Read The Deceivers Online

Authors: Harold Robbins

The Deceivers (27 page)

“Nadia Novikov. Was a top Russian model. Poor girl who worked her way up in a tough industry on the casting-room couch. Hooked up with a former KGB thug named Illya Daveydenko. He got to the top by fucking people, too, but the screw jobs he gave were considerably more violent. When Russia went capitalistic and the whole country turned into a free-for-all in which whatever you could grab and defend was yours, Illya was one of the guys who got rich quick. With bribes and murder, whichever worked best, he took a bite out of the old Soviet oil industry. Probably a big enough mouthful to make him a billionaire.”

“You told me he was murdered.”

“Thoroughly. He'd moved his operation to Hong Kong when Putin's boys started cracking down on the ruthless thugs who had taken over Russian industries in the violent business atmosphere of the early nineties. They called Russia the Wild Wild East because the guy with the fastest gun—or checkbook—would grab ownership of a bank or a factory or, in Illya's case, an oil company, with no down payment, and gut it before the next robber baron came on the scene to bribe government officials to let him have it. Illya left the country following Putin's crackdown on business fraud and tax invasion and ended up buying the farm on foreign turf.”

“I take it Comrade Daveydenko ran afoul of another big gun?”

“Two of them. Hired, the kind of Russian
mafiya
wiseguys who used to break heads for the KGB and now hire out as enforcers for the new cadre of the country's billionaires. After leaving Russia one step ahead of a criminal indictment, he came to the Far East to work some oil deals and got nailed by two hired guns as he came out of a nightclub in Hong Kong.”

“And Nadia managed to dodge the bullets?”

“She did, but the girl with Illya that night didn't. There were some nasty rumors that Nadia herself set up the hit because Illya was dumping her.”

“How does the Siva fit in?”

“If you're asking whether Illya knew it was fake when he bought it, I wouldn't know that from a rat's ass. The Hong Kong police tell us Nadia cleaned out Illya's place minutes after he was shot. She told the police the art was a gift from him. Some of the pieces are worth millions. His body was still warm when she put out the word she had merchandise to sell.”

“That was sentimental of her. Is she still in Hong Kong?”

“That's what I've been told.”

“I'd like to talk to her.”

“She told the police Illya bought the stuff from a dealer but she never knew the dealer's name.”

“That's convenient. But she might open up to me.”

“Don't bet on it just because you're a woman. Nadia Novikov doesn't relate to other women. She's the type of manhunter who considers women competition.”

“Detective Michelangelo, you are underestimating this woman's ability to deal with other people. If there's anything I've come to understand after years in the art business, it's that the common trait of just about everyone with a whole bunch of money is greed. They all want
more
—money, power, status, envy. Remember the scene in
Key Largo
when the gangster Rocco who had everything told Humphrey Bogart that he wanted more.
Rocco wants more
, he said. Or something like that. Well, that's how people are. Nadia the model got millions from the sale of that Siva. And she's sitting on other pieces that can get her plenty more if she can figure out a way to get around the scandal of the Siva being a fake.”

“You have the perfect background to approach someone about dealing in contraband art … is that it?”

Bastard. “What's Nadia's address?”

He didn't have an address for Nadia but gave me the name of the Hong Kong art gallery that arranged the New York sale of the Siva—Cheung Dragon Antiques. “They told the Hong Kong police Daveydenko lied to them about how he got the Siva.”

I called Bolger and asked to him to check out Nadia and the art dealer who handled the New York sale. I told him I'd talk to him on my cell phone when I hit Hong Kong.

When I came into the lobby to check out, the clerk had a message for me from Kirk.
Call me
. He had tracked me down.

I trashed the message and headed to the Angkor airport.

 

WHO OWNS HISTORY?

Many countries have rich cultural histories, producing objets d'art over the eons that are today considered priceless museum pieces.

Egypt, Iraq, Turkey, Greece, Italy, Mexico, Peru, China, and Cambodia are just a few of the countries that have amazingly rich pasts that produced fine statues, vases, weapons, ceramics, and hundreds of other items that today are considered “museum pieces.”

Many of these magnificent relics of the past were produced over the eons by long-gone empires. And are often located in “third world countries” which lack the resources to properly protect them from looters and the wear and tear of time.

Some people argue not only that the “history” of long-gone empires belongs to the world at large, but that the museums and collectors in the rich industrialized nations of the world have a right and duty to keep and preserve artifacts that are part of the cultural history of less fortunate nations.

There's some merit to the argument. Of course, it ignores what would happen if the Iraqis suddenly started dismantling pre-Columbian native American buildings in the southwest to ship to Baghdad … if the Turks suddenly started taking down Britain's Hadrian's Wall to ship it to Istanbul … if the Cambodians suddenly started digging for Jomon pottery in Tokyo.

In other words, what if the shoe was on the other foot?

30

Hong Kong

I chose the Peninsula Hotel in the Kowloon District. The hotel had old snob appeal and was famous for its white-gloved doormen who attended a line of Roll-Royce “taxis.” My budget called for Motel 6, but if I had to give Nadia or the art dealer the name of my hotel, I wanted it to be one that fit my profile of a woman who could talk millions. Even if I was a buyer's agent, which is how I planned to pass myself off, I still had to have the smell of money.

Hong Kong wasn't very big, basically a whole lot of islands and a large peninsula, but it had many geographical and governmental divisions. As the name of the hotel revealed, it was on the peninsula—in this case Kowloon. The south end of Kowloon was separated from the central government and business district on Hong Kong Island by Victoria Harbor. The district spilled across the harbor and spread into Kowloon's Tsim Sha Tsui district and adjoining areas.

The Peninsula had an enormous colonnaded lobby, fancy restaurants, a shopping arcade, and high tea in the lobby bar. Flipping through the description in the guidebook, it had only one feature besides snob appeal that appealed to me: body massages. My body and soul needed some TLC.

It was hard to imagine that this bustling postage-stamp commercial entity filled with hurrying people, predatory business types, and concrete towers for more than a decade had been a special administrative region of China. Red China.

I took a walk around the area after I checked into the hotel. It wasn't long before people edged closer to me and whispered, “Handbag?”

Shades of Chinatown.

The art dealer who set up the New York sale for the Siva would be my first stop. Regardless of what he told the police, he would know who sold Daveydenko the pieces in the first place. Probably not a good chance he would tell me but it was worth a try on my part. I also wanted the dealer's insight about Nadia.

Getting information would not be easy. Art dealers were more secretive than magicians. And just as tricky when it came to sleight of hand.

In the taxi to the hotel, I called Bolger to find out what he had discovered about the dealer and let him know I was in Hong Kong … just in case one day I mysteriously fell off the radar and my body—sans identification—was later found floating facedown in the harbor. After my discussion with Detective Anthony in which he had expressed no concern for me, I wanted to make sure someone who cared knew where I was.

Whenever I had these thoughts of my premature demise, I reminded myself that just months ago I didn't think this way and someday my life would be back to normal.

“I read that Hong Kong has more than two hundred stores selling Chinese antiques,” I said, showing off my guidebook knowledge. “So maybe I'll bring home a tea set that belonged to a Ming emperor.”

“Your guidebook won't help if you're caught doing it. China doesn't allow it's priceless cultural treasures to be slipped into Hong Kong and sold to the world at large. But don't worry about that—your chances of getting a genuine Chinese antique ceramic in hand are about nil.”

I knew that and I knew the process for authenticating a ceramic, but as usual, I let Bolger talk to see what else I could glean.

“You probably remember we use a thermoluminescence test to check authenticity,” he went on. “It involves drilling a small sample. By measuring the amount of light emitted from the sample when it's heated, it tells the amount of time that has passed since it was fired. But fakers can inject radioactive material to fool the TL test. That's why you look at other factors: the shape, the color, the consistency with the period in question, the weight, the chop.”

The “chop” was an intricate signature of Chinese characters.

