Sharon green chains 02, p.5

Sharon Green - Chains 02, page 5

 

Sharon Green - Chains 02
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  Having a slave who has to do exactly as you say is intoxicating, Killen, a fact you yourself can’t argue no matter how much you might want to.”

  Jake would have enjoyed protesting the accusation, but he’d already been forced to admit the truth of that claim. Having someone in your complete power was a heady drug, and not even being against slavery in general was enough to keep from being enticed into excess.

  “It’s come to me that what you really need to change your outlook is a taste of what you consider so acceptable for others,” Tain went on, drawing Jake’s attention again. “Can you say truthfully that your emotional reaction to slavery hasn’t been changed by what you went through?”

  “No, I can’t say that and not be lying,” Jake agreed, now seriously bothered. “I disliked the idea of slavery before, but now I’d kill or die to keep it from happening to me again.”

  “And the only way to be absolutely certain that you can never be enslaved again is to make sure no one can be enslaved,” Tain said, smiling grimly as she nodded. “You as an individual may be safe today, but as long as it’s possible to enslave someone you might suddenly find your safety gone tomorrow. Does this strong leader you mentioned have friends or enemies with as much influence as he does?”

  “I’m sure he does, but I don’t know who they are,” Jake answered, glancing at Tandro where he lay on his stomach on his own blanket.

  “Tandro only knew about Gordi, so he was the one we meant to talk to. If we can talk Gordi around, and there’s a good chance of that in spite of your point being valid, he ought to call in the others and let us talk to them as well.”

  “I’m not as big a fan of calm conversation as I used to be,” Tain remarked, looking into her coffee cup before draining it. “I’m more of the opinion that one good experience is worth a million words instead of a thousand, not to mention twenty-five words or less. If the man really doesn’t want to hear what you have to say, you’d be lucky to get in even as many as twenty-five words. Risdin, you and I need to talk.” And with that Tain walked over to the native woman and began to speak to her in tones too low for Jake to hear. He was being shut out of Tain’s plans just the way he’d shut Tain out of his, and Jake found that he didn’t like it any more than Tain had.

  “What’s going on, Killen?” Tandro asked from where he lay only a couple of feet away, his expression as calm as it usually was but agitation showing in his eyes. “Are we going to be free, or have we simply exchanged owners?”

  “I’m sure we’ll be free, but the question right now is when,” Jake answered, speaking as softly as Tandro had. “I wanted to go straight home, but if there’s a chance we can end slavery before we go then I’m willing to wait. Do you feel differently?”

  “I can’t decide,” Tandro admitted, defining the agitation Jake had seen.

  “I want to be free as soon as possible, but now that I know that drug will work on me as well as it does on women my familiar world suddenly scares me. How can I go back to living a normal life if that life can be stolen from me with very little effort? If your woman needs us to tell Gordi how bad being a slave is from the male point of view, I know I can be more than a little convincing.”

  “You and me both,” Jake agreed, suddenly noticing that the woman Risdin had made a fresh pot of coffee as the aroma of the fresh brew began to fill the room. “If having us speak to Gordi of what we went through is part of Tain’s plan, I’m hoping she doesn’t ask us to go into real detail. Talking about it won’t be quite as bad as having lived it, but I don’t expect the experience to be pleasant.”

  “You really do like understatement, don’t you,” Tandro commented dryly, then he shook his head. “I’m trying very hard to forget those details you mentioned, but looking at your woman isn’t making the effort easy. That insertion isn’t affecting me any longer, but the outfit your woman is wearing is bringing back some of what we weren’t allowed to relieve.

  And speaking of women, where’s the girl?”

