The girl wore Gorean dancing silk. It hung low upon her bared hips, and fell to her ankles. It was
scarlet, diaphanous. A front corner of the silk was taken behind her and thrust, loose and draped,
into the rolled silk knotted about her hips; a back corner of the silk was drawn before her and
thrust loosely, draped, into the rolled silk at her right hip. Low on her hips she wore a belt of
small denomination, threaded, overlapping golden coins. A veil concealed her muchly from us, it
thrust into the strap of the coined halter at her left shoulder, and into the coined belt at her right
hip. On her arms she wore numerous armlets and bracelets. On the thumb and first finger of both
her left and right hand were golden finger cymbals. On her throat was a collar...
He clapped his hands. Immediately the girl stood beautifully, alert, before us, her arms high,
wrists outward. The musicians, to one side, stirred, readying themselves. Their leader was a
czehar player....
He looked at the girl. He clapped his hands, sharply.
There was a clear note of the finger cymbals, sharp, delicate, bright, and the slave girl danced
before us.
I regarded the coins threaded, overlapping, on her belt and halter. They took the firelight
beautifully. They glinted, but were of small worth. One dresses such a woman in cheap coins; she
is slave. Her hand moved to the veil at her right hip. Her head was turned away, as though
unwilling and reluctant, yet knowing she must obey...
The dancer was now moving slowly to the music...
I turned to watch the dancer. She danced well. At the moment she writhed upon the "slave pole,"
it fixing her in place. There is no actual pole, of course, but sometimes it is difficult to believe
there is not. The girl imagines that a pole, slender, supple, swaying, transfixes her body, holding
her helplessly. About this imaginary pole, it constituting a hypothetical center of gravity, she
moves, undulating, swaying, sometimes yielding to it in ecstasy, sometimes fighting it, it always
holding her in perfect place, its captive. The control achieved by the use of the "slave pole" is
remarkable. An incredible, voluptuous tension is almost immediately generated, visible in the
dancer's body, and kinetically felt by those who watch. I heard men at the table cry out with
pleasure. The dancer's hands were at her thighs. She regarded them, angrily, and still she moved.
Her shoulder lifted and fell; her hands touched her breasts and shoulder; her head was back, and
then again she glared at the men, angrily. Her arms were high, very high. Her hips moved,
swaying. Then, the music suddenly silent, she was absolutely still. Her left hand was at her thigh;
her right high above her head; her eyes were on her hip; frozen into a hip sway; then there was
again a bright, clear flash of finger cymbals, and the music began again, and again she moved,
helpless on the pole. Men threw coins at her feet....
The dancer moaned, crying out, as though in agony. Still she remained impaled upon the slave
pole, its prisoner...
The hips of the dancer now moved, seemingly in isolation from the rest of her body, though her
wrists and hands, ever so slightly, moved to the music...
Samos, with a snap of his fingers, freed the dancer from the slave pole. She moved, turning,
toward us. Before us, loosening her veil at the right hip, she danced. Then she took it from her
left shoulder, where it had been tucked beneath the strap of her halter. With the veil loose,
covering her, holding it in her hands, she danced before us. then she regarded us, dark-eyed, over
the veil; it turned about her body, then,.. she wafted the silk about her, immeshing her in its
gossamer softness. I saw the parted lips, the eyes wide with horror, of the kneeling, harnessed
girl, through the light, yellow veil; then the dancer had drawn it away from her, and, turning, was
again in the center of the floor....
The dancer whirled near us, then enveloped me in her veil. Within the secrecy of the veil,
binding us together, she moved her body slowly before me, lips parted, moaning... I slowly
removed her veil from her, then threw it aside. Then with my right hand, the Tuchuk quiva in it,
while still holding her with my left, as she continued to move to the music, I, behind her back, cut
the halter she wore from her. I then thrust her from me, before the tables, that she might better
please the guests of Samos, first slaver of Port Kar. She looked at me reproachfully, but, seeing
my eyes, turned frightened to the men, hands over her head, to please them. Never in all this, of
course, had she lost the music in her body. The men cried out, pleased with her beauty...
All eyes were on the dark-haired dancer, the skirt of diaphanous scarlet dancing silk low upon
her hips. Her hands moved as though she might be, starved with desire, picking flowers from a
wall in a garden. One saw almost the vines from which she plucked them, and how she held them
to her lips, and, at times, seemed to press herself against the wall which confined her. Then she
turned and, as though alone, danced her need before the men...
