years nobody has left,
except those -' Again he stopped.

'Even without the dragons,' he went on, 'we wouldn't like to be under open skies,
with the sun shining on us.'

'Well, with your permission, we'll take our chances with the dragons,' said Conan.

Tascela began to speak, but Olmec put up a hand to stop her. 'It's nearly night. If
you travel across the desert now, the dragons will surely attack and kill you.'

'We saw none there last night,' replied Conan.

Tascela smiled icily. 'You will not leave Xuchotl!'

'I think they will,' said Olmec. 'Look - Conan, Valeria - the gods sent you to help
us win the war against our enemies. Stay and help us beat the Xotalancas. Then you
can leave the city with all the treasure that you can carry.'

And can you help us destroy the dragons?' asked Valeria. 'With bows and poisoned
arrows, thirty men could kill all the dragons in the forest in a day.'

'Well, we don't use bows and arrows for close fighting here. But if you teach us
how to shoot with them, we can,' said Olmec.

'What do you think?' Valeria asked Conan.

'Well, we're poor travellers, aren't we? And killing Xotalancas is as good a job as
any!'

'Then you agree!' cried Olmec. Techotl seemed pleased.

'Yes,' answered Conan. 'But now can we go to rooms where we can sleep? We must be
ready for battle tomorrow.'
Olmec smiled, and waved a hand. Techotl and a woman took the two adventurers
through a door to one side of the green steps. Looking back, Valeria could see the
prince, his head on one hand, watching them. Sitting next to him, Tascela called
her maid to her, and whispered something in her ear.

The corridor that they walked down was not wide, but it was very long. Soon the
woman opened a door on the right. She stood to one side to let Valeria enter the
room before her.

'And where am I sleeping?' asked Conan.

Techotl pointed to a room across the corridor, one door further along. Valeria
smiled at Conan and shut her door in his face. After that, the barbarian followed
Techotl to his room.

'Is Tascela Olmec's wife?' Conan asked when they arrived. Techotl looked
secretively about him before he answered. 'No. She was the wife of Xotalanc - the
woman Tecultli stole years ago - when the feud began.'

'What are you saying?' cried Conan. 'Tascela's beautiful and young. Are you telling
me she was married fifty years ago?'

'It's true, I promise you. She came to Xuchotl as a young woman, when Xotalanc and
Tecultli were young men.'

'How is that possible?'

'She's a witch. She knows the secret of eternal youth.'

'And what secret is that?' asked Conan.

'Don't ask me. I can't tell you. It's too terrible for words.'

Then, putting a finger to his lips, Techotl left the room.

Valeria took off her sword belt and put it on the couch where she planned to sleep.
All the doors in her room had bolts, she noticed. 'Where do they go?' she asked.

'Those two open on the rooms next door,' the woman answered, pointing to the doors
on the right and on the left.

'And that one?' asked Valeria, pointing to the metal-faced door opposite the one
that they had come through.

'Behind it is a corridor that takes you to stairs going to the catacombs. But don't
be afraid. Nothing can hurt you here.'
'Who's afraid? I'm just checking for danger,' said Valeria. 'You have my permission
to go now.'

Once she was alone, Valeria bolted all the doors, took off her boots, and lay on
the couch. She was soon asleep. But she woke up suddenly in the middle of a strange
dream.

In the darkness, she saw something shadowy bending over her. At first, she thought
the figure was part of her dream. She lay on the couch, and a large black flower
floated above her. Its smell filled her body with lazy tiredness. She floated on
clouds of happy sleepiness. Then something touched her face and she woke up fully.
She saw not a flower, but a woman bending over her.

Valeria sat up, and the woman turned to run away. But the pirate jumped up from the
couch and caught her arm. The woman tried to escape, but could not. Valeria pulled
her back, and turned her around until she could see her face. It was Tascela's
maid, Yasala.

'What are you doing here? And what's in your hand?' cried Valeria.

Yasala tried to hide the thing behind her, but Valeria pulled her arm forward. The
thing that the maid held fell to the floor. It was a large black flower, as big as
a woman's head, on a thick green branch with dark green leaves.

'A black lotus!' cried Valeria. 'It's smell brings deep sleep. You were trying to
drug me. But why?'

Yasala said nothing. Valeria pushed the maid to her knees and pulled her arm up
behind her back.

'Tell me, or I'll tear your arm from your body,' she shouted. Yasala only shook her
head silently.

Valeria remembered Tascela's eyes on her at dinner, and her whispered conversation
in Yasala's ear. 'Did Tascela send you?' she asked. The maid said nothing.

'Why don't you speak? Who are you afraid of? Tascela? Olmec? Do I have to torture
you to find out?'

A low cry escaped the woman's lips. 'Please, no torture. I'll speak. But first I
need a drink. My mouth is dry.'

She pointed to a gold cup of wine on the table by the couch. Valeria brought it to
her. Yasala took the cup in her hand and suddenly threw the wine hard in the
pirate's face. Valeria stepped back, helpless, her eyes half-closed with pain.
Yasala unbolted the metal door and ran through it, away down the corridor.

Seconds later, Valeria followed - but Yasala was already gone. When the pirate
reached the end of the corridor, she found an open door through which she saw dark
stairs going underground. A terrible smell of dry bones floated up from below.
'This must be the entrance to the catacombs!' she thought.
Just then, a woman's cry reached her from down in the blackness. 'Help! No! Please!
Aaargh!' The voice died away suddenly, but Valeria heard a sickening, ghostly laugh
follow it.

She hurried back along the corridor, not stopping to close the stair door, and went
into her room. She quickly pulled on her boots and put on her sword belt. She
decided to ask Conan to run away with her from this city of devils.

But just then - as she left her room - a long, loud scream filled the air, together
with the sound of swords and running feet.

CHAPTER EIGHT

TWENTY NAILS

Two Tecultli soldiers sat talking in the guardroom by the Door of the Eagle.
Usually watchful, they were now resting. An attack on the great metal door from
outside was possible, but for many years, their enemies had never tried it.

'The strangers are good allies,' began one. 'Everyone says Olmec will move against
the enemy tomorrow.'

The other went on, 'And if we destroy Xotalanc, what will happen then, Xatmec?'

'Well, Excelan,' replied Xatmec, 'We'll put more red nails in the pillar, I
suppose. And if we take any prisoners, we'll tear their skin off and cut them into
quarters.'

Excelan went on, 'But after we've killed them all, won't it seem strange to have no
enemy? All my life, I've fought and hated the Xotalancas. But when the feud ends,
what will we do?'

Xatmec shrugged his shoulders. He couldn't manage to think of a life without the
feud. Then suddenly both men sat up. They had heard something outside the door.

'Listen carefully!' cried Excelan. 'I'll use the Eye!'

Xatmec, sword in hand, put his ear to the door. Excelan looked into the mirrored
device. His eyes widened in surprise. A crowd of serious men stood outside. They
were holding their swords in their teeth, and they had their fingers in their ears.
One of them, with feathers on his head, held some pipes in his hands. He lifted
these to his lips, and just as Excelan started to give a warning cry, he began to
play them.

The cry died in the guard's throat as the thin, strange music came through the
thick metal of the door and reached his ears. Xatmec stood bent forward against the
door, unable to move. His face was wooden as he listened to those maddening pipes.
Excelan, who was further away, noticed how the unnatural music filled his own head
with strange and crazy ideas. With a great effort, he broke the spell and shouted
to warn the others in the castle of an enemy attack.

Suddenly, the piper blew harder and faster. Now the music was high and fierce like
a knife in Excelan's ears. Xatmec screamed in sudden pain, and all the reason left
his face like a light dying in the wind. He pulled back the bolts on the door,
opened it, and ran out into the hall beyond. Twelve swords cut him down, and the
Xotalancas stepped quickly over his wounded body and ran into the guardroom with a
long, loud cry.

With an ache in his head from the shock of it all, Excelan jumped to meet them with
a spear in his hand. The terrible magic of the pipes was less important now than
the fact that enemy fighters were in Tecultli. He drove his spear into a
Xotalanca's side, and then a sword crashed down hard on his skull and he knew no
more. But just then, other wild-eyed Tecultli fighters ran into the guardroom from
the halls behind it.

It was the shouting of men and the noise of sword against sword that made Conan
jump from his couch, fully awake, with his sword in his hand. In a second, he had
reached the door and thrown it open. He stared out into the corridor, just as
Techotl hurried up to him, his eyes shining madly.

