Priest-Kings of Gor

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Priest-Kings of Gor Page 5

by John Norman


  She looked at me. "Yes," she snapped. She fumbled irritably with the clasp of her robe, but her fingers were clumsy with rage. She was unable to fasten the clasp.

  I fastened it for her.

  She looked up at me, her eyes blazing. "I will prepare food," she said.

  "Be quick, Slave Girl," I said.

  Her shoulders shook with rage.

  "I see," I said, "that I must teach you the meaning of your collar." I took a step toward her and she turned stumbling with a cry and ran to the corner of the room.

  My laugh was loud.

  Almost instantly, reddening, Vika regained her composure and straightened herself, tossing her head and brushing back a melody of blond hair which had fallen across her forehead. The wool fillet she had worn to bind her hair had loosened. She fixed on me a look of the most lofty disdain and, standing against the wall, lifting her arms behind the back of her neck, she prepared to replace the fillet.

  "No," I said.

  I had decided I liked her better with her hair loose.

  Deliberately, testing me, she continued to tie the fillet.

  My eyes met hers.

  Angrily she pulled the fillet from her hair and threw it to the floor, and turned away to busy herself with the preparation of my meal.

  Her hair was very beautiful.

  6

  When Priest-Kings Walk

  Vika could cook well and I enjoyed the meal she prepared.

  Stores of food were kept in concealed cabinets at one side of the room, which were opened in the same fashion as the other apertures I had observed earlier.

  At my command Vika demonstrated for me the manner of opening and closing the storage and disposal areas in her unusual kitchen.

  The temperature of the water which sprang from the wall tap, I learned, was regulated by the direction in which the shadow of a hand fell across a light-sensitive cell above the tap; the amount of water was correlated with the speed with which the hand passed before the sensor. I was interested to note that one received cold water by a shadow passing from right to left and hot water by a shadow passing from left to right. This reminded me of faucets on Earth, in which the hot water tap is on the left and the cold on the right. Undoubtedly there is a common reason underlying these similar arrangements on Gor and Earth. More cold water is used than hot, and most individuals using the water are right-handed.

  The food which Vika withdrew from the storage apertures was not refrigerated but was protected by something resembling a foil of blue plastic. It was fresh and appetizing.

  First she boiled and simmered a kettle of Sullage, a common Gorean soup consisting of three standard ingredients and, as it is said, whatever else may be found, saving only the rocks of the field. The principal ingredients of Sullage are the golden Sul, the starchy, golden-brown vine-borne fruit of the golden-leaved Sul plant; the curled, red, ovate leaves of the Tur-Pah, a tree parasite, cultivated in host orchards of Tur trees; and the salty, blue secondary roots of the Kes Shrub, a small, deeply rooted plant which grows best in sandy soil.

  The meat was a steak, cut from the loin of a bosk, a huge, shaggy, long-horned, ill-tempered bovine which shambles in large, slow-moving herds across the prairies of Gor. Vika seared this meat, as thick as the forearm of a warrior, on a small iron grill over a kindling of charcoal cylinders, so that the thin margin of the outside was black, crisp and flaky and sealed within by the touch of the fire was the blood-rich flesh, hot and fat with juice.

  Beyond the Sullage and the bosk steak there was the inevitable flat, rounded loaf of the yellow Sa-Tarna bread. The meal was completed by a handful of grapes and a draught of water from the wall tap. The grapes were purple and, I suppose, Ta grapes from the lower vineyards of the terraced island of Cos some four hundred pasangs from Port Kar. I had tasted some only once before, having been introduced to them at a feast given in my honor by Lara, who was Tatrix of the city of Tharna. If they were indeed Ta grapes I supposed they must have come by galley from Cos to Port Kar, and from Port Kar to the Fair of En'Kara. Port Kar and Cos are hereditary enemies, but such traditions would not be likely to preclude some profitable smuggling. But perhaps they were not Ta grapes, for Cos was far distant, and even if carried by tarns, the grapes would probably not seem so fresh. I dismissed the matter from my mind. I wondered why there was only water to drink, and none of the fermented beverages of Gor, such as paga, Ka-la-na wine or Kal-da. I was sure that if these were available Vika would have set them before me.

