Robert Ludlum – Rhinemann Exchange

involvement was the important factor. It meant simply that the whole

unfocused picture had nothing to do with Erich Rhinemann. And thus, as far

as could be determined, was unrelated to Buenos Aires. David made the quick

decision not to confide in the nervous brigadier. Pace had been right: the

man couldn’t take any more complications. He’d use Fairfax, source control

be damned.

The plane landed; Spaulding walked into the passenger terminal and looked

for the signs that read Taxis. He went through the double doors to the

platform and heard the porters shouting the vadous destinations of the

unfilled cabs. It was funny. but the shared taxis were the only things that

caused him to think LA

197

Guardia Airport knew there was a war going on somewhere.

Simultaneously he recognized the foolishness of his thoughts. And the

pretentiousness of them.

A soldier with no legs was being helped into a cab. Porters and civilians

were touched, helpful.

The soldier was drunk. What was left of him, unstable.

Spaulding shared a taxi with three other men, and they talked of little but

the latest reports out of Italy. David decided to forget his cover in case

the inevitable questions came up. He wasn’t about to discuss any mythical

combat in Salerno. But the questions did not arise. And then he saw why.

The man next to him was blind; the man shifted his weight and the afternoon

sun caused a reflection in his lapel. It was a tiny metal replica of a

ribbon: South Pacific.

David considered again that he was terribly tired. He was about the most

unobservant agent ever to have been given an operation, he thought.

He got out of the cab on Fifth Avenue, three blocks north of the

Montgomery. He had overpaid his share; he hoped the other two men would

apply it to the blind veteran whose clothes were one hell of a long way

from Leslie Jenner’s Rogers Peet.

Leslie Jenner … Hawkwood.

A cryptographer named Marshall.

The unfocused picture.

He had to put it all out of his mind. He had to sleep, forget; let

everything settle before he thought again. Tomorrow morning he would meet

Eugene Lyons and begin … again. He had to be ready for the man who’d

burned his throat out with raw alcohol and had not had a conversation in

ten years.

The elevator stopped at the sixth floor. His was the seventh. He was about

to tell the elevator operator when he realized the doors were not opening.

Instead, the operator turned in place. In his hand he gripped a

short-barreled Smith & Wesson revolver. He reached behind him to the lever

control and pushed it to the left, the enclosed box jerked and edged itself

up between floors.

‘The lobby lights go out this way, Colonel Spaulding. We may hear buzzers,

but there’s a second elevator used in emergencies. We won’t be disturbed.’

The accent was the same, thought David. British overlay. Middle Europe.

‘I’m glad of that. I mean, Jesus, it’s been so long.’

198

‘I don’t find you amusing!

‘Nor 1, you … obviously!

‘You’ve been to Fairfax, Virginia. Did you have a pleasant journey?’

6YOU9ve got an extraordinary pipeline.’ Spaulding wasn’t only buying time

with conversation. He and Ira Barden had taken the required precautions.

Even if the Montgomery switchboard reported everything he said, there was

no evidence that he had flown to Virginia. The arrangements were made from

telephone booths, the flight from Mitchell to Andrews under an assumed name

on a crew sheet. Even the Manhattan number he had left with the Montgomery

desk had a New York address under constant surveillance. And in the Fairfax

compound, only the security gate had his name; he had been seen by only

four, perhaps five men.

‘We have reliable sources of information…. Now you have learned firsthand

the lesson of Fairfax, noT

‘I’ve learned that a good man was murdered. I imagine his wife and children

have been told by now.’

‘There is no murder in war, colonel. A misapplication of the word. And

don’t speak to us. . . .’

A buzzer interrupted the man. It was short, a polite ring.

‘Who is “us”T asked David.

‘You’ll know in time, if you cooperate. If you don’t cooperate, it will

make no difference; you’ll be killed…. We don’t make idle threats.

Witness Fairfax.’

