Book Read Free

Robert Ludlum - Aquatain Progression.txt

Page 21

by The Aquitaine Progression [lit]


  shakes all over . . . and I try to hold her . . . and

  sometimes she thinks I'm one of them and she

  screams. After all these years . . . Chnst!"

  "Have you tried professional help not my

  kind but the sort she might need?"

  "Oh, hell, she recovers pretty quick," said the

  actor defensively, as if slipping into a role, his

  teacher's grammar displaced for effect. "Also, until

  a few years ago we didn't have the money for that

  kind of thing," he added somberly in his natural

  voice.

  "What about now? That can't be a problem now."

  Dowling dropped his eyes to the flight bag at his

  feet. "If I'd found her sooner . . . maybe. But we

  were both late bloomers; we got married in our

  forges two oddballs looking for something. It's too

  late now."

  "I'm sorry."

  "I never should have made this goddamn picture.

  Never. "

  "Why did you?"

  "She said I should. To show people I could play

  something more than a driveling, south-forty

  dispenser of fifth-rate bromides. I told her it didn't

  matter.... I was in the war, in the Marine Corps. I

  saw some crap in the South Pacific but nothing to

  compare with what she went through, not a spit in

  the proverbial bucket. Jesus! Can you imagine what

  it must have been like?"

  "Yes, I can."

  THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 131

  The actor looked up from the flight bag, a

  half-drawn smile on his lined, suntanned face. "You,

  good buddy? Not unless you were caught in

  Korea "

  '1 wasn t in Korea."

  '.Then you'd be hard put to imagine it any more

  than 1. You were too young and I was too lucky."

  "Well, there was . . ." Converse fell silent, it was

  pointless. It had happened so often he did not

  bother to think about it anymore. 'Nam had been

  erased from the national conversational psyche. He

  knew that if he reminded a man like Dowling, a

  decent man, the air would be filled with apologies,

  but nothing was served by a jarring remembrance.

  Not as it pertained to Mrs. Dowling, born

  Oppenfeld. "There's the 'no smoking' sign," said Joel.

  "We'll be in Hamburg in a couple of minutes."

  "I've taken this flight a half-dozen times over the

  past two months," said Caleb Dowling, "and let me

  tell you, Hamburg's a bitch. Not German customs,

  that's a snap, especially this late. Those rubber

  stamps fly and they push you through in ten minutes

  tops. But then you wait. Twice, maybe three times,

  it was over an hour before the plane to Bonn even

  got here. By the way, care to join me for a drink in

  the lounge?" The actor suddenly switched to his

  Southern dialect. "Between you and me, they make

  it mighty pleasant for al' Pa Ratchet. They telex

  ahead and Ah got me my own gaggle of cowpokes,

  all ridin' hard to git me to the waterin' hole."

  "Well . . . ?"Joel felt flattered. Not only did he

  like Dowling, but being the guest of a celebrity was

  a pleasant high. He had not had many pleasant

  things happen to him recently.

  "I should also warn you," added the celebrity,

  "that even at this hour the groupies crawl out of the

  walls, and the airline PR people manage to roust out

  the usual newspaper photographers, but none of it

  takes too long."

  Converse was grateful for the warning. "I've got

  some phone calls to make," he said casually, "but if

  I finish them on time, I'd like very much to join

  you."

  "Phone calls? At this hour?"

  "Back to the States. It's not this hour back in . . .

  Chicago."

  "Make them from the lounge they keep it open for

  me."

  "It may sound crazy," said Joel, reaching for

  words, "but I think better alone. There are some

  complicated things I have to explain. After customs

  I'll find a phone booth."

  "Nothing sounds crazy to me, son. I work in Holl

  132 ROBERT LUDLUM

  Bee-wood." Suddenly, the actor's amused

  exuberance faded. "In the States," he said softly, his

  words floating again, eyes distant again. "You

  remember that crap in Skokie, Illinois? They did a

  television show on it.... l was in the study learning

  lines when I heard the screams and the sound of a

  door crashing open. I ran out and saw my wife

  racing down to the beach. I had to drag her out of

  the water. Sixty-seven years old, and she was a little

  girl again, back in that goddamn camp, seeing the

  lines of hollow-eyed prisoners, knowing which lines

  were which . . . seeing her mother and father, her

  three kid brothers. When you think about it, you

  can understand why those people say over and over,

  'Never again.' It can't ever happen again. I wanted

  to sell that tucking house; I won't leave her alone in

  it."

  "Is she alone now?"

