Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure
“Surely,” said Aemilianus. “I, you, the others, all of us, we have all be
pronounced renegades.”
“Should Ar not be warned?” he asked.
“And what do you think we, we who were abandoned by Ar, we whom she holds in
dishonor and contempt, we whose Home Stone she spits upon, we whom she has
pronounced renegades owe to her-—now?”
“We own her nothing,” said Marcus, bitterly. “But I would still see her warned.”
“And so, too, would I,” said Aemilianus, smiling. “So, too, would I.”
“But of what is she to be warned?” he asked.
“And to whom would you speak?” I asked.
“We do not know for certain what is going to happen,” said Aemilianus. “At the
moment we have little but our suspicions, our fears.”
“Ar will destroy the Cosians in the north, and then destroy them in the south,”
said Marcus.
“Quite possibly,” said Aemilianus.
“Then there is nothing to do,” he said, slowly.
“Not now,” said Aemilianus.
We were now within the harbor at Port Cos. The piers were some three hundred
yards away, jammed with people. Music came from them. Pennons waved. The pharos
on its promontory was behind us now, to port, something like a pasang away. The
flotilla, entering the harbor, with its flags and streamers, would be a splendid
sight. Already, too, from the piers, it would be able to be seen that the two
slaves hung (pg.426) from the outjutting display beams on either side of the
concave bow of the Tais.
“Do not concern yourself now about such matters,” said Aemilianus to the young
warrior. “Rejoice now. We have come safe to Port Cos.”
The slave whip snapped again, loudly, sharply, unmistakable in its definition
and authority. The two girls cried out again, startled. Publia jerked in her
harness as though she might have been struck, but it had not touched her.
Claudia, too, winced, but, too, it had not touched her.
“Publia, Claudia!” said the keeper.
“Yes, Master!” said Publia.
“Yes, Master!” said Claudia.
“You, Publia,” he said, “prepared well to surrender yourself to Cosians.”
“Yes, Master,” she wept.
“You, Claudia,” he said, “were a traitress to your city.”
“Yes, Master,” she wept.
“And you are not both slaves,” he said.
“Yes, Master!” they said.
“And so,” he said, “you will enter Port Cos as the slaves, and sluts, you are.”
“Master?” asked Publia.
“The movements of your hips, and your squirmings and glances,” he said, “will
leave no doubt as to the fittingness of your bondage.”
“Master!” wept Publia, in protest.
“Please, no, Master!” called Claudia.
“Your movements for the most part,” said the keeper, “will be slow and sensuous,
but terribly meaningful, sexually. These may be mixed upon occasion with sudden,
perhaps surprising, movements, almost spasmodic, or spasmodic, in nature. I
trust that you understand these things. If there is difficulty in the matter it
may perhaps be clarified by the whip.”
Publia threw back her head and wept, in the harness.
“You, Publia, first,” he said. He then required of her a variety of forward and
backward movements of the lower belly, and then lateral movements of the hips.
These things ranged, in their varieties, from almost imperceptible extensions
and shadings, to sharp, forward thrusts, such as bumps (pg.427) and buckings,
and from scarcely detectible lateral movements, to tantalizing or abrupt
movements, to rhythmical swayings. He had Claudia, too, do these things. “Now,”
said he, “consider transitions among such movements.” My hands clenched on the
rail. The slaves were beautiful. “Now,” said he, “slow, rotatory movements of
the hips, slow, agonizingly slow, grinding movements!” I thought that many on
the piers might have to hurry their own girls home, if they could make it that
far. I was almost in pain.
“Well done, girls,” said the keeper. “And do not forget the beauty of your
breasts, and your squirmings, your glances and smiles.”
Publia cried out in misery.
We were now something like a hundred yards from the piers. Two of the fellows on
the bow deck already had the forward lines in hand.
“It has been decided, slaves,” said the keeper to them, “hat you will be sold at
auction. In order, however, that you come into the keeping of Cosians,
attendance at the auction, save by sales personnel, will be limited to Cosians.
