The Empty Shelves of the Inn
This Gorean Fan Fiction was generated using Chat GPT alongside the RP logs.
Please note that the Gorean Saga is a fictional series, and its world, customs, and values may not align with modern societal standards or moral principles.
Gor is Copyrighted by John Norman
The Inn had grown too quiet.
Where once laughter, music, and the scent of roasted bosk
filled its halls, there was now only the faint aroma of stale bread and the
sharp bitterness of blackwine left too long on the fire. Kash, the Inn’s
remaining slave, worked tirelessly among the empty shelves, his bare feet
silent upon the stone floor. Every cup he poured reminded him of what was
missing — the meat, the wine, the cheese, the fruit — all gone.
He bowed before Mistress Neeve one morning, his voice
trembling as he spoke. “This slave begs your mercy, Mistress. Our stores are
nearly gone. We have only blackwine, tea, and a few pastries from the bakery.
No meat, no mead, no wine, no ale. We clean for bread now, Mistress… and we
wait.”
Neeve’s brow furrowed as she surveyed the barren shelves.
Once, the Inn had been the heart of the city — a place where travelers were
welcomed, merchants struck bargains, and slaves served with quiet pride. Now,
it was a shell. “This is unacceptable,” she murmured, scribbling notes onto
parchment. “An Inn without food is a city without breath.”
At one of the tables, Lady Sibylle sat quietly with her cup
of larma juice, watching. She had come seeking a runaway slave, but even she
could not ignore the emptiness that hung in the air. “It seems your owners have
abandoned their duties,” she said coolly to Kash, her tone not cruel, merely
matter-of-fact.
The boy lowered his head. “Yes, Mistress. They left some
time ago. We serve as best we can.”
Neeve sealed the scroll with her own mark and rose from the
table. “Enough,” she declared. “If the Innkeeper has gone, then the city must
intervene. I will bring this matter to the Head of Merchants myself.”
Later that day, the Physician strode into the merchant’s
hall, the scroll clutched tightly in her hand. Nero Titus, the newly appointed
Head of the Merchants’ Caste, looked up from his desk as she entered.
“Tal, Lady Neeve,” he greeted. “If you’ve come for an
interview, I’ll warn you, I’m not fond of them.”
She ignored the jest. “Neither interview nor gossip brings
me here, Sir. I come with grave news. The city’s Inn — our heart of trade and
hospitality — has run out of supplies. The Innkeeper is absent. The slaves have
nothing to serve. I’ve made a list.” She placed the parchment before him with a
firm hand. “It must be restocked immediately.”
Nero leaned forward, scanning the long list of provisions: flour,
bosk meat, cheese, sugar, larma fruit, tospit, suls, mead, wine, ale... The
necessities of daily life — and of civilization itself.
He sighed. “The merchants will cover it. We can’t have an
empty Inn in a thriving city. It will be billed to the owners if they ever
return.”
At his side, his slave knelt silently. Nero’s tone softened
slightly as he gestured for her to fetch water for the Physician. The girl
obeyed, her movements graceful, though even she could sense the tension hanging
in the room.
Neeve accepted the cup and sat down. “Kash is terrified to
act without his Mistress’s command,” she explained. “He believes he will be
punished if he speaks of the shortage. I cannot stand by while the city’s
servants starve and its visitors go unserved.”
Nero’s expression darkened. “You have done well to bring
this to my attention. But in the future, leave matters of trade to the
merchants. The caste system exists for order — not chaos.”
Her lips thinned, but she nodded. “Then see that order feeds
your city, Head Merchant. Because as it stands, the Inn cannot serve a single
proper meal.”
She turned and strode out, her cloak snapping behind her
like a banner of defiance.
That evening, Kash knelt alone by the fire again. The
shelves still stood empty, though for the first time in weeks, he felt a
flicker of hope. Word would spread. Carts would come.
The Inn — and perhaps the city itself — might yet wake from
its hunger.


Excellent narratives using all the tools at her disposal and the lush setting of Second Life Gor. I look forward to further adventures in this Freewoman's story.
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