Book 32. (1 results) Smugglers of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
48
52
Too, if there were any warrant for my fears, why had I not, in all this time, if it were a predator, been attacked? To bring down, and feed upon, a prey such as I might be, an unarmed kajira in the forest, would pose no difficulty to any likely predator.
Too, if there were any warrant for my fears, why had I not, in all this time, if it were a predator, been attacked? To bring down, and feed upon, a prey such as I might be, an unarmed kajira in the forest, would pose no difficulty to any likely predator.
- (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter 48, Sentence #52)
Book 32. (7 results) Smugglers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
48
49
From such a sound, even were the monster caged, I think uneasy, awed men might back away and women flee.
48
50
Then from my right I heard, unmistakably, from within the brush somewhere, an answering, rumbling growl.
48
51
I had occasionally sensed I might have shared the forest with some unseen companion, like a shadow amongst the trees, but I had dismissed this apprehension as, Ahn after Ahn, even following investigations, I had detected nothing.
48
52
Too, if there were any warrant for my fears, why had I not, in all this time, if it were a predator, been attacked? To bring down, and feed upon, a prey such as I might be, an unarmed kajira in the forest, would pose no difficulty to any likely predator.
48
53
I lacked the stealth and speed of the tabuk, the horns of the forest bosk, the tusks of the tarsk boar.
48
54
But clearly, now, there was not one, but two beasts, that which had emerged from the brush of the riverside, where, suddenly disturbed, it might have been drinking, and the other, still unseen, in the brush to my right.
48
55
I remained perfectly still.
From such a sound, even were the monster caged, I think uneasy, awed men might back away and women flee.
Then from my right I heard, unmistakably, from within the brush somewhere, an answering, rumbling growl.
I had occasionally sensed I might have shared the forest with some unseen companion, like a shadow amongst the trees, but I had dismissed this apprehension as, Ahn after Ahn, even following investigations, I had detected nothing.
Too, if there were any warrant for my fears, why had I not, in all this time, if it were a predator, been attacked? To bring down, and feed upon, a prey such as I might be, an unarmed kajira in the forest, would pose no difficulty to any likely predator.
I lacked the stealth and speed of the tabuk, the horns of the forest bosk, the tusks of the tarsk boar.
But clearly, now, there was not one, but two beasts, that which had emerged from the brush of the riverside, where, suddenly disturbed, it might have been drinking, and the other, still unseen, in the brush to my right.
I remained perfectly still.
- (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter 48)