After The Bighorn Chapter Three An unexpected Death.
(Originally published on EmmaOfGor on 03 August 2024, https://emmaofgor.blogspot.com/2024/08/after-bighorn-chapter-three-unexpected.html#more )
Shocking News comes to the Lazy F.
Early in the morning on July 14th
shocking news came to the Lazy F.
Willard Frick, head of the Family had been murdered in London. (Steel Worlds, Chapter
28). Despite the early hour, the Fricks on the
ranch were already up and at breakfast, setting the tasks for the day. The news pushed all that to the side. Woodrow
Frick and his uncle Wilson set out immediately to see to the security of the
Lazy F. Every man capable of bearing
arms was on high alert. Around mid-afternoon, Wilson and Woodrow met alone in
Wilson’s office. The meeting was grim,
and the two men were wary of each other.
Wilson began. “I have talked to Cousin Wyandotte Frick in
Pittsburgh.”
“I as well.”
“Then you know the
situation. It was some kind of power
play by the folks in London. They have been getting above themselves and denied
Willard his rightful tribute. And then they
killed him with the Families Council on the line.”
Woodrow looked grim and
strained. “He was my father. I need to take vengeance.”
“The Ubar of the North American
Families will exact vengeance. We need
to pick a new leader for the Family. Urgently. The Family needs a leader. My brother Willard left no son.”
“He left me!”
“Willard did not marry your
mother, that matters on Earth.”
“They were Free Companions when
I was born.”
“Except for those who have been
to Gor, they don’t understand that.
Wyandotte understands, I understand, you understand, but the rest of the
Family does not understand that, not in their bones. Even many of the council do not understand
and we need a leader tonight. London may take further action; our less friendly
friends on the council may try to diminish us. Willard was removed from the
council; we need someone who can push to have the Head of the Family back on
the council. Otherwise, our interests suffer. Most of the rest of the cousins
are too old or too weak. We need a leader right now.”
“Do you seek the Headship?”
Wilson shook his head. “I have
been out of things here on the ranch, not in the center of things at Willard’s
right hand like Wyandotte was. I have
just called Wyandotte and let him know I will support him. I am to have more
autonomy here on the Lazy F and it is to become our main shipping point. London and Europe in general know too much
about our Pittsburgh operation.”
Woodrow leaned back. He relaxed a bit. It seemed a fight that he
was braced for might not occur.
“Before I came into the office,
I called Wyandotte as well. I have
pledged him my support. He is the only logical choice. As you yourself said,
you have been out of things here on the ranch.
We need someone who can reclaim our rightful place on the council. I just hope he is strong enough, he has
mostly operated as a counselor and aide to Willard. He is going to have to lead now, not be an
administrator. He will have to maneuver to regain our rightful seat on the
Council of the Families; in our time of weakness, our rivals will try to take
advantage.
As for me, leaving aside Free
Companionship vs Marriage, I am too young at twenty-four, and have been away on
Gor for eight years. I don’t know our operation, or the Council. It must be
Wyandotte.”
Both men were more relaxed now
that there wasn’t going to be fight for the Leadership.
Wilson poured them both drinks.
“There is one thing I want to
know, really, I need to know. I didn’t
ask you before, it didn’t matter with Willard alive.”
“How did you get to Gor? You had no ring; Willard had the Frick
ring. No one has been to Gor since
Wyandotte returned over fifteen years ago.”
“I used the McMurtry Ring.”
“In the name of the
Priest-Kings, who are the McMurtrys?”
“They were one of the original
North American families, going back to the beginning, like the Fricks or the
Bannons. My mother was the last of the
McMurtrys. She was at least fifteen years older than he when I was born. Then Willard terminated the Free
Companionship when a better alliance came along. His new wife didn’t want a
bastard baby under foot, so I was left with my mother, while Willard formed his
disastrous first marriage.”
“Do you blame him for that?”
“No, my mother did, she was a
woman, emotional. I understood he needed to make the best alliance for the
Family.”
Woodrow nodded. Women can be emotional; men need to
understand strength and power.
