Ash. The Legends of the Nameless World. Progression Gamelit Story by Kirill Klevanski (ink book reader .txt) ๐
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- Author: Kirill Klevanski
Read book online ยซAsh. The Legends of the Nameless World. Progression Gamelit Story by Kirill Klevanski (ink book reader .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Kirill Klevanski
It was Slattery, lost in his thoughts, who saw her first. Radiant, all in white, stepping through the French windows. He blinked in case he was dreaming. She was, he thought, the most beautiful woman he had ever seen. She wore a calf-length, white, cotton dress, cross-cut in a deep V over her small breasts and tied loosely at the waist by a red cord. Silken black hair cascaded over her shoulders, so black it was almost blue as it caught the glare of the sun. Her skin was the colour of teak, her eyes a deep, almost luminescent brown. There was just a touch of rouge on her fine high cheekbones, a hint of blue on the lids of her eyes, the merest trace of red on her full, wide lips. She moved with a slow assured elegance across the lawn and he realized that she was tall, perhaps five-six, and not of pure Asian blood. Tuk rose as she approached, and Elliot turned his head to see her for the first time. And he knew from that first moment that she was something very special.
โMy dear,โ Tuk said. He stood and made a little bow. She kissed him on each cheek in the French manner and took his hands in hers.
โThan. You are well, I hope?โ she said with an accent that owed more to French than Cambodian.
Tuk smiled with genuine affection. โOf course,โ he said. โBut I have no need to ask it of you. You are radiant, as always.โ
She inclined her head in acknowledgement with the assurance of one accustomed to admiration. Slattery saw now that she was older than she appeared. Tiny lines around the eyes and the mouth, a slight loosening of the skin at her neck. She looked thirty, although she could easily have been forty, or even more. But age enhanced rather than diminished her beauty. She was flawed only by her lack of innocence. A look, knowing and calculated, in her eyes. She turned, ignoring Slattery, and looked directly at Elliot with an unwavering gaze of naked interest. โAre you not going to introduce us, Than?โ
โBut, of course. La Mรจre Grace, Mr Elliot. A business associate from England.โ
โOh? And what kind of business are you in, Mr Elliot?โ
โI make war,โ Elliot said.
She offered him a cool hand, small and perfect, which caressed his for the briefest of moments. Then she looked at Slattery. Tuk said, โAnd Mr Slattery.โ
โAnd do you make war also, Mr Slattery?โ she asked.
โOnly when I get paid.โ Slattery grinned and added, โBut I prefer making love.โ
She raised an elegant eyebrow. โThen we have much in common. I, too, prefer to make love. But only when paid.โ Her eyes flickered back to Elliot.
Tuk watched with amusement. โGrace runs the best brothel in Bangkok,โ he said. โPlease, do sit.โ They all sat and Tuk called for another drink.
โBrothel is not a word I care to use,โ La Mรจre Grace said. โIt has . . . connotations. My girls entertain only the most discerning of clients. I have other establishments to cater for the more basic clientele.โ She looked again at Slattery. โWe can cater for almost every taste.โ Slattery shifted uncomfortably under her gaze, feeling like a book that had just been read and discarded.
Tuk offered her a cigarette and lit it, then lit one for himself. He did not extend the offer to Elliot or Slattery. She took tiny puffs, exhaling the smoke through pursed lips.
โLa Mรจre Grace ran the most celebrated house in Phnom Penh until the early Seventies.โ Tuk leaned back and ran a hand through his hair. โShe only just escaped the country before the Khmer Rouge took over. Unfortunately she was unable to bring her girls with her.โ
โI very much fear they were killed by the communists,โ she said with no apparent trace of regret. โI have had to find and train new girls. Thai girls.โ
โI was telling Mr Elliot,โ Tuk said, โthat he must speak to you of Cambodia. He and Mr Slattery intend visiting it in the not too distant future.โ
A look of surprise flickered momentarily in her eyes, but she knew better than to ask. โOf course,โ she said. โIf I can be of any assistance.โ
Tuk stood up. โAnd now, gentlemen, I have other business to attend to. At which hotel are you staying?โ
Elliot rose. โThe Narai.โ
โThen I shall pick you up this evening at seven and take you to my warehouse to examine the merchandise. And we can also make arrangements for our trip tomorrow.โ
His dismissal was brief and pointed. Slattery raised himself to his feet and grinned at La Mรจre Grace. โPleased to have met you, maโam.โ
She smiled perfunctorily and held out a card to Elliot. โCall on me tomorrow night. Both of you. Iโll expect you at nine.โ
She watched them walk across the lawn towards the house. โHe doesnโt say much,โ she said. โThe dark one.โ
Tuk rubbed his chin thoughtfully. โIt is often the quiet ones who are the most dangerous. We would, each of us, do well not to underestimate him.โ
CHAPTER TWELVE
David poured the last of the wine into their glasses. Lisa had drunk most of the bottle, since he was driving. Before the meal she had gone through three gins and tonic. He wasnโt sure now whether she meant to be vague or whether it was the drink. It was she who had called and suggested they go out for a meal โ the first time sheโd called him in days. But she had been strangely formal and uncommunicative, and done nothing
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