The Chase by Clive Cussler (ebook reader 8 inch .txt) ๐
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- Author: Clive Cussler
Read book online ยซThe Chase by Clive Cussler (ebook reader 8 inch .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Clive Cussler
After the niceties were over and the ladies returned to their desks, Cromwell asked his senior secretary, who had been with him for nine years, to come into his office.
He sat down at his massive teak desk and parked the suitcase underneath. He smiled at Marion Morgan. โHow are you, Miss Morgan? Any new gentlemen friends lately?โ
She blushed. โNo, Mr. Cromwell. I spend my nights staying home and reading.โ
Marion was twenty-one when she finished college and came to work for Cromwell as a teller, and she had risen to manager. She had just turned thirty and had never married, which made many consider her an old maid. But the truth was, she could have had any one of the well-heeled men in town. She was an unusually ravishing and nubile lady who could pick and choose her suitors but had yet to select one for a husband. She was particular about men, and the Prince Charming of her dreams had not appeared. Her straw-blond hair was wrapped on her head, as was the fashion of the day, and her lovely facial features enhanced a long swan neck. Her corseted figure looked like the classic hourglass. She gazed across the desk at Cromwell through coralโsea green eyes, and a delicately shaped hand held a pencil poised above a notepad.
โI expect agents representing a bank in Salt Lake City to arrive at any moment to check our records.โ
โAre they going to examine our books?โ she asked as if mildly alarmed.
He shook his head. โNothing like that. Iโve heard rumors among my fellow bankers that a bank in Salt Lake City was robbed and that monies stolen might have been deposited in another bank.โ
โDo you wish me to take care of the matter?โ
โNo. Please, simply entertain them until Iโm prepared to deal with it.โ
If Marion had any inquiries as to the uncertainty about Cromwellโs request, she showed no curiosity. โYes, of course, Iโll see that they are comfortable until you wish to see them.โ
โThat will be all,โ said Cromwell. โThank you.โ
As soon as Marion left his office and shut the door, Cromwell reached into his breast pocket and brought out the bank draft from the Salt Lake Bank & Trust. Then he stood and went over to the large stand-up safe that held the bankโs ledgers and records. He quickly, and expertly, doctored the books so that it appeared that the draft had already been received and the full amount paid to Eliah Ruskin. Cromwell also made entries that indicated the money had been deducted from his bankโs liquid capital.
Cromwell did not have long to wait after finishing doctoring the records. The expected agents walked into his outer office twenty minutes later. Marion had stalled them, saying Mr. Cromwell was extremely busy. When a small buzzer beneath her desk sounded, she showed them into his office.
He was holding a telephone and nodded a greeting while motioning them to take chairs. โYes, Mr. Abernathy, I will personally see that your account is closed and the funds transferred to the Bank of Baton Rouge in Louisiana. Not at all. Glad to be of service. Have a good trip. Good-bye.โ
Cromwell put down the phone with a dead line and no caller on the other end. He stood, came around the desk, and offered his hand. โHello, Iโm Jacob Cromwell, president of the bank.โ
โThese gentlemen are from Salt Lake City,โ said Marion. โThey wish to see you about a draft drawn against their bank.โ Then she swirled her skirt, a bare inch above the ankles, left the office, and closed the door.
โHow can I help you?โ Cromwell asked courteously.
One man was tall and gangly, the other short and stocky and sweating. The tall one spoke first. โIโm William Bigalow, and my associate here is Joseph Farnum. We are inquiring if any financial institution in San Francisco might have received a bank draft for four hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars drawn on the Salt Lake Bank and Trust.โ
Cromwell raised his eyebrows in mock apprehension. โWhat seems to be the problem?โ
โThe draft was made under duress by the bank manager before a bandit shot him dead and made off with it, including the bankโs money in its vault. Weโre trying to trace its whereabouts.โ
โOh, my,โ said Cromwell, throwing up his hands in a sign of distress. โThat draft came into our hands yesterday afternoon.โ
The two agents tensed. โYou have the draft?โ Farnum queried expectantly.
โYes, it is in a safe in our bookkeeping department.โ Cromwellโs tone became grave. โUnfortunately, we honored it.โ
โYou honored it!โ Bigalow gasped.
Cromwell shrugged. โWhy, yes.โ
โWith a check, no doubt,โ said Farnum, in hope there was still time to stop the bandit from cashing it at another bank.
โNo, the gentleman whose name was on the draft asked for cash and we complied.โ
Bigalow and Farnum looked at Cromwell in shock. โYou paid almost half a million dollars in cash to someone who walked into your bank off the street?โ Bigalow frowned severely.
โI checked the draft myself when my manager brought it to me for approval. It appeared perfectly legitimate.โ
Bigalow did not look happy. It would be his burden to contact the directors of the Salt Lake Bank and tell them their four hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars had vanished.
โWhat was the name on the draft?โ
โA Mr. Eliah Ruskin,โ answered Cromwell. โHe produced a file of papers that showed Mr. Ruskin was the founder of an insurance company that was going to pay off claims brought on by a fire that destroyed a city block in a townโฆโ Cromwell paused. โI believe he said its name was Bellingham, in Washington State.โ
โCan you describe Ruskin?โ asked Farnum.
โVery well dressed,โ offered Cromwell. โTall, with blond hair and a large blond mustache. I didnโt catch the color of his eyes. But I seem to recall that he carried an unusual cane, with a silver eagleโs head.โ
โThatโs Ruskin, all right,โ muttered Farnum.
โHe didnโt
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