We stood before the lodge of Canka.
He emberged from the lodge.
Immediately Winyela, a penitent slave, lowered herself to her knees, and then to her belly before him.
"You may kiss his feet," I said.
She began to kiss the moccasined feet of her master.
"I was displeased with her," said Canka to me.
"She knows," I said.
Canka reached down and pulled her up to her knees and then, by the hair, he bent her back, and then twisted her about.
"She does not appear to be much disciplined," he said.
"I think the discipline to which she was subjected will prove to be adequate," I said. "If it does not, it may, of course, be doubled, or trebled."
"That is true," said Canka. Winyela, then, released, was again at his feet. Imploringly, beseechingly, again on her belly, as she had been before, she continued to press her lips to his moccasis.
"Do you think she is improved?" asked Canka.
"I think so," I said.
I looked down at the girl. I had little doubt she had learned her lessons. The highly intelligent woman, incidentally, as would be expected, learns her slave lessons, and that she is a slave, much more quickly than the stupid woman. It takes some stupid women as much as two days before they learn that they are truly in a collar. If a slave continues to prove recalcitrant, of course, she gains nothing by this. She will merely be disposed of.
"It is my hope," said Canka, "that she will not repeat her earlier mistakes."
"I do not think she will," I said, "and, of course, if she is not pleasing in some way she may be swiftly brought into line."
"She is responsive to the quirt?" asked Canka.
"Yes," I said.
"And to the touch of the master?" he asked.
"Yes," I said, "and, as befits a slave, helpless and superbly so."
"Good," he said. He then stepped back from the contrite girl, bellying to him, kissing his feet, suing for his forgiveness and mercy.
"Have you firmly resolved to improve your qualities of pleasingness to your master?" I asked.
"Yes, Master," said the girl, on her stomach.
"With your permission," I said to Canka.
"Of course," he said.
"You may not indicate your new attitude toward your master," I told her.
"Yes, Master," she said. She then rose to her hands and knees and head down, crawling, entered Canka's lodge.
He looked at me, puzzled.
In a moment she re-emerged from the lodge as she had entered it, crawling, with her head down. Grasping between her small, fine white teeth was the center of a heavy, braided, beaded-handled kaiila quirt. Canka watched, as she, unbidden, brought him the quirt. She lay it at his feet, from her teeth, and then knelt before him, her head down. Her hands were on her thighs. Her knees were widely seperated. This knee position indicated that she knew herself to be a woman held in the deepest and most intimate form of slavery.
"Thus," I said, "does she display her new understanding of her condition. Thus does she indicate her new attitued towards her master."
I saw that Canka approved of what he saw, and well.
"Behold her," I said, "a humbled, submitted slave. Her name is Winyela. She is the property of the warrior, Canka, of the Isbu Kaiila."
"Look up," said Canka to the girl.
There were tears in her eyes.
"She desires to speak," I said.
"You may speak," said Canka.
"I am yours, and I love you, my master," said the girl. Then she lowered her head.
Canka reached down and picked up the kaiila quirt. Then he indicated, with the quirt, that the girl should enter the intterior of the lodge. She crawled to the lodge, head down.
"I see," said Canka, "that you have returned me a better slave than the one I sent you."
I said nothing.
"I am very pleased." he said.
"That pleases me," I said.
"I did not wish to have to kill her," he said.
"I do not think that will be necessary," I said. "I think you will now find that she is a good slave, and that all is in order."
Canka grinned.
"She is within," I said. "She awaits her master."
"Thank you," said Canka, "-my friend."
"It was nothing," I said, "my friend."
Cnaka then entered his lodge. A moment later I heard Winyela crying out, rapturously, doubtless locked in his arms. I had suggested the business of the kaiila quirt to her before we had left Cuwignaka's lodge. I had thought it might please Canka, and give Winyela a way to demonstrate, graphically and meaningfully, unmistakably, that she was now, knew herself to be, and desired not to be other than, the total slave of her master.
I then walked away. As I left, I heard her crying out in ecstasy and heard, too, the uncomporimising, triumphant roars, unrestrained, bestial and victorious, of his ownership of her, a slave, a girl named Winyela, whom I had prepared for his lodge.