[Kim by Rudyard Kipling]@TWC D-Link book
Kim

CHAPTER 6
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Umballa city is as full of them as is Lahore.' 'Four annas,' said the writer, sitting down and spreading his cloth in the shade of a deserted barrack-wing.
Mechanically Kim squatted beside him--squatted as only the natives can--in spite of the abominable clinging trousers.
The writer regarded him sideways.
'That is the price to ask of Sahibs,' said Kim.

'Now fix me a true one.' 'An anna and a half.

How do I know, having written the letter, that thou wilt not run away ?' I must not go beyond this tree, and there is also the stamp to be considered.' 'I get no commission on the price of the stamp.

Once more, what manner of white boy art thou ?' 'That shall be said in the letter, which is to Mahbub Ali, the horse-dealer in the Kashmir Serai, at Lahore.

He is my friend.' 'Wonder on wonder!' murmured the letter-writer, dipping a reed in the inkstand.


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