Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Erotica, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Outer Space, #Slaves
The grass felt good to my bare feet. It seemed I could feel each blade. I felt
the rough fabric of the camisk on my body as I moved, the pull of the strap on
my shoulder, the heavy, swaying touch of the bota as, in the rhythm of my walk,
it touched my side.
(pg. 113) Beyond the fire, in the distance, like an irregular margin, a torn,
soft, dark edge hiding the bright stars of Gor, I could see the lofty, still
blackness of the borders of the northern forests. Far off, I heard the scream of
a hunting sleen. I shivered.
Then I heard the laughing of the men, and turned again toward the fire.
Back away toward the compound, here and there on the meadow, I could see other
fires, and clusters of wagons. This was a night for paga, for celebration.
Tomorrow, Targo, and his men and his merchandise, would make their way to Laura
and, crossing the river there, begin their long, overland journey to Ko-ro-ba,
called by some the Towers of the Morning, and from thence to luxurious Ar
itself. The journey would be not only long and hard but dangerous.
“Paga!” called the guard.
I hurried to him.
* * *
“Let Lana dance,” whimpered Lana.
The guard handed me a piece of meat and I took it in my teeth kneeling beside
him, where he sat cross-legged, I lifting and squeezing the bota of paga, filled
from one of the large jugs, guiding the stream of liquid into his mouth. I bit
through the charred exterior of the meat, into the red, hot, half-raw, juicy
interior.
The guard, with one hand, gestured that he had had enough.
I laid the bota aside on the grass.
I closed my eyes, running my tongue about the inside of my mouth, and over my
teeth and lips, savoring the juice and taste of the externally charred, hot,
half-raw meat.
Tomorrow we would begin the journey to Ko-ro-ba, and from thence to luxurious,
glorious Ar.
I opened my eyes.
The fire was very beautiful, and the shadows on the wagon canvas.
Ute was humming.
“I want to dance,” said Lana. She was lying beside one (pg. 114) of the guards,
her head at his waist. She bit at his body through the fabric of the tunic. “I
want to dance,” she teased. Her body was beautiful in the parting of the camisk.
“Perhaps,” he encouraged her.
The guards had liked us, muchly, and had apparently expected that they would
for, to our delight, they had purchased a small bottle of Ka-la-na wine, in a
wicker basket, which they had permitted us, swallow by swallow, to share. I had
never tasted so rich and delicate a wine on Earth, and yet here, on this world,
it cost only a copper tarn disk and was so cheap, and plentiful, that it might
be given even to a female slave. I remembered each of the four swallows which I
had had. I tasted them even still, with the meat and bread which I had eaten. It
was the first Gorean fermented beverage which I had tasted. It is said that
Ka-la-na has an unusual effect on a female. I think it is true.
I took the hand of the guard near whom I knelt, and placed it at my waist,
slipping his fingers inside the double loop of binding fiber that belted my
camisk, that he might hold me.
His fist suddenly tightened the loop, and I gasped, being suddenly drawn toward
him.
We looked at one another.
“What are you going to do with me, Master?” I asked.
He laughed. “You silken little sleen,” he said. He removed his hand from the
binding fiber. I reached out for him. He thrust a huge piece of the yellow
Sa-Tarna bread into my hands. “Eat,” he said.
Looking at him, smiling, holding the bread in both hands, I began to eat it.
“She-sleen,” he smiled.
“Yes, Master,” I said.
“Targo would take my hide off to the backbone,” he muttered.
“Yes, Master,” I smiled.
“She is only white silk,” said Lana. “Lana is red silk. Let Lana please you.”
“Lana,” I told her, loftily, “could not please an urt.”
(pg. 115) Lana screeched with rage as Ute, and the men, laughed, and leaped
toward me. The fellow over whom she leapt seized her by one ankle, and she fell
short of me, crying out in fury. He dragged her back and pulled her to her feet,
where he held her by the arms, kicking and squirming.
Another of the guards, laughing, untied the double loop of binding fiber which
belted her camisk, and drawing the fiber about her body, as she cried out, threw
it aside. Then he tore her camisk from her. The guard held her then threw her to
the grass at their feet. She looked up at them, frightened. Would she be beaten?
“If you have so much energy,” said the guard who had torn away the camisk, “you
may dance for us.”
Lana looked up, her eyes bright with pleasure. “Yes,” she cried, “let Lana
dance.” Then she threw me a look of hatred. “We shall see who can please men!”
she cried.
Another of the guards had gone to one of the wagons, and, as he returned, I
heard the sound of slave bells.
Lana stood proudly beside the fire, her head back and arms down, and extended at
her sides, while the bells, mounted in their double rows, on their straps, were
fastened on her wrists and ankles.
Meanwhile the Ka-la-na bottle was brought forth again by another guard. He held
it for Lana to drink, and then passed it to Ute and myself. There was a bit left
and I gave it back to him, and he handed it to the now-belled Lana. With a
barbaric jangle of bells she threw back her head and finished the bottle.
She threw the bottle to one side and put down her head, and then brought her
head up and back, shaking her head back and forth, her hair flying, and she
stamped down on her right foot.
Ute and the men began to sing and clap, one of them slapping at the leather of a
shield.
I thought I saw a movement in the darkness, beyond the wagons.
Lana, for an instant, stopped, her hands lifted over her head. “Who is
beautiful?” she demanded. “Who pleases men?”
(pg. 116) “Lana,” I cried, in spite of myself. “Lana is beautiful! Lana pleases
men!” I could not help myself. I was stunned, and then overwhelmed. I had not
realized that my sex was capable of such beauty. Lana was incredibly beautiful,
extraordinarily, utterly and incredibly beautiful.
I could scarcely speak, so thrilled I was.
Then with a tempestuous flash of slave bells Lana again danced in the firelight,
before the men.
I became aware, suddenly, that the hand of the guard near whom I knelt, his
fist, was in the binding fiber that belted my camisk.
I sensed furtive movement, to one side.
“Master?” I asked.
He was not watching Lana. He was lying on his back, looking up at me, kneeling
near him.
I could her the slave bells, the song of the Ute and the men, their clapping,
the slapped rhythm on the leather shield.
“Kiss me,” said the man.
“I am white silk,” I whispered.
“Kiss me,” he said.
I bent toward him, a Gorean Kajira, obeying her master. My hair fell about his
head. My lips, delicately, obediently, lowered themselves toward his. I was
trembling.
My lips parted, but his hands on my arms held me.
I struggled, terrified, trying to pull away.
I was held, his prisoner.
He seemed puzzled at my struggles, my terror. But then, too, I felt helpless,
and furious. I hated him. I hated all men, and their strength. They exploited
us, they dominated us, they forced us to serve them, and do their bidding! They
were cruel to us! They did not acknowledge our humanity! And mixed with my anger
and terror were the instinctual fears of the white-silk girl, dreading to be
made a woman. And most, perhaps, mixed therein were the fury and the
frustration, and terror, of the spoiled, rich, Earth girl, Elinor (pg. 117)
Brinton, resenting her station, repudiating the role that had been given her so
undeservedly on this barbaric world. I am Elinor Brinton, I cried to myself! She
is no slave! She obeys no man! She is free! Free! The girl who had worn the
black, buttoning, midriff blouse, the tan slacks, who had owned the Maserati,
who had had three quarters of a million dollars, who had had a penthouse, who
had modeled, and traveled, struggled. The exquisite, beautiful, educated,
sophisticated, smartly attired, tasteful girl struggled. The Earth girl
struggled, finding herself in the arms of a barbarian on a distant world.
“Do not touch me,” I hissed at him.
He turned about, easily, placing me on my back on the grass.
“I hate you! I hate you! I wept.
I saw the look of anger come into his eyes. He held me very tightly. Then, too,
to my dismay, I saw another look, which I, even white silk, understood. I would
not be simply used, and discarded. I had irritated him. I moaned. I would be
used with patience, and care, and delicacy and thoroughness, and efficient
mastery, until I had yielded myself to him, on his terms, not mine, until I,
proud and angry and free, had been reduced to a surrendered female slave.
I tried to struggle. I heard the bells of Lana, the singing and clapping of Ute
and the men, the slapping of the rhythm of Lana’s dance on the leather of the
shield.
His large head bent toward my throat. I turned my head to one side, weeping.
Suddenly there was a rush about us of bodies, the sound of blows, Lana began to
scream, but the scream was muffled. Ute cried out, but then her cry, too, was
abruptly terminated. The men tried to climb to their feet, shouting in anger.
There were blows, heavy blows from the darkness. The man who had held me leaped
half to his feet, crying out, when something large and heavy struck him on the
side of the head. He fell to one side in the grass. I tried to dart to my feet
but two bodies, those of girls, thrust themselves on me. Another girl snapped a
choke leash on my throat, twisting (pg. 118) it, so that I almost strangled. As
I opened my mouth, gasping for air, a wadding was thrust into it by another
girl. Then I was gagged. The pressure on my throat then eased. I was thrown onto
my stomach and, with binding fiber, my wrists were tied behind my back. Then, by
the choke leash, half strangling, I was dragged to my feet.
“Build up the fire,” said the leader of the girls, a tall, blondish girl. How
startling she seemed. She carried a light spear. She was dressed in skins. There
were barbaric golden ornaments on her arms, and about her neck.
Another of the girls threw wood on the fire.
I looked about.
Girls knelt beside the last two of the guards, fastening them in bonds.
Then they stood up.
I saw that Lana and Ute, were already bound and gagged.
“Shall we enslave the men?” asked one of the girls.
“No,” said the tall, blond girl.
The girl who had asked the question gestured to Ute and Lana. “What of them?”
she asked.
“You saw them,” said the tall, blond girl. “Leave them here. They are Kajiras.”
My heart leapt. These were forest girls, sometimes called panther girls, who
lived wild and free in the northern forests, outlaw women, sometimes enslaving
men, when it pleased them to do so.
Doubtless they had seem me struggle! I was no Kajira! Doubtless they wanted me
to join them! Now I would be free! Perhaps, somehow, they could even help me
return to Earth. In any case, they would free me! I would be free!
But I stood there on the grass, gagged, my hands bound behind my back, a choke
leash on my throat, held by one of the girls.
It did not seem that I was free.
“Drag the me about the fire,” said the tall girl.’
“Yes, Verna,” said one of the other girls.
Together, in pairs, the girls dragged the men back to the fire. The men, too, by
now, had been gagged. Only one of them had regained consciousness. One of the
girls in the skins (pg. 119) knelt before him, holding a knife at his throat,
her hand in his hair.
Some of the girls threw aside their clubs. They looked at the men, their hands
on their hips, and laughed.
How elated I was, that they had come swiftly from the darkness, with clubs, and
had made captives of men, taking them as simply as girls. But I, too, had been
bound.
The tall girl, the blond girl, their leader, called Verna, lithe in the skins of
forest panthers, in her golden ornaments, with her spear, strode to where Lana
lay on the grass, on her side, bound and gagged. With her spear, Verna rolled
Lana onto her back. Lana looked up at her in terror. Verna’s spear was at her
throat.
“You danced well,” said Verna.
Lana trembled.
Verna looked at her with contempt, and then drew aside the spear. She kicked
Lana savagely in the side. “Kajira!” she scorned.
The tall girl then went to Ute and kicked her as well, again saying, “Kajira!”
Lana whimpered, but Ute made no sound. There were tears in her eyes over the
gag.
“Tie the men in sitting positions about the fire,” ordered Verna.
Her girls, perhaps fifteen of them, complied. They used a heavy chest, and a
wagon tongue, to do so.
From a distance it would appear that they sat about the fire.
Verna approached me.
She frightened me. She seemed tall, and strong. There was a feline arrogance in
the barbarian beauty. She seemed magnificent and fierce in the brief skins and