Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Historical, #Erotica, #Thrillers, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character)
06 Raiders of GorRaiders or Gor
John Norman
Chronicles of Counter-Earth Volume 6
1
The Blood Mark
I could smell the sea, gleaming Thassa, in the myths said to be without a
farther shore.
I reached down from the rush craft and took a palm of water into my hand and
touched my tongue to it. Thassa could not be far beyond.
I took the triangular-bladed tem-wood paddle and moved the small craft, light
and narrow, large enough scarcely for one man, ahead. I was formed of pliant,
tubular, lengthy Vosk rushes, bound with march vine.
To my right, some two or three feet under the water, I saw the sudden, rolling
yellowish flash of the slatted belly of a water tharlarion, turning as it made
its swift strike, probably a Vosk carp or marsh turtle. Immediately following I
saw the water seem to glitter for a moment, a rain of yellowish streaks beneath
the surface, in the wake of water tharlarion, doubtless its swarm of scavengers,
tiny water tharlarion, about six inches long, little more than teeth and tail.
A brightly plumaged bird sprang from the rushes to my left, screaming and
beating its sudden way into the blue sky. In a moment it had darted again
downward to be lost in the rushes, the waving spore stalks, the seed pods of
various growths of the Gorean tidal marshes. Only one creature in the marshes
dares to outline itself against the sky, the predatory UI, the winged
tharlarion.
It was difficult to see more than a few feet ahead: sometimes I could see no
further than the lifted prow of my small craft, as it nosed its way among the
ruses and the frequent rence plants.
It was the fourth day of the sixth passage hand, shortly before the Autumnal
Equinox, which in the common Gorean calendar begins the moth of Se’Kara. In the
calendar of Ko-ro-ba, which, like most Gorean cities, marks years by its
Administration of my father, Matthew Cabot. In the calendar of Ar, for those it
might interest, it was the first year of the restoration of Marlenus, Ubar of
Ubars, but, more usefully for the purposes of consolidating the normal chaos of
Gorean chronology, it was the year 10,119 Contasta Ar, that is, from the
founding of Ar.
My weapons shared the boat, with a gourd of water and a tin of bread and dried
bosk meat. I had the Gorean short sword in its scabbard, my shield and helmet,
and, wrapped in leather, a Gorean long bow of supple Ka-la-na wood, from the
yellow wine trees of Gor, tipped with notched bosk horn at each end, loose
strung with help and whipped with silk, and a roll of sheaf and flight arrows.
The bow is not commonly favored by Gorean warriors, but all must respect it. It
is the height of a tall; its back, away from the bowman, is flat; its belly,
facing the bowman, is half-rounded; it is something lika an inch and a half wide
and an inch and a quarter thick in the center; it has considerable force and
requires considerable strength to draw; many men, incidentally, even some
warriors, cannot draw the bowy; nine of the arrrows can be fired aloft before
the first falls again to the earth; at point-blank range it can be fired
completely through a four-inch beam; at two hundered yards it can pin a man to a
wall; at four hundred yards it can kill the huge, shambling bosk; its rate of
fire is nineteen arrows in a Gorean Ehn, about eighty Earth seconds; and a
skilled bowman, but not an extradordinary one, is expected to be able to place
these nineteen arrows in on Ehn into a target, the size of a man, each a hit, at
a range of some two hundred and fifty yards. Yet, as a weapon, it has serious
disadvantages, and on Gor the crossbow, inferior in accuracy, range and rate of
fire, with its heavy cable and its leaves of steel, tends to be generally
favored. The long bow cannot well be used except in a standing, or at least
kneeling, position, thus making more of a target of the archer; the long bow is
difficult to use from a saddle; it is impractical in close quarters, as in
defensive warfare of in fighting from room to room; and it cannot be kept set,
loaded like a firearm, as can the crossbow; the crossbow is the assassin’s
weapon, par excellence; further, it might be mentioned that, although it takes
longer to set the crossbow, a weaker man, with, say, his belt claw or his
winding gear, can certainly manage to do so; accordingly, for every man capable
of drawing a warrior’s long bow there will be an indefinite number who can use
the crossbow; lastly, at shorter distances, the crossbow requires much less
skill for accuracy than the long bow.