  I looked at her.

  She had not prepared herself a portion but, after I had been served, had knelt silently to one side, back on her heels in the position of a Tower Slave, a slave to whom largely domestic duties would be allotted in the Gorean apartment cylinders.

  On Gor, incidentally, chairs have special significance, and do not often occur in private dwellings. They tend to be reserved for significant personages, such as administrators and judges. Moreover, although you may find this hard to understand, they are not thought to be comfortable. Indeed, when I had returned to Earth from my first trip to Gor I had found that one of the minor inconveniences of my return was reaccustoming myself to the simple business of sitting on chairs. I felt, for some months, rather awkward, rather unsteady perched on a little wooden platform supported by four narrow sticks. Perhaps if you can imagine yourself suddenly being forced to sit on rather high end tables you can sense the feeling.

  The Gorean male, at ease, usually sits cross-legged and the female kneels, resting back on her heels. The position of the Tower Slave, in which Vika knelt, differs from that of a free woman only in the position of the wrists which are held before her and, when not occupied, crossed as though for binding. A free woman's wrists are never so placed. The Older Tarl, who had been my mentor in arms years ago in Ko-ro-ba, had once told me the story of a free woman, desperately in love with a warrior, who, in the presence of her family was entertaining him, and whose wrists, unconsciously, had assumed the position of a slave. It was only with difficulty that she had been restrained from hurling herself in mortification from one of the high bridges. The Older Tarl had guffawed in recounting this anecdote and was scarcely less pleased by its sequel. It seems she thereafter, because of her embarrassment, would never see the warrior and he, at last, impatient and desiring her, carried her off as a slave girl, and returned to the city months later with her as his Free Companion. At the time that I had been in Ko-ro-ba the couple had still been living in the city. I wondered what had become of them.

  The position of the Pleasure Slave, incidentally, differs from the position of both the free woman and the Tower Slave. The hands of a Pleasure Slave normally rest on her thighs but, in some cities, for example, Thentis, I believe, they are crossed behind her. More significantly, for the free woman's hands may also rest on her thighs, there is a difference in the placement of the knees. In all these kneeling positions, incidentally, even that of the Pleasure Slave, the Gorean woman carries herself well; her back is straight and her chin is high. She tends to be vital and beautiful to look upon.

  "Why is there nothing but water to drink?" I asked Vika.

  She shrugged. "I suppose," she said, "because the Chamber Slave is alone much of the time."

  I looked at her, not fully understanding.

  She gazed at me frankly. "It would be too easy then," she said.

  I felt like a fool. Of course the Chamber Slaves would not be permitted the escape of intoxication, for if they were so allowed to lighten their bondage undoubtedly, in time, their beauty, their utility to the Priest-Kings, would be diminished; they would become unreliable, lost in dreams and wines.

  "I see," I said.

  "Only twice a year is the food brought," she said.

  "And it is brought by Priest-Kings?" I asked.

  "I suppose," she said.

  "But you do not know?"

  "No," said she. "I awaken on some morning and there is food."

  "I suppose Parp brings it," I said.

&nbs
p; She looked at me, with a trace of amusement.

  "Parp, the Priest-King," I said.

  "Did he tell you that?" she asked.

  "Yes," I said.

  "I see," she said.

  The girl was apparently unwilling to speak more of this matter, and so I did not press her.

  I had almost finished the meal. "You have done well," I congratulated her. "The meal is excellent."

  "Please," she said, "I am hungry."

  I looked at her, dumbfounded. She had not prepared herself a portion and so I had assumed that she had eaten, or was not hungry, or would prepare her own meal later.

  "Make yourself something," I said.

  "I cannot," she said simply. "I can eat only what you give me."

  I cursed myself for a fool.

