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Gorean Games, Fun, and Sports
Game of Love Wars - Page One
Continued on: Page 2
"Be patient, Tarl Cabot," said Kamchak, beside me on his kaiila. "In the
spring there will be the games of Love War and I will go to Turia, and you
may then, if you wish, accompany me."
"Good," I said.
I would wait. It seemed, upon reflection, the best thing to do. The mystery
of the message collar, intriguing as it might be, was of secondary
importance. For the time I put it from my mind. My main interests, my
primary objective, surely lay not in distant Turia, but with the wagons.
I wondered on what Kamchak had called the games of Love War, said to take
place on the Plains of a Thousand Stakes. I supposed, in time, that I would
learn of this.
"After the games of Love War," said Kamchak, "the omens win be taken."
NOMADS OF GOR-, Pages 55-56
In the crowd, on the back of a kaiila, I noted the girl
Hereena, of the First Wagon, whom I had seen my first day in the camp of the
Tuchuks, she who had almost ridden down Kamchak and myself between the
wagons. She was a very exciting, vital, proud girl and the tiny golden nose
ring, against her brownish skin, with her flashing black eyes, did not
detract from her considerable but rather insolent beauty. She, and others
like her, had been encouraged and spoiled from childhood in all their whims,
unlike most other Tuchuk women, that they might be fit prizes, Kamchak had
told me, in the games of Love War. Turian warriors, he told me, enjoy such
women, the wild girls of the Wagons. A young man, blondish-haired with blue
eyes, unscarred, bumped against the girl's stirrup in the press of the
crowd. She struck him twice with the leather quirt in her hand, sharply,
viciously. I could see blood on the side of his neck, where it joins the
shoulder. NOMADS OF GOR-, Page 67
Now this morning we had come to the Plains of a Thousand
Stakes.
For all his uproarious stomping about the wagon last night, Paga bottle in
hand, singing gusty Tuchuk songs, half frightening Miss Cardwell to death,
he seemed in good spirits, looking about, whistling, occasionally pounding a
little rhythm on the side of his saddle. I would not tell Miss Cardwell but
the rhythm was the drum rhythm of the Chain Dance. I gathered Kamchak had
his mind on Aphris of Turia, and was, perilously to my mind, counting his
wenches before he had won them.
I do not know if there are, by count, a thousand stakes or not on the Plains
of a Thousand Stakes, but I would suppose that there are that many or more.
The stakes, flat-topped, each about six and half feet high and about seven
or eight inches in diameter, stand in two long lines facing one another in
pairs. The two lines are separated by about fifty feet and each stake in a
line is separated from the stake on its left and right by about ten yards.
The two lines of stakes extended for more than four pasangs across the
prairie. One of these lines is closest to the city and the other to the
prairies beyond. The stakes had recently been, I observed, brightly painted,
each differently, in a delightful array of colors; further, each was trimmed
and decorated variously, depending on the whim of the workman, sometimes
simply, sometimes fancifully, sometimes ornately. The entire aspect was one
of color, good cheer, lightheartedness and gaiety. There was something of
the sense of carnival in the air. I was forced to remind myself that between
these two lines of stakes men would soon fight and die.
I noted some of the workmen still affixing small retaining rings to some of
the stakes, bolting them one on a side, usually about five feet to five and
a half feet from the ground. A workman sprang a pair shut, and then opened
them with a key, which he subsequently hung from a tiny hook near the top of
the stake.
I heard some musicians, come out early from Turia, playing a light tune
behind the Turian stakes, about fifty yards or so away.
In the space between the two lines of stakes, for each pair of facing
stakes, there was a circle of roughly eight yards in diameter. This
circle, the grass having been removed, was sanded and raked.
Moving boldly now among the Wagon Peoples were vendors from Turia, selling
their cakes, their wines and meats, even chains and collars.
Kamchak looked at the sun, which was now about a quarter of the way up the
sky.
"Turians are always late," he said.
From the back of the kaiila I could now see dust from Turia. "They are
coming," I said.
