Robert Ludlum – The Sigma Protocol

oxygen ceased to function–that the aural and optical functions shut

down first, but that sentience itself would soon follow.

He waited until he saw Strasser hit the ground before he allowed his own

eyes to close. As they did so, there was a fleeting awareness that his

eyes would never open again; and then there was no awareness of anything

at all.

Back in the hotel room, Ben and Anna rifled through a stack of papers

that they’d hurriedly purchased at a newsstand on the way. Chardin had

referred to an imminent development. And the “fancy-dress forum” in

Austria that Strasser had mentioned chimed with an item they’d recently

come across: but what was it?

The answer was within their grasp.

It was Anna who came across the item in El phi’s, Argentina’s leading

newspaper. It was another brief article about the International

Children’s Health Forum a convocation of world leaders to discuss

matters of pressing mutual concern, especially with respect to the

developing world. But what caught her eye this time was the city where

the meeting was to be held: Vienna, Austria.

She read on. There was a list of sponsors among them, the Lenz

Foundation. Translating from the Spanish, she read the article out loud

to Ben.

A shiver ran down his spine. “My God,” he said. “This is it! It has

to be. Chardin said only days remained. What he was talking about has

to be related to this conference. Read me the list of sponsors again.”

Anna did so.

And Ben started to make a few phone calls. These were calls to

foundation professionals, people who were delighted to hear from one of

their contributors. Slipping into a familiar role, Ben sounded hale and

hearty when he spoke to them, but what he learned was profoundly

dismaying.

“They’re great people, the folks from the Lenz Foundation,” Geoffrey

Baskin, programs director for the Robinson Foundation, told him in his

dulcet New Orleans accent. “It’s really their baby, but they just

wanted to keep a low profile. They put it together, footed most of the

bill it’s hardly fair that we’re getting any of the glory. But I guess

they wanted to make sure it had an international feeling. Like I say,

they’re really selfless.”

“That’s nice to hear,” Ben said. His tone upbeat even as he

felt a rising sense of dread. “We may be partnering with them on a

special project, so I just wanted to get your sense of them. Really

nice to hear.”

Dignitaries and leaders from around the world would be gathering in

Vienna, under the auspices of the Lenz Foundation … They had to get to

Vienna.

It was the one place in the world they shouldn’t be showing their faces,

and the one place where they had no choice but to go.

Anna and he paced the hotel room. They could take precautions

precautions that now came as second nature: disguise, falsified

identities, separate flights.

But the risks seemed much greater now.

“If we’re not just chasing a will-o’-the-wisp, we’ve got to assume that

every commercial flight into Vienna is going to be scrutinized very

carefully,” Anna said. “They’re going to be on full alert.”

Ben felt the flicker of an idea. “What did you say again?”

“They’re going to be on full alert. Border control isn’t going to be a

cakewalk. More like a gauntlet.”

“Before that.”

“I said we’ve got to assume that every commercial flight into Vienna”

“That’s ir,” Ben said.

“What’s it?”

“Anna, I’m going to take a risk here. And the calculation is that it’s

a smaller risk than we’d otherwise be facing.”

“I’m listening.”

“I’m going to call a guy named Fred McCall an He was the codger I was

supposed to go skiing with in St. Moritz.”

“You were going to St. Moritz to go skiing with a ‘codger.” ”

Ben blushed. “Well, there was a granddaughter in the picture.”

“Go on.”

“More to the point, though, there’s a private jet in the picture. A

Gulfstream. I’ve been in it once. Very red. Red seats, red carpeting,

red TV set. Fred will still be at the Hotel Carlton there, and the

plane will probably be at the little airport in Chur.”

“So you’re going to call him up and ask for the keys. Kind of like

borrowing someone’s station wagon to pick up groceries, right?”

“Well…”

Anna shook her head. “It’s true what they say the rich really are

different from you and me.” She shot him a look. “I mean, of course,

just me.”

