A Girl Being Trained in a Chain Dance
The drummer and the flautist prepared once more to play. The girl in the long, light chain
smiled at me. She, at any rate, was pleased by my response.
A wrist ring was fastened on her right wrist. The long, slender, gleaming chain was
fastened to this and, looping down and up, ascended gracefully to a wide chain ring on her
collar, through which it freely passed, thence descending, looping down, and ascending,
looping up, gracefully, to the left wrist ring. If she were to stand quietly, the palms of
her hands on her thighs, the lower portions of the chain, those two dangling loops, would
have been about at the level of her knees, just a little higher. The higher portion of the
chain, of course, would be at the collar loop.
The musicians began again to play. There is much that can be done with such a chain. It
was a dancing chain. Its purpose was not to confine the girl but to allow her to
incorporate it in her dance, enhancing the dance with its movements and beauty. It is, of
course, symbolic of her bondage, this adding fantastic dimensions of significance to the
dance. It is not merely a beautiful woman who dances, but one who can be bought and sold,
one who is subject to male ownership. Too, of course, the wrist rings, and the collar, are
truly locked on her. There is no doubt about it. It is a slave, with all that that means,
who is dancing.
Kajira of Gor, Pg. 142 - 143