The Devil's Banker
The Devil's Banker book cover

The Devil's Banker

Hardcover – August 26, 2003

Price
$17.40
Format
Hardcover
Pages
400
Publisher
Delacorte Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0385337274
Dimensions
6.25 x 1.25 x 9.5 inches
Weight
1.55 pounds

Description

From Publishers Weekly Reich (The Numbered Account; The Runner; The First Billion) returns to the stratospheric heights of international finance in this complicated novel of terrorist intrigue. Mild-mannered forensic accountant Adam Chapel revels in his first field mission, as he follows the tangled trail of a terrorist money transfer. Just as he's set to make an arrest, the suspect detonates a bomb that kills four of Chapel's fellow investigators. Injured in the blast but undeterred, Chapel teams up with Sarah Churchill, a beautiful spy of uncertain affiliation, to hunt down the bomber's secret organization. The shadowy association called the Hijira is funded in part by the elusive genius financier Marc Gabriel, who is engaged in funneling vast sums of money through legitimate and clandestine financial markets to fund Hijira's master plan to destroy the very heart of the American political establishment. Reich's numerous characters can be difficult to keep straight, as can the acronymic organizations they belong to, leading to sentences on the order of: "Run the name through the CBRS. Check for SARs and CTRs" and "OFAC called the White House. The White House called FTAT to confirm that OFAC's IEEPA request was legit...." Readers may scratch their heads in confusion as they wade through the alphabet soup, but those who persevere will receive an advanced education in the secret world of financial deviltry on the grandest of scales. Reich has a lot of fascinating financial lore to pass along, all of which goes down easily as the fast-paced plotting and relentless action speed the reader over the bumpy parts and into a satisfyingly gripping and informative read.Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. "This smart, fast-paced read shuttles between Wall Street finance and the Eastern paperless hawala banking system--and makes both sound surprisingly cool."-- Entertainment Weekly From the Inside Flap Hailed as x93the John Grisham of Wall Streetx94 by the New York Times , Christopher Reich returns to the world he knows so well--the dangerous, dazzling world of high finance and international intrigue. In this ingeniously crafted thriller, the bestselling author of Numbered Account and The First Billion introduces his most complex and engaging hero yet: forensic accountant Adam Chapel--and paints a frightening scenario where terrorism is big business and money is the ultimate weapon of warx85The explosion that shatters the smart Parisian apartment reverberates around the globe. In an instant, a suspected terrorist is dead and half a million dollars has vanished. Within days, the CIA is certain it has found a connection between the dead man and a planned terrorist attack on U.S. soil. Determined to avert another 9/11, they have assembled an elite counterterrorist task force, code name: Blood Money. Its mission: to follow the money trail. Its secret weapon: forensic accountant Adam Chapel. A man who trusts numbers more than people, Chapel has his own reasons for wanting to get the job done-- four of his colleagues were killed in the Paris blast. Now Chapel is thrust back into the line of fire when he teams up with British intelligence agent Sarah Churchill. The two are assigned to hunt down a shadowy mastermind who is moving vast sums of money from country to country, from bank to bank, leaving no tracks--as he prepares for an Armaggedon of his own devising. As Chapel follows a disappearing money trail from Paris to Munich to the deserts of Saudi Arabia, Sarah uses her elite training to stalk the x93shadowx94 and his elusive network. Meanwhile, their quarry is auditing their every move, laying a twisting trail of false clues and shocking surprises. With the clock ticking down, soon Chapel and Sarah have only days, hours, minutes to avert disaster as a master terrorist plots to unleash the first strike in a brilliantly orchestrated conspiracy--with an almost unimaginable goal. Hurtling us from the winding alleys of Pakistan to the elite banking houses of Europe, The Devilx92s Banker creates an adrenaline-fueled world where following the money has never been more dangerous, and evil has never been harder to unmask. "This smart, fast-paced read shuttles between Wall Street finance and the Eastern paperless hawala banking system--and makes both sound surprisingly cool."-- Entertainment Weekly Christopher Reich was born in Tokyo in 1961. A graduate of Georgetown University and the University of Texas at Austin, he worked in Switzerland before returning to the United States to pursue a career as a novelist. The bestselling author of three other acclaimed novels, Numbered Account , The Runner , and The First Billion , he lives in California with his wife and children. