“I told you that it wasn’t. If I’d qualified this account previously, there wouldn’t be any question about the transaction.”

He frowned, looking at the check again. Twenty-two million. “Yeah, I guess you did mention that. So we can’t clean it up that way.”

Clean it up? Kayla asked silently. I don’t like the sound of that. But then, I haven’t liked the sound of anything since Elena handed me that check.

The light on one of Foley’s telephones blinked, alerting him to an incoming call. He ignored it.

“What we need to do is find a way of carrying the transaction on our books that won’t put us at risk but will buy us a little time,” he said. He looked at the check again. “Bank of Aruba, Sugar Sands branch…Wait a minute, wait a minute.”

He spun his high-backed executive chair and addressed the flat screen of his desktop computer. His fingers moved rapidly over the keyboard, drilling down through pages and documents.

“There,” he said. “I knew I remembered that name. They have a correspondent banking relation with us. They’ve had it for some months now. That will make things much easier.”

Some of the tension seeped out of Kayla.

The light still blinked on the desk phone.

Foley turned back to her. “Here’s what we do. You call the Aruba bank. Make sure Andre has the money in the account, then put a hold on the funds and tell them you intend to run the draft through their correspondent account.”

Kayla hesitated. “I don’t know nearly as much as you do about international banking and correspondent accounts, but is it legal? Who’s responsible for knowing the customer?”

Foley kicked back in his chair. “Not us, for damn sure. Our correspondent, aka the Bank of Aruba, Sugar Sands branch, is on the spot for due diligence.”

She looked as doubtful as she felt. “You’re certain?” It’s my ass on the line.

“Standard operating procedure,” he said. “If anybody challenges us, we simply say we assumed the Aruba bank had done their own due diligence on the account before they let Andre start writing checks of this size.”

“Would it fly?” Kayla asked bluntly.

The telephone light stopped blinking.

“It’s defensible, which is all that matters. By the way, I really like how you wrinkle your nose when you’re thinking hard.”

She barely heard the personal remark. She was focused on legalities. “But pushing it off on the Aruba bank is just a bookkeeping trick, almost under the heading of ‘the dog ate my due diligence.’ How does it get me off the hook?”

Foley laughed. “Sweetie, the bank business is all about bookkeeping tricks. The government makes unenforceable antibusiness regs, and the lawyers find ways around them. Correspondent accounts are a legal superhighway. Nobody ever checks the correspondent accounts, not inside the bank and not at Treasury. Everybody is clean and everybody is happy.”

Kayla wished she was happy about what she was hearing, but she wasn’t. If the feds came down on her, she wanted something more solid than a “defensible” position to shield her.

The telephone light started blinking again, double time. Urgent.

“So move the money and let me take care of the rest,” Foley said. “And if Andre comes up with any more big checks, do the same thing. I’ll keep you posted, but don’t get impatient. It will take time to do the background work and walk it up the line to Operations.”

“You’re asking me to move millions of dollars of uncertain origin into the U.S. banking system,” Kayla said. “That’s called laundering.”

“Not so long as I put a hold on the money.”

“What?”

“I’ll lock down the correspondent account.”

“How will that help?” she asked.

“It will be pretty much like the money never left Aruba. Then, after we investigate and find out that everything is kosher, we release the funds and let Andre Bertone do what he wants.”

“But what if things aren’t kosher?” she asked.

The phone light blinked rapidly.

“I know what I’m doing,” Foley said. “Follow my instructions and I’ll take full responsibility.”

“But-” My name will still be on the bottom line.

“Unless you have a better solution?” Foley asked impatiently.

Kayla didn’t. She just didn’t like his.

“Cash the check. I’ll put the rest of it in motion,” Foley said.

He turned his back on her and reached for the phone.

13

Victoria, B.C.

Friday

12:15 P.M. PST

Rand McCree looked around John Neto’s suite in disbelief. There were TV cameras, lights, a makeup artist, a hair stylist, a continuity person with a clipboard and a frown, the telegenic Brent Thomas with an earnest yet horrified expression on his face, and a black man with a steel-tipped forearm prosthesis talking about war atrocities.

Everything but a dancing pig.

He turned on Faroe. “You didn’t say anything about a media circus.”

“Interview, not a circus,” Faroe said. “The World in One Hour is high-class crap.”

“Quiet!” someone called out.

Quietly Rand raised a middle finger. Then he leaned close and murmured in Faroe’s ear. “Just thought I’d let you know-from what I’ve read so far, Kayla Shaw isn’t good for it.”

“Not a crook?”

“Not likely. Read between the lines of her dossier. Backpacked all over the world. Younger sister has a Ph.D. in tropical diseases, married to a doctor, both working for Doctors without Borders. Close family until the parents died. Kayla doesn’t gamble, get drunk, do drugs, or hump along the casual sex circuit. Smart, middle-class, hardworking. Somehow Bertone twisted her. It’s how he does business.”

“I’ll keep it in mind,” Faroe said. “You keep in mind that most white-collar crooks don’t start out to end up felons.”

“You really think she’s a crook?” Rand asked.

“I’m partial to the Mexican justice system-guilty until proven innocent. Grace feels like you do, if it matters.”

Rand shrugged. Nothing mattered but getting close enough to Bertone to kill him.

But he really hated to see an innocent ground to bits by transnational criminals and governments that were rarely better than they had to be to survive.

“Take a break,” called someone.

Ted Martin hurried over to Faroe.

“Okay, is this him?” Martin asked, jerking a thumb at Rand. “The photog you told me about?”

“Yeah.”

“Okay, but he’ll have to wait. We’re just getting into it with Neto. Awesome stuff. That pink half-arm on his plum-black body says it all.”

Rand stared at the man wearing jeans and a silk sweatshirt, rhapsodizing about a black man whose forearm had been hacked off with a machete and replaced by a white man’s prosthesis. Then Rand looked at Faroe and said, “I’ll wait until hell freezes solid.”

“Okay, can you at least comb him out before we put him on camera?” Martin asked over his shoulder as he hurried back to Neto. “I’ll send over Freddie. She could make a woolly mammoth look good.”

Faroe snickered.

Rand said something under his breath and ignored both men. He found an empty chair, booted up Faroe’s computer, and began reading. Neto’s interview made an odd counterpart to the dossiers that clicked by beneath Rand’s fingertips. The Scots-accented English that Neto spoke reminded Rand of his grandfather.

“How did you come to be in MI-5?” Thomas asked Neto.

“I was born in Africa, raised there long enough to see the beginnings of the troubles, back when the militias had only machetes.” He raised his artificial hand. “We escaped and made it to Scotland, Glasgow. Strange and wonderful people, the Scots. I came to love their bluntness and pragmatism. That is one of the reasons I sought out St. Kilda Consulting. The island of St. Kilda is-or was-to Scotland what Scotland was to the rest of England, a last frontier.”


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