'The Xotalancas!' he cried. 'They're inside our castle!'

Conan was running down the corridor when Valeria suddenly came out of her room.
'What's happening?' she called.

'Techotl says the Xotalancas are inside Tecultli,' he answered. With Techotl close
behind them, they ran into the throne room, and saw a terrible picture there.

Twenty Xotalanca men and women, their long black hair flying out behind them and
white skulls on their chests, were locked in battle with the people of Tecultli.
The women on both sides fought as madly as the men, and already the room and the
hall beyond were full of dead bodies.

Olmec was fighting for his life by the black pillar, and as the adventurers
entered, Tascela ran in from a room behind the pillar with a sword in her hand.

Why had the Xotalancas decided to enter their enemies' castle? There were many
reasons: they had lost more men than the Tecultli supposed. With the Burning Skull
now destroyed, and the Crawler now badly wounded, things seemed hopeless for them.
Added to that, they had heard the news, whispered by a dying man, that mysterious
foreigners had joined their enemies to fight against them. All of these things
together made them decide to die bravely, killing their old enemies.

After the first shock of the attack, the Tecultli fought back fiercely. It was a
bitter battle to the death, the final fight after fifty years of the feud, and
everyone knew it.

The end was no surprise. There were twice as many Tecultli as Xotalancas, and they
were more confident of success, too, because Conan and Valeria were fighting beside
them.

Valeria was fast on her feet and quick with her sword, which danced in her hand
like white fire. Conan was sure-footed and terribly strong, a real killing machine.
None of the Xotalancas stood a chance against him.

It was not long before the last of them fell dying to the ground. Those Tecultli
still standing looked around in surprise at the dead bodies of friends and enemies
lying on the floor.

'There's a wound on your leg,' Conan said to Valeria.

She looked down, for the first time noticing the pain. Some dying man on the floor
behind her had driven his knife into the back of her leg with a last effort.

Olmec walked over to them, his eyes shining fiercely.

'We've won,' he cried. 'The feud is finished. The dogs of Xotalanc lie dead. It's
good to look at their lifeless faces. Twenty dead dogs! Twenty red nails for the
black pillar.'

'But are you sure that this is all of them?' asked Conan.

'Yes. A chief doesn't divide his army in an attack like this. I promise you: we've
killed them all. There were fewer of them than I dreamed. But how could they enter
our castle?'

Just then, Tascela came toward them with her sword in one hand. In the other, she
held the pipes that she had taken from the feathered chief of the Xotalancas.

'Here are "The Pipes of Madness",' she explained. 'One of our fighters told me that
Xatmec opened the door to our enemies after they played these.

'This fighter arrived from the inner hall just in time to see all this happen, and
to hear the last strange notes of some music that turned his blood to ice.

'In the old days, Tolkemec spoke of these pipes. The Xuchotlans had said they were
hidden in the catacombs with the bones of the old wizard who once played them. In
some way, the men of Xotalanc found them and learned their secret.'

'Why don't we check if any fighters in Xotalanc are still alive?' asked Conan.
'I'll go if somebody shows me the way.'
'Who will take Conan to Xotalanc?' asked Olmec.

Techotl stepped forward. He had a bad cut down one side of his body. 'I'll go,' he
said.

'No, you won't,' said Conan. And you're not going either Valeria - not with your
leg like that.'

'I'll go!' said a young fighter, cleaning a small cut on one arm. 'Very well,
Yanath. Go with the barbarian. You too, Topal,' Olmec pointed to an older man who
had only small cuts on him. 'But first, let's carry those people who are hurt to
the couches. Our nurses can take better care of them there.'

They did this quickly. As they bent to pick up a woman that the Xotalancas had
knocked on the head with a big fighting stick, Olmec's beard brushed against
Topal's ear. Conan thought that the prince whispered something to the fighter, but
he couldn't be sure. A few moments later, he was walking with Yanath and Topal down
the hall to the metal entrance door.

CHAPTER NINE

GLASS-FRONTED SHELVES

Carefully, the two Tecultli walked out beyond the metal door, and Conan followed.
They went through many rooms, but they saw no one, and heard nothing. After they
crossed the Great Hall that divided the city in two from north to south, they
became more watchful. But all the rooms that they passed were empty.