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1 IT IS DIFFICULT TO WALK CASUALLY WITH FIVE HUNDRED thousand dollars taped to your belly. More difficult still when any of the men brushing past you would gladly slit your throat were they to suspect the king’s ransom you carried.The man who had chosen the warrior’s name Abu Sayeed snaked through the alleys of the Smugglers’ Bazaar, careful to check his impatient step. He was close now, but he could not hurry. To hurry invited attention. And attention meant trouble he could not afford.Around him, shopkeepers leaned in open doorways, smoking cigarettes and sipping cups of tea. He could sense their eyes upon him as they studied his bearing, gauging its strength, deciding whether he was a predator or prey. Instinctively, he stood straighter and thrust his chin forward. But all the while he kept his pace relaxed, his face slack, even as the claws dug into him.The money was divided into fifty packets, each containing ten thousand dollars, each wrapped and waterproofed in transparent plastic. The packets had sharp, cruel corners that chafed and cut his flesh. He had been traveling for thirty-six hours. His chest and back were flayed as if scored by a cat-o’-nine tails. Only by thinking of the operation was he able to continue. The prospect of the infidels’ death invigorated him with the strength of the Pharaoh’s army.At four p.m., the summer sun was at its fiercest. Dust devils arose on the dusty road, swirled lazily, then spun themselves out. After a brief lull, the bazaar was rousing itself to life. Beneath fluorescent lights, shelves sagged with cartons of Dunhill cigarettes, Toshiba laptops, and Paco Rabanne cologne, all brought overland from Afghanistan to avoid duty and tax. Other windows displayed less mundane goods: Kalashnikov rifles, Colt pistols, and Claymore mines. Hashish, heroin, even human chattel could be had at the right address. If there was a free market on earth, mused Sayeed, it was here on the western outskirts of Peshawar, the gateway to the Khyber Pass.Stopping to purchase a cube of diced sugarcane, he cast his gaze behind him. His depthless black eyes scoured the street, checking for the misplaced face, the averted gaze, the anxious dawdler. So close, he must keep his senses keen. He did not believe that the crusaders knew his identity. Still, he must be cautious. Members of the American Special Forces infested Peshawar as lice infest a beast. Most were easy to spot, with their Oakley sunglasses, Casio watches, and desert boots. A few even dared enter the bazaar, where foreigners were not welcome and Pakistani law held no sway.The thought of the Americans brought a contemptuous smile to his lips. Soon they would learn that they could not run. The fire was coming. It would burn them in their heartland. It would scald them from within.And for a moment, the claws loosened their grip. The pain subsided, and he basked in the glow of destruction.Satisfied his trail was clean, Sayeed spat out the sinewy cane and crossed the narrow road. To look at, he was no different from any of the thousands of souls who eked out an existence trafficking the porous border that separated Pakistan from Afghanistan. His shalwar kameez, the baggy shirt and trousers that made up the local dress, was filthy and stiff with dried sweat; his black headdress smothered with red alkali dust. His beard belonged to the most fervent of believers, as did the AK-47 he carried slung over a shoulder and the bejeweled dagger strapped to his calf.But Sayeed was not Pakistani, nor was he a Pashtun from the southern provinces of Afghanistan, or an Uzbek from the north. Born Michael Christian Montgomery in London, England, Sayeed was the bastard offspring of a cancerous British officer and a teenage Egyptian whore. His father had died while he was a boy, leaving him a polished accent and not much more. Unable to care for him, his mother returned to Cairo and gave him over to the madrasas, the religious schools that gifted him with an Islamic education. His childhood was brutish and short. It was a natural progression to the camps where he learned the creed of the gun, memorized the verse of violence, and worshiped at the altar of rebellion. And from there to the killing fields of Palestine, Chechnya, and Serbia.At twenty, the Sheikh found him.At twenty-one, Michael Christian Montgomery ceased to exist. It was Abu Mohammed Sayeed who swore the oath, accepted the mark, and joined Hijira.Skirting a convoy of carts piled high with Korean fabrics, Tibetan rugs, and Panasonic televisions still in their factory packaging, he reached the Tikram Mosque. The doors were open, and inside the shadowy hall, a few men lay on prayer rugs, prostrate in worship. His eyes returned to the street. Scanning the intersection ahead, he felt a new pain lash his back. This time, however, it was not the jagged belt that provoked his discomfort. It was fear. He could not see the store. Somehow, he had taken a wrong turn. He was lost.Frantically, Sayeed turned his head this way and that. It could