Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Erotica, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Outer Space, #Slaves
Everything went black, but I did not faint, held in position by the guards.
(pg. 165) When I opened my eyes, blinded with tears, I saw the leather worker
approaching my face with a tiny, steel ring, partly opened, and a pair of
pliers.
As I was held he inserted the ring in my nose. It was painful. Then, with the
pliers, he closed the ring, and turned it, so that its opening, where the closed
edges met, was concealed within, at the side of the septum.
I began sobbing with pain, with misery and degradation.
The guards released me. One untied my ankles.
“Gag her,” said Targo.
I was gagged. My wrists were not unbound, they fearing perhaps I would have torn
at the ring. Perhaps I might have.
A guard, not much pleased with me, dragged me stumbling, eyes filled with tears,
moaning with misery, from the platform. He threw me, half stumbling, into the
wall, among the other girls. I struck the wall, and slid down it, to my knees. I
could not believe what had been done to me. Everything almost went black again.
I shuddered and shook, tears running from my eyes, leaning against the wall.
“Next!” had called the leather worker.
Ute, who was looking at me with puzzlement, as were the other girls, rose to her
feet and went obediently to the block.
When she returned, she, too, wore a tiny, steel ring in her nose. There were
tears in her eyes. “It smarts,” she said to Inge.
I looked at Ute, piteously. Could she not see what had been done to me, to me!
Ute came to me and took me by the shoulders, and I sobbed against her,
uncontrollably.
“Do not cry, El-in-or,” she said.
I pressed my head against her shoulder.
She held my head to her shoulder.
“I do not understand, El-in-or, “ she said. “The most terrible thing you do not
mind. You are then very brave. And they you cry about a little nose ring. It is
not like having your ears pierced.”
“El-in-or is a coward,” said Rena of Lydius.
(pg. 166) “Next!” called the leather worker.
Rena rose to her feet and went to the platform.
The piercing of the ears is far more terrible,” said Ute. “Nose rings are
nothing. They are even pretty. In the south even the free women of the Wagon
Peoples wear nose rings.” She held me more closely. “Even free women in the
south,” she insisted, “” the free women of the Wagon Peoples, wear nose rings.”
She kissed me. “Besides,” she said, “it may be removed, and no will ever know
that you wore it. It will not show.” Then Ute’s eyes clouded with tears. I
looked at the tiny steel rods holding open the wounds in her ears. She wept.
“How can I ever hope to become a Free Companion,” she wept. “What man would want
a woman with the pierced ears of a slave girl? And if I were not veiled, anyone
might look upon me, and laugh, and scorn me, seeing that my ears had been
pierced, as those of a slave girl!”
I shook my head, and against pressed my head into her shoulder. I understood
nothing. I knew only I, Elinor Brinton, once of Park Avenue, once of the
restaurants and boulevards of New York and the continent, now wore in my nose a
tiny ring of steel.
Inge went next to the platform, her hands still bound behind her back, that she
not disturb the tiny rods in her ears. She submitted to the fixing of the ring
gracefully.
She did say to Targo. “But I am of the scribes.”
He said to the leather worker. “Put the ring in her nose.”
She did not protest.
Lana went next to the platform. When she returned, she threw back her head, and
placed her hands behind her head. “Is it not pretty?” she asked.
“It would be more beautiful if it were of gold,” said Rena of Lydius.
“Of course,” said Lana.
“But it is pretty,” said Inge to Lana. “You are so beautiful, Lana.”
Lana smiled.
Inge looked at her timidly. “Am I pretty?” she asked.
(pg. 167) “Yes,” granted Lana, “the ring is pretty—and you are pretty.”
Inge looked at her gratefully.
“What of me?” asked the Lady Rena of Lydius.
“You are beautiful,” said Inge.
I did not lift my head from Ute’s shoulder. I did not want anyone to see.
One after the other of the girls went to the platform.
Afterwards we were fed. Inge and I were unbound, and I was ungagged.
