Robert Ludlum – Rhinemann Exchange

as she seemed on the staircase. She was past thirty; comfortably past. And

she seemed aware of his inspection, the approbation – or lack of it –

unimportant to her.

‘Oh, it’s all right for a limited stay. You can’t get anything else on that

basis, not if you’re American. But it’s small.’

Her handshake was firm, almost masculine, thought Spaulding. ‘I appreciate

your taking the trouble. I’m sorry to have caused it.’

‘No one else here could have gotten you anything but a hotel,’ said

Ballard, touching the girl’s shoulder; was the contact protective? wondered

David. ‘The portehos trust Mother Cameron. Not the rest of us.’

‘Portefios,’ said Jean in response to Spaulding’s questioning expression,

‘are the people who live in BA …..

‘And BA – don’t tell me – stands for Montevideo,’ replied David.

‘Aw, they sent us a bright one,’ said Ballard.

‘You’ll get used to it,’ continued Jean. ‘Everyone in the American and

English settlements calls it BA. Montevideo, of course,’ she added,

smiling. ‘I think we see it so often on reports, we just do it

automatically!

‘Wrong,’ interjected Ballard. ‘The vowel juxtaposition in “Buenos Aires” is

uncomfortable for British speech.’

‘That’s something else you’ll learn during your stay, Mr. Spaulding,’ said

Jean Cameron, looking affectionately at Ballard. ‘Be careful offering

opinions around Bobby. He has a penchant for disagreeing!

‘Never so,’ answered the cryp. ‘I simply care enough for my fellow

prisoners to want to enlighten them. Prepare them for the outside when they

get paroled.’

I “Well, I’ve got a temporary pass right now, and if I don’t get over to the

ambassador’s office, he’ll start on that damned address system…. Welcome

again, Mr. Spaulding.’

223

‘Please. The names David! ,

-‘Nfine’s Jean. Bye,’ said the girl, dashing down the hallway, calling back

to Ballard. ‘Bobby? You’ve got the address and the key? For … David’s

place?’

‘Yep. Go get irresponsibly drunk, I’ll handle everything!

Jean Cameron disappeared through a door in the right wall.

‘She’s very attractive,’ said Spaulding, ‘and you two are good friends. I

should apologize for. . .’

‘No, you shouldn’t,’ interrupted Ballard. ‘Nothing to apologize for. You

formed a quick judgment on isolated facts. I’d’ve done the same, thought

the same. Not that you’ve changed your mind; no reason to, really!

‘She’s right. You disagree … before you know what you’re disagreeing to;

and then you debate your disagreement. And if you go on, you’ll probably

challenge your last position!

‘You know what? I can follow that. Isn’t it frightening?’

‘You guys are a separate breed,’ said David, chuckling, following Ballard

beyond the stairs into a smaller corridor.

‘Let’s take a quick look at your Siberian cubicle and then head over to

your other cell. It’s on C6rdoba; we’re on Corrientes. It’s about ten

minutes from here.’

David thanked Bobby Ballard once again and shut the apartment door. He had

pleaded exhaustion from the trip, preceded by too much welcome home in New

York – and God knew that was the truth – and would Ballard take a raincheck

for dinner?

Alone now, he inspected the apartment; it wasn’t intolerable at all. It was

small: a bedroom, a sitting room-kitchen, and a bath. But there was a

dividend Jean Cameron hadn9t mentioned. The rooms were on the first floor,

and at the rear was a tiny brickleveled patio surrounded by a tall concrete

wall, profuse with hanging vines and drooping flowers from immense pots on

the ledge. In the center of the enclosure was a gnarled fruit-bearing tree

he could not identify; around the trunk were three ropewebbed chairs that

had seen better days but looked extremely comfortable. As far as he was

concerned, the dividend made the dwelling.

Ballard had pointed out that his section of the Avenida C6rdoba was just

over the borderline from the commercial area, the ‘downtown’ complex of

Buenos Aires. Quasi residential, yet near enough to stores and restaurants

to be easy for a newcomer.