not be. He was at the Tikram Mosque. He had seen the photographs. He had studied the maps. Despair washed over him. Others were waiting. The countdown had begun. Seven days. The thought of failure turned his bowels to water.Terrified, he wandered into the street. A horn blared in his ear, loud, very loud, but from another universe altogether. Sayeed jumped back a step and a jitney lumbered past, passengers hanging from the doors, clinging to the luggage rack. In its wake, a cloud of rank exhaust choked the already oppressive air. He could not go on. He could not go back. Truly, he was damned.The exhaust dissipated and he saw it. The gold letters emblazoned on a black field. “Bhatia’s Gold and Precious Jewelry.” His despair vanished. In its place came joy. The light of a thousand suns.“Insh’allah, God is great,” he whispered, a bolt of piety swelling his heart.Guards stood on either side of the doorway, Kalashnikovs to their chests, fingers tickling the trigger guard. Sayeed passed them without a glance. They were not there to protect jewelry, but cash, primarily U.S. dollars, and gold ingots. Bhatia’s reputation as a jeweler might be suspect, but his trustworthiness as a hawaladar, or money broker, was unquestioned. Faisan Bhatia had long served the local smuggling community as its agent of choice. He was the only broker in the region able to handle the large sums that Abu Sayeed required.In Arabic, hawala means “to change.” And in Hindi, “trust.” Put simply, it was the hawala broker’s job to effect transfers of cash from one city to another. Some of his clients were traders eager to repatriate their earnings after selling their haul in the bazaar. Others, simple folk wishing to send money home to loved ones in Karachi, Delhi, or Dubai. Both groups shared a distrust of the bureaucracy and paperwork demanded by the country’s less-than-solvent banks. For them, hawala was a welcome alternative. A system built on trust, hidden from intrusive eyes. A system that had been in place when Arab traders plied the Silk Road hundreds of years ago.Bhatia, a fat Indian with a streak of gray in his hair, stood imperiously behind the counter. As Sayeed approached, he eyed the customer’s caked clothing and unwashed face with undisguised contempt.“I would like to make a transfer,” Abu Sayeed whispered when he was close enough to taste the man’s breath. “It is a matter of some urgency.”The Indian did not move.“The Sheikh sent me.”Faisan Bhatia’s eyes flickered, but only for an instant. “Come this way.” Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Hailed as “the John Grisham of Wall Street” by the
  • New York Times
  • , Christopher Reich returns to the world he knows so well--the dangerous, dazzling world of high finance and international intrigue. In this ingeniously crafted thriller, the bestselling author of
  • Numbered Account
  • and
  • The First Billion
  • introduces his most complex and engaging hero yet: forensic accountant Adam Chapel--and paints a frightening scenario where terrorism is big business and money is the ultimate weapon of war…The explosion that shatters the smart Parisian apartment reverberates around the globe. In an instant, a suspected terrorist is dead and half a million dollars has vanished. Within days, the CIA is certain it has found a connection between the dead man and a planned terrorist attack on U.S. soil. Determined to avert another 9/11, they have assembled an elite counterterrorist task force, code name: Blood Money. Its mission: to follow the money trail. Its secret weapon: forensic accountant Adam Chapel. A man who trusts numbers more than people, Chapel has his own reasons for wanting to get the job done-- four of his colleagues were killed in the Paris blast. Now Chapel is thrust back into the line of fire when he teams up with British intelligence agent Sarah Churchill. The two are assigned to hunt down a shadowy mastermind who is moving vast sums of money from country to country, from bank to bank, leaving no tracks--as he prepares for an Armaggedon of his own devising. As Chapel follows a disappearing money trail from Paris to Munich to the deserts of Saudi Arabia, Sarah uses her elite training to stalk the “shadow” and his elusive network. Meanwhile, their quarry is auditing their every move, laying a twisting trail of false clues and shocking surprises. With the clock ticking down, soon Chapel and Sarah have only days, hours, minutes to avert disaster as a master terrorist plots to unleash the first strike in a brilliantly orchestrated conspiracy--with an almost unimaginable goal. Hurtling us from the winding alleys of Pakistan to the elite banking houses of Europe,
  • The Devil’s Banker
  • creates an adrenaline-fueled world where following the money has never been more dangerous, and evil has never been harder to unmask.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(73)
★★★★
25%
(61)
★★★
15%
(36)
★★
7%
(17)
23%
(55)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Wish rating system allowed 1/2 stars as this is 3 1/2

