The Legacy ~ Part 2
I had hoped
Elaine would soften and join me, after a few weeks, even for a few
days. But she adamantly refused to set foot inside the place,
and so my lonely monastic existence continued without remission.
I plotted, planned,
and schemed, increasing my stash; it’s harder than you'd think even when your
activities are not illegal. I was neither producing forgeries
nor passing off reproductions as being originals. The
duplicates are as authentic as the originals. When I realised
this I began buying and selling things at auction. Then
somewhere around my fortieth day, I heard that a number of rare Victorian cash
boxes had been discovered at a local tip, and had been sold on through the
local antiques market. I reasoned it would only be a matter of
time before they were traced back to me, so I destroyed and disposed of the two
remaining boxes. I placed their contents in identical plastic
bags. Unfortunately, they were not identical enough; I wound up
with four stacks of money, £120,000. Ok? I admit it, I
started to panic; it was all getting out of hand. So I purchased an
incinerator and burned two stacks, you wouldn't believe how long it takes to
burn sixty thousand quid! Duplicates are bad enough,
quadruplicates plus those I had already put into circulation, cash had become
far too rich for me. So, I went back to antiques, a game I’m
familiar with.
Several weeks later, a
delivery van arrived at the front gates with the rest of my personal
belongings. Not only was Elaine's job too important for her to
miss, she'd invited Jerry, a friend from her health club to move in with
her. It was then self-evident that I had neglected
her. So, on Saturday I drove home to surprise
her. Elaine had neglected to tell me that Jerry was a 6ft
6" muscle-bound ape suffering from acute testosterone
poisoning. She was apologetic; she explained that she had
needs…
Another week passed
and I reached my lowest ebb, I visited the Slater's Arms, where I’d become a
regular, for my usual two to three pints in convivial company.
Laura and her friends
were out on a hen night. She was a student at the local
polytechnic; her course was applied aromatherapy, physiology and massage. We
started chatting, one thing led to another, so I invited her back for coffee
and some hands-on experience… She came around six or seven
times in the next two weeks, that was when I noticed the stash of cash I kept
in the top drawer of my dresser was dwindling. I asked her
outright if she’d been helping herself, she didn't deny it.
“But, if you need
money, all you have to do is ask,” I said.
"What do you
think I am a prostitute?” she yelled, slamming the door behind her as she left.
It was two more lonely
weeks before I met Dawn. She was the proprietor of a select
local antique shop. I purchased a few incomplete and damaged
sets of china from her. I placed the good pieces in the box
and smashed the damaged pieces, hey presto I had complete and matching sets. This
effectively doubled their value overnight. I explained I had
contacts in the trade who were happy to acquire pieces for me or purchase the
incomplete sets from me. Within the week she was supplying me
with some quite rare singles, and one-offs. By then, we both
knew we had something special going between us but, with women, you’re
never really sure if 'the
something' is the same for her as it is for you. She
wanted me to go home with her, so I had to explain the stipulations of Perry's
will. She then offered to come home with me instead. She
got up for a drink in the night and found all my priceless china.
"Why do you keep
it in there," she asked, curiosity piqued.
"Who would think
to look for valuables there?" I asked. A week later
somebody broke-in during the day. When I returned home the
cupboard was bare. It was then I noticed the shelves were
later additions, so if I removed them I could get larger pieces inside. Such
as Tables chairs and motorbikes. Dear grandpa had some very
interesting furniture and it wasn't cheap. As a precaution I
had all the locks changed and installed a sophisticated alarm system, at the
suggestion of the local crime prevention officer. I found
several of my stolen pieces at Dawn’s shop, when I confronted her she asked me
to leave. That was when I decided I could make it on my own.
Ten days to go, and I
was coasting, then Laura arrived at my front door in the early hours. I
told her to go away and leave me alone.
"I need your help
Clive, It's a matter of life and death!" She sounded distressed so I opened
the door. Laura stumbled in, stoned out of her skull, closely
followed by a heavy set 'man-cum-mountain', reminiscent of Jerry.
"Hi babe,"
she said in a false theatrical voice. I just looked at her.
"I owe this guy,
and I need a loan?"
"Whose he?"
"The names
Percival Fitzroy Hammond, Fitz to my friends, you can call me Mr Hammond."
"How much,"
I asked. I had already decided to pay him off.
She gave a silly laugh
and hesitated, immediately I knew it would be a lot.
"Five K?"
she said quickly in a whisper.
"Five
thousand?" I said incredulously. "I don't keep that
sort of money in the house, not since you were here last," I
said.
"What about your
fridge?" she asked. Her face puckered and tears slid down
her cheeks, filling her slightly parted lips. "He's going
to kill me Clive," she whispered, looking so vulnerable. "You’re
my last hope. Please?” she begged, trembling like a fawn.
"I was burgled,
it's empty," I said.
"I ain't got time
fer dis shit! Are you gwina cough up? Where’s
dis box yoo talknabout?" He yelled producing a telescopic
police baton.
"Sit Down! Chill,”
I said with a confidence I didn’t feel. I emptied my pockets
how much do you have," I asked.
"Whas dis,"
he began.
"You’re in my
home, am I likely to run off with the contents of your wallet? Where
would I go," I asked.
He removed a fat
wallet from his inside breast pocket and laid two-fifty on the table,
"Is this a
scam?"He eyed me suspiciously, taking a packet of white powder from his
jacket and placing it beside the money, on my 'fifties' glass coffee table.
"What's
that," I asked.
"Snow," he
said.
"What’s it
worth?" I asked.
"Wholesale, a
thousand."
I picked it up
together with the cash, "Coffee or tea?" I asked moving into the
kitchen.
"Whiskey!"
he answered, "I never allow non-alcoholic beverages to pass my lips."
I returned ten minutes
later with five packets of powder, £1,750 in cash, a bottle of Glenfidich, and
three glasses.
"This is the best
I can do on the fly," I said.
He eyed the powder
suspiciously and tested it, "How'd ya do dat," he asked.
I tapped my nose
conspiratorially.
"I aksed yo a
question!" he snarled.
"I aksed you
first," I said, glaring right back at him, with a mean attitude to match.
"It’ll do,"
he said deliberately, "But, we ain't finish, by a long stretch." He
stood up and they left.
"Thank you
sweetheart, I'm forever in your debt," she said kissing me clumsily.
"Just don't come
back," I replied, "I don't need this aggravation." Even
as I uttered the words, I knew the flood gates were about to open, just a
matter of time I thought.
"He loves me
really," I heard Laura tell Fitz, as I reached for the phone.
.-…-.
Next
morning Hammond 's
face stared back at me from the front page of my newspaper, large as
life. He was dubbed ‘Public Enemy No. 1'. He
had been apprehended the night before carrying two pounds of pure Heroin with a
street value of half a million pounds.
To be continued/...
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