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)
Nick shuddered, seeing how simple the plan was. “Where was the money coming from?”
“I’ve only seen two businesses that generate that kind of cash: casino gambling and drugs. I’ve never heard of Allen Soufi in Las Vegas, have you?”
Nick smiled grimly. “So the idea is to piggyback the laundering operation on top of the legitimate business.”
“Bravo,” said Burki. “Once the million dollars is in the bank, USB pays off the letter of credit to the company in Argentina — which Soufi, naturally, controls. And the other five hundred grand is banked as Goldluxe’s profit. Soufi wired as much as he wanted to his accounts in London and Switzerland twice a week.”
“Twice a week?”
asked Nick.
“He was a punctual bastard, I’ll give him that much, your
Allen Soufi
.”
“And my father?”
“Alex blew the whistle. He asked too many questions. When he figured out what they were doing, he threatened to close the account. Two months after my dinner with Schweitzer, your father was dead.” Burki pointed a finger at Nick. “Don’t ever tell a man like Soufi, a professional running a very serious operation all over the world, to fuck off.”
“His name wasn’t really Allen Soufi, was it?” Nick asked, knowing the answer, but wanting to hear it, needing to have another human voice tell him he wasn’t crazy.
“What do you care?” asked Burki, pushing himself shakily to his feet. “That’s it, kid. Now get the fuck out of here and let me get on with my business.”
Nick put a hand on his shoulder and brought him back down to the ground. “I mean you said he was
my
Allen Soufi. You said I could call him that if I wanted to. What was his real name?”
“Cost you another hundred francs. A man’s gotta live.”
Or die.
Nick pulled out his wallet and gave Burki his money. “Give me his name.”
Burki crumpled it up into his left hand. “No one you’ve ever heard of. A Turkish thug. Mevlevi was his name. Ali Mevlevi.”
Beneath her cosmopolitan fringe, Zurich kept hidden a mantle of brooding solitude and introspection that was, in fact, her true self. A devotion to commerce that bordered on pious, an attention to community that ran to the intrusive, a worship of self that one could only call vain: all these conspired during the week to mask her spinster’s heart. But on a midwinter Sunday, when those with families retreated to the familiar confines of stolid churches and cozy kitchens, and those without cosseted themselves in a comfortable nook of their comfortable apartment, her streets were left bare and her buildings stripped of their pretentious facades. With a soft gray sky as witness, Zurich let down her veil of pomp and prosperity, and shed a single tear. And Nick, walking through the silent streets, glimpsed her lonely nature and smiled inwardly, for he knew it was his own.
He had come to Switzerland to uncover the circumstances surrounding his father’s death. He had forsaken his every moral precept to learn what his father had done to unknowingly precipitate his own murder. Yet now, having put flesh on a framework of conspiracy and deceit, he felt none of the emotions that should crown so difficult a journey. His neck didn’t bristle with rage at the crimes of which Wolfgang Kaiser was guilty. His back didn’t stand straighter for having put Mevlevi’s face to Allen Soufi’s name. And worse, his heart had unleashed no secret reservoir of filial pride as the nobility — or was it merely obstinacy? — of his father’s resistance came to light. In all, he felt neither triumph nor relief, just a cold determination to put an end to this game, once and for all.
Nothing meant a goddamm thing if he didn’t stop Ali Mevlevi.
Nick stood at the center of Quaibrucke. A crust of ice extended unbroken over the Lake of Zurich. The paper said it was the first solid freeze since 1962. A chill breeze grazed his cheeks and took with it his private melancholy. He turned his thoughts away from himself and concentrated on the Pasha, and how after tomorrow Ali Mevlevi would no longer be a force in this world. Nick felt a warm glow in the core of his stomach at the prospect of cutting short his reign of terror, and he knew it was his striving self coming back to the fore. He banished his doubt and his sorrow to a faraway place, wishing he could destroy them forever, but knowing at the same time that they were a part of him, no matter how strong he willed himself to be, and that he had to live with them as best he could.
Nick knew then that the world had changed for him. He wasn’t fighting for his father anymore. Alex Neumann was dead. Nothing he could do would bring him back. Nick was fighting for himself. For his life.
Soon, he was thinking only about the Pasha. About the pearly smile and the dismissive laugh. About the serpent’s eyes and the confident swagger.
