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Authors: John Norman

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Erotica

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BOOK: Marauders of Gor
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I had heard of the ship.

           
"It has a much higher freeboard area than this vessel," I told Ivar Forkbeard. "It is a warship, not a raider. In any engagement you would be at a disadvantage."

           
The Forkbeard nodded.

           
"It is said, too," said I, "to be the swiftest ship in the north."

           
"That we will find out," said the Forkbeard.

           
"Two pasangs away !" called the lookout.

           
"It has forty benches," said Ivar Forkbeard. "Eighty oars, one hundred and sixty rowers." The benches on only one side, I recalled, are counted. "But her lines are heavy, and she is a weighty ship."

           
"Do you intend to engage her ?" I asked.

           
"I would be a fool to do so," said the Forkbeard. "I have with me the loot ofthe temple of Kassau, and eighteen bond-maids, and lovely Aelgifu. I would have much to lose, and little to gain."

           
"That is true," I said.

           
"When I engage Thorgard of Scagnar," said Ivar Eiorkbeard, "I shall do so to my advantage, not his."

           
"One pasang!" called the lookout.

           
"Do not disturb the pieces," said Ivar, getting up. He said to Gorm, "Take the first bond=maid and draw her up the mast." Then he said to two others of his men, "Unbind the ankles of the other bond-maids and thrust them to the rail, where they may be seen." Then he said to the rowers on the starboard side, "When I give the signal, let us display to Thorgard of Scagnar what we can of the riches of the temple of Kassau!"

           
The men laughed.

           
"Will we not fight ?" asked the giant, slowly.

           
Ivar Forkbeard went to him, as might have a father, and took his head in his hands, and held it against his chest. "No battle now," said he, "Rollo. Another time."

           
"No-battle-now ?" asked the giant.

           
"No battle now," repeated the Forkbeard, shaking the giant's head. "Another time. Another time."

           
There was an agony of disappointment in the large eyes of the huge head.

           
"Another tirne !" laughed the Forkbeard, giving the great head a shake, as though it might have been that of a pet hound or bear.

           
"A half pasang and slowing!" called the lookout. "She will approach astern!"

           
"Swing to face her amidships," laughed the Forkbeard. Let them see what riches we carry !"

           
The blond, slender girl's wrists were now fettered before her body, and a rope attached to the fetters. It was thrown over the spar. Her hands were jerked over her head. Then, by her fettered wrists, she moaning, her naked body twisting against the mast, foot by foot, she was drawn to five feet below the spar. She dangled there, in pain, her body that of a stripped bond-maid, exquisite, tempting, squirming, a taunt to the blood of the men of Thorgard of Scagnar.

           
That will encourage them to row their best," said Ivar Forkbeard.

           
Then the other bond-maids, seventeen of them, were thrust to the rail, and, steadied by the hands of rowers, stood upon it, wrists fettered behind them, in coffle.

           
The ship of Thorgard was now little more than a quarter of a pasang away. I could detect its captain, doubtless the great Thorgard himself, on its stern deck, above the helmsman, with a glass of the builders.

           
What marvelous beauties he saw, seventeen naked prizes fettered and coffled, that might be his, could he but take them, and, dangling from the mast, perhaps the most exquisite of all, the slender, blond girl, perhaps herself worth five bond-maids of the more common sort. Aelgifu, too, of course, might be seen, chained to the mast, her wrists fettered before her. That she was clothed would indicate to Thorgard thal: she was free, and might bring high ransom.

           
"Throw the bond-maids between the benches and secure them," said Ivar, to those steadying them at the rail. Quickly the miserable bond-wenches were pulled back and flung, belly down, some Iying on others, between the benches. Gorm quickly bent to them, lashing their ankles together. "Lower the wench from the spar!" called the Forkbeard. "You on the starboard side, display now the loot of Kassau's temple !"

           
Rowers of Ivar Forkbeard now took their place at the port side. Some waved the golden hangings of the temple over their heads, as though they might have been banners. Others, jeering across the water, lifted up plates and candlesticks. The blond, slender girl, lowered from the mast, collapsed at its foot. She was pulled to her feet by the arm and thrust running, stumbling, to Gorm. He fettered her hands behind her body, and thrust her to her belly, face down, among the other girls. He then fastened her again in the coffle and, swiftly, lashed together her ankles.

           
The ship of Thorgard was now only some hundred yards away.

           
An arrow cleft the air, passing over the gunwales.

           
"Throw the loot over the bond-maids," called the Forkbeard. This would provide the miserable wenches, terrified and fettered, some measure of protection from missiles, stones and darts. "The awning !" called Forkbeard. Some of the girls looked up, the slender, blond girl among them, and saw the darkness of the awning, unrolled, quickly cast over the loot. Some of them screamed, being suddenly plunged in darkness.

           
More arrows slipped past. One struck in the mast. Aelgifu knelt behind it, still chained to it by the neck, her head in her fettered hands. A javelin struck in the deck. A stone bounded from the rail at the top of the port gunwale, splintering it. The ship of Thorgard, Black Sleen, was no more than some fifty yards away. I could see helmeted men at its gunwales, some five feet above the water line. The helmets of the north are commonly conical, with a nose-guard, that can slip up and down. At the neck and sides, attached by rings, usually hangs a mantle of linked chain. The helmet of Thorgard himself, however, covered his neck and the sides of his face. It was horned. Their shields, like those of Torvaldsland, are circular, and of wood. The spear points are large and heavy, of tapered, socketed bronze, some eighteen inches in length. Many, too, carried axes.

