Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space, #Nomads, #Outlaws
apologized.
"That is all right," I assured him, "take your time."
I then followed Harold along one of the smooth, stone
paths leading among the trees, brushing our way through the
clusters of blossoms, skirting the edge of the nearer blue
pool. I could see the three moons of Gor rejected in its
surface. They were beautiful shining among the green and
white blossoms on the water.
The masses of flowers and vegetation in Saphrar's Pleasure
Gardens filled the air with mingled, heavy sweet fragrances.
Also the fountains had been scented and the pools.
Harold left the walk and stepped carefully to avoid tram-
pling a patch of talenders, a delicate yellow flower, often
associated in the Gorean mind with love and beauty. He
made his way across some dark blue and yellowish orange
grass and came to the buildings set against one wall of the
gardens. Here we climbed several low, broad marble steps
and passed down a columned porch and entered the central
building, finding ourselves in a dim, lamp-lit hall, bestrewn
with carpets and cushions and decorated, here and there,
with carved, reticulated white screening.
There were seven or eight girls, clad in Pleasure Silks,
sleeping in this hall, scattered about, curled up on cushions.
Harold inspected them, but did not seem satisfied. I looked
them over nod would have thought that any one of them
would have been a prize, presuming it could be safely trans-
ported somehow to the wagons of the Tuchuks. One poor
girl slept naked on the tiles by the fountain. About her neck
was a thick metal collar to which a heavy iron chain had
been fastened; the chain itself was attached to a large iron
ring placed in the floor. I supposed she was being disciplined.
I immediately began to worry that that girl would be the one
who would strike Harold's eye. To my relief, he examined
her briefly and passed on.
Soon Harold had left the central hall and was making his
way down a long, carpeted, lamp-hung corridor. He entered
various rooms off this corridor and, after, I suppose, inspect-
ing their contents, always emerged and trekked off again.
We then examined other corridors and other rooms, and
finally returned to the main hall and started off down another
way, again encountering corridors and rooms; this we did
four times, until we were moving down one of the last
corridors, leading from one of the five main corridors off the
central hall. I had not kept count but we must have passed
by more than seven or eight hundred girls, and still, among
all these riches of Saphrar, he could not seem to find the one
for which he searched. Several times, one girl or another,
would roll over or shift in her sleep, or throw out an arm,
and my heart would nearly stop, but none of the wenches
awakened and we would troop on to the next room.
- At last we came to a largish room, but much smaller than
the main hall, in which there were some seventeen beauties
strewn about, all in Pleasure Silk. The light in the room was
furnished by a single tharlarion-oil lamp which hung from the
ceiling. It was carpeted by a large red rug on which were
several cushions of different colors, mostly yellows and or-
anges. There was no fountain in the room but, against one
wall, there were some low tables with fruits and drinks upon
them. Harold looked the girls over and then he went to the
low table and poured himself a drink, Ka-la-na wine by the
smell of it. He then picked up a juicy, red larma fruit, biting I
into it with a sound that seemed partly crunching as he went
through the shell, partly squishing as he bit into the fleshy,
segmented endocarp. He seemed to make a great deal of
noise. Although one or two of the girls stirred uneasily, none,
to my relief, awakened.
Harold was now fishing about, still chewing on the fruit, in
a wooden chest at one end of the table. He drew out of the
chest some four silken scarves, after rejecting since others
which did not sufficiently please him.
Then he stood up and went to where one of the girls lay
curled on the thick red carpet.
"I rather like this one," he said, taking a bite out of the
fruit, spitting some seeds to the rug.
She wore yellow Pleasure Silk, and, beneath her long black
hair, on her throat, I glimpsed a silverish Turian collar. She
lay with her knees drawn up and her head resting on her left
elbow. Her skin color was tarnish, not too unlike the girl I
had seen from Port Karl I bent more closely. She was a
beauty, and the diaphanous Pleasure Silk that was the only
garment permitted her did not, by design, conceal her
charms. Then, startled, as she moved her head a bit, restlessly
on the rug, I saw that in her nose was the tiny golden ring of
a Tuchuk girl.
"This is the one," Harold said.
It was, of course, Hereena, she of the First Wagon.
Harold tossed the emptied, collapsed shell of the larma
fruit into a corner of the room and whipped one of the scarves
from his belt.
He then gave the girl a short, swift kick, not to hurt her,
but simply, rather rudely, to startle her awake.
"On your feet, Slave Girl," he said.
Hereena struggled to her feet, her trend down, but Harold
had stepped behind her, pulling her wrists blind her back
and tying then with the scarf in his hand.
"What is it?" she asked.
"You are being abducted," Harold informed her.
The girl's head flew up and she spun to face him, pulling to
free herself. When she saw him her eyes were as wide as
larma fruit and her mouth flew open.
"It is I," said Harold, "Harold the Tuchuk."
"No!" she said. "Not you!"
"Yes," he said, "I," turning her about once again, routinely
checking the knots that bound her wrists, taking her wrists in
his hands, trying to separate them, examining the knots for
slippage; there was none. He permitted her to turn and face
him again.
"How did you get in here?" she demanded.
"I chanced by," said Harold.
She was trying to free herself. After an instant she realized
that she could not, that she had been bound by a warrior.
Then she acted as though she had not noticed that she had
been perfectly secured, that she was his prisoner, the prisoner
of Harold of the Tuchuks. She squared her small shoulders
and glared up at him.
"What are you doing here?" she demanded.
"Stealing a slave girl," he said.
"Who?" she asked.
"Oh, come now," said Harold.
"Not I!" she said.
"Of course," said he.
"But I am Hereena," she cried, "of the First Wagon!"
I feared the girl's voice might awaken the others, but they
seemed still to sleep.
"You are only a little Turian slave girl," said Harold, "who
has taken my fancy."
"Nor" she said.
Then Harold had his hands in her mouth, holding it open.
"See," he said to me.
I looked. To be sure, there was a slight gap between two
of the teeth on the upper right.
Hereena was trying to say something. It is perhaps just as
well she could not.
"It is easy to see," said Harold, "why she was not chosen
First Stake."
Hereena struggled furiously, unable to speak, the young
Tuchuk's hands separating her jaws.
"I have seen kaiila with better teeth," he said.
Hereena made an angry noise. I hoped that the girl would
not burst a blood vessel. Then Harold removed his hands
deftly, narrowly missing what would have been a most savage
!
bite.
"Sleen!" she hissed.
"On the other hand," said Harold, "all things considered,
she is a not unattractive little wench."
"Sleen! Sleen!" cursed the girl.
"I shall enjoy owning you," said Harold, patting her head.
"Sleep! Sleen! Sleen!" cursed the girl.
Harold turned to me. "She is, is she not all things con
sidered a pretty little wench? I could not help but regard the angry, collared Hereena, furious in the swirling Pleasure Silk.
"Yes," I said, "very."
"Do not fret, little Slave Girl," said Harold to Hereena.
"You will soon be able to serve me and I shall see that you
shall do so superbly."