Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Erotica
spears of guards, through the great gate of Corcyrus, not to be permitted to
return before the second passage hand!”
This was the one case which I remembered the most clearly.
The culprit was a small, vile man with a twisted body. He was an itinerant
peddler, Speusippus of Turia. I had found him inutterably detestable. A Corcyran
merchant had brought charges against him. He had received a bowl from Speusippus
which was purportedly silver, a bowl seemingly stamped with the appropriate seat
of Ar. The bowl upon inspection, the merchant becoming suspicious as to the
weights involved, had turned out to be merely plated. Further, since the
smithies of Ar, those authorized to use the various stamps of Ar, will not plate
objects without using relevant variations on the seal of Ar to, indicate this,
the object was not only- being misrepresented but was, in effect, a forged
artifact. This had led to a seizure and search of the stores and records of
Speusippus.
Various other discrepancies were found. He had two sets of weights, one true and
one false. Too, documents were found recording the purchase of quantities of
slave hair, at suitable prices, some even within the city of Corcyrus itself.
This hair, as was attested to by witnesses, had been represented to the public
as that of free women, with appropriate prices being expected. Hair,
incidentally, is a common trade item in Gorean markets. It is used for various
purposes, for example, for insect whisks, for dusters, for cleaning and
polishing pads, for cushionings, decorations and ropes, particularly catapult
ropes, for which it is highly prized. It is not unusual, incidentally, for slave
girls, particularly for those who may not have proved superbly pleasing, as yet,
to discover that their hair, even while it is still on them, is expected, like
themselves, to serve various lowly, domestic purposes. For example, when a girl,
serving at a banquet, hears the command, “Hair,” she knows she is to go to the
guest and kneel, and lower her head, that her hair may be used as a napkin or
wiping cloth, by means of which the free person, either male or female, may
remove stains, crumbs or grease from his hands. Similarly a girl’s hair, if
sufficiently long, may be used for the washing and cleaning of floors. In this
she is usually on her hands and knees, and naked and chained. The hair is used
in conjunction with the soap and water, in the appropriate buckets, being dipped
in, and wrung out, and rinsed, and so on.
Hair incidentally, is not used for the application of such things as waxes or
varnishes, because of the difficulty of removing such substances from the hair.
Such a mistake could necessitate a shearing and a lowering of the market value
of a girl for months. For similar reasons, a girl’s hair, even within a cloth,
if it is still on her, is seldom used for such purposes as buffing and
polishing. Hair is common, of course, as a stuffing for pads used for such
purposes, for example, for tile purposes of cleaning, buffing and polishing.
I was pleased to see the odious Speusippus turned about by guards and dragged
from my presence. How pleased I was, too, to see the awesome strength of men
serving my purposes.
I lay on my back, on the great couch, in the hot Corcyrus night.
Some things I did not understand. Even Susan, who knew much more of Gor than I,
did not understand them.
In my audiences, and public appearances, for example, and even in the court, I
appeared without the veils common to tile Gorean free woman. I knew the veils,
and Susan had instructed me in their meanings, arrangements and fastenings, but,
publicly, at least, I seldom wore them. This omission seemed puzzling to me,
from what I had learned of Gor, particularly in the case of a free woman of so
lofty a station as a Tatrix, but I saw no real reason for objecting,
particularly in the warm weather of Corcyrus. Indeed, Susan’s being so
scandalized, and her reservations about sending me forth unveiled from my
quarters, she once of Cincinnati, Ohio, seemed to me exquisitely amusing. I did
try to explain the matter to her, as Ligurious had explained it to me, when I
had asked him about it. The important difference between myself and other free
women, of high station, was precisely that, that I was a Tatrix and they were
not. A Tatrix, Ligurious had informed me, has no secrets from her people. It is
good for the people of a Tatrix to be able to look lovingly and reverently upon
her. “Yes, Mistress,” had said Susan, her head down. I had wondered if Ligurious
was being candid with me. At any rate, there was little doubt that the features
of their Tatrix had now become well known in Corcyrus, at least to many of her
citizens. Indeed, only this morning I, unveiled, in a large, open, silken
palanquin, borne by slaves, Ligurious at my side, had been carried through the
streets of Corcyrus, behind trumpets and drums, flanked by guards, through
cheering crowds. “Your people love you,” had said Ligurious. I had lifted my
hand to the crowds, and bowed and smiled. I had done these things with
graciousness and dignity, as I had been instructed to do by Ligurious. It had
been a thrilling experience for me, seeing the people, the shops, the streets,
the buildings. It was the first time I had been outside the grounds of the
palace. The streets were clean and beautiful. The smelt of flowers was in the
air. Petals had been strewn by veiled maidens before the path of the palanquin.
“It is good for you to appear before the people,” bad said Ligurious, “given the
trouble with Argentum.”
“What is the trouble with Argentum?” I had asked.
“Skirmishes have taken place near there,” be said. “Look,” he said, pointing,
“there is the library of Antisthenes.”
“It is beautiful,” I said, observing the shaded porticoes, the slim, lofty
pillars, the graceful pediment with its friezes.
“What is the problem with Argentum?” I asked.
“This is the avenue of Iphicrates,” I was informed.
The people at the sides of the street did not seem surprised that my features
were not concealed by a veil. Perhaps it was traditional, I gathered, as I had
been informed by Ligurious, that this was the fashion in which the Tatrix
appeared before her people. At any rate, whatever might have been the reason,
the people, reassuringly, from my point of view, seemed neither scandalized nor
surprised by my lack of a veil. If anything, they might have been saluting me,
as though for my courage.
