A Calculated Risk Katherine Neville (adventure books to read txt) đ
- Author: Katherine Neville
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âIâd never disparage Charles,â he said with that smile. âBut I looked at your charts. As it happens, you asked him the wrong questionâhow many domestic wire transfers you could stealâa drop in the bucket! What about money from outside the United States?â
Good Lord, he was right! It was double the volume or moreâbut I hadnât included those transfers in my study. Though I didnât control systems like CHIPS or SWIFTâthe governmentâs huge wire transfer networksâI certainly interfaced with them, and that money still moved in and out of our bank.
âIâm beginning to feel grateful to you,â I admitted, sipping my cognac with a smile. âItâs a deal, if we can agree on the stakes. I know what I wantâIâve thought this through all day. I want to be head of security at the Fed; I had the job, anyway, until my boss told them not to hire me. I know, with your contacts, you could get me the job back. But I wonât ask you toâunless I win, fair and square.â
âVery well,â he agreed with a grimace. âBut my dear, as I told you twelve years ago, you donât belong in a financial institution. Those people donât know red from blackâthey think loans are assets and deposits are liabilities. You belong to me; Iâve invested too many years in you to watch you pumping out columned ledgers for bankersâa bunch of ignoramuses who canât appreciate what theyâve got.â
âMy grandfather was a banker,â I said with injured pride.
âNot really; he lost his shirt to men like these. Believe me, I know the story. What was he lackingâhave you asked yourself? I doubt very much that intelligence or integrity is the answer.â
He motioned for the check as he continued, somewhat irritably.
âVery wellâyouâll have what you want. But if I winâas I shallâI feel no compunction about collecting what I want: youâll come to work for me, as you should have done long ago.â
âAs whatâGalatea, your flawless creation?â I said with a laugh, though I didnât find it so awfully amusing. Iâd escaped from this ten years ago; now again, I found myself staring it in the face. But even if I lost, I wasnât going to be a patsy to Torâs hubris for the rest of my life.
âFor how long?â I asked him. âYou couldnât expect it to be forever?â
He thought about that for a moment.
âFor a year and a day,â he said cryptically, not looking at me.
ââThe Owl and the Pussycatâ!â I exclaimed. âI remember that poem: âThey took some honey and plenty of money âŠââ
ââWrapped up in a five-pound note,ââ Tor said, looking up pleasantly surprised.
ââAnd they sailed away for a year and a day, âneath the light of the silvery moon,ââ I finished.
âIt would seemâmature and seasoned banker that you areâyou still recall your fables, my dear little pussycat,â said Tor with a smile. âWho knowsâperhaps youâd enjoy losing this wager to me far more than winning it.â
âI wouldnât bank on it,â I said.
There was only one thing that made Tor uncomfortable about the wager heâd dragged me into. In order to carry out his part of the bet, he needed an accomplice. Though he knew everything there was to know about computers, there was one necessary skill he himself did not possess.
âI need a photographer,â he told me, âand a good one.â
By coincidence, I happened to know one of the best photographers in New York. I agreed to take Tor over there the very next morning.
âTell me about this friend of yours,â he said as we taxied uptown on Sunday. âIs he trustworthy? Can we tell him the truth about our plans?â
âHe is a she, and her name is Georgian Daimlisch,â I said. âSheâs my best friend, though I havenât seen her in years. I can assure you, sheâs totally trustworthyâbut donât believe a word she says.â
âI see,â he said. âThe picture you paint is much clearerâweâre about to meet a reliable schizophrenic. Does she know what weâre coming to see her about?â
âIâm not sure she knows weâre coming at all.â
âDidnât you tell me you spoke with the mother?â Tor said.
âLelia? Yes, of courseâbut that doesnât mean anything.â
Tor was silent the rest of the trip.
It had always been hard to describe Georgian, though sheâd been my best friend for more years than sheâd permit me to reveal. When she lived anywhere, it was at her motherâs apartment on upper Park Avenue. But Georgian never settled anywhere for long; she was a butterfly of a rare breed, and wildly independent.
Georgian wasnât independent financiallyâor, I should say, no one knew exactly how much she had. As a photographer, she traveled around the world, stopping at chĂąteaus and palaces that were far beyond ordinary means. On the other hand, she usually dressed in tattered jeans and T-shirts, and wore so many gold rings she seemed to be sporting brass knuckles.
Most of her acquaintances thought she was frivolous, sex-crazed, extravagant, and more than slightly batty; I found her serious, reclusive, and a brilliant business manager with a mind like a steel trap. How could one person engender such diverse impressions in the minds of so many? Simpleâshe was unique, her own creation. Sheâd become a photographer to fashion her own universe, and then live in it.
I saw her rarely, because when I did, she expected me to do likewise.
As soon as Iâd agreed to introduce Tor to Georgian, I began to have reservations. They had a lot in common: both were highly possessive of me and thought they could fix whatever was wrong with meâbut their ideas of how to achieve that fix were incompatible. Tor wanted to introduce me to reality; Georgian wanted to strike the word from my vocabulary. I feared theyâd hate each other on sight.
The lobby of Lelia and Georgianâs building looked like a fancy auto showroom; it lacked only the Cadillacs scattered about the floor. Enormous chandeliers hung from the ceilings like bunches of frosted grapes; a number of deep red, flocked-velvet divans were
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