Hunters of Gor (26 page)

Read Hunters of Gor Online

Authors: John Norman

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Erotica, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character), #Outer Space

BOOK: Hunters of Gor
13.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She lowered her head between her arms.

“I submit myself,” she said.

The collar was locked on her throat. Her hands were tied.

She lowered her bound wrists and lifted her head to Marlenus. “I am your girl,”

she said, “Master.”

Marlenus turned to a subordinate. “Have her cleaned and combed,” he said. “And

perfume her.”

She put down her head.

“Then put her in yellow pleasure silk,” he said, “fresh silk, and place bells on

her left ankle.”

“Yes, Ubar,” said the man.

Marlenus was regarding the slave who knelt before him, her head down.

“And have her ears pierced,” said Marlenus, “and fix in them earrings of gold,

large ones.”

“Yes, Ubar,” said the man.

The slave, conquered, did not so much as lift her head. It would be done to her,

what her master wished.

“And tonight,” said Marlenus, “when she is sent to my tent, see that she wears

lipstick.”

“It will be done as you say, Ubar,” said the man. He looked down at Verna. “Come

with me, Girl,” he said.

“Yes, Master,” she said, and was led away.

I recalled the flaminium, in the grip of Marlenus.

“These other slaves,” said Marlenus, indicating Verna’s former girls, “take them

away.”

Frightened, on their chain, they were herded away. There was not one of them but

what knew that what had happened to Verna might have happened to any one of

them. I suspected that each of them would be very conscious that night of the

ring locked on their right ankle, and the chain that fastened them to the two

stakes.

“May we leave, Ubar?” asked Hura.

Marlenus looked upon Hura and Mira. They were very conscious that they were

women that stood among men.

“Yes,” said Marlenus.

The two women, in their brief skins, hurried to the gate, which was opened to

let them pass. Outside, the panther girls were waiting for them. Hura, Mira, and

Hura’s band swiftly disappeared in the forest.

They did not remain long in the vicinity of the camp of Marlenus, Ubar of Ar.

”Think, Ubar,” I said, “that I choose to return to my ship soon, at the banks of

the Laurius.”

“You are welcome to leave when you wish,” said Marlenus, “but enjoy my

hospitality another day.” He clapped me on the shoulder. “Do we not have a game

on the board?”

“Yes,” I smiled. “We do.” I had almost forgotten the game we had scarcely begun,

before we had heard the cry at the gate, heralding Hura’s return of an escaped

slave girl.

At the entrance to Marlenus’ tent, I stopped.

Marlenus looked at me.

“Ubar,” said I, “if the girl Verna had not cried out for mercy, if she had not

wept and yielded herself, completely and utterly, to you as slave, would you

have truly done what you threatened?”

“I do not understand,” said Marlenus.

“Would you truly have hamstrung her?” I asked.

“Of course,” said Marlenus. “I am a Ubar.”

“When you leave,” said Marlenus, regarding the board, “it is my wish that you go

to your ship.”

It was his move.

“That is my intention,” I said.

“It is not my wish,” said Marlenus, “that you fare forth to an exchange point to

set free a former citizen of Ar.”

“I understand,” I said.

“I, as her former Ubar, will treat of that business,” said Marlenus. She had

much shamed him. I did not envy the girl, Talena.

“What is your intention with regard to her?” I asked.

“She will be kept in Ar,” he said.

“I see,” I said.

Marlenus looked up. “Put her from your mind,” he said. “She is unworthy of a

free man.”

I nodded. It was true what he had said. Talena, once the beautiful daughter of a

great Ubar, shamed and disowned, was now nothing. No longer did she have family.

No longer did she have position, wealth and power. She was now nothing. She now

had only her beauty, and that wore a brand. Even if she were freed, she would

not, in virtue of the disownment, have a caste. The lowest peasant wench on Gor,

secure in her caste rights, would be far above her. Talena, once the marvelous

and beautiful Talena, was now nothing. She was nothing, nothing.

No longer was she a desirable match. No longer was she acceptable, no longer was

she suitable.

She was nothing.

Marlenus and I, Goreans, sat across the board from one another.

“A slave, said a man, standing outside the tent.

