Showing posts with label geneva. Show all posts
Showing posts with label geneva. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

ALMOST A DEAD MAN - CHAPTER 19


TWENTY-TWO

That Sunday a fierce rainstorm pummeled Lac Leman and Sean imagined that the Russians and USA were waging meteorological war over Europe. Rather than leave the hotel room's comfort, Sean ordered club sandwich from room service and read Heinrich Boll's BILLIARDS AT HALF PAST NINE, figuring the day to be a dead loss. He fell asleep halfway through the book.

In the morning the bells of Emanuel Church tolled eight times. Sean rose from the bed and went to the window. The rain was still falling through a misty fog onto Geneva's lakeside park,

At 8:15am the bellboy entered the room with the pre-ordered continental breakfast. Sean ate, then dressed in the black suit, which he wore on these trips to Geneva. By 9:05am he checked out of the hotel.

Rain splashed off the sidewalk and he sat in the Volvo.

"No walking today." asked Murah.

"A little too wet for my taste."

The big man was unusually tanned and Sean complimented the Yugoslavian saying, "Nice color."

Murah bobbed his head like a tendon had been cut in his neck.

"Yes, I was in Thailand one week and girls big fun. Little brown fucking machine. A man's Disneyworld."

The Yugoslav put the car in drive and the Volvo pulled away from the hotel.

During the short drive Sean studied the driver's profile. Murah's brow had been battered by fists and his ears flattened by a thousand punches. The flutter of his right eyelid indicated nerve damage. Sean had been hundreds of fights throughout his life, but Murah had been in countless life-and-death battles. The flattened knuckles on the steering wheel were a proof that the driver gave worse than he received.

They arrived at the bank on Rue du Fosse Vert. Sean checked his watch. 9:30am. He got out of the car, saying, "I'll be a minute."

"Take this." Murah handed him a chrome suitcase, similar to those photographers used to transport cameras. Sean opened the case. It was empty, but its addition jarred him into understanding what he was for Kurt.

A bagman.

Someone who picked up cash for someone else.

The same as Johnny Fats, who ended up dead in New York.

The marrow in his spine gelled into ice, as he entered the bank. The guards were in place. The tellers were at the tills. Herr Egard sat at his desk and nodded a greeting. Everything about the routine had the feeling of sameness. Sean approached the desk and the banker handed him a packet, saying, "Four hundred thousand Swiss Marks."

"Four hundred thousand francs?"

"Swiss."

Sean signed a document authorizing the transfer of funds. The amount was twice as much as the previous pick-up.

"Is there something wrong?"

"No, I just want to count the money in private."

"As you wish, please come this way." Herr Egard brought him to a thick-walled room and said, "Buzz me, when you are through."

The door shut behind him and Sean suspected these walls would protect him from an atomic blast. Nothing bad could happen to him in here, only outside, so he took his time counting each packet of ten thousand-franc bills, while going over every moment of his trip back to Hamburg.

When he was finished counting, Sean repacked the case, then buzzed the door.

"Alles in Ordnung?" asked Herr Egard.

"Alles ist klar." Sean was envious of the banker's well-ordered world. Except for a few wrong turns early in his life Sean could be leading the same life, but he had no idea how to get back onto that path. He was who he was and nothing was going to change that.

He walked toward the exit and a guard opening the door for him proved that, but once he stood on the steps, a crazy urge to run away came over him.

Sean looked at Murah behind the wheel of the Volvo. The Yugoslav was certainly packing a piece, but his hands were not on the steering wheel. It would take him a couple of seconds to get out of the car. Sean could outrun the big man and melt into the city. He could be in Paris by nightfall and anywhere in the world the next day, but something kept him from robbing Kurt.

Actually someone.

Sean got in the car and the Yugoslav asked, "Is there anything wrong?"

"No, I was just taking a breath of air before I get stuck in the airport all day," Sean lied, not caring whether Murah believed him or not.

"All part of the job," Murah commented, as the Volvo pulled away from the curb. The driver said nothing else on the way to the airport and by the time Sean arrived at the airport, he had settled down to being strictly a courier, instead of a thief.

He walked into the terminal with his travel bag over his shoulder and the aluminum case in his left hand. Murah seemed to be on edge, as he escorted Sean through the terminal.

