Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space, #Nomads, #Outlaws
his right sleeve.
"Perhaps," I admitted.
"You do riot even know how to enter the city," he said.
"That is true," I admitted.
"I can enter Turia when I wish," he said. "I know a way."
"Perhaps," I suggested, "I might accompany you."
"Perhaps," he granted, carefully wiping the quiva on the
back of his left sleeve.
"When are you going to Turia?" I asked.
"Tonight," he said.
I looked at him. "Why have you not gone before?" I
asked.
I-Ic smiled. "Kamchak," he said, "told me to wait for you."
"I expect," I said "it might be found here or there in the
House of Saphrar, a merchant of Turia."
"That is interesting," said Harold, "for I had thought I
might try chain luck in the Pleasure Gardens of a Turian
merchant named Saphrar."
"That is interesting indeed," I said, "perhaps it is the
same."
"It is possible," granted Harold. "Is he the- smallish fellow,
rather fat, with two yellow teeth."
"Yes," l said.
"Then l shall attempt not to he hitter," I said.
"I think that is a good idea," granted Harold.
Then we sat there together for a time, not speaking fur-
ther, he eating, I watching while he cut and chewed the meat
that was his supper. There was a fire nearby, but it was not
his fire. The wagon over his head was not his wagon. There
was no kaiila tethered at hand. As far as ~ could gather
Harold had little more than the clothes on his back, a
boskhide robe, his weapons and his supper.
"You will be slain in Turia," said Harold, finishing his
meat and wiping his mouth in Tuchuk fashion on the back of
his right sleeve.
"Perhaps," I admitted.
"You do riot even know how to enter the city," he said.
"That is true," I admitted.
"I can enter Turia when I wish," he said. "I know a way."
"Perhaps," I suggested, "I might accompany you."
"Perhaps," he granted, carefully wiping the quiva on the
back of his left sleeve.
"When are you going to Turia?" I asked.
"Tonight," he said.
I looked at him. "Why have you not gone before?" I
asked.
He smiled. "Kamchak," he said, "told me to wait for you.
It was not a pleasant path to Turia that Harold the Tuchuk
showed to me, but I followed him.
"Can you swim?" he asked.
"Yes," I said. Then I inquired, "How is it that you, a
Tuchuk, can swim?" I knew few Tuchuks could, though some
had learned in the Cartius.
"I learned in Turia,' said Harold, "in the public baths
where I was once a slave."
The baths of Turia were said to be second only to those of
Ar in their luxury, the number of their pools, their tempera-
tures, the scents and oils.
"Each night the baths were emptied and cleaned and I was
one of many who attended to this task," he said. "I was only
six years of age when I was taken to Turia, and I did not
escape the city for eleven years." He smiled. "I cost my
master only eleven copper tarn disks," he said, "and so I
think he had no reason to be ill satisfied with his investment."
"Are the girls who attend to the baths during the day as
beautiful as it is said?" I inquired. The bath girls of Turia are
almost as famous as those of Ar.
"Perhaps," he said, "l never saw them during the day I
and the other male slaves were
chained in a darkened cham-
ber that we might sleep and preserve our strength for the
work of the night." Then he added, "Sometimes one of the
girls, to discipline her, would be thrown amongst us but we
had no way of knowing if she were beautiful or not."
"How is it," I asked, "that you managed to escape?"
"At night, when cleaning the pools, we would be
unchained, in order to protect the chain from dampness and
rust we were then only roped together by the neck, I had
not been put on the rope until the age of fourteen, at which
time I suppose my master adjudged it wise prior to that I
had been free a bit to sport in the pools before they were
drained and sometimes to run errands for the Master of the
Baths it was during those years that I learned how to swim
and also became familiar with the streets of Turia one
night in my seventeenth year I found myself last man on the
rope and I chewed through it and ran, I hid by seizing a
well rope and descending to the waters below there was
movement in the water at the foot of the well and I dove to
the bottom and found a cleft, through which I swam under-
water and emerged in a shallow pool, the well's feed basin I
again swam underwater and this time emerged in a rocky
tunnel, through which flowed an underground stream
fortunately in most places there were a few inches between
the level of the water and the roof of the tunnel it was very
long, I followed it."
"And where did you follow it to?" I asked.
"Here," said Harold, pointing to a cut between two rocks,
only about eight inches wide, through which from some
underground source a flow of water was emerging, entering
and adding to the small stream at which, some four pasangs
from the wagons, Aphris and Elizabeth had often drawn
water for the wagon bask.
Not speaking further, Harold, a quiva in his teeth, a rope
and hook on his belt, squeezed through and disappeared. I
followed him, armed with quiva and sword.
I do not much care to recall that journey. I am a strong
swimmer but it seemed we must confront and conquer the
steady press of flowing water for pasangs and indeed we did
so. At last, at a given point in the tunnel, Harold disappeared
beneath the surface and I followed him. Gasping, we
emerged in the tiny basin area fed by the underground
stream. Here, Harold disappeared again under the water and
once more I followed him. After what seemed to me an
uncomfortably long moment we emerged again, this time at
the bottom of a tile-lined well. It was a rather wide well,
perhaps about fifteen feet in width. A foot or so above the
surface hung a huge, heavy drum, now tipped on its side. It
would contain literally hundreds of gallons-of water when
filled. Two ropes led to the drum, a small rope to control its
filling, and a large one to support it; the large rope, inciden-
tally, has a core of chain; the rope itself, existing primarily to
protect the chain, is treated with a waterproof glue made
from the skins, bones and hoofs of bask, secured by trade
with the Wagon Peoples. Even so the rope and chain must be
replaced twice a year. I judged that the top of the well might
lie eight or nine hundred feet above us.
I heard Harold's voice in the darkness, sounding hollow
against the tiled walls and over the water. "The tiles must be
periodically inspected," he said, "and for this purpose there
are foot knots in the rope."
I breathed a sigh of relief. It is one thing to descend a long
rope and quite another, even in the lesser gravity of Gor, to
climb one particularly one as long as that which I now saw
dimly above me.
The foot knots were done with subsidiary rope but worked
into the fiber of the main rope and glued over so as to be
almost one with it. They were spaced about every ten feet on
the rope. Still, even resting periodically, the climb was an
exhausting one. More disturbing to me was the prospect of
bringing the golden sphere down the rope and under the
water and through the underground stream to the place
where we had embarked on this adventure. Also, I was not
clear how Harold, supposing him to be successful in his
shopping amongst the ferns and flowers of Saphrar's Pleasure
Gardens, intended to conduct his squirming prize along this
unscenic, difficult and improbable route.
Being an inquisitive chap, I asked him about it, some two
or three hundred feet up the rope
"In escaping," he informed me, "we shall steal two tarns
and make away."
"I am pleased to see," I said, "that you have a plan."
"Of course," he said, "I am Tuchuk."
"Have you ever ridden a tarn before?" I asked him.
"No," he said, still climbing somewhere above me.
"Then how do you expect to do soy" I inquired, hauling
myself up after him.