Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Historical, #Erotica, #Thrillers, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character)
eluded me. I expect to pick up some of them, however. And, of tarn ships, I have
one captured, your flagship, and from the reports of my captains, some eighteen
or twenty have been seriously damaged or sunk. That would leave you with some
ten, or perhaps twelve, ships yet abroad on Thassa.”
At that point, from the foremast of a nearby round ship, where I had placed a
lookout, came the cry, “Twelve sail! Twelve said abeam!”
“Ah,” said I, “twelve ships, it seems.”
“They will fight!” cried the admiral. “You have not yet won!”
“Doubtless they will strike their masts,” I said, “but I do not think they will
fight.”
He looked at me, his fists clenched in his irons.
“Thurnock,” said I, “signal seventeen of my twenty ships to present themselves
to our apparoaching friends. Let two remain on the far side of the treasure
fleet. The Dorna, for the time will remain here. The seventeen ships are not to
enter battle unless accompained by the Dorna, and under no conditions, if battle
ensues, are any of my ships to move more than four pasangs from the fleet.”
“Yes, Captain,” roared Thurock, turning and crossing on the plank to the deck of
the Dorna, then taking his way to the shielded flag racks at the foot of her
stem castle.
Soon the flags were whipping from the halyards.
Battled preparations were underway on my ships. Seventeen soon began to move
around the fleet, or come about, to face the approaching twelve vessels. Men sat
ready at the oars of the Dorna, should I come aboard her. Others, with axes,
stood ready to chop away the lines that now bound the Dorna to the flagship.
“They are striking their masts!” came the cry from the lookout.
In a quarter Ahn my vessels were aligned for battle. The enemy fleet, the twelve
ships, was now, by estimate from the lookout, with his glass, some four pasangs
distant.
If they came within two pasangs, I would board the Dorna.
I had the admiral freed of his leg irons and he and I, from the stem castle of
his own ship, regarded the approaching ships.
“Do you wager,” I asked him, “that they come within two pasangs?”
“They will fight!” he said.
The Lady Vivina, prepared for the prow, stood nearby, a sailor’s hand on her
arm, she, too, watching the approaching ships.
Then the admiral cried out with rage and the Lady Vivina, her hand at her
breasts, eyes horrified, cried out, “No, No!”
The twelve ships had put about, taking their course now for Cos.
“Take the admiral away,” I said to Turnock.
The admiral was dragged away.
I looked on the Lady Vivina. Our eyes met. “Put her at the prow,” I said.
15
How Bosk Returned in Triumph to Port Kar
The return to Port Kar was triumphal indeed.
I wore the purple of a fleet admiral, with a golden cap with tassel, and gold
trim on the sleeves and borders of my robes, with cloak to match.
I wore at my side a jeweled sword, no longer the sword I had worn for the long
years when I had served Priest-Kings. That sword, shortly after coming to Port
Kar, I had put aside, and purchased others. I did not feel, somehow, that I
should carry that old sword any longer. It stood for too many things, and its
steel was deep with too many memories. It spoke to me of an old life, that of a
fool, which I, now grown wise, had put from me. Besides, more importantly, it
was insufficiently grand, with its plain pommel and unfigured blade, for one of
my position, one of the most significant me in one of Gor’s greatest prots. I
was Bosk, a simple, but shrewd man, who had come from the marshes to startle
Port Kar and dazzle and shake the cities of Gor with my cunning and my blade,
and now my power and wealth.
My ten search vessels had managed to bring in five of the seven missing round
ships, four of which had been, foolishly, striking out directly for Telnus in
Cos. The world, I thought, is filled with fools. There are the fools, and there
are the wise, and I could now surely, perhaps for the first time, count myself
securely among the latter.
