Robert Ludlum – Aquatain Progression

United States Navy and the chief legal officer at a

major naval base. Mr. Converse accepted an

assignment from us which has an

238 ROBERT LUDLUM

element of personal risk for him and the highest

priority of classification for us. Back off, Mr.

Dowling. We appreciate and I speak for Converse

as well as myself your interest and your generosity,

but it’s time for you to recede. For your own

benefit, incidentally.”

“What about Interpol? He killed a man.”

“Who tried to kill him, ” added Fitzpatrick

quickly, a lawyer rejoining a negative statement by

a witness on the stand. “That will be clarified

internally and the charges dropped.”

“You’re pretty smooth, Commander,” said

Dowling, sitting up. “Better than you were last

night this morning, actually.”

“I was upset. I’d lost him and I had to find him.

I had to deliver vital information.”

The actor now crossed his legs at the knees and

leaned back, his arm slung casually over the slatted

rim of the bench. “So this thing Converse and you

are involved with is a real hush-hush operation?”

“It’s highly classified, yes.”

“And you and he being lawyers, it’s got

something to do with legal irregularities over here

that somehow reach into the military, is that right?”

“In the broadest sense, again yes. I’m afraid I

can’t be any more specific. Converse mentioned that

there was someone you wanted him to meet.”

“Yes, there is. I said a couple of harsh things

about him, but I take them back; he was doing his

thing. He didn’t know who the hell I was any more

than you did. He’s one smart man, tough but fair.”

“I hope you understand that under the

circumstances Converse can’t comply with your

request.”

“You’ll do,” said Dowling calmly, removing his

arm from the back of the bench.

Connal was suddenly alarmed. There was

movement behind him in the shadowed moonlight;

he whipped his head around, peering over his

shoulder. Out of the protective darkness of the

building from within the pitch-black cover of a

doorway the figure of a man began walking across

the dark green lawn. An arm thrown casually over

the rim of the bench, then just as casually removed.

Both movements had been signals” Identity

confirmed; move in.

“What the hell have you done?” asked the Navy

lawyer harshly.

THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 239

“Bringing you two bucks to your senses,” replied

Dowling. ‘.If my celebrated instincts are valid, I did

the right thing. If they’re wrong, I still did the right

thing.,’

“W7lat?”

The man crossing the lawn entered the spill of

clear moonlight. He was heavyset and wore a dark

suit and tie; his scowling, late-middle-aged face and

straight grey hair gave him the air of a prosperous

businessman. It was clear that at the moment he was

intensely angry.

Dowling spoke as he got up from the bench.

“Commander, may I introduce the Honorable Walter

Peregrine, United States ambassador to the Federal

Republic of Cermany.”

Lieutenant David Remington wiped his

steel-rimmed glasses with a silicone-treated tissue,

then threw the tissue into a wastebasket and got up

from his desk. Returning the glasses to his face, he

walked to a mirror secured to the back of his office

door and checked his appearance. He smoothed his

hair, shoved the knot of his tie in place, and looked

down at the failing crease of his trousers. All things

considered it was 1730 hours and he had been

harassed at his desk since 0800 in the morning,

including that crazy Four Zero emergency from

Fitzpatrick he looked quite presentable. And

anyway, Rear Admiral Hickman was not a stickler

for spit and polish where the desk corps was

concerned. He knew damn well that most of the

legal execs would bolt in a minute for much higher

paying jobs in the civilian sector if the dress and

other disposable codes were taken too seriously.

Well, David Remington wouldn’t. Where the hell

else could a man travel all over the world, housing a

wife and three kids in some of the nicest quarters

imaginable, with all the medical and dental bills paid

for, and not have the terrible pressures of rising in

private or corporate practice. His father had been an

attorney for one of the biggest insurance companies

in Hartford Connecticut, and his father had had

ulcers at forty-three, a nervous breakdown at

forty-eight, his first stroke at fifty-one, and a final,

massive coronary at fifty-six; everyone had said he

was so terrific at his job he might even be in line for

the presidency. But then, people always said things

like that when a man died in the line of corporate

duty which men did too goddamned frequently.

