“Dead?”
She nodded.
“When the friggin’ hell did that happen?”
She hunched over. “Two or three weeks...” she said.
“What a coincidence. About the same time Cannodine and Drucker are getting blown to bits.” Dawson seeped his rage through Angela’s tears— and softened. “I’m sorry. I care. Sometimes I get too emotional.”
“Yes, sir.”
“What the hell is going on?” Dawson asked. “Angela, are you okay?”
“I think so.” She bit her lower lip.
“When you’re ready, see if I can get back the originals I sent for analysis—that would include a short letter, copies of ledger pages, notes, and two transcripts of phone calls.” He put the soda can against his burning cheek.
“I already asked,” she said. “They refuse to release any records until the deceased’s cases have been reassigned and the technicians have had a chance to evaluate his work.”
“How long will that take?” Dawson stood and trudged around his desk. Finishing his soda, he crushed the thin aluminum can and slammed it into the trash container. The clang echoed off the sides of both the can and his skull.
“Several weeks,” Angela said.
“Tell them this is top priority. Tell them I want everything as soon as possible.”
“Yes, sir. Shall I tell them anything else?”
“Yeah. Tell them . . . No. Forget it. I guess I’m just going to have to friggin’ wait.”
“Is that all, sir?” she asked, struggling with the words.
“Yes, I guess it is.”
The second she left, Dawson went to the open window, stuck his head out, and yelled, “Fuck it all!”
Through the noises of downtown D.C., his words died before they hit any ears other than his own. His voice barely qualified as sound.
Figures, he thought.
The door hinges chirped as Peter entered Ayers’ office. The attorney, propped upright against the front of his desk, greeted him with a wan smile. When Peter took a step forward, Ayers straightened up and offered his hand. The attorney stood an inch taller than Peter, and, with fingers like thick noodles, offered a limp handshake. Dressed like the millionaire he was, Ayers had regained much of the dignity he’d lost the morning he’d come to Peter’s apartment and broken down. Peter also looked refreshed in a blue suit—not a designer label like Ayers’, but still neat and a good fit. An outsider would not have recognized these two from their rendezvous over two weeks ago.
The office air held the scent of pungent flowers—somehow familiar— but mixed with tobacco smoke. Ayers’ face pointed away. Peter turned just as a woman’s voice said, “Hello, Mr. Neil.”
The woman from the elevator now eyed him as she leaned over her cane, all the while coddling a cigarette wedged inside a slim, plastic holder. She didn’t inhale deeply, but managed an endless stream of exhale.
“I didn’t see you when I entered,” Peter said, stumbling over his words.
His mind had just enough time to wonder who she was before she said, “I am Stenman.”
“You’re Morgan Stenman? I assumed . . .” Peter felt exponentially disoriented. Suddenly, knowing this was Stenman, the metal cane became an extension of her metal arm, her metal chest, shoulder, neck, and head. Cast in iron, she was an element of the earth, basic and impenetrable. Beyond flesh and blood.
“You expected a man,” Morgan said.
“I confess, I did. And that makes me a moron.” Peter’s face reddened. If his pants had fallen to his knees, exposing his privates, he couldn’t have felt more foolish.
“I gather you don’t watch much investment television,” Ayers said in Peter’s defense. “Morgan is an advisor to presidents and a glass-ceiling breaker of the first order.”
“Being flat broke, I watch no business TV. My portfolio consists of a couple boxes of cereal and a pint of milk for my cat.”
Stenman nodded. “Clever.”
Peter didn’t think she sounded sincere. “Put a foot in your mouth often enough,” he said, “and you develop strategies for getting the damn thing out. Nice to meet you, Ms. Stenman.” He offered his hand.
“I do not shake hands.” She leaned back, creating a few inches of additional space between herself and Peter. “From this point forward,” she continued, “if you intend to work for me, refer to me as Morgan.”
“If I intend to work for you?” Peter’s voice wavered between unbelieving and hopeful.
She took a calculated puff.
Ayers chimed in, “Your choice, Peter.”
Peter did not risk a moment’s hesitation. “If it’s up to me, then yes.”
“Good,” Ayers said. “Morgan informs me that you’ll start out doing trade processing and projects. If you are half as intelligent as I’ve assured her, you will progress quickly to more important assignments.”
Stenman held up her hand and Ayers immediately fell silent. “I am not offering you a job just because my long-time friend and attorney says to,” she said. “If you accept the challenge, then know this: your value as a human being will be measured by how much money you make for my firm, yourself, and me. You must make the necessary sacrifices. That is understood?”
Peter guessed her manner of speaking and accent were Eastern European. He blinked for the first time in a minute. “That’s the American way.” His face turned red over the triteness of his response.
“Indeed. The American way,” agreed Ayers. “Your beginning salary will be minimal—seventy-five thousand—but once you pass your probationary period, in a month, that will increase to a hundred. If you make it through year end, you will be eligible for a bonus.”
Peter doubted he had heard correctly. “Seventy-five thousand dollars?”
Stenman gave him a harsh look. “That is inadequate?” She had charcoal eyes—cold now but combustible.
“No, no,” Peter said. “Fine. More than fine.”
Peter knew he had failed to hide his shock. Seventy-five K was nearly twice what he’d been pulling-in writing mortgage loans. The thought of a hundred K and a down-the-road-bonus knocked his heart against his backbone.
“Now, Peter,” Ayers said, “about the loan secured against your mother’s house . . .”
Peter mentally switched gears. “The loan? Once I verify income, I can schedule repayment.”
“No,” Ayers said. “Stenman Partners will arrange to pay off the second mortgage—and keep the house from going up for sale. You should be able to handle the original loan on your own. With Morgan’s permission, I’ve already cut a check for fifty thousand dollars. The amount will be deducted from your year-end bonus.”
“Am I dreaming?” Peter asked, looking to Ayers.
“I erase your debts,” Stenman said, “because I do not want my employees’ attention diverted from business. Any other questions?”
“When do I start?” Peter asked, thinking they had way overpaid for him. He would have been happy to work for half what they offered and been satisfied with the annual five percent raises the rest of the world lived with. When you’ve had dose after dose of shit luck, you get used to the smell. He tried not to, but worried there had to be a catch.
“You begin tomorrow. Five-thirty,” Ayers answered. “New York markets open at half past six, but foreign markets trade all night.”
“I don’t know what to say,” Peter sputtered.
“Show up on time and do what it takes not to fail.” Stenman’s voice sounded guttural.
“Dress is smart-casual, Peter.” Ayers chuckled. “Only Martha Stewart knows what that means.”
“You report to Howard Muller—third floor.” As Stenman spoke, obliterating Ayers’ attempt at lightening the mood, Peter’s head jerked back to her. “Now,” she said in a dismissive tone, “I have other matters to discuss with my attorney.”