A Calculated Risk Katherine Neville (adventure books to read txt) đ
- Author: Katherine Neville
Book online «A Calculated Risk Katherine Neville (adventure books to read txt) đ». Author Katherine Neville
âSecurities arenât tracked by computer?â I said, amazed.
âThe trading, yesâbut not the physical location,â Tor informed me. âThe SEC believes that five to ten percent of all the stocks out there in bank vaults, attic trunksâeven inside the Depository Trustâare either fraudulent or stolen. If they could put them all on computer, theyâd find out which were duplicates or otherwise fakes. They want a physical inventoryâand they want it now.â
âSounds like a great chance for everyone to clean house,â I agreed.
âDoes it?â Tor said with raised eyebrow, looking at me in the darkening light. âThen perhaps you can explain why every single institutionâwithout exceptionâturned it down.â
Of course, it didnât take a genius to figure that one out. The SEC didnât own the banks and couldnât force them to conduct an inventory, even if they provided the system. And none of these institutions wanted it known how many of their own securities were worthless! So long as they pretended they were real, they could keep trading them, or use them as collateral for other things. Once they were proven fakesâbingoâtheyâd be holding an empty bag. I realized suddenly the extent of dastardly behavior rampant in the entire financial industryâjust as Tor had said. And it really made me see red.
But I realized something else, too: Iâd underestimated Tor by quite a margin, and I felt dreadful about it. Why did I have to be so bloody self-righteous, assuming that I was the only one on earth with principles, and the desire to carry them through? He was right when heâd said I needed to expand my horizons. Now I knew what I had to do.
I glanced up and caught him watching me as we stood there in the mist that had turned to lightly falling snow. He was smiling his old wry smile, and for just an instant, I felt suspicious againâas if heâd mapped out the cogs in my brain beforehand, and had known precisely how many revolutions it would require to get me to this point.
âSo you accept the wager, then?â he said.
âNot so fast,â I told him. âIf itâs a wager, and not just a double-whammy theftâshouldnât there be some stakes?â
âI hadnât thought of that,â he admitted, unsettled for a moment. âBut youâre right. If weâre going through all these pains, I suppose there should be.â
He thought awhile as we walked arm in arm back up the empty street in search of a cab. At last, he turned to me and put both hands on my shoulders, looking down with an expression I couldnât fathom.
âI have it,â he said with a mischievous grin I didnât care for at all. âWhoever loses will have to grant the winnerâs fondest wish.â
âA wish?â I said. âThat sounds like a fairy tale. Besidesâmaybe the loser would be in no position to grant such a wish.â
âPerhaps not,â he said, still smiling. âI only know that youâd be in a position to grant mine.â
THE LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
Men of thin skin with a conscience all the time full of prickles, are out of place in business dickerings. A prickly conscience would be like a silk apron on a blacksmith.
It isnât how you get your money, but what you do with it that counts.
âBouck White,
THE BOOK OF DANIEL DREW
I was certainly relieved Iâd had the chance to hike on Wall Street after lunch. Even so, I could barely put away a quarter of the dinner Tor ordered at the Plaza dining room that nightâsaumon en papillote, duck Ă lâorange, soufflĂ© Grand Marnier, to scratch the surfaceâas we finished ironing out the kinks in our bet.
Tor was unwilling to reveal what his wish might be, should he win the wager. And so, based upon prior experience with him, I thought it best to come up with more substantial terms for our stakes. The ensuing negotiation began over the salmon, not the coffee. It took hours; and afterward, although my head ached long before the cognac was served, I couldnât remember the last time Iâd had such fun.
Tor had always been able to explain anything with amazing clarity, but his mind itself was baroque. He was a master of complexity and intrigue, and loved to examine an issue from every possible viewpoint. I knew heâd dreamed up this wager as much out of boredom as moral indignation. As usual, life itself just wasnât enough of a challenge.
âItâs far too simple,â he said off the bat, âjust to walk off with a billion dollars; any hacker can do that. To make it really interesting, I think we should leave undefined the specific amount of the theft.â
âHow can we tell whoâs won, then?â I wanted to know.
âWeâll put a time limit on itâthree months or soâperhaps a bit extra to plan the details. Then we take the money weâve âborrowedâ ⊠and invest it! This throws in the added challenge of speculation. So the issue is not who steals the most money, but who makes best use of it. Weâll target a reasonable sum. Whoever reaps the agreed-upon amount first will win.â
âStealing a billion isnât tough enough,â I commented, not expecting an answer.
But Tor was tapping away at his small machine. âThirty million dollars!â he announced, looking up. âThatâs how much you can make, with a decent return on a billion, in three monthsâ time.â
Without waiting to hear from me, he pulled out a pocket calendar. âToday is November twenty-eighthânearly December,â he went on. âIt should take me two weeks, as I said, for the actual theft, then the three months for the investment. With a few extra weeks to set up and prepare, I should be able to finish by ⊠April first!â
âApril Foolsâ Day?â I laughed. âThat seems more than appropriate. But what about me? Charles said I could steal only ten million. How can I invest that to
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