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"kajira "

Book 34. (1 results) Plunder of Gor (Individual Quote)

I recalled, too, one of our captors informing Paula that they had heard her enunciation "La kajira," even though we had searched the apartment diligently and had discovered no listening devices. - (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 6, Sentence #472)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 472 I recalled, too, one of our captors informing Paula that they had heard her enunciation "La kajira," even though we had searched the apartment diligently and had discovered no listening devices.

Book 34. (7 results) Plunder of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 469 Certainly it proved to us that a fearsome capacity for destruction, even within so small a compass as a handheld device, was at the disposal of our captors.
6 470 We were confronted with an example, doubtless a trivial example, suggesting an awesome technology with which we were not acquainted.
6 471 I recalled how swiftly, and apparently simply, the bolts on the apartment door had been undone.
6 472 I recalled, too, one of our captors informing Paula that they had heard her enunciation "La kajira," even though we had searched the apartment diligently and had discovered no listening devices.
6 473 I wondered if I, and doubtless others, had been under a visual and auditory surveillance of which we were unaware.
6 474 Were there such devices, I did not doubt but what they had been removed from the apartment, probably after we had been handcuffed together and hooded in the two blankets, before being conducted to the waiting van.
6 475 But one supposes there might have been another purpose, as well, to that seemingly small, but surely awesome, demonstration.
Certainly it proved to us that a fearsome capacity for destruction, even within so small a compass as a handheld device, was at the disposal of our captors. We were confronted with an example, doubtless a trivial example, suggesting an awesome technology with which we were not acquainted. I recalled how swiftly, and apparently simply, the bolts on the apartment door had been undone. I recalled, too, one of our captors informing Paula that they had heard her enunciation "La kajira," even though we had searched the apartment diligently and had discovered no listening devices. I wondered if I, and doubtless others, had been under a visual and auditory surveillance of which we were unaware. Were there such devices, I did not doubt but what they had been removed from the apartment, probably after we had been handcuffed together and hooded in the two blankets, before being conducted to the waiting van. But one supposes there might have been another purpose, as well, to that seemingly small, but surely awesome, demonstration. - (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 6)