The Helicopter Heist
Page 3
* * *
—
By the time he reached Nybroplan, the city had clearly woken up. There were people walking from Strandvägen toward Hamngatan, and from Blasieholmen toward Östermalm. Stockholm’s wealthiest neighborhood had never appealed to the Södermalm resident Sami. Besides, the suburbs felt more present in the city center than they did where he lived, and he had long since had enough of the suburbs. Karin Flodin was born and bred in the streets around Nytorget, and the schools there were some of the best in town. It was in Södermalm that his children would grow up.
Sami had loved Karin for as long as he could remember. He’d always believed that one true love awaited every person, and he had been lucky. He had met his while he was just a teenager.
The moment she transformed from his unattainable, youthful obsession into his actual lover, the love he felt for her had deepened in a way he would never have been able to predict. Vague dreams became a physical reality. Crumpled tubes of toothpaste, unwashed plates and scrunched-up underwear on the bathroom floor were all points of irritation that had never featured in his fantasies. But nor had he been able to imagine how the skin of her stomach would smell in the morning, how her eyes would glitter when she looked at him, or how she would grab his hands whenever he told a story, hold them still and gaze deep into his soul, revealing things about him that he hadn’t even been aware of himself.
When she added the next role to those she had filled earlier and became the mother of his child, his love had undergone another transformation. It was most obvious when he thought about how he would feel if he lost her. That had always been his worry, but he could no longer imagine a life without Karin. The thought was too painful.
That was why Sami Farhan was in the car on that dark, early February morning. Driving along Strandvägen toward his new life.
4
“Here it is,” Michel Maloof said in English.
He lifted the black briefcase from the chair next to him and placed it on the table.
Director Anders Mild and Chairman Rick Almanza stared suspiciously at the bag.
“Your briefcase?” Mild asked. “But…I think I must have misunderstood something. I thought this meeting was about streamlining our Swedish distribution activity.”
“Exactly, exactly.” Maloof smiled, flashing his white teeth, set off by his dark beard, at the two men. “There’s no better way to put it. Streamlining. In Sweden.”
“What do you mean?” Mild wondered.
“I mean that maybe…now that we’re speaking in English anyway…this could be of interest elsewhere than just Sweden?”
The best way to deal with a bluff was to call it.
Maloof was still unsure whether the Englishman was who he claimed to be. The idea that the chairman had flown in to see him seemed absurd.
But the older man remained silent, and Maloof felt more like he was being observed than questioned.
“Let me…tell you about my briefcase,” Maloof continued. He had told Anders Mild’s secretary that he had flown up from Malmö for the meeting in Stockholm. “It was on the floor under the seat on the plane yesterday. And I had it next to me this morning when I drove over here. So…well…how many people do you think noticed it?”
It was a rhetorical question. The black briefcase on the table was as anonymous as the room they were sitting in. It looked neither cheap nor expensive, and it seemed to be utterly lacking in design. From a distance, it looked like leather, but a closer inspection would suggest it was some kind of tough plastic.
“Are you saying…” the Englishman began. He had worked out where Maloof was heading.
“Right, right.” Maloof smiled, and his grin grew wider. “This briefcase isn’t just the equivalent…it’s more secure than any other security bag on the market. It holds much more.”
He tried to prevent his pride from turning into self-conceit. But the truth was that Maloof himself was fascinated by the bag on the table in front of him.
Anders Mild seemed to have worked out what the day’s meeting was about, what Maloof was doing there. The director twisted uncomfortably in his seat and gave a short sigh. Plenty of salesmen tried to sell new security bags to G4S. A Swedish company from the north of the country, SQS in Skellefteå, was already well into the development stage and had a number of customers on the continent. Maloof was sure that SQS, like everyone else, had also tried to get a meeting. But without a Zoran Petrovic to date the director’s secretary, those doors remained closed.
It was too late now for Mild to do anything about it; Maloof’s bag was already on the table.
“Is it really possible?” Mild asked. He sounded doubtful. “For it to be that big inside?”
Without further ado, and with an infectious enthusiasm, Maloof began his detailed demonstration of the inside of the briefcase.
* * *
—
For years now, G4S had been using blue security bags produced in southern Germany. One of Zoran Petrovic’s Serbian contacts had been to the top-secret factory, and it was there that the idea had been born. The German bags were big and bulky, meaning the guards had to move them about using small dollies, and it was impossible to either pick up or drop off the cash without drawing attention to it. As a consequence, they had made a virtue of necessity and developed the big blue bags into portable spy centers. They contained, in addition to GPS devices capable of being tracked within a sixty-mile radius, built-in security cameras and hidden microphones. Which meant that they also registered and documented everything that a potential robber said or did. Many of Maloof’s friends had learned that very fact during trials, as prosecutors presented the court with evidence that was impossible to deny.
