Robert Ludlum – Scarlatti Inheritance

describe-the people who shouldn’t fight each other are doing just that.

Nevertheless. rve nearly accomplished what I set out to do. Soon I’ll have

a list of thousandsl Thousandsl Who’ll do as we wand

January, 1925 My dear Kroeger:

This is my last letter. I write from Zurich. Since Herr Hitlees release he

has once again assumed leadership of the party and I confess there are deep

divisions between us. F~exhaps they will be resolved. 1, too, have my

followers. To the point We are all of us under the strongest surveillance.

The Weimar is frightened of us—as weU it should be, I am oonvinced my

mail, my telephone, my every action is senitinized. No more chances. But the

time approaches.- A bold plan is being conceived and I have taken -the

liberty of suggesting Heinrich Kroegees inclusion. It is a master plan, a

fantastic plan. You am to contact the Marquis Jacques Louis Bertholde

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of Bertholde at Fils, London. By mid-April. The only name he knows-as

mywff–b Heinrich KroeBer.

A gray-haired man of sixty-three &at at his desk looking out the window

over K Street in Washington. His name was Benjamin Reynolds and in two

years he would retim Until that time, however, he was responsible for the

functions of an innocuous-sounding agency attached to the Department of the

Interior. The agency was titled Field Services and Accounting. To lea than

An hundred people, it was known simply as Group Twenty.

The agency got its shortened name from its origins: a group of twenty field

accountants sent out by Interior to look into the growing conflicts of

interest between those politicians allocating federal funds and those of

the electorate receiving them

With America!s entry into the war and the overnight industrial expansion

necessary to sustain the war effoM Group Twenty became an overworked unit.

The award ing of munitions and armament contracts to businesses throughout

the country demanded an around-the-clock scrutiny beyond the capabilities

of the limited number of field acootintants. However, rather than expand

the silent agency, it was decided to use it only in the most sensitive-or

embarrassing-weas. There were a sufficient number of these. And the field

accountants were specialists.

After the war there was talk of disbanding Or9up Twenty, but each tune such

action was considered problems arose that requiz-ad as talents. Generally

they were problems Involving highly placed public sermts who dipped a bit

too greedily into the public jewel box. But in Isolated cases Group Twenty

assumed duties shunned by other departments for any number of reasons.

Such as the Treasury Department’s reluctance to pursue a vapor called

ScarlattL

11″, Gloverr’ asked the gray haired man. “The question is why? Assuming

there’s an ounce of prosecutable proof, why?-

‘Vhy does anyone break a law?” A man roughly ten years younger than

Reynolds answered him, with another

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questiom “For profit. And theres a lot of profit in Prohibition.”

“Nol God damn it to hell, nol” Reynolds spun around in his chair and

slammed his pipe on the desk blotter. “You’re wrongi This Scarlatti has

more money than our combined imaginations can conceive of. It’s like saying

the Mellons are going to open a bookmaking parlor in Philadelphia. It

-doesn’t make sense. . . . Join me in a drinkr,

It was after five and Group Twenty’s staff was gone for the day. Only the

man named Glover and Ben Reynolds remained.

“You shock me, Ben,” Glover said with a grin.

“nen to hell with you. I’ll save it for myself.”

“You do that and ru turn you in…. Good stuff?”

“Right off the boat from old Blighty, they tell me.” Reynolds took a

leather-bound flask out of his top drawer and two water glasses from a desk

tray and poured.

“If you rule out profits, what the devil have you got left, Ben?”

“Damned if I know,” replied the older man, drinking.

‘What are you going to do? I gather no one else wants to do anything.”

“Yes, sireel That is no, sireel Nobody wants to touch this. . . . Oh,

they’ll go after Mr. Smith and Mr. Jones with a vengeance. They’ll

prosecute the hell,out of some poor slob in East Orange, New Jersey, with

a case in his basement But not this onel”

“You lost me, Ben.”

I-rhis is the Scarlatti Industriest This is big, powerful friends on the

Hilll Remember, Treasury needs money, too. It gets it up there.”