  "Nope," said Dowling, his smile returning. "That's

  the good part. After that night we faced it; we both

  knew she couldn't be. Got her a sister, that's what

  we did. Bubbly little thing with more funny stories

  about Cuckooburg than ever got into print. But

  she's tough as they come; she's been bouncing

  around the studios for forty years."

  "An actress?"

  "Not so's anyone could tell, but she's a great face

  in the crowd. She's a good lady, too, good for my

  wife."

  "I'm glad to hear it," said Joel, as the aircraft's

  wheels made bouncing contact with the runway and

  the jet engines screeched into reverse thrust. The

  plane rolled forward, then started a left turn toward

  its dock.

  Dowling turned to Converse. "If you finish your

  calls, ask someone for the VIP lounge. Tell them

  you're a friend of mine."

  "I'll try to get there."

  "If you don't," added the actor in his Santa Fe

  dialect "see y'awl back in the steel corral. We got us

  another leg on this here cattle drive, pardner. Glad

  you're ridin' shotgun."

  "On a cattle drive?"

  "What the hell do I know? I hate horses."

  The plane came to a stop, and the forward door

  opened in less than thirty seconds as a number of

  excited passengers rapidly jammed the aisle. It was

  obvious from the whispers and the stares and the

  few who stood up on their toes to get clearer views

  that the reason for the swift exodus of this initial

  crowd was the presence of Caleb Dowling. And the

  actor was

  THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 133

  playing his part, dispensing Pa Ratchet benedictions

  with warm smiles, broad infectious winks, and

  deep-throated laughter, all with good-old-wrangler

  humility. As Joel watched he felt a rush of

  compassion for this strange man, this actor, this

  risk-taker with a private hell he shared with the

  woman he loved.

  Never again. It can 't ever h
appen again. Words.

  Converse looked down at the attache case he

  held with both hands on his lap. inside was another

  story, one that held a time bomb ready to detonate.

  I am back, l am well, and l am at yourservice.

  Also words from another time but full of menace

  for the present, for they were part of the story of a

  living man's silent return. A spoke in the wheel of

  Aquitaine.

  The first rush of curious passengers filed through

  the exit door after the television star, and Joel

  slipped into the less harried line. He would go

  through customs as rapidly and as unobtrusively as

  possible, then find a dark corner of the airport and

  wait in the deepest shadows until the loudspeakers

  announced the plane for Cologne-Bonn.

  Goebbels and Hess accepted Dr. Heinrich Leif-

  helm's offer with enthusiasm. One can easily imagine

  the propaganda expert visualising the image of this

  blond Aryan physician of 'impeccable credentials"

  spread across thousands of pamphlets confirming the

  specious theories of Nazi genetics, as well as his all

  too willing condemnation of the inferior, avaricious

  Jew; he was heaven-sent. Whereas for Rudolf Hess,

  who wanted more than his little boys to be accepted

  by the Junkers and the monied class, the Herr Dok-

  -tor was his answer; the physician was obviously a

  true

  aristocrat, and in time, quite possibly a lover.

  The confluence of preparation, timing and ap-

  pearance turned out to be more than young Stoes-

  sel-Leifhelm could have imagined. Adolf Hitler re-

  turned from Berlin for one of his Marienplatz rallies,

  and the imposing Doktor, along with his intense,

  well-mannered son, was invited to dinner with the

  Fuhrer. Hitler heard everything he wanted to hear,

  and Heinrich Leifhelm from that day until his death

  in 1934 was Hitler's personal physician.

  There was nothing that the son could not have,

  134 ROBERT LUDLUM

  and in short order he had everything he

  wanted. In June of 1931 a ceremony was held

  at the National Socialists' headquarters, where

  Heinrich Leifhelm's marriage to "a Jewess was

  proclaimed invalid because of a "concealment

  of Jewish blood" on the part of an

  "opportunistic Hebrew family, ' and all rights,

  claims and inheritances of the children of that

  "insidious union" were deemed void. A civil

  marriage was performed between LeifLelm and

  Marta Stoessel, and the true inheritor, the only

  child who could claim the name of LeifLelm,

  was an eighteen-year-old called Erich.

  Munich and thelewish community still

  laughed, but not as loudly, at the absurd

  announcement the Nazis inserted in the legal

  columns of the newspapers. It was considered

  nonsense; the Leifhelm name was a discredited

  name, and certainly no paternal inheritance was

  involved; finally it was all outside the law. What

  they were only beginning to understand was

  that the laws were changing in changing

  Germany. In two short years there would be

  only one law: Nazi determination.

