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PAPER MONEY by Ken Follett

blackest day of young Tim’s life, and his leadership qualities remained

stifled until he went to college and joined the Party.

A lost fight, a torn blazer, and six of the best: he could wish for

problems like that now. A whistle blew in the playground outside the

flat, and the noise of the children ceased abruptly. I could end my

troubles that quickly, Tim thought; and the idea appealed.

What was I living for yesterday? he wondered.

Good work, my reputation, a successful government; none of these things

seemed to matter today. The school whistle meant it was past nine

o’clock. Tim should have been chairing a committee meeting to discuss

the productivity of different kinds of power stations. How could I ever

have been interested in anything so meaningless? He thought of his pet

project, a forecast of the energy needs of British industry through to

the year 2000.

He could summon no enthusiasm for it. He thought of his daughters, and

dreaded the idea of facing them. Everything turned to ashes in his

mouth.

What did it matter who would win the next election? Britain’s fortunes

were determined by forces outside its leaders’ control. He had always

known it was a game, but he no longer wanted the prizes.

There was nobody he could talk to, nobody. He imagined the conversation

with his wife: “Darling, I’ve been foolish and disloyal. I was seduced

by a whore, a beautiful, supple girl, and blackmailed …” Julia would

freeze on him. He could see her face, taking on a rigid look of distaste

as she withdrew from emotional contact. He would reach out to her with

his hand, and she would say: “Don’t touch me.” No, he could not tell

Julia; not until he was sure his own wounds had healed and he did not

think he could survive that long.

Anyone else? Cabinet colleagues would say:

“Good God, Tim, old chap–I’m terribly sorry.. and immediately begin to

map out a fallback position for the time when it got out. They would

take care not to be associated with anything he sponsored, not to be

seen with him too often; might even make a morality speech to establish

Puritan credentials. He did not hate them for what he knew they would

do: his prognosis was based on what he would do in that situation.

His agent had come close to being a friend, once or twice. But the man

was young; he could not know how much depended upon fidelity in a

twenty-year-old marriage; he would cynically recommend a thorough

cover-up and overlook the damage already done to a man’s soul. to HIS

sister, then? An ordinary woman, married carpenter, she had always

envied Tim a little.

She would wallow in it. Tim could not contemplate that.

His father was dead, his mother senile. Was he that short of friends?

What had he done with his life, to be left with no one who would love

him right or wrong? Perhaps it was that that kind of commitment was

two-way, and he had been careful to see that there was nobody he

wouldn’t be able to abandon if they became a liability

There was no support to be had. Only his own resources were available.

What do we do, he thought wearily, when we lose the election by a

landslide? Regroup, draw up the scenario for the years of opposition,

start hacking away at the foundations, use our anger and our

disappointment as fuel for the fight. He looked inside himself for

courage, and hatred, and bitterness, to enable him to deny the victory

to Tony Cox; and found only cowardice and spite. At other times he had

lost battles and suffered humiliation, but he was a man, and men had the

strength to struggle on, didn’t they?

His strength had always come from a certain image of himself: a

civilized man, steadfast, trustworthy, loyal, and courageous; able to

win with pride and lose with grace. Tony Cox had shown him a new

picture; naive enough to be seduced by an empty-headed girl; weak enough

to betray his trust at the first threat of blackmail; frightened enough

to crawl on the floor and beg for mercy.

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