Robert Ludlum – Aquatain Progression

for her more than he cared for himself? Enough!

Where was the goddamned church ?

It was there, on the right. A small church with

fake spires, a silly-looking church with what looked

like a decorated Quonset hut for a rectory beside it.

Joel ran up the short path to the door, a door with

a hideously bejeweled crucifix in the center a

rhinestone Jesus; rock along with Christ and

knocked. Moments later an overweight, cherubic man

with very little white hair, though perfectly groomed,

opened the door.

“Ah, Guten Tag, Herr Kollege.”

‘Forgive me,” said Converse, out of breath. “I

don’t speak German. I was told you speak English.”

“Ah, yes, indeed, I should hope so. I spent my

novitiate in the Mother Country as opposed to the

Fatherland you understand the difference in

gender, of course. Come in, come rnl A visit from a

fellow priest calls for a Schnaps. ‘A touch of wine’

sounds better, doesn’t it? Again the Mother

Country so soft, so understanding. My, you’re an

attractive youmg manl”

‘Not so young, Father,” said Joel, stepping inside.

“That’s relative, isn’t it?” The German priest

walked unsteadily into what was obviously his living

room. Again there were jeweled figures mounted on

black velvet on the walls the cheap stones glittering,

the faces of the saints unmistakably feminine. “What

would you like? I have sherry and muscatel, and for

rare occasions a port I’ve been saving for very special

occasions…. Who sent you? That wicked novice from

Lengerich?”

“I need help, Father.”

“Great Jesus, who doesn’t? Is this to be a

confessional? If so, for God’s sake give me until

morning. I love the Lord my God with all my soul

and all my strength and if there are sins of the

flesh, they are Satan ‘s. Not I, but the Archangel of

Darknessl”

The man was drunk; he fell over a hassock and

tumbled to the floor. Converse ran to him and lifted

him up, then lowered him into a chair a chair by

the only telephone in the room.

“Please understand me, Father. Or don’t

misunderstand

542 ROBERT LUDIUM

me. l have to reach a woman who’s waiting for me at

Osnabruck. It’s important!”

“A woman? Satan! He is Lucifer with the eyes of

fire! You thinly better than me?”

“Not at all. Please. I need help!”

It took ten minutes of pleading, but finally the

priest calmed down and got on the telephone. He

identified himself as a man of God, and moments later

Joel heard the name that allowed him to breathe

steadily again.

“Frau Geyner? Es tat mir leid . . . ” The old priest

and the old woman talked for several minutes. He hung

up and turned to Converse. “She waited for you,” he

said, frowning in bewilderment. “She thought you might

have gotten off in the freight yards…. What freight

yards?”

“I understand.”

“I do not. But she knows the way here and will pick

you up in thirty minutes or so…. You have sobered me,

Father. Was I disgraceful?”

“Not at all,” said Joel. “You welcomed a man in

trouble there’s nothing wrong with that.”

“Let’s have a drink. Forget Schnaps and ‘a glass of

wine’; they’re a bore, aren’t they? I have some

American bourbon in the refrigerator. You are

American, are you not?”

“Yes, and a glass of bourbon would be just fine.”

– “Good! Follow me into my humble kitchen. It’s

right

through here, mind the sequined curtain, dear boy. It

is too

much, isn’t it? . . . Oh, well, for all of that whatever

it is I’m

a good man. I believe that. I give comfort.”

“I’m sure you do.”

“Where were you schooled, Father?” asked the priest.

“Catholic University in Washington,” replied

Converse pleased with himself that he remembered and

answered so quickly.

“Good Lord, I was there myself” exclaimed the

German priest. “They shunted me around, you

understand. Do you remember what’s his name . . . ?”

Oh, my God! thought Joel.

Frau Hermione Ceyner arrived, and took Converse

in tow commandeered him, in fact. She was a small

woman far older than Joel had imagined. Her face was

withered, remmding him of the woman in the

Amsterdam station, and dominated by wide, intense

eyes that seemed to shoot out bolts of electricity. He

got in the car and she pushed the lock

THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 543

in place. She climbed behind the wheel and sped up

the street, reaching what had to be sixty miles an

hour in a matter of seconds.

“I appreciate everything you’re doing for me,”

said Converse, bracing his feet against the

floorboard.

“It is nothing!” exclaimed the old woman. “I have

myself taken out officers from airplanes that crashed

in Bremerhaven and Stuttgart and Mannheiml I spat

in soldiers’ eyes, and crashed through barricades! I

never failed! The pigs could not touch me!”

“I only meant that you’re saving my life, and I

want you to know I’m grateful. I’m aware that

Valerie your niece, and my . . . my former

wife told you I didn’t do the things they said I did,

and she was right. I didn’t.”

“Ach, Valerie! A sweet child, but not very

reliable, ja? You got rid of her, jaP”

“That’s not exactly the way it happened.”

“How could she be?” continued Hermione

Geyner, as if he had not spoken. “She is an artist,

and we all know how unstable they are. And, of

course, her father was a Frenchman. I ask you, could

she have a greater disadvantage? Franzase! The

worms of Europe! As untrustworthy as their wine,

which is mostly in their stomachs. They’re drunkards,

you know. It’s in their blood.”

“But you believed her where I was concerned.

You’re helping me, you’re saving my life.”

“Because we could! We knew we could!”

Joel stared at the road ahead, at the rapidly

oncoming curves taken at sixty miles an hour as the

tires screeched. Hermione Geyner was not at all what

he had expected, but then nothing was anymore. She

was so old and it was late at night and she had been

through a great deal these last two days; it had to

have taken its toll on her. Old prejudices come to the

surface when very old people are tired. Perhaps in

the morning they could have a clearheaded

conversation. The morning it was the start of the

second day, and Valerie had promised to call him in

Osnabruck with news of Sam Abbott and the

progress she was making to reach the pilot. She had

to make that call! Sam had to be told about the

strange language Joel had heard from an old man in

Amsterdam, where a word meaning one thing also

meant something else entirely. Assassination! Cal,

call me. For God’s sake, call me!

544 ROBERT LUDLUM

Converse looked out the window. The minutes

passed the countryside was peaceful but the silence

awkward.

“Here we are!” shouted Hermione Geyner,

turning crazily into the drive that led to a large old

three-story house set back off the country road.

From what Converse could see, it was a house that

had once had a certain majesty, if only by its size

and the profusion of roofed windows and gables. In

the moonlight now, it looked like its owner very

old and frayed.

They walked up the worn wooden steps of the

enormous porch and crossed to the door. Frau

Geyner knocked rapidly, insistently; in seconds an

old woman opened it, nodding solemnly as they

went inside.

“It’s very lovely,” began Joel. “I want you to know ”

“Sshh!” Hermione Geyner dropped her car keys

in a red laquered bowl on a hall table and held up

her hand. “This way!”

Converse followed her to a pair of double doors,

she opened them and Joel walked in behind her. He

stopped, confused and astonished. For in front of

them in the large Victorian room with the subdued

lighting was a row of high-backed chairs and seated

in each was an old woman nine old women!

Mesmerized, he looked closely at them. Some

smiled weakly, several trembled with age and

infirmity, obviously senile; a few wore stern, intense

expressions, and one seemed to be humming to

herself.

There was an eruption of fragile

applause hands thin and veined, others swollen

with flesh, flesh striking flesh with obvious effort.

Two chairs had been placed in front of the women;

Valerie’s aunt indicated that they were for Joel and

herself. They sat down as the applause dwindled off

to silence.

“Meine Schwestern Soldaten,” cried Hermione

Geyner rising. “Heute Nacht . . .”

The old woman spoke for nearly ten minutes,

interrupted occasionally by scattered applause and

expressions of wonder and respect. Finally she sat

down. “lean. Pragen!”

The women one after another began to

speak frail, halting voices for the most part, yet

several were emphatic, almost hostile. And then

Converse realized that most were looking at him.

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