Numbered Account (63 page)

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Authors: Christopher Reich

Tags: #International finance, #Banks and banking - Switzerland, #General, #Romance, #Switzerland, #Suspense, #Adventure fiction, #Thrillers, #Banks & Banking, #Fiction, #Banks and Banking, #Business & Economics, #Zurich (Switzerland)

BOOK: Numbered Account
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Nick patted him on the back, checking his own garb in return. Blue jeans, a sweatshirt, and a forest-green parka. “Depends on what kind of work you had in mind.” He opened the door to Sprungli for his friend and followed him up the stairs to the main dining room. They chose a table in the far left corner, not far from the lavish breakfast buffet. They waited until a waitress arrived to take their orders before getting down to business.

Nick shot a glance at the briefcase. “Did you take a minute this morning and compare our man’s transfers through USB with the purchases made for the Ciragan Trading account?”

“Did better than that.” Sprecher opened the briefcase and withdrew a ledger sheet. He had drawn a line down its center and written the words
USB transfers
to the left and
Ciragan Trading Purchases
to the right. He handed Nick the sheet, saying, “We’re close, but it’s not a hundred percent. Mevlevi transferred over eight hundred million through his account at USB since last June.”

“And Konig’s purchases of USB stock?”

“Started small in July and kicked into full gear in November. I’m surprised Kaiser hadn’t taken note of someone snapping up such large blocks of shares.”

“Could’ve been anyone. Pension fund managers, mutual funds, individual investors. How was he to know?”

Sprecher raised an eyebrow, not ready to dismiss Kaiser’s gaffe. “Anyhow, we’re a hundred million off in total.”

Nick studied the sheet. “Yeah, but look. For twenty-odd weeks, the value of shares purchased by the Adler Bank exactly matches Mevlevi’s transfers. Maybe the final tally’s not a hundred percent, but it’s darned close.”

Nick continued to examine the ledger. He was excited to have obtained what he believed would pass for proof that Mevlevi was behind the Adler Bank’s takeover of USB. Yet, he realized that so far nothing had truly been accomplished. Yes, he had the ammunition he needed. But the real battle would take place tomorrow
. . . if
the proper generals arrived at the proper battlefields at the proper times. Three skirmishes would be fought across two fronts separated by forty kilometers, and the one enemy could not be engaged before the other had been vanquished. The time for celebration was far off.

“I don’t fancy being in Klaus’s shoes,” said Sprecher, “not when his ship gets taken out from under him. Do you think he knows exactly who the Pasha is?”

“Of course he knows,” Nick said. “Everyone knows. The secret is pretending you don’t, and keeping a straight face when you deny it.”

“I suppose you’re right.”

“Come on. Mevlevi’s fingerprints are all over the Adler Bank. My only fear is not knowing exactly what he’s trying to pull off. Why does Ali Mevlevi want to control the United Swiss Bank?”

“Why does he want to control the Adler Bank?” Sprecher countered.

“Banks. That’s where the money is.’ Willie Sutton said that. Back in the twenties, he was a pretty decent bank robber.”

Sprecher spread his arms and tilted his head toward Nick as if to say “Case closed.” “Tack on sixty years, change the color of the passport, and update the wardrobe. Voila: it’s still the same man. One more well-dressed hood.”

Nick wasn’t convinced. “So the Pasha is a bank robber? If that’s the case, this has to be the most sophisticated heist in history. Not to mention the most expensive!”

“Look at it this way, put up a billion francs in order to get back ten billion. Call me old-fashioned, but that’s a fair return on your investment.”

“Not possible, my friend. Not possible.” But as Nick peered through the window at the clothing stores that quilted the Bahnhofstrasse, boutiques selling cashmere sweaters at three thousand francs a shot and Italian leather handbags at twice that amount, he asked himself, “Why not?” Maybe Ali Mevlevi was a thief, a glorified holdup artist? Was it possible to plunder the resources of a bank from within its own walls? Could the Pasha empty the vaults of his own bank under official pretenses? And what if he didn’t give a damn for official pretenses?

Nick turned his mind to a more troubling area of inquiry. What would Mevlevi do with the money? He recalled Thorne’s rant about the arms and materiel Mevlevi had accumulated at his compound near Beirut. If Mevlevi has that much equipment now, imagine what he could purchase with funds diverted from the Adler Bank and USB.

Since the end of the cold war, arms dealers had been willing to sell their wares to any breathing soul with hard currency. Damn the politics! Mevlevi had only to pick up a telephone to have his choice of the deadliest weapons currently manufactured.