“My mother was getting sick as
she grew older and sent me to my father when I was twelve. The first wife was gone by then. Mother died
when I was fourteen. When I was sixteen,
a lawyer sent me a packet. In it was information about her family and a ring. I
had been spending my summers on the ranch, one night I took the ring and
summoned a ship to Gor. I was there eight years. I was a warrior and a rider of Tarns.”
Both men took a sip of their
drinks. Wilson was entranced by the
romance of the story. He had been to Gor
for a short period but had never ridden a Tarn. Woodrow went on.
“So, while Wyandotte stabilizes
the strength of the Family after this disaster, and fights his way back on the
council, and you run our operation here on the Lazy F, I suggest I travel
around to our cousins, our Friends, and our assets to put the Family into
fighting trim. We have become complacent and need to retire retainers and
cousins who have grown too old or too soft. We must harden ourselves for the
coming struggles to remake Earth and claim our rightful place in the new
Order.”
“The Council would never have
dared to remove Willard from its ranks if the family was stronger.”
Wilson demurred, “Willard was
strong, we have strength here.”
Woodrow shook his head, “But
there was no strength behind him. He was
a force, but he needed a phalanx of spearmen behind him. On the Lazy F, we had
strength enough resist attack, but not enough to go on offence. We need power to attack, power to influence,
and though my father would not admit it, we need friends and allies.”
Wilson nodded again. He was
naturally taciturn; he was not the kind to influence a council with words.
The younger Frick took another
sip. Talking was thirsty work.
“Another thing I want to do is
find out what happened to the McMurtry money.
There was a lot of it, but little enough ended up in my mother’s
estate. Collateral cousins and dodgy
trustees, I suspect.”
Wilson nodded. “Thank you for filling me in on your
story. But you left out one important
thing. What City? To what city are the
McMurtrys connected? Our Frick
connection is Glorious Ar, the greatest on Gor, as befits our standing; but
what city for the McMurtrys?”
Woodrow laughed. It was a
private joke he had been waiting years to share. “It is Ko-ro-ba. The darling of the Priest-Kings, enemy of Ar,
and Home City of that posturing pirate, Tarl Cabot. And one of the Great
Families of North America right under their nose.”
The two men smiled, finding
humor even on this tragic day.
Then the phone rang. Wilson answered and listened, his face
becoming grave.
“With Willard dead, a patent
troll from Silicon Valley has attacked our patents. This could cost us hundreds of millions.”
“It would really weaken
us. How do we fight this off, with all
our other problems.”
The answer came to them both at
once.
“We have a Friend who is a
patent attorney. Let us see what his
friendship is worth.”
“Patrick Skull-Ax”
“Patrick of San Francisco.”
Wilson picked up the
phone. That night Patrick Masters left
for Pittsburgh to do battle on his favorite battleground.
Legal Combat with Vincent VanRijn
Patrick Masters’ Narrative
I took the redeye to
Pittsburgh. Wilson Frick apologized for
not sending their private jet, but Woodrow was also on his way to Pittsburgh. I
noticed in a small section of the San Francisco Chronicle that the old Grand
Duke of Lutha had died. I made a note to
send letters of condolence to the Prime Minister Count Rupert and to the new
Grand Duchess. She is a young woman; I
hope she has the sense to leave important matters in the hands of older and
wiser men.
As I got out some of the legal
papers on the Frick vs VanRijn case, I felt a pang of sadness for being away
from Juli. I truly leave her deeply, and
so much more now she is in a collar. Our
relationship is so much better now it accords with the natural order. Our bliss is great.
Business Class on the plane was
not crowded. I had a row to myself. A
young woman, a stewardess, or as they say now, a flight attendant welcomed me
to the flight. She was quite beautiful
and not at all dismissive and snippy as was the other stewardess, a fake blonde
with the name of Scarlett. The name
likely as phony as the blonde hair and the dismissive attitude. She would be saving herself for a rich
man. With only seven passengers in
Business Class, neither Scarlett nor her brown-haired colleague were
overworked. Scarlett concentrated on two young men with open shirts, golden
chains and loud voices. They were trying
to give off an aura of entitled wealth, and fake as they were, they fooled
Scarlett into fawning all over them. The
other girl, Leigh, according to her name-tag, looked after me and the other
passengers with quiet, self-effacing efficacy.
