<h2><SPAN name="I" id="I"></SPAN>I</h2>
<div class="sidenote"><i>Grimly Eric John Stark slogged toward that ancient Martian
city—with every step he cursed the talisman of Ban Cruach that flamed
in his blood-stained belt. Behind him screamed the hordes of Ciaran,
hungering for that magic jewel—ahead lay the dread abode of the Ice
Creatures—at his side stalked the whispering spectre of Ban Cruach,
urging him on to a battle Stark knew he must lose!</i></div>
<p>Through all the long cold hours of the Norland night the Martian had not
moved nor spoken. At dusk of the day before Eric John Stark had brought
him into the ruined tower and laid him down, wrapped in blankets, on the
snow. He had built a fire of dead brush, and since then the two men had
waited, alone in the vast wasteland that girdles the polar cap of Mars.</p>
<p>Now, just before dawn, Camar the Martian spoke.</p>
<p>"Stark."</p>
<p>"Yes?"</p>
<p>"I am dying."</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"I will not reach Kushat."</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>Camar nodded. He was silent again.</p>
<p>The wind howled down from the northern ice, and the broken walls rose up
against it, brooding, gigantic, roofless now but so huge and sprawling
that they seemed less like walls than cliffs of ebon stone. Stark would
not have gone near them but for Camar. They were wrong, somehow, with a
taint of forgotten evil still about them.</p>
<p>The big Earthman glanced at Camar, and his face was sad. "A man likes to
die in his own place," he said abruptly. "I am sorry."</p>
<p>"The Lord of Silence is a great personage," Camar answered. "He does not
mind the meeting place. No. It was not for that I came back into the
Norlands."</p>
<p>He was shaken by an agony that was not of the body. "And I shall not
reach Kushat!"</p>
<p>Stark spoke quietly, using the courtly High Martian almost as fluently
as Camar.</p>
<p>"I have known that there was a burden heavier than death upon my
brother's soul."</p>
<p>He leaned over, placing one large hand on the Martian's shoulder. "My
brother has given his life for mine. Therefore, I will take his burden
upon myself, if I can."</p>
<p>He did not want Camar's burden, whatever it might be. But the Martian
had fought beside him through a long guerilla campaign among the harried
tribes of the nearer moon. He was a good man of his hands, and in the
end had taken the bullet that was meant for Stark, knowing quite well
what he was doing. They were friends.</p>
<p>That was why Stark had brought Camar into the bleak north country,
trying to reach the city of his birth. The Martian was driven by some
secret demon. He was afraid to die before he reached Kushat.</p>
<p>And now he had no choice.</p>
<p>"I have sinned, Stark. I have stolen a holy thing. You're an outlander,
you would not know of Ban Cruach, and the talisman that he left when he
went away forever beyond the Gates of Death."</p>
<p>Camar flung aside the blankets and sat up, his voice gaining a febrile
strength.</p>
<p>"I was born and bred in the Thieves' Quarter under the Wall. I was proud
of my skill. And the talisman was a challenge. It was a treasured
thing—so treasured that hardly a man has touched it since the days of
Ban Cruach who made it. And that was in the days when men still had the
lustre on them, before they forgot that they were gods.</p>
<p>"'Guard well the Gates of Death,' he said, 'that is the city's trust.
And keep the talisman always, for the day may come when you will need
its strength. Who holds Kushat holds Mars—and the talisman will keep
the city safe.'</p>
<p>"I was a thief, and proud. And I stole the talisman."</p>
<p>His hands went to his girdle, a belt of worn leather with a boss of
battered steel. But his fingers were already numb.</p>
<p>"Take it, Stark. Open the boss—there, on the side, where the beast's
head is carved...."</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Stark took the belt from Camar and found the hidden spring. The rounded
top of the boss came free. Inside it was something wrapped in a scrap of
silk.</p>
<p>"I had to leave Kushat," Camar whispered. "I could never go back. But it
was enough—to have taken that."</p>
<p>He watched, shaken between awe and pride and remorse, as Stark unwrapped
the bit of silk.</p>
<p>Stark had discounted most of Camar's talk as superstition, but even so
he had expected something more spectacular than the object he held in
his palm.</p>
<p>It was a lens, some four inches across—man-made, and made with great
skill, but still only a bit of crystal. Turning it about, Stark saw that
it was not a simple lens, but an intricate interlocking of many facets.
