Robert Ludlum – Aquatain Progression

The telephone rang; Stone looked at it and let

it ring again. Metcalf? He reached over and picked

it up. ‘Yes?”

“AureliusP”

“Somehow I knew you’d come through, Colonel.”

“Who the hell are you?”

“The name’s Stone and we’re on the same side,

at least I think we are. However, you wear a

uniform and I don’t, so I need a little more

confidence in you. Can you understand

“You’re one of those bastards in D.C. who sent him

outl” “You’re warmer, Colonel. I came on late, but

yes, I am one of those bastards. What happened to

General Abbott?”

“He was killed, you son of a bitchl . . . I assume

this phone s clean.”

“For at least twenty-four hours. Then we all

disappear just like you disappeared.”

“No remorse? No conscience? Do you know

what you’ve done?”

“We don’t have time for that, Colonel. Perhaps

later, if there’s a later for w…. Get to, it, soldier!

I’ve lived with thisl Now. Where do we meet?

Where are you?”

“Okay, okay,” said the obviously exhausted Air

Force officer. “I took a dozen different Bights. I’m

in where the hell am 1? in Knoxville, Tennessee.

I’ve got a night to Washington in twenty minutes.”

THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 595

“Why?”

“To blow this tucking thing out of the air, what else?”

“Forget it, you’re a dead man. I’d think you’d

have learned that by now. You set up something on

the information Abbott gave you, right?”

“Yes.”

“And he was blown out of the air, right?”

“Goddamn you, shut up!”

“You should have learned. They’re where you

can’t see them or find them. But the wrong word to

the wrong person and they can find you.”

“I know that!” shouted Metcalf. “But I’ve been in

this business for twenty years. There’s got to be

someone I can trust!”

“Let’s talk about it, Colonel. Scratch D.C. and fly

up to New York. I’ll get a room at the

Algonquin actually, I’ve already reserved one.”

“What name?”

“What else? Marcus.”

“You’re on, but as long as we’re in this deep I

should tell you. The woman’s been trying to reach

me since one o’clock this morning.”

“Converse’s wife?”

“Yes.”

“We need her. We need him!”

“I’ll reprogram the machine. The Algonquin?”

“That’s it.”

“He’s from New York, isn’t he? I mean he’s a

New Yorker.”

“Whatever that means, yes. He’s lived here for

years.”

“I hope he’s bright they’re bright.”

“Neither of them would be alive now if they

weren’t very bright, Colonel.”

“See you in a few hours, Stone.”

The civilian hung up the phone, his hands

shaking, his eyes on a bottle of bourbon across the

room. No! There would be no drinks, he had

promised himself. He got out of the chair and went

to the bed, where his small suitcase was open, a gap-

ing mouth waiting to be filled. He filled it, leaving

the bottle of whisky on the table, and went outside to

the elevators down the hall.

* * *

596 ROBERT LUDLUM

1, Joel Harrison Converse, an attorney admitted

to practice before the bar of the State of New York

and employed by the firm of Talbot, Brooks and

Simon, 666 Fifth Avenue, New York City, New

York arrived in Geneva, Switzerland, on August 9

for legal conferences on behalf of our client, the

Comm Tech Corporation, for the purpose of

finalising a contemplated business association

referred to hereafter as the Comm Tech-Bern

merger. On the morning of August 10, at

approximately eight o’clock, I was contacted by the

chief counsel representing the Bern Croup, Mr.

Avery Preston Halliday of San Francisco,

California. As he was an American only recently re-

tained by the Swiss companies, I agreed to meet

with him to clarify the existing points of argument

and our positions with respect to them. When I

arrived at the cafe on the Quai du Mont Blanc, I

recognized Mr. Halliday as a student and close

friend I had known years ago at the Taft School in

Watertown, Connecticut. His name then was Avery

P. Fowler. Mr. Halliday readily confirmed this fact,

explaining that his surname had been changed upon

the death of his father and the remarriage of his

mother to a John Halliday of San Francisco. The

explanation was acceptable, the circumstances,

however, were not. Mr. Halliday had ample prior

time and opportunity to apprise me of his

identity the identity with which I was

familiar but did not do so. There was a reason.

On that morning of August 10, Mr. Halliday sought

a confidential meeting with the undersigned regard-

ing a matter totally unrelated to the Comm

Tech-Bern merger. This meeting was the primary

reason for his being in Geneva. It was the first of

many disturbing revelations….

If the very proper and distant British

stenographer had the slightest interest in the

material she was transcribing in segments from

dictation to the typewritten page, she did not show

it. Her thin lips pursed, her grey hair knotted into

a forbidding bun on the top of her head, she

performed like a machine, as if everything was

accepted in rote and by rote. Valerie’s somewhat

guarded explanation that her husband was an

American novelist intrigued by recent events in

Europe was

THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 597

greeted with a cold stare and the gratuituous

information that the legal secretary never watched

television and rarely read the newspapers. She was a

member of the Franco-ltalian Alpine Society, whose

purpose was to defend the natural endowments being

eroded by man; working for the society took up all

her time and energy when she was not earning a

living to enable her to remain in her beloved

mountains. She was an automaton putting in her

time; one could dictate the book of Genesis and Val

doubted the woman would know what she was typing.

It was the seventh hour and there was still no

answer at Alan MetcalPs telephone in Las Vegas.

Only a machine. It was time for the eighth call.

“If we don’t get him now,” said Converse grimly,

above the quiet tapping of the typewriter across the

room, “go ahead and reach Prudhomme. I wanted to

talk to this Metcalf first, but it’s possible that_it may

not be possible.”

“What difference does it make? You need help

quickly, and he’s willing to help.”

“The difference is I know where Prudhomme’s

coming from, you’ve told me. I got an idea what he

can do and what he can’t do, but I don’t know

anything about Metcalf except that Sam put him

way up on a high priority. Whoever I call first I’ve

got to make specific statements to him, accusations

and observations that’ll blow his mind. Those are

commitments, Val, and I have to go with the

strongest…. Try Metcalf again.”Joel turned and

headed for the telephone in the bathroom as Valerie

dialed the international codes for Las Vegas, Nevada.

“Caller C, message received. Please reidentify

yourself twice, followed by a slow count to ten. Stay

on the line.”

Joel put the phone down on the edge of the basin

and rushed out to the bedroom-sitting room. He

walked over to Val, holding up his hand as he

reached for a pencil on the desk. He wrote out the

words: “Go ahead. Stay calm. P.S.E.”

“This is Miss Parquette speaking,” said Valerie,

frowning bewildered. “This is Miss Parquette

speaking. One, two, three, four . . .”

Converse returned to the bathroom, picked up

the telephone and listened.

“. . . eight, nine, ten.”

Silence. Finally, there were two sharp clicks and

the metaJlic voice came back on the line.

“Confirmed, thank you.

598 ROBERT LUDLUM

This is the second tape and will be microed out when

completed. Listen carefully. There is a place on an

island well known for its tribal nights. The King will

be in his chair. That’s it. We are burning.”

Joel hung up the phone and studied the

half-legible words he had hastily scribbled in soap on

the mirror above the basin. The door opened and

Valerie walked in, a piece of paper in her hand.

“I wrote it down,” she said, handing it to him.

“I wrote it sideways your way is better. Christ, a nd

“No more than the one you gave me. What in

heaven’s name does ‘P.S.E.’ mean?”

” ‘Psychological Stress Evaluator,’ ” answered

Converse, leaning against the wall and reading

MetcalPs message. He looked up at her. “It’s a voice

scanner you can attach to a phone or a recording

machine that supposedly tells you whether the person

you’re talking to is Iying or not. Larry Talbot played

around with one for a while but claimed he couldn’t

find anyone telling the truth, including his nine-

ty-two-year-old mother. He threw it away.”

“Does it work?”

“They say it’s much more accurate than a lie

detector, and I suppose it is if you know how to read

it or use it. It worked in your case. Your voice was

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