Adam Chapel is a former accountant indepently wealthy from a job at a big investment firm that is recruited into a new (sub) intelligence agency against the war on Terrorism. Chapel faces ther reality behind the glamourous new career when a bomb kills members of his fellow team, on the hunt of a terrorist.

A taped message has all the acronyms (and this book is loaded with them) on edge as it threatens another attack on American soil. Enter Chapel and his enigmatic partner Sarah Churchill from M-I6. Chapels, job is to help hunt the terrorists using numbers and accounts as his tools of the trade, follow the money trail that will lead to the Hijura.

Reich does many things right in this novel. He prints out pages and pages of suspense, International intrique, and a dab of romance between his lead characters(probably preparing for a Hollywood adaptation.) The main flaws I found with this thriller was its pace. While entertaining and intriquing enough to finish, it lagged purposely in parts. There was enough suspense, but not quite enough action to rate higher on my own scale of thriller novels.

This is a well written novel, with an interesting enough premise and plot to be worth the read yet would not label it a "must-read" by any means.
14 people found this helpful
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Disappointed

Having a financial background adds much to my enjoyment of Christopher Reich novels.And I really enjoyed his first three books especially Numbered Account.
But I just could not get into his latest endeavor The Devils Banker. For me it was disjointed,overly complex which some people describe as "intelligent" but which I describe as obtuse. Most importantly it was mainly conversations among the characters rather than exciting action.
One might think he was attempting to write a LeCarre like novel. I'd rather re-read Numbered Account.
6 people found this helpful
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Great thriller! Loved it! Accountants rejoice!

As an accountant, it is wonderful to read an excellent thriller where the hero of the story is an accountant. (We get such a bum rap most of the time in novels!)
I love Chris Reich's books and would recommend every one of them. This one is a very fast read with a ingenious plot-it would make a terrific movie. I thought the insights provided were extremely interesting related to terrorists and their activities. I've seen where he is called the "John Grisham of Wall Street". He's a much better author than Grisham, in my opinion. Merry Christmas C,S,N,K
5 people found this helpful
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Surprising Hero...Timely Story

Reich's novel is a doozy. It is scary and very real. The accountant as hero part is surprisingly compelling. The twists and turns and red herrings keep you from figuring out the entire plot until the end. It is good old fashioned spy novel, as well as a thriller and tour through the world of finance. Really well paced and exciting. A quick, but engrossing read.
4 people found this helpful
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Another Winner From Reich!

Christopher Reich has once again managed to write an exciting
financial thriller.Adam Chapel and three of his team members
chase a suspected terrorist into an apartment. Three of the team members are killed in an explosion.A half million dollars vanishes but a tape is left behind. On it a threat of a terrorist
attack is revealed.A strike force called Blood Money is assembled
to track down the money trail of the terrorits organization the is called Hijira.Chapel teams uo with Sarah Churchill. The mastermind of the financial network is named Mark Gabriel.They
chase the money trail from Paris to Munich to the deserts of Saudi Arabia.Gabriel is near impossible to capture.The true
identity of Gabriel comes as a surprise.The plan to attack America is frightening as well.This is an excellent book that you
will enjoy reading.
3 people found this helpful
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Missed

I have to say that the book was ok. This was my first book from Mr.Reich. I've heard so many great things about Numbered Account that I wanted to read his latest book because the premise sounded interesting. While he did delve into financial crimes details which I enjoy, the story line was just not beleiveable. It just felt like something was missing. It was all too pat, the characters were cardboard.
I am planning on reading Numbered Account and I am hoping that it will be better.

But on the plus side, I'll still keep an eye out for what he will be writing next as I like financial thrillers.
3 people found this helpful
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Reich Scores Again

Christopher Reich's latest effort, The Devil's Banker recaptures the magic of his first work, Numbered Account. The plot races along at breakneck speed, and Reich's historical research is so exacting and vivid that the reader feels they are watching rather than reading the book. Reich's timely tale is captivating and highly entertaining, a thriller, and page turner you don't want to miss.
3 people found this helpful
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Well Worth Reading!

Suspenseful, well-written and interesting. The plot of The Devil's Banker is very timely in view of what is now going on in the world and provides a well-balanced perspective. Highly recommended.
2 people found this helpful
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Back on Top!

I have followed Reich's carreer since the bestseller Numbered Account. He lost me a little bit with The Runner,his second book,mostly because of the subject matter. I am not a big WWII fan.The First Billion was excellent,and now The Devil's Banker is on par with his best. From page one you are dragged into a true thriller... a can't put down winner. What I notice most is how he has matured as a writer. The character development is wonderful and you feel like you know all of the players by books end.
This is a must read!!!!
2 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

Packed with lots of information about how we are tracked in the banking world and in cyberspace.
1 people found this helpful