Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space, #Nomads, #Outlaws
drawing blood, but he did not have the weight of the leaping
animal behind his thrust; he thrust at arm's length, the point
scarcely reaching me. Then the animal seized my shield in its
teeth and reared lifting it and myself, by the shield straps,
from the ground. I fell from some dozen feet to the grass
and saw the animal snarling and biting on the shield, then it
shook it and hurled it far and away behind it.
I shook myself.
The helmet which I had slung over my shoulder was gone.
I retained my sword. I grasped the Gorean spear.
I stood at bay on the grass, breathing hard, bloody.
The Tuchuk laughed, throwing his head back.
I readied the spear for its cast.
Warily now the animal began to circle, in an almost
human fashion, watching the spear. It shifted delicately,
feinting, and then withdrawing, trying to draw the cast.
I was later to learn that kaiita are trained to avoid the
thrown spear. It is a training which begins with blunt staves
and progresses through headed weapons. Until the kaiila is
suitably proficient in this art it is not allowed to breed. Those
who cannot learn it die under the spear. Yet, at a close
range, I had no doubt that I could slay the beast. As swift as
may be the kaiila I had no doubt that I was swifter. Gorean
warriors hunt men and tarts with this weapon. But I did not
wish to slay the animal, nor its rider.
To the astonishment of the Tuchuk and the others who
observed, I threw away the weapon.
The Tuchuk sat still on his mount, as did the others. Then
he took his lance and smote it on the small, glossy shield,
acknowledging my act. Then so too did the others, even the
white-caped man of the Paravaci.
Then the Tuchuk drove his own lance into the dirt and
hung on the lance his glossy shield.
I saw him draw one of the quivas from a saddle sheath,
loosen the long, triple-weighted bole from his side.
Slowly, singing in a gutteral chant, a Tuchuk warrior song,
he began to swing the bole. It consists of three long straps of I
leather, each about five feet long, each terminating in a
leather sack which contains, sewn inside, a heavy, round,
metal weight. It was probably developed for hunting the
tumit, a huge, flightless carnivorous bird of the plains, but the
Wagon Peoples use it also, and well, as a weapon of war.
Thrown low the long straps, with their approximate ten-foot
sweep, almost impossible to evade, strike the victim and the
weighted balls, as soon as resistance is met, whip about the
victim, tangling and tightening the straps. Sometimes legs are
broken. It is often difficult to release the straps, so snarled do
they become. Thrown high the Gorean bole can lock a man's
arms to his sides; thrown to the throat it can strangle him;
thrown to the head, a difficult cast, the whipping weights
can crush a skull. One entagles the victim with the bole, leaps
from one's mount and with the quiva cuts his throat.
I had never encountered such a weapon and I had little
notion as to how it might be met.
The Tuchuk handled it well. The three 'weights at the end
of the straps were now almost blurring in the air and he, his
song ended, the reins in his left hand, quiva blade now
clenched between his teeth, bole in his swinging, uplifted
right arm, suddenly cried out and kicked the kaiila into its
charge.
He wants a kill, I told myself. He is under the eyes of
warriors of the other peoples. It would be safest to throw
low. It would be a finer cast, however, to try for the throat
or head. How vain is hey How skillful is he?
He would be both skillful and vain; he was Tuchuk.
To the head came the flashing bole moving in its hideous,
swift revolution almost invisible in the air and I, instead of
lowering my head or throwing myself to the ground, met
instead the flying weighted leather with the blade of a Koro-
ban short sword, with the edge that would divide silk
dropped upon it and the taut straps, two of them, flew from
the blade and the other strap and the three weights looped
off pinto the grass, and the Tuchuk at the same time, scarcely
realizing what had occurred, leaped from the kailla, quiva in
hand, to find himself unexpectedly facing a braced warrior of
Ko-ro-ba, sword drawn.
The quiva reversed itself in his hand, an action so swift I
was only aware of it as his arm flew back, his hand on the
blade, to hurl the weapon.
It sped toward me with incredible velocity over the hand-
ful of feet that separated us. It could not be evaded, but only
countered, and countered it was by the Koroban steel in my
hand, a sudden ringing, sliding flash of steel and the knife
was deflected from my breast.
The Tuchuk stood struck with awe, in the grass, on the
trembling plains in the dusty air.
I could hear the other three men of the Wagon Peoples,
the Kataii, the Kassar, the Paravaci, striking their shields
with their lances. "Well done," said the Kassar.
The Tuchuk removed his helmet and threw it to the grass
He jerked open the jacket he wore and the leather jerkin
beneath, revealing his chest.
He looked about him, at the distant bosk herds, lifted his
head to see the sky once more.
His kailla stood some yards away, shifting a bit, puzzled,
reins loose on its neck.
The Tuchuk now looked at me swiftly. He grinned. He did
not expect nor would he receive aid from his fellows. I
studied his heavy face, the fierce scarring that somehow
ennobled it, the black eyes with the epicanthic fold. He
grinned at me. "Yes," he said, "well done."
I went to him and set the point of the Gorean short sword
at his heart.
He did not flinch.
"I am Tarl Cabot," I said. "I come in peace."
I thrust the blade back in the scabbard.
For a moment the Tuchuk seemed stunned. He stared at
me, disbelievingly, and then, suddenly, he threw back his
head and laughed until tears streamed down his face. He
doubled over and pounded on his knees with his fist. Then he
straightened up and wiped his face with the back of his hand.
I shrugged.
Suddenly the Tuchuk bent to the soil and picked up a
handful of dirt and grass, the land on which the bosk graze,
the land which is the land of the Tuchuks, and this dirt and
this grass he thrust in my hands and I held it.
The warrior grinned and put his hands over mine so that
our hands together held the dirt and the grass, and were
together clasped on it.
"Yes," said the warrior, "come in peace to the Land of the
Wagon Peoples."
I followed the warrior Kamchak into the encampment of
Tuchuks.
Nearly were we run down by six riders on thundering
kaiila who, riding for sport, raced past us wildly among the
crowded, clustered wagons. I heard the lowing of milk bask
from among the wagons. Here and there children ran be-
tween the wheels, playing with a cork ball and quiva, the
object of the game being to strike the thrown ball. Tuchuk
women, unveiled, in their long leather dresses, long hair
bound in braids, tended cooking pots hung on "em-wood
tripods over dung fires. These women were unscarred, but
like the bask themselves, each wore a nose ring. That of the
animals is heavy and of gold, that of the women also of gold
but tiny and fine, not unlike the wedding rings of my old
world. I heard a haruspex singing between the wagons; for a
piece of meat he would read the wind and the grass; for a
cup of wine the stars and the flight of birds; for a fat-bellied
dinner the liver of a sleen or slave.
lithe Wagon Peoples are fascinated with the future and its
signs and though, to hear them speak, they put no store in
such matters, yet they do in practice give them great consider-
ation. I was told by Kamchak that once an army of a
thousand wagons turned aside because a swarm of rennels,
poisonous, crablike desert insects, did not defend its broken
nest, crushed by the wheel of the lead wagon. Another time,
over a hundred years ago, a wagon Ubar lost the spur from
his right boot and turned for this reason back from the gates
of mighty Ar itself.
By one fire I could see a squat Tuchuk, hands on hips,
dancing and stamping about by himself, drunk on fermented
milk curds, dancing, according to Kamchak, to please the
Sky.
The Tuchuks and the other Wagon Peoples reverence