Read Conspirators of Gor Online

Authors: John Norman

Conspirators of Gor (52 page)

BOOK: Conspirators of Gor
2.39Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“Tonight,” I said, “I am to be taken to a paga tavern.”

“To be sold?” said Jane.

“I do not think so,” I said.

It could, of course, be done to me. It would have to be at the instructions of the Lady Bina, of course, my Mistress.

“I must let you rest,” I said.

“Here in the dirt, nude, in our chains,” said Jane.

“Do you not feel,” I whispered, “that they are right on you?”

There was a pause, in the darkness.

“Yes,” Jane whispered.

“Yes,” Eve whispered.

I then withdrew.

 

* * * *

 

 
“Now those are slaves,” said Master Desmond, with an expansive gesture about the room, he in whose keeping I was.

“Yes, Master,” I said.

I knelt beside the low table, about which Masters Desmond, Lykos and Astrinax sat, cross-legged.

It was a high tavern.

“Not one would go for less than two silver tarsks,” he said.

“Perhaps,” I said.

I supposed men had much sweated in their bidding on them. I saw one fellow knot the wrists of a slave behind her and thrust her toward an alcove.

I recalled that he in whose keeping I was had said that in some of the alcoves a man might stand upright. The alcoves, I understood were furnished with a variety of conveniences, bracelets, chains, thongs, cords, scarves, hoods, switches, whips, and such, by means of which a girl might be encouraged to perform excellently, to do her best for one of her master’s customers. It was in her best interest to see that no client was disappointed, in the least.

I looked about. The girls were belled, on the left ankle. Each was clothed, in a sense. Each was silked, but diaphanously. In my brief, rep-cloth tunic, kneeling by the table, I felt myself less exhibited than they, in their soft, colorful, swirling silks.

I could understand how it was that men would seek the paga taverns.

Still, to one side, at more than one table, fellows were intent upon a game of kaissa.

How could that be? Were the slaves not beautiful enough?

I knew that a yearning slave, to one side, lying in her chains, must often await the outcome of such a game

There was music in the tavern, a czehar player, a drummer, utilizing the small tabor, two flautists, and a pair of kalika players. He with the czehar was the leader. That was common, as I was given to understand.

I could smell paga, and roast bosk.

A bit of silk flashed by. I drew my head back, for it had brushed across my face.

He in whose keeping I was laughed.

I did not care for that.

“Master?” I said.

“You were insulted,” he smiled.

“What flanks!” said Astrinax.

“Why do you not pursue her and tear her silk from her?” asked Lykos.

“She would tear out my hair, and beat me,” I said.

Master Astrinax had been, so far, unsuccessful in his recruiting. He had approached more than one table, without success.

Master Desmond, I noted, had an eye for the paga slaves. That was nothing to me, of course. Why, then, was I so angry?

“I have brought Allison here,” said Master Desmond, “that she might see what true slaves are like.”

“My collar is on my neck as well as theirs are on theirs,” I said, angrily.

“Then,” said he in whose charge I was, “you are a true slave, as well?”

“My thigh is marked,” I said, “my neck is collared, I am owned.”

“Then you are a true slave?” he said.

I looked at him. “Yes, Master,” I said, “Allison is a true slave.”

“Look at me, and say it,” he said.

“I am a true slave,” I said. “Allison is a true slave.”

“That is known to me,” he said.

“I hate you,” I said, tears in my eyes.

“Put your hand on her,” said Lykos.

“No!” I said.

“How would you like to be taken to an alcove?” asked he in whose charge I was.

How I had dreamed of being in his power, as a slave is in a master’s power.

“No,” I said, “no!”

“Why not?” he asked.

“You do not own me!” I said.

“True,” said Master Desmond.

“I have seen her like,” said Lykos. “Put her in your chains, and she will leap, begging, to your touch.”

“No, no!” I said.