"Was ist los?" Remembering Kurt's mention of armed robbery, Sean clasped the case, though he could imagine anyone so stupid as to attempt a hold-up it in an airport.

"Nichts ist los?" Murah answered, though his eyes swiveled like a lizard hunting for a fly.

"Who are you looking for? The police?"

"Die Polizei sind da." Murah motioned secretively at the two uniformed officers against the wall. His porcine eyes shifted from left to right, then he smiled dully. "I'm more worried about the taxman."

"The taxman?"

"What do they do the taxman look like?"

"Like saints. Very evil saints." Obviously Murah did hold any love for the government revenue collectors and as they sat down, Murah announced, "As you Americans say, "The coat is clear."

Sean didn't bother to correct the Yugoslav's mutilation of the phrase and remained quiet, as they sat through the long hours till his departure. When he finally passed through the gate, Sean said, "See you next week."

Murah waved back, glad for this trip to be over, for he could have sworn that the American was planning a runner at the bank and had anticipated him to attempt the same in the airport. He would have hated to shoot him, but a job is a job. He waited for the plane to take off, then Murah returned to his Volvo, ready for another week of work at his car repair shop.

During the Lufthansa flight #3671 to Hamburg the 727 rose through innumerable pockets of turbulence, as a capricious cross-streams buffeted the plane. The aircraft yeed and yawed like a ship at sea. Every passenger on the flight was scared and Sean was no exception. He picked up a Stern Magazine and buried his face in the pages praying for the plane to land. His prayer went unanswered and for the first time in his life he reached for the airsick bag, though he successfully fought back the nausea. They did not clear the overcast, until they were a few hundred feet from the ground. The wind tugged on the plane from all directions and, when the pilot expertly landed on all three points, everyone on board responded with applause.

The quick taxi to the terminal undernoted how little air traffic Fuhlsbuttel handled.

When the airplane's outer door opened, Sean was first out of the plane and swiftly proceeded across the windy tarmac to the terminal. Inside he spotted Kurt behind the separating glass, but when he waved, the German strangely retreated into the crowd.

"Herr Tempo?" a man asked behind him. A stranger using your last name is always a bad sign, whether in person or on the phone. Sean turned around to face a young man sporting a trim goatee and longish blond hair. There was no denying what he was.

"Are you Herr Tempo?" asked the plainclothes policeman.

"Depends on who's doing the asking." Sean noticed that the other travelers gave the two men a wide berth and their whispering glances confirmed that they had already convicted him without an accusation.

"Inspector Brucken." A badge further identified the blonde man as a police officer. "I am with the Hamburg Kriminalpolizei. Would you please come with me?"

It was more a command than a request. A pair of uniformed policemen stood by the arrival gate in a back-up position. Sean had no choice, but obeyed the command and entered the office before the inspector. The walls were painted institutional green. A table and two chairs were bolted to the floor. A two-way mirror was screwed into the wall and Sean recognized he was in an interrogation room.

"What's this all about?"

"You are familiar with Cali Nordstrom or Tommy Letier, also called SS Tommy?" The police inspector's crumpled suit bore the stress of having spent too many hours in a car.

"Maybe I do." The next best thing to saying nothing was to repeat the negative of what you had just said, so he added, "Maybe I don't."

"I know you do, so could you open that case?"

As far as he knew, transporting money was not illegal, though ignorance was no guarantor of innocence, still Sean took a risk and opened the case. It wasn't his money. The policeman's eyes widened at seeing so much cash. Sean had probably responded in the same manner at the bank.

Alex Brucken read from a notebook for a few seconds, then said in clipped English, "You have been taking trips to Geneva every Monday for the last three weeks."

"Am I a hobby of yours?" Sean asked, refusing to be rattled.

"More or less." The plainclothed officer folded the notebook inside his jacket, so it might have been mistaken for a gun in a shoulder holster. "You take this money to Kurt Oster, a business associate of Cali Nordstrum."

"I haven't robbed any banks. All I did was pick up some money from Switzerland and bring it here. As far as I know that is not against the law."

"No, but maybe what happens to the money afterwards is."

"Is this an official investigation?" Sean started for the door.

"What is the difference?" Inspector Brucken grabbed Sean's wrist.

"It's the difference between telling you the truth or telling you to go fuck yourself." He had used the line before in New York and practice makes perfect.

