Book Read Free

Swordsmen of Gor cog[oc-29

Page 10

by John Norman


  “That is common with female slaves,” I said.

  “You do not understand!” she hissed.

  “What do I not understand?” I asked.

  “Nothing, nothing,” she said, sullenly.

  “Do not fear,” I said. “With proper tools the collar may be easily removed. Any metal worker, with the proper tools, could manage the business without difficulty.”

  “Beast!” she said.

  “How does it feel to be collared, truly collared?” I asked.

  “I hate you!” she said.

  “Now that you are truly collared,” I said, “I think certain other adjustments would be in order.”

  “Stop!” she said.

  But, tied, as she was, she could not deter my work, and I carefully, without being extreme, or excessive, in the matter, shortened the skirt of her tunic in such a way that it would be more typical in length for that of a Gorean slave girl.

  “Beast, monster!” she hissed.

  “I do not think Pertinax will mind,” I said. “And if he wishes to shorten it further, to make it truly ‘slave short,’ or ‘slave delightful,’ he is free to do so.”

  “Do you not understand!” she exclaimed. “If someone sees me like this, they will take me for a slave!”

  “You are a slave, are you not?” I asked.

  “- Yes, yes,” she whispered.

  “And I did not slit the skirt at the left thigh,” I said, “so Goreans will assume it is branded. If it were discerned that it lacked the brand, they would doubtless soon see that the oversight, one scarcely pardonable, was remedied.”

  In her distress I do not think she even understood what I was saying.

  I then fastened my hands at the neckline of the tunic.

  “No,” she said. “No!”

  “Why not?” I asked.

  “I am not a slave!” she said. “I am a free woman!”

  “Perhaps you are a slave and do not even know you are a slave,” I said.

  “No, no!” she said. “I am free, free!”

  I did not remove my hands from the neckline of the tunic.

  “Speak!” I said.

  “I was hired!” she said.

  “You and Pertinax,” I said.

  “Yes!” she said.

  “To whom are you in fee?” I inquired.

  “Men,” she said, “anonymous. I was approached on Earth, and it was I who recruited he whom you know as Pertinax.”

  “Your Gorean is acceptable,” I said.

  “We were given weeks of intensive training on Earth,” she said, “and more on Gor.”

  “Continue,” I said.

  “I was given a retainer of one hundred thousand dollars,” she said, “and so, too, was Pertinax, and we are to receive one million dollars each at the accomplishment of our mission.”

  “The deposit was seemingly made to a given bank, one selectively chosen, and you were furnished with what appeared to be documentation of this,” I said. “But I am confident the money was never in actuality deposited.”

  She regarded me, wildly.

  “To be sure,” I said, “you were doubtless given funds, which led you to believe the business was in earnest.”

  “More than five thousand dollars,” she said.

  “I see,” I said.

  “I shall collect the rest when I am returned to Earth,” she said.

  “Of course,” I said.

  “I shall return to Earth shall I not?” she said.

  “You are on Gor, girl,” I said, “and on Gor you will remain.”

  “No,” she said. “No!”

  “And there will be others,” I said, “as greedy, and foolish, as you.”

  Wide were her eyes.

  “You are, doubtless unknowingly, a minion of a life form known as Kurii,” I said. “Kurii, however one views them, have a sense of honor, a sense of what is appropriate, of what is proper. I assure you they have little respect for traitresses.”

  “I do not believe you!” she said.

  “As you wish,” I said.

  “What would be my fate?” she asked.

  “You are nicely faced, and figured,” I said.

  “No!” she said.

  “It would amuse Kurii,” I said, “that you would sell for a handful of coins.”

  “You are trying to frighten me,” she said.

  “You were not to be trusted,” I said. “Why should you expect that others were to be trusted?”

  “I will not be frightened!” she insisted.

  “When the iron is put to your thigh,” I said, “you will know what you are.”

  “No!” she said.

  “Then you will finally be worth something. Someone will get some good out of you.”

  “No!” she said.

  “Continue to improve your Gorean,” I said. “You may be well whipped for errors.”

  “Let me go!” she said.

  “But we have not finished our chat,” I said.

  “Release me,” she said. “What if someone should see me as I am?”

  “What is your role here?” I asked.

  “Surely you do not expect me to speak,” she said.

  “As you wish,” I said.

  My hands tightened at the neckline of her garment.

  “Do not!” she said. “You are of the warriors. You have codes. I am free, a free woman! I am not to be touched! I am to be treated with respect and dignity! I am not a slave! I am a free woman!”

  I removed my hands from her garment, and stepped back.

  “Now untie me,” she said.

  I left her bound.

  She did have nice legs. Such women put a strain on the codes.

  “I think,” I said, “that you are indeed a free woman, but, you must remember, you are one of Earth, not Gor. There is a considerable difference. For example, you have no Home Stone.”

  “What is a Home Stone?” she said.

  “Surely you have heard of them,” I said.

  “Yes,” she said, “but I do not understand them.”

  “I am not surprised,” I said.

  She pulled at the bonds.

  “Do not look at me like that!” she said.

  “Do you not know how appealing to a man is the sight of a bound woman?” I asked. “Masters not unoften bind their slaves and order them to squirm. The slave then is well reminded of her dependency and helplessness. And the master, for his part, now knows the slave is wholly his, prostrate at his mercy, and he finds this pleasant, and stimulating. Too, the woman is aroused, as well, and knowing herself helpless, and wholly in the master’s power, is soon beside herself with readiness. This has much to do with dominance/submissive ratios, which are pervasive in nature. Too, much can be accomplished along these lines by merely dressing the woman as one pleases, and seeing to her obedience and service. The master/slave relationship is extensive and complex. It is not all a matter of putting the slave to one’s pleasure, though, to be sure, without that it is nothing.”

  She then stood very still.

  “Yes,” I said. “Women such as you strain the codes.”

  “I am free,” she said. “Free!”

  “Yes,” I said, “you are a free woman, but one of Earth. You do not have the status of a Gorean free woman. Compared to a Gorean free woman, sheltered by her Home Stone, secure within her walls, complacent in the unquestioned arrogance of her station, the women of Earth do not even understand what it is to be free. The Gorean free woman is glorious in her freedom. The free women of Earth are no more than the sort of women that Gorean slavers think nothing of enslaving. They see the women of Earth not as free women, but only as slaves who have not yet been put in their collars.”

  “I am a woman of Earth!” she said.

  “Precisely,” I said.

  “Monster!” she said.

  “But it is true,” I said, “that you are a free woman of Earth, at least as far as those women can be free, and thus that my codes, though the matter is controversial, m
uch depending on interpretations, do suffice to give me pause.”

  “Excellent,” she said. “Now release me.”

  “But you have not yet explained your role here,” I said, “nor that of Pertinax.”

  “Nor is it my intention to do so,” she said.

  “Very well,” I said.

  “Untie me,” she said.

  I turned about, and looked out to sea. I was now sure of it. What had been hitherto no more than a dot on the horizon, perhaps no more than a sea bird resting on the waves, even sleeping, as they do, was now clearly, though still small, and far off, a sail.

  “There is a ship,” I said, shading my eyes.

  “There have been such ships,” she said, straining her eyes, pulling against her bonds, looking outward, toward the horizon.

  “One came in yesterday,” I said, “from which were disembarked, following the surmises of Pertinax, your subordinate, and not master, bandits, brigands, or such.”

  “Untie me! Untie me, swiftly!” she begged.

  I wondered if an agent, or agents, of Priest-Kings might be aboard that vessel, now so far off, now seeming so tiny.

  “Untie me, now!” she cried.

