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Authors: Bill Vidal

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‘Making money, then?’

‘Lots of money, Vlad, and I ain’t rubbing your head.’

‘Selfish bastard.’

Tom looked at the time. Five-thirty, and he’d had enough. Time to get out. He was angry with Sweeney, euphoric over his fortune and cocksure in the belief that the $5 million had gone into Taurus. He had noticed the pound was down two centimes in Zurich, which pleased him, and decided to call it a day. It would be Tuesday before he realized the $5 million payment had been cancelled.

He next called his friend Stuart Hudson to propose a game of squash. Stuart had been having a lousy day himself, he said, and jumped at the suggestion. Hudson was a partner in the law firm that acted for Tom’s bank. The two had met shortly after Tom arrived in London and soon established that they shared the same passion for its nightlife. The Englishman’s connections had opened every door in town for the American, and it had been Stuart who introduced Tom and Caroline at Annabel’s. On that night, lying in bed exhausted, following the intense lovemaking of first nights, Tom had asked her how she knew the lawyer.

‘Went out with him for two years,’ she replied.

‘With Stuart?’

‘Mm.’

‘Odd he never mentioned you,’ Tom said, inexplicably irked by the revelation.

‘He wouldn’t. He’s a gentleman,’ Caroline teased.

And that he was, thought Tom. Stinking rich, handsome, bright, and his father a peer of the realm.

‘How come you let him slip?’ he asked, surprised by a creeping jealousy.

‘He was fun. It wasn’t love.’

She had said it with unquestionable finality. Tom was not about to argue with that.

He took a taxi to Fulham Road and pretended to read the
Evening Standard
to avoid talking to the driver. He tried to detach himself from emotional issues and address the facts. He had collected forty-three million dollars. Fact. The money was his. The bank in Zurich had double-checked and agreed it was his. Had there been the slightest doubt, they would have sent him packing. There could be no doubt. Fact.

But did Dick really mean Tom’s life was threatened? London was a long way from New York, but still Tom had to accept that for forty million bucks one could be murdered anywhere. Whose money was it supposed to be, anyway? Tom felt a sudden chill along his spine. ‘Not the goddamn IRA.’

There was something in the diaries he had read. Something he did not understand but which Dick might be able to explain. Sean. Where did he fit in? Who was he? Uncle Sean? Every month his grandfather had made a little note.
Sean 5,000. Sean, 4,000
. And so it went. Once it had been ten thousand, but normally it was less. Was Pat Clayton in business with his brother? Was that the problem? Did Sean claim that the money was his? He would wait and see. At a push, if someone could convince
him
, Tom might share some of his windfall. That would be his bottom line. But there was no way he would part with all forty-three million. That was his legally established inheritance.

Hudson took the first two games 9–4 and 9–6 and was leading 6–3 in the last. Though shorter than Tom, he covered the court with equal competence.

‘Having an off day, old boy?’ Hudson prodded, adjusting the bandana that held his long, fair hair in place as his muscles tensed for the serve.

‘Shut up and play, Stuart,’ Tom replied angrily, crouching in readiness.

The ball bounced high over Clayton and died in the corner. Tom heard Stuart chuckle ‘Seven–three’ as he got up. He just stood there staring at his friend for a moment, then unwillingly imagined Caroline in Stuart’s arms. And that did it. Not one more serve would Hudson win. Clayton hit the ball as though he hated it, and leapt about the court as he had not done in years. He never said a word or looked at Hudson, just smashed and viciously sliced until he won 9–7.

‘What was that all about?’ Stuart asked later, as they shared a drink in the club’s bar. So Tom told him, in general terms, about the money in Switzerland, and the possibility that it might not be his.

‘If the Swiss gave it to you, dear boy,’ he said quite seriously, ‘my guess would be that it really is yours. Those rascals do nothing out of the kindness of their hearts.’

‘Well, there’s this lawyer coming to see me Friday,’ Tom explained. ‘I’ll hear what he has to say.’

‘Should you need my help with lawyers, you only have to shout.’

‘I know. Thanks,’ said Tom sincerely. ‘I may well do that.’