"Consider it unofficial interest." The policeman released his hold.

"Then consider me 'gone', I'll save the 'fuck yourself' for later." Sean saluted the inspector.

"That is very funny, but excuse me, if I do not laugh," the inspector said, as he opened the office's door. "We will stay in touch."

"I'm sure I can bet on that," Sean replied like some tough guy in a movie, but he was relieved to be freed. As he walked through the terminal, Sean thought about what he was going to say to Kurt. Nothing nice, for he didn't have to wonder why he was being rousted. Kurt and Cali were criminals just like the officer said they were. All that talk about this being legal was bullshit, but then Sean had always known that.

Stepping outside he pulled up his collar against the cold the drizzling wind. Summer was almost gone and he was not even close to getting out of town.

A brand-new BMW pulled up to the curb. Kurt was behind the wheel. Sean slid in and they sped from the airport. Kurt's eyes flicked to the rearview mirror.

"What was that all about?"

"Some policeman sticking his nose where he should not." Kurt answered, which Sean could tell wasn’t the truth.

"He knew about my transporting your money." To Sean's way of thinking Inspector Brucken could have only discovered what he was doing by someone snitching him out. The list of those people aware of his trip was small; Petra, Kurt, Herr Egard, and Murah. None of them would have talked, meaning someone else was taking an interest in what he was doing for Kurt.

"There is nothing illegal about that. If there was, then you would have been arrested, yes?" Kurt's telling him the same thing again had a more false ring to it after his encounter with the police. "That policeman, he is guessing. That is all."

"Then why did he mention Cali's and your names?" Sean was too angry to buy the excuse. He had come three thousand miles to avoid a problem with the police only to find himself getting in deep here. Inspector Brucken might be shooting in the dark, but eventually the policeman would find something, because there was more than likely something to find.

"He is simply fishing for information."

"Then why did you hide?" Sean turned around in his seat. The road was empty, but that didn't make him feel any better.

"It was better that way." Kurt stepped on the gas. The thrust of the car forced them against the leather seats. He nervously drummed on the steering wheel, indicating the gravity of the confrontation. "All that money came from my liquidation of my telex holdings throughout Germany. They send people to jail for tax evasion, so I have been protecting myself. To be truthful, I will be leaving Germany soon. I am tired of this shitty weather. Once I settle my affairs, we can both leave."

"I want to go now." Sean was spooked. Anytime you speak to a cop means things are heading in the direction of jail. While a German prison might be better than Riker's Island, Sean had no desire to be a penal guest of any nation.

As the BMW rushed down Mittelweg, the streetlights came on one by one. The few people on the street were wearing more clothes than the weather required, as if they were anticipating an early winter. Sean fingered the door handle, when they neared Milchstrasse.

"If you want to go, I cannot stop you." Kurt braked sharply, and the big car swerved to a halt. He was angry, because something had fucked up. Even worse was Sean's wanting to bail out. He had to stop the American from going and said, "But I can't pay your percentage from the club right this instance."

"Just pay me from what you have in the case?" Kurt owed him approximately five thousand Marks, which converted to around $3000.

"I have to give it all to Cali."

"Why not me?"

"You will not kill me and Cali would. All I'm asking is for one month more."

"From where I'm sitting one month seems like forever."

"I can use you here. At the club."

Sean looked up at his apartment. The lights were on. Petra was upstairs. She had kept him from running in Geneva. Her and her alone. It was Petra who also made him cave into Kurt by saying, "Okay, I'll stay, but I'm through with the trips to Geneva."

"Thank you, Sean. Thank you very much." Kurt was profoundly grateful, and tears formed in his eyes. Sean was fairly certain it was all an act, but asked, "What is wrong?"

"Well," Kurt hesitated, as he weighed opening up his mind to the American, then he said, "It is Vanessa. She's gone."

"How many days has she been gone?"

"Two."

"Stop worrying. I can tell by the way she looks at you, that this is no fly-by-night affair," Sean assured the driver, though he had never given Kurt anything, but long odds with the platinum beauty. Their worlds were too far apart.

"I'm glad someone sees it that way," Kurt said, as his passenger left the car.

