Almuric - Robert E. Howard (trending books to read TXT) 📗
- Author: Robert E. Howard
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warning. The watchman had not been as drowsy as I had expected.
He leaped at me, the starlight glinting on his spear. With a
desperate twist of my body, I avoided the whistling blade, though the
effort almost toppled me from the wall. My out-thrown hand gripped his
lank hair as he fell against the coping with the fury of his wasted
thrust, and jerking myself back into balance, I dealt him a crushing
buffet on the ear with my clenched fist. He crumpled, and the next
instant I was over the wall.
Ghor was bellowing like a bull in the river, mad to know what was
taking place above him, and in the dim light the Akkas were swarming
like bees out of their stony hives. Leaning over the barrier I
stretched Ghor the shaft of the watchman’s spear, and he came heaving
and scrambling up beside me. The Akkas had stared stupidly for an
instant; then realizing they were being invaded, they rushed, howling
madly.
As Ghor sprang to meet them, I leaped to the great windlass that
controlled the bridge. I heard the Bear’s thunderous war cry boom
above the squalling of the Akkas, the strident clash of steel and the
crunch of splintered bone. But I had no time to look; it was taking
all my strength to work the windlass. I had seen five Akkas toiling
together at it; yet in the stress of the moment I accomplished its
lowering single-handed, though sweat burst out on my forehead and my
muscles trembled with the effort. But down it came, and the farther
end touched the other bank in time to accommodate the feet of the
warriors who sprang up and rushed for it.
I wheeled to aid Ghor, whose panting gasps I still heard amidst the
clamor of the melee. I knew the din in the lower town would soon rouse
the Yagas and it was imperative that we gain a foothold in Akka before
the shafts of the winged men began to rain among us.
Ghor was hard pressed when I turned from the bridge-head. Half a
dozen corpses lay under his feet, and he wielded his great sword with
a berserk lustiness that sheared through flesh and bone like butter,
but he was streaming blood, and the Akkas were closing in on him.
I had no weapon but Gotrah’s dagger, but I sprang into the fray and
ripped a sword from the sinking hand of one whose heart my slim blade
found. It was a crude weapon, such as the Akkas forge, but it had edge
and weight, and swinging it like a club, I wrought havoc among the
swarming blue men. Ghor greeted my arrival with a gasping roar of
pleasure, and redoubled the fury of his tremendous strokes, so that
the dazed Akkas momentarily gave back.
And in that fleeting interval, the first of the Guras swarmed across
the bridge. In an instant fifty men had joined us. But there the
matter was deadlocked. Swarm after swarm of blue men rushed from their
huts to fall on us with reckless fury. One Gura was a match for three
or four Akkas, but they swamped us by numbers. They crushed us back
into the bridge mouth, and strive as we could, we could not advance
enough to clear the way for the hundreds of warriors behind us who
yelled and struggled to come to sword-strokes with the enemy. The
Akkas pressed in on us in a great crescent, almost crushing us against
the men behind us. They lined the walls, yelling and screaming and
brandishing their weapons. There were no bows or missiles among them;
their winged masters were careful to keep such things out of their
hands.
In the midst of the carnage dawn broke, and the struggling hordes
saw their enemies. Above us, I knew, the Yagas would be stirring.
Indeed I thought I could already hear the thrash of wings above the
roar of battle, but I could not look up. Breast to breast we were
locked with the heaving, grunting hordes, so closely there was no room
for sword-strokes. Their teeth and filthy nails tore at us beastlike;
their repulsive body odor was in our nostrils. In the crush we writhed
and cursed, each man striving to free a hand to strike.
My flesh crawled in dread of the arrows I knew must soon be raining
from above, and even with the thought the first volley came like a
whistling sheet of sleet. At my side and behind me men cried out,
clutching at the feathered ends protruding from their bodies. But then
the men on the bridge and on the farther bank, who had held their fire
for fear of hitting their comrades in the uncertain light, began
loosing their carbines at the Akkas. At that range their fire was
devastating. The first volley cleared the wall, and climbing on the
bridge rails the carbineers poured a withering fusillade over our
heads into the close-massed horde that barred our way. The result was
appalling. Great gaps were torn in the struggling mob, and the whole
horde staggered and tore apart. Unsupported by the mass behind, the
front ranks caved in, and over their mangled bodies we rushed into the
narrow streets of Akka.
Opposition was not at an end. The stocky blue men still fought back.
Up and down the streets sounded the clash of steel, crack of shots,
and yells of pain and fury. But our greatest peril was from above.
The winged men were swarming out of their citadel like hornets out
of a nest. Several hundred of them dropped swiftly down into Akka,
swords in their hands, while others lined the rim of the cliff and
poured down showers of arrows. Now the warriors hidden in the
shrub-masked ditches opened fire, and as that volley thundered, a rain of
mangled forms fell on the flat roofs of Akka. The survivors wheeled
and raced back to cover as swiftly as their wings could carry them.
