"Murphy, Warren - [Destroyer 060] - The End of the Game" - читать интересную книгу автора (Destroyer)"And yet the glory of Sinanju, the days when the great House of Assassins was properly honored by civilized nations, surprises you. Persians remember their assassins. Americans remember nothing, especially not gratitude." "I am very grateful to you, Little Father, for all you have taught me," Remo said. "You're the worst of whites," said Chiun. "When it comes to knowing what is, there is no match for you," Remo said. "I have never questioned that. Not once." "The French are acceptable although they do not wash. The Italians, yes, even Italians are acceptable although their breath is foul. Even the British. But I was cursed with an American student. A hybrid white. And yet I gave without stint or complaint. Your lunatic government contracted for my services and then gave me a thing like you to turn into an assassin. I should have returned home. I would have been justified. I could simply have said this pale piece of pig's ear is much too ugly to allow in my presence and I could have walked away from you and this imbecilic country of yours. But instead I stayed and I trained you. And what do I get? Ingratitude. Surprise that what I say is true." "All I'm saying," Remo said, "is that the old legends tend to get a bit, well, glorified." "Of course. How else could one treat the awesome magnificence of the glory of the House of Sinanju?" Chiun asked. Remo sat down in front of Chiun. The old man turned within his yellow robes. He turned so that he faced away. "Little Father," Remo said to the back of Chiun's head. "I respect what the House of Sinanju is because I have Sinanju. I am part of it. But the rest of the world doesn't have quite that high opinion of assassins. And that Sinanju was remembered in Iran after centuries was gratifying-- yeah, gratifying." Remo liked that. He thought he had really come out of that one well. Chiun was quiet a moment. And then he turned. Remo had done it. He was so surprised that he couldn't quite remember if it were the first time Chiun had ever responded to his reasoning and his apology. He would have to remember how he did it. He felt quite confident and he smiled. "Did you remember heads like melons on the ground or did you just say fruit?" Chiun asked. "I got to melons," Remo said. "If you had listened well, you would have remembered the melons. You would have remembered heads littering the fields like melons. You would have performed better. But why should I be listened to? It is impossible to teach someone who thinks he knows everything." "Of course I don't know everything," Remo protested. "Well, I do," Chiun said. And on that he contended that Remo should listen to everything in the future, as he should have been listening in the past. Chiun was not the only problem with the Iran assignment. There was a message waiting for Remo at the desk of the hotel. Aunt Catherine had called. Therefore Remo was to phone the coded number that would automatically scramble from both ends. It was answered far north in a sanitarium overlooking Long Island Sound. Headquarters. "Where have you been? Remo, the White House is desperate. We promised them protection for the next crucial month and then you disappear." "They have it," Remo said. "They have the best protection." "Remo, the White House had to publicly ring itself with concrete barricades to stop truck bombers. That's an international admission of weakness. But we know there are suicide groups aimed at the President's life. We can't stop them with normal security. We had your assurance that the President would be protected. Where are you?" "Home, or whatever passes for it this week." "What about the protection?" "The President's got the best kind," Remo said. "He doesn't see you. Where is his protection?" |
|
© 2025 Библиотека RealLib.org
(support [a t] reallib.org) |