Norman, John - Gor 10 - Tribesmen of Gor.txt

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by Tribesmen of Gor [lit]


  The dancer turned from the tables and, hands high over her head, approached me.

  She swayed to the music before me. “You commanded me to dance my beauty for the

  guests of Samos,” said she, “Master. You, too, are such a guest.

  I looked upon her, narrow lidded, as she strove to please me.

  Then she moaned and turned away, and, as the music swirled to its maddened,

  frenzied climax, she spun, whirling, in a jangle of bells and clashing barbaric

  ornaments before the guests of Samos. Then, as the music suddenly stopped, she

  fell to the floor helpless, vulnerable, a female slave. Her body, under the

  torchlight, shone with a sheen of sweat. She gasped for breath; her body was

  beautiful, her breasts lifting and falling, as she drank deeply of the air. Her

  lips were parted. Now that her dance was finished she could scarcely move. We

  had not been gentle with her. She looked up at me and lifted her hand. It was at

  my feet she lay.

  I gestured her to her knees, head down. She obeyed. Her hair fell to the map

  floor.It touched the portion of the map which, together Samos and I had been

  contemplating. I regarded the lettering, in Gorean script.

  “The secret is there,” said Samos, pointing to the map, “in the Tahari.”

  Delicately, timidly the dancer reached out, with her two hands, to touch my

  ankle. She looked at me, agonized.

  I signaled to the guards. She cried out with misery as she was dragged by the

  ankle across the door and thrown over two of the small tables.

  I would let others warm her.

  The men cried out with pleasure.

  Her final yieldings I would force from her later, when it pleased me.

  She who had once been Miss Priscilla Blake-Allen, a free Earth girl prior to her

  enslavement, struggled to her feet, her eyes wide with horror, trying to

  struggle backward but the guards’ hands on her arms, she now only a nameless

  slave, for her master had not yet given her a name, held her in place.

  She looked at her master, Samos of Port Kar. He gave a sign. She screamed.

  She fought the harness.

  She too was thrown across the tables.

  Ibn Saran, salt merchant of Kasra, did not rise from behind the table behind

  which, cross-legged, he sat. His eyes were half closed. He paid no attention to

  the raping of the slaves. He, too, it seemed, contemplated the map.

  “Either girl’s use is yours, noble Ibn Saran,” said Samos, “if you wish.”

  “My thanks,” said he, “Noble Samos. But it will be in my own tent, on the

  submission mats, that I will teach a slave to be a slave.”

  I turned to Samos. “I will leave in the morning” I said.

  “Do I understand,” asked Ibn Saran, “that your path leads you to the Tahari?”

  “Yes,” I said.

  “That direction, too, is mine,” said Ibn Saran. “I, too, leave in the morning.

  Perhaps we might travel together?”

  “Good,” I said.

  Ibn Saran rose to his feet, and brushed his hand against the right palm of

  Samos, twice, and against my right palm, twice. “May your water bags be never

  empty. May you always have water.”

  “May your water bags be never empty,” I said. “May you always have water.”

  He then bowed, turned, and left the room.

  “The Kur,” I said. I referred to the beast in the dungeons of Samos.

  “Yes?” said Samos.

  “Free it,” I said.

  “Free it?” he asked.

  “Yes,” I said.

  “Is it your intention to follow it?”

  “No,” I said. Few, if any humans, in my opinion, could long follow an adult Kur.

  They are agile, highly intelligent beasts. Their senses are unusually keen. It

  would be difficult, if not impossible to trail, perhaps for weeks, such a

  keen-sensed, wary, suspicious creature. It would be almost suicidal, in my

  opinion, to attempt it. Sooner or later the beast would become aware of the

  pursuit. At that point the hunter would become the hunted. The night vision of

  the Kur is superb.

  “Do you know what you are doing?” asked Samos.

  “There are factions among Kurii” I said. “It is my feeling that this Kur may be

  our ally.”

  “You are mad,” said Samos.

  “Perhaps,” I granted.

  “I shall release the Kur,” said Samos, “two days after you have departed Port

  Kar.”

  “Perhaps I shall meet it in the Tahari,” I said.”

  “I would not look forward to the meeting,” he said.

  I smiled.

  “You leave in the morning?” asked Samos.

  “I shall leave before morning,” I said.

  “Are you not traveling with Ibn Sarah?” asked Samos.

  “No,” I said. “I do not trust him.”

  Samos nodded. “Nor do I,” he said.

  2 The Streets of Tor

  “Water! Water!” called the man.

  “Water,” I said.