He watched the American cross the street to the apartment building. Sean had a right to be rattled. Someone had talked. Not Cali, not himself, and the banker had too much to lose to blurt out his guts. Kurt thumped the dashboard with his fist. This policeman was a warning from someone other than the police saying they knew exactly what Cali and Kurt were doing.

If Cali found out about this policeman, he would back out of the project. Without the money from the swindle, Kurt would remain a front for Cali and, as much as his friend would take care of him, Kurt had to be his own man.

Cali and Kurt had pledged at the beginning of this project, that no one could stop them. Neither of them had ever said anything about that person being one of them and nothing was going to change that either. Nothing and he drove away into the rain

ALMOST A DEAD MAN - CHAPTER 32

The warm sun bathed Sean's skin, as he stood on Geneva's quai. A powerful fountain in the center of the Rade a powerful fountain spumed water hundreds of feet into the crystalline blue sky. The glaciers of Mt. Blanc gleamed to the south. The giant peak lay in France. If Sean stole the money in the case, he was heading there.

A horn blared behind Sean.

a silver Turbo Benz 500 with German plates pulled up to the curb before the rococo statue of a long-dead aristocrat. The passenger window rolled down and Kurt shouted to Sean, "I told you I would be here."

Several Swiss passers-by glared at the man inside. Yelling from a car your horn was not considered proper etiquette in staid Switzerland, then again Kurt was not Swiss and he said with a jerky voice, "Get in the car."

Sean threw his bag in the back and sat in the front.

"Did you sleep at all?" Sean surveyed the street for the police.

"An hour outside of Basel," Kurt spoke with a weary voice.

We can sleep after the drop-off."

"I want to get this money and then get over to Paris. That is all."

"Sure." Sean had no desire to argue with anyone in Kurt's state and checked his watch. "Then we better go."

The German stepped on the gas and the Mercedes sped down the street, narrowly missing several parked cars.

"Slow down." Sean hated bad driving.

"I know what I'm doing."

Kurt grabbed at his chest and struggled to gain his breath. He turned left onto Rue Vert-Fosse and braked before the bank's ornate doors.

"See. Safe and sound."

"I'll see you soon." Sean got out of the car.

"I'll be waiting."

Kurt glanced at the bank. The gray facade conveyed an eternal calm from the countless deals completed without anyone ever hearing about them, but the best way to rob a bank was from inside and that was exactly what Cali and Kurt were doing.

This was his OberSeminar, the final test for his life of crime. He had been a petty pickpocket, passed bad checks, burgled mansions for jewelry and art, sold stolen Rolls-Royces and Bentleys to Africa, dealt drugs, all of it small time in comparison to this score. In a few minutes he would be a millionaires and escape his life of crime for good. He could open a classic Caribbean restaurant on Montserrat and live well into the next century.

A guard moved nearer to the door and checked out the Mercedes. Fifty minutes remained till Three O'clock and the bank closed at Five. Hans Roth should have sent the wire at Twelve PM. Kurt had called Herr Egard to have all the money in the account ready for this afternoon's pick-up. Herr Egard told him everything was in place. Once Sean received the money, the guards would escort him to the car . He would give Sean his cut and be on his way.

By Monday the bankers would all be demanding who Sean Coll was and why he had been given the money. Kurt would be somewhere sunny and warm. He had been planning to be with Vanessa, but her interlude with him had been a sick joke on Lukas' part. They were both laughing at him now. The money he was about to receive would take away part of that sting.

The German grimaced, as an agonizing pain shot inside his chest. His hands fell from the steering wheel and he couldn't breathe again, until the tortuous wave subsided. Kurt had to calm down. Maybe he could get Sean to drive to Paris, so he could sleep. He stared inside the bank again and was annoyed Sean was taking so long.

A buzzing tunneled into his ears, but went away.

Finally Sean appeared at the doorway with the Halliburton case in his hand. He sat in the car and Kurt said, "Is that it?"

"Herr Egard said this cleaned out your account."

"How much was it?" Kurt asked with the elation of lottery winner waiting for the announcement of the sum.

"1,650,000 Swiss Francs."

Kurt calculated the exchange rate in his head and came up with the sum he had put into the account to accustom the bank to large money transactions. Kurt grabbed the case and opened it. The money barely filled the case. The driver exclaimed, "Where is the rest of it?"

"That's all I was given."

"There should be four or five million dollars."

"You want to search me?" Sean would have been satisfied with a tenth of that money.

