Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space, #Nomads, #Outlaws
for him to do. I would rather have expected Kamchak to
have stood before the walls of Turia, his kaiila saddled, his
arrows at hand, until the winds and snows had at last driven
him, the Tuchuks, the wagons and the bask away from the
gates of the beleaguered city, the nine-gated, high-walled
stronghold of Turia, inviolate and never conquered.
This train of thought was interrupted by the sounds of an
altercation below, the shouting of an annoyed guardsman at
the gate, the protesting cries of the driver of the merchant
wagon. I looked down from the wall, and to my amusement,
though I felt sorry for the distraught driver, saw that the
right, rear wheel of the wide, heavy wagon had slipped the
axle and that the wagon, obviously heavily loaded, was now
tilting crazily, and then the axle struck the dirt, imbedding
itself.
The driver had immediately leaped down and was gesticu-
lating wildly beside the wheel. Then, irrationally, he put his
shoulder under the wagon box and began to push up, trying
to right the wagon, surely an impossible task for one man.
This amused several of the guards and some of the pas-
sersby as well, who gathered to watch the driver's dis-
comfiture. Then the officer of the guard, nearly beside him-
self with rage, ordered several of his amused men to put their
shoulders to the wagon as well. Even the several men, togeth-
er with the driver, could not right the wagon, and it seemed
that levers must be sent for.
I looked away, across the prairie, bemused. Dina was still
watching the broil below and laughing, for the driver seemed
so utterly distressed and apologetic, cringing and dancing
about and scraping before the irate officer. Then I noted
across the prairie, hardly remarking it, a streak of dust in the
sky.
Even the guards and townsfolk here and there on the wall
seemed now to be watching the stalled wagon below.
I looked down again. The driver I noted was a young man,
well built. He had blond hair. There seemed to be something
familiar about him.
Suddenly I wheeled and gripped the parapet. The streak of
dust was now more evident. It was approaching the main
gate of Turia.
I seized Dina of Turia in my arms.
"What's wrong!" she said.
I whispered to her, fiercely. "Return to your home and
lock yourself in. Do not go out into the streets!"
"I do not understand," said she. "What are you talking
about?"
"Do not ask questions," I ordered her. "Do as I say! Go
home, bolt the door to your rooms, do not leave the house!"
"But, Tarl Cabot," she said.
"Hurry!" I said.
"You're hurting my arms," she cried.
"Obey mel" ~ commanded.
Suddenly she looked out over the parapet. She, too, saw
the dust. Her hand went to her mouth. Her eyes widened in
fear.
"You can do nothing," I said. "Run!"
I kissed her savagely and turned her about and thrust her a
dozen feet down the walkway inside the wall. She stumbled a
few feet and turned. "What of you?" she cried.
"Run!" I commanded.
And Dina of Turia ran down the walkway, along the rim
of the high wall of Turia.
Beneath the unbelted tunic of the Bakers, slung under my
left arm, its lineaments concealed largely by a short brown
cloak worn over the left shoulder, there hung my sword and
with it, the quiva. I now, not hurrying, removed the weapons
from my tunic, removed the cloak and wrapped them inside it.
I then looked once more over the parapet. The dust was
closer now. In a moment I would be able to see the kaiila,
the flash of light from the lance blades. Judging from the
dust, its dimensions, its speed of approach, the riders, perhaps
hundreds of them the first wave, were riding in a narrow
column, at full gallop. The narrow column, and probably the
Tuchuk spacing, a Hundred and then the space for a Hun-
dred, open, and then another Hundred, and so on, tends to
narrow the front of dust, and the spaces between Hundreds
gives time for some of the dust to dissipate and also, inciden-
tally, to rise sufficiently so that the progress of the conse-
quent Hundreds is in no way impeded or handicapped. I
could now see the first Hundred, five abreast, and then the
open space behind them, and then the second Hundred. They
were approaching with great rapidity. I now saw a sudden
flash of light as the sun took the tips of Tuchuk lances.
Quietly, not wishing to hurry, I descended from the wall
and approached the stalled wagon, the open gate, the guards.
Surely in a moment someone on the wall would give the
alarm.
At the gate the officer was still berating the blond-haired
fellow. He had blue eyes, as I had known he would, for I had
recognized him from above.
"You will suffer for this!" the commander of the guard
was crying. "You dull fool!"
"Oh mercy, master!" whined Harold of the Tuchuks.
"What is your name?" demanded the officer.
At that moment there was a long, wailing cry of horror
from the wall above. "Tuchuks!" The guards suddenly looked
about themselves startled. Then two more people on the wall
took up the cry, pointing wildly out over the wall. "Tuchuks!
Close the gates!"
The officer looked up in alarm, and then he cried out to
the men on the windlass platform. "Close the gates!"
"I think you will find," said Harold, "that my wagon is in
the way."
Suddenly understanding, the officer cried out in rage and
whipped his sword from his sheath but before he could raise
his arm the young man had leaped to him and thrust a quiva
into his heart. "My name," he said, "is Harold of the
Tuchuks!"
There was now screaming on the walls, the rushing of
guardsmen toward the wagon. The men on the windlass
platform were slowly swinging the great double gates shut as
much as possible. Harold had withdrawn his quiva from the
breast of the officer. Two men leaped toward him with
swords drawn and I leaped in front of him and engaged
them, dropping one and wounding the other.
"Well done, Baker," he cried.
I gritted my teeth and met the attack of another man. I
could now hear the drumming of kaiila paws beyond the
gate, perhaps no more than a pasang away. The double gate
had closed now save for the wagon wedged between the two
parts of the gate. The wagon bask, upset by the running
men, the shouting and the clank of arms about them, were
bellowing wildly and throwing their heads up and down,
stomping and pawing in the dust.
My Turian foe took the short sword under the heart. I
kicked him from the blade barely in time to meet the attack
of two more men.
I heard Harold's voice behind me. "I suppose while the
bread is baking," he was saying, "there is little to do but
stand about and improve one's swordplay."
I might have responded but I was hard pressed.
"I had a friend," Harold was saying, "whose name was
Tarl Cabot. By now he would have slain both of them."
I barely turned a blade from my heart.
"And quite some time ago," Harold added.
The man on my left now began to move around me to my
left while the other continued to press me from the front. It
should have been done seconds ago. I stepped back, getting
my back to the wagon, trying to keep their steel from me.
"There is a certain resemblance between yourself and my
friend Marl Shot," Harold was saying, "save that your
sword is decidedly inferior to his. Also he was of the caste
of warriors and would not permit himself to be seen on his
funeral pyre in the robes of so low a caste as that of the
Bakers. Moreover, his hair was red like a larl from the
sun whereas yours is a rather common and, if I may say so,
a rather uninspired black."
I managed to slip my blade through the ribs of one man
and twist to avoid the-thrust of the other. In an instant the
position of the man I had felled was filled by yet another
guardsman.
"It would be well to be vigilant also on the right," re-
marked Harold.