A sound came from Waldo, unrecognizable as a word. For several moments he stood rocklike and unmoving, and then, almost appearing unaware of what was happening, he let himself be turned at his partner’s urging and led from the room.
When he was pouring at the bar, Franks realized just how much he was shaking. But it hadn’t been fear, he decided, pleased. In any physical confrontation he knew full well that Waldo would have beaten him to a pulp, but even when it seemed the man might lash out he hadn’t felt frightened. Another awareness came, counteracting Franks’ satisfaction. Waldo was wrong and certainly he’d appeared off-balanced, but the FBI man had been convinced of his guilt. How many others, when everything became public, would have a no-smoke-without-fire reaction? He’d been wrong trying to minimize the embarrassment in his meetings with the schoolteachers that afternoon. Franks flushed, hot with a helpless impotence to do anything to make it different. Maybe he deserved to suffer for his stupidity, but he didn’t think he deserved to suffer quite this much.
The knock at the door came after thirty minutes and this time there was no barging intrusion. Franks took his time answering. It was Schultz, not Waldo.
“Can I come in?” asked the American politely.
“My argument isn’t with you,” said Franks.
“Please,” said Schultz.
Franks hesitated and then moved aside. Schultz entered and then turned back, looking at Franks. Schultz said, “Harry’s in a hell of a state. Really bad. I know you wanted it from him but I want to say sorry, instead. He was way out of bounds. He knows it, which makes it worse.”
Franks walked back into the room, and said, “Would you like a drink?”
“Yes,” smiled Schultz. “Yes, I would. Scotch would be fine.”
Franks poured the drink, made another for himself, and said, “What the hell was it all about?”
“It’s a personal thing,” said Schultz. “I know it shouldn’t be—that it never should have happened—but it has. Some damned fool at Washington headquarters thought he had a good idea and assigned Harry to the case, which was a mistake. But Washington doesn’t admit its mistakes; although to be fair, there’s no way they could know, not unless you start making the sort of waves you set up today with that complaint direct to the district attorney.”
“You’re not being very clear,” said Franks.
“This isn’t the first time Harry’s gone after Pascara and Flamini,” explained Schultz. “He used to work out of the Chicago office. Made a case against them about five years back and didn’t get it right. Hurried, I think, because he was up for promotion and saw it as the way to jump a couple of grades. Except that it didn’t work out that way. The lawyers blew so many holes in the case it was embarrassing; grand jury threw it out and Harry was the asshole of the year. Promised himself to get even. Kept bothering Washington, to try again. Seems to have convinced them he’s some sort of expert on the Flamini and Pascara families. Washington’s mistake was in letting him have the second try, because it’s become an obsession he can’t see around. He was sure he’d made everything watertight this time, not just against those two but against Dukes and you. It was Ronan’s idea to offer the deal: make you a witness. Harry argued against it like hell. Ronan said without you they’d probably get off again, which would mean Harry being wrong once more. So he got overruled. Then he got overruled again when Ronan agreed to your coming here. Headquarters has started asking questions about all the fighting between us and the D.A.’s office, and there’ll be more questions, because you went direct to Ronan, through your lawyer, today.” Schultz gulped at his drink, finishing it. “That’s how it is,” he said. “I know that doesn’t excuse him for what happened in here. But that’s how it is.”
Schultz accepted a second drink and this time Franks stayed with the one he had. “Let me ask you something,” he said.
“What?”
“You worked with him all the time on this?”
“Yes,” said Schultz.
“So do you think I’m guilty?” demanded Franks urgently.
“Does what we’re talking about now form any part of a conversation you might later have with your lawyer? And he with the district attorney?”
“Of course not!” said Franks.
“If it did, I’d deny it.”
“I’ve told you no,” said Franks.
“Like Harry, I thought you were as guilty as hell. I couldn’t understand why … why you had to get involved, I mean. But then, these guys can put the black on someone for a lot of things, so maybe there was pressure. That’s what I thought, all the way through the investigation. I guess I still thought it after that first meeting at the Plaza, although maybe I did have some doubts; no, not doubts. Doubts is too strong. Maybe I felt a vague uncertainty. That file you produced was good; dissolving the companies seemed like panic, though.”
Rosenberg’s caution about the companies’ dissolvement, remembered Franks. He said, “You’re going up and down, like a seesaw. Do you or do you not—personally—consider that I’m guilty!”
“Not anymore,” said the FBI man. “Having been with you all the time, seen how you behave, not anymore.”
“Not until now!” said Franks, anguished.
“You ever been in an American court, Mr. Franks?”
Franks shook his head. “No.”
“I know all about justice,” said Schultz. “About men being innocent until proven otherwise. I know about courts; how they’re stage-managed and how plea bargaining is done; how deals are made, lesser sentences for lesser charges. If I’d sat on a jury and heard a case made out against you—the sort of case that is made out in court, with a lot of innuendo and a lot of things unsaid that should have been said—then I think I’d have found it difficult to think you were innocent.”
