Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space, #Nomads, #Outlaws
perhaps in time man would grow rational, and reason and
love and tolerance would wax in him and he and Priest-Kings
might together turn their senses to the stars.
But I knew that more than anything I was doing this for
Misk, who was my friend.
The consequences of my act, if I were successful, were too
complex and fearful to calculate, the factors involved being
so numerous and obscure.
If it turned out badly, what I did, I would have no defense
other than that I did what I did for my friend for him
and for his brave kind, once hated enemies, whom I had
learned to know and respect.
There is no loss of honor in failing to achieve such a task,
I told myself. It is worthy of a warrior of the caste of
Warriors, a swordsman of the high city of Ko-ro-ba, the
Towers of the Morning.
Tal, I might say, in greeting, I am Tart Cabot of Ko-ro-
ba; I bring no credentials, no proofs; I come from the
Priest-Kings; I would like to have the object which was
brought to you from them; they would now like it back;
Thank you; farewell.
I laughed.
I would say little or nothing.
The object might not even be with the Wagon Peoples any
longer.
And there were four Wagon Peoples, the Paravaci, the
Kataii, the Kassars, and the dreaded Tuchuks.
Who knew with which people the object might have been
placed?
Perhaps it had been hidden away and forgotten?
Perhaps it was now a sacred object, little understood, but
revered and it would be sacrilege to think of it, blasphemy
to speak its Barge, a cruel and slow death even to cast one's
eyes upon it.
And if I should manage to seize it, how could I carry it
away?
I had no tarn, one of Gor's fierce saddlebirds; I had not
even the monstrous high tharlarion, used as the mounts of
shock cavalry by the warriors of some cities.
I was afoot, on the treeless southern plains of Gor, on the
Plains of Turia, in the Land of the Wagon Peoples.
The Wagon Peoples, it is said, slay strangers.
The words for stranger and enemy in Gorean are the
same.
I would advance openly.
If I were found on the plains near the camps or the bosk
herds I knew I would be scented out and slain by the do-
mesticated, nocturnal herd sleen, used as shepherds and
sentinels by the Wagon Peoples, released from their cages
with the falling of darkness.
These animals, trained prairie sleen, move rapidly and
silently, attacking upon no other provocation than trespass on
what they have decided is their territory. They respond only
to the voice of their master, and when he is killed pr dies, his
animals are slain and eaten.
There would be no question of night spying on the Wagon
Peoples.
I knew they spoke a dialect of Gorean, and I hoped I
would be able to understand them.
If I could not I must die as befitted a swordsman of
Ko-ro-ba.
I hoped that I would be granted death in battle, if death it
must be. The Wagon Peoples, of all those on Gor that I
know, are the only ones that have a clan of torturers, trained
as carefully as scribes or physicians, in the arts of detaining
life.
Some of these men have achieved fortune and fame in
various Gorean cities, for their services to Initiates and
Ubars, and others with an interest in the arts of detection
and persuasion. For some reason they have all worn hoods. It
is said they remove the hood only when the sentence is
death, so that it is only condemned men who have seen
whatever it is that lies beneath the hood.
I was surprised at the distance I had been from the herds,
for though I had seen the rolling dust clearly, and had felt
and did feel the shaking of the earth, betraying the passage
of those monstrous herds, I had not yet come to them.
But now I could hear, carried on the wind blowing toward
distant Turia, the bellowing of the basks. The dust was now
heavy like nightfall in the air. The grass and the earth
seemed to quake beneath my tread.
I passed fields that were burning, and burning huts of
peasants, the smoking shells of Sa-Tarna granaries, the shat-
tered, slatted coops for vulos, the broken walls of keeps for
the small, long-haired domestic verr, less belligerent and
sizeable than the wild verr of the Voltai Ranges.
Then for the first time, against the horizon, a jagged line,
humped and rolling like thundering waters, seemed to rise
alive from the prairie, vast, extensive, a huge arc, churning
and pounding from one corner of the sky to the other, the
herds of the Wagon Peoples, encircling, raising dust into the
sky like fire, like hoofed glaciers of fur and horn moving in
shaggy floods across the grass, toward me.
And then I saw the first of the outriders, moving toward
me, swiftly yet not seeming to hurry. I saw the slender line of
his light lance against the sky, strapped across his back.
I could see he carried a small, round, leather shield, glossy,
black, lacquered; he wore a conical, fur-rimmed iron helmet,
a net of colored chains depending from the helmet protecting
his face, leaving only holes for the eyes. He wore a quilted
jacket and under this a leather jerkin; the jacket was trimmed
with fur and had a fur collar; his boots were made of hide
and also trimmed with fur; he had a wide, five-buckled belt. I
could not see his face because of the net of chain that hung
before it. I also noted, about his throat, now lowered, there
was a soft leather wind scarf which might, when the helmet
veil was lifted be drawn over the mouth and nose, against
the wind and dust of his ride.
He was very erect in the saddle. His lance remained on his
back, but he carried in his right hand the small, powerful
horn bow of the Wagon Peoples and attached to his saddle
was a lacquered, narrow, rectangular quiver containing as
many as forty arrows. On the saddle there also hung, on one
side, a coiled rope of braided boskbide and, on the other, a
long, three-weighted bole of the sort used in hunting tumits
and men; in the saddle itself on the right side, indicating the
rider must be right-handed, were the seven sheaths for the
almost legendary quivas, the balanced saddleknives of the
prairie. It was said a youth of the Wagon Peoples was taught
the bow, the quiva and the lance before their parents would
consent to give him a name, for names are precious among
the Wagon Peoples, as among Goreans in general, and they
are not to be wasted on someone who is likely to die, one
who cannot well handle the weapons of the hunt and war.
Until the youth has mastered the bow, the quiva and the
lance he is simply known as the first, or the second, and so
on, son of such and such a father.
The Wagon Peoples war among themselves, but once in
every two hands of years, there is a time of gathering of the
peoples, and this, I had learned, was that time. In the thinking
of the Wagon Peoples it is called the Omen Year, though the
Omen Year is actually a season, rather than a year, which
occupies a part of two of their regular years, for the Wagon
Peoples calculate the year from the Season of Snows to the
Season of Snows; Turians, incidentally, figure the year from
summer solstice to summer solstice; Goreans generally, on
the other hand, figure the year from vernal equinox to vernal
equinox, their new year beginning, like nature's, with the
spring; the Omen Year, or season, lasts several months, and
consists of three phases, called the Passing of Turia, which
takes place in the fad; the Wintering, which takes place
north of Turia and commonly south of the Cartius, the
equator of course lying to the north in this hemisphere; and
the Return to Curia, in the spring, or, as the Wagon Peoples
say, in the Season of Little Grass. It is near Turia, in the
spring, that the Omen Year is completed, when the omens
are taken usually over several days by hundreds of harus-
pexes, mostly readers of bask blood and verr livers, to
determine if they are favorable for a choosing of a Ubar
San, a One Ubar, a Ubar who would be High Ubar, a Ubar
of an the Wagons, a Ubar of all the Peoples, one who could
lead them as one people.*
The omens, I understood, had not been favorable in more