Robert Ludlum – Aquatain Progression

known, too that nothing would be accomplished if

they remained where they were.

Contrary to what he had told Peter Stone,

Nathan knew precisely whom he had to see not one

man, but three. The President, the Speaker of the

House, and the Attorney General. The apex of the

executive branch, the leader of the legislative, and

the nahon’s chief law-enforcement officer. He would

see no one of lesser stature, and it was far more

advantageous to see them all together rather than

individually. He had to see them, whether separately

or as a group, and there was his dilemma; it was the

trap. One did not simply pick up a telephone and

make appointments with such men. There were

procedures, formalities, and screening processes to

ensure the validity of the requests; men with their

responsibilities could not waste time. The trap. The

minute his name was mentioned, the word would go

out. Delavane himself would know within a matter of

hours, if not minutes.

Despite Joel’s gratuitous and highly dubious

statements to Peter Stone, it was not easy to reach

powerful government

638 ROBERT LUDIUM

figures any more than it was logical to have a judge

issue a court order under seal that somehow

miraculously, legally, guaranteed extraordinary

protection for those same people without informing

the entire security apparatus as to why the

protection was deemed vital. Ridiculous! Such court

orders were reasonable where intimidated witnesses

were concerned before a criminal trial and even

afterward in terms of fabricated rehabilitation, but

that process hardly applied to the White House, the

Congress, or the Justice Department. Joel had taken

a legal maneuver, ballooned it way out of prob-

ability, and scaled it up into orbit for a reason, of

course. Stone and his colleagues had provided

depositions.

And yet, thought Simon, there was an odd logic

in Converse’s misapplied exaggerations. Not in any

way Joel had considered but as a means to reach

these men. “A court, a single judge . . .” Converse

had said to Stone. That was the logic, the rest was

nonsense. The so preme Court, a justice of that

court. Not a request from one Nathan Simon who

would have to be screened, if only in terms of

content, not character, but an urgent message to the

President from a venerated justice of the Supreme

Court! No one would dare question such a man if

he pronounced his business to be between the

President and himself. Presidents were far more

solicitous of the Court than of Congress, and with

good reason. The latter was a political battleground,

the former an arena of moral judgment. Nathan

Simon knew the man he could call and see, a justice

in his late seventies. The Court was not in session;

October was a month away. The justice was

somewhere in New England; his private number was

at the office.

Nathan blinked, then brought his hand up to

shield his eyes. For a brief moment the fireball of

the early sun had careened a blinding ray through a

geometric maze of glass and steel across the park

and entered his window before being blocked by a

distant building. And suddenly, at that instant of

blindness, he was given the answer to the terrifying

quesbon of where and when the unrest that had to

be the prelude for the eruption of violence. There

was scheduled throughout Free Europe, Great

Britain, Canada, and the United States an

internationally coordinated week-long series of

antinuclear protests. Millions of concerned people

joining hands and snarling traffic in the streets of

the major cibes and capitals, making their voices

heard at the expense of normalcy. Rallies to be held

in the parks and in the squares and in

THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 639

rout government buildings. Politicians and statesmen,

pereiving as always the power of ground swells, had

promised o address huge crowds everywhere in

Paris and Bonn, tome and Madrid, Brussels and

London, Toronto, Ottawa, lew York, and

Washington. And again, as always, both the incere

advocates and the posturing sycophants of the bodies

olitic would blame the lack of arms-control progress

on the ntransigence of evil adversaries, not on their

own deficien~ies. The genuine and the phony would

walk hand in hand cross the many podiums, none

sure of the other’s stripes.

Crowds everywhere would espouse deeply felt,

deeply divisive issues: the believers of universal

restraint would be gifted against those who intensely

believe in the effectiveness -Jf raw power, and the

latter would surely be heard. No one thought the

massive demonstrations would be without incidents,

yet how far might these minor confrontations

escalate if the incidents themselves were massive?

Units of terrorist fanatics financed anonymously,

convinced of their mission to infiltrate and savagely

disrupt so as to get their messages across, messages

of real and or imagined grievances that had nothing

to do with the protests, creating chaos primarily be-

cause the crowds were not of their world or their

fevers. Crowds- everywhere. These were the hordes

of people who could be galvanised by sudden

violence and worked into a state of madness. It

would be the prelude. Everywhere.

The demonstrations were scheduled to begin in

three days.

Peter Stone walked down the wide dirt path

toward the lake behind the A-frame house

somewhere in lower New Hampshire he did not

know precisely where, only that it was twenty minutes

from the airport. It was close to dusk, the end of a

day filled with surprises, and apparently more were

to come. Ten hours ago, in his room at the

Algonquin, he had called Swissair to see if the flight

from Geneva was on schedule; he had been told it

was thirty-four minutes ahead of schedule and,

barring landing delays, was expected a half-hour

early. It was the first surprise and an inconsequential

one. The second was not. He had arrived at Kennedy

shortly before two o’clock, and within a few minutes

he heard the page over the public address system for

a ‘Mr. Lackland,” the name he had given Nathan

Simon.

“Take Pilgrim Airlines to Manchester, New

Hampshire,’

640 ROBERT LUDIUM

the lawyer had said. “There’s a reservation for Mr.

Lacklanc on the three-fifteen plane. Can you make

it?”

“Easily. The flight from Geneva’s early. I assume

that’s La Guardi a? ”

“Yes. You’ll be met in Manchester by a man

with red hair. I’ve described you to him. See you

around five-thirty.”

Manchester, New Hampshire? Stone had been

so sure Simon would ask him to fly to Washington

that he had not even bothered to put a toothbrush

in his pocket.

Surprise number three was the courier from

Geneva. A prim, gaunt Englishwoman with a face of

pale granite and the most uncommunicative pair of

eyes he had seen outside of Dzerzhinsky Square. As

arranged, she had met him in front of the Swissair

lounge, a copy of the Economist in her left hand.

After studying the wrong side of his out-of-date

government identification, she had given him the

attache case and made the following statement in

high dudgeon. “I don’t like New York, I never have.

I don’t like flying either, but everyone’s been so

lovely and it’s better to get the whole whack-a-doo

over all at once, righto? They’ve arranged for me to

take the next plane back to Geneva. I miss my

mountains. They need me and I do try to give them

my very all, righto?”

With that abstruse bit of information she had

smiled wanly and started back somewhat uncertainly

toward the escalator. It was then that Stone had

begun to understand. The woman’s eyes did not

reveal her condition but the whole person did. She

was drunk or, perhaps, “pickled” having over-

come her fear of flying with liquid courage.

Converse had made a strange choice of a courier,

Stone had thought, but had instantly changed his

mind. Who could be less suspect?

The fourth surprise came at the Manchester

airport. An ebullient, middle-aged redheaded man

had greeted him as though they were long-lost

fraternity brothers from some Midwestern university

in the late thirties, when such fraternal ties were

deemed far deeper than blood. He was effusive to

the point where Stone was not only embarrassed by

the display of camaraderie but seriously concerned

that unwarranted attention would be drawn to them.

But once in the parking lot, the redhead had

suddenly slammed him into the doorframe of the

car and shoved the barrel of a gun into the back of

his neck while the man’s free hand stabbed his

clothes for a weapon.

THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 641

“I wouldn’t take the risk of going through metal

detectors with a gun, damn it!” protested the ex-CIA

agent.

“Just making sure, spook. I’ve dealt with you

assholes, you think you’re something else. Me, I was

Federal.”

“Which explains a great deal, ‘ said Stone, meaning

it.

“You drive.

“Is that a question or an order?”

“An order. All spooks drive,” replied the redhead.

Surprise number five came in the car as Stone

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *