Book 10. (7 results) Tribesmen of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
208
"Yes," said Samos.
1
209
When I had probed the girl in the pens, mercilessly, forcing her to recall all details, even apparently meaningless scraps of detail, or information, she had recalled one thing which had seemed puzzling, disturbing.
1
210
I had not much understood it, but Samos had evinced concern.
1
211
He knew more than I of the affairs of Others, the Kurii, and priest-kings.
1
212
The girl had heard the remark drowsily, half stupefied, shortly after her arrival on Gor.
1
213
She, stripped, half drugged, the identification anklet of the Kurii locked on her left ankle, had lain on her stomach, with other girls, in the fresh grass of Gor.
1
214
They had been removed from the slave capsules in which they had been transported.
"Yes," said Samos.
When I had probed the girl in the pens, mercilessly, forcing her to recall all details, even apparently meaningless scraps of detail, or information, she had recalled one thing which had seemed puzzling, disturbing.
I had not much understood it, but Samos had evinced concern.
He knew more than I of the affairs of Others, the Kurii, and priest-kings.
The girl had heard the remark drowsily, half stupefied, shortly after her arrival on Gor.
She, stripped, half drugged, the identification anklet of the Kurii locked on her left ankle, had lain on her stomach, with other girls, in the fresh grass of Gor.
They had been removed from the slave capsules in which they had been transported.
- (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter )