Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure
womanhood.”
“Lady Claudia,” I said, “had already begun to learn it.”
“Like those women on the landing,” said a fellow beside us.
“Yes,” I said.
The Cosians there must have taken at least four hundred women on the landing. At
least two hundred of these were still there. Many were pushed up against the
wall, in some groups facing it, in others with their backs to it. I had little
doubt that the delicious loot even now was learning masculine domination. On the
landing many were kneeling, or bellying. There was much licking and kissing.
More than one had been put in a display position, and forced to hold it. I saw
one girl cuffed, and another, one who had perhaps been slow to obey, lashed with
a strap. Swiftly then, and eagerly, did she begin to lick an kiss her captor
about the feet and ankles. Some were still being tied and tagged. Others were
being lined up, their hands tied behind their backs to form coffles, ropes being
put on their necks. Some, among these many others, were serving even now on the
landing, being put to use by impatient masters. We could see their squirming
bodies, their subdued, thrashing limbs, hear their cried, cries with which they
responded to, and registered and recorded, their ravishments, cries mostly, at
this point, of protest and lamentation, but, too, in instances, of astonishment
and wonder, and sometimes, even so soon, of sudden, frightened acquiescence,
(pg.326) of eager acceptance, of grateful yieldings, dreams coming true in
thongs.
“Yes, too,” he said, “many claim, interestingly, to have seen the same female,
she who was supposedly impaled, whoever she was, later on the wall’s walkway,
and later, too, with the women and children.”
“Surely that seems unlikely,” I said.
I noted one girl on the landing. From the way she held her hands behind her back
I could tell that she was in thumb cuffs. These are handy devices. They are
light and take up little space in a warrior’s pack. I myself, thinking sometimes
that thumb cuffs are perhaps a bit cruel, generally prefer, if slave bracelets
are not available, a simple thong or a short length of binding fiber. A woman,
of course, may be bound in a large variety of ways and with a large variety of
materials. For example, one might use strips, cut and rolled, from her own
clothing, particularly as one will probably be removing the garb from her
anyway. If she is naked, she might even be bound with short lengths of her own
hair. two or three horts of hair suffice to tie her thumbs behind her back, and
another two or three will suffice to tie he two large toes together.
I might mention two possible reservations pertaining to thumb cuffs. First, many
feel that they are must less secure than, say, slave bracelets, because of the
diverse ratios involved, of wrist to hand, and of upper thumb to the thumb
joint, at their location points. To compensate for this, of course, one can make
the thumb cuffs tighter, but this produces greater discomfit in the wearer. It
is harder for her to attend to her lessons, naturally, if she is in pain. I
generally feel that pain, at least generally, should not be inflicted on a slave
unless it is meaningful. There can, of course, be a point to generalized
discomforts, even of a rather trivial nature.
For example, when a woman has been slept naked on a hardwood floor without
covers, she is likely to come to a much better understanding of the value of a
slave blanket. Second, if the woman is in thumb cuffs, and she becomes
hysterical, it is much easier for her to hurt herself. Accordingly, just as one
would not wish to secure a sleen or a kaiila (pg.327) in a way in which it might
inadvertently hurt or injure itself, so, too, one might not wish to secure a
slave in such a manner. The slave, too, is a domestic animal, and like other
domestic animals, has a specific value. Accordingly, thumb cuffs, if used on a
slave, in my opinion at least, should be used only under close supervision. To
be sure, under such supervision, they might be helpful.
Certainly it is hard for a woman to wear thumb cuffs and not understand her
helplessness. Some masters favor them early in a girl’s training, thinking that
it hastens their progress. Whereas I have occasionally introduced a woman
somewhat rudely into the realities of bondage, I generally prefer to ease then
into it, giving them time to develop and gradually understand their new feelings
and sensations, giving them time to accommodate themselves to their new life and
destiny. Accordingly, thought I might put a girl into thumb cuffs for an Ahn or
so, perhaps early in her training, perhaps in the process of informing her as to
the nature of various bonds, their textures, and such, I generally do not use
them. I think of them, like close chains, more as a punishment than a restraint.
That she knows they exist, and could be put on her, by my will, like close
chains, in itself has its salutary effect on her. And what seems to me generally
sufficient.
The major point of the restraint is to restrain, not hurt. Indeed, pain can
interfere with many of the diverse subsidiary values of restraints, physical and
psychological. It can be distractive. Pain is a bit like the whip. The slave is
subject to the whip, and truly subject to it, but this does now mean that she is
necessarily whipped; that she could be whipped, and will be whipped, if she is
not pleasing, is what is important, not that she need be whipped. Why should one
beat a pleasing slave? To be sure, there are no bargains, contracts or
arrangements in these matters, and the slave may be beaten whenever the master
pleases, with or without a reason. She is, after all, a slave. Similarly, along
these lines, to be perfectly honest, I have upon occasion used thumb cuffs on
females, when it has seemed to me there was a point of doing so, or when it
pleased me to do so.
“She was naked, hooded, and thonged, and on a leash, in the keeping of one or
another free person,” he said.
(pg.328) “That sounds like a slave,” I said.
“Yes, it does,” he said.
We heard the small boats behind us, drawing up, near the pilings beneath the
walkway.
“It is my supposition,” he said, “that no female was impaled.”
“That is an interesting supposition,” I granted him.
“If it is true,” he said, “Lady Claudia, whom I suspect is somewhere about,
probably in the rags of Lady Publia, is still entitled to look forward to her
impalement.”
