I turned away and gave my attention to the slave writhing on the tiles before us.
She was performing a need dance, of a type not uncommon among Gorean female slaves. Such a
dance usually proceeds in clearly defined phrases, evident not merely in the expressions and
movements of the girl but in the nature of the accompanying music.
There are usually five
phases to such a dance. In the first phase the girl, dancing, feigns indifference to the presence
of men, before whom, as a slave, she must perform. In the second phase, for she has not yet
been raped, her distress and uneasiness, her restlessness, her disturbance by her sexual urges,
must become subtly more manifest. Here it must be evident that she is beginning to feel her
sexuality, and drives, profoundly, and yet is struggling against them. Toward the end of this
phase it must beome clear not only that she has sexual needs, and deep ones, but that she is
beginning to fear that she may not be, simply as she is, of sufficient interest to men to obtain
their satisfaction. Here, need, coupled with anxiety and self-doubt, for she has not yet been
seized by strong men, must become clear.
In the third phase of the dance she, in an almost
ladylike fashion, acknowledges herself defeated in her attempt to conceal her sexuality; she
then, again in an almost ladylike fashion, delicately but clearly, with restraint but unmistakably,
acknowledges, and publicly, before masters, that she has sexual needs. Then, with smiles, and
gestures, displaying herself, she makes manifest her readiness for the service of men, her
willingness, and her receptivity. She invited them, so to speak to have her. But she has not yet
been seized by an arm or an ankle, or by her collar, a thumb hooked rudely under it, or hair,
and pulled from the floor. What if she is not sufficiently pleasing? What if she is not to be
fulfilled? What if she must continue to dance, alone, unnoticed.
At this point it becomes clear
to her that it is by no means a foregone conclusion that men will find her of interest, or that
they will see fit to satisy her. She must strive to be pleasing. If she is not good enough she may
be chained, unfilfilled, another night alone in the kennel. There are always other girls. She must
earn her rape. Too, if she should be insufficiently pleasing consistently it is likely that she will
be slain. goreans place few impediments in the way of liberation of a slave female's sexuality.
In this phase of the dance, then, shamelessly the woman dances her need and, shamelessly,
begs for her sexual satisfaction. The phase of the dance is sometimes known as the Heat of
the Collared She-Sleen.
The fifth, and final phase, of the dance, is far more dramatic and
exciting. In this phase the girl, overcome by sexual desire and terrified that she may not be
found sufficiently pleasing, clearly manifests, and utterly, that she is a slave female. In this
portion of the dance the girl is seldom on her feet. Rather, sitting, rolling, and changing
position, on her side, her back, her belly, half kneeling, half sitting, kneeling, crawling, reaching
out, bending backwards, lying down, twisting with passion, gesturing to her body, presenting it
to masters for their inspection and interest, whimpering, moaning, crying out, brazenly
presenting herself as a slave, pleading for her rape, she writhes, a piteous, begging, vulnerable,
ready slave, a woman fit for and begging for the touch of a master, a woman begging to
become, at the least touch of her master, a totally submitted slave. The fourth phase of the
dance, as I have mentioned, is sometimes known as the Heat of the Collared She-Sleen. This
portion of the dance, the fifth portion, is sometimes known as the Heat of the Slave Girl...
The music ended with a swirl of sound and the girl, with a jangle of bells, lay before the table
of Policrates, whimpering, her hand extended. She lifted her head. I read the unmistakable
need in her eyes. She was indeed a slave female.
Rogue of Gor, pg. 185, by John Norman.