Switchback (16 page)

Read Switchback Online

Authors: Matthew Klein

Tags: #USA

In August there were few students on campus, just a handful of rollerbladers, gliding lackadaisically down Palm Drive. Timothy drove past them, then cut across the campus to Sand Hill Road.

Sand Hill was as famous, in its way, as Park Avenue or Champs-Elysées, except instead of storefronts and cafes, it offered nondescript low-rises and fields of California oatgrass. It was the most expensive real-estate in the state, costing more per square foot than downtown San Francisco or Los Angeles, but was spectacularly nondescript: a two-lane street in a prairie formerly known for its excellent cattle grazing.

But the cattle were gone now. They had been replaced with two other commodities: cash and brains. For within those plain office boxes congregated the world's smartest people – computer scientists, biologists, genetic engineers – and, in the same buildings,
the highest concentration of venture capital anywhere on the earth. It was this combination that gave Sand Hill its frisson; Sand Hill was a street where a scientist could run into a financier at the hot-dog stand at noon, off-handedly mention the project he was working on, and be offered twenty-five million dollars to start a company before dinner.

Sand Hill Road cut through Timothy's world like the lifeline on a crone's hand. He had driven it hundreds of times, in his continual search for new money and new investors. When you are a successful venture capitalist, and each year your share of your partnership's profits, twenty or thirty million dollars, drops into your lap like a sack of potatoes, then you have a problem: what to do with the cash? Venture capitalists are the only people in the world who do not want to invest their wealth in venture capital: it means too many eggs in one basket – and a single industry downturn will ruin them.

So Timothy was a problem-solver. Osiris took the cash, fed it back into the financial markets, and made it grow by between fifteen and twenty percent a year – not exactly venture capital returns, but respectable enough, and certainly better than any bank or real estate investment could offer.

Today Timothy drove down Sand Hill Road searching not for other people's money, but for his own. There was that small, curious matter of the hundred and fifty thousand dollars that he had given to Katherine on the day before her death, money which was somehow, apparently with Katherine's permission, transformed into bits and bytes and then beamed through fiber optic cables and microwave towers, first into the Bahamas, and then into Panama, and then, according to Frank Arnheim, back to Menlo Park. Not exactly, Timothy thought, the typical way home remodeling gets done.

Timothy found the address he was looking for, turned left across two lanes of traffic and pulled into the parking lot at the 3600 complex. He got out of the car and locked the BMW with his keychain remote. Even at three o'clock the August sun was high overhead, baking the asphalt, making the air beside his hubcaps shimmer.

There were two buildings on opposite ends of the parking lot. Timothy followed a flagstone path past the first building, which said: ‘3700-3799.' He continued on through a courtyard into the shade of newly planted sycamore trees, and then past a bronze sculpture shaped like an automobile-sized egg. Ahead he saw the second office building, and a sign above the entry that said: ‘3600-3699.'

Timothy bounded up three shallow steps leading to the building. He pushed open the glass doors and found himself in an empty lobby, all cool air and marble. Across the lobby he saw a directory.

He scanned the directory, running his finger over the small plastic letters inserted into black corduroy. It took him a moment to find what he was looking for. There, between Aegis Capital and Angus Biotech, he saw: ‘Amber Corp. – Suite 301.'

Timothy studied the directory: all venture capital partnerships, law firms, and vaguely futuristic-sounding research companies. Another line of the directory caught his eye: ‘Ho, Dr. Clarence – Suite 301.'

Suite 301, Timothy thought, must be a very crowded place.

Timothy decided to pay Dr. Clarence Ho a visit. He walked across the lobby, his shoes echoing on the marble floor. At the far end he found a concrete staircase and started to climb. At the second floor, his bad knee began to ache. The change in temperature – the heat of the parking lot, then the sudden chill of the lobby – must have aggravated it, he decided.

On the third floor the stairs stopped at a carpeted hallway. Timothy wandered past Suite 304, and then 302. The hallway was lit with buzzing fluorescent bulbs, and had the familiar smell of a dental office – disinfectant and perfume.

He came to Suite 301. A small plaque on the door – easily removed and replaced, Timothy noted – said: ‘Amber Corp.' Timothy turned the knob and pushed open the door.

