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Such was my fond hope as I drifted off for a nap on my desk. Tam was in Tanaka's office, half-nodding in her chair, while Jim Bob was sitting before his monitor, still nouris.h.i.+ng himself with beer and colored pills. I gave him the Uzi and told him to help Tam out by keeping an eye on Tanaka and the two guards, all now sleeping like a baby. My last vision was of Jim Bob sitting there, the Uzi draped over his wrinkled white lap, clicking away at the keyboard.
I slept right through Emma's four-o'clock phone call from my office downtown. When I awoke around nine P.M. Jim Bob mentioned she'd rung.
No message, he said. Then don't worry about it, I mumbled to myself; get back to her in the morning.
Tam didn't seem to remember the call, which momentarily troubled me.
Had we both been dozing at the helm? Well, who could blame her? In spite of my own nap I still felt like h.e.l.l, so I dragged myself up, stretched, wandered around the office, drank some more green tea, and inquired of Jim Bob how things seemed to be proceeding.
"Looking good." He grinned. He was now working Hong Kong and the Asian exchanges, limbering up the satellites as he flashed our (DNI's) money around the globe. Anybody heard from Henderson? Not a word, he said in a tone that seemed disconcertingly pat.
I briefly toyed with heading down to the street and trying to locate an early "bulldog" Times to see what kind of a splash we were making in the press, but since Tam was now sound asleep, I figured I'd better stick to duty.
I vaguely recall stumbling into my office to rummage for an old box of NoDoz stashed somewhere there in the desk, and thinking how nice it would be just to lean back in the chair. . . .
A phone was jangling in my ear. As I pulled erect, the clock on my desk was reading ten-thirty--My G.o.d, A.M.--and I felt as if I'd been run over by an eighteen-wheeler. What the h.e.l.l was in that green tea Tanaka had been brewing?
Inside the receiver at my ear was Emma, and what she had to say brought me awake like an ice-cold shower. In a voice
br.i.m.m.i.n.g with triumph, she announced she'd just resigned and I could consider this official notice thereof. In fact, she was price-shopping Florida condos this very minute--what did I think of Coral Gables?--and I was lucky she'd bothered to take out time to inform me of her intended plans. By Wednesday she expected to be able to loan money to the Rockefellers, in case they should need a little liquidity on short notice.
How'd you come by this sudden fortune? I asked. Where, she snapped back, have you been? The Dow Jones average was about to double, if it hadn't already. Funny, but the rest of the market was going nowhere.
Oddest thing she'd ever seen. However, it only went to show what she'd always told me, and if I'd listened to her instead of those smarty- pants uptown brokers, I'd be rich now too. Stick with the blue chips.
IBM was up thirty percent since yesterday, AT&T was flying, GM was selling for a price that would make you think they were back in the car business.
What the h.e.l.l was she talking about! That's when I noticed a copy of Tuesday's New York Times lying there on my desk, right next to the phone. Only at first it didn't seem like the Times. Or maybe Punch Sulzberger had just been swallowed whole by Rupert Murdoch, because I hadn't seen a headline that arresting since the Posts immortal "Coed Jogger Slain in Bed." It was banner, right across the top; the Times'
headline writer was practically o.r.g.a.s.mic. But whereas the Post gets off on mere s.e.x, the good gray Times reserves its libidinous juices for that ageless aphrodisiac, money.
_New York Stock Exchange Prices Explode
NEW YORK--Volume skyrocketed on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange yesterday, as buyers for Big Board issues responded worldwide to a renewed confidence in American industry. a.n.a.lysts are calling this the first leg of the Great Bull Market of the 1990s, saying this surge has been overdue for a decade. Leading the phenomenal rally were a number of America's foremost corporations. . . .
_I came off my chair like a shot and headed for Tam's office. "Is anybody following what's going on outside?"
Her face was down on the desk, dark hair tousled across her cheeks. She looked up and rubbed her eyes, obviously knocked out too. Strange.
"What . . . ?" Her voice was slurred.
"Something's gone crazy," I yelled. "Where's Henderson?"
Then I remembered he wasn't there. However, I did locate Jim Bob easily enough. He was in Noda's corner office, wideawake and still carrying our Uzi. Only now there were two of those long black automatics present, the other lying atop the wide teakwood desk.
