Book 5. (1 results) Assassin of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
17
236
The plan was to arrange to have the girls purchased by an agent of Priest-Kings on the love Feast, which began tomorrow, an agent who would have the resources to outbid any conceivable competition.
The plan was to arrange to have the girls purchased by an agent of Priest-Kings on the Love Feast, which began tomorrow, an agent who would have the resources to outbid any conceivable competition.
- (Assassin of Gor, Chapter 17, Sentence #236)
Book 5. (7 results) Assassin of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
17
233
Caprus, who had become more affable, and apparently somewhat bolder, following the enthronement of Cernus, perhaps because Cernus was less often then in the House, informed me that he had made contact with an agent of Priest-Kings.
17
234
The girls, even though I had not yet received the documents and maps, would be rescued.
17
235
His plan was a simple one, but ingenious.
17
236
The plan was to arrange to have the girls purchased by an agent of Priest-Kings on the love Feast, which began tomorrow, an agent who would have the resources to outbid any conceivable competition.
17
237
They would then be as naturally and neatly removed from the House as Elizabeth had originally been introduced into it.
17
238
It was true that Elizabeth was no longer needed in the House, nor had she been for a long time; Caprus had located the important materials and was copying them; I was needed, of course, to take the documents and Caprus from the house.
17
239
Elizabeth, predictably, did not care to leave without me, but she recognized the plan as a good one; if she could be independently removed from the House there would be less for Caprus and me to worry about; further, she naturally wished Virginia and Phyllis to have the same opportunity for freedom as she had for herself, an opportunity they might not be likely to obtain elsewhere; further, of course, she recognized that it might well be complex and difficult for me to attempt to convey the documents, Caprus, herself and myself, and two others as well, from the house.
Caprus, who had become more affable, and apparently somewhat bolder, following the enthronement of Cernus, perhaps because Cernus was less often then in the House, informed me that he had made contact with an agent of Priest-Kings.
The girls, even though I had not yet received the documents and maps, would be rescued.
His plan was a simple one, but ingenious.
The plan was to arrange to have the girls purchased by an agent of Priest-Kings on the love Feast, which began tomorrow, an agent who would have the resources to outbid any conceivable competition.
They would then be as naturally and neatly removed from the House as Elizabeth had originally been introduced into it.
It was true that Elizabeth was no longer needed in the House, nor had she been for a long time; Caprus had located the important materials and was copying them; I was needed, of course, to take the documents and Caprus from the house.
Elizabeth, predictably, did not care to leave without me, but she recognized the plan as a good one; if she could be independently removed from the House there would be less for Caprus and me to worry about; further, she naturally wished Virginia and Phyllis to have the same opportunity for freedom as she had for herself, an opportunity they might not be likely to obtain elsewhere; further, of course, she recognized that it might well be complex and difficult for me to attempt to convey the documents, Caprus, herself and myself, and two others as well, from the house.
- (Assassin of Gor, Chapter 17)