I saw that the woman in thumb cuffs was now on her knees on the landing, and
that her head was pushed down to the stone. The cord from her nose ring was
lying beside her head on the stone. She was then put to use. I saw her wrists
lifting, her fingers, beside her confined thumbs, jerking, opening and closing.
Then she was pulled to her feet by the cord on the nose ring and hurrying after
her master.
“Do you not think so?” he asked.
“They are marshaling at the end of the walkway,” I said.
I heard axes behind us, attacking the pilings of the walkway.
“Do you not think so?” he asked.
“You are certainly a zealous fellow,” I said. “I have seldom encountered so
single-minded a devotion to duty.”
“Obviously, if you did not impale her,” he said, “you did not wish her impaled,
and you have done service to Ar’s Station, whatever may be your own Home Stone.
That is one reason I am beside you now, that I may guiltlessly evade, if
possible, my very unpleasant duty, but clear duty, in that matter.”
“I do not understand,” I said. “I am sorry.”
“But if we should survive,” he said, “you understand that we must attempt to
apprehend the prisoner and see that the sentence is carried out upon her, even
if it means only weights on her ankles and a sharpened pole on a pier.”
“The Cosians!” I cried.
Then, with shield and sword, with the ringing of metal, (pg. 329) with shouts,
with cries of war, the six of us, I, Marsias, the grizzled fellow, and the three
who had come originally to the cell, struck by charging Cosians, almost swept
back, struggled to hold the walkway.
19
The Walkway
(pg.330) It was on the long walkway leading out to the piers that we fought.
Behind us, some fifteen yards back, the walkway was afire.
Portions of it, hewn and chopped from the small boats, sank into the water. Most
of these boats were of Ar’s Station, those which had been out at the piers.
Other boats trying to flank our position, for using their crossbows, were met
and turned back by those of Ar’s Station. Indeed, the walkway for a dozen yards,
closer to the landing, was covered by these boars, until the camp commander sent
his own crossbowmen out on the walkway, to keep them their distance. Fourteen
times did the Cosians assault us. In the fifth assault Marsias was grievously
wounded, and one other, one who had come originally to the cell. At that time
the walkway was still intact, though flaming, behind us, and they could be
withdrawn through the fire and smoke to the piers. Their places were taken, to
my amazement, by other stout fellows of Ar’s Station. Behind us it seemed men
vied to join us. Then, in the seventh assault, two others of our original band,
the other two who had come originally to the cell, were forced back, bleeding,
unable to stand. They were lowered by fishermen into waiting small boats. From
these two others climbed to the walkway, to take their place. Of the original
band this left only myself and the grizzled fellow.
(pg.331) Fins slid through the water circling the boats, and back and forth
beneath the walkway, among the pilings. Sometimes, converging, they suddenly
knifed toward a splash in the water, as one fellow or another lost his footing,
or fell, bloodied, from the walkway. There were screams from the water and
extended hands, and wild eyes. Then there would be churning froths, and blood
swirling up, and reachings out, graspings with nothing to grasp, and then we
would see bodies drawn under the water. Sometimes we could see them being drawn
under the walkway, being taken into its shadows. Sometimes we could see, too,
less easily, the long dark shapes, a yard or so beneath the water, conducting
them, and the movements of the powerful, vertical tails. Often the fish fought
for their prey, sometimes under the walkway itself. We could sometimes feel the
movements of their bodies against the pilings beneath us. I saw one fellow of
Ar’s Station, standing in a small boat, scream with hatred and strike down at
one of the shapes with a pike. I think he cut its back. I saw another fellow, a
fellow of Cos, spend a quarrel on a fish that was scouting his boat. It
descended rapidly, as though stung, the metal fins of the quarrel disappearing
under the water with the dorsal fin.
In between the assaults we gasped for breath and crouched behind our shields,
resting their rims on the walkway. To lift such a device for Ehn at a time, and
receive blow after blow upon it, bearing up under them, in time makes the arm
desperately tired and sore. It is little wonder warriors often train with
weighted shields. In the early Ahn of battle a common cause of causalities,
particularly with young warriors, is recklessness, and the failure to use the
shield properly to protect oneself. In the late Ahn of a battle, however, an
even more common cause of causalities, interestingly enough, is the simple
inability to lift, control and maneuver the shield. There is a great temptation
to lower it, to ease the pain of the screaming muscles. This compounds, of
course, with arm weariness, the result of wielding the sword, and the slowing of
reflexes and reaction time, resulting from general fatigue.
The same problems, of course, normally afflict one’s enemy. When one understands
these factors, and that battles often last several hours, and are sometimes
renewed for two or three days, it is easier to understand certain things which
(pg.332) might otherwise seem anomalous in this form of warfare, for example,
the respites between assaults, the fluctuations of lines, the occasional,
apparently incredible truces which can occur by mutual consent here and there in
the pockets of a battle, men standing about, looking at one another, sometimes
even conversing, and the great importance of the judicious distribution of, and
application of, reserves.
For those who are interested in such matters, it might be pointed out that
factors such as these seem to be playing their part in the gradual replacement
of the phalanx with the square in Gorean warfare. It is not simply that the
squares are more tactically flexible, being capable of functioning on broken
terrain, and such, but also that they facilitate substitutions in the front
lines, permitting the swift injection of fresh troops at crucial points. The
success of many generals, in my opinion, is largely a function of their
intelligent use of reserves.
Deitrich of Tarnburg, for example, though one often thinks of him in terms of
innovations such as the oblique advance and the use of siege equipment in the
field, is also, in my opinion, based on my studies of his campaigns, for