want to prove. In this case they'd want it low. My guess is, every year, seventy million, maybe closer to a billion.'
'I suppose it's possible,' Miles said. He was remembering how much counterfeit money had been detected at the bank and how much more must have escaped attention altogether. 'Know the hardest kind of money to reproduce?' 'No, I don't.' 'An American Express travelers check. Know why?' Miles shook his head.
'It's printed in cyan-blue, which is next to impossible to photograph for an offset printing plate. Nobody with any knowledge would waste time trying, so an Amex check is safer than American money.'
'There are rumors,' Miles said, 'that there's going to be new American money soon with colors for different denominations the way Canada has.'
''Tain't just rumor,' Danny said. 'Fact. Lots of the colored money's already printed and it’s stored by the Treasury. Be harder to copy than anything made yet.' He smiled mischievously. 'But the old stuff'll be around a bit. Maybe as long as I am.'
Miles sat silent, digesting all that he had heard. At length he said, 'You've asked me questions, Danny, and I answered them. Now I've one for you.' 'Not saying Ill answer, son. But you can try.' 'Who and what are you?'
The old man pondered, a thumb stroking his chin as he appraised Miles. Some of his thoughts were mirrored his face: A compulsion to frankness struggled against caution; pride mingled with discretion. Abruptly Danny made up his mind. 'I'm seventy-three years old,' he said, 'and I'm a master craftsman. Been a printer all my life. I'm still the best there is. Besides being a craft, printing's an art.' He pointed to the twenty-dollar bills still spread out on the bed. 'Those are my work. I made the photographic plate. I printed them.'
Miles asked, 'and the drivers' licenses and credit cards?'
'Compared with printing money,' Danny said, 'making those is as easy as pissing in a barrel. But, yep I did 'em all.'
13
In a fever of impatience now Miles waited for a chance to communicate what he had learned to Nolan Wainwright, via Juanita. Frustratingly, though, it was proving impossible to leave the Double-Seven and the risk of conveying such vital intelligence over the health club's telephone seemed too great.
On Thursday morning the day after Danny's frank revelations the old man showed every sign of having made a full recovery from his alcoholic orgy. He was clearly enjoying Miles's company and their chess games continued. So did their conversations, though Danny was more on guard than he had been the day before.
Whether Danny could hasten his own departure, if he chose to, was unclear. Even if he could, he showed no inclination and seemed content at least for the time being with his confinement in the fourth-floor cubicle.
During their later talks, both on Wednesday and Thursday, Miles had tried to gain more knowledge of Danny's counterfeiting activities and even hinted at the crucial question of a headquarters location. But Danny adroitly avoided any more discussion on the subject and Miles's instinct told him that the old man regretted some of his earlier openness. Remembering Wainwright's advice 'don't hurry, be patient' Miles decided not to push his luck.
Despite his elation, another thought depressed him. Everything he had discovered would ensure the arrest and imprisonment of Danny. Miles continued to like the old man and was sorry for what must surely follow. Yet, he reminded himself, it was also the route to his own sole chance of rehabilitation.
Ominsky, the loan shark, and Tony Bear Marino were both involved with Danny, though in precisely what way was still not clear. Miles had no concern for Russian Ominsky or Tony Bear, though fear touched him icily at the thought of their learning as he supposed they must eventually of his own traitorous role.
Late on Thursday afternoon Jules LaRocca appeared once more. 'Gotta message from Tony. He's sending wheels for ya tomorra morning.'
Danny nodded, but it was Miles who asked, 'Wheels to take him where?'
Both Danny and LaRocca looked at him sharply without answering, and Miles wished he hadn't asked.
That night, deciding to take an acceptable risk, Miles telephoned Juanita. He waited until after locking Danny in his cubicle shortly before midnight, then walked downstairs to use a pay phone on the club's main floor. Miles put in a dime and dialed Juanita's number. On the first ring her voice answered softly, 'Hello.'
