Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Erotica, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space
bound back by a fillet of white wool, she might have been any slave girl.
“Extend your wrists,” I said.
“You’re not going to bracelet me!” she cried.
If I did so, she would be almost helpless in the forests.
“No!” she cried.
I snapped the bracelets on her. Her wrists were confined some four inches apart.
It would be difficult for her to run, almost impossible to climb.
“Do I mean nothing to you?” she asked.
“No,” I said.
“The hold,” she protested.
“It mean nothing,” I told her.
She put her head down, a braceleted slave girl.
Rim and Thurnock were with me, and five men. We had come deep into the forests.
We had brought with us a pack of trade goods, some gold. The pack, and gold, was
now flung to one side. Before that it had been strapped to Sheera’s back.
We would now make camp, putting sharpened stakes about our camp, to protect us
from animals, and the nocturnal attacks of panther girls.
Sheera lifted her eyes. “They may simply slay me,” she said.
“Panther girls,” said I, “are not likely to slay a braceleted slave.”
“I am Sheera,” said the girl, suddenly, proudly. “I am the enemy of Verna. If
she captures me, she may slay me.”
“You are Sheera,” I said. “If you captured Verna, branded and collared, what
would you do with her?”
she looked at me, angrily. “I would return her to slaver,” she said, “and
promptly.”
“Precisely,” said I.
“What if I do not fall in with her?” asked Sheera.
I held the chain joining the slave bracelets. I shook it, that she might well
feel the steel retainers on her wrists.
“Then,” I said, “I expect you will fall in with sleen, or forest panthers.”
She looked at me, with horror.
“Permit me to start now,” she said.
I looked at the sun, and then away. “It is a bit early,” I said, “for a slave
girl to escape.”
“But the sleen,” she said, “the panthers!”
“Kneel, and wait,” I said.
She knelt, braceleted.
I did not expect it would take long for Verna’s girls to pick her up. We had
made no effort to conceal our movements, or trail. I suspected that, already,
they were aware of our presence in the forests. I had seen, an Ahn earlier,
before we had reached this camp site, a tawny movement in the brush, some fifty
yards in front of us, and to our left. I did not think that it was a forest
panther.
The men were cutting and sharpening stakes, and setting them in the ground,
about our camp site.
I looked at Sheera, kneeling in the bracelets.
Then I sat down, cross-legged, and withdrew an arrow, for the great bow, from
its quiver and, with thread and a tiny pot of glue, bent to refreshing one of
the shafts.
Above Laura, north of her, there lie several slave compounds. It had taken the
better part of the morning, but Rim and I, and Thurnock, had found the blazed
tree, blazed with a spear point, several feet high on the trunk. We had then
found the next tree, to establish the line. We had marked the points and line on
our map. On the map, later, in the stern castle, we had traced out, with greater
accuracy than had hitherto had been possible, following the directions of Tana
and Ela, what should be the location of Verna’s camp and dancing circle. Our
original estimate, we were pleased to note, was not grossly inaccurate. We
would, of course, as before, if the need arose, not approach the camp by the
familiar route. If it should prove necessary to storm the camp with slave nets,
we would do so after a secret approach, striking decisively, and fiercely from
an unexpected direction.
Things were going well.
I thought of the slave girl, Tana, paga slave in the tavern of Sarpedon of
Lydius. I wondered how she would relish her new duties. I wondered if Sarpedon
would have beaten her, for concealing from him her skills. It was quite
probable. She would look well, when not carrying paga, dancing in the sand. A
slave girl is not permitted to conceal her skill as a dancer from Sarpedon, her
master. Yes, she would have been beaten. Then, that night, as Sarpedon had
promised, she would dance.
As she danced, I trusted that she would think of me.
She had made her decision. It had been a brave decision. But it had not been a
decision without its risks. She had gambled. She had lost.
I thought, too, of Telima. She, too, had made her decision. Let her remain, if
she wished, in her beloved marshes.
I sought Talena.
I smiled.
Talena was not a simple paga slave, as was Tana. Talena was not a simple rence
girl, indigenous to the marches, as was Telima. Talena was the daughter of a
Ubar!
It was not simply that Tana was beneath me, a rich man, Bosk, admiral in Port
Kar. She, slave, was beneath any free man. She was only kept alive for one
purpose, to serve such men, and be pleasing to them. And Telima, though she was
very beautiful, was a rence girl. She was of low caste. She was scarcely fit
consort for one of my position. But Talena, she was the daughter of a Ubar.
She might, with fitness, sit by my side.
She would be acceptable.
I mused.
In time, I might become first captain in the Council of Captains. And who knew
what political occurrences might take place in Port Kar? I was popular in the
city. Perhaps in time there would be a Ubar in Port Kar.
At my side Talena would be the most beautiful, the richest and the most powerful
woman on Gor.
I finished with the arrow on which I was working.
I would rescue her.
We would repledge our companionship. And who knew to what heights I might raise
the chair of Bosk? Indeed, with Talena at my side, the daughter of the great
Ubar of Ar, my fortunes, in many matters, might be much improved. The
companionship would be an advantageous one. She, by virtue of her influences and
associations, could bring me much. Who knew to what heights, in time, might be
raised the chair of Vosk? Perhaps, in time, it might stand as high, or higher,
than the throne of Ar? And might there not come to be, in time, an alliance of
Gor’s greatest sea power and her greatest land power, and, perhaps, in time, but
one throne?
We would make a splendid and powerful couple, the envy of Gor, Bosk, the great
Bosk, and Talena, the beautiful Talena, daughter of a great Ubar, his consort.
I rose to my feet, the arrow well refeathered, and set it to one side, across
two rocks. In the morning it would be dry and I would replace it in the quiver.
