Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space, #Nomads, #Outlaws
raiders. I wondered on the fate of Aphris of Turia.
Kamchak, I knew, however, cared little for the slave, and
would not be much concerned; yet her fate concerned me,
and ~ hoped that she might live, that her beauty if not
compassion or justice might have won her life for her, be it
only as a Paravaci wagon slave; and then, too, I wondered
again on the fate of Miss Elizabeth Cardwell, the lovely
young New York secretary, so cruelly and so far removed
from her own world; and then, exhausted, I lay down on the
boards of Kamchak's looted wagon and fell asleep.
Turia was now largely under the control of Tuchuks. For
days it had been burning.
The morning after the Battle at the Wagons I had
mounted a rested kaiila and set forth for Turia. Some Ahn
after departing from the Tuchuk camp I encountered the
wagon that carried my tarn, and its guard, still advancing
toward the camp. The wagon carrying Harold's tarn and its
guard accompanied it. I- left the kaiila with the Tuchuks and
mounted my tarn, and in less than an Ahn, saw the shimmer-
ing walls of Turia in the distance, and the veils of smoke
rising over the city.
The House of Saphrar still stood, and the tower that had
been fortified by Ha-Keel's tarnsmen. Aside from these there
remained few pockets of organized - resistance in the city,
though here and there, in alleys and on roof tops, small
groups of Turians furtively and sporadically attempted to
carry the war to the invaders. I and Kamchak expected
Saphrar to flee by tarn at any moment, for it must now be
clear to him that the strike of the Paravaci against the
Tuchuk wagons and herds had not forced Kamchak to with-
draw; indeed, his forces were now supplemented by Kataii
and Kassars, a development which must have horrified him.
The only reason that occurred to me why Saphrar had not
yet fled was that he was waiting in Turia for an excellent
reason possibly the arrival on tarnback of the gray
man with whom he had negotiated apparently to secure the
golden sphere. I reminded myself, beyond this, that if his
house should actually be forced, and himself threatened, he
could always flee, with relative safety, at the last moment,
At
abandoning his men, his servants and slaves to the mercies of
ravaging Tuchuks.
I knew that Kamchak was in constant touch, by means of
riders, with the wagons of the Tuchuks, and so I did not
speak with him of the looting of his wagon, nor of the fate of
Aphris of Turia, nor did I deem it well to speak to him of
Elizabeth Cardwell, for it seemed evident that he had sold
her, and that my inquiry, to a Tuchuk mind, might thus
appear prying or impertinent; I would discover, if possible,
her master and his whereabouts independently; indeed, for all
I knew, perhaps she had been abducted by raiding Paravaci,
and none among the Tuchuks would even know.
I did ask Kamchak why, considering the probabilities that If'
the Kataii and the Kassars would not have come to the aid
of the Tuchuks, he had not abandoned Turia and returned
with his main forces to the wagons. "It was a wager," said
he, "which I had made with myself."
"A dangerous wager," I had remarked.
"Perhaps," he said, "but I think I know the Kataii and the Kassars."
"The stakes were high," I said.
"They are higher than you know," he said.
"I do not understand," I said.
"The wager is not yet done," he said, but would speak no dusk more.
On the day following my arrival in Turia, Harold, on
tarnback, relieved at his request of the command of the
wagons and herds joined me in the palace of Phanius Turmus must.
During the day and night, taking hours of sleep where we
could, sometimes on the rugs of the palace of Phanius Tur-
mus, sometimes on the stones of the streets by watch fires,
Harold and I, at Kamchak's orders, performed a variety of
tasks, sometimes joining in the fighting, sometimes acting as
liaison between him nod other commanders, sometimes merely
positioning men, checking outposts and reconnoitering.
Kamchak's forces, on the whole, were so disposed as to push
the Turians toward two gates which he had left open and
undefended, thus providing a route of escape for civilians
and soldiers who would make use of it. From certain post-
lions on the walls we could see the stream of refugees fleeing
the burning city. They carried food and what possessions they
could. The time of the year was the late spring and the
prairie's climate was not unkind, though occasionally long l
rains must have made the lot of the refugees fleeing toward .
other cities miserable. There were occasional small creek,
across the paths of the refugees and water was available.
Also, Kamchak, to my pleasure but surprise, had had his men
drive verr flocks and some Turian bask after the refugees
I asked him about this, for Tuchuk warfare, as I under-
stood it, was complete, leaving no living thing in its wake,
killing even domestic animals and poisoning wells. Certain
cities, burned by the Wagon Peoples more than a hundred
years ago, were still said to be desolate ruins between their
broken walls, silent save for the wind and the occasional foot-
fall of a prowling sleen hunting for urts.
"The Wagon Peoples need Turia," said Kamchak, simply.
I was thunderstruck. Yet it seemed to me true, for Turia
was the main avenue of contact between the Wagon Peoples
and the other cities of Gor, the gate through which trade-
goods flowed to the wilderness of grasses that was the land of
the riders of the kaiila and the herders of bask. Without
Turia, to be sure, the Wagon Peoples would undoubtedly be
the poorer.
"And," said Kamchak, "the Wagon Peoples need an enemy."
"I do not understand," I said.
"Without an enemy," said Kamchak, "they will never stand
together and if they fail to stand together, someday they
will fall."
"Has this something to do with the 'wager' you spoke of?"
I asked.
"Perhaps," said Kamchak.
- Still I was not altogether satisfied, for, on the whole, it
seemed to me that Turia might yet have survived even had
Kamchak's forces wrought much greater destruction than
they had for example, opening but a single gate and permit-
ting only a few hundred, rather than thousands to escape the
city. "is that all?" I asked. "Is that the only reason that Be
many of Turia yet live beyond the city?"
He looked at me, without expression. "Surely, Command"
or," he said, "you have duties elsewhere."
I nodded curtly and turned and left the room, dismissed.
Long ago I had learned not to press the Tuchuk when he did
not wish to speak. But as I left I wondered at his compare
five lenience. He professed a cruel hatred of Turia and
Turians, and yet he had, considering the normal practices of
the Wagon Peoples, not noted for their mercy to helpless
foes, treated the unarmed citizens of the city with unique
indulgence, permitting them, on the whole, to keep their lives
and freedom, though only as refugees beyond the walls. The
clearest exception to this, of course, lay in the case of the
more beautiful of the city's women, who were treated by
Gorean custom, as portions of the booty.
I spent what free time I could in the vicinity of Saphrar's
compound. The structures about the compound had been
fortified by Tuchuks, and walls of stone and wood had been
thrown into the streets and openings between the buildings,
thus enclosing the compound. 1 had been training some
hundred Tuchuks in the use of the crossbow, dozens of which
had now fallen into our hands. Each warrior had at his
disposal five crossbows and four Turian slaves, for winding
and loading the bows. These warriors I stationed on roofs of
buildings encircling the compound, as close to the walls as
possible. The crossbow, though its rate of fire is much slower
than the Tuchuk bow, has a much greater range. With the
crossbow in our hands, the business of bringing tarns in and
out of the compound became proportionately more haz-
ardous, which, of course, was what I intended. In fact, to my
elation, some of my fledgling crossbowmen, on the first day,
brought down four tarns attempting to enter the compound,
though, to be sure, several escaped them. If we could get the
crossbows into the compound itself, perhaps even to the
outside walls, we could for most practical purposes close the
compound to entrance and escape by air. I feared, of course,
that this addition to our armament might hasten Saphrar's