"Do you think so?" I asked.
"Of course," said Cuwignaka. "He is a red savage. Do not be culturally confused."
I shrugged.
"He will wish for her to be returned to his lodge a better slave than she left it," said Cuwignaka.
"Perhaps," I said.
"Lash her awake," said Cuwignaka. "Set her, without mercy, about her duties. Let her be in no doubt that it is men who are her masters."
"I think I shall let her sleep," I smiled.
"As you wish," said Cuwignaka.
"She has suffered enough for one day, I think," I said.
"As you wish," said Cuwignaka.
"But," I said, "I think I shall go to see Grunt."
"And look for Wasnaphodi," laughed Cuwignaka.
"Maybe," I said.
"Poor Wasnapohdi!" lauhed Cuwignaka.
Chapter 8
I TAKE MY LEAVE FROM GRUNT'S LODGE
"I am sorry," said Grunt. "Wasnapohdi is not here. She is out picking berries. I do not know when she will be back. After that she is to help some of the other women."
"Oh," I said.
"If I had known you might want her," said Grunt, "I could have kept her here for you, naked, tied hand and foot, at the side of the lodge."
"That is all right," I said. "It is nothing."
"You made a mistake with Winyela," he said.
"Oh?" I said.
"She was sent to you to be punished," he said. "You should have done so."
"Do you think so?" I asked.
"I know red savages," he said. "Yes."
"I did not do so," I said. Indeed, I had even let her rest, and then sleep.
"That was a mistake," said Grunt.
"Perhaps," I said.
We spoke within Grunt's lodge, one put at his disposal by his friend, Mahpiyasapa, civil chief of the Isbu Kaiila.
"I spoke to Cuwingaka earlier today," I said. "He told me that you seemed troubled."
"Oh?" he asked.
"Yes," I said. Grunt wore the broad-brimmed hait, that one with which I was so familiar. It was interesting to me that he wore it even within the lodge. I had never seen him without it.
"Is anything wrong?" I asked.
"I don't think so," he said.
"What is it?" I asked.
"Have you heard the rumors?" he asked. "About the Yellow Knives? That they are going to send a delegation even into the camp?"
"I have heard rumors, even today," I said, "about the possiblility of a peace being arranged with the Yellow Knives. I had not reallized, however, that things had proceeded so far, that a delegation was to be welcomed into the camp."
"Yes," said Grunt.
"Negotiations are much more advanced than I realized then," I said. "It seems, now, that there may be a real possiblitly for peace."
"I do not like it," said Grunt.
"Why?" I asked. "Surely you welcome the prospect of peace."
"I do not trust the Yellow Knives," he said.
"Why?" I asked.
"I have never had good relations with the Yellow Knives," he said.
I smiled. Grunt divided the tribes of red savages into those with whome he had had good relations and those with whome he had not had good relations. He had had good relations, for example, with the Dust Legs, the Kaiila and the Fleer. He had not, on the other hand, had good relations with the Yellow Knives. Grunt pulled down his hat further on his head, an interesting guesture, on about which he was apparently not really thinking.
"Are they any worse, really," I asked, "than the Kaiila, or the Kailiauk or the Fleer?"
"I suppose not," admitted Grunt.
"If peace comes about," I said, "this might even open up new possiblities for trade."
"Let others, then, exploit them," said Grung, irritably.
"You do not seem overly fond of Yellow Knives," I observed.
"No," said Grunt.
"Do they hate you?" I asked.
"I would not suppose so," he said.
"You seem to dislike them," I said.
"Do I?" asked Grunt.
"Yes," I said.
"Perhaps," he said.
"Why?" I asked.
"Never mind," said Grunt. "It is not important."
I rose to my feet. "It is getting late in the afternoon," I said. "It is time for me to awaken Winyela and retun her to the lodge of Canka."
"I wish you well," said Grunt.
"I wish you well, too," I said.
I then took my leave from Grunt's lodge.
Chapter 9
THIS OCCURRED IN THE LODGE OF CUWIGNAKA
Gently I put my hand on the girl's small, soft shoudler, it under the hide blanket. I shook her twice, gently.
"No," she said, "no. Surely it is not time already to go to the office."
"Awaken," I said.
She opened her eyes, registering her surroundings. She laughed softly, lying under the hide blanket. "I awaken naked, in a man's collar, on a distant world," she said. "no, it is not time for me to go to the office."
"No," I said.
She then rolled to her stomach and, under the hide blanket, stritched. Her ody moved dleiciously under the hide.
"That concealed slaverly is behind you now," I said. "Your slavery is now of a more open nature."
"Yes," she said.
I then lifted the hide blanket back, and down to her claves. Such may be done with a slave. Her curves were marelous.
I listened for a moment to the sounds of the camp outside. Somewhere I heard a girl crying out, being beaten. It was probably a white slave girl.
I looked at Winyela, on her stomach, n the dark robes.
I then, sweating, my fists clenched on the hide blanket, drew it back up, over her, to the middle of her back.
"I may be revealed," she said. "I am a slave."
I said nothing. I fought for my self-control.
She turned then, to her side, supporting herself on her elbow. This action cause the hide blanket to slip to her waist. "Thank you for letting me sleep," she said. "You were very kind."
"It was nothing," I said.
"I should like to thank you," she said. She reached her lips toward mine but I, by her upper arms, held her from me. "What is wrong?" she asked.
"The kiss of a slave can be but the prolongue to her rape," I said.
"Oh," she said, smiling. She then drew back, and then, on her side, lay down. She pulled the hide blanket up about her neck.
"You must get up soon," I said. "In a while it will be time to return you to the lodge of Canka."
"If I dally," she asked, "will you quirt me?"
"If I think you dally overmuch," I said, "of course."
"Could you do that?" she asked.
"Yes," I said.
"Of course," she said, "for I am only a slave."
"Of course," I said.
"Sometimes it seems strange to me," she said, "thinking of myself as subject to the whip."
"There is nothing strange in it," I said. "You are a slave."
"That is true," she said.
"Master," she said.
"Yes," I said. It had surprised me, for a moment, that she had called me 'Master', but then I recalled that she had been given to me, for the afternoon. Indeed, for the afternoon, or, I supposed, until, within reason, I shose to return her to the lodge of Canka, she was, for all pracitical purposes, my own slave.
"You have treated me with great tenderness and kindness," she said.
I shrugged.
"May I surmise from this," she asked, "as I know little of slavery, and am new to the condition, that there can be tenderness and kindness for a slave?"
"There can be tenderness and kindness for a slave," I said, "of course. It is not permitted, however, to compromise in the least the iron discipline under which she is kept."
"I see," she said.
I regarded her.
"I want to be kept under an iron discipline," she said.
"I know," I said.
It was hard for me to forget that she was naked under the hide blanket.