How to Rob a Bank. Tom Mitchell
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Название: How to Rob a Bank

Автор: Tom Mitchell

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Книги для детей: прочее

Серия:

isbn: 9780008276515

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СКАЧАТЬ 28: Never Be Too Proud to Ask for Help

       Chapter 29: Expect to Fail and You Won’t Be Disappointed

       Chapter 30: The Darkest Point of the Night Comes Before Sunrise (or something like that)

       Chapter 31: Take Advantage of Unexpected Opportunities

       Chapter 32: Flexibility Can Be as Important as Detailed Planning

       Chapter 33: A Journey of a Thousand Miles Begins with a Single Step

       Chapter 34: Don’t Let Your Ego Blind You to Your Plan’s Faults

       Chapter 35: The Running Track of Life is Littered with Potholes

       Part 3

       Chapter 36: Operation RHC (Retrieve History Coursework)

       Chapter 37: Fail to Prepare, Prepare to Fail

       Chapter 38: Don’t Forget the Importance of Good Timing

       Chapter 39: Never Underestimate your own Potential for Stupidity

       Chapter 40: Don’t Try to Rob a Bank on Your Own

       Chapter 41: Robbing a Bank is a Matter of Holding Your Nerve

       Chapter 42: Take Inspiration from Everywhere and Everything

       Chapter 43: There’s Nothing More Important Than Your Getaway Plan

       Chapter 44: Don’t Forget to Eat

       Chapter 45: The End

       About the Author

       About the Publisher

Chapter Four

       Chapter Four

       Identify Your Justification: Why Bother?

      Ask yourself – do I need the money? Robbing a bank isn’t something to do to pass the time, like kicking footballs over the neighbour’s fence or reading. Some people rob banks because they’re greedy. Those people are usually caught after buying muscle cars or diamond-encrusted baseball caps. Others enjoy the adrenalin rush of thrusting sawn-off shotguns into the faces of middle-aged women. Those are typically twenty-somethings with troubled childhoods.

      Me? I robbed a bank because of guilt. Specifically: guilt and a Nepalese scented candle.

      Let me explain.

      It was an endless summer and I was fifteen and fed up with playing Call of Duty and FIFA. There are only so many times you can get sniped in the chin or spanked five–nil before you start questioning the meaning of it all. Mum and Dad’s moaning meant I’d applied for part-time jobs. But even McDonald’s had turned me down. Dad said this was evidence of Broken Britain. Mum said I shouldn’t stop trying.

      It was a Saturday afternoon, one of those boring summer Saturdays without Premier League football and with lasagne planned for dinner. Dad was on the sofa, Mum was on the wine, and Rita was on the phone. And all my friends, apart from Beth, were on exotic holidays with never-ending beaches and azure oceans.

      ‘What do you know about Watergate and Richard Nixon?’ asked Dad. His question, like most of his questions, was a run-up to convincing me to watch a film. This time, it was All the President’s Men, which he’d first shown me when I was in primary school and I’d thought boring and confusing.

      I told him I was off to see a girl. That shut him up.

      ‘Good for you,’ said Mum, who was at the dining table, holding a dog-eared magazine in one hand and a chipped wine glass in the other.

      ‘Yes,’ said Dad, waving a hand to silence Mum. ‘Live a little.’

      Dad was being ironic. It was something else he did – watching films and being ironic. That was Dad. Also – snoring.

      I went to my room, closed the door, and ignored the smell of sweat that rose like shimmering heat waves from my stained duvet. I fell to my knees and ran my hands underneath the bed. My fingers passed over crisp packets and sticky patches that I’d worry about later. Finally I found the package I’d been searching for. It had been hiding here since Monday when Brian, our seven-foot-tall German postman, had stood at our front door and had said:

      ‘Parcel for you. Ist party time?’

      And he’d smiled a smile so bright that to look directly into his mouth would blind you.

      TBH, I wasn’t 100 per cent convinced a Nepalese scented candle would impress my friend Beth. But I’d cornered myself when Harry, a drippy guy in the year below, had asked what I’d got Beth for her birthday.

      Beth lets Harry follow her around because their mums are members of the same yoga club or something. He thinks they’re best friends but they’re so not.

      I didn’t even know she had a birthday. I mean, I know everyone has a birthday but …

      ‘I’m a teenager,’ I said. ‘I don’t buy friends birthday presents. I don’t even write on their Facebook walls.’

      ‘I bought her a necklace,’ said Harry. ‘It’s silver.’

      Round Beth’s neck was this pretty thing with tiny dolphins that I’d not noticed until now.

      ‘Honestly,’ said Beth, ‘I don’t care about presents.’

      I confess: I СКАЧАТЬ