A Calculated Risk Katherine Neville (adventure books to read txt) đ
- Author: Katherine Neville
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âDirt,â he said, looking down at the mess. âGet out of bed and take off your clothes.â
âBefore coffee?â I laughed.
âWeâre going for a swim,â he informed me.
âIs there a heated pool on this rock?â
âDonât be absurdâweâre on an island surrounded by water. Weâre going for a dip in the bay.â
âPardon me, but Iâve recently checked my almanac, and discovered itâs Christmas Day. Maybe youâre going for a dip in the bayâbut Iâm not about to die of overexposure!â
âYouâll never feel more alive,â he assured me. âI swim in the north Atlantic every Christmas morning. Even with all that fog of yours outside, this seems like a tropical paradise to me.â
He yanked the covers away and pulled me out by the feet, kicking and protesting. Tossing me over his shoulder, he sprinted out the door and downstairs, and jogged across the lawn to the pier where our boat was tied. He leaped off the end with me in his arms and we hit the water.
When the water enveloped me, I thought my entire system would crash. The shock of cold knocked the breath from me, filled my blood with ice, and drew my stomach into a knot. Tor was holding me in the lapping waves, to make sure I didnât sink.
âBreathe deeplyâin and out very slowly,â he counseled me. âLet your body relaxâthatâs it. It seems a violent way to enter the water, but itâs soon over and far more gentle. How do you feel now?â
âSadist,â I gasped, flopping over onto my belly in the waves. âYour mind is sickâthis is the worst thing youâve ever done to me.â I felt Iâd come down with lockjaw, my teeth were clenched so tightly.
âYouâre still too tense,â he said. âLoosen up, and youâll love it.â
âI hope you die of pneumonia,â I croaked.
âIf youâd swim a bit, youâd warm up faster,â he said.
âThanks for the advice. May yourââ But he put his hand on my head and dunked me, so the cold seemed to penetrate even my brain. I came up sputtering, but at once realized that I felt suffused with warmth.
âGee, what happened?â I asked. âI feel warm and glowing, all of a sudden.â
âHypothermia,â he told me. âThe first stage of shockâjust before you freeze to death.â
âVery funny.â
âTrulyâwe mustnât stay long, and must swim a bit, or it might be so. This waterâs less than forty degrees.â
We swam a lap around the little island. Then freezing all overâour wet nightclothes stuck to our bodiesâwe clambered up the rocky shore and fled across the lawn to the house.
âCome in here,â said Tor, grabbing my arm as we went down the hall to the room. He dragged me through a door, and I then understood what all the racket had been about earlier.
It was another bedroomâlarger than mineâwith a seating area and a vast bed built into the window bay beyond. On the back wall, facing the windows, was a huge fireplace with a roaring fire already crackling away, a giant log at center. Tor must have been up at the break of dawn and used superhuman effort to drag that thing up the stairs.
He stripped off his dripping pajamas and threw them in a soggy pile on the floor. Then, picking me up in my tattered wet gown, he carried me to the bath, where a hot tub of bubbles was waiting, and lowered me in. My skin tingled and burned. Tor climbed in after me.
The tub was a deep enameled affair, with lionâs claws for feet. The water went up to my nose when I sank down.
âDid you enjoy that?â he asked with a smile.
âI loved it,â I admitted. I held my nose and dunked to rinse the rubble from my hair. When I surfaced, I said, âBut now Iâm starving.â
âIâll make you some foodâthis place is fully stocked, as I arranged it to be when I phoned from New York. The owners offered to cook all our meals as part of the plan. But I was hoping to have some time alone with you to talk.â
âIâm still recovering from last nightâs little chat,â I told him with a grin.
âIâm serious,â he assured me. âI was unprepared for the adventure you sprang on me the moment I walked in your doorâand for what followed between us, tooâthough I confess thatâs crossed my mind more than once in the last twelve years. I came here, in truth, to ask for your help. Did Lelia tell you what sheâd done?â
âShe said you and Georgian were angry with her. She didnât say why,â I replied.
âThen Iâd better explain. She took the bonds to Europeâbut she didnât establish the lines of credit I wantedâshe took money out in the form of loans instead.â
âItâs nearly the same,â I pointed out.
âExcept for the interest,â he agreed. âBut weâre not yet ready to invest the money, and thanks to Lelia we have to start making payments now. Thatâs not allâshe got lousy terms as well. With collateral worth two hundred cents on the dollar, we should have secured great rates. But Lelia signed contracts with prepayment penalties, too!â
It looked pretty bad, I had to admit. With this kind of deal, he couldnât give the money back and say it was all a mistakeânor could he repay the loans early, even if he wound up making a pile on his investments. If he tried to do either, heâd have hefty fines to pay.
âWhat I donât understand,â he was saying as he lathered his chest with soap, âis why she did it. She wouldnât give me an answer. She kept saying âThat will show them, that will show themââas if she were trying to prove a point.â
âOh,â I said, blowing bubbles from my hand and sinking further down in the tub.
âOh?â said Tor. âPlease fill me inâI assure you, nothing would surprise me at this point.â
âItâs the Rothschilds, I think,â I told him. âRemember how angry she got when you spoke of them that night? Not the Rothschilds themselvesâbut German bankersâall bankers,
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