Читаем 11 The Brighter Buccaneer полностью

Mr. Tombs sat down, stiffly. His eyes kept straying back to the heaps of wealth on the floor and the table, as though at each glance he would have been relieved rather than surprised if they had vanished.

"It's like this, Mr. Tombs. I'm taking you into my confidence because I've known you a couple of hours and I've made up my mind about you. I like you. Those notes, Mr. Tombs, were printed from a proof plate that was stolen out of the Bank of England itself by a fellow who worked there. He was in the engraving department, and when they were making the plates they made one more than they needed. It was given to him to destroy-and he didn't destroy it. He was like the man we were talking about-the man in the taxi. He had a genuine plate that would print genuine pound notes, and he could keep it for himself if he wanted to. All he had to do was to make an imitation plate that no one was going to examine closely-you can't tell a lot from a plate, just looking at it-and cut a couple of lines across it to cancel it. Then that would be locked up in the vaults and probably never looked at again, and he'd have the real one. He didn't even know quite what he'd do with the plate when he had it, but he kept it. And then he got scared about it being found out, and he ran away. He went over to New York, where I come from.

"He stopped in the place I lived at, over in Brooklyn. I got to know him a bit, though he was always very quiet and seemed to have something on his mind. I didn't ask what it was, and I didn't care. Then he got pneumonia.

"Nobody else had ever paid any attention to him, so it seemed to be up to me. I did what I could for him-it didn't amount to much, but he appreciated it. I paid some of the rent he owed. The doctor found he was half starved-he'd landed in New York with just a few pounds, and when those were gone he'd lived on the leavings he could beg from chop houses. He was starving himself to death with a million pounds in his grip! But I didn't know that then. He got worse and worse; and then they had to give him oxygen one night, but the doctor said he wouldn't see the morning anyhow. He'd starved himself till he was too weak to get well again.

"He came to just before the end, and I was with him. He just looked at me and said: 'Thanks, Benny.' And then he told me all about himself and what he'd done. 'You keep the plate,' he said. 'It may be some good to you.'

"Well, he died in the morning, and the landlady told me to hurry up and get his things out of the way as there was another lodger coming in. I took 'em off to my own room. There wasn't much; but I found the plate.

"Maybe you can imagine what it meant to me, after I'd got it all figured out. I was just an odd-job man in a garage then, earning a few dollars a week. I was the man in the taxi again. But I had a few dollars saved up; I'd have to find the right paper, and get the notes printed-I didn't know anything about the technical side of it. It'd cost money; but if it went through all right that poor fellow's legacy would make me a millionaire. He'd starved to death because he was too scared to try it; had I got the guts?"

Benny Lucek closed his eyes momentarily, as if he were reliving the struggle with his conscience.

"You can see for yourself which way I decided," he said. "It took time and patience, but it was still the quickest way of making a million I'd ever heard of. That was six years ago. I don't know how much money I've got in the bank now, but I know it's more than I can ever spend. And it was like that all of three years ago.

"And then I started thinking about the other people who needed money, and I began to square my conscience by help­ing them. I was working over in the States then, of course, changing this English money in small packets at banks all over the continent. And I started giving it away-charities, down-and-outs, any good thing I could think of. That was all right so far as it went. But then I started thinking, that fellow who gave me the plate was English, and some of the money ought to go back to people in England who needed it. That's why I came across. Did I tell you that fellow left a wife behind when he ran away? It took me two months to find her, with the best agents I could buy; but I located her at last serving in a tea-shop, and now I've set her on her feet for life, though she thinks it was an uncle she never had who died and left her the money. But if I can find any other fellow whose wife needs some money he can't earn for her," said Benny nobly, "I want to help him too."

Mr. Tombs swallowed. Benny Lucek was a master of elocu­tion among his other talents, and the manner of his recital was calculated to bring a lump into the throat of an impressiona­ble listener.

"Would you like some money, Mr. Tombs?" he inquired.

Mr. Tombs coughed.

"I-er-well-I can't quite get over the story you've told me."

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Эскортница
Эскортница

— Адель, милая, у нас тут проблема: другу надо настроение поднять. Невеста укатила без обратного билета, — Михаил отрывается от телефона и обращается к приятелям: — Брюнетку или блондинку?— Брюнетку! - требует Степан. — Или блондинку. А двоих можно?— Ади, у нас глаза разбежались. Что-то бы особенное для лучшего друга. О! А такие бывают?Михаил возвращается к гостям:— У них есть студентка юрфака, отличница. Чиста как слеза, в глазах ум, попа орех. Занималась балетом. Либо она, либо две блондинки. В паре девственница не работает. Стесняется, — ржет громко.— Петь, ты лучше всего Артёма знаешь. Целку или двух?— Студентку, — Петр делает движение рукой, дескать, гори всё огнем.— Мы выбрали девицу, Ади. Там перевяжи ее бантом или в коробку посади, — хохот. — Да-да, подарочек же.

Агата Рат , Арина Теплова , Елена Михайловна Бурунова , Михаил Еремович Погосов , Ольга Вечная

Детективы / Триллер / Современные любовные романы / Прочие Детективы / Эро литература
Апокалипсис
Апокалипсис

Самая популярная тема последних десятилетий — апокалипсис — глазами таких прославленных мастеров, как Орсон Скотт Кард, Джордж Мартин, Паоло Бачигалупи, Джонатан Летем и многих других. Читателям предоставляется уникальная возможность увидеть мир таким, каким он может стать без доступных на сегодня знаний и технологий, прочувствовать необратимые последствия ядерной войны, биологических катаклизмов, экологических, геологических и космических катастроф. Двадцать одна захватывающая история о судьбах тех немногих, кому выпало пережить апокалипсис и оказаться на жалких обломках цивилизации, которую человек уничтожил собственными руками. Реалистичные и легко вообразимые сценарии конца света, который вполне может наступить раньше, чем мы ожидаем.

Алекс Зубарев , Джек Макдевитт , Джин Вулф , Нэнси Кресс , Ричард Кэдри

Фантастика / Фэнтези / Социально-философская фантастика / Фантастика: прочее / Детективы