  He came to me, bent over, tattered, swarthy, grinning up at me, the verrskin bag

  over his shoulder, the brass cups, a dozen of them, attached to shoulder straps

  and his belt, rattling and clinking. His shoulder on the left was damp from the

  bag. There were sweat marks on his torn shirt, under the straps. One of the

  brass cups he unhooked from his belt. Without removing the bag from his

  shoulder, he filled the cup. He wore a head scarf, the wrapped turban, wound

  about his head. It was of rep-cloth. It protects the head from the sun; its

  folds allow beat and perspiration to escape, evaporating, and, of course, air to

  enter and circulate. Among lower-class males, too, it provides a soft cushion,

  on which boxes, and other burdens, may be conveniently carried on the head,

  steadied by the right hand. The water flowed into the cup through a tiny

  vent-and-spigot device, which wastes little water, by reducing spillage, which

  was tied in and waxed into a hole left in the front left foreleg of the verr

  skin. The skins are carefully stripped and any rents in the skin are sewed up,

  the seams coated with wax. When the whole skin is thoroughly cleaned of filth

  and hair, straps are fastened to it so that it may be conveniently carried on

  the shoulder, or over the back, the same straps serving, with adjustment, for

  either mode of support. The cup was dirty.

  I took the water and gave the man a copper tarsk.

  I smelled the spices and sweat of Tor. I drank slowly. The sun was high.

  Tor, lying at the northwest corner of the Tahari, is the principal supplying

  point for the scattered oasis communities of that dry vastness, almost a

  continent of rock, and heat, and wind and sand. These communities, sometimes

  quite large, numbering in hundreds, sometimes thousands of citizens depending on

  the water available, are often hundreds of pasangs apart. They depend on

  caravans, usually from Tor, sometimes from Kasra, sometimes even from far Turia,

  to supply many of their needs. In turn, of course, caravans export the products

  of the oases. To the oases caravans bring various goods, for example, rep-cloth,

  embroidered cloths, silks, rugs, silver, gold, jewelries, mirrors, kailiauk

  tusk, perfumes, hides, skins, feathers, precious woods, tools, needles, worked

  leather goods, salt, nuts and spices, jungle birds, prized as pets, weapons,

 
rough woods, sheets of tin and copper, the tea of Bazi, wool from the bounding

  Hurt, decorated, beaded whips, female slaves, and many other forms of

  merchandise. The principal export of the oases is dates and pressed-date bricks.

  Some of the date palms grow to more than a hundred feet high. It takes ten years

  before they begin to bear fruit. They will then yield fruit for more than a

  century. A given tree, annually, yields between one and five Gorean weights of

  fruit. A weight is some ten stone, or some forty Earth pounds. A great amount of

  farming, or perhaps one should speak of gardening, is done at the oasis, but

  little of this is exported. At the oasis will be grown a hybrid, brownish

  Sa-Tarna, adapted to the heat of the desert; most Sa-Tarna is yellow; and beans,

  berries, onions tuber suls, various sorts of melons, a foliated leaf vegetable,

  called Katch, and various root vegetables, such as turnips, carrots, radishes,

  of the sphere and cylinder varieties, and korts, a large, brownish-skinned,

  thick-skinned, sphere-shaped vegetable, usually some six inches in width, the

  interior of which is yellowish, fibrous and heavily seeded. At the oasis,

  because of the warm climate, the farmers can grow two or more crops a year.

  Larma and tospits are also grown at the oases, in small orchards. Some rep is

  grown, for cloth, but most cloth comes to the oases from caravans. Kaiila and

  verr are found at the oases, but not in great numbers. The herds of these

  animals are found in the desert. They are kept by nomads, who move them from one

  area of verr grass to another or from one water hole to another, as the holes,

  for the season, go dry. Smaller water sources are used in the spring, for these

  are the first to go dry, larger ones later in the year. No grass grows about

  these water holes because many animals are brought to them and graze it to the

  earth. They are usually muddy ponds, with some stunted trees about, centered in

  the midst of an extensive radius of grassless, cracked, dry earth. Meat, hides,

  and animal-hair cloth are furnished to the oases by the nomads. In turn, from

  the oases the nomads receive, most importantly, Sa-Tarna grain and the Bazi tea.

  They receive, as well, of course, other trade goods. Sa-Tarna is the main staple

  of the nomads. They, in spite of raising herds, eat very little meat. The

  animals are too precious for their trade value, and their hair and milk, to be

  often slaughtered for food. A nomad boy of fifteen will often have eaten meat no

  more than a dozen times in his life. Raiders, however, feast well on meat. The

  animals mean little to them and come to them cheaply. Tea is extremely important

  to the nomads. It is served hot and heavily sugared. It gives them strength

  then, in virtue of the sugar, and cools them, by making them sweat, as well as

  stimulating them. It is drunk three small cups at a time, carefully measured.

  I finished the cup of water and handed the cup back to the water carrier. He

  bowed, grinning, the bag, swollen and bulging, damp on his shoulder, and.

  hooking the cup on his belt, backed away. “Water!” he called. “Water!”

  I blinked my eyes against the heat and glare of the sun. The buildings of Tor

  are of mud brick, covered with colored, often flaking, plasters. But now, in the

  sun, and the dust, raised by the people in the streets, everything seemed

  drained of color. I would soon have to buy appropriate garments. In such a city

  I was too conspicuous.

  I made my way toward the bazaar.

  I knew the light lance, and the swift, silken kaiila. I had learned these with

  the Wagon Peoples. But I did not know the scimitar. The short sword, now slung

  over my left shoulder, in the common fashion, would be of little use on kaiila

  back. The men of the Tahari do not fight on foot. A man on foot in the desert,

  in warfare, is accounted a dead man.

