1. Hmm. Yes.
Copy !req
2. Well, here we are now
in the hut where I write.
Copy !req
3. I've been in this hut for 30 years now.
Copy !req
4. Well, it's important, uh, before I start,
Copy !req
5. I like to make sure I have everything
around me that I'm going to need. Um...
Copy !req
6. Cigarettes, of course.
Some coffee, chocolates.
Copy !req
7. And always make sure
I have a sharp pencil before I start.
Copy !req
8. I have six pencils,
and then I like to clean my writing board.
Copy !req
9. See how many bits of rubber.
Copy !req
10. There.
Copy !req
11. And then, finally, one starts.
Copy !req
12. It's, uh...
usually a few corrections needed.
Copy !req
13. Yeah.
Copy !req
14. It's, um...
Copy !req
15. Henry Sugar was 41 years old,
unmarried and rich.
Copy !req
16. He was rich because
he had a rich father who was now dead.
Copy !req
17. Was unmarried because he was too selfish
to share any of his money with a wife.
Copy !req
18. He was 6'2" tall,
Copy !req
19. and not perhaps as handsome
as he thought he was.
Copy !req
20. He paid a great deal
of attention to his clothes.
Copy !req
21. He went
to an expensive tailor for his suits,
Copy !req
22. to a shirt maker for his shirts,
and to a boot maker for his shoes.
Copy !req
23. His hairdresser trimmed his hair
once every ten days,
Copy !req
24. and he always took a manicure
at the same time.
Copy !req
25. He drove a Ferrari motor car
Copy !req
26. which cost him about the same
as a country cottage.
Copy !req
27. All his friends were rich
Copy !req
28. and he had never done
a day's work in his life.
Copy !req
29. Men like Henry Sugar can be found
drifting like seaweed all over the world.
Copy !req
30. They're not particularly bad men,
but they're not good men either.
Copy !req
31. They're simply part of the decoration.
Copy !req
32. All rich people
of Henry's type, of course,
Copy !req
33. have one peculiarity in common:
a terrific urge to make themselves richer.
Copy !req
34. The 10 million is never enough.
Nor is 20 million.
Copy !req
35. Always they suffer
the insatiable longing for more money
Copy !req
36. and the terror of waking up one morning
and finding nothing in the bank.
Copy !req
37. They employ various methods
to increase their fortunes.
Copy !req
38. Some buy stocks and shares,
watch them go up and down.
Copy !req
39. Some buy land or art or diamonds.
Some bet on roulette, blackjack, horses.
Copy !req
40. Some, indeed, bet on anything.
Copy !req
41. Henry Sugar was one of those,
and not at all above cheating, by the way.
Copy !req
42. One summer weekend,
Copy !req
43. Henry drove from London to the countryside
to stay with Sir William W.
Copy !req
44. The house was magnificent.
So were the grounds.
Copy !req
45. But when Henry arrived that Saturday,
it was already pelting with rain.
Copy !req
46. The host and his other guests
whiled away the afternoon playing games,
Copy !req
47. while Henry glumly stared out at the drops
splashing against the windows.
Copy !req
48. Henry wandered out of the drawing room
and into the front hall.
Copy !req
49. He drifted through the house, aimless.
Then finally mooched into the library.
Copy !req
50. Sir William's father was a book collector,
and the walls of this huge room
Copy !req
51. were lined with antiquated
leather bound volumes floor-to-ceiling.
Copy !req
52. Henry wasn't interested.
Copy !req
53. He only read detective novels
and thrillers. Nothing like that here.
Copy !req
54. He was about to leave
Copy !req
55. when his eye was caught and held
by something quite different.
Copy !req
56. So slim, he never would've noticed it
Copy !req
57. if it hadn't been sticking out
from the books on either side.
Copy !req
58. He pulled it from the shelf.
Copy !req
59. It was nothing more
Copy !req
60. than a cardboard exercise book,
the kind children use at school.
Copy !req
61. The cover was dark blue,
with nothing written on it.
Copy !req
62. On the first page, hand-printed
in black ink, clear and neat, it said:
Copy !req
63. Strange. Weird. What is this?
Copy !req
64. He settled himself into an armchair
and started from the beginning.
Copy !req
65. The following is what Henry read
in the little, blue exercise book.
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66. My name is Z.Z. Chatterjee. Head surgeon
at Lords and Ladies Hospital, Calcutta.
Copy !req
67. On the morning of 2nd December, 1935,
Copy !req
68. I was in the doctors' rest room
having a cup of tea.
Copy !req
69. Three other doctors were present with me.
Doctors Marshall, Mitra, and Macfarlane.
Copy !req
70. - There was a knock.
Copy !req
71. "Come in," I said.
Copy !req
72. Excuse me, please.
May I ask you gentlemen a favor?
Copy !req
73. "This is a private room," I said.
Copy !req
74. I know. I'm sorry to burst in like this,
Copy !req
75. but I have a most, I think,
interesting thing to show you.
Copy !req
76. We were pretty annoyed
and didn't say anything.
Copy !req
77. Gentlemen, I'm a man
who can see without using his eyes.
Copy !req
78. He was a small man, about 60,
Copy !req
79. white mustache and a matting of black hair
over the outsides of his ears.
Copy !req
80. You may bandage my head
with 50 bandages in any way,
Copy !req
81. and I'll still be able to read you a book.
Copy !req
82. He seemed perfectly serious.
I felt my curiosity beginning to stir.
Copy !req
83. Come in, please.
Copy !req
84. All right. How many fingers
is Dr. Marshall holding up?
Copy !req
85. - Seven.
- "Once more," I said.
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86. - Nine.
- "Once more," I said.
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87. - Three.
- Once more—
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88. - Three again.
- Once more.
Copy !req
89. No fingers.
Copy !req
90. Hmm. What's the trick?
Copy !req
91. There's no trick. This is a genuine thing
I've managed after years of training.
Copy !req
92. What sorts of training?
Copy !req
93. Forgive me, sir,
but that is a private matter.
