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I’d only been trading for little over a week, so naturally I didn’t have much idea about how I was going to pull something like this off, but when I got back to my

apartment, as though on cue, there was a message from Kevin Doyle on my answering machine.

Click.

Beeep.

‘Hi Eddie, Kevin – what is all this stuff I’ve been hearing? Call me.’

Without even taking my jacket off, I picked up the phone and dialled his number.

‘Hello.’

‘So what have you been hearing?’

Beat.

‘Lafayette, Eddie. Everyone’s talking about you.’

‘About me?’

‘Yeah. I happened to be having lunch with Carl and a few other people today when someone mentioned they’d heard rumours about a day-trading firm on Broad

Street – and some trader there who was performing phenomenally. I made a few enquiries after lunch and your name came up.’

I smiled to myself and said, ‘Oh yeah?’

‘And Eddie, that’s not all. I was speaking to Carl again later and I told him what I’d found out. He was really interested, and when I said you were actually a friend

of mine he said he’d like to meet you.’

‘That’s great, Kevin. I’d like to meet him. Any time that suits.’

‘Are you free tomorrow night?’

‘Yeah.’

He paused. ‘Let me call you back.’

He rang off immediately.

I went over and sat on the couch and looked around. I was going to be getting out of here soon – and not a moment too soon, either. I envisaged the spacious,

elegantly decorated living-room of a house in Brooklyn Heights. I saw myself standing at a bay window, looking out on to one of those tree-lined streets that Melissa

and I, on our way from Carroll Gardens into the city, on summer days, had often walked along, and even talked about one day living on. Cranberry Street. Orange

Street. Pineapple Street.

The phone rang again. I stood up and walked across the room to answer it.

‘Eddie – Kevin. Drinks tomorrow night? At the Orpheus Room?’

‘Great. What time?’

‘Eight. But why don’t you and I meet at seven-thirty, that way I can fill you in on some stuff.’

‘Sure.’

I put the phone down.

As I stood there, with my hand still on the receiver, I began to feel light-headed and dizzy, and everything went dark for a second. Then, without consciously

registering that I had moved – and moved to the other side of the room – I suddenly found myself reaching out to the edge of the couch for something to lean against.

It was only then that I realized I hadn’t eaten anything in three days.

[ 12 ]

I ARRIVED AT THE ORPHEUS ROOM before Kevin and took a seat at the bar. I ordered a club soda.

I didn’t know what I expected from this meeting, but it would certainly be interesting. Carl Van Loon was one of those names I’d seen in newspapers and magazines

all throughout the 1980s, a name synonymous with that decade and its celebrated devotion to Greed. He might be quiet and retiring these days, but back then the

chairman of Van Loon & Associates had been involved in several notorious property deals, including the construction of a gigantic and controversial office building in

Manhattan. He had also been involved in some of the highest-profile leveraged buyouts of the period, and in countless mergers and acquisitions.

Back in those days, as well, Van Loon and his second wife, interior-designer Gabby De Paganis, had been denizens of the black-tie charity circuit and had had their

pictures in the social pages of every issue of New York magazine and Quest and Town and Country. To me, he’d been a member of that gallery of cartoon characters

– along with people like Al Sharpton, Leona Helmsley and John Gotti – that had made up the public life of the times, the public life we’d all consumed so voraciously on

a daily basis, and then discussed and dissected at the slightest provocation.

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