"Destroyer 012 - Slave Safari.pdb" - читать интересную книгу автора (Williams Remo)"There are no white women available in Busati, Walla. That will be another cut for lying." "White women. Oh, yes. White women. I know." "Why haven't I heard of them before?" "Not allowed. Not allowed. Secret. White women at the big house with the iron gate." "A whorehouse, Walla?" "Yes, Bwana. White women in the whorehouse. Don't cut Walla. You can do anything to them you want if you got money. Anything. You can cut white women if you got enough money." "That's outrageous, Walla. If you're lying, I'll give you twenty cuts. Do you hear me?" "I hear, Bwana." When Lippincott drove up to the large white house with the iron gate, he saw to his delight that the windows held air-conditioning units. Iron bars held the gray units in place. If he had looked closer, he would have seen that there were bars also on windows that had no air conditioners. But he did not look closer, nor did he wonder why Walla did not accompany him, even though the servant knew he would be punished for just disappearing the way he had. Lippincott was pleasantly surprised to see that the buzzer button on the gate worked. He tried it only after he found that the gate did not open to his pushing. "Identify yourself," came a voice from a black box over the mother-of-pearl button. "I was told I could find entertainment here." "I'm James Forsythe Lippincott, a close personal friend of the Minister of Public Safety." "Then he sent you?" If Lippincott had lived a life that exposed him to any sort of danger, he might have taken cautioned notice of the fact that in a country where brass doorknobs were stolen regularly, no one had pried loose the little mother-of-pearl buzzer from that front door. But James Lippincott was discovering himself, and in the excitement of finding that he truly loved to inflict pain, he neither worried nor cautioned. "Yes, the Minister of Public Safety sent me and said everything would be okay," Lippincott lied. So what? Instead of a pre-guilt payment, there would be an after-guilt payment. "All right," said the voice in the hollow raspiness of a speaker system. Lippincott could not place the accent, but it sounded faintly British. "The car can't get through the gate," said Lippincott. "Will you send a boy out to watch it?" "No one will touch a car in front of this gate," came the voice. The gate clicked open and such was Lippincott's anticipation that he did not wonder what might protect a car in front of this house, when ordinarily Busatians stripped a parked car like piranha working over a crippled cow. The path to the door of the mansion was inlaid stone and the door handles shiny brass. The door of oak was polished to a gleam and the bell knob was the crafted head of a lion;-not African lion but British. Lippincott knocked. The door opened and a man hi Busati Army whites, with sergeant's stripes on his sleeves, stood in the entrance. "A bit early, what?" he said in a British accent, that seemed even colder coming from his anthracite face. "Yes. Early," said Lippincott, assuming that was what he should say. The sergeant ushered him into a living room with ornate Victorian furniture, chairs stuffed to discomfort, bric-a-brac filling crannies, large portraits in gold frames of African chiefs. It was not British, but almost British. Not the almost-British of Busati, but the almost-British of another colony. Lippincott could not place it. The sergeant motioned Lippincott to a seat and clapped his hands. |
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