Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Erotica
I surveyed Corcyrus. In the Gorean world, and I sometimes still had difficulty
coping with this comprehension, female slavery was permitted. How horrifying!
Yet something deeply within me, undeniably, was profoundly stirred and excited
by this comprehension. This stirring within me troubled me. It did not seem to
be a response which I had been taught.
“There is the palace,” said Drusus Rencius, pointing.
“I see,” I said.
Given the sovereignty of males in nature, general among the mammals and
universal among the primates, it was natural enough, I supposed, that in a
civilization congenial to nature, rather than in one opposed to it, that an
institution such as female slavery might exist. This might be regarded as the
civilized expression of the biological relationship, a recognition of that
relationship, and perhaps an enhancement, riefinement and celebration of it,
and, within the context of custom and law, of course, a clarification and
consolidation of it. But why, I asked myself, irritatedly, should a civilization
be congenial to nature? Is it not far better, I asked my self, for a
civilization to contradict and frustrate nature; is it not far better for it to
deny and subvert nature; is it not far better for it to blur natural
distinctions and CODfUse identities; is it not far better for it, ignoring human
happiness and fulfillment, to produce anxiety, guilt, frustration, misery and
pain?
“There is the theater of Kleitos,” said Drusus Rencius, “the library, the
stadium.”
“Yes,” I said.
But whatever might be the truth about such matters, or the optimum ways of
viewing them, female slavery, on Gor, was a fact. There were, as I had long ago
learned, slaves here. I looked out, over the city. In the city, within these
very walls, there were women, perhaps not much different from myself, in
collars, who were literally held in categorical, uncompromised bondage. I had
seen several of them, in their distinctive garb, in their collars. I had even
seen one who, naked and in her collar, had been locked in an iron belt. Such
women were owned, literally owned, with all that that might mean.
“There, where you see the trees,” said Drusus Rencius, “is the garden of
Antisthenes.”
“How many slave girls do you suppose there are in Corcyrus?” I asked, as though
idly.
do not know,” he said. “Probably several hundred. We do not count them.”
“Do such women seem happy?” I asked.
“As they are only slaves,” said Drusus Rencius, “their feelings and happiness
are unimportant.”
Of course,” I said. Men arie such brutest How helpless are the slavesl
“There, where you see the trees,” said Drusus Rencius, again, “is the garden of
Antisthenes.”
“Yes,” I said. We had visited it twice. It was there, on our second visit, that
I had first tried to entice Drusus Rencius to kiss me. The second time had been
after we had witnessed the fencing matches. I had been rejected both times. I
wondered if I would have been rejected had I been a collared slave. To be sure,
he might have made ‘me whimper and beg for his kiss.
I rejected an impulse to kneel before Drusus Rencius. How I hated himl
6
The Sirik
“There are places you have not taken me in Corcyrus,” I reminded him.
“Perhaps,” he granted me.
“There was a place two days ago,” I said, “which we passed in the afternoon.”
“Surely you heard the music which was coming from within?” he asked.
“Yes,” I said. It would not be easy to forget that music, so melodious, so
exciting and sensual.
“A girl was dancing within,” he said. “It was a paga tavern.”
“You did not let me enter,” I said.
“Such girls often dance in little more than jewels, or chains,” he said. “It is
better, I think, too, that free women not see how they look at men and bow they
move before them.”
“I see,” I said. “And bow do men find such women?”
“It is in the best interests of the woman,” said be, “that the men find her
pleasing, very pleasing.”
see,” I said, shuddering. I wondered if I could be pleasing to a man in that
way, dancing before him, and then, later, if he had paid my owner my price, in
an alcove. Most girls in such a place, I had heard from Susan, but generally not
the dancers, came merely with the price of the drink itself. I supposed that if
one were a dancer, and was then serving in an alcove, an additional price having
been paid for one’s use, one would have to strive to be particularly good.
Gorean men, I was sure, would see to it that they got their money’s worth.
“Sometimes I feel sorry for slaves, mere slaves,” I said.
“Do not,” lie said.
“Why not?” I asked.
“As you suggest,” he said, “they are merely slaves.”
“Of course,” I said, bitterly.
“Does Lady Sheila identify with slaves?” be asked.
“No,” I said. “Of course nott”
“Good,” lie said.
“Why is it good?” I asked.
“It is said,” he said, “that she who identifies with slaves wants the collar on
her own neck.”
“No!” I cried.
“It is only a saying,” he said. “Another such saying is that she who identifies
with slaves is a slave.”
“Absurd!” I said.
“Doubtless,” lie said.
“But if I were a slave,” I said, poutingly, “I suppose I would have to obey. I
would have to do what I was told.” I stood quite close to him. I was quite small
compared to him.
His size and masculinity made me feel weak.
“Yes,” he said, looking down into my eyes. “In such circurnstances, you would
have to obey. You would have to do what you were told.”
I turned away from him, suddenly, frightened, and looked again out over the
wall, toward the fields. The tarns, now, were again on my right.
“It is fortunate that I am not a slave,” I laughed.
“Yes,” he said.
“Soldiers, too, are to obey, are they not?” I asked.
“Lady?” he asked.
“Hereafter,” I said, “when I wish to go somewhere, or do something, I shall
expect you to respect my wishes.”
“If Lady Sheila is dissatisfied with my services,” he said, “she need only call
this to the attention of Ligurious, first minister of Corcyrus. A replacement,
perhaps one more pleasing to her, may then be assigned.”
“N”ile you are assigned as my guard,” I said, “you will obey me. I shall decide
if, or when, you are relieved of your duties, or even if you are to be
discharged entirely from the service of Corcyrus.”
“Yes, Tatrix,” be said.
“Your services are not entirely displeasing to me,” I said, “but it is my
intention to see that they are improved. I am Tatrix of Corcyrus.”