I stood at the prow of the long, purple ship, which had been the flagship of the
treasure fleet. The rooftops and the windows of the buildings were crowded with
cheering throngs, and I lifted my arm to them and accepted their acclaim. The
ships, in a splendid, long line, filing behind me, the Dorna first, then the
tarn ships, then the round ships, under oars, move slowly through the city,
following the triumphal circuit of the great canal, passing even before the
chamber of the Council of Captains.
Flowers had been scattered in the canal, and others were thrown on our ships as
we passed.
The cheers and cries were deafening.
I had decreed that from my shares of the treasure, each worker in the arsenal
would receive one gold piece, and each citizen of the city of a silver tarsk.
I lifted my hand to the crowd, smiling and waving.
Near me, chief among my prizes, exposed to the crowds, their hootings and
jeerings, bound on the prow, ankles and wrists, neck and belly, like a common
slave girl, was the Lady Vivina, who was to have been the Ubara of Cos.
Few men, thought I, have enjoyed such a triumph as thish.
And, petty though it might seem, I was eager to present myself before Midice, my
favored slave, with my new robes and treasures. I could now give her garments
and jewels that would be the envy of Ubaras. I could well imagine the wonder in
her eyes as she understood the greatness of her master, her joy, the eagerness
with which she would now serve me.
I was well satisfied.
How simple it is, I thought, to become a true man, powerful and predatory,
self-regarding, and self-seeking. It requires only to put apart from oneself the
hesitations and trammels which the weak and the fools would impose upon
themselves, making themselves and their fortunes their prisoners. In coming to
Port Kar I had, for the first time, become free.
I lifted my hand to the corwds. Flowers fell about me. I looked at the girl
bound on the prow, my prize. I accepted the acclaim of the wild thongs.
I was Bosk, who could do as he pleased, who could take what he wanted.
I laughed.
Had there ever been triumph such as this is Port Kar?
I brought with me fifty-eight ships: the flagship of the treasure fleet, Vivina
bound at its prow, the Dorna, the other twenty-nine ships which had composed my
original fleet, and, as prizes, laden with wealth which might have been the
ransom of cities, a full twenty-seven of the thirty round ships of the fabulous
treasure fleet of Cos and Tyros. And bound at the prow of the first forty ships,
following the flagship, beginning with the Dorna, and then the tarn ships and
the first ten and largets of the captured round ships, was a high-born beauty,
once intended to be the maiden of Cos’s Ubara, now, like herseld, destined only
for the brand and collar of a slave girl.
I raised my hand to the cheering crowds.
“This is Port Kar,” I told Vivina.
She said nothing.
The wild crowds screamed and shouted, and threw flowers, and the flagship, oars
dipping in stately fashion, took her regal path, ram’s crest dividing flowers in
the water, between the buildings lining the great canal.
I stood among the falling flowers, my hand lifted to the crowds.
“Should I put you in a public paga tavern,” I said, “doubtless hundreds of these
would crowd its doors, that they might be served by one once destined to be a
Ubara in Cos.”
“Slay me,” she said.
I waved to the crowds.
“My maidens?” she asked.
“Slaves,” I said.
“Myself?” she asked.
“Slave,” said I.
She closed her eyes.
In the five days it had taken to reach Port Kar from the scene of the engagement
with the treasure fleet, due to the slowness of the round ships, I had not kept
Vivina, and her maidens, of course, at the prows of the ships. I had only placed
them there in victory, and now again, for the entry of Port Kar.
I recalled, late the first night, under ship’s torches, I had had Vivina brought
down from the prow and brought before me.
I received her in the admiral’s cabin, which was, of course, on the treasure
fleet’s flagship.
“If I remember correctly,” I had said, behind the admiral’s table, busied with
papers, “in the hall of the Ubar of Cos you told me that you did not frequent
the rowing holds of round ships.”
She looked at me. There had been laughter from my men present. High-born ladies
commonly sail in cabins, located in the stern castles of either ram-ships or
round ships. She had had, of course, a luxurious cabin in the flagship of the
treasure fleet, this very ship.
