The Douglas Kennedy Collection #2

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The Douglas Kennedy Collection #2 Page 80

by Douglas Kennedy


  Five minutes after I sent this email, another one bounced back at me from him:

  Will be in touch.

  But Dad never got in touch with me after this. Five days after the money was transferred I called my bank who confirmed that, yes, the funds had been lodged in the designated account in Santiago. I sent him a follow-up email, asking him to confirm arrival of the money. No response. Five further days passed. I sent two more emails. Still no response. I called his apartment in Santiago and got an operator recording in Spanish. Ken Botros spoke the language fluently (“ ’cause I was stupid enough once to marry a ’Rican”). I asked him to listen to it.

  “The babe’s saying this number no longer works,” he said. “Says it’s been cut off. Your dad must be elsewhere.”

  Another week went by. I sent an email:

  I am still waiting to hear from you.

  But I now knew that there would be no reply.

  That same afternoon Trish was called into Brad’s office for a ten-minute meeting.

  “Keep an eye on things,” she told me.

  This directive terrified me, but I remained glued to the swirling numbers on the screen, trying to find order amid this statistical bombardment. Literally a minute after she had left, a notice flashed up on the MSNBC screen:

  SWISS GENFEN GROUP WANTS $7 BILLION STAKE

  IN NIPPON TECH

  A little alarm bell went off in my head. Trish had mentioned something to me earlier that morning about how Brad was in talks with a Mumbai-based financial consortium. They were trying to purchase a controlling interest in Nippon Tech—one of Japan’s leading manufacturers of optic fibers—and Brad was just waiting for the moment when another financial group started pursuing Nippon to stage a big move on them. “We want the Jap motherfuckers to shit curry,” was the way she artfully put it, tossing out this information in typical rat-tat-tat Trish style. Then she grabbed a phone and started berating a currency dealer who’d let her down on an Aussie dollar move.

  And now, three hours later, here was a flash news item in a corner of the MSNBC screen about Nippon Tech being pursued by . . .

  I picked up the phone and punched in the number of Trish’s cell. She answered on the first ring.

  “What?” she barked.

  “Nippon Tech—” I said.

  “What about them?”

  “Some Swiss group is making a move on them.”

  “You making this up?”

  “It was on the television.”

  “Holy fuck,” she said, then hung up.

  What happened next was the stuff of pure theater. Trish came racing back to her workstation, shouting orders at everyone in her path, the gist of which was: “The Jap motherfuckers are shitting Swiss cheese.”

  Everyone on the floor seemed to understand the metaphoric significance of this comment as all the traders dived to the phones and began dealing like mad. Brad showed up a few moments later, all smiles.

  “We need to close this sucker by the sound of the bell on Wall Street,” he shouted above the din. Then turning to me he said: “Good call, Jane.”

  What was going on was a long-planned attack on Nippon Tech. Orchestrated by Freedom Mutual and financed by some very wealthy Indian and Russian plutocrats, Nippon Tech became the target of a leveraged buyout, in which Genfen—the Swiss consortium who were putting together that $7 billion offer—were outgunned at the last minute by Brad and Company.

  “This is General Patton territory,” he bragged to me as the afternoon wore on. Through dense, precisely executed trading maneuvers, the Freedom Mutual team managed to drive Genfen’s stock price down, thereby creating uncertainty about their ability to pony up the $7 billion offer; in turn, opening up the way for the Mumbai consortium to snap up Nippon Tech for $7.1 billion. In the midst of all this free-market frenzy, Brad disappeared into his office for three hours. When he emerged back on the floor, he called for silence. And then, with a showman’s flourish, he quietly said: “The deal is done. And Freedom Mutual is one hundred and forty-two million dollars richer this afternoon.”

  The place erupted. Within five minutes three cases of chilled champagne were wheeled out by some caterers. And everyone seemed to be drinking a bottle by the neck.

