Every stock brokerage firm has millions of dollars in stocks and bonds stored in its vaults as a convenience to customers. Some of the stock certificates bear the name of the owner, but the vast majority are street-name stocks with a coded CUSIP number—the Committee on Uniform Security Identification Procedures—that identifies the owner. The stock certificates are not negotiable, but George Mellis did not plan to cash them in. He had something else in mind. At Hanson and Hanson, the stocks were kept in a huge vault on the seventh floor in a security area guarded by an armed policeman in front of a gate that could only be opened by a coded plastic access card. George Mellis had no such card. But he knew someone who did.
Helen Thatcher was a lonely widow in her forties. She had a pleasant face and a reasonably good figure, and she was a remarkable cook. She had been married for twenty-three years, and the death of her husband had left a void in her life. She needed a man to take care of her. Her problem was that most of the women who worked at Hanson and Hanson were younger than she, and more attractive to the brokers at the office. No one asked Helen out.
She worked in the accounting department on the floor above George Mellis. From the first time Helen had seen George, she had decided he would make a perfect husband for her. Half a dozen times she had invited him to a home-cooked evening, as she phrased it, and had hinted that he would be served more than dinner, but George had always found an excuse. On this particular morning, when her telephone rang and she said, “Accounting, Mrs. Thatcher,” George Mellis’s voice came over the line. “Helen? This is George.” His voice was warm, and she thrilled to it. “What can I do for you, George?”
“I have a little surprise for you. Can you come down to my office?”
“Now?”
“Yes.”
“I’m afraid I’m in the middle of—”
“Oh, if you’re too busy, never mind. It will keep.”
“No, no. I—I’ll be right down.”
George’s phone was ringing again. He ignored it. He picked up a handful of papers and walked toward the bank of elevators. Looking around to make sure no one was observing him, he walked past the elevators and took the backstairs. When he reached the floor above, he checked to make sure Helen had left her office, then casually walked in as though he had business there. If he was caught—But he could not think of that. He opened the middle drawer where he knew Helen kept her access card to the vault. There it was. He picked it up, slipped it in his pocket, left the office and hurried downstairs. When he reached his desk, Helen was there, looking around for him.
“Sorry,” George said. “I was called away for a minute.”
“Oh, that’s all right. Tell me what the surprise is.”
“Well, a little bird told me it’s your birthday,” George said, “and I want to take you to lunch today.” He watched the expression on her face. She was torn between telling him the truth and missing the chance of a lunch date with him.
“That’s—very nice of you,” she said. “I’d love to have lunch with you.”
“All right,” he told her. “I’ll meet you at Tony’s at one o’clock.” It was a date he could have made with her over the telephone, but Helen Thatcher was too thrilled to even question it. He watched as she left.
The minute she was gone, George went into action. He had a lot to accomplish before he returned the plastic card. He took the elevator to the seventh floor and walked over to the security area where the guard stood in front of the closed grilled gate. George inserted the plastic card and the gate opened. As he started inside, the guard said, “I don’t think I’ve seen you here before.”
George’s heart began to beat faster. He smiled. “No. This isn’t my usual territory. One of my customers suddenly decided he wanted to see his stock certificates, so I’ve got to dig them out. I hope it doesn’t take me the whole blasted afternoon.”