Robert Ludlum – Aquatain Progression

the effect was owlish, scholarly. He was no longer

the man in the newspaper photograph, and equally

important, the concentration he had devoted to his

appearance had begun to clear his mind. He could

think again, sit down somewhere and sort things

out. He also needed food and a drink.

The cafe was crowded, the stained-glass windows

muting the summer sunlight into shafts of blue and

red piercing the smoke. He was shown to a table

against the black-leather upholstered banquette,

assured by the maitre d’, or whoever he was, that

an he had to do was request a menu in English; the

items were numbered. Whisky on the Continent,

however was universaDy accepted as Scotch; he

ordered a double, and took out the pad and

bar-point pen he had picked up at the variety store.

His drink came and he proceeded to write.

Connal Fitzpatrick?

BriefcaseP

$93,000 plus

Embassy out

No Larry 7albot et al.

No Beale

No A nstett

No man in San Francisco

Men in Washington. WhoP

THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 371

Caleb Dowling? No. Hickman, Navy, San Diego?

Possible.

. . . Mattilon?

Rene! Why hadn’t he thought of Mathlonbefore?

He understood why the Frenchman made the

remarks attributed to him anonymously in the

newspaper story. Rene was trying to be protective. If

there was no defence, or if it was so weak so as not

to be viable, the most logical backup was temporary

insanity. Joel circled Mattilon’s name and wrote the

number I on the left, circling it also. He would find

a telephone exchange in the streets, the kind where

operators assigned booths to bewildered tourists, and

call Rene in Paris. He took two swallows of whisky,

relaxing as the warmth spread through him, then

went back to his list, stardng at the top.

Connal . . ? The presumption that he had been

killed was inevitable, but it was not conclusive. If he

was alive, he was being held for whatever

information could be pried out of him. As the chief

legal officer of the West Coast’s largest and most

powerful naval base, and a man who had a history of

meetings with the State Department’s Office of

Munibons Control as well as its counterparts at the

Pentagon, Fitzpatrick could be an asset to the men

of Aquitaine. Yet to call attention to him was to

guarantee his execution, if he had not been killed

already. If he was still alive, the only way to save him

was to find him, but not in any orthodox or official

manner; it had to be done secretly. Connal had to be

rescued secretly.

Suddenly, Joel saw the figure of a man in the

uniform of the United States Army across the room

talking with two civilians at the bar. He did not know

the man. It was the uniform that struck him. It

brought to mind the military charge d’affaires at the

embassy, that extraordinarily observant and precise

officer who was capable of seeing a man who was

not at a bridge at the exact moment he was not

there. A liar for Aquitaine, someone whose lies

identified him. If that liar did not know where

Fitzpatrick was, he could be made to find out.

Perhaps there was a way, after all. Converse drew a

line on the right side of his list, connecting Connal

Fitzpatrick with Admiral Hickman in San Diego. He

did not give it a number; there was too much to

consider.

Briefoase? He was still convinced that Leifhelm’s

men had not found it. If the generals of Aquitaine

had that attache

372 ROBERT LUDLUM

case, they would have let him know. It was not like

those men to conceal such a prize, not from the

prisoner who had thought he was a match for them.

No, they would have told him one way or another,

if only to make clear to him how totally he had

failed. If he was right, Connal had hidden it. At the

inn called Das Rektorat? It was worth a try. Joel

circled the word Briefoase and numbered it 2.

“Speisekarte, main Herr?” said a waiter before

Converse knew he was standing there.

“English, please?”

“Certainly, sir.” The waiter separated his menus

as though they were an outsized deck of cards. He

selected one and handed it to Joel as he spoke.

“The Spezialitat for today is Wienerschnitzel it is the

same in English.”

“That’s fine. Keep the menu, I’ll take it.”

“Danke. ” The man swept away before Joel

could order another drink. It was just as well, he

thought.

$93,000 plus. There was nothing more to be

said, the irritating bulge around his waist said it all.

He had the money; it was to be used.

Embassy out . . . No Larry Talbot, et al . . . No

Beale . . . No A nstett . . . No man in San Francisco.

Throughout the meal he thought about each item,

each statement, wondering how it all could have

happened. Every step had been considered carefully,

facts absorbed, dossiers memorized, caution

uppermost. But everything had been blown away by

complications far beyond the simple facts provided

by Preston Halliday in Geneva.

Build just two or thme cases that are tied to Dela-

vane even circumstantially and it’ll be enough.

In light of the revelations on Mykonos, then in

Paris, Copenhagen and Bonn, the simplicity of that

remark was almost criminal. Halliday would have

been appalled at the depth and the breadth of

influence Delavane’s legions had attained, at the

penetrations they had made at the highest levels of

the military, the police, Interpol and, obviously, now

those who controlled the flow of news from

so-called authoritative sources in Western

governments.

Converse abruptly checked his racing thoughts.

He suddenly realised that he was thinking about

Halliday in the context of a man who saw only a

pair of eyes at night in the jungle, unaware of the

size or the ferocity of the unseen animal in the

darkness. That was wrong. Halliday knew the

materials

THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 373

Beale was handing over to him on an island in the

Aegean; he knew about the connections between

Paris, Bonn, Tel Aviv and Johannesburg; he knew

about the decision makers in the State Department

and the Pentagon he knew it all! He had arranged

it all with unknown men in Washington! Halliday had

lied in Geneva. A California wrestler he had

befriended years ago in school named Avery Fowler

was the manipulator, and in the name of A. Preston

Halliday, he had lied.

Where were those subterranean men in

Washington who had the audacity to raise half a

million dollars for an incredible gamble but were too

frightened to come out in the open? What kind of

men were they? Their scout had been killed, their

puppet accused of being a psychopathic assassin.

How long could they wait? What were they?

The questions disturbed Converse so much that

he tried not to pursue them they would lead only to

rage, which would blind his reason. He needed

reason and, above all, the strength that came with

awareness.

It was time to find a telephone exchange and

reach Mattilon in Paris. Rene would believe him,

Rene would help him. It was unthinkable that his old

friend would do anything else.

The civilian walked in silence to the hotel

window, knowing he was expected to deliver a

pronouncement that would form the basis of a

miracle not a solution but a miracle, and there were

no such things in the business he knew so well. Peter

Stone was by all the rules a relic, a castaway who had

seen it all, and in the final years of seeing had finally

fallen apart. Alcohol had taken the place of true

audacity, at the end rendering him a professional

mutant, a part of him still proud of past

accomplishments, another part sickened by the waste,

by the knowledge of wasted lives, wasted

strategies morality thrown into a gargantuan

wastebasket of a collective nonconscience.

Still, he had once been one of the best he could

not forget that. And when he knew it was all over, he

had faced the fact that he was killing himself with a

plethora of bourbon and self-pity. He had pulled out.

But not before he had gained the enmity of his past

employers in the Central Intelligence Agency, not for

speaking out publicly but for telling them privately

who and what they were. Fortunately, as sobriety re-

turned he learned that his past employers had other

enemies in Washington, enemies having nothing to

do with foreign en

374 R08ERT LUVIUM

tanglements or competition. Simply men and women

serving the republic who wanted to know what the

hell was going on when Langley wouldn’t tell them.

He had survived was surviving. He thought about

these things, knowing that the two other men in the

room believed he was concentrating on the issue at

hand.

There was no issue. The file was closed, the

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