Page 13 of Golden Buddha


  “Paul Samuelson,” he said, extending a slightly limp wrist for a handshake. “The home office asked me to take over for Mr. Lassiter, who has unfortunately been stricken with a bug.”

  Truitt’s version of Samuelson was coming across as a light-in-the-loafers Michael Caine.

  “I trust you’re familiar with this type of sculpture?”

  “Oh, yes,” Truitt gushed. “I did graduate studies in Asian art. It’s one of my favorite forms.”

  Ho motioned to the stairs, then led the way up. “The object is known as the Golden Buddha. Are you in any way familiar with the piece?”

  They rounded the first leg of the stairs and crossed the landing to the second flight.

  “I’m afraid not,” Truitt said breathlessly. “Has it ever been displayed?”

  “No,” Ho said quickly. “It has been part of a private collection for decades.”

  “Then I shall examine it with an eye for comparison to the other pieces I am familiar with.”

  They had exited the second flight and were winding their way around to the last set of stairs.

  “You have a beautiful home,” Truitt lied. “The staircases are mahogany, are they not?”

  “Yes,” Ho said, pausing at the door to his office to scan a card that unlocked the door. “From Brazil and hand fitted without nails or screws.”

  Ho opened the door and stepped aside.

  “How lovely,” Truitt said. He stared across the office to where the Golden Buddha sat. “But nowhere near as lovely as this.”

  Truitt walked over to the Buddha, followed by Ho.

  “Magnificent,” Truitt said easily. “May I touch it?”

  “Please,” Ho said.

  The insurance adjuster was acting just as Ho had hoped. Equal parts respect and sublimation. There was a good chance the appraisal would be in his favor. If it was not to his liking, Ho was sure he could bully the agent into capitulation.

  Truitt rubbed his hand over the face of Buddha, then stared into the jeweled eyes. “Might I ask some about the history?”

  “He’s from the thirteenth century and from Indochina,” Ho said.

  Truitt opened a small leather clutch he had been holding and removed a jeweler’s eyepiece. He placed it over one eye and examined the stones. “Exquisite.”

  Ho watched as the adjuster examined the Buddha from head to toe. The man seemed competent, so he decided to ask him about the secret storage compartment. “I had a historian dig into it a little and he mentioned that some of these pieces contained an inner chamber.”

  “The part of Buddha where there is no ego,” Truitt said quickly, “the void.”

  “Then you are familiar with the idea?” Ho said.

  “Oh, yes,” Truitt said. He was glad the Corporation had seen fit to provide him with a report on ancient Asian art. The “void” had been part of the study.

  “I can’t seem to find one on this piece.”

  “Let’s look closer,” Truitt said.

  The two men spent the next twenty minutes carefully examining the object, but no secret compartment was found. Truitt decided to use the revelation to his favor.

  “Shall we sit for a bit?” he asked Ho.

  The men took seats around Ho’s desk.

  “What value do you have in mind,” Truitt said, “that you would like our company to underwrite?”

  “I was thinking in the neighborhood of two hundred million,” Ho said.

  “That’s an expensive neighborhood,” Truitt said, smiling.

  Leaning forward, he spilled the contents of his leather clutch on the floor. Scooping down to pick up the contents, he attached a small bug to the bottom of Ho’s desk.

  “Silly me,” he said after the bug was attached and the bag placed back on his lap.

  “What do you think is the value?” Ho asked.

  “The absence of the secret compartment actually adds to the rarity of the piece,” Truitt lied. “It places the age at least a few decades before what I had estimated. The voids date from the twelfth century and later. You may have something here that defies accurate pricing.”

  Ho smiled his feral smile. He loved it when he bested someone in a deal, and he was beginning to think he’d outsmarted some of the wisest art collectors in the world. At first, the $200 million he’d paid had seemed like a king’s ransom—now it was looking like he’d bought cheap.

  “What are you saying?” he asked.

  “I could easily insure it for twice what you are seeking,” Truitt said, “but of course the premiums would reflect the increased value.”

