Red to Black (14 page)

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Authors: Alex Dryden

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Espionage

BOOK: Red to Black
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‘Very nicely put,’ Finn says.

Frank chuckles and his whole face lights up with jolly amusement. He is a man made for his kind of work, Finn thinks, someone who isn’t ever going to descend into discouragement, let alone despair. He is an individual strengthened rather than weakened by the huge odds against him. Finn identifies with Frank a little, or tries to, as he does with all his closest contacts. But Frank is very special to Finn, like a father, a benevolent version of Adrian. Finn works best at the level of the personal and nobody is closer to him among his contacts than Frank.

‘I’m looking at a company here in Luxembourg and in other places. It’s called Exodi,’ Finn says.

He lights another cigarette, of which Frank imperceptibly disapproves, and scrapes the froth from his cappuccino out of the cup with a spoon.

‘Exodi?’ Frank thinks and his eyes glitter at some memory from his vast archive. ‘Yes. I think I have heard of Exodi,’ he says after a pause.

‘There are several companies called Exodi,’ Finn prompts him. ‘They’re all connected to one another. One or more of them have secret accounts at Westbank.’

‘I will have to look at my files, Finn. It will take time. But I have heard of Exodi, I think, in another context.’

Frank frowns, looking cross at the unreliability of a memory that contains thousands of pieces of numeric and alphabetic information.

‘Ah yes!’ The frown disappears; he beams again. ‘There was a story I heard here, in Luxembourg…when? I don’t remember, but not long ago, a few weeks, maybe. Wait.’

Frank takes a mobile phone from the pocket of his tatty blue woollen coat and makes a call. He speaks first in German and then is passed to someone else, to whom he speaks in French. He writes down a name and address on a scrap of paper. He ends the call with some small joke or other and replaces the phone in his pocket and looks at Finn with disappointment.

‘It’s nothing, I think. Just a kid, a twenty-two-year-old boy who worked here in Luxembourg for a company called Exodi. He serviced their computers or something, that’s all. But he was sacked a few weeks ago and told to say nothing about the company. That’s normal, I guess. But apparently they didn’t pay him his final pay cheque. He told a friend of a friend of a friend that Exodi doesn’t pay its employees’ insurance here either. That’s illegal, of course. It seems the company got to hear about his conversations on the subject. He was telephoned and warned to stop talking about Exodi.’

‘Telephoned by whom?’

‘I don’t know.’

‘Perhaps there’s more, Frank.’

‘Perhaps. If you are interested in this company, Finn, you must have a reason. Perhaps there is something to look into further. Here. Here’s the boy’s name and address.’ He handed the scrap of paper across the table. ‘Perhaps you’re right. My friend just said that the boy is scared of something.’

Finn pockets the scrap of paper after a brief glance.

‘The address is across the bridge, a street behind the railway station,’ Frank says. ‘Let me know what happens. I will look in my files over the next few weeks. See if we have any Exodi for you, Finn.’

F
INN PREFERS TO WALK.
Even when he was in Moscow in winter, when even the moderately rich and relatively rich don’t go anywhere without their cars, he preferred to walk. While they kept their chauffeurs running car engines for hours outside bars and restaurants simply to imply the status of urgency, Finn walked. He likes walking. Walking is the appropriate pace of humanity, he says, everything else is too fast for the brain. He always liked the French word for ‘day’
–journée-
because of its original meaning, the distance a man can walk in a day.

Like so much about Finn’s own analysis of himself, however, this represents only part of the truth. He likes walking because, as well as giving him time to think, it also delays the moment when he arrives. For Finn the journey- the
journée
- is always more enjoyable than to arrive. As if somehow his expectations were never quite met.

Walking also delayed the moment when he needed to act. There was now a reluctance in Finn, as so often on a job. There is a period of time he needs in order to steel himself to act, even in the most
trivial actions, even going to the shops or telephoning his aunt. This reluctance reflects the deepest, most concealed aspect of Finn’s nature–a lack of simple, fundamental self-belief that comes from his childhood, from the shocking few minutes of being ringed with adults, the shouting, his childish tears. As an adult he overcame the rising fear by sheer willpower. Most people never saw it.

So he walks from the main square of Luxembourg’s city and across the long, wide bridge over the gorge that once protected the ancient fortress, until he comes to the Rue de Grèves on the far side of the gorge, behind the station.

The address is a five-storey, grey-stone building that rambles a long way back. There are twenty or so bells at the main doorway with nameplates that for the most part have no names written on them; small flats or studios for the more modest citizens of Luxembourg, a building for students, perhaps, or older people who have fallen through the net of Luxembourg’s wealth.

The flat number Frank has written on the scrap of paper is number ten. Finn walks past the door once and then retraces his steps and pauses at the steps leading up to the door. He looks at an estate agent’s sign and copies down the telephone number. He casually scans the street. He thinks about walking up the stone steps, but if he rings the bell now, he risks a rebuttal before he can even get inside. The boy is scared, Frank has said. Why would he let a stranger in?

There are few people on the street. Finn crosses back over it and studies a few signs belonging to other house agents. Then he settles on the far side of the street, half concealed down some cellar steps, and waits.

After more than an hour standing in the damp cold, and with several false starts, he sees a man who appears to be approaching the main door of the block that interests him. He is a young man and he carries a small brown bag of groceries. Slowing as he approaches the stone steps, the man fumbles in his coat pocket and
halts completely as he reaches the foot of the steps up to the door of the building.

Finn crosses the road. He is leaping up the steps behind the man as the man reaches the door and, still fumbling, inserts a key.

Finn stands at the young man’s shoulder, with a genuinely grateful and somewhat foolish smile on his face, and looks with all the charming appeal he possesses into the man’s eyes.

‘Thank goodness you’ve come,’ he says, stamping and shaking with cold on the step below him. ‘I’ve been waiting nearly an hour and I haven’t got my key.’

The young man turns, the door half-open now as he juggles the key and the bag of groceries, and stares at Finn. He’s a student perhaps, Finn thinks, a temporary lodger in the building, and with the carelessness of a student who believes no doors, anywhere, should ever be locked, he silently shrugs and Finn enters after him. They climb the first staircase one after another and then the young man peels off down a corridor on the first floor without a backward glance and, without pausing, Finn climbs up further to the floor above before he stops to check his whereabouts.

He must be quick. He looks at the first numbers. Eight, nine. Ten is around the corner of a dingy corridor. He walks along a faded, worn red carpet until he stands outside a door with ‘10’ painted roughly in white paint on its peeling blue wood. He hears music playing from behind it, the muffled wailing lilt of a female singer singing a Portuguese song.

Finn pauses, catches his breath. Then he knocks twice before he detects the occupant of the room walking towards the door across a wooden floor. A lock is snapped, the door opens a few inches on a chain, and revealed is a tired, pale face with a wispy orange beard that looks like thin tumbleweed.

‘I’m from the property agents,’ Finn says. ‘Come to check the windows.’

‘The windows are fine,’ the boy says.

‘I’m sure they are. But we’re painting the outside. If you wouldn’t mind, I need to make my report.’

There is a pause while the boy thinks and makes the decision between risking letting a stranger inside and risking offending the property agents. When the latter has overcome his evident reluctance, the boy pulls the chain off its slide and opens the door.

The room has an old carpet that was once olive-green, Finn guesses, but now wears the scars of many tenants who’ve had no interest in the apartment’s long-term welfare. Dirty net curtains hang off a pole in front of the windows, there is an unmade futon on the floor, a shelf of books above it, and the main part of the room consists of a desk covered with laptop computers, papers, wires, boxes of software and coffee cups. Finn looks around.

‘Comfortable here?’ Finn says.

‘The windows are over there,’ the boy replies. Finn shuts the door behind him and stands still in front of it.

‘Having trouble paying the rent?’ Finn says.

‘How would you know?’

‘That’s exactly what I would know.’

‘Who are you? What’s your name?’ the boy says nervously.

Finn takes a small transparent plastic packet from his pocket and holds it out. ‘That’s three months’ rent,’ he says.

The boy doesn’t move.

‘We have about ten minutes,’ Finn says, ‘before anyone watching the outside of the building wonders what I’m doing here.’

He wastes no time now.

‘You have a number to call if anyone asks questions about Exodi?’ he snaps.

The boy looks like he’s been hit.

‘Maybe,’ he says faintly. ‘What’s it to you?’

‘The longer I’m here, the more anyone watching will think you’ve told me. It’s in your interests to be quick. When I leave, call the number they gave you. Tell them exactly what happened. Say,
of course, what I asked you and that you told me nothing. Say I was persistent and that it took you ten minutes to get rid of me.’

Finn throws the money on to the futon but doesn’t move from the door. The boy looks paler than ever.

‘What did you do at Exodi?’ Finn says. ‘What was your specific job?’

The boy doesn’t reply.

‘I’m not from here,’ Finn says. ‘I’m not from Luxembourg. I’m nothing to do with them. But if you don’t talk to me, I will tell them you did talk to me. Got it? You have a few seconds to start answering my questions. After that…it’s up to you.’

The boy hangs his head and looks around for some escape.

‘What did you do at Exodi?’ Finn repeats. ‘We’re wasting valuable time.’

‘I was hired on a salary to service the computers,’ came the faint and angry reply.

‘For what kind of business?’

‘The company didn’t seem to do much.’ The boy sits down at his desk, apparently exhausted, and faces Finn.

‘What
did
it do?’

‘It didn’t do anything that I could see,’ the boy almost shouts.

‘Why did they hire you, then?’

‘I don’t know. Maybe they thought they’d be busy and then weren’t.’

‘Nothing coming in or out of the office, nothing on the computers you serviced, no one visiting for meetings?’

‘That was the thing,’ the boy protests, and Finn sees that it is genuine. ‘There didn’t seem to be anything going on at all. It wasn’t like a normal office. There was no business in or out. No one ever came. Just once…’ The boy’s voice fades out.

‘What?’ Finn prompts.

