Robert Ludlum – The Sigma Protocol

“No. It’s not one of yours?”

“Absolutely not. I can tell from plates.”

“Maybe it’s a neighbor, or a friend?”

“I wonder could your American colleagues be involving in this, maybe

checking on you?” Heisler said heatedly. “Because if that’s the case,

I’m calling this operation off right now!”

Unsettled and defensive, she said, “It can’t be. Tom Murphy would have

let me know before sending someone in.” Wouldn’t he? “Anyway, he

barely seemed interested when I first told him.”

But if he were checking up on her? Was that possible?

“Well, then who is it?” Heisler demanded.

“Who are you?” Jurgen Lenz repeated, fear now showing on his face. “You

are not a friend of Winston Rockwell’s.”

“Sort of,” Ben admitted. “I mean, I know him from some work I’ve done.

I’m Benjamin Hartman. My father is Max Hartman.” Once more, he watched

Lenz to gauge his reaction.

Lenz blenched, and then his expression softened. “Dear God,” he

whispered. “I can see the resemblance. What happened to your brother

was a terrible thing.”

Ben felt as if he’d been punched in the stomach. “What do you know?” he

shouted.

The police radio crackled to life.

“Korporal, well 1st das?”

“Keine Ahnting.”

“Keiner van uns, oder?”

“Richtig.”

Now the other team wanted to know whether the Peugeot was one of theirs;

Heisler confirmed he had no idea who it was. He took a night vision

monocular from the backseat and held it up to one eye. It was dark on

the street now, and the unidentified car had switched off its lights.

There was no street lamp nearby, so it was impossible to see the

driver’s face. The night-vision scope was a good idea, Anna thought.

“He has a newspaper up before his face,” Heisler said. “A tabloid. Die

Kronen Zeitung–I can just make it out.”

“Can’t be easy for the guy to read the paper in the dark, huh?” She

thought: Lenz Junior could be dead already, and we’re sitting here

waiting.

“I do not think he’s getting much reading done.” Heisler seemed to

share her sense of humor.

“Mind if I take a look?”

He handed her the scope. All she saw was newsprint. “He’s obviously

trying not to be identified,” she said. What if he really was Bureau?

“Which tells us something. O.K. if I use your cell phone?”

“Not at all.” He gave her his clunky Ericsson, and she punched out the

local number of the U.S. embassy.

“Tom,” she said when Murphy came on the line. “It’s Anna Navarro. You

didn’t send anyone out to Hietzing, did you?”

“Hietzing? Here in Vienna?”

“My case.”

A pause. “No, you didn’t ask me to, did you?”

“Well, someone’s screwing up my stakeout. No one in your office would

have taken it upon himself to check up on me without clearing it with

you first?”

“They better not. Anyway, everyone’s accounted for here, far as I

know.”

“Thanks.” She disconnected, handed the phone back to Heisler.

“Strange.”

“Then who is in that car?” Heisler asked.

“If I may ask, why did you think I was CIA?”

“There are some old-timers in that community who have rather taken

against me,” Lenz said, shrugging. “Do you know about Project Paper

Clip?” They had graduated to vodka. Use Lenz had still not returned to

the sitting room, more than an hour after she had so abruptly left.

“Perhaps not by that name. You’re aware that immediately after the war,

the U.S. government–the OSS, as the CIA’s predecessor was

called–smuggled some of Nazi Germany’s leading scientists to America,

yes? Paper Clip was the code name for this plan. The Americans

sanitized the Germans’ records, falsified their backgrounds. Covered up

the fact that these were mass-murderers. You see, because as soon as

the war was over, America turned its attention to a new war–the Cold

War. Suddenly all that counted was fighting the Soviet Union. America

had spent four years and countless lives battling the Nazis and suddenly

the Nazis were their friends–so long as they could help in the struggle

against the Communists. Help build weapons and such for America. These

scientists were brilliant men, the brains behind the Third Reich’s

enormous scientific accomplishments.”

