The prudent purchase of minefields
Any English speaker who can justifiably call themselves ‘travelled’ knows that one of the key features of the ex-pat circuit is the immediate best-matery that springs up between two strangers who’ve not heard English spoken in some time.
In
English Mark worked in property, making deals across the Balkans that may or may not have been legit; we never could really tell. His phone conversations, which we unashamedly eavesdropped on – and I openly took notes of – tended to go like this:
‘I’m sure it’s a beaut deal, Mr Tjyhgvgrybncjkvbic, and legal-ish, it’s just that I’ve never really known anyone before who owned a minefield…’ And later: ‘I know the church technically owns the land that the village people have been farming for centuries…but I just think that suing the Catholic Church is probably not that great for karma…’
English Mark has since married a ‘city’ girl (ie. form Split), which we were relieved to hear, because it always seemed more likely he’d be knocked off by a local father for tampering with their daughters than leave of his own accord.
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