Parts 1-2 first appeared, unedited, in the "Story/Plot Ideas"
section of Katie Smith's "Tracey Stories Archive," on 30 January
2012.
TRACY IN THE SLAVE MARKET
by
Joe Doe
Prologue (by C. Lakewood)
The Pacific island of Pendennis (since 1758 known variously as
Admiralty Island, St. Denis, Isle de Fraternité, and Pendennis)
has spent over 200 years as the property of France or Great
Britain. Since 1848, it has been British, and, for some time,
its primary importance was as the only coaling station within
almost 1000 nautical miles. By the time oil had replaced coal,
the island had become important for other reasons: a unique
variety of superfine cotton, vast deposits of guano, and, most
recently, a seemingly inexhaustible supply of "unobtanium-class"
rare-earths. As a result of this leverage, the island has been
able to quietly maintain an exemption for its flourishing slave
market, despite British laws to the contrary.
Young John Chambers has recently inherited a sizeable plantation
on the island from his great-uncle, Bedford Chambers. John has
arrived from Hampshire, together with his ex-teacher, Tracy Smith
(on whom the young man has had a schoolboy crush for years).
Tracy hopes to work a handsome profit from the trip. She claims
to be researching and writing a sober, scholarly article on the
slave market for a respectable academic journal -- but is really
planning to produce a sensational exposé too lurid even for Fleet
Street.
Lucy Lewes, a lawyer and resident of Pendennis, is executrix
of Great-uncle Bedford's will and has been drafted by Tracy
("she-who-is-to-be-obeyed") as a guide and dog robber.
******************************
Part 1
The young, prematurely balding clerk barely looked at Tracy as
he filled in her information. "Now, let's see...you want to be
auctioned subject to confirmation?"
Tracy, a little hesitant, looked to Lucy, all the while trying not
to let on to John that she was in over her head and had studied
auction terminology far less than she should have. "Mustn't let
the student know teacher hasn't done her homework," Tracy thought.
Fortunately for Tracy, desperate for an answer, Lucy flashed her a
quick, almost imperceptible nod.
"Yes, definitely," Tracy explained. "I don't want to actually BE
sold, you know. I just want to go through the process. I want
to specify a huge required bid, so I won't actually be sold."
"It's called a reserve," the clerk said. "Top grade 'fancy girls'
go for about £15,000."
"Miss Smith is worth much more than that," John protested earnestly.
Tracy smiled. As headmistress, she had done a wonderful job of
making sure that 18-year-old John's exposure to women had been
minimal during his time at the academy, and it was quite obvious
he had a schoolboy "pash" for his headmistress, despite (and
perhaps because of) her fondness for using the cane.
She shifted slightly in her chair as Lucy appraised her with a
critical, knowing eye. "She's very pretty, but she's totally
untrained. I'm not sure if you'd get TOP dollar for her, but,
well...."
"Put in a minimum sales price of £300,000," Tracy said irritably,
making a mental note to keep Lucy's own lack of "training" in mind
at her next performance review. "Since the bidders don't see the
minimum price anyway, we might as well make it as high as possible,
just to make sure there are no...unfortunate accidents."
Lucy protested that this record-setting price was "absurd," while
John, sweet and love-struck as ever, assured his teacher that she
was worth every penny. Lucy's objection overruled, the clerk
entered the number and moved on to the next question.
"The property will be sold as-is?" the clerk asked. Tracy flushed
a bit, then nodded.
"So you'd like a preview period, then?" he asked, typing.
Tracy, unsure, again looked to Lucy. Lucy, stung at being
overruled, maintained a poker face and answered Tracy's
unspoken query with an absolutely blank look.
"Yes, that's what I want, a preview," Tracy said, piecing it
together. "A long preview.... I'd like to see as much as
possible."
She ignored Lucy's mischievous giggle as the clerk searched the
schedule.
"I can book you into Lot 1347, on Saturday. The preview period
will give you time to learn your paces."
