Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
55
218
The two killer humans were not unaware of his arrival, and they, exchanging cries, something between speech and signals, ceased to prosecute their passage through the herd, and made their way back, almost as though through chest-high water, to the company of their colleagues, nearer the exit of the womb tunnel, and on the herd's far side.
The two killer humans were not unaware of his arrival, and they, exchanging cries, something between speech and signals, ceased to prosecute their passage through the herd, and made their way back, almost as though through chest-high water, to the company of their colleagues, nearer the exit of the womb tunnel, and on the herd's far side.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 55, Sentence #218)
Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
55
215
He instantly flung his prize, rolling to the grass, bell jangling, from him, and backed into the herd.
55
216
Cabot had little doubt Lord Grendel was intent upon tearing his throat out.
55
217
Lord Grendel stopped, though, at the edge of the herd, lifted his mighty arms, and roared, a Kur roar that echoed back from the cliffs beyond.
55
218
The two killer humans were not unaware of his arrival, and they, exchanging cries, something between speech and signals, ceased to prosecute their passage through the herd, and made their way back, almost as though through chest-high water, to the company of their colleagues, nearer the exit of the womb tunnel, and on the herd's far side.
55
219
At the same side the small figure freed by the massive cattle human, flung from him, regained its feet, and fled through the grass.
55
220
Lord Grendel was then between the fleeing figure and the herd, and, farther back, the killer humans.
55
221
Nothing moved from the herd, and the herd leader, bleating in fear, and protest, moved further back into the herd, using it as a wall to separate himself from the angry, hostile figure who was threateningly close.
He instantly flung his prize, rolling to the grass, bell jangling, from him, and backed into the herd.
Cabot had little doubt Lord Grendel was intent upon tearing his throat out.
Lord Grendel stopped, though, at the edge of the herd, lifted his mighty arms, and roared, a Kur roar that echoed back from the cliffs beyond.
The two killer humans were not unaware of his arrival, and they, exchanging cries, something between speech and signals, ceased to prosecute their passage through the herd, and made their way back, almost as though through chest-high water, to the company of their colleagues, nearer the exit of the womb tunnel, and on the herd's far side.
At the same side the small figure freed by the massive cattle human, flung from him, regained its feet, and fled through the grass.
Lord Grendel was then between the fleeing figure and the herd, and, farther back, the killer humans.
Nothing moved from the herd, and the herd leader, bleating in fear, and protest, moved further back into the herd, using it as a wall to separate himself from the angry, hostile figure who was threateningly close.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 55)