The pay phone was a wall type, in the open near the bar, and Miles whispered so he would not be overheard. 'You know who this is. But don't use names.' 'Yes,' Juanita said.
'Tell our mutual friend I've discovered something important here. Really important. it's most of what he wanted to know. I can't say more, but I'll come to you tomorrow night.' 'All right.'
Miles hung up. Simultaneously, a hidden tape recorder in the club basement, which had switched on automatically when the pay phone receiver was lifted, just as automatically switched off.
14
Some verses from Genesis, like subliminal advertising, flashed at intervals through Roscoe Heyward's mind: Of every tree of the garden thou mayest freely eat: But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it; for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die.
In recent days, Heyward had worried at the question: Had his illicit sexual affair with Avril, which began that memorable moonlit night in the Bahamas, become his own tree of evil from which he would harvest the bitterest of fruit? And was all that was happening adversely now the sudden, alarming weakness of Supranational, which could thwart his own ambition at the bank intended as a personal punishment by God?
Conversely: If he severed all ties with Avril decisively and at once, and expunged her from his thoughts, would God forgive him? Would He, in acknowledgment, restore strength to Supranational and thereby revive the fortunes of His servant, Roscoe? Remembering Nehemiah… Thou art a God ready to pardon, gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and of great kindness… Heyward believed He might.
The trouble was, there was no way to be sure.
Also, weighing against severance from Avril was the fact that she was due in the city on Tuesday, as they had arranged last week. Amid his current melange of problems, Heyward longed for her.
Through Monday and early Tuesday morning in his office, he vacillated, knowing he could telephone New York and stop her. But at midmorning Tuesday, aware of flight schedules from New York, he realized it was too late and he was relieved that no decision could be taken.
Avril phoned in late afternoon, using the unlisted line which rang directly on his desk. 'Hi, Rossiel I'm at the hotel. Suite 432. The champagne's on ice but I'm hot for you.'
He wished he had suggested a room instead of a suite, since he would be paying. For the same reason, champagne seemed needlessly extravagant and he wondered if it would be ungracious to suggest sending it back. He supposed it would. 'I'll-be with you shortly, my dear,' he said.
He managed a small economy by having a bank car and chauffeur take him to the Columbia Hilton. Heyward told the man, 'Don't wait.'
As he entered Suite 432, her arms went around him immediately and those full lips hungrily ate at his own. He held her tightly, his body reacting at once with the excitement he had come to know and crave. Through the cloth of his trousers he could feel Avril's long slim thighs and legs, moving against him, teasing, shifting, promising, until all of him seemed concentrated in a few square inches of physique. Then, after several moments, Avril released herself, touched his cheek, and moved away.
'Rossie, why don't we get our business arrangements out of the way? Then we can relax, not worry any more.'
Her sudden practicality jolted him. He wondered: Was this the way it always happened. the money first, before fulfillment? Yet he supposed it made sense. If left until afterward, a client his urgency gone and appetite sated might be disinclined to pay.
'All right,' he said. He had put two hundred dollars in an envelope; he gave it to Avril. She took the money out and began counting it, and he asked her, 'Don't you trust me?' 'Let me ask you something,' Avril said. 'Suppose I took money to your bank and paid it in, wouldn't someone count it?' 'They certainly would.' 'Well, Rossie; people have as much right as banks to look out for themselves.' She finished counting and said pointedly, 'This is the two hundred for me. As well as that, there's my air fare plus taxis, which comes to a hundred and twenty; the rate on the suite is eighty-five; and the champagne and tip were twenty-five. Why don't we say another two hundred and fifty? That should cover everything.' Staggered by the total, he protested, 'That's a lot of money.' 'I'm a lot of woman. It's no more than Supranational spent when they were paying, and you didn't seem to mind then. Besides, if you want the best, the price comes high.' Her voice had a direct, no-nonsense quality and he knew