Due Diligence Read online




  Due Diligence

  By Grant Sutherland

  Publisher: Grant Sutherland

  Copyright: © Grant Sutherland

  ISBN: 978-0-9571622-5-9

  grantsutherland.net

  THURSDAY

  1

  * * *

  The rain falls in sheets, the wind blows, and the world is grey: it is winter in the City. I get to work early, and passing his office I put my head round his door.

  ‘Daniel?’

  Nobody there.

  In my own office I hang my jacket over the chair. The floor-to-ceiling window gives me a view of the Thames, and for a moment I watch the dim light move slowly up the river. Then I glance at the Reuters screen and flick through the paperwork on my desk, a sheaf of documents and memos, the litter of the previous day’s problems that filters up to me each morning. There’s one long memo from Stephen Vance, our Finance Director, about the Meyer Group’s bid for Parnells. This is the big one.

  For two years now our Corporate Finance Department has been strangely becalmed. The bread-and-butter work, the underwritings and flotations, have kept coming in, but the big deals that Vance once pulled off so regularly, the takeovers and defences, have dried up. The fees and bonuses have gone elsewhere. The simmering discontent in the department had begun to break into open revolt before the Meyer deal came along: three of our best employees walked. Vance promises me the Meyer deal will mark the beginning of our renaissance, but reading his memo now I’m not at all reassured. The Meyer brothers don’t want to raise the bid. If they don’t raise their bid they won’t get Parnells, and if they don’t get Parnells we won’t get our success fee. No success fee, no bonuses, and a full-scale meltdown in our Corporate Finance Department will follow. Then everyone worth keeping will walk.

  Rubbing my eyes, I put the memo aside. I came in to work early to escape the heart-numbing silence that I wake to each morning these days. My daughter no longer stumbles sleepily into our room and crawls into bed between us; my wife no longer turns on the radio and listens to the morning prayer. They have left me. Theresa has taken our daughter Annie, and gone. I came in to escape, and now this. Looking down at Vance’s memo, I try very hard not to contemplate what might happen to the bank should the Meyer bid fail. Troubles, they come not single spies.

  Coffee. I need a mug of coffee, black and strong.

  The Corporate Finance offices are still empty, but inside the Dealing Room alcove I surprise a dealer from the nightdesk blowing smoke-rings into the steam from the urn. He’s young, twenty-two or -three perhaps.

  ‘Morning,’ he says, pushing away from the bench.

  ‘Busy night?’ I ask, and he shakes his head. ‘Jimmie, isn’t it?’

  ‘Jamie,’ he says. But he doesn’t seem troubled by my mistake. And I remember him now, one of last year’s graduate intake, a first in Medieval French History. As I get myself a coffee, I ask what the US dollar did overnight.

  ‘Down a bit.’ He stubs out his cigarette. ‘Big-figure on the Mark.’

  Someone calls to him from the Dealing Room and he hurries away. Stirring my coffee, I sip a little, and then follow. Including Jamie, there are three of them down on the nightdesk, they sit in a small pool of light at the far end of the Room. The other desks are in darkness, all empty. Very early. I glance at my wrist, but there’s only a bruise where my watch should be.

  ‘Hey! How was the party?’ Owen Baxter, the loud braying voice is unmistakable. ‘Big night?’ he bellows. He’s a senior dealer, usually on the proprietary trading desk, and depending on your point of view either the team-joker or the biggest bore out here in Treasury. He trades like the rest of us breathe. When the real markets fall quiet he gets involved in those quirky parallel markets that ripple across the City from time to time: Christmas trees at Christmas; at Easter, chocolate Easter eggs. Last week it was bananas. Owen bid too high, and a barrowload of rotting fruit was subsequently dumped at the Carlton Brothers reception. Daniel, our treasurer, was not impressed. As a punishment for the misdemeanour, Owen is now in temporary exile on the nightdesk.

  ‘Not bad,’ I answer, approaching down the aisle. Overhead, on the big wall-screen, the closing numbers from Tokyo glow in the darkness. Endless lines of numbers go flickering across the Reuters screens, and the PCs hum quietly, unattended. The dragon sleeps.

  ‘Becky go?’

  Becky, my secretary, falsely rumoured to be sleeping her way towards a trial as a trainee dealer.

