"Arkadi and Boris Strugatsky. Monday begins on Saturday (англ.)" - читать интересную книгу автора "I'll talk to the fellows," I promised. "I know some who are unhappy."
"We don't need just any programmer," said Hawk-nose. "Programmers are in short supply, and are spoiled, but we don't need a prima donna." "That's more complicated," I said. Hawk-nose started counting his fingers. "We need a programmer who: a-- is not spoiled; b-- is a volunteer; c-- is willing to live in a dorm-- " "D," picked up The Beard, "will take one hundred and twenty rubles." "And how about wings?" I asked. "Or, say, a halo around the head? You are searching for one in a thousand!" "But all we need is just that one," said Hawk-nose. "But what if there's only nine hundred?" "We'll settle for nine-tenths." The forest fell away on either side; we crossed a bridge and ran along between potato fields. "Nine o'clock," said Hawk-nose. "Where are you planning to spend the night?" "I'll sleep in the car. How late are the stores open?" "The stores are already closed," said Hawk-nose. "You could stay in the dorm," said The Beard. "I have an extra bunk bed in my room." "You can't park near the dorm," Hawk-nose said dreamily. "Yeah, I guess so," said The Beard, chuckling for some private reason. "We can park the car over by the police," said Hawk-nose. "That's a lot of folderol," said The Beard. "Here I am prattling nonsense, and you trail right along. How's he going to get in the dorm?" "Right, right, damn it," said Hawk-nose. "Quite so; can't get through a "How about transvecting him?" "That's a no-no," said Hawk-nose. "You are not dealing with a sofa, you know. And you are no Cristobal Junta, and neither am I..." "Don't worry yourselves," I said. "It's not the first time I slept in the car." Suddenly I felt a terrible yen to sleep between sheets. It had been four nights that I had been sleeping in a bag. "I've got it," said Hawk-nose. "Ho-ho-- -- Iznakurnozh !"* "Right!" exclaimed The Beard. "Over to Lukomoniye with him!" ____________________________________________________________________________ * lzba na kuryikh nozhkakh: Log cottage on hen's legs, of Russian folklore. "Honest to God, I can sleep over in the car," I said. "You are going to sleep in a house," said Hawk-nose, "on relatively clean sheets. There must be some way we can repay you...." "You wouldn't want us to push a ruble on you, would you?" said The Beard. We entered the town. Ancient stout fences, mighty log houses with blackened timbers and narrowish windows, decorated with filigreed fronts and |
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