I changed the subject. “I thought this place would remind me of a big Chinatown, but it's got a life of its own. Like a mini-world. It's part Chinatown, part Wall Street with Fifth Avenue and Times Square thrown in.”

“You do know that the Brits held Hong Kong for over a hundred and fifty years before the Reds took it back.”

It really wasn't a question but Bolger's erudite way of leading into a subject so he could show off his knowledge—at my expense.

“Of course. I do know something about world history beyond London, Paris, and other points west. You always make it sound like I learned all my history from guidebooks I buy at the airport.” Which, I didn't add, was the source of my knowledge about Hong Kong—other than what I already knew, that they made men's suits cheap and it was a merchandise pirate's paradise.

“Then you know all about the Opium Wars.”

I'd heard the phrase but couldn't remember the history.

Bolger snorted his intellectual contempt for my ignorance. “The Brits and other Westerners made big bucks selling opium to the Chinese. The Chinese government tried to put a stop to it and seized opium warehouses in China. The Brits outgunned them and the Chinese not only had to permit the opium trade, but conceded Hong Kong Island and eventually Kowloon Peninsula and the rest of what we call Hong Kong to the British.”

“Thanks for sharing.” I loved these charming stories of how Americans and Europeans screwed over the rest of the world, especially when I was traveling in the places that took the beating.

Even though Hong Kong was civilized territory in comparison to Cambodia, it was also home for some of the infamous Chinese gangs called triads, not to mention where Daveydenko bought the farm.

“Bought the farm” was a nice old expression for death. I asked Bolger about it.

“I think it has something to do with fighter pilots talking about buying a farm to retire on,” he said. “So their pals say they bought the farm when they're shot down. I can look it up for you.”

“That's okay, the less I know about ways of getting killed, the better. What about the Hong Kong dealer?”

“Your cop friend is correct,” Bolger told me, “Cheung Dragon Antiques arranged the transfer of the Siva from Nadia to the New York auction house. I spoke to an appraiser for the auction house. He said the Cheung firm claimed it wasn't involved in Daveydenko originally acquiring the piece. They said it was a transaction between Daveydenko and a private collector.”

“They'd hardly fess up to helping him acquire a piece that later turned out to be a fake,” I said. “What's the reputation of the dealer?”

“Outstanding. Run by Albert Cheung for decades. I recall examining some pieces he sold to the Met. All were as represented. But Albert retired and his nephew took over and doesn't have the old man's pristine reputation. Hong Kong is one of the world centers of fake art and Jimmy Cheung has joined the not-too-exclusive club of peddling things off as genuine if it means a big price tag.”

“You think he made the Siva's phony provenance for Daveydenko?”

“Maybe. But Russia's as violent today as Al Capone's Chicago was in the thirties. In a country where you can buy suitcase A-bombs at flea markets and become a billionaire overnight by starting a bank and stealing the deposits, he could have had a provenance made that tracked the ownership history back to Genghis Khan.”

He gave me the phone number and address of the store on Cat Street. He'd been to Hong Kong antique dealers in the past, but not to the Cheung store.

“Cat Street is off Hollywood Road, the city's antiques row. It's probably the place where the expression ‘caveat emptor' was born.
Let the buyer beware
should be printed on the shop doors along with the hours of operation. Hollywood Road, by the way, got its name from a colonial administrator's English manor house. It used to have more brothels than antique shops.”

“Maybe I'll rummage around the stalls and pick up a rare treasure for you for a buck,” I kidded.

“Yeah, and maybe you should use the dollar to buy a hundred-million-to-one lottery ticket—we'd have a better chance at making a profit. If you decide to buy anything and shake on the deal, count your fingers afterward. Jimmy Cheung isn't the only dealer in Hong Kong who isn't particular about what he sells. I'll bet you don't know how Cat Street got its name.”

“Enlighten me.”

“Like the Thieves Market in Bangkok, it was once an alley where crooks unloaded their loot. The thieves were called rats and the shopkeepers who bought their stuff were called cats.”

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