Assassin of Gor (32 page)

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Authors: John Norman

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Epic, #Adventure, #Erotica, #Fantasy Fiction; American, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Outer Space, #Slaves

BOOK: Assassin of Gor
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"Please," she said to Sura, "let it not be he."

 

"Be silent, Slave," said Sura.

 

"Come here, Slave," said Ho-Sorl to Phyllis. She looked at him angrily, and went to him.

 

Relius, who had walked over to Virginia, placed his large hands on her hips. She did not raise her head.

 

"She wears the iron belt," said Sura.

 

Relius nodded.

 

"And I will hold the key," said Sura.

 

"Of course," said Relius. Virginia did not raise her head.

 

"This one does, too," said Ho-Sorl, a bit irritably.

 

"Of course I wear the iron belt," said Phyllis, even more irritably. "What did you expect?"

 

"I will hold the key to her belt as well," said Sura.

 

"Let me hold the key," suggested Ho-Sorl, and Phyllis blanched.

 

Sura laughed. "No," she said, "I will hold it."

 

"Bracelets!" snapped Ho-Sorl suddenly, and Phyllis flung her wrists behind her back, threw back her head and turned it to one side, the instantaneous response of a trained girl.

 

Ho-Sorl laughed.

 

Tears appeared in Phyllis' eyes. Her response, automatic, unthinking, had been that of a trained animal. Before she could recover, Ho-Sorl had snapped the bracelets on her. He then said, "Leash," and she looked at him angrily, then lifted her chin. He snapped the leash on her collar.

 

Meanwhile Virginia had turned her back to Relius, extending her wrists, and he had put bracelets on her; then she turned and faced him, her head still down. "Leash," said he, quietly. She lifted her head, the chin delicately high. There was a metallic snap and Virginia Kent, the slave girl, had been leashed by Relius, guard in the House of Cernus, Slaver of Ar.

 

"Do you want leash and bracelets for her?" asked Sura, pointing to Elizabeth.

 

"Oh yes," I said. "Yes, of course."

 

They were brought. Elizabeth glared at me while I braceleted her, and leashed her. Then, together, we left the House of Cernus, leading our girls.

 

Outside the House of Cernus, and around the first corner, I took the bracelets and leash from Elizabeth.

 

"Why did you do that?" asked Ho-Sorl.

 

"She will be more comfortable," I said. "Besides," I said, "she is only Red Silk."

 

"He is probably not afraid of her," said Phyllis pointedly.

 

"I do not understand," said Ho-Sorl.

 

"You may remove the bracelets from me," said Phyllis. "I will not attack you," Phyllis turned about and held her braceleted hands to Ho-Sorl, her head irritably in the air.

 

"Well," said Ho-Sorl. "I would certainly not want to be attacked."

 

Phyllis stamped her foot.

 

Relius was looking at Virginia, and with his hand he lifted her chin, and for the first time, she met his eyes, with her deep gray, timid eyes. "If I remove the bracelets from you," said Relius, "you will not attempt to escape, will you?"

 

"No," she said, softly, "Master."

 

In an instant her bracelets had been removed. "Thank you," said she, "Master." The Gorean slave girl addresses all free men as "Master" and all free women as "Mistress."

 

Relius looked deeply into her eyes, and she dropped her head.

 

"Pretty slave," he said.

 

Without looking up, she smiled. "Handsome Master," she said.

 

I was startled. That seemed rather bold for the timid Virginia Kent.

 

Relius laughed and set off down the street, giving Virginia a tug that almost pulled her off her feet, and she stumbled and caught up with him, then remembered herself, and followed him, head down, two paces behind, but he gave her another tug and took up the slack in her leash, so that she must walk at his side, and she did so, barefoot, beautiful, and, I think, happy.

 

Ho-Sorl was speaking to Phyllis. "I will take off the bracelets, but in order that you may attack me if you wish. That might be amusing."

 

The bracelets were removed from Phyllis. She rubbed her wrists and stretched in the leash.

 

"I think I will tear the iron belt from her," commented Ho-Sorl.

 

Phyllis stopped stretching. She looked at Ho-Sorl irritably.