  “As you are a free woman,” I said, “even though one of Earth, I have treated you with some circumspection. In the codes such matters are gray, for it is commonly supposed that a Home Stone would be shared. If you were a slave, of course, whether of Earth or not, the matter would not even come up. Too, as you may not understand, even a Gorean free woman is expected to show a fellow respect, as another free person. If she insults him, belittles him, ridicules him, or treats him in any way which he deems improper or unbecoming, sometimes even to the glance, depending on the fellow, she is considered as having put away the armor of her status, and may be dealt with as the male sees fit. This is particularly the case if there is no shared Home Stone. Other situations are also regarded as ones in which the woman has voluntarily, or inadvertently, divested herself of the social and cultural mantles usually sufficient to protect her freedom and honor, such as walking the high bridges at night, undertaking dangerous expeditions or voyages, traversing lonely areas of a city, entering into a paga tavern, and so on.”

  “There is a ship there!” she said. “I can see it clearly!”

  “Yes,” I said.

  “Can they see us?” she asked, desperately.

  “Perhaps,” I said. “They may have a glass of the Builders.”

  “If they see me here,” she cried, “half naked, bound, collared, what will they do with me?”

  “Put you on a chain, of course,” I said.

  “But I am free!” she said.

  “Perhaps for the better part of an Ahn, or so,” I said.

  “I am free,” she said. “Your codes! Your codes! You must protect me!”

  “My codes do not require that,” I said.

  “You would not leave me here as I am!” she cried.

  “You are mistaken,” I said. “That is precisely what I will do.”

  I then turned away, to withdraw into the forest.

  “Wait!” she begged. “Wait!”

  I turned to face her.

  “I will speak, I will speak!” she cried.

  “As you will,” I said.

  “Untie me!” she cried. “Let us hide! They can see us here. They may have already seen us here.”

  “Possibly,” I said.

  “Untie me!” she begged, wildly.

  “Speak first,” I said.

  “We were brought here, Pertinax and I, by a disk craft, and told to wait for you,” she wept. “We were to encounter you, and show you hospitality, and then conduct you into the forest, to a rendezvous. Pertinax knows the place. He has been there. The trail is marked.”

  “What sort of rendezvous,” I asked, “with whom, and to what purpose?”

  “I know little,” she said, “save that they would enlist your services.”

  “My services are not easily enlisted,” I said.

  “They will have a hold over you,” she said. “A woman.”

  “What woman?” I asked.

  “I do not know!” she cried.

  “I understand little of this,” I said.

  “It has to do with tarns, and a ship, a great ship,” she said.

  “What woman?” I asked. “What woman?”

  “I do not know,” she said.

  I untied her hands and she pulled away from the tree, weeping, and fled back some yards into the forest. There I saw her stop for a moment and tear wildly, hysterically, at her collar. She could not, of course, remove it. It was nicely on her, a typical Gorean collar of the higher latitudes, sturdy, flat, close-fitting. She tried to jerk down the hem of the shortened tunic, on both sides, but it sprang upward again. She then cried out in misery, and disappeared into the trees, presumably to warn Pertinax.

  Presumably he would see her differently now, given the alterations to her tunic. And he would note, too, from its shortening, and the ragged lower edges, that the key was no longer in its place.

  Yes, I thought, he would doubtless see her differently now.

  And doubtless she would be well aware that she would now be being seen differently.

  To be sure, I did not think she had anything to fear from Pertinax. It would be quite different, of course with a Gorean male.

  I then turned to note the ship, now something like a hundred yards off shore.

  It was a round ship, more deeply keeled, more broadly beamed, than the long ship.

  It would not beach.

  A longboat was being put in the water.

  It had four rowers and a helmsman, and one individual forward.

  The individual forward, I supposed, would be he for whom I had been waiting, the agent of Priest-Kings.

  I suspected that Constantina would by now be at the hut, begging, perhaps on her knees, in her desperation, and as she was now clothed, Pertinax to flee.

