"I expect it does," I said.
"You do not seem much pleased with the House of Cernus," observed Ho-Tu.
"Are you," I asked, "Ho-Tu?"
He looked up at me, surprised. "I am well paid," he said. Then he shrugged. "Most of the House you have seen," said he, "with the exception of training areas, the iron pens, the processing rooms, and such."
"Where are the women who were brought to the Voltai last night on the black ship?"
"In the kennels," he said. "Follow me."
On the way down the stairs to the lower portions of the cylinder, several floors of which, incidentally, are below ground level, we passed the office of Caprus. I saw Elizabeth there, in the hallway outside, carrying an armful of scrolls.
Seeing me she fell to her knees and put down her head, managing somehow to retain her hold on the several scrolls.
"I see your training has not begun even yet," I said, rather sternly.
She did not speak.
"Her training," said Ho-Tu, "will begin soon."
"What are you waiting for?" I asked.
"It is an idea of Cernus," said Ho-Tu. "He wants to train a first small set of barbarian slaves. She will be numbered among those in the first set."
"The girls who were brought in last night?" I asked.
"Only two of them in her set," said Ho-Tu. "The remaining eight will be divided into two larger sets and trained separately."
"Barbarians, I have heard," I said, "do not train well."
"It is our belief," said Ho-Tu, "that much can be done with a barbarian girl-it remains to be proven, of course."
"But such would not be likely to bring a high price," I observed.
"Who knows what may be the case by the month of En'Var?" asked Ho-Tu. "Or perhaps even by En'Kara?"
"Should the experiment be successful," I said, "it seems the House of Cernus will have the largest supply of such girls."
Ho-Tu smiled. "Of course," he said.
"You already have several in the pens?" I speculated.
"Yes," said Ho-Tu. "And more are obtained each rendezvous."
Elizabeth looked up, as though puzzled at this, as though she did not understand the reference, and then dropped her head again.
"When will you begin the training?" I asked.
"When the two new girls chosen for the first set grow weary of the kennels, and of the gruel of the iron pens."
"Do girls in training not eat such gruel?" I asked.
"Girls in training," said Ho-Tu, "partake of the finest of slave porridges. They are given mats to sleep on, and later in their training, furs. They are seldom chained. Sometimes they are even permitted, under guard, to leave the house, that they may be stimulated and pleased by the sights of Ar."
"Do you hear that, Little Vella?" I asked.
"Yes, Master," said Elizabeth, not lifting her head.
"Further," said Ho-Tu, "after the first few weeks of training, if sufficient progress is made, they will be permitted foods other than slave porridges."
Elizabeth looked up brightly.
"One might even say," said Ho-Tu, "that they will be well fed."
Elizabeth smiled.
"In order that they may bring," added Ho-Tu, looking at Elizabeth, "a higher price."
Elizabeth looked down.
At that time we heard the fifteenth bar. Elizabeth looked up at me. "You are permitted to leave," I told her. She sprang up and returned to the office of Caprus, who was closing the top of the desk before which he stood. She replaced the scrolls in the pigeonholes of a scroll bin and Caprus slid the cover over the bin and locked it, and then with a word to him, she lightly ran past us and disappeared down the hall.
"With speed like that," said Ho-Tu, smiling, "she will not be the last to arrive at the porridge trough."
I looked at Ho-Tu and smiled.
He lifted his shaved head to mine, and the black eyes met mine. He scratched his left shoulder. He stood squarely there before me, and then he grinned.
"You are a strange one for an Assassin," he said.
"Are we now to go to the iron pens?" I asked.
"It is the fifteenth bar," said Ho-Tu. "Let us go to table. After we have eaten, I will show you the pens."
Here and there, down the hall, I could see slaves hurrying in one direction or another, depending on the location of their feeding quarters. I could also see members of the staff moving about, and could hear doors being closed and locked.
"All right," I said, "let us eat."
There were various matches in the pit of sand that evening. There was a contest of sheathed hook knife, one of whips and another of spiked gauntlets. One of the slave girls spilled wine and was fastened to a slave ring, stripped and beaten. Later the Musicians played and a girl I had not seen before, whom I was told was from Cos, performed the collar dance, and creditably. Cernus, as before, was lost in his game with Caprus, this time lingering at the board even long after Paga and full-strength Ka-la-na were served.
"Why is it?" I asked Ho-Tu, whom I felt I had come to know somewhat better in the day, "that when others have Ka-la-na and meat and bread and honey you eat only this porridge?"
Ho-Tu pushed back the bowl.
"It is not important," he said.
"Very well," I said.
The horn spoon snapped in his hands, and he angrily threw the pieces into the bowl.
"I am sorry," I said.
He looked at me puzzled, his black eyes glinting. "It is not important," he repeated.
I nodded.
He rose. "I will take you to the pens now," he said.
I indicated the door to one side through which, the night before, the shackled slave had been led, through which Cernus had left as well. This night, I had been pleased to note that none of the slaves who had come out poorly in their contests had been shackled and led through the door. The slave who had won at hook knife the night before, I observed, was again eating at the foot of the table. The collar had been taken from his throat. I gathered he might now be free. There was a whipping strap looped about his belt, and in the belt, sheathed, was a hook knife, the hilt buckled down in the sheath, as was the case with that of Ho-Tu. "The thing you call the beast," I said, "lies through that door."
Ho-Tu looked at me, narrowly. "Yes," he said.
"I would like to see it," I said.
Ho-Tu paled. Then he smiled. "Pray to the Priest-Kings," he said, "that you never see it."
"You know nothing of the beast?" I asked.
"Cernus, and certain others," said he, "can look upon it-they alone." He looked at me closely. "Do not be curious, Killer," said he, "for commonly those who look upon the beast do so only in death."
"I trust," I said, "it is safely caged."
Ho-Tu smiled. "I trust so," he said.
"How often is it fed?" I asked.
It can eat many times a day," said Ho-Tu, "but it can also endure long periods without food. Normally we feed it a slave every ten days."
"A live slave?" I asked.
"It likes to make its own kills," said Ho-Tu.
"As long as it is safely caged," I remarked, "I gather there is no danger."
"Fear of the beast keeps good order in the House of Cernus," said Ho-Tu.
"I expect it does," I admitted.
"Come," said Ho-Tu. "I will show you the pens."