Book 6. (7 results) Raiders of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
7
105
I looked at her.
7
106
"It seemed to me," I said, "last night that you much feared slavery".
7
107
I indicated that she should approach me.
7
108
Only when I had unbound her had I noticed, on her left thigh, the tiny mark, which had been burned into her flesh long ago, the small letter in cursive script which was the initial letter of kajira, which is the most common Gorean word for a female slave.
7
109
Always before, in the lighted hut, she had kept that side from me; in the day it had been covered by her tunic; in the night, in the darkness and tumult, I had not noticed it; on the raft it had been concealed in the reeds of the rence plant, with which I had covered her.
7
110
She had now come closer to me, as I had indicated she should, and stood now where, if I wished, I might take her in my grasp.
7
111
"You were once slave," I told her.
I looked at her.
"It seemed to me," I said, "last night that you much feared slavery".
I indicated that she should approach me.
Only when I had unbound her had I noticed, on her left thigh, the tiny mark, which had been burned into her flesh long ago, the small letter in cursive script which was the initial letter of kajira, which is the most common Gorean word for a female slave.
Always before, in the lighted hut, she had kept that side from me; in the day it had been covered by her tunic; in the night, in the darkness and tumult, I had not noticed it; on the raft it had been concealed in the reeds of the rence plant, with which I had covered her.
She had now come closer to me, as I had indicated she should, and stood now where, if I wished, I might take her in my grasp.
"You were once slave," I told her.
- (Raiders of Gor, Chapter )