The Double Eagle (2 page)

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Authors: James Twining

BOOK: The Double Eagle
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Chapter Eighty-Six

“I’ll almost miss you, Browne,” said Corbett as he raised…

Chapter Eighty-Seven

As Tom turned, Corbett kicked out and caught his hand…

Chapter Eighty-Eight

“Don’t do it, Tom.” He felt Jennifer’s gentle touch on…

Chapter Eighty-Nine

The announcer’s tinny voice echoed through the departure lounge, first…

Chapter Ninety

“So that’s put the kibosh on that then?” Archie’s familiar…

Epilogue

“Please remove any metallic objects from your pockets. Keys, coins…

The 1933 Double Eagle is the world’s most valuable coin. When it was sold to an anonymous buyer for $8 million in July 2002, it marked the end of an incredible seventy-year journey that saw it stolen from the U.S. Mint, owned by an Egyptian king, and then vanish for more than forty years, only to be seized by Treasury agents in a dramatic sting operation. The Double Eagle is now on display at the New York Federal Reserve.

 

All references to works of art, architecture, and artists are also accurate.

EXECUTIVE ORDER NO.
6102

BY VIRTUE OF THE AUTHORITY VESTED IN ME BY
Section 5(b) of the Act of October 6, 1917, as amended by Section 2 of the Act of March 9, 1933, entitled “An Act to provide relief in the existing national emergency in banking, and for other purposes,” in which amendatory Act of Congress declared that a serious emergency exists,

I, Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States of America, do declare that said national emergency still continues to exist and pursuant to said section do hereby prohibit the hoarding of gold coin, gold bullion, and gold certificates within the continental United States by individuals, partnerships, associations and corporations and hereby prescribe the following regulations for carrying out the purposes of this order:

 

All persons are hereby required to deliver on or before May 1, 1933, to a Federal Reserve bank or a branch or agency thereof or to any member bank of the Federal Reserve System all gold coin, gold bullion and gold certificates now owned by them or coming into their ownership on or before April 28, 1933.

Upon receipt of gold coin, gold bullion or gold certificates delivered to it, the Federal Reserve Bank or member bank will pay thereof an equivalent amount of any other form of coin or currency coined or issued under the laws of the United States.

 

Whoever willfully violates any provision of this Executive Order or of these regulations or of any rule, regulation or license issued thereunder may be fined not more than $10,000, or, if a natural person, may be imprisoned for not more than ten years, or both; and any officer, director, or agent of any corporation who knowingly participates in any such violation may be punished by a like fine, imprisonment, or both.

This order and these regulations may be modified or revoked at any time.

—Franklin D. Roosevelt
President of the United States of America
April 5, 1933

PROLOGUE

What do you not drive human hearts into, cursed craving for gold!

—V
IRGIL,
The Aeneid (iii. 56)

PONT DE GRENELLE
, 16
TH ARRONDISSEMENT, PARIS
16 July—9:05
P.M.

 

T
hey were late.

They’d said quarter to and it was already five past. It made him uneasy to be standing out in the open for this long. If they weren’t there in the next five minutes he was leaving, a million dollars or not.

 

He patted his pocket nervously. It was still there, he could feel it through the black woolen material, its warm weight pressing against his thigh. It was still safe.

A teenage couple, arms interlinked, strolled toward him, snatching kisses every few steps in the dying light. Mid-embrace, the girl caught sight of him and broke away with an embarrassed shrug. Her fingers flew unconsciously to the small silver crucifix that hung around her neck.

 

“Bonsoir mon père.”
Good evening, Father.

“Bonsoir mon enfant.”
Good evening, my child.

 

He smiled and nodded at them both as they walked on past him to the other side of the Pont de Grenelle, noting that it was only then they allowed their guilty laughter to echo up through the fading heat. Against a crimson sky, the lights on the Eiffel Tower sparkled as if it was on fire.

With a sigh, he rested his arms on the bridges’s parapet and looked out at the Statue of Liberty. Identical to her much larger sister across the Atlantic, she dominated the Allée des Cygnes, the narrow island in the middle of the River Seine upon which she had been erected in 1889, according to the inscription on her base. She had her back to him, smooth bronze muscles of crumpled fabric and taut skin, eternally youthful despite the green patina of old age.

 

As a child, his grandmother had once told him that many members of their family had made the long and difficult journey from Naples to America in the 1920s. When he looked at the statue, he felt somehow connected to those faceless relatives, understood something of their sense of wonder at their first sight of the New World, their unshakable faith in a new beginning. So he always chose this place. It felt familiar. Safe. Protected.

Caso mai.
Just in case.

 

Two men appeared out of the shadows of the bridge below, and looked up at him, interrupting his thoughts. He sketched a wave, crossed to the other side of the road and made his way down the shallow concrete steps toward them, walking under the bridge’s low steel arch. He stopped at the edge of the wide area encircling the statue’s massive stone pedestal, careful as always to keep about twenty feet between himself and them.

They must have been there all the time, he thought to himself; watching him, checking that he was alone, hiding in the lengthening shadows like lions in long grass. That figured. These were not people to take chances. But then neither was he.

