PAPER MONEY by Ken Follett

and they had been happy.

Laski had accepted the stolen money more readily than Tony expected.

Maybe the crafty sod thought he could embezzle some of it: just let him

try. The two of them would have to cook up some scheme for concealing

the true nature of any withdrawals Tony made from the funds. That

couldn’t be difficult.

Tonight, nothing could be difficult. He wondered what to do with the

evening. Perhaps he would go to a gay bar and pick up a friend for the

night. He would dress up, put on some fancy jewelry, and stuff a roll of

tenners into his pocket He would find a boy a couple of years younger

than himself, and shower him with kindness: a wonderful meal, a show,

champagne–then back to the Barbican flat. He would knock the boy about

a bit, just to soften him up, and then … It would be a good night. In

the morning the boy would go away with his pockets full of money,

bruised but happy. Tony enjoyed making people happy.

On impulse, he pulled up outside a corner shop and went in. It was a

news agent’s, with bright modern decor and new racking along the walls

for magazines and books. Tony asked for the biggest box of chocolates in

the shop.

The young girl behind the counter was fat, spotty, and cheeky. She

reached up for the chocolates, letting her nylon overalls ride up almost

to her bottom. Tony looked away. the lucky lady, then?” the girl asked

him.

“My mum.”

“Pull the other one.”

Tony paid and got out fast. There was nothing more revolting than a

revolting woman.

As he drove away he thought: really, with a million pounds I should do

something more than just going out for a night on the town. But there

was nothing else he wanted. He could buy a house in Spain, but he got

too hot out there. He had enough cars; world cruises bored him; he did

not want a mansion in the country; there was nothing he collected. It

made him laugh when he thought of it this way: he had become a

millionaire in a day, and the only thing he could think of to buy was a

three-pound box of chocolates.

The money was security, though. If he went through a bad patch–even if,

God forbid, he did a stretch–he could look after the boys more or less

indefinitely. Running the firm could be expensive at times. There were

about twenty blokes in all, and each of them looked to him for a few

quid every Friday, whether they had had a tickle or not. He sighed. Yes,

his responsibilities would weigh less heavily now. It was worth it for

that.

He pulled up outside his mother’s house. The dashboard clock said four

thirty-five. Ma would. have tea ready soon: perhaps a bit of cheese on

toast, or a plate of baked beans; then some fruit cake or Battenberg;

and canned pears with Ideal milk to finish off. Or she might have got

him his favorite-crumpets and jam. He would eat again later tonight. He

had always had a good appetite.

He entered the house and closed the front door behind him. The hall was

untidy. The vacuum cleaner stood unattended halfway up the stairs, a

raincoat had fallen from the hall stand onto the tiled floor, and there

was some kind of mess by the kitchen door. It looked as if Ma had been

called away suddenly: he hoped there wasn’t bad news.

He picked up the raincoat and hung it on a hook. The dog was out, too;

there was no welcoming bark.

He went into the kitchen, and stopped with one foot still in the hall.

The mess was awful. At first he could not figure out what it was. Then

he smelled the blood.

It was everywhere: walls, floor, ceiling; all over the fridge, the

cooker, and the draining board.

The stench of the abattoir filled his nostrils, and he felt sick. But

where had it all come from? What had caused it? He looked around wildly

for some clue, but there was nothing; just the blood.

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