Incredibly complicated, hypnotic if one looked at it too long.</p>
<p>"What is its use?" he asked of Camar.</p>
<p>"We are as children. We have forgotten. But there is a legend, a
belief—that Ban Cruach himself made the talisman as a sign that he
would not forget us, and would come back when Kushat is threatened. Back
through the Gates of Death, to teach us again the power that was his!"</p>
<p>"I do not understand," said Stark. "What are the Gates of Death?"</p>
<p>Camar answered, "It is a pass that opens into the black mountains beyond
Kushat. The city stands guard before it—why, no man remembers, except
that it is a great trust."</p>
<p>His gaze feasted on the talisman.</p>
<p>Stark said, "You wish me to take this to Kushat?"</p>
<p>"Yes. Yes! And yet...." Camar looked at Stark, his eyes filling suddenly
with tears. "No. The North is not used to strangers. With me, you might
have been safe. But alone.... No, Stark. You have risked too much
already. Go back, out of the Norlands, while you can."</p>
<p>He lay back on the blankets. Stark saw that a bluish pallor had come
into the hollows of his cheeks.</p>
<p>"Camar," he said. And again, "Camar!"</p>
<p>"Yes?"</p>
<p>"Go in peace, Camar. I will take the talisman to Kushat."</p>
<p>The Martian sighed, and smiled, and Stark was glad that he had made the
promise.</p>
<p>"The riders of Mekh are wolves," said Camar suddenly. "They hunt these
gorges. Look out for them."</p>
<p>"I will."</p>
<p>Stark's knowledge of the geography of this part of Mars was vague
indeed, but he knew that the mountain valleys of Mekh lay ahead and to
the north, between him and Kushat. Camar had told him of these upland
warriors. He was willing to heed the warning.</p>
<p>Camar had done with talking. Stark knew that he had not long to wait.
The wind spoke with the voice of a great organ. The moons had set and it
was very dark outside the tower, except for the white glimmering of the
snow. Stark looked up at the brooding walls, and shivered. There was a
smell of death already in the air.</p>
<p>To keep from thinking, he bent closer to the fire, studying the lens.
There were scratches on the bezel, as though it had been held sometime
in a clamp, or setting, like a jewel. An ornament, probably, worn as a
badge of rank. Strange ornament for a barbarian king, in the dawn of
Mars. The firelight made tiny dancing sparks in the endless inner
facets. Quite suddenly, he had a curious feeling that the thing was
alive.</p>
<p>A pang of primitive and unreasoning fear shot through him, and he fought
it down. His vision was beginning to blur, and he shut his eyes, and in
the darkness it seemed to him that he could see and hear....</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>He started up, shaken now with an eerie terror, and raised his hand to
hurl the talisman away. But the part of him that had learned with much
pain and effort to be civilized made him stop, and think.</p>
<p>He sat down again. An instrument of hypnosis? Possibly. And yet that
fleeting touch of sight and sound had not been his own, out of his own
memories.</p>
<p>He was tempted now, fascinated, like a child that plays with fire. The
talisman had been worn somehow. Where? On the breast? On the brow?</p>
<p>He tried the first, with no result. Then he touched the flat surface of
the lens to his forehead.</p>
<p><i>The great tower of stone rose up monstrous to the sky. It was whole,
and there were pallid lights within that stirred and flickered, and it
was crowned with a shimmering darkness.</i></p>
<p>He lay outside the tower, on his belly, and he was filled with fear and
a great anger, and a loathing such as turns the bones to water. There
was no snow. There was ice everywhere, rising to half the tower's
height, sheathing the ground.</p>
<p>Ice. Cold and clear and beautiful—and deadly.</p>
<p>He moved. He glided snakelike, with infinite caution, over the smooth
surface. The tower was gone, and far below him was a city. He saw the
temples and the palaces, the glittering lovely city beneath him in the
ice, blurred and fairylike and strange, a dream half glimpsed through
crystal.</p>
<p>He saw the Ones that lived there, moving slowly through the streets. He
could not see them clearly, only the vague shining of their bodies, and
he was glad.</p>
<p>He hated them, with a hatred that conquered even his fear, which was
great indeed.</p>
<p>He was not Eric John Stark. He was Ban Cruach.</p>
<p>The tower and the city vanished, swept away on a reeling tide.</p>
<p>He stood beneath a scarp of black rock, notched with a single pass. The
cliffs hung over him, leaning out their vast bulk as though to crush
him, and the narrow mouth of the pass was full of evil laughter where
the wind went by.</p>
<p>He began to walk forward, into the pass. He was quite alone.</p>
<p>The light was dim and strange at the bottom of that cleft. Little veils
of mist crept and clung between the ice and the rock, thickened, became
more dense as he went farther and farther into the pass. He could not
see, and the wind spoke with many tongues, piping in the crevices of the
cliffs.</p>
<p>All at once there was a shadow in the mist before him, a dim gigantic
shape that moved toward him, and he knew that he looked at death. He
cried out....</p>
<p>It was Stark who yelled in blind atavistic fear, and the echo of his own
cry brought him up standing, shaking in every limb. He had dropped the
talisman. It lay gleaming in the snow at his feet, and the alien
memories were gone—and Camar was dead.</p>
