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"dance "

Book 6. (1 results) Raiders of Gor (Individual Quote)

I expected that the girl might soon again dance, and perhaps again with ankles in delicious proximity and wrists lifted again together back to back above her head, palms out. - (Raiders of Gor, Chapter 6, Sentence #122)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 122 I expected that the girl might soon again dance, and perhaps again with ankles in delicious proximity and wrists lifted again together back to back above her head, palms out.

Book 6. (7 results) Raiders of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 119 Then the warrior threw her to her stomach, swiftly binding her wrists together behind her back, then binding her ankles.
6 120 With a slave knife he cut the rence tunic from her and threw her, still partly tangled in the net, over his shoulder, and carried her toward one of the dark, high-prowed barges in the shadows at the edge of the island.
6 121 He would take no chances of the loss of such a prize.
6 122 I expected that the girl might soon again dance, and perhaps again with ankles in delicious proximity and wrists lifted again together back to back above her head, palms out.
6 123 But this time I expected that her ankles would not be as though chained, her wrists as though braceleted; rather would they be truly chained and braceleted; she would wear the linked ankle rings, the three-linked slave bracelets of a Gorean master; and I did not think she would then conclude her dance by spitting upon him and whirling away.
6 124 Rather might she almost die with terror hoping that he would find her pleasing.
6 125 "There!" cried Henrak, with the white scarf tied about his body, pointing towards us.
Then the warrior threw her to her stomach, swiftly binding her wrists together behind her back, then binding her ankles. With a slave knife he cut the rence tunic from her and threw her, still partly tangled in the net, over his shoulder, and carried her toward one of the dark, high-prowed barges in the shadows at the edge of the island. He would take no chances of the loss of such a prize. I expected that the girl might soon again dance, and perhaps again with ankles in delicious proximity and wrists lifted again together back to back above her head, palms out. But this time I expected that her ankles would not be as though chained, her wrists as though braceleted; rather would they be truly chained and braceleted; she would wear the linked ankle rings, the three-linked slave bracelets of a Gorean master; and I did not think she would then conclude her dance by spitting upon him and whirling away. Rather might she almost die with terror hoping that he would find her pleasing. "There!" cried Henrak, with the white scarf tied about his body, pointing towards us. - (Raiders of Gor, Chapter 6)