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I became privy to all these trade tricks in 1963 when English Eddie came to New York to announce his retirement at the age of thirty-three. He had never been arrested and he had never spent a minute in jail, but he was finding it more and more difficult to travel without spending hours on end in the company of immigration officials, none of whom was particularly anxious to have him set up shop within their particular borders.

“Christ,” he said, “I can scarcely get into Switzerland anymore. When you can’t get in there with a bagful of money, you know things are bad.”

So English Eddie Apex decided to retire and to announce his retirement through my column, if I were willing, which I was. I spent nearly a week with him and got two good columns out of it and one visit from a fraud squad detective who wanted to know if I really thought that English Eddie was hanging up his gloves.

“I think so,” I said. “He’s made enough.”

The detective nodded. “Like he says, he’s rich now.”

“That’s right.”

“Yeah, well, that’s what I mean. It’s like he also says in your column, the rich always want to get more.”

“Maybe,” I said, “but maybe he’ll go legit.”

The detective nodded again, gloomily. “Yeah, and my cat’ll whistle ‘Stardust,’ too.”

The day after my last column on Eddie Apex appeared, he dropped by my office and handed me a carefully wrapped box. I opened it while he watched. It was an alligator wallet, obviously expensive. “I would have offered you money, but I didn’t think you’d take it,” he said, sounding to me for all the world like Richard Burton imitating a terribly bored captain of the guards.

“You’re right,” I said. “I wouldn’t.”

“It’s rather a good wallet,” he said. “It should last you for years.”

“Well, thanks very much.”

“It’s nothing really. Oh, by the way, I think I told you that I was retiring to Mexico?”

“That’s what you told me.”

“Well, just let it stand that way. But actually I’m not.”

“Not retiring?”

“Oh, I’m retiring right enough, but not to Mexico.”

“Where then?”

“London.”

“Why London?”

“Well, it’s obvious, isn’t it?”

“What?”

He grinned his charming, con man’s grin. “I can pass there.”

When he was gone, I examined the wallet. It had one of these semi-secret compartments and when I looked into it I found five one-hundred-dollar bills. I took them down to a bank to see whether they were any good and when I found that they were, I went out and bought something for my wife that was ridiculously expensive, but for the life of me I can’t remember what it was.

“What did he want?” I asked, after telling a fascinated Myron Greene a lot of what I knew about English Eddie Apex.

“He was rather vague until we got down to the question of money.”

“He usually perks up there.”

“He said that he was calling me instead of you because he’d heard that I represented you, which he thought was sound because when it comes to negotiating in your own behalf, he didn’t think you’d be too effective.”

“I don’t have your drive, Myron.”

Myron Greene nodded his agreement at that. “Well, it seems that a work of art has been stolen from a party or parties that Mr. Apex is representing. The thieves are willing to sell it back for one hundred thousand pounds. The owner — or owners, I’m not sure which because Apex would sometimes say ‘they’ and sometimes ‘he’ when referring to whomever it was stolen from — anyway, they or he are willing to engage your services as go-between for the usual ten percent. At this point, of course, we started negotiating. I asked for your expenses. Mr. Apex declined, but countered with an offer of earnest money — ten percent of your fee to be deposited in your bank here. I told him that I thought fifteen percent of your fee in advance would be far more in line in view of the fact that you would be paying your own expenses. We settled for twelve and a half percent in advance. I must say that Apex seems quite good at doing large sums in his head.”

“He didn’t say what had been stolen?” I said.

“No.”

“Or from whom?”

“No.”

“It’s probably hot then.”

“Really? What makes you think so?” It was obvious that Myron Greene would be delighted if it were. Shady dealings always fascinated him.

“Let’s look at it this way,” I said. “Firstly, Eddie Apex is involved. I don’t think I need a secondly.”

“You said he retired.”

“He retired from the con, not from crime.”

“He certainly sounds straightforward,” Myron Greene said.

“He hasn’t lost his touch then. You notice he didn’t say what was stolen or from whom. You know as well as I do, Myron, that when any valuable art is stolen, the first to be notified is the insurance company and the second is the police. And usually it’s the insurance company or another lawyer who calls you. Or maybe the thieves themselves. But here we’ve got an ex-con artist calling on behalf of clients unnamed about an unmentionable work of art that somebody has stolen and is willing to sell back for nearly a quarter of a million dollars. That means that its true market value must be close to a million or more. But no insurance company seems to be involved. No lawyer. And certainly no police. That makes it sound hot to me.”

“Possibly,” Myron Greene said. “You present a good case. However, it may be that whatever was stolen was uninsurable — or even that whoever stole it threatened to destroy it, if the police were brought in. We’ve known cases like that before.”

“Kidnappings mostly.”

We sat there at the poker table in silence for a while until I got up and mixed us both another drink. “I perhaps neglected to mention that the earnest money that Apex agreed to advance is nonreturnable,” he said.

My admiration for Myron Greene’s ability as a skilled negotiator rose several more degrees. “You talked Eddie Apex out of that?”

Myron Greene smiled for perhaps the first time that day, the day that he became a millionaire. “He did take a bit of convincing,” he said as modestly as he could. “Of course, it means that you’ll have to go to London to find out what the deal is. If you don’t like it, you can turn it down and, except for your expenses, you’ll have made twelve hundred and fifty pounds or approximately three thousand dollars.”

“Apex won’t talk about it over the phone?”

“No.”

“Why doesn’t he just write us a letter?”

Myron Greene smoothed his hair. “There’s a time factor.”

“What time factor?”

“You have to be there tomorrow night.”

We shared another silence and after a few moments I said, “Well, London should be pleasant this time of year.”

“You lived there once, didn’t you?”

“Uh-huh. A long time ago for about a year. It was when the paper thought that I might do the same thing for London that Buchwald was doing for Paris. It didn’t work out though.”

“What happened?”

“I got homesick.”