"Niven, Larry - Nova Weather" - читать интересную книгу автора (Niven Larry)"No no no, you don't have the proper attitude. One must window shop on foot. It's in the rules."
"But the rain!" "You won't die of pneumonia. You won't have time," she said, too grimly. Tiffany's had a small branch office in Beverly Hills, but they didn't put expensive things in the windows at night. There were a few fascinating toys, that was all. We turned up Rodeo Drive -- and struck it rich. Tibor showed an infinite selection of rings, ornate and modern, large and small, in all kinds of precious and semiprecious stones. Across the street, Van Cleef & Arpels showed brooches, men's wristwatches of elegant design, bracelets with tiny watches in them, and one window that was all diamonds. "Oh, lovely," Leslie breathed, caught by the flashing diamonds. "What they must look like in daylight! . . . Wups --" "No, that's a good thought. Imagine them at dawn, flaming with nova light, while the windows shatter to let raw daylight in. Want one? The necklace?" "Oh, may I? Hey, hey, I was kidding! Put that down you idiot, there must be alarms in the glass." "Look, nobody'sgoing to be wearing any of that stuff between now and morning. Why shouldn't we get some good out of it?" "We'd be caught!" "Well, you said you wanted to window shop . . ." "I don't want to spend my last hour in a cell. If you'd brought the car we'd have some chance --" "-- Of getting away. Right. I wanted to bring the car --" But at that point we both cracked up entirely, and had to stagger away holding onto each other for balance. There were a good half dozen jewelry stores on Rodeo, But there was more. Toys, books, shirts and ties in odd and advanced styling. In Francis Orr, a huge plastic cube full of new pennies. A couple of damn strange clocks further on. There was an extra kick in window shopping, knowing that we could break a window and take anything we wanted badly enough. We walked hand in hand, swinging our arms. The sidewalks were ours alone; all others had fled the mad weather. The clouds still churned overhead. "I wish I'd known it was coming," Leslie said suddenly. "I spent the whole day fixing a mistake in a program. Now we'1l never run it." "What would you have done with the time? A baseball game?" "Maybe. No. The standings don't matter now." She frowned at dresses in a store window. "What would you have done?" "Gone to the Blue Sphere for cocktails," I said promptly. "It's a topless place. I used to go there all the time. I hear they've gone full nude now." "I've never been to one of those. How late are they open?" "Forget it. It's almost two-thirty." Leslie mused, looking at giant stuffed animals in a toy store window. "Isn't there someone you would have murdered, if you'd had the time?" "Now, you know my agent lives in New York." "Why him?" "My child, why would any writer want to murder his agent? For the manuscripts he loses under other manuscripts. For his ill-gotten ten percent, and the remaining ninety percent that he sends me grudgingly and late. For --" |
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