Book 4. (1 results) Nomads of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
12
506
He turned and ran, and I, drawing my sword, ran stumbling after him but in less than a moment or two I found my pursuit cut short by a string of tied kaiila being returned after having been released to hunt on the plains.
He turned and ran, and I, drawing my sword, ran stumbling after him but in less than a moment or two I found my pursuit cut short by a string of tied kaiila being returned after having been released to hunt on the plains.
- (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 12, Sentence #506)
Book 4. (7 results) Nomads of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
12
503
For no reason that I am quite sure of I unwisely purchased another bottle of paga, perhaps for company in my lonely walk.
12
504
I was only about a quarter of the way through the bottle and was passing the side of a wagon when I saw a swift flicker of a shadow suddenly leap on the lacquered boards and by instinct I threw my head to one side as a quiva flashed past and buried itself three inches deep in the timber side of the wagon.
12
505
Flinging the paga bottle aside, a swirl of the liquid flying out of it, I whirled and saw, some fifty feet away, between two wagons, the dark figure of the hooded man, he of the Clan of Torturers, who had been following me.
12
506
He turned and ran, and I, drawing my sword, ran stumbling after him but in less than a moment or two I found my pursuit cut short by a string of tied kaiila being returned after having been released to hunt on the plains.
12
507
By the time I could manage to avoid their buffeting bodies and crawl under the rope that joined them, my assailant was gone.
12
508
All I received for my trouble were the angry shouts of the man leading the kaiila string.
12
509
Indeed, one of the vicious beasts even snapped at me, ripping the sleeve on my shoulder.
For no reason that I am quite sure of I unwisely purchased another bottle of paga, perhaps for company in my lonely walk.
I was only about a quarter of the way through the bottle and was passing the side of a wagon when I saw a swift flicker of a shadow suddenly leap on the lacquered boards and by instinct I threw my head to one side as a quiva flashed past and buried itself three inches deep in the timber side of the wagon.
Flinging the paga bottle aside, a swirl of the liquid flying out of it, I whirled and saw, some fifty feet away, between two wagons, the dark figure of the hooded man, he of the Clan of Torturers, who had been following me.
He turned and ran, and I, drawing my sword, ran stumbling after him but in less than a moment or two I found my pursuit cut short by a string of tied kaiila being returned after having been released to hunt on the plains.
By the time I could manage to avoid their buffeting bodies and crawl under the rope that joined them, my assailant was gone.
All I received for my trouble were the angry shouts of the man leading the kaiila string.
Indeed, one of the vicious beasts even snapped at me, ripping the sleeve on my shoulder.
- (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 12)