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"duties "

Book 5. (1 results) Assassin of Gor (Individual Quote)

She had then been collared and turned over to Caprus, to be combed and cleaned, for the smell of the pens was on her, given two sets of slave livery and instructed in her duties. - (Assassin of Gor, Chapter 4, Sentence #40)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
4 40 She had then been collared and turned over to Caprus, to be combed and cleaned, for the smell of the pens was on her, given two sets of slave livery and instructed in her duties.

Book 5. (7 results) Assassin of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
4 37 She had then been examined thoroughly by the Physicians of the House of Cernus.
4 38 Then, found acceptable, she had knelt while agents of the House signed the receipt of her delivery and endorsed her papers, retaining one set, giving one set to the seller's agent, for forwarding to the Cylinder of Documents.
4 39 Then she had submitted herself to the House of Cernus, kneeling before one of its agents, lowering her head, extending her arms, wrists crossed.
4 40 She had then been collared and turned over to Caprus, to be combed and cleaned, for the smell of the pens was on her, given two sets of slave livery and instructed in her duties.
4 41 Caprus was said to be a friend of Priest-Kings.
4 42 There had been no difficulty, it seemed, in placing Vella in the House of Cernus.
4 43 Yet I feared for her safety.
She had then been examined thoroughly by the Physicians of the House of Cernus. Then, found acceptable, she had knelt while agents of the House signed the receipt of her delivery and endorsed her papers, retaining one set, giving one set to the seller's agent, for forwarding to the Cylinder of Documents. Then she had submitted herself to the House of Cernus, kneeling before one of its agents, lowering her head, extending her arms, wrists crossed. She had then been collared and turned over to Caprus, to be combed and cleaned, for the smell of the pens was on her, given two sets of slave livery and instructed in her duties. Caprus was said to be a friend of Priest-Kings. There had been no difficulty, it seemed, in placing Vella in the House of Cernus. Yet I feared for her safety. - (Assassin of Gor, Chapter 4)