I smiled to myself.
It is not difficult to see why, popularly, the crossbow should be regarded as a
generally more efficient weapon that the long bow, in spite of being inferior to
it, in the hands of an expert, in range, accuracy and rate of fire. Well used,
the long bow is a far more devastating weapon than its rival, the crossbow; but
few men had the strenght and eye to use it well; I prided myself on my skill
with the weapon.
I paddled along, gently, kneeling on the rushes of my small, narrow craft.
It is the weapon of a peasant, I heard echoing in my mind, and again smiled. The
Older Tarl, my former master-at-arms, had so spoken to me years before in
Ko-ro-ba, my city, the Towers of the Morning. I looked down at the long, heavy,
leather-wrapped bow of supple Ka-la-na wood in the bottom of the rush craft.
I laughed.
It was true that the long bow is a weapon of peasants, who make and use them,
sometimes with great efficiency. That face, in inself, that the long is a
peasant weapon, would make many Goreans, particularly those ont familiar with
the bow, look down upon it. Gorean warriors, generally drawn from the cities,
are warriors by blood, by caste; moreover, they are High Caste; the peasants,
isolate in their narrow fields and villages, are Low Caste; indeed, the Peasant
is regarded, by those of the cities, as being little more than an ignoble brute,
ingnorant and superstitious, venal and vicious, a grubber in the dirt, a
plodding animal, an ill-tempered beast, something at best cunning and
treacherous; and yet I knew that in each dirt-floored cone of straw that served
as the dwelling place of a peasant and his family, there was, by the fire hole,
a Home Stone; the peasants themselves, though regarded as the lowest caste on
all Gor by most Goreans, call themselves proudly the ox on which the Home Stone
rests, and I think their saying is true.
Peasants, incidentally, are seldom, except in emergencies, utilized in the armed
forces of a city; this is a futher reason why their weapon, the long bow, is
less known in the cities, and among warriors, than it deserves to be.
The Gorean, to my mind, is often, though not always, bound by historical
accidents and cultrual traditions, which are then often rationalized into a
semblance of plausibility. For example, I had even heard arguments ot the effect
that pleasants used the long bow only because they lacked the manufacturing
capablity to produce crossbows, as though they could not have traded their goods
or sold animals ot obtain crossbows, if they wished. Further, the heavy,
bronze-headed spear and the short, double-edged steel sword are traditionally
regarded as the worthy, and prime, weapons of the Gorean fighting man, he at
least who is a true fighting man; and similarly traditionally, archers, who slay
from a distance, not coming to grips with their enemy, with their almost
invisible, swiftly moving shafts of wook, those mere splinters, are regarded as
being rather contemptible, almost on the periphery of warriorhood; villains in
Gorean epics, incidentally, when not of small and despised castes, are likely to
be archers; I had heard warriors say that they would rather be poisoned by a
woman than slain by an arrow.
I myself, perhaps because I had been raised not on Gor, but on Earth, did not,
fortunately in my opinion, suffer from these inhibiting prepossessions; I could
use the long bow with, so to speak, no tincture of shame, no confusion of
conscience, without the least injury to my self-esteem; I knew the long bow to
be a magnificent weapon; accordingly, I made it my own.
I heard a bird some forth or fifty yards to my right; it sounded like a marsh
gant, a small, horned, web-footed aquatic fowl, brad-billed and broad-winged.
Marsh girls, the daughters of rence growers, sometimes hunt them with throwing
sticks.
In some cities, Port Kar, for example, the long bow is almost unknown. Similarly
it is not widely known even in Glorious Ar, the largest city of known Gor. It is
reasonably well know in Thentis, in the Mountains of Thentis, famed for her tarn
flocks, and in Ko-ro-ba, my city, the Towers of Morning. Cities vary. But
generally the bow is little known. Small straight bows, of course, not the
powerful long bow, are, on the other hand, reasonably common on Gor, and these
are often used for hunting light game, such as the brush-maned, three-toed
Qualae, the yellow-pelted, sing-horned Tabuk, and runaway slaves.