"Go back in the bank and tell that fucking banker to call me on this number. Right fucking now." Kurt scrawled Cali's mobile phone number and passed the paper to Sean.

"Calm down, Kurt."

"I am calm,” exploded Kurt.

"I'm going."

Sean returned inside the bank and the guard closed the door behind him. A minute later the phone rang in the car. Kurt fumbled for the phone. Herr Egard asked, "Herr Oster, what seems to be the problem?"

"Where is the money?" Kurt demanded.

"That was all that was in your account, Herr Oster. I thought you would have more, but no new transfers enter your account this week."

"There has to be more."

"I am sorry. Herr Coll has examined the transaction records and he will verify what I have told you."

"Do you understand that I freed your son? That I paid for his release? That I have him in Thailand?"

"I understand all of that, Herr Oster. If more money was in the account, then I would have given it to you." Herr Egard had dealt with this situation before, when the 'customer' may think he's right, except the numbers never lie. "As it is, the sum you have is the exact amount that was in the account. I can only give you that. Maybe your money will show up Monday."

"No, it should be there now." Blood thrashed through his temples and he had to put down the phone. Someone had fucked him and it only could be someone he loved.

He pounded the steering wheel, till his face glowed a bright red and his ears deafened by a roar. Numbness prickled his fingers and toes. His hands gripped at his chest, as a stake was driven through his heart and an unbearable weight descended on his body. He leaned back in the seat and exhaled a breath from his lungs.

They would not get another.

Twenty minutes later Sean came out of the bank, holding a photocopy of the account's most recent transactions. He thanked the guard at the door and went to the Mercedes. Wearing sunglasses, Kurt appeared to be taking a nap, but Sean's opening the door should have woken him.

"Kurt, are you all right?" asked Sean asked, then saw that the German had stopped breathing. He felt for his pulse. There was none and Kurt was already losing the warm bloom of life.

"Kurt, motherfucking Kurt."

Sean expected him to come alive, except the Lazarus act wasn't working today.

Sean should have called the police, but they would ask questions, especially about the money in the case. Questions to which he had no answers and they wouldn't bring Kurt back to life, so Sean decided to leave the German where he was. Strangers would discover the body sooner or later. The police would canvass the neighborhood. Maybe Herr Egard would identify the body and maybe not.

Sean regarded the case on his lap. He had to tell Petra to get on a plane. They would meet and start a new life together. The same plan had failed with Tammi, but it had to work sometime. Sean was about to get out of the car to call Petra from a phone box, when the mobile phone rang. Cali was on the other end. "I want to speak to Kurt."

Sean said in English, "I have bad news. Kurt is dead."

"Dead. How?" This information stunned Kurt's friend.

"Heart attack in the car. He was already in bad shape, when I met him, but there seems to have been some trouble with the money and that sent him over the edge."

"What trouble with the money?"

Sean told Cali the exact sum he had received from the bank and the man on the other end asked, "Are you sure Kurt is dead?"

"He's cold as ice."

"Shit."

"My feeling exactly."

"Are the police there?"

"No."

"Good. I want you to drive to an address in Switzerland. My friends will bring him to Paris. You drive to Hamburg with the money."

"No fucking way." Cali would kill him, if he took the money in the case, but the pimp would have to find him first.

"If you don't run any red lights or crash the car, no police will stop you."

"No, I'll go to call the police and have them sort it out. That's their job, not mine."

"You'll do as I say and I give you one reason." Cali mentioned Petra's name and his address. "I don't want to hurt her, but I will. Kurt may have trusted you, Honky, but I ain't no stupid nigger."

"You motherfucker."

"I'm that and more. So Honky, is it yes or no?"

Sean warned him, "If you touch her, I'll kill you."

"I hate love stories with bad endings. Just trust me.”

"That's easy for you to say."

"Kurt was my friend. He was stupid about the drugs, but the money was nothing to die over. You have the money, yes?"

"Yes."

"Good. Drop off Kurt and then drive back to Hamburg. When you get close, give me a call." The line went dead.

When the street was clear, Sean swiftly moved Kurt into the back and buckled him upright with the seatbelt. Sean got behind the wheel and drove away. Like the dead man in the back seat he had no other choice other than to obey what was asked of him.

Maybe he never had.