  Erich LeifLelm had arrived and his

  ascendancy in the party was swift and assured.

  At eighteen he was Jungfuhrer of the Hitler

  Youth movement, photographs of his strong,

  athletic face and body challenging the children

  of the New Order to join the national crusade.

  During his tenancy as a symbol, he was sent to

  the University of Munich, where he completed

  his courses of study in three years with high

  academic honors. By this time, Adolf Hitler had

  been swept into power; he controlled the

  Reichstag, which gave him dictatorial powers.

  The Thousand-Year Reich had begun and

  Erich Leifhelm was sent to the Officers

  Training Center in Magdeburg.

  In 1935, a year after his father's death,

  Erich LeifLelm, now a youthful favorite of

  Hitler's inner circle, was promoted to the rank

  of Oberstleutnant in the Gruppenkommando 1

  in Berlin under Rundstedt. He was deeply

  involved in the vast military expansion that was

  taking place in Germany, and as the war drew

  nearer he entered what we can term the third

  phase of his complicated life, one that ulti

  THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 135

  mately brought him to the centers of Nazi power

  and at the same time provided him with an

  extraordinary means of separating himself from

  the leadership of which he was an intrinsic and

  influential part. This is briefly covered in the

  following final pages, a prelude to the fourth

  phase, which we know is his fanatic allegiance to

  the theories of George Marcus Delavane.

  But before we leave the young Erich Leifhelm

  of Eichstatt, Munich, and Magdeburg, two events

  should be recorded here that provide insights

  into the man's psychotic mentality. Mentioned

  above was the robbery at the Luisenstrasse house

  and the resulting profits of the theft. LeiLhelm to

  this day does not deny the incident, taking

  pleasure in the tale because of the despicable

  images he paints of his father's first wife and her

  "overbearing" parents. What he does not speak

  of, nor has anyone spoken of it in his presence,

  is the original police report in Munich, which, as

  near as can be determined, was destroyed

  sometime in August 1934, a date corresponding

  to Hindenburg's death and Hitler's rise to

  absolute power as both president and chancellor

  of Germany with the title of der Fuhrer raised to

  official mandatory status.

  All copies of the police report were removed

  from the files, but two elderly pensioners from

  the Munich department remember it clearly.

  They are both in their late seventies, have not

  seen each other in years, and were questioned

  separately.

  Robbery was the lesser crime that early

  morning on the Luisenstrasse; the more serious

  one was never spoken of at the insistence of the

  family. The fifteen-year-old Leifhelm daughter

  was raped and severely beaten, her face and body

  battered so violently that upon admission to the

  Karlstor Hospital she was given little chance of

  recovery. She did recover physically, but

  remained emotionally disturbed for the rest of

  her short life. The man who committed the

  assault had to be familiar with the interior of the

  house, had to know there was a back staircase

  that led to the girl's room, which was separated

  from the rooms of her two brothers and her

  136 ROBERT LUDLUM

  mother in the front. Erich Leifhelm had

  questioned his father in depth regarding the

  inside design of that house; he was there by his

  own admission, and was aware of the fierce

  pride and strict moral code held by the

  "tyrannical in-law
s." There is no question; his

  compulsion was such that he had to inflict the

  most degrading insult he could imagine, and he

  did so, knowing the influential family would and

  could insist on official silence.

  The second event took place during the

  months of January or February 1939. The

  specifics are sketchy insofar as there are few

  survivors of the time who knew the family well,

  and no official records, but from those who

  were found and interviewed, certain facts

  surfaced. Heinrich Leifhelm's legal wife, his

  children and her family tried without success

  for several years to leave Germany. The official

  party line was that the old patriarch's medical

  skills, having been acquired in German

  universities were owed to the state. Too, there

  were unresolved legal questions arising from the

  dissolved union between the late Dr. Heinrich

  Leifhelm and a member of the family questions

  specifically relating to commonly shared assets

  and the rights of inheritance as they affected an

  outstanding officer of the Wehrmacht.

  Erich Leifhelm was taking no chances. His

  father's "former" wife and children were

  virtually held prisoners, their movements

  restricted, the house on the Luisenstrasse was

  watched, and for weeks following any renewed

  applications for visas, they were all kept under

  full "political surveillance" on the chance that

  they had plans of vanishing. This information

  was revealed by a retired banker who recalled

  that orders came from the Finanzministerium in

  Berlin instructing the banks in Munich to

  immediately report any significant withdrawals

  by the former Frau Leifhelm and/or her family.

 

‹ Prev