  I looked up at the buildings. I was now in the shade, descending a narrow, steep

  street, toward the bazaar. The buildings in Tor are seldom more than four

  stories high, which is about as high as one may build safely with beams and mud

  brick. Because of the irregular topography of Tor, however, which is a hilly,

  rocky area, like most of the Tahari terrain, many of the buildings, built on

  shelves and rises, seemed considerably higher. These buildings, on the outside

  smooth and bleak, save for occasional narrow windows, high, not wide enough to

  admit a body, abut directly on the streets, making the streets like deep, walled

  alleys. In the center of the street is a gutter. It seldom rains in Tor, but the

  gutter serves to collect waste, which is often thrown into it, through open

  doors, by slaves. Within these walls, however, so pressing upon the street, I

  knew there were often gardens, walled, well-watered, beautiful, and cool, dark

  rooms, shielded from the heat and sun, many with superb appointments. Tor was,

  as Gorean cities went, rich, trading city. It was headquarters for thousands of

  caravan merchants. In it, too, were housed many craftsmen, practicing their

  industries, carvers, varnishers, table makers, gem cutters, jewelers, carders,

  dyers of cloth, weavers of rugs, tanners, makers of slippers, toolers of

  leather, potters, glaziers, makers of cups and kettles, weapon smiths, and many

  others. Much of the city, of course, was organized to support the caravan trade.

  There were many walled, guarded warehouses, requiring their staffs of scribes

  and guards, and, in hundreds of hovels, lived kaiila tenders, drovers, and such,

  who would, at the caravan tables, when their moneys had been exhausted, apply,

  if accepted, making their mark on the roster, once more for a post with some new

  caravan. Guards for these caravans, incidentally, were usually known by, and

  retained by, caravan merchants between caravans. They were known men. Tenders

  and drovers, on the whole, came and went. Elaborate random selection devices,

  utilizing coins and sticks, and formulas, were sometimes used by merchants to

  assure that applying tenders and drovers were selected, if they were not known,

  by chance. Tenders and drovers were assured that this was to insure fairness.

  Actually, of course, as was well known, this was a precaution against the danger

  of hiring, en bloc, unwittingly, an organized group of men, who might, prior to

  their hiring, have formed a plan to slay the guards and merchants and make off

  with the caravan. Tenders and drovers, however, like men generally, were an

  honest sort. When they returned to Tor, of course, they had been long in the

  desert. At the end of the trip they received their wages. Sometimes, not even a

  hundred yards from the warehouses, these men would be met by enterprising cafe

  owners, praising the advantages of their respective establishments. The owners

  of these cafes, usually, would bring with them a chain of their girls, stripped,

  as free women in the Tahari districts may not be, purportedly a typical

  selection of the stock available.

  “In my house,” he would call, indicating one or another of the girls, “rent the

  key to her chains.”

  But generally the men would proceed past these enticements, which were, from

  what I saw, far from negligible, and hurry toward their favorite cafes and

/>   hostels, whose wares, I gathered, did not need such blatant advertisement, whose

  worth, and capacities for total and complete satisfaction were apparently well

  known. Certain of these cafes I might mention. The Silken Oasis is well known,

  even in Ar, but it is extremely expensive; in the middle range of price are the

  Golden Collar and the Silver Chain, both under the same management, that of a

  Turian named Haran; good, relatively inexpensive cafes are the Thong, which I

  would recommend, the Veminium, the Pomegranate, the Red Cages and the Pleasure

  Garden. These various establishments, and more than forty others, from the point

  of view of tenders and drovers, have one thing in common. They succeed in

  separating, with celerity and efficiency, a fellow from his money. I do not feel

  this way myself. I think most of them, with the exception of the Silken Oasis,

  are reasonable. The drover’s objection, I think, is largely a function of the

  fact that he does not have a great deal of money to spend. What there is,

  accordingly, seems rapidly diminished. Tenders and drovers often proceed from

  one cafe to the other, for several nights. The wages for a caravan trip, which

  often takes months, commonly will last the fellow about ten days, or, if nursed

  out, some fifteen days. They are, of course, a rather pleasant ten or fifteen

  days. At the end of this time, after a day or so of some physiological

  discomfort, usually violent nausea and blinding headaches, it is common to find

  the man again back at the tables, once more attempting to vend his services to

  the master of a caravan.

  A fellow walked past me, carrying several vulos, alive, heads down, their feet

  tied together. He was followed by another fellow, carrying a basket of eggs.

  I followed them, as they would be going to the market streets, near which was

  the bazaar.

  The water in an oasis is, of course, at its lowest point. Residences, at an

  oasis, are built on the higher ground, where nothing will grow. It is the

  valley, naturally, which, irrigated, usually by hand, though sometimes with

  clumsy wooden machinery, supports the agriculture. Land, at an oasis, which will

  grow food, is not wasted on domiciles. Tor, rather similarly, though few crops

  were grown within its walls, was built high, about its water, several wells in

  the deepest area in the city. The architecture of Tor, in concentric circles,

 

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