"Russo, Richard Paul - Just Drive, She Said" - читать интересную книгу автора (Russo Richard Paul) funny.
She was right, though, about a motel. From a mile away I saw a bright glowing sign: M O T E L As we got closer, I could make out other words, but none of them made sense. There were numbers as well, but there were too many digits, and a strange hooked symbol instead of a dollar sign. "Hope you can pay for this," I said. "My money's not going to be much good here." She smiled. "You'd be surprised." I pulled off the freeway, drove into the motel parking lot, and the woman pointed out the office at the end of the building. She made me go in with her. At the desk, she talked to a crusty old man who wore a black helmet, face covered by a smoky visor. What they spoke sounded like a mix of foreign languages--a few words close to English, others like German, a few like French. The woman paid with large, brightly colored bills, and the man gave her a narrow cylinder that hung by a chain from a plastic ball. We walked back to the car in silence, then she directed me to drive around the back of the building, where we parked in front of a tan door. The woman handed the wine bottles to me, took two duffel bags out from behind the seats, then made sure I locked the car. She inserted the cylinder into a narrow opening where it hummed, then clicked; the door swung open, and we stepped inside. There was a table with two padded chairs, a television set, a radio, and a bottles on the table; the labels had changed, and were now unreadable. I looked at her. "There's only one bed." "We'll manage," she said. "Let's go get something to eat, I'm hungry." We went to a coffee shop next to the motel, where the woman ordered for both of us. I ended up with something that looked and tasted a lot like a Denny's chicken fried steak and mashed potatoes. After we ate, the woman said she needed a drink. I figured I could use one too, so we went to the attached lounge and sat at a table in the back corner, empty tables all around us. She asked me what I liked to drink, and I told her Scotch. She ordered from the waiter, and when my drink came it did taste an awful lot like Scotch--cheap Scotch, but Scotch nevertheless. The woman was drinking something clear over ice. "A trans-universal," the woman said. "Alcohol, coffee, and tobacco. Hotels and motels are close, along with guns and cars, but alcohol, coffee, and tobacco are almost everywhere." Right. We drank. One drink, two drinks. Then a third. I was feeling it. We didn't talk, but we had another drink. I didn't know about her, but I was getting smashed. "What's your name?" I asked. Drunk, I was feeling reckless, and it seemed like a reckless question. "It would sound like garbage." She paused. "Call me Victoria." Another pause. "What's your name?" "Robert." |
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