Numbered Account
check that it’s here, then tells us to get rid of it by five.”
    “He doesn’t keep any money on deposit here?”
    “Cerruti whispered about him having over two hundred million at the bank — in shares and in cash. I’ve looked like hell for it, but Cerberus won’t reveal a lick of information, will you, darling?” Sprecher patted the top of the gray computer monitor. “Uncle Peter doesn’t have high enough clearance.”
    “Cerberus?”
Nick asked.
    “Our management information system. Guards our client’s financial information like the three-headed hound at the gates to hell. Each employee has access only to those accounts the proper fulfillment of his job demands he see. I can look at the accounts in FKB4, but no others. The Pasha may have two hundred million dollars stashed away, but someone somewhere” — Sprecher jabbed a thumb toward the ceiling, indicating the Fourth Floor, where the top executives of the bank resided—”doesn’t want me to see it.”
    “Do the Pasha’s transfers always involve such a large sum?” Nick’s curiosity was piqued by the likelihood, however remote, that one day he’d be on the receiving end of that phone call.
    “Same instructions twice each week. The amounts vary but are never less than ten million. The highest I’ve seen in eighteen months was thirty-three million. Scoot your chair over here and let’s look at his account together. The Pasha has set up seven matrices, each of which specifies the amounts we are to wire — as a percentage of the total sum in the account — and the institutions where they’re to go. Look here: matrix three.” Sprecher slid the orange file closer to Nick and peeled back the pages, stopping at a pink sheet. “We type each matrix on a different color sheet for easy differentiation. Matrix one is yellow, two is blue, three is pink. Cerberus has them all memorized, but we always double-check with the hard copy. Procedure.”
    Nick ran a finger along the list of banks: Kreditanstalt, Vienna; Bank of Luxembourg; Commerz Bank, Frankfurt; Norske Bank, Oslo. A numbered account was listed next to each bank. Nowhere on the paper was there an individual’s name. “He’s certainly well traveled.”
    “The money is, that’s for sure. The Pasha chooses a different matrix each time he calls, and never in order. He skips around. But his instructions are always the same. Confirm the balance of his account. Transfer the entire amount to anywhere from twenty-two to thirty-three financial institutions around the world.”
    “I guess I shouldn’t ask who he is, or why he’s transferring his money through a maze of banks.”
    “And you’d be correct in that presumption. Don’t get into any bad habits. All we need is another . . .” Sprecher exhaled. “Forget it.”
    “What?” Nick bit his tongue a second too late.
    “Nothing,” said Sprecher curtly. “Just do as you’re told and remember one thing: We’re bankers, not policemen.”
    ““Ours is not to reason why,”’ said Nick wryly. He’d meant it as a joke, but somehow in this office it sounded all too serious.
    Sprecher clapped him on the back. “A quick learner, indeed.”
    “Let’s hope so.”
Keep your eyes open and your mouth shut
, his father’s stern voice reminded him.
Become one of them
.
    Sprecher turned his attention back to the transfer of funds slip. He filled in the necessary information rapidly. When he was done, he checked the time, wrote it on the sheet, and finally signed it. “The Pasha requires our immediate and undivided attention. Therefore, it has become our practice to walk the sheet down to Payments Traffic in order to personally deliver it to Pietro, the clerk responsible for international transfers. When the Pasha says “Urgent,’ he means urgent. Come on, I’ll show you where you’ll be going every Monday and Thursday afternoon at three-fifteen.”
     
     
    After work, Peter Sprecher invited Nick to join him for a beer at the James Joyce

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