<p>After a time he crouched down, breathing harshly. He did not want to
touch the lens again. The part of him that had learned to fear strange
gods and evil spirits with every step he took, the primitive aboriginal
that lay so close under the surface of his mind, warned him to leave it,
to run away, to desert this place of death and ruined stone.</p>
<p>He forced himself to take it up. He did not look at it. He wrapped it in
the bit of silk and replaced it inside the iron boss, and clasped the
belt around his waist. Then he found the small flask that lay with his
gear beside the fire and took a long pull, and tried to think rationally
of the thing that had happened.</p>
<p>Memories. Not his own, but the memories of Ban Cruach, a million years
ago in the morning of a world. Memories of hate, a secret war against
unhuman beings that dwelt in crystal cities cut in the living ice, and
used these ruined towers for some dark purpose of their own.</p>
<p>Was that the meaning of the talisman, the power that lay within it? Had
Ban Cruach, by some elder and forgotten science, imprisoned the echoes
of his own mind in the crystal?</p>
<p>Why? Perhaps as a warning, as a reminder of ageless, alien danger beyond
the Gates of Death?</p>
<p>Suddenly one of the beasts tethered outside the ruined tower started up
from its sleep with a hissing snarl.</p>
<p>Instantly Stark became motionless.</p>
<p>They came silently on their padded feet, the rangy mountain brutes
moving daintily through the sprawling ruin. Their riders too were
silent—tall men with fierce eyes and russet hair, wearing leather coats
and carrying each a long, straight spear.</p>
<p>There were a score of them around the tower in the windy gloom. Stark
did not bother to draw his gun. He had learned very young the difference
between courage and idiocy.</p>
<p>He walked out toward them, slowly lest one of them be startled into
spearing him, yet not slowly enough to denote fear. And he held up his
right hand and gave them greeting.</p>
<p>They did not answer him. They sat their restive mounts and stared at
him, and Stark knew that Camar had spoken the truth. These were the
riders of Mekh, and they were wolves.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="II" id="II"></SPAN>II</h2>
<p>Stark waited, until they should tire of their own silence.</p>
<p>Finally one demanded, "Of what country are you?"</p>
<p>He answered, "I am called N'Chaka, the Man-Without-a-Tribe."</p>
<p>It was the name they had given him, the half-human aboriginals who had
raised him in the blaze and thunder and bitter frosts of Mercury.</p>
<p>"A stranger," said the leader, and smiled. He pointed at the dead Camar
and asked, "Did you slay him?"</p>
<p>"He was my friend," said Stark, "I was bringing him home to die."</p>
<p>Two riders dismounted to inspect the body. One called up to the leader,
"He was from Kushat, if I know the breed, Thord! And he has not been
robbed." He proceeded to take care of that detail himself.</p>
<p>"A stranger," repeated the leader, Thord. "Bound for Kushat, with a man
of Kushat. Well. I think you will come with us, stranger."</p>
<p>Stark shrugged. And with the long spears pricking him, he did not resist
when the tall Thord plundered him of all he owned except his
clothes—and Camar's belt, which was not worth the stealing. His gun
Thord flung contemptuously away.</p>
<p>One of the men brought Stark's beast and Camar's from where they were
tethered, and the Earthman mounted—as usual, over the violent protest
of the creature, which did not like the smell of him. They moved out
from under the shelter of the walls, into the full fury of the wind.</p>
<p>For the rest of that night, and through the next day and the night that
followed it they rode eastward, stopping only to rest the beasts and
chew on their rations of jerked meat.</p>
<p>To Stark, riding a prisoner, it came with full force that this was the
North country, half a world away from the Mars of spaceships and
commerce and visitors from other planets. The future had never touched
these wild mountains and barren plains. The past held pride enough.</p>
<p>To the north, the horizon showed a strange and ghostly glimmer where the
barrier wall of the polar pack reared up, gigantic against the sky. The
wind blew, down from the ice, through the mountain gorges, across the
plains, never ceasing. And here and there the cryptic towers rose,
broken monoliths of stone. Stark remembered the vision of the talisman,
the huge structure crowned with eerie darkness. He looked upon the ruins
with loathing and curiosity. The men of Mekh could tell him nothing.</p>
<p>Thord did not tell Stark where they were taking him, and Stark did not
ask. It would have been an admission of fear.</p>
<p>In mid-afternoon of the second day they came to a lip of rock where the
snow was swept clean, and below it was a sheer drop into a narrow
valley. Looking down, Stark saw that on the floor of the valley, up and
down as far as he could see, were men and beasts and shelters of hide
and brush, and fires burning. By the hundreds, by the several thousand,
they camped under the cliffs, and their voices rose up on the thin air
in a vast deep murmur that was deafening after the silence of the
plains.</p>
<p>A war party, gathered now, before the thaw. Stark smiled. He became
curious to meet the leader of this army.</p>
<p>They found their way single file along a winding track that dropped down
the cliff face. The wind stopped abruptly, cut off by the valley walls.