  ‘Didn’t notice,’ I say, and Owen smiles while the two younger men avoid my eyes. I really don’t need this. They’ve been watching over the bank’s currency exposure, and now I ask how it went. Owen reaches across and gives me the deal-sheet. There’s one big number buried there, a Yen trade. I look up. ‘Who gave you the ton?’ One hundred million US.

  ‘Bunara,’ he says, and I wince. Bank Bunara, a heavyweight from the Far East, the rogue‘ elephant of the currency markets. ‘Dumped it quick as I could,’ he adds unhappily. ‘Bloody pricks.’

  ‘Expensive?’ When he shakes his head, I ask him what the Profit and Loss was for the night.

  ‘Even, pretty much. Ten grand up,’ he says.

  But without the disastrous Yen deal they’d be up two hundred thousand. Expensive enough, and I’m surprised he’s been caught like this. I hand back the deal-sheet. Owen keeps his eyes lowered, telling me now about some revised growth figures due out later, and then he gives me a quick summary of some statement the German Chancellor made at a conference in Beijing. Owen’s second offsider plays with a Gameboy; watching him play, my mind drifts. I see moonlight on the Thames; hear laughter and the clink of a glass.

  ‘Raef?’

  Pinching the bridge of my nose, I ask if Bunara were trying to stuff us.

  Owen turns to the other pair. ‘Sure they were trying to stuff us, right?’

  The one with the Gameboy mutters, ‘Dollar—Yen just dived.’ Jamie continues ticking off deals, checking them against the slips in his hand.

  I tell Owen to leave it with me, that I’ll have a word with Daniel. The big glass doors swing open, and the first few of the day-shift come in. Suddenly the electronic ping from the Gameboy turns musical. The lad whoops and pushes the toy up near Owen’s face. He calls Owen a loser.

  Owen swears. He grabs the Gameboy and smashes it on the desk, the thing bursts into a shower of shattered plastic. Jamie keeps his head down, but the other lad stares at the mess in disbelief. ‘What the fuck?’ he murmurs.

  A smile rises to Owen's lips. ‘Unlucky bounce,’ he says.

  Now I push away from the desk and head for the door. Around the room the squawkboxes, the speakers that sit in rows on each desk, are coming to life. The brokers at the far end of the lines are putting together the first bids and offers of the day. The Dealing Room is two floors deep, and up on the next level, through the glass wall of the bank’s in-house restaurant, a cleaner waves down. I nod in return. When I hit the switches by the door, the whole Dealing Room is awash with light, and Owen cheers as more of the day shift arrives.

  Back in my office I sip my coffee and glance at Vance’s memo again. I must get a grip. I tell myself this quite firmly. Pull yourself together; snap out of it . . . all the clichés. Zero hour is approaching for the bank, and I’m only half here. My ship is drifting towards the rocks, and I — the man with his hand on the tiller — I am still gazing astern, looking backwards, stricken by the sun. Get a grip. I sit down, take a breath, and gather myself. Then I draw a jotting pad near and pick up a pen. The desk calendar, six hours late, ticks over. Thursday morning, and for me, the Honourable Raef Carlton, Deputy Managing Director of Carlton Brothers, the phoney war is over. Alone at my desk it comes to me quite clearly: the real battle at the bank has now begun.<
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  2

  * * *

  Most of the paperwork is in the OUT tray before Becky arrives. The Meyer memo, the sole piece of any interest from the pile, sits at my elbow. ‘Sore head?’ I ask as she enters, and she frowns. The last time I saw her, around midnight, she was dancing on a table, bottle in hand. ‘Can you get Stephen to come in for a word?’

  ‘Sir John’s in the Boardroom,’ she tells me. A New Zealander, her voice lilts, so when she adds, ‘He wants to see you,’ it comes out like a question. ‘Somethings happened,’ she says, reaching for the OUT tray.

  ‘What happened?’

  She shrugs. She doesn’t know. On my way to the Boardroom I put my head in at Stephen Vance’s office and ask him to come and find me in half an hour. He says he has a meeting with the Meyers later, and invites me to tag along. I tell him I’ll see.

