Geneva, September 1992
I phoned Clair George’s room in Le Richemond at 8:30 and awakened him from deep slumber.
A half-hour later, on the hotel’s verandah where we met for coffee, I greeted him with Time magazine, which had just published a full-page article about him.
“Uh-oh,” was all he said.
Time reported that Clair had returned home from a post-trial vacation in Maine. Little did anyone know, least of all any reporters, that he was sitting here with me in Geneva, about to consult with a billionaire countess.
At 11:20 our Mercedes taxi stood waiting. I got in first. As Clair climbed in after me… Brrrrrrrrrrraaaap! He looked at me sheepishly. Too much champagne the night before? No. His business suit trousers had split at the crotch.
“You want to carry on without me?” he asked.
“No, I’ll wait.”
Clair returned to his room and emerged eight minutes later in a blazer and khaki trousers.
It forever boggled my mind how Clair always found whatever he needed from the small travel bag he carried on our many business trips to Europe. I would come to call it The Magic Bag because it seemed bottomless.
The Gray Fiduciary
Our driver whisked us to the office of a colorless individual I dubbed The Gray Fiduciary—every billionaire needs one.
It was apparent within 30 seconds of joining the countess and her fiduciary that the assignment was a given; a decision had already been made to retain our services.
The Gray Fiduciary provided me his fax number for invoicing; he had, a week earlier, wired thousands of dollars to cover the cost of our presence here in Serene City.
Cousin Bruno
After bidding fiduciary farewell, the countess joined Clair and me at Le Richemond with her cousin, Bruno.
Our morning session had confirmed the business transaction. Now we moved onto substantive issues as the countess elucidated further detail about her ex-son-in-law, Baron von Biggleswurm.
He had met her daughter, Lara, at a party in St. Moritz, where the count and countess owned a chalet.
Her disapproving parents had not liked the baron from the start; the count considered him the village idiot.
The baron then wooed Lara by mail for two years, recognizing, said the countess, that she was one of Europe’s wealthiest and most eligible bachelorettes.
When Lara finally agreed to meet him again, Biggleswurm postured himself as a struggling cellist in need of a benefactor. She took the bait and came to his aid by organizing a concert appearance for him, renting a hall and underwriting the advertising. Seven persons showed up; one of them was a critic who panned his performance.
And then she fell in love with the baron.
Her parents and all her friends begged her to recognize that Biggleswurm was a gold-digger. But despite their pleas, she wed the baron. (The count and countess boycotted the wedding, which took place in Paris.)
Within a year, Lara became pregnant with their son.
The marriage turned sour almost immediately; the baron’s charms and affection switched off.
His wife stuck with it, embarrassed that her parents had been right all along but finally, after suffering more than enough, she fled with her son and filed for divorce.
Biggleswurm quickly ran through the resulting pay-off and henceforth used the boy as a weapon to gouge more.
The countess provided us with full names, birthdates, addresses and other details needed for us to get started.
Her only stipulation was that we were to work around her daughter, who, she insisted, must know nothing of our mission.
Lara apparently considered the predicament her own problem, her own mistake, and did not want her mother meddling in her affairs. She would, we were told, become angry if she knew the countess had retained us.
“It’s a pride thing,” said the countess. “We were right all along about Biggleswurm and she knows it. She doesn’t want to be humiliated any further.”
Cousin Bruno seemed to have other ideas. “Lara needs a man,” he chirped in.
Clair and I exchanged glances, like, is this supposed to be part of our assignment?
We saw them to the door, watched them revolve onto the street and took off the other direction for fresh air.
With little sleep, fatigue had cut in big-time, my brain unwilling to connect with my tongue.
A solution occurred to me: McDonald’s, on the basis that there’s nothing like a belly full of grease to get you up and running.
We pigged out on scrumptious Big Macs and French fries and milk shakes (better in Europe than the USA), relishing each bite and every slurp.
Afterwards, we took a lakeside walk, followed by a stroll around the old town, stopping at a high-class shoe store called J. Weston to inspect their window display of precious footwear. I pointed out a pair of black crocodile monk strap shoes to Clair and converted the price: $1700. He almost choked.
Enter Art Stimson
Back to Le Richemond—and Art Stimson, who flew in from Germany after a summons from Clair through me.
Art, Clair and I sat in a detached part of the verandah away from prying ears as I laid out the assignment.
Clair listened quietly while Art nodded his head and scribbled notes.
Art's mission in a nutshell: Visit the village of Biggleswurm in northern Germany and dig up intelligence on our nutcase baron.
Clair’s Net
Business concluded, Art scooted, his seat taken within minutes by Jim Fees.
