by Play Dead
Mr. Averall Thompson, the Celtics’ lawyer and longtime friend of Clip Arnstein, leaned forward. “Let me make this as quick and simple as possible. Will that be okay, Mrs. Baskin?”
Laura nodded to him.
“First, please accept my most sincere belated condolences on your loss.”
“Thank you.”
“And second, let me apologize for the delay in settling these matters. Whenever the deceased does not execute a will, there is always some degree of confusion.”
“I understand, Mr. Thompson. No apology is necessary.”
“Fine.” The senior law partner put on his reading glasses. “In cases such as this, the widow is left all of the deceased’s property. According to our study, you two already have most of your assets in joint accounts, so that should expedite matters. You both bought the house in Brookline. You have three joint accounts, two at banks and one at a financial institution. On top of that, David left a few mutual funds and stocks, his condominium in Boston, and that’s about it.”
“And his account at Heritage of Boston Bank,” Laura added.
“Excuse me, Mrs. Baskin.”
“David had an account at Heritage of Boston. There’s about half a million dollars in it.”
The older man looked puzzled. “Are you sure that wasn’t liquidated?”
“Quite sure.”
Mr. Thompson looked over the file in front of him. Laura glanced around the room. T.C. was looking straight down at his shoes. Most of the faces were mildly puzzled, more curious than concerned. The exception was her father. James Ayars’s face drained of color, his eyes frightened and confused.
“I don’t see anything about that in the file. Do you have the account number?”
“The statements are in David’s condominium.”
Thompson leaned forward and buzzed his secretary. “Beatrice?”
“Yes, Mr. Thompson.”
“Call our contact at Heritage of Boston. See if they have an account there for a Mr. David Baskin.”
“Right away, Mr. Thompson.”
He leaned back. “I’m very sorry about this, Mrs. Baskin. I don’t understand how we could have made a mistake like that. I am really very embarrassed.”
“I’m sure we’ll straighten it all out.”
“I’m sure, too.”
A moment later, the phone on the desk buzzed. “Mr. Thompson?”
“Yes, Beatrice.”
“I called the Heritage of Boston. There is no record of any account for a Mr. David Baskin.”
Laura sat up. “That’s not possible.”
Averall Thompson smiled understandingly. “Perhaps if you could come back with the bank account number …”
Maybe it was just her father’s expression or the way T.C. kept staring at the ground, but Laura suddenly felt very uneasy. The money meant nothing to her. She already had more than she knew what to do with. But this was all very odd. Something was very wrong.
“Thank you, Mr. Thompson.”
LAURA managed to find the key with a shaking hand. T.C. had volunteered to accompany her but she had thought it would be best if she went alone. Now, standing in front of the door to David’s apartment, she wondered if she had done the right thing.
She placed the key in the lock and turned. The door opened into the darkened apartment. Laura hesitated. She was afraid to turn on the lights, afraid to face the painful memories readying to leap out at her.
She and David had spent many happy moments here—moments of pure joy that she knew she would never again experience. It wasn’t fair. Blasphemous to say, but God had cheated her. Cheated her and hurt her in the worst way possible. He had made her happy, brought her up to the highest high. Then He tore her wings off and let her plummet back down to the hard surface below. One minute her David was alive and strong. The next minute he was gone. How could someone like David just be snatched away like that? How could everything suddenly be worth nothing?
It was all a cruel, sadistic trick.
She stepped in but still did not turn on the lights. She suddenly remembered the last time she had entered his apartment alone. She and David had been going out for about three months and were already hopelessly in love.
She had stopped by to visit him on her way home from work, knocked on the door, and waited. No one came to the door.
Strange.
She had spoken to David only a few minutes earlier. Why would he have gone out? She tried the door, and to her surprise, it was unlocked. She smiled. He would never leave the door unlocked if he had gone out. David was too compulsive when it came to that kind of stuff. He must have been in the shower.
She opened the door. The apartment was dark, just like it would be two and a half years later when she opened it to search for his bank statements from the Heritage of Boston. Her eyes surveyed the darkened room. No one was there. She listened for the sound of the shower, but the apartment was silent.
That was when she heard the muffled scream.
The sound ripped into her stomach. She sprinted toward the bedroom, where the anguished cry had originated.
“David?”
The next scream, though still muffled, was louder, more hideous than any sound Laura had ever heard.
She reached the bedroom. Her eyes quickly adjusted to the darkness. David was huddled in a corner of the bed, his head clasped hard between his hands, his body writhing in agony. He released another scream into the pillow.
She ran to him, her heart pounding like a sledgehammer in her chest. “David, what is it?”
His face was contorted into a frightening picture of absolute agony. Laura had never seen pain like this, had never known it could exist. David’s teeth were gritted, his color terrifyingly red as though his head were about to explode. He struggled, but he could not hold back. He dug his face into the pillow. The smothered shriek punctured Laura’s heart. Panic filled her.
“I’m going to call the hospital.”
She tried to reach for the phone, but David’s grip on her arm locked her into place.
