Robert Ludlum – The Sigma Protocol

about any international trip. I was hoping he might have said something

to you.”

“Not a word. Did he get any phone calls … ?”

“No, I don’t… Let me look at the message book.” She came back to the

phone a minute later. “Just a Mr. Godwin.”

“Godwin?”

“Well, actually, it says Professor Godwin.”

The name took him by surprise. That had to be Ben’s college mentor, the

Princeton historian John Barnes Godwin. Then again, he realized, it

wasn’t particularly bizarre for Godwin to be calling Max: a few years

ago, impressed by what Ben had told him about the famous historian, Max

had given money to Princeton to set up a Center for the Study of Human

Values, of which Godwin became the director. Yet his father hadn’t

mentioned Godwin. Why were the two of them talking on the morning

before Max disappeared?

“Let me have the number,” he said.

He thanked her and clicked off.

Strange, he thought. For a brief moment he imagined that his father was

fleeing somewhere, because he knew his past had been uncovered or was

about to be uncovered. But that made no sense fleeing what? Fleeing

where?

Ben was exhausted and emotionally depleted, and he knew he was not

thinking clearly. He badly needed sleep. He was making connections now

that weren’t quite logical.

He thought: Peter knew things, things about their father’s past, about a

company Max had helped set up, and then Peter was killed.

And then … And then I found a photograph of the founders of this

corporation, my father among them. And I followed to Liesl and Peter’s

cabin, and I found a page from the incorporation document setting this

company up. And then they’d tried to kill both me and Liesl and cover

up the evidence by blowing up the cabin.

So is it possible that they… again, the faceless, anonymous They …

had gotten to my father, informed him that the secret was out, the

secret of his past, or maybe the secret of this strange corporation? Or

both?

Yes, of course it was possible. Since They seem to be trying to

eliminate anyone who knows about this company… Why else had Max

disappeared so suddenly, so mysteriously?

Might he have been compelled to go somewhere, to meet with certain

people… There was only one thing Ben felt sure of: that his father’s

sudden disappearance was in some way connected with the murders of Peter

and Liesl, and with the uncovering of this document.

He returned to the Range Rover, noticed in the light of the rising sun

the deep scratches that defaced its sides, and drove back to

Zahringerplatz. Then he settled back in the Rover and placed a call to

Princeton, New Jersey.

“Professor Godwin?”

The old professor sounded as if he’d been asleep.

“It’s Ben Hartman.”

John Barnes Godwin, historian of Europe in the twentieth century and

once Princeton’s most popular lecturer, had been retired for years. He

was eighty-two but still came into his office every day to work.

An image of Godwin came into Ben’s mind–tall and gaunt, white haired,

the deeply wrinkled face.

Godwin had been not just Ben’s faculty adviser but a sort of father

figure as well. Ben remembered once sitting in Godwin’s book-choked

office in Dickinson Hall. The amber light, the vanilla-mildew smell of

old books.

They’d been talking about how FOR managed to maneuver the isolationist

United States into the Second World War. Ben was writing his senior

thesis about FDR and had told Godwin that he was offended by Roosevelt’s

trickery.

“Ah, Mr. Hartman,” Godwin replied. That was what he called Ben in

those days. “How is your Latin? Honesta turpitudo est pro causa bona.n

Ben looked at the professor blankly.

” “For a good cause,”” Godwin translated with a slow, sly smile, ”

‘wrongdoing is virtuous.” Publilius Syrus, who lived in Rome a century

before Christ, and said a lot of smart things.”

“I don’t think I agree,” Ben said, the morally indignant undergraduate.

“To me that sounds like a rationalization for screwing people over. I

hope I never catch myself saying that.”

Godwin regarded him with what seemed to be puzzlement. “I suppose

that’s why you refuse to join your father’s business,” he said

pointedly. “You’d rather be pure.”

“I’d rather teach.”