“She would be an easy one to master,” said Lykos, “a little resistance, and then she is yours.”

“No, Masters!” I said.

“See that one!” said he in whose charge I was, pointing toward the paga vat.

She was indeed beautiful.

“See that auburn hair,” said Astrinax.

“That color,” said he in whose charge I was, “is prized in the markets.” Then he looked at me. “It is not common,” he said, “like brown hair.”

“Brown hair is beautiful,” said Lykos.

I cast him a look of gratitude.

“But common,” said he in whose charge I was. How angry I was with him.

“The hair of the Lady Bina,” said Lykos, “what I have seen of it, is beautiful.”

That was true. I had often seen the Lady Bina unhooded, unveiled, and her hair was strikingly blond, and her eyes were a soft, sometimes, sparkling blue. She was exquisite, in face and figure. I supposed, though the speculation was inappropriate, as she was a free woman, that she might bring a fine price off a block. I had sometimes wondered what she would look like, if marked and collared.

She with auburn hair, the paga slave, had dipped her goblet into the vat, and then, holding it with two hands, had turned, and conveyed it to a table.

“There is another beauty,” said Astrinax, gesturing with his head to another slave.

She had a swirl of long blond hair.

“That hair color is similar to that of the Lady Bina, is it not?” said Lykos.

“Perhaps, Master,” I said. It did not seem fitting to me, to speak of such things, to speak of the Mistress. To be sure, at the troughs, and in the Sul Market, I had heard more than one woman’s slave excoriate her Mistress, in the most detailed and vivid terms.

I noted that Master Desmond, whom I supposed of the Metal Workers, certainly he in whose charge I was, to my annoyance, was still appraising various paga slaves, as masters look upon such women.

“Master considers slaves,” I observed.

“See that one,” he said to me, pointing.

“Perhaps Master would care to gaze upon a slave closer at hand,” I said.

“Where?” he said.

“Here,” I said.

“You?” said he.

“Perhaps,” I said.

“Surely you do not think to compare your beauty with that of the paga girls of The Kneeling Slave,” he said.

“On my former world I was thought quite lovely.”

“Perhaps for such a world,” he said.

“If we were such poor stuff,” I said, “we would not have been brought here, to be put in the collars of brutes such as yourself.”

“Some barbarians are of interest,” he said.

“You might learn much from the men of my world,” I said.

“Oh?” he said.

“They are sweet, pleasant, kind, gentle, sensitive, solicitous, accommodating, and wonderful, and they do what we want,” I said.

“Is that why the women of your world make such excellent slaves, why they lick and kiss our whips and feet, why they beg to be subdued and chained, owned and mastered, why they writhe in grateful ecstasy in the thongs and silken cords that render them helpless?” he asked.

“Ah!” said Astrinax. “See that one!”

“But, yes!” agreed he in whose care I was.

“You knew me in Ar,” I said. “You must have agreed to my keeping and management.”

“I like having you cook for me,” he said, “and I enjoy shackling you, such things.”

“I see,” I said. “I have heard that some men, for whatever reason, see a woman as their slave, as delicious, incomparable collar meat, special to them, and will not rest until she is chained at their feet.”

“And I have heard,” said he, “that some women, for whatever reason, look up at a fellow, from their knees, and recognize him as their master.”

“There is another beauty,” said Astrinax, indicating another paga girl.

“She has brown hair,” I said.

“At least,” said he in whose charge I was, “it is more than a hort or two in length.”

“My hair will grow,” I said.

“I think,” said he, “I will ask the Lady Bina to have it shaved off again.”

“Please do not, Master!” I said.

“You are going to be deferent, docile, obedient, humble, zealous, eager to please, and such, are you not?” he asked.

“Yes, Master!” I said.

“What lovely girls,” said Astrinax.

“Superb,” said he in whose charge I was.

“But we have obtained no new men, no new swords,” said Lykos.