“Simply not possible,” Nick assured Peter, if only to allay his own fears. “The Pasha’s a pirate all right, but that might be going too far. Anyway, it doesn’t matter why he wants it. With what we’ve got in our possession, we can drop him cold.” He enumerated the evidence on the fingers of his right hand. “Proof of his transfers into and out of USB. Signature cards from when the account was first opened, including code words written in his own hand. Copies of the matrices that show to which banks he wires his funds. And now proof of his involvement with Konig and the Adler Bank.”

“And what about Thorne? Without him, all we have is a lot of paper and a crazy theory.”

“He’s solid,” said Nick, coaxing himself to believe his own words. “I got ahold of him this morning and he’s ready to work with us.” Nick didn’t bring up the personal leap of faith required to call Sterling Thorne and offer his services. After his dealings with Jack Keely, he had sworn never to work with another agent of the United States government again. But his current situation forbade the luxury of prejudice. Like it or not, Thorne was all he had.

“Fill me in then,” said Sprecher. “What have you worked out with him?”

For the next fifty minutes, Nick outlined the rudiments of his plan to Sprecher. He didn’t know what to make of his friend’s frequent guffaws and laments, but when he had finished, Sprecher extended his hand and said, “I’m in. We’ve got no better than a fifty-fifty chance, mind you, but you can count on me. First time in my life I feel like I’m doing something worthwhile. It’s a new sensation. Can’t decide if I like it or not.”

Nick paid the bill and both men walked outside. “You’ve got enough time to make your train?”

Sprecher checked his watch. “Loads of it. Eleven-thirty now. I’m on the 12:07 via Lucerne.”

“And you’ve brought your friend?”

Sprecher winked and patted a slight bulge beneath his arm. “Standard issue of every officer in the Swiss Army. I am a captain, don’t forget.”

Nick switched to another topic. “How much do you think it will take to convince the front office manager to give you that suite?”

“Top floor, lake view? Five hundred minimum.”

“Ouch!” Nick said. “I owe you.”

Peter buttoned his coat and tossed the scarf over his shoulder. “Only if I end up with a tag on my toe. Otherwise, consider it my membership fee in your world of responsible and civilized nations.”

 

 

Caspar Burki lived in a grim block of buildings. None was higher than four stories, and each was painted a different color along some invisible boundary. The first was yellow — or had been twenty years ago. The next a glum brown. Burki’s building had faded to a mottled dishwater gray. All of them were streaked with soot and caked with dirt washed from their mansard roofs.

Nick took up position in the doorway of a store selling antique furniture across the street from Burki’s building. He settled in for a long wait, scolding himself for not having arrived sooner. He had accompanied Peter Sprecher to the main railway station after lunch and while there, had made two telephone calls, one to Sylvia Schon, the other to Sterling Thorne. Sylvia confirmed that their dinner engagement was on as planned. He was to arrive no later than 6:30 — she had a roast in the oven and would take no responsibility for its condition should he arrive late. His conversation with Thorne was briefer. As instructed, he had identified himself as Terry. Thorne said only two words: “Green light” — which meant that Jester had checked in and that everything was on as planned.

Nick peered at the sad building. He didn’t know whether to ring the bell and wait for an answer or to hide in the shadows in the hope that Burki would come out and be somehow recognizable. Meanwhile Yogi Bauer’s words seeped into his mind. “
Don’t look for him. Has to stay near the source, doesn’t he
?”

A commotion in the vestibule of Burki’s apartment building caught Nick’s eye. He made out two men grappling each other inside the glass doorway. It was impossible to tell what was going on, so he took a step into the alley to get a better view. Just then, the two men stumbled from the building. The taller of the two, a thin man with gaunt cheeks and sunken eyes, supported the short man, a wan figure in a dark Sunday suit. Jesus Christ, Nick whispered, the short one was Yogi Bauer. He could hear him swearing and cursing as he stumbled out into the alleyway.

“Du kommst mit?
You’re coming with me, right?” Yogi asked over and over.

Nick retreated into the doorway of the antique shop and pretended to study a Louis XVI chaise. He watched out of the corner of his eye as the taller, gray-haired man, who he figured was Caspar Burki, led Bauer down the street. He bet he knew where they were going. Sure enough, they headed straight for the Keller Stubli. Nick followed at a safe distance, not wanting to confront Burki with Yogi Bauer present. But then a strange thing happened. When the two men reached the Keller Stubli, Burki refused to go inside. He stood there for a few minutes, hearing Bauer’s abusive epithets and vehement protestations until Bauer gave up and went inside alone.

Caspar Burki adjusted his overcoat, gathering it tightly around him, then set off at a rapid pace down the Niederdorf. Destination unknown.