I looked at Sheera.
The shadows were longer. It was late in the afternoon. She looked at me.
I turned away from her.
It was not yet time for a slave girl to escape.
Things were going well.
I went to inspect the work of the men, setting the sharpened stakes about the
camp.
We had made one alteration in our original planes, an alteration to take into
account the arrival in Laura of the Rhoda of Tyros.
We had taken the Tesephone from the wharves of Laura, and ascended the river
some twenty pasangs. It was there, on the north bank, that we made our camp.
Above Laura the river is less navigable than below, particularly in the late
summer. The Rhoda, though a shallow drafted galley, was still considerably
deeper keeled than the Tesephone. Moreover, it was a much longer ship. The Rhoda
would be unable to follow us to our camp. Furthermore, I would post guards,
downriver, to warn us of any approach, say, by longboats, from Laura. I had also
pointed guards about the camp, in case, as was unlikely, there should be an
attempt to make an approach through the forests.
I suspected that these precautions were unnecessary, but I saw fit to decree
them nonetheless.
Furthermore, the camp above Laura, on the north bank of the Laurius, provided us
with privacy for our business. We might be simply, as far as those in Laura
knew, attempting to achieve better prices on sleen fur by establishing this
camp. Such things were sometimes done. No one in Laura need know the true object
of our expedition.
The riverside camp was not untypical of a semipermanent Gorean naval camp. The
Tesephone had been beached, and lay partly on her side, thus permitting
scraping, recalking and resealing of the hull timber, first on one side and
then, later, when turned, on the other. These repairs would be made partly from
stores carried on board, partly from stores purchased in Laura. There would
also, of course, be much attention given to the deadwork of the ship, and to her
lines and rigging, and the fittings and oars. Meanwhile, portions of the crew
not engaged in such labors, would be carrying stones from the shore and cutting
saplings in the forest, to build the narrow rectangular wall which shields such
camps. Cooking, and most living, is done within the camp, within the wall and at
the side of the Tesephone. The wall is open, of course, to the water. Canvas
sheets, like rough awnings on stakes, are tied to the Tesephone, and these
provide shade from the sun and protection in the case of rain.
I was fond of my crew. I would have girls, paga slaves, brought up for them from
Laura.
“How goes the work?” I asked Thurnock.
“It goes well,” said he, “my captain.”
The men would soon be finished.
The camp of Marlenus, the great Ubar of Ar, I had learned was somewhere within
the forest, north or northwest of Laura. It was quite possibly the same camp he
had used several months ago, when, as recreation from the duties of the Ubar, he
had gone hunting in the northern forests, a sporting trip in which he had
captured a large number of animals, and, as well, Verna, a famed outlaw woman,
and her entire band.
Marlenus, I was certain, would be overconfident.
Verna, I was certain, would not be so easily taken a second time.
“Another two stakes, and we are done,” said Thurnock.
I looked at the sun, it was now low, behind the trees, well below them. In half
an Ahn, it would be dusk.
It was now time for a slave girl to escape.
I looked at Sheera. “On your feet, Slave Girl,” I said.
She stood up, her wrists braceleted before her body. She faced me. She wore the
brief, sleeveless garment of white wool, her dark hair back by the fillet of
white wool. She was barefoot. My collar was at her throat.
I realized, suddenly with a start, that she was a quite beautiful woman.
She regarded me.
Her fists were clenched in the slave bracelets. The short chain, joining the
bracelets, was taut.
“Is this why you purchased me?’ she asked.
“Yes,” I said.
She turned quickly, wrists braceleted, and slipped between two stakes, where
Thurnock had not yet closed the defenses of the camp. She sped swiftly into the
forest.
It was in her best interest, braceleted, to fall swiftly into the hands of
Verna’s band. Within the Ahn, hungry, nocturnal sleen would slip from their
burrows to hunt.
“What shall we do now, Captain,” asked Thurnock. He had finished closing the
wall, setting the two stakes, sharpened, inclined toward the forests, into
place.
“We shall cook some food,” I said, “and we shall eat, and we shall wait.”
About the twentieth Ahn, the Gorean midnight, we heard a sound, beyond our
defensive perimeter.
“Do not put out the fire,” I told my men, “but stay back from it.”
That we kept the fire burning would indicate that our intentions were not
hostile, and that we wished to make contact.
We remained back from the fire to make it more difficult for the panther girls,
were it their intention, to slay us from the darkness with arrows.
But that was not their intention. Had it been I do not believe we would have
heard the sound we did.
It had been the breaking of a branch, to alert us, to permit them to see what
our response would be.
But the fire was not covered.
I stood near the fire, and lifted my arms, that they might see I held no
weapons.
“I am Bosk, of the Free Island of tabor,” said I. “I am a merchant. I would hold
converse with you.”
There was only silence.
“We have trade goods,” I said.
From the darkness, beyond the perimeter, there stepped forth a woman, boldly.
She carried a bow. She wore the skins of panthers.
“Build up your fire,” she commanded.
“Do so,” said I to Thurnock.
Reluctantly Thurnock heaped more wood on the fire, until the interior of the
perimeter was well illuminated in the darkness.
We could not see beyond the fire.
“Keep the fire high,” said the woman.
“Keep it high,” said I to Thurnock.
Each of us, now within the defensive perimeter, between the stakes, was an easy
mark.
“Remove your sword belts and weapons,” said the woman. I dropped my belt, with
sword and sheath, and knife, to the ground, beside the fire. My men, at my
signal, did likewise.
“Excellent,” said the woman, from the other side of the stakes.
She looked at us. In the light from the recently built-up fire I could see her
more clearly. I saw the brief skins, the bow. She had a golden armlet on her
left arm, a golden anklet on her right ankle.