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Robert Howard: Tigers Of The Sea

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"Come away," said Wulfhere hurriedly. "That stench was never born on earth. This well must lead into some Roman Hades-or mayhap the cavern where the serpent drips venom on Loki."

Cormac paid no heed. "I see the trap now," said he. "That slab was balanced on a sort of pivot, and here is the catch that supported it. How it was worked I can't say, but this catch was released and the slab fell, held on one side by the pivot…"

His voice trailed away. Then he said, suddenly: "Blood-blood on the edge of the pit!"

"The thing you slashed," grunted Wulfhere. "It has crawled into the gulf."

"Not unless dead things crawl," growled Cormac. "I killed it, I tell you. It was carried here and thrown in. Listen!"

The warriors bent close; from somewhere far down-an incredible distance, it seemed-there came a sound: a nasty, squashy, wallowing sound, mingled with noises indescribable and unrecognizable.

With one accord the warriors drew away from the well and, exchanging silent glances, gripped their weapons.

"This stone won't burn," growled Wulfhere, voicing a common thought. "There's no loot here and nothing human. Let's be gone."

"Wait!" The keen-eared Gael threw up his head like a hunting hound. He frowned, and drew nearer to one of the arched openings.

"A human groan," he whispered. "Did you not hear it?"

Wulfhere bent his head, cupping palm to ear. "Aye-down that corridor."

"Follow me," snapped the Gael. "Stay close together. Wulfhere, grip my belt; Hrothgar, hold Wulfhere's, and Hakon, Hrothgar's. There may be more pits. The rest of you dress your shields, and each man keep close touch with the next."

So in a compact mass they squeezed through the narrow portal and found the corridor much wider than they had thought for. There it was darker, but further down the corridor they saw what appeared to be a patch of light.

They hastened to it and halted. Here indeed it was lighter, so that the unspeakable carven obscenities thronging the wall were cast into plain sight. This light came in from above, where the ceiling had, been pierced with several openings-and, chained to the wall among the foul carvings, hung a naked form. It was a man who sagged on the chains that held him half erect. At first Cormac thought him dead-and, staring at the grisly mutilations that had been wrought upon him, decided it was better so. Then the head lifted slightly, and a low, moan sighed through the pulped lips.

"By Thor," swore Wulfhere in amazement, "he lives!"

"Water, in God's name, whispered the man on the wall.

Cormac, taking a well-filled flask from Hakon Snorri's son, held' it to the creature's lips. The man drank in great, gasping gulps, then lifted his head with a mighty effort. The Gael looked into deep eyes that were strangely calm.

"God's benison on you, my lords," came, the voice, faint and rattling, yet somehow suggesting that it had once been strong and resonant. "Has the long torment ended and am I in Paradise at last?"

Wulfhere and Cormac glanced at each other curiously. Paradise! Strange indeed, thought Cormac, would such red-handed reivers as we look in the temple of the humble ones!

"Nay, it is not Paradise," muttered the man deliriously, "for I am still galled by these heavy chains."

Wulfhere bent and examined the chains that held him. Then with a grunt he raised his axe and, shortening his hold upon the haft, smote a short, powerful blow. The links parted beneath the keen edge and the man slumped forward into Cormac's arms, free of the wall but with the heavy bands still upon wrists and ankles; these, Cormac saw, sank deeply into the flesh which the rough and rusty metal envenomed.

"I think you have not long to live, good sir," said Cormac. "Tell us how you are named and where your village is, so it may be we might tell your people of your passing."

"My name is Fabricus, my lord," said the victim, speaking with difficulty. "My town is any which still holds the Saxon at bay."

"You are a Christian, by your words," said Cormac, and Wulfhere gazed curiously.

"I am but a humble priest of God, noble sir," whispered the other. "But you must not linger. Leave me here and go quickly lest evil befall you."

"By the blood of Odin," snorted Wulfhere, "I quit not this place until I learn who it is that treats living beings so foully!"

"Evil blacker than the dark side of the moon," muttered Fabricus. "Before it, the differences of man fade so that you seem to me like a brother of the blood and of the milk, Saxon."

"I am no Saxon, friend," rumbled the Dane.

"No matter-all men in the rightful form of man are brothers. Such is the word of the Lord-which I had not fully comprehended until I came to this place of abominations!"

"Thor!" muttered Wulfhere. "Is this no Druidic temple?"

"Nay," answered the dying man, "not a temple where men, even in heathenness, deify the cleaner forms of Nature. Ah, God-they hem me close! Avaunt, foul demons of the Outer Dark-creeping, creeping-crawling shapes of red chaos and howling madness-slithering, lurking blasphemies that hid like reptiles in the ships of Rome-ghastly beings spawned in the ooze of the Orient, transplanted to cleaner lands, rooting themselves deep in good British soil-oaks older than the Druids, that feed on monstrous things beneath the bloating moon-"

The mutter of delirium faltered and faded, and Cormac shook the priest lightly. The dying man roused as a man waking slowly from deep sleep.

"Go, I beg of you," he whispered. "They have done their worst to me. But you-they will lap with evil spells-they will break your body as they have shattered mine-they will seek to break your souls as they had broken mine but for my everlasting faith in our good Lord God. He will come, the monster, the high priest of infamy, with his legions of the damned-listen!" The dying head lifted. "Even now he comes! Now may God protect us all!"

Cormac snarled like a wolf and the great Viking wheeled about, rumbling defiance like a lion at bay. Aye, something was coming down one of the smaller corridors which opened into that wider one. There was a myriad rattling of hoofs on the tiling-"Close the ranks!" snarled Wulfhere. "Make the shield-wall, wolves, and die with your axes red!"

The Vikings quickly formed into a half-moon of steel, surrounding the dying priest and facing outward, just as a hideous horde burst from the dark opening into the comparative light. In a flood of black madness and red horror their as sailants swept upon them. Most of them were goat-like creatures, that ran upright and had human hands and faces frightfully partaking of both goat and human. But among their ranks were shapes even more fearful. And behind them all, luminous with an evil light in the darkness of the winding corridor from which the horde emerged, Cormac saw an unholy countenance, human, yet more and less than human. Then on that solid iron wall the noisome horde broke.

The creatures were unarmed, but they were horned, fanged and taloned. They fought as beasts fight, but with less of the beast's cunning and skill. And the Vikings, eyes blazing and beards a-bristle with the battle-lust, swung their axes in mighty strokes of death: Girding horn, slashing talon and gnashing fang found flesh and drew blood in streams, but protected by their helmets, mail and over-lapping shields, the Danes suffered comparatively little while their whistling axes and stabbing spears took ghastly toll among their unprotected assailants.

"Thor and the blood of Thor," cursed Wulfhere, cleaving a goat-thing clear through the body with a single stroke of his red axe, "mayhap ye find it a harder thing to slay armed men than to torture a naked priest, spawn of Helheim!"

Before that rain of hacking steel the hellh-orde broke, but behind them the half-seen man among the shadows drove them back to the onslaught with strange chanting words, unintelligible to the humans who strove against his vassals. So his creatures turned again to the fray with desperate fury, until the dead things lay piled high about the feet of their slayers, and the few survivors broke and fled down the corridor. The Vikings would have scattered in pursuit but Wulfhere's bellow halted them. But as the horde broke, Cormac bounded across the sprawling corpses and raced down the winding corridor in pursuit of one who fled before him. His quarry turned up another corridor and finally raced out into the domed main chamber, and there he turned at bay-a tall man with inhuman eyes and a strange, dark face, naked but for fantastic ornaments.

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