“I asked you, as I recall,” I had reminded her, “if you had ever been in the
hold of a round ship?”
She said nothing.
“You responded that you had not, as I recall,” I had said, “and then, I
mentioned that perhapss someday you would have the opportunity.”
“No,” she said, “please no!”
I had then turned to some of my men. “Take this lady, “ said I to them, “in a
long boat to the largest of the round ships, one rowed by captured officers of
the treasure fleet, and chain her there, with other treasures, in the rowing
hold.”
“Please,” she begged. “Please!”
“I trust you will find the accommodations satisfactory,” I said.
She drew herself up to her full height. “I am sure I shall,” said she.
“You may conduct the Lady Vivina to her quarters,” I told the seaman responsible
for her.
“Come along, Girl,” said he to her.
Like a Ubara she turned and followed him.
But before she had left my cabin, she turned again at the door. “Only slave
girls, I understand,” said she, “are kept chained below decks in round ships.”
“Yes,” I said.
Angrily she turned, and left, following the seaman.
Now, in my triumphal entry and course through Port Kar, I looked again upon her.
I saw that she had again opened her eyes.
On the prow, she passed slowly beneath the men, and the women and children, on
the rooftops, many of whom called out to her, hooting and jeering her.
I took two talenders which had fallen on my shoulder and fastened them in the
ropes at her neck.
This delighted the crowds, who cried out their pleasure.
“No,” she begged. “Not talenders.”
“Yes,” said I, “talenders.”
The talender is a flower which, in the Gorean mind, is associated with beauty
and passion. Free Companions, on the Feast of their Free Companionship, commonly
wear a garland of talenders. Sometimes slave girls, having been subdued, but
fearing to speak, will fix talenders in their hair, that their master may know
that they have at last surrendered themselves to him as helpless love slaves. to
put talenders in the neck ropes of the girl at the prow, of course, was only
mockery, indicative of her probable disposition as pleasure slave.
“what are you going to do with me?” she asked.
“Whe the treasures have been checked, tallied, and appraised, which should take
some four or five weeks,” I told her, “you, with your maidens, in the chains of
slave girls, will be displayed, together with samples of, and full accountings
of, the other treasures, before the Council of Captains.”
“We are booty?” she asked.
“Yes,” I said.
“Apparently then, Captain,” said she, icily, “you have perhaps a full month of
triumph before you.”
“Yes,” I said, waving again to the crowds, “that is true.”
“What will you do with us after we have been displayed before the council of
captains?” she asked.
“That,” I told her, “you may wait until then to find out.”
“I see,” she said, and turned her head away.
More flowers fell, and there was more cheering, and hooting and jeers for the
bound girl.
Had there ever been triumph such as this in Port Kar, I asked myself, and
answered, doubtless never, and smiled, for I knew that this was but the
beginning. The climax would occur in some four or five weeks in the formal
presentations before the Council, and in the receipt of its highest accolade as
worthy captain of Port Kar.
“Hail Port Kar!” I cried to the crowds.
“Hail Port Kar!” they cried. “And hail Bos, Admiral of Port Kar!”
“Hail Bosk!” cried my retainers. “Hail Bosk, Admiral of Port Kar!”
It was now five weeks after my triumphal entry into Port Kar.
In this very afternoon the formal presentations and accountings of the victory
and its plunder had taken place in the chamber of the Council of Captains.
I rose to my feet and lifted my goblet of paga, acknowledging the cries of my
retainer.
The goblets clashed and we drank.
It had been five weeks of entertainments, of fetes, of banquets and honors piled
one upon another. The treasures taken were rich beyond our wildest expectations,
beyond the most remote calculations of our most avaricious scribes. And now, in
this very afternoon, my glories had been climaxed in the chamber of the Council
of Captains, in which had taken place the formal presentations and accountings
of the victory and its pluder, in which had taken place the commendation of the