The Ministry of Fear

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Book: The Ministry of Fear Read Online Free PDF
Author: Graham Greene
‘Or so I tell myself.’
    Listening Rowe thought, as he often did, that you couldn’t take such an odd world seriously, and yet all the time, in fact, he took it with a mortal seriousness. The grand names stood permanently like statues in his mind: names like Justice and Retribution, though what they both boiled down to was simply Mr Rennit, hundreds and hundreds of Mr Rennits. But of course if you believed in God – and the Devil – the thing wasn’t quite so comic. Because the Devil – and God too – had always used comic people, futile people, little suburban natures and the maimed and warped to serve his purposes. When God used them you talked emptily of Nobility and when the devil used them of Wickedness, but the material was only dull shabby human mediocrity in either case.
    â€˜. . . new orders. But it will always be the same world, I hope,’ Mr Rennit was saying.
    â€˜Queer things do happen in it, all the same,’ Rowe said. ‘That’s why I’m here.’
    â€˜Ah yes,’ Mr Rennit said. ‘We’ll just fill our cups and then to business. I’m sorry I have no soda-water. Now just tell me what’s troubling you – as if I was your best friend.’
    â€˜Somebody tried to kill me. It doesn’t sound important when so many of us are being killed every night – but it made me angry at the time.’
    Mr Rennit looked at him imperturbably over the rim of his cup. ‘Did you say you were not married?’
    â€˜There’s no woman in it. It all began,’ Rowe said, ‘with a cake.’ He described the fête to Mr Rennit, the anxiety of all the helpers to get the cake back, the stranger’s visit . . . and then the bomb. ‘I wouldn’t have thought twice about it,’ Rowe said, ‘if it hadn’t been for the taste the tea had.’
    â€˜Just imagination, probably.’
    â€˜But I knew the taste. It was – hyoscine,’ he admitted reluctantly.
    â€˜Was the man killed?’
    â€˜They took him to hospital, but when I called today he’d been fetched away. It was only concussion and his friends wanted him back.’
    â€˜The hospital would have the name and address.’
    â€˜They had a name and address, but the address – I tried the London Directory – simply didn’t exist.’ He looked up across the desk at Mr Rennit expecting some sign of surprise – even in an odd world it was an odd story, but Mr Rennit said calmly, ‘Of course there are a dozen explanations.’ He stuck his fingers into his waistcoat and considered. ‘For instance,’ he said, ‘it might have been a kind of confidence trick. They are always up to new dodges, those people. He might have offered to take the cake off you – for a large sum. He’d have told you something valuable was hidden in it.’
    â€˜Something hidden in it?’
    â€˜Plans of a Spanish treasure off the coast of Ireland. Something romantic. He’d have wanted you to give him a mark of confidence in return. Something substantial like twenty pounds while he went to the bank. Leaving you the cake, of course.’
    â€˜It makes one wonder . . .’
    â€˜Oh, it would have worked out,’ Mr Rennit said. It was extraordinary, his ability to reduce everything to a commonplace level. Even air-raids were only things that occurred at Purley.
    â€˜Or take another possibility,’ Mr Rennit said. ‘If you are right about the tea. I don’t believe it, mind. He might have introduced himself to you with robbery in mind. Perhaps he followed you from the fête. Did you flourish your money about?’
    â€˜I did give them a pound when they wanted the cake.’
    â€˜A man,’ Mr Rennit said, with a note of relief, ‘who gives a pound for a cake is a man with money. Thieves don’t carry drugs as a rule, but he sounds a neurotic
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