One more thing. Seated behind that desk, his silver hair framed by the sunlight streaming through the wide back windows, was . . . Matsuo Noda.
The Shogun had arrived.
And with him came the dawn of a new, powerful reality. My drugged mind was flooded with the ramifications. Matsuo Noda, I now realized, had been on to us from the start. Once again he had used us. He had been the one who had emptied the office, the better to lure us in.
But the guards . . .
Noda-san, I bow to a true samurai. A swordsman's swordsman. Of course, it was as simple as it was elegant. You were testing us, allowing us a plausible opening, just difficult enough to force us to reveal our true strategy. The dictum of the masters: "If you want to strike your enemy, let him try to strike you first. The moment he strikes you, you have already succeeded in striking him." Pure _bus.h.i.+do_.
Everything up till now had only been feints. What I a.s.sumed was the battle turned out to have merely been staking out terrain, jockeying for position. At last, though, we were ready for the real engagement.
Trouble was, Matsuo Noda had just secured the high ground.
"Come on in and have yourself a seat, Walton." Jim Bob beckoned toward the vacant chair as he sipped from a gla.s.s of California champagne, its plastic-looking bottle stationed on the floor beside him. Coors time was over.
"Jim Bob, what's happening with the market?" I was ignoring Noda for the moment, trying to get a firmer grasp on the new "prevailing conditions."
"'Bout what we figured," he replied, his white suit now greasy and wrinkled. "Yep, looks like we're roughly on schedule."
"It's a relief to know there's a timetable." I finally turned to Noda.
"Wouldn't want this takeover to be half-c.o.c.ked."
"Mr. Walton, if you would be so kind." He smiled and indicated the chair. "It would be well for you to join us."
Jim Bob waved me over with his Uzi. "Fact is, we're all about due for a little show and tell." He glanced up as Tarn entered the doorway. "Be a good idea if you got up to speed on what we're doing here, too."
"I just scrolled some prices," she said, glaring groggily at Noda, the morbid realization descending rapidly now. "You don't have to tell me anything. I know exactly what you're doing."
"What we're doing is, we're pulling this country out of the s.h.i.+t.
That's what we're doing. We're saving this country's a.s.s. Which is more than anybody else here's doing," Jim Bob continued, satisfaction in his voice. "How in h.e.l.l did you ever think you could pull something like you were trying? Mr. Noda here could squash you all just like a june bug anytime he gets a mind, take my word for it."
Noda still hadn't amplified the new Dai Nippon scenario, but he didn't really need to bother.
"Jim Bob, don't spoil the fun and tell me. Let me try to guess." I glanced over at Noda, then back at him. "He suckered you in with his 'Rescue America' spiel. World peace at a price."
"Well, tell you the truth, the man did buy me lunch."
"I'll bet that's not all he did, you opportunistic son of a b.i.t.c.h."
I examined Noda. "How does it feel to have j.a.pan about to be sole owner of IBM and AT&T and GM and . . . guess I could just check the supercomputer out there for the full list."
"Certain strategic corporations." Noda smiled benignly. "It had become the only meaningful direction to proceed, Mr. Walton. I'm afraid our other measures were clearly too little, too late."
"Why bother with the small fish, right? If you're going to buy up American technology, do it right."
"Mr. Walton, we both know it is inevitable. Neither you nor I can alter the tides of history." He sighed. "Perhaps j.a.pan can provide the management guidance required to save America's industrial base, but it cannot be achieved merely by dabbling. Stronger measures, much stronger, were required. I finally came to see that. The problem was how to do it without a major psychological disruption of the market and more j.a.pan bas.h.i.+ng. Then by the greatest of good fortune, you solved my problem for me." He nodded toward Tam. "Your new trading program, Dr.
Richardson, which allowed us to operate anonymously, was ideal. Why not make use of it? Particularly since Mr. Henderson had the personnel to render it operational."
While digesting that, I returned my attention to Jim Bob. "Let me guess some more. Ten to one you bought 'call' options on the Big Board issues he was planning to take over."
"Well, they were bound to go up." He flashed a reptilian grin as he adjusted the Uzi, now a bolt of black against his rumpled white suit.
"If you're standing by the road and a gravy bus comes along, what are you going to do?"
"Terrific. Be a pity for this insider windfall to go to waste. Just wanted to make double sure you got a piece for yourself."