Book 4. (1 results) Nomads of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
23
205
I was told by a tuchuk woman that they had not been in the cage when the Paravaci had struck—but rather that Aphris had been in the wagon and the barbarian, as she referred to Miss Cardwell, had been sent to another wagon, the whereabouts she did not know.
I was told by a Tuchuk woman that they had not been in the cage when the Paravaci had struck—but rather that Aphris had been in the wagon and the barbarian, as she referred to Miss Cardwell, had been sent to another wagon, the whereabouts she did not know.
- (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 23, Sentence #205)
Book 4. (7 results) Nomads of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
23
202
I would leave in the morning.
23
203
That night I found Kamchak's old wagon, and though it had been looted, it had not been burned.
23
204
There was no sign of either Aphris or Elizabeth, either about the wagon, or in the overturned, broken sleen cage in which, when I had last seen them, Kamchak had confined them.
23
205
I was told by a tuchuk woman that they had not been in the cage when the Paravaci had struck—but rather that Aphris had been in the wagon and the barbarian, as she referred to Miss Cardwell, had been sent to another wagon, the whereabouts she did not know.
23
206
Aphris had, according to the woman, fallen into the hands of the Paravaci who had looted Kamchak's wagon; Elizabeth's fate she did not know; I gathered, of course, from the fact that Elizabeth had been sent to another wagon that Kamchak had sold her.
23
207
I wondered who her new master might be and hoped, for her sake, that she would well please him.
23
208
She might, of course, have also fallen, like Aphris, into the hands of the Paravaci.
I would leave in the morning.
That night I found Kamchak's old wagon, and though it had been looted, it had not been burned.
There was no sign of either Aphris or Elizabeth, either about the wagon, or in the overturned, broken sleen cage in which, when I had last seen them, Kamchak had confined them.
I was told by a tuchuk woman that they had not been in the cage when the Paravaci had struck—but rather that Aphris had been in the wagon and the barbarian, as she referred to Miss Cardwell, had been sent to another wagon, the whereabouts she did not know.
Aphris had, according to the woman, fallen into the hands of the Paravaci who had looted Kamchak's wagon; Elizabeth's fate she did not know; I gathered, of course, from the fact that Elizabeth had been sent to another wagon that Kamchak had sold her.
I wondered who her new master might be and hoped, for her sake, that she would well please him.
She might, of course, have also fallen, like Aphris, into the hands of the Paravaci.
- (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 23)