She seemed to have a kind smile. As I had done with greater frequency
since I had returned from the Bighorn, I considered them both as possible
captives. Scarlett was the obvious
candidate for a collar, but it seemed that Leigh might in time make the better
kajira. But for now, she seemed to be a
proper young free woman.
I wrote my letters of
condolence to the Luthans on the death of their Grand Duke and put them in
envelopes to mail when we landed. I then sent an email to Jerry Reiss, offering
him temporary employment organizing the defense of the Frick Patents from my San
Francisco office. He is a hard worker
and very organized and it will be good to get him away from that bitch Maya for
a while.
At the Pittsburgh airport I was
met by a young man who introduced himself as Zach Frick. He looked about eighteen or so.
“I thought all the Fricks first
name started with W, no offence of course, but I am curious.”
He grinned, I was to learn he
was always grinning, as though he found life to be huge joke.
“Oh, that’s just the main branch, I am just a lowly second cousin. I help out
running errands and doing odd jobs while I study for the bar exam.”
“You seem awfully young for
that.”
“I am older than I look, I turn
twenty-one next week. I went to college
early, then law school. I am supposed to be quite smart, but really I work
hard, though I seem irresponsible.”
I could not help liking him, he
was so irrepressible. He stopped
chattering and I studied some of the legal papers in the lawsuit which was
opportunistic but meretricious. VanRijn was clever and unscrupulous, so defeating
him would be difficult. He likely would
want to be paid money to go away, but my impression of the Fricks was that they
were fighters; I expected them to decline that option.
I looked up as Zach Frick drove
the car to the front door of a sprawling brick mansion. Like Drysdale House, it
was of the Nineteenth Century, likely built by the same sort of Robber
Baron. From what I had seen on the Lazy
F, I was sure it had facilities and kennels for the keeping and training of
slaves and female beasts. I hoped to get
ideas for further improvements to Drysdale House while I was here.
Zach surprised me by getting my
luggage and briefcase from the trunk. I
had expected to stay downtown, near the Frick offices, and to set up my team so
we were close to all the papers of the Frick Companies. I looked at Zack and raised an eyebrow.
That young imp just
grinned. Then he relented.
“This was the great man’s
house, Willard Frick’s place. It has
been occupied by the Head of the Family for a hundred and fifty years. Cousin
Wyandotte will be moving in, and he wants you close for discussions it would
not be prudent to have in the offices where there are too many ears. A great one for prudence and caution is
Cousin Wyandotte.”
As we walked towards the
entrance, the two great doors opened, each by a young, healthy woman, barely
clad, with lovely legs and bosoms straining the front of the thin short dresses
they wore. The loose weave and the
tightness of the material displayed them well. As we entered, they sank very
gracefully to their knees, opening their thighs wide and sitting back on their
heels, thrusting out their breasts. They were breathtakingly gorgeous. Their collars, for of course they wore
collars, had black ribbons woven around them, in token, I supposed, of mourning
their slain master. I considered that much as I loved my own slave Juli, she
needed further training in graceful movement from someone who was more than a
novice. They were, in their collars and
training so much superior to the stewardesses on the airplane. I was sure
Scarlett needed a collar; I wondered if Leigh was too much the dignified free
woman for a collar.
A dignified black clad woman of
middle age approached us. The two door
slaves moved their legs together. She
glanced at them.
“Close the doors, you stupid
girls, our guests are inside. Just
because the Master is dead is no reason to get slack. It will be the switch for you if you fail in
decorum again.”
The two girls looked
frightened. And she did seem very
formidable. Her long black dress entirely covered her legs, torso and arms to
the wrists. A little bit of white lace
at the throat was the only relief from the entirely black costume she
wore. Her face showed her grief.
“Welcome to Frick House.” She
began but we were interrupted.
Another woman clad in black was
coming down the grand staircase. Her
dress was tight, and quite short, like a black widow in a 1940s film noir
trying to con the judge and jury into giving her the benefit of the doubt. She had great legs.
