PAPER MONEY by Ken Follett

The girl beside him had red hair, fitting her small head like a cap,

showing her tiny ears. All her features were small: nose, chin,

cheekbones, dainty teeth. Once, in the night, he had covered her face

with his broad, clumsy hands, pressing his fingers gently into the

hollows of her eyes and her cheeks, opening her soft lips with his

thumbs, as if his skin could feel her beauty like the heat from a fire.

Her left arm lay limply outside the coverlet, which was pushed down to

reveal narrow, delicate shoulders and one shallow breast, its nipple

soft in slumber.

They lay apart, not quite touching, although he could feel the warmth of

her thigh close to his. He looked away from her, up at the ceiling, and

for a moment he let the sheer joy of remembered fornication wash over

him like a physical thrill; then he got up.

He stood beside the bed and looked back at her.

She was undisturbed. The candid morning light made her no less lovely,

despite tousled hair and the untidy remains of what had been elaborate

makeup. Daybreak was less kind to Tim Fitzpeterson, he knew. That was

why he tried not to wake her: he wanted to look in a mirror before she

saw him.

He went naked, padding across the dull green living-room carpet to the

bathroom. In the space of a few moments he saw the place as if for the

first time, and found it hopelessly unexciting. The carpet was matched

by an even duller green sofa, with fading flowered cushions. There was a

plain wooden desk, of the kind to be found in a million offices; an

elderly black-and-white television set; a filing cabinet; and a

bookshelf of legal and economic textbooks plus several volumes of

Hansard.

He had once thought it so dashing to have a London pied-a’-terre.

The bathroom had a full-length mirror–bought not by Tim, but by his

wife, in the days before she had totally retired from town life. He

looked in it while he waited for the bath to fill, wondering what there

was about this middle-aged body that could drive a beautiful girl

of–what, twenty-five?–into a frenzy of lust. He was healthy, but not

fit; not in the sense with which that word is used to describe men who

do exercises and visit gymnasia. He was short, and his naturally broad

frame was thickened by a little superfluous fat, particularly on the

chest, waist, and buttocks. His physique was okay, for a man of

forty-one, but it was nothing to excite even the most physical of women.

The mirror became obscured by steam, and Tim got into the bath. He

rested his head and closed his eyes. It occurred to him that he had had

less than two hours of sleep, yet he felt quite fresh. His upbringing

would have him believe that pain and discomfort, if not actual illness,

were the consequences of late nights, dancing, adultery, and strong

drink. All those sins together ought to bring down the wrath of God. No:

the wages of sin were sheer delight. He began to soap himself languidly.

It had started at one of those appalling dinners: grapefruit cocktail,

overdone steak and beg no surprise for three hundred members of a

useless organization. Tim’s speech had been just another exposition of

the Government’s current strategy, emotionally weighted to appeal to the

particular sympathies of the audience. Afterwards he had agreed to go

somewhere else for a drink with one of his colleagues^ brilliant young

economist–and two faintly interesting people from the audience. The

venue turned out to be a nightclub which would normally have been beyond

Tim’s means; but someone else had paid the entrance. Once inside, he

began to enjoy himself, so much so that he bought a bottle of champagne

with his credit card. More people had joined their group: a film company

executive Tim had vaguely heard of; a playwright he hadn’t; a left-wing

economist who shook hands with a wry smile and avoided shop talk; and

the girls. The champagne and the floor show inflamed him slightly. In

the old days, he would at this point have taken Julia home and made love

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