“Yes.”
She looked away.
“I suppose female bondage has a justification,” she said.
“Yes,” I said.
“Nature,” she said.
“Certainly,” I said. “Nature. Let her tell you of the rightfulness of your collar.”
She spun about, tears in her eyes. She clutched her collar. “She has told me!” she cried.
“I know,” I said.
“But we are no longer in the Steel World,” she said. “Here, surely, whether I will it or not, you will free me!”
“If you are testing me, trying my patience,” I said, “I do not care for it.”
“But we are alone,” she said. “You need not now, nor could you, continue to hold me in bondage!”
“Do you wish to be freed?” I asked.
“No,” she cried. “I do not wish to be free! But you must free me! You are not Gorean! You are of Earth, of Earth! You have no choice but to free me!”
“I do not understand,” I said. Did she not know she stood on the soil of Gor, and was collared?
“You must take me away from myself!” she sobbed. “You must rob me of myself!”
“I do not understand,” I said.
“You are of Earth, of Earth!” she said. You have no choice but to free me! You must free me!”
“You think so?” I asked.
“Certainly,” she wept.
“Certainly?” I inquired.
“Certainly,” she said.
“Remove your clothing,” I said, “and approach me, with your wrists crossed, before your body.”
“What?” she said.
“Now,” I said.
In a moment I lashed her wrists together before her body. I then drew her, stumbling, by the loose end of the strap to the edge of the forest. There I thrust her against a tree, belly against the bark, and flung the free end of the strap over a branch. “Master!” she cried. I then drew her crossed, bound hands up, high, unpleasantly so, over her head, and fastened them in place, that by means of the same strap, it now tied beneath the straps on her wrist.
“Master!” she wept.
She was stretched, on her tiptoes.
“You have not been pleasing,” I informed her.
“Forgive me, Master!” she cried.
I removed my belt.
In a moment I was through with her, but it had been enough.
“Do you think you will be freed?” I asked.
“No, Master!” she wept.
“Perhaps I will sell you,” I said. The former Miss Virginia Cecily Jean Pym had not been pleasing.
“Please do not sell me!” she begged.
I replaced my belt, freed her and turned away.
In moments she had followed me, and was on her belly on the pebbled sand, naked, sobbing, licking and kissing my feet, in piteous supplication.
“Do you think you will be freed?” I asked.
“No, Master!” she wept. “No, Master!”
“I am Gorean,” I said.
“Yes, Master!” she said.
“Do you understand that, Earth female?” I said. “You are owned — owned by a Gorean.”
“Yes, Master!” she said.
“Do you understand the meaning of that?”
“Yes, Master!” she said. “I am a slave, only a slave, and no more!”
“The most abject, worthless, and meaningless of slaves,” I said.
“Yes, Master!” she wept.
“What a miserable lot is yours,” I said, “that of helpless, abject bondage.”
“Yes, Master,” she said.
“Perhaps you understand better now the peril and degradation of your condition?”
“Yes, Master!”
“Do you still wish to be a slave?” I asked.
“Do not make me speak!” she begged.
“Speak,” I said.
“Yes, Master!” she sobbed. “Yes, Master!”
“Why?” I demanded.
“For then,” she said, “as a woman, I am wholly myself!”
“Do you think you will be kept as a slave for any reason of yours?” I asked. “Perhaps because you wish to be a slave?”
“Master?” she said.
“What you might wish is not only unimportant,” I said, “but meaningless, absurdly irrelevant.”
She looked up at me, from her belly, tears in her eyes.
“It is irrelevant,” I said, “whether or not you want to be a slave, or desire to be a slave, or need to be a slave.”
“Master?” she said.
“You will be kept as a slave,” I said, “because you are a slave, and should be a slave, and it pleases men that such as you should be owned.”
“Yes, Master,” she sobbed.
“Your will is nothing,” I said.
“Yes, Master,” she said.
“You were less than fully pleasing,” I informed her. “A slave is to be fully pleasing.”
“Yes, Master!” she wept.
“I think I will sell you,” I said.
“Please, no, Master!” she wept. “I will try to please you, Master, fully, Master, fully, fully, perfectly, in all ways! Please do not sell me, Master! Keep me, I beg you!”
“I will do as I wish,” I informed her.
“Yes, Master,” she wept.
“Perhaps you now better understand what it is to be a slave?”
“Yes, Master,” she whispered. “Yes, Master.”
She looked up at me, mine, her face run with tears.
I regarded her.
Her lips trembled with emotion.
Her face was sensitive, soft, and beautiful. It was nicely framed in glossy, dark hair, still a bit short, perhaps, but it would grow. Long hair, as is well known, is favored in such as she. Much may be done with it, aesthetically, and in the furs. Too, it might be noted, in passing, that the female was highly intelligent. That much improves a girl’s price. That would be important if I chose to sell her. Such women make the best slaves. They quickly learn what they now are. Too, compared to the more ordinary, or average, woman, they tend to be, at least initially, more in touch with, and more aware of, and more open to, their own deepest needs, and desires. They come into the collar, thus, half-prepared for bondage.
Gorean slavers do not bring stupid women to Gor. They do not sell well.
I looked down upon her.
I liked her as she was, at my feet, collared, naked.
She belonged there.
“Now,” I said, “we must welcome our visitor.”
She looked up at me, wildly.
“Clothe yourself, girl,” I said.
She scrambled on her knees to her discarded garment, hastily pulled it on, over her head, and turned, on her knees, to face the visitor.
She would remain kneeling until given permission to rise, as she was a slave in the presence of free men.
“Tal,” said the fellow, standing back, amidst the trees, in the shadows.
“Tal,” I rejoined.
Chapter Two
PERTINAX;
A VESSEL WILL NOT BEACH
“Come forward,” said the fellow, gesturing toward the forest.
“You come forward,” I said, motioning him down, toward the beach. I did not know what might lurk in the forest.
“You want me within the circuit of your steel,” he remarked.
“You need not approach that closely,” I said. “Too, my blade is sheathed.”
“That seems unwise,” he said, “when greeting a stranger.”
“You do not appear to be armed,” I said.
I wondered if he realized how swiftly a blade might be unsheathed.
“Are you one of them?” he asked.
“One of whom?” I asked.
“I saw no ship,” he said.
“From the sky,” I said. “Do you know such ships?”
He wore a mottled tunic, irregularly green and brown. It would match in well with the background, with attendant shadows.
He did not have the blue and yellow chevrons which sometimes characterizes the lower-left-hand sleeve of the slavers, different, of course, from their more formal regalia, or robes, commonly blue and yellow, their colors. Some view the Slavers as a caste, others as a subcaste of the Merchants. The colors of the Merchants are yellow and white, or gold and white.