It was not impossible that the penal caravan, with me, and presumably, others, would be intercepted.
If I had been Ibn Saran I would not have taken this risk.
The door to the cell opened.
“Tal, noble Ibn Saran,” said I, “and gracious Hamid, lieutenant to Shakar, captain of the Aretai.”
In Ibn Saran’s hand was his scimitar, unsheathed. I moved in the chains. They carried no light, but the moonlight, streaming through the barred window into the cell, permitted us to regard one another.
“It seems,” I said, “I am not to reach the brine pits of Klima.”
I observed the scimitar. I did not think they would slay me in the cell. This would seem, to the magistrates of Nine Wells, inexplicable, an incident demanding the most rigorous and exacting inquiry.
“You mistake us,” said Ibn Saran.
“Of course,” I said. “Actually you are agents of Priest-Kings, secretly seeming to work for Kurii. Before your men you were forced to conduct your charade of complicity in their schemes, lest your true loyalties be discovered. Doubtless you have fooled them all, and well, but not me.”
“You are perceptive,” said Ibn Saran.
“Obviously it was the intention of Kurii to kill me, for they sent one of their kind to do so. You, however, saved me from its merciless fangs.”
Ibn Saran inclined his head. He sheathed his scimitar.
“We have little time,” he said. “Outside your kaiila awaits, saddled, with a weapon, the scimitar, and water.”
“But is there no guard?” I asked.
“He was outside,” said Ibn Saran. “We have slain him for you.”
“Ah,” I said.
“We will drag the body into the cell when you have made good your swift escape.”
The manacles on my wrists and ankles were lock shackles. Hamid thrust the key in, unsnapping them. “And Hamid,” I said, “by intent, did not strike Suleiman to the death, but feigning clumsiness, wounded him only.”
“Precisely,” said Ibn Saran.
“Had I wished to kill,” hissed Hamid, “the blow would have told.”
“Doubtless,” I said.
“It was essential for us, to protect appearances with Kurii, to appear to attempt to delay you, to forestall you in the completion of your inquiry for Priest-Kings.”
“Of course,” I said. “But now, appearances kept, you free me to continue my work.”
“Precisely,” said Ibn Saran.
From within his cloak Hamid produced a chisel and hammer.
“Open the collar,” I told him, “rather than merely break the links. It will take more time, but it will be more comfortable.”
“Someone will hear!” said Ibn Saran.
“I am confident,” I told him, “none will hear.” I smiled. “It is late.”
I had a special reason for wishing to delay my escape some quarter of an Ahn.
“Open the collar,” said Ibn Saran, angrily.
“It is a lovely moonlight night,” I observed. “It will thus, in my escape, make it easier for me to see my way.”
Ibn Saran’s eyes flashed. “Yes,” he said.
“I am pleased,” I said, “to learn that you labor in the service of Priest-Kings.”
Ibn Saran inclined his head.
“Will my escape not require an explanation?” I asked.
“The guard was bribed,” said Ibn Saran. “Then you, in treachery, in your escape, slew him.”
“We will leave the body here, with the tools,” said Hamid.
“You are thorough,” I admitted.
I eased my neck from the collar, it scraping the sides of my neck. It hung against the stones, on the two chains. It caused me great pain to stand. I moved my arms and legs. I wondered how far I was supposed to get. If it were true that a saddled kaiila, my own, awaited, I gathered the strike would be made in the desert, probably just outside the oasis.
It must be well planned. It must be, in their opinion, foolproof, far surer than the likelihood, which would be high, of my reaching Klima in penal caravan.
I left the cell. On a table outside was clothing. I donned it. It was my own. I checked the wallet. It contained even the gems which I had placed there, after removing them from my interior belt, when I had been negotiating with Suleiman.
“Weapons?” I asked.
“The scimitar, at the saddle,” said Ibn Saran.
“I see,” I said. “And water?”
“At the saddle,” he said.
“It seems,” I said, “that it is twice I owe you my life. You have saved me this afternoon from the beast’s attack, and tonight you free me, rescuing me from the brine pits of Klima. I am indebted to you, it seems.”