He wanted to kill the man.
Early that evening, Nick climbed the familiar path to Sylvia Schon’s home. The road was shorn of ice, and he made good time up the hill. Too good, in fact, for soon he found himself shortening his steps, trying to delay his arrival at her doorstep. Since yesterday afternoon, he had been plagued by a festering doubt concerning Sylvia’s true nature. Why had she helped him locate his father’s files? Was it because of her affection for him? Had she found deep inside her a need to see justice done, even if it was for a perfect stranger who had died almost two decades ago? Or had she been the Chairman’s spy? Keeping tabs on Nick’s every move inside the Emperor’s Lair? Helping Kaiser for reasons he knew all too well?
He didn’t have the answers to any of his questions, and he dreaded finding out. To ask was to admit suspicion, and if he was wrong he would destroy the trust that acted as the foundation of their relationship. “
Trust
,” he heard Eberhard Senn, the Count Languenjoux saying. “
It’s the only thing left in this world
.”
Nick kept returning to the voice he had heard on Sylvia’s answering machine Friday night. The gruff, demanding voice that he was sure belonged to Wolfgang Kaiser. He would have to ask Sylvia straight out if she had told Kaiser about Schweitzer. Yet, he already knew that her words alone could not convince him. He had to hear the tape.
Nick was greeted at the door to her apartment with a kiss on the cheek and a grand smile. For the first time, part of him wondered how much of her welcome was for real.
“How was your father?” he asked, stepping inside the warm hallway.
“Lovely,” Sylvia answered. “Curious about who I’m spending my time with. He was interested to hear about my new beau.”
“You have a new beau? What’s his name?”
Sylvia wrapped her arms around him and stood on her tiptoes so that her eyes almost matched his. “I can’t remember offhand. He’s a cocky American. Some might say too much for his own good.”
“Sounds like a bum. Better dump him.”
“Maybe. I haven’t decided yet if he’s the right man for me.”
Nick chuckled as expected of him. It was difficult keeping up an easy going front. His mind kept returning to Kaiser’s office, to the moment when the Chairman had flogged his colleague of thirty years with the barbed accusations of being a spy for the Adler Bank. He asked himself for the hundredth time how Kaiser could have known about Schweitzer’s treachery. For the hundredth time, he came up with the same answer, and he hated himself for it.
“Take off your jacket,” said Sylvia, leading him by the hand into the living room. “Stay awhile.”
Nick unfastened the belt of his jacket and slipped it from his shoulders. He tried to keep from looking at her, wanting to guard a distance between them, but she had never looked more beautiful. She wore a black cashmere turtleneck, and her wheat-colored hair was pulled back into a ponytail. Her cheeks were flushed red. She looked radiant.
Sylvia took the jacket from him and put a hand to his cheek. “What’s the matter? Is something wrong?”
Nick lowered her hand from his cheek and stared into her eyes. He had rehearsed the lines a hundred times, but suddenly his mouth was empty of words. This was more difficult than he’d expected. “Yesterday afternoon I was with the Chairman. There was a group of us: Ott, Maeder, Rita Sutter. There was a crisis atmosphere around the place — every problem magnified to three times its real size, everyone at each other’s throats. Armin Schweitzer was brought in and questioned about the tips the Adler Bank had received. You know, the phony information about which of our shareholders were still undecided.”
Sylvia nodded.
“Kaiser accused him of being the culprit, of secretly providing Klaus Konig with that information. He fired him. Practically kicked Schweitzer out of the office himself.”
“Kaiser fired Armin Schweitzer?”
“On the spot.”
Sylvia appeared stunned. “The creep deserved it. You told me so yourself. You were convinced he was stealing papers from your office.”
“Sylvia, no one but you, me, and Peter Sprecher knew that the Adler Bank had a spy inside of USB. What we felt about Schweitzer, that he was the one responsible, that was only a suspicion, a guess.”
“So? If Kaiser fired him, obviously we guessed right.”
Nick shook his head in frustration. She wasn’t making this any easier. “Did you tell Kaiser that it was Schweitzer who was passing shareholder information to Klaus Konig?”
Sylvia laughed, as if the suggestion were absurd. “I could never phone Herr Kaiser directly. I barely know the man.”
“It’s okay if you told him. I can understand why you’d feel motivated to protect the bank. All of us want to stop Konig.”