I idly observed the dancer. Her eyes were on me. It seemed, in her hands, she held ripe fruits for
me, lush larma, fresh picked. Her wrists were close together, as though confined by the links of
slave bracelets. She touched the imaginary larma to her body, caressing her swaying beauty with
it, and then, eyes piteous, held her hands forth, as though begging me to accept the lush fruit. Men
at the table clapped their hands on the wood, and looked at me. Others smote their left shoulders.
I smiled. On gor, the female slave, desiring her master, yet sometimes fearing to speak to him,
frightened that she may be struck, has recourse upon occasion to certain devices, the meaning of
which is generally established and cuturally well understood...to kneel before the master and put
her head down and lift her arms, offering him fruit, usually a larma, or a yellow Gorean peach,
ripe and fresh. These devices, incidentally, may be used even by a slave girl who hates her
master but whose body, trained to love, cannot endure the absence of the masculine caress. Such
girls, even with hatred, may offer the larma, furious with themselves, yet helpless, the captive of
their slave needs, forced to beg on their knees for the touch of a harsh master, who revels in the
sport of their plight..They are slaves.
The girl now knelt before me, her body obedient still trembling, throbbing, to the melodious,
sensual command of the music.
I looked into the cupped hands, held toward me. They might have been linked in slave bracelets.
They might have held lush larma. I reached across the table and took her in my arms, and dragged
her, turning her, and threw her on her back on the table before me. I lifted her to me, and thrust
my lips to hers, crushing her slave lips beneath mine. Her eyes shone. I held her from me. She
lifted her lips to mine. I did not permit her to touch me. I jerked her to her feet and, half turning
her, ripping her silk from her, hurled her to the map floor, where she half lay, half crouched, one
leg beneath her, looking at me, stripped save for her collar, the brand, the armlets, bells, the
anklets, with fury. "Please us more," I told her. Her eyes blazed. "And do not rise from the floor,
Slave," I told her. The music, which had stopped, began again.
She turned furiously, yet gracefully, extending a leg, touching an ankle, moving her hands up her
leg, looking at me over her shoulder, and then rolled, and writhed, as though beneath the lash of
master....
The dancer now lay on her back and the music was visible in her breathing, and in small
movements of her head, and hands. Her hands were small and lovely.
She lay on the map floor, her head turned toward us. She was covered with sweat. I snapped my
fingers and her legs turned under her, and she was kneeling, head back, dark hair on the tiles. Her
hands moved, delicate, lovely.
Slowly, if permitted, she would rise to an erect kneeling position; her hands, as she lifted herself,
extended toward us. Four times said I "No," each time my command forcing her head back, her
body bent, to the floor, and each time, again, to the music, she lifted her body. The fifth time I let
her rise to an erect kneeling position. The last portion of her body to rise was her beautiful head.
The collar was at her throat. Her dark eyes, smoldering, vulnerable, reproachful, regarded me.
Still did she move to the music, which had not yet released her.
With a gesture I permitted her to rise to her feet. "Dance your body, Slave," I told her, "to the
guest of Samos."
Angrily the girl, man by man, slowly, meaningfully, danced her beauty to each guest. They struck
the tables, and cried out. More than one reached to clutch her but each time, swiftly, she moved
back...
The dancer, now behind us, continued to move before the low tables. The eyes of the men
gleamed. Before each man, for moments seemingly his alone, she danced her beauty...
The dancer turned from the tables and, hands high over her head, approached me. She swayed to
the music before me. "You commanded me to dance my beauty for the guests of Samos," said she,
"Master. You, too, are such a guest."
I looked upon her, narrow lidded, as she strove to please me.
Then she moaned and turned away, and, as the music swirled to its maddened, frenzied climax,
she spun, whirling, in a jangle of bells and clashing barbaric ornaments before the guests of
Samos. then, as the music suddenly stopped, she fell to the floor, helpless, vulnerable, a female
slave. Her body, under the torchlight, shone with a sheen of sweat. She gasped for breath; her
body was beautiful, her breasts lifting and falling, as she drank deeply of the air. Her lips were
parted. Now that her dance was finished she could scarcely move. We had not been gentle with
her. She looked up at me, and lifted her hand. It was at my feet she lay.
Tribesmen of Gor, pg. 08, by John Norman.