Among the Tuchuks, though dismounted, I saw the young man Harold, he whom
Hereena of the First Wagon had so sorely insulted at the time of the
wagering with Conrad and Albrecht. I did not, however, see the girl. The
young man seemed to me a strong, fine fellow, though of course unscarred. He
had, as I mentioned, blond hair and blue eyes, not unknown among the Tuchuks,
but unusual. He carried weapons. He could not, of course, compete in these
contests, for there is status involved in these matters and only warriors of
repute are permitted to participate. Indeed, without the Courage Scar one
could not even think of proposing oneself for the competition. It might be
mentioned, incidentally, that without the Courage Scar one may not, among
the Tuchuks, pay court to a free woman, own a wagon, or own more than five
bosk and three kaiila. The Courage Scar thus has its social and economic, as
well as its martial, import.
"You're right," said Kamchak, rising in the stirrups. "First the warriors."
On long lines of tharlarion I could see warriors of Turia approaching in
procession the Plains of a Thousand Stakes.
The morning sun flashed from their helmets, their long tharlarion lances,
the metal embossments on their oval shields, unlike the rounded shields of
most Gorean cities. I could hear, like the throbbing of a heart, the beating
of the two tharlarion drums that set the cadence of the march. Beside the
tharlarion walked other men-at-arms, and even citizens of Turia, and more
vendors and musicians, come to see the games.
On the heights of distant Turia itself I could see the flutter of flags and
pennons. The walls were crowded, and I supposed many upon them used the
long glasses of the Caste of Builders to observe the field of the stakes.
The warriors of Turia extended their formation about two
hundred yards from the stakes until in ranks of four or five deep they
were strung out in a line as long as the line of stakes itself. Then they
halted. As soon as the hundreds of ponderous tharlarion had been marshaled
into an order, a lance, carrying a fluttering pennon, dipped and there was a
sudden signal on the tharlarion drums. Immediately the lances of the lines
lowered and the hundreds of tharlarion, hissing and grunting, their riders
shouting, the drums beating, began to bound rapidly towards us.
"Treachery!" I cried.
There was nothing living on Gor I knew that could take the impact of a
tharlarion charge.
Elizabeth Cardwell screamed, throwing her hands before her face.
To my astonishment the warriors of the Wagon Peoples seemed to be paying
very little attention to the bestial avalanche that was even then hurtling
down upon them. Some were haggling with the vendors, others were talking
among themselves.
I wheeled the Kaiila, looking for Elizabeth Cardwell, who, afoot, would be
slain almost before the tharlarion had crossed the lines of the stakes. She
was standing facing the charging tharlarion, as though rooted to the earth,
her hands before her face. I bent down in the saddle and tensed to kick the
kaiila forward to sweep her to the saddle, turn and race for our lives.
"Really," said Kamchak.
I straightened up and saw that the lines of the tharlarion lancers had, with
much pounding and trampling of the earth, with shouting, with the hissing of
the great beasts, stopped short, abruptly, some fifteen yards or so behind
their line of stakes.
"It is a Turian joke," said Kamchak. "They are as fond of the games as we,
and do not wish to spoil them."
I reddened. Elizabeth Cardwell's knees seemed suddenly weak but she
staggered back to us.
Kamchak smiled at me. "She is a pretty little barbarian, isn't she, he said.
"Yes," I said, and looked away, confused.
Kamchak laughed.
Elizabeth looked up at us, puzzled.
I heard a cry from the Turians across the way. "The wenches!" he cried, and
this shout was taken up by many of the others. There was much laughing and
pounding of lances on shields.
In a moment, to a thunder of kaiila paws on the turf, racing between
the lines of stakes, scattering sand, there came a great number of riders,
their black hair swirling behind them, who pulled up on their mounts,
rearing and squealing, between the stakes, and leaped from the saddle to the
sand, relinquishing the reins of their mounts to men among the Wagon
Peoples.
They were marvelous, the many wild girls of the Wagons, and I saw that chief
among them was the proud, beauteous Hereena, of the First Wagon. They were
enormously excited, laughing. Their eyes shone. A few spit and shook their
small fists at the Turians across the way, who reciprocated with
good-natured shouts and laughter.
I saw Hereena notice the young man Harold among the warriors and she pointed
her finger imperiously at him, gesturing him to her.
He approached her. "Take the reins of my kaiila, Slave," she said to him,
insolently throwing him the reins.
He took them angrily and, to the laughter of many of the Tuchuks present,
withdrew with the animal.
The girls then went to mingle with the warriors. There were between a
hundred and a hundred and fifty girls there from each of the four Wagon
Peoples.
"Hah!" said Kamchak, seeing now the lines of tharlarion part for a space of
perhaps forty yards, through which could be seen the screened palanquins of
Turian damsels, borne on the shoulders of chained slaves, among them
undoubtedly men of the Wagon Peoples.
Now the excitement of the throng seemed mostly to course among the warriors
of the Wagon Peoples as they rose in their stirrups to see better the
swaying, approaching palanquins, each reputedly bearing a gem of great
beauty, a fit prize in the savage contests of Love War.
The institution of Love War is an ancient one among the Turians and the
Wagon Peoples, according to the Year Keepers antedating even the Omen Year.
The games of Love War, of course, are celebrated every spring between, so to
speak, the city and the plains, whereas the Omen Year occurs only every
tenth year. The games of Love War, in themselves, do not constitute a
gathering of the Wagon Peoples, for normally the herds and the free women of
the peoples do not approach one another at these times; only certain
delegations of warriors, usually about two hundred from a people, are sent
in the spring to the Plains of a Thousand Stakes.
The theoretical justification of the games of Love War, from the Turian point of view, is that they provide an excellent arena in which to
demonstrate the fierceness and prowess of Turian warriors, thus perhaps
intimidating or, at the very least, encouraging the often overbold warriors
of the Wagon Peoples to be wary of Turian steel. The secret justification, I
suspect, however, is that the Turian warrior is fond of meeting the enemy
and acquiring his women, particularly should they be striking little beasts,
like Hereena of the First Wagon, as untamed and savage as they are
beautiful; it is regarded as a great sport among Turian warriors to collar
such a wench and force her to exchange riding leather for the bells and
silks of a perfumed slave girl. It might also be mentioned that the Turian
warrior, in his opinion, too seldom encounters the warrior of the Wagon
Peoples, who tends to be a frustrating, swift and elusive foe, striking with
great rapidity and withdrawing with goods and captives almost before it is
understood what has occurred. I once asked Kamchak if the Wagon Peoples had
a justification for the games of Love War. "Yes," he had said. And he had
then pointed to Dina and Tenchika, clad Kajir, who were at that time busy in
the wagon. "That is the justification," said Kamchak. And he had then
laughed and pounded his knee. It was only then that it had occurred to me
that both girls might have been acquired in the games; as a matter of fact,
however, I later learned that only Tenchika had been so acquired; Dina had
first felt the thongs of a master beside the burning wagons of a caravan in
which she had purchased passage. Now, looking on the approaching
palanquins, I supposed that so once, in veil and silks, had ridden the
lovely Tenchika, and so, too, as far as I knew, might have ridden the lovely
Dina, had she not fallen earlier and otherwise to the chains of Kassar
warriors. I wondered how many of the proud beauties of Turia would
this night tearfully serve barbarian masters; and how many of the wild,
leather-clad girls of the Wagons, like Hereena, would find themselves this
night naught but bangled, silken slaves locked behind the high walls of
distant, lofty Turia.
One by one the screened palanquins of the damsels of Turia were placed on
the grass and a serving slave placed before each a silken mat that the
inmate of the palanquin, in stepping from her seclusion, might not soil the
toe or heel of her sandal or slipper.
The wagon girls, watching this, some of them chewing on fruit or
stalks of grass, jeered.
One by one, clad in the proud arrays of resplendent silks, each in the Robes
of Concealment, the damsels of Turia, veiled and straight-standing, emerged
from their palanquins, scarcely concealing their distaste for the noise and
clamor about them.
Judges were now circulating, each with lists, among the Wagon Peoples and
the Turians.
As I knew, not just any girl, any more than just any warrior, could
participate in the games of Love War. Only the most beautiful were eligible,
and only the most beautiful of these could be chosen.
A girl might propose herself to stand, as had Aphris of Turia, but this
would not guarantee that she would be chosen, for the criteria of Love War
are exacting and, as much as possible, objectively applied. Only the most
beautiful of the most beautiful could stand in this harsh sport.
I heard a judge call, "First Stake Aphris of Turia!"
"Hah!" yelled Kamchak, slapping me on the back, nearly knocking me from the
back of my kaiila.
I was astonished. The Turian wench was beautiful indeed, that she could
stand at the first stake. This meant that she was quite possibly the most
beautiful woman in Turia, certainly at least among those in the games this
year.
In her silks of white and gold, on cloths thrown before her, Aphris of Turia
stepped disdainfully forward, guided by a judge, to the first of the stakes
on the side of the Wagon Peoples. The girls of the Wagon Peoples, on the
other hand, would stand at the stakes nearest Turia. In this way the Turian
girls can see their city and their warriors, and the girls of the Wagons can
see the plains and the warriors of the Wagon Peoples. I had also been
informed by Kamchak that this places the girl farther from her own people.
Thus, to interfere, a Turian would have to cross the space between the
stakes, and so, too, would one of the Wagon Peoples, thus clearly calling
themselves to the attention of the judges, those officials supervising the
Games.
The judges were now calling names, and girls, both of the Wagon Peoples and
of Turia, were coming forward.
I saw that Hereena, of the First Wagon, stood Third Stake, though, as far as
I could note, she was no less beautiful than the two Kassar girls who stood
above her.
Kamchak explained that there was a slight gap between two of her teeth
on the upper right hand side in the back.
"Oh," I said.
I noted with amusement that she was furious at having been chosen only third
stake. "I, Hereena of the First Wagon, am superior," she was crying, "to
those two Kassar she-kaiila!"
But the judge was already four stakes below her.
The selection of the girls, incidentally, is determined by judges in their
city, or of their own people, in Turia by members of the Caste of Physicians
who have served in the great slave houses of Ar; among the wagons by the
masters of the public slave wagons, who buy, sell and rent girls, providing
warriors and slavers with a sort of clearing house and market for their
feminine merchandise. The public slave wagons, incidentally, also provide
Paga. They are a kind of combination Paga tavern and slave market. I know of
nothing else precisely like them on Gor. Kamchak and I had visited one last
night where I had ended up spending four copper tarn disks for one bottle of
Paga. I hauled Kamchak out of the wagon before he began to bid on a
chained-up little wench from Port Kar who had taken his eye.
I looked up and down the lines of stakes. The girls of the Wagon Peoples
stood proudly before their stakes, certain that their champions, whoever
they were to be, would be victorious and return them to their peoples; the
girls of the city of Turia stood also at their stakes, but with feigned
indifference.
I supposed, in spite of their apparent lack of concern, the hearts of most
of the Turian girls were beating rapidly. This could not be for them an
ordinary day.
I looked at them, veiled and beautiful in their silks. Yet I knew that
beneath those Robes of Concealment many wore the shameful Turian camisk,
perhaps the only time the hated garment would touch their bodies, for should
their warrior lose this match they knew they would not be permitted to leave
the
stake in the robes in which they came. They would not be led away as free women.
To myself, wondering if Aphris of Turia, standing so loftily at the first
stake, wore beneath the robes of white and gold the camisk of a slave girl.
I guessed not. She would be too confident, too proud.
Kamchak was working his kaiila through the crowd toward the first stake.
I followed him.
He leaned down from the saddle. "Good morning, little Aphris," he said
cheerily.
She stiffened, and did not even turn to regard him. "Are you prepared to
die, Sleen?" she inquired.
"No," Kamchak said.
I heard her laugh softly beneath the white veil, trimmed with silk.
"I see you no longer wear your collar," observed Kamchak.
She lifted her head and did not deign to respond.
"I have another," Kamchak assured her.
She spun to face him, her fists clenched. Those lovely almond eyes, had they
been weapons, would have slain him in the saddle like a bolt of lightning.
"How pleased I shall be," hissed the girl, "to see you on your knees in the
sand begging Kamras of Turia to finish you!"
"Tonight, little Aphris," said Kamchak, "as I promised you, you shall spend
your first night in the dung sack."
"Sleen!" she cried. "Sleen! Sleen!"
Game of Love Wars ~ Continued on
Page 2
Kudos to you, Mr. Norman for writing the Gorean series!
A rich, yet utterly simple saga; a world, a time, a people;
those of the Counter-Earth .. the planet .. Gor.
Thank you!
The material presented herein was researched and compiled by me,
naia{Saul}.
The material referenced comes from John Norman's Gor Series, The
Counter-Earth Saga.
This is a work in process.
Please, do not take, copy, duplicate, or use this work as your own.
If you find it valuable enough to share, please .. share the link to this
page.
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