In time, red-eyed, the Lady Constanzia rose to her feet, unsteadily. She took the leash, pulling it from the ring.
“I am sorry,” I said to her.
“We had a wonderful day,” she said. “We did everything we saw everything.”
“I am sorry,” I said.
“I’m sorry we put the lock gag on you,” she said, “but we thought it best. We would not have wanted you to furnish information to others, about who I was with, where we might have gone, and such. I did not want to risk being summoned in early. You understand. We did not want to risk you spoiling our holiday.”
I nodded.
I recalled the frustration of the intruder who had been unable to question me because of the lock gag. I recalled the look in his eyes, and the readying of the sword, but he had not struck me. He had flung me, rather, angrily to the side. I had lain there, terrified. But I had survived. None of the slaves had been put to the sword. Our collars, it seemed, had saved us. This is not that unusual, incidentally. In the sacking of a city, salves, like other domestic animals, other valuables, and such, are often saved, while free folk may be put to the sword. Indeed, sometimes free women, I have heard, take the collars from their own girls, putting them about their own necks, that they may increase their chances of survival. They often then, self-collared, knot a rag about their hips, to conceal that they have no brand, and hurry into the streets, to surrender, as a slave, to one of the conquerors. Sometimes their girls pursue them, to point them out to the conquerors. Sometimes they subdue their former mistresses, remove the cloth at their hips, and bind them, and lead them on ropes to the conquerors.
“Can you stand?” asked the Lady Constanzia.
“yes,” I said, raising unsteadily.
In a few moments then we were making our way across the terrace to the brad steps far from the wall.
At the height of the steps I asked the Lady Constanzia to wait for a moment, while I looked back, across the expanse of the terrace. It seemed very brad. Here and there, on the wall, at the bridge, and to the right, and at certain places on the balustrade, were lamps. The sky was dark with clouds. One of the buildings, bordering the terrace, one now rather before me, and to my right, was still afire. Smoke rose from it to the dark sky. Artisans were still working with the tarnwire.
“Strangers held the terrace,” said the Lady Constanzia.
“Yes,” I said.
Toward its center was the place where the butchery had occurred.
How desperate had been those men. They had sought an entrance to the pits. They had apparently found one. In the corridors, I gathered, the last of them had died.
I looked back to the wall where I had been chained, that to which the slaves had been commanded, that against which the free women, those who had proclaimed themselves slaves, had also been confined. I could see the bridge across the way, that across which the free women, in coffle, had been marched, their arms held up, closely behind them, the elbow of the left arm grasped by the hand of the right, the elbow of the right grasped by the hand of the left. They would be, presumably, in the pens by now.
They might already be branded. My thigh tingled as I remembered my own branding in the pens, long ago. It had been quite painful. I had cried out in misery. A branding rack had been used, to hold us steady for the mark. Our hands had been braceleted behind our backs, to the belly chain, that we not be able to tear at the brand. My entire group, it was said, had been excellently marked. Certainly I was. But this was not surprising for the iron masters in such a place, of the caste of Metal Workers, are skilled. We had all been given the common kajira mark. Perhaps theirs would be the same. They were to be sold out of the city, I recalled. They would find themselves then at the mercy of strangers. Gone would be their privileged status, that of the free woman. Gone would be the protection of the law, of guardsmen, of the shared Home Stone. Let them then salvage what they could of their lives. Let them strive to learn how to please.
I thought of the slave girl, Dorna. The earrings had been quite attractive on her. I suspected that she might now be quite fond of them. That seems to be the way it is with the women of this world. They fear them. Then they love them. To be sure, they also made her only a pierced-ear girl. I supposed that she might now be bathing her master.
I then, on my leash, following the Lady Constanzia, descended the long stairway to the lower levels. I stepped carefully, as my hands were braceleted behind me.
In two places on the steps we saw dark stains, which I supposed to be blood.
“We saved a piece of fruit for you,” said the Lady Constanzia. “I put it in my tunic. I will give it to you below.”
“Thank you,” I said.
We continued on our way.
The Lady Constanzia was crying.
25
“Somewhere,” said the peasant, dully, “I heard steel, I heard shouting.”
“It was far away,” said the pit master, sitting, cross-legged, as he sometimes did, before the chained peasant.
The pit master’s legs were small for his upper body, almost bandy. He looked like a bolder of sorts, sitting there in the cell.
It was late, the same night as the raid of the intruders. I had been unable to attend upon the peasant until now, as I had been late returning to the pens. The pit master had waited for me.
“Master is all right,” I had said, relievedly, returned by the Lady Constanzia, kneeling before him.
“And I am pleased you live, little Janice,” said he, “and you, too, Lady Constanzia.”
We were both kneeling before him.
The pit master had been covered with grime and blood. He had been cut about the left shoulder. A bloody rag had been knotted about his upper body. His lower body was filthy as it seemed that one or more of the tunnels had been flooded to the height of a man’s waist, to facilitate the entry of water urts and tharlarion. These had been, I gathered, by noise and fire, herded toward intruders. But now he was clean and clad in a fresh tunic. That he had been wounded would not now be discernible, the blood stanched, the wound dressed, the dressing hidden beneath the tunic. It was not unusual, incidentally, for the pit master to be careful of his appearance when he came to the cell of the peasant. He would often bathe and attire himself in fresh, clean raiment before presenting himself before him.
It seemed strange that he would accord such courtesy and regard, such esteem, almost reverence, to one who was a mere peasant.
“I am finished, Master,” I said.
“What is honor?’ asked the pit master of the peasant.
The peasant lifted his head, and looked at him, uncomprehendingly.
“Honor,” said the pit master.
“I do not know,” said the peasant.
“I do not know, either,” said the pit master.
“I have heard of it, once, somewhere,” said the peasant. “But it was long ago.”
“I, too, have heard of it,” said the pit master, bitterly, “but, too, it was long ago.”
“Is it not something for upper castes?” asked the peasant.
“Perhaps,” granted the pit master.
“Then it is not our concern,” said the peasant.
“No,” said the pit master, bitterly, “It is not our concern.”
“Is it time for the planting?” asked the peasant.
“No,” said the pit master.
We then left the cell.
26
“You have eaten nothing!” I chided the Lady Constanzia. She lay in the white sliplike garment, that undergarment resembling a slave tunic, on the mat in her cell, her knees drawn up. Her eyes were red with weeping. She stared outward, though I think she was looking at nothing. I did not even know if she had heard me.
I had returned from my duties in the cell of the peasant, following the pit master back to his quarters. It was late, the same night as the raid of the intruders.