Tracy looked at the man, confused. Saturday was four days from
now. Was she going to have to come back this weekend?
"Paces," the man repeated. Exasperated by Tracy's ignorance, the
man turned to John. "Paces, my boy. You'll get a better price
for her."
John, unembarrassed by his ignorance, turned to Lucy. "What are
paces, miss?" he asked pleasantly.
"They'll show Miss Smith how to behave on the block, so she doesn't
make a fool of herself," Lucy said, shooting Tracy a snarky look.
"Inexperienced girls panic when they hear the auctioneer chanting,
and feel the sand between their toes, and see the eager expressions
on the faces of the bidders. Miss Smith might well lose her water."
John giggled. Tracy, highly annoyed, spoke to the clerk directly.
"Yes, I want to do that. I'd like to understand as much of the
process as possible. I want to learn my paces, and whatever else
I can, so I can write about this subject properly for an academic
journal."
"Would you like Identification Assurance?" the clerk asked. "It's
only £5."
Tracy looked perplexed, but this time Lucy jumped in to rescue her.
"With Identification Assurance the auction house offers a guarantee
that the girl will be properly tracked, and that the right girl
will be sold at the right price."
John seemed troubled. "£5 is a lot of money," he said. "I don't
think I have...."
"I'll pay it, John," Tracy said, pulling a crisp £5 note out of
her purse and handing it to the clerk. Shooting Lucy a glance,
she re-issued her maxim: "No accidents."
"Would you like some of the extras with that, miss?" the clerk
said. "We offer...."
"I don't need any extras, young man," Tracy replied, adopting the
tone she used with her students. "£5 is quite sufficient."
"It will be a bit more than that, miss," the clerk said. "This
will be a 'no sale fee' auction."
"Why should I have to pay a sale fee?" Tracy asked, befuddled.
"You don't," Lucy said. "That's just to keep the reserve status,
but you don't have to pay that until the day of the auction."
She looked at the clerk. "Are you trying to cheat us?"
Picking up on Lucy's cue, Tracy pounced. "If you're trying to
cheat me, maybe I should go elsewhere...or perhaps I should
report you."
"No need for that, miss," the clerk said. "As the lady observed,
we can deal with that later."
He spread several completed forms on the desk top. "Now, if you
and the lad would be so kind as to sign these papers...."
Tracy and John signed, Lucy witnessed, and, in less than 30
seconds, Tracy's faux slavery was notarized and stamped.
"So...do I own her?" John asked, his voice trembling.
"Down, son," the clerk said, laughing. "You have a right of
registration, which allows you to put her up for auction,"
he explained. "She will be a slave for the next few days,
for all intents and purposes, and will be put up for sale
the same as the rest, but her slavery will be reversible, at
least until she acquires an owner, and the sale is final."
"Which will never happen," Tracy added, shooting Lucy a fierce
look. "You know, maybe we should make it £3 million."
"Too late for that now," the clerk said. "The papers have been
signed and sealed. We need to get you outside, young lady,
with the other...uh...the other young ladies."
Tracy, John, and Lucy followed the clerk outside. As Lucy and John
watched, the clerk directed Tracy into a fenced-in area where she
joined two dozen other women destined to be processed into the
slave market. Some were young and pretty, some older, but all
looked scared out of their wits, a condition that did little to
alleviate Tracy's growing sense of dread.
She winced slightly at the click of the padlock as the gate locked
behind her. She stuck her fingers through the mesh of the chain
link fence forming her kennel, and she nervously eyed the mass of
barb wire over her head. But John's attention was already focused
opposite, at the exit leading to the first stage of Tracy's
"processing."
He watched, mouth agape, as a dozen women of varied skin colors
stripped themselves entirely naked, put their clothes and other
possessions into cardboard boxes, and scampered into a large,
open-air shower.
"They can wash goats and pigs there, too, when they're not washing
slaves," Lucy observed coolly. "You want to get the girls clean
before they're marked, to lower the risk of infection."