At last, they reached a large metal door like the Door of the Eagle in Tecultli.
They pushed it open. For fifty years, no Tecultli had passed along here except
prisoners on their way to torture and death. To Yanath and Topal, standing at that
door was like waiting to step into hell. They were afraid to go further. Conan
pushed past them and walked confidently into Xotalanc.

The others looked wildly about them as they followed, but nothing broke the silence
except their own steps.

After the guardroom, there was a corridor, almost the same as the one that went to
Olmec's throne room. Conan looked around and listened. He heard no noise, and the
place felt empty. He was confident that there were no Xotalancas alive there.

'Come on,' he said, and began going down the corridor.

But only Yanath followed him, he realized.


Conan turned back to see Topal standing some way behind them. Topal held one arm
out, like someone keeping danger away and there was a frightened expression on his
face. He was staring at something that was partly hidden by one of the couches.

'What is it?' cried Conan. And then he saw. An awful head protruded from behind the
couch. It was large and dragonish, and two long, white teeth protruded from its
mouth.

But the thing was unnaturally still, and its eyes were glassy. Conan looked behind
the couch and found a great serpent lying dead there. He had never seen anything
like it. The smell of the catacombs was on it, and its colour changed when he
looked at it from different sides. A great wound in its neck showed the reason for
its death.

'It's the Crawler!' whispered Yanath fearfully.

'It's the creature that I fought on the stairs,' added Conan.

After it followed us to the Door of the Eagle, it crawled back here to die. But how
could the Xotalancas control it?'

The Tecultli shrugged their shoulders. 'They brought it up from the catacombs. They
discovered secrets that were unknown to us.'

'Well, it's dead now,' said Conan. And my guess is there was only one Crawler. They
didn't bring another when they attacked the Door of the Eagle, did they? Come on.'

Yanath and Topal followed him to the end of the corridor where he opened a door
that was faced with silver.

'If we don't find anyone on this floor, we'll go lower. We'll check Xotalanc from
the roof to the catacombs... By all the gods! What's this?'

They were now in the throne room. It had the same couches, green stone steps, and
ivory throne as Olmec's great hall in Tecultli - except here there was no black
pillar with red nails. The blood feud was remembered in Xotalanc in a different
way. On the wall behind the throne, there were rows of glass-covered shelves. And
on these shelves there were hundreds of carefully arranged human heads. They seemed
almost alive as they stared out at the shocked visitors with unfeeling eyes, just
as they had stared for countless months and years.

Topal whispered something angrily to himself, but Yanath stood silent, a mad light
growing in his eyes. Conan watched the young man very carefully.

Just then, Yanath pointed to the lifeless heads with a shaking finger. 'There's my
brother's head!' he said. 'And my uncle! And there beyond them is my sister's son!'

Suddenly he began to cry, dry-eyed, with deep sobs that shook his body from head to
foot. He did not take his eyes from the heads.
His sobs grew louder and higher until he was laughing uncontrollably. Then the
sound changed again and became hellish screams. Yanath had gone crazy.

Conan put a hand on the young lighter's shoulder. Yanath turned quickly at this and
screamed loudly attacking the barbarian with his sword. Conan fought back, and
Topal tried to catch Yanath's arm. But the mad Tecultli pulled away and drove his
sword hard into Topal's body. Topal fell to the floor with a cry, and Yanath turned
for a moment in crazy circles. Then he ran to the glass- fronted shelves and began
to hit them with his sword while shouting the most terrible things.

Conan jumped on him from behind, trying to catch him by surprise. But Yanath turned
and went for him, screaming like a devil. The young fighter was hopelessly mad,
Conan realized, and he stepped to one side as Yanath ran past. Then he brought his
sword down heavily on Yanath's shoulder. The madman fell lifeless to the floor near
Topal.

Conan went to Topal. He was losing blood fast from the deep wound in his side, and
the barbarian could do nothing to save him. 'You're dying, Topal,' said Conan. 'Do
you want to send any word back to your people?'

'Bend closer,' whispered Topal. Conan did that. A second later, he caught the man's
wrist as Topal tried to drive a knife into the barbarian's chest.

'By the gods!' cried Conan. 'Are you mad, too?'

'Olmec ordered it,' whispered the dying man. 'I don't know why. As we took the
wounded people to their couches, he asked me quietly to kill you before we returned
to Tecultli -' And with the name of his clan on his lips, Topal died.

Conan looked at him wonderingly. Was Olmec mad, too? Were all the Tecultli mad?
Shrugging away these questions, he walked out of Xotalanc and left Yanath and Topal
lying dead before the staring, lifeless eyes of their clan-brothers.

Conan recognized the way back easily and needed no help. With his sword in his
hand, he was as watchful on the journey back to Tecultli as he had been on the
journey out to Xotalanc. But now he feared his past allies, not the ghosts of dead
Xotalancas.

The barbarian had already crossed the Great Hall and entered a corridor beyond it,
when he heard something in front of him. It sounded like someone pulling something
over the floor, and it stopped and started often. A low, choking voice spoke from
time to time in between the other noises.

Just then, Conan saw a man crawling across the floor toward him. It was Techotl,
and his eyes were glassy. He was bleeding badly from his chest. His hand covering
the wound was bloody, and with the other hand, he was pulling himself along.

'Conan!' Techotl sobbed when he saw the barbarian standing in front of him.
'Olmec's taken Valeria!'
'So that's why he wanted me dead!' Conan thought. He dropped to his knees by the
wounded man.

'I tried to stop him,' Techotl said.

'But he attacked me. He thought he'd killed me, but I crawled away.

Be careful, Conan! He'll try to ambush you. Kill him! Then leave with Valeria.
Olmec and Tascela lied about the dragons. They killed each other years ago, all
except the strongest. For twelve years, there's been only one dragon. If it's dead
now, then there are none. It was the prince's dragon-god. Olmec gave it human
sacrifices - the old and the sick. They were tied and thrown from the city wall. Go
quickly! He's taken Valeria to the Hall of...' Just then, his head dropped to one
side, and he died.

Conan ran off toward Tecultli, thinking fast. How many of the clan were left?
Seventeen, counting Olmec. Surely, he could beat them. Then he remembered Techotl's
words about an ambush.

'He's right!' he said aloud. 'Olmec planned for Topal to murder me, but he'll have
another plan ready, just to make sure.'

'The prince will think I'll return the same way that I left, so I'll enter Tecultli
from a lower floor,' he thought.

At the next stairs, he went down to the third floor and travelled west. After a
while, he knew he must be near Tecultli. Then he heard a noise. Somebody was trying
to cry out through a gag.

Conan followed the sound, which was repeated many times. At last, he stood by the
door from which the sound came. He opened it and looked inside, and was shocked at
what he saw.

CHAPTER TEN

HE COMES FROM THE DARKNESS

'Why did you bring me to this room?' asked Valeria. She sat on a couch with her
sword beside her, and her leg in front of her. A Tecultli woman was bandaging it.

'They've taken the wounded fighters to different rooms,' said the woman, finishing
her work. 'Then they'll take the dead bodies to the catacombs, to stop their ghosts
walking at night.'
'Ghosts?' asked Valeria.

'Yes. I saw the ghost of Tolkemec once in the catacombs,' the woman added. 'It took
the shape of an old man with long, white hair, and a beard. It was Tolkemec, I'm
sure. I saw him living when I was a child.'

She went on fearfully, 'Olmec laughs, but Tolkemec's ghost lives, I know. They say
the rats eat the meat from the bones of the newly dead - but I don't think it's
rats. I think...'

She looked up as a shadow fell across her. Valeria looked up also to find Olmec
staring down. The woman got up silently and left the room in a hurry.

'That bandage doesn't look right,' said the prince, bending over Valeria. 'Let's
see...'

A moment later, he had thrown her sword across the room, and was trying to take her
in his arms. Valeria pulled out a knife, but Olmec took her wrist in his hand,
crushing it until the knife fell to the floor. After Valeria bit his wrist, he hit
her on the side of the head. She fell back on the couch, unable to see straight.

Moments later, he was carrying her hurriedly from the room. She lay still for a
while. Conan was in Xotalanc, and she was sure that the Tecultli never questioned
the wishes of their prince. So she didn't call for help. But Olmec had his head on
one side, she noticed, like a thief listening for someone following him. They were
also going away from the throne room, she realized. So then, she screamed.

Suddenly, Techotl arrived. 'Olmec!' he shouted.

The prince turned angrily. He moved Valeria under his left arm, holding her around
the middle. She could not escape.

