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Robert Ludlum - Aquatain Progression.txt

Page 43

by The Aquitaine Progression [lit]


  named Joel Converse. Who is he, Harry?"

  "For Christ's sake, I never heard of him. What's

  the naval angle?"

  "Someone who claims to be the chief legal

  officer of a major Navy base with the rank of

  lieutenant commander."

  "Claims to be?"

  "Well, before that he passed himself off as a

  military attache working at the embassy."

  "Somewhere the inmates broke out of a home."

  "This isn't funny, Harry. Peregrine s no fool. He

  may be a vanity appointment, but he's damned good

  and he's damned smart. He says these people aren't

  only real but may know something he doesn't."

  "What does he base that on?"

  "First, the opinion of a man who's met this

  Converse "

  "Who?" interrupted Harry of Station Eight

  "He won't say, just that he trusts him, trusts his

  judgment. This person with no name says Converse

  is a highly qualified, very troubled man, not a black

  hat."

  THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 275

  "A what?"

  "That was the term Peregrine used. Obviously

  someone who's okay. '

  "What else?"

  "What Peregrine calls isolated odd behavior in

  his personnel ranks. He wouldn't elaborate; he says

  he'll discuss it with the Secretary or Sixteen Hundred

  if I can't satisfy him. He wants answers fast, and we

  don't want to rock the boat over there."

  "I'll try to help," said Harry. "Maybe it's

  something from Langley or Arlington the bastards!

  I can run a check on the Navy's chief legals in an

  hour, and I'm sure the ABA can tell us who

  Converse is if he is. At least narrow him down if

  there's more than one."

  "Get back to me. I haven't got much time and we

  don't want the White House raising its voice."

  "The last thing ever," agreed the director of

  Consular Operations, the State Department's branch

  of foreign clandestine activities.

  'Try that on for legal size!" shouted Rear

  Admiral Hickman, standing by the window, angrily

  addressing a rigid pale-faced David Remington. 'And

  tell me with as few goddamned details as possible

  how it fits!"

  "I find it impossible to believe, sir. I spoke with

  him yesterday at noon and then again last

  evening. He was in Sonoma!"

  "So did 1, Lieutenant. And whenever there was

  a scratching or an echo, what were the words? All

  that rain in the hills screwed up the telephone lines!"

  "Those were the words, sir."

  "He passed through Dusseldorf immigration two

  days ago! He's now in Bonn, Germany, with a man

  he swore to me had something to do with his

  brother-in-law's death. The same man he's protecting

  by putting a clamp on that flag. This Converse!"

  "I don't know what to say, sir."

  "Well, the State Department does and so do 1.

  They're pushing through that vet-delay or whatever

  the hell you called it in your legalese."

  "It's vetted material, sir. It simply means "

  "I don't want to hear, Lieutenant," said Hickman,

  head

  276 ROBERT LUDLUM

  ingback to his desk, adding under his breath. "Do

  you know how much you bastards cost me for the

  two divorces?"

  "I beg your pardon, sir?"

  "Never mind. I want that flag released. I brought

  Fitz on board here. I gave him his striper and the

  son of a bitch lied to me. He not only lied, he did it

  ten thousand miles away lying about where he was

  when he knew he shouldn't be there without my

  authorizationt He knew itl . . . Do you have any

  objections, Lieutenant? Something you can put into

  a sentence or two that won't require my bringing in

  three other legals to translate?"

  Lieutenant Remington, one of the finest lawyers

  in the United States Navy, knew when to put the

  engines in reverse. Legal ethics had been violated

  by misinformation, the course was clear. Aggressive

  retreat with full boilers or nuclear power, he

  supposed, although he did not really know. "I'll

  personally accelerate the vet-delay, Admiral. As the

  officer responsible for the secondary CLO statute,

  I'll make it clear that the direct order is now subject

  to immediate cancellation. No such order can or

  should originate under questionable circumstances.

  Legally "

  "That will be all, Lieutenant," said the Admiral,

  cutting off his subordinate and sitting down.

  "Yes, sir."

  "No, that isn't allI" continued Hickman, abruptly

  leaning forward. "How's that transcript released,

  and how soon can you expect it?"

  "With State's input it'll only be a matter of

  hours, sir, noon or shortly afterwards, I'd guess. A

  classified teletype will be sent to those requesting

  the Hag. However, since SAND PAC has only

  placed a restriction and not a request "

  "Request it, Lieutenant. Bring it up to me the

  minute it gets here and don't leave the base until it

  does."

