Robert Ludlum – Aquatain Progression

luck, hot water with which he could bathe his wound

and change the bandage again. During the last two

nights he had learned that such places were his only

possibilities for refuge. No questions would be asked

and a false name

424 ROBERT LUDLUM

on a registration card expected. But even the most

sullen greeting was a menace for him. He had only

to open his mouth and whatever came out identified

him as an American who could not speak German.

He felt like a deaf-mute running a gauntlet,

careening off walls of people. He was helpless, so

goddamned helpless! The killings in Bonn, Brussels

and Wesel had made every American male over

thirty and under fifty suspect. The melodramatic

suspicions were compounded by speculations that

the obsessed man was being aided, perhaps

manipulated, by terrorist organizahons

Baader-Meinhof, the PLO, Libyan splinter groups,

even KGB destabilizahon teams sent out by the

dreaded Voennaya. He was being hunted

everywhere, and as of yesterday, the International

Herald Tribune printed further reports that the

assassin was heading for Paris which meant that

the generals of Aquitaine wanted the concentration

to be on Paris, not where they knew he was, where

their soldiers could run him down, take him, kill

him.

To get off the streets he had to move with the

flotsam and jetsam and he needed a run-down hotel

like the one across the street. He knew he had to

get off the streets; there were too many traps

outside. So on the first night in Wesel he re-

membered the student Johann, and looked for ways

to re-create similar circumstances. Young people

were less prone to be suspicious and more receptive

to the promise of financial reward for a friendly

service.

It was odd, but that first night in Wesel was both

the most difficult and the easiest. Difficult because

he had no idea where to look, easy because it

happened so rapidly, so logically.

First he stopped at a drugstore, buying gauze,

adhesive tape, antiseptic and an inexpensive cap

with a visor. Then he went to a cafe, to the men’s

room, where he washed his face and the wound,

which he bound tight, skin joining skin, the bandage

firmly in place. Suddenly, as he finished his

ministrations, he heard the familiar words and

emphatic melody young raucous voices in song: “On,

Wisconsin…. On, Wisconsin . . . on to victoreee. . .”

The singers were a group of students from the

German Society at the University of Wisconsin, as

he later found out who were bicycling through the

northern Rhineland. Casually approaching a young

man getting more beers from the bar and

introducing himself as a fellow American, he told an

THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 425

outrageous story of having been taken by a whore

and rolled by her pimp, who stole his passport-but

never thought of a money belt. He was a respected

businessman who had to sleep it off, gather his wits,

and reach his firm back in New York. However, he

spoke no German, would the student consider the

payment of $100 for helping him out?

He would and did. Down the block was a dingy

hotel where no questions were asked; the young man

paid for a room and brought Converse, who was

waiting outside, his receipt and his key.

All yesterday he had walked, following the roads

in sight of the railroad tracks until he reached a town

named Halden. It was smaller than Wesel, but there

was a run-down, industrial section east of the

railroad yards. The only “hotel” he could find,

however, was a large, shoddy house at the end of a

row of shoddy houses with signs saying ZIMMER, 20

MARK in two first-floor windows and a larger one

over the front door. It was a boardinghouse, and

several doors beyond in the spill of the streetlampsa

heated argument was taking place between an older

woman and a young man. Above, a few neighbors sat

in their windows, arms on the sills, obviously

listening. Joel also listened to the sporadic words

shouted in heavily accented English.

“. . . ‘I hate it here!’ Das habe ich ihm gesagt. ‘I

do not care to stay, Onkel! I vill go back to

Germany! Maybe join .Baader-Meinhofl’ Das halve

ich item gesagt.”

“Barr!” screamed the woman, turning and going

up the steps. “Schweinehund!” she roared, as she

opened the door, went inside and slammed it shut

behind her.

The young man had looked up at his audience in

the windows and shrugged. A few clapped, so he

made an exaggerated, elaborate bow. Converse

approached; there was no harm in trying, he thought.

“You speak very good English,” he said.

“dye not?” replied the German. “They spend bags

of groceries for five years to give me lessons. I must

go to her brother in America. I say Nein! They say

da! I go. I hate it!”

“I’m sorry to hear that. I’m an American and I

like the Cerrnan people. Where were you?”

“In Yorktown.”

“Virginia?”

“Nein! The city of New York.”

“Oh, that Yorktown.”

426 ROBERT LUDLUM

‘Ja, my uncle has two butcher shops in New

York, in what they call Yorktown. Shit, as you say

in America!’

“I’m sorry. Why?”

“The Schwarzen and theJuden! If you speak like

me, the black people steal from you with knives, and

the Jews steal from you with their cash registers.

hreinie, they call me, and Nazi. I told a Jew he

cheated me I vas nice, I vas not impolite and he

told me to get out of his shop or he call the ‘cops !

I vas shit, he said! . . . You vear a good German

suit and spend good German money, they don t say

those things. You are a delivery boy trying to learn,

they kick the shit out of you, What do I know! My

father vas only a fourteen-year-old sol dier. Shit!”

“Again, I’m telling you I’m sorry. I mean it. It’s

not in our nature to blame children.’

“Shit!”

“Perhaps I can make up for a little of what you

went through. I m in trouble because I was a

stupid American. But I’ll pay you a hundred

American dollars . . .”

The young German happily got him a room at

the boardinghouse. It was no better than the one in

Wesel, but the water was hotter, the toilet nearer

his door.

Tonight was different from the other nights he

had spent in Germany, thought Joel, as he looked

across the street at the decrepit hotel in Emmerich.

Tonight could lead to his passage into Holland. To

Cort Thorbecke and a plane to Washington The

man Joel had recruited was somewhat older than

the oth ers who had helped him. He was a merchant

seaman out of Bremerhaven, in Emmerich to make

a duty call on his family with whom he felt ill at

ease. He had made the obligatory call been soundly

rebuked by his mother and father, and had returned

to the place and the people he loved best a bar at

the bend of the riverbank.

Again, as it had been in Wesel, it was the

English Iyrics of a song that had caught Joel’s

attention. He stared at the young seaman standing

at the bar and playing a guitar. This time it was not

a college football song but an odd, haunting mixture

of slow biting rock and a sad madrigal: “. . . When

you finally came down, when your feet hit the

ground, did you know where you were? When you

finally were real, could you touch what you feel,

were you there in the know? . . . ‘

The men around the bar were caught up by the

precise

THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 427

beat of the minor-key music. When the seaman

finished there was respectful applause, followed by a

resumption of fast talk and faster refilling of mugs of

beer. Minutes later Converse was standing next to

the seagoing troubador, the guitar now slung over his

shoulder and held in place by a wide strap like a

weapon. Joel wondered if the man really knew

English or only Iyrics. He would find out in seconds.

The seaman laughed at a companion’s remark; when

the laughter subsided, Converse said, ‘I’d like to buy

you a drink for reminding me of home. It was a nice

song.”

The man looked at him quizzically. Joel

stammered thinking that the seaman had no idea

what he was talking about. Then, to Converse’s

relief, the man answered. “Danke. It is a good song.

Sad but good, like some of ours. You are

Amerikaner?”

“Yes. And you speak English.”

“Okay. I don’t read no good, aber I speak okay.

I’m on merchant ship. We sail Boston, New York,

Baltimore sometimes ports, Florida.”

“What’ll you have?”

“Sin Bier,” said the seaman, shrugging.

“Why not whisky?”

‘Baja?”

“Certainly.”

“Ja. ”

Minutes later they were at a table. Joel told his

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