Robert Ludlum – The Sigma Protocol

the most part, we’re talking about individuals with personal involvement

in Sigma who sought to resist the inevitable. They complained that

Sigma had fallen under my sway, felt displaced by my emerging role. Oh,

all our members were treated generously…”

“Kept on a string, you mean. Given payments to fortify their

discretion.”

“As you like. But it was no longer enough, not now. What it came down

to was a failure of vision. The point remains that they declined to,

shall we say, get with the program. Then there were those who became

importunate, possibly indiscreet, had long since ceased to have anything

to offer. They were loose threads, and the time had come to snip them.

Perhaps it seems harsh, but when there’s this much at stake, you do not

simply give people a firm talking to, or spank their wrists, or put them

in ‘time-out,” yes? You take more definitive measures.”

Don’t give up, Ben told himself. Keep him engaged.

“Murdering these old men in itself seems a foolish risk, don’t you

think? The deaths were bound to attract suspicion.”

“Please. All the deaths appeared to be natural, but even if the toxin

were discovered, these were men with plenty of worldly enemies ”

Lenz heard the sound at the same moment Ben did.

A burst of machine-gun fire not far away.

And then another, even closer.

A shout.

Lenz turned toward the door, hypodermic needle in one hand. He said

something to the guard standing by the door.

The door burst open in a hail of bullets.

A scream, and the guard collapsed in a pool of his own blood.

Lenz dropped to the floor.

Anna!

Ben’s relief was enormous. She’s alive, somehow she’s alive.

“Ben!” she shouted, flinging the door shut behind her and turning the

lock. “Ben, you all right?”

“I’m all right,” he called.

“Stand up!” she screamed at Lenz. “You god damned son of a bitch.”

She advanced, machine gun leveled. She was wearing a doctor’s short

white coat.

Lenz stood. His face was flushed, his silver hair mussed. “My guards

will be here any second.” His voice quavered.

“Don’t count on it,” Anna replied. “I’ve sealed off the entire wing,

and the doors are jammed from the outside.”

“You’ve killed that guard, I think,” Lenz said, bravado returning to his

voice. “I thought the United States trained its agents only to kill in

selfdefense.”

“Haven’t you heard? I’m off duty,” Anna said. “Hands away from your

body. Where’s your weapon?”

Lenz was indignant. “I have none.”

Anna approached. “You don’t mind if I look, do you? Hands away from

your body, I said.”

Slowly she took a step toward Lenz, slid her free hand inside his

jacket. “Let’s see,” she said. “I sure hope I can do this without

setting off the damned machine gun. I’m not too familiar with these

little guys.”

Lenz paled.

She produced a small handgun from inside Lenz’s suit with a flourish,

like a conjurer pulling a rabbit out of a top hat.

“Well, well,” she said. “Pretty slick for an old man, Jurgen. Or do

your friends still call you Gerhard?”

CHAPTER FORTY-SEVEN.

Ben gasped, “Oh, my God.”

Lenz pursed his lips, and then, oddly, he smiled.

Anna pocketed Lenz’s handgun. “For the longest time it baffled me,” she

said. “The federal ID lab ran the prints but turned up nothing, no

matter how many databases they used. They tried the army intelligence

files, but still nothing. Until they went back to the old ten-print

cards from the war and a few years after, which haven’t yet been

digitized, why should they be, right? Your SS prints were included in

the Army’s files, I guess because you escaped.”

Lenz watched her, amused.

“The techies speculated that maybe the prints on the photo I’d sent them

were old, but the strange thing was, the fingerprint oil, the

perspiration residue they call it, was fresh. Made no sense to them.”

Ben looked at Lenz. Yes, he resembled the Gerhard Lenz who appeared in

the picture with Max Hartman. Lenz in that 1945 photo was in his

mid-forties. That made him, what, over a hundred years old.

/( seemed impossible.

“I was my own first successful subject,” Gerhard Lenz said quietly.

