Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space, #Nomads, #Outlaws
"Surely," said Kamchak, "for who could hire tarnsmen but
Saphrar of Turia or arrange for the diversion that drew
fools to the edge of the herds."
I was silent.
"There was a golden sphere," said Kamchak. "It was that
which he wanted."
I said nothing.
"Like yourself, Tart Cabot," added Kamchak.
I was startled.
"Why else," asked he, "would you have come to the
Wagon Peoples?"
I did not respond. I could not.
"Yes," I said, "it is true I want it for Priest-Kings. It is
important to them."
"It is worthless," said Kamchak.
"Not to Priest-Kings," I said.
Kamchak shook his head. "No, Tart Cabot," said he, "the
golden sphere is worthless."
The Tuchuk then looked around himself, sadly, and then
again gazed on the sitting, bent-over figure of Kutaituchik.
Suddenly tears seemed to burst from Kamchak's eyes and
his fists were clenched. "He was a great man!" cried Kam-
chak. "Once he was a great man."
I nodded. I knew Kutaituchik, of course, only as the huge,
somnolent mass of man who sat cross-legged on a robe of
gray boskhide, his eyes dreaming.
Suddenly Kamchak cried out in rage and seized up the
golden kanda box and hurled it away.
"There will now have to be a new Ubar of the Tuchuks," I
said, softly.
Kamchak turned and faced me. "No," he said.
"Kutaituchik," I said, "is dead."
Kamchak regarded me evenly. "Kutaituchik," he said,
b 'divas not Ubar of the Tuchuks."
"I don't understand," I said.
"He was called Ubar of the Tuchuks," said Kamchak, "but
he was not Ubar."
"How can this be?" I asked.
"We Tuchuks are not such fools as Turians would be-
lieve," said Kamchak. "It was for such a night as this that
Kutaituchik waited in the Wagon of the Ubar."
I shook my head in wonder.
"He wanted it this way," said Kamchak. "He would have it
no other." Kamchak wiped his arm across his eyes. "He said
it was now all he was good for, for this and for nothing
else."
It was a brilliant strategy.
"Then the true Ubar of the Tuchuks is not slain," I said.
"No," said Kamchak.
"Who knows who the Ubar truly is?" I asked.
"The Warriors know," said Kamchak. "The warriors."
"Who is Ubar of the Tuchuks?" I asked.
"I am," said Kamchak.
Turia, to some extent, now lay under sedge, though the
Tuchuks alone could not adequately invest the city. The other
Wagon Peoples regarded the problem of the slaying of Kutai-
tuchik and the despoiling of his wagon as one best left to the
resources of the people of the four bask. It did not
concern, in their opinion, the Kassars, the Kataii or the
Paravaci. There had been Kassars who had wanted to fight
and some Kataii, but the calm heads of the Paravaci had
convinced them that the difficulty lay between Turia and the
Tuchuks, not Turia and the Wagon Peoples generally. In-
deed, envoys had flown on tarnback to the Kassars, Kataii
and Paravaci, assuring them of Turia's lack of hostile inten-
tions towards them, envoys accompanied by rich gifts.
The cavalries of the Tuchuks, however, managed to
maintain a reasonably effective blockade of land routes to
Turia. Four times masses of tharlarion cavalry had charged
forth from the city but each time the Hundreds withdrew
before them until the charge had been enveloped in the
swirling kaiila, and then its riders were brought down swiftly
by the flashing arrows of the Tuchuks, riding in closely, al-
most to lance range and firing again and again until striking
home.
Several times also, hosts of tharlarion had attempted to
protect caravans leaving the city, or advanced to meet sched-
uled caravans approaching Turia, but each time in spite of
this support, the swift, harrying, determined riders of the
Tuchuks had forced the caravans to turn back, or man by
man, beast by beast, left them scattered across pasangs of
prairie.
