knew what their next job would be.
‘Come.’
The chief teller opened the door and stood aside to allow the banker from Argentina to enter the governor’s office. Martinez entered the room, dressed in a pinstriped double-breasted suit,
white shirt and silk tie, all purchased from a tailor in Savile Row. He was followed by two uniformed guards who carried a large, battered school trunk displaying the initials
BM.
Bringing
up the rear was a tall, thin gentleman dressed in a smart black jacket, grey waistcoat, pinstriped trousers and a dark tie with pale blue stripes, to remind lesser mortals that he and the governor
had been educated at the same school.
The guards placed the trunk in the centre of the room as the governor slipped out from behind his desk and shook hands with Don Pedro. He looked fixedly at the trunk as his guest unlocked its
clasps and opened the lid. The five men stared down at row upon row of neatly stacked five-pound notes. Not an unusual sight for any of them.
The governor turned to the chief teller and said, ‘Somerville, these notes are to be counted and then double-checked, and if Mr Martinez is in agreement with your figure, you will then
shred them.’
The chief teller nodded, and one of the guards lowered the trunk’s lid and flicked the clasps back into place. The guards then slowly lifted the heavy trunk and followed the chief teller
out of the room. The governor didn’t speak again until he heard the door close.
‘Perhaps you’d care to join me for a glass of Bristol Cream, old man, while we wait to confirm that our figures tally?’
It had taken Don Pedro some time to accept that ‘old man’ was a term of endearment, even a recognition that you were a member of the club, despite being a foreigner.
The governor filled two glasses and passed one across to his guest. ‘Good health, old fellow.’
‘Good health, old fellow,’ mimicked Don Pedro.
‘I’m surprised,’ said the governor after taking a sip, ‘that you kept such a large amount in cash.’
‘The money’s been stored in a vault in Geneva for the past five years, and it would have remained there if your government hadn’t decided to print new bank notes.’
‘Not my decision, old man. In fact I counselled against it, but that fool of a cabinet secretary – wrong school and wrong university,’ he mumbled between sips, ‘insisted
that the Germans had been counterfeiting our five-pound notes during the war. I told him that simply wasn’t possible, but he wouldn’t listen. Seemed to think he knew better than the
Bank of England. I also told him that as long as my signature was on an English bank note, the amount would be honoured in full.’
‘I wouldn’t have expected less,’ said Don Pedro, risking a smile.
After that, the two men found it difficult to settle on a subject with which they both felt at ease. Only polo (not water), Wimbledon, and looking forward to the twelfth of August kept them
going long enough for the governor to pour a second sherry, and he couldn’t hide his relief when the phone on his desk finally rang. He put down his glass, picked up the phone and listened
intently. The governor removed a Parker pen from an inside pocket and wrote down a figure. He then asked the chief teller to repeat it.
‘Thank you, Somerville,’ he said before putting the receiver down. ‘I’m happy to say that our figures tally, old fellow. Not that I ever doubted they would,’ he
added quickly.
He opened the top drawer of his desk, took out a cheque book and wrote
Two million, one hundred and forty-three thousand, one hundred and thirty-five pounds,
in a neat, bold,
copperplate hand. He couldn’t resist adding the word
only
before appending his signature. He smiled as he handed the cheque to Don Pedro, who checked the figure before returning his
smile.
Don Pedro would have preferred a banker’s draft, but a cheque signed by the governor of the Bank of England was the next best thing.
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