'Yes, I'm sure there are. I went over there to visit them a couple of years ago. I had a great time. Anyway, how can I help you?'
The policeman standing next to him was big and beefy, and his name tag had Murphy written on it. His scowl deepened as he listened to this conversation.
'Yes, I am trying to find something out about an old university friend of mine, Greg Shoffman. He was reported missing at this station four months ago, and I would like to try and find out what happened to him.'
'Sure. Wait a moment and I will see if I can find his file.'
I waited for about five minutes, and then the policeman returned, a very thin file in his hands.
'We don't have much on him. He was reported missing on April twentieth. No trace of him found at all. No body, no empty wallet, no driver's licence. His credit cards remained unused. The investigation is closed.'
'But how can a man disappear without trace?' I asked.
'This is New York. We have six murders a day here. Sure, we find the bodies of most of them. But not all of them.'
'Where was he last seen?'
The policeman referred to his file. 'The last reported sighting was when he left his office at seven o'clock on the nineteenth. Neither his doorman nor any of his neighbours reported seeing him arrive at his apartment. He lived alone. No wife, no girlfriend we know of.'
'What was his address?'
The policeman glanced at me, his eyes narrowing a little. 'I thought you said you were an old friend of his,' he said.
'Yes, I'm sorry. I left his address in England. I have his work number, so when I came over here I rang him at work to fix up dinner. Then they told me about his disappearance. It was a real shock. I would very much like to find out what really happened.'
The policeman's face softened. He gave me an address just two blocks away from the police station. Then he said, 'Look, mister. You are not going to find out anything, however hard you look. I have seen dozens of cases like this in the past. Unless the victim's body or his possessions are found and reported to the police, you never get anywhere. It's true that if we had more manpower and less murders we could have spent more time on this case, but I doubt whether we would have got any further.'
I thought about it. He was probably right. I sighed and thanked him for his trouble.
'Not at all. A pleasure to help. And have a pint of bitter for me when you get back.'
I assured him I would and left, thinking how lucky I had been to come across such a helpful New York cop. His Irish colleague's scowl followed me all the way out of the police station.
I walked the two blocks to Shoffman's apartment building. It was in one of those frontier neighbourhoods, where the more adventurous young urban professionals made forays into the run-down districts of Harlem. Neat brownstone buildings, built towards the end of the nineteenth century and renovated towards the end of the twentieth, rubbed shoulders with disused warehouses and builder's merchants. A Korean fruit-and-vegetable store stood on the street corner, spick and span, ready to sell its wares to returning office workers. At this time of the morning the streets were nearly empty. An old black man shuffled along the sidewalk, muttering to himself.
It is impossible for an Englishman to understand the real workings of a neighbourhood such as this. Brought up on a diet of TV cop shows and lurid news stories, it is all too easy to see New York as a battleground between white professionals and a black underclass. Shoffman lived right in the middle of the battle lines. The reality of the situation is probably infinitely more complicated than this, but, as an Englishman dressed in a suit, walking those streets on the outskirts of the notorious Harlem, I found it easy to believe that Shoffman could have become a casualty of this war.
The lobby of his apartment building was well furnished, and there was a doorman sitting behind a desk, guarding the passage to the lifts. I asked him about Shoffman, giving him the old-friend-from-England routine.
Yes, he remembered Mr Shoffman. Yes, he had been on duty on the evening of April nineteenth. No, he had not seen Mr Shoffman come home, neither had the doorman who relieved him at midnight. Yes, he would have remembered, he had been looking out for him to give him a parcel. No, the parcel was nothing special, just some books from a book club. No, he could not show me the apartment, it had a new owner.
I left defeated, hailed a cab, and went back to the hotel.
Back in my room I flopped on to my bed, stared at the ceiling and thought.
It looked as though I had drawn a blank on the answer to my first question. I only had a day left in New York. I was sure the policeman was right. My chances of finding out what really happened to Shoffman were very small. But I was still convinced that his disappearance so soon after his phone call to Honshu Bank was not a coincidence. Someone had found out that he had discovered Tremont Capital was a fraud, and he was now dead.
That still left the second question. How had Waigel put together the Tremont Capital deal? Who had he been dealing with? Where had the money raised by the private placement been paid?
There must have been some paperwork associated with the transaction. Hamilton would soon be looking for traces of it in Curacao. But there must also have been some at Bloomfield Weiss. The librarian in London had been adamant that none of it was in any central filing system. Of course it might have all been thrown away. But on the other hand the shell company still existed, it was still paying interest. No, it was quite possible that Waigel might have some of the records concerning the deal in his own private files. How could I get to his filing system?
I called Lloyd Harbin.
'Hallo. This is Paul Murray. I was just calling to thank you for showing me around yesterday.' I tried to keep the insincerity out of my voice.
'Oh sure, think nothing of it,' Lloyd said in a get-off-the-phone-quick-I've-got-something-better-to-do voice.
'I wonder if you could give me Tommy Masterson's home number?' I asked.
'I'm afraid Tommy has been terminated. He no longer works here.'
'None the less, I would be very grateful if you could help me. You see, I lent him my pen, and he didn't get a chance to return it. I have owned it for several years and it means a lot to me.'
'I am sorry, Paul. I just can't give out information about former employees.'
I should have known the sentimental approach wouldn't work with Lloyd Harbin. I would have to speak to him in his own language. 'Lloyd, listen carefully. De Jong & Co. is soon going to start a buying programme of junk bonds. It will total two hundred million dollars' (a lie but who cared?). 'Now, we can either buy them from Bloomfield Weiss or we can buy them from Harrison Brothers. The choice is yours.'
It worked. 'Now, hold on, don't do anything rash. I'll just get it for you.' He was back in less than half a minute. '342-6607.'
'Thank you. It will be a pleasure to do business with you,' I lied, and rang off.
I caught Tommy at home and asked him if he would mind meeting me for lunch. We agreed on an Italian restaurant, Cafe Alfredo, near where he lived in Greenwich Village.
Tommy without a job seemed much the same as Tommy with a job. The same laid-back air, the same amiability.
'I was sorry to see you let go yesterday,' I said, using the standard euphemism for 'getting fired'.
'Thank you,' said Tommy. 'It was a bit of a surprise.'
'I was amazed at the way they did it. Is that how it normally works? You get hauled off to some office somewhere and don't even get a chance to go back to your desk.'
'That's the way it works,' said Tommy, 'although usually you get a little more warning of what is going to happen.'
'Why did he do it?' I asked.
'He doesn't like me,' Tommy said. ''My attitude did not fit in with the Bloomfield Weiss culture.' And, 'I was undermining his authority.' I don't think they like too much independent thought at Bloomfield Weiss. They don't like people who call a rip-off a rip-off instead of a 'unique investment opportunity'. Still, without me they will sell less bonds and make less money, so that is something to be grateful for.'
'You must be angry,' I said.
'Oh, I'll be all right. This has probably been a good thing. It will force me to go and find somewhere better to work, somewhere that employs human beings. I may even go back to California and let the Bad Apple rot.'
For all the brave face he was putting on it, Tommy could not suppress the bitterness in his voice. Good, I