They arrived at the Banque de l’Indochine. The Binh Xuyen guards escorted Nicholai and his cash inside.
123
HE MET WITH THE BANKER, a colon in his mid-fifties, in a private office.
“I wish access to my safety deposit box, please,” Nicholai said.
Laval had heard of this Guibert. All of Saigon had. He said, “I’m sorry, monsieur, but I wasn’t aware that you had a safety deposit box with us.”
“I do,” Nicholai answered. “In the name of Yuri Voroshenin.”
He slid Voroshenin’s passport across the desk. Laval glanced at it and then looked back at Nicholai. “I am informed that Monsieur Voroshenin recently passed away.”
“As you can see,” Nicholai said, “you were apparently misinformed.”
“This is most irregular.”
“Monsieur Laval,” said Nicholai, “the Banque de l’Indochine is most irregular.”
Laval looked insulted. He sat back in his chair and then ran his long fingers across his high forehead. “Do you have any additional identification that might authenticate your identity, monsieur… whoever you are?”
Nicholai nodded, removed an envelope from his jacket pocket, and handed it to Laval. The banker took it, opened it, turned ghostly pale, and sputtered, “This is outrageous.”
“I agree,” Nicholai said. “I imagine Madame Laval would agree as well.”
“How did you get these?” Laval asked, stunned by the photographs of him in bed with a young Cambodian girl.
“Does it matter?”
“This is hardly the act of a gentleman.”
“Again, we are in perfect harmony. Those copies are for you to keep, I have others safely stored away. However, if this is not adequate identification” – he slid a stack of piastre notes across the desk – “perhaps these pictures might suffice.”
Laval hesitated. Then he took the stack of bills and stuffed them and the photos inside his jacket pocket.
He grudgingly led him to the vault and handed him the key.
Nicholai opened the steel box.
Bankbooks for accounts in Switzerland and the United States. In addition to the accounts were stocks and securities – a bit ironic for a Communist, Nicholai thought. He knew nothing of such things, but could hope that Voroshenin did, and had invested the Ivanov fortune wisely. Then there were codes to other safety deposit boxes. In Zurich, Bonn, Paris, New York, Buenos Aires.
Of course, Nicholai couldn’t know what they contained, but there was already enough money to fund what he wanted to do and for he and Solange to live in reasonable comfort and safety.
And, on the subject of safety, Nicholai was delighted to find what he had hoped to find, and what a man of Voroshenin’s profession would surely store in a secure place -
Passports.
One French, another German. With unintentionally exquisite irony, one was Costa Rican – the same nationality that the Americans had promised him. And, speaking of the Americans, Voroshenin had even provided himself with an American passport.
One “Michael Pine,” resident of Park Avenue in New York City.
Nicholai took the contents of the box, put them in his briefcase, and walked out of the vault.
Laval was waiting for him.
“Now I wish to open an account, please,” Nicholai said, handing him the American passport, “in this name.”
The account was opened. Nicholai kept enough for immediate expenses, deposited the rest, and instructed Laval to wire it to their branch in Marseille.
Laval obediently did so.
Nicholai wished him a pleasant day and left.
124
THE MEN SAT in Antonucci’s office.
Mancini, Antonucci, Guarini, Ribieri, Sarti, Luciani – the whole leadership of L’Union Corse sat around the table and listened to what Captain Signavi’s guest, the amerloque who called himself “Mr. Gold,” had to say.
“The so-called Michel Guibert,” Diamond said, “is an asset of an American anti-narcotic unit sent to infiltrate the Indochina- Marseille-New York heroin connection.”
The men were silent for a minute.
Finally, Mancini said, “This is what comes of doing business with outsiders.”
“He seemed like a respectful young man,” Antonucci responded. He took a cigar from its humidor and carefully lit it, not showing his fury at having been deceived by the young Guibert.
“It’s the times,” Guarini offered consolingly.
“There’s more,” Diamond said. “His handler is an American working in Saigon under USIS cover.”
“Haverford,” Mancini said. “I knew it.”
More silence ensued, more sipping of espresso, more slow, deliberate smoking. Then Mancini said, “The Haverford thing has to look like something else. A robbery… use some of the local boys.”
“What about Guibert?” Antonucci asked.
Signavi interjected, “He’s something different. He can handle himself.”
The men took this in.
Antonucci said, “I’ll give it to the Cobra.”
125
A DOUR, OVERWEIGHT FRENCHMAN was waiting for Nicholai in the lobby of the Continental. He slowly unfolded himself from his chair and approached Nicholai as he waited for the clerk to retrieve his room key.
“Monsieur Guibert?”
“Yes?”
The man’s suit hung off him like laundry. Dark circles under his eyes gave an impression of even greater colonial lassitude.
“Patrice Raynal,” he said. “SDECE. I would like a word.”
“The bar?” Nicholai suggested.
“Perhaps your room?” Raynal suggested. “For your privacy?”
They repaired to Nicholai’s room, where Raynal refused the offered drink, lowered himself into a chair, and got right down to business. “I don’t like you, Guibert.”
“Ah,” Nicholai responded. “Most people wait a day or two until they decide to dislike me.”
“They have not had the advantages,” Raynal said, “of receiving hostile wires from Moscow and Beijing demanding your immediate arrest and extradition, nor equally strident inquiries from Norodom Palace inquiring about the identity of a Frenchman who insulted the emperor and made improper advances toward his escort. Nor have they received the reports that you sold a cargo of extremely lethal and probably stolen weapons to the Binh Xuyen and that you took an extremely ill-advised airplane ride to Cap St.-Jacques.”
“The Binh Xuyen are your allies,” Nicholai said pleasantly.
Raynal’s voice was tired. “You see, publicly they’re not. The French government does not consort with pirates and dope smugglers. And just this morning, Guibert, before I even had a chance to spike my coffee with a fortifying jolt of cognac, I received word that a certain, admittedly minor Soviet functionary, formerly of the Beijing delegation, was dead in a Cholon flophouse, an apparent suicide but, jaded cynic that I am, I can’t help but wonder if your presence in the same city is merely coincidental. You do seem to have a habit of being in the vicinity of dead Russians.”
Leotov dead? Nicholai wondered, keeping any sign of it off his face. An overdose or the Russians, or the Chinese? “I suppose I have that in common with any number of, say, Germans.”
“Witty,” Raynal said. “I dislike you more every minute.”
“So are you arresting me?” Nicholai asked, tired of the jousting. Obviously, extradition to either of the Communist capitals would be the end of the game.
“No,” Raynal said. “We don’t take our orders from Moscow or Beijing. Not even from Washington, yet. But your business in Saigon is concluded. You managed to make a nice little lagniappe at the casino last night. Leave, Guibert, as soon as possible.”
“Bay Vien told me the same thing.”
“He was correct,” Raynal said. “I really don’t care what happens to you, I just don’t want it happening in my little garden. Not to put too fine a point on it, get out. Va t’en.”