 

“Bonsoir.”
The large man on the left called clearly through the night air, his long blond hair melting into a thick beard. An American, he guessed.

“Bonsoir,”
he called back warily.

 

A large Bateau Mouche swept down the river past them, its blinding lights reaching into the darkness, probing, feeling. The heavy folds of the statue’s robe seemed to ripple and lift gently under their touch as if caught in some unseen draft.

“You got it?” the bearded man called out in English when the throb of the ship’s engines had faded and the burning lights had shifted their relentless glare further along the bank.

 

“You got the money?” His voice was firm. It was the usual game, played out more times than he cared to remember. He looked down, feigning indifference, and noticed that his polished black shoes were already dusty from the dry gravel.

“Let’s see it first,” the man called back.

 

He paused. There seemed to be something strange about the bearded man’s voice. A slight tension. He looked up and checked over his shoulder but his escape route was clear. He blinked his concern away and gave them the standard response.

“Show me the money and I’ll take you to it.”

There. He saw it this time. Most wouldn’t have noticed but he had been around long enough to read the signs. The stiffening of the shoulders, the narrowing of the eyes as the lone antelope strayed just that little too far from the rest of the herd.

They were preparing themselves.

 

He looked around again. His route was still clear, although it was difficult to see beyond the trees as night closed in. Then he realized. That’s why they’d been late.

So it would be dark.

 

Without saying a word he spun on the gravel, running, running as fast as he could, his slick leather soles spraying stones behind him like tires accelerating on a dirt track. He couldn’t let them get it. He couldn’t let them find it.

He snatched a glance over his shoulder and saw the two men bearing down on him, a gun barrel glimmering in the orange glow of the lights that lined the bridge overhead like a sharp claw.

 

Instinctively, he snapped his head back round just as he ran onto the point of the knife. Now he understood. The dark shape that had appeared in front of him, arm outstretched, face masked by the night, had been hiding in the shadows until he had come within striking distance. He’d been herded into the arms of death like an animal.

With a short, sharp punch, the six-inch serrated blade carved up into his chest and the shock of the impact made him swallow hard. He felt its coldness slicing through the soft cartilage at the base of his sternum, cutting into his heart.

 

It was the last thing he felt.

In the orange light, the blood that had leaked over the starched whiteness of his dog collar glowed green as Lady Liberty’s weathered skin. But unknowing, unseeing, unfeeling, her steady gaze was fixed instead toward America.

 

Toward New York.

PART I

Gold conjures up a mist about a man, more destructive of all his old senses and lulling to his feelings than the fumes of charcoal.

—C
HARLES
D
ICKENS
Nicholas Nickleby

FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK CITY
16 July—11:30
P.M.

 

G
racefully he fell, his body arcing in one smooth movement out from the side of the building and then back in, like a spider caught in a sudden gust of wind as it dropped on its thread, until with a final fizz of the rope through his gloved hand he landed on the balcony of the seventeenth floor.

Crouching, he unclipped the rope from his harness and flattened his back to the wall, his dark, lithe shape blending into the stained stone. He didn’t move, his chest barely rising, the thin material of his black ski mask slick against his lips. He had to be sure. He had to be certain that no one had seen him on the way down. So he waited, listening to the shallow breaths of the city slumbering fitfully below him, watching the Met’s familiar bulk retreating into shadow as its floodlights were extinguished.

 

And all the while, Central Park’s dark lung, studded with the occasional lights of taxis making their way between East and West Eighty-sixth Street, breathed a chilled, oxygenated air up the side of the building that made him shiver despite the heat. Air heavy with New York’s distinctive scent, an intoxicating cocktail of fear, sweat, and greed that bubbled up from subway tunnels and steam vents.

And although a lone NYPD chopper, spotlight primed, circled ever closer and the muffled scream of sirens echoed up from distant streets through the warm air, he could tell they were not for him. They never were. Tom Kirk had never been caught.

 

Keeping below the level of the carved stone balustrade, he padded over to the large semicircular window that opened onto the balcony, its armored panes glinting like sheet steel. Inside, he could see that the room was dark and empty, as he knew it would be. As it was every weekend during the summer.

A few taps on each of the hinges that ran down the side of the right-hand window and the bolts popped out into his hand. Then carefully, so as not to break the alarmed central magnetic contact, he levered the edge of the window away from the frame until there was a gap big enough for him to slip through.

 

Once inside, Tom swung his pack down off his shoulder. From the main compartment he took out what looked like a metal detector—a thin black plate attached to an aluminium rod. He flicked a switch on the top of the plate and a small green light on its smooth surface glowed into life. Keeping completely still, he gripped the rod in his right hand and began to sweep the plate over the arid emptiness of the floor in front of him. Almost immediately the light on the back of the plate flashed red and he paused.

Pressure pads. As predicted.

 

Moving the plate slowly over the spot where the light had changed color, he quickly identified an area that he circled with white chalk. Repeating this procedure, he worked his way methodically across the room, moving in controlled, precise movements. Five minutes later and he had reached the far wall, a trail of small white circles in his wake.