 

"Perhaps you wish me to promise that I shall not attempt to escape?" she inquired.

 

"That will not be necessary," responded Ho-Sorl, starting off after Relius. "You will not escape."

 

"Oh," cried Phyllis, nearly thrown from her feet. The she was angrily walking beside Ho-Sorl. But he stopped and turned and regarded her. Not speaking, but biting her lip, she stepped back two paces, and thus, leashed, furious, followed him.

 

"Let us not be late for the races," said Elizabeth.

 

I extended her my arm, and together we followed the guards and their prisoners.

 

At the races Relius and Ho-Sorl unsnapped the slave leashes and, though in the stands, amid thousands of people, Virginia and Phyllis were free. Virginia seemed rather grateful, and knelt quite close to Relius, who sat on the tier; in a moment she felt his arm about her shoulders and thus they watched race after race, or seemed to watch the race, for often, I observed them looking rather more at one another. Ho-Sorl, after several races, gave Phyllis a coin, ordering her to find a vendor and buy him some Sa-Tarna bread smeared with honey. A sly look came over her face and in an instant, saying, "Yes, Master," she was gone.

 

I looked at Ho-Sorl. "She will try to escape," I said.

 

The black-haired scarred fellow looked at me, and smiled. "Of course," he said.

 

"If she escapes," I said, "Cernus will doubtless have you impaled."

 

"Doubtless," said Ho-Sorl. "But she will not escape."

 

Pretending not to be particularly observant, but watching very closely, Ho-Sorl and I observed Phyllis picking her way past two vendors with bread and honey. He smiled at me. "See," he said.

 

"Yes," I said. "I see."

 

Phyllis then, darting a look about her, suddenly turned and fled down one of the dark ramps at the races.

 

Ho-Sorl leaped nimbly to his feet and started after her.

 

I waited a moment or so and then I arose also. "Wait here," I said to Elizabeth.

 

"Don't let him hurt her," said Elizabeth to me.

 

"She is his prisoner," I told Elizabeth.

 

"Please," said Elizabeth.

 

"Look," I said, "Cernus would not be much pleased if she were slain or disfigured. The most Ho-Sorl will do to her is give her a good drubbing."

 

"She doesn't know any better," said Elizabeth.

 

"And that," I said, " would probably do her good."

 

I then left Elizabeth, and Relius and Virginia, and started off after Ho-Sorl and Phyllis, picking my way through the bustling crowd. The judge's bar rang three times, signaling that the tarns were coming to the track for the next race.

 

I had hardly walked more than fifty yards through the crowd when I heard a frightened scream, that of a girl, coming from the dark ramp down which Phyllis had disappeared. I then pushed and shoved my way through men and women, tumbling a vendor to the left, and raced to the passageway. I could now hear some angry cries of men, the sound of blows.

 

I bounded down the ramp, three turns, and managed to seize a fellow by the collar and seat of his tunic and fling him some dozen feet to the next landing below, who had been rushing on Ho-Sorl from behind. Ho-Sorl meanwhile was lifting one fellow over his head and hurling him down the ramp. On both the left and the right side there lay a battered, senseless fellow. Phyllis, wild eyed, the clothing half torn from her, the iron belt revealed, was trembling by the iron bannister on the ramp, on her knees shuddering, her left wrist braceleted to the railing, breathing spasmodically. The fellow Ho-Sorl had flung down the ramp rolled for some feet, struck the wall at the turn, struggled to his feet and drew a knife. Ho-Sorl immediately took a step toward him and the fellow screamed, threw down his knife, and ran.

 

Ho-Sorl strode over to Phyllis. The bracelet that fastened her to the railing was his. I gather he had come on the men, who had apparently seized the girl, beaten them away, braceleted her to keep her there, and then turned to fight them again as they had regrouped and attacked.

 

He glared down at Phyllis, who, this time, did not meet his eyes but looked down at the stones of the ramp on which she knelt.

 

"So," said Ho-Sorl, "the pretty little slave girl would run away?"

 

Phyllis swallowed hard, looking down, not speaking.

