Book 11. (7 results) Slave Girl of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
4
633
He had drawn them the preceding night for his lieutenants, when they had spoken alone.
4
634
He spoke swiftly and decisively, sometimes indicating a portion of the terrain by jabbing at it with the rock.
4
635
Sometimes he pointed to the largest of the three moons above; in a few days it would be full.
4
636
I stood there, naked, recently ravished, sweat and dirt on my body, and in my hair, in the shadows, ignored, holding the large flask of wine on my left hip, watching.
4
637
I wondered at what might be the nature of the camp in which I found myself.
4
638
It did not seem to be a hunting camp, though hunting was done from it.
4
639
Too, I did not think it was a camp of bandits, for the men in the camp did not seem of the bandit sort; not only did the cut and differing insignia on their tunics suggest a uniform of sorts, but the clear-cut subordination, the obvious organization and discipline which characterized them and their relationships did not suggest outlawry; too, the men seemed handsome, strong, clean-cut, responsible, reliable, disciplined, trained, and efficient; there was none of the laxness and disorder of either men or environment I would have expected in a camp of bandits.
He had drawn them the preceding night for his lieutenants, when they had spoken alone.
He spoke swiftly and decisively, sometimes indicating a portion of the terrain by jabbing at it with the rock.
Sometimes he pointed to the largest of the three moons above; in a few days it would be full.
I stood there, naked, recently ravished, sweat and dirt on my body, and in my hair, in the shadows, ignored, holding the large flask of wine on my left hip, watching.
I wondered at what might be the nature of the camp in which I found myself.
It did not seem to be a hunting camp, though hunting was done from it.
Too, I did not think it was a camp of bandits, for the men in the camp did not seem of the bandit sort; not only did the cut and differing insignia on their tunics suggest a uniform of sorts, but the clear-cut subordination, the obvious organization and discipline which characterized them and their relationships did not suggest outlawry; too, the men seemed handsome, strong, clean-cut, responsible, reliable, disciplined, trained, and efficient; there was none of the laxness and disorder of either men or environment I would have expected in a camp of bandits.
- (Slave Girl of Gor, Chapter )