Robert Ludlum – Aquatain Progression

hunt table. He stopped, raised his gaze to one of the

racehorse prints and turned back to Converse. “Do

you know what you’re asking me to do?”

“Yes. Give me the springboard that’ll catapult me

right in the middle of those would-be Genghis

Khans. To do it you’ll have to go further with

Hickman. Because you’re so person

254 ROBERT LUDLUM

ally involved and so goddamned angry which again

is the truth tell him to explain your position to

whoever wants the flag released. It’s a nonmilitary

matter, so you’re taking what you know to the

civilian authorities.”

“I understand all that,” said Fitzpatrick.

“Everything I say is the truth, as I saw it when I flew

over here to find you. Except that I reverse the

targets. Instead of being the one who can help me,

you’re now the one I want nailed.”

“Right on, counselor. And I’m met by a

welcoming committee at Leifhelm’s estate.”

“Then I guess you don’t see.”

“What?”

“You’re asking me to go on record implicating

you in first-degree murder. I’ll be branding you as

a killer. Once I say it, I can’t take the words back.”

“I know that. Do it.”

George Marcus Delavane twisted his torso in his

chair behind the desk in front of the strangely

colored fragmented map on the wall. It was not a

controlled movement; it was an action in search of

control. Delavane did not care for obstrucbons and

one was being explained to him now by an admiral

in the Fifth Naval District.

“The status of the Hag is Four Zero,” said

Scanlon. “To get it released we’d have to go through

Pentagon procedures, and I don’t have to tell you

what that means. Two senior officers, one from

naval intelligence, plus a supporting signature from

the National Security Agency; all would have to

appear on the request sheet, the level of the inquiry

stated, thus escalating the request to a sector

demand. Now, General, we can do all this, but we

run the risk ”

“I know the risk,” interrupted Delavane. “The

signatures are the risk, the identities a risk. Why the

Four Zero? Who placed it and why?”

“The chief legal officer of SAND PAC. I

checked him out. He’s a lieutenant commander

named Fitzpatrick, and there’s nothing in his record

to give us any indication as to why he did it.”

“I’ll tell you why,” said the warlord of Saigon.

“He’s hiding something. He’s protecting this

Converse.”

“Why would a chief legal officer in the Navy

protect a civilian under these circumstances?

There’s no connection.

THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 255

Furthermore, why would he exercise a Four Zero

condition? It only calls attention to his action.”

“It also clamps a lid down on that flag.” Delavane

paused, then continued before the admiral could

interrupt. “This Fitzpatrick,” he said. “You’ve checked

the master list?”

“He’s not one of us.”

“Has he ever been considered? Or approached?”

‘ I haven’t had time to find out.” There was the

sound of a buzzer, not part of the line over which

the two men spoke. Scanlon could be heard punching

a button, his voice clear, officious. “Yes?” Silence

followed, and seconds later the admiral returned to

Palo Alto. “It’s Hickman again.”

“Maybe he has something for us. Call me back.”

“Hickman wouldn’t give us anything if he had the

slightest idea we existed,” said Scanlon. In a few

weeks, he’ll be one of the first to go. If it were up to

me he’d be shot.”

‘~Call me back,” said George Marcus Delavane,

looking at the map of the new Aquitaine on the wall.

Chaim Abrahms sat at the kitchen table in his

small stone Mediterranean villa in Tzahala, a suburb

of Tel Aviv favored by the retired military and those

with sufficient income or influence to live there. The

windows were open and the breezes from the garden

stirred the oppressive summer’s night air. There was

air conditioning in two other rooms and ceiling fans

in three more, but Chaim liked the kitchen. In the

old days he and his men would sit in primitive

kitchens and plan raids; in the Negev, ammunition

was often passed about while desert chicken boiled

on a wood stove. The kitchen was the soul of the

house. It gave warmth and sustenance to the body,

clearing the mind for tactics as long as the women

left after performing their chores and did not

interrupt the men with their incessant trivialities. His

wife was asleep upstairs; so be it. He had little to say

to her anymore, or she to him; she could not help

him now. And if she could, she would not. They had

lost a son in Lebanon, her son she said, a teacher, a

scholar, not a soldier, not a killer by choice. Too

many sons were lost on both sides, she said. Old

men, she said, old men infected the young with their

hatreds and used Biblical legends to justify death in

the pursuit of questionable real estate. Death, she

cried. Death before talk that might avert it! She had

forgotten the early days; too many forgot too quickly.