“You would do as much for me,” he said.
“Yes,” I said.
His eyes clouded.
“Hurry,” said Hamid. “The guard will be soon changed.”
I climbed the stairs. I strode through the outer rooms, and out the portal, onto the sand.
“Be less bold. Be more careful,” said Ibn Saran.
“No one is watching,” I assured him. I smiled. “It is late,” I said.
I saw the kaiila. It was my own. It was saddled; water bags were at its flanks; a scimitar sheath, with weapon, on straps, hung at a saddle ring on the right. I checked the girth straps, the kaiila rein. They were in order. I hoped that the beast had not been drugged. I lifted my hand near its eye; it blinked, even to the third lid, the transparent lid; very lightly I touched its flank; the skin shook, twitching, beneath the finger.
“What are you doing?” asked Ibn Saran.
“I am greeting my kaiila,” I said.
The reflexes of the beast seemed fit. I doubted then that it had been drugged. If it had been drugged with a quick-acting agent, the quarter of an Ahn I had purchased, delaying my escape, in demanding that the collar be removed, rather than the links broken, would have given the drug time to be evident in the behavior of the beast. I doubted that a slow drug would have been used, because time would be significant in these matters. Ibn Saran would not have cared to risk giving me an Ahn’s start on a fast kaiila. I was pleased that the animal had not, apparently, been drugged.
It suddenly occurred to me that perhaps Ibn Saran, as he proclaimed, was indeed an agent for Priest-Kings. Perhaps Hamid, too, was such an agent.
If so, my dalliance, increasing their risks, had jeopardized their lives.
I mounted.
“May your water bags be never empty,” said Ibn Saran. “May you always have water.” He put his hand on the bulging water bag, which hung behind the saddle, on the left side of the beast, balanced by another on the right. One drinks alternately from the bags, to maintain the weight distribution. Such weight, of course, slows the kaiila, but, in the desert, one must have much water.
“May your water bags be never empty,” I said. “May you always have water.”
“Ride north,” said Ibn Saran.
“My thanks,” I said, and, kicking the beast in the flanks, sand scattering back from its claws, I pressed the beast to the north.
As soon as I was out of earshot of Ibn Saran and Hamid, and among the walls of the oasis buildings, I reined in.
I looked back and noted, high, lofting in the moonlight night, an arrow, with a silver pennon attached to it. It climbed more and more slowly to the height of its arc, seemed to pause, and then, gracefully, turned and looped down, faster and faster, the moonlight sparkling on the fluttering, silvered pennon.
I examined the paws of the kaiila. I found that for which I searched inserted in the right forepaw of the animal. I removed from its paw the tiny, rounded ball of wax, held in place by threads; within the wax, which would soon, in the riding and pounding, and by the heat of the animal’s body, disintegrate, concealed, I found a needle; I smelled it; it was smeared with kanda, a deadly toxin, prepared from the ground roots of the kanda bush; I wiped the needle, with a ripping from my shirt sleeve, cleaning it, and disca
rded needle and cloth in a refuse pile.
I sampled the water in the two water bags. It was, as I had expected, heavily salted. It was not drinkable.
I removed the scimitar from its sheath. It was not mine. I examined the blade and found the flaw, neatly filed, under the hilt, concealed by the guard. I tapped the blade into the sand; it fell from the hilt, which I retained in my hand. I concealed both blade and hilt in the refuse pile.
I drew the kaiila back into the shadows. Two men rode by, Ibn Saran and Hamid.
I poured the salt water into the sand. It was late. I decided I would seek an inn for the night. It was late.
8
I Become the Guest of Hassan the Bandit
I did not sleep as well as I might have that night, for, from time to time, clouds of riders, with bows and lances, swept through the streets of Nine Wells, returning from one sortie into the desert or another. For better than fifty pasangs about the terrain was apparently combed, again and again, but yielded not even a trail.
I did, however, get several hours of uninterrupted sleep toward morning, when, worn, exhausted, thirsty, slack in their saddles, the bulk of the search parties returned to Nine Wells.