At one point the retinue passed five kneeling girls. They were barefoot and wore
brief, sleeveless, one-piece tunics
Their heads were down to the very pavement itself. They wore close-fitting
-metal collars and were chained together, literally, by the neck. I gasped. “Do
not n-find such women,” said Ligurious. “They are nothing. They are only
slaves.” I was shaken by this sight. My heart was pounding rapidly. I could
scarcely breathe. It was not outrage which I felt, interestingly, nor pity. It
was something else. It was a state of unusual sexual excitement, and arousal.
“Smile,” suggested Ligurious, himself lifting his hand graciously to the crowd.
“Wave.”
I controlled myself, and then, again, favored the crowd with my attentions, with
my smiles and countenance.
At one time, later, we passed by a set of low, broad, recessed-from-the-street,
cement steps or shelves. Behind these levels, these shelves or steps, there was
a high cement wall.
There were several women, perhaps ten or eleven, on these steps or shelves. Most
were white but there were at least two blacks and, I think, one oriental. Each
was naked, absolutely.
Too, chains ran from heavy rings to their bodies, to perhaps a lovely neck, or a
fair wrist or ankle. They were fastened in place, literally, on the cement
shelves. As the retinue passed, they oriented themselves to the street and
knelt, their h ads down to the warm cement. There were more rings than there
were women on the shelves, and there were rings, too, set at various heights, in
the wall behind the shelves. These rings, too, however, like many of the shelf
rings, were not being used. There was ail apparatus at one side, like a canopy
wrapped about poles, but it, too, was not now in use.
I looked at the women, naked, kneeling, their heads down, chained on the
shelves.
“More slaves,” explained Ligurious.
Again I fought for breath. I clutched the side of the palanquin to steady
myself.
“What is wrong?” he asked.
“Nothing,” I said. “Nothing.”
“It was only an open-air market,” he said, “a small one.
There are several such in Corcyrus.”
“A market!” I said.
“Yes,” He said.
“But what is bought and sold there?” I asked. I recalled the naked, chained’
beauties.
“Women,” he said.
“Women!” I said.
“Yes,” he said.
“I see,” I said. How matter-of-factly he had put thatl Such markets, clearly,
like other sorts of markets, were a common feature of Gorean life.
“Bow, and wave,” he suggested.
Again I lifted my hand to the crowds. Again I smiled forth from the palanquin.
But I began to tremble. I had seen owned, displayed human females, women who
were merchandise, women who were literally up for sale.
“Put them from your mind,” said Ligurious. “They are nothing, only slaves.”
How terrifying, how horrifying, I thought, to be such a woman, one at the mercy
of anyone who has the means to buy her. What a horrifying and categorical thing
it would be, I thought, to be subject to sale.
“Hail Sheila, Tatrix of Corcyrus!” I heard.
“The people love you,” said Ligurious.
On this world, I said to myself, a woman could be literally owned by a man. She
could be as much his, literally, as a shoe or a dog. I fought the feelings
within me. I strove’ against them. I tried to force the memory of the women
chained on the shelves from my mind. I could not do so. I moaned. Then I could
no longer deny to myself that I was aroused sexually, helplessly and terribly.
The crowds, from time to time, surged closer to the palanquin. The guards,
flanking the palanquin on both sides, pressed them back with the sides of
spears. Among these guards, though he did not have a spear, was Drusus Rencius.
He had been assigned to me, some weeks ago, as my personal guard. Behind the
retinue, following it, came soldiers. Some of these had canvas sacks slung about
their shoulders. From these sacks, from time to time, they would fling coins,
and bits of coins, to the street. This was, I thought, a nice gesture. The
people would scramble for these coins. It seemed they found them very precious.
I continued to smile and wave to the crowd. From time to time, too, I stole a
glance at Drusus Rencius. He, however, walking beside the palanquin, had eyes
only for the crowd. Outside, perhaps, I seemed charming and benign. Inside,
however, almost uncontrollable emotions raged within me. On what sort of world
was this that I found myself I I had not known a woman could be so aroused!
Again I looked at Drusus Rencius, and the others, guardsmen of Corcyrus. I
wondered what it would be like to be owned by a man such as one of those. The
thought almost made me faint with passion. I had no doubt they well knew bow to
teach a woman her slavery. I would be kept by them by the lash, if necessary.
“Is anything amiss, my Tatrix?” inquired Ligurious.
“No,” I said. “No!”
Then I continued, again, to smile and bow, to nod and wave to the crowd.
I hoped that my condition was not evident to the stern, practical Ligurious,
first minister of Corcyrus.
His maleness, and Goreanness, too, of course, were felt keenly by me.
At his least word I would have stripped myself in the silken palanquin and
presented myself publicly to him for his pleasures.
Soon the procession began to wend its way back to the palace. One incident,
perhaps worthy of note, occurred. A man rushed forth, angrily, from the crowd,
to the very side of the palanquin. Drusus Rencius caught him there and flung him
back. I screamed, startled. In a moment, the retinue stopped, the man was held
by the arms, on his knees, at the side of the palanquin.
Swords were held at the man’s neck. “He is unarmed,” said Drusus Rencius.
“Down with Sheila, not Tatrix but Tyranness of Corcyrus!” cried the man, looking
angrily upward.
“Silence!” said Ligurious.
“You shall pay for your crimes and cruelties!” cried the man. “Not forever will
the citizens of Corcyrus brook the outrages of the palace!”
“Treason!” cried Ligurious.
The man was struck at the side of the head by the butt of a spear. I cried out,
in misery.
“This man is a babbling lunatic,” said Ligurious to me.
“Pay him no attention, my Tatrix.”
The fellow, his head bloody, sagged, half unconscious, in the grip of the
soldiers.
“Bind him,” said Ligurious. The man’s arms were wrestled behind his back and
tied there.
He looked up, his bead bloody, from his knees.
“Who are you?” I asked.
“One who protests the crimes and injustice of Sheila, Tyranness of Corcyrus!” he