cthia wrote:But I recall textev saying that he liked doing depraving and despicable things to his women, and did them to Georgia as well. His requests were sickening. I also recall her stating that his brother was no picnic either, being a Young. Not as bad as Pavel, but still a Youngin at heart.
Textev on the "only once"?
tlb wrote:Field of Dishonor, chapter 19:It had taken only one night, and the bruises that went with it, to convince her that even prison would be better than an unending sentence as Pavel Young's "lover," and she was still his chief security officer. In anyone else, that combination would have been too stupid to believe; in his case, Sakristos understood exactly how it worked, and her lips worked with the desire to spit. No one else was quite real to Pavel Young. That was especially true for women, but it applied to everyone else around him, as well. He lived in a universe of cardboard cutouts, of human-shaped things provided solely for his use. He had no sense of them as people who might resent him—or, indeed, who had any right to resent him—and he was too busy doing things to them to even consider what they might do to him if they got the chance.
Not having been a slave also means not to pretend to judge what the Ballroom would do to an ex-slave that gains freedom by selling out other slaves. I doubt that talking will be involved.
cthia wrote:I think that would be a crying shame and a travesty of Justice to condemn and murder without giving an opportunity to defend oneself.
That is like saying a woman who is constantly beaten and abused cannot one day snap and commit murder, and is wholly responsible for her actions without leniency. She was abused by an entire organization ALL of her life. I shudder to even think of the despicable things a sex slave might be forced to do. Temporary insanity and self-preservation. She sold out the other slaves, yes, but can their lives be blamed on her? She has to live with that, and she is probably a victim of her own worst nightmares. Again I say 'time served.'
-- skip --
At any rate, it doesn't actually say that it only happened one night, but that it had only taken one night to identify what she was lying under.
I was wrong, she had sex with him at least twice by the book, from Field of Dishonor:
chapter 13 wrote:The door closed, and North Hollow smiled at his father's chief dirty tricks specialist.
"Yes, My Lord?" she said politely.
"Pavel. It's still Pavel to you . . . Elaine."
"Of course, Pavel." Sakristos smiled back, but it was hard, even for her, for she knew the new earl's reputation. His father had promised to remove her name from his vault before he passed it on—that had been part of the quid pro quo that ensured her loyalty—but Pavel's use of the name "Elaine" proved he hadn't. She'd been afraid of that, given the suddenness of the old earl's death, and a shiver ran through her at the confirmation of her worst fear. Dimitri Young had been too wrecked by dissipation to do more than ogle her, but Pavel's smile told her he wanted more of her than the last earl had . . . and he had the weapons to demand it. He could do far worse than ruin her career; he could send her to prison for so long not even prolong would preserve her looks until she was released.
chapter 27 wrote:He couldn't believe how wrong things had gone. That traitorous bastard Tankersley had gone down exactly as planned, and he'd exulted as he savored his triumph over the bitch. He'd hurt her this time. Oh, yes, he'd hurt her, and he'd tasted her pain like sweet, sweet wine. He'd known when Agni departed to take her the news, and he'd counted the hours and treated himself to supper at Cosmo's and a celebratory night with Georgia on the day he calculated word had reached her, then waited in tingling anticipation for her return.
So Pavel could blackmail her into bed, but she would continue with Stefan without coercion because that put her into a position of power as Lady Georgia Young.chapter 29 wrote:She grimaced. Stefan was as bad as Pavel in most ways. She knew he was pursuing her primarily to humiliate Pavel by taking "his" woman away—none of the Youngs had ever seen attractive women as anything but a way to keep score, or people less powerful than they as anything except tools—but he was at least a little smarter than his eldest brother. Once Pavel was gone (and once she had that file out of his vault), Stefan should prove much easier to guide. Someone with an imagination was always easier to manipulate, especially when he had the ambition for power and knew his manipulator intended to share it with him.
I find it amazing that you have more feeling for her than for the transport full of people that thought they had escaped slavery, but were betrayed back into it by her. Is it because she has been given names and they are just faceless nonentities to you? What could she say to the Ballroom to justify that: the worst sort of treason in the world of the slave? A point you are ignoring is that her subsequent career as an "alleged" criminal mastermind (uncharged due to lack of evidence) should prove that she had the brains and guts to escape, but that would have left her penniless.
Go tell the Ballroom that it is "a crying shame and a travesty of Justice to condemn and murder without giving an opportunity to defend oneself", since that is their entire mode of operation in the fight against Mesa.
PS: we do not know what sort of slave that she was designed to be, just that she was murderously effective at whatever she decided to do.