-224

David picked up the telephone; the dial tone was delayed but eventually

there. He replaced it and walked across the small room to the refrigerator,

an American Sears Roebuck. He opened it and smiled. The Cameron girl had

provided – or had somebody provide – several basic items: milk, butter,

bread, eggs, coffee. Then happily he spotted two bottles of wine: an Orfila

tinto and a Col6n blanco. He closed the refrigerator and went back into the

bedroom.

He unpacked his single suitcase, unwrapping a bottle of Scotch, and

remembered that he’d have to buy additional clothes in the morning. Ballard

had offered to go with him to a men’s shop in the Calle Florida – if his

goddamned dials weren’t ‘humming.’ He placed the books Eugene Lyons had

given him on the bedside table. He had gone through two of them; he was

beginning to gain confidence in the aerophysicists’ language. He would need

comparable studies * in German to be really secure. He would cruise around

the bookshops in the German settlement tomorrow; he wasn’t looking for

definitive texts, just enough to understand the terms. It was really a

minor part of his assignment, he understood that.

Suddenly, David remembered Walter Kendall. Kendall was either in Buenos

Aires by now or would be arriving within hours. The accountant had left the

United States at approximately the same time he had, but Kendall’s flight

from New York was more direct, with far fewer stopovers.

He wondered whether it would be feasible to go out to the airport and trace

Kendall. If he hadn’t arrived, he could wait for him; if he had, it would

be simple enough to check the hotels -according to Ballard there were only

three or four good ones.

On the other hand, any additional time – more than absolutely essential –

spent with the manipulating accountant was not a pleasant prospect. Kendall

would be upset at finding him in Buenos Aires before he’d given the order

to Swanson. Kendall, no doubt, would demand explanations beyond those David

wished to give; probably send angry cables to an already strungout

brigadier general.

There were no benefits in hunting down Walter Kendall until Kendall

expected to find him. Only liabilities.

He had other things to do: the unfocused picture. He could begin that

search far better alone.

David walked back into the living room-kitchen carrying the

225

Scotch and took out a tray of ice from the refrigerator. He made himself a

drink and looked over at the double doors leading to his miniature patio. He

would spend a few quiet twilight moments in the January summertime breeze of

Buenos Aires.

The sun was fighting its final descent beyond the city; the last orange

rays were filtering through the thick foliage of the unidentified fruit

tree. Underneath, David stretched his legs and leaned back in the

rope-webbed chair. He realized that if he kept his eyes closed for any

length of time, they would not reopen for a number of hours. He had to

watch that; long experience in the field had taught him to eat something

before sleeping. :

Eating had long since lost its pleasure for him – it was merely a necessity

directly related to his energy level. He wondered if the pleasure would

ever come back; whether so much he had put aside would return. Lisbon had

probably the best accommodations – food, shelter, comfort – of all the

major cities, excepting New York, on both continents. And now he was on a

third continent, in a city that boasted undiluted luxury.

But for him it was the field – as much as was the north country in Spain.

As much as Basque and Navarre, and the freezing nights in the Galician

hills or the sweat-prone silences in ravines, waiting for patrols – waiting

to kill.

So much. So alien.

He brought his head forward, took a long drink from the glass and let his

neck arch back into the frame of the chair. A small bird was chattering

away in the midsection of the tree, annoyed at his intrusion. It reminded

David of how he would listen for such birds in the north country. They

telegraphed the approach of men unseen, often falling into different

rhythms that he began to identify – or thought he identified – with the

numbers of the unseen, approaching patrols.

Then David realized that the small chattering bird was not concerned with

him. It hopped upward, still screeching its harsh little screech, only

faster now, more strident.

There was someone else.

Through half-closed eyes, David focused above, beyond the foliage. He did

so without moving any part of his body or head, as if the last moments were

approaching before sleep took over.

The apartment house had four stories and a roof that appeared to have a

gentle slope covered in a terra-cotta tile of sorts -brownish pink in

color. The windows of the rooms above him

226

were mostly open to the breezes off the Rio de la Plata. He could hear

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