Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space, #Nomads, #Outlaws
amber fluid, into which he shook a dark, bluish powder. He
.~.i
_
62
NOMADS OF GOR
then took Elizabeth Cardwell in his left arm and with his
right hand gave her the drink. Her eyes were frightened, but
she drank. In a few moments she was asleep.
Once or twice that night, to Kamchak's annoyance and my
own loss of sleep, she screamed, jerking at the chain, but we
discovered that she had not awakened.
I supposed that on the morrow Kamchak would call for
the Tuchuk Iron Master, to brand what he called his little
barbarian; the brand of the Tuchuk slave, incidentally, is not
the same as that generally used in the cities. which for girls,
is the first letter of the expression Kajira in cursive script. but
the sign of the four bask horns that of the Tuchuk standard;
the brand of the four bask horns, set in such a manner as to
somewhat resemble the letter "H." is only about an inch
high; the common Gorean brand, on the other hand, is
usually an inch and a half to two inches high; the brand of the
four bask horns, of course, is also used to mark the bask of
the Tuchuks, but there, of course, it is much larger, forming
roughly a six-inch square; following the branding, I supposed
that Kamchak would have one of the tiny nose rings affixed;
all Tuchuk females, slave or free, wear such rings; after these
things there would only remain, of course, an engraved
Turian collar and the clothing of Elizabeth Cardwell Kajir.
In the morning I awakened to find Elizabeth sitting, red-
eyed, at the side of the wagon, leaning back against one of
the poles that supported the wagon hides, wrapped in the pelt
of the red larl.
She looked at me. "I'm hungry," she said.
My heart leaped. The girl was stronger than I had
thought. I was very pleased. On the dais of Kutaituchik I had
feared that she might not be able to survive, that she was too
weak for the world of Gor. I had been troubled that the
shock of her radical transposition between worlds, coupled
with her reduction to servitude, might disarrange her mind,
might shatter her and make her worthless to the Tuchuks,
who might then have simply cast her to the kaiila and herd
sleen. I saw now, however, that Elizabeth Cardwell was
strong, that she would not go mad, that she was determined
to live.
"Kamchak of the Tuchuks is your master," I said. "He will
eat first. Afterward, if he chooses, you will be fed."
She leaned back against the wagon pole. " right," she
said.
When Kamchak rolled out of his furs Elizabeth, involun
tartly, shrank back, until the pole would permit her to with-
draw no further.
Kamchak looked at me. "How is the little barbarian this
morning?" he asked.
"Hungry," I said.
"Excellent," he said.
He looked at her, her back tight against the wagon pole,
clutching the pelt of the larl about her with her braceleted
hands.
She was, of course, different from anything he had ever
owned. She was his first barbarian. He did not know exactly
what to make of her. He was used to girls whose culture had
prepared them for the very real possibility of slavery, though
perhaps not a slavery as abject as that of being a wench of
Tuchuks. The Gorean girl is, even if free, accustomed to
slavery; she will perhaps own one or more slaves herself; she
knows that she is weaker than men and what this can mean;
she knows that cities fall and caravans are plundered; she
knows she might even, by a sufficiently bold warrior, be
captured in her own quarters and, bound and hooded, be
carried on tarnback over the walls of her own city. More-
over, even if she is never enslaved, she is familiar with the
duties of slaves and what is expected of them; if she should
be enslaved she will know, on the whole, what is expected of
her, what is permitted her and what is not; moreover, the
Gorean girl is literally educated, fortunately or not, to the
notion that it is of great importance to know how to please
men; accordingly, even girls who will be free companions,
and never slaves, learn the preparation and serving of exotic
dishes, the arts of walking, and standing and being beautiful
the care of a man's equipment, the love dances of their city,
and so on. Elizabeth Cardwell, of course, knew nothing of
these things. I was forced to admit that she was, on almost
all counts, pretty much what Kamchak thought a little
barbarian. But, to be sure, a very pretty little barbarian.
Kamchak snapped his fingers and pointed to the rug,
Elizabeth then knelt to him, clutching the pelt about her, and
put her head to his feet.
She was slave.
To my surprise Kamchak, for no reason that he explained
to me, did not clothe Elizabeth Cardwell Kajir, much to the
irritation of other slave girls about the camp. Moreover, he
did not brand her, nor fix in her nose the tiny golden ring of
the Tuchuk women, nor did he even, incomprehensibly, put
her in the Turian collar. He did not permit her, of course, to
bind or dress her hair; it must be worn loose; that alone,
naturally, was sufficient to mark her slave among the wag-
ons.
For clothing he permitted her to cut and sew, as well as
she could, a sleeveless garment from the pelt of the red larl.
She did not sew well and it amused me to hear her cursing at
the side of the wagon, bound now only by a collar and chain
to the slave ring. time after time sticking the bone needle into
her fingers as it emerged through the hide, or fouling the
leather-threaded stitches, which would either be too tight,
wrinkling and bunching the fur, or too loose, exposing what
might eventually lie beneath it. I gathered that girls such as
Elizabeth Cardwell, used to buying machine-made, presewn
garments on Earth, were not as skilled as they might be in
certain of the homely crafts which used to be associated with
homemaking, crafts which might, upon occasion, it seemed,
come In handy.
At last she had finished the garment, and Kamchak
unchained her that she might rise and put it on.
Not surprisingly, but to my amusement, I noted that it
hung serveral inches below her knees, indeed, only about four
inches or so above her ankles. Kamchak took one look and,
with a quiva, shortened it considerably,-indeed, until it hung
even more briefly than had the quite short, delightful yellow
shift in which she had been captured.
"But it was the length of the leather dresses of the Tuchuk
women," Elizabeth had dared to protest.
I translated.
"But you are slave," had said Kamchak.
I translated his remark.
She dropped her head, defeated.
Miss Cardwell had slim, lovely legs. Kamchak, a man, had
desired to see them. Besides being a man, of course,
Kamchak was her master; he owned the wench; thus he
would have his desire. I will admit if need he that I was not
displeased with his action. I did not particularly mind the
sight of the lovely Miss Cardwell moving about the wagon.
Kamchak made her walk back and forth once or twice,
and spoke to her rather sharply about her posture, then, to
the surprise of both Miss Cardwell and myself, he did not
chain her, but told her she might walk about the camp
unattended, warning her only to return before dusk and the
release of the herd sleen. She dropped her head shyly, and
smiled, and sped from the wagon. I was pleased to see her
that much free.
"You like her?" I asked.
Kamchak grinned. "She is only a little barbarian," he said.
Then he looked at me. "It is Aphris of Turia I want," he
said.
I wondered who she might be.
On the whole, it seemed to me that Kamchak treated his
little barbarian slave notably well, considering that he was
Tuchuk. This does not mean that she was not worked hard,
nor that she did not receive a good drubbing now and then,
but, on the whole, considering the corneas lot of a Tuchuk
slave girl, I do not think she was ill used. Once, it might be
noted, she returned from searching for fuel with the dung
sack, dragging behind her, only half full. "It is all I could
find," she told Kamchak. He then, without ceremony, thrust
her head first into the sack and tied it shut. He released her
the next morning. Elizabeth Cardwell never again brought a
half-filled dung sack to the wagon of Kamchak of the
Tuchuks.
Now the Kassar, mounted on his kaiila, his lance under the
tip of the girl's chin. who knelt before him, looking up at
him, suddenly laughed and removed the lance.
I breathed a Sign of relief.
He rode his kaiila to Kamchak. "What do you want for