I patronized an unimportant, rather poor sort of establishment, whose proprietor, I suspected, would have had better things to do than attend trials at the chamber of justice. Fortunately this was true. He was, however, informed on the public news. “The assailant fled last night, into the desert,” he told me, “escaping!”
“Incredible,” I said. My response was appropriate, for I, for one, did not believe it.
I had arisen about the ninth hour, which, on Gor, is the hour before noon.
The kaiila I fed in the stable, where he occupied a rear stall, I watered it, too, deeply.
While at breakfast I sent a stableboy on small errands. When I finished breakfast the lad, a sprightly young fellow, had returned.
In my new burnoose and sash, a rather ostentatious yellow and purple, befitting, however, a local merchant, or peddler, who wishes to call attention to himself, I myself went about the shops, making purchases. I obtained a new scimitar. I did not need a sheath and belt. I obtained, too, a set of kaiila bells, and two sacks of pressed-date bricks. These are long, rectangular bricks, weighing about a stone apiece, or, in Earth weight, about four pounds.
In a short while, at the public well near the chamber of justice, I had filled my water bags and collected the latest gossip. “Out of my way,” said a soldier, reaching down to splash water in his face. I deferred to him, which it seemed to me was advisable for a local date merchant. Besides he had had a difficult night of it in the desert. “Have you found the assailant yet?” I asked. “No,” he growled. “Sometimes I fear I am not safe,” I said. “Do not fear, Citizen,” said he. “Very well,” I said.
The search parties would recuperate during the afternoon and night, I had learned. There was little chance of picking up a subtle trail by moonlight. It was impractical to begin again, the men and animals exhausted, until morning. That would give me a start, I speculated, of some fifteen Gorean hours.
It would be more than sufficient.
In the neighborhood of noon, moving slowly, in the yellow and purple striped burnoose, with sash, water bags at the flanks of my kaiila, sacks of pressed-date bricks tied across the withers, kaiila bells ringing, calling attention to myself and my wares, I left the oasis. Once, the lofty palms small behind me, I had to turn aside, to avoid being buffeted by the return of the last of the search parties.
* * * *
On a hill, more than two hundred pasangs north and east of Nine Wells, two days after I had left the oasis, I reined in, the kaiila turning on the graveled crest.
Below, in the valley, between the barren, rocky hills, I observed the small caravan being taken.
Two kurdahs were seized in the hand of a rider, by their frames, and jerked to the side on the kaiila, spilling their occupants, free girls, in a flurry of skirts, to the gravel.
Drovers and merchants were being herded, at lance point, to a side. A guard, holding his right shoulder, hurried by a lance tip, was thrust with them.
The packs of kaiila were being slashed, to determine the value of the merchandise carried, and whether it would be of value to raiders.
Some of these kaiila were pulled together, their reins in the hands of a rider.
One of the burdens tied among others on the back of one of the pack kaiila was transferred to another beast, one whose rein was held by the rider.
The hands of the free girls were bound before their bodies. Their hands were bound at the end of long straps. The lengthy, free end of these tethers, then, was, by their captor, looped and secured about his pommel.
One man tried to break and run. A rider, wheeling after him, struck him in the back of the neck with the butt of his lance. He fell sprawling in the dust and rocks.
I saw a water bag being slashed, the water dark on the side of a kaiila, it shifting and rearing, the water falling, soaking into the dust.
I saw other water bags slashed, too, and others were pierced with lance tips.
The raiders, I gathered, had access to their own water.
The kaiila became hard to control, excited by the smell of water.
Then some other water bags were thrown to the ground, before the dismounted, herded, cornered men.
Packs were cut from kaiila, their contents spilling on the ground. These were goods not desired. The kaiila, then, freed of reins and harness, with the flat of scimitars, and cries, were driven into the desert.
The two girls now stood naked in the dust, stripped by the blade of their captor. One of the girls had her hands, wrists bound, in her hair, pulling at it, crying out with misery. The other girl seemed angry. She looked at her bound wrists, her tether, as though she could not believe herself secured to the pommel. Her head was high. She had long, dark hair.
