Dagmar was silent. BJ took a fork and jabbed it angrily into his shortcake.
“The least I could get out of all that,” he said from around his dessert, “is a damn meal.”
“Be my guest,” Dagmar murmured.
BJ ate his dessert in wrathful silence. Dagmar’s mind spun in circles, trying to reconcile BJ’s story of AvN Soft’s fall with those of Charlie and Austin.
In any case, the story seemed to cast very little light on Charlie’s current behavior.
The waitress arrived to ask if they wanted anything else. Dagmar looked over her shoulder and saw they were alone in the dining room. The loudest sound from the bar was a cable news channel. Dagmar said they’d have the check and then went to the ladies’.
Her route passed through the bar, and something, some dreadful sense of déjà vu, made her look at the news program perched on its plasma screen above the bar.
The crawl at the bottom of the screen read Bolivian Currency Collapse.
A shiver ran up her spine.
She remembered watching the same network talking heads five months before, from the bar in the Royal Jakarta.
“Apparently the same traders have now switched their focus to Chile,” one said. “Chile’s the IMF’s poster boy in South America, a perfect example of the neoliberal economic model…”
The other talking head twinkled. “They call it neoconservatism here in America,” she said.
They laughed. The first talking head twinkled back.
“That’s right,” he said. “And if Chile falls, the rest of Latin America is just that much closer to economic apocalypse.”
Dagmar clenched her hands to keep them from trembling. The scent of burning Glodok came faintly to her nostrils.
She paid for the dinner with her company card, then drove BJ back to the AvN Soft building to pick up his car.
BJ stood for a long moment by Dagmar’s car, staring up at the darkened glass tower with only a few windows illuminated, where the service was cleaning or some programmer was pulling an all-nighter.
“This sure has been one damn weird day,” he said.
“True,” Dagmar said. She put her arms around his burly body, rested her head against his shoulder. He smelled pleasantly of steak and strawberries and coffee and himself. His arms came around her.
“Thanks for doing this,” he said.
“No problem.”
“And thanks for listening.” He took a deep breath. “You know, I hadn’t told that story to anyone before. I didn’t know if anyone would believe me.”
“I don’t know what to think,” Dagmar said. He stiffened, and she added quickly, “Not about you, but about Charlie.”
“Be careful around him,” BJ said. “I think he’s connected to all the wrong people.”
“I think you’re right.”
She released BJ and stepped back.
“I’ll talk to you tomorrow,” she said. “Have a safe drive home.”
“And you.”
Dagmar sat in her Prius and watched BJ’s old Chevrolet turn out of the parking lot and onto the frontage road. He had once owned a BMW, she remembered-he’d emailed her a picture of it.
He was just so different. She had a hard time reconciling the old hard-charging, energetic, arrogant BJ with the diffident, frustrated man she’d met today.
She wondered what made the difference.
Failure, she thought. Failure was all it took.
CHAPTER NINETEEN This Is Not Treason
FROM: Siyed Prasad
SUBJECT: Re: Holiday in L.A.
Dear Dagmar,
I know that you are very busy right now, but I simply must see you. Ever since our wonderful time together, I can think of no one but you. You possess my every waking thought, and you invade my dreams as well. I try to concentrate on work, but all I see is your beautiful face before me.
My dearest, we must meet. Name the time and the place, and I will fly to your side!
Your devoted,
Siyed
FROM: Dagmar Shaw
SUBJECT: Re: Holiday in L.A.
Go back to your wife.
Dagmar
FROM: Siyed Prasad
SUBJECT: Re: Holiday in L.A.
Dear Dagmar,
I don’t care about my wife. I don’t care about anyone but you. I will
leave my wife if you desire it. I will leave my family, my country,
everything.
Just let us be together. You mean everything to me.
Your desperate,
Siyed
FROM: Dagmar Shaw
SUBJECT: Re: Holiday in L.A.
You don’t deserve Manjari. Bugger off. Go away.
Dagmar
Twenty-five million dollars, Dagmar thought.
Numbers like that were as far beyond her understanding as the analysis of, for example, continuous tangent vector fields, but still she knew that money like that didn’t come from just anywhere.
The money didn’t seem to be in anyone’s budget. It was possible, she supposed, that Charlie shifted it to the Atreides account from another part of the company, but that sort of thing wouldn’t go unnoticed for long.
He had to have gotten it from somewhere.
Somebody earned this money, she thought. Either Charlie earned it, or the person who earned it gave it to Charlie. Or someone stole it. Or Charlie stole it.
Money will get you through times of inadequate staffing, Charlie had said, better than inadequate staffing will get you through times of no money.
The keys to the kingdom, Charlie had called it. Twice.
Did she want to turn those keys? she wondered. Did she want to find what Charlie was hiding in his kingdom?
Because right at this moment she had somewhere between one million and three million players who could help her.
She leaned back in her office chair and reached blindly for her teacup. She took a drink of the jasmine tea, replaced the cup, swallowed without tasting.
It was past eleven at night, and Dagmar was alone in her office. The aroma of the jasmine tea blended with the scent of the flowers that Siyed continued to send, one new arrival every morning. Every horizontal surface in the untidy office now had its elaborate arrangement, and the flowers weren’t dying fast enough to be replaced by the new arrivals, so Dagmar had begun to give the bouquets away. Soft floral scents floated through half the doors in the company, mingling on occasion with the odor of Jack Stone’s Frito pies.
Dagmar decided she didn’t want to think about the keys to the kingdom for the next, say, six minutes, so she touched the screen and brought up some other work, some of BJ’s, and she sat at her desk for the next few minutes and edited it.
She had known BJ was good at plotting, but she hadn’t known whether his writing would be adequate for her purposes. He wrote her lively emails, but that didn’t mean he had a sense of story or structure. That’s why she’d had him creating phony documents, because documents had a structure that would be easier for BJ to follow.
He’d turned out to be more than a satisfactory writer, though he was unfamiliar with the concise style required, and needed editing. Dagmar was relieved. Her instincts in hiring BJ had been correct.
And of course BJ’s presence had the potential to really make Charlie insane, which as far as Dagmar was concerned was a bonus, even if-as Dagmar intended-Charlie never found out that BJ had been hired.
Dagmar saved the changes on BJ’s work, then touched the screen and brought up the page that had her worried.
She had the number of the Atreides account. She had the time of the electronic fund transfer that had dumped the twenty-five mil into the account. She had the tracking number of the fund transfer itself.
The Long Night of Briana Hall had a financial dimension, the stock swindle that had motivated the murder of one of Briana’s ex-boyfriends. The murky financial history behind the killing was part of the game.