and in front and back, an opaque, cloaklike attachment, the “curtain.” The intention of this device was to conceal the delightful curves and smallness of her shoulders, and the revelatory, indicative excitements of her figure, both anterior and posterior. Uniformity was highly valued on Terennia, of thought, behavior and sexuality.
“Pulendius will doubtless be here,” said the officer of the court, offhandedly.
“And the handsome brutes with him,” said the woman with her.
The officer of the court stiffened. She had, of course, not been herself particularly interested in Pulendius. Irritatedly, she realized, too, that the woman beside her had understood her, only too well. She was embarrassed.
It might be mentioned at this point that although the officer of the court wore “same garb,” she also wore, beneath it, now, as of today, certain other garments, purchased in one of the ship’s shops, which were quite uncharacteristic of Terennia, but of such things, more anon.
These new undergarments were, of course, her carefully guarded secret. She felt she might die of mortification, if such things were known.
“Did you see how the one fellow, he on the right of Pulendius, looked at you?” asked the woman.
“You saw?” asked the officer of the court, pleased. It had not then been her imagination. Of course, she had known it had not been. Still, it was pleasant to have this confirmation. Too, she was pleased, though she was not eager to admit it, that another woman had noticed her being the object of such regard. That flattered her vanity, for she, like other women, was not without her vanity. It had been
“Of course,” said the woman.
“Oh?” asked the officer of the court, who, we must confess, was eager to hear more.
The woman with whom she was in converse was now only too well aware of her interest.
“And how he looked upon you!” she whispered.
“How was that?” asked the officer of the court, pressing her.
How warm she suddenly felt in those new undergarments, hidden under her “same garb.”
“Do not even ask, my dear,” said the woman in the pantsuit, pretending to abandon the conversation.
“No, please speak,” said the officer of the court. “I want to know.”
“You are sure?”
“Yes.”
“I know you are of the blood, my dear,” said the woman, “and we all look up to you and admire you for it, but he looked upon you as though you might be, in reality, properly understood, no more than a common slave.”
“I see,” said the officer of the court.
“No offense,” said the woman.
“Of course not,” said the officer of the court.
“I wish that he had looked upon me in that way,” laughed the woman in the pantsuit.
“I am not a slave,” said the officer of the court, angrily.
“We are all, at the bottom, slaves,” said the woman.
“No,” said the officer of the court.
“Surely you have sometimes wondered about your value as a woman, what price you would bring?”
The officer of the court was angry, silent. It was true that she had sometimes, in her loneliness, and misery, and frustration, and need, wondered if she had any real value, and what men, under no duress, would be willing to pay for her, if anything. Many times, in her imagination, she had turned upon the illuminated slave block, the faces of the men much hidden in the darkness, and heard the cries of the auctioneer, selling her.
“He is like a barbarian god,” she said.
“He is a large fellow, and of reasonably symmetrical features,” she said.
“Was he not the sort of man before whom a woman would quake, and hasten to obey?”
“Not a true woman,” said the officer of the court.
“Those whom you call ‘true women,’ “she said, “are merely women who have not yet met their master.”
“Nonsense,” said the officer of the court.
But she knew that it was true.
“Cannot you imagine what it might be to belong to him, really?” asked the woman.
“Not at all,” said the officer of the court.
“I suspect you can,” said the other woman, squeezing her hand.
“No,” said the officer of the court, firmly.
“I think you would obey him,” she said.
“No,” said the officer of the court.
“I think a taste of the whip would soon change your mind,” said the woman, smiling.
The officer of the court swallowed hard, and looked down. She had, you see, little doubt but what she would do her best to obey, and be fully pleasing, and that the whip, really, would not be in the least needed. That it was there, and that she knew it would be used, if he were not pleased, if she needed any additional incentive, would be quite enough, indeed, more than enough.
The tiers were now muchly filled. The entertainment was soon to begin.
“And what do you think you would bring?” asked the officer of the court, angrily.
“I do not know, my dear,” said the woman. “I hope a good price.”
“I see,” said the officer of the court.
“It would not be so high as that which you would fetch, however, my dear,” she said, “for you are very beautiful.”
The officer of the court looked at the other woman, who was perhaps in her forties. She was clearly educated. She had striking features and was well figured. The officer of the court wondered if that woman might not bring a higher price than she. That woman, in any event, was not from Terennia. That might make a difference in the prices they would bring. Women from Terennia, the officer of the court speculated, might be thought to be poor stuff, little more than jokes in the slave markets. On the other hand, she was not prepared to admit this. Surely women of Terennia, if so unfortunate as to fall slave, if that horrifying fate were to befall them, might be taught, as well as others. Might they not, in time, with diligence, come to take their place in the markets, even among the most precious of slaves?
“Look,” said the companion of the officer of the court.
The captain and his first officer, with some other officers, had just entered.
“May I join you?” asked one of the minor officers, looking up from the floor.
“Please do,” said the companion of the officer of the court.
Seats were scarce. Some had been reserved below, of course, at the side of the ring, in this case,
opposite the door to the section. The captain and the first officer, and certain other officers, were seated there, and some of these seats, too, had been left empty, apparently to be filled later. It might be mentioned that the officer of the court and her friend were not far from these privileged seats. They had come rather early to the entertainment, it may be recalled. They thus had much their pick of seating arrangements.
The officer took his seat to the right of the companion of the officer of the court, thus away from the officer of the court. He did this, rather than sit between the ladies, as might otherwise have been expected, for one of them was of Terennia, and the women of Terennia, being “sames,” or supposedly so, tend to be uncomfortable in the presence of males, and, accordingly, tend to shun their proximity.
Shortly thereafter the lights began to dim.
“It is beginning!” said the companion of the officer of the court.
CHAPTER 11
The lights had continued to dim until the section of the hold was in total darkness, and then, after a moment, they came on again, suddenly.
In the ring now, on the sand, to one side, rather toward the door, there knelt a large, bearded man. His long hair, which behind him fell to his waist, was bound back with a fillet of leather. He wore a tunic of roughly sewn