Dances of
the Wagon People
Painting from Dragonlance
Series
Click on Image for Larger Picture
"Dance," ordered Aphris.
The trembling girl before her did
not move.
"Dance!" screamed Aphris, rising
to her feet.
"What shall I do?" begged the kneeling
girl of Kamchak. She looked not too unlike Hereena, and was perhaps a similar
sort of girl, raised and trained much the same. Like Hereena, of course,
she wore the tiny golden nose ring.
Kamchak spoke to her, very gently.
"You are slave," he said. "Dance for your masters."
The girl looked at him gratefully
and she, with the others, rose to her feet and to the astounding barbarity
of the music performed the savage love dances of the Kassars, the Paravaci,
the Kataii, the Tuchuks.
They were magnificent.
One girl, the leader of the dancers,
she who had spoken to Kamchak, was a Tuchuk girl, and was particularly
startling, vital, uncontrollable, wild.
It was then clear to me why the
Turian men so hungered for the wenches of the Wagon Peoples.
At the height of one of her dances,
called the Dance of the Tuchuk Slave Girl, Kamchak turned to Aphris of
Turia, who was watching the dance, eyes bright, as astounded as I at the
savage spectacle. "I will see to it," said Kamchak, "when you are my slave,
that you are taught that dance."
Nomads of Gor, page 98
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