I heard another bird, another marsh gant it seemed, some fifty yards away, but
this time to my left.
I was late in the afternoon, the fourteenth Gorean Ahn I would have guessed.
Some swarms of insects hung in the sedge here and there but I had not been much
bothered: it was late in the year, and most of the Gorean insects likely to make
life miserable for men bred in, and frequented, areas in which bodies of
unmoving, fresh wather were plentiful. I did see a large, harmless zarlit fly,
purple, about two feet long with four translucent wings, spanning about a yard,
humming over the surface of the water then alighting and, on it’s padlike feet,
daintily picking its way across the surface. I flicked a salt leach from the
side of my light craft with the corner of the tem-wood paddle.
On river barges, for hundreds of pasangs, I had made my way down the Vosk, but
where the mighty Vosk began to break apart and spread into its hundreds of
shallow, constantly shifting channels, becoming lost in the vast tidal marshes
of its delta, moving toward gleaming Thassa, the Sea, I had abandoned the
barges, purchasing from rence growers on the eastern periphery of the delta
supplies and the small rush craft which I now propelled through the rushes and
sedge, the wild rence plants.
I noticed that one of these rence plants had, tied about it, below the tuft of
stamens and narrow petals, a white cloth, re-cloth.
I paddled over to look at the cloth. I looed about myself, and was for some time
quiet, not moving. Then I moved past the plant, parting the rence and passing
throug.
I heard again the cry of the marsh gant, from somewhere behind me.
No one had been found who would guide me into the delta of the Vosk. The
bargemen of the Vosk will not take their wide, broad-bottomed craft into the
delta. The channels of the Vosk, to be sure, shift from season to season, and
the delta is often little more than a trackless marsh, literally hundreds of
square pasangs of estuarial wilderness. In many places it is too shallow to
float even the great flat-bottomed barges and, more inmportantly, a path for
them would have to be cut and chopped, foot by foot, through the thickets of
rush and sedge, and the tangles of marsh vine. The most important reason for not
finding a guide, of course, even among the eastern rence growers, is that the
delta is claimed by Port Kar, which lies within it, some hundred pasangs from
its northwestern edge, bordering on the shallow Tamber Gulf, beyond wich is
gleaming Thassa, the Sea.
Port Kar, crowded, squalid, malignant, is sometimes referred to as the Tarn of
the Sea. Her name is a synonym in Gorean for cruelty and piracy. The fleets of
tarn ships of Port Kar are the scourge of Thassa, beautiful, lateen-rigged
galleys that ply the trade of plunder and enslavement from the Ta-Thassa
Mountains of the southern hemisphere of Gor to the ice lakes of the North; and
westward even beyond the terraced island of Cos and the rocky Tyros, with its
labyrinths of vart caves.
I knew one in Port Kar, by name Samos, a slaver, said to be an agent of
Priest-Kings.
I was in the delta of the Vosk, and making my way to the city of Port Kar, which
alone of Gorean cities commonly welcomes strangers, though few but exiles,
murderers, outlaws, thieves and cutthroats would care ot find their way to her
canaled darknesses.
I recalled Samos, slumped in his marble chair at the Curulean in Ar, seemingly
indolent, but indolent as might be the satisfied beast of prey. About his left
shoulder, in the manner of his city, he had worn the knotted ropes of Port Kar;
his garment had been simple, dark and closely woven; the hood had been thrown
back, revealing his broad, wide head, the close-cropped white hair; the face had
been red from windburn and salt; it had been wrinkled and lined, cracked like
leather; in his ears there wha been two small golden rings; in him I had sensed
power, experience, intelligence, cruelty; I had felt in him the presence of the
carnivore, at that moment not inclined to hunt or kill. I did not look forward