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"Where men have failed to take you," she said, "I have succeeded."

Too, their sex and alien origin, being from Earth, gives them an excellent distance from their subordinates.

She pulled the loops of rawhide rope from the ring at her belt, the same ring which held the hook on the whip, and tied one end of the rope about my neck, knotting it tightly.

Yes, I thought, such women would make excellent tools for the Kurii.

"There," she said, "the feared Tarl Cabot is tethered, kneeling on a woman's rope."

I was puzzled only that the Kurii would enlist such obviously feminine, genuinely feminine, even beautiful, women in their cause. Surely they could find more masculine women upon Earth. Why did they not use harder, harsher, more manlike females?

I looked up at her. She jerked the rawhide rope, testing it.

"An interplanetary force," she said, "unknown to the fools of Earth, lays siege to this solar system. Its programs will culminate in conquest. I, participating in this struggle, will find high place in the ranks of the victors."

"Priest-Kings oppose them," I said.

"I understand Priest-Kings are weak," she said. "Do they move other than defensively?" she asked.

"Upon occasion," I said.

Yet it was true, surely, that Priest-Kings were not an aggressive species. It did not seem to me, objectively, that it was unlikely they would eventually be supplanted in the system by a fiercer, more territorial, more aggressive form of life. Kurii, it seemed to me, were well fitted to become the dominant life form in the system.

"I shall be on the winning side," she said.

"The mercenary speaks," I said.

"Yes," she said.

I regarded her. She was slim, blue-eyed, auburn-haired, delicately beautiful and feminine.

"Do you truly think," I asked, "that if the Kurii are victorious you will stand high in the ranks of the victors?"

"Of course," she said.

I smiled to myself. I now knew why such women had been brought to Gor. When they had served their purpose, they would be made slaves.

She jerked the rope. "On your feet, Beast," she said.

I rose to my feet.

I looked down on the beauty. She had been brought to Gor, ultimately, to wear a man's collar.

I determined that it would be mine.

"Come, Beast," she said, leading me leashed from the room. "I will show you our work in the north. Later, as I choose and direct, you will labor for us." She turned and looked at me. "You have opposed us long enough," sue said. "Now you will, in your humble way, contribute, if only by carrying stone and wood, to our cause."

9

I See The Wall; I Am To Be Whipped

"Impressive, is it not?" she asked.

We stood on a high platform, overlooking the wall. It extended to the horizons.

"It is more than seventy pasangs in length," she said. "Two to three hundred men have labored on it for two years."

Beyond the wall there milled thousands of tabuk, for it had been built across the path of their northward migration. They stretched for pasangs to the south, grazing.

On our side of the wall was the compound, with the hall of the commander, the long houses of the guards and hunters, and the roofed, wooden pens of the laborers. There was a cook shack, a commissary, smithy and other ancillary structures. Men moved about their work.

"What are in the storage sheds?" I asked.

"Hides," she said, "thousands, not yet shipped south." "The slaughtering," she said, "takes place largely at the ends of the wall, to prevent animals from taking their way northward."

"It seems many would escape," I said.

"No," she said. "The ends of the wall are curved, to turn the beasts back. When they mill the hunters fall upon them. We kill several hundred a day."

"Can you skin so many?" 1 asked.

"No," she said. "We content ourselves with prime hide. Most of the animals we leave for the larts and sleen, and the jards." The jard is a small scavenger. It flies in large flocks. A flock, like flies, can strip the meat from a tabuk in minutes.

"Even the jards die, gorged with meat," said the man near us on the platform.

"May I present my colleague," said my lovely captor, "Sorgus."

"The hide bandit?" I asked.

"Yes," she said.

The man did not speak to me, nor look at me.

"Such men," she said, "have been useful. No longer are they confined to robbing the hides of honest hunters. We give them harvests beyond the loots which might be reaped from a hundred seasons of thievery."

"But I note." I said, "that higher men aid you as well."

I looked to the other fellow on the platform.

"We meet again," he said.

"It seems so," I agreed. "Perhaps now," I said, "you might succeed in striking me with your dagger."

"Release him," said he to my captor, "that I may with blades, he, too, armed, dispatch him."

"The silly pride of men offends me," said she.

"Free him," said he.

"No," she said. "He is my prisoner. I do not wish for you to kill him."

"It seems," said he to me, "that you will live, if only for an Ahn longer."

"It is you, perhaps," said I, "whose life she thusly prolongs."

He turned away, to look out over the railing on the platform, and out over the high wall, to the thousands of animals, like cattle, beyond.

"Can you truly do your own killing," I asked, "or do you need, as in my house, to enlist the services of a female slave to aid you?" I recalled Vella. She had given him a jacket of mine, that he might use it to give my scent to the sleen. What a traitress she was! I had known she had once served Kurii. I had not known at that time that the pretty little slave, the former secretary on Earth, still licked their claws. She would no longer receive an opportunity to betray me. Death was too good for her. When I returned to Port Kar I would plunge her into a slavery deeper than she would believe possible.

The man, angry, did not respond to me.

"You are not Bertram of Lydius," I said to him. "Who are you?"

"I do not speak to slaves," he said.

My fists clenched in the manacles.

"Did you truly enlist the services of a female slave in his house?" asked my captor.

"I do not wish to speak before him," said the man.

"Do so," she snapped.

I saw him look at her, angrily. I read the look in his eyes. I smiled to myself. I saw that it had been to him that she, when her work was done, had been promised as a slave.

"I am waiting," she said.

"Very well," said he. "It is true that I enlisted the services of a lowly bond girl in his house, to obtain material from which I might give scent to the sleen."

"She is a spy there?" she asked.

"No," he said, "I tricked her. I used her as a mere dupe in my scheme. It was not difficult. She was only a woman."

My captor's eyes flashed.

"Only a slave girl," he said.

"That's better," she said. Then she said, "Slave girls are so stupid."

"Yes," he said, "that is true."

I was amused. I wondered if she would change her opinion as to the intelligence of slave girls when she herself wore the collar. As a matter of fact intelligence is one of the major criteria used by Gorean slavers when scouting an Earth girl for capture and abduction to the chains of Gor. The other two major criteria appear to be beauty and femininity. Intelligent, beautiful, feminine women make the best slaves. Who would want a stupid slave? Too, intelligent women can feel their slavery much more keenly than their simpler sisters. This makes it much more amusing to keep them in bondage. Too, because of their intelligence they more swiftly realize the biological rightness of their predicament, though they may fight it longer. The intelligent woman is more apt to trust her own intelligence, and intuitions and feelings than the duller woman, who is more apt to be a naive functjon of the stereotypes and images with which she has been conditioned. The more intelligent woman is quicker to realize, though more tardy to admit, that it is right for her beauty to be enslaved. Her yielding, too, to her secret realities, when she yields honestly and fully to them, is a glorious thing. At last she whispers, on her knees, to him, "I am a slave, Master." "Go to the furs," he says, gently. "Yes, Master," she says, and obeys.