This was more than just dynamite and way larger than whether or not a bestseller had been born. Michael could more than understand why it would be worth killing for — if it were true. But the questions remained: was any or all of it accurate, could it be verified, what was the proof, and, probably most intriguingly, who had written it?
He went back to page one and read more carefully, pausing occasionally to take notes. At the end of another hour, he had a list of claims he could nose around for evidence of, as well as an idea of how to conduct the first batch of searches. Rubbing his eyes, he took a break and considered how to proceed.
Several things struck him as obvious. First, he’d need help on the research. Second, this was an extremely dangerous book, unless it was a work of fiction, in which case the level of detail bordered on a pathological level of invention and attention to consistency and inter-connectedness. Third, if true, he had to expect the worst — that there was now a team or teams of lethal operatives who would stop at nothing to silence any mention of the document or its contents. And he’d have to assume that he would be lucky to survive the next seventy-two hours; he would be up against CIA-level resources and monitoring capabilities.
Finally, if any or all of it was true, he was already out of time and needed to take steps which assumed he might have to disappear without any access to his resources, including his bank accounts, credit cards, or professional contacts.
In short, if Abe hadn’t died a natural death and that was just the first salvo in an all-out effort to contain the document, then everyone who had even talked to Abe since he’d received it and read it was potentially at lethal risk.
Meaning there was a fair chance that Michael was fucked.
He considered his options. Michael needed lawyers, guns and money. Well, actually, not lawyers, because they could do very little, if up against what was described in the book. But as to the rest — guns, which he had, and money, of which he had some — the question was whether he had enough.
He opened Abe’s bag and removed the bundles he’d taken from his safe, setting them on the kitchen counter as he rummaged around for a knife in the nearest drawer. Finding one, he carefully sliced open the first package.
Inside was a stack of hundred dollar bills. Thirty-five thousand dollars — his emergency funds. That had always seemed like a lot of cash. Now it looked laughable. It would fit in a couple of pockets of his cargo shorts.
Next, he removed a passport and international driver’s license.
He opened it.
Irish citizen. Thomas Derrigan. His middle and last names.
He’d long ago taken advantage of a citizenship program that Ireland offered to the offspring of Irish parents — his mother had been right off the boat from Enniscorthy as a two year old, having come to the U.S. when her parents emigrated. He’d applied for and been granted Irish citizenship and a passport, which he’d always figured could come in useful for banking or traveling purposes, especially in regions where being an American might be dangerous — such as in the Middle East. He’d just renewed it two years ago, so he had a long time before it expired.
Having dual citizenship and a second passport was one of the legal tricks of the trade he’d picked up working in the security game — where it paid to always keep your options open, to always have a contingency plan.
He unwrapped the other bundle and placed three plastic cylinders on the counter. Each tube contained twenty gold Krugerrands — all told, sixty ounces of untraceable gold. Less than four pounds in three little bundles that would fit in his shirt pocket.
This was his life savings, other than about twenty-five thousand dollars of operating cash in his bank account and a piece of property in Casper, Wyoming he’d bought over time as a retirement spot. Not a lot to show for years of working, but then again he hadn’t been particularly frugal — if you were single and male in New York, you likely had a considerable burn, unless you were a shut-in or never hoped to get laid. While Michael would have liked to have had triple what sat before him, it was what it was. He had a little more than six figures to his name, part of which would need to be converted into cash as needed. Fortunately, everybody liked gold, and it was extremely portable and easily exchanged for currency anywhere in the world.
That should be more than enough, depending upon how you defined enough.
The thought stopped him.
He needed to do a threat assessment, but before he could do so, he had to determine whether Abe had died of natural causes and whether the claims in the document could be either verified or debunked. Either would give him definitive data with which to plan. Right now, all he knew was that there was an old dead bookworm, some high tech spy-gear and probably a live surveillance effort. Obviously, these kind of variables could turn out to be life-changers. But he needed more information.
He walked over to the voice-over-IP phone his friend had next to the PC, looked up a phone number on his cell phone and then dialed on the internet phone. After a few moments, one of his buddies at the NYPD picked up.
“Detective Romer speaking.”
“Hey, Ken, it’s Michael Derrigan. How’s it hanging?” Michael asked, keeping things light.
“Super, Mike. How’s it going with you? Been a while since I heard from you,” Ken replied brightly.
“Too much work, too little cash, my friend. I haven’t had much time lately,” Michael admitted.
“What’s up, buddy? To what do I owe the pleasure on a work day? Did Vice finally bust you for male prostitution?” Ken inquired innocently.
“Yeah, the John wanted a refund and I refused,” Michael quipped. “Seriously, though, I have a client who was found dead this morning at his apartment. Heart attack, no suspicion of foul play. White male, late sixties-early seventies, lived alone with some dogs. Neighbor called it in. I was wondering if you could look into that a little closer and make sure it passes the sniff test.”
Ken’s tone changed. “Why, Mike? Tell me what I need to know. Do you have some reason to believe it might be something else?”
“We ran a sweep on his office this morning and his place had more bugs than a crack house kitchen. And Ken, it’s not like he was on Wall Street or trading in high value intel. He was a literary agent, which is about as exciting as manufacturing shoelaces,” Michael explained.
He stopped there — Ken didn’t need to know anything more. There was no point in getting him involved beyond providing confirmation that Abe’s death had been a natural one.
“So no reason for any listening devices…” Ken finished the thought.
“Exactly. I suppose it could be a competitor trying to learn what he was working on or negotiating, but that’s unlikely, given the industry.” Michael let that sink it. “Which is why I figured it might be worth having someone check the body.”
“What was the name and address?” Ken asked.
Michael told him everything he knew.
Ken would be able to do a quick system scan for bodies found in the last twenty-four hours and find Abe. Then he’d ask the coroner to do a suspicious death exam — unofficially at first, even though everyone was supposed to follow procedure. Nobody wanted to waste a ton of time on paperwork on a ‘favor bank’ call, so it was more expedient to do it casually at this stage.
Ken committed to notifying Michael whenever he had the results of the autopsy back. He figure it would be at least a day, maybe more, especially if they had to wait for a pathology report and tox screens to come in.
Michael hoped with all his heart that they would confirm he’d expired from a coronary.
Abe’s death was now under investigation; there was nothing else he could do on that score but wait, so Michael turned to the research issue. He needed fast, dependable and discreet verification by someone who’d never been within a mile of Abe’s offices and couldn’t be tied into his sweep or the e-mail. Normally, he would have used Koshi, but in light of his suspicions, Michael didn’t want to expose him to any more risk.