mean you walked up here?'
The store was empty when I arrived. Empty, except for a few million seeds. It is incredible how many different kinds of plants there are. One rack had seeds for more than eighty different varieties of roses. Another had almost as many kinds of beets, lettuce, and strawberries.
The prices on everything were low-trivial, reallyso the thought hit me: The old girl wants seeds? Well, she's going to get seeds! Thousands of them! Not that I'm going to stick any of them into the ground!
This slightly sadistic train of thought was interrupted as a magnificent pair of breasts came in from the back room. These breasts were followed by an equally magnificent young lady.
'Sorry. I didn't know anyone was out here. Can I help you?' Her eyes were a glorious pale green that floated in a field of red freckles. Her hair was that incredible natural red that you see maybe once in a decade, and, oh yes, dear God, she could help me in so many wonderful ways!
However, sad experience has taught me that pouncing on them tends to frighten them off. So I smiled, making sure that my mouth was closed and that I wasn't drooling.
'I expect so. My mother wanted me to buy her some seeds. '
'Then you've gotten to the right place.' She returned my smile. Glory! 'Did your mummy give you a shopping list?' She was wearing a light print blouse and was definitely without a bra. Nothing in there but healthy Polish girl!
'Well, no. Actually, she was pretty vague about it. I was hoping to get some friendly expert advice.'
'I think I qualify as a friendly expert. Where does she live?' She was still smiling, a good sign.
'We have a house just outside of Katowice.'
'And what sort of soil do you have?'
'I don't know. It stays on the ground and is reasonably polite about it.'
'No, silly! I mean is it sandy or clay or loam? What color is it? What's growing there now?'
'Well, it's sort of brownish. It doesn't stick to your shoes like clay, and we are presently harvesting great quantities of prizewinning crabgrass.' I set my pack on the floor, using it as an excuse to edge a little closer, still smiling. She didn't retreat.
'Okay. That's something to go on. Now you have to decide on what you want.'
I knew exactly what I wanted. But patience was still needed.
'I thought we might get a little of everything and let her do the choosing later.'
'Sensible. Do you like strawberries?'
'I absolutely love strawberries.' Strawberry blondes even more.
'Then these are definitely for you.' She reached across to one of the stands and gently bumped me with her hip. First contact! And she had initiated it!
'Now, this variety is perfect for a home garden. The strawberries come in all during the growing season from early spring to frost, and it's a perennial.' She wore the slightest hint of perfume.
'You've talked me into it.'
'And these are great if she wants to do some canningthey all come in at once.'
'Sold.' She wore a skirt and nylons. None of this modern pants nonsense.
'And this is a new climbing variety.'
'The wonders of modem science.'
And so we went up and down rows, throwing seed packages into a brown paper bag. Following her was a pleasure. She was as perfect behind as she was in front.
'You're certainly enthusiastic about your job. Do you make a commission on all this?'
'Of course not, silly. This is a state-owned facility. But sales do count toward my efficiency rating.'
'Well, we wouldn't want you to get a poor efficiency rating ... uh, what is your name?'
'Anna.'
'Anna. A lovely name.'
'And yours?'
'Conrad.'
'Hmm ... Conrad has such a strong, masculine sound.' She was still throwing seeds into the bag.
'Anna, what do people around here do when they're not selling seeds?'
'Not much, once the tourist season is over.'
'But there must be some place where you folks hang out.'
'Well, the group here at the station usually stops for a drink at the Red Gate Inn.' She was still smiling.
'And where is this wonderful establishment?'
'Oh, it's not all that wonderful. But it is sort of quaint. It's been there for hundreds of years, and they've never even built a road to it.'
'Then how do you get there?'
'You came in by the trail, didn't you? Then you must have come from the south; you would have passed it coming from the north.'
'An inn on a hiking trail?'
'About half a kilometer down. You know, that trail is ancient. It shows up on the oldest maps. Once it was the only road through here. Caravans used to travel on it.'
Caravans? Zakopane is surrounded by some of the highest mountains in the Carpathians. Unless you travel by the modem, dynamiteblasted road or you are a mountain climber or a helicopter pilot, there is only one way in or out-north. Within a hundred kilometers-to both the east and the west-there are ancient mountain passes into Czechoslovakia, but this area is one huge cul-de-sac. Nothing medieval would have traveled through here. The area's only natural resources are good hiking, great skiing, and magnificent scenery-none of which are particularly transportable by caravan mule.
However, I did not want to spoil her romantic notions. I wanted rather to encourage them.
'Amazing. I really must see this place. Is there any chance that you would be by there this evening?'
'There is an excellent chance.' She winked. 'I live just beyond the inn.'
The world was wonderful. Anna was wonderful. And yes, I was wonderful, too, so my mood wasn't seriously dampened when she figured up the bill. It seems that while the price of a pack of seeds was trivial, 342 times trivial equals substantial. Actually, it took a fair bite out of a week's pay.
But I wasn't going to let that bother me. Not when there was an evening with Anna to look forward to.
The trail to the Red Gate Inn wound among pine forests below the High Tatras.
I had earned my engineering degree in Massachusetts, studying at the expense of a wealthy American relative. My summers had been free, and I had spent one of them hiking in the Appalachians. They were good mountains, but somehow they were never mine. These Tatrasthis Poland-is my country, and I love it.
The Red Gate Inn was a surprisingly large place. Besides a restaurant and a taproom, it had rooms for rent and housing for its workers.
It was about four in the afternoon when I arrived, and I realized that I hadn't asked Anna about her quitting time. Well, she would get there when she got there.
The restaurant was tempting, but a meal with Anna was more tempting, so I went into the taproom, a lovely old cavern with huge oak beams and polished ancient furniture. Only the lighting and the taps themselves were modem.
They brewed their own beer, a rarity not to be passed up in these days of commercial fizziness. It was an excellent beer, and I was into my third stein by five-thirty. Also my tenth cigarette. I kept looking at the clock on the wall because I wasn't wearing my watch.
I owned an excellent watch, a solar-powered, solidstate, digital thing. It had a calculator with trig functions, and it played Chopin to wake me in the morning. But I was on vacation, and the whole idea of a vacation is to get away from things like clocks and timetables and delivery schedules and factories.
Not that I was complaining about my job. I worked for a healthy organization and had a decent, competent, understanding boss who generally let me do things sensibly, i.e., my way. Designers are all prima donnas.
We designed and built specialized industrial machinery, normally one-of-a-kind things to perform some industrial task-assembling carburetors, for example. My end of it involved designing the electronic and hydraulic controls for the machines, usually little more than specifying offthe-shelf components and programming a simple computer to run them. As a result, I rarely spent more than a few weeks on any one project, which kept things