Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space, #Nomads, #Outlaws
Initiates, which, however, largely contents itself with its cere-
monies and sacrifices, and is only too happy to delegate the
complex management of those vast, commercial phenomena,
the Sardar Fairs, to members~of the lowly, much-despised
Caste of Merchants, without which, incidentally, the fairs
most likely could not exist, certainly not at any rate in their
current form.
"Now this," Saphrar the merchant was telling me, "is the
braised liver of the blue, four-spired Cosian wingfish."
This fish is a tiny, delicate fish, blue, about the size of a
tarn disk when curled in one's hand; it has three or four
slender spines in its dorsal fin, which are poisonous; it is
capable of hurling itself from the water and, for brief dis-
tances, on its stiff pectoral fins, gliding through the air,
usually to evade the smaller sea-tharlarions, which seem to be
immune to the poison of the spines. This fish is also some
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APHRIS OF
85
times referred to as the songfish because, as a portion of its
courtship rituals, the males and females thrust their heads
from the water and utter a sort of whistling sound.
The blue, four-spired wingfish is found only in the waters
of Cos. Larger varieties are found farther out to sea. The
small blue fish is regarded as a great delicacy, and its liver as
the delicacy of delicacies.
"How is it," I asked, "that here in Turia you can serve the
livers of wingfish?"
"I have a war galley in Port Kar," said Saphrar the
merchant, "which I send to Cos twice a year for the fish."
Saphrar was a short, fat, pinkish man, with short legs and
arms; he had quick bright eyes and a tiny, roundish red-
lipped mouth; upon occasion he moved his small, pudgy
fingers, with rounded scarlet nails, rapidly, as though rubbing
the gloss from a tarn disk or feeling the texture of a fine
cloth; his head, like that of many merchants, had been
shaved; his eyebrows had been removed and over each eye
four golden drops had been fixed in the pinkish skin; he also
had two teeth of gold, which were visible when he laughed,
the upper canine teeth, probably containing poison; mer-
chants are seldom trained in the use of arms. His right ear
had been notched, doubtless in some accident. Such
notching, I knew, is usually done to the ears of thieves; a
second offense is normally punished by the loss of the right
hand; a third offense by the removal of the left hand and
both feet. There are few thieves, incidentally, on Gor. I have
heard, though, there is a Caste of Thieves in Port Kar, a
strong caste which naturally protects its members from such
indignities as ear notching. In Saphrar's case, of course, he
being of the Caste of Merchants, the notching of the ear
would be a coincidence, albeit one that must have caused him
some embarrassment. Saphrar was a pleasant, gracious fel-
low, a bit indolent perhaps, save for the eyes and rapid
fingers. He was surely an attentive and excellent host. I
would not Rave cared to know him better.
"flow is it," 1 asked, "that a merchant of Turia has a war
galley in Port Kar."
Saphrar reclined on the yellow cushions, behind the low
table covered with wines, fruits and golden dishes heaped
with delicate viands.
"I did not realize Port Kar was on friendly terms with any
of the inland cities," I said.
"She is not," said Saphrar.
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86
NOMADS OF GOR
"Then how?" I asked.
He shrugged. "Gold has no caste," he said.
I tried the liver of the wingfish. Then another swig of
Saga.
Saphrar winced.
"Perhaps," he suggested, "you would like a piece of
roasted bask meat?"
I replaced the golden eating prong in its rack beside my
place, shoved back the glittering dish in which lay several
theoretically edible objects, carefully arranged by a slave to
resemble a bouquet of wild Bowers sprouting from a rock
outcropping. "Yes," I said, "I think so."
Saphrar conveyed my wishes to the scandalized Feast Stew-
arc, and he, with a glare in my direction, sent two young
slaves scampering off to scour the kitchens of Turia for a
slice of bask meat.
I looked to one side and saw Kamchak scraping another
plate clean, holding it to his mouth, sliding and shoving the
carefully structured design of viands into his mouth.
I glanced at Saphrar, who was now leaning on his yellow
cushions, in his silken pleasure robes, white and gold, the
colors of the Caste of Merchants. Saphrar, eyes closed, was
nibbling on a tiny thing, still quivering, which had been
impaled on a colored stick.
I turned away and watched a fire swallower perform to the
leaping melodies of the musicians.
"Do not object that we are entertained in the house of
Saphrar of the Merchants," Kamchak had said, "for in Turia
power lies with such men."
I looked down the table a bit at Kamras, plenipotentiary
of Phanius Turmus, Administrator of Turia. He was a large-
wristed strong man with long, black hair. He sat as a
warrior, though in robes of silk. Across his face there were
two long scars, perhaps from their delicacy the scars of quiva
wounds. He was said to be a great warrior, indeed, to be
champion of Turia. He had not spoken with us nor acknowl-
edged our presence at the feast.
"Besides," Kamchak had told me, nudging me in tile ribs,
"the food and the entertainment is better in the house of
Saphrar than in the palace of Phanius Turmus."
I would still, I told myself, settle for a piece of bask
meat.
I wondered how the stomach of Kamchak could sustain
the delightful injuries he was heaping into it with such gusto.
1
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APHRIS 0P TUNA
87
To be sure, it had not. The Turian feast usually consumes the
better part of a night and can have as many as a hundred
and fifty courses. This would be impractical, naturally, save
for the detestable device of the golden bowl and tufted
banquet stick, dipped in scented oils, by means of which the
diner may, when he wishes, refresh himself and return with
eagerness to the feast. I had not made use of this particular
tool, and had contented myself with merely taking a bite or
two, to satisfy the requirements of etiquette, from each
course.
The Turians, doubtless, regarded this as a hopelessly bar-
barian inhibition on my part.
I had, perhaps, however, drunk too much Paga.'
This afternoon Kamchak and I, leading four pack kaiila,
had entered the first gate of nine-gated Turia.
On the pack animals were strapped boxes of precious
plate, gems, silver vessels, tangles of jewelry, mirrors, rings,
combs, and golden tarn disks, stamped with the signs of a
dozen cities. These were brought as gifts to the Turians,
largely as a rather insolent gesture on the part of the Wagon
Peoples, indicating how little they cared for such things, that
they would give them to Turians. Turian embassies to the
Wagon Peoples, when they occurred, naturally strove to
equal or surpass these gifts. Kamchak told me, a sort of
secret I gather, that some of the things he carried had been
exchanged back and forth a dozen times. One small, flat box,
however, Kamchak would not turn over to the stewards of
Phanius Turmus, whom he met at the first gate. He insisted
on carrying that box with him and, indeed, it rested beside
his right knee at the table now.
I was very pleased to enter Turia, for I have always been
j
excited by a new city.
-
I'
I found Turia to match my expectations. She was luxuri-
ous. Her shops were filled with rare, intriguing paraphernalia.
I smelled perfumes that I had never smelled before. More
than once we encountered a line of musicians dancing single
file down the center of the street, playing on their flutes and
drums, perhaps on their way to a feast. 1 was pleased to see
again, though often done in silk, the splendid varieties of
caste colors of the typical Gorean city, to hear once more the
cries of peddlers that I knew so well, the cake sellers, the