Jehungir Ahga, Lord of Khawarizm
(circa The Devil in Iron)

Medium Human Male
14th level
7th level Aristocrat /7th level fighter

Hit Dice: 5D8 + 5d10 +14 (68 hit points)
Inititiative: +3 (Dex)
Speed: 30 ft.
Armor Class: 19 (+3 Dex, +5 masterwork chainmail, +1 dodge)
Attacks: Scimitar +13/+8/+3 Melee; Longbow +16/+11/+6 ranged
Damage: Scimitar  1d6+1; Longbow 1d6+1
Face/Reach: 5 ft x 5 ft/ 5ft
Saves: Fort +8, Ref +7, Will +9
Attributes: Str 13, Dex 17, Con 13, Int 13, Wis 12, Cha 14
Skills: Appraise +18, Balance +20, Bluff +18, Gather Information +6, Intimidate +19
Feats: Dodge, Mobility, Weapon Focus (Longbow), Combat Reflexes, Improved Critical (longbow), Ranged Disarm, Ranged Pin, Precise Shot, Pointblank shot, Aiming

Climate/Terrain: Turan, Hyrkania
Organization: Solitary
Challenge Rating: 13
Treasure: None
Alignment: Lawful Neutral
Advancement: by character class
Jehungir Agha, lord of Khawarizm is the keeper of the coastal border of Turan.  Yezdigerd is not pleased with Jehungir's ability to guard the frontier from the robbers of the steppes, the Kozaks.  He believes the secret to defeating the Kozaks lies in killing Conan, who is welding the Kozaks into a cohesive force.  He owned Octavia for much of her life, until he gave her to another lord so that she could lure Conan into a trap.  He is a crafty, devious man.

Combat
The bow is his weapon of choice, but, when armored, he is not afraid to fight with his scimitar.
below is the original cover of Weird Tales, August 1934, featuring Conan fighting a snake in Xapur.  Art is by Margaret Brundage.
Robert E. Howard's story, "The Devil in Iron" was first published in Weird Tales in August of 1934.  The story can also be found in the Ace/Lancer paperback "Conan the Wanderer"; the Donald M. Grant Limited Edition "The Devil in Iron", and the Gnome Press collection "Conan the Barbarian".   It can also be found in the Berkley/Putnam collection "The People of the Black Circle".  Currently in print is the British volume "The Conan Chronicles Volume I : The People of the Black Circle" which is part of Millennium's "Fantasy Masterworks" series.  ISBN: 1-85798-996-1.  It is available off of Amazon.com.  "The Devil in Iron" can also be found in the Sci Fi Book Club "The Essential Conan."

One weakness of this story is the incredible coincidence upon which it hangs.  Jehungir Agha was lying when he told Conan Octavia had run away to Xapur.  She had been handed into the loathsome clutches of Jelal Khan.  Escaping, she somehow  finds her way to Xapur, a supposed tiny island with unscalable cliffs; the likelihood of her finding her way there purely by chance seems a little difficult to accept.  Then again, ERB wrote dozens of Tarzan novels that depended on even more unlikely coincidences.

There isn't a lot  in the way of characterization.  Conan spends more time running than thinking.  I suspect this may be partly because Howard wasn't sure how Conan should react to something so clearly inexplicable as a city appearing magically overnight.  To REH the Conan stories were inherently realistic, he favoured gorillas and snakes, and  the magic is often explained either as a sort of super-science, or as hypnosis.  In this case, there can be no such realist explanation, and so Howard himself may have found it a little hard to accept.
Conan
Khosatral Khel
Magic Dagger
Octavia
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