Book 26. (7 results) Witness of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
37
388
The gate was down.
37
389
The darkness of the walk ringing the urt pool was behind.
37
390
I also became aware, vaguely now, of a woman's screaming.
37
391
That must be the Lady Ilene, whom I had met in the chamber of the commercial praetor, kept now, I knew, pending the arrival of her ransom, in the tiny cage suspended over the urt pool, that cage which had been for some time the residence of the Lady Constanzia, that cage which could be opened at the tug of a cord.
37
392
The lieutenant, the six men, two with lamps, stood back from the pile of frenzied urts.
37
393
The fur of some of them was bloodied, they apparently having been, crowding in and about, in the haste and excitement of the feeding, bitten by their fellows.
37
394
"Pull them off," said the lieutenant, to one of the men who had not attacked the sleen.
The gate was down.
The darkness of the walk ringing the urt pool was behind.
I also became aware, vaguely now, of a woman's screaming.
That must be the Lady Ilene, whom I had met in the chamber of the commercial praetor, kept now, I knew, pending the arrival of her ransom, in the tiny cage suspended over the urt pool, that cage which had been for some time the residence of the Lady Constanzia, that cage which could be opened at the tug of a cord.
The lieutenant, the six men, two with lamps, stood back from the pile of frenzied urts.
The fur of some of them was bloodied, they apparently having been, crowding in and about, in the haste and excitement of the feeding, bitten by their fellows.
"Pull them off," said the lieutenant, to one of the men who had not attacked the sleen.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter )