As Albert said that, he took out his fat wallet from his pocket. There was not much cash in the wallet, but there were all kinds of bank cards inside.
Interestingly, each bank card had a sticky note with a string of numbers on them. Some were ten, some were twenty, thirty, o r even fifty and hundred.
Albert picked a card with a thirty written o n it. He threw the card to the driver's seat and said, "There are five hundred thousand dollars in the card. The password is 5, 0, 0, 0,0,0. You guys can spend it freely and split the remainder among yourself."
Albert always carried the bank cards with him. They were worth at least several million dollars. He was not the actual cardholder for the cards, but he kept the passwords on the card. Every password corresponded to the card's limit. A card worth three hundred thousand would have a password starting with three and ending with five zeros. Meanwhile, a card with five hundred thousand would use a password starting with five and ending with five zeros.
He brought so many cards around with him mainly for convenience when paying. He could easily transfer the money by giving the card to another person. It was more convenient than bringing tons of cash around, and much safer than a bank transfer.
His men accepted the card eagerly and thanked him, "Thanks, Albert!"
Albert reminded, "By the way, don’t be in a hurry to come back. Sleep all you want and wake up naturally. Then, go shopping somewhere and drive back here at night."
His men replied, "Leave it to us! We’ll follow your orders!"
Albert nodded and instructed the Accord's driver, "Go straight to the highway and to the dog farm."
The driver quickly replied, "Okay, Albert."
He then pressed on the accelerator, and the car sped away at once.
The traffic at night was much smoother. For that reason, Charlie only spent about twenty minutes sending Kathleen back to the Shangri-La hotel.
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