He had removed his jacket, and his shirt was soaked with dampness and sweat.
He could hear the chanting of the brothers.
Here and there, in niches, were small votive tablets.
***
“Is that a female?’’ had cried the gatesman in horror, pointing to the small figure with Julian and Tuvo Ausonius, all three long disembarked below, in the valley, from the hoverer.
The outer gate to the festung had creaked open, slowly, to admit the travelers.
It was a long, winding, tortuous trail up from the level, up from the valley, one of several miles, to the outer gate of the festung.
It was seldom traveled. Visitors were few at the festung of Sim Giadini.
At the village below they had learned that it would not be wise to approach the festung, save in this fashion, on foot and not obviously armed.
There were defenses, at various levels, which must be specifically, and consecutively, disarmed.
This was done from within the festung, the deactivations consequent, at given levels, upon judgments, given the data of diverse surveillance devices.
Too, a known man of the village had accompanied them, as a guide.
“Yes,” had said Julian.
“Nothing female may enter here,” said the gatesmen.
“This is the hospitality of the festung of Sim Giadini?” had asked Julian, irritatedly.
“She does not appear in desperate need of medical assistance, she is not bleeding, she is not dying,” said the gatesmen.
“No,” admitted Julian.
“She may not enter,” said the gatesmen.
He averted his eyes that he might not look upon, and perhaps be tempted by, what was now in the company of Julian and Tuvo Ausonius.
“Surely she is sufficiently concealed,” said Tuvo Ausonius.
The object of their discussion, small, fur-booted, and heavily bundled in furs, was kneeling on the stones before the gate, which posture she had assumed, correctly, suitably, while waiting for the response to the great metal ring, lifted and dropped three times, as the guide had advised, against the plate.
In her days with Julian and Tuvo Ausonius, thanks to their intensive training, she had made considerable progress in learning her slavery.
Her arms were not in the sleeves of her jacket but within the jacket, the wrists cuffed together, behind her back.
About her throat, over the furs there, there was a metal leash collar, from which, gracefully dangling, in loops, threaded through loops on the jacket, was a lovely, light, chain leash.
Commonly, in the transport of slaves by primitive peoples over the snow, in sleds, the slaves are simply, in their chains, wrapped naked in heavy furs. In this fashion there is little danger that they will be tempted to flee the sleds, or, huddling, chained, by the fires, the camps.
“It does not matter,” said the gatesman.
“She is only an animal, a slave,” said Tuvo Ausonius.
The woman looked up. Her head was muchly covered by the bundling of the fur hood, but it could be seen that her face was exquisite. Wisps of red hair peeked out from within the hood, framing her lovely features.
“Not even female animals are permitted within the festung,” said the gatesman. “Nothing female, no female bird, no hen, no ewe, no cow, no bitch, no mare, no sow, nothing female.”
“Put down your head,” said Julian.
The slave instantly lowered her head.
“You may look on her now,” said Julian. “You can see nothing.”
“No,” said the gatesman, “I can see furs, and it is not difficult to detect, from their configuration, that within them there is a female.”
“I fear he is right, milord,” said Tuvo Ausonius.
The small figure, the center of such attention, trembled a little, on her knees, her head down.
“Take her away!” cried the gatesman.
“Take her back to the valley, to the hoverer,” said Julian.
“Milord!” protested Tuvo Ausonius.
“It is all right,” said Julian. “I should have anticipated this.”
“I shall have to close the gate,” said the gatesman.
“She is leaving,” said Julian.
Julian gestured, with his head, to Tuvo Ausonius.
“On your feet, girl,” said Tuvo Ausonius.
She rose up and followed Tuvo Ausonius, head down, with small steps, deferentially, who drew away from the vicinity of the gate, to where the guide stood.
“May I now enter?” inquired Julian.
“Certainly,” said the gatesman.
Standing near the guide, and Tuvo Ausonius, she looked back, toward the gate.
The gatesman, with his weight, with two hands, was pressing the gate shut. He paused for a moment, Julian within, impatient, beyond him, to view the slave, even bundled as she was, angrily, and then shut the gate, firmly.
She heard the two heavy bars being slid through their brackets behind the gate, first one, and then the other.
She briefly met the eyes of the guide, a rude fellow, from below, and then looked away.
She had seen desire in his eyes.
He was a peasant, simple, brutal, rude, lustful.
She had become aware of her desirability here again, as she had on the patrol ship, serving the crew’s mess, barefoot, in a collar and slave rag, and in the appreciative glances of Julian and Tuvo Ausonius, as they sought to improve her posture, her movements and skills, until they would be likely to meet the requirements of even an unusually exacting master. And now here, again, she had become aware of her desirability, twice, in quite different ways, once in the loathing, the anger and disgust of the gatesman, fighting a naturalness and might which he had mistakenly, ignorantly, forsworn, he the deluded, self-tortured victim of a grotesque conditioning program, one promulgating, even celebrating, thwarted drives and suppressed desires, and that of the peasant, who had looked upon her with hardy approbation, much as he might have upon a fine pig.
She was aware now, from many indications, of her desirability, and its effect on men, and the power which she might, in virtue of it, under different circumstances, have held over men.
It is no wonder, she thought, that they strip us, and chain us, and cage us, and put us up for sale.
We are too beautiful, and too dangerous, to be free. It is wrong that we should be free! It is absurd that we should be free. We belong to them by nature, and they will see to it that they own us. It is no surprise then, she thought, that they do with us as they please.
We belong to them, she thought. I do not object. I love them. Let them be strong with us! I despise weak men. Oh, be strong with me, Masters!
“Come, girl!” called Tuvo Ausonius.
He and the guide were already several yards down the trail.
“Yes, Master!” she called, and hurried after them.
Tuvo Ausonius was a master of women. But he had not so much as put a hand on her. He cared, it seemed, for some other slave, a Sesella, back on Inez IV. But surely he could have two slaves. Some men had several! Lord Julian, too, whose identity she had learned, kneeling before him naked, in obeisance, on the patrol ship, she sensed was a natural master of women, but he had not touched her either, other than once to tie her, and whip her, for clumsiness. He had some barbarian slave, it seemed, of which he was fond. But she was sure she could compete, at least after more training, with a mere barbarian. Let him choose between us, she thought, or have both of us, and others! But she had not been given to the crew, either. She was a virgin, which was not unusual, as she had been purchased at an early age, fourteen, to be a woman’s slave.
That she was a virgin seemed to be of interest to some men. She was not certain why that was. To be sure, it was important to her. She would not have wanted to awaken in her cell, for example, and discover that her virginity was simply gone.