We knelt in a circle, eating from the wooden bowls of bread and stew. We were
given no utensils. Our fingers served to pick out meat and bread, and the gravy
we drank. The girls chatted, and most seemed to have forgotten the ordeal of the
morning. If they had not forgotten it, there was very little they could do about
it. Further, they knew that with their ears pierced, they might bring a somewhat
higher price, and thus, perhaps, obtain a somewhat better-fixed master. Some
prudish slavers, scandalized by ear piercing, refused to have it done to their
girls, but Targo, doubtless because of the gold involved, had insisted upon it.
Many Gorean men apparently find pierced ears in a girl extremely provocative.
Craftsmen of the metal workers, men specializing in the working of gold and
silver, were concerned to work out new forms of jewelry for slave females. It
was said that a year ago in Ar, Marlenus, Ubar of that city, had created a
sensation at a banquet given for his high officers, by presenting a slave-girl
dancer before them who, though she was not in his private pleasure gardens or
compartments, he had had put in earrings. Today, however, better than a year
later, it was not uncommon to see a slave girl wearing, and insolently, such
jewelry, even in public.
I had no objection to earrings. Indeed, if I could find an attractive pair, or
pairs, I was confident I could wear them to my advantage, to please a master, to
perhaps obtain my way, to perhaps help me dominate him. If I could not engage
his affections, I would have him then, would I not, at my mercy? I would bend my
efforts to do so, and when (pg. 168) I had done so then I might, by granting, or
refusing to grant, my favors, or the fervor of my favors, control him and,
though I wore the collar, own Him! How else could a woman fight on Gor? She is
not as strong as a man! She is at their mercy. The entire culture puts her at
his feet. Well I was beautiful enough, and intelligent enough, to fight, and
surely to win! I was truly a slave girl, and that I knew, but my master would
learn that a slave girl could be a dangerous foe. I would conquer him. So I
mused. The only thing that I did not take into my considerations was the Gorean
male. He is unlike the men of Earth, on the whole so weak and pliable, so
reasonable, so compromising, so much in need of recognition and affection, or
its pretense. The only thing I failed to take into my calculations was that the
Gorean male, whether by culture or genetic endowment, is unlike the typical man
of Earth. He, unlike the typical man of Earth, though not unlike all, is a
natural master of women. There was a time in my life when I would not have
understood this, or how it could be. There was surely a time in my life when I
could not have believed this, when I would have found it preposterous, absurd,
incomprensible , false. But at that time I had not been brought to this world.
At that time I had not been in the arms of a Gorean male.
“Eat,” urged Ute.
I had scarcely touched the stew in the wooden bowl.
“We will wear the nose rings,” said Ute, “until our training is finished. Then,
when we leave Ko-ro-ba, they will be removed.
“Where did you hear this?” I asked. There are often rumors carried about the
pens and cages.
“I heard Targo telling one of the guards,” she whispered, looking about.
“Good,” I said. I reached into the bowl. No one ever need know that Elinor
Brinton, of Park Avenue, had once had a steel ring fixed in her nose.
Pleased, I joined Ute in eating.
Afterwards, after we had been hooded and taken to our private training pens in
Ko-ro-ba, I trained well.
It was well I had eaten, for the work was difficult. (pg. 169) Perhaps Targo
wished to take our minds from the events of the morning. In the evening, at the
private pens, we were fed well and our group, myself, Ute, Inge and Lana, were
among those groups given pastries following our meal.
I was pleased with my performance. It was right that we should be rewarded.
I was, indeed, rather pleased with my performance in general.
Sometimes I was irritated by the instructor, herself a slave, when she would
commend me. “See,” she would say to the other girls. “That is how it is done!