  “Ennie must be safe, or Tain would hardly be acting so unconcerned,” Jake assured the other man, bothered that he hadn’t noticed the girl’s absence himself. What he had noticed was the costume Tain still wore, but he’d finally remembered how to control himself. Without the insertion egging him on, controlling his reactions was no harder than standing on his hands for an hour would be. The effort would exhaust him, but it was possible…

  And thinking about other things helped a good deal. With that in mind, Jake concentrated on the aroma of coffee brewing to blot out awareness of how badly he wanted to take Tain in his arms and make love to her…

  “We now have a workable plan,” Tain told Risdin as soon as she’d moved far enough away from the men to make the conversation private. “If the only way to make men eager to end slavery is to force them to experience the state, we now have the perfect man to start with. As soon as we make Gordi ours we’ll get a list of names from him, then we’ll do the same with as many of the men on the list as we can.”

  “That’s a great idea, but I’m afraid there’s one small thing wrong with it,” Risdin said, her expression not quite ridiculing. “We could convince Gordi if we could get to him, but we have no way of getting to him.

  Inviting him to come visit and be enslaved probably won’t work.“

  “That all depends on how you word the invitation,” Tain countered, then waved away Risdin’s immediate protest. “I’m just joking. I know you and your people can’t get to Gordi, but Killen and I ought to be able to.

  We’re trained for this kind of thing, but we won’t be able to do it tonight. Killen is hurting too badly and we all need to get some sleep, not to mention the fact that we have to stay out of that slaver’s way. Is there some place other than here where we can all hide out until tomorrow night?“

  “You think there’s a chance we’ll be found in this room?” Risdin asked, now looking faintly worried. “The others and I have always been safe here, so what makes you think that won’t continue to be the case?”

  “As soon as the slaver finds Killen and Tandro gone, he’ll probably have his men search everywhere in the immediate neighborhood,” Tain explained patiently. “He’ll know that his former victims were too hurt to go very far, so he’ll search hoping to find them again. And since he’ll certainly be back first thing in the morning, we’ll be best off not waiting to go elsewhere until his men are knocking on the door.”

  “Knocking down the door, you mean,” Risdin corrected ruefully.

  “And if you and your friend do manage to take Gordi, we’ll need a place to keep him while we show him what slavery is all about. All right, we’ll move everything out of here to where we keep it when the warehouse is being used, and then we’ll get some sleep. But first I’ve got to tell Areen what we’re doing. Help yourself to the fresh coffee and I’ll be back in just a little while.”

  Risdin waited for Tain to nod agreement, then she turned and went to one of the cabinets in the wall to the far right. Instead of opening the cabinet doors she felt under the bottom of the unit, half her arm disappearing in the attempt.

  When Tain heard a small click and then saw the whole cabinet section swing away from the wall, she understood where the other women had gone. A lantern hung on the wall just inside the hidden opening, but once Risdin was back on her feet and moving past the cabinet she left the lantern where it was and disappeared down what looked like wooden stairs.

  “Your new friend seems to be very well organized,” Killen commented from where he lay on the blanket he’d been given, his attention and Tandro’s on the opening in the wall. “If that’s where we’ll be moving to, I can’t tell you how glad I am to hear it. Thinking about the search Himlin will have his men make in the morning would have kept me, at least, from sleeping at all tonight.”

  “I didn’t want to scare Risdin, but we might not have until morning for that search to start,” Tain said, drawing the men’s attention. “Your original guards stood their post for three hours before they were relieved, so that’s the absolute maximum amount of time we can count on before the next pair of guards shows up. If I’m not mistaken it hasn’t yet been an hour since I took out the guards, but I’ll feel better getting us under cover as soon as possible. Do you think I’m wrong?”

  “No, I couldn’t agree with you more,” Killen said at once, and Tain saw a look of fear ghost through his eyes before he regained control. “I was going to ask if I could have a cup of that coffee, but now I’d rather get started moving down those stairs.”

  “We’ll have to wait until Risdin gets things set up,” Tain said, seeing how the man would have jumped to his feet if he’d been in better physical condition - and was allowed to leave the blanket. “It shouldn’t take her long, so we might as well spend the waiting time stoking up on caffeine. Would you also like a cup of coffee, Tandro?”

