The Fifth Avenue Series Boxed Set (25 page)

Celina laughed and stepped into the room.
 
As she crossed to her father’s desk, she became aware of herself.
 
She wondered how she looked.
 
She wondered why she cared.
 
“I owe you an apology,” she said, sitting in her father’s leather wingback.
 
“I meant to return for that dance, but something came up and I had to leave unexpectedly.”

“Don’t worry about it,” Jack said.
 
“I left not long after you, anyway.”

“You saw me leave?”

Jack nodded.
 
“I would have gone after you, but you seemed pretty upset.
 
Is everything all right?”

If he had seen her in that state, she could hardly lie.
 
“It wasn’t, but I’m fine now. Thank you for asking.”

At that moment, George entered the room.
 
Celina looked at him and felt relieved.
 
She didn’t want to discuss that evening with anyone.

“You’re here,” George said to Celina.
 
“Good.
 
Then we can get started.”
 
He looked at Jack.
 
“Have you told her the good news?”

“We didn’t get around to it.”

“Then we should now.
 
Jack accepted my offer, Celina.
 
He’ll be taking Eric’s place as our chief financial officer.”

A wave of feelings assailed her.
 
She felt a sense of loss—not the happiness she had been anticipating.
 
Eric was gone.
 
He really was gone.
 
It was as if those years with him now meant nothing.
 
But there was another feeling and she couldn’t deny that it was a sense of relief.

She managed a smile—and knew by the change in Jack’s expression that he could sense it wasn’t genuine.
 
She felt uncomfortable.
 
She wondered why she came.
 
She wondered why she still had feelings for Eric.
 
She should hate him for what he did to her and to Leana.
 
So, why did she miss him?

“That’s great,” she said to Jack.
 
“Congratulations.”

Jack said nothing.
 
He looked away from her and faced George, who was opening a file on WestTex.
 
Celina sensed this meeting was going to pass slowly, but business was business, so she sucked it up.

They discussed the takeover of WestTex, which shipped anything from oil out of the Persian Gulf to coffee beans out of Colombia.
 
Eighty-six percent of their business was strictly international and it was not uncommon for most of WestTex’s fleet to be in international waters at the same time.

As Jack thumbed through the file, he learned that while business at WestTex was good, it was being affected by the instability in the Middle East.
 
He also learned that George Redman was about to pay $10 billion for a company that, according to these figures, was worth half that.

He looked at George, who was seated across from him, and found himself at a loss for words.
 
Why would a man whose stock was at an all-time low pay twice what WestTex was worth when the company had just pulled its entire fleet from the Gulf and whose situation was worsening in the wake of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars?
 
No wonder the press was hounding him.
 
No wonder his stockholders were so damned nervous.
 
The man could lose everything if he took over WestTex.

And then it occurred to him.
 
George Redman was no fool.
 
He obviously knew something the press and his stockholders didn’t know, something that had the power of making him millions.
 
Jack couldn’t help a smile.

“So, what do you think?” George asked.
 
He was sitting in his chair, legs crossed, hands clasped behind his head.
 
The late afternoon sun cast a warm glow against one side of his face, leaving the other side in shadow.

“If you weren’t George Redman, I’d say you were a fool to even consider this takeover.”

“Mind explaining why?”

“Not at all.
 
With your stock at an embarrassing low, you’ve agreed to pay $10 billion for a company that’s worth half that.”

George shrugged.
 
“WestTex can support itself.”

“Not if the Middle East remains in the can.”

“WestTex isn’t just about the Middle East.”

“According to these papers, more than sixty percent of its business is done in the Middle East.”

“So, we turn things around.
 
Find other avenues.
 
Explore other ventures.”

Jack lifted the folder from his lap.
 
“Oil is where the money’s at.
 
And yet it says here that because of each war, WestTex and other shipping companies are pulling their tankers from the Gulf.
 
That’s a sixty percent drop in business for WestTex.
 
And with that kind of decline, there’s no way it can support the $10 billion you’re willing to pay for it, no matter what avenues or ventures you have in mind.
 
The money is in oil.
 
Period.”

George suppressed a smile.
 
“So, why do you think I’m going through with it?”

“I think you know something the public doesn’t,” Jack said.
 
“I think once this takeover is complete, you’re going to be the one laughing—not the press.
 
Am I right?”

“I hope so.”

“Mind filling me in?”

“Absolutely.
 
You’re an employee now.
 
What is said in this room stays in this room.”

“Of course.”

George left his chair and stepped to one of the large casement windows behind him. Acres upon acres of green lawns and rolling hills stretched out as far as he could see.

“You’re perfectly right,” he said to Jack.
 