After a Cosian buys you, of course, he can do with you what he wants. We are now
nearing the pier. I will point out various Cosians in the crowd, for there will
be several. They are recognizable by their habiliments. You will then direct
your glances and your movements particularly to them. Be pretty. Arouse interest
in yourselves. We want them sweating blood when they bid for you!”
Aemilianus was already raising his hand to the crowds. There was much cheering.
“Look!” cried a fellow on the dock, pointing to the slaves.
“Yes!” said a man. “Yes!” cried another.
“Sensuous sluts!” laughed a man.
Claudia cried out with misery, but did not cease to move.
As so many were waving to us, I, too, with many of the others, at the starboard
rail, waved back.
All seemed a riot of music and color.
“There,” said the keeper, gesturing with his whip, as we drew alongside the
pier. “There is a fellow of Cos! Present yourselves to him! You are female
slaves! Do it! And there is another!”
“I am not such a girl!” suddenly cried Claudia.
(pg.428) Then she threw back her head and shrieked, as the lash, like lightning
and fire, struck about her body.
She dangled and jerked in the harness, sobbing, though she had been struck but
once.
“I am such a girl!” cried Publia, fervently, seeing the keeper turn toward her.
“I am such a girl!”
“If she is recalcitrant, or not pleasing,” cried slave girls on the pier,
“strike her! Strike her! Punish her! Punish her! Punish her severely!”
Slave girls, kept under strict discipline themselves, they wanted it imposed on
others with the same authority, exactness and perfection that it was imposed
upon them. They were deeply concerned that Claudia not be permitted to get away
with anything, no more than they. Was she, too, not a slave girl? Thus,
interestingly, it is often slave girls themselves who are most zealous to see
that masters are strict with their slaves.’’
The keeper turned back toward Claudia.
“I, too, am such a girl!” she cried out, wildly, swinging in the harness.
Clearly she did not wish another blow from the disciplinary instrument. Yet,
too, I think that the matter was far deeper than that, and this became clear but
an instant later. The chain-and-leather harness, incidentally, is muchly open.
That is what one would expect, considering its display purposes. On the other
hand, a consequence of this openness, also, of course, is that it affords
little, or no, protection, from the slave whip. Claudia swung in the harness to
face me. Our eyes met. “Yes!” she cried. “Yes! I am such a girl!”
“You are,” I assured her.
“Yes!” she wept. “Yes!”
I saw then that her small rebellion had been no more than a foolish sop to her
pride, one perhaps she thought in order, I wondered if she had uttered her silly
noise only because I was there, who had known her when she was a mere free
woman. I hoped not. But in any case, whether because of her own pride, in
itself, or her concern that I who had known her as a free woman was about, or
because of the strangers in the crowd, or the other slave girls, or whatever,
how woefully out of place was the absurd utterance in her new reality! But then
I saw in her eyes, she half laughing, half crying, that whatever had been her
motivation, whether some or all of (pg.429) the things I had wondered about, or
even others, that she had only wanted the reassurance of the whip, the
reassurance of the inflexibility of the will of men, that she must now obey, and
was truly a slave. Moving as she did, and being what she was, a slave, was the
deepest and most wonderful thing in her being, and she reveled in it, and loved
it! She had wanted only the clear understanding that she must now surrender to
it, that she was now truly a slave. She was elated in the harness.
“There!” said the keeper, pointing out a fellow with the coiled whip.
She swung about. “Am I pretty, Master?” she cried. “Will you bid upon me?”
“Bid upon me!: cried Publia to him. “I need a collar and a man!”
“There is another,” said the keeper.
“Perhaps it will be you who will own me?” called Claudia to him.
The forward lines were cast to fellows on the pier. Ina moment they were made
fast to mooring cleats.
