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and honored.
Coper had also pushed up with us, and now he squeaked his own outrage.
 If he kills you, Dray, if he does  why  it is all for nothing, for he will be the rightful king still 
 I do not think Djanduin would care for that.
 No  we would have to kill him then, ourselves. And the country  Kytun flicked blood-drops from
his sword.  By Djan! This is a sorry business. The challenge should never have been allowed!
 But it has been, good Kytun, and I accept. Is all prepared?
 Aye, Dray. It will be as the old laws prescribe. Man against man, and no other man will raise his hand
to help either, no matter what the outcome.
So I walked forward between the arcades with the sculptured and painted friezes  fine work but
nothing to compare with what I had seen elsewhere on Kregen. Fresh torches were brought and they
cast their flickering erratic light down into the sacred court of the warrior gods. Kov Nath sat on the
faerling throne. He looked as I had last seen him, save that his once-smooth helmet of copper hair had
now grown long and was disarranged. Many dead Djangs lay about the court. I marked them. The night
was very dark, and the stars sparkled down with unwonted brilliance.
 Bring torches! bellowed Kytun.
I went with my people in a kind of procession into the sacred court; the thought occurred to me then:
almost as though we marched ceremoniously into the Jikhorkdun where we would perform our bloody
rituals.
Still more torches were brought. Their golden light streaked upon the chemzite carvings of the walls,
upon the mosaics of the floor, now dabbled in blood, upon the gold and silver and ivory of the faerling
throne, and upon the huge and solidly gem-plated hood which rose, high and domed and arching, above.
Like a hollow benediction of gold and jewels the sacred hood of the faerling throne rose over the throne
itself, both protecting and threatening. As Kov Nath stood up to reveal himself, clad only in a scarlet
breechclout, I loosened my longsword and drew it forth.
Kov Nath stepped down the six golden steps and trod upon the mosaic floor. His four hands were
empty.
Thinking it a useful ploy to be seen not to have the advantage of armor I started to strip it off, and Wil of
the Bellows was there, unstrapping and carefully removing all the dinted pieces from my body. He took
my sword. I held out my hand for the weapon.
An old Dwadjang came forward with a wide and shallow balass box. Wil clung on to my sword, his
eyes wide and fear filled upon me. The old Djang opened the box. Inside were ranked eight djangirs. The
short broad blades of the double-edged swords glittered in the torchlight.
 This is by the customs of the ancients of Djanduin! he cried out in a reedy voice.  The challenge has
been made and accepted. It is man against man and the prize is the crown and the faerling throne!
In the rustling silence the spit and crackle of the torches sounded loud and ominous. I stood, all manner
of thoughts rushing and colliding in my head.
 Come, cramph, the rast men call Notor Prescot! Select your weapons!
Slowly I drew out two djangirs.
Kov Nath Jagdur laughed with immense scorn. He plunged his four hands in and withdrew four djangirs.
This was the way of it, then! This was the ancient custom! In Djanduin the Djangs fight duels and ritual
battles with their national weapon, the djangir.
We faced each other. Two men, alike in so many ways, for had Kov Nath not possessed an extra pair
of arms he would have been apim. And  because of a little fad, a weakness, of mine which made me
don my old scarlet breechclout on the morning of battle  we both stood naked but for a scarlet
loincloth.
He fell into a fighting crouch and then surged up, laughing, gleeful, swinging his arms.
I stand as though mesmerized at those four whirling djangirs.
So he faced me, at the end, Nath Jagdur, Kov of Hyr Khor, who was once of the Djin tan. The
torchlight threw two stars of mocking gold into his eyes, and his four arms wove a flickering silver net
before my eyes. He leaped for me, and in his four hands the whirling blades swung into a lethal wheel of
deadly steel!
CHAPTER TWELVE
The fight in the sacred court of the warrior gods
The marvelous world of Kregen is blessed with two suns and seven moons. Usually at night a
combination of moons sends down their streaming pinkish rays, sometimes golden, sometimes jade, as
seasons change and the mists rise. Sometimes there falls a night in which no moons are visible. There are
two suns and seven moons, and each has many names, and the tenth is called Notor Zan, the Tenth
Lord, the Lord of Blackness.
The Djangs are ferocious warriors.
Had I my trusted longsword  or a thraxter and shield  or a rapier and main-gauche  for it might
perhaps have been too much to ask that I gripped the superb Savanti sword I had left with Delia  I
would have gone up against Kov Nath with greater confidence.
As it was, we fought with his national weapon, and he had four arms and he was possessed of great
skill. He leaped for me and his arms wove a deadly net of steel. I backed away nimbly, leaping dead
bodies, for the court had not been cleared of the corpses. He roared and charged.
 Stand and fight, you nulsh! By Zodjuin of the Storm-clouds! Act like a man, even if you are only apim!
There had to be a way of taking him. He would not be decoyed so easily as to stumble over a dead
man. Djangs are warriors born. I circled, for we were pent between the mystic friezes of the sacred court
of the warrior gods, and men clustered in the arcades, watching us by the light of torches.
On those walls frowned down the carved representations of warrior gods, the pantheon of Djanduin.
High over the rest rose a giant stele with symbols incised upon it describing the creation of Djanduin out
of the primitive miasmas of the Ocean of Doubt. Djan had called forth the land and the land had risen
and, lo! that land was Djanduin, blessed among the lands of the world.
Kov Nath flickered his three djangirs most expertly while he kept his left lower blade down and limp, as
though out of the play. I might not have four arms, but I recognized the symptom of the ploy he was
trying there. As I circled he rushed me in an attempt to finish the thing quickly. I took two djangirs upon
my own and skipped aside as the third sliced down past my thigh and only just managed to interpose a [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]

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