based on Gorean fiction by John Norman
The girl sagged sobbing in her chains.
Her bark-cloth skirt had been torn from her and stuffed into her mouth as a gag. She was naked but for her belt collar and brands. Her formerly long and glossy brown hair had been crudely sheared short to her scalp. Her sweaty body trembled against the dance pole.
All of the household vijakazi, slavegirls, were assembled in the Great Hall, of Mfalme Mwindu's residence, in a wide circle around the dance-pit to witness the punishment.
The Mfalme, Ubar of the Ancient City Of Ruins, lord of all he surveyed, turned from the girl and swept the circle of slaves with a hard and pitiless gaze. Without warning, he thrust up his arm above his head, a ring held between thumb and forefinger.
"Theft," he say, "is unacceptable in this City. Unacceptable among the Free, infinitely more so among the collared."
The Mfalme's deep voice, intentionally projected, rolled easily to every corner of the huge room. Every slavegirl's eyes were averted, most trembling as badly as the chained girl. Mwindu saw the exotic passion-girl Mai, his mwanzo kijakazi, first girl, sitting on her mat about five feet away from him. Rare is the pleasure or passion-girl in a wealthy household who does not wear a cosmetic of some kind to emphasize certain features, certainly it was true of the vijakazi in the residence. Their masters, the workers and askaris of the great house, liked their girls at their very best possible. Even the kettle girls, lowest of the slave hierarchy, were allowed make-up in the Ubar's household. Mai never wore cosmetics. She didn't have to. Careful breeding had rendered the copper-skinned girl a natural radiant beauty. Even her black on black almond eyes were exaggerated purely by Nature. The Mfalme had killed because of her, twice, both Free men. She was his openly known love-slave. She was the only kajira within the circle with him, aside from the unfortunate slut chained to the turwood pillar.
He could conjecture what the exotic dancer was thinking. It wasn't a difficult guess, after all, the first-girl had expressed them only minutes ago before he and she had come downstairs to the hall. He'd been drinking bitter tea from a stone cup in his reception room when Mai had begged permission to speak. Then she had begged for mercy for the condemned girl, on account that it was Mai's own fault as first-girl that the theft had occurred at all. As the slave-mistress of the household she should have prevented the crime. If anyone should be pusnished, it was her.