Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space, #Nomads, #Outlaws
"Let us fight," I suggested.
Angrily the Tuchuk pulled back on the reins of the kaiila,
causing it to rear, snarling, pawing at the sky. "And willingly
would I do so, Koroban sleep," he spit out. "Pray thou to
Priest-Kings that the lance does not fall to me!"
I did not understand this.
He turned his kaiila and in a bound or two swung it about
in the midst of his fellows.
Then the Kassar approached me.
"Koroban," said he, "did you not fear our lances?"
"I did," I said.
"But you did not show your fear," said he.
I shrugged.
"Yet," said he, "you tell me you feared." There was
wonder on his face.
I looked away.
"That," said the rider, "speaks to me of courage."
We studied each other for a moment, sizing one another
up. Then he said, "Though you are a dweller of cities, a
vermin of the walls, I think you are not unworthy, and thus
I pray the lance will fall to me."
He turned his mount back to his fellows.
They conferred again for a moment and then the warrior
of the Katau approached, a lithe, strong proud man, one in
whose eyes I could read that he had never lost his saddle, nor
turned from a foe.
His hand was light on the yellow bow, strung taut. But no
arrow was set to the string.
"Where are your men?" he asked.
"I am alone," I said.
The warrior stood in the stirrups, shading his eyes.
"Why have you come to spy?" he asked.
"I am not a spy," I said.
"You are hired by the Turians," he said.
"No," I responded.
"You are a stranger," he said.
"I come in peace," I said.
"Have you heard," he asked, "that the Wagon Peoples slay
strangers?"
"Yes," I said, "I have heard that."
"It is true," he said, and turned his mount back to his
fellows.
Last to approach me was the warrior of the Paravaci, with
his hood and cape of white fur, and the glistening broad
necklace of precious stones encircling his throat.
He pointed to the necklace. "It is beautiful, is it not?" he
asked.
"Yes," I said.
"It will buy ten bosks," said he, "twenty wagons covered
with golden cloth, a hundred she-slaves from Turia."
I looked away.
"Do you not covet the stones," he prodded, "these riches?"
"No," I said.
Anger crossed his face. "You may have them," he said.
"What must I do?" I asked.
"Slay me!" he laughed.
I looked at him steadily. "They are probably false stones,"
I said, "amber droplets, the pearls of the Vosk sorp, the
polished shell of the Tamber clam, glass colored and cut in
Ar for trade with ignorant southern peoples."
The face of the Paravaci, rich with its terrible furrowed
scars, contorted with rage.
He tore the necklace from his throat and flung it to my
feet.
"Regard the worth of those stones!" he cried.
I fished the necklace from
the dust with the point of my sword, it in the sun. It hung like a belt of light, sparkling with a spectrum of riches hundred merchants.
"Excellent," I admitted, handing it back to him on the tip
of the spear.
Angrily he wound it about the pommel of the saddle.
"But I am of the Caste of Warriors," I said, "of a high city
and we do not stain our spears for the stones of men not,
even such stones as these."
The Paravaci was speechless.
"You dare to tempt me," I said, feigning anger, "as if I
beyond the dreams of a man, were of the Caste of Assassins or a common
thief with his dagger in the night." I frowned at him. "Beware," I
warned,
"lest I take your words as insult."
The Paravaci, in his cape and hood of white fur, with the
priceless necklace wrapped about the pommel of his saddle,
sat stiff, not moving, utterly enraged. Then, furiously, the
scars wild in his face, he sprang up in the stirrups and lifted
both hands to the sky. "Spirit of the Sky," he cried, "let the
lance fall to motto mel" Then abruptly, furious, he wheeled
the kaiila and joined the others, whence he turned to regard
me.
As I watched, the Tuchuk took his long, slender lance and
thrust it into the ground, point upward. Then, slowly, the
four riders began to walk their mounts about the lance,
watching it, right hands free to seize it should it begin to fall.
The wind seemed to rise.
In their way I knew they were honoring me, that they had
respected my stand in the matter of the charging lances, that
now they were gambling to see who would fight me, to whose
weapons my blood must flow, beneath the paws of whose
kaiila I must fall bloodied to the earth.
I watched the lance tremble in the shaking earth, and saw
the intentness of the riders as they watched its Lightest
movement. It would soon fall.
I could now see the herds quite clearly, making out indi-
vidual animals, the shaggy humps moving through the dust,
see the sun of the late afternoon glinting off thousands of
horns. Here and there I saw riders, darting about, all
mounted on the swift, graceful kaiila. The sun reflected from
the horns in the veil of dust that hung over the herds was
quite beautiful.
The lance had not yet fallen.
Soon the animals would be turned in on themselves, to mill
together in knots, until they were stopped by the shaggy walls
of their own kind, to stand and grew until the morning. The
wagons would, of course, follow the herds. The herd forms
both vanguard and rampart for the advance of the wagons.
The wagons are said to be countless, the animals without
number. Both of these claims are, of course, mistaken, and
I the Ubars of the Wagon Peoples know well each wagon and
the number of branded beasts in the various herds; each herd
is, incidentally, composed of several smaller herds, each
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watched over by its own riders. The bellowing seemed now to
come from the sky itself, like thunder, or from-the horizon,
like the breaking of an ocean into surf on the rocks of the
shore. It was like a sea or a vast natural phenomenon slowly
approaching. Such indeed, I suppose, it was. Now, also, for
the first time, I could clearly smell the herd, a rich, vast,
fresh, musky, pervasive odor, compounded of trampled grass
and torn earth, of the dung, urine and sweat of perhaps more
than a minion beasts. The magnificent vitality of that smell,
so offensive to some, astonished and thrilled me; it spoke to
me of the insurgence and the swell of life itself, ebullient,
raw, overflowing, unconquerable, primitive, shuffling, smell-
ing, basic, animal, stamping, snorting, moving, an avalanche
of tissue and blood and splendor, a glorious, insistent, invinci-
ble cataract of breathing and walking and seeing and feeling
on the sweet, flowing, windswept mothering earth. And it was
in that instant that I sensed what the bask might mean to the
Wagon Peoples.
"Ho!" I heard, and spun to see the black lance fall and
scarcely had it moved but it was seized in the fist of the
scarred Tuchuk warrior.
The Tuchuk warrior lifted the lance in triumph, in the
same instant slipping his fist into the retention knot and
kicking the roweled heels of his boots into the silken flanks of
his mount, the animal springing towards me and the rider in
the same movement, as if one with the beast, leaning down
from the saddle, lance slightly lowered, charging.
The slender, flexible wand of the lance tore at the seven-
layered Gorean shield, striking a spark from the brass rim
binding it, as the man had lunged at my head.
I had not cast the spear.
I had no wish to kill the Tuchuk.
The charge of the Tuchuk, in spite of its rapidity and
momentum, carried him no more than four paces beyond
me. It seemed scarcely had he passed than the kaiila had
wheeled and charged again, this time given free rein, that it
might tear at me with its fangs.
I thrust with the spear, trying to force back the snapping
jaws of the screaming animal. The kaiila struck, and then
withdrew, and then struck again. All the time the Tuchuk
thrust at me with his lance. Four times the point struck me