“What do you want to do, Benr

“I want to find out why the mil-moth’s tusk is phinging into bird feed.”

“Howr’

“With Canfield. He’s partial to bird feed himself, the poor son of a

bitch.”

“He’s a good man, Ben.” Glover did not like the sound of Reynold’s

invective. He liked Matthew Canfield. He thought he was talented, quick.

There but for the money to complete an education was a young man with a

future. Too good for government service. A lot better than either of them.

. . . Well, better than him-

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self, better than a man named Glover who didn’t care anymore. There weren’t

many people better than Reynolds.

Benjamin Reynolds looked up at his subordinate. He seemed to be reading his

thoughts. “Yes, he’s a good man. . . . He’s in Chicago. Go out and call

him. His routing must be somewhere.”

“I have it in my desk.”

“Then get him in here by tomorrow night.”

63

CHAPTZR 6

Matthew Canfield, field accountant, lay In his Pullman berth, and smoked the

next to last thin cigar in his pack. They had no thin cigars on the New

York-Chicago Limited and he inhaled each breath of smoke with a degree of

Sacrifice,

in the early morning he would reach New York, transfer to the next train

south, and be in Washington ahead of schedule. That would make a better

impression on Reynolds than arriving in the evening. That would show that

he, Canfield, could close a problem quickly, with no loow ends left

dangling. Of course, with his current assignment it wasn’t difficult. He

had completed it several days ago but had remained in Chicago as the guest

Of the wnator he had been sent to confront about Payroll allocations to

nonexistent employeas.

He wondered why he had been called back to Washington. He always wondered

why he was called bacIL probably because he believed deeply that it Was

never just another job but, instead, that someday, somehow Washington would

be on to him. Group Twenty would be on to hiDL

Ibey would confront him.

With evidenm

But it was unlikely. It hadn!t happened. Matthew Canfield was a

professional-minor level, he granted to himseif-but still a professional.

And he had no regrets whatsoever. He was entitled to every wooden nickel he

could dig up.

why not? He never took much. He and his mother de-

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served something. It had been a federal court in Tulsa, Oklahoma, which had

pasted the sheriff’s notice on his father’s store. A federal judge who had

rendered the determination-Involuntary Bankruptcy. Ile federal government

hadn’t listened to any explanations other than the fact that his father no

longer had the ability to pay his debts.

For a quarter of a century a man could work, raise a family, get a son off

to the state university-so many dreams fulfilled, only to be destroyed with

the single banging of a wooden gavel upon a small marble plate in a

courtroom.

Canfield had no regrets.

“You have a new occupation to get under your belt, Canfield. Simple

procedures. Not difficult.”

“Fine, Mr. Reynolds. Always ready.”

“Yes. I know you are. . . . You start in three days at pier thirty-seven in

New York City. Customs. I’ll fill you in as best I can.”

But, of course, Benjamin Reynolds did not “fill in” Matthew Canfield as

thoroughly as he might have. He wanted Canfield to “fill in” the spaces he,

Reynolds, left blank. The Scarlatti padrone was operating out of the West

Side piers-middle numbers-that much they knew. But someone had to see him.

Someone had to identify him. Without being told.

That was very important.

And if anyone could do that it would be someone like Matthew Canfield, who

seemed to gravitate to the nether world of the payoff, the bribe, the

corrupt.

He did.

On the night shift of January 3, 1925.

Matthew Canfield, customs inspector, checked the invoices of the steamer

Genoa-Stella and waved to the shakeup foreman to start unloading hold one

of its crates of Como wool.

And then it happened.

At first an argument. Then a hook fight.

The Genoa-Stella crew would not tolerate a breach of unloading procedures.

Their orders came from some-

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one elm Certainly not from the American customs officials.

Two crates plummeted down from the cranes, and underneath the straw packing

the stench of -uncut alcohol was unmistakable.

The entire pier force froze. Several men then raced to phone booths and a

hundred apelike bodies swarmed around the crates ready to fend off

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