Part 89 (1/2)

The pit master then gestured to the guard who had spoken before, and I willingly surrendered the leash to him.

He stood rather close to the free woman and, the leash wrapped about one hand, put his two hands on her hips. He looked down into her eyes, and she turned her head away. With one hand, the chain of the leash dangling from it, he reached up and, within her hood, the chain trailing, touched the left side of her face. Then he turned it, again, to face him. He then put one finger to the height of the veil, where, near her left eye, rather at the bridge of her nose, he pulled it down, ever so little. It seemed he might think of peering down, within it. She tried to back away, but was prevented from doing so by one of the court's guards. The fellow then crouched down a little behind her, on her right. He transferred the leash to his left hand, and, with that hand, brushed up the hem of the robes a bit and, with his right hand, grasped her right ankle. ”Steady her,” he said to the court guard behind her, and that guard then grasped her by the upper arms. The pit guard then, holding to her ankle, lifted her foot, lifted it up so that the lower portion of the robe of concealment came forward, to lodgment behind the knee, this revealing something of her calf, and also, of course, her foot, the ankle in his grasp. ”A pretty calf,” said the pit guard. ”Yes,” said the court guard holding the woman from behind. ”I think she would take a two-ring,” said the pit guard, lifting the ankle a little more. ”Yes,” said the other pit guard. ”I would think so,” said the other court guard.

This was a reference to the sizes of ankle rings. ”She is about the size of Janice,” said the other pit guard, he not holding the woman's ankle. ”What size ankle ring do you take, Janice?” ”A tworing, Master,” I said.

”See?” said the pit guard holding the woman's ankle. ”Yes,” agreed his fellow. The woman put her head in the air. I suppose she was not pleased at all to learn that she had this in common with me, that we might take the same size ankle ring. But what would be so surprising about this? Were we so different?

And are not free women, as the men of this world sometimes suggest, only slaves without collars? The pit guard then released her ankle, and the fellow behind her released her upper arms. She now stood as she had before.

Only I think that now she was acutely conscious of the men about her, and, in particular, of he who held her leash.

His fist, the right fist, the leash now again transferred to his right hand, the leash wrapped about it, was only about six inches from her collar ring. He looked down at her. She quickly averted her eyes. ”I wonder if she is pretty,” said one of the court guards. ”'Ilene' would be a pretty name for a slave,” said the fellow with the leash. ”Yes,” said his fellow.

”Please,” protested the woman.

”Do you think you might make good company for a lonely man on a long, cold night?” asked the guard, he holding her leash.

”I would be led by the slave,” said the free woman hastily, frightened.

There was laughter.

I thought her request a judicious one, particularly if she did not wish to be visited in a cell at night, and forced to strip, and perform as a slave.

”Forgive me, Mistress,” I said, accepting the leash from the guard.

”s.l.u.t,” she said to me.

”Yes, Mistress,” I said.

”Functionary,” said the woman to the clerk.

”Lady?” he said, politely.

”You will expedite the arrangements for my ransom,” she said. ”I will soon be ransomed by my beloved sisters. There should be no difficulties in the matter, as we are one of the richest houses in Venna.”

”It is my hope,” said he, ”that these matters may be conducted with the utmost dispatch.”

”And if things do not work out,” said the pit guard, he in whose hands she had been, in effect, a.s.sessed, ”I am sure we can think of something else for you.”

”Beast!” she said.

”What did you think I had in mind?” he asked.

She turned away, angrily.

”I expect,” she said to the clerk, ”to be treated with honor, and with dignity and respect, such as comports with my condition and station.”

”I understand,” he said.

”You may begin,” she said, ”by removing these horrid bracelets and this obscene leas.h.!.+”

”They are the devices,” said he, ”of your current keeper, a warden of the city.”

She turned to the pit master.

”Lout,” she said.

The pit master lifted his head a little, his features hidden in the folds of the hood. He seldom left the depths, and, when he did so, he apparently exercised certain cautions.

”Remove the bracelets and leas.h.!.+” she said.

”Remove them yourself,” he said.

She struggled, briefly, pulling at the bracelets behind her back. The chain danced on its collar ring. I trusted she would neither mark nor injure her wrists.

Such bracelets are not designed to be slipped by a female. They hold us well.

”I cannot do so,” she said.

”Then they will remain on you, until I see fit to remove them,” said the pit master.

”Tarsk!” she berated him.

The pit master stiffened. He was known as ”the Tarsk” to certain scions of the city, I knew.

The free woman, of course, would not know this. With her, it was merely a convenient term of abuse, an insult at hand.

The guards present smiled. The two pit guards exchanged glances. With her insult the free woman may have inadvertently placed herself closer to their grasp than she realized.

”I am rich, and of high station,” she said. ”I shall expect the finest accommodations.”

”I have in mind a little place for you,” responded the pit master, ”one near the water.”

”Excellent,” she said.

”Sir!” protested one of the pit guards, he who had for a time held the free woman's leash.

”No,” said the pit master, his decision having been made.

The free woman, it seemed, would not soon be in a cell, or even an ample-sized, low-ceilinged kennel, one which might be on the guard's rounds, one to which he might hold the key.

The free woman laughed merrily, understanding the pit master's decision as const.i.tuting for her some sort of victory, particularly given the disgruntlement of the guard.

”Perhaps later,” said the pit master to the guard. ”We shall see.”

”Our business here is done,” said the clerk, he having signed over the prisoner to the pit master. ”I wish you well.”