The Millionaires (34 page)

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Authors: Brad Meltzer

Tags: #Fiction, #Large Type Books, #Brothers, #Suspense, #Thrillers, #United States, #Suspense Fiction, #Banks and Banking, #Secret Service, #Women Private Investigators, #Theft, #Bank Robberies, #Bank Employees, #Bank Fraud

BOOK: The Millionaires
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“A what?” Charlie asks.

“NDA—a nondisclosure agreement. You sign them during business deals so both sides’ll keep their mouths shut. It’s how you
prevent a new idea from leaking out.”

“And this one…?”

I hold up the document and point to the signature at the bottom. It’s a mad scribble in muddy black ink. But there’s no mistaking
the name. Martin Duckworth.

43

I
don’t get it,” Gillian says. “You think dad invented something?”

“Oh, he definitely invented something,” I say, my voice already racing down the mountain. “And from the looks of it, he was
up to something big.”

“What’re you talking about?” Charlie asks.

I once again wave the creased paper through the air. “Read the other signature on the contract.”

He grabs my wrist to hold it steady.
Agreed to and signed—Brandt T. Katkin—Chief Strategist, Five Points Capital.
“Who’s Brandt Katkin?” Charlie asks.

“Forget Katkin—I’m talking about Five Points Capital. With a name like that and a letter like this, I’ll bet you my boxers
it’s a VC.”

“VC?” Gillian asks.

“Venture capital,” I explain. “They lend money to new companies… get entrepreneurs rolling by investing in their ideas. Anyway,
when a venture capital firm signs a nondisclosure agreement—trust me on this one—we’re talking pocketfuls of cash on the line.”

“How do you know?”

“That’s how the business works—these VCs see hundreds of new ideas every day—one guy invents Widget A; another guy invents
Widget B. Both widget guys want to get nondisclosure agreements before they go in and lift their skirts. But the VCs—they
hate nondisclosures. They want to see up every skirt they can lay their eyes on. More important, if a VC signs a nondisclosure,
it opens itself up to liability. When we took a client to Deardorff Capital in New York last year, one of the partners said
the only way they’d sign an NDA was if Bill Gates himself walked in and said, ‘I have a great idea—sign this and I’ll tell
you about it.’”

“So the fact that Duckworth got them to sign…”

“… means that he’s got a Bill Gates–sized idea,” I agree. Turning to Gillian, I ask, “Do you have any clue what he was working
on?”

“No, I… I didn’t know he was building anything. All his other inventions were tiny—like the 8-track.”

“Not anymore,” I say. “If this is right, he came up with something that makes the 8-track look like, well… like an 8-track.”

“It had to be something with computers,” Charlie adds.

“Really? You think?” Gillian asks sarcastically.

“No. Just a guess,” he shoots back.

“Both of you—stop,” I warn. “Gillian, are you sure there’s nothing you can think of ? Anything at all that he might’ve been
trying to sell?”

“What makes you think he was selling it?”

“You don’t go to a VC unless you need some cash. Either he got them to invest, or he made the sale outright.”

“So that’s where he got the money?” Charlie asks. “You think the idea was that good?”

“If they’re giving him three million dollars,” Gillian adds, “it’s gotta be major good.”

Charlie wings me a look.
If it’s three hundred mil, it’s King Kong good.

“What about the photos?” Gillian blurts out of nowhere. She sounds incredibly excited, but as Charlie immediately points out,
her bare feet are once again fists on the carpet. What does he expect? We’re all anxious.

“So they’re not relatives or anything?” Charlie asks her.

“Never seen ’em before in my life.”

“What about friends?” I ask.

“I bet one of them’s Brandt Katkin,” Charlie says, motioning with his chin at the nondisclosure agreement.

“They could be anyone,” I add, unable to slow down. With the taste of hope on my tongue, I stare down at the four headshots.
“I’m betting they were his contacts at the VC.”

“Maybe they were people he was working with,” Charlie adds. “Maybe they were the people he trusted.”

“Or maybe they were the ones who killed him,” Gillian says. “They could all be Secret Service.”

All three of us fall silent. At this point, anything’s possible.

“So what do we do now?” she adds.

“We should call up this guy Brandt Katkin and ask him about Five Points Capital,” Charlie suggests.

“At two in the morning?” Gillian asks.

“The later the better,” he glares back at her, refusing to give a centimeter. “We should go down there and bust through a
window. In high school, Joel Westman once taught me how to take out an alarm with a kitchen magnet. We can rummage through
the files Watergate-style.”

“No, that’s a great idea,” I chime in. “Then you two can lower me on a rope from the airvents, where I’ll try to stop a single
drop of sweat from falling to the ridiculously overprotected floor and simultaneously grab the NOC list.”

Charlie’s eyes narrow. “Are you being sarcastic?”

“Stay focused,” I tell him. “Why risk it all sneaking through the back when we can walk right in the front?”

“Say what?”

“Work with what you have,” I say, pointing to Gillian. “If they made that kind of investment in Duckworth’s future, don’t
you think they’ll want to meet his next of kin…?”

“So you really want to go down there?” Charlie asks.

“First thing tomorrow morning,” I say, still feeling the sugar rush. “Me, you, Gillian… and all our new friends at Five Points
Capital.”