Copy !req
94. What can we do for you?
Copy !req
95. I work in a traveling theater.
We arrived in Calcutta today.
Copy !req
96. Tonight we give our opening performance
at the Royal Palace Hall.
Copy !req
97. I am billed on the program as:
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98. Imdad Khan,
the Man Who Sees without His Eyes.
Copy !req
99. When our company arrives in a new town,
Copy !req
100. I go to the largest hospital
Copy !req
101. and ask the doctors to bandage my eyes
in the most thorough fashion.
Copy !req
102. It is important this job
is done by doctors,
Copy !req
103. otherwise people may think I'm cheating.
Copy !req
104. Then I go out into the streets
and do a dangerous thing.
Copy !req
105. I looked at the others.
Copy !req
106. Mitra and Macfarlane
had to go back to their patients. Go on.
Copy !req
107. - But Dr. Marshall said...
- Why not? Let's do the job properly.
Copy !req
108. Make it absolutely certain
he can't see anything.
Copy !req
109. You are kind. Please do whatever you wish.
Copy !req
110. "Before we bandage him," I said,
Copy !req
111. "fill his eye sockets
with something soft, solid."
Copy !req
112. - Dough?
- Perfect. Go to the hospital bakery.
Copy !req
113. I'll take him and seal his eyelids.
Copy !req
114. I led Imdad down
the long corridor to the surgery.
Copy !req
115. "Lie down there," I said.
Copy !req
116. I took a bottle of collodion
from the cupboard.
Copy !req
117. I'll glue your eyelids shut
with this stuff.
Copy !req
118. How do I remove it later?
Copy !req
119. Just dab some alcohol carefully
below the lashes. That'll dissolve it.
Copy !req
120. Keep your eyes closed
while we wait for it to harden.
Copy !req
121. Two minutes passed.
Copy !req
122. "Open your eyes," I said. He couldn't.
Copy !req
123. I took some of Dr. Marshall's dough
and plastered it over one of Imdad's eyes.
Copy !req
124. I filled the whole socket
Copy !req
125. and let the dough
overlap onto the surrounding skin.
Copy !req
126. I did the same with the other eye.
Copy !req
127. I pressed the edges down hard.
Copy !req
128. - "Isn't too uncomfortable?" I asked.
- Not at all. Thank you.
Copy !req
129. "Do the bandaging," I said to Marshall.
Copy !req
130. My fingers are too sticky.
Copy !req
131. Pleasure. We'll just pop these here...
Copy !req
132. Dr. Marshall laid thick cotton-wool
on Imdad's dough-filled eyes.
Copy !req
133. It stuck in place.
Copy !req
134. Sit up please.
Copy !req
135. Dr. Marshall rolled a three-inch bandage
round the face and head.
Copy !req
136. Please do leave
my nose free for breathing.
Copy !req
137. Of course.
Copy !req
138. Sorry, it's going to be
a pinch on the tight side.
Copy !req
139. How's that?
Copy !req
140. "Splendid," I said.
Copy !req
141. Looked like he suffered
a terrible brain operation.
Copy !req
142. How does it feel?
Copy !req
143. It feels very good.
Copy !req
144. I must compliment you gentlemen
on doing such a thorough job.
Copy !req
145. Imdad Khan stood up off the bed
and walked straight to the door.
Copy !req
146. Great Scott! See that?
He put his hand right on the doorknob!
Copy !req
147. Dr. Marshall stopped grinning.
Copy !req
148. Imdad was walking normally,
quite briskly along the corridor.
Copy !req
149. We followed five yards behind him.
Spooky it was to watch this man
Copy !req
150. with an enormous,
totally bandaged head strolling casually...
Copy !req
151. "He saw it!" I cried.
Copy !req
152. "He saw that trolley!
This is unbelievable!"
Copy !req
153. Dr. Marshall didn't answer.
Copy !req
154. His whole face was rigid
with shocked disbelief.
Copy !req
155. Imdad went down the stairs
with no trouble at all.
Copy !req
156. Didn't even hold the stair-rail.
Copy !req
157. Several people were coming up.
You can see how they reacted.
Copy !req
158. At the bottom of the stairs, he turned
and headed out the doors to the street.
Copy !req
159. Dr. Marshall and I kept close behind him.
Copy !req
160. Below us, a crowd of 100
barefoot children shouted and surged
Copy !req
161. towards our white-headed visitor.
Copy !req
162. He greeted them
with his hands above his head.
Copy !req
163. He walked to a bicycle,
mounted it, and pedaled a figure-eight.
Copy !req
164. The barefoot children chased him,
cheering and laughing.
Copy !req
165. He sped straight out
into the traffic of the busy street
Copy !req
166. with honking motor-cars
whizzing around him in every direction.
Copy !req
167. He rode superbly.
Copy !req
168. For a minute, we kept him in sight.
Copy !req
169. Then he turned a corner and was gone.
Copy !req
170. - "I can't believe it," Dr. Marshall said.
- I can't believe it.
Copy !req
171. "I can't either," I said.
Copy !req
172. I think we just witnessed a miracle.
Copy !req
173. For the rest of the day,
I was busy with patients.
Copy !req
174. In the evening,
I went to my flat to change clothes.
Copy !req
175. I took a long, cool shower.
Copy !req
176. I drank whisky-soda on the veranda
with only a towel around my waist.
Copy !req
177. At ten minutes to 7:00,
I arrived at the Royal Palace Hall.
Copy !req
178. The show lasted two hours.
Copy !req
179. To my surprise, I enjoyed it. The juggler,
the snake-charmer, the fire-eater,
Copy !req
180. the sword-swallower who pushed a rapier
down his throat into his stomach.
Copy !req
181. Lastly, to a great fanfare of trumpets,
Copy !req
182. our friend Imdad Khan
came out to do his act.
Copy !req
183. Members of the audience
were called onstage to blindfold him
Copy !req
184. before he threw knives around a boy's body
Copy !req
185. and shot a can off his head
with a revolver.
Copy !req
186. Then, finally, a metal barrel was fitted
over his already bandaged head.
Copy !req
187. The boy placed a needle in Imdad's hand
and some cotton thread in the other.
Copy !req
188. A large magnifying glass
was placed in front of him,
Copy !req
189. and with no false moves,
Copy !req
190. he neatly threaded the thread
through the eye of the needle.
Copy !req
191. I was flabbergasted.
Copy !req
192. Backstage, I found Imdad
sitting quietly on a stool
Copy !req
193. while he removed his stage makeup.
Copy !req
194. You're curious, doctor, correct?
Copy !req
195. "Most curious," I said.
Copy !req
196. Again, I was struck by the matting
of black hair on the outsides of his ears.
Copy !req
197. I'd never seen anything like it
on another person.
Copy !req
198. I have a proposal:
I'm not a writer by profession.
Copy !req
199. But if you tell me
how you developed this power
Copy !req
200. of seeing without your eyes,
I'll take it down faithfully.
Copy !req
201. I'll try to get it published
in the British Medical Journal
Copy !req
202. or in a famous magazine.
Copy !req
203. Would that help you?
To become better known?
Copy !req
204. - It would help me very much.
- Splendid.
Copy !req
205. I have a shorthand
for taking down medical histories.
Copy !req
206. I believe I got everything
Imdad said to me, word for word.
Copy !req
207. I give it to you now
exactly as he spoke it.
Copy !req
208. I was born in Kashmir State in 1873.
Copy !req
209. My father was a ticket inspector
on the national railway.
Copy !req
210. One day, a conjurer came to our school
and gave a performance.
Copy !req
211. I was spellbound.
Copy !req
212. Two weeks later, I took all my savings
Copy !req
213. and ran away
to join a traveling theater company.
Copy !req
214. That was in 1886. I was 13 years old.
Copy !req
215. For three years
Copy !req
216. I traveled with this group
all over the Punjab.
Copy !req
217. By the end of it,
I was playing top of the bill.
Copy !req
218. All the time, I was saving money,
Copy !req
219. which finally added up
to just over 3,000 rupees.
Copy !req
220. At this moment,
I heard tell of a great, famous yogi
Copy !req
221. who had acquired
the rare power of levitation.
Copy !req
222. It was said that when he prayed,
Copy !req
223. his whole body left the ground
and rose up 18 inches into the air.
Copy !req
224. At the very least, a terrific effect.
Copy !req
225. Mustache?
Copy !req
226. - Oh. I quit the theater company...
- Mmm-hmm.
Copy !req
227. and made my way to the small town
on the banks of the Ganges,
Copy !req
228. where rumor said this yogi was living.
Copy !req
229. One day,
I overheard a traveler mention a hermit
Copy !req
230. he had encountered not so very far away,
in the densest jungle, all alone.
Copy !req
231. That was enough for me.
Copy !req
232. Um, I dashed out to hire a horse and cart.
Copy !req
233. As I negotiated with the driver,
Copy !req
234. a man appeared and said
he was going in the same direction,
Copy !req
235. and suggested we share the ride
and split the cost.
Copy !req
236. Well, what truly fantastic luck!
Copy !req
237. Talking to my companion,
Copy !req
238. I found that he was a disciple
of the great yogi himself,
Copy !req
239. and on his way,
at that very moment, to visit his master.
Copy !req
240. I blurted out,
Copy !req
241. "This is the man I'm looking for!
Please, may I meet him?"
Copy !req
242. My companion looked at me long and slow.
Copy !req
243. "That is impossible," he said.
Copy !req
244. From this point forward,
he refused to answer my questions.
Copy !req
245. However, I managed
to learn one small thing:
Copy !req
246. the time of day
the great yogi commenced his meditation.
Copy !req
247. My companion signaled to halt the cart,
dismounted, and was gone.
Copy !req
248. I pretended to drive on.
But just around the corner,
Copy !req
249. I jumped down
and snuck back along the path.
Copy !req
250. Already, the man
had disappeared into the jungle.
Copy !req
251. - I heard a rustling in the undergrowth.
Copy !req
252. "If that's not him," I thought,
"it's a tiger,
Copy !req
253. and I'm about to be
pounced upon, thrashed,
Copy !req
254. and eaten in little, torn morsels
of bloody flesh."
Copy !req
255. It was him.
Copy !req
256. There wasn't even a shadow of a trace
of a path where the man was walking.
Copy !req
257. He was pushing his way
between tall bamboos
Copy !req
258. and every kind of heavy vegetation.
Copy !req
259. I crept after him, very quiet,
keeping at least 100 yards behind.
Copy !req
260. Whenever I lost sight of him,
which was most of the time,
Copy !req
261. I was able to follow
the sound of his footsteps.
Copy !req
262. For half an hour, this tense game
of follow-the-leader went on.
Copy !req
263. Then, suddenly,
I no longer heard the man in front of me.
Copy !req
264. I stopped and listened.
Copy !req
265. All at once,
through the thick undergrowth,
Copy !req
266. I saw a little clearing
and two small huts.
Copy !req
267. My heart jumped.
Copy !req
268. There was a water-hole
next to the nearest hut
Copy !req
269. with a prayer-mat beside it, and above,
Copy !req
270. a large baobab tree
with beautiful, thick, leafy branches.
Copy !req
271. All through
the great noontime heat, I waited.
Copy !req
272. On through the heavy wet heat
of the afternoon, I waited.
Copy !req
273. As five o'clock approached,
Copy !req
274. I quietly climbed up my tree
and hid among the leaves.
Copy !req
275. Finally, the great yogi
came out of his hut
Copy !req
276. and sat cross-legged on the mat.
Copy !req
277. Each movement he made was calm and gentle.
Copy !req
278. He put his hands
palm downward on his knees
Copy !req
279. and took a long breath
through his nostrils,
Copy !req
280. and already I could see
a sort of brightness was melting over him.
Copy !req
281. For 14 minutes, he remained
perfectly still in this position.
Copy !req
282. And then, as I watched,
I saw, quite positively,
Copy !req
283. his body slowly lifting off the ground.
