Book 33. (1 results) Rebels of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
492
It seems her games, pretenses, deceits, and machinations had been more transparent than she realized.
It seems her games, pretenses, deceits, and machinations had been more transparent than she realized.
- (Rebels of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #492)
Book 33. (7 results) Rebels of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
489
I knew little of what lay behind these matters.
1
490
It seemed likely, however, given the mysterious appearance of Pani in the northern forests, and the work on a great ship, so far from civilization, a ship which might be capable of crossing Thassa, that this business would have to do, somehow, with Kurii, or Priest-Kings, or both.
1
491
In any event, Miss Wentworth, expecting riches, discovered in Tarncamp that she had been perhaps less successful in her attempts to delude, manipulate, and exploit men on Earth than she had supposed.
1
492
It seems her games, pretenses, deceits, and machinations had been more transparent than she realized.
1
493
Perhaps she had annoyed, irritated, or merely amused certain powerful men, Gorean slavers or those associated with them.
1
494
Perhaps some thought she might look less well in a brief, black cocktail dress with pearls, with a drink in hand, than in a rep-cloth slave tunic and collar, bearing drink to a master.
1
495
What might she look like, being vended naked on a Gorean slave block? However it had come about, she had been, unbeknownst to herself, even whilst on Earth, selected for Gorean slavery.
I knew little of what lay behind these matters.
It seemed likely, however, given the mysterious appearance of Pani in the northern forests, and the work on a great ship, so far from civilization, a ship which might be capable of crossing Thassa, that this business would have to do, somehow, with Kurii, or Priest-Kings, or both.
In any event, Miss Wentworth, expecting riches, discovered in Tarncamp that she had been perhaps less successful in her attempts to delude, manipulate, and exploit men on Earth than she had supposed.
It seems her games, pretenses, deceits, and machinations had been more transparent than she realized.
Perhaps she had annoyed, irritated, or merely amused certain powerful men, Gorean slavers or those associated with them.
Perhaps some thought she might look less well in a brief, black cocktail dress with pearls, with a drink in hand, than in a rep-cloth slave tunic and collar, bearing drink to a master.
What might she look like, being vended naked on a Gorean slave block? However it had come about, she had been, unbeknownst to herself, even whilst on Earth, selected for Gorean slavery.
- (Rebels of Gor, Chapter 1)