44

Y
ou’re not going to like it,” DeSanctis warned as he entered Gallo’s office in the downtown Field Office of the Secret Service.It
was almost two in the morning and the halls were dead-empty, but DeSanctis still shut the door.

“Just tell me what it says,” Gallo demanded.

“Her name’s Saundra Finkelstein, fifty-seven years old…” DeSanctis began, reading from the top sheet of the stack. “Tax returns
say she’s been renting there for almost twenty-four years—plenty of time to become best friends.”

“And the phone records?”

“We went back six months. On average, she spends at least fifteen minutes a day on the horn with Maggie. Since last night,
though, not a single call.”

“What about long distance?”

“See, that’s where it starts getting ugly. At one
A.M.
last night, she accepted her first-ever collect call—from a number we identified as—ready for this?—a payphone in Miami International
Airport.”

Biting at the knuckle of his thumb, Gallo stopped. “
What?

“Don’t look at me…”


Who the hell else am I supposed to look at!?
” he asked, slamming the desk with his fist. “
If they’re at Duckworth’s
—”

“Believe me, I’m well aware of the consequences.”

“Have you looked into flights?”

“Two tickets. They’re booking them as we speak.”

Ramming his chair backwards as he stood up, Gallo let it crash into his credenza. The impact shook the half a dozen Secret
Service plaques and photographs that decorated his wall. “There’s nothing to find there,” he insisted.

“No one said there was.”

“We should still call—”

“Already did,” DeSanctis said.

Nodding to himself, Gallo stormed toward the door. “When did you say we leave?”

“Next flight out—six
A.M.
into Miami,” DeSanctis added, chasing behind him. “We’ll be standing on their necks by breakfast.”

* * * *

“Fudge, I know you’re there!” Joey yelled into the answering machine. “Don’t act like you’re sleeping—I know you can hear
me! Pick up, pick up, pick up…” She waited, but no one answered. “Are you there, God, it’s me, Joey.” Still nothing. “Okay,
that’s it—now you can deal with my niece’s alphabet song—A is for
Acrobat,
B is for
Bubbles,
C is for
Charley Horse,
D is for—”

“D is for
Death,
my dear,” Fudge answered, his voice hoarse with sleep. “It’s also for Destruction, Dismemberment, Disemboweling…”

“So you know the song?” Joey asked, working hard to keep it light.

“Mommie dearest, it’s currently two-fourteen in the bloody morning. You are, indeed, the devil herself.”

“Listen, I’ll make it up to you tomorrow—no playing around—I need you to speed up that phone trace on Margaret Caruso.”

“It’s now two-
fifteen
in the bloody morning…”

“I’m serious, Fudge! I’ve got a crisis!”

“So what do you want me to do?”

“Can’t you get your people at the phone company?”

“Now?” he asked, still groggy. “My people don’t work these hours—these hours are for deviants, and rock stars, and… and deviants.”

“Please, Fudge…”

“Call me tomorrow, sweetie-pie—I’ll have my baby-fresh scent after nine.” With a click, he disappeared.

Pulling the earpiece from her ear, Joey glanced down at the digital map on her global positioning system. Fifteen minutes
ago, a blue blinking triangle slowly made its way toward downtown. Whatever Gallo and DeSanctis had seen, they were taking
it back to headquarters. As they entered the Service’s garage, though, the blue blinking triangle disappeared and a high-pitched
beep screamed through Joey’s car.
System Error,
the screen flashed.
Transfer interrupted.
Joey didn’t bat an eye. When it came to locking down external transmitters, there was no messing with the Secret Service.

45

W
hen Charlie was in high school he used to love walking down empty streets at two in the morning. The vacuum of silence. The
undertow of darkness around every corner. The noble power of being the last man standing. He used to thrive on it. Now he
hates it.

Speedwalking back to our apartment, he sticks to the sidewalks, loses himself under the rows of palm trees, and every few
steps, checks anxiously over his shoulder.

“Who’re you looking for?” I ask.

“How about lowering your voice?” he hisses. “No offense, but I want to see if she’s following.”

“Who, Gillian? She already knows where we’re staying.”

“Okay, then I guess we have nothing to worry about…”

“See, now you’re being paranoid.”

“Listen, Ollie, just ’cause you’ve got a new kick in your walk doesn’t mean you can shut your brain.”

“Is that what I’m doing? Shutting my brain?” Crossing into the street, I’m sick of the arguing. And the jealousy.

“Get back here,” he scolds, motioning toward the sidewalk.

“Who made you mom?” I ask. He makes a face; I love the dig. There’s a near-full moon up above, but he doesn’t bother to look.
“Why’re you giving Gillian such a hard time anyway?”

“Why do you think?” Charlie asks, once again checking over his shoulder. “Didn’t you see that layer of dust in her bedroom?”

“And that’s what’s got the ants in your undies? She doesn’t touch her nightstand?”

“It’s not just the nightstand—it’s the bathroom and the closets and the drawers and everything else we went through…. If you
moved into your dead father’s house, would you still keep his stuff everywhere?”

“Didn’t you hear what she said about sleeping on her couch? Besides, it took mom a year to—”

“Don’t talk to me about mom. Gillian’s been living there for a month, and the place looks like she moved in last week.”

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