Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Historical, #Erotica, #Thrillers, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character)
from Tyros, in their green ships, painted to resemble the sea, but neither of
them had chosen ot engage us. We gathered that, seeing how low we sat in the
water, they assumed our cargo to be one of bulk goods and departed, doubtless
having higher hopes for gain upon the sea. It is scarely worth the risk of crew
and ship, unless desperate, to win a hold filled with lumber or stone.
My men were mostly pirates and cutthroats. Doubtless many of them did not much
care to ply an honest trade. Better, they would think, to lie in wait on the
open sea for the slave galleys of Tyros or the treasure ships of Cos. But two
who challenged me for the captaincy I slew within a dozen strokes, and the
others, thus given pause, chose to confine their disgruntlement, if any, to
their cups and conclaves. Any who did not wish to continue in my service were
free to go. I instructed Luma to discharge any such with a gift of gold, of half
a stone’s weight. Surprisingly, few left my ships. I do not think they cared to
foresake their piracies, but, too, I think they felt pride in serving one who
was said, now, after the incident of the paga tavern, to possess one of the
finest blades in Port Kar.
“When do we sail against the ships of Cos and Tyros?” asked Tab of me.
“Cos and Tyros,” I said, “have not injured me.”
“They will,” said he.
“Then,” said I, “we will sail against them.”
Ashore my crews were roisterous and brawling but on the ships, strange as it is
to relate, they were serious and disciplined men.
I attempted to treat them fairly.
On land I did not see much of them, preferring it this way, remaining aloof.
But I did, of course, pay them well and, in my holding, knowing men, saw that
they could have their pick of some of Port Kar’s most beautiful slave girls.
I had purchased the girl whom I had seen dance in the Paga Tavern, for forty
pieces of gold. I had called her Sandra, after a girl once known on Earth. I had
put my collar on her and, after using her, had consigned her to my men, that she
might please their senses.
My fifth voyage was one ot satisfy my interest, and made in a light swift
galley.
I had wanted to see both Tyros and Cos.
Both lie some four hundred pasangs west of Port Kar, Tyros to the south of Cos,
separated by some hundred pasangs from her. Tyros is a rugged island, with
mountains. She is famed for her vart caves, and indeed, on the island, trained
varts, batlike creatures, some the size of small dogs, are used as weapons. Cos
is also a lofty island, even loftier than Tyros, but she has level fields to her
west. Cos had many terraces, on which the Ta grapes are grown. Near her, on
night, lying off her shore, silently, I heard the mating whistles of the tiny,
lovely Cosian wingfish. This is a small, delicate fish; it has three or four
slender spines in its dorsal fin, which are poisonous. It is called the wingfish
because it can, on its stiff pectoral fins, for short distances, glide through
the air, usually in an attempt to flee small sea tharlarion, who are immune to
the poison of the spines. It is also called a songfish, because, in their
courtship rituals, males and females thrust their heads from the water, uttering
a kind of whistle. Their livers are regarded as a delicacy. I recalled I had
once tried one, but had not cared for it, at a banquet in Turia, in the house of
a man named Saphrar, who had been a merchant.. Saphrar, I recalled, had once
been a perfumer from Tyros but, being exiled as a thief, had made his way to
Port Kar, and thence had gone to Turia.
I had learned on the rail of the light galley, and, in the moonlight, had
listened to the mating whistles of the small fish.
The seemed so small, and innocent.
“The moons are now full,” had said Tab to me.
“Yes,” I said, “weigh the anchors.”
Silently, oars scarcely touching the water, we had moved from Cos, leaving her
behind in the moonlight.
While I made my five voyages my other six ships were engaged in commercila
ventures similar to those which had occupied my first four voyages. I seldom
returned to Port Kar without learning from Luma that my fortunes had been
augmented even further in my absence. I had made, to date, only the five voyages
mentioned. In the last two months, in my holding, I had been largely occupied
with matters of business and management, mostly organizing and planning the
voyages of others. I expected I would again, however, return to Thassa. She, as
it is said, cannot be forgotten.
I had made one innovation in practices common to Port Kar. I used free men on
the rowing benches on my round ships, of which I had four, not slaves, as is
traditional. The fighting ship, incidentall, the long ship, the ram-ship, has
never been, to my knowledge, in Port Kar, or Cos, or Tyros, or elsewhere on Gor,
rowed by slaves; the Gorean fighting ship always has free men at the oars. The
galley slaves I thought worth freeing, I freed, and found that many would stay
with me, taking me for their captain. Those I did no wish, for one reason or
another, to free, I sold to other captains, or exchanged them for slaves whom I
might free, several of whom, when freed, also agreed to serve with me. Gaps on
my benches were easily filled. I would purchase a strong man from the market
chain on the slave wharf, and then, saying nothing, set him free. I think not
once did such a man not follow me to my holding, asking to be my man. Not only
did fre men render more efficient service at the oars, but, when they were given
the opportunity, I found them eager to train with arms, and so hired masters to
teach them weapons. It was thus that the round ships of Bosk, the captain from
the marshes, with their free crews, became in their own right dangerous,
formidable ships. Merchants of Port Kar began to apply to me that they might
transport their goods in my ships. I preferred, however, to buy and sell my own
cargos. Certain other captain, I noted, were now also experimenting, on certain
of their shiips, with free crews.
My attention was then returned to the meeting of the council of captains.