They came in among the shelters of the camp.</p>
<p>Here the snow was churned and soiled and melted to slush by the fires.
There were no women in the camp, no sign of the usual cheerful rabble
that follows a barbarian army. There were only men—hillmen and warriors
all, tough-handed killers with no thought but battle.</p>
<p>They came out of their holes to shout at Thord and his men, and stare at
the stranger. Thord was flushed and jovial with importance.</p>
<p>"I have no time for you," he shouted back. "I go to speak with the Lord
Ciaran."</p>
<p>Stark rode impassively, a dark giant with a face of stone. From time to
time he made his beast curvet, and laughed at himself inwardly for doing
it.</p>
<p>They came at length to a shelter larger than the others, but built
exactly the same and no more comfortable. A spear was thrust into the
snow beside the entrance, and from it hung a black pennant with a single
bar of silver across it, like lightning in a night sky. Beside it was a
shield with the same device. There were no guards.</p>
<p>Thord dismounted, bidding Stark to do the same. He hammered on the
shield with the hilt of his sword, announcing himself.</p>
<p>"Lord Ciaran! It is Thord—with a captive."</p>
<p>A voice, toneless and strangely muffled, spoke from within.</p>
<p>"Enter, Thord."</p>
<p>Thord pushed aside the hide curtain and went in, with Stark at his
heels.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>The dim daylight did not penetrate the interior. Cressets burned, giving
off a flickering brilliance and a smell of strong oil. The floor of
packed snow was carpeted with furs, much worn. Otherwise there was no
adornment, and no furniture but a chair and a table, both dark with age
and use, and a pallet of skins in one shadowy corner with what seemed to
be a heap of rags upon it.</p>
<p>In the chair sat a man.</p>
<p>He seemed very tall, in the shaking light of the cressets. From neck to
thigh his lean body was cased in black link mail, and under that a tunic
of leather, dyed black. Across his knees he held a sable axe, a great
thing made for the shearing of skulls, and his hands lay upon it gently,
as though it were a toy he loved.</p>
<p>His head and face were covered by a thing that Stark had seen before
only in very old paintings—the ancient war-mask of the inland Kings of
Mars. Wrought of black and gleaming steel, it presented an unhuman
visage of slitted eyeholes and a barred slot for breathing. Behind, it
sprang out in a thin, soaring sweep, like a dark wing edge-on in flight.</p>
<p>The intent, expressionless scrutiny of that mask was bent, not upon
Thord, but upon Eric John Stark.</p>
<p>The hollow voice spoke again, from behind the mask. "Well?"</p>
<p>"We were hunting in the gorges to the south," said Thord. "We saw a
fire...." He told the story, of how they had found the stranger and the
body of the man from Kushat.</p>
<p>"Kushat!" said the Lord Ciaran softly. "Ah! And why, stranger, were you
going to Kushat?"</p>
<p>"My name is Stark. Eric John Stark, Earthman, out of Mercury." He was
tired of being called stranger. Quite suddenly, he was tired of the
whole business.</p>
<p>"Why should I not go to Kushat? Is it against some law, that a man may
not go there in peace without being hounded all over the Norlands? And
why do the men of Mekh make it their business? They have nothing to do
with the city."</p>
<p>Thord held his breath, watching with delighted anticipation.</p>
<p>The hands of the man in armor caressed the axe. They were slender hands,
smooth and sinewy—small hands, it seemed, for such a weapon.</p>
<p>"We make what we will our business, Eric John Stark." He spoke with a
peculiar gentleness. "I have asked you. Why were you going to Kushat?"</p>
<p>"Because," Stark answered with equal restraint, "my comrade wanted to go
home to die."</p>
<p>"It seems a long, hard journey, just for dying." The black helm bent
forward, in an attitude of thought. "Only the condemned or banished
leave their cities, or their clans. Why did your comrade flee Kushat?"</p>
<p>A voice spoke suddenly from out of the heap of rags that lay on the
pallet in the shadows of the corner. A man's voice, deep and husky, with
the harsh quaver of age or madness in it.</p>
<p>"Three men beside myself have fled Kushat, over the years that matter.
