Robert Ludlum – Rhinemann Exchange

quiet. David felt the perspiration rolling down his forehead and over his

neck.

How many were there? They’d immobilized a garrison.

He had no commitment matching those odds.

Yet he had a strange commitment to Lyons. He had commitment enough for him

at the moment. He dared not think beyond that instant.

And he was good; he could – should – never forget that. He was the best

there was.

If it was important to anyone.

So much, so alien.

He pressed his cheek against the molding of the arch and what he saw

sickened him. The revulsion, perhaps, was increased by the surroundings: a

well-appointed flat with chairs and couches and tables meant for civilized

people involved with civilized pursuits.

Not death.

The two male nurses – the hostile Johnny, the affable, dense Hal – were

sprawled across the floor, their arms linked, their heads inches from each

other. Their combined blood had formed a pool on the parquet surface.

Johnny’s eyes were wide, angry –

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dead; Hal’s face composed, questioning, at rest.

Behind them were Rhinemann’s two other guards, their bodies on the couch

like slaughtered cattle.

I hope you know what you’re doing!

Johnny’s words vibrated painfully – in screams – in David’s brain.

There were three other men in the room – standing, alive, in the same

grotesque stocking masks that had beenworn by those in the Duesenberg who

had cut short the few moments he’d had alone with Leslie Hawkwood high in

the hills of Lujin.

The Duesenberg that had exploded in fire in the hills of Colinas Rojas.

The men were standing – none held weapons – over the spent figure of Eugene

Lyons – seated gracefully, without fear, at the table. The look in the

scientist’s eyes told the truth, as Spaulding saw it: he welcomed death.

‘You see what’s around you!’ The man in the light grey overcoat spoke to

him. ‘We will not hesitate further! You’re dead! … Give us the designs!’

Jesus Christ I thought David. Lyons had hidden the plans!

‘There’s no point in carrying on, please believe me,’ continued the man in

the overcoat, the man with the hollow crescents under his eyes Spaulding

remembered so well. ‘You may be spared, but only if you tell us! Now!’

Lyons did not move; he looked up at the man in the overcoat without

shifting his head, his eyes calm. They touched David’s.

‘Write iff said the man in the light grey overcoat.

It was the moment to move.

David spun around the molding, his pistol leveled.

‘Don’t reach for guns! Youl’ he yelled at the man nearest him. ‘Turn

around!’

In shock, without thinking, the man obeyed. Spaulding took two steps

forward and brought the barrel of the Beretta crashing down into the man’s

skull. He collapsed instantly.

David shouted at the man next to the interrogator in the grey overcoat.

‘Pick up that chair! Now!’ He gestured with his pistol to a straight-backed

chair several feet from the table. ‘Now, I said!’

The man reached over and did as he was told; he was immobilized. Spaulding

continued. ‘You drop it and I’ll kill you….

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Doctor Lyons. Take their weapons. You’ll find pistols and knives. Quickly,

please.’

It all happened so fast. David knew his only hope of avoiding gunfire was

in the swiftness of the action, the rapid immobilization of one or two men,

an instant reversal of the odds.

Lyons got out of the chair and went first to the man in the light grey

overcoat. It was apparent that the scientist had observed where the man had

put his pistol. He took it out of the overcoat pocket. He went to the man

holding the chair and removed an identical gun, then searched the man and

took a large knife from his jacket and a second, short revolver from a

shoulder holster. He placed the weapons on the far side of the table and

walked to the unconscious third man. He rolled him over and removed two

guns and a switchblade knife.

‘Take off your coats. Now!’Spaulding commanded both men. He took the chair

from the one next to him and pushed him toward his companion. The men began

removing their coats when Spaulding suddenly spoke, before either had

completed their actions. ‘Stop right there! Hold it! … Doctor, please

bring over two chairs and place them behind them.’

Lyons did so.

‘Sit down,’ said Spaulding to his captives.

They sat, coats half off their shoulders. David approached them and yanked

the garments further – down to the elbows.

The two men in the grotesque stocking masks were seated now, their arins

locked by their own clothes.

Standing in front of them, Spaulding reached down and ripped the silk masks

off their faces. He moved back and leaned against the dining table, his

pistol in his hand.

‘All right,’ he said. ‘I estimate we’ve got about fifteen minutes before

all hell breaks loose around here…. I have a few questions. You’re going

to give me the answers.’

349

36

Spaulding listened in disbelief. The enormity of the charge was 80

far-reaching it was – in a very real sense – beyond his comprehension.

The man with the hollow eyes was Asher Feld, commander of the Provisional

Wing of the Haganah operating within the United States. He did the talking.

‘The operation … the exchange of the guidance designs for the industrial

diamonds … was first given the name “Tortugas” by the Americans – one

American, to be exact. He had decided that the transfer should be made in

the Dry Tortugas, but it was patently rejected by Berlin. It was, however,

kept as a code name by this man. The misleading association dovetailed with

his own panic at being involved. It came – for him and for Fairfax – to

mean the activities of the man from Lisbon.

‘When the War Department clearances were issued to the Koening company’s

New York offices – an Allied requisite – this man coded the clearance as

‘Tortugas.’ If anyone checked, ‘Tortugas’ was a Fairfax operation. It would

not be questioned.

‘The concept of the negotiation was first created by the Nachrichtendienst.

I’m sure you’ve heard of the Nachrichtendienst, colonel. . . .’

David did not reply, He could not speak. Feld continued.

‘We of the Haganah learned of it in Geneva. We had word of an unusual

meeting between an American named Kendall –

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a financial analyst for a major aircraft company -and a very despised German

businessman, a homosexual, who was sent to Switzerland by a leading

administrator in the Ministry of Armaments, Unterstaatssekretir Franz

AltmOller…. The Haganah is everywhere, colonel, including the outer

offices of the ministry and in the Luftwaffe. . . .’

David continued to stare at the Jew, so matter of fact in his extraordinary

… unbelieveable … narrative.

‘I think youll agree that such a meeting was unusual. It was not difficult

to maneuver these two messengers into a situation that gave us a wire

recording. It was in an out-of-the-way restaurant and they were amateurs.

‘We then knew the basics. The materials and the general location. But not

the specific point of transfer. And that was the all-important factor.

Buenos Aires is enormous, its harbour more so -stretching for miles. Where

in this vast area of land and mountains and water was the transfer to take

placeT

‘Then, of course, came word from Fairfax. The man in Lisbon was being

recalled. A most unusual action. But then how well thought out. The finest

network specialist in Europe, fluent German and Spanish, an expert in

blueprint designs. How logical. Don’t you agree!’

David started to speak, but stopped. Things were being said that triggered

fiashes of lightning in his mind. And unbelievable cracks of thunder . . .

as unbelievable as the words he was hearing. He could only nod his head.

Numbly.

Feld watched him closely. Then spoke.

‘In New York I explained to you, albeit briefly, the sabotage at the

airfield in Terceira. Zealots. The fact that the man in Lisbon could turn

and be a part of the exchange was too much for the hot-tempered Spanish

Jews. No one was more relieved than we of the Provisional Wing when you

escaped. We assumed your stopover in New York was for the purposes of

refining the logistics in Buenos Aires. We proceeded on that assumption.

‘Then quite abruptly there was no more time. Reports out of Johannesburg –

unforgivably delayed – said that the diamonds had arrived in Buenos Aires.

We took the necessary violent measures, including an attempt to kill you.

Prevented, I presume, by Rhinemann’s men.’ Asher Feld stopped. Then added

wearily, ‘The rest you know.’

No I The rest he did not know! Nor any other part/

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Insanityl

Madnessl

Everything was nothing I Nothing was everything I

The Years I The lives I… The terrible nightmares offear … the killing!

Oh, my God, the killing!

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