“Under ordinary circumstances, this takeover would be the end of me and Redman International.
 
Not only can’t WestTex support itself at the price I’ve agreed to pay for it, but after spending nearly $1.5 billion on the new building, I would never be able to afford it.”
 
He smiled.
 
“But, luckily, that isn’t the case.”

“Why’s that?”

“Because of my deal with Iran,” George said.
 
“The deal no one knows about.”
 
He turned to Celina, who was sitting beside Jack.
 
“This is your area.
 
Why don’t you take it from here?

Celina began with the basics.
 
“Two weeks ago, my father and I met with a group of Iranian officials to see if we could work out a deal that would make us one of Iran’s chief exporters of oil.
 
For a lot of reasons, few are willing to go near them.”

“Except for you and a few others,” Jack said.
 
“But why?”

“We’re willing to take the risk because of two factors,” Celina said.
 
“First is the price we’ll be paying for the oil.
 
Iran has guaranteed us a price so low, the revenues we’ll earn from hauling and selling the oil should pay off WestTex in less than five years.
 
That’s over two billion dollars a year.
 
In a sense, we can’t afford not to go to Iran.”

The kind of money they were discussing was astronomical.
 
“What’s the other reason?” Jack asked.

“It was recently announced that the U.S. would do what they did during the Gulf War.
 
Our country plans to send the Navy into the Gulf to provide military escorts for dozens of American-flagged tankers.
 
For security reasons, the exact date wasn’t given.
 
It’s been kept top secret.
 
No one—not Iran nor Iraq, nor any other oil or shipping company—knows the date but us.”

“How did you find out?”

“I have contacts at the State and Defense Department,” George said.
 
“I called in a few favors and was given the date.”

“So, what you’re saying is that, with the Navy in the Gulf, the risks will be fewer and insurance prices will go down.”

“Exactly,” George said.
 
“Making the venture profitable.”

“If that date was made public, every oil and shipping corporation in the world would be scrambling to export oil out of the Gulf.”

Celina smiled.
 
“But instead, most are scrambling to get out of it.”

“It’s not all a gilded road,” George said.
 
“There are problems—major ones.
 
Just yesterday afternoon, RRK, the investment group we hired to help finance the deal, pulled out.
 
They felt the risks were too great to get involved, the deal with Iran too shaky because our agreement with them is verbal.”

“Verbal?”

“That’s right,” George said.
 
“Verbal.”

“I’m not sure what to think about that.”

“That’s because you don’t have the biggest set of balls in the room.
 
Earlier this afternoon, I met with Ted Frostman from Chase.
 
We talked over a game of skeet, I told them the pros and cons of taking over the company and he’s agreed to work with us.”

“That’s terrific,” Jack said.

“Don’t get excited just yet,” George said.
 
“We’ve yet to discuss fees and the terms of the deal—but Ted did assure me that he can get a commitment from Chase and, if for some reason that falls through, word’s out that Peter Cohen at Morgan Stanley is looking for an LBO—he might be interested.”

George looked at Jack.
 
“What do you think?”

Jack’s former boss was Peter Cohen, Morgan’s chairman and chief executive.
 
“I think Peter would be very interested,” he said. “Morgan is still trying to get back into the LBO business and I happen to know that Peter is under pressure to save their third-quarter earnings, which are expected to be down.
 
A one-shot injection of, say, $100 to $200 million might be the opportunity he’s been waiting for.”

“Good,” George said.
 
“Because we have to move fast.
 
If I wait much longer, Iran could learn of the Navy’s move—and if that happens, there’s no question they’ll withdraw their offer.”

He stepped away from the window and sat in his chair.
 
There was a sudden energy about George, a vitality that glimmered in his eyes and animated his features.
 
“My sources at the State and Defense departments say that the Navy will begin its move on July 21.
 
I’ve already spoken to my contacts at Lloyds, and they’ve agreed to cut their insurance rates in half when the Navy is stationed in the Gulf.”

“Where do I come into all this?” Jack asked.

“You mean besides your connections at Morgan Stanley, which might prove invaluable?
 
On the day WestTex becomes ours, you, Celina and Harold Baines will be signing the final papers in Iran.
 
It’s all just a formality, really—by then, the papers will have been drawn up and vetted.
  
But obviously, it’s an important formality.
 
If I take over WestTex without having secured this deal with Iran, I could lose everything I’ve ever worked for if they decide to back out.”

“Why don’t you just complete the deal with Iran first?”

George looked wistful.
 
“I wish I could, but Iran won’t allow it.
 
Only when WestTex is ours will they sign the final papers.
 
They refuse to commit themselves otherwise.”

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