           
"Benches!" laughed Ivar Forkbeard. "Sail!"

           
In my opinion he had waited too long.
       
 

           
His men leaped to their benches and seized their oars. At the same time the sail, with its red and white stripes, in itS full length, fell snapping from the yard.

           
"Stroke!" called Ivar. A javelin hissed past him.

           
The wind, like a hammer, took the sail. The oars bit the water. The prow of the serpent of Ivar Forkbeard leaped from the water and its stern went almost awash.

           
"Stroke!" called the Forkbeard.

           
I laughed with pleasure. The serpent of Ivar Forkbeard leaped toward the line of the horizon.
 

           
There was consternation on the deck of Black Sleen. I could see Thorgard of Scagnar, in the horned helmet, bearded, crying orders.

           
The prow of Black Sleen, sluggishly, I thought, turned our wake. I saw men rushing to their benches. I saw the long oars lift, and then fall.

           
A javelin, and four more arrows struck the deck of Ivar's ship. Two of the arrows struck the plate of the temple of Kassau, and hung, broken, in the boskhide awning that covered the Forkbeard's loot, both that of gold and flesh, and then anotherjavelin fell behind us, into the sea, and the bowmen returned to their benches.

           
For a quarter of an Ahn the Forkbeard himself held the helm of his ship.

           
But after a quarter of an Ahn, grinning, the Forkbeard surrendered the helm to one of his men, and came to join me amidships.

           
We placed the board again between us on the chest. The position of the pieces had not changed, held by the board's pegs.

           
"A most interesting variation," said Forkbeard, returning his attention to the board.

           
"It may meet theJarl's Ax's gambit," I said.

           
"I think not," said Forkbeard, "but let us see."

           
After another quarter of an Ahn Forkbeard bade his men rest at their oars.

           
Far behind us Black Sleen, reputed to be the fastest ship in the north, struggled, under oars and sail, to match our pace. She could not do so. Under sail alone the serpent of -Ivar Forkbeard, almost scornfully, sped from her. Soon she had become no more than a speck astern, and was then visible only to the lookout. The awning was drawn back, and rolled, and placed to one side. The bond-maids, their bodies sweaty, broken out from rash and heat, struggled to their knees, their heads back, and drank the fresh air. The litter of gold under which they had been forced to lie was kicked to one side. Gorm then unbound their fair ankles, and, taking their wrists from behind them, once more fettered thenbefore their bodies, at their bellies. Shortly thereafter the were fed, certain of them preparing the food. Life returned to normal aboard the ship. Soon Black Sleen was visible no even to the lookout.

           
It was growing toward evening.

           
"Take course," said Ivar Forkbeard, to his helmsman, ''fo the skerry of Einar."

           
"Yes, Captain," said the helmsman.

           
Aelgifu laughed with joy.

           
It was there, at the rune-stone of the Torvaldsmark, that Ivar Forkbeard would receive her ransom.

           
I discovered, to my instruction, an Ahn later, that Singer to Ax two, followed by Jari to Ax four, is insufflcient to counter the Jarl's Ax's gambit, as it is played in the north.

           
"I did not think it would be," said Ivar Forkbeard.

           
"The name of the ship of Thorgard of Scagnar," I said, "is Black Sleen. What is the name of your ship, if I may know ?"

           
"The name of my ship," said Ivar, "is the Hilda."

           
"Is it not unusual for a ship of the north to bear the name of a woman ?" I asked.

           
"No," he said.

           
"Why is she called the Hilda ?" I asked.

           
"That is the name of the daughter of Thorgard of Scagnar," said Ivar Forkbeard.

           
I looked up at him, astonished.

           
"The Hilda is my ship," said Ivar Forkbeard, "and the daughter of Thorgard of Scagnar will be my bond-maid."

           
We lay to, without lights, a pasang from the skerry of Einar.

           
The wrists of the bond-maids were fettered behind their backs; their ankles were tied; they wore the coffle rope of the north; and their mouths, with waddings of sleen fur, and strappings of leather, were tightly gagged.

           
There was silence on the ship of Ivar Forkbeard. Ivar, and four men, had taken the longboat, which is tied, keel up, on the decking of the after quarter, and made their way to the skerry. With them, her hair combed, warmed with a broth of dried bosk meat, heated in a copper kettle, over a fire on a rimmed iron plate, legged, set on another plate on the stern quarter, her hands tied behind her with simple binding fiber, had gone Aelgifu.

           
Gorm, who seemed second to Ivar, and I, stood at the railing near the prow on the port side of the serpent.

           
I could see, against the night sky, the darker shape, but low in the water, of the skerry. Too, against the sky, I could see the tall rune-stone, looking like a needle against the stars, which forms the Torvaldsmark.

           
Ivar had left the ship in good humor. "I shall return with Aelgifu's ransom money," he had told us.

           
With him, in the longboat, in a round, bronze can, with twist lid, he had taken his scales, collapsible, of bronze and chain, with their weights. I knew that Gurt of Kassau, too, would bring his scales. I hoped that the weights matched, for if they did not, there would be trouble indeed. Gurt, I knew, if wise, would not attempt to cheat the Forkbeard. I had less confidence in the weights of the man of Torvaldsland.

BOOK: Marauders of Gor
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