  Had I now become so much the Gorean warrior that I could disregard the feelings of a fellow creature, in particular those of a girl, who must be protected and cared for? Could it be that I had, as the codes of my caste recommended, not even considered her, but merely regarded her as a rightless animal, no more than a subject beast, an abject instrument to my interests and pleasures, a slave?

  "I am sorry," I said.

  "Was it not your intention to discipline me?" she asked.

  "No," I said.

  "Then my master is a fool," she said, reaching for the meat that I had left on my plate.

  I caught her wrist.

  "It is now my intention to discipline you," I said.

  Her eyes briefly clouded with tears. "Very well," she said, withdrawing her hand.

  Vika would go hungry that night.

  * * * *

  Although it was late, according to the chamber chronometer, fixed in the lid of one of the chests, I prepared to leave the room. Unfortunately there was no natural light in the room and so one could not judge the time by the sun or the stars and moons of Gor. I missed them. Since I had awakened, the energy bulbs had continued to burn at a constant and undiminished rate.

  I had washed as well as I could, squatting in the stream of water which emerged from the wall.

  In one of the chests against the wall I had found, among the garments of various other castes, a warrior's tunic. I donned this, as my own had been torn by the larl's claws.

  Vika had unrolled a straw mat which she placed on the floor at the foot of the great stone couch in the chamber. On this, wrapped in a light blanket, her chin on her knees, she sat watching me.

  A heavy slave ring was set in the bottom of the couch to which I might have, had I pleased, chained her. I buckled on my sword.

  "You are not going to leave the chamber, are you?" asked Vika, the first words she had said to me since the meal.

  "Yes," I said.

  "But you may not," she said.

  "Why?" I asked, alert.

  "It is forbidden," she said.

  "I see," I said.

  I started for the door.

  "When the Priest-Kings wish you, they will come for you," she said. "Until then you must wait."

  "I do not care to wait," I said.

  "But you must," she insisted, standing.

  I went to her and placed my hands on her shoulders. "Do not fear the Priest-Kings so," I said.

  She saw that my resolve was not altered.

  "If you go," she said, "return at least before the second gong."

  "Why?" I asked.

  "For yourself," she said, looking down.

  "I am not afraid," I said.

  "Then for me," she said, not raising her eyes.

  "But why?" I asked.

  She seemed confused. "I am afraid to be alone," she said.

  "But you have been alone many nights," I pointed out.

  She looked up at me and I could not read the expression in her troubled eyes. "One does not cease to be afraid," she said.

  "I must go," I said.

  Suddenly in the distance I heard the rumble of the gong which I had heard before in the Hall of Priest-Kings.

  Vika smiled up at me. "You see," she said in relief, "it is too late. Now you must remain."

  "Why?" I asked.

  She looked away, avoiding my eyes. "Because the energy bulbs will soon be dimmed," she said, "and it will be the hours allotted for sleep."

  She seemed unwilling to speak further.

  "Why must I remain?" I asked.

  I held her shoulders more firmly and shook her to force her to speak. "Why?" I insisted.

  Fear crept into her eyes.

  "Why?" I demanded.

  Then came the second rumbling stroke of the distant gong, and Vika seemed to tremble in my arms.

  Her eyes were wide with fear.

  I shook her again, savagely. "Why?" I cried.

  She could hardly speak. Her voice was scarcely a whisper. "Because after the gong—" she said.

  "Yes?" I demanded.

  "—they walk," she said.

  "Who!" I demanded.

  "The Priest-Kings!" she cried and turned from me.

  "I am not afraid of Parp," I said.

  She turned and looked at me. "He is not a Priest-King," she said quietly.

  And then came the third and final stroke of that distant gong and at the same instant the energy bulbs in the room dimmed and I understood that now somewhere in the long corridors of that vast edifice there walked the Priest-Kings of Gor.

  7

  I Hunt for Priest-Kings

  In spite of Vika's protests it was with a light heart that I strode into the passageway beyond her chamber. I would seek the Priest-Kings of Gor.

  She followed me almost to the portal, and I can remember how the sensors set in that great threshold in the dimmed light of the energy bulbs began to glow and pulse as she neared them.

