Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space, #Nomads, #Outlaws
with the Thousands sweeping over the hills, I saw the stan-
dard of the Yellow Bow, and on the right, flying forward
with the hurtling Thousands, its leather streaming behind its
pole, I saw the standard of the Three-Weighted Bola.
"Katain!" screamed Harold, hugging me. "Kassars!"
I stood dumbfounded on the planking and saw the two
great wedges of the Kataii and the Kassars close like tongs
on the trapped Paravaci, taking them in the unprotected
flanks, crushing the ranks before them with the weight of
their charge. And even the sky seemed dark for a moment
as, from the left and right, thousands upon thousands of
arrows fell like dark rain among the startled, stumbling,
turning Paravaci.
"We might help," remarked Harold.
'Yes!" I cried.
"Korobans are slow to think of such matters," he re-
marked.
I turned to the men. "Open the wagons!" I cried. "To your
animals!"
And in an instant it seemed the wagon lashing kind been
cut by quivas and our hundreds of warriors, the pitiful
remnant of our two Thousands, swept forth upon the Parava-
ci, riding as though they had been fresh rested and ready,
shouting the wild war cry of the Tuchuks.
It was not until late that afternoon that I met with Hakim-
ba of the Kataii and Conrad of the Kassars. On the field we
met and, as comrades in arms, we embraced one another.
"We have our own wagons," said Hakimba, "but yet we are of the Wagon Peoples."
"It is so, too, with us," said Conrad, he of the Kassars.
"I regret only," I said, "that I sent word to Kamchak and
even now he has withdrawn his men from Turia and is
returning to the wagons."
"No," said Hakimba, "we sent riders to Turia even as we
left our own camp. Kamchak knew of our movements long
before you."
"And of ours," said Conrad, "for we too sent him word
thinking it well to keep him informed in these matters."
"For a Kataii and a Kassar," said Harold, "you two are
not bad fellows." And then he added. "See that you do not
ride off with any of our bask or women."
"The Paravaci left their camp largely unguarded," said
Hakimba. "Their strength was brought here."
I laughed.
"Yes," said Conrad, "most of the Paravaci bask are now in
the herds of the Kataii and Kassars."
"Reasonably evenly divided I trust," remarked Hakimba.
"I think so," said Conrad. "If not, we can always iron
matters out with a bit of bask raiding."
"That is true," granted Hakimba, the yellow and red scars
wrinkling into a grin on his lean, black face.
"when the Paravaci those who escaped us return to
their wagons," remarked Conrad, "they will find a surprise in
store for them."
"Oh?" I inquired.
"We burned most of their wagons those we could," said
Hakimba."
"And their goods and women?" inquired Harold.
"Those that pleased us both of goods and women," re-
marked Conrad, "we carried off of goods that did not
please us, we burned them of women that did not please us,
we left them stripped and weeping among the wagons."
"This will mean war," I said, "for many years among the
Wagon Peoples."
"No," said Conrad, "the Paravaci will want back their
bask and women and perhaps they may have them for a
price."
"You are wise," said Harold.
"I do not think they will slay bask or join with Turians
again," said Hakimba.
I supposed he was right. Later in the afternoon the last of
the Paravaci had been cleared from the Tuchuk wagons,
wherever they might be found. Harold and I sent a rider
back to Kamchak with news of the victory. Following him, in
a few hours, would be a Thousand each from the Kataii and
the Kassars, to lend him what aid they might in his work in,
Turia.
In the morning the warriors remaining of the two Thou"
sands who had ridden with Harold and I would, with the help
of other Tuchuks surviving among the wagons, move the
wagons and the bask the field. Already the bask were
growing uneasy at the smell of death and already the grass
about the camp was rustling with the movements of the tiny
brown prairie arts, scavengers, come to feed. Whether, after
we had moved the wagons and bask some pasangs away, we
should remain there, or proceed toward the pastures this side
of the Ta-Thassa Mountains, or return toward Turia, was not
decided. In the thinking of both Harold and myself, that
decision was properly Kamchak's. The Kataii main force and
the Kassar main force camped separately some pasangs from
the Tuchuk camp and the field and would, in the morning,
return to their own wagons. Each had exchanged riders who,
from time to time, would report to their own camp from that
of the other. Each had also, as had the Tuchuks, set their
own pickets. Neither wished the other to withdraw secretly
and do for them what they together had done for the
Paravaci, and what the Paravaci had attempted to do to the
Tuchuks. It was not that they, on this night, truly distrusted I
one another so much as the fact that a lifetime of raiding
and war had determined each to be, as a simple matter of
course, wary of the other.
I myself was anxious to return to Turia as soon as it could
be well managed. Harold, willingly enough, volunteered to
remain in the camp until the commander of a Thousand
could be sent from Turia to relieve him. I appreciated this
very much on his part, for I keenly wished to return to Turia
as soon as it would be at all practical I had pressing and ~
significant business yet unfinished behind its walls.
I would leave in the morning.
That night I found Kamchak's old wagon, and though it
had been looted, it had not been burned.
There was no sign of either Aphris or Elizabeth, either
about the wagon, or in the overturned, broken sleen cage in
which, when I had last seen them, Kamchak had confined
them. I was told by a Tuchuk woman that they had not been
in the cage when the Paravaci had struck but rather that
Aphris had been in the wagon and the barbarian, as she
referred to Miss Cardwell, had been sent to another wagon,
the whereabouts she did not know. Aphris had, according to
the woman, fallen into the hands of the Paravaci who had
looted Kamchak's wagon; Elizabeth's fate she did not know;
I gathered, of course, from the fact that Elizabeth had been
sent to another wagon that Kamchak had sold her. I won-
dered who her new master might be and hoped, for her sake,
that she would well please him. She might, of course, have
also fallen, lice Aphris, into the hands of the Paravaci. I was
bitter and sad as I looked about the interior of Kamchak's
wagon. The covering on the framework had been torn in
several places and the rugs ripped or carried away. The
saddle on the side had been cut and the quivas had been
taken from their sheaths. The hangings were torn down, the
wood of the wagon scratched and marred. Most of the gold
and jewels, and precious plate and cups and goblets, were
missing, except where here and there a coin or stone might
lie missed at the edge of the wagon hides or at the foot of
were gone and those that were not had been shattered
against the floor, or against the wagon poles, leaving dark
stains on the poles and on the hides behind them. The floor
was littered with broken glass. Some things, of little or no
worth, but which I remembered fondly, were still about.
There was a brass ladle that Aphris and Elizabeth had used
in cooking and a tin box of yellow Turian sugar, dented in
now and its contents scattered; and the large, gray leathery
object which I had upon occasion seen Kamchak use as a
stool, that which he had once kicked across the floor for my
inspection; he had been fond of it, that curiosity, and would
perhaps be pleased that it had not been, like most of his
things, carried away in the leather loot sacks of Paravaci