“Anna …”

“I’m scared as shit, Ben. Bad jokes come with the territory. Listen, I

don’t know this guy from Adam. If you think you can trust him if that’s

what your gut is telling you then I can live with it.”

“Because you’re right, it’s the commercial flights they’ll be watching”

Anna nodded vigorously. “So long as they’re not coming from places like

Colombia, private flights get pretty much a free pass. If this guy’s

pilot can move the Gulfstream to Brussels, let’s say…”

“We go directly to Brussels, assuming nobody’s onto the IDs Oscar made

for us. Then transfer to Fred’s private jet and fly to Vienna that way.

That’s the way the Sigma principals travel. Chances are, they’re not

going to be expecting a Gulfstream with two fugitives on board.”

“O.K.” Ben,” Anna said. “I call this the beginning of a plan.”

Ben dialed the number of the Hotel Carlton and waited a minute for the

front desk to connect him.

Fred McCall an voice boomed even through the international phone lines.

“My God, Benjamin, do you have any idea of the hour? Never mind, I

suppose you’re calling to apologize. Though I’m not the one you should

apologize to. Louise has been devastasted. Devastated. And you two

have so much in common.”

“I understand, Fred, and I…”

“But actually I’m glad you finally called. Do you realize they’re

saying the most preposterous things about you? A guy called me up and

gave me an earful. They’re saying that…”

“You’ve got to believe me, Fred,” Ben said urgently, cutting him off,

“there’s no truth to those reports whatever I mean, whatever they’re

accusing me of, you’ve got to believe me when I say that…”

“And I laughed in his face!” Fred was saying, having talked over Ben’s

interjection. “I told him, maybe that’s what you get from your creepy

English boarding schools, but I’m a Deerfield man myself, and there’s no

way on God’s green earth that…”

“I appreciate the vote of confidence, Fred. The thing is …”

“Top-seeded in tennis, I told him. You were, weren’t you?”

“Well, actually…”

“Track and field? I was a track and field man myself did I ever show

you my trophies? Louise thinks it’s ridiculous that I’m still boasting

about them fifty years later, and she’s right. But I’m incorrigible.”

“Fred, I’ve got a really, really, really big favor to ask.”

“For you, Benny? You’re practically family, you know that. One day you

might actually be family. Just say the word, my boy. Just say the

word.”

As Anna said, it was the beginning of a plan, no more. But foolproof

would take more time than they had. Because the one thing that was

certain was that they had to make their way to Vienna as fast as

possible, or it would be too late.

Unless it was, as Chardm had suggested, already too late.

CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE.

The hotel was in Vienna’s seventh district, and they had selected it

because it appeared to be suitably anonymous, catering mostly to German

and Austrian tourists. Traveling to Brussels in uniform as David Paine,

Ben arrived first, by several hours; Anna, using the Gayatri

Chandragupta alias for one last time, had traveled on a separate flight,

connecting through Amsterdam. McCall an pilot, a genial Irishman named

Harry Hogan, was perplexed by the odd garb of his guests, and further

perplexed that they’d refused to tell him in advance where they planned

on going, but the old man had been vehement in his instructions:

whatever Ben wanted, Ben would get. No questions asked.

Compared to the luxury of the Gulfstream, and the open-faced

companionability of Harry Hogan, the hotel seemed drab and depressing.

All the more so because Anna hadn’t arrived yet: they agreed that

traveling together from the airport was a risk best avoided. They’d

travel separately, and by different routes.

Alone in the room, Ben felt caged and anxious. It was noontime but the

weather was foul; rain spattered against the room’s small windows,

deepening his sense of gloom.

He thought about Chardin’s life, about the incredible ways in which the

governance of the Western world had been molded and directed by these

corporate managers. And he thought about his father. A victim? A

victimizer? Both?

Max had hired people to watch out for him–minders, baby-sitters, for

God’s sake. In a way, that was typical of the man: if Ben wouldn’t let

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