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"law " "slave "

Book 24. (7 results) Vagabonds of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
32 258 They were not cut from us.
32 259 Rather we were forced to remove them before our chaining.
32 260 The Cosians, it seems, wanted some uniforms, doubtless for purposes of subterfuge or infiltration.
32 261 Too, the women of the rencers like the bright cloth, and we were told, too, that some of them were to be cut into slave strips, or fashioned into ta-teeras, slave rags, for slave girls, such being, in their opinion, a fit disposition for such material".
32 262 One of our fellows made an angry noise.
32 263 To be sure, I had fashioned Ina's slave strips from such material, and he did not seem to object to them on her.
32 264 Indeed, I am sure he regarded her as quite fetching in them.
They were not cut from us. Rather we were forced to remove them before our chaining. The Cosians, it seems, wanted some uniforms, doubtless for purposes of subterfuge or infiltration. Too, the women of the rencers like the bright cloth, and we were told, too, that some of them were to be cut into slave strips, or fashioned into ta-teeras, slave rags, for slave girls, such being, in their opinion, a fit disposition for such material". One of our fellows made an angry noise. To be sure, I had fashioned Ina's slave strips from such material, and he did not seem to object to them on her. Indeed, I am sure he regarded her as quite fetching in them. - (Vagabonds of Gor, Chapter )