 

"Where did the pretty little slave girl think to run?" asked Ho-Sorl.

 

"I don't know," she said numbly.

 

"Pretty little slave girls are foolish, aren't they?" asked Ho-Sorl.

 

"I don't know," she said. "I don't know."

 

"There is no place to run," said Ho-Sorl.

 

Phyllis looked up at him, then, I think, feeling the true hopelessness of her plight.

 

"Yes," she said numbly, "there is no place to run."

 

Ho-Sorl did not beat her but rather, after removing the slave bracelets from the railing of the ramp and from her wrist, putting the bracelets in his belt, simply pulled her to her feet. He found the ripped slave cloak and hood which had been torn from her and helped her to tie together the parts of her slave livery. When she stood ready to return to the tiers she put her back to him and extended her wrists behind her. But he did not bracelet her, nor leash her. Rather he looked about on the ramp until he found the small coin he had given her to buy him bread and honey, which coin she had dropped when the four men had seized her. To her astonishment he gave her the coin.

 

"Buy me bread and honey," he told her. Then he said to me, "We have missed the sixth race," and together we turned about and went back into the stands, finding our seats.

 

Some minutes later Phyllis came to our seats, bringing Ho-Sorl his bread and honey, and the two copper tarn disks change. He became absorbed in the races. He may not have noticed that she knelt on the tier below us, her head down, her face in her hands, sobbing. Virginia and Elizabeth knelt with her, one on each side, holding her about the shoulders.

 

"I only regret," Ho-Sorl was saying to me, "that I never saw Melipolus of Cos ride."

 

Race followed race, and, eventually, we heard the judge's bar ringing three times, signaling that the tarns were being brought out for the eleventh race, the last of the day.

 

"What do you think of the Steels?" asked Relius, leaning toward me.

 

The Steels were a new faction in Ar, their patch a bluish gray. But they had no following. Indeed, there had never yet been a Steel in a race in Ar. I had heard, however, that the first tarn would fly for the Steels in this very race, the eleventh race, that which was shortly to begin. I did know, further, that a tarn cot for the Steels had been established during Se'Var and riders had been hired.

 

The backing of the faction was a bit mysterious. What gold there was behind the Steels was not clear, either as to quantity or origin. It might be noted, however, that a serious investment is involved in attempting to form a faction. There are often attempts to found a new faction, but generally they are unsuccessful. If a substantial proportion of races are not won in the first two seasons the law of the Stadium of Tarns discontinues its recognition of that faction. Moreover, to bring a new faction into competition is an expensive business, and involves considerable risk to the capital advanced. Not only is it expensive to buy or rent tarn cots, acquire racing tarns, hire riders and Tarn Keepers, and the entire staff required to maintain a faction organization, but there is a large track fee for new factions, during the first two probation years.

 

This fee, incidentally, can be levied even against older factions if their last season is a very poor one; moreover, a number of substandard seasons, even for an established faction, will result in the loss, permanently or for a ten-year period, of their rights on the track. Further, the appearance of new factions is a threat to the older factions, for each win of the new counts as a loss against the old. It is to the advantage of any given faction that there should be a small number of factions in competition and so the riders of an older faction, if unable to win themselves in given races, will often attempt to prevent a good race being flown by the riders of the new faction. Further, it is common among older factions not to hire riders who have ridden for the new factions, though sometimes, in the case of a particularly excellent rider, this practice is waived.

 

"What do you think of the Steels?" asked Relius again.

 

"I don't know," I said. "I know nothing of them." There had been something in his voice which puzzled me. Also, Ho-Sorl gave me a look at about this time. Neither of them, incidentally, had ever seemed much taken aback by the fact that I commonly wore the black of the Assassin. Now, of course, as I usually did when I was outside the house, I wore the red of the Warrior. They had not exactly attempted to become friends with me, but they had not avoided me; and often wheere I was I found them about.

 

"Now that is a bird!" cried Ho-Sorl, as the low, wheeled platforms were being drawn on the track.

 

I heard several in the crowd cry out in amazement.

 

I looked down to the track, and could not speak. I sat frozen on the tier. I could not breathe.

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