Their captor, who seemed to be chief of the raiders, mounted. He stood in his stirrups. He shouted directions to his men. The raiders, then, as one man, turned their kaiila, and, unhurried, rode slowly from the trail. Two of the men held the reins of two pack kaiila; another man, by the rein, pulled another beast, shambling after him. The leader, his scimitar across his saddle, rode first, his burnoose gentle, swelling in the hot wind, behind him. Tied to his pommel, stumbling, followed his two fair captives.
Behind, the men shouted. Some dared to raise their fists. Others went to the water bags.
On foot, on the trail, they would have only enough water to reach the tiny oasis of the Lame Kaiila, where there would be for them doubtless sympathy, but little aid in the form of armed men. Indeed, it lay in a direction away from Nine Wells, which was the largest, nearest oasis where soldiers might be found. By the time word of the raid reached Nine Wells the raiders might be thousands of pasangs away.
I turned my kaiila and dropped below the crest of the hill. I had scouted the camp of the raiders last night.
I would meet them there. I had business with their leader.
* * * *
“You work well,” I told the slave girl. The camp was abandoned, save for her.
She cried out. The heavy, round-ended pestle, some five feet in height, more than five inches wide at the base, dropped. It weighed some thirty pounds. When it dropped, the heavy wooden bowl, more than a foot deep and eighteen inches in diameter, tipped. Sa-Tarna grain spilled to the ground. I held her by the arms, from behind.
Like the camps of many nomads the camp was on high ground, which commanded the terrain, but was itself concealed among scrub brush and boulders. There was a corral of thorn brush, uprooted and woven together, which served for kaiila. Within it, now, were four pack kaiila. There were five tents, each of tawny, inconspicuous kaiila-hair cloth, each pegged down on three sides, each with the front, facing east, for the warmth of the morning sun, left open. These tents, typical nomad tents, were small, some ten feet in depth, some ten to fifteen feet wide; they were supported on wooden
frames; the ground, within them, leveled off, was covered by mats. At the back the tents were low, stretching to the ground. It is at the backs that goods are stored. In a normal family situation the household articles and the possessions of the women are kept on the left side of the area, and the goods of the men, blankets, weapons, and such, are kept on the right. These goods, both of men and women, are kept in leather bags of various sizes. These, made by the women, are often fringed, and of various colors, and beautifully decorated.
I looked about; there was little difference between this camp and a typical nomad camp. One crucial difference, of course, was the absence of free women and small children. In this camp there was only a slave girl, left behind to pound grain and watch kaiila.
I smiled. This was a camp of raiders.
I released the girl.
She turned about. “You!” she cried. Alyena was fully dressed. She wore a long, bordered skirt, with scarlet thread at its hem, which swirled as she turned; she wore a jacket, tan, of soft kaiila-hair cloth, taken from the animal’s second coat, which had a hood, which she had thrown back; beneath the jacket she wore a cheap, printed blouse of rep-cloth, blue and yellow, which well clung to her.
At her throat was a metal collar, no longer mine.
I observed the drape of the skirt on her hips, the sweet, delicate, betraying candor of her blouse.
Her master had not given her undergarments. What need has a slave for such?
She wore slippers.
She looked at me, frightened, her eyes very blue, the hair loose and lovely.
“I see, pretty Alyena,” I said, “you now wear earrings.”
They were golden loops, large, barbaric. They fell beside her neck.
“He did it to me,” she said. “He pierced my ears with a saddle needle.”
I did not doubt it, in this out-of-the-way place. The operation, usually, of course, is performed by one of the leather workers.
“He put them on me,” she said. She lifted her head, and brushed one. I could see she was proud. “They are from his plunder,” she said.
Alyena, as an Earth girl, acculturated to earrings, did not object to them, not in themselves. If she had had objections doubtless they would have pertained to other matters, such as the fact that, against her will, her ears had been pierced; that she had not chosen the rings, but he; and that he, as a master, giving her no choice, not considering her feelings, because it had pleased him, had simply put them on her, making her, his slave, wear them. But she did not seem displeased. She had a healthy flush to her features. Alyena, though she seemed apprehensive, did not seem unhappy.
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