Chaim Abrahms did not forget, nor would he ever.

256 R08ERT LUDLUM

And his sense of smell was as acute as ever. This

lawyer, this Converse, this talk! It was all too clever,

it had the stench of cold, analytical minds, not the

heat of believers. The Mossad specialist was the

best, but even the Mossad made mistakes. The

specialist looked for a motive, as if one could

dissect the human brain and say this action caused

that reaction, this punishment that commitment to

vengeance. Too damned clever! A believer was

fueled by the heat of his convictions. They were his

only motive, and they did not call for clever

manipulations.

Chaim knew he was a plainspoken man, a direct

man, but it was not because he was unintelligent or

lacked subtle perceptions; his prowess on the

battlefield proved otherwise. He was direct because

he knew what he wanted, and it was a waste of time

to pretend and be clever. In all the years he had

lived with his convictions he had never met a fellow

believer who allowed himself to waste time.

This Converse knew enough to reach Bertholdier

in Paris. He showed how much more he knew when

he mentioned Leifhelm in Bonn and specifically

named the cities of Tel Aviv and Johannesburg.

What more did he have to prove? Why should he

prove it if his belief was there? Why did he not

plead his case with his first connection and not

waste time? . . . No, this lawyer, this Converse, was

from somewhere else. The Mossad specialist said

the motive was there for affiliation. He was wrong.

The red-hot heat of the believer was not there. Only

cleverness, only talk.

And the specialist had not dismissed Chaim s

sense of smell. As well he should not, as the two

sabres had fought together for years, as often as not

against the Europeans and their conniving

ways those immigrants who held up the Old

Testament as if they had written it, calling the true

inhabitants of Israel uneducated ruffians or clowns.

The Mossad specialist respected his sabre brother,

it was in his look, that respect. No one could dismiss

the instincts of Chaim Abrahms son of Abraham,

archangel of darkness to the enemies of Abraham’s

children. Thank God his wife was asleep.

It was time to call Palo Alto.

My general, my friend.”

Shalom, Chaim,” said the warlord of Saigon. Are

you on your way to Bonn?”

I’m leaving in the morning we’re leaving. Van

Headmer is in the air now. He’ll arrive at Ben

Gurion at

THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 257

eight-thirty, and together we’ll take the ten o’clock

flight to Frankfurt, where Leifhelm’s pilot will meet

us with the Cessna.”

“Good. You can talk. ‘

“We must talk now,” said the Israeli. “What more

have you learned about this Converse?”

“He becomes more of an enigma, Chaim.”

“I smell a fraud.”

“So do 1, but perhaps not the fraud I thought.

You know what my assessment was. I thought he was

no more than an infantry point, someone being used

by more knowledgeable men Lucas Anstett among

them to learn far more than they knew or heard

rumors about. I don’t discount a degree of minor

leaks; they’re to be anticipated and managed, scoffed

at as paranoia.”

“Get to the point, Marcus,” said the impatient

Abrahms who always called Delavane by his middle

name. He considered it a Hebrew name, in spite of

the fact that Delavane’s father had insisted on it for

his first son in honor of the Roman Caesar the

philosopher Marcus Aurelius, a proselytiser of

moderation.

‘ Three things happened today,” continued the

former general in Palo Alto. “The first infuriated me

because I could not understand it, and frankly

disturbed me because it portended a far greater

penetration than I thought possible from a sector I

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