Part 39 (1/2)
”Hi,” Stone said, ”may I speak with Lance?”
”He's not here,” she said, and she sounded upset.
”What's wrong?” Stone asked.
”He left in the middle of the night; I didn't wake up until Monica called a few minutes ago.”
”You sound a little groggy.”
”I know; I can't seem to wake up.”
”Did Lance leave a note?”
”No, nothing; and all his clothes are gone. I mean, everything, and all his luggage, too.”
”I'll call you back,” Stone said, and hung up. He turned to Carpenter. ”Sounds like Lance drugged Erica last night, then packed up and decamped. Does this change anything?”
”No,” she said. ”It makes sense that he'd not tell her where he's going, and he wouldn't want to return to the house after the buy.”
”But why would he go two days before the buy?”
”This leads me to think that the exchange will be tonight, rather than tomorrow. It can't happen any earlier than that, because his man at Eastover will be working all day; if he didn't show up for work, our people would be all over him.”
”Then why hasn't Lance called with the wiring instructions?” Stone asked. ”He can't make the buy without the funds, and he made the very good point last night that the cash would have to be transported to England. This doesn't make any sense.”
Carpenter got out her cellphone and went into the study. She came back a few minutes later. ”Both our suspects at Eastover are at work, as usual,” she said. ”We'll be notified if they leave the installation for any reason, and there are people there to keep track of them if they do.”
Stone was suddenly struck with an odd feeling. ”Excuse me a minute, will you?” He went upstairs and retrieved his copy of the Swiss bank doc.u.ments. There was an account manager's name at the top of the first page, and a telephone number. Stone dialed the number.
An operator answered, repeating only the number.
”May I speak with Dr. Peter von Enzberg?” Stone asked.
”Who is calling, please?” the operator asked in stiff English.
”My name is Stone Barrington.”
”One moment.” There was a brief pause, followed by several clicks.
”This is Peter von Enzberg,” a deep voice said, sounding very English. ”Is that Mr. Barrington?”
”Yes, Doctor. I opened an account yesterday and transferred some funds from New York.”
”Of course, Mr. Barrington; we received the funds in good order.”
”Can you tell me the current balance in my account?”
”May I have your code word, please?”
Stone gave it to him.
”One moment.” Stone could hear computer keys clicking. ”Your current balance is one hundred dollars, Mr. Barrington.”
Stone felt suddenly ill. ”What was the amount you received from New York?”
”Two hundred and fifty thousand dollars.”
”Then why isn't it in the account?”
”A request was made to transfer the funds shortly before closing yesterday. It was very late, but the request was urgent, so we accommodated Mr. Cabot.”
”Mr. Cabot had access to my account?”
”Why, yes, Mr. Barrington; his signature was on the account application, and he knew the code word.”
Stone felt frozen. ”Where were the funds transferred?”
”To an account in Hong Kong,” the account manager replied.
”Thank you, Dr. von Enzberg.” He hung up and trudged down the stairs.
”What's wrong?” Carpenter asked. ”You look ill.”
”I've been had,” Stone replied.
52.
STONE SANK HEAVILY INTO AN ARMCHAIR in the drawing room.
”Explain,” Carpenter said.
”Lance transferred all the money out of the account yesterday, to a bank in Hong Kong.”
”How could he do that?”
”Apparently, he had access to my account.”
Carpenter stared at him. ”Did you sign the account application, then give it back to Lance?”
”Yes.”
”Then he simply added his own signature to the doc.u.ment. Did he know your code?”
”I wrote it on the form. How could I have been so stupid?”
”An expensive oversight,” Carpenter said.