He entered what looked like a doctor's office: a small waiting room with padded chairs lined against the wall. A glass window separated the waiting room from a receptionist station. Behind the window, the reception area was dark and deserted. A sign in
front of the window said, ‘We prefer payment at the time services are rendered.'

In the corner of the waiting area, near the chairs, there was a low, white Formica table, the kind of table that doctors use to display magazines, to keep waiting patients occupied. But this table was empty, and so too was the waiting room. No magazines, Timothy thought, and no patients.

Timothy called out, ‘Hello?'

No answer. Timothy heard only a soft buzzing sound coming from somewhere behind the reception area. ‘Hello?' Timothy called again.

A door leading to the back room swung open. A Chinese man with a slight, pipe-cleaner body leaned his torso into the waiting room. He wore a white lab coat, pens in his chest pocket, and small wire-frame glasses. ‘Yes?' he said. ‘May I help you?'

Timothy took a step toward him. ‘Dr. Ho? Dr. Clarence Ho?'

The Chinese man was noncommittal. He kept the door pulled tightly beside his body, as if ready to pull back inside and lock Timothy out. ‘Yes?'

‘I'm here to talk to you about Katherine Van Bender. Do you know her?'

But even before he could finish asking the question, Dr. Ho pushed open the door, waved his hand, and beckoned Timothy inside. It was clear that he did.

Dr. Ho led Timothy down a florescent-bathed corridor, past rooms marked simply Lab #1 and Lab #2. He stopped at an open doorway, reached around the wall, and flipped on the lights.

He showed Timothy into a small office. Not much larger than a closet, it was crowded with bookshelves on three walls, and piles of paper on the floor. There was barely enough room for a desk, which itself was crammed high with stacks of manila folders. Ho stepped over a pile of folders on the floor and squeezed behind his desk. He gestured for Timothy to take one of the two seats across from him.

‘Excuse the mess,' Ho said.

Timothy sat down. The doctor, like many Chinese men, was
of indeterminate age. His skin was smooth, without wrinkles, but his hair was streaked with gray. His tiny spectacles were too tight, buried deep into the bridge of his nose, so the wire frame became almost a part of his brow.

‘Well, well,' Ho said. He looked at Timothy wearily. ‘You must be Mr. Van Bender.'

‘I am.'

‘I've been expecting you.' With a sudden burst of energy he leaned across his desk and began flipping through a pile of manila folders, searching for one in particular, like a card sharp working his way down a deck to find his assistant's chosen card. As he flipped, he said: ‘I figured you'd be paying me a visit. I'm sorry about your wife.'

‘How exactly did you know my wife?'

Ho didn't answer. He kept working his way through the pile, picking up each folder, looking at its label, then tossing it aside. ‘Let's see. It should be here …' He flipped another folder from the pile. ‘Ah, here. Katherine Van Bender.' Then, holding the folder up for Timothy to see: ‘Your wife.'

He opened the folder, riffled the papers inside. From Timothy's view it seemed that Ho was skimming medical charts and hand-scribbled notes. ‘I am your wife's doctor,' Ho said, finally answering Timothy's earlier question. ‘Did your wife tell you about her illness?'

Timothy shook his head.

‘No,' Ho said, ‘I thought not. She had mentioned to me that she wanted to keep it from you. Often my patients make that decision. I neither encourage nor discourage it.'

‘Exactly what kind of doctor are you, Dr. Ho?'

Ho looked up from the folder, a faint smile playing on the corners of his mouth. He looked down again at the medical chart in front of him and answered a different question. ‘Your wife suffered from a very rare and very deadly form of ovarian cancer. She came to me seeking an experimental treatment that I – and my company – have pioneered.'

Timothy looked around the room, the whirlwind of papers and sagging bookshelves. It seemed hard to believe that a man in this
three-by-five cubicle, with papers stacked haphazardly and shin-high, was pioneering anything, let alone a treatment for ovarian cancer. But then Timothy's eye landed on a row of diplomas hanging on the wall behind Ho, and the large calligraphy told him something different: that Dr. Clarence Ho had, first, graduated in 1982 from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a B.S. degree in biochemistry, and then received an M.D. from Stanford University in 1985, and then further completed a Fellowship in neurology from Stanford in 1992. Dr. Ho was, apparently, a well-educated man.

