to his father and begged to be rescued. It was humiliating, of course. When Stanley had fired him, Kit had accused his father bitterly of not caring about him. Now he was admitting the truth: his father did love him, and would do almost anything for him, and Kit knew that perfectly well. His pretense had collapsed ignominiously. But it was worth it. Stanley had paid.
Kit had promised he would never gamble again, and meant it, but the temptation had been too strong. It was madness; it was a disease; it was shameful and humiliating; but it was the most exciting thing in the world, and he could not resist.
Next time his debt reached fifty thousand, he went back to his father, but this time Stanley put his foot down. âI havenât got the money,â he said. âI could borrow it, perhaps, but whatâs the point? Youâd lose it and come back for more until we both were broke.â Kit had accused him of heartlessness and greed, called him Shylock and Scrooge and fucking Fagin, and sworn never to speak to him again. The words had hurtâhe could always hurt his father, he knew thatâbut Stanley had not changed his mind.
At that point, Kit should have left the country.
He dreamed of going to Italy to live in his motherâs hometown of Lucca. The family had visited several times during his childhood, before the grandparents died. It was a pretty walled town, ancient and peaceful,with little squares where you could drink espresso in the shade. He knew some ItalianâMamma Marta had spoken her native tongue to all of them when they were small. He could rent a room in one of the tall old houses and get a job helping people with their computer problems, easy work. He thought he could be happy, living like that.
But, instead, he had tried to win back what he owed.
His debt went up to a quarter of a million.
For that much money, Harry Mac would pursue him to the North Pole. He thought about killing himself, and eyed tall buildings in central Glasgow, wondering if he could get up on the roofs in order to throw himself to his death.
Three weeks ago, he had been summoned to this house. He had felt sick with fear. He was sure they were going to beat him up. When he was shown into the drawing room, with its yellow silk couches, he wondered how they would prevent the blood spoiling the upholstery. âThereâs a gentleman here wants to ask you a question,â Harry had said. Kit could not imagine what question any of Harryâs friends would want to ask him, unless it was Whereâs the fucking money?
The gentleman was Nigel Buchanan, a quiet type in his forties wearing expensive casual clothes: a cashmere jacket, dark slacks, and an open-necked shirt. Speaking in a soft London accent, he said, âCan you get me inside the Level Four laboratory at Oxenford Medical?â
There were two other people in the yellow drawing room at the time. One was Daisy, a muscular girl of about twenty-five with a broken nose, bad skin, and a ring through her lower lip. She was wearing leather gloves. The other was Elton, a handsome black man about the same age as Daisy, apparently a sidekick of Nigelâs.
Kit was so relieved at not being beaten up that he would have agreed to anything.
Nigel offered him a fee of three hundred thousand pounds for the nightâs work.
Kit could hardly believe his luck. It would be enough to pay his debts and more. He could leave the country. He could go to Lucca and realize his dream. He felt overjoyed. His problems were solved at a stroke.
Later, Harry had talked about Nigel in reverent tones. A professional thief, Nigel stole only to order, for a prearranged price. âHeâs the greatest,â Harry said. âYouâre after a painting by Michelangelo? No problem. A nuclear warhead? Heâll get it for youâif you can afford it. Remember Shergar, the racehorse that was kidnapped? That was Nigel.â He added: âHe lives in
Donald Franck, Francine Franck