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ation: Money buys anything, I tell you--anything!] "Cut it out," said Monk brusquely. "You've got that death's-head look again, Rostov. If you want to say something, say it." "You were tight as a drum," said the doctor. "That's going to influence my findings, you know. If you hadn't refused the narcotic--" Fletcher Monk barked: "I won't be drugged!" "It would have relaxed you--" "I was as relaxed as I ever am," the other man said candidly, and Rostov recognized the truth of his analysis. Monk lived in a world of taut muscles and nerves stretched out just below the breaking point. Tenseness was his trademark; there was no more elasticity in Monk's body than there was in the hard cash he accumulated so readily. "Well?" the patient jeered. "What's the verdict, you damned sawbones? Going to throw away my cigars? Going to send me on a long sea voyage?" Rostov frowned. "Don't look so smug!" Monk exploded. "I know you think there's something wrong with me. You can't wait to bury me!" "You're sick, Mr. Monk," said the doctor. "You're very sick." Monk glowered. "You're wrong," he said icily. "You've made a lousy diagnosis." "What was that feeling you described?" asked Rostov. "Remember what you told me? Like a big, black bird, flapping its wings in your chest. Didn't that mean something to you, Mr. Monk?" * * * * * The industrialist paled. "All right. Get to the point," he said quietly. "What did that gadget tell you?" "Bad news," said the doctor. "Your heart's been strained almost to bursting. It's working on will power, Mr. Monk; hardly anything else." "_Get to the point!_" Monk shouted. "That _is_ the point," Rostov said stiffly. "You have a serious heart condition. A dangerous condition. You've ignored eight years of my advice, and now your heart is showing the effects." "What can it do to me?" "Kill you," said the doctor bluntly. "Frankly, I can't even promise that the usual precautions will do any good. But we have no other choice than to take them. The human body is a miraculous affair, and even the most desperate damages sometimes can't prevent it from going on living. But I won't mince words with you, Mr. Monk. You're a direct sort of person, so I'm telling you directly. Your chances are slim." Monk sat down and put his black tie on distractedly. He sat deep in thought for a while, and then said: "How much would it cost to fix it?" "What?"
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