  Life out in the open-plan Corporate Finance section is stirring. About fifteen young men and two women today, the rest of them are scattered in hotel rooms across the globe. Some of those who remain are helping Vance with the Meyer bid, and most of the others are preparing a big mining company float for later in the month, and two upcoming bond issues. But right now they’re checking their E-mail, drinking their coffees, and chatting. Until three years ago, one of these desks was mine. I was Vance’s deputy then, and many times since I’ve wished myself back out here in the fray. At times like this, the Meyer bid running down to the wire, the yearning to be part of it again is almost physical. A few of them nod to me as I pass.

  When I enter the Boardroom, Sir John looks up and I stop, surprised. Since I saw him yesterday evening he appears to have changed, buckled somehow, he’s showing every one of his sixty-four years. He drinks to excess these days, but this looks to be much more than a bad morning-after. ‘Daniel,’ he says, and I turn back to the door, explaining that it might take me a minute to find him.

  ‘Daniel’s dead.’

  I check. His words echo. Then slowly I turn. He looks straight at me, and his moist eyes hold something I can’t quite understand. But then I feel it: sorrow; deep and heartfelt sorrow. It sweeps towards me like an incoming wave.

  ‘Raef,’ he says, ‘I’m so sorry.’

  The wave breaks over me warm and deep, my mouth stops its ridiculous twitching smile. ‘Daniel?’

  ‘Go home, Raef.’

  ‘But he was there,’ I say stupidly, my voice suddenly husky. ‘Last night.’

  Sir John can’t look at me now. I raise my eyes to my grandfather’s portrait on the wall. There is a sense of unreality, of profound disconnection. Far away, glowing in the endless summer of childhood, I hear two young boys laughing.

  ‘How?’ I say.

  Sir John drops his eyes. He tells me the police will be arriving here soon.

  ‘What happened?’

  ‘We're not sure.’ Then he looks up and past me. ‘Raef. It seems Daniel was shot.’

  ‘What?’

  He lifts a hand, frowning. ‘I’ve only just heard myself.’

  ‘You're sure he's dead? Where was this?’

  ‘He’s dead, Raef. He was shot down on St Paul’s Walk. Some Inspector called me. He’ll be here shortly.’

  St Paul’s Walk by the river, just fifteen minutes’ walk from the office. Bowing my head, I stare at my hands, suddenly adrift from the things of the world.

  ‘The Inspector wants to question everyone who was at the party last night.’ Sir John turns his head. ‘Terrible thing.’

  I find myself nodding. Is this real? Has it happened?

  ‘Was there anything untoward at the party?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘I just can’t understand it Raef. Who would do a thing like that? And Daniel.’ Sir John looks bewildered. ‘He must have been mugged.’

  ‘Could it have been an accident?’

  Sir John regards me with sympathy. ‘Raef, he was shot.’ He rises and comes toward me. ‘If there’s anything I can do, Raef. Anything.’

  Nothing to be done, I think, the phrase rising unbidden. Everything to be endured.

  He touches my shoulder. ‘Go home. If there is any more news, I’ll let you know.’

  After a moment his hand slips away. The door opens and closes just behind me.

  Alone now I try to face it: Daniel Stewart, the man I once loved as a brother, has been killed, he is no more. I should feel something. I should be weeping, but my eyes remain stubbornly dry.

  ‘Raef?’ Stephen Vance has come-in. ‘I couldn’t wait,’ he apologizes. ‘Reuben Meyer just called, he wants the meeting ASAP.’

  Stepping past, I tell to check my diary with Becky. ‘Fix it for tomorrow.’

  ‘What’s wrong with now?’

  Going out, I repeat that one word quietly. Tomorrow.

  3

  * * *

  After giving my driver his instructions, I turn and mount the steps to my home. These moments, a hand in one pocket, grappling for the keys, are usually the most dismal of my day. There’s no-one to greet me on the far side of the door — I know that — yet I still get this surge of expectation, as if my mind hasn’t convinced my heart that they’re gone. And today? Turning the key, I shoulder the door wide open. Home in Belgravia. Daniel is dead, my wife has left me, and here I am at 9.00 a.m. returned to my big, empty home.