According to Petrovic, the bag’s greatest feature was its security-protected locking function. For one, it was impossible to pick with ordinary skeleton keys, but screwdrivers, crowbars and brute force wouldn’t work either. A couple of inexperienced kids or an opportunistic junkie would never manage to crack the lock. Even professional robbers who took the blue bag to a workshop and laid into it with real tools would fail. The bag was booby-trapped and would detonate if opened incorrectly, causing dye ampoules to explode. The money, and sometimes even the robber’s clothes, would be destroyed in the process.
The black bag Michel Maloof was demonstrating to the European division of G4S that Tuesday afternoon in February could boast all the same features as the blue bag. And since the company from Skellefteå still hadn’t managed to take out patents on its products, Maloof’s bag had also borrowed several functions from them.
But in addition to that, there were two crucial improvements. First of all, Maloof’s black briefcase was roomier than the blue bags. The security and technology features had been condensed and stored in the lid and the bottom, leaving more space for the valuables requiring transport. The result was a light, discreet bag, when compared with the blue monsters currently being used.
“Incredible,” Mild said once he had allowed himself to be convinced.
“Right, right,” Maloof agreed. “We…that is…manufacture takes place in Slovenia. That’s the reason…for the price.”
He looked the two men straight in the eye. They still hadn’t talked prices; the men hadn’t asked and Maloof hadn’t wanted to bring it up until he was sure they were convinced. But judging by how intensely they had been nodding during his presentation, he was cautiously optimistic. The Englishman was harder to read, but toward the end he had even allowed a quick smile.
Now the older of the two cleared his throat and spoke directly to Anders Mild.
“This was a surprise,” he said. “Truly.”
Almanza’s English was the kind Maloof had grown up with on TV during the late seventies, from programs based in rural English castles and country manors, with men in green tweed clothing who hunted foxes at weekends and employed an army of servants.
The Englishman turned to Maloof.
“I’m in Sweden for a conference, not flying home u
ntil tomorrow evening,” he explained. “Anders asked whether I would like to join him for this meeting, and I answered yes mostly because I had nothing urgent to attend to. I’m glad I did.”
Maloof tried to hold back a satisfied smile, but he only half-managed it. He stroked his beard and looked proudly at his black security bag, as though it had performed particularly well.
“Naturally, there are a number of questions we will have to return to,” Almanza continued. “Among them the security in the Slovenian factories.”
“Of course,” Maloof replied.
“And then there’s the question of exclusivity.”
Maloof nodded.
“Exclusivity. If G4S makes an order…then obviously none of your competitors would be able to buy our product.”
He gave a wide smile. The Englishman nodded with satisfaction. Maloof realized that the price was clearly a minor detail in this context. They still hadn’t asked about it. He had gone into the meeting with the intention of asking for 20,000 kronor per bag, but he now realized he could just as easily say 30,000. It would make absolutely no difference. He hardly dared think about how much money that would mean within the Swedish market, but imagine if they were talking about a Europe-wide deal?
According to Zoran Petrovic, each bag cost 5,000 kronor to produce. The number of security bags used in the Swedish market was somewhere around ten thousand.
The amount was dizzying.
“And there will have to be some discussion in London,” Almanza added drily, “but I’m fairly sure my enthusiasm will rub off onto our colleagues there.”
He raised a confident eyebrow to show that this was just a formality, and Anders Mild nodded in agreement.
“And you could fly over to London to repeat this presentation?”
Maloof smiled and sat down. “Of course, of course. Just give me a few hours…I’ll be there.”
Almanza looked pleased.
When Michel Maloof and his family had landed at Arlanda almost thirty years earlier, he had torn up his Lebanese passport and flushed it down the toilet before they even reached passport control. That was what you did back then, that was the advice they had been given from relatives already in Sweden. Without a passport, refugees were registered as stateless, which minimized the risk of being sent back. Where could they be sent back to? But that early morning in a toilet cubicle at the airport was something Maloof had come to regret over the years. He and his family had been permitted to stay in Sweden, but getting ahold of a Swedish passport without a foreign one to swap it for had proved almost impossible. And by the time Maloof had waited long enough for it to finally be a possibility, he had been arrested for the first time.
That meant he had ended up at the back of the line. The same thing would go on to happen again and again. Michel Maloof was now thirty-two, but he still didn’t have a passport, neither Lebanese nor Swedish. And since England was outside the Schengen zone, there was no way he could make the trip to London. He would have to send someone else. Petrovic could go. It wasn’t a big problem.
Rick Almanza stood up, and Mild did the same.
“Thank you so much, Michel,” the Englishman said. “It’ll be a pleasure to do business with you.”
Maloof got to his feet. He felt dazed and confused. He shook hands with the two men on the other side of the table.
He had just earned more money than he ever could have dreamed of. Millions. Tens of millions.
“Thank you. And as for the price…the quantity…and the delivery date…?”
Almanza laughed.
“We’ll have plenty of time to get back to you about that,” the older of the men said. “The contract on our current security bags doesn’t expire until 2024. That gives us fifteen years to negotiate.”
