The Face in the Abyss by Abraham Merritt (spicy books to read .TXT) đź“•
She crossed to the little knoll and picked up the spears. She held one out to him, the one that bore the emerald point.
"This," she said, "to remember--Suarra."
"No," he thrust it back. "Go!"
If the others saw that jewel, never, he knew, would he be able to start them on the back trail--if they could find it. Starrett had seen it, of course, but he might be able to convince them that Starrett's story was only a drunken dream.
The girl studied him--a quickened interest in her eyes.
She slipped the bracelets from her arms, held them out to him with the three spears.
"Will you take these--and leave your comrades?" she asked. "Here are gold and gems. They are treasure. They are what you have been seeking. Take them. Take them and go, leaving that man here. Consent--and I will show you a way out of this forbidden land."
Graydon hesitated. The emerald alone was worth a fortune. What loyalty did he owe the three, afte
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like a wave.
And now there were two battles upon the mead—winged serpents against Xinli and Urd, and behind them the locked
lines of nobles and Emer.
From all the Temple rang out a wild shout of triumph. Out of the distance, from the direction of the caverns, came a vast humming, a drone rising to a shrieking wail which tortured the ears; then, falling below the range of hearing, became an unheard sound that shook the brain and every nerve to the verge of madness. Closer drew that droning, traveling with projectile speed. It paused overhead and
came to rest directly above the Temple. Up rose the maddening note, then down—and up and down—
And suddenly all the space between earth and the lurid sky was shot through with rays of dull red light. They seemed rigid, those rays—striated. They tore at the eyes as the drone tore at the brain.
But not then did Graydon know that. He felt nothing; the drone of madness was to him only a humming as of some gigantic top, nothing more; the red rays spared him.
Uncomprehending, he watched Huon’s sword drop from his hands, saw him reel, hands clasped over eyes—
And saw appear in that inexplicable, rigid light—the winged serpents. The Messengers of the Mother—no longer protected by their cloak of invisibility!
They were black shapes, caught in the rays. And they, too, were blinded. Whirling and tumbling, striking against each other, they fell. Little and great, the winged serpents cropped, coils lashing, into the talons of the Urd, the lizardmen, immune like Graydon himself to that intolerable vibration of linked light and sound.
Within the Temple sound and light brought full madness, as though they were intensified. In tortured brains of one and all was but one thought—to get into the open; to run and run—away from drone and searing ray. The huge doors flung open. Out of them poured Emer and noble, men and women alike. They came dropping from the windows—
Shaken out of the Temple even as the Lord of Evil had promised!
Through the droning came a hideous sussuration, a hellish hissing. He knew it for what it was before his eyes told him. The hunting packs of the dinosaurs. Emerald and sapphire scales glittering in the crimson light, crimson eyes flaming, they burst from the shelter of the trees that stretched between the Temple meadow and the city. Ahead of them rode Lantlu, alone, mounted upon his Xinli. Shouting, he raced to the stairway.
Graydon broke the bonds of his paralysis, raised his rifle;
cursing, he sent bullet after bullet at the master of the pack. Untouched, unharmed, Lantlu drove on, the Xinli leaping at his heel.
Out from the Serpentwoman’s sanctuary upon the Temple roof shot one of the immense silver globes; swiftly in its wake soared the others. They halted, hovering in a thousandfoot circle high above the plain. They began to pulse with a brilliant white radiance; and as they pulsed they expanded, became a coronet of little incandescent suns which sprayed their rays of white incandescence through the striating rays of sullen red.
Abruptly the drone ceased. The turmoil of the winged serpents ended. They faded back into invisibility. And the torment of brains and nerves and eyes was lifted.
Now it was Graydon’s turn to feel agony. The white radiance seared his eyes, sent needles of torment through them into his brain. And in this torture again was he one with Urd and saurian and those of the Old Race who wore the collar of Nimir. From drone and red ray that collar had protected him—but to this weapon of the Serpentwoman it had betrayed him.
Before the agony mastered him, sent him writhing, face to ground, hands clasped tight over eyes, he saw Lantlu’s monstrous mount rear, twitch its head from reins, tear its jaws from cruel bit and stagger blindly back, screeching. Saw Lantlu pitch from its saddle, regain his feet with his panther quickness and stagger, face covered by his arms. Saw the lizardmen running this way and that, and falling under the thrusts of the winged serpents.
Down upon Xinli and Urd the soldiery of the Temple surged, striking the lizardmen to earth with their maces, hamstringing the monsters with their swords, thrusting up with their javelins at the vulnerable spot in their throats, slaughtering Lantlu’s crazed pack.
Intent upon his enemy, Huon had forgotten Graydon. He had leaped upon the barricade, was half over it, when he turned to look for him. Only for a breath did he hesitate between concern for him and hatred for Lantlu. He sprang back, lifted him in his arms, started to carry him up into the Temple—
A wind whose breath bore the cold of outer space sighed round them. And at its touch Graydon’s agony ended. He writhed from Huon’s grip. They stood, staring at the radiant
globes. Their brilliancy had dimmed. A film of darkness was gathering round them. Steadily that film grew denser.
The globes went out!
Together the two leaped the barricade. Close to the base of the stairway, sword dripping blood, the body of a bluecloaked noble at his feet, was Lantlu, glaring up at them, freed like Graydon from the torture.
And over all the meadow noble and Emer and Urd were locked together in death struggle. Of the hunting pack not one was left. And the giant Xinli had vanished.