That is how the body of a slave girl moves!” but I wanted to learn, that I might
use my skills to enhance my fortunes on Gor. As a warrior applies himself to the
arts of his weapons, so I applied myself to the arts of the female slave, which
I was. I became sleek and more beautiful from the diet and the exercises. I
learned things of which I had not dreamed. Our training, because it was limited
to a few short weeks, did not include many of the elements that are normally
included in a full training. I remained ignorant of Gorean cooking and the
cleaning of Gorean garments. I learned nothing of musical instruments. I
remained ignorant even of the arrangements of small rugs, decorations and
flowers, things that any Gorean girl, slave or free, it likely to know. But I
was taught to dance, and to give pleasure, and to stand, and move, and sit and
turn, and lift my head and lower it, and kneel, and rise. Interestingly, and
sometimes not altogether to my pleasure, I found the training becoming
effective. In the early evening of the day on which our nose rings had been
affixed I was returning to my cage, after having run an errand for Targo in the
pens. I was one of his favorites, and he often used me for his errands.
As I passed by a guard, as a slave girl passes a man, he seized me by the arm
and held me, almost jerking me off my feet, pulling me to him. “You are learning
to move, Slave,’ he said. I was frightened. Then I was not frightened. I pulled
slightly against his arm as though I might be frightened, but could not hope to
elude him. And indeed, of course, I could not have, in fact, eluded him, even
had (pg. 170) I cared to do so. He, being a man, was quite strong enough, as I
knew, to do with me what he might please. How I resented the strength of men! I
looked up at him, timidly. “Perhaps, Master,” I whispered, lips timidly parted,
slightly smiling, keeping my ankles together, and moving my body slightly away
from him, but my shoulders pointing towards him.
“She-sleen,” he said.
He grinned.
He took the nose ring between his thumb and first finger and lifted it. I stood
painfully on my toes.
“You are a pretty slave,” he said.
“I am white silk,” I whispered, now frightened, truly frightened.
He released the ring and reached for me. “What does it matter?” he said.
I backed away from him, and turned and, stumbling, striking into the wall of
cages, fled down the hall. I am afraid I did not flee as a lovely slave girl. I
fled clumsily, terrified, as an Earth girl fleeing from a Gorean male.
I heard him laugh behind me, and stopped. He had been having sport with me.
I turned and looked at him in irritation.
He clapped his hands and took a step toward me, and I turned and fled stumbling
away again, hearing his laughter in the hallway behind me.
But in a moment or two I had regained my composure.
When I reached the cage I was well pleased with myself. I had attracted the
guard. He had wanted me. He, of course, would not have taken me, for fear of the
wrath of Targo, but I had no doubt of his desire. I shuddered. If it had not
been for Targo he doubtless would have taken me, on the cement flooring, before
the bars. But still, on the whole, I was quite pleased. I knew that I was
desirable. I knew that I was very desirable. I was an exciting slave. I was
proud. I was much pleased.
Ute and Inge asked Lana and I to help clean the cage that night but we, as
usual, refused. That was the work of lesser girls. Lana and I were more valuable
than Ute and (pg. 171) Inge, or so we thought. The three of us might have forced
Lana to help, but then I would have had to work, too. I realized that if I
joined with Lana, thought I did not care for her, they could not force either of
us to work. Since Ute and Inge were insistent that the cage be cleaned, this
unpleasant task thus fell regularly to them. I liked a clean cage. I just did
not wish to clean it. Lana and I, that night, thought them fools, and, satisfied
with ourselves, went to sleep on the straw.
I was pleased that I was exciting. I touched the nose ring. I resented it. In
the morning I would have even more reason to resent it. I became drowsy. I was
pleased that I was exciting, and was pleased, too, that the hated nose ring
would be removed before we left Ko-ro-ba. I rolled over, closing my eyes.
Ko-ro-ba, I thought, Ko-ro-ba. I was drowsy. We had approached the city in the
early morning and Targo had permitted us to leave the wagons to look upon it, in
the morning sun. The city, the sun reflecting on its walls and towers, was very
beautiful. It is sometimes called The Towers of the Morning, and perhaps