Copy !req
284. Twelve inches. Fifteen. Eighteen. Twenty.
Copy !req
285. Two feet above the prayer-mat.
Copy !req
286. Up in the tree, I said to myself,
Copy !req
287. "There before you
is a man sitting in the air."
Copy !req
288. Forty-six minutes, by my watch,
his body remained suspended.
Copy !req
289. And then he slowly descended
back to earth,
Copy !req
290. until his buttocks
rested again upon the mat.
Copy !req
291. I climbed down from my tree
and ran straight over.
Copy !req
292. The great yogi
was washing his hands and feet.
Copy !req
293. "How long have you been here?"
he said sharply.
Copy !req
294. Suddenly, he picked up a brick
and threw it at me so hard
Copy !req
295. it broke in two
as it struck my leg below the knee.
Copy !req
296. I have the scar still.
I'll show it to you.
Copy !req
297. This was actually a stroke of luck.
Copy !req
298. A great yogi isn't meant
to lose his temper and fling bricks.
Copy !req
299. The old man was humiliated, remorseful,
and deeply disappointed in himself.
Copy !req
300. He explained that though
he could not take me on as a disciple,
Copy !req
301. he would, nevertheless,
give me some informal instruction
Copy !req
302. in order to make amends for attacking me,
Copy !req
303. an attack I fully deserved, by the way.
Copy !req
304. This was in 1890.
Copy !req
305. I was nearly 17 years old.
Copy !req
306. Now, what was
the great yogi's instruction?
Copy !req
307. Here it comes.
Copy !req
308. The mind is a scattered thing.
Copy !req
309. It concerns itself
with thousands of different items at once.
Copy !req
310. Things you see around you.
Things you hear and smell.
Copy !req
311. Things you think about.
Things you try not to think about.
Copy !req
312. You must learn to concentrate such that
Copy !req
313. you can visualize at will one item,
one item only, and nothing else.
Copy !req
314. If you work hard, you may be able
to concentrate your conscious mind
Copy !req
315. on any one object you select
Copy !req
316. for around three and one-half minutes.
Copy !req
317. This will take
about 20 years of diligent, daily effort.
Copy !req
318. "Twenty years!" I cried.
Copy !req
319. Twenty years. It may take longer.
Copy !req
320. That's the usual time,
if you are able to do it at all.
Copy !req
321. I'll be an old man by then!
Copy !req
322. The time varies.
Some take ten years, some take thirty.
Copy !req
323. On extremely rare occasions,
a special person comes along
Copy !req
324. who's able to develop the power
in only one or two years,
Copy !req
325. but this is one in a billion. Not you.
Copy !req
326. Is it that difficult
to concentrate the mind—
Copy !req
327. Almost impossible. Try it and see.
Shut your eyes and think of something.
Copy !req
328. Think of just one object.
Visualize it. See it before you.
Copy !req
329. In a few seconds, your mind will wander.
Copy !req
330. Other thoughts will creep in.
It's a very difficult thing.
Copy !req
331. Thus spoke the great, wise, old yogi.
Copy !req
332. And so my exercises began.
Copy !req
333. Each evening, I sat down,
Copy !req
334. closed my eyes, and visualized the person
I loved best in the world,
Copy !req
335. which was my elder brother
who died, age ten, from a blood disease.
Copy !req
336. I concentrated on his face,
but the instant my mind began to wander,
Copy !req
337. I stopped the exercise,
rested for several minutes,
Copy !req
338. then I tried again.
Copy !req
339. After five years of daily practice,
Copy !req
340. I was able to concentrate
absolutely on my brother's face
Copy !req
341. for one and a half minutes.
Copy !req
342. I was making progress.
Copy !req
343. In the meantime,
Copy !req
344. I began to earn quite good money
giving conjuring performances.
Copy !req
345. By nature,
my sleight-of-hand is very good,
Copy !req
346. but always, I continued my exercises.
Copy !req
347. Every evening, wherever I was,
I settled myself down in a quiet spot
Copy !req
348. and concentrated my mind
on my brother's face.
Copy !req
349. Sometimes, I lit a candle
and began by staring at the flame.
Copy !req
350. A candle flame, as you know,
has three separate parts:
Copy !req
351. the yellow at the top,
the mauve lower down,
Copy !req
352. and the black inside.
Copy !req
353. I placed the candle
16 inches away from my face,
Copy !req
354. absolutely level with my eyes,
Copy !req
355. so I didn't have to make
even tiny adjustments of my eye muscles
Copy !req
356. by looking up or down.
Copy !req
357. I stared at the black part in the center
until everything around me disappeared.
Copy !req
358. Then I shut my eyes
Copy !req
359. and began to concentrate
on my brother's face.
Copy !req
360. By 1907, when I was 34 years old,
I could concentrate for three minutes
Copy !req
361. without any wandering
of my mind whatsoever.
Copy !req
362. It was also at this time
that I became aware of a slight ability,
Copy !req
363. just a queer, little feeling,
Copy !req
364. that when I closed my eyes
and looked at something hard,
Copy !req
365. with fierce intensity,
Copy !req
366. I could see the outline
of the object I was looking at.
Copy !req
367. I thought of a thing the yogi had said:
Copy !req
368. "Certain holy people have been known
to develop so great a concentration
Copy !req
369. they can see without using their eyes."
Copy !req
370. Each night after I performed
my exercises with the candle flame,
Copy !req
371. I drank a cup of coffee,
then I blindfolded myself
Copy !req
372. and sat in my chair
trying to see without my eyes.
Copy !req
373. I started with a deck of playing cards.
Copy !req
374. I studied the backs. I guessed the values.
Copy !req
375. Immediately, I had a 60% success rate.
Copy !req
376. Later, I bought maps
and navigational charts
Copy !req
377. and pinned them up around my room.
Copy !req
378. I spent hours looking at them blindfolded,
trying to read the small lettering.
Copy !req
379. Every evening for the next eight years,
I proceeded with this kind of practice.