The mercenary tarnsmen of Turia were most feared by the
Tuchuks, for such could, with relative impunity, fire upon
them from the safety of their soaring height, but even this
dread weapon of Turia could not, by itself, drive the Tuchuks
from the surrounding plains. In the field the Tuchuks would
counter the tarnsmen by breaking open the Hundreds into
scattered Tens and presenting only erratic, swiftly moving
targets; it is difficult to strike a rider or beast at a distance
from tarnback when he is well aware of you and ready to
evade your missile; did the tarnsman ap-
proach too closely, then he himself and his mount were
exposed to the return fire of the Tuchuks, in which case of
proximity, the Tuchuk could use his small bow to fierce
advantage. The archery of tarnsmen, of course, is most
effective against massed infantry or clusters of the ponderous
tharlarion. Also, perhaps not unimportantly, many of Turia's
mercenary tarnsmen found themselves engaged in the time-
consuming, distasteful task of supplying the city from distant
points, often bringing food and arrow wood from as far away
as the valleys of the eastern Cartius. I presume that the
mercenaries, being tarnsmen a proud, headstrong breed of
men made the Turians pay highly for the supplies they
carried, the indignities of bearing burdens being lessened
somewhat by the compensating weight of golden tarn disks.
There was no problem of water in the city, incidentally, for
Turia's waters are supplied by deep, tile-lined wells, some of
them hundreds of feet deep; there are also siege reservoirs,
Bled with the melted snows of the winter, the rains of the
spring.
Kamchak, on kaiilaback, would sit in fury regarding the
distant, white walls of Turia. He could not prevent the
supplying of the city by air. He lacked siege engines, and the
men, and the skills, of the northern cities. He stood as a
nomad, in his way baffled at the walls raised against him.
"I wonder," I said, "why the tarnsmen have not struck at
the wagons with fire arrows why they do not attack the
bask themselves, slaying them from the air, forcing you to
withdraw to protect the beasts."
It seemed to be a simple, elementary strategy. There was,
after all, no place on the prairies to hide the wagons or the
bask, and tarnsmen could easily reach them anywhere within
a radius of several hundred pasangs.
'`They are mercenaries," growled Kamchak.
"I do not understand your meaning," I said.
"We have paid them not to burn the wagons nor slay the
bosk," said he.
`'They are being paid by both sides?" I asked.
"Of course," said Kamchak, irritably.
For some reason this angered me, though, naturally, I was
pleased that the wagons and boss; were yet safe. I suppose I
was angered because I myself was a tarnsman, and it seemed
somehow improper for warriors astride the mighty tarns to
barter their favors indiscriminately for gold to either side.
"But," said Kamchak, "I think in the end Saphrar of Turia
will meet their price and the wagons will be fired and the
bask slain" He gritted his teeth. "He has not yet met it,"
said Kamchak, "because we have not yet harmed him nor
made him feel our presence."
I nodded.
"We will withdraw," said Kamchak. He turned to a subor-
dinate. "Let the wagons be gathered," he said, "and the bosk
turned from Turia."
"You are giving up?" I asked.
Kamchak's eyes briefly gleamed. Then he smiled. "Of
course," he said.
I shrugged.
I knew that I myself must somehow enter Turia, for in
Turia now lay the golden sphere. I must somehow attempt to
seize it and return it to the Sardar. Was it not for this
purpose that I had come to the Wagon Peoples? I cursed the
fact that I had waited so long even to the time of the Omen
Taking for thereby had I lost the opportunity to try for the
sphere myself in the wagon of Kutaituchik. Now, to my
chagrin, the sphere lay not in a Tuchuk wagon on the open
prairie but, presumably, in the House of Saphrar, a merchant
stronghold, behind the high, white walls of Turia.
I did not speak to Kamchak of my intention, for I was
confident that he would have, and quite properly, objected to
so foolish a mission, and perhaps even have attempted to
prevent my leaving the camp.
Yet l did not know the city. I could not see how I might
enter. I did not know how I might even attempt to succeed in
so dangerous a task as that which I had set myself.
The afternoon among the wagons was a busy one, for they