“Even the Lusitania’s almost a hundred years ago.”
“Nineteen sixty-four. Gulf of Tonkin. You don’t really think the North Vietnamese were stupid enough to have one of their PT boats fire on an American destroyer, do you?”
“Professor, that’s all a bunch of conspiracy gibberish.”
“Really? Well, before you go knocking my conspiracy theories, I suggest you take a look in the mirror. You, darling, are a conspiracy theory waiting to happen.”
“Me?”
Bonny nodded gravely. “Tomorrow or the next day, someone will walk up to you, put a gun in your back, and pull the trigger. Good-bye, Jenny. Good-bye, baby. The police will say robbery. Or just a random murder. All will agree it’s a tragedy. Case closed. Mention the club and see the look you get.”
“But . . . but . . .” Jenny felt stranded, violently alone. She reached over and drank the rest of Bonny’s beer. “Jesus,” she said, her breath leaving her.
“Somewhere there’s a record of it all,” said Simon Bonny, whispering now, his eyes gone buggy, his chin bobbing in seven directions at once. “Hamilton was specific about keeping the minutes so that posterity would know of his contributions. The Founding Fathers were such vain twits. All of them so concerned about how history would look back on them. All of ’em scribbling away in their diaries and letters and newspaper articles. Each one trying to outgun the other. Old Scotch Nat knows. He kept the minutes. He had to. Only one of them not in the government’s service. Apparently, they held quite a lot of meetings at his house, too. He lived on Wall Street, next to his best friend, Mr. Hamilton.” He stopped and fixed Jenny with a frightened, quizzical stare. “You’re not carrying one now, are you? A phone?”
“Yes, but it belongs to my doctor. I took it by accident when I left the hospital.”
Bonny took his wallet and began ripping out bills and throwing them on the bar. “Ten? That enough . . . oh bloody hell, give ’em a twenty.” He scooped his cap off the stool and grabbed his overcoat and scarf. “Get rid of it . . . might as well have a homing beacon planted on your head.”
“But they don’t know I have it.”
“How can you be so sure? They knew about you shooting your brother with a BB gun. I don’t even want to imagine how they found out that little nugget of information. Someone’s been on the phone with Daddy, haven’t they? Scale, my dear. Scale. Look around you. It’s the biggest government in the whole damned world!”
“But . . .”
“But nothing!”
With a final anguished sigh, Simon Bonny stormed out the door.
47
Dr. Satyen patel picked up the phone at the nurses’ station. “Yes?”
“This is Detective John Franciscus out of the three-four uptown. Shield M one eight six eight. I understand you’re the physician who attended to Jennifer Dance.”
“I treated her for a gunshot wound. It was a graze that required disinfection and debridement. Nothing too serious.”
“Everything went well?”
“Just fine,” Patel confirmed.
“Do you have her close by? I need to ask her some questions about the shooting.”
Patel stood at the nurses’ station in the ER, the phone held to his ear. “Miss Dance left the hospital a few hours ago.”
“Did you sign her out?”
“No. She left on her own. There was a man claiming to be her brother asking to visit her. She felt he meant to harm her. She insisted on leaving immediately.”
“And this man was there . . . at the hospital?”
“Yes, he was. After she left, I confronted him.”
“What did the man say?”
“Nothing. He turned right around and left. Did you want to get in touch with her, Detective?”
“Yes, I would.”
“I gave her my jacket to help her avoid the man’s attention. My cell phone was in the pocket. I hope she discovered it there.” Patel read off his number. “You might try reaching her. A woman in her condition shouldn’t be out in this weather fearing for her life.”
“I thought you said the gunshot wound wasn’t serious?”
“I’m not talking about the gunshot. Miss Dance is eight weeks pregnant. That kind of stress is more than enough to cause even the strongest woman to miscarry.”
A long silence ensued. Thomas Bolden stared at the phone, his throat scratchy from imitating the detective’s gravelly voice. It was his last shot. He’d tried to get through to Jenny a dozen times, but the switchboard had been prohibited from giving out information.