 

CHAPTER 58

 

Caspar Burki had an appointment to keep. That much Nick knew for certain. The old man walked with his head bowed and his shoulders pressed forward as if fighting a rising wind. The rhythm of his feet assumed a perfect cadence, and Nick fell into his step, matching him stride for stride. He listened to the steady tap of his own feet on the wet cobblestones and remembered learning to march at Brown Field in Quantico, Virginia. He could practically hear the sergeant instructor’s strained voice yelling at him, even now.

What are you, Neumann? A walkie-talkie? Keep your mouth shut and your eyes straight ahead. That’s right, troop. Hands cupped to the crease of your trousers, heels to the ground! Left, left, left right left.

Nick maintained a cautious distance, imagining a taut fifty-foot rope strung between him and Burki. He followed the spindly man down the Niederdorfstrasse toward Central, and from there across the bridge toward the Bahnhofplatz. He was sure Burki was heading for the main station, but then Burki veered to the right toward the Swiss National Museum. His path skirted the Platzspitz, taking him north along the banks of the river Limmat. Nick had no idea where Burki was going.

The city took on an unsettled feeling. Nick passed an abandoned factory, windows broken and doors boarded up, and a deserted apartment building wrapped in colorful graffiti. He hadn’t known Zurich hid such run-down neighborhoods. Clusters of kids, mostly in their teens, cropped up on the sidewalk. Some were headed in the opposite direction, and they stared at Nick, with his short hair and clean clothing, with undisguised contempt. The sidewalk grew dirtier, littered with empty candy wrappers, crushed soda cans, and a million cigarette butts. Soon, he wasn’t able to walk without stepping in a pile of refuse.

“He has to be near the source,”
Yogi Bauer had said.

Nick slowed as he saw Caspar Burki cross a wooden footbridge that spanned the Limmat. A ragged assortment of lowlifes crowded the railing. Ill-shaven men wrapped in scarred leather coats, grubby women bundled in frayed sweaters. Burki hunched his shoulders, as if trying to make himself thinner, less obtrusive than he already was, and walked between them. Nick could hear the planks rattle under the old man’s tread, and in their staccato stamp he felt the fluttering of his own hollow stomach. He knew where the bridge led. Letten. The city’s public shooting gallery.
Caspar Burki’s source
.

Nick crossed the bridge, working hard not to appear as anxious as he felt. A stubby, bearded man stepped in his path. “Hey, Johnny Handsome,” the man said to Nick, “you sure you’re in the right place? We don’t give manicures around here.” He smiled, revealing a dingy set of teeth, then stepped closer. “Fifty francs. That’s as low as I’ll go. You won’t find any better. Not today. Not when there’s a drought.”

Nick jabbed two fingers into the man’s chest, ready to take him down. “I’m already taken care of. Thanks anyway.”

He retreated easily, lifting his arms in surrender. “When you come back, it’ll be seventy francs. Don’t say I didn’t warn you.”

Nick walked past him, concerned that he might lose sight of Caspar Burki. He asked himself what he was doing here. What could he expect to learn from a junkie? He inched by a teenage girl squatting on her haunches at the top of the far steps. She held a syringe in her hand and had just found a vein to slide the needle into. Drops of blood fell from her arm, spattering the cement. He descended the steps at the far side of the bridge and took his first look at the abandoned station.

It was a picture as foreign as the surface of the moon.

A restless tide of shabby men and women ambled back and forth across a wide cement platform. There were around a hundred of them, maybe more, and they were arranged into small encampments of five or six persons. Here and there, fires burned from rusted oil barrels. A swamplike haze hovered between platform and ceiling. Above his head, spray painted in cheap black Krylon, were the words “
Welcome to Babylon
.”

The place was squalor. It was death.

Nick saw that Burki had reached his destination — a circle of doddering addicts his own age at the far end of the station. A scrawny hen of a woman was preparing a dose of heroin for a man who didn’t look much different from Burki. Shorter maybe, but just as thin and with that same starved look to his eyes. The “nurse” rolled up the man’s sleeve and laid his bony arm across a slapdash wooden table. She tied a short length of rubber tubing around his arm, snapping at his veins to make them stand out more prominently. Satisfied, she popped the needle into his arm. She pulled back the syringe to allow his blood to mix with the opiate, then patiently pumped the drug into his arm. With maybe an eighth of the bloody payload remaining, she withdrew the syringe from the addict’s arm, balled her fist, then jabbed the needle into her own arm. A second later, she pressed the plunger, mixing the addict’s opiated blood with her own. Finished, she tossed the used needle into a white plastic bag with a Red Cross decal on it. The “nurse” raised her forearm to her bicep, as if she had just received her annual flu shot, said a few words to the addict, then leaned over and gave him a polite peck on each cheek. Decorum. The addict lurched away from the makeshift table, and Caspar Burki stepped forward to take his place.

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