Robert Ludlum – Aquatain Progression

. ,,

ever.

“But you said you were making good money.

Why did you steal?”

“Why do most men steal?”

“They need it the money or they want things

they can’t have normally, or they’re just basically

dishonest, which I don’t think you are.”

“Go back. Adam stole the apple, Amerikaner.”

“Not exactly. You mean a woman?”

“Many years ago. She was with child and she

did not want her man on the seas and the ships.

She wanted more.” The captain permitted himself

the slightest glint in his eyes and a touch of a smile

on his lips. “She wanted a flower shop.”

From the core of his stomach, his pain

momentarily forgotten, Joel laughed. “You’re quite

a guy, Captain.” I never see you again.”

“Then your nephew ”

“Never see you again!” the German broke in, now

laugh

444 ROBERT LUDLUM

ing out loud himself, his eyes on the water as he

headed into the Dutch marina.

Converse leaned against a piling smoking a

cigarette, the visor of his cheap cap angled over his

forehead, his eyes roaming up and down the pier

and beyond to the repair yard in the Dutch marina.

The men milling about the huge machinery were

mechanically going about their tasks while those

around the boats seemed more intent on inspecting

than doing, shaking their heads solemnly. The

captain argued with the dispenser of fuel, making

obscene gestures at the rapidly climbing figures on

the glass-encased face of the pump while his

softheaded deckhand grinned several feet away. On

board, the Gauner alternately leaned over the

railing, a large wire brush in his hands, and abruptly

turned back to his scraping whenever his employer

glanced over at him.

The time was right, thought Joel as he pushed

himself away from the piling. No one anywhere had

the slightest interest in him; the dismal chores and

the early-morning dissatisfactions took precedence

over the insignificant and unfamiliar.

He started walking up the pier, his pace casual

to the point of being slovenly but his eyes alert. He

proceeded to the edge of the repair yard

approaching a row of hulls in dry dock. Beyond the

last elevated boat, no more than three hundred feet

away, was an inordinately tall hurricane fence and

an open gate. A uniformed guard sat on the left

drinking coffee and reading a newspaper, his chair

angled back into the crisscrossing wire mesh. Seeing

him, Joel stopped, his breath suspended, an internal

alarm going off for no reason. Men passed back

and forth through the gate, but the guard did not so

much as glance at anyone, his eyes devouring only

the tabloid on his lap.

Converse turned, a last look at the river.

Suddenly he became aware of the captain. The

German had run to the base of the pier and was

gesturing wildly, pressing his hands forward in short,

rapid strokes. He was trying to warn Converse.

Then he shouted at the top of his lungs; men stared

at him and turned away, none caring to be involved.

They had seen too much in the early hours on the

waterfront, the slashing with hooks too frequently

the language of the docks.

“Laugh Run! Get oral!”

Joel was mystified; he looked around. Then he saw

them.

THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION “5

Two no three burly men were lurching up from the

pier, their glassy eyes focused on him. The first man

staggered forward to the left of the captain. The

Cerman grabbed his shoulder, swinging him around,

stopping him, but only for seconds as the other two

men crashed their fists into the captain’s neck and

spine. They were animals Gauner their nostrils in-

flamed by the scent of a trapped fat quarry who

might keep them in food and drink for days.

Converse dove under the row of dry-docked

boats, smashing his head on several hurts as he

scrambled toward the other side and the shafts of

light beyond. He could see frantic legs pounding the

earth behind him; they were gaining on him; they

were running, he was crawling. He reached the end

of the suspended row of hulls, sprang out and started

for the gate. He pulled out his shirt, tore off the

lower section and held it against the cuts on his head

as he walked rapidly past the guard and through the

gate. He looked around. The three men were arguing

furiously, drunkenly, among themselves, two

crouching and peering unsteadily under the boats.

Then the man standing saw him. He shouted to the

others; they stood up and started after Joel. He ran

faster, unfit he could see them no longer; the animals

had given up.

He was in the Netherlands; the welcome was less

than gracious, but he was there, one step closer to

Amsterdam. On the other hand he had no idea

where he was right now except that the town was

named Lobith. He had to catch his breath and think.

He stepped into a deserted storefront, where a dark

shade behind the entrance made the glass a dim

mirror it was enough. He was a mess. Think. For

God’s sake, think)

Mattilon had told him to take the train from

Arnhem to Amsterdam, he remembered that clearly.

And the captain of the barge had said he had to take

an “omnibus” from Lobith to Arnhem; there was no

train in Lobith. The first thing he had to do was

reach the railroad station in Arnhem, clean himself

up, then study the crowds and judge whether to risk

becoming part of them. And relative to this

consideration, his mind darted in several directions

at once. The plain-lensed glasses had long since

disappeared, undoubtedly during the insane events in

Wesel; he would replace them with dark glasses.

There was little he could do about the scrapes on his

face, but they would appear less menacing after soap

and water, and certainly in or around a railroad

station something could be done about his torn

clothing…. And a map. God

446 ROBERT LUDLUM

damn it, he was a pilot! He could reach Point A

from Point B and he had to do so quickly. He had

to reach Amsterdam and find a way to make

contact with a man named Cort Thorbecke and

call Nathan Simon in New York. There was so

much to do!

As he walked out of the storefront he was

suddenly aware of what was happening to him. It

had happened before a lifetime ago, in the j

tingles when the fear of the night sounds had

passed and he c ould watch the dawn and accurately

plot his directions, his lines of march, his survival.

He was thinking, his mind functioning again. All

things considered, he was far less the man than

what he had been, but he could be better than he

was he had to be. Every day that passed brought

the generals of Aquitaine closer to whatever

madness they were planning. Everywhere. He and

they had to reverse roles. The hunted had to

become the hunter. Delavane’s disciples had

convinced the world he was a psychopathic assassin,

and so they had to find him, take him, kill him and

hold him up as one more example of the spreading

insanity that could be contained only with their

solutions. Aquitaine had to be exposed and

destroyed before it was too late. The countdown

was in progress, the commanders surely, inexorably,

moving into their positions, consolidating their

powers.

Move! shouted Converse silently to himself as he

walked faster down the pavement.

He sat in the last car of the train, still wary but

satisfied by the progress he had made. He had done

everything cautiously but without wasting mohon,

his concentration absolute, aware of a dozen

possible dangers eyes that stared at him, a man or

a woman seen twice in too short a bme, a clerk

delaying him by being more helpful than the hour

and the crowds would normally permit. These

calculated possibilities were his readouts, his dials,

his gauges; without clearance he would abort all

forward motion, takeoff canceled, the escape hatch

sprung, safety found in the streets. His equipment

was not an aircraft that was an extension of himself,

it was himself; and he had never flown with such

precision in his life.

ENGLISH SPOKE had been the sign tacked to

the roof of the busy corner newsst.md in Lobith. He

had asked directions to the “omnibus” to Arnhem

while buying a map and a newspaper, holding both

close to his face. The owner was too preoccupied

with customers to notice his appearance and

THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 447

shouted rapid instructions, more useful in the

pointed finger than in the words. Joel found the bus

stop some four blocks away. He sat in the crowded

vehicle, his face buried in a newspaper he could not

read, and forty-odd minutes later he got off at the

railroad station in Arnhem.

First on his checklist was a trip to the farthest

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