The buzzersounded again. This time prolonged, not quite polite.

‘How am I supposed to cooperate? What aboutT

‘We must know the precise location of Tortugas!

Spaulding’s mind raced back to five o’clock that morning. In Fairfax. Ira

Barden had said that the name ‘Tortugas’ was the single word opposite his

transfer specification. No other data, nothing but the word ‘Tortugas.’ And

it had been buried in Pace’s ‘vaults.’ Cabinets kept behind steel doors,

accessible only to the highest-echelon Intelligence personnel.

‘Tortugas is part of an island complex off the coast of Florida. It’s

usually referred to as the Dry Tortugas. It’s on any map.’

The buzzer again. Now repeated; in short, angry spurts.

‘Don’t be foolish, colonel!

‘I’m not being anything. I don’t know what you’re talking about.’

199

The man stared at Spaulding. David saw that he was unsure, controlling his

anger. The elevator buzzer was incessant now; voices could be heard from

above and below.

‘I’d prefer not to have to kill you but I will. Where is Tortugas?’

Suddenly a loud male voice, no more than ten feet from the enclosure, on

the sixth floor, shouted.

‘It’s up here I It’s stuck! Are you all right up therer

The man blinked, the shouting had unnerved him. It was the instant David

was waiting for. He lashed his right hand out in a diagonal thrust and

gripped the man’s forearm, hammering it against the metal door. He slammed

his body into the man’s chest and brought his knee up in a single, crushing

assault against the groin. The man screamed in agony; Spaulding grabbed the

arched throat with his left hand and tore at the veins around the larynx.

He hammered the man twice more in the groin, until the pain was so

excruciating that no more screams could emerge, only low, wailing moans of

anguish. The body went limp, the revolver fell to the floor, and the man

slid downward against the wall.

Spaulding kicked the weapon away and gripped the man’s neck with both

hands, shaking the head back and forth to keep him conscious.

‘Now, you tell me, you son of a bitch! What is “Tortugas”?’

The shouting outside the elevator was now deafening. There was a cacophony

of hysteria brought on by the screams of the battered operator. There were

cries for the hotel management. For the police.

The man looked up at David, tears of terrible pain streaming from his eyes.

‘Why not kill me, pig,’ he said between ago Wing chokes of breath. ‘. . .

You’ve tried before.’

I David was bewildered. He’d never seen the man. The north

country? Basque? Navarre?

There was no time to think.

‘What is “Tortugas”?’

‘Altmillier, pig. The pig AltmollerThe man fell into

unconsciousness.

There was the name again.

Altmidler.

Spaulding rose from the unconscious body and grabbed the control lever of

the elevator. He swung it to the far left, accelerating the speed as fast

as possible.. There were ten floors in the

200

Montgomery; the Panel lights indicated that the first-, third., and

sixth-floor buttons had been activated. If he could reach the tenth before

the hysterical voices followed him up the stairs, it was possible that he

could get out of the elevator, race down the corridor to one of the comers,

then double back into the crowd which surely would gather around the open

elevator doors.

Around the unconscious man on the floor.

It had to be possible! This was no time for him to be involved with the New

York police.

The man was carried away on a stretcher; the questions were brief.

No, he didn’t know the elevator operator. The man had dropped him off at

hisfloor ten or twelve minutes ago. He’d been in his room and came out when

he’d heard all the shouting.

The same as everyone else.

What was New York coming to?

David reached his room on seven, closed the door and stared at the bed.

Christ, he was exhausted I But his mind refused to stop racing.

He would postpone everything until he had rested, except for two items. He

had to consider those now. They could not wait for sleep because a

telephone might ring, or someone might come to his hotel room. And he had

to make his decisions in advance. Be prepared.

The first item was that Fairfax no longer could be used as a source. It was

riddled, infiltrated. He had to function without Fairfax, which, in a way,

was akin to telling a cripple he had to walk without braces.

On the other hand, he was no cripple.

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