Robert Ludlum – Aquatain Progression

320 ROBERT IUDIUM

hour it would be dark. Darkness had been his friend

before as the waters of a river had been his friend.

They had to be his friends again. They had to be!

The sounds came first racing paws and nasal

explosions then the sight of gleaming dark coats of

animal fur rushing in circles in front of the

jailhouse. Joel ran to the bathroom, concentrating

on the seconds as he waited for the sliding of the

bolt. It came; he flushed the toilet, then closed the

bathroom door and raced back to the chair. He

raised it and stood in place, his legs and feet locked

to the floor. The door was opened several

inches only seconds now then the German’s right

hand pushed it back.

“Herr Converse? Wo sind . . . Bach, die Toilette. ”

The chauffeur walked in with the tray, and Joel

swung the chair with all his strength into the

German’s head. The driver arched back off his feet,

tray and dishes crashing to the floor. He was

stunned, nothing more. Converse kicked the door

shut and brought the heavy chair repeatedly down

on the chauffeur’s skull until the man went limp,

blood and saliva pouring down his eyes and face.

The phalanx of dogs had lurched as one at the

suddenly closed door and began to bark maniacally

while clawing at the wood.

Joel grabbed the silver chain, slipped it over the

unconscious German’s head and pulled the silver

whistle out of the pocket. There were four tiny

holes on the tube; each meant something. He pulled

the remaining chair to the window at the right of

the door, climbed up and put the whistle to his lips.

He covered the first hole and blew into the

mouthpiece. There was no sound, but it had an

effect.

The Dobermans went mad! They began to attack

the door in suicidal assaults. He removed his finger,

placed it over the second hole and blew.

The dogs were confused; they circled around

each other snapping, yelping, snarling, but still they

would not take their concentration off the door. He

tried the third tiny hole and blew into the whistle

with all the breath he had.

Suddenly, the dogs stopped all movement, their

tapered close-cropped ears upright, shifting they

were waiting for a second signal. He blew again,

again with all the breath that was in him. It was the

sound they were waiting for, and again, as one, the

pack raced to the right beneath the window,

THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 321

pounding to some other place where they were

meant to be by command.

Converse leaped down from the chair and knelt

by the unconscious German. He went rapidly

through the driver’s pockets, taking his billfold and

all the money he had, as well as his wristwatch and

his gun. For an instant Joel looked at the weapon,

loathing the memories it evoked. He shoved it under

his belt and went to the door.

Outside, he pulled the heavy door shut, heard

the click of the lock and slid the bolt in place. He

ran up the dirt path estimating the distance to the

fork where the right leg was verboten and the left led

to the steep hill and the sight of the Rhine below. It

was actually no more than two hundred yards away,

but the winding curves and the thick bordering

foliage made it seem longer. If he remembered

accurately and on the walk back he was like a pilot

without instruments relying on sightings there was

a flat stretch of about eighty feet below the fork.

He reached it, the same flat area, the same

diverging paths up ahead. He ran faster.

Voices! Angry, questioning? Not far away and

coming nearer! He dove into the brush to his right,

rolling over the needle-like bushes until he could

barely see through the foliage. Two men walked

rapidly into his limited view, talking loudly, as if

arguing but somehow not with each other.

“Was haben die Hunde?”

“Die sollten bat Heinrich sein!”

Joel had no idea what they were saying; he only

knew as they passed him that they were heading for

the isolated cabin. He also knew that they would pot

spend much time trying to raise anyone inside before

they took more direct methods. And once they did,

all the alarms in LeifLelm’s fortress would be

activated. Time was measured for him in minutes

and he had a great deal of ground to cover. He crept

cautiously out of the brush on his hands and feet.

The Germans were out of sight, beyond a rounding

curve. He got up and raced for the fork and the

steep hill to the left.

The three guards at the immense iron gate that

was the entrance to Leifhelm’s estate were

bewildered. The pack of Dobermans were circling

around impatiently in the out grass, obviously

confused.

“Why are they here?” asked one man.

322 ROBERT LUDLUM

“It makes no sense!” replied a second.

“Heinrich has let them loose, but why?” said the third.

“Nobody tells us anything,” muttered the first guard,

shrugging. “If we don’t hear something in the next few

minutes, we should call.”

“I don’t like this!” shouted the second guard. “I’m

calling right now!”

The first guard walked into the gatehouse and picked

up the telephone.

Converse ran up the steep hill, his breath short, his

lips dry, his heartbeat thundering in his chest. There it

was! The river! He started running down, gathering

speed, the wind whipping his face, stinging him. It was

exhilarahng. He was back! He was racing through the

sudden, open clearings of another jungle, no fellow

prisoners to worry about, only the outrage within himself

to prod him, to make him break through the barriers

and somehow, somewhere, strike back at those who had

stripped him naked and raped an innocence

and goddamn it turned him into an animal! A

reasonably pleasant human being had been turned into

a half-man with more hatreds than a person should live

with. He would get back at them all, all enemies, all

animals!

He reached the bottom of the open slope of gnarled

grass

and bush, the trees and intertwining underbrush

once more

a wall to be penetrated. But he had his bearings; no

matter

how dense the woods, he simply had to keep the last

rays of

the sun on his left, heading due north, and he would

reach

the river.

Rapid explosions made him spin around. Five

gunshots followed one upon the other in the distance. It

was easy to imagine the target: a circle of wood around

the cylinder of a lock in the door of an isolated cabin in

the forest. His jailhouse was being assaulted, entrance

gained. The minutes were growing shorter.

And then two distinctly different sounds pierced the

twilight, interwoven in dissonance. The first was a series

of short, staccato bursts of a high-pitched siren. The

second, between and under the repeated blasts, was the

hysterical yelping of running dogs. The alarms had been

set off; scraps of discarded clothing and slept-on sheets

would be pressed onto inflamed nostrils and the

Dobermans would come after him, no quarter

THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 323

considered no cornered prey only animal teeth

ripping human flesh a satisfactory reward.

Converse plunged into the wall of green and ran

as fast as he could, dodging, crouching, lurching

from one side to the other, his arms outstretched, his

hands working furiously against the strong, supple

impediment of the woods. His face and body were

repeatedly whipped by slashing branches and

obstinate limbs, his feet continually tripped by fallen

debris and exposed roots. He stumbled more times

than he could count, each time bringing an instant of

silence that emphasized the sound of the dogs

somewhere between the fork and the hill and the

lower forest. They were no farther away, perhaps

nearer. They were nearer, they had entered the

woods. All around him were the echoes of their

hysteria, punctuated by howling yelps of frustration

as one or another or several were caught in the

tangled ground cover, straining and roaring to be

free to join the pursuit.

The water! He could see the water through the

trees. Sweat was now rolling down his face, the salt

blinding his eyes and stinging the scrapes on his neck

and chin. His hands were bleeding from the sharp

nettles and the coarse bark everywhere.

He fell, his foot plunging into a hole burrowed by

some riverbank animal, his ankle twisted and in pain.

He got up, pulling at his leg, freeing his foot,

and, limping badly, tried to resume running. The

Dobermans were gaining, the yelping and the harsh

barking louder and more furious; they had picked up

his direct scent, the trail of undried sweat maddening

them, preparing them for the kill.

The riverbank! It was filled with soft mud and

floating debris, a webbing of nature’s garbage caught

in a cavity, whirling slowly, waiting for a strong

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