Authors: Mike Cooper
VIKING
VIKING
Published by the Penguin Group
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First published in 2012 by Viking Penguin,
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1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
Copyright © Mike Cooper, 2012
All rights reserved
Publisher’s Note
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING IN PUBLICATION DATA
Cooper, Mike.
Clawback / Mike Cooper.
p. cm.
ISBN: 978-1-101-56889-7
1. Finance—Fiction. 2. Murder—Investigation—Fiction. 3. Wall Street (New York, N.Y.)—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3603.O58284C53 2012
813′.6—dc23
2011036310
Printed in the United States of America
Set in Walbaum MT Std
Designed by Alissa Amell
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ALWAYS LEARNING
PEARSON
For Lisa
Y
ou’d think imminent arrest for a forty-million-dollar fraud might slow a guy down, but nope, there he was, wandering out of Bazookas at midnight. By himself, conveniently. I’d been one step behind for twenty hours, chasing Hayden Pen-nerton across the hedge fund demimonde: Greenwich estate to Park Avenue offices to midtown soju bar to East Village nightclub, and numerous meetings between. Finally, long after dark, back to Connecticut—stopping off at a strip club on the way home, like it was any other workday.
Hayden was so obvious a flight risk I couldn’t believe the Stamford PD wasn’t standing in line.
A dozen college boys got out of their cars, dome lights glowing and radios blaring as they slammed the doors. Light traffic passed on Richmond Hill Avenue. The parking lot was well lit, the air warm for early October.
The sort of night you felt comfortable, at ease. Safe.
“Hey,” I said, friendly like, when Hayden walked past. “How are the girls inside?”
“Easy on the eyes.” He was thirty-six, gym fit, not too drunk and a Master of the Universe. What did he have to fear from me? “Nice, too.”
“I hate wasting my money, you know what I mean?”
I was no older than him, respectably dressed in gabardine and button-down. My knockoff Breguet was good enough to pass. Hayden saw what he expected to see: another rich asshole, a man of his world.
“The way I figure it,” he said, “cash money is never wasted on a naked woman.”
“Truth.”
The Yalies disappeared inside, pulling out their fake IDs. For a moment we had the parking lot to ourselves.
“May I?” I stepped up to Hayden, locked his right arm nice and smooth and put the Sig into his side.
He froze.
“I’m pointing this away from me,” I whispered, about six inches from his face. “If I pull the trigger, half your internal organs splatter the pavement.”
“What—?”
“To your car, please. Silver-gray Audi S5, right?”
“You’re fucking
jacking
me?”
“No,” I said. “Beep the remote on your keychain.”
That was tradecraft—give someone a small illusion of control, and he’ll be more willing to go along. It also occupied his free hand, inside his pants pocket. If he expected to drive, which always seems to happen in the movies, so much the better.
We edged over to the Audi. Too much tension in Hayden’s muscles.
He said nothing, but his breathing shortened, and the movement I could feel in his arm was too obvious.
“The door,” I said.
He leaned forward, opening a little space between us, then twisted, shoved and broke the armlock.
All much faster than I expected.
“Shit.” I stepped back, even as he swung a pretty nice left. By luck or design the punch struck the median nerve, right below my shoulder. A shock wave of pain down my arm, and I dropped the pistol. Oops.
I guess he
was
a gym rat.
Hayden jabbed again, then crossed. I blocked but the blows hurt. This was taking far too long.
“Gonna fuck you
up
now!” Grinning, teeth bared.
“Right,” I said, waiting for his footwork to align. The instant it did, I kicked him sharply in the knee. He stumbled, face going white. I slipped inside, punched his sternum—hard—and followed with an elbow in the neck. He whooshed and fell backward, onto the Audi’s hood.
I picked up the pistol, flexing my other hand. It hurt.
At least no one had seen us.
A minute later Hayden was more or less conscious again, groaning in the back seat. I’d flexicuffed his ankles together and his wrists to the steel bucket seat supports, one on each side of the car. This left him leaning forward, arms locked out and down, his torso bent over his knees. The position made it hard for him to breathe in fully, and therefore hard to yell.
Not that I was worried about noise. Audi soundproofing is top-notch. I sat in the passenger seat, keeping the handgun in sight.
“Just to be clear,” I said. “I don’t want your wallet or your house keys or this car—though the leather is very comfortable.” It had that new-car smell, even over Hayden’s sweat.
He grunted and glared.
“This conversation could have gone much easier, you know?”
No response.
“Oh well.” I tapped him on the nose with the gun barrel. “I represent one of your investors. He wants to remain anonymous, so I’ll just call him Mr. Green.”
Another labored grunt.
“‘Green’ for the best kind of negotiable instrument, get it?” I allowed a demented chuckle. “No?”
It helps if they think you’re crazy.
Hayden finally spoke. “What do you want?”
“Mr. Green is unhappy.”
“What does
he
want?” Considering his position, Hayden was more defiant than most sensible people would be. I shook my head.
“Mr. Green has become distressed by rumors of a liquidity crisis in your operations.”
“Hey, that’s all bullshit.”
“Oh? That leak from the Manhattan DA’s office was solid enough for the
New York Times.
How many counts in the indictment—twelve, was it?”
“She’s up for reelection. What do you expect?”
I thought about hammering his skull with the Sig. “In any event, Mr. Green has decided to accelerate his redemption request.”
“Huh?”
“Think of it as clawback.” A term of art, referring to the mandatory return of compensation paid on a deal that later goes bad. Sometimes the
claw
part is literal. “Mr. Green is now at the very front of your creditor queue.”
I swear, you could see the gears grinding. But when Hayden finally spoke, he was way out in the tall grass.
“Which fund?”
“Which
fund
?” It was true Hayden’s little shop ran three or four different investment vehicles, but I had to laugh. “Let me explain something. Making the proper journal entry is
very
low down on your to-do list, right this moment.”
The Greenwich grapevine believed Hayden’s hedge funds were rotten clear through. He’d bet the wrong way on Spanish sovereign debt, doubled down by selling CDS positions at the peak of the crisis, and then covered everything by falsifying statements and paying interest out of capital for six months. Even the SEC had gotten involved, Johnny-come-lately as usual.
My client, reasonably enough, wanted to get his money out before Hayden went to jail and every last asset froze up in a decade’s worth of litigation. Because Hayden wasn’t taking calls, he’d hired me instead. I wasn’t even on fee-for-service—as the last available option, I was able to negotiate a generous contingency instead.
Now all I had to do was collect.
“You should have returned Mr. Green’s calls,” I said. “But that’s water under the bridge. Let’s talk numbers.”
“No.”
“No?” I nodded. “I’ll start, then. Ten point six million dollars.”
He squirmed. His face was hard to read, dark in the shadowed interior.
“You said it.” Hayden’s voice was hoarse. “Liquidity crisis. There’s no cash. Mr. Green’s out of luck.”
“Hmm.”
“I mean, I understand. Look, I’ll be paying everyone back, in order. What does he have, A shares?”
“Don’t bother. The ten point six isn’t going to help you figure out who he is either—I adjusted the amount.”
“Okay, okay.” Another pause as he thought things through. “Look, we can work this out.”
“Yes. Very easily. You give me the money and you never see me again.”
“Exactly!”
I hesitated. “Good…”
“How much do you want?”
“Oh, for fuck’s sake.” If I ever took a bribe, I’d never get work again. “Don’t even go there.”
“Hey, I didn’t mean—”
I lifted the pistol slightly. “Let’s discuss your options.”
He winced but shut up.
“Here’s one approach I’ve found effective in the past,” I said. “I shoot you in both ankles. Then both elbows. Then I cut off one ear.”