PAPER MONEY by Ken Follett

to her roughly–she liked that, just occasionally. But now she no longer

came to town, and he no longer went to nightclubs; not normally.

The girls had not been introduced. Tim started to talk to the nearest, a

flat-chested redhead in a long dress of some pale color. She looked like

a model, and said she was an actress. He expected that he would find her

boring, and that she would reciprocate. That was when he got the first

intimation that tonight would be special: she seemed to find him

fascinating. Their close conversation gradually isolated them from the

rest of the party, until someone suggested another club. Tim immediately

said he would go home. The redhead caught his arm and asked him not to;

and Tim, who was being gallant to a beautiful woman for the first time

in twenty years, instantly agreed to go along. He wondered, as he got

out of the bath, what they had talked about for so long. The work of a

Junior Minister in the Department of Energy was hardly cocktail-party

conversation: when it was not technical, it was highly confidential.

Perhaps they had discussed politics. Had he told wry anecdotes about

senior politicians, in the deadpan tone which was his only way of being

humorous?

He could not remember. All he could recall was the way she had sat, with

every part of her body angled devotedly toward him: head, shoulders,

knees, feet; a physical attitude that was at once intimate and teasing.

He wiped steam off the shaving mirror and rubbed his chin speculatively,

sizing up the task.

He had very dark hair, and his beard, if he were to grow it, would be

thick. The rest of his face was, to say the least, ordinary. The chin

was receding, the nose sharply pointed with twin white marks either side

of the bridge where spectacles had rested for thirty-five years, the

mouth not small but a little grim, the ears too large, the forehead

intellectually high. No character could be read there. It was a face

trained to conceal thoughts, instead of displaying emotion.

He switched on the shaver and grimaced to bring all of his left cheek

into view. He was not even ugly. Some girls had a thing about ugly men,

he had heard–he was in no position to verify such generalizations about

women. Tim Fitzpeterson did not even fit into that dubiously fortunate

category.

But perhaps it was time to think again about the categories he fitted

into. The second club they had visited had been the kind of place he

would never knowingly have entered. He was no music-lover, and if he had

liked it his taste would not have included the blaring, insistent row

which drowned conversation in The Black Hole. Nevertheless, he had

danced to the jerky, exhibitionist dancing that seemed to be de rigueur

there. He enjoyed it, and thought he acquitted himself well enough;

there were no amused glances from the other patrons, as he feared there

might be. Perhaps that was because many of them were his age.

The disc jockey, a bearded young man in a T-shirt improbably printed

with the words

“Harvard Business School,” capriciously played a slow ballad, sung by an

American with a heavy cold. They were on the small dance floor at the

time.

The girl came close to him and wound her arms around him. Then he knew

she meant it; and he had to decide whether he was equally serious.

With her hot, lithe body clinging to him as closely as a wet towel, he

made up his mind very quickly.

He bent his head–he was slightly shorter than her–and murmured into

her ear: “Come and have a drink at my flat.”

He kissed her in the taxi–there was something he had not done for many

years! The kiss was so luscious, like a kiss in a dream, that he touched

her breasts, wonderfully small and hard under the loose gown; and after

that they found it difficult to restrain themselves until they reached

home.

The token drink was forgotten. We must have got into bed in less than a

minute, Tim thought smugly. He finished shaving and looked around for

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *