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"bina "

Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)

It was his group which had flushed the Lady Bina into the open, earlier, when she had been noted by Lord Grendel, Statius, and Cabot, in the vicinity of a womb tunnel. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 64, Sentence #125)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
64 125 It was his group which had flushed the Lady bina into the open, earlier, when she had been noted by Lord Grendel, Statius, and Cabot, in the vicinity of a womb tunnel.

Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
64 122 These were Cestiphon's own women, as opposed to the women held in common by his group of killer humans.
64 123 On that rope there were fourteen.
64 124 Cestiphon was the leader of his group, which contained some twenty males.
64 125 It was his group which had flushed the Lady bina into the open, earlier, when she had been noted by Lord Grendel, Statius, and Cabot, in the vicinity of a womb tunnel.
64 126 Perhaps too close to them a small, concealed figure moved, timidly, slowly, trying to pass about them, its motion impeded by the shackles it wore on its slim ankles.
64 127 It was bent over and clutched a sheet about itself with closely braceleted hands.
64 128 The sheet was clutched in a such a way that the face was effectively hooded, the opening on the sheet sufficing for little more than a lowered head to survey the next patch of ground on which it might dare to tread.
These were Cestiphon's own women, as opposed to the women held in common by his group of killer humans. On that rope there were fourteen. Cestiphon was the leader of his group, which contained some twenty males. It was his group which had flushed the Lady bina into the open, earlier, when she had been noted by Lord Grendel, Statius, and Cabot, in the vicinity of a womb tunnel. Perhaps too close to them a small, concealed figure moved, timidly, slowly, trying to pass about them, its motion impeded by the shackles it wore on its slim ankles. It was bent over and clutched a sheet about itself with closely braceleted hands. The sheet was clutched in a such a way that the face was effectively hooded, the opening on the sheet sufficing for little more than a lowered head to survey the next patch of ground on which it might dare to tread. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 64)