Copy !req
380. By 1915,
I could read a book straight through,
Copy !req
381. cover to cover, blindfolded.
Copy !req
382. I had it!
Copy !req
383. At last, I had this power.
Copy !req
384. As you know,
it became my entire conjuring performance.
Copy !req
385. Audiences loved it, but no one
believed it to be genuine. Still don't.
Copy !req
386. Even doctors, like you, who blindfold me
in the most expert fashion,
Copy !req
387. refuse to believe
anyone can see without his eyes.
Copy !req
388. They forget there are other ways
of sending an image to the brain.
Copy !req
389. Imdad Khan fell silent.
Copy !req
390. He was tired.
Copy !req
391. "What other ways?" I asked.
Copy !req
392. Quite honestly, I do not know.
Copy !req
393. The seeing is done
by another part of the body.
Copy !req
394. Which part?
Copy !req
395. That night I didn't go to bed.
Copy !req
396. This man would have scientists
turning somersaults in the air.
Copy !req
397. He must be the most valuable man alive.
Copy !req
398. I had to find out exactly how it was,
biologically, chemically, magically,
Copy !req
399. an image could be sent to the brain
without using the eyes.
Copy !req
400. Blind people might be able to see.
Deaf people to hear. Who knows what else?
Copy !req
401. "This incredible man
must not be ignored," I thought.
Copy !req
402. I started transcribing with care
everything Imdad had told me that evening.
Copy !req
403. I wrote for five hours without stopping.
Copy !req
404. At eight o'clock the next morning,
I finished the most important part:
Copy !req
405. the pages you've just read.
Copy !req
406. I didn't see Dr. Marshall
until we met for our tea-break.
Copy !req
407. I told him what I could
in the time we had.
Copy !req
408. "Back to the theater tonight," I said.
Can't lose him now.
Copy !req
409. I'll come with you.
Copy !req
410. At 6:45,
we drove to the Royal Palace Hall.
Copy !req
411. I parked the car,
and we walked to the theater.
Copy !req
412. "There's something wrong," I said.
Copy !req
413. There was no crowd,
and the doors were closed.
Copy !req
414. The poster for the show was in place,
but someone had printed across it...
Copy !req
415. "Tonight's performance canceled."
Copy !req
416. I asked an old gatekeeper
by the locked doors: "What happened?"
Copy !req
417. - Someone died.
- "Who?"
Copy !req
418. Of course, I already knew.
Copy !req
419. The man who sees
without his eyes.
Copy !req
420. "How?" I cried.
Copy !req
421. He went to sleep
and never woke up.
Copy !req
422. These things happen.
Copy !req
423. We walked slowly back to the car.
Copy !req
424. I felt an overwhelming sense
of grief and anger.
Copy !req
425. I should never have allowed him
out of my sight.
Copy !req
426. I should've given him my bed,
taken care of him.
Copy !req
427. Imdad Khan was a maker of miracles.
Copy !req
428. He'd communicated with mysterious forces
far beyond the reach of ordinary people.
Copy !req
429. Now he was dead.
Copy !req
430. "That's that," Dr. Marshall said.
Copy !req
431. That's that.
Copy !req
432. "Yes," I said.
Copy !req
433. "That's that."
Copy !req
434. This is a true and accurate report
of everything
Copy !req
435. concerning my two meetings
with Imdad Khan.
Copy !req
436. Well, well, well.
Copy !req
437. Now that is extremely interesting.
Copy !req
438. This is a terrific piece of information.
Copy !req
439. This could change my life.
Copy !req
440. The piece of information
Henry was referring to
Copy !req
441. was that Imdad Khan had trained himself
to read the value of a playing-card
Copy !req
442. from the reverse side,
Copy !req
443. and, being,
as mentioned, a dishonest gambler,
Copy !req
444. Henry realized at once,
Copy !req
445. he could make a fortune.
Copy !req
446. He went downstairs to the butler's pantry
Copy !req
447. and asked for a candle,
a candlestick, and a ruler.
Copy !req
448. He took them to his bedroom,
locked the door,
Copy !req
449. drew the curtains,
and turned off the lights.
Copy !req
450. Put the candle on the dressing-table.
Pulled up a chair.
Copy !req
451. He noticed with satisfaction
that his eyes were level with the wick.
Copy !req
452. Using the ruler, he positioned
his face 16 inches from the candle,
Copy !req
453. as indicated in the book.
Copy !req
454. Imdad Khan had visualized
the face of the person he loved best,
Copy !req
455. which, in his case,
was his deceased brother.
Copy !req
456. Henry didn't have a brother.
Copy !req
457. He decided instead
to visualize his own face.
Copy !req
458. As Henry stared into the black area
at the center of the flame,
Copy !req
459. an extraordinary thing happened.
Copy !req
460. His mind went absolutely blank,
his brain ceased fidgeting,
Copy !req
461. and all at once he felt as if
his entire body had become encased,
Copy !req
462. snug and cozy,
Copy !req
463. within that little black area
of burning nothingness.
Copy !req
464. Admittedly, this lasted only 15 seconds.
Copy !req
465. Then, no matter where,
or what he was doing,
Copy !req
466. he made a point of practicing
with the candle five times a day.
Copy !req
467. For the very first time, he threw himself
into something with genuine enthusiasm,
Copy !req
468. and the progress he made was remarkable.
Copy !req
469. After six months
Copy !req
470. he could concentrate absolutely upon
the image of his face for three minutes
Copy !req
471. without a single outside thought
entering his mind.
Copy !req
472. "It's me," Henry thought.
Copy !req
473. "I'm the one-in-a-billion with the ability
Copy !req
474. to acquire yoga powers
at incredible speed!"
Copy !req
475. By the end of the first year,
he'd exceeded five and a half minutes.
Copy !req
476. The time had come.
Copy !req
477. The living room
of Henry's London flat. Midnight.
Copy !req
478. He shakes with excitement as,
for the first time,
Copy !req
479. he places a deck of cards
upside down before him
Copy !req
480. and concentrates on the top card.
