Book 22. (7 results) Dancer of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
33
292
"Oh, master," I breathed, joyously, "master!" I felt incredible relief.
33
293
My entire body relaxed.
33
294
I leaned forward, toward him, toward my master.
33
295
Almost at the same instant I heard a sudden, bestial, deafening, screaming roar behind me and the movement of a huge body and my master was leaping to his feet lunging over the fire thrusting his sword into the darkness behind me over my head and I twisted and saw two great, hairy arms outstretched reaching for him, which closed about him, and I screamed, the body and jaws of the thing over me, I between it and my master, and I threw myself to the side.
33
296
In an instant I turned, wildly, on all fours, and, in the half darkness, the fire muchly struck and scattered, tiny flames about, from fiery brands and flaring leaves, saw two shapes, a gigantic bestial shape, and that of a human being, a man, locked together, swaying, clawed feet and sandals moving in the dirt, struggling for leverage and position.
33
297
My master had said it was not coming, but how could he have known that, I now realized, at that particular time, without even looking up? No, he had known it was coming.
33
298
When he had said that it had seemed, in my relief, that the entire physiology and tone of my body had changed.
"Oh, master," I breathed, joyously, "master!" I felt incredible relief.
My entire body relaxed.
I leaned forward, toward him, toward my master.
Almost at the same instant I heard a sudden, bestial, deafening, screaming roar behind me and the movement of a huge body and my master was leaping to his feet lunging over the fire thrusting his sword into the darkness behind me over my head and I twisted and saw two great, hairy arms outstretched reaching for him, which closed about him, and I screamed, the body and jaws of the thing over me, I between it and my master, and I threw myself to the side.
In an instant I turned, wildly, on all fours, and, in the half darkness, the fire muchly struck and scattered, tiny flames about, from fiery brands and flaring leaves, saw two shapes, a gigantic bestial shape, and that of a human being, a man, locked together, swaying, clawed feet and sandals moving in the dirt, struggling for leverage and position.
My master had said it was not coming, but how could he have known that, I now realized, at that particular time, without even looking up? No, he had known it was coming.
When he had said that it had seemed, in my relief, that the entire physiology and tone of my body had changed.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter )