Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure
The warder laughed.
Did the fellow not know the Lady Claudia was a free woman? It seemed to me he
handled her rather roughly, given that she was free. She was not, after all, a
slave girl.
The rope, then, in coil after coil, was wrapped about the Lady Claudia. It was
in this fashion, I had gathered, from her own account of her capture, that she
had been bound on the wall, and brought before Aemilianus. This touch was
doubtless to remind her of the events of that evening.
“Make it tight!” said the warder.
Lady Claudia winced as the ropes were drawn about her.
“Now the leash and collar!” said the warder.
In a moment, then, the leash and collar were fastened on her. She then knelt
there, in the center of the cell, heavily bound, collared, the leash dangling
down before the ropes bound about her.
“Splendid!” said the warder.
Tears ran down Lady Claudia’s cheeks. She looked at me, and smiled. She pursed
her lips a little, kissing softly, almost imperceptibly, at me. I watched, lying
in the straw, my eyes half closed. I did not respond to her tiny, pathetic
gesture. It interested me, however, that she bore me no ill will. Had I not led
her to believe that I might be of assistance to her? Had I not tried to keep up
her courage? But I realized now she had never expected me, really, in the moment
of truth, so to speak, to act. It would be pointless.
“How touching!” said the warder.
(pg.231) I made as though to try to rise, to my knees, my head down. It seemed I
could not manage this.
“Remain where you are,” said one of the fellows with a crossbow.
“He is too weak to do anything,” said the warder. “He cannot even stand.” She
then went to stand before Lady Claudia. “The spear, my dear Claudia,” she said,
“is a single piece of solid, polished metal. It is very long, and less than a
hort thick. It is tapered to a point. It fits in a mount.”
Lady Claudia knelt there, with her eyes closed.
I made as though, again, to try to rise. One of the guards looked at me, and
then looked away.
“Glory to Ar!” snarled the warder.
“Glory to Ar,” wept Lady Claudia.
“Do you know what we are waiting for?” asked the warder of Lady Claudia.
“No,” whispered Lady Claudia.
There was then a sudden impact somewhere on the wall, perhaps not seventy-five
feet from where we were.
“That was close,” said one of the guards, uneasily.
As I had expected they would, they had more to worry about than what went on in
the cell.
Again I struggled to my knees. This time I remained there, head down, as though
unable to move.
“Stay where you are,” said one of the guards. I was about seven or eight feet
from him.
“We are waiting for the executioner to come for you,” said the warder,
delightedly. “He will come to fetch you, and take you to the wall, to the
spear.”
Lady Claudia put down her head.
“Glory to Ar!” cried the warder.
“Glory to Ar,” said Lady Claudia. She had her eyes closed. That, I thought, was
fortunate. The nearest guard looked at me, and then glanced back to the two
women. The guards had been in the cell some time, at least a few Ehn. This, I
had thought, would put them at their ease. The expectation of resistance, of
course, is at its height early. If it were to rise again, which I did not really
expect, or not significantly, under the current circumstances, presumably that
would be shortly before their departure from the cell. They were now awaiting
the arrival of the executioner, who (pg.232) was to fetch Lady Claudia to the
spear. Their expectation of resistance, now, I thought, might be at its low. To
be sure, that is an excellent time to be particularly prepared. Yet it is
impossible to maintain an attitude of full alertness for an extended period of
time. It is psychologically impossible. This meant that the initiative, in this
situation, was mine. If they had expected resistance, of course, they might have
thought, appropriately enough, that I might choose to act before the arrival of
the executioner, as that would mean an additional fellow to deal with.
I had not, of course, realized that the executioner would come to the cell. If I
had given the matter much thought, I would have supposed that he, or they, would
wait on the wall. Such customs, I supposed, would differ from city to city. I
was not pleased to hear about the pending arrival of the executioner, of course,
as that might set me an additional problem, one I had not anticipated and one I
certainly did not welcome.
It was not a mistake that I had lain in the straw where I had. I had, the day
before, found a ridge in the stones there which would give me leverage,
something to push away from. Too, I was barefoot. I would not slip. I lifted my
head, dully, as though groggily, to look at the guards. They were half starved.
Their reflexes, I was sure, would be slow. They would not have their full
strength. The nearest guard looked at me, again, and I returned his gaze, dully.
He then glanced back at the women once more.
“He is very skilled at his work,” said the warder to Lady Claudia. :He will put
you on the spear so gently that you will last a long time.”
Lady Claudia kept her eyes closed, and she shuddered.
“But if her wants to hurry a little,” said the warder, “he will tie weights on
your legs.”
Lady Claudia sobbed.
“How pretty you look, kneeling there, my dear, all tied up, and in your collar,”
she said. “Do not fret. He will be here soon! You will then be taken to the
spear! You do not have long to wait! You will look amusing, wriggling on it!
Glory to Ar! Glory to Ar!”
“Glory to Ar!” wept Lady Claudia.
At that instant I lunged forward and the nearest guard had (pg.233) barely time
to turn his head before I caught him, and his fellow, taking them together,
striking them with great force, I sprinting, thrusting, they off balance, and
blasted them back, one loosened, sprung quarrel skittering about the room like a
frightened animal, the other smote from the guide into the straw, against the
wall, and I snarled, the noise not in that moment seeming human, and it was the
terribleness of the warrior’s exhilaration that was that instant in my heart,
nostrils and mouth, and, one with each hand, struck back their heads against the
stone. Had they not been helmeted their brains would have been on the stone.
In the same moments I had freed the sword of one of them and I turned,
crouching, snarling, to face the man near Lady Claudia. His face was white.
Perhaps I seemed then to him more beast than man. I did not take my eyes from
him and the door. The warder, cut off, too, from the door, had fled behind him.
He weakly half drew his sword but before it could clear the sheath I was upon
him, within his guard. He released the hilt. The blade fell back, into the
sheath. I turned and kicked back and he grunted, collapsing. The warder bolted
for the door but I caught her at the portal by the back of the neck and lifted
her up and turned, and then flung her stumbling back toward the far wall. I then
returned to the fallen warrior, and bent over him. He was gasping. His eyes were
wild. Not taking my eyes from the warder, who now crouched down, against the
outside wall, her eyes wide with terror over the veil, I seized him by the back
of the neck, below the helmet, and lifted his head a few inches from the floor.
He could offer no resistance. I then struck his head, back, in the helmet, on
the stones.
“You have killed them, you have killed them all!” said the warder.
“No,” I said. The first two had been in the greatest danger, but their helmets
had saved them. It was not that I had lost control of myself in the rush of that
first moment. I had not. It was rather that, in the exigencies of the situation,
it had not been my intention to take any chances with them. But their helmets
had saved them.
“Lie down,” I said to the warder, “on your belly, in the (pg.234) straw, your
head to the wall. Spread your legs as widely as you can. Cover your head with
your hands and arms.”
She sobbed, but did so. In this fashion she could not see what might transpire
behind her, she could not easily rise, and she would have some protection from
debris, if the outside of the cell wall should be struck.
I then stripped the clothing and accouterments from the fellow I had just
struck, and donned them. I did, however, exchange swords, removing his from its
scabbard and placing therein the one I had taken from the other guard. It was a
looser fit, which pleased me.
There was an impacting on the side of the citadel, some hundred or so feet away.
I could feel the jar, however, through the floor. The warder, over by the wall,
moaned, her hands and arms over her head. I then put the three guards together,
in a corner of the cell, and heaped straw over them. They could not be seen from
the observation panel.
I then turned to the Lady Claudia who still knelt as she had been placed. Her
eyes were wide. There must have been fifty coils of rope wound tightly about her
fair person. On her neck was the collar; from it dangled the leash.
“Greetings,” I said.
“You must flee!” she whispered. “Save yourself! I am known! Do not concern
yourself for me!”
I removed the leash and collar from her.
“Do not stop for me!” she begged. “Flee!”
I began to remove the rope from her.
“The executioner may arrive at any moment,” she said, miserably.
“He is more likely to think I am binding you, then unbinding you,” I said.
She moaned.
Then she was free of the rope. I looked at her, closely, as a master at a slave,
and she shrank back. I saw that, indeed, she would bring a high price in a slave
market.
“You must leave me behind!” she said.
“You are too pretty to leave behind,” I said.
She looked at me, wildly, elatedly.
“Yes,” I said.
She laughed, and smiled at me, through tears. “I am pleased if master finds me
pleasing,” she whispered.
(pg.235) “Where did you ever hear talk like that?” I asked.
“I once heard a slave girl speak so to her master,” she said.
“And what did you do then?” I asked.
“I ran home to my bed,” she said, “to strike it with my fists, and to weep and
squirm in frustration.”
“Such words are appropriate for you, too, to say,” I said.
“I know!” she said. “I know!”
I looked in the fellow’s wallet, which I now wore at my belt. There was, as I
had hoped, a crust of bread in it. Such things, in Ar’s Station, in these days,
might be kept in such places. It might be his secret horde, or day’s ration. It
was probably worth more to him than gold. I gave it to Lady Claudia and she,
with two hands, gratefully, thrust it in her mouth, crumbs at the side of her
mouth. “Look in the pouches of those other fellows, too,” I said. “They might
have some food. If so, eat it. Then come join me.”
Quickly she did as she was told. It amused me to see with what alacrity she
sprang up to do my bidding. It was as though, suddenly, she was a new person.
I then went to stand near our warder, lying on her stomach in the straw, her
head to the wall, her legs spread, her head covered with her hands and arms.
Aware of my approach she widened her legs further. This pulled her artfully
contrived rage, with their points, higher on her legs. I noted that she had
excellent calves and ankles.
“There is food here,” called Lady Claudia, softly, elatedly, from where she
crouched, near the guards.
“Good,” I said. “Eat it.”
She thrust the bit of food into her mouth, feeding on it like a voracious little
animal. She fed with the eagerness of a half-starved slave girl.
I looked down at the warder. “Put your legs together,” I said, “and your arms at
your sides, palms up.”
She obeyed.
I then crouched down, beside her.
She moved, uneasily, but kept position.
“These rags,’ I said, ‘are doubtless contrived in such a way that they may
easily be removed.”
She squirmed in anger.
I did not touch them, however.
(pg.236) I pulled back the warder’s scarflike turban which, I had assumed, was
worn to cover and hide a closely cropped head.
“OH!” she said. To my surprise, however, her hair, loosened from under the
turban, would have, had she been standing, fallen well beneath her shoulders.
“Oh,” said Lady Claudia, interested, come now to my side, a piece of crust in
her hand.
“Yes,” I said. “Her hair has not been cropped.”
The warder squirmed a little, angrily.
“As I recall,” I said to Lady Claudia, “you had not had yours cut either.”
“No,” said Lady Claudia, smiling. “I did not want it cut. I was too vain. I was
too proud of it. I thought it too pretty to want to look like one of those girls
who carries water in a quarry, or works in a mill or laundry, in the heat. Let
other women sacrifice their hair, not me. But when I was caught on the wall it
was cut quickly enough.”
“Then as a punishment,” I said.
“Doubtless,” she said, “but, too, they had need of catapult cordage.”