  "Aye, aye, sirI"

  The deep-red Mercedes limousine weaved down

  the curving road inside the massive gates of Erich

  Leifhelm's estate. The late-afternoon orange sun

  filtered diagonally through the tall trees, which not

  only bordered the road but were everywhere beyond

  on both sides. The drive might have been restful

  had it not been for a sight that made the whole

  scene grotesque: racing alongside the car were at

  least a half-dozen giant Dobermans, not one of

  them making a

  THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 277

  sound. There was something unearthly about their

  running furiously in silence, black eyes flashing up at

  the windows, their jaws wide with rapid, erratic teeth

  bared, but no sound emerging from their throats.

  Somehow Converse knew that if he stepped out of

  the car without the proper commands being issued,

  the powerful dogs would tear him to pieces.

  The limousine pulled into a long circular drive

  that fronted wide brown marble steps leading to an

  arched doorway, the heavy panels covered with dark

  bas-relief a remnant of some ancient pillaged

  cathedral. Standing on the lower step was a man with

  a silver whistle raised to his lips. Again there was no

  sound a human could hear, but suddenly the animals

  abandoned the car and ran to him, flanking him,

  facing forward on their haunches, jaws slack, bodies

  pulsating.

  "Please wait, sir," said the chauffeur as he

  climbed out and ran around to Joel's door. "If you

  will step out, please, and take two paces away from

  the car. Only two paces, sir." The chauffeur now held

  in his hand a black object with a rounded metal tube

  extending from the front of the instrument, not

  unlike a miniaturised electric charcoal starter.

  "What's that?" asked Converse.

  "Protection, sir. For you, sir. The dogs, sir. They

&n
bsp; are trained to sense heavy metal."

  Joel stood there as the German moved the

  electronic detector over his clothes, including his

  shoes, his inner thighs and the back of his waist. "Do

  you people really think I'd come out here with a

  gun?"

  "I do not think, sir. I do as I am told."

  'How original," mumbled Converse as he

  watched the man on the marble step raise the silver

  whistle again to his lips. As one, the phalanx of

  Dobermans suddenly leaped forward. In panic, Joel

  grabbed the chauffeur, spinning the German in front

  of him. There was no resistance; the man simply

  turned his head and grinned as the dogs veered to

  the right and raced around the circular drive into the

  approach road cut out of the forest.

  "Don't apologize, mein Herr, " said the chauffeur.

  "It happens often."

  "I wasn't going to apologise," said Converse flatly

  as he released the man. "I was going to break your

  neck." The German moved away, and Joel remained

  motionless, stunned by

  278 ROBERT LUDLUM

  his own words. He had not spoken words like that

  in over eighteen years.

  "This way, sir." said the man on the steps, his

  accent oddly yet distinctly British.

  Inside, the great hall was lined with medieval

  banners hanging down from an interior balcony.

  The hal] led into an immense sitting room, the

  motif again medieval, made comfortable by soft

  leather chairs and couches, gaily fringed lamps and

  silver services everywhere on thin polished tables.

  The room was also made ugly by the profusion of

  protruding animals'heads on the upper walls; large

  cats, elephants and boar looked down in defiant

  anger. It was a field marshal's lair.

  It was not, however, the furnishings that

  absorbed Converse's attention but the sight of the

  four men who stood beside four separate chairs

  facing him.

  He knew Bertholdier and LeifLelm; they stood

  beside each other on the right. It was the two on

  the left he stared at. The medium-sized, stocky man

  with the fringe of close-cropped hair on a balding

  head and wearing a rumpled safari jacket, the

  ever-present boots below his khaki trousers, could

  be no one but Chaim Abrahms. His pouched, angry

  face with its slits of glaring eyes was the face of an

  avenger. The very tall man with the gaunt, aquiline

  features and the straight grey hair was General Jan

  van Headmer, the Slayer of Soweto. Joel had read

  the Van Headmer dossier quickly; fortunately it was

  the briefest, the final summary saying it all.

  In essence, Van Headmer is a Cape Town

  aristocrat, an Afrikaner who has never really

  accepted the British, to say nothing of the tribal

  blacks. His convictions are rooted in a reality that

  for him is unshakable. His forebears carved out a

  savage land under savage conditions and at a great

  loss of life brutally taken by savages. His thinking is

  unalterably that of the late-nineteenth and

  early-twentieth centuries. He will not accept the

  sociological and political in

  ~roads made by the more educated Bantus because

  he will never consider them anything more than

  bush primitives. When he orders austere

  deprivations and mass executions, he thinks he is

  dealing only with subhuman animals. It is this

  thinking that led him to be jailed along with Prime

  Minister Verwoerd and the racist Vorster during

  World War II. He con

  THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 279

  curred wholeheartedly with the Nazi concept of su

  perior races. His close association with Chaim

  Abrahms is the single difference between him and

  the Nazis, and not a contradiction for him. The

  sabres carved a land out of a primitive Palestine;

  their history parallels his country's, and both men

  take pride in their strength and respective

  accomplishments. Van Headmer, incidentally, is one

  of the most charming men one could meet. On the

  surface he is cultured, extremely courteous and

  always willing to listen. Underneath, he is an

  unfeeling killer, and he is Delavane's key figure in

  South Africa with its vast resources.

  "Mein Haus ist dein Haus," said LeifLelm, walking

  toward Joel, his hand outstretched.

  Converse stepped forward to accept the

  German's hand. Their hands clasped. "That was an

  odd greeting outside for such a warm sentiment,"

  said Joel, abruptly releasing Leifhelm's hand and

  turning to Bertholdier. "Good to see you again,

  General. My apologies for the unfortunate incident

  in Paris the other night. I don't mean to speak lightly

  of a man's life, but in those few split seconds I didn't

  think he had much regard for mine."

  Joel's boldness had the desired effect.

  Bertholdier stared at him, momentarily unsure of

  what to say. And Converse was aware that the other

  three men were watching him intently without

  question struck by his audacity, in both manners and

  words.

  "To be sure, monsieur," said the Frenchman,

  pointlessly but with composure. 'As you know, the

  man disregarded his orders."

  "Really? I was told he misunderstood them."

  "It is the samel" The sharp, heavily accented

  voice came from behind.

  Joel turned around. 'Is it?" he asked coldly.

  "In the field, yes," said Chaim Abrahms. "Either

  one is an error, and errors are paid for with lives.

  The man paid with his."

  "May I introduce Ceneral Abrahms?" Leifhelm

  broke in touching Converse's elbow and leading him

  to the Israeli.

  "General Abrahms, it's a privilege," said Joel with

  convincing sincerity as they shook hands. "Like

  everyone here,

  280 ROBERT LUDLUM

  I've admired you tremendously, although perhaps

  your rhetoric has been excessive at times."

  The Israeli's face reddened as soft laughter filled

  the large room. Suddenly Van Headmer stepped

  forward, and Converse's eyes were drawn to the

  strong face, the brows frowning, muscles taut.

  "You are addressing one of my closest

  associates, sir," he said; the rebuke was

  unmistakable. Then a thin smile creased his gaunt,

  chiseled face. "And I could not have said it better

  myself. A pleasure to know you, young man." The

  Afrikaner's hand was stretched toward Joel, who

  accepted it amid the subdued laughter.

  "I am insulted!" cried Abrahms, his thick

  eyebrows raised, his head bobbing in mock despair.

  "By talkers I'm insulted! Frankly, Mr. Converse, they

  agree with you because none of them has had a

  woman in a quarter of a century. They may tell you

  otherwise others may tell you otherwise but

  believe me they hire whores to play cards with them

  or read stories into their old grey ears just to fool

  their frie
nds!" The laughter grew louder, and the

  Israeli, now playing to an audience, went on,

  leaning forward and pretending to speak sotto voce

  to Joel. 'But you see, I hire the whores to tell me

  the truth while I shtup them! They tell me these

  fancy talkers nod off by nine o'clock, whining for

  warm milk. With the Ovaltine, if it's possible!"

  "My dear sabre," said Leifhelm, talking through

  his laughter, "you read your own romantic fiction

  too assiduously. '

  "You see what I mean, Converse?" asked

  Abrahms shrugging, palms extended. "You hear

  that? 'Assiduously. Now you know why the Germans

  lost the war. They forever spoke so dramatically of

  the Blitzkrieg and the AngrifJ:e, but actually they

  were talking assiduously about what to do next!"

  "They should have given you a commission,

  Chaim," said Bertholdier, enjoying himself. "You

  could have changed your name, called Rommel and

  Von Runstedt Jews and taken over both fronts."

  "The High Command could have done worse,"

  agreed the Israeli.

  "I wonder, though," continued the Frenchman,

  "if you would have stopped there? Hitler was a fine

  orator, as you are

  THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 281

  a fine orator. Perhaps you would have claimed that

  he, too, was a Jew and moved into the chancellery."

  "Oh, I have it on good authority that he was a

  Jew. But from a very bad family. Even we have them;

  of course, they're all from Europe."

 

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