wrong.”
“Yes. Even if I’m proven to be full of shit, I need to know. So do you.”
“If this were anyone else in the department, I’d say go to hell. But you’re a good agent, and I can’t ignore something this big. Let’s hear the plan.”
“We go around Ranson . . .” Dawson explained how. “Then I work in the background to determine where those documents came from—I work solo. Without anyone’s sanction, not even yours. It will take some time, but I’ve waited my whole life for this kind of an opportunity, and I’m willing to take it slow and easy.”
“Why without sanction?”
Dawson sensed the heated stare and felt naked, subjected to ridicule by this important man. Dawson’s skinny chest began panting. No turning back now, he knew. “Because eventually these sons of bitches are gonna figure out I’m involved. If they think this is official, and think the SEC is launching a full-blown investigation, people and their families are gonna get buried—literally. If they think it’s just me, they’re more likely to opt for damage control.”
“If what you say is true—and I suspect ninety-plus percent of your story is self-delusional—that makes you a possible target too.”
“Maybe. But if I disappear or end up dead, it’ll be hard for them to explain. If anything does happen to me, then at least I’ll have proven a point. Correct?”
“If you die in a freaky manner, yes, I’ll buy into your thesis. Hell of a way to make your point, Oliver.”
Dawson’s head swung from the road to Ackerman. In all the years they had known one another, this marked the first time the director referred to him as Oliver. He felt foolish for the happiness this small gesture brought him.
Still warmed by the informality, Dawson continued: “I’ll go to San Diego. I’ll pay my own way. When I find out who in San Diego sent me those documents, I’ll take some time off and investigate on my own time, in violation of agency guidelines. If I’m caught, you read me the riot act. If I create too much of a stink, you fire me on the spot. That should convince Ranson I’m acting without agency approval.”
“This is nuts. I don’t think such extreme—”
“Excuse me for interrupting, sir, but if I lose one more lead, this case will disappear—and I’ll feel responsible for additional suffering. Please. Trust me.”
“Once you’re fired, then what?”
“If we get to that, I’ll try to find someone on the inside to feed me information. If this person who sent the Cannodine papers has anything else, or can produce more, I milk him or her. That’s it.”
“You’re a piece of work, Dawson.”
“Thank you, sir.”
“I didn’t mean it as a compliment. I reiterate: you screw up, or smear Ranson—assuming, as I suspect, he’s done nothing wrong—and you are history. And until this heats up, you work your normal case load.”
“Of course.”
“You keep me up-to-date once you make a contact in San Diego—
“Yes.”
“You have six months to get me something concrete—no, more than concrete. Six months to bust this case open or I bust you. That’s the deal.”
Dawson exhaled, realizing that working covertly, with limited resources, meant slow progress. Even uncovering who had sent him the papers might take weeks or months. If he used up his allotted time without concluding the case, he’d get on his knees, if necessary, and beg for more time. On second thought, looking at the ripples of black around Ackerman’s narrowed eyes, Dawson realized begging would be a waste of time.
“You put up or shut up.” Those were the last words from Director Ackerman as he stormed from Dawson’s car once they reached the office.
Fumbling under his seat for a can, Dawson found a Diet Coke, opened it, and sipped.
“A dog that’s got a bone,” he told himself. “That’s what I am . . . an ugly mutt, done got a stinky bone, and nobody’s gonna take it away from me.”
As the San Diego summer arrived, and the fog hanging over his pre-sunrise arrivals gave way to dry, warmer days, Peter found his financial confidence growing. San Diego, never cold, had transitioned from cool spring to tepid summer. At the same time, Peter had devoured book after book on the markets. He learned about value investing, momentum investing, charts and graphs, micro-economics, macro-economics, even the capital asset pricing model and the theory’s absurd assumption that markets were efficient. If they were efficient, he figured, then Stenman and her operatives couldn’t be turning in kick-ass performance records quarter-after-quarter, year-after-year.
Peter also enjoyed analyzing companies and picking them apart—by accessing annual reports, year-end 10K’s filed with the SEC, quarterly 10Q’s, brokerage research reports, and calls to and visits from company executives. He dug deeply for investment insights, using his newfound analytical skills. The learning curve was slick and fast and exciting as hell. The days seemed to last only seconds, the weekends—even when having a good time with friends—lingered, feeding his impatience to get back into the action—so much so that he often came into the office Sunday evenings, with the opening of foreign markets, and stayed the night. He had developed, he told himself, a healthy addiction.
After months of clerking and working orders on the various exchanges at the behest of others, Peter was finally allowed to cut his teeth. By the end of summer, he began to trade independently. By having Stenman Partners on his business card, brokers and executives fed him information and favors. It was as if it were Christmas, year-round. A whisper-number on earnings came a day ahead of the company’s press release, and always dead-on accurate. When a gigantic institution hit the market with a buy order in a given stock—one big enough to push the price up several dollars—a broker might let it slip that Peter should buy a few shares ahead of that event. With a research recommendation pending, he’d be told: “Buy some, Peter. You won’t be sorry.”
Gifts, bestowed every hour of every day. Was it all perfectly legal? he asked himself. Probably not, but it was business as usual, and it wasn’t smart to refuse presents from people he might one day need.
In a jam, like when lugging a non-performing stock position, Peter learned to create a technical breakout— buy more, and take the stock higher, through a previous price-resistance level. A call to one of the Street’s top- rated technical analysts—along with the promise of future remuneration—could generate a technical, short-term buy-recommendation, thus driving the share price even higher, just long enough for Peter to dump his position. “Tricks of the trade,” Stuart told him. It was a smaller version of the good old pump and dump, only tailored to his specific needs. Information and influential friends—Stuart had been quite right about their importance.
Once fall rolled in, Peter began to make substantial contributions to the hedge fund’s profits. In some things—fundamental stock research for one—he actually became more proficient than his mentor Stuart. Peter’s energy and passion grew daily. Even an occasional stinker trade couldn’t diminish the thrill of making significant money by day’s end, and of winning, where the final score was determined simply by numbers of dollars. In the case of a hot deal, Peter might make a hundred percent increase in a single trading session. And because of Stenman’s financial muscle, when he asked for it, he always got gigantic representation on these ultra-hot deals. Everybody understood the unwritten rule: generous stock allocations went to those who paid the most in commissions. And nobody paid more than Stenman Partners with their four- or five-hundred percent turnover per year in funds under management.
Now that he understood the process, Peter felt like a pump-cart in a room full of locomotives. He longed to dabble in the big numbers thrown around by more senior traders—those who tucked their ears into their phones, protected their sources of information like a well-guarded treasure, and made tens-of-millions in magical profit on a near-constant basis.
And beyond these wizards were Howard Muller and Morgan Stenman. They had the resources and touch that could turn a “pittance”— a hundred million or so—into a fortune of several hundred million or even a billion dollars. Peter could recite stories he’d heard of how mysterious overseas partners raked in more money than many countries’ governments had stored in their central banks. This was heady stuff, and Peter imagined the day he could taste that kind of raw financial power.
By October, nobody doubted Peter’s passion. “A machine,” Stuart said of Peter’s seventy-hour weeks. “A