“This is unacceptable. Wyandotte shall not have my house. I am my father’s heir, his only legitimate
child. I am the Tatrix of the Fricks.”
The last words were almost in a
shout.
The older woman slapped her
face. Then slapped it again.
“Chelsea Frick, you shut your
mouth. Behave yourself. The Fricks are led by men, strong men, not
silly girls. You shame yourself; you
shame this house with such antics. You
go upstairs, you wash off that whore’s make-up, you dress yourself
properly. Then you come down and beg
these gentleman’s pardon. On your
knees.”
Chelsea Frick was crying; she
turned and ran up the stairs.
The severe woman turned back to
Zack and me.
“I am sorry you had to see
that. The poor girl was distrait with
grief”
It seemed to me that Chelsea
had been full of anger and self-pity, not grief, but I accepted the lie at face
value.
“I am the housekeeper, Mrs
Magruder. Please come this way.”
She led us into what I imagine
was the formal parlor when the house was built.
The two girls followed and when we were seated, knelt by the
fireplace. I tried not to stare. Mrs Magruder had the two girls serve us
coffee. It was so gracefully done it
took my breath away. They went to a side
table, where there was a carafe of coffee, and two china coffee mugs, and
silver containers for milk and sugar.
The carafe, the creamer and the sugar bowl were all of silver, with
silver tongs for the sugar. One of the
girls, asked how I took my coffee, then held the china cup up between her
breasts, slightly warming the cup. As
she pushed the cup against the thin material, it stretched it more, clearly
delineating her curves. She then put in
the milk, I don’t take sugar, and filled the cup with coffee, bringing the cup
against her chest then raising it up to me from her knees. The coffee was good
too. I wondered if I would be given the
opportunity to console this pretty morsel in her grief for her master.
Zach Frick was then served in
the same way. The girls left the room to
return to the door. Zach and I sipped
our coffee. He finished his quickly and
excused himself to be about other errands for the family. This left me alone with Mrs Magruder. After an awkward silence, Mrs Magruder spoke
again.
“Willard Frick was a great
man. You didn’t know him, I
understand. He was a force of nature. A
True Man.”
I could hear her capitalize the
last words.
She leaned forward. She was
under a great deal of stress.
“I have worked in this house
for the Fricks for thirty years. I don’t
know where I will go now.”
I didn’t say anything. I didn’t want to break the thread of her
thought.
“Mr Wyandotte has his own
housekeeper, one used to his ways. I
expect he will want to have her take over here and serve him. I expect I shall be sent to the ranch in
retirement. I don’t know if I am ready
for that.”
It was likely the first time in
her thirty years in this house that a personal emotional confession had broken
her reserve. I did not embarrass either
of us by saying anything. We sat in
silence sipping coffee until we were interrupted.
The girl, Chelsea Frick, came
into the room. Her face was bare of makeup,
but angry marks showed where she had been slapped. She wore much more modest clothing and looked
younger than the termagant who had raged about the unfairness of not being made
head of the family. She begged my pardon
most humbly for her display. It is
always pleasant to have a woman kneeling in front of you. She kissed my hand as I granted her pardon.
Her demeanor was humble, but her eyes showed how much she hated kneeling and begging
pardon. She then rose and knelt in front
of Mrs Magruder, thanking her for her discipline and bringing her to her
senses.
I did not show it, not in the
House of the Fricks, but I thought how suited Chelsea Frick was to being on her
knees, how good she would look, collared and naked, her curves displayed for
the appreciation of men, her body trembling in submission and need. I thought how good she would look; the tips
of her breasts quivering in anticipation and need.
Of course, to even think such a
thing about a daughter of the Fricks was a severe disrespect to the House and a
free woman, no Friend of the Fricks could contemplate dishonouring them by
collaring Chelsea. But it was clear to
me, that like the stewardess Scarlett, Chelsea Frick belonged in a collar.
I could hear the front doors
open in the entrance hall and the door slaves greeting Wyandotte Frick. I rose to meet my new client and thrust ideas
of Chelsea Frick caressing my manhood from my mind.
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