38

“It is there,” said the pit master to the messenger, indicating the sack.

The pit master had been engaged in a game of Kaissa with the officer of Treve.

“The messenger is here,” Fina had announced.

The pit master had then risen, to attend to the business at hand.

“This is to be transmitted to Lurius of Jad, Ubar of Cos,” said the messenger.

“As indicated on the orders,” said the pit master, signing them and stamping them.

I did not want to look at the sack. In it was the head of Gito.

“He is your friend?” the pit master had asked Gito, in one of the passages, shortly after we had returned from the pool area. Gito had retrieved the sack, and was holding it, opened, as he had been requested.

“Yes,” had said Gito.

The pit master had taken him by the throat, and pressed him back against the wall of the passage. The sack had slipped from his hand.

“And you are his friend?” asked the pit master.

“Yes, yes!” said Gito.

“And I am your friend,” had said the pit master. He had then lifted Gito up by the throat, holding him against the side of the passage. Gito squirmed, held so. I do not know if Gito, unable then to speak, held by the throat, saw the stiletto leave the tunic of the pit master or not. Surely he must have felt its point enter his body, on the left side, before the ribs. The point then, with terrible slowness, as Gito squirmed like an impaled urt, moved upward, behind the ribs, until it entered the heart. His head was shortly thereafter twisted and cut from the body. It was kicked into the opened sack by the foot of the pit master. The sack was then closed, and was later sealed, with a wax disk and string. The pit master cleaned his blade on Gito’s tunic. The body itself was later given to tharlarion.

I watched the messenger leave.

The pit master then returned to the game.

“A water urt was found in the valley three days ago,” said the officer of Treve, studying the board.

“That is interesting,” said the pit master.

“Naturally I had the outlets from the sewers checked,” said the officer.

“Of course,” said the pit master.

“A bar was found broken from the stone, and another, beside it, bent to the side,” said the officer, his fingers poised over a piece on the board.

“Creating an opening large enough for the passage of a man?” asked the pit master.

“Yes,” said the officer, moving the piece.

“Large enough for a large man?”

“Quite,” said the officer.

“Interesting.”

“I thought you said there was no way out from the passages.”

“There was no way, when I spoke,” said the pit master.

“A way was apparently made,” said the officer. “A ruined bow was found at the spot, the metal, and quarrels, used as tools, also the blade of a sword, and of a knife, blunted, broken from their hilts, these things used in furrowing stone, in scratching out the mortar.”

“Imperfect tools for such work,” said the pit master.

“Yes,” agreed the officer.

“You have repaired the damage?”

“Of course.”

“I think we may assume that our friend has left us.”

“Yes,” said the officer.

“But he is now, it seems, unarmed?”

“It would seem so,” said the officer. “To be sure, in the hands of such a man a branch, a stone, could be dangerous.”

“What do you conjecture are his chances of survival?” asked the pit master, studying the board.

“You are joking?”

“No.”

“He has no chance,” said the officer.

“Oh?” said the pit master.

“He will be detected by patrols,” said the officer.

“I would not count on it,” said the pit master.

“No man can live alone in the mountains,” said the officer. “He will starve. He will die of exposure. He is, for most practical purposes, unarmed. Sleen will kill him.”

“I see,” said the pit master.

“He cannot escape the mountains,” said the officer.

“Nor could he escape the depths,” said the pit master.

“He is no more than a wild beast himself,” said the officer, “a madman, roaming in the mountains.”

“That is true,” said the pit master.

“He will die,” said the officer.

“But his blood will not be on our hands,” said the pit master.

“No,” said the officer.

“He is a remarkable man,” said the pit master. “He is cunning, and brilliant, and ruthless, and powerful. He is a relentless, implacable foe. He is generous and loyal to those he things are his friends and would be merciless with those he deems his enemies. It would not be well to betray such a man. I fear his vengeance would be terrible.”

“He will die in the mountains,” said the officer.

“It would be well for some if he did,” said the pit master.

“He is harmless now,” said the officer. “He does not even know who he is.”

“And some had best hope he never remembers,” said the pit master.

