The Fear in Yesterday's Rings

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The Fear in Yesterday's Rings Page 27

by George C. Chesbro


  “Just what is it you do, Mr. Pomeroy?”

  “I thought I had explained that. This office serves as a clearinghouse for applications that originate in western Europe and sections of North America, including Quebec Province. Based on what we find out, we—I—pass judgment on whether or not a grant should be authorized, and this is usually based on the nature of the proposal. We process thousands of applications every year.”

  “And you investigated this Michael Radigan?”

  He stiffened. “Yes, to the degree that we investigate any applicant. It’s easy to second-guess this office now, but his credentials, and those of the organization he claimed to represent, seemed impeccable at the time.”

  “Even though it was all phony.”

  “Dr. Frederickson, if John Sinclair was not capable of erecting such exquisite inventions, he wouldn’t be the master criminal he is, now would he? I did my job, and Interpol tells me that the cover he invented would have survived a much more thorough investigation than the ones we routinely conduct.”

  “Mr. Neuberger tells me New York never authorized the grant.”

  “Of course not; they never had the time. And if they had, it would have shown up in bank records.”

  I was experiencing a growing sense of frustration and a feeling of inadequacy. Another feeling I had, and it was only a feeling, was that Hyatt Pomeroy was withholding something—perhaps something important—but I just didn’t have the information or expertise to adequately grill him.

  “Will that be all, Dr. Frederickson?” he continued, responding to my silence.

  “Look, Mr. Pomeroy, Sinclair didn’t rob you with a gun, he robbed you with a number. This whole damn thing is about numbers. What I know about encryption of data codes and electronic transfers of funds wouldn’t wet the bottom of a thimble, but I sure as hell know that Sinclair wouldn’t have gone to all the trouble of setting up dummy corporations and inventing a phony identity to get in here, and he wouldn’t have wasted six weeks of his time to meet with you on four occasions, if he didn’t need something from this office, from you. What did you give John Sinclair that he needed to fleece Cornucopia, Mr. Pomeroy?” I paused when I saw the change of expression on his face, and I felt a tiny surge of exhilaration. And suddenly, I thought I knew the answer. “A number. You gave him a number. You may not be authorized to award grants or transfer funds, but you do assign certain numbers. Is that it, Mr. Pomeroy?”

  In only a matter of seconds, Hyatt Pomeroy had gone from looking defensive but self-assured to downright glum. “Mr. Neuberger is well aware of the encryption process used by the organization his grandfather founded and which he now directs, Dr. Frederickson. He also has all the pertinent data, as does Interpol.”

  “Well, it apparently slipped Mr. Neuberger’s mind to give me the information I’m looking for now, and I didn’t know enough to ask. But he obviously wants me to have it, or he wouldn’t have sent me over here to prepare a report. So let me ask you again: What did Sinclair get from you that he needed to pull off the scam?”

  Pomeroy heaved a long, heartfelt sigh, then abruptly wrote something down on a slip of paper, which he shoved across the desk toward me. “A file number,” he said tersely.

  “Ah, now we’re getting someplace,” I said, glancing at the seven-digit number he had written down before putting the paper into my pocket.

  “Not really, Dr. Frederickson,” he replied in the same brusque tone. “While it’s true that he required a file number, he also required a good deal more that he didn’t—couldn’t—get from this office. Don’t assume that just because I find it humiliating to have to rehash all this bloody business for the hundredth time it means you’ve wrung from me some earth-shattering discovery. The file number forms the base for the final encryption code, but twelve more numbers—digits—are required to construct the electronic key he needed to get at the money. It’s all very complex, and it can only be accomplished with computers operated by people with proper authorization codes. What he did should have been impossible.”

  “Your boss agrees with you. But the fact remains that Sinclair used the file number you gave him to manufacture his very own encrypted electronic key, upped the ante to ten million dollars, bypassed all the built-in security procedures, transferred the ten million to an account he had created, withdrew the money, and walked away.”

  Pomeroy nodded curtly. “Apparently.”

  “Definitely. You have any idea at all of how he might have done it?”

  “None whatsoever.”

  “You have any notions at all about this bloody business that you’d care to share with me?”

  “None whatsoever.”

  It was looking like the business part of my trip to Switzerland was going to take even less time than I’d thought.

  The first thing I noticed when I walked back into my hotel suite was a distinct and unpleasant medicinal smell. I assumed the odor was from some kind of disinfectant, but everything had seemed in perfect order when I’d checked in, and I couldn’t understand why the maid would be cleaning a clean bathroom so late in the day. I opened all the windows before going down to the hotel dining room to eat. When I returned, the odor was gone. I closed the windows, turned on the air conditioner, and went to bed. I fell asleep almost immediately and dreamed of making love to Harper by a roaring fire in a chalet somewhere high in the Alps.

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  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © by George C. Chesbro

  Cover design by Ian Koviak

  ISBN: 978-1-5040-4474-5

  This edition published in 2017 by MysteriousPress.com/Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.

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  GEORGE C. CHESBRO

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