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"panther " "girls "

Book 35. (7 results) Quarry of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
9 50 I had felt it often enough, particularly in my first days in the kitchen.
9 51 Once I had not knelt quickly enough, twice I had forgotten to request permission to speak, and once, the worst time, I had dropped one of the metal plates and it had fallen, ringing and clattering, to the floor.
9 52 I think that I had now been some fourteen or fifteen days in the kitchen.
9 53 In this time, I had seen three new girls brought in from one market or another, and had seen two girls taken away, either to the floor or, perhaps, to be sold.
9 54 I had also seen two girls brought to the kitchen from the floor, who had, I suppose, in one way or another, displeased one or more of the taverner's men.
9 55 The kitchen, thus, can serve as a venue of reprimand as well as a simple kitchen.
9 56 The taverner, he who owned the tavern, was a man named "Ho-Tosk," who had come from Ar to Port Kar years ago, supposedly under some cloud of obloquy.
I had felt it often enough, particularly in my first days in the kitchen. Once I had not knelt quickly enough, twice I had forgotten to request permission to speak, and once, the worst time, I had dropped one of the metal plates and it had fallen, ringing and clattering, to the floor. I think that I had now been some fourteen or fifteen days in the kitchen. In this time, I had seen three new girls brought in from one market or another, and had seen two girls taken away, either to the floor or, perhaps, to be sold. I had also seen two girls brought to the kitchen from the floor, who had, I suppose, in one way or another, displeased one or more of the taverner's men. The kitchen, thus, can serve as a venue of reprimand as well as a simple kitchen. The taverner, he who owned the tavern, was a man named "Ho-Tosk," who had come from Ar to Port Kar years ago, supposedly under some cloud of obloquy. - (Quarry of Gor, Chapter )