Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space, #Nomads, #Outlaws
skeptically, reproachfully.
"What is the matter?" asked Harold.
"It is still hobbled," I said.
I bent to the tarn hobble and opened it. Immediately the
huge bird's wings began to beat and it sprang skyward.
"Aiii!" I heard Harold cry, and could well imagine what had
happened to his stomach.
As quickly as I could I then unhobbled the other bird and
climbed to the saddle, fastening the broad safety strap. Then
I hauled on the one-strap and seeing Harold's bird wheeling
about in circles against one of the Gorean moons sped to his
side.
"Release the straps!" I called to him. "The bird will follow
this one!"
"Very well," I heard him call, cheerily.
And in a moment we were speeding high over the city of
Turia. I took one long turn, seeing the torches and lights in
the House of Saphrar below, and then guided my bird out
over the prairie in the direction of the wagons of the
Tuchuks.
I was elated that we had managed to escape alive from the
House of Saphrar, but I knew that I must return to the city,
for I had not obtained the object for which I had come the
golden sphere which still resided in the merchant strong-
hold.
I must manage to seize it before the man with whom
Saphrar had had dealings the gray man with eyes like
glass could call for It and destroy it or carry it away.
As we sped high over the prairie I wondered at how it was
that Kamchak was withdrawing the wagons and bosk from
Turia that he would so soon abandon the siege.
Then, in the dawn, we saw the wagons below us, and the
bosk beyond them. Already fires had been lit and there was
much activity in the camp of the Tuchuks, the cooking, the
checking of wagons, the gathering and hitching up of the
wagon bosk. This, I knew, was the morning on which the
wagons moved away from Turia, toward distant Thassa, the
Sea. Risking arrows, I, followed by Harold, descended to
alight among the wagons.
I had now been in the city of Turia some four days, having
returned on foot in the guise of a peddler of small jewels. I
had left the tarn with the wagons. I had spent my last tarn
disk to buy a couple of handfuls of tiny stones, many of them
of little or no value; yet their weight in my pouch gave me
some pretext for being in the city.
I had found Kamchak, as I had been told I would, at the
wagon of Kutaituchik, which, drawn up on its hill near the
standard of the four bask horns, had been heaped with what
wood was at hand and filled with dry grass. The whole was
then drenched in fragrant oils, and that dawn of the retreat,
Kamchak, by his own hand, hurled the torch into the wagon.
Somewhere in the wagon, fixed in a sitting position, weapons
at hand, was Kutaituchik, who had been Kamchak's friend,
and who had been called Ubar of the Tuchuks. The smoke of
the wagon must easily have been seen from the distant walls
of Turia. ~
Kamchak had not spoken but sat on his kaiila, his face
dark with resolve. He was terrible to look upon and I, though
his friend, did not dare to speak to him. I had not returned
to the wagon I had shared with him, but had come immedi-
ately to the wagon of Kutaituchik, where I had been in-
formed he was to be found.
Clustered about the hill, in ranks, on their kaiila, black
lances in the stirrup, were several of the Tuchuk Hundreds.
Angrily they watched the wagon burn.
I wondered that such men as Kamchak and these others
would so willingly, abandon the siege of Turia.
At last when the wagon had burned and the wind moved
about the blackened beams and scattered ashes across the
green prairie, Kamchak raised his right hand. "Let the stan-
dard be moved," he cried.
I observed a special wagon, drawn by a dozen bask, being
pulled up the hill, into which the standard, when uprooted,
would be set. In a few minutes the great pole of the standard
had been mounted on the wagon and was descending the hill,
leaving on the summit the burned wood and the black ashes
that had been the wagon of Kutaituchik, surrendering them
now to the wind and the rain, to time and the snows to
come, and to the green grass of the prairie.
"Turn the wagons!" called Kamchak.
Slowly, wagon by wagon, the long columns of the Tuchuk
retreat were formed, each wagon in its column, each column
in its place, and, covering pasangs of prairie, the march front
Turia had begun.
Far beyond the wagons I could see the herds of bask, and
the dust from their hoofs stained the horizon.
Kamchak rose in his stirrups. "The Tuchuks ride from
Turial" he cried.
Rank by rank the warriors on the kaiila, dour, angry,
silent, turned their mounts away from the city and slowly
went to find their wagons, save for the Hundreds that would
flank the withdrawal and form its rear guard.
Kamchak rode his kaiila up the hill until he stood, that
cold dawn, at the edge of the burned wood and ashes of
Kutaituchik's wagon. He stayed there for some time, and
then turned his mount away, and came slowly down the hill.
Seeing me, he stopped. "I am pleased to see you live," he
said.
I dropped my head, acknowledging the bond he had ac-
knowledged. My heart felt grateful to the stern, fierce war-
rior, though he had been in the past days harsh and strange,
half drunk with hatred for Turia. I did not know if the
Kamchak I had known would ever live again. I feared that
part of him perhaps that part I had loved best had died
the night of the raid, when he had entered the wagon of
Kutaituchik. ~
Standing at his stirrup I looked up. "Will you leave like
this?" I asked. "Is it enough?"
He looked at me, but I could read no expression on his
face. "The Tuchuks ride from Turia," he said. He then rode
away, leaving me standing on the hill.
Somewhat to my surprise I had no difficulty the next
morning, after the withdrawal of the wagons, in entering the
city. Before leaving the wagons I had joined them briefly on
their march, long enough to purchase my peddler's disguise
and the pound or so of stones which was to complete it. I
purchased these things from the man from whom Kamchak
had, on a happier afternoon, obtained a new saddle and set
of quivas. I had seen many things in the man's wagon and I
had gathered, correctly it seems, that he was himself a
peddler of sorts. I then, on foot, following for a time the
tracks of the departing wagons, then departing from them,
returned to the vicinity of Turia. I spent the night on the
prairie and then, on what would have been the second day of
the retreat, entered the city at the eighth hour. My hair was
concealed in the hood of a thin, ankle-length rep-cloth gar-
ment, a dirty white through which ran flecks of golden
thread, a fit garment, in my opinion, for an insignificant
merchant. Beneath my garment, concealed, I carried sword
and quiva.
I was hardly questioned by guards at the gates of Turia,
for the city is a commercial oasis in the plains and during a
year hundreds of caravans, not to mention thousands of
small merchants, on foot or with a single tharlarion wagon,
enter her gates. To my great surprise the gates of Turia stood
open after the withdrawal of the wagons and the lifting of
the siege. Peasants streamed through them returning to their
fields and also hundreds of townsfolk for an outing, some of
them to walk even as far as the remains of the old Tuchuk
camp, hunting for souvenirs. As I entered I regarded the
lofty double gates, and wondered how long it would take to
close them.
As I hobbled through the city of Turia, one eye half shut,
staring at the street as though I hoped to find a lost copper
tarn disk among the stones, I made my way toward the
compound of Saphrar of Turia. I was jostled in the crowds,
and twice nearly knocked down in the guard of
Phanius Turmus, Ubar of Turia.
I was vaguely conscious, from time to time, that I might