I did not understand these things. It was the talk of masters. I was to one side, kneeling by a lamp, sewing a rent tunic for one of the guards. I had been taught to sew in the pens. Such skills are expected of us, as I have indicated. I had been ordered to kneel, and then the garment had been thrown to me, with instructions to repair it. “Yes, Master,” I had said. But I enjoyed performing such tasks for the masters. I had learned to sew well, and must, in any event, comply, and the guard, too, was handsome. That he had selected me out to sew his garment, I was sure, was not without significance. Too, my needs, those of a slave, those which put me so much at the mercy of men, had begun, powerfully, irresistibly, to arise in me again.

“I have never known such a man,” said the pit master. “Have you, Terence?” I was startled. This was the first time I had ever heard the name of the officer.

The pit master moved a piece.

“That is an interesting move,” said the officer.

“Have you?” asked the pit master. “Have you ever known such a man?”

“No,” said the officer of Treve, Terence.

“Do you know any who could stand against such a man?” asked the pit master.

“One, perhaps,” said Terence.

“Who?” asked the pit master.

“One I met long ago, when I was mercenary tarnsman,” said Terence. “I was in Port Kar.”

“A den of thieves, a lair of pirates,” said the pit master.

“It was at the time of the naval engagement between Cos and Tyros and Port Kar,” said Terence.

‘As I understand it, you had some role in that.”

“Yes,” said Terence.

“One which did not endear you to those of either Cos or Tyros,” said the pit master.

“It was the first time tars were used at sea,” said Terence.

“What was his name?” asked the pit master.

“Bosk,” said Terence, “Bosk, of Port Kar.”

Two guards were at the far end of the long table, also involved with Kaissa.

“What is the news, from the surface?” asked the pit master.

“Dietrich of Tarnburg has seized Torcadino,” said Terence. “In the north, Ar’s Station is under siege.”

“Dietrich’s action stops the drive to Ar,” said the pit master. “That will give Ar the time she needs.”

“Ar deserves no such good fortune,” said Terence.

“The siege of Ar’s Station, on the large scale of things,” said the pit master, “seems surprising. I would think it would be unimportant.”

“One would think so,” said Terence. “One trusts that it will remain so.”

Besides myself, of the pit slaves, there were now in the chamber only Fina, Kika, and Tira. Most of the slaves were about their duties in the corridors. Two had been permitted to the surface for holiday. One, Tassy, had been thought in the view of the pit master to have shown too little deference to a particular prisoner. She had, accordingly, last night, been put in with him. I had seen her pulled back by the hair, screaming, from the bars, her hands trying to reach through them. This morning I had seen her lying at his thigh, in the straw, docile and timid. I feared she had become his slave. Fina was kneeling near the pit master, cleaning leather. Kika and Tira were washing suls. These would be later baked, and used in the evening feeding.

Terence thrust a piece to a new position on the board.

“A strong counter to my move,” said the pit master. “I fear I must think again.”

“Guard your Tarnsman,” said Terence.

I bent to my work. I made my stitches small, and fine, and closely and evenly spaced. I hoped the master, the guard, for whom I labored would be pleased. I did not wish to be beaten.

“Ai,” said one of the two guards to the side, at the far end of the table, responding to some move in his own game.

This utterance was followed by a sound of chain as the woman near them lifted herself a little, looking up. She was now half lying, half kneeling. Her legs were together. Her weight was muchly on he right thigh and hip. The palms of her hands were on the floor. The sound had been the consequence mainly of the movement of the chain on her neck, the links moving against one another, and the terminal link pulling at the holding ring of the metal collar, but there had been, too, the movement of the links on the floor of the chamber, those of the chain which joined her ankle rings, and that of the chain which joined her wrist rings. She was the only free woman in the chamber. Too, perhaps paradoxically, she was the only woman in the chamber who had not been given clothing. The rest of us had our tunics. She was chained where she was, to a ring, near the guards, because she, or, perhaps more accurately, her use for the evening, was to figure as prize in the guards’ game. She must also, though free, address the pit slaves as ‘Mistress’, and wait upon us, as we might please. She was the girl, Ilene. She had learned much in the cage. The pit master had decided that it would not harm her, to spoil her freedom. What could her sisters do, after all, if what was returned to them was, at that time, little better than a needful female slave? She would still be legally free, and that would suffice for the justification of the ransom’s collection, a ransom measured, interestingly enough, to a rate appropriate to a free female. What did it matter if, returned to her house, she might writhe and squirm in tears in her bed, striking her pillows in need? I think she now feared only that the ransom might be paid. I myself was not certain that her fears were justified. I had gathered that her sisters might be loath to pay and, also, now having tasted the wealth and power of the house, might be unwilling to do so. I expected that it would eventually be her fate to ascend the slave block, to be auctioned. Such a fate is quite common with those in her predicament. And once the collar was on her neck her sisters need fear her not at all. Indeed, they might even keep her in their own house, as a slave.

I was a little bit angry that she had been selected as the prize in the guards’ game. I think that was not so much because she was beautiful, which she was, as because she was free. Her being a free woman gave something of a fillip, it seemed, to use her as a prize. Once she was collared, of course, if that should occur, she would have to compete with such as I on more even basis. Her treatment, her caresses, her rewards, and such, would then be more clearly a function of what she was in herself alone, more clearly a function of whatever intrinsic merit, quality, or worth she might possess in herself alone, as a female, as a slave.

“Surrender your Home Stone,” said the other guard. “You are done, finished!”

“Hold, hold,” said the first fellow, irritably, he who had uttered the exclamation only a moment ago.

“Your Ubar and Ubar’s Builder are forked,” said the other guard. “Any honorable fellow in these circumstances would hasten to resign.”

“I will defend the Home Stone while yet a Spearman remains,” said the other, irritably.

“Very well,” said the other.

“I retain two Physicians to your one,” said the first.

“So it will be a lengthy endgame,” said the other.

“I may even tease out a draw,” said the first.

“-Masters,” said the Lady Ilene, suddenly falteringly.

“Did you request permission to speak?” asked one of the guards.

“Forgive me, Masters,” she whispered, frightened. “May I speak?”

“Yes,” said the fellow.

“Thank you, Masters,” she said. The Lady Ilene, you see, was not always granted permission to speak. She was, accordingly, applicative. That permission could have been denied to her, of course, even as it might be denied to a slave.

But perhaps we should all be grateful when granted permission to speak.

Women love to speak.

It is one of our great pleasures.

Therefore, that we must request this privilege well reminds of who is Master.

I really thought they were more harsh with her than with us. A slave is almost always allowed to speak. It is merely that she is expected to ask permission to do so. The Lady Ilene, on the other hand, had seldom been granted that permission. I wondered if she realized, though she was a free woman, that that was part of collar training, or slave training.

I was pleased that they had given her permission to speak. It was clearly, this time, more than usually, quite important to her.

Indeed, so concerned she had been that she, doubtless in a momentary lapse, occasioned by her agitation, her sense of vulnerability, had failed to enunciate a standard permission request. I had seen that she had been frightened, but a moment after the utterance of the word ‘Masters’. She had not, clearly, or at least clearly enough, thought there had been supplication in her voice and tears in her eyes. Requested permission to speak. Had she forgotten that she was naked and chained to a ring at their feet?

But they were kind to her.

“So speak,” said the other guard.

“I have a question,” she said.

“What is it?” asked the first guard.

“What, Masters,” she asked, “-what, Masters-what if there is a tie, a draw, Masters?”

“Then we share you,” said one of the fellows. “Now be silent.”

“Yes, Masters,” she said, and lay back down, quietly, on the stones, naked, in her chains, to await their pleasure.

She had hoped, I was sure, that the first guard would win. It was he who had so initially terrified her in the chamber of the commercial praetor, who had placed his hands upon her hips and looked down upon her, who had reached within her hood to turn her face to his, who had dared to threaten the integrity of her veil, who had brushed up the hem of her robes and had calmly examined an ankle and calf.

I had realized even then that she had found him despicably handsome. Even then it had been clear to me that she had wondered what it would be to be in his arms. She had inquired if I thought he liked her, and my response, I fear an unpleasant one, had been to the effect that he might if she were inclined to be pleasant and was nude at his feet. This response, of course, hand incensed her. “Slut! Slut!” she had cried. “Yes, Mistress,” I had said, and then hooded her.