  “Yes, please,” the native answered after the barest of hesitations, his own gaze hidden from Tain’s sight with the turn of his head. What

  Tain could see of his body looked more tense than usual, which meant that both men were feeling the same fear. Not being sure you’d be able to protect yourself was definitely something to bring on fear, and Tain didn’t have to work to understand how they felt. She’d felt the same herself when she’d been under Killen’s control…

  Rather than dwelling on the past, Tain found two more cups, filled them with coffee, then brought the coffee to Killen and Tandro. The men accepted the cups with thanks, but the thanks were mumbled and the coffee was swallowed in gulps in spite of how hot it was. Tain went back and refilled her own cup, pretending she didn’t see how rattled Killen and Tandro were. The fresh coffee was strong and hot and felt good going down, but if Risdin wasn’t back in another ten minutes Tain meant to leave that good coffee and go looking for the woman.

  No more than five of the ten minutes passed before Risdin reappeared at the top of the stairs, a smile on her face.

  “Areen loved your idea, and she’s now passing on the word and then she’ll be back to help us move things down,” Risdin announced as soon as she stepped through the opening. “I thought about waiting for her, but on the way up I decided I’d rather not. If that slaver finds out sooner than morning that his prisoners are gone, we don’t still want to be in the middle of moving.”

  “You’re right, so let’s get to it this minute,” Tain said, putting her cup down and moving off the wall she’d been leaning on. “You men pick up your blankets and body cloths, and you can carry those along with your cups. Risdin and I will carry the heavy stuff, and you can take your turn with doing more tomorrow, when you’re not quite as stiff and hurting.”

  “What idea is Risdin talking about?” Killen asked as he and Tandro both began to get to their feet. “You haven’t yet mentioned what you have in mind.”

  “You’ll know when you need to know,” Tain answered, feeling the least bit childish but not really caring. “But don’t worry that you’ll be left out of things, because you won’t be.

  Pandora’s box has been opened, and since you’re the one who opened it you’ll even get to tell people all about it.”

  “What’s Pandora’s box?” Risdin asked as Killen turned away to hide whatever his expression was like. “And what can a box have to do with any of what we’re in the middle of?”

  “Pandora’s box is from very old folklore,” Tain explained while she and Risdin began to empty the space behind the wall of what it held.

  “Pandora was given a box and told not to open it, otherwise something very terrible would happen. The girl was able to stay away from the box for a short while, but eventually her curiosity got to be too much and she opened the box. The box held all the evils of the world, and once it was open Pandora found that it couldn’t be closed again. All the evils escaped into the world, and that was supposed to be the reason that bad things happen to good people.

  Because someone didn’t know enough to leave things they way they were.”

  “That doesn’t make much sense,” Risdin said as she led the way to the opening, bedding and blankets filling her arms. “If the person who gave Pandora the box had told her what was in it, she wouldn’t have opened the thing. Not telling her just about guaranteed that the evils would be let loose, so it wasn’t Pandora’s fault but the fault of whoever gave her the box.”

  “I agree with you up to a certain point,” Tain said, knowing the two men were following her the way she followed Risdin, her own arms full of food supplies. “Pandora should have been told what was in the box, but would knowing the truth have helped? If all the evils in the world were inside the box, Pandora had no real idea what evil was. Sometimes you have to know, personally, just how bad a thing can be before you can tell if it’s something that shouldn’t be allowed to exist. And you have to understand how far the evil can spread, otherwise opening the box doesn’t seem to be a bad idea at all.” The silence behind Tain suggested that Killen might be thinking about what she’d said, or maybe he was ignoring it. She’d finally remembered hearing Killen tell Tandro that using the slave drug on a man the first time had been his idea, a doing that had been completely out of the question until that moment. Killen was definitely the one who had opened Pandora’s box, so he couldn’t very well complain that bad stuff was falling out of the sky all over him.