“And war criminals,”

“Precisely. Some of them responsible for the torture and murder of

thousands upon thousands of concentration-camp inmates. Some, like

Wernher von Braun and Dr. Hubertus Strughold, had invented many of the

Nazi’s weapons of war. Arthur Rudolph, who helped murder twenty

thousand innocent people at Nordhausen, was awarded NASA’s highest

civilian honor!”

Twilight settled. Lenz got up and switched on lamps around the sitting

room. “The Americans brought in the man who was in charge of death

camps in Poland. One Nazi scientist they gave asylum to had conducted

the freezing experiments at Dachau he ended up at Randolph Air Force

Base in San Antonio, a distinguished professor of space medicine. The

CIA people who arranged all this, those few who survive, have been less

than appreciative of my efforts to shed light on this episode.”

“Your efforts?”

“Yes, and those of my foundation. It is not an insignificant part of

the research that we sponsor.”

“But what threat could the CIA pose?”

“The CIA, I understand, did not exist until a few years after the war,

but they inherited operational control of these agents. There are

aspects of history that some old-guard types in the CIA prefer to have

left undisturbed. Some of them will go to quite extraordinary lengths

to ensure this.”

“I’m sorry, I can’t believe that. The CIA doesn’t go around killing

people.”

“No, not anymore,” Lenz conceded, a note of sarcasm in his voice. “Not

since they killed Allende in Chile, Lumumba in the Belgian Congo, tried

to assassinate Castro. No, they’re prohibited by law from doing such

things. So now they out source as you American businessmen like to say.

They hire freelancers, mercenaries, through chains of front

organizations, so the hit men can never be connected with the U.S.

government.” He broke off. “The world is more complicated than you

seem to think.”

“But that’s all ancient, irrelevant history!”

“Scarcely irrelevant if you’re one of the ancient men who may be

implicated,” Lenz pressed on inexorably. “I speak of elder statesmen,

retired diplomats, former dignitaries who did a stint with the Office of

Strategic Services in their youth. As they putter around their

libraries and write their memoirs, they cannot avoid a certain unease.”

He gazed into the clear fluid in his glass as if seeing something there.

“These are men accustomed to power, and deference. They would not look

forward to revelations that would darken their golden years. Oh, of

course, they’ll tell themselves that what they do is for the good of the

country, sparing the good name of the United States. So much of the

wickedness men do is in the name of the commonweal. This, Mr. Hartman,

I know. Frail old dogs can be the most dangerous. Calls can be made,

favors called in. Mentors drawing on the loyalty of proteges.

Frightened old men determined to die with at least their good names

intact. I wish I could discount this scenario. But I know what these

men are like. I have seen too much of human nature.”

Use reappeared, carrying a small leather-bound book; on its spine Ben

made out the name Holderlin, lettered in gilt. “I see you gentlemen are

still at it,” she said.

“You understand, don’t you, why we can be slightly on edge,” Lenz told

Ben smoothly. “We have many enemies.”

“There have been many threats against my husband,” Use said. “There are

fanatics on the right who view him, somehow, as a turncoat, as the man

who betrayed his father’s legacy.” She smiled without warmth and

repaired to the adjoining room.

“They worry me less, to be frank, than the self-interested, ostensibly

rational souls who simply don’t understand why we can’t let sleeping

dogs lie.” Lenz’s eyes were alert. “And whose friends, as I say, may

be tempted to take rather extreme measures to ensure that their golden

years remain golden. But I go on. You had certain questions about the

postwar period, questions you hoped I might be able to answer.”

Jorgen Lenz examined the photograph, gripping it in both hands. His

face was tense. “That’s my father,” he said. “Yes.”

“You look just like him,” Ben said.

“Quite the legacy, hmm?” Lenz said ruefully. No longer was he the

charming, affable host. Now he peered intently at the rest of the

photograph. “Dear God, no. It can’t be.” He sank into his chair, his

face ashen.

“What can’t?” Ben was unrelenting. “Tell me what you know.”

“Is this genuine?” The same reaction that Carl Mercandetti, the

historian, had had.

“Yes.” Ben took a deep breath, and replied with the utmost intensity.

“Yes.” The lives of Peter, Liesl, and who knew how many others had been

its guarantors of authenticity.

“But Sigma was a myth! An old wives’ tale! We’d all satisfied

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