  This was going better than Truitt could have hoped—greed had removed Ho’s doubt in his identity. He had come a stranger, but now he was a friend bearing gifts. Cons only work when the mark wants to believe. Ho wanted to believe.

  “But…,” Ho said slowly, “if I insured it for more, banks would loan on the increased value.”

  “Yes,” Truitt said, “banks tend to follow our lead.”

  Ho nodded slowly. “Why don’t you figure the premiums on four hundred million.”

  “I would, of course, need to contact our main office for the quotes,” Truitt said, “but I can easily attest to the value.”

  Ho sat back in his chair. The realization that he owned a truly priceless work of art was sinking into his soul. Now his ego needed stroking. A stroking that only other rich people could give him.

  “I’m having a party today,” he said.

  “I saw the preparations,” Truitt said, smiling.

  “You, of course, are invited,” Ho said, “but I was thinking of displaying the artifact to my guests. I would feel more comfortable if I had a rider covering the piece until I receive the actual quote. Just something to cover today.”

  “You are, of course, thinking of displaying it downstairs,” Truitt said.

  Ho wasn’t, but he was now.

  “Yes,” Ho said. “Perhaps out on the grounds?”

  Truitt nodded. “Let me make a quick call.”

  Ho pointed to his telephone, but Truitt whipped out a cell phone and hit the speed dial.

  “Samuelson here.”

  “Richard, you’re a magnificent bastard,” the voice said. “We have been listening for the last few minutes over the bug. Nice work.”

  “I need a quote on a one-day rider to Mr. Ho’s policy to cover a piece of art valued at four hundred million until we can come up with an accurate figure for long-term coverage.”

  “La de dah, de dah. All right then,” the operator on the Oregon said, “let me make up a number for you. How about twenty thousand dollars? Or whatever you decide. But I’d take the fee in cash if I was you. Then we can have a party after this is over.”

  “I see,” Truitt said, nodding, “so we will require increased security. Hold on a minute.”

  Truitt placed his hand over the telephone.

  Back on the Oregon, the operator turned to Hanley.

  “Truitt’s red-hot today,” he said. “I had not even thought of that angle.”

  Ho was waiting for the adjuster to speak.

  “The fee for the rider for the day will be eighteen thousand five hundred U.S. But my company is insisting on increased security. Luckily, we have a local firm we use—my office will contact them and have some men out here within the hour, if that’s okay with you.”

  “Does the fee include the security detail?” Ho asked.

  Truitt thought for a second, but decided not to push.

  “The fee includes three security guards, but we will want the fee in cash,” Truitt said seriously.

  Ho stood up and walked over to his safe. “Sounds reasonable,” he said.

  Truitt smiled—the offer was anything but reasonable, but Ho had no way to know that.

  “I’ll tell them,” Truitt said.

  Ho began spinning the dial to his safe.

  “We have an agreement,” he said to the operator on the Oregon, “but we’ll need the security people here as soon as possible.”

/>   “Damn, you’re good,” the operator said.

  “Yes, I am,” Truitt said quietly, then disconnected.

  Ho returned with two wrapped stacks of dollars. Each strip read $10,000. Removing fifteen of the hundred-dollar bills from one of the stacks, he handed Truitt the rest. Sliding the stacks of money into his leather clutch, he smiled at Ho.

  “Do you have a sheet of paper?”

  “What for?” Ho asked.

  “I need to write you a receipt,” Truitt said.

  HANLEY reached for the telephone and dialed Cabrillo. “Dick Truitt just got us three more men inside the compound, acting as security guards.”

  “Excellent,” Cabrillo said, “and there was no problem with the appraisal?”

  “He handled it like the pro he is,” Hanley said.

  “Have we got security guard uniforms in the Magic Shop?”

  “Absolutely,” Hanley said. “I’ll just call Nixon and have him blast off a jazzy patch on the embroidery machine.”

  “Get on it,” Cabrillo said quickly, “so we can extract Truitt.”