Whatever the outcome, he was going to be stigmatized for the rest of his life, Franks thought in stomach-emptying awareness; branded like a medieval criminal, with an identifiable mark on his forehead so that everyone would know who he was and what he had done. Except that he hadn’t done anything. He’d said that so many times to himself—as well as to every other accuser—that it was beginning to sound hollow, even to himself. He tried to remember some schoolboy quotation—he thought it was Shakespeare—that said something about somebody protesting too much and decided it was apposite. And it was Shakespeare. Hamlet. The wrong sex but the right message. The lady doth protest too much, methinks. Franks was surprised it had taken him so long to remember; it had been one of the challenges between himself and Nicky, when Enrico was insisting that they study classics. Franks had lost track of the conversation he was having. Trying to recover, he said, “Where does that leave me?”
“In the public mind, some guy who was pretty lucky to get away with it,” said Schultz, honestly.
“I’m not going to stand any more shit from Waldo,” said Franks. “His problems are his problems; I’ve got enough of my own. This time, okay. But not anymore.”
“Sure,” agreed Schultz. The FBI man rotated his glass in his hand and said, “You got any idea about bringing your kids back at some time, to those schools?”
“Anything wrong with keeping my options open?”
“It’s not the way, Mr. Franks. You’re either in the protection program or you’re not. It’s not something you pick up and put down. It’s new names, new lives, new everything. For good.”
“No one in America knows what schools the kids go to,” insisted Franks. “Where would the problem be if they came back under new names?” He hadn’t discussed new names with either school head. It would be impossible trying to make it work like that. His way was the way, Franks was convinced.
“You’re in the big leagues,” warned Schultz. “These guys have facilities every bit as good as we do; sometimes better because they can afford better. Don’t underestimate them. You’ve been suckered once; be careful about it happening again.”
The American was offering a genuine warning, Franks knew. Perhaps
he should acknowledge it with further thought than he’d already given. Thinking back to his conversation with Tomkiss, on the car ride into New York, Franks said, “You ever been involved in this before? The protection program?”
“Once,” said Schultz.
“What happened?”
Schultz looked down into his glass. “We set it all up,” he said. “New ID, new Social Security number, bank account, house in another part of the country. Everything. It was against three capos in New Jersey. Got our indictments from the grand jury and started planning the celebration. They got to him before the trial. We still don’t know how. One day we had him nicely boxed and protected and the next day we didn’t; he slipped us visiting his lawyer’s office. Got out through a bathroom window. Never saw him again. No one has.” Schultz snapped his fingers. “Just like that. That’s how the case collapsed, too.”
“You mean he was killed?”
Schultz put his empty glass on a side table and declined the gestured offer for more. “I don’t know,” said Schultz. “No one knows. Some people think he’s part of a support in some overhead traffic system. Others that he’s doing exactly what we offered him, living under a different identity on mob money. Doesn’t really matter. We lost him and we lost the case.” Schultz smiled sadly. “It’s that sort of story that throws Harry.”
“Don’t you realize what running would mean?” demanded Franks. “Doesn’t Waldo? It would mean abandoning my wife and children!”
“Guy I’m talking about had been married for fifteen years and had three nice kids. Great family man. Kissed them good-bye that morning and never came back. Happens a lot.”
“It’s not going to happen with me.”
“Glad to hear it, Mr. Franks. We’ve got a lot riding on this.”
“Make sure Waldo understands it, too.”
“I’ll try,” promised the American.
The following day, Schultz appeared to have done so. There was an initial embarrassment between Franks and Waldo, but Franks discerned a definite change in attitude. There wasn’t the streetwise antagonism from the other man, and he actually appeared more relaxed. They caught the early flight to Zurich, wanting to complete the visit and return in one day. There had clearly been liaison with the Swiss authorities, and officials from the American embassy in Bern were waiting at Zurich.
Francois Dulac, the Swiss lawyer, was a white-haired, smooth-faced, unsmiling man who seemed offended by the crowd surrounding Franks, particularly the escorting police car. He closed the door positively against Waldo and Schultz, and said complainingly, “This isn’t the normal way that I am accustomed to do business.”
“It’s not the way that I am accustomed to doing it, either,” assured Franks.
“You have some identification, from Mr. Kenham?”
Franks produced the documentation that the company secretary had provided the previous afternoon. Dulac fitted heavy bifocals into position and read steadily. Then he said, “You have a passport?”
Franks offered it, and the man compared the photograph in it to the man sitting opposite. Franks sat unmoving, as if he were actually posing for a photograph, feeling vaguely stupid.
Dulac returned the passport and said, “It’s my understanding you want an omnibus account for a bank holding. And for me to establish from here, but in Liechtenstein, an actiengesellschaft.”
“Is that possible?” said Franks.
“Of course,” said Dulac briskly. “You want me the director named in the companies?”
“Yes,” said Franks.
“There is, of course, a fee.”
“I understand. Also I want my attachment to the companies, through you, to be in a name other than my own.” The moment of commitment to a new identity, thought Franks. He wondered how long it had taken his father to decide; the transportation might have been different—like the circumstances that made the change necessary—but they’d both wandered Europe, running from unseen pursuers.