  I could see her white garment and sense the pale beauty of her skin as she stood back from the portal in the semidarkened chamber.

  "Please do not go," she called to me.

  "I must," I said.

  "Come back," she cried.

  I did not answer her but began to prowl down the hallway.

  "I'm afraid," I heard her call.

  I assumed she would be safe, as she had been on countless nights and so I went on.

  I thought I heard her weep, and supposed that she did so for herself, because she was frightened.

  I continued down the passageway.

  My business was not to console her, not to tell her not to be afraid, not to give her the comfort of another human presence. My business was with the dread denizens of these dim passageways which had so inspired her terror; my business was not that of the comforter or friend, but that of the warrior.

  As I went down the passageway I looked into the various chambers, identical with my own, which lined it. Each, like mine, lacked a gate or door, and had for its entrance only that massive portal, perhaps some twelve feet wide and eighteen feet high. I would not have enjoyed sleeping in such a room, for there was no way to protect oneself from the hall, and of course eventually one would need sleep.

  Almost all of the chambers I passed, and I passed many, seemed to be empty.

  Two, however, housed Chamber Slaves, girls like Vika, clad and collared identically. I supposed the only difference in the attire of the three girls would have been the numerals engraved on their collars. Vika of course had worn a scarf and these girls did not, but now Vika no longer wore her scarf; now her collar, steel and gleaming, locked, encircling her fair throat, was as evident and beautiful as theirs, proclaiming her to the eyes of all, like them, only a slave girl.

  The first girl was a short, sturdy wench with thick ankles and wide, exciting shoulders, probably of peasant stock. Her hair had been braided and looped over her right shoulder; it was hard in the light to determine its color. She had risen from her mat at the foot of the couch unbelievingly, blinking and rubbing her heavy-lidded, ovoid eyes. As far as I could tell she was alone in the chamber. When she approached the portal its sensors began to glow and pulse as had Vika's.

  "Who are you
?" asked the girl, her accent suggesting the Sa-Tarna fields above Ar and toward the Tamber Gulf.

  "Have you seen Priest-Kings?" I asked.

  "Not this night," she said.

  "I am Cabot of Ko-ro-ba," I said and went on.

  The second girl was tall, fragile and willowy, with slender ankles and large, hurt eyes; she had dark, curling hair that fell about her shoulders and stood out against the white of her garment; she may have been of High Caste; without speaking to her it would be hard to tell; even then it might be difficult to be sure, for the accents of some of the higher artisan castes approximate pure High Caste Gorean; she stood with her back against the far wall, the palms of her hands against it, her eyes fastened on me, frightened, scarcely breathing. As far as I could tell she too was alone.

  "Have you seen Priest-Kings?" I asked.

  She shook her head vigorously, No.

  Still wondering if she were of High Caste, and smiling to myself, I continued down the passageway.

  Both of the girls had in their way been beautiful but I found Vika superior to both.

  My Chamber Slave's accent had been pure High Caste Gorean though I could not place the city. Probably her caste had been that of the Builders or Physicians, for had her people been Scribes I would have expected a greater subtlety of inflections, the use of less common grammatical cases; and had her people been of the Warriors I would have expected a blunter speech, rather belligerently simple, expressed in great reliance on the indicative mood and, habitually, a rather arrogant refusal to venture beyond the most straightforward of sentence structures. On the other hand these generalizations are imperfect, for Gorean speech is no less complex than that of any of the great natural language communities of the Earth nor are its speakers any the less diverse. It is, incidentally, a beautiful language; it can be as subtle as Greek; as direct as Latin; as expressive as Russian; as rich as English; as forceful as German. To the Goreans it is always, simply, The Language, as though there were no others, and those who do not speak it are regarded immediately as barbarians. This sweet, fierce, liquid speech is the common bond that tends to hold together the Gorean world. It is the common property of the Administrator of Ar, a herdsman beside the Vosk, a peasant from Tor, a scribe from Thentis, a metal worker from Tharna, a physician from Cos, a pirate from Port Kar, a warrior from Ko-ro-ba.

 

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