Copy !req
481. All he sees initially is the ordinary
design of thin red lines on the back,
Copy !req
482. perhaps the most common
playing-card design in the world.
Copy !req
483. He now shifts his concentration
to the other side of the card.
Copy !req
484. He focuses with great intensity
upon the invisible underneath of the card.
Copy !req
485. Thirty seconds elapse.
One, two, three minutes.
Copy !req
486. Henry doesn't move a muscle.
Copy !req
487. His now highly-developed concentration
is absolute.
Copy !req
488. He visualizes the reverse of the card.
Copy !req
489. No other thought
is permitted to enter his mind.
Copy !req
490. During the fourth minute,
something starts to happen.
Copy !req
491. Slowly, magically, but distinctly,
Copy !req
492. a black blob becomes a spade,
a twisty squiggle becomes a five.
Copy !req
493. The five of spades.
Copy !req
494. Fingers quivering,
he picks up the card and turns it over.
Copy !req
495. "I've done it," he says.
Copy !req
496. Henry becomes a fanatic.
Copy !req
497. He never leaves his flat
except to buy food and drink.
Copy !req
498. All day and often far into the night,
Copy !req
499. he crouches over the cards
with the stopwatch.
Copy !req
500. - Reducing his time, second by second.
Copy !req
501. In a month, he's at a minute and a half.
Six months, 20 seconds.
Copy !req
502. Seven more months, ten seconds flat.
Copy !req
503. His target is five.
Copy !req
504. Unless he can read through
a card in five seconds,
Copy !req
505. he won't work the casinos successfully.
Copy !req
506. Yet the nearer he gets to his target,
the more difficult it becomes to reach it.
Copy !req
507. Four weeks
to get from ten seconds to nine.
Copy !req
508. Five more to get from nine to eight.
Copy !req
509. Hard work no longer bothers him.
Copy !req
510. He's able to work
12 hours straight, no trouble.
Copy !req
511. He knows with certainty he'll get there.
Copy !req
512. The last two seconds
are the hardest, 11 months.
Copy !req
513. But late one Saturday afternoon...
Copy !req
514. Five seconds. Henry goes through the pack,
timing himself with every card.
Copy !req
515. Five seconds. Five seconds. Five seconds.
Copy !req
516. How long has it taken him
to reach this moment?
Copy !req
517. Three years and three months
of uninterrupted effort.
Copy !req
518. There were over
100 legitimate casinos in London.
Copy !req
519. Henry was a member of no less than ten.
Lord's House was his favorite.
Copy !req
520. It was the finest in the land,
in a magnificent Georgian mansion.
Copy !req
521. Good evening, Mr. Sugar.
Copy !req
522. said the man
whose job it was to never forget a face.
Copy !req
523. Henry ascended the marvelous staircase
to the cashier's office.
Copy !req
524. He wrote a check for £10,000.
Copy !req
525. Well-fed women circled the roulette wheel
like plump hens around a feeding hopper.
Copy !req
526. Men with crimson faces,
cigars between their lips
Copy !req
527. counted their chips,
eyes glittering with greed.
Copy !req
528. Odd. For the first time in Henry's life,
Copy !req
529. he looked with distaste upon a room
full of horrible rich people.
Copy !req
530. He searched for a vacant seat
directly on the dealer's camera left
Copy !req
531. at any of the blackjack tables.
Copy !req
532. The dealer took Henry's plaque
and dropped it into a slot.
Copy !req
533. He was a young-ish man
with black eyes and gray skin.
Copy !req
534. He never smiled
and only spoke when necessary.
Copy !req
535. He had slim hands.
There was arithmetic in his fingers.
Copy !req
536. He picked up a wedge of £25 chips
and placed them in a pile.
Copy !req
537. He didn't need to count them.
Those nimble fingers were never wrong.
Copy !req
538. He slid the pile to Henry.
Copy !req
539. As Henry stacked his chips,
Copy !req
540. he glanced at the top card
in the dealer's shoe.
Copy !req
541. In five seconds he read it as a ten.
He pushed out eight chips, £200,
Copy !req
542. the maximum stake allowed at Lord's House.
Copy !req
543. He was dealt the ten.
His second card was a nine.
Copy !req
544. Nineteen all together.
Copy !req
545. On 19, you stick.
Copy !req
546. You sit tight and hope the dealer
doesn't get 20 or 21. It's a given.
Copy !req
547. - When the dealer came to Henry, he said...
- Nineteen.
Copy !req
548. and passed to the next player.
"Wait," said Henry.
Copy !req
549. The dealer came back to Henry.
Copy !req
550. He raised his eyebrows,
looked with cool eyes.
Copy !req
551. - You wish to draw to 19?
- ... he asked crisply.
Copy !req
552. There were only two ranks that
wouldn't bust a 19, the ace and the two.
Copy !req
553. Only an idiot would risk drawing on 19,
especially with £200 on the table.
Copy !req
554. The back of the next card lay visible.
The dealer hadn't touched it.
Copy !req
555. "Yes," Henry said. "Another card."
The dealer shrugged and dealt it.
Copy !req
556. The two of clubs landed in front of Henry
alongside the ten and the nine.
Copy !req
557. - 21.
- ... the dealer said evenly.
Copy !req
558. He glanced up again into Henry's face,
Copy !req
559. and rested there,
silent, watchful, puzzled.
Copy !req
560. Henry had unbalanced him. He'd rarely,
if ever, seen anyone draw on 19.
Copy !req
561. This fellow had
with a calmness and certainty
Copy !req
562. that was quite staggering, and he'd won.
Copy !req
563. Henry caught the dealer's look,
realized he'd made a silly mistake.
Copy !req
564. He'd attracted attention.
"I beg your pardon."
Copy !req
565. He must never do that again.
Copy !req
566. He must be very careful,
even make himself lose occasionally.
Copy !req
567. The game went on.
Copy !req
568. Henry's advantage was so enormous,
Copy !req
569. he had difficulty
keeping his winnings reasonable.