  Mid-morning, and I still wander the house like a wraith. In the bedroom I brush past Theresa’s dressing table, moving a small mahogany box out of place. Carefully I push it back with my finger. Back into the line of her combs and hair-clips; everything in order, all just as she left it when she took Annie down to Hampshire two months ago.

  Then I resume my aimless wandering, room‘to corridor, corridor to room, stalked everywhere by a feeling of dread. At last I stop outside Annie's door. Then I reach, and the door opens. Warm winter sunlight pours in through the window, slanting across the giant panda by the cupboard, and the doll’s house upended in the corner. Above the bed, a mobile of smiling moons and silver stars begins to turn. I should leave, I think. But I cross to the bed and sit studying the cartoon elephants stencilled in neat rows on the wall.

  Daniel. What has happened? I bow my head and the memories rise. I see him as a schoolboy, sitting on the riverbank and laughing. I see him in the attic at Boddington, jumping from the table and teaching me how to fly. And older now, going up to receive the maths prize at Speech Day, the headmaster shaking his hand. The trip we made to Italy that last summer of university; seeing him off at the station when he went to Sandhurst, and watching him walk through the door of my ofice the day he joined Carltons. I see him in the only way I will ever see him again, in the random light of memories that must fade with the years and grow dim.

  I lie down. There are stars and bright smiling moons just above me. It should be night. I rest my cheek on the pillow. Dear God. Dear God, this is not how I thought it would be.

  Later, Celia calls.

  ‘Raef,’ she says tearfully. ‘Will you come round?’ And when she starts to cry, I close my eyes. ‘Raef?’

  ‘I'll be there in half an hour.’

  4

  * * *

  Celia presses her face‘to my chest, and I wrap my arms round her shoulders.

  ‘The police,’ she says, then she falters, and I walk her inside.

  It’s been ten years since Daniel brought Celia to my house and announced his engagement. She was vivacious then, always smiling, but the years between have drawn heavy lines on her face. Marriage to Daniel has aged her. As we enter the sitting room she wipes the backs of her hands over her eyes. Everything here is just as it always is, neat and newly cleaned; and there’s a faint smell of wax on the air. She slumps into the sofa.

  ‘He was shot,’ she says. She looks straight ahead, eyes fixed, and it occurs to me she might still be in shock. But when I ask if I can get her a drink, she shakes her head. ‘Why would someone shoot him?’

  ‘I don’t know, Celia.’

  ‘The bank?’ she wonders, wiping her eyes again. ‘Wh
y?’

  I can’t bring myself to face her. I ask what she’s heard from the police.

  ‘They said they’d talk to me later. They had a policewoman bring me home after I saw Daniel.’ I glance down the hall. ‘Gone,’ she says. ‘I sent her away.' She gestures for me to sit. ‘He said he’d be late,’ she tells me, meaning Daniel. ‘That’s what he always said. I wasn’t worried when he didn’t come back. He said it was no wives. Was that true?’

  Not true at all, as I think Celia sees from my expression.

  ‘Theresa didn’t come either,’ I remark lamely.

  ‘Right.’ She looks absolutely wretched. ‘I got a call at five this morning. I thought it was Daniel but it wasn’t.’

  ‘The police?’

  ‘They came and got me. I had to identify him.' Tears come to her eyes again but she holds them back. She explains that Daniel’s body was found on St Paul’s Walk. His wallet, it seems, was still in his jacket.

  ‘So he wasn’t mugged?’

  ‘They don’t think so.’

  ‘Who found him?’

  ‘Some policemen. I heard them talking at the morgue. They said they thought Daniel was a tramp, drunk or something. They tried to wake him up.’

  She stares into space. When she starts to tremble I go and sit by her, an arm around her shoulders.

  I never thought I’d feel close to Celia, not when I first met her. But after my marriage to Theresa, all four of us became close friends; we even took holidays together before Celia’s first child, my godson Martin, was born. And as Daniel’s peccadilloes have become too brazen to ignore, I’ve found my fondness for Celia turning to admiration and respect. Now she leans forward, her face in her hands, and I feel as close to her as I’ve ever felt to anyone.

  ‘How do I tell the boys?’ she whispers. Her two sons, they’re up at Eton, and for one horrible moment I think she’s asking me to break the news to them. But then she says, ‘I’ll have to go out and see them later.’