Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space, #Nomads, #Outlaws
"Will you now return to Turia?" asked Dina.
"No," said Tenchika, smiling. "I will remain with Albrecht
With the wagons."
Albrecht himself was busy elsewhere, talking with Conrad,
Ubar of the Kassars.
"Here," said Tenchika, thrusting the small cloth sack she
held into Dina's hands. "These are yours you should have
them you won them."
Dina, wondering, opened the package and within it she
saw the cups and rings, and pieces of gold, which Albrecht
had given her for her victories in the runnings from the bole.
'Wake them," insisted Tenchika.
"Does he know?" asked Dina.
"Of course," said Tenchika.
"He is kind," said Dina.
"I love him," said Tenchika, kissing Dina and hurrying
away.
I approached Dina of Turia. I looked at the objects she
held. "You must have run well indeed," I remarked.
She laughed. "There is more than enough here to hire
help," she said. "I shall reopen the shop of my father and
brothers."
"If you like," I said, "I will give you a hundred times
that."
"No," she said, smiling, "for this is my own."
Then she lowered her veil briefly and kissed me. "Good-
bye, Tarl Cabot," she said. "I wish you well."
"And I," I said, "wish you well noble Dina of Turia."
She laughed. "Foolish warrior," she chided, "I am only the
daughter of a baker."
"He was a noble and valiant man," I said.
"Thank you," said she.
"And his daughter, too," I said, "is a noble and valiant
woman and beautiful."
I did not permit her to replace her veil until I had kissed
her, softly, one last time.
She refastened her veil and touched her fingertips to her
lips beneath it and then pressed them to my lips and turned
and hurried away.
Elizabeth had watched but she had shown no sign of anger
or irritation.
"She is beautiful," said Elizabeth.
"Yes," I said, "she is." And then I looked at Elizabeth.
"You, too," I told her, "are beautiful."
She looked up at me, smiling. "I know," she said.
"Vain wench," I said.
"A Gorean girl," she said, "need not pretend to be plain
when she knows that she is beautiful."
'what ~ true," I admitted. "But where," I asked, "did you
come by the notion that you are beautiful?"
"My master told me," she sniffed, "and my master does
not lie does he?"
"Not often," I said, "and particularly not about matters of
such importance."
'And I have seen men look at me," she said, "and I know
that I would bring a good price."
I must have appeared scandalized.
"I would," said Elizabeth firmly, "I am worth many tarn
disks."
"You are," I admitted.
"So I am beautiful," she concluded.
"It is true," I said.
"But," said she, "you will not sell me---will you?"
"Not immediately," I said. "We shall see if you continue to
please me."
"Oh, Tarl!" she said.
"Master," I prompted.
"Master," she said.
"Well?" I asked.
'I shall," she said, smiling, "strive to continue to please
you." '
"See that you do," I said.
"I love you," she said suddenly, "I love you, Tarl Cabot,
Master." She put her arms about my neck and kissed me.
I kept her long in my arms, savoring the warmth of her
lips, the delicacy of her tongue on mine.
"Your slave," she whispered, "Master, forever your
slave."
It was hard for me to believe that this marvelous, collared
beauty in my arms was once a simple girl of Earth, that this
astounding wench, Tuchuk and Gorean, was the same as
Miss Elizabeth Cardwell, the young secretary who 80 long
before had found herself inexplicably thrust into intrigues and
circumstances beyond her comprehension on the plains of
Gor. Whatever she might have been before, a clock number,
a set of records in a personnel file, an unimportant employee,
with her salary and benefits, under the obligation to please
and impress other employees, scarcely more important than
herself, she was now alive, and free in her emotions though
her flesh might be subject to chains; she was now vital,
passionate, loving, mine; I wondered if there were other girls
of Barth in whom a transformation might be wrought,
others who might, not fully understanding, long for a man
and a world a world in which they must find and be
themselves, for no other choice would be theisms world in
which they might run and breathe and laugh and be swift and
loving and prized and in their hearts at last open and free
though paradoxically perhaps, for a time, or until the man
should choose otherwise, wearing the collar of a slave girt
But I dismissed such thoughts as foolish.
None remained now in the court of the Ubar other than
Kamchak and Aphris, Harold and Hereena, and myself and
Elizabeth Cardwell.
Kamchak looked across the room to me. "Well," said he,
"the wager turned out well."
~
I recalled he had spoken of this. "You gambled," I said,
I
"when you did not surrender Turia to return to defend the
bask and wagons of the Tuchuks that the others, the Kataii
and Kassars, would come to your aid." I shook my head. "It
was a dangerous gamble," I said.
"Perhaps not so dangerous," said he, "for I know the
Kataii and the Kassars better than they knew themselves."
"You said there was more to the wager though," I re-
marked, "that it was not yet done."
"It is now done," said he.
"What was the latter part of the wager?" I asked.
'That," said he, "the Kataii and the Kassars and, too, in
time the Paravaci would see how we might be divided against
ourselves and singly destroyed and would thus recognize
the need for uniting the standards, bringing together the -
Thousands under one command"
"That they would," I said, "recognize the need for the
Ubar San?"
"Yes," said Kamchak, "that was the wager that I could
teach them the Ubar San."
"Hail," said I, "Kamchak, Ubar San!"
"Hail," cried Harold, "Kamchak, Ubar San!"
Kamchak smiled and looked down. "It will soon be time
for hunting tumits," he said.
As he turned to leave the throne room of Phanius Turmus,
to return to the wagons, Aphris lightly rose to her feet to
accompany him.
But Kamchak turned and faced her. She looked up at him,
questioningly. It was hard to read his face. She stood quite
close to him.
Gently, ever so gently, Kamchak put his hands on her arms
and drew her to him and then, very softly, kissed her.
"Master?" she asked.
Kamchak's hands were at the small, heavy lock at the back
of the steel, Turian collar she wore. He turned the key and
opened the collar, discarding it.
Aphris said nothing, but she trembled and shook her head
slightly. She touched her throat disbelievingly.
"You are free," said the Tuchuk.
The girl looked at him, incredulously, bewildered.
"Do not fear," he said. "You will be given riches." He
smiled. "You will once again be the richest woman in all of
Turia."
She could not answer him.
The girl, and the rest of us present, stood stunned. Most of us
knew the peril, the hardship and danger the Tuchuk had
sustained in her acquisition; all of us knew the price he had
been willing to pay only recently that she, fallen into the
hands of another, might be returned to lam
We could not understand what he had done.
Kamchak turned abruptly from her striding to his kailla,
which had been tethered behind the throne. He put one foot
in the stirrup and mounted easily. Then, not pressing the
animal, he took his way from the throne room. The rest of us
followed him, with the exception of Aphris who remained,
stricken, standing beside the throne of the Ubar, clad perhaps