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Book 12. (1 results) Beasts of Gor (Individual Quote)

Some would be sold to traders in the spring; others might be kept in the camps, to serve the red hunters; they, male slave beasts, would be stronger than female slave beasts. - (Beasts of Gor, Chapter 36, Sentence #5)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
36 5 Some would be sold to traders in the spring; others might be kept in the camps, to serve the red hunters; they, male slave beasts, would be stronger than female slave beasts.

Book 12. (7 results) Beasts of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
36 2 In two Ahn we were ready to withdraw from the complex.
36 3 Sleds were readied; prisoners, men of the complex, now in furs, some forty of them, were tied, their hands behind them, their necks linked by a long rope of rawhide, placing them in coffle.
36 4 There was no fight left in them; they knew that on the ice, away from the technology of the complex, they could survive only if the red hunters chose to let them do so.
36 5 Some would be sold to traders in the spring; others might be kept in the camps, to serve the red hunters; they, male slave beasts, would be stronger than female slave beasts.
36 6 Perhaps eventually a hunter would take a trading trip south and take them with him, bound, to dispose of them in, say, Lydius, with his furs and other trade goods.
36 7 I regarded fifteen women who had been in the complex, women being trained as Kur agents for work in their cause.
36 8 All were kneeling naked; most already had bondage strings on their necks; those that did not the hunters could sort out or do contest for.
In two Ahn we were ready to withdraw from the complex. Sleds were readied; prisoners, men of the complex, now in furs, some forty of them, were tied, their hands behind them, their necks linked by a long rope of rawhide, placing them in coffle. There was no fight left in them; they knew that on the ice, away from the technology of the complex, they could survive only if the red hunters chose to let them do so. Some would be sold to traders in the spring; others might be kept in the camps, to serve the red hunters; they, male slave beasts, would be stronger than female slave beasts. Perhaps eventually a hunter would take a trading trip south and take them with him, bound, to dispose of them in, say, Lydius, with his furs and other trade goods. I regarded fifteen women who had been in the complex, women being trained as Kur agents for work in their cause. All were kneeling naked; most already had bondage strings on their necks; those that did not the hunters could sort out or do contest for. - (Beasts of Gor, Chapter 36)