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"urt " "people "

Book 13. (7 results) Explorers of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
4 352 She might hide in various ways.
4 353 Obvious ways of hiding would be to conceal herself among the boxes and bales at the wharves, to creep into a crate, or barrel, or to cover herself with sheets of sail canvas or with heavy coils of mooring rope.
4 354 Guardsmen, I was certain, would examine such possibilities systematically.
4 355 Too, a she-urt found in such a place, it not being night, would surely be viewed as a girl in hiding.
4 356 She would presumably then be tied and taken to the praetor.
4 357 Perhaps she is wanted for something.
4 358 I was now in the vicinity of the Spice Pier.
She might hide in various ways. Obvious ways of hiding would be to conceal herself among the boxes and bales at the wharves, to creep into a crate, or barrel, or to cover herself with sheets of sail canvas or with heavy coils of mooring rope. Guardsmen, I was certain, would examine such possibilities systematically. Too, a she-urt found in such a place, it not being night, would surely be viewed as a girl in hiding. She would presumably then be tied and taken to the praetor. Perhaps she is wanted for something. I was now in the vicinity of the Spice Pier. - (Explorers of Gor, Chapter )