Red Blades of Black Cathay - Robert E. Howard - E-Book

Red Blades of Black Cathay E-Book

Robert E. Howard

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Beschreibung

Sir Godric de Villehard, a Norman knight, finds himself in distant, exotic Cathay after a failed crusade. Hired to protect the city of Jahadur, he must rally its decadent defenders against an invasion by Genghis Khan's Mongol horde. Amid brutal battles and shifting loyalties, Godric's ferocious courage earns him the respect of friend and foe alike—and a chance to carve out his own kingdom in the East.

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Seitenzahl: 55

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2025

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Table of Contents
Red Blades of Black Cathay
SYNOPSIS
NOTICE
Red Blades of Black Cathay
Chapter I
Chapter II
Chapter III

Red Blades of Black Cathay

Robert E. Howard

SYNOPSIS

Sir Godric de Villehard, a Norman knight, finds himself in distant, exotic Cathay after a failed crusade. Hired to protect the city of Jahadur, he must rally its decadent defenders against an invasion by Genghis Khan’s Mongol horde. Amid brutal battles and shifting loyalties, Godric’s ferocious courage earns him the respect of friend and foe alike—and a chance to carve out his own kingdom in the East.

Keywords

Sword-and-Sorcery, Epic Battles, Heroic Adventure

NOTICE

This text is a work in the public domain and reflects the norms, values and perspectives of its time. Some readers may find parts of this content offensive or disturbing, given the evolution in social norms and in our collective understanding of issues of equality, human rights and mutual respect. We ask readers to approach this material with an understanding of the historical era in which it was written, recognizing that it may contain language, ideas or descriptions that are incompatible with today's ethical and moral standards.

Names from foreign languages will be preserved in their original form, with no translation.

 

Red Blades of Black Cathay

 

Trumpets die in the loud parade,The gray mist drinks the spears;Banners of glory sink and fadeIn the dust of a thousand years.Singers of pride the silence stills,The ghost of empire goes,But a song still lives in the ancient hills,And the scent of a vanished rose.Ride with us on a dim, lost roadTo the dawn of a distant day,When swords were bare for a guerdon rare.

—The Flower of Black Cathay.

 

Chapter I

 

The singing of the swords was a deathly clamor in the brain of Godric de Villehard. Blood and sweat veiled his eyes and in the instant of blindness he felt a keen point pierce a joint of his hauberk and sting deep into his ribs. Smiting blindly, he felt the jarring impact that meant his sword had gone home, and snatching an instant's grace, he flung back his vizor and wiped the redness from his eyes. A single glance only was allowed him: in that glance he had a fleeting glimpse of huge, wild black mountains; of a clump of mail-clad warriors, ringed by a howling horde of human wolves; and in the center of that clump, a slim, silk-clad shape standing between a dying horse and a dying swordsman. Then the wolfish figures surged in on all sides, hacking like madmen.

"Christ and the Cross!" the old Crusading shout rose in a ghastly croak from Godric's parched lips. As if far away he heard voices gaspingly repeat the words. Curved sabers rained on shield and helmet. Godric's eyes blurred to the sweep of frenzied dark faces with bristling, foam-flecked beards. He fought like a man in a dream. A great weariness fettered his limbs. Somewhere - long ago it seemed - a heavy axe, shattering on his helm, had bitten through an old dent to rend the scalp beneath. He heaved his curiously weighted arm above his head and split a bearded face to the chin.

"En avant, Montferrat!" We must hack through and shatter the gates, thought the dazed brain of Godric; we can not long stand this press, but once within the city - no - these walls were not the walls of Constantinople: he was mad; he dreamed - these towering heights were the crags of a lost and nameless land and Montferrat and the Crusade lay lost in leagues and years.

Godric's steed reared and pitched headlong, throwing his rider with a clash of armor. Under the lashing hoofs and the shower of blades, the knight struggled clear and rose, without his shield, blood starting from every joint in his armor. He reeled, bracing himself; he fought not these foes alone, but the long grinding days behind - the days and days of hard riding and ceaseless fighting.

Godric thrust upward and a man died. A scimitar shivered on his crest, and the wielder, torn from his saddle by a hand that was still iron, spilled his entrails at Godric's feet. The rest reined in around howling, seeking to overthrow the giant Frank by sheer weight of numbers. Somewhere in the hellish din a woman's scream knifed the air. A clatter of hoofs burst like a sudden whirlwind and the press was cleared. Through a red mist the dulling eyes of the knight saw the wolfish, skin-clad assailants swept away by a sudden flood of mailed riders who hacked them down and trampled them under.

Then men were dismounting around him, men whose gaudy silvered armor, high fur kaftans and two-handed scimitars he saw as in a dream. One with thin drooping mustaches adorning his dark face spoke to him in a Turkish tongue the knight could faintly understand, but the burden of the words was unintelligible. He shook his head.

"I can not linger," Godric said, speaking slowly and with growing difficulty, "De Montferrat awaits my report and I must - ride - East - to - find - the - kingdom - of - Prester - John - bid - my - men - mount - "

His voice trailed off. He saw his men; they lay about in a silent, sword-gashed cluster, dead as they had lived - facing the foe. Suddenly the strength flowed from Godric de Villehard in a great surge and he fell as a blasted tree falls. The red mist closed about him, but ere it engulfed him utterly, he saw bending near him two great dark eyes, strangely soft and luminous, that filled him with formless yearning; in a world grown dim and unreal they were the one tangible reality and this vision he took with him into a nightmare realm of shadows.

Godric's return to waking life was as abrupt as his departure. He opened his eyes to a scene of exotic splendor. He was lying on a silken couch near a wide window whose sill and bars were of chased gold. Silken cushions littered the marble floor and the walls were of mosaics where they were not worked in designs of gems and silver, and were hung with heavy tapestries of silk, satin and cloth-of-gold. The ceiling was a single lofty dome of lapis lazuli from which was suspended on golden chains a censer that shed a faint alluring scent over all. Through the window a faint breeze wafted scents of spices, roses and jasmine, and beyond Godric could see the clear blue of the Asian skies.

He tried to rise and fell back with a startled exclamation. Whence this strange weakness? The hand he lifted to his gaze was thinner than should be, and its bronze was faded. He gazed in perplexity at the silken, almost feminine garments which clothed him, and then he remembered - the long wandering, the battle, the slaughter of his men-at-arms. His heart turned sick within him as he remembered the staunch faithfulness of the men he had led to the shambles.