“No!” David managed, and then once again, he turned his mouth into the pillow.
He released her as he once again screamed, his hands going back to the sides of his head. The effort of uttering that one word had cost him. He looked up, his tortured eyes finding hers. He worked up enough strength to say two more words: “Hold me.”
She did. She held him, hugged him, soothed him, stroked him. She cried with him, and he hung on to her as if she were a life preserver. It took almost two hours before the pain began to loosen its stranglehold on him. But Laura would not let go of David, would not risk allowing whatever had attacked him to come back and hurt him again.
“It’s all right now, Laura.”
She still held on.
“I guess I should explain,” he said.
“Only if you want to,” she whispered, shaking.
“I do.”
She cradled his head. “Do they come often?”
He shrugged. “Once is often enough with these things. My doctor describes them as a combination of very bad cluster headaches and some sort of inoperable brain dysfunction.”
Dread washed through her. “Brain dysfunction?”
“Like a cyst … or a tumor. But it’s not that serious. I mean, it’s not lethal. It can never do more than cause tremendous pain. My doctor said I was born with it, even though it never bothered me until my first year of college.”
“Can’t medication control it?”
“Not really.”
“David, how bad do they get?”
He forced a smile on his worn face. “I was never very good at feigning bravery. To be honest with you, that was probably the mildest attack I’ve ever had.”
Laura felt her heart sink at the thought.
“I guess that has something to do with you comforting me,” David continued. “The attacks usually start out like someone is using a trip-hammer on the sensitive nerves in my head. Then the pain grows until
it feels like a thousand volts of electricity are being hurtled through my brain. Sometimes, I wish I could reach into my skull to stop it, but it’s like trying to scratch an itch in a cast. And then sometimes the pain hits certain nerves that paralyze my body.”
“Isn’t there anything we can do?”
“Just what you did. Hold me when it happens.”
“Do your teammates know?”
He shook his head. “Only T.C. and my doctor know. I haven’t even told Clip and Earl. I can usually sense when an attack is starting to come on, so I make myself scarce. It helps to sit in a dark room. A lot of times I call T.C.” He swallowed and then looked up. “T.C. can’t help with the pain, but sometimes it gets so bad, I’m afraid I’ll do something I may later regret. I don’t mean to scare you. I just want you to understand the severity of these attacks.”
She was crying now, gripping him even tighter. “I love you, David. I love you so much.”
“I love you too, Laura.” He closed his eyes. “I need you so much.”
David’s final attack came in October 1988. During the last eight and a half months of his life, the torturous headaches never bothered him. David had been sure that Laura was somehow responsible, that she had somehow chased away whatever demon had been living inside of his brain. Even his doctor was amazed to discover that his cyst or tumor had died. Somehow, they had conquered David’s demon.
Or had they?
Had the evil demon really been killed or had he just been waiting for the right time to strike? Had he merely faked his own demise until David was vulnerable in the rough water? Had he then decided this was his opportunity to finish the game once and for all, to destroy David by paralyzing him in the treacherous ocean, to force him to go underwater until his lungs exploded?
T.C. had said no. Laura was not so sure.
She flicked on the light. Her eyes were wet. Even when David was alive, the thought of the agony he was forced to bear always made her tear.
She went into the bedroom half expecting to find him huddled on the bed, but of course, the room was empty. Then she headed into his study and over to the file cabinet she had bought him last year. The neatly labeled manila files gave the illusion at least that David was a somewhat organized individual. The illusion, however, was merely surface. He still lost bills, financial statements, important documents. David had always hated paperwork of any kind. He knew nothing of finance and wanted to know even less. “You make both of our monetary decisions,” he had finally told her. “You’re the financial genius.”
The second drawer contained the financial statements. She pulled it open. She knew that his bank book and monthly reports from Heritage of Boston were filed behind the Gunther Mutual folder. She thumbed through the manila folders. Catalyst Energy, Davidson Fund, equities with Recovery Corporation of America, Fredrickson and Associates, Gunther Mutual …
There was no Heritage of Boston.
She checked to make sure that it had not been placed out of order. Then she checked the other drawers. There was nothing on Heritage of Boston.
She stood up. Her whole body was shaking. She needed to find answers and she needed to find them now. It was time to pay a visit to Heritage of Boston.
T.C. and Laura parked the car and walked toward the entrance of the Heritage of Boston Bank. T.C. always felt odd walking with Laura. Here was one of the world’s most beautiful women walking with a pudgy, nondescript shmoe in a wrinkled suit who was a good three inches shorter than she was. It must have made some spectacle for street pedestrians.
“So you couldn’t find the statements,” T.C. said. “Big deal. Maybe he moved the account and got rid of them.”
“We’re talking about David, remember? You know how bad he was when it came to financial matters.”
They waited for about ten minutes before a secretary ushered them into an office.
“I’m sorry for the delay,” the man behind the desk said. He stood and shook Laura’s hand. “I’m Richard Corsel, one of the bank’s vice presidents. Please come in.”
He was young—no more than thirty—and something in his manner told Laura that he was not very happy to see them. “Laura Baskin,” she said.