The room was exactly as the photos had shown it and had the distinctive smell of new money and old furniture. A large Victorian partners’ desk dominated, a masculine marriage of polished English oak and Italian leather that reminded him of the interior of a 1920s Rolls-Royce. Behind the desk, the wall was lined with what looked like the remnants of a once substantial private library, now presumably scattered across the world according to auction lots.

 

The two sidewalls that ran up to the window were painted a sandy gray and symmetrically hung with a series of drawings and paintings, four down each wall. He did not have to look closely to recognize them—Picasso, Kandinsky, Mondrian, Klimt. But Tom was not there for the paintings, nor for the decoy safe he knew lay behind the third picture on the left. He had learned not to be greedy.

Instead, he picked his way back through the chalk circles to the edge of the silk rug that filled the floor between the desk and the window, its colors shimmering in the pale moonlight. With his back to the window, he gripped one corner of the rug and threw it back. Underneath, the wood was slightly darker where it had been shielded from the bleaching sun.

 

Kneeling, he placed his gloved hands flat on the floor and slid them slowly across the dry wooden surface. About two feet in front of him, the tips of his fingers sensed a slight ridge in the wood. He moved his hands apart along the ridge, until he reached what felt like a corner on both sides. Placing his knuckles on these corners, he leaned forward with all his weight.

With a faint click, a two-foot square panel sank down and then sprang up about half an inch higher than the rest of the floor. It was hinged at the far end and he folded the panel back on itself so that it lay flat revealing a gleaming floor safe.

 

The safe manufacturing and insurance industries cooperate on the security ratings of safes. Manufacturers regularly submit their products to independent testing by the Underwriters Laboratory, or UL, who in return issue the safe with a Residential Security Container Label that allows the insurers to accurately determine the relevant insurance premium.

The safe that Tom had revealed had, according to its freshly affixed label, been rated TXTL 60. In other words, it had been found to successfully resist entry for a net assault time of 60 minutes. It was one of the highest ratings that UL could give.

 

Even so, it took Tom just eight and a half seconds to open it.

Inside there was some cash—around $50,000 he guessed—jewelry, and a 1920s Reverso wristwatch. But he ignored all these, turning his attention instead to a large wooden box, its dark mahogany lid inlaid with a golden double-headed eagle, an orb and scepter firmly gripped in each of its talons. The Romanov imperial crest. He eased the box open, carefully lifting the precious object it contained out from the luxuriant embrace of its white silk lining.

 

He felt his pulse quicken. Even to him, who had seen myriad objects of breathtaking beauty, this was an exceptional piece. So much so that he took the unprecedented step, for him at least, of sliding his mask up off his face for a better view. His uncharacteristic imprudence was almost immediately rewarded. As the moonlight caught its jeweled surface, the delicate object came alive in his hands, glowing like firelight through the hoarfrosted window of a remote wooden cabin.

The words on the roughly torn page from the Christie’s catalog that had been included with his briefing notes immediately came tumbling back into his head.

 

The Winter Egg was made by Carl Fabergé for Tsar Nicholas II to give to his mother, the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna, for Easter in 1913. The egg, cut from Siberian rock crystal, is encrusted with more than three thousand diamonds, with another 1,300 diamonds adorning the base.

As with all Fabergé’s eggs it contains an Easter “surprise,” in this case a platinum Easter basket decorated with flowers made from gold, garnets, and crystals. The basket symbolizes the transition from winter to spring.

 

Alone, he gazed at the egg. Soon, he could hear nothing except the steady rise and fall of his own chest and the ticking of an unseen clock. And still he stared, the room melting away from the edge of his vision, the diamonds sparkling like icicles in a midday sun, until he was certain he could see right through the egg, through his gloves and his fingers to the bones themselves.

Suddenly he was back in Geneva, standing at the foot of his father’s coffin, candles sputtering on the altar, the priest’s voice droning in the background. Some water had dropped off the circular wreath onto the coffin lid and was trickling off the side and onto the floor. He had stood there, fascinated, watching the red carpet change color as the crystal drops shattered again and again on its soft pile.

 

Unexpected and unwanted, a thought had occurred to him then, or rather a question. It had slipped into his head and tiptoed around the edges of his consciousness, taunting him.

“Is it time?”

Afterward, he had dismissed it. Not given it much thought. Not wanted to, perhaps. But in the two months since the funeral, the question had returned again and again, each time with increasing urgency. It had haunted him, undermining his every action, investing his every word with doubt and uncertainty. Demanding to be answered.

And now he knew. It was so clear to him. Like winter turning to spring, it was inevitable. It was time. After this, he was going to walk away.

 

He slid his mask back on, packed the egg up, shut the safe door, and closed the wooden panel. Stealthily retreating across the room, he made his way back out through the window onto the balcony.

The sirens far below him seemed louder now, and he found that his heart was beating in time with the thumping blades of the police helicopter that was almost overhead, its spotlight raking over the trees and street below, clearly looking for someone or something. Crouching, he attached the rope to his harness and timed his jump for when the helicopter had made its next pass. In an instant he was gone.

 

Only an eyelash remained where it had fluttered down from his briefly unmasked face to the floor. It glinted black in the moonlight.

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