One died in the spring floods. One was caught in the moving ice of
winter. One lived. A thief named Camar, who stole a certain talisman."</p>
<p>Stark said, "My comrade was called Greshi." The leather belt weighed
heavy about him, and the iron boss seemed hot against his belly. He was
beginning, now, to be afraid.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>The Lord Ciaran spoke, ignoring Stark. "It was the sacred talisman of
Kushat. Without it, the city is like a man without a soul."</p>
<p>As the Veil of Tanit was to Carthage, Stark thought, and reflected on
the fate of that city after the Veil was stolen.</p>
<p>"The nobles were afraid of their own people," the man in armor said.
"They did not dare to tell that it was gone. But we know."</p>
<p>"And," said Stark, "you will attack Kushat before the thaw, when they
least expect you."</p>
<p>"You have a sharp mind, stranger. Yes. But the great wall will be hard
to carry, even so. If I came, bearing in <i>my</i> hands the talisman of Ban
Cruach...."</p>
<p>He did not finish, but turned instead to Thord. "When you plundered the
dead man's body, what did you find?"</p>
<p>"Nothing, Lord. A few coins, a knife, hardly worth the taking."</p>
<p>"And you, Eric John Stark. What did you take from the body?"</p>
<p>With perfect truth he answered, "Nothing."</p>
<p>"Thord," said the Lord Ciaran, "search him."</p>
<p>Thord came smiling up to Stark and ripped his jacket open.</p>
<p>With uncanny swiftness, the Earthman moved. The edge of one broad hand
took Thord under the ear, and before the man's knees had time to sag
Stark had caught his arm. He turned, crouching forward, and pitched
Thord headlong through the door flap.</p>
<p>He straightened and turned again. His eyes held a feral glint. "The man
has robbed me once," he said. "It is enough."</p>
<p>He heard Thord's men coming. Three of them tried to jam through the
entrance at once, and he sprang at them. He made no sound. His fists did
the talking for him, and then his feet, as he kicked the stunned
barbarians back upon their leader.</p>
<p>"Now," he said to the Lord Ciaran, "will we talk as men?"</p>
<p>The man in armor laughed, a sound of pure enjoyment. It seemed that the
gaze behind the mask studied Stark's savage face, and then lifted to
greet the sullen Thord who came back into the shelter, his cheeks
flushed crimson with rage.</p>
<p>"Go," said the Lord Ciaran. "The stranger and I will talk."</p>
<p>"But Lord," he protested, glaring at Stark, "it is not safe...."</p>
<p>"My dark mistress looks after my safety," said Ciaran, stroking the axe
across his knees. "Go."</p>
<p>Thord went.</p>
<p>The man in armor was silent then, the blind mask turned to Stark, who
met that eyeless gaze and was silent also. And the bundle of rags in the
shadows straightened slowly and became a tall old man with rusty hair
and beard, through which peered craggy juts of bone and two bright,
small points of fire, as though some wicked flame burned within him.</p>
<p>He shuffled over and crouched at the feet of the Lord Ciaran, watching
the Earthman. And the man in armor leaned forward.</p>
<p>"I will tell you something, Eric John Stark. I am a bastard, but I come
of the blood of kings. My name and rank I must make with my own hands.
But I will set them high, and my name will ring in the Norlands!</p>
<p>"I will take Kushat. Who holds Kushat, holds Mars—and the power and the
riches that lie beyond the Gates of Death!"</p>
<p>"I have seen them," said the old man, and his eyes blazed. "I have seen
Ban Cruach the mighty. I have seen the temples and the palaces glitter
in the ice. I have seen <i>Them</i>, the shining ones. Oh, I have seen them,
the beautiful, hideous ones!"</p>
<p>He glanced sidelong at Stark, very cunning. "That is why Otar is mad,
stranger. <i>He has seen.</i>"</p>
<p>A chill swept Stark. He too had seen, not with his own eyes but with the
mind and memories of Ban Cruach, of a million years ago.</p>
<p>Then it had been no illusion, the fantastic vision opened to him by the
talisman now hidden in his belt! If this old madman had seen....</p>
<p>"What beings lurk beyond the Gates of Death I do not know," said Ciaran.