“I recognized you right away, Mrs. Baskin. I’m very sorry to hear about your husband.”
“Thank you. This is Terry Conroy with the Boston Police Department.”
“Police? Is something wrong?”
“Nothing that I’m sure we can’t work out,” Laura replied. “It involves an account my husband held here.”
“Yes?”
“I can’t find the statements and I was hoping you could tell me what the current balance is.”
“One moment.” Richard Corsel tapped a few keys on his computer terminal. “Your husband no longer has an account here, Mrs. Baskin.”
“I’m sure he had one before we left for Australia a few weeks ago.”
“That’s very possible, Mrs. Baskin, but the account is closed.”
“Was the money withdrawn or transferred?”
Richard Corsel coughed into his fist. “I’m not allowed to say.”
“By whose authority?”
“Your husband’s.”
She sat forward. “What?”
“When your husband cleared out his account, he left very specific stipulations. One of these was not to give out any information involving his funds.”
“But he’s dead.”
“That does not alter his request.”
She glanced over at T.C. to make sure she was hearing right. “When did he close the account?” she asked.
“I can’t tell you that either. I’m sorry.”
“Mr. Corsel, the money is missing. No one has any idea where it is being held.”
“I’m sorry. There’s really nothing I can do.”
She peered into his eyes. They darted away from Laura’s glare like scared birds. “I want to know what happened to that account.”
“I can’t tell you.”
T.C. stood. “Let’s go, Laura.”
“What are you talking about?” Laura raged. “I’m not leaving until I find out what happened to that account.”
“Mr. Corsel already said it’s confidential.”
Richard Corsel nodded. “Please, Mrs. Baskin, I am only obeying your husband’s wishes.”
“His wishes? He told you not to tell his wife what happened to his account?”
“I … I can’t reveal that.”
“Mr. Corsel, you are forcing my hand.”
His voice cracked. “There is really nothing I can do.”
“Well, there is something I can do,” Laura snapped. “May I borrow your phone?”
“Of course.”
She dialed, waited, had the call transferred, and then she spoke. “Sam? It’s Laura. Thank you. It’s nice to hear your voice, too. I need you to do something for me. How much is Svengali holding in Heritage of Boston? I know it’s a lot but can you give me a good estimation?”
Richard Corsel was turning white.
“Jesus, Laura,” T.C. interrupted, “what the hell are you doing?”
“Wait outside, T.C. I don’t want you to get involved in this.”
“But—”
“Please just do what I say.”
With a shrug T.C. stood and headed out. He slammed the door behind him, leaving Corsel alone to confront Laura.
“What’s that, Sam? How many millions? Fine. Transfer it to First Boston. Tell the board of directors at Heritage of Boston that I was annoyed by the service of one of its vice presidents, a Mr. Richard Corsel. Tell them I also suspect he’s involved in a scheme to rip me off. Right, that’s C-O-R-S-E-L. Got that?”
“Wait!” Richard Corsel interrupted. “Can’t we talk about this?”
“Hold on a second, Sam. Excuse me?”
“Please, Mrs. Baskin, just hang up and let’s discuss this rationally.”
She turned back to the phone. “Sam, if you don’t hear from me in the next ten minutes,
go ahead with the transaction.” She hung up. “I’m listening.”
“Mrs. Baskin, you are using blackmail.”
“I want to know what happened to that account, Mr. Corsel, and believe me, I’ll find out. This is no idle threat. If you still won’t tell me after I transfer the Svengali funds, I’ll have the press and my lawyers swarming all over the place. The media should love a story about a widow who wants to donate her late husband’s earnings to charity and the bank that may have stolen the money.”
“Stolen?”
“The bank’s reputation will be somewhat compromised, Mr. Corsel, but eventually I will get the information.”
Richard Corsel looked as if he had just lost a boxing match.
“By the way,” Laura added, “Sam is very precise. I only have a few minutes left to stop him.”
Corsel lowered his head. “I don’t know where the account is exactly. You have to believe me.”
“Go on.”
“Your husband had me transfer the money to a bank in Switzerland.”
“When?”
He paused. “Please, Mrs. Baskin, I can’t tell you.”
“Which bank in Switzerland?”
“Bank of Geneva. But I know it didn’t stay there long, so you can’t make a claim there. And you may be able to threaten Heritage of Boston, but there’s no way to budge a Swiss bank.”
“But why would David do something like that?”
He shrugged. “I don’t know.”
“Did he handle this transaction in person?”
“No, I spoke to him on the phone.”
“Are you sure it was David’s voice?”
“Positive. I know your husband’s voice very well—even with the static. Plus he used a code number only he knows.”
“784CF90821BC,” Laura stated.
“And obviously,” Richard Corsel replied, “he trusted you with it.”
“David always told me everything, Mr. Corsel,” she said. “Now would you please hand me the phone? I have to call Sam.”
LAURA recounted the conversation to T.C. as they headed back to the car.
“I can’t believe you did that, Laura. I arrest people for doing that sort of thing.”