Conan #3
In "Miroirs mortels," Conan carries a message from Makkalet to Pah-Disha, navigating treachery and deadly trials as Red Sonja saves him twice. Together, they battle a magical serpent, steal a sacred tiara from a temple, and face off in a fierce clash that ends with Red Sonja outwitting Conan before riding off toward Pah-Disha. The story unfolds with Barry Windsor-Smith’s dynamic art and Roy Thomas’s sharp scripting, capturing the raw intensity of the Hyborian Age.
In "Miroirs mortels," Conan delivers a critical message from Makkalet to Pah-Disha, navigating treachery and deadly trials with Red Sonja at his side—her loyalty tested as they battle a magical serpent, steal a cursed tiare, and flee through temple walls. As war looms and alliances shift, their uneasy partnership leads them through bloodshed and deception, ending with Red Sonja outwitting Conan and vanishing toward Pah-Disha.
In "La visite du robot," a lone extraterrestrial envoy arrives on Earth with a deadly mission: force humanity to surrender or face annihilation. But as the robot observes the resilience, compassion, and creativity of the people it was sent to destroy, it begins to question its purpose—leading to a choice that could reshape its destiny.
In "Mystère dans le métro," a crowded subway train veers off its route into the unknown depths of the underground, plunging passengers into chaos as police move in to confront unseen threats—only to uncover a truth far stranger than violence. The story unfolds in tense, shadowed corridors, where fear meets misunderstanding in a tale of mystery and hidden motives.
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↩ Reprints Strange Tales #73 (1960), The Incredible Hulk #121 (1969), Conan the Barbarian #18 (1972), Conan the Barbarian #23 (1973), Conan the Barbarian #24 (1973), Conan the Barbarian #25 (1973), Conan the Barbarian #26 (1973)
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