Broken Wings (A Romantic Suspense) (45 page)

BOOK: Broken Wings (A Romantic Suspense)
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I had to figure out what I was going to tell her. I wasn’t going to be telling her that I was working on sending her father to prison.

Chapter Fifteen

Victor

The company was a weird place to me. No matter how old I was, it was still “going to work with Dad” except there was no Dad to go with me. Everyone knew who I was, though, on sight. I wore a conservative dark suit and tie. The sleeves covered my tattoos. I’d designed them that way, to remain hidden in business attire. When I visited, it raised eyebrows. The Heir didn’t often stop by. Maybe once or twice a year. Since I was eighteen I’d been meeting semi-regularly with the management. Amsel is privately held, so no board of directors, only employees. These old men worked for me. I signed in at the front desk. Amsel occupied the top three floors of a center city highrise. The whole building belonged to me, but our offices took up only the three floors. For the most part, when Amsel invested in something, a publicly traded company did the actual work. Amsel itself was only what’s called a holding company, owning the stock and directing with a light touch.

For the better part of two hundred years, it worked. Amsel prospered by finding men of talent in fields of interest and funding them. Synthetic fibers, explosives, medicine, chemistry, computers. Most people probably never heard of us until Eve took over the company and started making waves, but Amsel owned a piece of everyone’s daily lives, from the food they ate to the clothes they wore to the cars they drove. That’s a lot of money, flowing in and out, year after year, day after day, hour after hour. Somewhere I had a calculation to tell me how much money I made while I was using the bathroom. Tuition was meaningless to me. I could have
bought
the college if I felt like it.

There was only one thing that mattered and I was going to lose it.

I showed the receptionist my driver’s license and signed in at the front desk, and headed to the elevator. I wanted this tedium to be over. Really, I wanted to just stick my head in the sand and deal with this when I took over. Once it was official and I had my degree, the requirements of my father’s will would be satisfied and I would be the sole owner of the company. Then it would be bye bye Martin. As of that moment, my part of the company was held in trust managed by my mother, and my mother put Martin in charge after he managed her portion of the estate successfully for years. That was how they met, years ago now. So far as I knew their marriage was happy. He never laid a hand on my mother and he was hands off with Eve, too, virtually ignoring her during the summers between semesters. We still kept things quiet, leaving the estate when we wanted to spend the night together, but it would take a fool not to realize where we were going and what we were doing.

Fool that I was, I thought we really were keeping it a secret. I was trying to talk Eve into coming off the birth control after I graduated. She wanted to finish her degree. I respected that. She was starting to budge on coming off after she graduated herself, a year from now. That would work for me. Not like we were going to
try
for a kid, so much as let nature take its course. If we kept at it like we had been before, nature would take its course pretty quick. When I was younger if you told me that I’d be thinking about marriage and kids when I was only twenty-two years old, I’d have been horrified. Now I could barely think of anything else. The idea of filling the halls of that huge sprawling house with children was starting to appeal to me. Mom wanted more kids with Dad, but it never happened and he was gone when she was so young. If he’d lived I’d have brothers and sisters, I know it.

My every instinct was screaming at me to Let. It. Be.

I had to know. If Martin was trying to destroy my family legacy I had to know. I had to be able to take care of Eve.

Arms folded, I leaned on the elevator wall and sighed, waiting for it to ascend. If it was up to me I’d be fixing cars for the rest of my days. Hell, maybe I’d find a manager -anybody but Martin- and do just that. Be hands off. Dad was like that. He came here maybe two days a week, and didn’t visit at all for long stretches in the summer. Up until around he died, anyway. Something happened then and he was spending hours every
 
day, but he’d leave super early and be home in the middle of the afternoon to spend time with me and then spend the evenings with Mom. That was a happier time, happier than I can remember until I convinced Eve to take a chance on me.

Eve. If I closed my eyes I could smell that lavender, like tasting a color. I wanted to get this shit over with and get back to her.

I still hadn’t told her where I was, what I was doing. She thought I was in class right now. If I made it back in time, nothing would be amiss.

