"Orson Scott Card - Fat Farm" - читать интересную книгу автора (Card Orson Scott)"Oh," Anderson chuckled. "We'll never go out of business."
"I have no doubt you could support your whole organization on what you charge me." "You're paying for much more than the sitnple service we perform. You're also paying for privacy. Our, shall we say, lack of government intervention." "How many of the bastards do you bribe?" "Very few, very few. Partly because so many high officials also need our service." "No doubt." "It isn't just weight gains that bring people to us, you know. It's cancer and aging and accidental disfigurement. You'd be surprised to learn who has had our service." Barth doubted that he would. The couch was ready for him, immense and soft and angled so that it would be easy for him to get up again. "Damn near got married this time," Barth said, by way of conversation. Anderson turned to him in surprise. "But you didn't?" "Of course not. Started getting fat, and she couldn't cope." "Did you tell her?" "That I was getting fat? It was obvious." "About us, I mean." "I'm not a fool." Anderson looked relieved. "Can't have rumors getting around among the thin and young, you know." "Still, I think I'll look her up again, afterward. She did things to me a woman shouldn't be able to do. And I thought I was jaded." Anderson placed a tight-fitting rubber cap over Barth's head. "Think your key thought," Anderson reminded him. Key thought. At first that had been such a comfort, to make sure that not one iota of his memory would be lost. Now it was boring, almost juvenile. Key thought. Do you have your own Captain Aardvark secret decoder ring? Be the first on your block. The only thing Barth had been the first on his block to do was reach puberty. He had also been the first on his block to reach one hundred fifty kilos. How many times have I been here? he wondered as the tingling in his scalp began. This is the eighth time. Eight times, and my fortune is larger than ever, the kind of wealth that takes on a life on its own. I can keep this up forever, he thought, with relish. Forever at the supper table with neither worries nor restraints. "It's dangerous to gain so much weight," Lynette had said. "Heart attacks, you know." But the only things that Barth worried about were hemorrhoids and impotence. The former was a nuisance, but the latter made life unbearable and drove him back to Anderson. Key thought. What else? Lynette, standing naked on the edge of the cliff with the wind blowing. She was courting death, and he admired her for it, almost hoped that she would find it. She despised safety precautions. Like clothing, they were restrictions to be cast aside. She had once talked him into playing tag with her on a construction site, racing along the girders in the darkness, until the police came and made them leave. That had been when Barth was still thin from his last time at Anderson's. But it was not Lynette on the girders that he held in his mind. It was Lynette, fragile and beautiful Lynette, daring the wind to snatch her from the cliff and break up her body on the rocks by the river. Even that, Barth thought, would be a kind of pleasure. A new kind of pleasure, to taste a grief so magnificently, so admirably earned. And then the tingling in his head stopped. Anderson came back in. |
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