Robert Ludlum – The Sigma Protocol

couple when she’d stopped in Kramerbooks, on Connecticut Avenue, and saw

them shopping together. Ramon was a small, open-faced man with an easy

smile, his white teeth dazzling against his dark complexion.

He worked as an administrator for the local Meals on Wheels program. He

and Anna warmed to each other immediately; Ramon insisted that she dine

with them that evening, as a spur-of-the-moment thing, and she agreed.

It was a magical occasion, partly because of the excellence of Ramon’s

paella, partly because of the relaxed conversation and easy banter, none

of which ever touched upon office matters; she envied them their easy

intimacy and affection.

David, with his square jaw and sandy hair, was a tall, ruggedly handsome

man, and Ramon noticed the way she looked at him. “I know what you’re

thinking,” he confided to her at one point, when David was across the

room with his back to them, fixing drinks. “You’re thinking, “What a

waste.” ”

Anna laughed. “It’s crossed my mind,” she said.

“All the girls say that.” Ramon grinned. “Well, he ain’t wasted on

me.”

A few weeks later, Anna had lunch with David and explained to him why he

hadn’t received a promotion from E-3 grade. On paper, he reported to

Anna, but Anna reported to Dupree. “What would you like me to do?” Anna

asked.

Denneen responded quietly, with less outrage than Anna felt on his

behalf. “I don’t want to make a big deal of this. I just want to do my

work.” He looked at her. “Truth? I want to get the hell out of

Dupree’s division. I happen to be interested in operations and

strategy. I’m only E-3, so I can’t arrange it. But you might be able

to.”

Anna pulled a few strings. It meant doing an end-run around Dupree,

which didn’t exactly endear her to OSI management. But it worked, and

Denneen never forgot it.

Now she filled in Denneen about what had happened at her apartment, and

between Ramon’s chicken mole and a bottle of a velvety Rioja, she felt

some of her tension ebb. Soon she found herself joking grimly about

having been “trounced by a member of the Back Street Boys.”

“You could have been killed,” Denneen said solemnly, not for the first

time.

“But I wasn’t. Which proves that wasn’t what he was after.”

“And what might that have been?”

Anna just shook her head.

“Listen, Anna. I know you probably can’t talk about it, but do you

think there’s any chance it has to do with your new assignment at

I.C.U?

Old Alan Bartlett has kept so many secrets over the years, there’s no

telling what he’s got you up against.”

“El diablo sake mas par viejo que par diablo,” Ramon muttered. It was

one of his mother’s proverbs: The devil knows more because he is old

than because he is the devil.

“Is it a coincidence?” Denneen persisted.

Anna looked at her wineglass and shrugged, wordlessly. Were others

interested in the death of the people in the Sigma files? She couldn’t

think about this right now, and didn’t want to.

“Have some more camitas,” Ramon said helpfully.

The following morning at the M Street building, Anna was summoned to

Bartlett’s office the instant she arrived.

“What did you learn in Nova Scotia?” Bartlett asked, not wasting any

time on social niceties this time.

She’d earlier decided against mentioning the intruder in her apartment;

there was no reason to think it was related, and she worried, vaguely,

that the episode would undermine his confidence in her. She told him

about what was clearly relevant: the puncture mark in the old man’s

hand.

Bartlett nodded slowly. “What kind of poison did they use?”

“Haven’t gotten the toxicology results back yet. It takes time. Always

does. If they find something, they call you right away. If they don’t,

they keep testing and testing.”

“But you really believe Mailhot might have been poisoned.” Bartlett

sounded nervous, as if uncertain whether this was good news or bad.

“I do,” she said. “Then there’s the money question. Four months ago

the guy got a wire transfer of a million bucks.”

Bartlett knit his brows. “From?”

“No idea. An account in the Cayman Islands. Then the trail disappears.

Laundered.”

Bartlett listened in perplexed silence.

She went on. “So I got the bank records going back ten years, and there

it is, regular as clockwork. Every year Mailhot got a chunk of money,

wired into his account. Steadily increasing amounts.”

“A business partnership, perhaps?”

