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

She had been for them no more than a piece in their games, of value only for her possible effect on Grendel, but now, given his lack of concern for her, even his contempt for her, she was no longer even that. - (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 33, Sentence #112)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
33 112 She had been for them no more than a piece in their games, of value only for her possible effect on Grendel, but now, given his lack of concern for her, even his contempt for her, she was no longer even that.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
33 109 "Perhaps everything," he had said.
33 110 What I had failed to anticipate were his revelations to me prior to our entry into the so-called Audience Chamber of Agamemnon, spoken of as the "Theocrat of the World," and the "Eleventh Face of the Nameless One".
33 111 There I had understood, for the first time, that he had no more respect for, or feeling for, the Lady Bina than the other Kurii.
33 112 She had been for them no more than a piece in their games, of value only for her possible effect on Grendel, but now, given his lack of concern for her, even his contempt for her, she was no longer even that.
33 113 His motivations, made clear to me, were wealth and power.
33 114 How clever he was! His initial reluctance to further their cause, as one might see now, had been no more than a ruse to raise the stakes, presumably to the governorship of a world.
33 115 I had been wrong about Grendel.
"Perhaps everything," he had said. What I had failed to anticipate were his revelations to me prior to our entry into the so-called Audience Chamber of Agamemnon, spoken of as the "Theocrat of the World," and the "Eleventh Face of the Nameless One". There I had understood, for the first time, that he had no more respect for, or feeling for, the Lady Bina than the other Kurii. She had been for them no more than a piece in their games, of value only for her possible effect on Grendel, but now, given his lack of concern for her, even his contempt for her, she was no longer even that. His motivations, made clear to me, were wealth and power. How clever he was! His initial reluctance to further their cause, as one might see now, had been no more than a ruse to raise the stakes, presumably to the governorship of a world. I had been wrong about Grendel. - (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 33)