“Do you think men might be interested in me?”
“Certainly,” I said.
“Enough to pay good money for me?”
“Of course.”
“Am I beautiful?” she asked.
“yes, beautiful,” I said.
“Am I truly beautiful?”
“Yes,” I said, “you are truly beautiful. And you are also vain. Quite vain.”
“But slaves are permitted vanity, are they not?” she inquired.
“Perhaps,” I said. “But you are not a slave.”
“Perhaps you are mistaken,” she said. She smiled.
How irritating a free woman can be!
I looked away.
“I am clothed as a low slave, am I not?” she asked.
“Yes,” I said.
“You enjoyed devising these garments, and putting me in them, didn’t you?” she asked.
I turned, to look back upon her.
“Yes,” I said, “free woman.”
“A slave’s vengeance on us?” she laughed.
“Perhaps,” I said.
“Was I supposed to be dismayed, to be scandalized and shamed?” she asked.
“Perhaps,” I said. “Were you?”
“No,” she said.
“But when we came to the exit, at the height of the tunnels, you hung back,” I said. “You were terrified. You feared to be drawn, as you are, into the light.”
“Yes,” she said. “I was afraid then!”
“Do you wish to return to the cell?” I had asked her.
“No,” she had wept.
“You will then, free woman,” I had said to her, “emerge into the light, and as you are!”
I had then, she braceleted and helpless on the leash, unable to resist, drawn her forth, out into the light. Then she had stood there, just outside the opening to the tunnel, “slave clad,” her head lifted, her eyes closed against the light, in the full light of the sun. she has seemed suddenly rapturous. It had been done. She stood there, outside of the tunnels. Her bared feet were on the warm stones. The light of the sun fell full upon her, illuminating and warming her. It was hot and bright on her muchly exposed body.
“I will show you the bazaar,” I had said.
“These garments make me attractive, don’t they?” she asked.
“You are attractive anyway,” I said, “and would never be more so than if you were naked in your collar.”
“But they do, too, make me attractive, in their way, do they not?” she asked.
“As all suitable slave garments,” I said, “they stimulate and provoke interest.”
“Yes!” she said.
“They conceal and hint,” I said, “but, as slave garments, they are not permitted to deceive or falsify.”
“I understand the distinction perfectly,” she said.
“Even the relative modesty of a common slave tunic,” I said, “tends to be stimulatory.”
“Doubtless,” she said.
“I have haltered your breasts high,” I said, “the better to emphasize the line of your body, and the better to show you as one subject to bonds, but it is clear, from the way in which this is done, the deception is not involved. For example, it is quite clear what would be the case were they free to be gazed upon without interference, the halter having been, say, cut away. Too, the line in question is one of several quite natural ones. It would be similarly well revealed if your wrists were fastened to an overhead chain or if you were thrown on your back, head down, half over a couch.”
“I see,” she said.
“You would doubtless look delightful in a variety of slave garments,” I said. “I think you would look quite fetching, for example, in a common slave tunic, sleeveless, brief and such.”
“Yes,” she said. “Let us come again and again to the surface. And garb me variously!”
“Perhaps,” I said.
“But never forget,” she said, “as you have garbed me now!”
“You do not object?” I asked.
“No,” she said. “I love it!”
“Perhaps,” I said, somewhat maliciously, “the next time, if the pit master permits us a repetition of this adventure, I will march you thought he streets as a bare-breasted slave, permitted only a string and slave strip.”
She suddenly squirmed and jerked at the slave bracelets confining her hands behind her back. “Surely, Janice,” she cried, “you would not!”
I laughed.
“You are teasing me!” she said.
“Yes,” I said.
“Tell me more of slave garments!” she begged.
“Are you rested?” I asked.
“Yes,” she said.
“We must be on our way,” I said.
“Please!” she said.
“There are many varieties of slave garments,” I said, “which have their various purposes and utilities, such as display of the slave, the mockery or humiliation of the slave, the assurance of her instant availability, punishment garments, confinement garments, and such.”
“It is an entire world,” she said.
“Yes,” I said.
“But the important thing, really, about slave garments,” I said, “whether they are the riches of gowns, with perhaps a slit in them through which a thigh must be revealed, or the tiniest of strings and slave strips, is that they are just that, slave garments. It is their meaning, primarily, which renders them provocative, that they are slave garments, that she who wears them is slave.”
“Yes!” she said. “That is it!”
“We must be on our way,” I said.
“I have seen some slaves in the streets naked,” she said.
“Yes,” I said. “We are subject to that.”
“If I were a slave,” she said, “I could be put in the street that way, couldn’t I?”
“Of course,” I said.
“You are so vulnerable,” she said.
“Yes,” I said.
She looked down at her knees. They were not pressed closely together.
“Have you heard, Janice,” she asked, “anything of my ransom?”
“No,” I said. “Alas, no.”
“Perhaps I have been forgotten?” she said.
“No, I am sure that is not the case,” I said. “You must keep up your hopes!”
“What do you know of my hopes?” she asked.
I did not understand this.
“Are you slaves dawdling?” asked a man’s voice.
“No, Master!” I cried. “We were just leaving!” I leaped to my feet. “Up, lazy, Tuta!” I said, angrily. I snapped the free woman’s leash. She seemed startled at this but, responsive to my command, and doubtless, too, not failing to comprehend the leash signal, rose swiftly to her feet. “Does she not know how to respond?” asked the man. “What do you say?” he asked the free woman. “Yes, Mistress!” exclaimed the free woman. “She is new to her collar,” I explained. “Do not be easy with her,” said the man. “That is not how a slave is trained.” “Yes, Master” I said. “Forgive us, Masters!” I said, for there were two men there, in tunics and cloaks. I then, head down, avoiding their eyes, as a slave normally does with unknown free men, turned about and led the free woman up the stairs. I think the men watched us ascend, and then, at their own pace, also ascended the stairs. We had ascended but two or three steps when I heard one of the men say something to the other. “A pair of juice puddings,” he said. “Yes,” said the other.
In a few minutes, perhaps three or four, we came to the largest of the high terraces. There were many other high terraces in this part of the city, but none were as large, as spacious, as splendid, as this. I had a special reason for coming to this terrace.
“How glorious is the view!” exclaimed the free woman.
I recalled that she had told me that she had been brought here hooded in her own veils. I had had fastened upon me, doubtless appropriately, a simple slave hood.
I took her toward the balustrade, where we might look out.
“It is breathtakingly beautiful!” she exclaimed.
We drank in the sight of the snow-capped peaks, the darkness in the valleys, the patches of cloud in the bright sky. So small we were in the face of nature.
“Janice,” said the free woman.
“Yes,” I said.
“Do you remember what the man said on the stairs, as we left?”
“Do not concern yourself with the matter,” I said.
“I am not sure I understood him,” she said.
“Consider the beauty of the mountains,” I said.
“Janice!” she protested.
“It is only a vulgar expression,” I said, “like ‘vulo’ or tasta’.”