“Are all taverns like this, Master?” I asked Astrinax. I suspected not, for the apparent quality of the girls.

“No,” he said. “The prices here are such that the place should be burned down. In a typical tavern a drink is a single tarsk-bit, with which drink a girl may go, if you want her. Here, a drink is five tarsk-bits, five! And for all I know, the girl is extra.”

“No,” said Lykos. “She goes with the drink.”

“But five tarsk-bits!” said Astrinax.

“True,” granted Lykos, resignedly.

At that moment there was an exciting skirl of music, a flash of bells, a burst of color, a jangle of beads, and a cry of enthusiasm from the patrons, and a dancer was on the floor. After her entry she stood silent, not moving, posed, ready, on the floor. I could sense the anticipation, even the difference in breathing, of the men. Then the music began, softly, slowly, and the dancer, looking about herself, began to move, obedient to the melody of masters.

“Is she a slave?” I asked.

“Certainly,” said he in whose charge I was. “It may be hard to see, beneath the necklaces, so many of them, but there is a collar there, close-fitting, steel, and locked.”

“Much as mine,” I said.

“Yes,” he said.

“She is so beautiful,” I said. “She is so soft, so feminine, so utterly female, so vulnerable, so needful.”

“A slave,” said Lykos.

“It is so beautiful,” I said. “What is it called?”

“It is a form of dance fit for slaves, is it not?” he said.

“Yes,” I breathed, awed, rapt.

“Slave dance,” said he in whose charge I was.

“Slave dance,” I whispered.

“Yes,” he said.

“I have seen something like it,” I said, “on my former world, but I scarcely dared look upon it.”

“It spoke to you of things which stirred you, things for which you longed, but which you feared, spoke to you of a distant, or forgotten, world, one a thousand times more real, I suspect, than that which you knew. It spoke to you of how women might be before men, as slaves, and how men might look upon women, as masters.”

“Yes,” I whispered, “but here it seems somehow different.”

“It is different here,” he said, “for this is such a world.”

“I think I know this dance, or sort of dance,” said Astrinax. “It will have its phases, its swiftness, and its slowness, its emotions, insolence, pride, defiance, apprehension, recognition, fear, struggle, defeat, surrender, and submission.”

I heard, it startling me, the cracking of a whip. The dancer reacted, as though struck, but the blade had not touched her. Occasionally it snapped again, and again, and, at the end of the dance, as is often the case in such dance, the dancer is prostrate, clearly submitted and owned. In this particular dance she was kneeling and the fellow with the whip was behind her. He placed the whip, coiled, against the back of her neck, and she lowered her head. The men about voiced their approval, and several smote their left shoulders with their right hand. Others uttered trilling noises or staccato bursts of sound. Others pounded on the tables. She then sprang to her feet and hurried from the floor, followed by the fellow with the whip.

“Paga, Master?” asked a girl.

She had not been summoned to our table!

Sometimes a master will summon a particular girl to his table. Masters have choices, of course, even if they are interested only in paga. I suppose it is natural for a master to wish to be served by one girl, rather than another. On the other hand, more than paga might be involved. The particular girl, summoned, is well aware that the fellow may be considering her for alcoving, as well.

The slave had addressed herself to he in whose charge I was! To be sure, a girl might approach a table, unsummoned. But how dared she? I remained, of course, on my knees. I had no permission to rise.

She glanced at me, condescendingly, and smiled, with the look of a high-priced girl upon one of lesser value, perhaps one who might regard herself as fortunate that men had deigned to put a collar on her, at all.

BOOK: Conspirators of Gor
2.39Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Trigger Fast by J. T. Edson
The Story of God by Chris Matheson
Viaje alucinante by Isaac Asimov
Have a Nice Guilt Trip by Lisa Scottoline, Francesca Serritella
Gear, W Michael - Novel 05 by The Morning River (v2.1)
An Amish Match by Jo Ann Brown
Lady Beware by Jo Beverley