Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Erotica, #Gor (Imaginary Place)
between us.
“Do not fear,” I said. “I have no intention at present of testing you for
vitality.”
I then picked up the makings of the gag which were to her left, the wadding and
the binding.
She eyed them, apprehensively.
“This is not the first time you have been a slave,” I said. “Once, I knew, you
were owned by Rask of Treve.”
She looked up at me.
“Did you serve him well?” I asked.
“He put me often in slave silk, and jewelry, to show me off,” she said, “as it
amused him, he, of Treve, to have the daughter of Marlenus of Ar for a slave,
but he did not make much use of me. Indeed, I served him, by his will, almost
entirely in domestic labors, keeping his tent, and such. This he seemed to feel
was appropriate, such demeaning, servile labors, for the daughter of Marlenus of
Ar. But, too, I do not think he much cared for me. Then, when he got his hands
on a meaningless little blond chit, a true slave in ever hort of her body, named
El-in-or, he gave me away, to a panther girl named Verna, to be taken to the
northern forests. I served panther girls, too, as domestic slave, and was later
sold, at the coast, where I came into the collar of Samos, of Port Kar.”
“It is difficult to believe that Rask of Treve did not put you to slave use,” I
said.
“He did, of course,” she said.
“And how were you?” I asked.
“He told guests that I was superb,” she said.
“And were you?” I asked.
“I had better have been,” she said.
“True,” I said. I had twice met Rask of Treve, both times in Port Kar. He was
the sort of fellow whom women strove to serve unquestioningly to the best of
their abilities.
“Surely you learned much of the arts of the slave in his tent,” I said.
(pg. 484) “No,” she said. “I was more of a prize, or a political prisoner. I was
more like a free woman in slave silk than a slave, in his camp.”
“Then, in effect,” I said, “aside from having worn the collar and such, you have
never experienced what one might call a full slavery?”
“Like a common slave slut?” she asked.
“Yes,” I said.
“No!” she said, angrily.
“That would seem to have been an oversight on the part of Rask of Treve,” I
said.
“Perhaps,” she said, angrily.
“Perhaps other masters can remedy that oversight,” I said.
“I am the Ubara of Ar!” she said.
“No,” I said. “You are a slave girl.” I then gagged her.
I then stood up, and looked down at her. “Tomorrow,” I said, “guardsmen will
come to free you of your bonds, and return you to the Central Cylinder. You must
not forget, of course, even in the Central Cylinder, that you are my slave girl.
Too, you must remember that I will come for you. When will it be? You will not
know. Will you fear to enter a room alone, or a corridor unescorted, for fear
someone may be there, waiting? Will you fear dark places, or shadows? Will you
fear high bridges, and roofs, and promenades, because you fear that loop of a
tarnsman tightening on your body, dragging you into the sky, his capture? Will
you fear even your own chambers, perhaps even to open the portals of your own
wardrobe, for fear someone might be waiting? Will you fear to remove your
clothing, for fear someone, somehow, somewhere, might see? Will you fear to
enter the bath, for fear you might be surprised there? Will you fear to sleep, I
wonder, knowing that someone might come to you in the night, that you might
waken suddenly to the gag, and helplessness?”
I looked down at her. There were tears in her eyes, over the gag. She looked
well in bonds. She was a pretty slave.
“Let us go,” I said to Marcus.
We then left the room.
28
The Room
(pg.485) I lay on a blanket, in the small room, in the insula of Torbon, on
Demetrios Street, in the Metellan district.
Outside, the city was generally quiet.
I looked up at the darkness of the ceiling.
It must have been in the neighborhood of the twelfth Ahn. By now, Milo and
Lavinia must have left the city. Too, Boots Tarsk-Bit, with his troupe, would be
on his way north, perhaps on the Viktel Aria. Somewhere, hidden among their
belongings, would be an obscure item, a seeming oddity, a stone. To look at it
one might not know it from many other stones. And yet it was different from all
other stones; it was special. I wondered about the Home Stones of Gor. Many seem
small and quite plain. Yet for these stones, and on account of these stones,
these seemingly inauspicious, simple objects, cities have been built, and
burned, armies have clashed, strong men have wept, empires have risen and
fallen. The simplicity of many of these stones has puzzled me. I have wondered
sometimes how it is that they have become invested with such import. They may,
of course, somewhat simply, be thought of as symbolizing various things, and
perhaps different things to different people. They can stand, for example, for a
city, and, indeed, are sometimes identified with the city. They, have some
affinity, too, surely, with territoriality and community. Even a remote hut, far
from the paved avenues of a town or city, may have a Home Stone, and therein, in
the place of his Home Stone, is the meanest beggar or the poorest peasant a
Ubar. The Home Stone says this place is mine, this is my home. I am here. But I
think, often, that it is a mistake to try to translate the Home Stone into
meanings. It is not a word, or a sentence. It does not really translate. It is,
more like a tree, or the world. It exists, which goes beyond, which surpasses,
meaning. In this primitive sense the Home Stone is simply that, and irreducibly,
the Home Stone. It is too important, too precious, to mean. And in not meaning,
it becomes, of course, the most meaningful of all. It becomes, in a sense, the
foundation of meaning, and, for Goreans, it is anterior to meaning, and precedes
meaning. Do not ask a Gorean what the Home Stone means because he will (pg. 486)
not understand your question. It will puzzle him. It is the Home Stone.
Sometimes I think that many Home Stones are so simple because they are too
important, too precious, to be insulted with decoration or embellishment. And
then, too, sometimes I think that they are kept, on the whole, so simple,
because this is a way of saying that everything is important, and precious, and
beautiful, the small stones by the river, the leaves of tress, the tracks of
small animals, a blade of grass, a drop of water, a grain of sand, the world.