The elevator came to my floor. I stopped in at the receptionist’s desk and signed in again. Yes, twice. Just to be on the safe side.

Then I went to meet Brittany.

It didn’t feel like I was ruining my life. Every employee that saw me greeted me pleasantly. Old men slapped me on the back and told me it would
 
be good to have an Amsel at the helm again after so long. One even squeezed my arm and told me my father would be proud of me. That made my day. It was a subtle thing.

The record’s vault was in the 27
th
floor, the second floor of the three belonging to the company. That was where I was to meet Brittany. There was no guard or anything. The big vault door opened with a pass code, a unique one assigned to everyone with access. Lots of important stuff was stored in here, and on paper. There were electronic records but Amsel is old fashioned, it’s just how
 
things go. Institutional momentum, my dad called it once. He was talking to my mother when he called it that. I punched in my code and the door popped open with a hollow metal thump and a
hiss
of escaping air.

Brittany was already inside. She dressed conservatively, as usual. Her reading glasses were cute, but I noted it as a passing thing, a simple fact like the color of her gray skirt or the heels on her pumps. She was going for a sexy schoolmarm look, I think. I just wanted to get this over with and get out of there. I closed the vault door and sealed it from the inside.

The implications of this did not come to me at the time. Unfortunately.

She had a lot of paperwork spread out on the reading table in the middle of the room. Some of it was photocopies. Anything older than six months was put on microfilm and the originals destroyed at a secure facility that specialized in that kind of thing. It was tossed in right in boxes and eaten by a huge, scary looking crosscut machine and the cuttings were incinerated. I think the machine was called an Industrial Macerator. Sounds pleasant.

“What am I looking at?” I said, leaning over the papers.

“I started pulling some of the paperwork on the accounts I told you about. Amsel is becoming involved with some very unsavory people.”

“Show me.”

“Okay,” she took a deep breath. “Amsel acquired this office supply company last year. Paperclips.”

“They make Paperclips?”

“No, that’s the name of the company. Paperclips.”

“That’s not a very good name.”

She sighed. “This is serious, Victor. Here’s the kicker,” she slipped me a page. “When Amsel acquired a controlling interest in Paperclips, the company was
deep
in the hole. They were a quarter billion in debt. Amsel propped up the company on the standard
 
terms, requiring a reorganization and so on. They started to turn a profit. Then this happens.”
 

She slid me another paper. I picked it up and skimmed it.

“The company bought bonds,” I said.

“Right. When you buy bonds, you’re basically loaning money. The bond is like a bank note. You turn it in when it matures, get paid back with interest.”

“Okay. So?”

“So, Amsel’s holdings don’t buy bonds. They pay a dividend on stock back to the company itself. To you, basically. They don’t lend money out. The company started taking on debt of its own and loaning it back out on these bonds. So I looked into where the bonds were coming from.”

She handed me a list. I took it in both hands and skimmed it.

“I’ve never heard of any of these companies.”

“Right, and you wouldn’t. They don’t exist. They all claim to be chartered in Russia, but none of them are real. I checked. The money is just disappearing up its own ass. Pardon my French.”

“Okay then. Now what?”

“Now Paperclips is being shuttered. The company is going into bankruptcy. Amsel owns stock, they…
you
don’t actually own the company, so you’re basically a creditor. Shielded from the debt. I learned about this two weeks ago when an investigator from the securities and exchange commission showed up. Now, look at this.”

She had more paperwork. I read it, but it was just some stock trades. Very good stock trades. Martin made me quite a bit of money on them, even if he was putting me on the hook for fake debt to Russian shell companies.

“What am I looking at?”

“You’ve been insider trading,” she said, sighing.

“I’ve been
what?”

“Legally, it’s you. Martin manages the account, obviously, so he’s on the hook. Someone has been passing him a lot of information. Corporate espionage stuff, mostly, but he got Amsel into the market before a couple of important pharmaceutical industry bills passed. Netted the company hundreds of millions, and a nice commission for himself. The management agreed to give him a sizeable bonus out of the returns. Most of it went to you, of course.”

