From the distance came the thin high wailing of pipes. Out of the side canyon men came pouring—barbarous men, half naked, their lean bodies smeared blue with woad. The men of Aynger! At their head ran Aynger himself, his gray beard flying, brandishing the hammer Helm–Breaker. The gray giant leaped upon a rock, gesturing toward the forces of Kiriath.
"Slay the oppressors!" he bellowed. "Slay! Slay!"
The weird pipes of the Amenalks shrilled their answer. The blue–painted men swept forward—
From the ranks of Sepher an arrow flew. It sped toward Aynger. It pierced his bare throat and drove deep—deep!
The Amenalk leader bellowed; his huge body arced like a bow. Blood spouted from his mouth.
A battalion charged out from the ranks of Kiriath. They sped toward the Amenalks, lances lowered, pennons flying.
Aynger fell! Dead, he toppled from the rock into the lifted arms of his men. The pipes skirled. The Amenalks, bearing their leader, turned and fled back into the valley!
Cursing, Elak dodged a shrewd thrust, killed his assailant, and spurred toward Sepher. The hilt of his rapier was slippery with blood. His body, under the chain armor, was a mass of agonizing bruises; blood gushed from more than one wound. His breath rasped in his throat. The stench of sweat and gore choked him; he drove over ground carpeted with the writhing bodies of men and horses.
Down the valley Dalan fought and bellowed his rage. The battle–thunder crashed on the towering crags and sent deafening echoes through the Gateway.
Still the trumpets of Kiriath called; still the drums and cymbals of Cyrena shouted their defiance.
And still Sepher slew, coldly, remorselessly, his bronzed face expressionless.
Kiriath gathered itself and charged. The forces of Cyrena were forced back, fighting desperately each step of the way. Back to the narrowing of the pass they were driven.
High above the archers loosed death on Kiriath.
With ever–increasing speed Sepher's army thrust forward. A gust of panic touched the ranks of Cyrena. A dragon banner was captured and slashed into flying shreds by keen blades.
Vainly Elak strove to rally his men. Vainly the Druid bellowed threats.
The retreat became a rout. Into the narrow defile the army fled, jammed into a struggling, fighting mob. An orderly retreat might have saved the day, for Kiriath could have been trapped in the narrow pass and crippled by boulders thrust down by the men stationed above. As it was, Cyrena was helpless, waiting to be slaughtered.
Kiriath charged.
Quite suddenly Elak heard a voice. In through the mountains. Above the call of trumpets came the thin wailing of pipes. Louder it grew, and louder.
From the side canyon the blue barbarians of Amenalk rushed in disorderly array. In their van a group ran together with lifted shields. Upon the shields was the body of Aynger!
Weirdly, eerily, the ear–piercing skirling of the pipes of Amenalk shrilled out. The woad–painted savages, mad with blood–frenzy, raced after the corpse of their ruler.
Dead Aynger led his men to war!
The Amenalks fell on the rear of the invaders. Flails and scythes and blades swung and glittered, and were lifted dripping red. A giant sprang upon the shield–platform, astride the body of Aynger. In his hand he brandished a war–hammer.
"Helm–Breaker!" he shouted. "He—Helm–Breaker!"
He leaped down; the great hammer rose and fell and slaughtered. Casques and helms shattered under the smashing blows; the Amenalk wielded Helm–Breaker in a circle of scarlet death about him.
"Helm–Breaker! Ho—slay! Slay!"
Kiriath swayed in confusion under the onslaught. In that breathing–space Elak and Dalan rallied their army. Cursing, yelling, brandishing steel, they whipped order out of chaos. Elak snatched a dragon banner from the dust, lifted it high.
He turned his horse's head down the valley. One hand lifting the standard, one gripping his bared rapier, he drove his spurs deep.
"Ho, the Dragon!" he shouted. "Cyrena! Cyrena!"
Down upon Kiriath he thundered. Behind him rode Lycon and the Druid. And after them the remnants of an army poured. Hira led his archers from the cliffs. The arbalasters came bounding like mountain goats, snatching up swords and spears, pouring afoot after their king.
"Cyrena!"
The drums and cymbals roared out again. Through the tumult pierced the thin, weird calling of the pipes.
"Helm–Breaker! Slay! Slay!"
And then madness—a hell of shouting, scarlet battle through which Elak charged, Dalan and Lycon beside him, riding straight for the bushy beard that marked Sepher. On and on, over screaming horses and dying men, through a whirlpool of flashing, thirsty steel, thrusting, stabbing, hacking—
The face of Sepher rose up before Elak.
The bronzed face of Kiriath's king was impassive; in his cold eyes dwelt something inhuman. Involuntarily an icy shudder racked Elak. As he paused momentarily the brand of Sepher whirled up and fell shattering in a great blow.
Elak did not try to escape. He poised his rapier, flung himself forward in his stirrups, sent the sharp blade thrusting out.
The enchanted steel plunged into Sepher's throat. Simultaneously Elak felt his back go numb under the sword–cut; his armor tore raggedly. The blade dug deep into the body of the war–horse.
The light went out of Sepher's eyes. He remained for a heart–beat upright in his saddle. Then his face changed.
It darkened with swift corruption. It blackened and rotted before Elak's eyes. Death, so long held at bay, sprang like a crouching beast.
A foul and loathsome thing fell forward and rumbled from the saddle. It dropped to the bloody ground and lay motionless. Black ichor oozed out from the chinks of the armor; the face that stared up blindly at the sky was a frightful thing.
And without warning darkness and utter silence dropped down and shrouded Elak.
10
The Black Vision
And the Devil That Deceived Them Was Cast Into the Lake of Fire and Brimstone, Where Are Also the Beast and the False Prophet; and They Shall be Tormented Day and Night for Ever and Ever
He felt again the dizzy vertigo that presaged the coming of Karkora. A high–pitched, droning whine rang shrilly in his ears; he felt a sense of swift movement. A picture came.
Once more he saw the giant crag that towered amid the mountains. The dark tower lifted from its summit. Elak was drawn forward; iron gates opened in the base of the pinnacle. They closed as he passed through.
The high whining had ceased. It was cimmerian dark. But in the gloom a Presence moved and stirred and was conscious of Elak.
The Pallid One sprang into view.
He felt a sense of whirling disorientation; his thoughts grew inchoate and confused. They were slipping away, spinning into the empty dark. In their place something crept and grew; a weird mental invasion took place. Power of Karkora surged through Elak's brain, forcing back the man's consciousness and soul, thrusting them out and back into the void. A dreamlike sense of unreality oppressed Elak.
Silently he called upon Dalan.
Dimly a golden flame flickered up, far away. Elak heard the Druid's voice whispering faintly, out of the abyss.
"Mider—aid him, Mider—"
Fires of Mider vanished. Elak felt again the sense of swift movement. He was lifted—
The darkness was gone. Gray light bathed him. He was, seemingly, in the tower on the summit of the crag—the citadel of Karkora. But the place was unearthly!
The planes and angles of the room in which Elak stood were warped and twisted insanely. Laws of matter and geometry seemed to have gone mad. Crawling curves swept obscenely in strange motion; there was no sense of perspective. The gray light was alive. It crept and shimmered. And the white shadow of Karkora blazed forth with chill and dreadful radiance.