I observed Phyllis Robertson performing the belt dance, on love furs spread between the
tables, under the eyes of the Warriors of Cernus and the members of his staff. Beside me
Ho-Tu was shoveling porridge into his mouth with a horn spoon. The music was wild, a melody of
the delta of the Vosk. The belt dance is a dance developed and made famous by Port Kar
dancing girls. Cernus, as usual, was engaged in a game with Caprus, and had eyes only for the
board...
The belt dance is performed with a Warrior. She now writhed on the furs at his feet, moving as
though being struck with a whip. A white silken cord had been knotted about her waist; in this
cord was thrust a narrow rectangle of white silk, perhaps about two feet long....
Phyllis Robertson now lay on her back, and then her side, and then turned and rolled, drawing
up her legs, putting her hands before her face, as though fending blows, her face a mask of
pain, of fear.
The music became more wild.
The dance receives its name from the fact that the girl's head is not suppose to rise above the
Warrior's belt, but only purists concern themselves with such niceties; wherever the dance is
performed, however, it is imperative that the girl never rise to her feet. The music now became
a moan of surrender, and the girl was on her knees, her head down, her hands on the ankle of
the Warrior, his sandal lost in the unbound darkness of her hair, her lips to his foot... In the
next phases of the dance the girl knows herself the Warrior's, and endeavors to please him,
but he is difficult to move, and her efforts, with the music, become ever more frenzied and
desperate...
The belt dance was now moving to its climax and I turned to watch Phyllis Robertson...
Under the torchlight Phyllis Robertson was now on her knees, the Warrior at her side, holding
her behind the small of the back. Her head went farther back, as her hands moved on the arms
of the Warrior, as though once to press him away, and then again to draw him closer, and her
head then touched the furs, her body a cruel, helpless bow in his hands, and then, her head
down, it seemed she struggled and her body straightened itself until she lay, save for her head
and heels, on his hands clasped behind her back, her arms extended over her head to the fur
behind her. At this point, with a clash of cymbals, both dancers remained immobile. Then, after
this instant of silence under the torches, the music struck the final note, with a mighty and
jarring clash of cymbals, and the Warrior had lowered her to the furs and her lips, arms about
his neck, sought his with eagerness. Then, both dancers broke apart and the male stepped back,
and Phyllis now stood, alone on the furs, sweating, breathing deeply, head down.
Assassin of Gor, pg. 185, by John Norman.