Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space, #Nomads, #Outlaws
the sky."
"And courage," added Harold, "and such things."
Kamchak and I laughed.
"I think it is because at least in part," I said, "that you
reverence the sky and courage and such things that the
egg was brought to you."
"Perhaps," said Kamchak, "but I shall be glad to be rid of
it, and besides it is nearly the best time for hunting tumits
with the bole"
"By the way, Ubar," asked Harold, winking at me, "what
was it you paid for Aphris of Turia?"
Kamchak threw him a look that might have been a quiva
in the heart.
"You have found Aphris!" I cried.
"Albrecht of the Kassars," remarked Harold, casually,
"picked her up while raiding the Paravaci camp."
"Wonderful!" I cried.
"She is only a slave, and unimportant," growled Kamchak.
"What did you pay for her return?" inquired Harold, with
great innocence.
"Almost nothing," muttered Kamchak, "for she is nearly
worthless."
"I am very pleased," I said, "that she is alive and well
and I gather that you were able to purchase her from A1-
brecht of the Kassars without difficulty.""
Harold put his hand over his mouth and turned away,
sniggering, and Kamchak's head seemed to sink angrily into
his shoulders.
"What did you pay?" I asked.
"It is hard to outwit a Tuchuk in a bargain," remarked
Harold, turning back, rather confidently.
"It will soon be time to hunt tumits," growled Kamchak,
looking off across the grass toward the wagons beyond the
walls.
Well did I recall how Kamchak had made Albrecht of the
Kassars pay dearly for the return of his little darling Ten-
chika, and how he had roared with laughter because the
Kassar had paid such a price, obviously having allowed
himself to care for a mere slave girl, and she a Turian at
that
"I would guess," said Harold, "that so shrewd a Tuchuk as
Kamchak, the very Ubar of our wagons, would have paid no
more than a handful of copper tarn disks for a wench of
such sorts."
"The tumits run best this time of year rather toward the
Cartius," observed Kamchak.
"I'm very happy," I said, "to hear that you have Aphris
back. She cared for you, you know."
Kamchak shrugged.
"I have heard," said Harold, "that she does nothing but
sing around the bask and in the wagon all day I myself
would probably beat a girl who- insisted on making all that
noise.
"I think," said Kamchak, "I will have a new bole made
for the hunting."
"He is, of course," observed Harold, "quite handsome."
Kamchak growled menacingly.
"At any rate," continued Harold, "I know that he would
have upheld the honor of the Tuchuks in such matters and
driven a hard bargain with the unwary Kassar."
"The important thing," I said, "is that Aphris is back and
safe." We rode on for a while more. Then I asked, "By the
way, as a matter of fact, what did you pay for her?"
Kamchak's face was black with rage. He looked at
Harold, who smiled innocently and questioningly, and then at
I
me, who was only honestly curious. Kamchak's hands were
like white clubs knotted on the reins of the kaiila. "Ten
thousand bars of gold`," he said.
I stopped the kaiila and regarded him, astounded. Harold
began to pound his saddle and howl with laughter.
Kamchak's eyes, had they been jets of fire, would have
frizzled the young, blond Tuchuk in his saddle.
"Well, well," I said, a certain regrettable malicious elation
perhaps unfortunately detectable in my voice.
Now Kamchak's eyes would have frizzled me as well.
Then a wry glint of amusement sparkled in the Tuchuk's
eyes and the furrowed face wrinkled into a sheepish grin.
'Yes," he said, "Tart Cabot, I did not know until then that I
was a fool."
"Nonetheless, Cabot," remarked Harold, "do you not
think, all things considered, he is on the whole albeit unwise
n certain matters an excellent Ubar?"
"On the whole," I agreed, "albeit perhaps unwise in certain
Matters an excellent Ubar."
Kamchak glared at Harold, and then at me, and then he
looked down, scratching his ear; then he looked at us again,
and all three of us suddenly burst together into laughter, and
tears even streamed down Kamchak's face, running here and
there among the scarred furrows on his cheeks.
"You might have pointed out," said Harold to Kamchak,
"that the gold was Turian gold."
"Yes," cried Kamchak, "that is true it was Turian gold!"
He cracked his fist on his thigh. "Turian gold"
"One might claim," said Harold, "that that makes quite a difference.
"Yes!" cried Kamchak.
"On the other hand," said Harold, "I for one would not
claim that."
Kamchak straightened in the saddle and thought about it.
Then he chuckled and said, "Nor would I."
Again we laughed and, suddenly, we urged the kailla
forward in great bounding strides, eager to reach the wagons,
each of us, for waiting in these wagons were three girls,
desirable, marvelous, ours, Hereena, she who had been of the
First Wagon, the slave of Harold, her master; Aphris of
Turia, almond-eyed and exquisite, once the richest and per-
haps the most beautiful woman of her city, now the simple
slave of the Ubar of Tuchuks, he Kamchak; and the slender,
lovely, dark-haired, dark-eyed Elizabeth Cardwell, once a
proud girl of Earth, now only the helpless and beautiful slave
of a warrior of Ko-ro-ba; a girl in whose nose had been fixed
the delicate, provocative golden ring of Tuchuk women, a
girl whose thigh bore unmistakably the brand of the four
bask horns, whose lovely throat was encircled by a collar of
steel, bearing my name; a girl whose rapturous and uncon-
trollable submission had, in its utterness, astounded both
herself and me, both he who commanded and she who
served, he who took and she who was given no choice but to
yield unreservedly. When she had left my arms she had lain
upon the rug and wept. "I have nothing more to give," she
cried. "Nothing morel"
"It is enough," I had told her.
And she had wept with joy, pressing her head with its
loose, wild hair to my side.
"Is my master pleased with me?" she had asked.
"Yes," I had told her. "Yes, Vella, Kajira mire. I am
pleased. I am pleased indeed."
I leaped from the back of the kaiila and ran toward the
wagon and the girl waiting there cried out with joy and tad
to me and I swept her into my arms and our lips met and she
wept, "You are safer You are safer"
"Yes," I said, "I am safe and you are safe and the
world is safer"
At the time I believed that what I kind said was true.
I gathered that the best season for hunting tumits, the
large, flightless carnivorous birds of the southern plains, was
at hand, for Kamchak, Harold and others seemed to be
looking forward to it with great eagerness. Kutaituchik
avenged, Kamchak was no longer interested in Turia, though
he wished the city to be restored, perhaps in order that the
Wagon Peoples might have a valuable trade outlet whereby
they could manage, if the caravan raids turned out poorly, to
barter hides and horn for the goods of civilization.
On the last day before the withdrawal of the Wagon
Peoples from nine-gated, high-walled Turia, Kamchak held
court in the palace of Phanius Turmus. The Turian Ubar
himself, with Kamras, former Champion of Turia, both clad
m the Kes, were chained at the door, to wash the feet of
those who would enter.
Turia had been a rich city, and though much gold had
been given to the tarnsmen of Ha-Keel and the defenders of
t he House of Saphrar, it was a tiny amount when compared
with the whole, not even counting that lost by being carried
by civilians through the gates Kamchak had designated as I
escapes from the burning city. Indeed, Saphrar's secret hordes
alone, kept in dozens of vast underground storehouses,
would have been enough to have made each and every
Tuchuk, and perhaps each Kataii and Kassar as well, a rich
man a very rich man in any of the cities of Gor. I
recalled that never before had Turia fallen, not since the
founding of the city, perhaps thousands of years ago.
Yet a large portion of this wealth perhaps a third
Kamchak designated should be left behind in the city, to aid
in its rebuilding.
Kamchak, as a Tuchuk, could not bring himself to be quite '