“Baltic Invest. It’s an investment and finance company.”
“Estonian?”
“No, it’s part of a larger international concern.”
“Come on, who owns the company?”
“It’s part of an Israeli conglomerate. The principal shareholder is a businessman named Benjamin Hararin.”
“A Jew.”
“What could be finer than the success of one of our own?”
“How did it so happen that you and Max became the company’s agents in Finland?”
“Through Max. A friend of his knows Hararin and suggested it to him. I wasn’t thrilled about it, but Max felt like free money was being thrown into our laps. All we had to do was introduce potential borrowers and lenders to each other. We’d get a slice of every loan — a slim one, but it wasn’t much work. Once Max filled out the papers for a million-euro loan in fifteen minutes. We got 20,000 euros for that. Pretty good hourly rate.”
“Does the name Amos Jakov say anything to you?”
“What you’re trying to insinuate isn’t true,” Eli said. He was starting to get angry.
“What is it I’m trying to insinuate?”
“I know what’s been written about Jakov in Israel. That Hararin is his frontman and launders Russian mafia money for him. The police there have been investigating it for years, but they haven’t found any proof.”
“If my brother says so, it must be true. How much have you guys brokered in loans?”
“We have several hundred clients, and they have a total of sixty million in loans. Jacobson was one of them.”
I did some quick mental calculations. If Max and Eli earned a similar slice for each loan, they had raked in 1.2 million euros from them. Not bad, considering that the business had only been in existence for a couple of years. Two men of modest needs would have no trouble living off that.
“How did he know to turn specifically to you and Max for a loan?”
Eli was genuinely irritated. “Max, again. Although you’d never guess it, he’s pretty agile when he wants to be. It’d be nice to know by what logic you’re trying to connect us to Jacobson’s murder.”
“Money’s always a good motive.”
“Was Jacobson’s company in financial hardship?”
“The wife says no, but maybe she didn’t know everything. Maybe you do. Did Jacobson make all his payments on time?”
Eli avoided my gaze. “Come on, spit it out.”
“The last few payments were late, because Jacobson’s company lost a lot of big orders and clients over a short period of time. We tweaked the payment schedule and everyone was happy. We weren’t worried, because Jacobson’s corporate and personal assets added up to much more than the amount of the loan, and we have collateral for every single cent.”
“Then maybe Jacobson had vices his wife didn’t know about.”
“Gambling and wild women?”
“The wife said he didn’t gamble. I’m not sure about the women.”
“Believe me, you can drop that line of investigation. That much I knew about the guy.”
“So try and come up with a better one,” I said.
“I’d start from something more prosaic. Maybe he had fired someone who decided to take revenge. It happens. You know that motives can be pretty unbelievable sometimes. When I was sitting on the bench in municipal court, I had this one case where a guy had locked his buddy in the sauna and set fire to it — and all because his friend had a better hunting dog than he did. It had kept him awake at night, and eventually it sent him off the deep end.”
Eli stopped to eye a new, expensive-looking boat moored at one of the docks. “I was thinking I’d buy a boat. How do you like that one?”
“Knock yourself out, as long as you don’t ask me to co-sign. You’re old enough to make decisions like that yourself.”
“You remember Dad’s old wooden boat that sank in that autumn storm?”
I nodded.
“I’ve always wondered why he never took us out in it,” Eli said.
“Because the engine was a piece of junk.”
“That’s what Dad said. So why didn’t he fix it?”
“Why do you think?”
“That he was afraid something would happen to us and to him — that the boat would capsize and we’d drown. The sea scared him and lured him at the same time. He solved the conundrum by buying the boat and keeping it at the marina. Pretty weird coincidence that he drowned.”
“Come on, we had a good time at the dock.”
“I’m not saying we didn’t, but it could have been fun to take the boat out to some nice little island, drop anchor, fish and spend the night. We could have turned up the stereo and danced butt-naked around the bonfire, drunk off our asses.”
I had no problem imagining Eli at the helm in a captain’s hat and a navy-blue Polo cardigan. Imagining him dancing naked around a bonfire was harder, but not impossible. Sometimes he would get seriously blitzed. One night that week at his cottage, he had sat at the shore singing “Jambalaya” for a good half-hour straight, sounding like a bear with bronchitis. At one point he had mixed up the words and bellowed about “Polish piroshki down the bayou.”
If Eli was feeling blue, he’d switch from “Jambalaya” to “The Death of the Farmer’s Lass”: “Before them lay the bog, rough boards bridged the mire…”
I had listened to “Jambalaya” non-stop until he passed out on the granite boulder. The loyal little brother that I was, I kept sitting there at his side, even after it started to rain. He woke up soaking wet and chilled to the bone.
“Up for a beer at the Sea Horse?” Eli suggested.
“Not tonight. I just got off work an hour ago.”
“Have you guys got anything yet?”
“No.”
“Well, I won’t twist your arm. Some other time.”
“We found the killer’s car,” I said, watching Eli’s expression.
“Good. Solve the case.”
“It was stolen in Tallinn.”
“Pretty clever.”
“It was owned by an Estonian investment company called Baltic Invest.”
Incredulity played across Eli’s face until he realized I was serious. It was clear that this was news to him. “Are you shitting me?”
“They reported it stolen a couple of weeks ago.”
“Quite the coincidence. You don’t think I have anything to do with it, do you?”
“Hard to imagine that you would. But I have to admit, I don’t believe it’s a coincidence.”
Eli stopped and looked at me, perplexed. “What could Baltic Invest have to do with Jacobson’s murder?”
“You told me that he didn’t make all of his payments. Maybe the company sent a killer to remind him that they weren’t the ones to screw around with.”
“Baltic Invest is not Assassination Ltd. And like I said, we have collateral. Jacobson even put up his house. Believe me, it has to be a coincidence,” Eli insisted, but he looked like he didn’t even believe it himself.
Eli glared at me and I glared at him. Then we parted in opposite directions. After a few yards, I glanced back. Eli was just disappearing behind some bushes, turning into the park. I had the distinct impression that we hadn’t seen the last of Eli’s business affairs.
I had brought Jacobson’s computer home. Ethel had given me the password, so I was able to access both the saved documents and email. The laptop was pretty new and didn’t contain many files. Jacobson had written some ordinary business letters, plus a few to his daughter in Israel. I felt like I was breaking the bounds of propriety when I read them, but they didn’t contain anything of interest in terms of the investigation. The biggest surprise was that Jacobson was writing his memoirs. The structure was a straightforward chronology, starting from his youth and approaching the present day. The final entries talked about the 1960s and how he met his future wife. They had been introduced to each other in the lobby of a movie theatre. The name of the film had been Exodus.