Graydon raised his rifle, took deliberate aim. Before he could press the trigger, Huon struck the gun from his hands.
“Mine to kill! Not yours!” he cried, and ran down the steps sword in hand to where the master of the dinosaurs waited him, lips drawn back over his teeth, his own red sword ready.
The crimson sky pulsed—once, twice, thrice—as though it were a giant heart. Down from it like enormous bats dropped black shadows. And bitter and ever more bitter grew the cold.
For a moment Graydon watched that dread rain. The shadows appeared to form directly beneath the canopy of crimson mist. They were shapeless, formless, yet densely black as though torn from the cloak of deepest night. They swirled down, spinning as they dropped. They fell with the swift dart of the swallow. They were falling over all the plain, on lizardmen and Emer and noble alike.
He heard the clash of sword on sword, saw Huon and Lantlu thrusting, beating at each other with their blades.
Between him and the pair swirled a knot of fighting Urd and Indians. A shadow dropped upon them, enveloped them, hid them, swirled upward again. He looked upon the little group it had covered. They were no longer fighting. They stood there, motionless, immobile. They swayed. They fell. He ran down the steps, stopped beside them. The grass was black as though burned. He touched them. They were stiff and icy cold. He touched the ground. It, too, was frozen.
He looked toward Huon. His sword was sweeping down upon Lantlu’s right wrist. It struck and half severed it. The master of the dinosaurs howled, sprang back, catching his
weapon in his left hand before it could fall. Heedless of his wound, he rushed upon Huon.
And Huon avoided the rush, stepped aside, and as Lantlu twisted toward him thrust him through the belly and with swift upward lift ripped him to the breast.
The master of the dinosaurs dropped his sword, glared at his killer, his hands at his navel, the blood spurting through his fingers. He sank to his knees. Fell forward—
A shadow came silently spinning down. It enveloped both quick and dead.
Graydon heard the shrieking of a voice he did not know;
realized it was his own! raced forward.
The shadow lifted, recoiled from him as though he had thrust it away, swirled skyward. Huon stood rigid, glaring down upon his enemy.
“Huon!” cried Graydon, and touched him upon the shoulder. It was icy cold.
And at the touch, Huon toppled, fell prone over the body of Lantlu.
He stood up, staring around him stupidly.
What were those lights? Winged shapes of greenish flame with cores of incandescence… flitting out of the air, pulsing from it… grappling with the shadows. Shapes of flame that battled with slaying shadows … and Huon dead there at his feet beneath a crimson sky.
As Huon had foretold—when was it? Ages upon ages ago.
His brain was numb. And despair … black despair that slowed his heart and set him gasping for breath was overwhelming him. Whence came that black tide … he’d never felt anything like that before? Hatred, too … cold hatred, cold and implacable as those slaying shadows … it was woven with the despair. Who was it he hated so … and, why? … if he could shake that creeping numbness from his brain.
Those damned shapes of flame! They were everywhere. And look at them running…. Emer and Urd and spawn of the Old Race. My men… running… conquered! My men… what did he mean… my men? What a hell of a light… what a hell of a night! Good rhyme that … it seemed to stop the spread of that cursed numbness. Try another—
ashes to ashes and dust to dust, if the shadows don’t get you the winged flames must. No … that didn’t help any. What the hell was the matter with his head? Poor Huon … wonder if Suarra knew he was down here … wonder where Nimir was … ah, now he knew whom he hated so … the Snakewoman … damned monster … Yes, Dark Master, I am coming!
Hell—what had made him say that? Brace up Nick Graydon … Nick Graydon of Philadelphia, Harvard School of Mines, U.S.A… . brace up! … Yes, yes, Dark Master … I… am coming!
An arm encircled him. He drew back, snarling. Why—it was Regor.
Regor! Something of the creeping deadness lifted from his brain.
“Head—Regor! Something wrong!”
“Yes, lad. It’s all right. Come now—with Regor. To the —to Suarra.”
Suarra? Yes, sure he’d go with Regor to Suarra. Not to that Snake woman though! No, no! Not to her… she wasn’t human… No, not to her. Dark Master….
Why, here he was back in the Temple! How the devil had he gotten there? Something was pulling at that collar. Pulling him by it. He wouldn’t go! That’s where that numbness came from—up from the collar. Ah—but he would have to go! But not before he had told Suarra about it all. Ah, there she was! Not the Snake woman though… No, Dark Master, I’ll not… it was good to have Suarra’s arms around you … your head on her breast….
“Hold him tight, Suarra,” said the Mother, quietly. “Kiss him. Talk to him. Do anything—but keep him aware of you. Kon!”
The Spiderman drew from the shadows, looked down Upon the muttering Graydon sorrowfully.
“Watch him closely, Regor. Kon may have to help you hold him. When the full call comes to him, his strength will be out of all bounds. If you must—bind him. But I would rather not—for my own reasons. Yet Nimir shall not have him. Ah—I feared it! Stand ready, Tyddo!”
A green glare, bright as daylight, flooded all the Hidden
Land. The slaying shadows had vanished, the crimson light had gone from the clouds. Up from the plain midway between Temple and lake arose an immense pillar of coruscant green flame. As it arose it roared. It pulsated with a slow, regular rhythm. Around its girth and above it and at its feet, lightnings flashed, and thunder crackled like torrents of shattering glass.
Beneath that terrifying glare the battling figures upon mead
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