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
âNoâin my name only,â said Lelia. âAnd I want to take the moneys from it as often as I wishânow, for example.â
âWell, that is somewhat different, then,â said Veerboom. âYou want to establish not only a line of creditâbut an opening balance, in the form of a loan, which naturally will involve interest payments. If I understand correctly, youâll give your daughter drafts as she requires from this initial amountâthus you will retain full control of the money. Quite sensible, if I may say so.â
âThen this is possible for you?â
âBut of course, nothing simpler, my dear lady. And how much did you wish as a loan, to establish the opening balance?â
âIt is this reason that I wished only to speak directly with you, Monsieur Veerboom. It is somewhat a large amount.â
âAnd how large a sum are we dealing with, my dear baroness?â asked Veerboom, smiling politely.
âTwenty million dollars American, my dear Monsieur Veerboom.â
Veerboom stared at her for a momentâthen recovered his charm.
âWhy, certainly. And what did you plan to use as collateral to secure this loan?â
âWill forty million be enough?â she asked sweetly.
âForty million to secure an advance of twenty?â asked Veerboom, wondering whether his ears were working correctly. âThis will be no problem whatever, my dear baroness. But perhapsâas itâs a holiday, and the bank is closing nowâI might ask you to sign a few papers today, and contact you in a week or so at Baden-Baden, where I understand you areââ
âThis will not be possible,â Lelia assured him. âI wish to take several millions with me nowâtoday. Because of this need, I have brought the securityâcollateralâwith me.â
Lelia opened the large bag she carried, and pulled out the stack of genuine bearer bonds, copies of which were now sittingâgathering dustâwithin the vaults of the Depository Trust in New York. She fanned them out across the table as Veerboom tried not to gape.
Just then, the valet entered.
âTea for madame,â Veerboom told him; he was practically choking, his throat was so dry. âAnd would you bring me brandy? Bring a decanter, in fact. Madame, you would join me in some brandy, perhaps?â
Lelia nodded her assent, and smiled sweetly.
âOhâand Hans,â Veerboom added as an afterthought, âwill you have Peter telephone my six oâclock appointment, and tell the gentleman that I shall be late? Thank you so much.â
THE FINANCING
Under no economic system earlier than the advent of the machine industry does profit on investment seem to have been accounted a normal or unquestionably legitimate source of gain.
âThorstein Veblen,
THE MACHINE AGE
Sunday, December 20, was nearly one month after my night at the opera. This day, for the matinee, the German gods had vacated in favor of that famous French fortune hunter Manon. It seemed a fitting tribute to that earlier, inspired evening.
I love the scene where Manon throws over her life as queen of Paris andâdripping in diamondsârushes to Saint Sulpice, to seduce her former lover on the eve of his entry into the priesthood.
Manon is a girl whoâs torn between love of men and love of money. But as usual in opera, money wins out in the end. As sheâs dying, in poverty and exile, even the stars above her head remind her of those diamonds she used to wear when she was rolling in cash.
I went home somewhat cheered not only by the charm of the music; but by the fact that it was Manon who had taken the fall, not I.
The fog enveloped my apartment like a white sock. I went out to the terrace and clipped a few of my winter orchids to bring inside. From out there, the fog was so dense I couldnât even make out that phallic tower Lillie Coit had erected atop Telegraph Hill, as a tribute to those firemen she used to chase around town.
I was inside making myself some tea when the phone rang.
âGood evening, my dear,â said the soft, familiar voice. âI phoned because I thought you might want to wish me a happy birthday.â
âIs today your birthday?â I asked. âI knew it was Beethovenâs.â
âGreat minds are guided by the same planets,â Tor agreed. âAnd it seems Iâve got plenty to celebrate today: weâre right on schedule.â
Damn. Did that mean heâd gotten all the bonds he needed in order to start phase twoâthe investment? And I wasnât even off first base. Since Tavish and the crew hadnât yet cracked a single code, I couldnât get my hands on a nickel. The entire idea of this bet suddenly began to depress me.
âSo what have you three been doing to celebrate?â I asked him, to change the subject.
âGeorgian and I are still working, of course,â he told me. âWe should be finished with the printing later this week. But Leliaâs gone off to Europe to help us get a jump on the gun.â
So there was good news and bad news. The good, of course, was that they werenât yet throughâI still had a week to catch up. But the bad news ⊠I thought Iâd better find out.
âYou sent Lelia to Europe all alone?â I asked. âI hope you understand what youâre doing.â
âShe canât get into much trouble,â he assured me. âSheâs taken those bondsâthe genuine ones we replaced with our forgeriesâand sheâs establishing lines of credit at various banks on the continent. No one would question a woman of her standing, in any country, with opening accounts of that size. But sheâs not actually taking out cashâjust setting things up so the moneyâs available when weâre ready to draw on it.â
âI hope this gun youâre âgetting a jump onâ wonât backfire and blow your head off,â I warned. âIâve known Lelia longer than you have. She likes to handle things her own way.â
âLet me worry about that,â he said blithely. âBesides, someone had to start the ball rolling. By the time weâve finished printing and substituting
Comments (0)