"Here we are, slave girl." The man Kit had heard called Wheylin put his hand on her shoulder while the slaveress was looking the other way. Kit looked at him out of the corner of one eye, unwilling to dedicate the whole of her attention to him. But she could see him raise a finger and point. "You see that?" He hissed, "Ravok is out there. In the middle of that lake."
The sun shone through parting clouds over the waters. She squinted, peered, tried to catch some glimpse of the city, and her heart sank like a heavy stone. Surely not. How could anyone get to it? Her stomach tried to force its way out of her throat. No, it couldn't be. Right? How do you escape a city in the middle of a damned lake?
The obvious answer was; you don't. I am alone, and no one will save me.
"Hands off the merchandise, Wheylin." The slaveress called, and the brute let go. Kit expected him to snarl, whisper some secret threat into her ear. But when she turned to look at him she saw him smiling. Just . . . smiling. The knot of fear that had slowly grown in her center blossomed into something terrible and thorny, and she felt despair spill over into her expression. "With me," the slaveress said, seized the chain attached to her cuffs and pulled, yanking Kit forward and giving her the choice between staggering after her.
There was a small, flat clearing, with the glittering, tranquil waters of lake Ravok beyond it. There were four things in the clearing; a washpan big enough to watch all a rich man's clothes at once, filled with dark water. A fire, burning bright, a wooden board with a hand's outline painted on, and a man, one of the slavers, with . . .
Panic, desperate and animal. "Oh Kel and Wyn," Kit breathed, eyes wide and stopped abruptly in her tracks. The Slaveress' felt her stop and turned around, her stare sympathetic.
"Have you never seen a brand before?"
He held a long metal pole in a gloved hand, a semicircle in a pattern Kit did not recognize, and shoved the end into the fire. Its end glowed orange with heat, like molten metal. Strategy fell out the window, plans fell out the window. "No," she said, pulling back. "No, no, no!"
But the slaveress was having none of that. She grabbed hold of Kit's chain and held her in place, pull Kit slowly closer and closer to her. "You're only making this harder for yourself," she said, in a tone that belonged to an exasperated teacher. Behind her, Kit could hear Wheylin laughing.
"Let me go," she cried, stripped of all illusions. "I don't wanna be here! Lemme go, LET ME GO!"
The slaveress grabbed Kit's shoulder and forced her forward, pressed her foot against the back of Kit's legs and sent her falling to her knees in the mud. "Put your hand on the board," the slaveress' said, and Kit felt a sudden pressure on the back of her head, a slackness around her wrist as the manacles came loose.
"N—" The slaveress shoved Kit's head into the washpan. Kit tried to hold her breath, till she felt a kick in her ribs, forcing the air from her lungs and into the water. She thrashed desperately, trying to force her way up. Her body demanded breathe, and her lungs did, pulling in water. Noise was muted and faded; the sounds of her own feeble struggle was distorted and warped by the water. Kit could hear nothing else. Kit's vision went dark around the edges and . . .
An ease on the pressure on her head. Air. Air. Precious air! She lifted her face from the water took a gasping breath of crisp fresh—
And then her head was underwater again. Her body screamed keep breathing, and screamed more when it took in water instead. Kit's head was pulled from the water, put back in. Again. Again. Again. There was no room in her mind for numbers. An eternity later, they took Kit's head out of the water long enough for her to shout. "STOP!" They submerged her again. "Stop!" She pleaded, and they submerged her again. "Stop . . ." She sobbed, coughing up water, tears hidden by the wetness of her face. "Stop . . ."
"Put your hand," the slaveress said, "on the board."
Kit lowered a tentative hand on the board and turned away, eyes closed, but the slaveress was having none of that. She grabbed hold of Kit's head and turned it back. "Open your eyes," she said, her face so close that Kit could feel the slaveress' breath on her ear.
She opened her eyes, saw her hand, unblemished, unmarked. It had never seemed so beautiful to Kit before. "There is no 'I,'" the slaveress whispered. "Do you understand? You are a slave. Not a person. Property. Property doesn't get to want. Say it. Say it."
"I—I am alone." Kit choked. "And n—no one will save me."
The slaver lifted the brand from the fire, hovered it down toward Kit's beautiful hand. "Scream if you'd like. It looks quite painful."
It was. |
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