A motion was on the floor that a new preserve in the northern forests be
obtained, that more timber for the arsenal be available. In the northern forests
Port Kar already had several such perserves. There is a ceremony in the
establishment of such a perserve, involving proclamations and the surrounds of
trumpets. Such preserves are posted, surrounded by ditches to keep out cattle
and unlicensed wagoners. There are wardens who watch the trees, guarding against
illegal cutting and pasturage, and inspectors who, each year, tally and examine
them. The wardens are also responsible, incidentally, for managing and improving
the woods. They do such work as thinning and planting, and trimming, and keeping
the protective ditch in repair. They are also responsibel for bending and
fastening certain numbers of young trees so that tey will grow into desired
shapes, usually to be used for frames, and stem and sternposts. Individual
trees, not in the perserves, which are claimed by Port Kar, are marked with the
seal of the arsenal. The location of all such trees is kept in a book available
to the Council of Captains. These preserves are usually located near rivers, in
order to facilitate bringing cut trees to the sea. Trees may also be purchased
from the Forest People, who will cut them in the winter, when they can be
dragged on sleds to the sea. If there is a light snowfall in a given year, the
price of timber is often higher. Port Kar is, incidentally, completely dependent
on the northern timber. Tur wood is used for galley frames, and beams and clamps
and posts, and for hull planking; Ka-la-na serves for capstans and mastheads;
Tem-wood for rudders and oars; and the needle trees, teh evergreens, for masts
and spars, and cabin and deck planking.
The motion to obtain a new preserve carried. I abstained from voting, not having
been convinced that a new preserve was needed. I supposed it might be, but I did
not know; i had not been convinced; so I had abstained.
But why should Cos and Tyros come against Port Kar at this time? But it was a
rumor, I reminded myself again, forcibly, a rumor, a baseless rumor. I was
angry. I again forced the thought from my mind.
I now had the means whereby I might purchase yet two more ships for my fleet.
They would be deep-keeled round ships, with mighty holds, and high, broad sails.
I had alread, to a great extent, selected crews. I had projected voyages for
them to Ianda and to Torvaldsland. Each would be escorted by a medium galley.
They would bring me, I conjecture, much riches.
I took the note from the boy, who appeared suddenly beside my chair. He had long
hair, and wore a tunic of red and yellow silk. I recognized him, he being a page
of the council.
The note, folded, was sealed with a disk of melted wax. The wax did not bear the
imprint of a signet ring.
I opened it.
The message was simple. It read, printed it block letters: I WOULD SPEAK WITH
YOU. It was signed, also in block printing, SAMOS.
I crumpled the paper in my fist.
“Who gave you this message?” I asked the boy.
“A man,” he said. “I do not know him.”
I saw Lysias, with his helmet, with the two golden slashes, with its captain’s
crest of sleen hair, on the arm of his curule chair. He was looking at me,
curiously.
I did not know if the message truly came from Samos, or not.
If it did, doubtless he had come to learn that Tarl Cabot was now in Port Kar.
But how would he have come to know this? And how could he have come to
understand that Bosk, fighting man and merchant, was the same as he who once had
been a warrior of the towered city of Ko-ro-ba, the Towers of the Morning?
Doubtless he wished to summon me to his presence, that he might recall me to the
service of Priest-Kings.
But I no longer served Priest-Kings. I served now only myself.
I was angry.
I would ignore the message.
At that moment a man burst into the hall in which was sitting the Council of
Captains.
His eyes were wild.
It was Henrak, who had worn the white scarf, who had betrayed the rencers.
“The arsenal!” he cried. “The arsenal is afire!”
11
The Crest of Sleen Hair
The Captains leaped from their chairs, crying out. Great chairs fell bounding
down the tiers of the council chamber. The Scribe at the table before the
thrones was on his feet shouting. Papers were scattering to the floor. Feet were
pounding toward the great double door, leading to the hallway beyond, leading
out to the tiled piazza fronting on the hall of the council. I saw pages
scurrying about, in their red and yellow silk. Ink had spilled on the great
table.
Then I saw that Lysias, with the captain’s crest of sleen hair on his helmet,
had not stirred from his chair.
And I saw, too, that the Scribe who normally sat his attendance at the right arm
of the empty throne of Henrius Sevarius, the Fifth, in the council chamber was
gone.
Outside, in the distance, through the great door, flung open, I heard cries of
alarm, and the clash of weapons.
Then I saw Lysias, his hair tied behind his neck with the scarlet string, rise.
He placed on his head his helmet.
He unsheathed his weapon.
So, too, did my steel leave its sheath.
But Lysias then, weapon at the ready, backed away, and then turned and fled
through a side door, leading from the council hall.
I looked about.
A small fire was burning to one side, where a lamp with candle had been knocked
to the floor, in the rush toward the door.
Chairs lay knocked over, furniture was broken. The floor was covered with
papers.
The scribe at the central table, that before the empty thrones, stood numb
behind the table.
Other scribes came and stood with him, looking from one to the other. To one
side, cowering, stood several of the page boys.
Then, staggering, bloody, the quarrel of a crossbow protruding from the emblem
on his velvet tunic, a captain reeled into the room and fell, clutching at the
arm of one of the curule chairs. Then, behind him, in the groups of four and
five, crying out, many bleeding from wounds, weapons brandished, and sometimes
bloodied, there came those captains who could.
I went to the place before the thrones.
I indicated the small fire burning to one side, that which had been caused by
the fallen lamp with candle. “Put it out,” I told two of the frightened pages.
I resheathed my sword.
The two pages leapt to do my bidding.
“Gather up and guard the book of the Council,” I told the Scribe who had been at
the great table.
“Yes, Captain,” said he, leaping to seize it up.
I then, throwing papers to the floor, scattering ink, lifted the great table
over my head.
There were cries of astonishment.
I turned and, step by step, carrying the great table, advanced toward the large
door leading to the hallway.
More captains, their back to the room, fighting, falling, were retreating