  “I promise not to call you a cunt for at least three days,” Trish told me after vanishing into the ladies for around ten minutes and then emerging with white crystal still adhering to both her nostrils.

  “I was just the messenger,” I said.

  “No, you were fucking smart. Had you not seen that news flash—”

  “Someone else here would have.”

  “But you saw it first, and that’s what counts.”

  Actually, this era of good feeling between myself and Trish lasted all of two days. When I was ten minutes late—due to a mechanical breakdown on the T—she threatened to fire me on the spot if I was ever tardy again. I simply apologized and assured her it was a one-off mistake. Then it was business as usual. The triumph of the leveraged buyout was quickly forgotten. At Freedom Mutual there was always more money to be made.

  Months passed. I got on with my job. I was still under Trish’s direct control (no one at the company was allowed to start trading independently until after half a year minimum), but her abuse seemed to be directed at me only 25 percent of our working hours together, and I took that to be a sign that I was making reasonable progress. I spoke with my mother on a regular bimonthly basis. After being initially shocked about my change in career direction (“Well, finance is the last place I ever expected to see you end up”), she told me that “making good money can’t be a bad thing . . . and I know your father’s so proud of you.”

  “Oh, have you heard from him recently?”

  “No, not recently. And you?”

  “Not for months.”

  “Maybe he’s on an extended business trip somewhere,” Mom said.

  “Maybe that’s the truth,” I said, not wanting to upset her but also not knowing the truth myself.

  Until, that is, two days later. It was early afternoon and I was trying to gauge derivative futures (don’t ask). The phone rang on my desk. It was Brad. I immediately tensed, as Brad never called me.

  “Could you come to the boardroom straightaway.”

  The line went dead. I stood up and headed down the long corridor to the boardroom. I knocked on the door and heard Brad tell me to come in. As I walked inside the first thing I saw was the strain on Brad’s face—discomfort mixed with a look of real anger that he shot me as soon as I was within his field of vision. There were two men seated next to Brad at the boardroom table—one stocky, one thin. Bland features, bad suits, hard faces. They both regarded me with cold professional interest. In front of them were assorted open dossiers. Among the papers spread out on the table, I saw a file with my father’s photograph stapled to the left-hand corner.

  “This is Agent Ames from the FBI,” Brad said, pointing to the thin man, “and Mr. Fletcher, an investigating officer from the Securities and Exchange Commission. And they have been asking me a lot of questions about you for the past half an hour. Because it seems that you’ve helped your father flee from justice.”

  “I what?” I said.

  “You sent him ten thousand dollars,” Agent Ames said, “which allowed him to vanish from view.”

  “What’s he done?” I asked.

  Mr. Fletcher pointed me into a chair.

  “Lots,” he said.

  SIX

  OVER THE NEXT hour I learned a great deal about my father. I learned that, for the past five years, he had been living off a small pension that had been arranged for him by the regime of Augusto Pinochet. And the reason why the Chilean dictator’s cohorts had been slipping him the equivalent of $10,000 per annum?

  “Well, back in the seventies,” Agent Ames told me, “before the coup took place, your father was well regarded within highly conservative circles in Chile: captains of industry, fellow mining guys, the military. The fact is—and I can mention this
because it’s now declassified information—he was an operative for Langley—”

  “My father was a spook?” I said, sounding far too shocked and far too loud.

  “The term Langley likes to use is ‘operative,’ especially as, at first, he wasn’t a paid operative for the Agency. I’m sure you remember when your father was setting up that mine in Iquique . . .”

  “That was before I was born.”

  “Well, I’m sure your mother might have talked about him being away at the time.”

  “My father was always away, all the time.”

  “As you might remember—even from just a passing acquaintance with Chilean history—the government of Salvador Allende nationalized all the copper mines in 1969, your father’s included. At that point he was approached by the Agency—knowing that he was still active, businesswise, in Chile—asking him if he would supply them with information about anyone and everyone he was meeting in the country, as he had firsthand contact with the Allende regime. They had employed him to stay on for an additional twenty-four months as a consultant, advising them on how to run the mine.

