Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space, #Nomads, #Outlaws
I spun to the right just in time to turn the blade of a third
man.
"It would not have been necessary to tell Tarl Cabot that,"
Harold said.
Some passersby were now fleeing past, crying out. The
great alarm bars of the city were now ringing, struck by iron
hammers.
"I sometimes wonder where old Tarl Cabot is," Harold
said wistfully.
"You Tuchuk idiot!" I screamed.
Suddenly I saw the faces of the men fighting me turn from
rage to fear. They turned and ran from the gate.
"It would now be well," said Harold, "to take refuge under
the wagon." I then saw his body dive past, scrambling under
the wagon. I threw myself to the ground and rolled under
with him.
Almost instantly there was a wild cry, the war cry of the
Tuchuks, and the first five kaiila leaped from outside the gate
onto the top of the wagon, finding firm footing on what I had
taken to be simple rain canvas, but actually was canvas
stretched over a load of rocks and earth, accounting for the
incredible weight of the wagon, and then bounded from the
wagon, two to one side, two the other, and the middle rider
actually leaping from the top of the wagon to the dust beyond
the harnessed bask. In an instant another five and then
another and another had repeated this maneuver and soon,
sometimes with squealing of kaiila and dismounting of riders
as one beast or another would be crowded between the gates
and the others, a Hundred and then another Hundred had
hurtled howling into the city, black lacquered shields on the
left arms, lance seized in the right hand. About us there were
the stamping paws of kaiila, the crying of men, the sound of
arms, and always more and more Tuchuks striking the top of
the wagon and bounding into the city uttering their war cry.
Each of the Hundreds that entered turned to its own destina
tion, taking different streets and turns, some dismounting and
climbing to command the roofs with their small bows. Al
ready I could smell smoke.
Under the wagon with us, crouching, terrified, were three
Turians, civilians, a wine vendor, a potter and a girl. The
wine vendor and the potter were peeping fearfully from
between the wheels at the riders thundering into the streets.
Harold, on his hands and knees, was looking into the eyes of
the girl who knelt, too, numb with terror. "I am Harold of
the Tuchuks," he was telling her. He deftly removed the veil
pins and she scarcely noticed, so terrified was she. "I am not
really a bad fellow," he was informing her. "Would you like
to be my slave?" She managed to shake her head, No, a tiny
motion, her eyes wide with fear. "Ah, well," said Harold,
repinning her veil. "It is probably just as well anyway. I
already have one slave and two girls in one wagon if I had
a wagon would probably be difficult." The girl nodded her
head affirmatively. "When you leave the wagon," Harold told
her, "you might be stopped by Tuchuks nasty fellows who
would like to put your pretty little throat in a collar you
understand?" She nodded, Yes. "So you tell them that you
are already the slave of Harold the Tuchuk, understand?"
She nodded again. "It will be dishonest on your part," said
Harold apologetically, "but these are hard times." There were
tears in her eyes. "Then go home and lock yourself in the
cellar," he said. He glanced out. There were still riders
pouring into the city. "But as yet," he said, "you cannot
leave." She nodded, Yes. He then unpinned her veil and took
her in his arms, improving the time.
I sat cross-legged under the wagon, my sword across my
knees, watching the paws and legs of the swirling kaiila
bounding past. I heard the hiss of crossbow quarrels and one
rider and his mount stumbled off the wagon top, falling and
rolling to one side, others bounding over him. Then I heard
the twang of the small ham bows of Tuchuks. Somewhere,
off on the other side of the wagon, I heard the heavy
grunting of a tharlarion and the squealing of a kaiila, the meeting of lances and shields. I saw a woman, unveiled, hair
streaming behind her, twisting, buffeted, among the kaiila,
somehow managing to find her way among them and rush
between two buildings. The tolling of the alarm bars was now
fearful throughout the city. I could hear screaming some
hundred yards away. The roof of a building on the left was
afire and smoke and sparks were being hurled into the sky
and swept by the wind across the adjoining buildings. Some
dozen dismounted Tuchuks were now at the great windlass
on its platform slowly opening the gates to their maximum
width, and when they had done so the Tuchuks, howling and
waving their lances, entered the city in ranks of twenty
abreast, thus only five ranks to the Hundred. I could now see
smoke down the long avenue leading from the gate, in a
dozen places. Already I saw a Tuchuk with a dozen silver
cups tied on a string to his saddle. Another had a screaming
woman by the hair, running her beside his stirrup. And still
more Tuchuks bounded into the city. The wall of a building
off the main avenue collapsed flaming to the street. I could
hear in three or four places the clash of arms, the hiss of the
bolts of crossbows, the answering featherswift flight of the
barbed Tuchuk war arrows. Another wall, on the other side
of the avenue, tumbled downward, two Turian warriors
leaping from it, being ridden down by Tuchuks, leaping over
the burning debris on kaiilaback, lance in hand.
Then in the clearing inside the gate, on his kaiila, lance in
his right fist, turning and barking orders, I saw Kamchak of
- the Tuchuks, waving men to the left and right, and to the
roof tops. His lance point was red. The black lacquer of his
shield was deeply cut and scraped. The metal net that de-
pended from his helmet had been thrown back and his eyes
and face were fearful to behold. He was flanked by officers
of the Tuchuks, commanders of Thousands, mounted as he
was and armed. He turned his kaiila to face the city and it
reared and he lifted his shield on his left arm and his lance in
his right fist. "I want the blood of Saphrar of Turia," he cried.
It had, of course, been the Tuchuk turn.
One makes a pretext of seriously besieging a city, spending
several days, sometimes weeks, in the endeavor, and then,
apparently, one surrenders the sedge and withdraws, moving
away slowly with the wagons and bask for some days in
this case four and then, the bask and wagons removed from
probable danger, swiftly, in a single night, under the cover of
darkness, sweeping back to the city, taking it by surprise. |
It had worked well.
Much of Turia was in flames. Certain of the Hundreds,
delegated the task, had immediately, almost before the alarm
bars could sound, seized many of the wells, granaries and I
public buildings, including the very palace of Phanius Turmus
itself. The Ubar, and Kamras, his highest officer, had fallen
captive almost immediately, each to a Hundred set that
purpose. Most of the High Council of Turia, too, now re- ~
posed in Tuchuk chains. The city was largely without leader- I
ship, though here and there brave Turians had gathered I
guardsmen and men-at-arms and determined civilians and
sealed off streets, forming fortresses within the city against
the invaders. The compound of the House of Saphrar, how-
ever, had not fallen, protected by its numerous guardsmen
and its high walls, nor had the tower elsewhere that sheltered
the tarn cots and warriors of Ha-Keel, the mercenary from
Port Karl
Kamchak had taken up quarters in the palace of Phanius
Turmus, which, save for the looting and the ripping down of
tapestries, the wanton defacing of wall mosaics, was un-
harmed. It was from this place that he directed the occupa-
tion of the city.
Harold, after the Tuchuks had entered the city, insisted on
squiring the young woman home whom he had encountered
under the wagon, and, for good measure, the wine vendor
and potter as well. I accompanied him, stopping only long
enough to rip away most of the upper portions of the baker's
tunic and rinse the dye from my hair in a street fountain. I
had no wish to be brought down with a Tuchuk arrow in the
streets as a Turian civilian. Also I knew many of the Tuchuks
were familiar with my perhaps too red hair and might, seeing
it, generously retain from firing on its owner. It seemed to
me that for once my hair might actually prove useful, a
turnabout I contemplated with pleasure. Do not take me
wrong, I am rather fond, on the whole, of my hair, it is
merely that one must, to be objective about such matters,