  “Truitt’s been invited to the party,” Hanley said, “unless you want me to order him out.”

  “Have him wait until the fake security team arrives,” Cabrillo said. “That way he can verify their identity to Ho. Then have him stick around—I have another job for him.”

  “Done,” Hanley said.

  Cabrillo disconnected and Hanley dialed the Magic Shop.

  “Kevin,” he said, “I need three security guard uniforms with the appropriate badges.”

  “Name?”

  Hanley thought for a moment before answering.

  “Make them Redman Security Services.”

  “As in Redford and Newman?”

  “You got it,” Hanley said, “The Sting.”

  “It will take me twenty minutes or so to make the badges,” Nixon said, “but send the three operatives down right away. I can fit the uniforms while the patches are forming.”

  “They will be there shortly,” Hanley said in closing.

  Hanley glanced at a clipboard in the control room. Most of the Corporation stockholders were already assigned to functions of operations, extraction or backup. His remaining choices were an assistant chef, Rick Barrett; a propulsion engineer named Sam Pryor; and a middle-aged man who worked in the armory, Gunther Reinholt. None had ever worked on the operations end. But beggars can’t be choosers.

  “Get me Reinholt, Pryor and Barrett,” Hanley said to one of the communications operators, “and have them meet me in the Magic Shop.”

  The operator began paging the men.

  “DON’T worry,” Murphy said to Halpert, “it just smells like marijuana.”

  Murphy was waving what looked like an incense stick near the members of the band when Cabrillo walked into the conference room.

  “Smells like a Grateful Dead concert in here,” he said.

  Murphy walked closer and let the smoke waft over the chairman.

  “It’s the little things,” he said with a grin, “that makes the Corporation successful.”

  “The real band was sober,” Cabrillo noted.

  “But Ho doesn’t know that.”

  Cabrillo nodded. “Listen up. Dick Truitt has managed to get three more operatives inside. The men will be dressed as security guards. I’ll have the company name shortly. Be careful, because there might be other guards Ho already hired. Don’t slip up and mistake ours for them.”

  Just then, Cabrillo’s telephone rang. He listened then disconnected.

  “Redman Security is the name on our guys’ uniforms,” he said to the group.

  A moment later Julia Huxley walked into the room.

  “Wow,” Kasim said.

  Huxley was dressed in a pair of form-fitting leather pants that laced up the side and showed two panels of leg from foot to hip. Her top was a metal-studded vest that barely covered her ample bosom. Around her neck was a strap of leather with a D-shaped hook, and one of her arms was decorated with a flowing tattoo of barbed wire and flower vines. Her hair was teased and coated with hair spray in a wild fashion and her makeup was bold and thickly applied. Five-inch pumps and a dusting of glitter on her exposed skin completed the picture.

  “Slutty enough for you boys?” she asked.

  “I didn’t know the Magic Shop had such costumes in stock,” Halpert said.

  Huxley walked over to Halpert and rubbed herself along his side. As the lead singer, he, of course, was the one who got the girl.

  “What do you mean?” she asked. “This is from my own collection.”

  Huxley was lying, of course—but then this entire operation was a façade.

  “Now, who would argue,” Kasim said, “that America’s not the greatest country in the world?”

  18

  ROSS was checking the smoke machines when Ho walked out onto the lawn.

  “Miss Iselda,” he said as he walked over, “I have a new piece of artwork I’ve decided I want to display out here on the lawn.”

  Ross watched Ho carefully. The man was gesturing toward one side of the tent. He looked back at her expectantly. There was no hint he found anything amiss.

  “Is it a painting?” Ross asked.

  “No, it’s a statue,” Ho said.

  Two workers were waiting alongside the colored lights near the smoke machine.

  “Take a break for a few moments,” Ross said.

  The men walked into the shade of the tent.

  “Describe it to me,” Ross asked.

  “Six foot tall and made of gold,” Ho said.

  Ross quickly thought. “Perhaps we could place the object there”—she pointed a few feet away—“at the end of the red carpet leading into the tent. As sort of a sentinel.”

