“I do not know,” said Adraste.
“What happened on the roof of the Central Cylinder?” asked Alcinoe.
“I do not know,” said Adraste, “but you failed to sell me for your freedom in Ar!”
“You looked well on your knees, at the feet of Seremides,” she said, “bound, helpless, waiting, in the rag of a slave!”
“You betrayed me!” said Adraste.
“You betrayed all of us, and Ar!” said Alcinoe.
“Do not pretend fidelity to the Home Stone,” said Adraste. “You were eager, and much with me, each hort of the way! We were arch traitresses, we two, so vain and proud, so ambitious, so ruthless, each abetting and urging on the other. You would line your purse with gold and your station with power! No opportunity for wealth, for influence, for self-aggrandizement was neglected! We glorified our offices and despoiled the city, ruined our enemies and enriched our favorites, our pets and hirelings!”
“But all did not continue to go well,” I said.
Both cried out with rage.
It amused me to see the two former high women of Ar, tunicked, barefoot, collared, kneeling, unable to stand, two slaves, crowded together in the small kennel.
How they, former conspirators, now helpless, hated one another!
It occurred to me that the occupants of that tiny enclosure were worth a fortune.
But I had never cared for gold washed in blood.
“You look well in a collar,” said Adraste. “You should have always worn one!”
“I see a metal circlet on your neck,” said Alcinoe, “slave!”
“How came you here?” asked Adraste.
“I escaped the city, but was captured, and collared,” said Alcinoe. “I was purchased, honestly and openly, in Brundisium, by Pani!”
“As a common slave,” sneered Adraste.
“And so, too, in similar straits,” said Alcinoe, “would you have been purchased, as a common slave, and surely for no more than for a handful of copper!”
Alcinoe, as I recalled, had sold for forty copper tarsks, not even half a silver tarsk. Presumably the Pani had bought her on speculation, that she would improve. In my view, their investment was excellent, and the former Lady Flavia, dieted and exercised, and having come to some sense of what it was to be in a collar, had more than substantiated their judgment. The former Lady Flavia, her freedom behind her, was now considerably improved. She had become an excellent piece of collar meat, perhaps worth even two silver tarsks. I had seen several fellows, on the ship, and later, in the courtyard, while the girls were being exercised, usually five at a time, on tethers, assessing her, as men will assess slaves of interest. I wondered if slaves were fully aware of their superiority as females to free women. The most female of all women is, of course, the slave.
“I would have sold for a thousand pieces of gold!” said Adraste.
That was not at all likely, unless she was being purchased with an eye to the bounty, later to be collected.
Alcinoe laughed unpleasantly, scornfully. “Writhing naked in your chains, to the prodding of a whip, on a cement shelf, I do not think you would bring more than four or five tarsk-bits.”
That estimate, in my view, was unrealistically low.
Alcinoe, incidentally, I had been given to understand, had been sold from such a shelf in Brundisium. Not every girl is publicly sold at auction. Indeed, some high slaves are exhibited privately to rich clients, in the purple booths. Even on the shelves, of course, as well as in the purple booths, a girl may be expected to perform to some extent, that some sense might be conveyed to the client of the possible value of the merchandise. It is only in the purple booths, of course, that a girl may be tried out by a prospective buyer, and woe to the girl, should she not prove satisfactory.
“I am the most beautiful woman on Gor!” said Adraste.
“I have seen tarsks better looking than you!” said Alcinoe.
“Do not strike one another,” I warned.
“Am I not more beautiful than she, Master?” inquired Alcinoe.
“You are both nice looking,” I said, circumspectly.
“Price us!” demanded Alcinoe.
“I would guess,” I said, “that you would go for two silver tarsks, perhaps two and a half, and she for three, perhaps four, in a good market.”
“See!” said Adraste.
“But there are many,” I said, “who would be likely to go for far more.”
“Surely not,” said Adraste.
“Which of us would you prefer?” asked Alcinoe.
“That is a different question,” I said.
“You prefer me!” she said.
“Oh?” I said.
“Yes,” she said, “the girls have watched you watching me, and they tell me things. You look upon me as a master upon a coveted slave. As a slaver on a maiden of choice, unaware in the baths, as a hungry sleen on the grazing tabuk. Doubtless in your mind you have put your bonds on me many times! How many times, in your mind, have I lain naked before you, helpless, bound hand and foot?”
I began to suspect that there were networks of communication amongst slaves of which I had been unaware. No wonder one strives to keep such beauties ignorant.
“Is it not true?” demanded Alcinoe.
“It is true,” I said, “that in a collar you are better looking than you were in your silks, in Ar.”
“Yes!” said Alcinoe.
“But is that not true of any woman?” I said.
“I thought you were my friend, my closest friend,” said Adraste.
“Ubars, and Ubaras, have no friends,” said Alcinoe.
“No!” said Adraste.
“Who would be your friend?” asked Alcinoe. “You are vain, and pretentious, deceitful, treacherous!”
“You used me!” said Adraste.
“Yes, and hated you!” said Alcinoe. “It was with overwhelming pleasure that I, on the command of Seremides, hunted you down in your chambers, where you cowered, alone, unguarded, forsaken, and cast you the rag of a slave, demanding that you strip yourself naked and put it on!”
“She-sleen!” cried Adraste.
“How well it looked on you!”
“She-tharlarion, she-urt!” cried Adraste.
“How right bondage is for you!” cried Alcinoe.
“And for you!” cried Adraste.
“It is enough,” I said to Alcinoe. “It is time to return you to your kennel.”
I opened the door of the kennel, and Alcinoe backed out. My hand on her shoulder prevented her from rising. I then closed the gate of the kennel, which, with its closing, locked.
Alcinoe made again to rise, but, again, I prevented her.
“Master?” she said.
“Surely you do not expect to rise,” I said.
“Master?”
“Return to your kennel,” I said, “in the modality of the she-sleen, on all fours.”
“Yes, Master,” she said.
“And lift your garment,” I said. “It is not to be soiled.”
I watched her leave the shed, and begin to make her way across the courtyard.
“You well know, Master,” said Adraste, “how to teach a woman her collar.”
“Sometime,” I said, “someone may teach you yours.”
“No one can do that,” she said.
