file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/harry%20kruiswijk/Mijn%20d...Anderson%20-%20The%20League%20of%20Extraordinary%20Gentleman.txt
Courageously—though futilely— he beat the metal monster with his baton and his
fists. He made barely a mark on the thick plating.
Ignoring him, the land ironclad rolled on down the street.
Dunning ran after the machine, not knowing how he might stop its inexorable
progress. The street opened up, away from the crowded slums, grimy pubs, and dim
opium dens. Ahead stood a particularly impressive building with an ornate
multistoried facade of marble columns, graceful statues, and stately blocks of
gray-white stone.
Dunnings stomach clenched as he glanced up at the deeply engraved words BANK OF
ENGLAND on the lintel over the building's main entrance. "Not the Old Lady," he
muttered, hardly able to conceive of such a violation.
The tank rolled toward it, picking up speed.
The privately owned bank, often referred to as the Old Lady of Threadneedle
Street, had been established more than two centuries earlier. In the past two
hundred years, the Bank of England had become more than simply a financial
institution: The Old Lady was a symbol of England itself.
The juggernaut smashed into the bank's broad central door. Columns broke apart
and tumbled down; the massive locked door collapsed inward.
And the mammoth machine kept moving forward all the way into the financial
fortress, undeterred.
The tank's heavy treads, now bloodstained, clattered down a flight of marble
steps that groaned and cracked under the immense weight. Picking up speed, the
land ironclad ground its way across the polished marble floor of the lobby.
A night contingent of British soldiers guarding the bank drew their guns and
opened fire. Like hail pattering on a tin roof, the bullets ricocheted
ineffectually off the iron armor plates. The panicked soldiers leaped aside as
the tank smashed through teller desks, back offices, records archives, private
consultation rooms lined with security boxes—and finally into the vault room.
Constable Dunning came running after it, picking his way through the rubble of
stone and splintered wood and glass. He was aghast at the sheer carnage all
around him. The soldiers recovered themselves then yelled indignant threats
after the rampaging machine. Scrambling together, they all raced toward the
vault room.
As if stymied, the mechanical monster came to rest against the massive iron door
of the vault.
Dust and debris settled in ominous silence as Dunning and the soldier guards
crept purposefully into the vault room. "Hah!" Dunning called, a bit disoriented
by the frantic activity going on around him. "That door's too solid even for a
beast like that!"
Several other constables, panting hard from their long run, entered the bank and
stared at all the destruction.
The tank just sat there, throbbing, pressed up against the thick vault door. It
seemed to be defeated… or simply gathering its breath, preparing to strike
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