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Authors: Chris Cleave

BOOK: Gold
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Simon & Schuster
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020
www.SimonandSchuster.com

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Copyright © 2012 by Chris Cleave

Originally published in Great Britain in 2012 by Hodder & Stoughton

All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information address Simon & Schuster Subsidiary Rights Department, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020.

First Simon & Schuster hardcover edition July 2012

SIMON & SCHUSTER and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

Lyrics from “(I’m Gonna Be) 500 Miles” by The Proclaimers are reproduced by kind permission of the copyright holders: (Reid/Reid) Warner/Chappell Publishing Ltd.

The Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau can bring authors to your live event. For more information or to book an event, contact the Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau at 1-866-248-3049 or visit our website at
www.simonspeakers.com
.

Designed by Ruth Lee-Mui

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Cleave, Chris.
Gold: a novel / Chris Cleave.—1st Simon & Schuster hardcover ed.
p. cm.
I. Title.
PR6103.L43G65 2012
823'.92—dc23
2011043699

ISBN 978-1-4516-7272-5
ISBN 978-1-4516-7274-9 (ebook)

For Cecily

Contents
 

Chapter 1: August 24, 2004

Chapter 2: Eight years later, Monday, April 2, 2012

Chapter 3: Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Chapter 4: Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Chapter 5: Thursday, April 5, 2012

Chapter 6: Two weeks later

Chapter 7: Three years later, Sunday, April 2015

Author’s Note

Thanks

About the Author

Reading Group Guide

August 24, 2004
Changing room, Olympic Velodrome, Athens, women’s sprint cycling Olympic gold medal race

Just on the other side of an unpainted metal door, five thousand men, women, and children were chanting her name. Zoe Castle didn’t like it as much as she’d thought she would. She was twenty-four years old and she sat where her coach told her to sit, beside him, on a thin white bench with the blue protective film still on it.

“Don’t touch the door,” he said. “It’s alarmed.”

It was just the two of them in the tiny subterranean changing room. The walls were freshly plastered, and little hardened curds of the stuff lay on the cement floor where they’d fallen from the trowel. Zoe kicked at one. It came detached, skittered away, and dinged against the metal door.

“What?” said her coach.

Zoe shrugged. “Nothing.”

When she’d visualized success—when she’d dared to imagine making it this far—the floors and the walls of every building in Athens had been Platonic surfaces, hewn from an Olympian material that glowed with inner light. The air had not smelled of drying cement. There hadn’t been this white plastic document wallet on the floor, containing the manufacturer’s installation guide for the air-conditioning unit that stood, partially connected, in the corner of the room.

Her coach saw her expression and grinned. “
You’re
ready. That’s the main thing.”

She tried to smile back. The smile came out like a newborn foal: its legs buckled immediately.

Overhead, the public stamped its feet in time. The start was overdue. Air horns blared. The room shook; it was so loud that her back teeth buzzed in her jaw. The noise of the crowd was liquidizing her guts. She thought about leaving the velodrome by the back door, taking a taxi to the airport, and flying home on the first available jet. She wondered if she would be the first Olympian ever to do that simple, understandable thing: to quietly slope off from Olympus. There must be something she could do with herself, in civilian life. Magazines loved her. She looked good in clothes. She was beautiful, with her glossy black hair cropped short and her wide green eyes set in the pale, haunted face of an early European saint. There was the slightest touch of cruelty in the line of her lips, a hint of steel in the set of her face that caused the eye to linger. Maybe she should do something with that. She could give interviews, laughing backstage after the show when the journalist asked did she know she looked quite a lot like that British girl who ran off from the Olympics—what was her name again?
Ha!
she would say.
I get that question all the time! And by the way, whatever did become of that girl?

Her coach’s breathing was slow and even.

“Well
you
seem okay,” said Zoe.

“Why wouldn’t I be?”

“Just another day at the office, right?”

“Correct,” said Tom. “We’re just clocking in to do our job. I mean, what do you want—a medal?”

When he saw how she looked at him, he raised his hands in supplication. “Sorry. Old coaching joke.”

Zoe scowled. She was pissed off with Tom. It wasn’t helping her at all, his insouciance—his pretense that this wasn’t a huge deal. He was usually a much better coach than this, but the nerves were getting to him just when she most needed him to be strong. Maybe she should change coaches, as soon as she got back to England. She thought about telling him now, just to wipe that faux-wise smile off his face.

The worst part was that she was shivering uncontrollably, despite the unconditioned heat. It was humiliating, and she couldn’t make it stop. She was already suited and warmed up. She’d given a urine sample and eight cc’s of blood that must have been mostly adrenaline. She’d recorded a short, nervy piece to camera for her sponsors, signed the official race entry forms, and pinned her race number to the back of her skinsuit. Then she’d removed it and pinned it back on again, the right way up. There was nothing left to occupy these terrible minutes of waiting.

The crowd went up another frenzied gear.

She slammed the flats of her hands down on the bench. “I want to go up there! Why are they keeping the door locked?”

Tom yawned and waved the question away. “It’s for our own safety. They’ll let us up once security have checked the corridors.”

Zoe held her head in her hands and rocked back and forth on the bench. It was torture, being locked in this tiny room, waiting for the race officials to release them. She couldn’t stop her body shaking and she couldn’t take her eyes off the metal door. It trembled on its hinges from the crowd noise. It was a strong door, designed to resist autograph seekers indefinitely or fire for thirty minutes, but fear came straight through it.

“God…” she whispered.

“Scared?”

“Shitting myself. Honestly, Tom, aren’t you?” She looked up at him.

He shook his head and leaned back. “At my age the big event isn’t what scares you.”

“So what is?”

He shrugged. “Oh, you know. The lingering sensation that in pursuit of my own exacting goals and objectives I might not have been as generous in spirit as I could have been with regard to the needs and dreams of the people I cared most about or for whom I was emotionally responsible.”

He popped the gum he was chewing and inspected his nails. Zoe seethed.

From the stands above them, a fresh cheer shook the building. The announcer was whipping up the crowd. They roared Zoe’s name. They stamped harder. In the changing room the temporary strip light went off and flickered back to life by stuttering increments. A sudden rill of dust fell from an unfinished break in the plasterboard ceiling.

Tom said, “You think this building will hold?”

Zoe exploded. “Shut up, will you? Shut up, shut up, shut up!”

Tom grinned. “Oh come on, this is just another bike race. It’s gravy.”

“Five thousand people aren’t screaming for you.”

He leaned close and took her arm. “You know what you should be scared of? The day they aren’t shouting your name. Then you’ll be like me. You’ll be the dust collecting in the cracks between the boards of the track. You’ll be the spit drying on the chewing gum stuck underneath the seats. You’ll be the sound of the brooms sweeping up after the crowd has pissed off. You’d rather be all of that? Would you?”

She shook her head, sulkily.

He cupped a hand around one ear. “What? I can’t hear you over the noise of all this love! Would you rather be the girl no one remembers?”

“No, for fuck’s sake!”

He smiled. “Alright then. So now get your arse out there and win!”

The two of them looked at the closed metal door, then down at the floor, then back at each other. A moment passed.

Tom sighed. “Nice pep talk though, wasn’t it? I maybe peaked too soon.”

Zoe glared at him. She was ready to spit.

Overhead, the crowd’s stamping was incessant. Plaster dust fell continually now.

She fixed her eyes on the door. “Why don’t they come? We’ve been down here for
ever
.”

“Maybe this is our personal hell. Maybe they never come, and the crowd just gets louder and louder, and we’re left alone for eternity with our thoughts.”

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