A Calculated Risk Katherine Neville (adventure books to read txt) đ
- Author: Katherine Neville
Book online «A Calculated Risk Katherine Neville (adventure books to read txt) đ». Author Katherine Neville
I knew what she was sayingâIâd known from the first time Tor mentioned the ideaâand it was more than dangerous. Stealing money from a bank to cover a personal debt in a foreign country wasnât the same as using âborrowedâ bonds to secure a loan you were going to pay back. If I got caught before we could put the money backâit would be international fraud on a really major scale.
But Tor cut inâhis voice strangely detached. âI canât accept that,â he said. âAfter all, Iâm the one she has a wager withânot the rest of you. Weâre still competing. If I accept money at this point, itâs tantamount to losing the bet.â
âBut a moment ago, you told us you were about to lose your shirt anyway,â I said, exasperated. âWhy wonât you admit itâs done? This miserable bet has already cost me plentyâmy job, my career, maybe my independenceâeverything Iâve worked for all my lifeââ
âPerhaps youâd care to hear what Iâve worked for?â he cut in with bitterness. âHonor and integrity, a fair dayâs wages for a fair dayâs work, justice in the marketplace so that people of honor and value are rewarded, and that those without honor are always, always punished.â He paused and looked at me with a coldness Iâd never seen. âWhat you work for is Lawrence.â He turned away in anger.
âItâs cruelly unfair of you to say that,â I protested, in shock. But all at once, I knew he was totally right.
Why had I been so hung up about working for Tor? What sort of independence would I really be losing in thatâthe freedom to play cat and mouse with people like Lawrence and Karp and Kiwiâwinning small triumphs while losing my life, my ability to produce, as Tor would say? What was I really, but the cleverest rat in the maze?
âI donât care about winning,â I told him, pacing about, as my three friends sat riveted, looking at us helplessly. âI got into this bet for the same reasons you didâto show there were cheats and wastrels and liars rife through the whole financial industry. Iâm not going back to the bank when itâs through, regardless how the bet winds up. I want to stay here and help you beat them. But I donât know howâwithout giving you the money to cover those loansââ
âItâs too late for that,â said Tor. âFar, far too late.â
âI donât want my friends to wind up in jail when I have the means to help,â I said. âBesidesâyou helped me when I needed it.â
âIndeed?â said Tor. âIs that what you think? Perhaps I did just the reverse.â
He stood up unexpectedly and left the terrace as Pearl and I looked at each other in surprise.
âWhat was that all about?â asked Georgian. âShe offers to save our asses and he declines because of a âgentlemanâs wager.â Doesnât sound too damned gentlemanly to me!â
âThis is because you have not the ears to hear inside the heart,â Lelia pointed out calmly. âThe divine Zoltanâhe feels he does wrong when he brings Verity into this wagerâwhen he helps her to continue onward in it, despite that she was losing at first. If not for that âhelp,â she might be safely free from all which happens now. And weâwe are her friendsâhe feels guilty because of us, too. We must make him to understand that we are all grown human beings. What we have done, we do freely of choice.â
She was right, of course; that explained the frustration and anger he must feelâbut it didnât solve the problem. I rose and went off to find Tor. It took half an hour or more of wandering through the woods and down to the stony shore before I saw himâstill in his wrinkled city shirt and rolled trousersâsitting glumly on a rock beside the sea.
âSo you just canât stop competing,â I said. Coming up with a smile, I took a seat on his knee. âToo proud to accept a nickel of my dough.â
âIf it were really âyour dough,â as you so charmingly put it, I couldnât be more delighted to be a kept man,â he said, sounding less than convincing. âBut when you offered to put yourself in federal penitentiary for twenty years to help me outâI really felt I should draw the line. Did you find that too harsh?â
âOkay, so itâs war then,â I said, still smiling. âWhatâs your next step, if I may ask?â
âDamned if I know,â he said, absently kissing my wrist as he gazed at the water. âIâve been trying to come up with an idea ever since this happened. I was too clever by half, and it may cost us all our freedom. Itâs amazing that I, of all people, could be taken off guard by a double-cross such as this.â
âHow did you leave it?â I asked.
âI played for as much time as I could, claiming Lelia was in charge and must be consulted. But theyâre coming to the island in two weeks, and theyâll expect us to sign on the dotted line thenâor have our assets attached in court.â
âLook, I already know Lawrence is a crook,â I told him, âbut I canât prove it with just one memo and circumstantial evidenceâlike the kind of clubs he belongs to. Not to mention that Lawrence covers his ass so well, he might hold a degree in paperhanging. But two weeks is better than nothingâand since itâs all weâve gotâI hoped you might not disdain my aid, if it only involved investigative reporting?â
âIf you honestly feel as youâve just said up there,â he told me, searching inside me with those incredible red-gold eyes, âthen help me destroy them as they deserve. Thatâs what itâs all about.â
PART 4
LONDON
SEPTEMBER 1814
Two years after Meyer Amschel Rothschildâs death, almost to the day,
Comments (0)