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We are each of us the center of the universe, Dalya said, our universe. I watched her sitting on the bar stool at base camp outside Hamburg, her dark hair tied back in a bun, her eyes on me. How are we the center of the universe? I said. We each perceive the universe through our senses and conceive with our minds, we cannot know this without our senses and our mind, she said. She crossed her legs, her tight skirt showing thigh. I think I read something like that in the Solzhenitsyn book I'm reading, I said, turning my eyes from her thigh to meet her dark eyes. What book's that? She said. She lit up a cigarette and offered one to me which I took and she lit mine with her cigarette. The Gulag Archipelago, I said, it's back in my bag in my tent, I'll show you later. Show me what in your tent? She said smiling. The book, I said, unless you want to see anything else. She smiled: have to see how it goes won't we, she said. It's a depressing book, I said. What's it about? she said. About Russian labour camps between 1918 until 1958, I said. Light reading, then, she said, why read that it if it's so depressing? Sometimes you have to read depressing things to get at the truth, I said. Want a beer? She said. I nodded, she ordered two German beers. we sat and talked of other things, and I eyed her thigh whenever I could, wondering if she'd come to my tent later that night, if things were quiet and all was all right.
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Sep 19, 2016
Sep 19, 2016 at 3:28 AM UTC
ALL WAS ALL RIGHT 1974.
We are each of us the center of the universe, Dalya said, our universe. I watched her sitting on the bar stool at base camp outside Hamburg, her dark hair tied back in a bun, her eyes on me. How are we the center of the universe? I said. We each perceive the universe through our senses and conceive with our minds, we cannot know this without our senses and our mind, she said. She crossed her legs, her tight skirt showing thigh. I think I read something like that in the Solzhenitsyn book I'm reading, I said, turning my eyes from her thigh to meet her dark eyes. What book's that? She said. She lit up a cigarette and offered one to me which I took and she lit mine with her cigarette. The Gulag Archipelago, I said, it's back in my bag in my tent, I'll show you later. Show me what in your tent? She said smiling. The book, I said, unless you want to see anything else. She smiled: have to see how it goes won't we, she said. It's a depressing book, I said. What's it about? she said. About Russian labour camps between 1918 until 1958, I said. Light reading, then, she said, why read that it if it's so depressing? Sometimes you have to read depressing things to get at the truth, I said. Want a beer? She said. I nodded, she ordered two German beers. we sat and talked of other things, and I eyed her thigh whenever I could, wondering if she'd come to my tent later that night, if things were quiet and all was all right.
A BOY AND GIRL IN HAMBURG IN 1974.
TerryCollett
Written by
Sep 19, 2016
Sep 19, 2016 at 3:28 AM UTC
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