Ho saw Timothy staring at the diplomas. ‘You see?' Ho said. ‘Not acupuncture or herbal medicine. Was that your fear?'

‘Did my wife pay you one hundred and fifty thousand dollars?'

‘She did.'

‘For what, exactly?'

Ho closed Katherine's folder. He clasped his hands together on top of his desk, and leaned back in his chair. ‘I'm afraid that at the present time I'm not at liberty to discuss your wife's course of treatment. This is a very gray legal area, Mr. Van Bender, since you are her husband. I can appreciate that it must be painful for you. But I hope you understand my position.'

Timothy looked at Ho. ‘I'm not sure I understand what your position is,' he said. ‘Did you know my wife was going to kill herself?'

‘Again, Mr. Van Bender, at the present time I cannot discuss my treatment of your wife.'

‘I asked about her suicide, not her treatment.'

Ho was silent.

‘Exactly what kind of treatment did you perform on my wife, Dr. Ho?'

Dr. Ho stood up and gestured at the door to his office. It was clear the interview was over. ‘I'm afraid I'm out of time. I'm certain that I must have other patients to see.'

Timothy thought about the pristine, empty waiting room – no magazines, no receptionist, no patients – and wondered exactly where those mysterious patients were that Dr. Ho was in a rush
to see, and exactly what Dr. Ho would do to them, if they ever turned up.

When Timothy returned to his office, Tricia was packing her purse, getting ready to leave for the day. Timothy looked at his watch and was surprised to see that it was already five o'clock.

‘Jay's gone,' Tricia said, peering into her purse. ‘He went to meet some friends at Zibbibos.'

‘When the cat's away …' Timothy started, but immediately thought better of it. She might take that the wrong way.

‘I'm leaving too. Is that okay?' She finished rearranging her purse, then tossed it over her shoulder.

‘Of course.'

She stood up, circled her desk, and walked toward the office door. She stopped near Timothy and stared at him. Timothy wondered if she was looking at the circles under his eyes, something he had been noticing with increasing interest himself. She asked, ‘How do you feel?'

‘Okay.'

She considered what she was going to say next. She started speaking, just a syllable, and stopped.

‘What?' Timothy asked.

‘I was going to invite you out. As a friend. You know, for drinks, maybe to the BBC, just the two of us. Casual. No pressure.'

‘Last time we did that, it didn't really work out.'

She shrugged. ‘That was last time. How about later this week?'

‘Maybe,' Timothy said.

She slid past him. Timothy held the glass doors open for her, and she exited to the elevator bank. He looked at her body as she went. Dumb as a wall, he thought, but what a body.

In the hall, she pressed the elevator call button and turned to him. ‘You know, if you won't have a drink with me, I might have to ask you for a raise.'

‘You can ask, but you're not going to like the answer.'

Behind her, the elevator chimed. The doors opened. She looked over her shoulder, then backed into the car. She flipped her purse
over her shoulder. She said, ‘But I always get what I want,' and then the elevator doors closed.

It wasn't clear if she was talking about a raise, or about Timothy, but either way, he thought: Yes, I believe you do.

20

The next morning, things began to fall apart.

First came the phone call from Pinky's lawyer in New York. He reached Tricia first. When she refused to put the lawyer through to Timothy, he played an old trick: Try to Make the Secretary Cry. He launched a diatribe – an electric, shocking, verbal torrent – alternately berating Tricia, muttering ominous legal threats, and scoffing at Timothy's hiding behind a receptionist. The speech was, Timothy knew, when Tricia came to him cowering, a rehearsed piece – the attorney's equivalent of a Hamlet soliloquy. But it accomplished exactly what it was designed to: it made Timothy pick up the phone.

The Kid was in Timothy's office when Tricia came to him, helpless. Timothy nodded and waved her out. She shut the door, then he picked up the speakerphone. ‘This is Timothy Van Bender.'

‘Timothy Van Bender,' the voice shot back, ‘I represent Pinky Dewer. You must send my client his money as he requested. There will be consequences if you refuse.'

Other books

Red Ridge Pack 1 Pack of Lies by Sara Dailey, Staci Weber
The Lake of Souls by Darren Shan
Roman by Heather Grothaus
Good Night, Mr. Holmes by Carole Nelson Douglas
Vampire World by Douglas, Rich
The Broken Shore by Peter Temple