Brittany took the papers and neatly stacked them up.

“What you see here is an orgy of evidence. There’s enough stuff here to send Martin to prison for the rest of his life, and the SEC does not, pardon my French, fuck around.”

I nodded slowly.

Gotcha.

“Why didn’t you go to the authorities yourself?”

“Because of his associates. Martin has been talking to this Vitali person constantly. I don’t want end up in pieces in an oil drum somewhere, Mister Amsel. I need protection. Help from somebody who can protect me. Not witness protection or something like that. I don’t want to destroy my life.”

“Alright. So what do you need from me?”

“I need your access code. There’s some stuff I can’t get on my own. I was hoping we could go through that now, see what we can find.”

“Okay.”

“The interior vault. We need your code.”

My code in fact opened a second vault door, into a smaller room where even more sensitive material was kept. That first day I mostly sat at the reading table while Brittany went over what she found, making notes, explaining it to me. I had a basic grasp of most of it, and some required explanation. I was carrying a B- average in business with a human resources concentration. This math shit was mostly there to be someone else’s problem. Dad always used to say there was no better problem than someone else’s problem. He also taught me to listen to my gut and trust my experts, let them do their jobs and reserve the high level decisions for myself.

“There’s so much here,” she said. “We can’t finish today and I can’t take any of this out of here.”

“So, I come back. When?”

“Martin goes to meetings every Monday, so every Monday?”

“That works.”

She looked up from the papers. “Maybe we could go over this tonight. Over dinner.”

I sat up. “No. Miss Andrews, look, let’s keep this strictly professional. I have a…” I almost said
fiancee
, “I have a girlfriend. That’s not why I’m here.”

“Oh. Sorry. I didn’t mean,” she brushed her hair back, “Um. Right. So…”

“See you Monday,” I said. “If we’re going to take that kind of time to keep doing this, I want you to keep an eye on what he’s doing right now. Anything you can put together to prove he’s dirty.”

“I can do that.”

“You have my cell number if you need anything. Don’t hesitate to call for help. Be careful.”

“I will.”

“I should leave first. Let’s not be seen together. Wait twenty minutes. You have a reason to be in here? If someone asks?”

“Yeah. We just ran into each other, that’s all.”

“Okay. I’ll see you Monday. Don’t email or text me anything, do it all in writing or by voice. I don’t want somebody stumbling on what you’re doing. I think we should go to the police now, but if I can’t change your mind…”

“Not yet. I’m not ready. If I try and fail…”

I sighed. “Yeah, I read you. Fine, Monday.”

I left first, as I suggested. I stopped in a few offices and said hello to some family friends, to make it look like I was there for a reason besides ducking into the vault for no readily apparent purpose.

When I got back to school, Eve was waiting for me. I copied a key to my room for her since we were living together in flagrant violation of the college rules. Not like I cared.

The key even said “Do Not Duplicate” on it. I’m a rebel.

“Where have you been?” she said, looking up from her book.

“Who, me? I was just out getting some air.”

“It’s five o’clock. Your last class ended at three.”

I’d skipped class, but she didn’t know that.

I answered her by scooping her up out of the chair. Eve was light as a feather then, and I was very strong. I picked her right up and kissed her, hard, and I could feel her worries melt away. There was a little jealous streak in my Eve. I thought it was endearing, really. Her father beat her down and ground her into dust but that iron core remained behind and she was bouncing back. She smiled, she laughed at my dumb jokes. Once that barrier was broken I found out how clever and subtle she was. I lifted her onto the bed and rolled on top of her. She slipped her legs around me and I felt the softness of her breasts through her sweat and smelled lilacs in her hair, and tasted her warm sweet lips for what felt like hours. Her stomach rumbled and she broke from a kiss, touching my shoulders.

“Let’s eat, huh?”

We ended up ordering pizza out. I ordered a big bowl of boneless hot wings and split a double cheesy with Eve, a big cheese pizza with more cheese in the crust around the edge. She loved those, used to eat them backwards.
 

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