  Another lantern hung on the wall half way down the stairs, and a third lantern lit the dimness at the bottom. There was more than enough room to get around the handrail at the bottom, and a corridor led into a series of small, doorless … areas or alcoves that could be considered semi-private rooms. The corridor continued on into unrelieved darkness, but three of the rooms had candles in holders adding some much needed light.

  “There isn’t that much more to bring down, but we ought to get the men settled first,” Risdin said over her shoulder, leading the way to the farthest of the three lit rooms. “You and I can share that first area, we can put the cooking stuff and the rest in the middle, and the men can sleep in the third.”

  There was no reason to argue the suggestion, so Tain simply nodded and joined Risdin in setting things up. While Risdin put two of the pallets in the third room and then took the others into the first room, Tain put the food she’d carried down into the middle area. She glanced into the men’s alcove to see that both of them were lying down again with their cups of coffee, then she and Risdin went back upstairs for the rest of the things that could betray their presence.

  The metal container the cooking was done on went down first, with both Tain and Risdin holding the container’s wooden handles. There were still live coals in it so they had to be careful, not to mention the fact that the thing was heavy. Once that was done, though, the rest went much more quickly. Tain had Risdin, who knew what was where, empty the wall space and the cabinets and bring the stuff to the top of the stairs while she herself carted things down.

  No more than ten minutes later Risdin was ready to help with taking things down, but first Tain had her make sure there was absolutely nothing left to show they’d been in the room.

  Risdin spent another couple of minutes brushing away charcoal dust and crumbs and closing all of the cabinets really tight, and then she took the candle and came onto the landing of the stairs. Another moment saw the hidden door closed and secured, and then she and Tain carried down what was left of the supplies.

  “Half of me wants to watch to see what happens across the street,” Risdin said as she and Tain put down the last of their burdens in the cooking room. “The other half, though, doesn’t want to know anything about it. That slaver will be furious when he finds out about the men being gone, and I hate to think what he’ll do to his women. And by the way, I’ve decided to make you something to eat before we go to bed. It finally came to me that you haven’t had a single bite all day.”

  Tain’s first urge was to tell Risdin not to bother with making her anything, but then she remembered that she did have to build up her strength after having so little real food for so long. She’d been able to do everything necessary tonight, but right now she felt empty and in need of recharging.

  “I appreciate the offer, Risdin, and I accept it gladly,” Tain said after only the smallest hesitation as she sat down on the stone floor. “As far as watching what goes on across the street, though, I have a feeling I’m much better off not seeing it. I’d hate to ruin things by losing my temper and going after that slimy man, thereby letting everyone know the men had help in getting away. If the slaver thinks his prisoners got themselves free he’ll be knocked off balance, and that’s the way we want him. Off balance.”

  “And frightened,” Risdin said, giving all her attention to the fresh charcoal she’d put in the metal container. “He deserves to be frightened, to feel what he makes so many others feel, and I only wish I could be the one to make him feel like that.” The woman’s words were so fierce that Tain could almost feel the pain and hatred that lay behind them. It wasn’t a pleasant experience, but it did give her an idea.

  “Maybe something can be arranged,” Tain said, knowing she sounded thoughtful. “I’ll keep the possibility in mind while we wait to see how things turn out. Personally I would have just killed the man, but that would let him off too easily, wouldn’t it.” Risdin flashed her such a delighted and grateful look that Tain filed the idea away for future use. Giving the slaver a taste of what he gave so easily to others would be the best poetic justice imaginable, but it might not prove to be possible. If circumstances forced his death he would die, but if not…

  The meal Risdin produced was quick and hot, and Tain actually bolted it down when she was handed the plate. The food not only warmed her insides but added a rush of the strength Tain needed, and afterward she sipped her rewarmed coffee feeling full and satisfied. Risdin kept her company while she ate, sipping from a cup of coffee of her own, and then the two cleaned up from the meal. The clean-up didn’t take long, and then they went to their alcove and lay down on pallets. The lamps and candles were left lit, to keep the underground darkness from becoming overwhelming.

 

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