‘A couple of guys came into the office. They said they were from Exodi in Paris. I was introduced to them. I don’t know why.’

‘Who were they?’

‘I don’t know. Like you, they spoke lousy French. One might have been from Eastern Europe. They looked rich,’ he adds.

‘Where in Paris?’ Finn says.

‘It was an address near the George V Hotel, I remember that, because one of them was staying at the hotel and said it was handy for the office.’ The boy tries to find some strength. ‘Why don’t you leave. I’m nothing to do with them.’

‘I’ll leave when I’ve finished and that’s up to you. But remember. Be quick, or they won’t believe you.’

‘You bastard,’ he said, but the weakness behind his voice contained no threat.

‘Who told you not to speak about Exodi?’ Finn snaps. ‘Who called you?’

‘Oh Jesus.’

‘Who was it?’ Finn persists. ‘If you’re interested in keeping your skin safe for any length of time tell me now before I walk out and it’s too late.’

‘Oh Jesus,’ the boy repeats and waves his head from side to side like a distressed zoo animal.

‘Who?’

‘All right, all right. I was called by a man called Philippe Pou-lain.’

‘The MP?’

‘Yes, here in Luxembourg.’

The boy looks utterly defeated.

‘Give me the phone number,’ Finn says urgently.

The boy wearily threads his bony hands through a pile of papers and finally finds and holds up a sheet of A4 with nothing but a number written on it. Finn walks across the room, memorises it and looks down at the boy.

‘Just do as I told you and they’ll know they can rely on you,’ he says.

As Finn turns and walks quickly out of the room the boy doesn’t move. Finn shuts the door and, without pausing, descends the two floors two steps at a time and exits on to the street. He doesn’t look up, or in either direction, but walks fast to the left, his face to the pavement but his eyes looking carefully to the right. There is nobody sitting in the parked cars on either side of the street. After a hundred yards, he stops sharply, puts his hand inside his coat as if he’d forgotten something, and turns back. But there is nobody there.

 

‘Luxembourg is run by a small, tight group of people,’ Finn writes. ‘It is a small, tight state. Its MPs are businessmen, financiers, their interests lying principally with the interests of the ruling elite rather than with their constituents’ complaints about road-widening or the provision of extra waste bins for dog faeces. And the interests of the ruling elite–as well as of ordinary citizens, it must be said–is the furtherance and increase of Luxembourg’s share of the world’s wealth. That is what national legislators should be interested in.

‘But in order to do this patriotic task, because so much of what Luxembourg does for a living is secret, all branches of the state must be tightly controlled. The press, for example, is often told by the chief of police to bury a story that might otherwise damage the image of Luxembourg as a guardian of wealth. Many of the stories the police chief has buried in recent years concern a prominent member of the royal family who has been cut out of the line of succession to Luxembourg’s duchy. There have been stories the police chief has buried that show bombings in Luxembourg and arson at the national airport in the mid-eighties, for example, in which he was allegedly implicated. There are many strange allegations that are buried here.

‘But the culture of suppressing press stories doesn’t stop with the Duke’s family. Luxembourg and its parliament are so small that everyone is bound closely to everyone else. They are in it together.
There is much more to conceal than just the prince’s antics. If Westbank, one of the world’s two clearing banks, can behave illegally, nearly everyone knows about it—everyone in Luxembourg’s elite, that is.

‘And so now, what do we see? We have a set of companies-Exodi. Exodi with a long “i”. They are Schmidtke’s companies, bequeathed to Otto Roth at the demise of Soviet Russia, wound up in 1989 and re-formed in 1991. Their true origins back in the mid-seventies, however, have been disguised by senior figures in the financial administrations of both Liechtenstein and Switzerland. And here in Luxembourg, thanks to this afternoon’s work, we have the edifying sight of a Luxembourg MP telephoning this boy, a former employee of Exodi with its illegal accounts, to warn him to say nothing.

‘And how beautiful is this? The father of this Luxembourg MP was a senior European commissioner. The father’s term ended in a welter of fraud allegations, missing public money, and attempts to silence the guardians of the EU budget who tried to blow the whistle on him. Exodi must indeed be important to have such protection.’

Finn describes this as a classic case of the overkill of secrecy I too know so well: when secrecy, for its own sake, reveals precisely what it is trying to conceal.

‘This boy knew nothing about Exodi, apart from the relatively trivial detail that it failed to pay its own employees’ insurance contributions.’

And so the attempt to keep the boy silent about something he knows nothing about has pulled back the carpet for Finn, to reveal that Exodi is not just a set of front companies which handle KGB money, first through Schmidtke and then through his successor Roth; not just a set of companies that has illegal secret accounts at Westbank, but a very deep and dirty set of companies which has the highest KGB connections to figures in the West who are central
to the defence of Western Europe’s interests. Does this lone Luxembourg MP know what he is protecting? And is he indeed acting alone, not a rogue figure at all who is divorced from Luxembourg’s interests? Everything about the way that this city state operates suggests ‘Yes, he knows’ and ‘No, he is not acting alone.’ But that is not enough, not yet.

 

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