Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space, #Nomads, #Outlaws
with its own riders, spreading out over the prairie, pawing
through the snow, snuffing about? pulling up and chewing at
the grass, mostly worthless and frozen. The animals began to
die and the keening of women, crying as though the wagons
were burning and the Turians upon them, carried over the
prairies. Thousands of the Wagon Peoples, free and slave, dug
in the snow to find a handful of grass to feed their animals.
Wagons had to be abandoned on the prairie, as there was no
time to train new bask to the harness, and the herds must
needs keep moving.
At last, seventeen days after the first snows, the edges of
the herds began to reach their winter pastures far north of
Turia, approaching the equator from the south. Here the
snow was little more than a frost that melted in the after-
noon sun, and the grass was live and nourishing. Still farther
north, another hundred pasangs, there was no snow and the
peoples began to sing and once more dance about their fires
of bask dung.
"The bask are safe," Kamchak had said. I had seen strong
men leap from the back of the kaiila and, on their knees,
tears in their eyes, kiss the green, living grass. "The bosk are
safe," they had cried, and the cry had been taken up by the
women and carried from wagon to wagon, "IT he bosk are
safer"
This year, perhaps because it was the Omen Year, the
Wagon Peoples did not advance farther north than was
necessary to ensure the welfare of the herds. They did not, in
fact, even cross the western Cartius, far from cities, which
they often do, swimming the bask and kaiila, floating the
wagons, the men often crossing on the backs of the seam,,
ming bask. It was the Omen Year, and not a year, apparently,
in which to risk war with far peoples, particularly not those?
Of cities like Ar, whose warriors had mastered the tarn and'
might, from the air, have wrought great destruction on the
herds and wagons
The Wintering was not unpleasant, although, even so far
north, the days and nights were often quite chilly; the Wagon
Peoples and their slaves as well, wore boskhide and furs
during this time; both male and female, slave or free, wore
furred boots and trousers, coats and the flopping, ear-flapped
caps that tied under the chin; in this time there was often no
way to mark the distinction between the free woman and the
slave girl, save that the hair of the latter must needs be
unbound; in some cases, of course, the Turian collar was
visible, if worn on the outside of the coat, usually under the
furred collar; the men, too, free and slave, were dressed
similarly, save that the Kajiri, or he-slaves, wore shackles,
usually with a run of about a foot of chain.
On the back of the kaiila, the black lance in hand, bending
down in the saddle, I raced past a wooden wand fixed in the
earth, on the top of which was placed a dried tospit, a small,
wrinkled, yellowish-white peachlike fruit, about the size of a
plum, which grows on the tospit bush, patches of which are
indigenous to the drier valleys of the western Cartius. They
are bitter but edible.
"Well done!" cried Kamchak as he saw the tospit, unsplit,
impaled halfway down the shaft of the lance, stopped only by
my fist and the retaining strap.
Such a thrust was worth two points for us.
I heard Elizabeth Cardwell's cry of joy as she leaped into
the air, clumsy in the furs, clapping her hands. She carried,
on a strap around her neck, a sack of tospits. I looked at her
and smiled. Her face was vital and flushed with excitement.
"Tospit!" called Conrad of the Kassars, the Blood People,
and the girl hastened to set another fruit on the wand.
There was a thunder of kaiila paws on the worn turf and
Conrad, with his red lance, nipped the tospit neatly from the
tip of the wand, the lance point barely passing into it, he
having drawn back at the last instant.
"Well done!" I called to him. My own thrust had been full
thrust, accurate enough but rather heavily done, in war, such
a thrust might have lost me the lance, leaving it in the
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body of an enemy. His thrust was clearly, I acknowledged,
worth three points.
Kamchak then rode, and he, like Conrad of the Kassars,
deftly took the fruit from the wand; indeed, his lance enter-
ing the fruit perhaps a fraction of an inch less than had
Conrad's. It was, however, also a three-point thrust.
