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Book 23. (1 results) Renegades of Gor (Individual Quote)

Did they look back, I wondered, on the days of their freedom, or did they look forward, perhaps with fear, to what might lie ahead, to their branding and collaring, to their sale, perhaps by public auction, to the hazards and duties, the labors and perils, of their new condition, to the strangers into whose total power they would come?. - (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 21, Sentence #1538)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
21 1538 Did they look back, I wondered, on the days of their freedom, or did they look forward, perhaps with fear, to what might lie ahead, to their branding and collaring, to their sale, perhaps by public auction, to the hazards and duties, the labors and perils, of their new condition, to the strangers into whose total power they would come?.

Book 23. (7 results) Renegades of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
21 1535 I wondered what the warnings of Calliodorus, if Aemilianus had read him aright, might have been about.
21 1536 I thought of the two women below decks, in the slave cages.
21 1537 I wondered what thoughts, if there were any others than those concerned with their tightness, and cramping, and pain, in the small cages, passed through their heads.
21 1538 Did they look back, I wondered, on the days of their freedom, or did they look forward, perhaps with fear, to what might lie ahead, to their branding and collaring, to their sale, perhaps by public auction, to the hazards and duties, the labors and perils, of their new condition, to the strangers into whose total power they would come?.
22 1 Publia, Slave Publia lay before me, on her stomach, over a pile of rope, aft on the Tais.
22 2 Her head was down.
22 3 Her neck was chained to a ring in the deck.
I wondered what the warnings of Calliodorus, if Aemilianus had read him aright, might have been about. I thought of the two women below decks, in the slave cages. I wondered what thoughts, if there were any others than those concerned with their tightness, and cramping, and pain, in the small cages, passed through their heads. Did they look back, I wondered, on the days of their freedom, or did they look forward, perhaps with fear, to what might lie ahead, to their branding and collaring, to their sale, perhaps by public auction, to the hazards and duties, the labors and perils, of their new condition, to the strangers into whose total power they would come?. Publia, Slave Publia lay before me, on her stomach, over a pile of rope, aft on the Tais. Her head was down. Her neck was chained to a ring in the deck. - (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 21)