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These things vary, I learned from city to city, and depend, also, on
such matters as context and conditions. In a market, in the crowding and
jostling for instance, a girl may follow so closely she pressed against
the back of his left shoulder. Girls seldom follow behind and on the
right. If she is thusly placed it is commonly a sign she is in disfavor.
If more than one girl is involved, she who follows most closely on the
left is generally taken to be in highest favor; girls compete for this
position. In an open area, such a the fields in which we trekked, the girl
is placed some five or ten feet behind, and on the left. So if he must
move suddenly she will not, thusly, constitute an impediment to his
action.
"Slave Girl of Gor" pg 30