'Valeria is Conan's friend!' Techotl cried. 'They fought against the Xotalancas.
You mustn't...'

Without a word, Olmec closed his free hand into a ball and sent it hard into the
wounded fighter's face. Techotl fell to the floor. Then the prince, still with his
prisoner under his arm, pulled Techotl's sword from his belt and drove it into
Techotl's chest. Throwing the sword to one side, Olmec hurried off with Valeria.
Techotl rolled over onto his front and began crawling eastward.

Olmec carried Valeria downstairs and along several corridors to a large hall with a
metal door at one end.

'That door goes to the city outside Tecultli,' he said. 'We don't need guards here
now because Xotalanc is finished.'

'Conan will cut your throat for this!' cried Valeria.

'Forget Conan,' he answered. 'I'm Prince of Xuchotl now, too. We'll have no more
fighting here. Let's drink to that!'

He sat down on the edge of a stone table and held her in one arm. With his free
hand, he reached across for an open bottle of wine that was standing on the table.
He lifted it to Valeria's lips. 'Drink!' he ordered her.

Valeria turned her head. Wine fell down her shirt. 'She doesn't like your wine,'
said a woman's voice coolly.

Olmec turned to see Tascela at the door behind them.

She had a small gold bottle in her hand.

'Luckily, I have some of my wine. I brought it here years ago. Do you understand,
Olmec?'

Tascela came closer. 'You think only of yourself Olmec,' she said. 'But Valeria is
mine. You did wrong.'

Olmec answered angrily, 'Witch! She- devil! Why didn't Tecultli murder you fifty
years ago? Go, before I kill you!'

'Oh, Olmec,' the princess went on calmly. 'You can't fight me. You're a slave of
the black lotus, and I control you!'

She pushed him back to sit on the table. Then she put the gold bottle to his lips.
'Drink!' she ordered him. The prince drank. Suddenly, he fell to the floor, unable
to speak or move.

Valeria tried to attack Tascela, but the princess caught the pirate's wrists in one
unnaturally strong hand and tied her to a chair. Then she opened the metal door.
'Through here there's a torture room that we used once. There's a big machine left
there which will be very suitable.'

Fear showed in Olmec's eyes. 'Yes, you can hear me,' said Tascela. 'And soon the
drugged wine will stop working and you'll feel again. But it'll be too late.'

She pulled the prince effortlessly across the floor and through the door. Soon
after that, Valeria heard a machine working and a man's cries of pain.

Tascela returned alone. She closed the door behind her, and untied Valeria. 'I've
chosen you for something very special,' she said. 'I'm old inside, so I need your
youth to keep me young and beautiful. And now you're going to give it to me.'

Tascela pulled the pirate to her feet. Valeria stared into the witch's eyes and
knew she must obey.

In the room before Conan, Olmec, Prince of Tecultli was tied to a metal bed. He lay
face up with his head on a bed of nails. A ring of leather was fastened around his
head, and from this, a long chain went up to a metal box on the ceiling above his
chest. From this box, another chain came down with a heavy metal ball at the end.
While the prince lay still, the ball stayed where it was. But when the nails became
too painful, and he lifted his head, the metal ball dropped a little. When he could
no longer keep his head up, it fell back and everything began again.
'That ball's going to crush his chest!' Conan cried.

Olmec lifted his head and looked over at the barbarian. The gag in his mouth
stopped him speaking. But his dark eyes asked for help. Conan walked over to him.

'Where's Valeria?' asked the barbarian, taking the gag from the prince's mouth.

'Once I'm out of this machine, I'll tell you,' said Olmec.

'Hmm. Maybe I'll find her myself,' said Conan, standing up.

'Wait. Don't leave. Princess Tascela has her. Look, Tascela's a witch and I'm her
slave. I was just obeying orders.'

'But why does she want Valeria?' asked Conan.

'She needs Valeria's youth to stay young. She'll sacrifice her today. We must
hurry.'

'We?' said Conan.

'Yes. I can help you get into the castle. I know all the doors in and out of it.
Listen, Tascela thinks I'm helpless and you're dead. Let's arrive together and
surprise her!'

