1980 - You Can Say That Again

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Book: Read 1980 - You Can Say That Again for Free Online
Authors: James Hadley Chase
in, carrying the poodle.
    ‘Well, Charles?’
    ‘The hair. Please tell me.’
    Her dark blue eyes surveyed me for a long moment, then she nodded.
    ‘Excellent,’ she said. ‘You are a great artist, Charles.’
    He began to simper, then the simper turned into a grimace. I could read his fears. He was a kidnapped captive as I was.
    ‘And the walk?’ Harriet said.
    ‘That has been arranged.’ Charles gave me a pleading look. ‘May I ask you, Mr. Stevens, to walk to the window and back?’
    So I limped to the shuttered window and back.
    ‘Please do it again, Jerry,’ Harriet said.
    So I did it again.
    ‘Yes, it will do,’ she said. ‘Now, we are getting somewhere. Take Charles to his room, Mazzo. Charles! We must not waste time. Get working on the mask.’
    ‘Of course.’ He walked before Mazzo and out of the room.
    Harriet sat down.
    ‘Now, Jerry, you have to earn the money we are paying you. So far, so good. Now you have a more difficult task. You must to able to forge my son’s signature.’
    At this moment, Durant came in, carrying a briefcase.
    He went to the table and sat down, zipped open the briefcase and produced a pack of tracing paper, a Parker pen, and a stack of paper which he laid on the desk.
    Harriet got to her feet.
    ‘I will leave you with Mr. Durant. He will explain what you are required to do,’ and she left.
    Durant regarded me.
    ‘Come here and sit down, Stevens,’ he said.
    I came there and sat down opposite him at the table. I noted I was no longer ‘Mr.’.
    ‘This is a matter of practice, Stevens,’ he said. ‘Here is the signature you must copy and perfect. You will use tracing paper until you feel confident you can reproduce the signature without aid.’ He pushed a sheet of paper towards me on which was scrawled a signature. He then placed a sheet of tracing paper over the signature.
    ‘Copy it and keep copying it.’ he said. ‘You must be able to write this signature perfectly at a moment’s notice. This will, of course, take you several days. Work at it, Stevens.’ He stared at me. ‘No one gets paid one thousand dollars a day without working for it.’
    He got to his feet, crossed over to the electronic door and the door snapped shut behind him.
    I looked at the scrawling signature: John Merrill Ferguson.
    For a long moment, I stared at the signature, scarcely believing my eyes.
    John Merrill Ferguson.
    If the signature had been that of Howard Hughes, I couldn’t have been more taken aback. Howard Hughes was dead, but John Merrill Ferguson, according to the newspapers, was very much alive. While waiting for telephone calls, I used to read a lot of newspapers my neighbor left for me. They contained continual references to John Merrill Ferguson who, according to the press, had taken over Howard Hughes’ mantle. The press called him the mysterious billionaire wheeler dealer who pulled strings that made politicians dance, who could, with a flick of a finger, make the stock market of the world either rise or wilt, who seemed to have a financial finger in every big deal.
    I sat there, staring at the signature. Into my mind, came the frightening thought that I was being groomed to impersonate this man!
    Me! A bit-part unsuccessful actor to impersonate one of the most powerful and richest men in the world!
    I realized now the answer to this mystery that had been baffling me. The little old woman with her Rolls Royce: Durant reeking of money: Mazzo, possibly a killer: this room with its electronic door and luxury furnishing: the frightened Charles who had, like me, been kidnapped.
    A man of John Merrill Ferguson’s power had only to give orders and what had happened to me and to Charles just happened.
    I thought of Larry Edwards.
    Jerks like him often have accidents. You’re smart, palsy. You won’t have an accident .
    It now came to me with a frightening impact that, because Larry had refused to cooperate, he had been murdered! Knowing now who I was dealing with,

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