The Wagon People have a warrior
culture. Most weapons used by the Wagon People have been modified in some
way to allow them to be optimally used while fighting on kaiila-back. Weapons
unsuitable for mounted combat, such as the sword, are rarely used by the
Wagon People.
The
Bola
is a
weapon peculiar to the Wagon People. It consists of three long straps of
leather, each terminating in a leather sack which contains, sewn inside,
a heavy, round, metal weight. It was probably developed for hunting the tumit,
a huge, flightless carnivorous bird of the plains, but the Wagon Peoples
use it also, and well, as a weapon of war.
The technique
for attacking with the bola calls for an extremely quick victim. It is thrown
low, so that it wraps around the legs of the victim. The swiftness of the
attack combined with the bola's ten-foot sweep makes it almost impossible
to evade. The leather straps strike the victim and immediately tangle around
the legs. The weight of the metal balls pulling the leather taut. The force
is such that the victim's legs can actually be broken by the clinch of the
straps. Thus bound, the victim is an easy mark for the Wagon warrior, who
leaps from his mount and slits his throat with one sweep of the quiva.
Variations
to this basic technique may include throwing the bola so that it binds the
victim's arms to his sides; throwing of the bola at the throat, causing it
to crush the windpipe and/or strangles the victim. The most difficult feat
using a bola is wrapping it around the victim's head. The metal weights would
then crush the skull.
The Kaiila
Lance
The lance
of the Wagon People are made from of the wood of young tem trees and generally
black in color. The lance is supple and may bent almost double without breaking.
A mounted warrior holds the lance lightly in his right fist. It is secured
by a loop of bosk-hide wrapped twice around the hand. The lance can be handled
very deftly and is rarely thrown. To effectively use a lance, you must practice
short thrusts instead of long charges at full tilt. The lance is never couched
against the saddle. When not in use, it is carried on the warrior's back.
The
Quiva
The quiva
is another weapon common among the Wagon People. It is a balanced throwing
knife, generally matched in sets of seven. The kaiila saddles of the Wagon
People have seven sheaths for carrying these knives. The blades are double-edged
and tapered, honed to a razor sharpness and mounted in handles of bosk horn
or bone. The Wagon People do no metalworking of their own. Most of their
blades are forged in the smithies of Ar. A quiva can be thrown with deadly
accuracy, but it can also be used as a hand-held weapon for slicing, thrusting
and piercing. Although primarily a saddle knife, the quiva is also carried
by most of the Freewomen.
The Horn
Bow
The Wagon
People are highly skilled with the horn bow. This bow is small, powerful
and made of bosk-horn then reinforced with strips of leather from the bosk.
The lacquered quivers are narrow and rectangular in shape and hold some forty
arrows kept at the ready. Trained in the use of this weapon from earliest
childhood, the wagon people can hit their target as easily from a running
kaiila gallop as when standing still.
Miscellaneous
Items
The Wagon
warrior also carries a rope of braided bosk-hide coiled on one side of his
kaiila saddle and a small round shield of leather, lacquered in the color
of one's tribe. A conical iron helm surrounded by a camail, or covering,
of chainmail, usually of multi-colored links. Although some Wagon People
have mastered the art of swordsmanship, through mercenary service in some
of the great cities of Gor, the sword is not in general use on the Plains.
The same holds true for the saber. It must be remembered that the prime
consideration for warriors of the Wagon Peoples is the efficiency of a given
weapon in mounted combat. Another trait of the Wagon People is their preference
for weapons that can be used at long range. The sword and saber are short-range
weapons, and reckoned to be unsuitable for the wide expanses of the open
plains.
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