so brightly green that the colors made her eyes hurt. A fountain splashed, moisture tickled her nose. She clutched the cloth tightly around her head, but kept a slit open toward the window so she could see the beautiful green foliage and the flowers, orange and white and pink, nestled along the branches. Four young children played beside the fountain; a woman seated on a stool nearby mended clothing.

The door opened.

'Look it over,' said the master. 'You'll see why I bought it.'

A hand tugged on the cloth, and she released it and cringed as she saw five people staring at her: the master and another man who looked enough like him to be his brother, two women, and a huge barefoot man. All but the master made warding signs.

The two women were likely cousins or sisters. They stared at her for a long time, then looked at each other, as sisters and cousins will, sharing stories in the tilt of a head and the shift of a mouth and the way an eyebrow lifts. Then they looked at the master and his brother, at the stiff way the men were standing.

The older of the woman said, 'Mountain, take its clothing off. I don't want to touch it.'

Reluctantly, the big man minced forward and began the difficult task of removing her clothing without actually touching her.

'It's a demon, husband,' said the younger one. 'Look at those blue eyes! Just like cornflowers. Bad luck! Why do you bring a demon into our clan?'

'For Girish.'

'Grandmother won't like it,' said the brother.

The master snorted.

The older woman said, irritably, 'Grandmother has been letting Girish do as he pleases. I've already been put to the expense of purchasing and training new slaves. She's blind to his habits-'

The master's expression darkened. 'Do not speak of my honorable mother in such a tone, Wife!'

She flinched. 'Pardon, Husband. Pardon.'

The younger woman broke in, 'What if it is diseased? It could infect everyone-'

The slave tugged off her dirty undertunic. She stood naked before them. The master's hand strayed low, but with a deliberate shift he reached up and scratched his jaw instead. The brother had no such control. Her pale skin and pale hair and blue eyes never ceased to excite and horrify. That was what demons were: an evil lure to tempt people into the wastelands where they would be devoured down to the bone.

The older woman's horror receded as her gaze narrowed with calculation. 'No other man in Kartu can claim to own a demon. It might content Girish, now that he's clamoring for a wife.'

'An allowance, and the demon,' said the brother. 'That might shut him up.'

'Pardon, Husband,' said the younger woman to the master, 'pardon me that I speak out so boldly, but if you perhaps might be willing to tell Girish also that you will take the demon away from him if he molests the slaves.' She hesitated, dipping her head submissively.

'I am not unaware of the trouble Girish has caused you, or of his disordered and repulsive habits,' said the master with a stern frown that squelched conversation. 'Let us see if this contents him.'

27

'It's so ugly,' said Girish with his habitual giggle as he hauled her into the smoky interior of the narrow house and shoved her toward a stained couch hidden behind a screen. 'I don't know what you see in it, Ramda.' His hands were shaking with excitement as his voice rose in a petulant whine. 'What do you have for me today? You promised me something new.'

Ramda was a thin, nervous man who never looked directly at her. I te flicked a hand toward the curtained entrance to the back rooms, not watching as Girish pushed past the curtain and vanished.

'Here.' Ramda handed her a lit smoke.

She brought it to her lips and sucked. Warmth spread from tingling lips down into her throat. She sighed, taking another suck as the warmth spread throughout her body. When Ramda limped over and dropped his trousers, she took another suck and let him press her back onto the couch with its lumps and damp spots. After a while he finished. Other customers came and went in the main room, and sometimes after coin changed hands a man might step behind the screen and lie down on top of her, breath hot against her face. The ceiling of the hall was half obscured by threads of smoke that traced patterns along the wood. She followed their slow dance with her eyes, the way smoke crawled up the slope of the eaves or pooled beside brackets and beams. Coin jingled. Men laughed. Dice rolled. A child's thin scream penetrated the smoke, and for a moment all fell quiet.

Then they started up again, gaming, drinking, smoking, talking. She drowsed in the warmth.

An argument erupted in the main room. The warmth was beginning to wear off as the smoke lost its hold. Ramda never gave her more than one for herself, and every time the ache of its leaving prodded her like a fresh wound. She fumbled with the ties of her long jacket, closing it over her naked body. Shoved from the other side, the screen clattered down on top of her. She fell off the couch, found herself sitting on the loose trousers slaves wore, her thighs sticky.

'Come! Come!' Girish shouted at her as he wiped blood from his hands with a cloth. She struggled clumsily to get the trousers on, unable to remember having taken them off.

Ramda shuffled in behind him. 'Get out!' His hair was mussed as if he had combed it with his hands. 'That's the second one this month you damaged. I don't want you to come back.'

'You cheating dog! You said it was a new one, but I saw the same one last week over at Nonku's chop. I wanted a fresh one. One that will really be scared.' He grabbed her by the braids and tugged her. She tripped over the trousers, which she hadn't gotten up over her knees. The long jacket bunched and tangled around her hips. He slapped her once, twice, a third time. 'I hate you! I hate you!' He spat at her. 'You're the cause of all my trouble, demon!'

'Here, now,' said Ramda, hands trembling as he picked up the screen and set it aright. 'No need to hit it. It's just a slave.'

'It's a demon. I wanted a wife, and they gave me a demon because they are pigs and scorpions, my own relatives! They're just jealous because Mother loves me best.'

'You're drunk, Girish. Would you get out?'

'If you don't let me come back, you'll not get to poke her again, eh? And what of the other men? I know you sell her stinking flower while I'm inside, heh, heh.' He rubbed his fingers together as if he was feeling the texture of a coin. 'Don't think I don't know that you're padding your sleeve with a little coin on the side, selling the demon while I'm busy elsewhere, eh? Heh.'

She wrestled her trousers up and tied them, then tugged down the long jacket.

Ramda stared mournfully at her, remembered himself, and looked away. 'If you damage my goods, you can't come back, Girish. I can't keep replacing the things you break.'

Girish handed him coin. 'You can replace it. Here. Get some new ones this time.'

Ramda sighed, taking the coin. 'You're rich, suddenly. Did Father Mei increase your allowance?'

'My brother?' Girish dropped the bloodied cloth to the ground, spat on it. 'He begrudges every copper.'

He hooked the leash to the slave bracelet she wore on her right wrist and yanked her after him, out the door and into the alley. The sun's light staggered her; its heat was a blow. When she stumbled, he whipped her with the end of the leash.

'Come on! Come on!' He whipped her again, and again, smiling as she cowered. 'Put your hands down. Put your hands down.'

So she did, and let him strike her across the torso and shoulders, shuddering under the lash, until he grew tired of the sport of seeing her cower submissively before him.

'We're late. Stupid demon. Why do you*always make me late?'

She walked behind, her gaze fixed on the ground, as he hurried onto a side street and through town to the market. Now, seeing acquaintances, he was all gracious smiles, smooth greetings, heartfelt inquiries after aged relatives and promising children, and unctuous agreement with whispered diatribes against their Qin

overlords. Women in the marketplace flirted with him as he browsed their wares, because he was a good-

Вы читаете Shadow Gate
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату