The Moneychangers - Page 25/105

"Before the bank opened for business I went to the vault to get a cash truck one of the spares. Juanita Nunez was there. She unlocked her regular cash truck. I was right alongside. Without Juanita knowing, I watched to see her combination." "And?" "I memorized it. As soon as I could, I wrote it down..

With Wainwright prompting, the damning facts multiplied.

The main downtown branch vault was large. During daytime a vault teller worked in a cage-like enclosure just inside, near the heavy, timelock controlled door. The vault teller was invariably busy, counting currency, handing out packages of bills or receiving them, checking tellers and cash trucks in or out. While no one could pass the vault teller without being seen, once they were inside he took little notice of them.

That morning, while outwardly cheerful, Miles Eastin was desperate for cash. There had been betting losses the week before and he was being pressed for payment of accumulated debts.

Wainwright interrupted, "You already had an employee bank loan. You owed finance companies. Also the bookie. Right?" "Right." "Did you owe anyone else?" Eastin nodded affirmatively. .

"A loan shark?" The younger man hesitated, then admitted, "Yes." "Was the loan shark threatening you?"

Miles Eastin moistened his lips. "Yes; so was the bookie. They both are, still." His eyes went to the six thousand dollars.

The jigsaw was fitting together. Wainwright motioned to the money. "You promised to pay the shark and the bookie that?" "Yes." "How much to each?" "Three thousand." "When?"

"Tomorrow." Eastin looked nervously at a wall clock and-corrected himself. "Today."

Wainwright prompted, "Go back to Wednesday. So you knew the combination of the Nunez girl's cash box. How did you use it?"

As Miles Eastin revealed the details now, it was all incredibly simple. After working through the morning, he took his lunch break at the same time as Juanita Nunez. Before going to lunch they wheeled their cash trucks into the vault. The two cash units were left side by side, both locked.

Eastin returned from lunch early and went into the vault. The vault teller checked Eastin in, then went on working. No one else was in the vault.

Miles Eastin went directly to Juanita Nunez's cash truck and opened it, using the combination he had written down. It took seconds only to remove three packages of bills totaling six thousand dollars, then close and retook the box. He slipped the currency packages into inside pockets; the bulges scarcely showed. He then checked out his own cash truck from the vault and returned to work.

There was a silence, then Wainwright said, "So while questioning was going on Wednesday afternoon some of it by you, and while you and I were talking later that same day an that time you had the money on you?"

"Yes," Miles Eastin said. As he remembered how easy it had been, a faint smile creased his face.

Wainwright saw the smile. Without hesitating, and in a single movement, he leaned forward and hit Eastin hard on both sides of the face. He used his open palm for the first blow, the back of his hand for the second. The double blow was so forceful that Wainwright's hand stung. Miles Eastin's face showed two bright weals. He shrunk backward on the sofa and blinked as tears formed in his eyes.

The security chief said grimly, "That's to let you know I see nothing funny in what you did to the bank or to Mrs. Nunez. Nothing at all." Something else he had just learned was that Miles Eastin was afraid of physical violence. He observed that it was 1 A.M.

"The next order of business," Nolan Wainwright announced, "is a written statement. In your own handwriting and with everything in it that you've told me." "Nol I won't do thatl" Eastin was wary now.

Wainwright shrugged. "In that case there's no point in my staying longer." He reached for the six thousand dollars and began stowing it in his pockets. "You can't do thatl"

"Can't I? Try stopping me. I'm taking it back to the bank the night depository."

"Listen! you can't prove…" The younger man hesitated. He was thinking now, remembering too late that the serial numbers of the bins had never been recorded.

"Maybe I can prove it's the same money that was taken Wednesday; maybe not. If not, you can always try suing the bank to get it back." Eastin pleaded, "I need it nowl Todayl"

"Oh, sure, some for the bookie and some for the loan shark. Or the strong-arm guys they'll send. Well, you can try explaining how you lost it, though I doubt if they'll listen." The security chief eyed Eastin for the first time with sardonic amusement. "You really are in' trouble. Maybe they'll both come together, then they'll break one of your arms and one leg each. They're apt to do that sort of thing. Or didn't you know"

Fear, real fear, showed in Eastin's eyes. "Yes, I do know. You've got to help met Please!"

From the apartment doorway Wainwright said coldly, "I’ll consider it. After you've written that statement."

The bank security chief dictated while Eastin wrote the words down obediently.

1, Miles Broderick Eastin, make this statement voluntarily. I have been offered no inducement to make it. No violence or threat of violence has been used…

I confess to stealing from First Mercantile American Bank the sum of six thousand dollars in cash at approximately 1:30 P.M. on Wednesday, October…

I obtained and concealed this money by the following means…

A quarter of an hour ago, after Wainwright's threat to walk out, Miles Eastin had collapsed entirely, co-operative and cowed.

Now, while Eastin continued writing his confession Wainwright telephoned Innes, the FBI man, at his home.

15

During the first week of November, Ben RossellPs physical condition worsened. Since the bank president's disclosure of his terminal illness four weeks earlier, his strength had ebbed, his body wasted as proliferating and invading cancerous cells tightened their stranglehold on his remaining life.

Those who visited old Ben at home including Roscoe Heyward, Alex Vandervoort, Edwina D'Orsey, Nolan Wainwright, and various directors of the bank were shocked at the extent and speed of his deterioration. It was obvious he had very little time to live.

Then, in mid-November, while a savage storm with gale force winds beset the city, Ben Rosselli was moved by ambulance to the private pavilion of Mount Adams Hospital, a short journey which was to be his last abode. By then he was under almost continuous sedation, so that his moments of awareness and coherence became fewer day by day.

The last vestiges of any control of First Mercantile American Bank had now slipped from him, and a group of the bank's senior directors, meeting privately, agreed the full board must be summoned, a successor to the presidency named. The decisive board meeting was set for December 4th.

Directors began arriving shortly before 1O A.M. They greeted one another cordially, each with an easy confidence the patina of a successful businessman in the company of his peers.

The cordiality was slightly more restrained than usual in deference to the dying Ben Rosselli, still clutching feebly to life a mile or so away. Yet the directors now assembling were admirals and field marshals of commerce, as Ben had been himself, who knew that whatever else on traded, business, which kept civilization lubricated, must go on. Their mood appeared to say: The reason behind decisions we must make today is regrettable, but our solemn duty to the system shall be done.

Thus they moved resolutely into the walnut paneled boardroom, hung with paintings and photographs of selected predecessors, once important themselves, now long departed.

A board of directors of any major corporation resembles an exclusive club. Apart from three or four top management executives who are employed full time, the board comprises a score or so of outstanding businessmen often board chairmen or presidents themselves from other diverse fields.

Usually such outside directors are invited to join the board for one or more of several reasons their own

achievements elsewhere, the prestige of the institution they represent, or a strong connection usually financial with the company on whose board they sit.

Among businessmen it is considered a high honor to be a company director, and the more prestigious the company the greater the glory. This is why some individuals collect directorships the way some Indians once collected scalps Another reason is that directors are treated with ego satisfying reverence and also generously major companies pay each director between one and two thousand dollars for every meeting attended, normally ten a year.