  “As you can imagine, your father was an important conduit of information for Langley. He knew everyone in the Allende cabinet and was considered a ‘good’ gringo. He came home to the States for a considerable amount of time in 1972. His cover had been blown when some secret-police types tortured a Chilean operative whom they caught trying to photograph top-secret documents on Soviet plans for military installations. Your father basically made it to Santiago Airport and onto the last flight out of the country around thirty minutes before Allende’s goons raided his apartment.

  “His mistress of that era—a certain Isabelle Fernandez—was the daughter of Allende’s minister for mines. She was also informing on him to Allende’s secret police. After the Pinochet coup her father fled to East Germany. It was not the most appealing of destinations, but it was a way of avoiding being ‘suicided’—the fate that befell Allende and so many of his comrades. Señorita Fernandez, on the other hand, found a different sort of escape route. Though it’s not documented, it’s been surmised that she met the same fate as so many of the thousands of ‘Disappeared’ during that era. She was packed into a military plane with around a dozen other prisoners and heavily armed soldiers. The plane took off and headed in the direction of the Pacific Ocean. Once over water, the soldiers would open a hatch and systematically toss each prisoner out—from a height of around three thousand feet. Considering that they were a good hour’s flying time from Santiago, the chances of a body being washed up onshore were virtually nonexistent. So there was no evidence of any malfeasance on the part of the junta. Dissidents were arrested, rounded up, and then—splash. They simply disappeared.

  “Now all this has only come to light in the past few years, when Chile’s new socialist president ordered that all the old records be opened up—those that weren’t shredded, that is. It’s taken a long time for their people to dig up the dirt, but around three weeks ago, they uncovered an interesting nugget of evidence: your father worked as a paid informer to the Pinochet regime.”

  “By ‘informer,’ ” I said, “you mean—”

  “I mean exactly what is meant by the term ‘informer.’ In the early weeks after the coup, your father returned to Chile and offered his services to the Pinochet regime. They hired him immediately as a consultant on the reprivatization of the mining industry. But they also asked him for names: names of people he’d met during his years as an adviser to Allende and company. According to the documents found a few months ago, your father readily informed on people he knew to be leftists, dissidents, and/or potential troublemakers for the dictatorship. One of them happened to be his ex-lover, Isabelle Fernandez.”

  “I don’t believe this . . .”

  “Believe it, Miss Howard. Not only was your father paid five thousand dollars for every known enemy he named, he was also rewarded with that consulting job, which he held for ten years, and with the pension I mentioned earlier. He even got an apartment out of the junta as well.”

  I stared down at the table and said nothing.

  “From your silence, I presume this is all new to you,” Ames said.

  “Of course it’s new. If I had known—”

  “You would never have helped him flee?”

  “Like I told you before, I didn’t think I was helping him flee.”

  “What did he tell you exactly?”

  I took him through the entire conversation about the loan shark to whom he owed money—and how Dad was allegedly being threatened with grievous bodily harm. Just as I also mentioned his alleged employment prospects with Creighton Crowley. Mr. Fletcher looked up from the papers in front of him when I mentioned that name.

  “Did you have any prior knowledge of this Creighton Crowley?” he asked.

  “None whatsoever—though I did tell my dad that being asked to invest fifty thousand dollars in this dot com company he was touting—”

  “Yeah, we know all about Creighton Crowley and his dot com scam. Just as we also know that your dad was part of the entire thing . . .”

  “In what way?”

  “He sold shares in this company to twelve very foolish people who should have known better. Blocks of shares at fifty to one hundred grand a go. Your dad pocketed twenty percent of each sale.”

  “Then why was he badgering me for money?”

  “We estimate his net profit was around one hundred thousand dollars,” Fletcher said. “That’s what he lived on for around three years. Divided by three, it’s not exactly big bucks. But because several of the investors he tapped were in the States, it did bring him to our attention. We’ve been after Creighton Crowley for some time now. The guy’s got a history of insider trading and creating bogus investment schemes. The problem is, he’s always slipped through our radar—and eventually ended up in Chile. Your father met him through ‘mutual business associates’ and, professionally speaking, it was love at first sight.”

  Ames came in here: “The only reason I mentioned your father’s colorful political past in Chile,” he continued, “is for you to understand that the man you helped flee—even if it was unwitting on your part—is nothing short of a crook. He sold shares in a company that was nonexistent. He informed his investors that he was buying shares on their behalf, even though he was ‘gifted’ these shares in his ‘contract’ with the company.”

  “Not that there was a ‘contract’ of any sort between Mr. Crowley and your father,” Mr. Fletcher said. “More of a simple letter of agreement, in which Crowley gave him fifty thousand shares in this sham of a company. Your dad could have had fifty million shares. It didn’t matter. It was all a big con job. He’d been gifted the shares as part of his employment contract and he’d then sold them on. Crowley was, of course, doing the exact same thing.

  “Want to hear a real lulu? Ever remember a family friend named Don Keller?”

  Of course I remembered Don Keller. He worked with my dad—a geologist who dealt with all the technical stuff in the mining operations and a world-class boozer who was always going out on binges with my father.

  “They were professional associates,” I said.

  “According to Mr. Keller,” Fletcher said, “they were very close friends. Keller had ‘alcohol issues’ and lost his career and his marriage around ten years ago. He’s been living a very modest life in a very modest house on the outskirts of Phoenix. His entire life savings amounted to one hundred and fifty thousand dollars—and late last year, your father convinced him to invest it in his company, promising him—in writing—that he could double it in twelve months.”

  “Don Keller is now a ruined man, thanks to your father,” Agent Ames said. “He’s completely penniless—and his rage is vast. So vast that he contacted us about your father’s business activities. As it turned out our friends at the SEC were also interested in Mr. Crowley’s investment scheme. As we were monitoring all movements of money to your father, we were naturally interest
ed when we saw your ten-thousand-dollar transfer to him.”

  Again I was about to protest my innocence, but it struck me as best to say nothing further for the moment. I did look up and made eye contact with Brad. His displeasure was massive.

  “We have naturally been investigating your own bank records,” Mr. Fletcher said, “and noticed a deposit of twenty thousand dollars from Freedom Mutual in the past few weeks. Mr. Pullman here informed us that this was your ‘joining bonus’ for starting work here.”

  “That’s right,” I said. “That was the deal Brad offered me.”

  “Why did he offer you, a graduate student in literature, such a large sum of money?” Mr. Fletcher asked.

  Brad came in here.

  “I’m a talent spotter—and, as I told you, it was clear that Jane had talent and that if I was going to tempt her away from academia, I had to cough up some serious money.”

  “Knowing your company’s considerable turnover,” Ames said, “I don’t think twenty grand could be classified as serious money.”

  “Well, do you really think I’d be paying a mere rookie more?”

  Long silence.

  “We’re still not entirely convinced that Miss Howard acted unknowingly when giving her father the money,” Ames said.

  “Sir, my father has never been—in any way—a responsible man. Dig back into my personal history—if you haven’t done so already—and you’ll see that he never paid my tuition at college or grad school, that I had to rely on financial aid and scholarships to get through. Call my high school principal, Mr. Merritt, and get him to tell you how hard up my mother and I were. The only reason—the only damn reason—I sent that bastard ten thousand dollars was because I wanted to let him know that, unlike him, I wasn’t going to let members of my family dangle in the financial wind. So how dare you think that I was in any way in cahoots with that awful man.”

  I was yelling—and judging from the alarmed looks on the faces of Ames and Fletcher, my vehemence had been noted. Brad, on the other hand, remained impassive, staring at me with chilly detachment.

 

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