“I told you. No, I did not.”
“Come on, Sylvia. How else could the Chairman have found out?”
“I believe you’re accusing me, Mr. Neumann.” Her cheeks grew redder, though now with anger. ““How else?’ you ask. How else do you think? Schweitzer is guilty. Kaiser discovered it himself. Caught him red-handed. I don’t know. Do you think Konig’s the only one with spies? The Chairman doesn’t need you to protect him. He doesn’t need me. He’s run that bank for as long as any of us can remember.” Sylvia brushed by him. “And I sure as hell don’t have to explain myself to you.”
Nick followed her into the living room. He was certain she was lying. Sylvia and her devotion to the bank. Sylvia and her employee retention rate. She’d used the assumption of Schweitzer’s guilt as a fulcrum with which to lever her career up a notch. Why did she have to lie about it?
“What about your answering machine?” he asked.
“What about it?” she shot back.
“On Friday night, when we were checking your messages, I heard Wolfgang Kaiser’s voice. You know I heard it. I saw you. You were scared that I might have figured out who it was. Tell me the truth.”
Sylvia recoiled from him. “The truth? Is that what this is all about?” She ran to the answering machine and rewound the tape, stopping every few seconds to listen to the voice speaking. She found the section she was looking for and pressed play. “You want the truth? I wasn’t scared. I was embarrassed.”
Peter Sprecher’s voice rose from the machine. “Call me at the Adler Bank as soon as possible. We’re very interested in meeting with you. Thank you.” A pause. A beep. Then the next message. A rough voice spoke from the recorder. “Sylvia, are you there? Pick up, please. All right, then, just listen.”
The voice was unsteady and, Nick suspected, drunk.
“I want you at home this weekend. You know what we like to eat on Saturdays. It was always the boys’ favorite. On the table by seven, please. You’re a good girl, Sylvia, but I’m afraid your mother would have been disappointed — you so far away, leaving your father to grow old by himself. Well, anyway, I’ll manage. Be sure to tell your brothers. Get them here on time. Seven o’clock or we’ll start without them.”
Nick walked to the machine and turned it off. It was not Wolfgang Kaiser’s voice.
Sylvia dropped into a chair, her head slumped to her chest. “My brothers haven’t come to the house in three years. It’s just my father and me. Last night, he spent five minutes berating me for having forgotten to tell them. I just nod and say I’m sorry. So are you satisfied? Happy now that you know all about my daddy’s love of beer? How I’ve abandoned him to grow old alone?”
Nick walked to the dining room table and sat beside her. He felt utterly distraught. His carefully constructed case lay in shambles, a house of cards toppled by a single breath. How could he have been so stupid? How could he have doubted her for a minute? He had distrusted Sylvia when it really counted, insulting her instead of showing his faith in her. Look at her actions. She’s been helping you every step of the way. Why can’t you just accept that she likes you? That she wants to give you a hand? Why can’t you learn that it’s okay to rely on somebody else?
“I’m sorry,” he said. “I didn’t mean to embarrass you.”
Sylvia wrapped her arms around herself like a distressed schoolgirl. “Why didn’t you believe me when I told you the first time? I wouldn’t lie to you.”
Nick placed his hands on her shoulders. “I’m sorry. I can’t really explain why . . .”
“Don’t touch me,” she cried. “I feel like a fool. I didn’t tell Wolfgang Kaiser about Armin Schweitzer. If you don’t like that answer, get the hell out of here.”
Nick tried again to gently cup her shoulders. This time she allowed herself to be touched and then drawn to his chest. “I believe you,” he said quietly. “But I had to ask. I had to know.”
Sylvia buried her head in Nick’s chest. “I took it for granted he would be caught. I always expected it to happen. That doesn’t mean I opened my mouth like an indiscreet teenager, blabbing to everyone who might have an interest in what Peter Sprecher had discovered.” She laid her head back so that she could see his eyes. “I would never betray your confidence.”
Nick held her close to him for a while longer. He smelled the clean scent of her hair and delighted in the drape of her cashmere sweater. “These last weeks have been tough. It’s as if I’ve been under water, swimming with a straitjacket. If I can make it through tomorrow, maybe we’ll come out of this all right.”
“Is it about your father? You didn’t tell me if you found Caspar Burki.”