“But why are you so sure you want to teach?” Godwin had asked, sipping

tawny port.

“Because I love it.”

“You’re certain?”

“No,” Ben admitted. “How can a twenty-year-old be certain of anything?”

“Oh, I find that twenty-year-olds are certain of most things.”

“But why should I go into something I have no interest in, working in a

company my father built, to make even more money that I don’t need? I

mean, what good does our money do for society? Why should I have great

wealth while others have no food on the table?”

Godwin closed his eyes. “It’s a luxury to thumb your nose at money.

I’ve had some extremely rich students, even a Rockefeller, in my class.

And they all struggle with this same dilemma not to let the money rule

your life or define you, but, instead, to do something meaningful with

your life. Now, your father is one of our nation’s great

philanthropists ”

“Yeah, wasn’t it Reinhold Niebuhr who said that philanthropy is a form

of paternalism? The privileged class tries to preserve its status by

doling out funds to the needy?”

Godwin glanced up, impressed. Ben tried not to smile. He’d just read

this in his theology class, and the line had stuck in his mind.

“A question, Ben. Is becoming a grade school teacher actually your way

of rebelling against your father?”

“Maybe so,” Ben said, unwilling to lie. He wanted to add that it was

Godwin who had inspired him to teach, but that might sound too …

something.

He was surprised when Godwin replied, “Bully for you. That takes guts.

And you’ll be a great teacher, I have no doubt of it.”

Now, Ben said, “I’m sorry to be calling you so late ”

“Not at all, Ben. Where are you? The connection ”

“Switzerland. Listen, my father’s disappeared ”

“What do you mean, ‘disappeared’?”

“He left home this morning, went somewhere, we don’t know where, and I

was wondering because you called him this morning, just before that…”

“I was returning his call, really. He wanted to talk about another gift

to the center he was planning to make.”

“That’s it?”

“I’m afraid so. Nothing out of the ordinary, as far as I can recall.

But if he happens to call me again, is there a way I can get in touch

with you?”

Ben gave Godwin his digital number. “Another question. Do you know

anyone on the faculty of the University of Zurich? Someone who does

what you do modern European history.”

Godwin paused for a moment. “At the University of Zurich? You can’t do

any better than Carl Mercandetti. A first-class researcher. Economic

history’s his specialty, but he’s very wide-ranging in the best European

tradition. The fellow also has an astounding collection of grappa,

though I suppose that’s neither here nor there. Regardless,

Mercandetti’s your man.”

“I appreciate it,” Ben said, and he hung up.

Then he put the car seat back and tried to doze for a few hours.

He slept fitfully, his sleep disturbed by unceasing nightmares in which

he was forced to see the cabin explode time and again.

When he awoke at a few minutes after nine, he saw in the rearview mirror

how unshaven and dirty he looked, saw the deep circles under his eyes,

but he didn’t have what it took to find a place to shave and wash.

There wasn’t any time in any case.

It was time to begin excavating a past that was no longer the past.

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN.

Paris

Only a small brass plaque marked the office of Groupe TransEuroTech SA,

on the third floor of a limestone building on the avenue Marceau in the

eighth arrondissement. The plaque, mounted on the stone to the left of

the front door, was but one of seven brass plaques bearing the names of

law firms and other small companies, and as such it attracted little

attention.

The office of TransEuroTech never received unscheduled visitors, but

anyone who happened to pass by the third floor would see nothing out of

the ordinary: a young male receptionist sitting behind a glass teller’s

window made of a bullet-resistant polycarbonate material that looked

like plain glass. Behind him, a small, bare room furnished with a few

molded-plastic chairs, and a single door to the interior offices.

No one would, of course, realize that the receptionist was actually an

armed and experienced ex-commando, or see the concealed surveillance

cameras, the passive infrared motion detectors, the balanced magnetic

switches embedded in every door.

The conference room deep inside the offices was actually a room within a

room: a module separated from the surrounding concrete walls by

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