Copy !req
570. In an hour, he'd won £30,000.
Copy !req
571. There he stopped.
Copy !req
572. It could just as easily
have been a million.
Copy !req
573. Thank you.
Copy !req
574. Henry was now
almost certainly capable of making money
Copy !req
575. faster than any other person
in the entire world.
Copy !req
576. Interesting.
Copy !req
577. Had this been a made-up story
instead of a true one,
Copy !req
578. it would have been necessary
Copy !req
579. to invent a surprising
and exciting end for the thing.
Copy !req
580. Something dramatic and unusual.
Copy !req
581. For example, Henry could go home
and start counting his money.
Copy !req
582. While doing this,
he might suddenly begin to feel unwell.
Copy !req
583. He has a pain in his chest.
Copy !req
584. He decides to go to bed.
He takes off his clothes.
Copy !req
585. Walks naked and puts on pajamas.
Copy !req
586. He passes the full-length mirror
against the wall. He stops.
Copy !req
587. Automatically, from force of habit,
he starts to concentrate.
Copy !req
588. All at once, he sees through his own skin.
Copy !req
589. Like an X-ray, only better.
He sees everything.
Copy !req
590. Arteries, veins,
the blood pumping through him.
Copy !req
591. Liver, kidneys, intestines.
He sees his heart beating.
Copy !req
592. He looks at where the pain is coming from
Copy !req
593. and sees a dark lump inside the large vein
leading into the heart on the right side.
Copy !req
594. A blood clot. At first,
the clot appears to be stationary.
Copy !req
595. Then it moves. The movement's slight.
Only a millimeter or so.
Copy !req
596. The blood is pumping up behind the clot
and pushing past it,
Copy !req
597. and the clot moves again.
Copy !req
598. It jerks forward about half an inch.
Henry watches in terror.
Copy !req
599. He knows a large clot that's broken free
and is traveling in the vein
Copy !req
600. will reach the heart.
Copy !req
601. He is about to die.
Copy !req
602. Not a bad ending for fiction,
but this isn't fiction.
Copy !req
603. This story is fact.
Copy !req
604. The only untrue thing is Henry's name,
which wasn't Henry Sugar.
Copy !req
605. His name has to be protected.
It still must be protected.
Copy !req
606. Apart from that, this is a true story,
Copy !req
607. and because it's a true story,
it must have the true ending.
Copy !req
608. Here's what actually happened.
Copy !req
609. Henry walked for an hour.
The evening was cool and pleasant.
Copy !req
610. The city still wide awake.
Copy !req
611. He could feel the thick bankroll
in the inside pocket of his jacket.
Copy !req
612. He patted it gently.
Copy !req
613. A lot of money for an hour's work.
Copy !req
614. Yet, he was a puzzled man.
Copy !req
615. He couldn't understand why he felt
so little excitement about this success.
Copy !req
616. If this had happened three years ago,
before the yoga,
Copy !req
617. he'd have gone crazy with excitement,
Copy !req
618. he'd be rushing off
to a nightclub to celebrate.
Copy !req
619. But Henry didn't feel excited.
Copy !req
620. He felt sad.
Copy !req
621. Every time he made a bet,
he'd been certain to win.
Copy !req
622. There was no thrill,
no suspense, no danger.
Copy !req
623. He knew he could travel
around the world making millions.
Copy !req
624. But was it going to be any fun?
Copy !req
625. Another thing.
Was it not entirely possible
Copy !req
626. the process of acquiring yoga powers
Copy !req
627. had completely and utterly
changed his entire outlook on life?
Copy !req
628. It was possible.
Copy !req
629. The next morning,
Henry woke up late, got out of bed,
Copy !req
630. saw the enormous bundle
lying on his dressing-table,
Copy !req
631. and didn't want it.
Copy !req
632. Oi?
Copy !req
633. Good morning, sir.
That's for you! It's a present.
Copy !req
634. I...
Copy !req
635. A what?
Copy !req
636. Put it in your pocket!
Copy !req
637. All right.
Copy !req
638. What is it?
Copy !req
639. - It's money.
- Keep it!
Copy !req
640. Hey!
Copy !req
641. Come on...
Copy !req
642. The doorbell rang.
Copy !req
643. - What do you think you're doing?
- Sorry about the crowd.
Copy !req
644. I was giving away some money.
Copy !req
645. - You're inciting a riot!
- Just giving away some money.
Copy !req
646. I won't do it again. They'll soon go away.
Copy !req
647. The policeman took one hand off his hip,
produced a £50 note.
Copy !req
648. - A-ha, you got one yourself.
- This is evidence. Where's the money from?
Copy !req
649. I won it at blackjack.
I had a tremendously lucky night.
Copy !req
650. Henry named the club
and the policeman wrote it down.
Copy !req
651. They'll tell you it's true.
Copy !req
652. The policeman lowered the book.
I don't care.
Copy !req
653. - Don't you?
- Not whatsoever.
Copy !req
654. In fact, I believe your story,
Copy !req
655. but that doesn't excuse
what you did even the tiniest bit.
Copy !req
656. I didn't do anything illegal, did I?
Copy !req
657. Illegal?
Copy !req
658. You're an idiot!
Copy !req
659. If you're lucky enough to win yourself
a big sum of money like that,
Copy !req
660. and want to give it away,
you don't throw it out of the window.
Copy !req
661. You give it somewhere it'll do some good.
A hospital for instance, or an orphanage.
Copy !req
662. There's hospitals and orphanages all over
Copy !req
663. got hardly enough money
to buy the kids a present for Christmas.
Copy !req
664. Then comes a spoiled idiot
Copy !req
665. who's never known
what it's like to be hard up,
Copy !req
666. and you throw the stuff
out into the street!
Copy !req
667. The policeman stomped down the stairs
and out of the door.
Copy !req
668. Henry didn't move.
Copy !req
669. Those words, and the fury
with which they were spoken,
Copy !req
670. struck hard and deep.