“According to his wife, these were payouts from a grateful employer.”

“A very generous employer.”

“A very rich one. And a very dead one. The old man spent most of his

life working as a personal assistant to a wealthy press baron. A

bodyguard, a factotum, a lifelong gofer, best I can figure it.”

“To whom?”

“Charles Highsmith.” Anna watched Bartlett’s reaction carefully. He

nodded briskly; he’d already known this.

“The question, of course, is why the offshore payments,” he said. “Why

not a straightforward transfer from Highsmith’s estate?”

Anna shrugged. “That’s just one of many questions. I suppose one way

to answer it is to trace the funds, see if they really did originate

with Charles Highsmith’s estate. I’ve done work before on laundered

drug money. But I can’t be optimistic.”

Bartlett nodded. “What about the widow… ?”

“No help. She may be covering something up, but as far as I can tell,

she didn’t know much about her husband’s business. Seemed to think he

was in the grip of paranoia. Apparently, he was one of those who

thought Highsmith’s death might not have been an accident.”

“Is that right?” Bartlett said, with a tincture of irony.

“And you’re another one, aren’t you? Obviously you knew about

Highsmith’s connection to Mailhot. Was there a Sigma file on him, too?”

“That’s immaterial.”

“Forgive me, but you’ll have to let me be the judge of that. I have a

sense that not much I’m reporting comes as news to you.”

Bartlett nodded. “Highsmith was Sigma, yes. Both master and servant

were, in this case. Highsmith seems to have placed great trust in

Mailhot.”

“And now the two are inseparable,” Anna said grimly.

“You did superb work in Halifax,” Bartlett said. “I hope you know that.

I also hope you didn’t unpack. It appears that we’ve got a fresh one.”

“Where?”

“Paraguay. Asuncion.”

A fresh one. The words were, she had to admit, intriguing as well as

chilling. At the same time, the Ghost’s high-handed way with

information filled her with frustration and a deep sense of unease. She

studied the man’s face, half-admiring its complete opacity. What

precisely did he know? What wasn’t he telling her?

And why?

CHAPTER ELEVEN.

St. Gallen, Switzerland

Ben Hartman had spent the last two days traveling. From New York to

Paris. From Paris to Strasbourg. At Strasbourg he had taken a short

commuter flight to Mulhouse, France, near the borders of Germany and

Switzerland. There he had hired a car to drive him to the regional Aero

port Basel-Mulhouse, very close to Basel.

But instead of crossing into Switzerland, which was the logical point of

entry, he instead chartered a small plane to take him to Liechtenstein.

Neither the charter operator nor the pilot had asked him any questions.

Why would an apparently prosperous-looking international businessman be

seeking to enter the duchy of Liechtenstein, one of the world’s centers

of money-laundering, in a manner that was undetectable, and frankly

irregular, avoiding official border crossings? The code among them was

understood: don’t ask.

By the time he had arrived in Liechtenstein, it was almost one in the

morning. He spent the night in a small pension outside Vaduz, and then

set off in the morning to find a pilot who would be willing to cross the

Swiss border, in such a way that his name would appear on no manifests

or passenger lists.

In Liechtenstein, the plumage of an international businessman–the Kiton

double-breasted suit, the Hermes tie, and the Charvet shirt–was

protective coloration, nothing more. The duchy distinguished sharply

among insiders and outsiders, among those who had something of value to

offer and those who had not, among those who belonged and those who did

not. It was emblematic of its clannishness that foreigners who sought

to become citizens had to be approved by both the parliament and the

prince.

Ben Hartman knew his way around places like these. In the past, that

fact had filled him with moral unease, his permanent, ineradicable air

of privilege burning like the mark of Cain. Now it was merely a

tactical advantage to be exploited. Twenty kilometers south of Vaduz

was an airstrip where businessmen with private jets and helicopters

sometimes disembarked. There he had a conversation with a gruff, older

member of the ground maintenance crew, referring to his requirements in

terms that were both vague and unmistakable. A man of few words, he

looked Ben over and scrawled a phone number on the back of a manifest

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *