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Даргер и Довесок
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— Какое жуткое зрелище! Не могу отделаться от ощущения, что в какой-то мере несу за это ответственность.

— А, бросьте! — сказал Даргер — Перестаньте печалиться, мы оба теперь богатые люди. Бриллианты леди Памелы позволят нам жить безбедно в течение многих лет. Что же касается Лондона, это далеко не первый пожар, который ему пришлось перенести. И не последний. Жизнь коротка, и давайте веселиться, пока живы.

— Довольно странное высказывание для меланхолика, — удивленно заметил Сэрплас.

— Во времена побед мой разум обращается лицом к солнцу. Не думайте о прошлом, дорогой друг, думайте о блестящем будущем, которое открывается

перед нами.

— Ожерелье не представляет собой ценности, — сказал Сэрплас — Теперь, когда у меня появилось время, чтобы изучить его отдельно от смущающего тела леди Памелы, я понял, что это не бриллианты, а их имитация — И он собрался швырнуть ожерелье в воды Темзы.

Но прежде чем он успел это сделать, Даргер перехватил у него бриллианты и принялся внимательно разглядывать. Потом откинул голову и захохотал:

— Попались! Что ж, возможно, это стразы, но тем не менее они выглядят дорого. Мы найдем им применение в Париже.

— Мы собираемся в Париж?

— Ведь мы партнеры, не так ли? Помните старинную поговорку когда одна дверь закрывается, другая открывается? Вместо сгоревшего города манит другой. Итак, во Францию, навстречу приключениям! Потом — в Италию, Ватикан, Австро-Венгрию, возможно, даже в Россию! Не забывайте, что вы еще должны вручить свои верительные грамоты Московскому князю.

— Отлично, — сказал Сэрплас. — Но когда до этого дойдет, я сам буду выбирать модем.

The Little Cat Laughed to See Such Sport

THERE WAS A SEASON in Paris when Darger and Surplus, those two canny rogues, lived very well indeed. That was the year when the Seine shone a gentle green at night with the pillars of the stone bridges fading up into a pure and ghostly blue, for the city engineers, in obedience to the latest fashions, had made the algae and mosses bioluminescent.

Paris, unlike lesser cities, reveled in her flaws. The molds and funguses that attacked her substance had been redesigned for beauty. The rats had been displaced by a breed of particularly engaging mice. A depleted revenant of the Plague Wars yet lingered in her brothels in the form of a sexual fever that lasted but twenty-four hours before dying away, leaving one with only memories and pleasant regrets. The health service, needless to say, made no serious effort to eradicate it.

Small wonder that Darger and Surplus were as happy as two such men could be.

One such man, actually. Surplus was, genetically, a dog, though he had been remade into anthropomorphic form and intellect. But neither that nor his American origins was held against him, for it was widely believed that he was enormously wealthy.

He was not, of course. Nor was he, as so many had been led to suspect, a baron of the Demesne of Western Vermont, traveling incognito in his government’s service. In actual fact, Surplus and Darger were being kept afloat by an immense sea of credit while their plans matured.

“It seems almost a pity,” Surplus remarked conversationally over breakfast one morning, “that our little game must soon come to fruition.” He cut a slice of strawberry, laid it upon his plate, and began fastidiously dabbing it with golden dollops of Irish cream. “I could live like this forever.”

“Indeed. But our creditors could not.” Darger, who had already breakfasted on toast and black coffee, was slowly unwrapping a package that had been delivered just minutes before by courier. “Nor shall we require them to. It is my proud boast to have never departed a restaurant table without leaving a tip, nor a hotel by any means other than the front door.”

“I seem to recall that we left Buckingham by climbing out a window into the back gardens.”

“That was the queen’s palace, and quite a different matter. Anyway, it was on fire. Common law absolves us of any impoliteness under such circumstances.” From a lap brimming with brown paper and excelsior, Darger withdrew a gleaming chrome pistol. “Ah!”

Surplus set down his fork and said, “Aubrey, what are you doing with that grotesque mechanism?”

“Far from being a grotesque mechanism, as you put it, my dear friend, this device is an example of the brilliance of the Utopian artisans. The trigger has a built-in gene reader so that the gun could only be fired by its registered owner. Further, it was programmed so that, while still an implacable foe of robbers and other enemies of its master, it would refuse to shoot his family or friends, were he to accidentally point the gun their way and try to fire.”

“These are fine distinctions for a handgun to make.”

“Such weapons were artificially intelligent. Some of the best examples had brains almost the equal of yours or mine. Here. Examine it for yourself.”

Surplus held it up to his ear. “Is it humming?”

But Darger, who had merely a human sense of hearing, could detect nothing. So Surplus remained unsure. “Where did it come from?” he asked.

“It is a present,” Darger said. “From one Madame Mignonette d’Etranger. Doubtless she has read of our discovery in the papers, and wishes to learn more. To which end she has enclosed her card — it is bordered in black, indicating that she is a widow — annotated with the information that she will be at home this afternoon.”

“Then we shall have to make the good widow’s acquaintance. Courtesy requires nothing less.” 

* * *

Chateau d’Etranger resembled nothing so much as one of Arcimboldo’s whimsical portraits of human faces constructed entirely of fruits or vegetables. It was a bioengineered viridian structure — self-cleansing, self-renewing, and even self-supporting, were one willing to accept a limited menu — such as had enjoyed a faddish popularity in the suburban Paris of an earlier decade. The columned facade was formed by a uniform line of oaks with fluted boles above plinthed and dadoed bases. The branches swept back to form a pleached roof of leafy green. Swags of vines decorated windows that were each the translucent petal of a flower delicately hinged with clamshell muscle to air the house in pleasant weather.

“Grotesque,” muttered Surplus, “and in the worst of taste.”

“Yet expensive,” Darger observed cheerily. “And in the final analysis, does not money trump good taste?”

Madame d’Etranger received them in the orangery. All the windows had been opened, so that a fresh breeze washed through the room. The scent of orange blossoms was intoxicating. The widow herself was dressed in black, her face entirely hidden behind a dark and fashionable cloud of hair, hat, and veils. Her clothes, notwithstanding their somber purpose, were of silk, and did little to disguise the loveliness of her slim and perfect form. “Gentlemen,” she said. “It is kind of you to meet me on such short notice.”

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