“Send her in,” said Marlenus, studying the board. I looked up.

Verna was stunningly beautiful. Her hair, long and blond, was loosed and combed

back. she wore a bit of yellow pleasure silk, very short and diaphanous. It

clung to her, sweet with her breathing. On her left ankle, locked, were slave

bells. I caught the scent of her perfume, a delicate Torian scent, feminine. She

wore lipstick. She carried wine.

She was one of the most beautiful female slaves I had ever seen.

Marlenus lifted his head and regarded her. Her breathing quickened.

“Put down the wine,” said Marlenus, “and step before us.”

The girl did so.

“Lift your hair away from your ears,” said Marlenus, “and turn your head from

side to side.”

Verna displayed the earrings, large and gold, which had been fastened in her

ears.

They were beautiful.

“Remove the silk,” said Marlenus, ”and face us.”

The slave did so.

She stood beautifully. She did not stand as might have Cara, or another girl,

who had well known the touch of a man, but she did stand as though owned. The

resistance was gone from her shoulders and diaphragm. Even the palms of her

hands, naturally now fell at her thighs, her left palm over her brand. She had

not been taught to stand in this fashion. The difference, subtle and

interesting, had been accomplished in the enslavement of the afternoon.. Now,

naturally, unaware of it, she stood as a slave girl. She knew now she stood

before the man who was her complete master, open to him, his slave. She stood as

a slave, because she now knew herself as a slave, and this knowledge was

reflected, inevitably, in her stance. It was natural that she now stand as a

slave. She was a slave.

“Turn,” said Marlenus.

Verna did so, gracefully, obediently. She stood, facing away from us.

“You see?” asked Marlenus.

“Yes,” I said.

Verna knew that she was beautiful. Moreover, she knew that her beauty was now

being surveyed, candidly, by two free men. I could sense, in her breathing, and

her carriage, that this excited her. It may well have excited her, for she was a

mere slave, and belonged to one of the men present. A girl in a collar, as it is

said, is not permitted inhibitions.

We observed her.

She stood on the ball of her left foot. The left leg was slightly, subtly,

flexed, and her right leg was flexed, too, and much more than the left. Her head

was turned slightly to the right, as though she might wish, did she dare, to

look over her right shoulder. I noted the hamstrings. They were not tight. They

were lovely, beautifully resilient. Marlenus played a savage game. I was pleased

that they had not bee severed.

“You see?” asked Marlenus.

“Yes,” I said.

“There is now a readiness,” said Marlenus. “She is still a raw girl, an ignorant

girl, but now there is a readiness.”

I nodded. “Face us,” said Marlenus.

“Yes, Master,” said Verna. I marveled. Her lips were parted. She faced Marlenus.

I saw her breathing. She was excited. A girl in a collar is not permitted

inhibitions. Simply standing before her master, in his collar, she was visibly

excited. I could scarcely conjecture the helplessness and violence of her

responses to Marlenus, should he deign to touch her.

“Do you sense in yourself a readiness,” Marlenus asked her, “to serve as a slave

girl?”

“Yes,” she said, “yes, Master!”

“Clothe yourself,” said Marlenus.

Unsteadily, tears in her eyes, she did so.

Marlenus’ attention was again upon the board of the game.

“Ubara’s Builder to Ubara’s Builder Nine,” said Marlenus. He moved the piece.

I responded to this with Scribe to Ubara’s Builder Two.

Marlenus looked up. He glanced at the girl, absently.

“Serve us wine,” he said.

“Yes, Master,” she said.

I observed the board.

I wondered at women. It seems that they, in reality, care for tender, loving

men, who treat them with great consideration and solicitude. Yes, in their

dreams, it seems they find themselves forced to surrender, totally, to fierce,

dominating masters, who insolently and cruelly, though often with ironic

courtesy and tenderness, exact from their bodies, over a period of hours, every

last minute sensation of response of which their bodies are capable, strong men,

warriors, who, patiently, permit them no shield, who permit them to withhold

nothing, who permit them to save not a particle of their honor, who will force

them to yield themselves totally, helplessly, in complete and utter surrender.