Maloof’s smile faded. Had he heard him right? Had he misunderstood?
“As I’m sure you can understand,” Anders Mild explained in Swedish, “we can’t do much as long as we’re tied into our current contract. But we plan ahead within G4S, and I hope you can do the same.”
2024?
Were they pulling his leg?
5
Sami Farhan turned left onto Tegeluddsvägen and drove across the train tracks toward the offices and warehouses in Frihamnen. It was six thirty in the morning, the sky was still dark and expectation made him drum the wheel with his fingers.
Compared with the sleepy inner city, the harbor was a hive of activity. Vans and trucks shuttled along Frihamnsgatan in the glare of the bright spotlights that replaced the streetlights out there, cranes lifted containers from ships and the thought that a metal box just like that would be the starting point for Sami’s new life got him worked up.
Hassan Kaya’s office was in Magasin 6, and Sami pulled up next to the loading dock.
In just under half an hour, the boat would be coming in.
He hadn’t been able to stop himself from coming down to see it with his own eyes. He had agreed to meet Ibrahim Bulut, the one who had originally attracted him to the project, on the dock. It would be a moment to remember.
* * *
—
Four months earlier, Sami had stepped into Hassan Kaya’s cramped, cluttered office off a narrow corridor with no windows on the second floor.
Ibrahim Bulut had taken care of the introductions.
Sami had boxed with Bulut at a club called Linnea during his teens. It hadn’t been for more than a couple of months, but that was all it took for the two to strike up a friendship. They continued to see one another from time to time over the years, and had even done a couple of jobs together in the early 2000s. Since then, Bulut had been busy doing exactly what Sami was about to do. He had changed sides. The Turk had left his criminal life behind him and now ran a successful business importing flowers in Årsta. It was through his import work that he had come into contact with Hassan Kaya last autumn, just as Kaya was about to start a new company. That Sami had been invited to get involved was purely because he had been in the car with Bulut when Kaya called to talk about his plans.
A few days later, they met up in Kaya’s office in Magasin 6. The room smelled damp and had been full of files and papers. Sami had sat down on a wooden chair and listened as Kaya explained the setup.
He had been in the game for a long time, he said, and had been importing fresh and frozen shellfish since the mid nineties. But now he was changing tack, giving up the fight against the big monopolies—ICA and Axfood. That was why he needed new partners. The majority of fishing for prawns and mussels was done in the North Sea, but if you went farther, up toward the Arctic Ocean, the quality of the shellfish was much better. The reason so few did it was that the journey back to Sweden often took a long time because the seas were so rough. But Hassan Kaya had managed to find a captain who froze the shellfish as soon as it was loaded onto the boat, and who also delivered superior-quality products at a reasonable price. With the kind of markup you could add as a wholesaler, they would be making money hand over fist.
On a paper napkin he grabbed out of an old takeout carton from a Chinese restaurant on Valhallavägen, Kaya had scrawled out the plan. Sami had taken the figures away with him. So he could work out for himself just how much money there was to be made in the import branch.
“We’re starting a company,” Kaya had explained. “You, me and Ibrahim. My captain needs to upgrade the freezers on board, and that needs capital. Ibrahim’s promised to go in with ten million and I’m doing the same. How much were you thinking of investing?”
After the meeting, Sami had felt overwhelmed. He didn’t have that kind of money. Once he had emptied his own bank account and his brothers had reluctantly agreed to loan him the majority of their savings, Sami had eventually managed to convince some of his friends and Karin’s uncle to get involved. He managed to scrape together a total of five million. For that, he got 20 percent of the newly formed import company.
He told Karin about the project, but failed to mention just how much he was staking on it
.
Still, risks were something he had lived with his entire life.
* * *
—
When Sami Farhan ran up the two flights of stairs in Magasin 6 to exchange a few words with Hassan Kaya that cold February morning, he wasn’t surprised to find the door to the unassuming office locked. Kaya had advised Sami not to go out there to meet the boat; unloading a container full of frozen prawns was hardly a spectacular event for someone who had done it countless times before.
But Sami hadn’t listened.
He rushed back down the stairs and out of the building. The water of the Baltic Sea was still a few degrees warmer than the chilly morning air. Fog lay over the bay and the docks, and his face grew damp as he crossed the street. It was ten to seven, and he smiled when he saw Ibrahim Bulut’s white Mercedes parked at the end of the dock.
The successful wholesaler climbed out of his car as Sami approached, and they greeted one another.
“Time to make some damn money,” Bulut said with a hoarse laugh. A cloud of condensation left his mouth, as though he were laughing in a speech bubble. “Where’s the boat?” he asked, glancing around.
Sami shook his head and pointed randomly toward the harbor entrance. “You’re the one who knows this stuff. I’ve got no idea. Are boats like planes? Do they dock at a set time, or how’s it work?”
“When did a plane last land on time?” Bulut asked. “Have you seen the trucks?”