  Ho and Ross walked over to the spot.

  “I could light it with blue and red spotlights,” she said.

  “What else?” Ho asked.

  Ross racked her brain. What could help the Corporation with the theft?

  “What do you think about some billowing clouds of smoke,” she said slowly, “so the object seems to appear and disappear like a mirage?”

  “Excellent,” Ho said eagerly.

  Ross smiled. Out of the corner of her eye she caught a glimpse of a trio of men from the Oregon; they were dressed in security guards’ uniforms. Somehow her team had sent help. Barrett, acting as the leader of the guards, walked over to where she and Ho were standing.

  “Are you Mr. Ho?” he said.

  “I’m Ho.”

  “The insurance company sent us.”

  Barrett placed a finger to his eye and winked at Ross when Ho was not looking.

  “Good,” Ho said, “I’m glad you arrived so quickly. This is Iselda; she’s in charge of planning. We were just now figuring out the best place to place the object you will be guarding.”

  Barrett nodded.

  “We’re thinking there,” Ho said, pointing, “near the entrance to the tent.”

  Barrett scanned the grounds as if to determine the security of the spot. He turned back to Ho and spoke.

  “My company mentioned it was a statue.”

  “Right,” Ho said, “a six-foot-tall Buddha.”

  Barrett nodded as if he were weighing his options.

  “Is it heavy?” he asked.

  “It weighs about six hundred pounds,” Ho said. “Why do you ask?”

  “Well, sir,” Barrett said, “I thought you might want it to be more of a part of the festivities—you know, have it moved from place to place as the party proceeds. Six hundred pounds is too heavy for my men to move, however.”

  Ross was catching on.

  “You mean to have the statue become one of the guests,” she said eagerly.

  “Something like that,” the guard admitted. “The object would actually be safer the more people that are around.”

  “Interesting,” Ho said.

  “The party’s almost ready to start,” Ross said, “but I could see
if I could scrounge up some other Buddha statues and do an entire theme in that direction.”

  “What do you mean?” Ho asked.

  “Maybe I could find some plaster Buddha statues and have them placed around the grounds,” Ross said.

  “That would help with security,” Barrett admitted, “by confusing the real and the fakes.”

  “Do you think you can?” Ho asked.

  “Don’t worry, Mr. Ho,” Ross said, “my company can work miracles.”

  THE band was assembled in the conference room on the Oregon. Hanley and Cabrillo were walking them through their last-minute instructions.

  “As you know, we have three more men inside,” Cabrillo said, “posing as security, so we don’t need to worry about getting it down to ground level. It should already be there.”

  “That’s a plus,” Franklin noted.

  “So the actual removal from the site has become easier,” Hanley said, “but we have the added problem of more witnesses.”

  “That means we almost certainly need to drug the guests,” Kasim noted.

  “It’s beginning to look that way,” Cabrillo admitted.

  “The playlist features three sets,” Hanley continued. “That gives us two breaks between sets when you, as members of the band, can move freely about. Watch the chairman for the lead and be flexible—this entire caper is still unfolding.”

  “Do we have the plane waiting to receive the icon after the theft?” Halpert asked.

  “Arranged,” Cabrillo said. “A plane is inbound as we speak.”

  “When’s the extraction scheduled?” Monica asked.

  “Ten minutes before midnight, tonight,” Hanley said.

  “The Oregon sails away from here sometime tomorrow,” Cabrillo said, “no matter what the outcome. So let’s just do our jobs and take our leave.”

  “A little richer for the effort,” Murphy said, smiling.

  “That’s the idea,” Cabrillo agreed.

  THIN tendrils of richly scented incense smoke wafted toward the ceiling in the A-Ma Temple.

  A scattering of tourists filed through the public areas and left offerings at the foot of various Buddhas. They walked on the pebbled paths, sat on the carved wooden benches on the grounds and stared at the sea in reflection. It was a place of tranquillity; a port of serenity in a storm of confusion and haste.