She was looking up at him now. Her eyes were moist. Her lips were slightly parted.

I saw she was apprehensive, but curious, and eager, as well.

Her hair had been nicely brushed and combed. She had been washed.

I did not think she had any reason to be afraid. She had nothing to fear, saving perhaps failing to please.

It seemed likely that he would win, or, at least, not lose, and in that case he would be one of the two who would share her.

She was a prize for men. But then are not all women, in their way prizes for men?

I looked at her.

Her head was now down, her eyes closed. I think she was trying to understand her feelings.

“She addressed them as “Master,” you see, as she addressed us as “Mistress.” She served in the chamber, though free, as, in effect, a slave of slaves, that her character might be improved, and that she experiences might to some extent mitigate the abruptness of any possible transition to bondage, when such behaviors would not only be suitable for her, but required. And she would address free men as “Master,” similarly, that she might become accustomed to that form of address, it perhaps becoming incumbent upon her one day. Too, the pit master thought it fitting, as she was a female.

“Capture of Home Stone,” said Terence.

“Ah,” said the pit master, leaning back.

Terence began to reset the board.

“No,” said the pit master, lifting his hand.

“Do you not wish to play again?”

The pit master shook his head.

“Is your heart not in the game?”

“Did we do well?”

“I think so.”

“It is my hope that we did well,” said the pit master.

“Let us play again.”

“No.”

“It will take days for the object to reach Lurius of Jad,” said Terence, “and days for his response.”

“That is not important,” said the pit master.

“I have seen that the papers have been arranged,” said Terence, “those attesting even to the departure of those of the black caste from the city.”

“I have never lost a prisoner before,” said the pit master.

“He will die in the mountains,” said Terence. “He will never reach Ar.”

I recalled that there had been some speculation that the holding of the peasant might be in the vicinity of Ar. To be sure, he himself had not seemed sure of it.

“I think you do not understand,” said the pit master. “I betrayed my trust, my post, my oath to the city.”

Fina looked up from her work.

“What we did may well be in the best interests of the city,” said Terence.

“That does not alter the fact that I betrayed my oath.”

“Would you have had murder done?” asked Terence.

“No,” said the pit master.

“You did what you had to.”

“Of course.”

“Dismiss the matter then from your mind,” said Terence.

“I must now do again what I must,” said the pit master.

“I do not understand,” said Terence.

“What I must do is quite clear,” said the pit master. “The moves were determined from my first action. I have known that from the beginning. It is a forced continuation.”

“I do not understand,” said Terence.

“There are no alternative moves.”

“Let us play again.”

“No.”

Fina seemed frightened. She had stopped her work.

“I will take my leave,” said Terence. “I wish you well.”

“I wish you well,” said the pit master.

Terence then gathered together his things, and left the chamber.

The game between the two guards, unexpectedly, I gathered did turn out to be a draw. He with the advantage had apparently been over confident, or careless, in the endgame. The draw turned, apparently, on a single Spearman. Some games are such, that the outcome depends not on the pieces of power, which may balance one another, but on the smallest move of the most insignificant piece on the board. I suppose that this may upon occasion be true in greater games, as well, that even a child, or slave, properly placed, at a critical juncture, might serve to topple empires. The free woman knelt before the two men and kissed their feet. She was then freed of the neck chain, pulled to her feet, turned about, and thrust toward the portal. This was not done ceremoniously. She might have been no more than a slave. She then hurried, in her manacles and shackles, as she could, toward the guards’ quarters, to prepare wine for them. They followed, their arms about one another’s shoulders. She knew the way. She had served on the mats before.

Fina seemed frightened.

I did not understand her apprehension.

I returned to my sewing. I hoped the guard for whom I labored would be pleased. I did not wish to be beaten. It was my hope, as well, that he would ask for me, and that the pit master would see fit to assign me to him. Oh, how I would run to his mat! How I longed to lie in his arms, and be reminded, once again, of what I was, a slave.

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