you.â He pointed to Barbara, blonde, full-figured, and glowing. I didnât blame him a bit for wanting her, but we had to get out of this predicament without pissing him off, because a man whoâd killed 15 pieds-noirs wasnât going to think twice about shooting us dead if he felt he had been insulted by an American.
âHow much will you pay for her?â I asked, emulating an ancient Arab custom in which wives were purchased.
âHow much do you wish?â he countered, also following the custom, and I could see we were in for some hard haggling. And I could see that Barbara had stopped glowing.
I asked him what he thought a fair price, and he offered 1,500 U.S. dollars, cash or gold.
âWell, thatâs a good start,â I answered. âBut only for an average woman. Itâs not enough for her. Barbara here is exceptional.â Exceptionally pale at the moment, I noticed.
âHow much do you want?â
âWell, we just couldnât part with her for less than three thousand dollars. Sheâs no ordinary woman. Shining hair, nursing skills, nice disposition, andâ¦â
âAnd lots of meat,â the commissioner smirked. âAll right, I give you two thousand. Itâs too much for a woman, but since youâre my good friend, Iâll give it to you.â
âIâm sorry, but we just couldnât take less than three thousand, even from a good friend like you. We turned down twenty-seven hundred for her in Marrakesh from the Sultanâs half-brother. We have to send part of the money to her mother.â
âYou do not bargain, Monsieur.â
âThree thousand dollars is a bargain for a beauty like Barbara.â
âAs you wish. All right. I take her.â
We were astonished! My ruse had failed. I couldnât conceive of anybody paying three thousand dollars for a woman outside of divorce court, but here it was. Barbara looked about ready to faint, when I recovered with, âBut thereâs one thing I forgot to mention, dear friend. You see, weâd planned to sell these women as a group. They all go together. And because you are our friend, you can have the other two at a big discount, only two thousand dollars each, seven thousand dollars for all three.â
âNo, I do not want the other two. They are too skinny. Look,â he said, pinching Liz, who screamed. âNo meat. All bones. Like a sick camel. I could not even get two hundred dollars for her from the nomads. I only want the big one.â
âBut, you see, we have to sell them together. The one you prefer is the prize of the flock. You have excellent taste. You can understand why we need her to help us sell these other two miserable ones. Nobody will buy these scrawny chickens otherwise. Come on, special for you, as our friend, only seven thousand for all three.â
We all held our breath while he thought it over.
âNo,â he said finally. âNo deal.â
And so, with a collective sigh of relief, our group drove on to Algiers, the Kiwis sitting in the back of the Land Cruiser singing, at the top of their lungs, âMáori Battalion March to Victory.â
Algiers buzzed with activity, none of it conducive to a pleasant visit. Under President Ben Bella it had become a center of anti-American propaganda and policies. Weâd picked up its radio programs denouncing Americans as âimperialists, exploiters, fascists, and colonialists.â Ben Bella had opened Algiers to international revolutionary groups. Its streets teemed with young rebels from the Mozambique Liberation Front and the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola. The city was plastered with signs and billboards extolling sacrifice, praising Socialism, saluting the Soviets, thanking Red China, and damning America.
Behind the flags and slogans, we detected unrest and discontent. High prices, low wages, half-empty stomachs, and disillusionment were rife. As were guns