"Marked?" John asked, certain that he had heard wrong.
"Yes, marked, with a branding iron," Lucy said matter-of-factly.
"It's part of Identification Assurance. They stencil the girl's
registration number on her inside lower lip, like you would with
a puppy. Branding is included, to the owner's specification. You
can put a symbol on her backside, or your initials, if you prefer.
Any preference, John?"
John looked past the showers to the branding barn, where a dozen
irons were already resting in the huge, smoking brazier.
"You mean they're really going to brand her?" John asked.
"Oh, yes...however you want," Lucy said. "Your call, entirely.
Of course, they could just tattoo your initials on, but that's
more work and is one of those 'extras' that Tracy didn't want
to pay for. I think we should respect her wishes, don't you?"
"Uh, yeah, I guess so," John said.
"Quite right. Now we should pick out a brand, so it's ready when
she gets out of the shower. It's like pulling off a bandaid...it's
easier if you do it fast, without a lot of discussion."
"But I can't believe they're really going to brand her."
"She must think it's worth it," Lucy said. "After all, why else
would she sign up for Identity Assurance? It's not like Tracy's
the sort of girl who wouldn't research everything. A right Clever
Clara, she is."
******************************
Part 2
John and Lucy strolled over to the branding barn. John was
reluctant to mark Tracy's "perfect" bottom, but, after some
prodding, he agreed to have his initials -- "JC" -- branded
in cursive script between Tracy's bottom cheeks. The mark
would thus be visible whenever she bent over and touched her
toes.
"Not to worry!" Lucy said brightly. "They will put some salve on
it. It'll make it hurt worse, but help it heal faster. And, if I
don't miss my guess, little Tracy's brand will get a lot of fresh
air, because she's going to be spending much of the preview period
bent over, with her bottom cheeks spread."
"I don't understand, miss," he said, confused. "What will Tracy be
previewing?"
Lucy laughed. "Oh, no, John. In auction lingo 'preview' refers to
the period where the prospective bidders get to literally 'feel the
goods.' I'll take you over later, when she's on display, and let
you, too, get a 'feel' for the situation."
By this time, Tracy had already failed to convince the man with the
cattle prod that delousing her was "quite unnecessary," since she
had bathed that morning, and the scent of her Coco Mademoiselle
perfume would be far more alluring than the harsh disinfectants
used to delouse the livestock.
******************************
The auctioneer's assistant, a cruel thug of a man, responded by
lifting up Tracy's chin with the prod and sneering, "A right proper
English lady, are we? Well, you're going to strip down butt-naked
with the rest of 'em, and scrub down out there in the open, where
the buyers can get a look."
It was true enough. For, as Tracy undressed and put her belongings
into a crate, she was acutely aware of the men on the other side of
the fence, hooting and whistling as she and other girls performed
their humiliating command performance strip tease.
By the time John and Lucy were ready to exit the barn, Tracy was
down to her lacy pink bra and panties, stopping dead when she saw
John gaping at her.
John was staring, stunned at his teacher's loveliness. Lucy's
attention, however, was focused on Tracy's purse, which was
resting comfortably in the crude property box that now held
her jewelry and most of her clothes.
Lucy reflected momentarily on the importance of the presence
or absence of a lowly hyphen. (A salutary lesson for the
grammatically feeble.)
Tracy had been told it was a "no sale fee auction," which she had
interpreted to mean that "no sale-fee" needed to be paid. Lucy
knew it meant a "no-sale fee" that must be paid if an item on
reserve -- in this case, Tracy -- was not sold ("no-sale")
because the bidding didn't meet the outlandish reserve price
that she had set on herself.
If the "no-sale" fee was not on file by the time the bidding was
complete, the "reserve" auction would become an "absolute" auction,
and the sale would be FINAL, whatever the price.
Lucy smiled. The fee was only a pittance, but how would Tracy pay
it when she was naked in the showroom, and her purse was boxed up,
awaiting final disposal pending her sale?
Edited by C. Lakewood