Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space, #Nomads, #Outlaws
your pretty little barbarian slave?" he asked.
"She is not for sale," said Kamchak.
"Will you wager for her?" pressed the rider. He was
Albrecht of the Kassars, and, with Conrad of the Kassars,
had been riding against myself and Kamchak.
My heart sank.
Kamchak's eyes gleamed. He was Tuchuk. "What are your
terms?" he asked.
"On the outcome of the sport," he said, and then pointed
to two girls, both his, standing to the left in their furs,
"against those two." The other girls were both Turian They
were not barbarians. Both were lovely. Both were, doubtless,
well skilled in the art of pleasing the fancy of warriors of the
Wagon Peoples.
Conrad, hearing the wager of A1brecht, snorted derisively.
"No," cried Albrecht, "I am serious!"
"Done!" cried Kamchak.
Watching us there were a few children, some men, some
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slave girls. As soon as Kamchak had agreed to Albrecht's
proposal the children and several of the slave girls immedi-
ately began to rush toward the wagons, delightedly crying
"Wager! Wager!"
Soon, to my dismay, a large number of Tuchuks, male and
female, and their male or female slaves, began to gather near
the worn lane on the turf. The terms of the wager were soon
well known. In the crowd, as well as Tuchuks and those of
the Tuchuks, there were some Kassars, a Paravaci or two,
even one of the Kataii. The slave girls in the crowd seemed
particularly excited. I could hear bets being taken. The
Tuchuks, not too unlike Goreans generally, are fond of
gambling. Indeed, it is not unknown that a Tuchuk will bet
his entire stock of bask on the outcome of a single kaiila
race; as many as a dozen slave girls may change hands on
something as small as the direction that a bird will fly or the
number of seeds in a tospit.
The two girls of Albrecht were standing to one side, their
eyes shining, trying not to smile with pleasure. Some of the
girls in the crowd looked enviously on them. It is a great
honor to a girl to stand as a stake in Tuchuk gambling. To
my amazement Elizabeth Cardwell, too, seemed rather
pleased with the whole thing, though for what reason I could
scarcely understand. She came over to me and looked up.
She stood on tiptoes in her furred boots and held the stirrup.
"You will win," she said.
I wished that I was as confident as she.
I was second rider to Kamchak, as Albrecht was to Con-
rad, he of the Kassars, the Blood People.
There is a priority of honor involved in being first rider, but
points scored are the same by either rider, depending on his
performance. The first rider is, commonly, as one might
expect, the more experienced, skilled rider.
In the hour that followed I rejoiced that I had spent much
of the last several months, when not riding with Kamchak in
the care of his bask, in the pleasant and, to a warrior,
satisfying activity of learning Tuchuk weaponry, both of the
hunt and war. Kamchak was a skilled instructor in these
matters-and, freely, hours at a time, until it grew too dark to
see, supervised my practice with such fierce tools as the lance,
the quiva and bole. I learned as well the rope and bow. The
bow, of course, small, for use from the saddle, lacks the
range and power of the Gorean longbow or crossbow; still, at
close range, with considerable force, firing rapidly, arrow
after arrow, it is a fearsome weapon. I was most fond,
perhaps, of the balanced saddle knife, the quiva; it is about a
foot in length, double edged; it tapers to a daggerlike point. I
acquired, I think, skill in its use. At forty feet I could strike a
thrown tospit; at one hundred feet I could strike a- layered
boskhide disk, about four inches in width, fastened to a lance
thrust in the turf.
Kamchak had been pleased.
I, too, naturally had been pleased.
But if I had indeed acquired skills with those fierce arti-
cles, such skills, in the current contests, were to be tested to
the utmost.
As the day grew late points were accumulated, but, to the
zest and frenzy of the crowd, the lead in these contests of
arms shifted back and forth, first being held by Kamchak and
myself, then by Conrad and Albrecht.
In the crowd, on the back of a kaiila, I noted the girl
Hereena, of the First Wagon, whom I had seen my first day
in the camp of the Tuchuks, she who had almost ridden
down Kamchak and myself between the wagons. She was a
very exciting, vital, proud girl and the tiny golden nose ring,
against her brownish skin, with her flashing black eyes, did
not detract from her considerable but rather insolent beauty.
She, and others like her, had been encouraged and spoiled
from childhood in all their whims, unlike most other Tuchuk
women, that they might be fit prizes, Kamchak had told me, in
the games of Love War. Turian warriors, he told me, enjoy
such women, the wild girls of the Wagons. A young man,
blondish-haired with blue eyes, unscarred, bumped against
the girl's stirrup in the press of the crowd. She struck him
twice with the leather quirt in her hand, sharply, viciously. I
could see blood on the side of his neck, where it joins the
shoulder.
"Slave!" she hissed.
He looked up angrily. "I am not a slave," he said. "I am
Tuchuk."
"Turian slaver" she laughed scornfully. "Beneath your furs
you wear, I wager, the Kes!"
"I am Tuchuk," he responded, looking angrily away.
Kamchak had told me of the young man. Among the
wagons he was nothing. He did what work he could, helping
with the bask, for a piece of meat from a cooking pot. He
was called Harold, which is not a Tuchuk name, nor a name
used among the Wagon Peoples, though it is similar to some
of the Kassar names. It was an English name, but such are
not unknown on Gor, having been passed down, perhaps, for
more than a thousand years, the name of an ancestor, per"
haps brought to Gor by Priest-Kings in what might have
been the early Middle Ages of Earth. I knew the Voyages of
Acquisition were of even much greater antiquity. I had
determined, of course, to my satisfaction, having spoken with
him once, that the boy, or young man, was indeed Gorean;
his people and their people before them and as far back as
anyone knew had been, as it is said, of the Wagons. The
problem of the young man, and perhaps the reason that he
had not yet won even the Courage Scar of the Tuchuks, was
that he had fallen into the hands of Turian raiders in his
youth and had spent several years in the city; in his adoles-
cence he had, at great risk to himself, escaped from the city
and made his way with great hardships across the plains to
rejoin his people; they, of course, to his great disappoint-
ment, had not accepted him, regarding him as more Turian
than Tuchuk. His parents and people had been slain in the
Turian raid in which he had been captured, so he had no kin.
There had been, fortunately for him, a Year Keeper who had
recalled the family. Thus he had not been slain but had been
allowed to remain with the Tuchuks. He did not have his
own wagon or his own bask. He did not even own a kaiila.
He had armed himself with castoff weapons, with which he
practiced in solitude. None of those, however, who led raids
on enemy caravans or sorties against the city and its outlying
fields, or retaliated upon their neighbors in the delicate mat-
ters of bask stealing, would accept him in their parties. He
had, to their satisfaction, demonstrated his prowess with
weapons, but they would laugh at him. "You do not even
own a kaiila," they would say. "You do not even wear the
Courage Scar." I supposed that the young man would never
be likely to wear the scar, without which, among the stern,
cruel Tuchuks, he would be the continuous object of scorn,
ridicule and contempt. Indeed, I knew that some among
the wagons, the girl Hereena, for example, who seemed to
bear him a great dislike, had insisted that he, though free,
be forced to wear the Kes or the dress of a woman. Such
would have been a great joke among the Tuchuks.
I dismissed the girl, Hereena, and the young man, Harold,
from my mind.
Albrecht was rearing on his kaiila, loosening the bole at his
saddle.
"Remove your furs," he instructed his two girls.
Immediately they did so and, in spite of the brisk, bright
chilly afternoon, they stood in the grass, clad Kajir,