Book 13. (7 results) Explorers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
755
She would have the ring on her neck removed and then be placed in a slave sack and taken to the house of Bejar.
1
756
I supposed that Bejar, or the slaver to whom he sold her, and the others, would mark her slave.
1
757
How piteously and helplessly she had clung to the pole.
1
758
She had already begun to learn that gor was not Earth.
1
759
"I wish you well, Captain," I said to Samos.
1
760
"I wish you well, Captain," said he to me.
1
761
Again we clasped hands and then I strode from him, down the hallway toward the double gates leading from his house.
She would have the ring on her neck removed and then be placed in a slave sack and taken to the house of Bejar.
I supposed that Bejar, or the slaver to whom he sold her, and the others, would mark her slave.
How piteously and helplessly she had clung to the pole.
She had already begun to learn that gor was not Earth.
"I wish you well, Captain," I said to Samos.
"I wish you well, Captain," said he to me.
Again we clasped hands and then I strode from him, down the hallway toward the double gates leading from his house.
- (Explorers of Gor, Chapter )