"But my dark mistress will test their strength—and I think my red
wolves will hunt them down, once they get a smell of plunder."</p>
<p>"The beautiful, terrible ones," whispered Otar. "And oh, the temples and
the palaces, and the great towers of stone!"</p>
<p>"Ride with me, Stark," said the Lord Ciaran abruptly. "Yield up the
talisman, and be the shield at my back. I have offered no other man that
honor."</p>
<p>Stark asked slowly, "Why do you choose me?"</p>
<p>"We are of one blood, Stark, though we be strangers."</p>
<p>The Earthman's cold eyes narrowed. "What would your red wolves say to
that? And what would Otar say? Look at him, already stiff with jealousy,
and fear lest I answer, 'Yes'."</p>
<p>"I do not think you would be afraid of either of them."</p>
<p>"On the contrary," said Stark, "I am a prudent man." He paused. "There
is one other thing. I will bargain with no man until I have looked into
his eyes. Take off your helm, Ciaran—and then perhaps we will talk!"</p>
<p>Otar's breath made a snakelike hissing between his toothless gums, and
the hands of the Lord Ciaran tightened on the haft of the axe.</p>
<p>"No!" he whispered. "That I can never do."</p>
<p>Otar rose to his feet, and for the first time Stark felt the full
strength that lay in this strange old man.</p>
<p>"Would you look upon the face of destruction?" he thundered. "Do you ask
for death? Do you think a thing is hidden behind a mask of steel without
a reason, that you demand to see it?"</p>
<p>He turned. "My Lord," he said. "By tomorrow the last of the clans will
have joined us. After that, we must march. Give this Earthman to Thord,
for the time that remains—and you will have the talisman."</p>
<p>The blank, blind mask was unmoving, turned toward Stark, and the
Earthman thought that from behind it came a faint sound that might have
been a sigh.</p>
<p>Then....</p>
<p>"Thord!" cried the Lord Ciaran, and lifted up the axe.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="III" id="III"></SPAN>III</h2>
<p>The flames leaped high from the fire in the windless gorge. Men sat
around it in a great circle, the wild riders out of the mountain valleys
of Mekh. They sat with the curbed and shivering eagerness of wolves
around a dying quarry. Now and again their white teeth showed in a kind
of silent laughter, and their eyes watched.</p>
<p>"He is strong," they whispered, one to the other. "He will live the
night out, surely!"</p>
<p>On an outcrop of rock sat the Lord Ciaran, wrapped in a black cloak,
holding the great axe in the crook of his arm. Beside him, Otar huddled
in the snow.</p>
<p>Close by, the long spears had been driven deep and lashed together to
make a scaffolding, and upon this frame was hung a man. A big man,
iron-muscled and very lean, the bulk of his shoulders filling the space
between the bending shafts. Eric John Stark of Earth, out of Mercury.</p>
<p>He had already been scourged without mercy. He sagged of his own weight
between the spears, breathing in harsh sobs, and the trampled snow
around him was spotted red.</p>
<p>Thord was wielding the lash. He had stripped off his own coat, and his
body glistened with sweat in spite of the cold. He cut his victim with
great care, making the long lash sing and crack. He was proud of his
skill.</p>
<p>Stark did not cry out.</p>
<p>Presently Thord stepped back, panting, and looked at the Lord Ciaran.
And the black helm nodded.</p>
<p>Thord dropped the whip. He went up to the big dark man and lifted his
head by the hair.</p>
<p>"Stark," he said, and shook the head roughly. "Stranger!"</p>
<p>Eyes opened and stared at him, and Thord could not repress a slight
shiver. It seemed that the pain and indignity had wrought some evil
magic on this man he had ridden with, and thought he knew. He had seen
exactly the same gaze in a big snow-cat caught in a trap, and he felt
suddenly that it was not a man he spoke to, but a predatory beast.</p>
<p>"Stark," he said. "Where is the talisman of Ban Cruach?"</p>
<p>The Earthman did not answer.</p>
<p>Thord laughed. He glanced up at the sky, where the moons rode low and
swift.</p>
<p>"The night is only half gone. Do you think you can last it out?"</p>
<p>The cold, cruel, patient eyes watched Thord. There was no reply.</p>
<p>Some quality of pride in that gaze angered the barbarian. It seemed to
mock him, who was so sure of his ability to loosen a reluctant tongue.</p>
<p>"You think I cannot make you talk, don't you? You don't know me,
stranger! You don't know Thord, who can make the rocks speak out if he
will!"</p>
<p>He reached out with his free hand and struck Stark across the face.</p>
<p>It seemed impossible that anything so still could move so quickly. There
was an ugly flash of teeth, and Thord's wrist was caught above the
thumb-joint. He bellowed, and the iron jaws closed down, worrying the
bone.</p>
<p>Quite suddenly, Thord screamed. Not for pain, but for panic. And the
rows of watching men swayed forward, and even the Lord Ciaran rose up,
startled.</p>
<p>"<i>Hark!</i>" ran the whispering around the fire. "Hark how he growls!"</p>
<p>Thord had let go of Stark's hair and was beating him about the head with
his clenched fist. His face was white.</p>
<p>"Werewolf!" he screamed. "Let me go, beast-thing! Let me go!"</p>
<p>But the dark man clung to Thord's wrist, snarling, and did not hear.
