Ken Follett - Paper Money
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- Название:Paper Money
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Paper Money: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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He wrapped the dead dog in his jacket and placed the bundle gently in the hole. He shoveled the earth back in and made the surface even with the flat of the spade. You didn't say prayers for dogs, did you? No.
He went back into the kitchen. The mess was awful. There was no way he could clean it up alone. Ma would be back any minute-it was a bloody miracle she had stayed out this long. He had to have help. He decided to ring his sister-in-law.
He went through the kitchen, trying not to spread the blood around. It seemed an awful lot of blood, even for a boxer dog.
He went into the parlor to use the phone, and there she was.
She must have been trying to reach the phone. A thin trail of blood led from the door to the body, lying stretched full length on the carpet. She had been stabbed only once, but the cut had been fatal.
The look of horror frozen on Tony's face changed slowly as his features contorted, like a squeezed cushion, into an expression of despair. He raised his arms slowly upward and pressed his palms against his cheeks. His mouth opened.
At last words came, and he roared like a bull. "Ma!" he cried. "Oh God, Ma!"
He fell to his knees beside the body and cried: huge, loud, racking sobs, like the cries of a child in total misery.
Outside in the street a crowd gathered around the parlor window, but no one dared to come in.
34
The city tennis club was an establishment which had nothing to do with tennis and everything to do with afternoon drinking. Kevin Hart was often struck with the implausibility of its title. In an alley off Fleet Street, squeezed in between a church and an office block, there was hardly room to play table tennis, let alone the real thing. If all they wanted was an excuse to serve drinks when the pubs were shut, Kevin thought, they could surely have found something more credible, like philately or model railways. As it was, the nearest they could get to tennis was a coin-in-the-slot machine which displayed a miniature tennis court on a television screen: you moved your player by twiddling a knob.
However, it did have three bars and a restaurant, and it was a good place to meet people from the Daily Mail or the Mirror who might one day give you a job.
Kevin got there shortly before five o'clock. He bought a pint of draft beer and sat at a table, talking idly to a reporter from the Evening News whom he knew vaguely. But his mind was not on the conversation: inside he was still seething. The reporter went away after a little while, and Kevin saw Arthur Cole come in and go to the bar.
To Kevin's surprise, the deputy news editor brought his drink across to the table and sat down.
By way of greeting Arthur said: "Quite a day."
Kevin nodded. He really did not want the older man's company: he wanted to be alone to sort out how he felt.
Arthur sank half his beer in one, and set his glass down with a sigh of satisfaction. "I didn't get one at lunchtime," he explained.
Just to be polite, Kevin said: "You've been holding the fort on your own."
"Yes." Cole took out a packet of cigarettes and a lighter, and put them on the table. "I've said no to those all day. I wonder how long I can keep it up."
Kevin looked surreptitiously at his watch, and wondered whether to move on to El Vino's.
Arthur said: "You're probably thinking you made a mistake ever to join this profession."
Kevin was startled. He had not credited Cole with that much perspicacity. "I am."
"You might be right."
"That's very encouraging."
Cole sighed. "That's your trouble, you know. You will come out with these clever remarks."
"If I've got to lick boots, I am in the wrong profession."
Arthur reached for the cigarettes, then changed his mind. "You've learned something today, haven't you? You're beginning to understand what it's all about, and if there's anything to you at all, you've acquired a trace of humility."
Kevin was angered by the patronizing tone. "It amazes me that after what's happened today there is nobody around here with a sense of failure!"
Cole laughed bitterly, and Kevin realized he had struck a chord: Arthur's sense of failure must be more or less permanent.
The older man said: "You people are a new breed, and I suppose we need you. The old way-making everyone start at the bottom and work their way up slowly-was better at producing reporters than executives. God knows there's a shortage of brains in newspaper management. I hope you'll stick it out. Want another pint?"
"Thanks."
Arthur went to the bar. Kevin was somewhat bemused. He had never had anything but criticism from Cole, yet now the man was asking him to stay in newspapers and become a manager. That was not in his plans, but only because he had never thought of it. It was not what he wanted: he liked finding things out, writing, working for the truth.
He was not sure. He would think about it.
When Arthur came back with the drinks, Kevin said: "If this is what happens when I get a big story, how am I ever going to get anywhere?"
Arthur gave that bitter laugh again. "You think you're alone? Do you realize I was news editor today? At least, for you, there will be another story." He reached for the packet of cigarettes, and this time he lit one.
Kevin watched him inhale. Yes, he thought, for me there will be another story.
For Arthur, there won't.
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