“That is no problem either,” said Dulac. “What do you want it to be?”
The idea had come to him the previous night, after Schultz had left the suite and he’d permitted himself another drink. Franks knew it was sentimental, but the given name had belonged to his father. “Isaacs,” he said. “David Isaacs.”
“I’ll need a sample signature today in that name. And a photograph of yourself to accompany it; that needn’t be provided today. I’d accept it from Mr. Kenham.”
Franks was suddenly aware of the provision he always made to permit Tina access to any account. He said, “My wife must also have drawing facilities.”
“I’ll also need sample signatures and photographs,” said Dulac. “In the name of Isaacs?”
If he were going to be sentimental, he might as well be completely so and involve his unknown mother, as well. “Rebecca Isaacs,” he said. “I’ll see they come to you from my American attorney. His name is Rosenberg.” Franks paused. Why involve Kenham anymore? He added, “My photograph will come from Mr. Rosenberg, too.”
“As you wish,” said the Swiss lawyer.
“Something else,” continued Franks. “You are already familiar with Mr. Kenham, in London. I want today to draw up a document—a sort of will, I suppose—giving Mr. Kenham and the named members of the boards of my English companies disposal access to the actiengesellschaft in the event of my death. But only in the event of my death.”
“The death of whom?” said the lawyer. “Edmund Franks or David Isaacs?”
Franks wondered if anything ever surprised or shocked this imperturbable man. “Either,” he said. “Provable upon production of photographs and a notarized death certificate.” Would there have been any reaction from Dulac at a photograph of the blasted-apart Nicky Scargo?
“Some of the documentation has already been prepared,” said Dulac. “The access document can be prepared while we go through what is already available.”
The man gave brief instructions in German through an intercom and then moved with Franks to another part of the office, where there was a settee and a low table in front of it. They sat side by side while Dulac took him through all the clauses and conditions of the hidden account and companies. Franks initialed each page and signed a total of three. He provided the sample signature and took the forms necessary for Tina, and by the time they finished, the papers giving the London boards access were ready, as Dulac had promised. They remained on the couch and went painstakingly through the newest documents. Again each page had to be initialed and finally signed. Again, there were three copies.
“I will deal with you direct?” queried Dulac.
Franks shook his head. “Through Mr. Rosenberg.”
“There are laws in this country to which I have to comply,” said Dulac. “Are you the subject of criminal proceedings?”
“I am involved in criminal proceedings,” said Franks. “I am not a defendant, nor am I likely to be accused of any crime.”
“Mr. Rosenberg will provide an affidavit attesting to that?”
“If you feel it necessary.”
“I think it would keep and maintain things in correct order,” said the lawyer. He looked through the window, from which the escorting police car was still visible. “It is not usual for clients to come with the police,” he said.
“The affidavit will come from Mr. Rosenberg with everything else that you’ve asked for,” promised Franks.
They were back in London—Franks still unable to adjust to what Waldo and Schultz felt necessary protection—by early evening. He called and arranged the final directors’ meeting for the following day. Just that, and he could return to America, Franks realized. He’d looked forward to the trip, to escaping the Scarsdale imprisonment, but it hadn’t felt like an escape at all. At least the continued relaxation with Waldo had remained throughout the day. Deciding to eat in his suite—he didn’t feel like going out anyway—he invited the two FBI men to join him. Schultz was the one who accepted for both of them. There was a slight uneasin
ess at the transition from a strictly business to partially social situation, but Schultz, the chosen mediator, worked hard to relax the group. He told stories on himself for mistakes in investigations—but, considerately, nothing of the sort in which Franks was involved—and then Waldo emerged to do the same, showing the same consideration. Waldo showed pictures of his wife and family—two boys the same ages as David and Gabby—and said he’d promised his wife a going-home present of a tartan skirt, and Schultz hesitatingly disclosed his hobby of campanology and said he regretted that he hadn’t been able to visit any of England’s famous cathedrals to hear the bells being rung. The meal was very good and the wine was excellent, and as Franks poured the brandies, Waldo finally said, “I’m extremely sorry about yesterday. I was way out of line.”
Franks indicated Schultz with his brandy goblet, and said, “John explained a lot. It’s forgotten.”
“Thanks,” said Waldo.
Franks decided he was enjoying himself; for the first time since he couldn’t remember when. He’d had a lot to drink—they all had—but be wasn’t drunk. None of them were. It had been a convivial, relaxed, pleasant evening, and he’d unwound. As the thought came, Franks knew just how much he’d needed to unwind. He asked, “What happens afterward, when it’s all over?” He spread his hands. “Does it go on, like this?”
“Usually, for the first few weeks. Kind of settling down; making sure people understand what to do. The scale down is gradual. You’ve always got contact numbers to call any time, not just for emergencies. But eventually you’re on your own.”
Franks found it difficult to imagine what it had ever been like for him and Tina and the kids to be on their own. “You personally?” he said.
“I shouldn’t think so,” said Schultz. “The FBI is involved, of course. Runs the operation. But the marshals are usually the people who do it. It’s their job.”
“It’s going to be difficult for you,” declared Waldo abruptly.
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