Minutes later, Olmec was a free man. At once, he took Conan to a secret entrance
into Tecultli. 'Only Tascela and I know of this,' he explained. 'Tecultli himself
built it fifty years ago, but one day, when he was returning from a fight with the
Xotalancas, the door didn't open. Tascela - who no longer loved him - had
discovered his secret and bolted it against him. So his enemies came and killed
him.'

Olmec pushed a golden button behind a pillar. A door opened in the wall. The prince
and the barbarian began to climb the stairs going up inside, and the door closed
behind them.

'These stairs take us up to the roof,' explained Olmec on the way. 'From there,
more stairs go down to the throne room.'

When they reached the roof, they walked along a short corridor to the top of the
other stairs. Suddenly, they heard a woman's scream far below. Conan recognized
Valeria's voice. He pushed past Olmec, and started hurrying down the stairs. Just
then, Olmec lifted his closed hand to hit the barbarian on the back of the head.
Conan turned just in time, and his fingers closed around the prince's throat. The
two of them fell, fighting, all the way down the stairs. They landed with a crash
at the bottom, rolling across the floor and banging against the throne room door.
This broke into pieces as they shot through it. Conan jumped up quickly, ready for
more. But Olmec's neck was broken, and he lay lifeless on the floor.

Then Conan turned and saw the others. Tascela sat on the throne. Valeria lay on a
black stone altar before the green steps. A young man held her wrists, and a young
woman held her ankles. Thirteen more men and women of Tecultli were on their knees
before the altar, and seven black candles burned in gold pots around it. These
candles sent clouds of sweet-smelling green smoke floating up to the ceiling.
Tascela stood. She walked to the altar and lifted a golden knife high in the air.

'Stop!' cried Conan, running toward her. But just then, a metal trap in the floor
closed around his leg. Its silver teeth bit into his skin. He was caught.

Tascela laughed. 'Stupid barbarian!' she cried. 'All the doors in this room have
traps before them. Now watch while your friend gives me the greatest present of all
- eternal life!'

Just then, a strange and terrible figure entered the room from a door by the green
steps. He had long white hair, a white beard, and grey skin.

'Tolkemec!' cried Tascela, putting the gold knife in her belt. 'Not a story, then,
not a ghost - you live! But why did you wait twelve years to return from the
catacombs?'

The old man laughed crazily and jumped over the trap before him in the floor. He
shook something madly in his hand. It was a long, green stick with a red ball at
the top.

'Ah, I see,' said Tascela. 'You were searching for something down in the catacombs,
and now you've found it.'

Tolkemec smiled toothlessly and pointed the stick straight at Tascela. Red lire
shot from the ball at the end of it toward her. She jumped to one side, and the
fire went past her. It hit the woman holding Valeria's ankles and she turned to
ash.

The other fourteen Tecultli in the room ran around screaming as the old wizard shot
them one by one with the fire-stick and turned them to ash. Soon only Conan,
Valeria, and Tascela were left. Valeria had run to Conan's side as soon as she
could. Now the princess joined them, putting a heavy silver knife in Conan's hand.

'Help me!' she cried. 'My magic spells are useless against Tolkemec. Kill him and
you can go free.'

She stepped on a gold button. The trap opened and its teeth went back down into the
red stone floor.

'Be careful,' cried Tascela. 'If you're between the altar or a metal door and the
fire-stick, Tolkemec can burn you to ash. Good luck!'

After that, the barbarian and the wizard danced around the room silently. Conan
stayed away from the altar and the metal doors, and Tolkemec tried to trick him
into making a mistake. But Conan cleverly moved closer all the time, and Tolkemec
never realized.

Suddenly, Valeria screamed. For a second, Conan stood between a metal door and the
fire-stick.

Tolkemec pointed the stick and shot while Conan turned, jumped, and threw the
silver knife. It landed squarely in the wizard's chest and the wizard fell down
dead, while the fire-stick rolled across the floor.

Tascela ran for it, but Valeria pulled the golden knife from Tascela's belt, drove
it deep into the witch's heart, and killed her.

'Good work,' laughed Conan.

'You too,' smiled Valeria. 'And now let's leave Xuchotl.'

'Yes, let's do that, and without any of its hellish treasure. Where shall we go
next?' he asked.

'It's a long way to the coast,' said Valeria.

'Don't worry. We'll be there in no time.'

And, arm in arm, the two of them left the dead city.

- THE END -

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