Copy !req
671. He was ashamed.
Copy !req
672. It was an awful feeling.
Copy !req
673. Then, all at once,
Copy !req
674. Henry felt a powerful electricity
tingling through his entire body,
Copy !req
675. and there began to come to him
an idea that was to change everything.
Copy !req
676. He started pacing up and down,
Copy !req
677. ticking off the points
that would make his idea possible.
Copy !req
678. One. I'm going to win
a very large sum of money
Copy !req
679. each and every day of my life
from this moment forward.
Copy !req
680. Two. I can go to the
same casino only once every six months.
Copy !req
681. Three. I must never win
too much money in one sitting.
Copy !req
682. £50,000 pounds a night,
that's my limit.
Copy !req
683. Four.
£50,000 a night for 365 days a year.
Copy !req
684. That's £18.25 million.
Copy !req
685. Five. Keep moving.
Copy !req
686. No more than three nights
at a stretch in any city.
Copy !req
687. London, Monte-Carlo, Cannes, Biarritz,
Copy !req
688. Deauville, Las Vegas,
Mexico City, Buenos Aires, Nassau.
Copy !req
689. Six. I'll take the money and establish
hospitals and orphanages around the world.
Copy !req
690. Corny and sentimental
as a dream,
Copy !req
691. but as a reality,
I think I can make it work.
Copy !req
692. I don't think it'd be corny at all.
It would be wonderfully stupendous.
Copy !req
693. Seven. I need a partner who can
sit behind a desk and receive the money,
Copy !req
694. then send it where it's needed.
Copy !req
695. Someone I can deeply,
emphatically, categorically trust forever.
Copy !req
696. John Winston was Henry's accountant,
and had been his father's too,
Copy !req
697. and John's father had been
Henry's father's father's accountant.
Copy !req
698. You could be the richest man on Earth.
Copy !req
699. I don't want to be
the richest man on Earth.
Copy !req
700. I can't operate in England.
The taxman'll take it all.
Copy !req
701. I'll have to move to Switzerland.
But not tomorrow.
Copy !req
702. I'm not unattached like you
with no responsibilities.
Copy !req
703. I must talk to my family,
give notice to my partners.
Copy !req
704. I must sell my house,
find another in Switzerland,
Copy !req
705. take the kids out of school.
These things take time.
Copy !req
706. One year later,
Henry had sent just over £120 million
Copy !req
707. to John Winston in Lausanne.
Copy !req
708. The money was delivered five days a week
Copy !req
709. to a Swiss company
called Winston Sugar, LLC.
Copy !req
710. Nobody except John and Henry
knew where the money came from
Copy !req
711. or what would happen to it.
Copy !req
712. The Monday remittance was the biggest
Copy !req
713. because it included the take
for Friday, Saturday, and Sunday,
Copy !req
714. when the banks were closed.
Copy !req
715. He moved with astonishing speed,
Copy !req
716. changing his identity
several times in a single week.
Copy !req
717. Often, the only clue John had
of Henry's whereabouts
Copy !req
718. was the address of the bank which had
sent the money. It was stupendous.
Copy !req
719. Henry died last year,
age 63, from a pulmonary embolism.
Copy !req
720. He saw it coming, quite literally,
but was very much at peace.
Copy !req
721. He'd been following his plan
for just over 20 years.
Copy !req
722. He'd made £644 million.
Copy !req
723. He'd left 21 well-established,
Copy !req
724. well-run children's hospitals
and orphanages around the world,
Copy !req
725. administered and financed from Lausanne
by John Winston and his staff.
Copy !req
726. His work was complete.
Copy !req
727. Now, how do I know all this?
Good question. I'll tell you.
Copy !req
728. Soon after Henry's death, John Winston
telephoned me from Switzerland.
Copy !req
729. He introduced himself simply
Copy !req
730. as the head of a company
calling itself Winston Sugar, LLC,
Copy !req
731. and asked
if I'd come to Lausanne to see him
Copy !req
732. with a view to writing
a brief history of the organization.
Copy !req
733. I don't know how he chose me.
Copy !req
734. Probably had a list of writers
and stuck a pin in it.
Copy !req
735. He would pay me well, he said, and added,
Copy !req
736. "A remarkable man has died recently."
Copy !req
737. "His name was Henry Sugar."
Copy !req
738. "I think people ought to know a bit
about what he has done for the world."
Copy !req
739. In my ignorance,
Copy !req
740. I asked whether the story
was really interesting enough
Copy !req
741. to merit being put on paper.
Copy !req
742. This annoyed John Winston very much.
Perhaps it even offended him.
Copy !req
743. In five minutes on the phone,
Copy !req
744. he told me
about Henry Sugar's secret career.
Copy !req
745. It was secret no longer.
Copy !req
746. Henry was dead and would never
enter another casino again.
Copy !req
747. "I'm coming," I said.
Copy !req
748. In Lausanne,
I met John Winston, now over 70,
Copy !req
749. also Max Engelman,
Copy !req
750. a renowned make-up artist
who traveled the world with Henry
Copy !req
751. creating fantastic disguises
to conceal his identity.
Copy !req
752. They were both shattered by Henry's death.
Max even more so than John Winston.
Copy !req
753. I loved him. He was a great man.
Copy !req
754. John Winston showed me
the original dark-blue exercise book
Copy !req
755. written by Z.Z. Chatterjee
in Calcutta in 1935.
Copy !req
756. I later copied it out word-for-word.
Copy !req
757. "One last question," I said.
Copy !req
758. "You keep calling him Henry Sugar,
yet you tell me that wasn't his name."
Copy !req
759. "Don't you want me to say
who he really was when I do the story?"
Copy !req
760. - No.
- ... John Winston said.
Copy !req
761. Max and I promised
never to reveal his identity.
Copy !req
762. Oh, I suppose
it'll probably leak out sooner or later.
Copy !req
763. He was from a well-known English family,
Copy !req
764. but I'd appreciate it
if you didn't try to find out.
Copy !req
765. Just please,
call him plain Mr. Henry Sugar.
Copy !req
766. And that is what I have done.
Copy !req