Gorean culture, of course, differs greatly from Earth culture. On Gor, for

better or for worse, the reality in which a woman, terrified, might find herself

is not altogether unlike that of her feared dreams on Earth, but on Gor it is

not a dream; it is as real as the steel of slave bracelets and the commanding

touch of a master.

I looked at Marlenus of Ar.

He was lost in the game, his attention on the board. I had not thought much of

it before, but I now realized that he must be attractive, enormously attractive,

to women. He was broad and strong. He was fierce and highly intelligent. He was

as insolent, and rugged and handsome as the crags of the mighty Voltai. He was

uncompromising; he was powerful; he was wealthy’ he controlled cities and men’

he was a tarnsman, master of the great, predatory saddlebirds of Gor. He had

taken, and owned many women. He seemed a natural master of female flesh. Many

women, just seeing him, had a spontaneous desire to yield to him. Some high-born

beauties of Ar, I knew, had begged for his collar.

“Ubara to Ubara Four,” said Marlenus.

I moved my Ubar’s Physician to my Ubara Six, interposing it between the Ubara

and the Home Stone.

Marlenus and I watched her pour the wine. She poured it differently than she had

before. She knelt, her head down, the hair forward. I could see it in her

shoulders. She, a slave girl, poured wine for masters. That she was owned was

revealed, beautifully, in her serving.

I saw his collar gleaming at her throat.

Marlenus looked at me and smiled. I nodded. Verna was a slave.

She lifted her eyes to him, helplessly.

“Later,” said Marlenus. “I must finish this game.”

“Yes, Master!” she whispered.

She withdrew, kneeling, and watched. Her eyes were on the board, but I could see

that she did not understand the game. It was only pieces to her. Yet she sensed

the struggle.

Sometimes she looked away from the board. She was breathing deeply. Her fists

would clench and unclench. There was a light sheen of sweat on her body. The

slave silk clung to her the more closely. She put her head back. Her thighs

moved. She was in the torment of her need, often visible in a female slave.

“Tarnsman to Ubara Six,” said Marlenus. He moved his tarnsman to his Ubara Six,

my Ubara Four.

“Capture of the Home Stone,” said Marlenus.

I had been crushed.

I shrugged. I stood up.

Verna’s eyes shone. I had been defeated, and devastatingly, by her master. She

did not play the game, but this much she knew. She could read it in the tone of

Marlenus, the swiftness with which he had moved, his insolent handling of the

pieces, the vigor and arrogance of his carriage. I had been driven before his

attack, stumbling and reeling before him. I could not defend myself. I had been

helpless. He had crushed me.

This Verna knew. She could not take her eyes from him.

Marlenus set aside the board, and looked upon her. He had now set aside the

things of men, and was ready for her, a woman.

I walked to one side of the tent.

“Remove the silk,” said Marlenus, “and come to my arms.”

Verna parted the slave silk, and dropped it to the side. He was sitting

cross-legged, and she crept to him, trembling. He took her and held her across

his knees, cradling her in his left arm. She looked up at him, vulnerable,

helpless. His right hand was at her thigh, over her brand. There was the slight

sound of slave bells, locked on her left ankle.

“You seem a woman,” said Marlenus.

“I am a woman,” said Verna.

“Are you free?” asked Marlenus.

“No,” she whispered. “I am a slave. I am your slave.”

With his hand Marlenus turned her head from side to side. Her hair was back.

“These are lovely earrings,” he said.

I could see, from across the tent, the tiny shadows, where the small golden

wires were thrust through the softness of her ear lobes.

They were indeed beautiful.

“Yes,” whispered Verna, a lowly pierced-ear girl in the arms of her master.

“Do you like them?” asked Marlenus.

“Yes,” she whispered. “They excite me. They excite me as a woman.”

“That is one of their purposes,” said Marlenus.

She attempted to lift her lips, delicately, to his, but his hand prevented them

Other books

The Freedom Writers Diary by The Freedom Writers
The Beatles Boxed Set by Joe Bensam
Lines on the Water by David Adams Richards
Only Emma by Sally Warner, Jamie Harper
Inevitable by Louis Couperus
Element, Part 1 by Doporto, CM