6

MORALES LOOKED LEFT
towards the hole, then back at his feet. He swung the putter gently and struck the ball cleanly, allowing himself a smirk of satisfaction as he watched it travel along a perfect line. Then without warning the ball shuddered, moved off its course and came to rest two inches left of target. He swore loudly and turned to confront his gardener.

‘You idiot!’ he shouted.

The man just stood there, petrified. He had been working on the putting green for weeks, rolling every square foot, then on his hands and knees, cutting unwelcome weeds with scissors. He could not understand.

‘You don’t see it, do you?’ yelled Morales, walking towards the offending clump and striking a deep gash through its centre with the club. The fear-stricken gardener remained silent.

‘There, you idiot! There, there,
there
!’ he repeated, rhythmically slashing the lawn as he spoke. Then he threw the putter at the gardener and walked away towards the house. He was surrounded by imbeciles, he thought as he
strode
– how was he supposed to run a business when every little detail needed his personal attention?

‘Where’s Romualdes?’ he asked a bodyguard as he crossed the veranda towards the living room.

‘On his way, Don Carlos,’ replied the stocky Arawac Indian. ‘With Mr De la Cruz.’

Morales ordered a whisky from no one in particular and sat down. Almost a month had elapsed since he had first voiced his plans to Speer. Now he was ready for the next round and he wanted results in a hurry. Since the coke business had moved to Cali, Morales had been following developments there with keen attention. The once-seigneurial southern city was degenerating into chaos. One or two families such as the Ortegas were emerging as leaders but thugs ruled the streets of Cali. They spent money brazenly and local merchants matched the sudden prosperity with their own greed. In Cali’s shops one could buy the most extravagant clothes and jewellery, and restaurant bills eclipsed the best of Bogotá. But many of Cali’s old residents had left. Traditional landowners sold their estates, fearful of denying the cocaine merchants airstrips for their planes. Armed thugs roamed the city’s streets and dead bodies in the gutters were the norm. Morales could see Cali going the way of Medellín. One day soon the troops would come in earnest, and there would be carnage.

They were ignorant fools, risen from nowhere and unable to contend with the headiness of sudden wealth. Morales was different. His parents had been relatively humble schoolteachers, but from an early age Carlos Alberto had aspired to more. He achieved the highest grades in high school and left Medellín for the capital, where he enrolled in the Faculty of Law at the National University. But reality soon caught up with him and he
dropped
out after a miserable year in squalid student digs with the other poor boys from the provinces. A year of endless menial night jobs to finance his education, watching children of the rich leaving for plush suburbs after class, driving cars bought by their parents. A year of seeing his lecturers attempt to ingratiate themselves with wealthier students, for lecturers were also lawyers who hoped their classroom contacts might draw a more prosperous clientele to their humble offices. It only took that one year for Morales to understand with clarity that a young lawyer without family connections could at best look forward to a mediocre life.

So he went home to Medellín, and there discovered a new world of opportunity. A few enterprising farmers were making money out of weeds. The new Colombian Gold planted for a few pesos in the Aburra Valley was bringing in the most bountiful of harvests. The police turned a blind eye: it was harmless, a passing fancy in America and Europe which brought the country some badly needed cash.

The nineteen-year-old Morales went to work for one such farmer, at a wage five times higher than his parents’ combined income.

In time a more profitable crop was discovered, from plants that grew most happily in the even higher regions of Bolivia and Peru. The coca plants were lush and bulky and in their native habitat not worth much. Indians, miners and peasants chewed the leaves to help them exist in the high altitudes, but the Colombians learnt how to extract the active alkaloid and convert it into hydrochloric salt. They already had in place the means of distribution and a new white powder would follow the marijuana trail. It was a dream come true, a real Eldorado, and the birth of
the
cartels. In the years the dream lasted, Morales had done well.

All he wanted now was a year at the most. Medellín would never be allowed to return to the old ways. So he shipped as much as possible, saved his money and raced to make himself a pillar of the city. Then he would become untouchable.