“Detective, are you still there?”
“Yes,” said Bolden. “I’m still here. Thanks for the information.”
Clad in his boxer shorts and socks, Bolden stood in the back room of the Ming Fung Laundry Company in Chinatown, Althea’s cell phone to his ear. “Answer the call, Jenny. Pick it up. Let me know where you are.”
After four rings, Dr. Patel’s recorded message began. “Hello, you have reached . . .”
Bolden hung up, exhaling through his teeth. Around him, several men and women guided giant canvas baskets filled with dirty clothing across the floor to industrial washing machines, arranged shirts on ironing boards, and transferred them to tall piles to be packed and moved up front.
As a freshman at Princeton, Bolden had looked at the Ming Fung Laundry as his own Barneys. Every few months he’d take a train into the city to sort through their left-behinds, finding Ralph Lauren shirts in perfect condition for five dollars, and dress flannels for ten. These days, shirts ran ten bucks, and pants went for twenty. The blue blazer he’d chosen had set him back fifty. If there was anyplace he might hide, it was Chinatown. A world within a world.
Eight weeks pregnant.
Why hadn’t she told him? He sighed, angry with himself. She had wanted to at lunch, but he’d been so busy going on about his own problems that he hadn’t given her half a chance to get to it. But, why not before? Why not after dinner last night? Or when they’d been lying in bed Sunday morning? Or anytime after she’d found out? What had he done to make her so reluctant to tell him? He knew the answer. He’d been himself. The emotionally remote, self-centered financial genius in all his blazing glory. She’d hinted at it last night, and what had he said? He’d called her a body snatcher. Good going, jerk! Bolden sat down and ran a hand over his forehead. A father. He was going to be a father.
Slowly, a smile lit up his face. Of all the things to learn on this day . . . he was going to be a father. It was wonderful. It was beyond wonderful. Eight weeks pregnant. The baby would be born in September. He shook his head. A father. He hadn’t expected to be so happy at the news. He hadn’t expected to feel like this . . . to feel liberated. Yes, that was it. Liberated. It was as if someone had turned on the lights ahead of him, and for the first time, he could see all the way down the tunnel. A father.
And then his joy dimmed.
Eight weeks pregnant. And they shot her. They aimed a rifle at her and gunned her down as if she were no better than an animal. A rage such as he had never known filled Bolden, causing him to tremble and grow red in the face. He would not let it stand.
Bolden sorted through the folder Althea had given him. It was all there, in black and white. Scanlon Corporation had belonged to Defense Associates, a company that named Mickey Schiff as a director, and James Jacklin, its chairman. When Defense Associates went bust, Schiff moved over to Harrington Weiss. Jacklin spun the dice again, starting up Jefferson Partners with Guy de Valmont, at that point a young partner at HW. Was it a trade? Schiff to HW. De Valmont to Jefferson. Some kind of payout to make up for the fifty million and change HW had had to write off when Defense Associates shut down? Common sense would dictate that Sol Weiss never put another dime in one of Jacklin’s ventures. But twenty years down the road, the ties between Jefferson and HW were tighter than ever. HW had invested in all of Jefferson’s funds and the investments had paid off richly. Returns of eighty percent, a hundred, higher even, were not unco
mmon. Until lately . . .
The private equity industry was growing crowded. “Overfished” was a term people used. The same five or six behemoths trawling the same waters for the same deals. When a company came up for sale, all six would make bids. An auction ensued. One or two might drop out, but the rest would eagerly join the bidding, upping the ante one hundred million dollars, two hundred million, a billion at a time. With each uptick, the return on the investment declined. It was simple math. Profit equaled the price you received for selling the company minus the price paid to purchase it.
And here was the problem: HW invested in all of its clients’ funds, as did most of the larger pension funds, college endowments, and investment banks. It was a way of diversifying, of keeping risk within acceptable measures. The result was that HW was, in effect, bidding against itself. When Jefferson bid against Atlantic, they were using HW’s money. When Atlantic counterbid, they were using HW’s money, too. It was like playing against yourself at a poker table.