The warrior who then rode with Conrad thundered down
the lane in the turf.
There was a cry of disappointment, as the lance tip
sheared the fruit, not retaining it, knocking it from the wand.
It was only a one-point thrust.
Elizabeth cried out again, with pleasure, for she was of the
wagon of Kamchak and Tarl Cabot.
The rider who had made the unsatisfactory thrust suddenly
whirled the kaiila toward the girl, and she fell to her knees,
realizing she should not have revealed her pleasure at his
failure, putting her head to the grass. I tensed, but Kamchak
laughed, and held me back. The rider's kaiila was now
rearing over the girl, and he brought the beast to rest. With
the tip of his lance, stained with the tospit fruit, he cut the
strap that held the cap on her head, and then brushed the cap
off; then, delicately, with its tip, he lifted her chin that she
might look at him.
"Forgive me, Master," said Elizabeth Cardwell.
Slave girls, on Gor, address all free men as master,
though, of course, only one such would be her true master.
I was pleased with how well, in the past months, Elizabeth
had done with the language. Of course, Kamchak had rented
three Turian girls, slaves, to train her; they had done so,
binding her wrists and leading her about the wagons, teaching
her the words for things, beating her with switches when she
made mistakes; Elizabeth had learned quickly. She was an
intelligent girl.
It had been hard for Elizabeth Cardwell, particularly the
first weeks. It is not an easy transition to make, that from a
bright, lovely young secretary in a pleasant, fluorescently lit,
air-conditioned office on Madison Avenue in New
to a slave girl in the wagon of Tuchuk warrior.
When her interrogation had been completed, and she had
collapsed on the dais of Kutaituchik, crying out in misery
"La Kajira. La Kajira!" Kamchak had folded her, still weep-
ing, clad in the Sirik, in the richness of the pelt of the red
tart in which she had originally been placed before us.
As I had followed him from the dais I had seen Kutaituchik,
the interview ended, absently reaching into the small
golden box of kanda strings, his eyes slowly beginning to
close.
Kamchak, that night, chained Elizabeth Cardwell in his
wagon, rather than beneath it to the wheel, running a short
length of chain from a slave ring set in the floor of the
wagon box to the collar of her Sirik. He had then carefully
wrapped her, shivering and weeping, in the pelt of the red
larl.
She lay there, trembling and moaning, surely on the verge
of hysteria. I was afraid the next phase of her condition
would be one of numbness, shock, perhaps of refusal to
believe what had befallen her, madness.
Kamchak had looked at me. He was genuinely puzzled by
what he regarded as her unusual emotional reactions. He
was, of course, aware that no girl, Gorean or otherwise,
could be expected to take lightly a sudden reduction to an
abject and complete slavery, particularly considering what
that would mean among the wagons.
He did, however, regard Miss Cardwell's responses as
rather peculiar, and somewhat reprehensible. Once he got up
and kicked her with his furred boot, telling her to be quiet.
She did not, of course, understand Gorean, but his intention
and his impatience were sufficiently clear to preclude the
necessity of a translation. She stopped moaning, but she
continued to shiver, and sometimes she sobbed. I saw him
take a slave whip from the wall and approach her, and then
turn back and replace it on the wall. I was surprised that he
had not used it, and wondered why. I was pleased that he
had not beaten her, for I might have interfered. I tried to
talk to Kamchak and help him to understand the shock that
the girl had undergone, the total alteration of her life and
circumstances, unexplained finding herself alone on the
prairie, the Tuchuks, the capture, the return to the Wagons,
her examination in the grassy avenue, the Sirik, the interro-
gation, the threat of execution, then the fact, difficult for her
to grasp, of being literally an owned slave girl. I tried to
explain to Kamchak that her old world had not prepared her
for these things, for the slaveries of her old world are of a
different kind, more subtle and invisible, thought by some
not even to exist.
Kamchak said nothing, but then he got up and from a
chest in the wagon he took forth a goblet and filled it with an