But they were more deadly in defense than in attack. From every
casement, tower and battlement above they rained their arrows; a hail
of death showered Akka, striking down foe and serf alike. Guras and
Akkas took refuge in the stone-roofed huts, where the battling
continued in the low-ceilinged chambers until the gutters of Akka ran
red. Four thousand Guras battled four times their number of Akkas, but
the size, ferocity and superior weapons of the apemen balanced the
advantage of numbers.
Across the river Khossuth’s carbineers kept up an incessant fire at
the towers of Yugga, but with scant avail. The Yagas kept well
covered, and their arrows, arching down from the sky, had a greater
range and accuracy than the carbines of the Guras. But for their
position among the ditches, Khossuth’s men would have been wiped out
in short order, and as it was, they suffered terribly. They could not
join us in Akka; it would have been madness to try to cross the bridge
in the teeth of that fire.
Meanwhile, I ran straight for the temple of Yasmeena, cutting down
those who stood in my way. I had discarded the clumsy Akka sword for a
fine blade dropped by a slain Gura, and with this in my hand I cut my
way through a swarm of blue spearmen who made a determined stand
before the temple. With me were Ghor, Thab the Swift, Than
Swordswinger and a hundred other picked warriors.
As the last of our foes were trampled under foot, I sprang up the
black stone steps to the massive door, where the bizarre figure of the
Akka priest barred my way with shield and spear. I parried his spear
and feinted a thrust at his thigh. He lowered the great gold-scrolled
shield, and before he could lift it again I slashed off his head,
which rolled grinning down the steps. I caught up the shield as I
rushed into the temple.
I rushed across the temple and tore aside the golden screen. My men
crowded in behind me, panting, bloodstained, their fierce faces
lighted by the weird flame from the altar jewel. Fumbling in my haste,
I found and worked the secret catch. The door began to give,
reluctantly. It was this reluctance which fired my brain with sudden
suspicion, as I remembered how easily it had opened before. Even with
the thought I yelled, “Back!” and hurled myself backward as the door
gaped suddenly.
Instantly my ears were deafened by an awful roar, my eyes blinded by
a terrible flash. Something like a spurt of hell’s fire passed so
close by me it seared my hair in passing. Only my recoil, which
carried me behind the opening door, saved me from the torrent of
liquid fire which flooded the temple from the secret shaft.
There was a blind chaotic instant of frenzy, shot through with awful
screams. Then through the din I heard Ghor loudly bellowing my name,
and saw him stumbling blindly through the whirling smoke, his beard
and bristling hair burned crisp. As the lurid murk cleared somewhat, I
saw the remnants of my band—Ghor, Thab and a few others who by
quickness or luck had escaped. Than Swordswinger had been directly
behind me, and was knocked out of harm’s way when I leaped back. But
on the blackened floor of the temple lay three-score shriveled forms,
burned and charred out of all human recognition. They had been
directly in the path of that devouring sheet of flame as it rushed to
dissipate itself in the outer air.
The shaft seemed empty now. Fool to think that Yasmeena would leave
it unguarded, when she must have suspected that I escaped by that
route. On the edges of the door and the jamb I found bits of stuff
like wax. Some mysterious element had been sealed into the shaft which
the opening of the door ignited, sending it toward the outer air in a
rush of flame.
I knew the upper trap would be made fast. I shouted for Thab to find
and light a torch, and for Ghor to procure a heavy beam for a ram.
Then, telling Than to gather all the men he could find in the streets
and follow, I raced up the stair in the blackness. As I thought, I
found the upper trap fastened—bolted above, I suspected; and
listening closely, I caught a confused mumbling above my head, and
knew the chamber must be filled with Yagas.
An erratic flame bobbing below me drew my attention, and quickly
Thab reached my side with a torch. He was followed by Ghor and a score
of others, grunting under the weight of a heavy loglike beam, torn
from some Akka hut. He reported that fighting was still going on in
the streets and buildings, but that most of the Akka males had been
put to the sword, and others, with their women and children, had
leaped into the river and swum for the south shore. He said some five
hundred swordsmen were thronging the temple.
“Then burst this trap above our heads,” I exclaimed, “and follow me
through. We must win our way into the heart of the hold, before the
arrows of the Yagas on the tower overwhelm Khossuth.”
It was difficult in that narrow shaft, where only one man could
stand on each step, but gripping the heavy beam like a ram, we swung
it and dashed it against the trap. The thunder of the blows filled the
shaft deafeningly, the jarring impact stung our hands and quivered the
wood, but the trap held. Again—and again—panting, grunting, thews
cracking, we swung the beam—and with a final terrific drive
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