But today he had another problem. Somewhere in his business a traitor was hidden, a fool on Cali’s payroll. Scattered around the bush at a dozen nomadic sites were some two hundred men employed by Morales, remnants he had rescued from the fallen Escobar. They manned refineries, assembled cargoes, and cleared land for precarious landing strips. Morales used only light aircraft – he could buy those for $200,000 or so. Stripped of non-essentials and fitted with long-range tanks, they would make the thousand-mile journey, past Haiti and on to the islands, sometimes carrying half a ton, often more. There he sold his produce. Other groups would take it to America – the price doubled after the final journey – but that way Morales’ planes always came back, ready for another load and then another. The millions just rolled in.

That week he had lost a plane. Blown up over the jungle, smithereened by a thousand pounds of fuel just three minutes after taking off. The distinctive hand of Cali. The stupid bastards wanted it all. But there had been no strangers at the landing strip. So one of his own men must have planted the bomb. The drug baron knew he had no choice but to go into the jungle and deal with the matter in person. It was a question of respect.

The Mayor and the lawyer arrived just as Morales started to sip his cool Scotch. Romualdes wore a new suit and an
imitation
Panama. Looking like a man who had gone up in the world, he carried a large set of rolled-up plans with him, while De la Cruz brought a case full of papers. They all shook hands and moved into the dining room.

Romualdes was pleased to report that the purchase of all sites had been completed. One, he said, had proved difficult. The Angelini widow had not wanted to sell, but Romualdes had talked to her patiently, he boasted, and won her round. He started to spread the plans on the table as the lawyer pulled out the contracts.

‘I believe the agreed prices are good, Don Carlos,’ expounded De la Cruz, who then read from his typed list:

‘Durante’s three hectares off the Bogotá road, $10,000, and the other two hectares next door, $8,000. The Angelini land, ten hectares, $25,000. Those three will be for the housing sub-divisions.’

Morales nodded approval and waited for the lawyer to continue.

‘Likewise the city sites.’ He looked towards the Mayor for support. ‘Miguel and I agreed some low valuations but not so low that they would cause trouble in the capital. As you said,’ he added, returning his gaze to Morales. ‘Five thousand square metres, the telephone company’s land, will accommodate the hospital and we agreed $80,000 for that. The Krugger plots are two and a half thousand metres each. They wanted $45,000 apiece but we were able to negotiate there. Krugger’s boy needs money, so it’s $35,000 and $40,000, agreed.’

‘Fine,’ said Morales impatiently. ‘What’s the total?’

‘$198,000 plus taxes.’

‘Good. Now show me the drawings.’

The Mayor spread his hands over the sketches proudly. His brother-in-law was an architect who felt privileged to be involved with the Morales Foundation, so his fees would
be
most reasonable. Romualdes would guarantee that, he added gravely.

Morales looked at the sketches and was immediately impressed.

The hospital was a simple yet imposing building on three floors, with a total surface of 15,000 square metres. Above the canopy, in deep blue letters the sign read: Hospital General Fundación Morales.

He nodded approvingly and turned to the schools. The hardened drug baron was genuinely moved: the two edifices were almost identical, each on two storeys and cleverly named. The Don Pascual School for Boys, and the Doña Luisa School for Girls, after Morales’ deceased parents. Romualdes could on occasion display political flair. The Church would prefer segregated sexes, he explained, and they were sure to provide Brothers and Sisters to teach.

The houses were of a simple design, to keep costs down, but certainly, as demanded, they were dignified. Bungalows with red-tiled roofing, each ninety square metres, with little front gardens and paved streets in between.

‘We shall build four hundred on the Angelini land,’ said Romualdes proudly. ‘Plus one hundred and twenty, and eighty, respectively, on the other sites. We thought,’ he said to his host as his confidence was boosted by his own self-satisfaction, ‘that you might care to name the subdivisions yourself, Don Carlos.’

‘Have you got quotations, Aristides?’ he asked the lawyer.

‘I have, Don Carlos,’ he said, pulling out more sheaves of paper. ‘A syndicate of local companies. This is too much for any one builder in Medellín, but I assembled them in my office and we thrashed out a deal there and then. They are all proud of what you are doing and honoured to be a part of the project.’

‘How many people know about this?’ he asked.

‘We swore all four to secrecy, Don Carlos,’ interjected Romualdes. ‘But of course drawings and estimates were necessary –’

BOOK: The Clayton Account
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