After a bit there came the dull crack of bone.</p>
<p>Stark opened his jaws. Thord ceased to strike him. He backed off slowly,
staring at the torn flesh. Stark had sunk down to the length of his
arms.</p>
<p>With his left hand, Thord drew his knife. The Lord Ciaran stepped
forward. "Wait, Thord!"</p>
<p>"It is a thing of evil," whispered the barbarian. "Warlock. Werewolf.
Beast."</p>
<p>He sprang at Stark.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>The man in armor moved, very swiftly, and the great axe went whirling
through the air. It caught Thord squarely where the cords of his neck
ran into the shoulder—caught, and shore on through.</p>
<p>There was a silence in the valley.</p>
<p>The Lord Ciaran walked slowly across the trampled snow and took up his
axe again.</p>
<p>"I will be obeyed," he said. "And I will not stand for fear, not of god,
man, nor devil." He gestured toward Stark. "Cut him down. And see that
he does not die."</p>
<p>He strode away, and Otar began to laugh.</p>
<p>From a vast distance, Stark heard that shrill, wild laughter. His mouth
was full of blood, and he was mad with a cold fury.</p>
<p>A cunning that was purely animal guided his movements then. His head
fell forward, and his body hung inert against the thongs. He might
almost have been dead.</p>
<p>A knot of men came toward him. He listened to them. They were hesitant
and afraid. Then, as he did not move, they plucked up courage and came
closer, and one prodded him gently with the point of his spear.</p>
<p>"Prick him well," said another. "Let us be sure!"</p>
<p>The sharp point bit a little deeper. A few drops of blood welled out and
joined the small red streams that ran from the weals of the lash. Stark
did not stir.</p>
<p>The spearman grunted. "He is safe enough now."</p>
<p>Stark felt the knife blades working at the thongs. He waited. The
rawhide snapped, and he was free.</p>
<p>He did not fall. He would not have fallen then if he had taken a death
wound. He gathered his legs under him and sprang.</p>
<p>He picked up the spearman in that first rush and flung him into the
fire. Then he began to run toward the place where the scaly mounts were
herded, leaving a trail of blood behind him on the snow.</p>
<p>A man loomed up in front of him. He saw the shadow of a spear and
swerved, and caught the haft in his two hands. He wrenched it free and
struck down with the butt of it, and went on. Behind him he heard voices
shouting and the beginning of turmoil.</p>
<p>The Lord Ciaran turned and came back, striding fast.</p>
<p>There were men before Stark now, many men, the circle of watchers
breaking up because there had been nothing more to watch. He gripped the
long spear. It was a good weapon, better than the flint-tipped stick
with which the boy N'Chaka had hunted the giant lizard of the rocks.</p>
<p>His body curved into a half crouch. He voiced one cry, the challenging
scream of a predatory killer, and went in among the men.</p>
<p>He did slaughter with that spear. They were not expecting attack. They
were not expecting anything. Stark had sprung to life too quickly. And
they were afraid of him. He could smell the fear on them. Fear not of a
man like themselves, but of a creature less and more than man.</p>
<p>He killed, and was happy.</p>
<p>They fell away from him, the wild riders of Mekh. They were sure now
that he was a demon. He raged among them with the bright spear, and they
heard again that sound that should not have come from a human throat,
and their superstitious terror rose and sent them scrambling out of his
path, trampling on each other in childish panic.</p>
<p>He broke through, and now there was nothing between him and escape but
two mounted men who guarded the herd.</p>
<p>Being mounted, they had more courage. They felt that even a warlock
could not stand against their charge. They came at him as he ran, the
padded feet of their beasts making a muffled drumming in the snow.</p>
<p>Without breaking stride, Stark hurled his spear.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>It drove through one man's body and tumbled him off, so that he fell
under his comrade's mount and fouled its legs. It staggered and reared
up, hissing, and Stark fled on.</p>
<p>Once he glanced over his shoulder. Through the milling, shouting crowd
of men he glimpsed a dark, mailed figure with a winged mask, going
through the ruck with a loping stride and bearing a sable axe raised
high for the throwing.</p>
<p>Stark was close to the herd now. And they caught his scent.</p>
<p>The Norland brutes had never liked the smell of him, and now the reek of
blood upon him was enough in itself to set them wild. They began to hiss
and snarl uneasily, rubbing their reptilian flanks together as they
wheeled around, staring at him with lambent eyes.</p>
<p>He rushed them, before they should quite decide to break. He was quick
enough to catch one by the fleshy comb that served it for a forelock,
held it with savage indifference to its squealing, and leaped to its