The problem was that HW couldn’t just invest with Jefferson. Atlantic (and the other sponsors) might take that as a compelling reason to stop sending business HW’s way. Fees, not investment income, were HW’s bread and butter.
After analyzing the declining returns HW was earning on its investments with the larger sponsors, Bolden had written a memo to Sol Weiss suggesting the firm stop putting its own money into these mega-funds, and instead seek out smaller, more aggressive funds that concentrated on buying companies valued at less than a billion dollars. The potential return was markedly higher, as was the risk. But at least they weren’t bidding against themselves.
Jefferson Partners, in particular, was showing lagging returns.
Jefferson. It kept coming back to them.
Bolden shuffled through the list Althea had compiled detailing all companies Bolden’s core clients had bought and sold during the past twenty years. Over and over again, his eyes returned to the column under Jefferson’s name. TruSign. Purchased in 1994. Sold in 1999. National Bank Data. Purchased in 1991. Sold in 1995. Williams Satellite. Purchased in 1997. Sold in 2004. Triton Aerospace. Purchased in 2001. Still held. The list went on.
TruSign was one of the primary operators of the Internet backbone, handling something like twenty billion web addresses and e-mails each day. They also managed the largest telecom signaling network in the world—a network that enabled cellular roaming, text messaging, caller ID—as well as handling more than forty percent of all e-commerce transactions in North America and Europe.
National Bank Data handled check-clearing services for over sixty percent of the nation’s banks.
Bell National Holding was a prime supplier of phone service for the Mid-Atlantic region.
All these companies gave Jefferson unfettered access to e-mail transmissions and the Web, banking and credit records, phone and satellite communications, insurance and medical records, and much more. Taken together, they provided a network that could eavesdrop on anyone who owned a cell phone or maintained a bank account, used credit cards or visited an ATM, held medical insurance or regularly traveled. In short, they could spy on every American between Sag Harbor and San Diego.
And now, Trendrite. A deal Bolden had brought to their doorstep. Trendrite was the capper, the consumer loan processing company that promised its customers a 360-degree view of every American consumer.
And Scanlon? It had disappeared but it hadn’t died. There at the bottom of Althea’s list was a company purchased by Jefferson in their very first fund in 1981. SI Corporation. McClean, Virginia. To this date the company had not been sold.
Scanlon was Jefferson’s private army. Muscle on demand.
Bolden tried to call Jenny once more. When he received the same message, he hung up. He dialed information and asked for Prell Associates. The operator connected him.
“I need Marty Kravitz,” he said when the switchboard answered. “Tell him it’s Jake Flannagan from HW. And say it’s an emergency. No, check that. Say it’s a fuckin’ emergency.”
“Excuse me, sir?” asked an offended voice, heavy on the starch.
“You heard me. Verbatim, if you please.” Jake Flannagan, Bolden’s boss at HW, had the foulest mouth on the Street. In the trade, he was known as a screamer. He had three sons that he brought into the office once in a while. Quiet, handsome kids who never showed up without a blazer. The joke was he called them Fuckin’ A, Fuckin’ B, and Fuckin’ C.
“One moment, sir. I’ll put you through.”
Bolden moved to the back of the laundry and stepped inside a bathroom. Where he was going, he needed a suit. He closed the door as Marty Kravitz came on the line.
“Jesus, Jake,” said Kravitz. “You’re scaring the hell out my secretary.”
“Tough shit,” said Bolden, laying on Flannagan’s Southie brogue. “Probably needs a little excitement in her life anyway. Make those nipples stand at attention.”
“And here I was thinking you’d mellowed with age,” said Kravitz, formerly a special agent in charge of the FBI’s New York field office.
“I ain’t a fuckin’ bottle of wine.”
“How you holding up down there?”
“So you heard? What a disaster. Sol’s dead.”
