"Eddings, David - Regina's Song V2.0" - читать интересную книгу автора (Eddings David) I think the Twinkie Twins got more entertainment out of
this elaborate scam than anybody else did. They were high-school freshmen now, but they'd reverted to whispering in twin-speak, giving me those sickeningly cute smirks, and giggling. I carried a full course load in both the winter and spring quarters in 1993, and that satisfied the requirements for graduation. It'd taken me four years to reach the point that a full-time student achieves in two, but I was now an Associate in Arts and Sciences-with honors, no less. And I had a major in English, but with a lot of those "everything" courses that didn't apply. I went through the cap and gown ceremony with the Austins and Greenleafs in the audience, and after the ceremony we all went back to Greenleaf Manor for another of those "let's steer Mark in the right direction" sessions at which I was usually outnumbered six to one. Inga Greenleaf led the assault. "What in the world were you thinking of, Mark?" she demanded, waving a copy of my transcript at me. "Your grades are very good, but half the courses you took weren't even remotely connected to your major." "I didn't have a major when I started, Inga," I explained. "I was just browsing. It was only after a year or so that I finally settled on English." still brandishing my transcript. "I've checked with the University of Washington, and you'll have to take a couple of courses this summer to fill in the gaps. Les has contacts with some local banks, and your grades are good enough to qualify you for a student loan." I threw a quick look at my dad. We'd already discussed that at some length. He shook his head slightly. "I'm sorry, Inga," I said flatly. "Let's just forget that student loan business. Sooner or later, I'm going to have a mortgage on a house biting chunks out of my paychecks, and probably car payments as well-that of Dodge can't run forever. I'm not going to add a student loan on top of that. I won't hand three-quarters of my paycheck to the Last National Bank to pay interest. I'll look for a part-time job, but no jobbee, no schoolie, and that's final." "Oh, goodie!" one of the twins said, clapping her hands together. "We get to keep him!" "Shush, Twink," her mother snapped. I don't think she even realized that my Twinkie invention had crept into her vocabulary. The boss was squinting at the far wall. "When you get right down to it, Mark, you've already got a part-time |
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