None of that for David Remington, no sir! He

was simply going to be one of the best lawyers in the

U.S. Navy, serve

240 RORERT LUDLUM

his thirty years, get out at fifty-five with a generous

pension, and become a well-paid legal-military

consultant at fifty-six. At the precise age when his

father died, he would start living very nicely, indeed.

It was simply a matter of building a reputation as a

man who knew more about naval and maritime

law and who stuck to it than any other lawyer in

the Navy. If he stepped on toes in his performance,

so be it; it could only enhance that reputation. He

didn’t give a damn about being popular; he cared

only about being right. And he never made a

decision until he was certain of its correct legal

position. Consultants like that were prized

commodities in civilian practice.

Remington wondered why Admiral Hickman

wanted to see him, especially at this hour when

most of the desk corps had gone for the day. There

was a court-martial pending that could become a

sensitive issue. A black officer, an Annapolis

graduate, had been caught selling cocaine off a

destroyer berthed in the Philippines; that was

probably it. Remington had pre-prepared the case

for the judge advocate, who frankly did not care to

prosecute; the amount was not that large, and

others were certainly selling far more, and they

were probably white. That was not the point,

Remington had insisted. If there were others, they

had not been caught, if there was evidence, it had

not been found. The law was color-blind.

He would say the same thing to Hickman. The

“stickler prick,” a derisive nickname Remington

knew was used behind his back, would stand firm.

Well, at fifty-six the age at which his father had

been killed by company policy a stickler prick

would have all the comforts of an exclusive country

club without paying the corporate price. Lieutenant

Remington opened the door, walked out into the

grey hallway, and started for the elevator that would

take him to the office of the highest ranking man at

the San Diego naval base.

“Sit down, Remington,” said Rear Admiral Brian

Hickman, shaking the lieutenant’s hand and

indicating a chair in front of the large desk. “I don’t

know about you, but this has been what I used to

call at your age one fucked-up day. Sometimes I

wish Congress wouldn’t appropriate so damn much

money down here. Everyone gets on such a high

you’d think they’d smoked everything in Tijuana.

They forget they’re supposed to have architects

before they start bribing the contractors.”

THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 241

“Yes, sir, I know what you mean, sir,” said

Remington sithng down with proper deference as

Hickman stood several feet to his left. The mere

reference to Tijuana and drugs confirmed his

suspicions; the admiral was about to launch into the

everybody-does-it routine, which would lead to “Why

should the Navy stir up a racial controversy with

something that took place in the Philippines?” Well,

he was prepared. The law naval law was

color-blind.

“I m going to have a well-deserved drink,

Lieutenant,” said Hickman, heading for a copper dry

bar against the wall. “Can I get you something?”

“No, thank you, sir. ‘

“Hey, look, Remington, I appreciate your staying

late for this conference, I guess you’d call it, but I

don’t expect any version of corporate military

behavior. Frankly, I’d feel foolish drinking by myself,

and what we’ve got to talk about isn’t so almighty

important. I just want to ask you a couple of ques-

trons.

“Corporate behavior, sir? I’ll have some white

wine, if you have it, sir.”

“I always have it,” said the admiral with

resignation. “It’s usually for personnel who are about

to get divorced.”

“I’m happily married, sir.”

“Glad to hear it. I’m on my third wife should

have stuck with the first.”

The drinks poured, the seating arrangements in

order Hickman spoke from behind the desk, his tie

loosened, his voice casual. But what he said evoked

anything but casualness in David Remington.

“Who the hell is Joel Converse?” asked the admiral.

“I beg your pardon, sir?”

The admiral sighed, the sound indicating that he

would begin again. “At twelve hundred hours

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 *