After ensuring it was okay with me, Clair told his old CIA colleague the name of our new client.
Fees whistled softly and said, “An introduction like that is worth a million dollars.”
Clair continued on with a slow, rambling description of our assignment, concluding with Bruno’s suggestion that Lara needed a man. “And that’s where you come in,” Clair eased into his deadpan punchline, which was so very Clair. “We’re going to marry you into the Bossi fortune!"
Dining on perch at a lakeside restaurant, Fees reeled off a dozen more Cold War stories, with Clair jumping in, and I could only sit back in awe, a student of spy lore and tradecraft as taught by the best in the biz.
Fees, while serving in Yemen, awakened one morning to find his house completely surrounded by tribesmen on horseback. Their leader turned out to be from Brooklyn, had come to Yemen years earlier to take over the tribe and, feeling an affinity for the local CIA chief, offered his army for hire; for the right price, they’d take on whoever the CIA wanted them to vanquish.
The real story was not today’s CIA, which, listening to them, one would believe had been over-bureaucratized and emasculated.
The story was Clair’s Net—a worldwide network of former operations officers, many of whom had run large stations—first generation spooks, the smartest of their generation, who had been wined and dined and wooed in style (the way it used to be) to join the Agency, and could look back only in dismay at what their old pickle factory had become.
On Another Front
Investment guru and past client Harry Schultz was staying temporarily in Lausanne and wanted us to come see him.
So we trained 65 miles to the other end of the lake and, arriving early like good spooks, we appointed ourselves at an open-air café outside Hotel Central, read newspapers and sipped hot chocolate.
When mega-millionaire Harry appeared, crossing the boulevard toward us, he looked like one of the mole people that live beneath New York’s subway system. He wore several layers of ragged, mismatched clothing and carried a plastic bag in each hand.
“I got a new hearing aid,” said Harry brightly. “Sit anywhere you want!”
When Harry opened his mouth, I noticed that he’d had a lot of gold put in, probably to replace mercury fillings but maybe because he thought it was the safest place to keep it.
Harry was happy because, a few days earlier, his psychic had told him his most important work was yet to come. The psychic convinced Harry that it was his destiny to create the final economic formula that will save mankind. (It didn’t take much convincing.)
No more inflation. No more deflation. No more recession or depression.
Harry was now waiting in suspense for the formula to occur to him.
Harry then revealed to us that the world as we knew it would cease to exist in 1997. California and Great Britain would be gone—swallowed by the ocean after several earthquakes. Many other parts of the world would suffer the same fate, he added.
Clair leaned in, cupping a hand around his mouth conspiratorially, as only Clair could. “What about Washington?”
“Unfortunately,” said Harry, “Washington will be okay.”
“Are you still interested in UFOs?” I asked. The last time we met, Harry wanted us to track down aliens from outer space.
“Uh, yeah,” said Harry. “You know, they’re among us. That’s what the psychic told me. You’re supposed to say to new people you meet: ‘Are you a walk-in?’ That’s what they’re called, walk-ins. But I suppose they would deny it.”
Wax Museum
Harry thrust two copies of his current newsletter at us. “Look at the center-spread,” he commanded.
The center-spread consisted of a smattering of black & white photographs: Harry standing next to British Prime Minister John Major; Harry standing next to French President Francois Mitterrand and German Chancellor Helmut Kohl.
Harry appears animated, earnestly conversing with his new friends.
“What do you think?” snapped Harry.
“I think it’s great,” I said. “How did you manage that?”
Harry sat back in his chair, beaming.
“Congratulations!” said Clair.
We moved to another table for lunch, overlooking Lausanne’s train station.
“I still think you’re wrong,” Harry admonished, “for not doing anything about Loony.”
“What did you want us to do, break his legs?” I asked.
Harry did not answer. That’s exactly what he wanted.
“Our objective was to get him off your back,” I reminded, “not incite him further.”
Harry was growing lonelier—and wackier—in self-imposed exile.
Clair and I bid him farewell (we’d never see him again) and found a train going our way.
As we glided the rails back toward Serene City, I scrutinized Harry’s photo-spread. The caption said they were snapped at a G-8 meeting in Brussels.
“Look at this.” I held it out to Clair. “Tell me if I’m wrong, but I think the only real person in these photos is Harry.”
Clair rubbed his eyes, straightened his glasses and looked hard at the photos.
“Major, Mitterrand, Kohl…,” I said. “They’re wax figures.”
Clair shook his head, astonished. “I’ll be damned—you’re right.”
You've heard of waxing poetic?
Harry invented waxing prevaricate.