back. Then he let it bolt, and as he rode it he yelled, a shrill brute
cry that urged the creatures on to panic.</p>
<p>The herd broke, stampeding outward from its center like a bursting
shell.</p>
<p>Stark was in the forefront. Clinging low to the scaly neck, he saw the
men of Mekh scattered and churned and tramped into the snow by the
flying pads. In and out of the shelters, kicking the brush walls down,
lifting up their harsh reptilian voices, they went racketing through the
camp, leaving behind them wreckage as of a storm. And Stark went with
them.</p>
<p>He snatched a cloak from off the shoulders of some petty chieftain as he
went by, and then, twisting cruelly on the fleshy comb, beating with his
fist at the creature's head, he got his mount turned in the way he
wanted it to go, down the valley.</p>
<p>He caught one last glimpse of the Lord Ciaran, fighting to hold one of
the creatures long enough to mount, and then a dozen striving bodies
surged around him, and Stark was gone.</p>
<p>The beast did not slacken pace. It was as though it thought it could
outrun the alien, bloody thing that clung to its back. The last fringes
of the camp shot by and vanished in the gloom, and the clean snow of the
lower valley lay open before it. The creature laid its belly to the
ground and went, the white spray spurting from its heels.</p>
<p>Stark hung on. His strength was gone now, run out suddenly with the
battle-madness. He became conscious now that he was sick and bleeding,
that his body was one cruel pain. In that moment, more than in the hours
that had gone before, he hated the black leader of the clans of Mekh.</p>
<p>That flight down the valley became a sort of ugly dream. Stark was aware
of rock walls reeling past, and then they seemed to widen away and the
wind came out of nowhere like the stroke of a great hammer, and he was
on the open moors again.</p>
<p>The beast began to falter and slow down. Presently it stopped.</p>
<p>Stark scooped up snow to rub on his wounds. He came near to fainting,
but the bleeding stopped and after that the pain was numbed to a dull
ache. He wrapped the cloak around him and urged the beast to go on,
gently this time, patiently, and after it had breathed it obeyed him,
settling into the shuffling pace it could keep up for hours.</p>
<p>He was three days on the moors. Part of the time he rode in a sort of
stupor, and part of the time he was feverishly alert, watching the
skyline. Frequently he took the shapes of thrusting rocks for riders,
and found what cover he could until he was sure they did not move. He
was afraid to dismount, for the beast had no bridle. When it halted to
rest he remained upon its back, shaking, his brow beaded with sweat.</p>
<p>The wind scoured his tracks clean as soon as he made them. Twice, in the
distance, he did see riders, and one of those times he burrowed into a
tall drift and stayed there for several hours.</p>
<p>The ruined towers marched with him across the bitter land, lonely giants
fifty miles apart. He did not go near them.</p>
<p>He knew that he wandered a good bit, but he could not help it, and it
was probably his salvation. In those tortured badlands, riven by ages of
frost and flood, one might follow a man on a straight track between two
points. But to find a single rider lost in that wilderness was a matter
of sheer luck, and the odds were with Stark.</p>
<p>One evening at sunset he came out upon a plain that sloped upward to a
black and towering scarp, notched with a single pass.</p>
<p>The light was level and blood-red, glittering on the frosty rock so that
it seemed the throat of the pass was aflame with evil fires. To Stark's
mind, essentially primitive and stripped now of all its acquired reason,
that narrow cleft appeared as the doorway to the dwelling place of
demons as horrible as the fabled creatures that roam the Darkside of his
native world.</p>
<p>He looked long at the Gates of Death, and a dark memory crept into his
brain. Memory of that nightmare experience when the talisman had made
him seem to walk into that frightful pass, not as Stark, but as Ban
Cruach.</p>
<p>He remembered Otar's words—<i>I have seen Ban Cruach the mighty</i>. Was he
still there beyond those darkling gates, fighting his unimagined war,
alone?</p>
<p>Again, in memory, Stark heard the evil piping of the wind. Again, the
shadow of a dim and terrible shape loomed up before him....</p>
<p>He forced remembrance of that vision from his mind, by a great effort.
He could not turn back now. There was no place to go.</p>
<p>His weary beast plodded on, and now Stark saw as in a dream that a great
walled city stood guard before that awful Gate. He watched the city
glide toward him through a crimson haze, and fancied he could see the
ages clustered like birds around the towers.</p>
<p>He had reached Kushat, with the talisman of Ban Cruach still strapped in
the blood-stained belt around his waist.</p>
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