Orsborne presented the anecdote as factual, involving a writer known to an editor who then told the story to Orsborne. Moses states that Dahl's story was likely expanded from an anecdote found in George "Dod" Orsborne's Master of the Girl Pat, published in 1949. It was later included in the 1974 collection Switch Bitch. "The Visitor" was first published in the May 1965 issue of Playboy. (The implication is that Oswald has been exposed to leprosy after unsuspectingly sleeping with the second daughter.) Aziz reveals to Oswald that he has a second daughter who lives in seclusion in another part of the house – because she has incurable leprosy. The next day, Oswald leaves the house none the wiser as to which of the two women he has slept with. Oswald plots to seduce either the wife or daughter, and believes he has succeeded after a woman slips into his bedroom under cover of darkness and spends several passionate hours with him, although he cannot see her face and she refuses to converse with him. Oswald becomes stranded for a night near Cairo at the desert mansion of a wealthy businessman, Abdul Aziz, whose wife and adult daughter are both very beautiful.
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