Book 36. (1 results) Avengers of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
11
227
The iron then is put to her thigh, high, below the left hip, and a metal collar rudely snapped about her neck.
The iron then is put to her thigh, high, below the left hip, and a metal collar rudely snapped about her neck.
- (Avengers of Gor, Chapter 11, Sentence #227)
Book 36. (7 results) Avengers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
11
224
The woman, fully clothed, in the robes of concealment, perhaps lifting the glass to her lips, beneath her veil, eyes seductively lustrous over the veil, imbibes the beverage.
11
225
Later she recovers consciousness, perhaps lying on a stone floor, to find herself stripped and chained, a heated brazier glowing to the side, from which emerges the handle of an iron.
11
226
If she cries out, though she is still free, she may be cuffed to silence, that she may understand that the kind of woman she is now to be may not speak without permission.
11
227
The iron then is put to her thigh, high, below the left hip, and a metal collar rudely snapped about her neck.
11
228
Sometime the slaver or captor, in examining his unconscious catch, realizes that his conjectures as to the value of the catch were overly optimistic.
11
229
In such a case the woman, her clothing removed and destroyed, is left to regain consciousness in some public place.
11
230
Not lightly is the brand and collar bestowed.
The woman, fully clothed, in the robes of concealment, perhaps lifting the glass to her lips, beneath her veil, eyes seductively lustrous over the veil, imbibes the beverage.
Later she recovers consciousness, perhaps lying on a stone floor, to find herself stripped and chained, a heated brazier glowing to the side, from which emerges the handle of an iron.
If she cries out, though she is still free, she may be cuffed to silence, that she may understand that the kind of woman she is now to be may not speak without permission.
The iron then is put to her thigh, high, below the left hip, and a metal collar rudely snapped about her neck.
Sometime the slaver or captor, in examining his unconscious catch, realizes that his conjectures as to the value of the catch were overly optimistic.
In such a case the woman, her clothing removed and destroyed, is left to regain consciousness in some public place.
Not lightly is the brand and collar bestowed.
- (Avengers of Gor, Chapter 11)