“Yes, Tatrix,” he said.
“Should I wish to enter a paga tavern, for example,” I said, you will accompany
me.”
“In most paga taverns,” he said, “free women are not permitted. In some they
are.”
“I see,” I said. To force an entry to such a place, I then understood, might
necessitate an altercation, one perhaps ensuing in the exposure of my identity
as the Tatrix. A common free woman, for example, might simply be forbidden to
cross certain thresholds.
“Too,” he said, “even if commanded, I could not knowingly lead you into danger,
for example, into certain sections of the city at night. It is my duty to
protect the Tatrix, not to place her in jeopardy.”
“You are an excellent guard, Drusus,” I said. “You are right, of course.”
“I could take you to a tavern in which families are served,” he said.
“It was not such a tavern I had in mind,” I said.
“Oh,” he said.
“Slaves can enter taverns, can they not?” I asked.
“If on an errand, or in the company of, a free person,” he said.
“There seems little concern for their sensibilities,” I observed.
“Sometimes,” said he, “they are even taken to such places by their masters, that
they may see the paga slaves, and the dancers, and thus learn from them how to
serve even more deliciously and lasciviously in the privacy of their own
quarters.”
“What if I were clothed as a slave?” I asked.
“It is unthinkable!” he said.
I was pleased that this thought, obviously, had touched a nerve in him. I
wondered if he had speculated, privately, on what I might look like clad as a
slave, or perhaps, in chains, not clad at all. Many men had probably wondered
what I looked like, naked. I had always been rather jealous, rather privat~,
about my body, though. I had never had a master who might simply order me to
strip. I had been seen naked, of course, by the men in my apartment, when they
bad removed the towel from me. I remembered how casually and efficiently they
had handled me, how I had been injected with the contents of the syringe, how I
had been secured with leather straps, helpless aqd gagged, in the heavy metal
box, with air holes.
“Too,” he said, “in so public a place you might, unveiled as is a slave, be
recognized. Your resemblance to the Tatrix., at least, Would surely be noted.”
“You are right again, of course,” I said. He was.
He was silent.
“Drusus,” I said.
“Yes,” said be.
“I would like to see a slaver’s house, inside. I would like to see the ‘pens.”’
“Such are not fit for the sensibilities of a free woman,” he said.
“I would like to see them,” I said. “That would not be dangerous, would it?”
“No,” he admitted, reluctantly. Such places, I gathered, might be among the
-safest on Gor. I could scarcely conjecture the effectiveness of the security
that might be practiced within them, how helplessly the slaves might be
confined.
Too, a free person on Gor is almost never in any danger from a slave unless it
be a guard slave, and he is attacking its master. In some cities a slave can be
slain for so much as touching a weapon. Insurbordination, slaves are quickly
taught, is not -acceptable, in any way, to the Gorean master.
“Then,” I said, triumphantly, “I shall expect you to arrange a tour.”
“Are there any particular pens of interest to Lady Sheila?” he asked.
“The choice,” I told him, airily, “may be yours.”
“Did you merely wish to see girls in the grated ts, or chained in their kennels,
or at their rings,” he asked, or did you wish, perhaps, to gain also an idea of
what goes on in such a house?”
“What do you mean?” I asked.
“How, for example,” he said, “girls might be trained.”
“That might be interesting,” I said, as though considering it, trying to keep
the excitement out of my voice. The thought of women being trained, actually
trained, as Susan might have been trained, almost made me faint with excitement.
I wondered if I might train well. I supposed I might be punished if I did not.
Under such conditions I suspected I would train quite well. I would do my best
to be a diligent and apt pupil.
“Your presence, of course,” he said, “as you may be aware, may inhibit the
slaves.”
“You are an intelligent man,” I said. “Perhaps you can figure out a way to
prevent that.”
“It might be possible,” he said, “in the privacy of the house, where few would
know you.”
“What do you have in mind?” I asked.
“Do you have pretty legs?” he asked.
“Yesl” I said. I thought I had very pretty legs.
“It might be possible,” he mused.
“Tomorrowl” I said.
“So soon?” he asked.
“Yes,” I said.
“Why should you wish to see such a place?” be asked. “Why should it be of
interest to you?”
“I am merely curious,” I said, tossing my head.
“Tomorrow?” he asked.
“Yes,” I said.
“I shall attempt to make the arrangements,” he said.
“Do so,” I said. “I shall be totally cooperative.” I then heard again that small
sound, as of metal, from within his cloak.
“Why did you wait so long to bring me to the height of the wall?” I asked. That
small sound of metal had reminded me of his reticence with respect to its
origin. That had puzzled me. Too, I recalled his earlier nervousness, though now
that had seemed to pass. Too, I had not understood why he had brought me to this
particular place on the wall. Its proximity to those fearful tarns, only feet
away, had been unsettling.
He shrugged. Too suddenly, it bad seemed, after earlier demurrings, he had
brought me to the wall. It had almost been as though he had decided on some
action. His nervousness, too, had seemed uncharacteristic. What was there here,
other than the tarns, which need not be closely approached, to be nervous about?
“You seem strange today, Drusus Rencius,” I said. “You seem less communicative
than usual. There are many things here I do not understand. I do not know why
you hesitated so long to bring me here. It is a lovely view. Then why would you
have so suddenly, so belatedly, have found my suggestion agreeable? Had
something happened to make you change your mind? Why, too, earlier, did you seem
so distracted, as though your thoughts were elsewhere? Too, of all these places
on the wall, why did you bring me here, so close to those terrible birds. They
frighten me.”
arn a. poor guard, Lady Sheila,” he said. “Too, I am poor company this day.
Forgive me. Worse, I fear I am a poor soldier.”
“Why should you say that?” I asked. That genuinely puzzled me.