“Almost twenty years ago I was for the first time able to arrest, then

reverse, my own aging. Only a few years ago did we devise a formulation

that works reliably on everyone.” He was looking off in the distance,

his gaze unfocused. “It meant that everything that Sigma stood for

could now be made secure.”

“All right,” Anna interrupted. “Give me the key to the restraints.”

“I don’t have the key. The orderly–”

“Forget it.” She shifted the machine gun to her right hand, pulled a

straightened paper clip out of a jacket pocket, and freed Ben, handing

him a long plastic object, which he glanced at and understood at once.

“Don’t move a muscle,” Anna shouted, thrusting the Uzi in Lenz’s

direction. “Ben, take those restraints and lock this bastard to

something immobile.” She quickly looked around. “We’ve got to get out

of here as fast as possible, and–”

“No,” Ben said, steely.

She turned, startled. “What are you–?”

“He’s holding prisoners here–young people in tents outside, sick kids

in at least one of the wards. We’ve got to let them out first!”

Anna understood immediately. She nodded. “Fastest way is to shut down

the security system. De-electrify the fences, unlock…” She turned to

Lenz, adjusted the machine gun in her hands. “There’s a master control

panel, an override, in your office. We’re taking a little walk.”

Lenz looked phlegmatic. “I’m afraid I don’t know what you’re talking

about. All security for the clinic is controlled from the central guard

station on the first level.”

“Sorry,” Anna said. “I’ve already ‘debriefed’ one of your guards.” She

pointed with the Uzi toward a closed door, not the one through which

they’d entered. “Let’s go.”

Lenz’s office was immense, dark, cathedral-like.

Glimmers of pale light filtered in through slot windows cut into the

stone walls high above their heads. Most of the room was in shadows,

except for a small circle of light from a green-glass-shaded library

lamp in the middle of Lenz’s massive walnut desk.

“I assume you don’t object to my putting on the lights so I can see what

I’m doing,” Lenz said.

“Sorry,” Anna said. “We don’t need it. Just go around to the other

side of your desk and push the button that raises the control panel.

Let’s make this easy.”

Lenz hesitated but a moment, then followed her directions. “This is a

pointless exercise,” he said with weary contempt as he walked around to

his side of the desk. She followed, sidling, the weapon always leveled

at him.

Ben came just behind her. A second set of eyes in case Lenz attempted

something, as he was sure Lenz would do.

Lenz pushed a recessed button at the front edge of the desk. There was

a mechanical rumble, and a long, flat section arose from the middle of

the desktop like a horizontal tombstone: a brushed-steel instrument

panel, strange-looking atop the Gothic desk.

Set into the steel was what appeared to be a flat plasma screen, on

which nine small squares, glowing ice blue, were arranged in rows of

three. Each square display showed a different view of the interior and

exterior of the Schloss. Below the screen was an array of silver toggle

switches.

In one display the progeric children played, tethered to their poles; in

another, refugees milled about around their tents on the snow, smoking.

Guards stood by various entrances. Other guards patrolled the grounds.

Winking red lights every few feet along the electrified fences atop the

ancient stone walls, presumably showing that the system was still

operational.

“Move it,” Anna commanded.

Lenz bowed his head indulgently, and began toggling each switch off in

order from left to right. Nothing happened, no sign of the security

system shutting down. “We will find other progerics,” Lenz said as he

switched them off, “and there’s an endless supply of youthful war

refugees, displaced children the world doesn’t miss there always seems

to be a war somewhere.” This thought seemed to amuse him.

The winking red lights had gone out. A cluster of refugee children was

playing a game near one of the tall iron gates. One of them pointed

noticing that the red power lights had stopped blinking?

Another of them ran up to the gate, tugged at it.

The gate slowly came open.

Tentatively the child walked through the gate, looking back at the

others, beckoning. Slowly another joined him, passing through the gate

to freedom. They appeared to be shouting to the others, though there

was no sound.

Then a few more of the children. A bedraggled-looking girl with matted

curly hair. Another young boy.

More children.

Frenetic movement. The children began to scramble out, pushing and

shoving.

Lenz watched, his expression inscrutable. Anna’s attention was riveted

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