“The entire Street’s in shock. The boss extends the firm’s condolences. Allen tried to call Mickey, but he was with the police.” Then Kravitz’s voice found another tone altogether, quiet, plummy, confiding. “What in God’s name is going on over there? News is saying it was an employment dispute. I saw the tape. I don’t buy it for a second. Looked like you guys were getting set to arrest the guy. Bolden, was it? What’d he do, then? Insider trading? Fiddle with the books? Screw the secretaries? What?”
“Between you and me?”
“You have the firm’s word. Of course, I’ll have to tell Allen.”
“No problem there.”
“Allen” was Allen Prell, and Prell Associates, the firm that bore not only his name but also his imprimatur of ruthless efficiency and airtight secrecy, was the world’s foremost private investigative agency. Investment banks had come to use the firm so much that it had gotten the nickname Wall Street’s Private Eye. Harrington Weiss hired Prell to investigate corporate targets, assist with due diligence, and conduct background searches on prospective hires. But the firm’s expertise went beyond the world of high finance.
Prell was a government in trouble’s partner of choice to help track down stolen assets. It had helped Mrs. Aquino locate the billions pilfered by Mr. and Mrs. Marcos. It had dug up a lesser sum spirited away by “Baby Doc” Duvalier. And, more recently, it had assisted Lady Liberty in her search for the four billion dollars said to be stashed in Libya, and elsewhere, by Saddam Hussein. The company’s ranks were filled with former policemen, army officers, and intelligence professionals. Men and women who moved comfortably in the shadows, and who knew that the letter of the law depended on which language it was written in. They were very expensive, very professional, and very effective. The joke went that if you wanted to find the guy who worked for Prell, just look for the man with dirt under his fingernails. No one dug deeper.
Bolden considered what to tell and what to leave out. He decided to tell the truth. “Mickey Schiff went to Sol this morning with a story about Tom Bolden assaulting a gal at the firm,” he said. “You know Tom?”
“Peripherally. Resident do-gooder, isn’t he?”
“That’s him. Anyway, I guess he asked her to blow him last night at some dinner party, and when she said no, he belted her one. You’ve heard it before, right?”
“Too many times,” said Kravitz. “It’s always the ones with the smiles you’ve got to look out for. Check for the halo, I say. That’s the guilty man every time.”
“According to Mickey, the girl’s attorneys called this morning to read him the riot act and threatened to sue the firm for every last shekel if Bolden wasn’t turned over to the police pronto.”
“I’d have thought they’d sue anyway,�
�� said Kravitz.
“Ditto. From what I heard, Tommy denied ever touching the girl. Security tried to arrest him and he went ballistic. I talked to a couple people who saw the whole thing and they swore the shooting was an accident.”
“Why didn’t he stick around? Sounds to me he’s a better shot than you give him credit for.”
Bolden bit back a four-letter response. “If you find him you can ask him yourself.”
“Is that an assignment?”
“No. I think the police can cover it.”
“Where’s the girl?” asked Kravitz. “I’d like to talk to her first.”
“It’s a question we need to answer. Her name is Diana Chambers. Sound familiar?”
“No, but we do all of HW’s background checks. I’m sure she’s on file. What firm’s representing her?”
“Mickey didn’t say. Just showed us some nasty pictures of her face. It’s part of what raised our concerns. Listen, Marty, this is a rush job. We want to put out a name tomorrow about who’ll be succeeding Sol. We love Mickey, but we’ve got to give him the once-over, like everyone else. Don’t be surprised if you get a call asking about me. Everything’s up in the air.” Bolden hung the possibility of Flannagan’s taking over the firm out there like a slow one right down the middle.
“We’re always here for you, Jake,” said Kravitz, donning his salesman’s polyester jacket.
“One more thing . . .”
“Shoot.”
“Bolden. I need to see his file, too.”
“Yeah, let me take a look . . . well, well, how ’bout that . . . you’re going to like this. Thomas F. Bolden. We performed a new check on him last week. Guess who asked for it?”
Bolden didn’t have to. Kravitz was quick to answer his own question. “Mickey Schiff.”
“Looks like he was ahead of the game. I want everything you can get me on Schiff and Bolden by six tonight.”
The Patriots Club Page 27