  To be sure, it mattered little to me that she might observe the arrival of the newcomer.

  Chapter Five

  an old acquaintance is renewed; a new ship arrives, and discharges passengers and cargo; i obtain considerable intelligence, but not enough

  He waded ashore.

  The longboat did not beach.

  “You?” I said.

  “From the time of the Five Ubars, in Port Kar,” he said.

  “Before the ascendancy of the Council of Captains,” I said.

  “It has been a long time,” he said.

  “Do not approach too closely,” I said.

  “I am unarmed,” he said, opening his hands and holding them to the sides. “But others are not.”

  I did not unsheathe my weapon.

  Two of the oarsmen from the longboat were in the water to their waists, and each held a crossbow, with a quarrel readied in the guide.

  The other two oarsmen, oars outboard, and the helmsman, his hand on the tiller, nursed the boat, keeping it, as it was turned, muchly parallel to the shore. It could be easily swung about.

  “Sullius Maximus,” I said.

  “Officer to Chenbar, of Kasra, Ubar of Tyros,” he said.

  “Traitor to Port Kar,” I said. “Mixer of poisons.”

  He bowed, humbly.

  “You recall,” he said, smiling.

  “But you brewed an antidote,” I remarked.

  “Not of my own free will,” he smiled.

  He had been infected with his own toxin, which produced, in time, a broad paralysis, that he might prepare, if time permitted, its remedy. His lord, Chenbar, had not approved of poisoned steel, and I had once spared the Ubar’s life, on the 25th of Se-Kara. The antidote, proven in the case of Sullius Maximus, had been conveyed to Port Kar.

  “I am pleased to see you are looking well,” said Sullius Maximus.

  “How is it that I find you here?” I asked.

  “Surely you know,” he said.

  “Scarcely,” I said.

  “Surely you do not th
ink this is some eccentric coincidence,” he said.

  “No,” I said.

  “You are waiting for the agent of Priest-Kings,” he said.

  I was silent.

  “I am he,” he said.

  “No,” I said.

  “How else would I know of your location?”

  “Kurii know,” I said.

  “Who are Kurii?” he said.

  “You do not know?” I said.

  “No,” he said.

  “How is it that you, an agent of Priest-Kings, know not of Kurii?”

  “To serve our lords, the masters of the Sardar,” he said, “one needs know no more than they deem suitable.”

  “Perhaps they are your lords,” I said. “They are not mine.”

  “Are they not the lords of us all,” he said, “are they not the gods of Gor?”

  “And are the Initiates not their ministers and servitors,” I said.

  “One must allow all castes their vanities,” he said.

  “Doubtless,” I said.

  “I understand,” he said, “that you have labored, now and then, on behalf of Priest-Kings.”

  “Perhaps,” I said.

  “I find their choice of agents strange,” he said. “You are a barbarian, more of a larl than a man. You know little of poetry, and your kaissa is commonplace.”

  “My kaissa is satisfactory,” I said, “for one who is not a Player.”

  “You are not even a caste or city champion,” he said.

  “Are you?” I inquired.

  “Games are for children,” he said.

  “Kaissa is not for children,” I said. Life and death sometimes hung on the outcomes of a kaissa match, and war or peace. Cities had been lost in such matches, and slaves frequently changed hands.

  Too, the game is beautiful.

  Its fascinations, as those of art and music, exercise their spells and raptures.

  “To be sure,” he said, “you do have, I gather, a certain audacious expertise in certain forms of vulgar weaponry.”

  “Less sophisticated and urbane, doubtless,” I said, “than the administrations of poisons.”

  “Do not be bitter,” he said. “All that was long ago, and seasons change.”

  “Seasons, like enmities, and tides, return, do they not?” I asked.

  “I come to you in friendship,” he said, “as partisans in a common cause.”

  “I do not think you are an agent of Priest-Kings,” I said.

 

‹ Prev