There was much cheering, and waving, and calling out, between the pier and the
railing. Drums and pipes on board the Tais sounded. A plank was being run out to
the pier. The following ships in the flotilla, scarcely less resplendent than
the Tais herself would, in moments, in turn, take their own berths.
“What manner of slaves are those?” called a fellow on the pier, apparently, by
his garb, a Cosian, to the keeper on the bow deck. “Are they common slaves?”
“They are as common as you will have them!” shouted back the keeper.
“They are not branded, are they?” asked the fellow. “They are not collared!”
“Such details will be soon attended to,” laughed the keeper.
I did not doubt it. Goreans are efficient about such matters. For an instant
Publia, startled, and Claudia, frightened, stopped writhing in the harnesses. It
was, after all, their own branding and collaring of which the men were speaking!
“Move,” growled the keeper.
Then again they moved, frightened, obedient slave girls.
There was laughter from the pier.
(pg.430) “Wriggles!” called out a slave girl to them.
“Squirm! Squirm, Kajirae!” called out another.
“Do you not know how to squirm?” laughed another girl.
“How is it that these two are at the prow?” called another fellow.
“They squirm well,” said a man.
“Writhe—writhe—more slowly,” said the keeper to them.’
“Aiii!” cried a man.
“How is it that these two are at the prow?” called the fellow again.
“Stop,” said the keeper to the two slaves. Motionless were they then, their arms
high, their bodies beautifully elongated, stretched out, suspended from the
outjutting beams in the shackles and harness.
“Beautiful!” cried a man.
The keeper then, with his coiled whip, in two expansive gestures, one to port,
one to starboard, indicated, and called attention to, the lineaments of the
figures of the two lovely slaves. “Can you not guess?” he asked the fellow who
had asked the question.
“Yes!” said the fellow.
“Are they not worthy to be at the prow?” asked the keeper.
“They are!” called out more than one man. And they were worthy not only because
of the beauty of their figures, so well displayed, but because of their facial
beauty as well.
I saw a slave girl in her skimpy tunic, scarcely a rag on her, nuzzling a
fellow, rubbing her face and head against his left shoulder. She was trying to
distract him from the suspended slaves. She was urging a consideration of her
own not inconsiderable charms upon his attention.
“But perhaps, too, there is another reason!” hinted the keeper.
“Oh?” asked his questioner.
“This one was call ‘Publia,’” said the keeper, “and this one ‘Claudia.’” As he
said these names, he reached out, and, in turn, Publia first, flicked each of
them with the whip. At this touch, even as light and playful as it was, each of
them recoiled in dread. Both had now felt the whip at one time or another,
indeed, Claudia only a moment ago. There was more laughter. “They were both free
women of Ar’s Station,” (pg.431) continued the keeper. “Publia dressed in such a
way that her caste, that of the Merchants, would be concealed.”
A Cosian merchant in the crowd cried out in anger.
“And that none would know she was wealthy!” said the keeper.
“She is not wealthy now!” cried a man.
“Let her now serve the wealthy!” called out a well-dressed fellow.
“Or serve a master of low caste,” called out a fellow in the garb of the metal
workers, “with the same or greater perfections than would be required of her in
a high house!” I smiled. A great deal, indeed, is expected in low-caste
domiciles of slaves who were formerly of high caste. To be sure, they no longer
have caste then, of any sort. Even the lowest of castes is then undreamt-of
heights above them, for in such houses they are only animals.
“She was determined to survive the fall of Ar’s Station, whatever might prove to
be the fate of her sisters in the city,” said the keeper.
There were cries of anger.
“Thus, by such means as provocative dress and habiliments, baring even her
calves, hoping then to be taken for a lowly, beautiful, meaningless maid, by
even refusing to cut her hair on behalf of the city’s needs, an act by means of
which she hoped to appear more attractive to strong men, more attractive than
might her sheared sisters, and a lack which, incidentally, as you can see, has
been made up upon her, and by carrying gold with her, not shared with her