The word “Gor”, in Gorean, incidentally, means “Home Stone’. Their name for our
common sun, Sol, is “Tor-tu-Gor” which means “Light upon the Home Stone’,
A wagon trundled by. I heard the snort of a tharlarion. There were not so many
wagons now. There was less need. Ar was by now muchly looted, stripped of her
gold and silver, her precious items, even of many of her women and slaves. The
wagon, at any rate, would be some sort of official carrier, or licensed, or
authorized, as such. It was after curfew.
I thought of a slave. Tonight would not be a comfortable night for her, or, I
supposed, the better part of tomorrow. I had already arranged that a sealed
message, conveyed by courier, would reach the Central Cylinder tomorrow, after
the tenth Ahn. I wondered if she had been yet missed. Quite possibly. If not
now, surely by morning, when her women would arrive for her robing, her bathing,
the breaking of her fast, her morning audiences. How frantic would then be the
Central Cylinder. Well could I imagine Seremides storming about, striking
subordinates, denouncing his staff, threatening his officers, and all Ar,
overturning furniture, tearing down hangings, picking up the pen, putting it
down again, spilling ink, shouting orders, rescinding them, issuing them again,
demanding that word not be sent to the camp of Myron, not yet, not yet. How
eagerly they would seize on any clue. How swiftly, how desperately, would the
simple message be received, specifying her location. They would rush there and
find she whom they took to be their Ubara chained in place, as though she might
now be no more than someone’s mere slave girl. How they would rejoice upon her
recovery, and would hasten to cover her, and send for one of the metal workers,
to relieve her of her effective, shameful bonds. They would then convey her back
to the Central Cylinder, secretly, that none in Ar might know what had occurred.
She would then, within an Ahn or two, be restored to the role of the Ubara, and
perhaps even be seated again upon the throne. I wondered if she would be uneasy,
or perhaps even terrified, realizing the folly in which she was now enmeshed,
(pg.487) daring to ascend the dais, not to lie on its steps as a half naked
slave, collared, at a Ubar’s feet, an item of display, but to sit upon the
throne itself. Surely she must be aware of the presumption of this act, of the
insolence, and fearful peril, of it. One could scarcely dare conjecture the
punishments which might be attendant upon it, she only a slave. Well must she be
concerned to keep her bondage secret. Yet she must know that some in Ar would
know that secret, that some would even have access to the papers involved in its
proof.
I heard someone outside down in the street, doubtless a guardsman, cry, “Halt!
Halt!” There was then the sound of running feet. Guardsmen in the Metallan
district, as now in Ar, generally, went in pairs. Some fellows, I gathered, had
been spotted, violating the curfew.
No, the slave would not spend a comfortable night, lying on the flat flooring
stones, naked, her wrists chained closely to her ankles, kept in place by a neck
chain, fastened to a floor ring. It would be something of a change for her, from
the comforts, and cushions, of the Ubara’s couch. But I thought this might be
good for her. Long ago, when she had been the slave of Rask of Treve, she had
been, I gathered, treated as something rather special, kept less as a slave than
as a free woman kept, for his amusement, in the shame of slave garb. There, I
gathered, she had been kept more as a prize, or trophy, than a slave. She there,
though certainly technically in bondage, had, it seems, been pampered. That did
not displease me. Let this night, however, teach her what can be the lot of a
more common girl, such as she was.
I looked up at the ceiling.
I did not think she would forget this first night in my keeping.
I smiled to myself.
Let her sit again upon the throne of Ar. Beneath the robes of the Ubara, in all
their beauty, complexity and ornateness, she would be no more than my naked
slave.
I heard a sound outside, on the stairs.
I thought that perhaps she might, in time, tend to forget that she was now a
slave and come again, on the whole, to think of herself as Ubara of Ar. On the
other hand, surely, from time to time, perhaps in an uneasy or frightening
moment, she would recollect that she was my slave. Sometimes at night, I did not
doubt, she would start at some small noise, and lie there in the darkness,
wondering if she were alone. Or perhaps I had come for my slave, with gag and
bonds, to claim her.
(pg. 488) I considered Ar, and its condition. I thought of the delta of the
Vosk, and the disaster which had occurred there, and of the veterans returned
from the delta. How angry I was, even though I was not of Ar, that they had, for
all their loyalty and sacrifice, for all their service, courage and devotion,
received little but scorn and neglect from their compatriots, a scorn and
neglect engineered by factions hoping to profit from the perversities of such
politics, using them to further their own ends, among these ends being to put Ar
and those of Ar into a condition of even greater weakness and confusion, to
undermine their will and sap their pride, to put Ar and those of Ar even more at
the mercy of their enemies. And interestingly, it seemed that many of Ar,
particularly the young, the less experienced, the more gullible, the more
innocent, and, too, perhaps, the most fearful of hardship, responsibility and
danger, and their attendant risks, those accustomed to such things, those who
had always received and never given, those who had never sacrificed anything,
were among those most ready to lap up the sops of Cos, clinging to excuses for
their cowardice, indeed, commending their lack of courage as a new virtue, a
new, and improved, convenient courage. Yet how unfair was this to the perceptive
young, piercing the propaganda, scorning the public boards, recognizing without
being told what was being done to them and their city, smarting with shame,
burning with indignation, recollective of Ar’s glory, the young in whom flowed
the blood of their fathers, and the hope of the city’s future. Perhaps there was
not, after all, young and old, but rather those who were ready to work and
serve, and those who were not, those who preferred to profit from the work and
service of others, risking nothing, contributing nothing. But even so, how odd,
I thought, that those who did not wade in the delta, facing the arrows of
rencers, the spears of Cos, the teeth of tharlarion, should profess their