"Frederik Pohl - My Lady Green Sleeves" - читать интересную книгу автора (Pohl Frederick)being a clerkor a mechanic or a soldier, or even a
laborer for that matter. Good laborers were the salt of the earth! They weren't smart, maybe, but they had a well, a sort of natural, relaxed joy of living. O'Leary was a broadminded man, and many times he had thought al- most with a touch of envy how comfortable it must be to be a wipea laborer, he corrected himself. No responsi- bilities. No worries. Just an easy, slow routine of work and loaf, work and loaf. Of course, he wouldn't really want that kind of life, because he was Civil Service, and not the kind to try to cross over class barriers that weren't meant to be "Evening, Cap'n." He nodded to the mechanic inmate who was, theoreti- cally, in charge of maintaining the prison's car pool, just inside the gate. "Evening, Conan," he said. Conan, now he was a big buck greaser, and he would be there for the next hour, languidly poking a piece of fluff out of the air filter on the prison jeep. Lazy, sure. Undependable, cer- tamly. Bat he kept the cars goingand, O'Leary thought approvingly, when his sentence was up in another year or so, he would go back to his life with his status restored, a mechanic on the outside as he had been inside, and he certainly would never risk coming back to the Jug by trying to pass as Civil Service or anything else. He knew So why didn't this girl, this Sue-Ann Bradley, know hers? n Every prison has its Green Sleevessometimes they are called by different names. Old Marquette called it "the canary"; Louisiana State called it "the red hats"; elsewhere it was called "the hole," "the snake pit," "the Klondike." When you're in it you don't much care what it is called; it is a place for punishment. And punishment is what you get. Block 0 in Estates-General Correctional Institution was the disciplinary block, and because of the green strait- jackets its inhabitants wore it was called the Green Sleeves. It was a community of its own, an enclave within the larger city-state that was the Jug. And like any other com- munity, it had its leading citizens . . . two of them. Their names were Sauer and Flock. Sue-Ann Bradley heard them before she reached the Green Sleeves. She was in a detachment of three unfor- tunates like herself, convoyed by an irritable guard, climb- ing the steel steps toward Block 0 from the floor below, when she heard the yelling. "Owoo-o-o," screamed Sauer from one end of the cell |
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