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Book 31. (1 results) Conspirators of Gor (Individual Quote)

Rich men, to whom money is of less interest than what it might purchase, sometimes buy in-house, putting out three or four times what a girl might bring in the open market. - (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 8, Sentence #293)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
8 293 Rich men, to whom money is of less interest than what it might purchase, sometimes buy in-house, putting out three or four times what a girl might bring in the open market.

Book 31. (7 results) Conspirators of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
8 290 Sometimes, too, the capture and enslavement of a woman has been arranged by an enemy or admirer, and, in such a case, it is usually that particular woman that is wanted.
8 291 She may have been paid for in advance, the price having been earlier negotiated and agreed upon.
8 292 There is little difficulty in delivering such women through the streets, as they are hooded.
8 293 Rich men, to whom money is of less interest than what it might purchase, sometimes buy in-house, putting out three or four times what a girl might bring in the open market.
8 294 But most on the coffle, I supposed, and perhaps all, were being delivered to local markets, some possibly owned by the house itself.
8 295 As girls were removed from the coffle, their chaining, with the bracelets and coffle collars, was hung about the neck and shoulders of others.
8 296 In the vicinity of the Tenth Ahn, as I guessed, I was alone, several loops of chaining, and such, slung about me or wrapped about my body.
Sometimes, too, the capture and enslavement of a woman has been arranged by an enemy or admirer, and, in such a case, it is usually that particular woman that is wanted. She may have been paid for in advance, the price having been earlier negotiated and agreed upon. There is little difficulty in delivering such women through the streets, as they are hooded. Rich men, to whom money is of less interest than what it might purchase, sometimes buy in-house, putting out three or four times what a girl might bring in the open market. But most on the coffle, I supposed, and perhaps all, were being delivered to local markets, some possibly owned by the house itself. As girls were removed from the coffle, their chaining, with the bracelets and coffle collars, was hung about the neck and shoulders of others. In the vicinity of the Tenth Ahn, as I guessed, I was alone, several loops of chaining, and such, slung about me or wrapped about my body. - (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 8)