Robert Ludlum – The Sigma Protocol

create an industrial power infinitely greater than the sum of its parts.

To my eyes, as an analyst of capital, Trianon was a masterpiece–the

Sistine Chapel of corporate design.

Within a matter of months, word of my statistical prowess had reached

the head of the department for which I worked, Monsieur Arteaux. He was

an older gentleman, a man of few hobbies and a near total devotion to

Menard’s vision. Some of my coworkers found me cold, but not Monsieur

Arteaux. With us, conversation flowed as if between two sports fans. We

could discuss the relative advantages of internal capital markets or

alternate measurements of equity risk premiums, and do so for hours.

Matters that would stupefy most men, but which involved the architecture

of capital itself ~rationalizing the decisions of where to invest and

reinvest, how risk was best to be apportioned. Arteaux, who was nearing

retirement, put everything on the line by arranging for me to be

introduced to the great man himself, catapulting me over endless

managerial layers. Menard, amused by my obvious youth, asked me a few

condescending questions. I replied with rather serious and rather

provocative responses in truth, responses that verged on rudeness.

Arteaux himself was appalled. And Menard was, so it seems, captivated.

An unusual response, but it was, in capsule form, an explanation of his

own greatness. He told me later that my combination of insolence and

thoughtfulness reminded him of no one so much as himself. A magnificent

egotist, he was, but it was an earned egotism. My own arrogance for

even as a child I was tagged with that attribute was perhaps not

unfounded, either. Humility was a fine thing for men of the cloth. But

rationality decreed that one be sensible to one’s own capabilities. I

had considerable expertise in the techniques of valuation. Why

shouldn’t it logically extend to the valuation of oneself? My own

father was, I believed, handicapped by a deferential manner; he esteemed

his own gifts too little, and persuaded others to undervalue them in

turn. That would not be my mistake.

I became, in a matter of weeks, Menard’s personal assistant. I

accompanied him absolutely everywhere. No one knew whether I was an

amanuensis or a counselor. And in truth I moved, smoothly, from playing

the first role to playing the second. The great man treated me far more

like an adopted son than a paid employee. I was his only protege, the

sole acolyte who seemed worthy of his example. I would make proposals,

sometimes bold ones, occasionally proposals that reversed years of

planning. I suggested, for example, that we sell off an oil-exploration

division that his managers had spent years in developing. I suggested

massive investments in still unproven technologies. Yet when he heeded

my advice, he almost invariably found himself pleased by the results.

L’ombre de Menard the shadow of Menard became my nickname in the early

1950s. And even as he fought the disease, the lymphoma, that would

ultimately claim his life, he and Trianon came to rely increasingly upon

my judgment. My ideas were bold, unheard of, seemingly mad and soon

widely mimicked. Menard studied me as much as I studied him, with both

detachment and genuine affection. We were men in whom such qualities

enjoyed an easy coexistence.

Yet for all the privileges he granted me, I had sensed, for a while,

that there was one final sanctum to which I had not been granted entry.

There were trips he made without explanation, corporate allocations I

could not make sense of and about which he would brook no discussion.

Then the day came when he decided that I would be inducted into a

society I knew nothing about, an organization you know as Sigma.

I was still Menard’s wunderkind, still the corporate prodigy, still in

my early twenties, and utterly unprepared for what I was to see at the

first meeting I attended. It was at a chateau in rural Switzerland, a

magnificent ancient castle situated on a vast and isolated tract of land

owned by one of the principals. The security there was extraordinary:

even the landscaping, the trees and shrubbery surrounding the property,

was designed to permit the clandestine arrival and departure of various

individuals. So on my first visit, I was in no position to see the

others arrive. And no form of surveillance equipment could have

survived the high-intensity blasts of high and low electromagnetic

pulses, the latest technology in those days. All items made of metal

were required to be deposited in containers made of dense osmium;

otherwise, even a simple wristwatch would have been stopped dead by the

pulses. Menard and I came there in the evening, and were escorted

directly to our rooms, he to a magnificent suite overlooking a small

glacial lake, I to an adjoining chamber, less grand but exceedingly

comfortable.

The meetings began the next morning. About what was said then, I

actually remember little. Conversations continued from earlier ones of

which I knew nothing it was difficult for a newcomer to orient himself.

But I knew the faces of the men around the table, and it was a genuinely

surreal experience, something a fantasist might have tried to stage.

Menard was a man who had few peers, with respect to his own wealth, his

corporate power, or his vision. But what peers he had were there in the

room. The heads of two warring, mighty steel conglomerates. The head

of America’s leading electrical equipment manufacturers. Heavy

industry. Petrochemicals. Technology. The men responsible for the

so-called American century. Their counterparts from Europe. The most

famous press baron in the world. The chief executives of wildly

diversified portfolio companies. Men who, in combination, wielded

control over assets that exceeded the gross domestic product of most of

the countries in the world put together.

My worldview was shattered that day, then and forever.

Children, in history classes, are taught the names, the faces of

political and military leaders. Here is Winston Churchill, here is

Dwight Eisenhower, here is Franco and De Gaulle, Atlee and Macmillan.

These men did matter. But they were, really, little more than

spokesmen. They were, in an exalted sense, press secretaries,

employees. And Sigma made sure of it. The men who truly had their

hands on the levers of power were sitting around that long mahogany

table. They were the true marionette masters.

As the hours passed, and we drank coffee and nibbled on pastries, I

realized what I was witness to: a meeting of the board of directors of a

massive single corporation that controlled all other corporations.

A board of directors in charge of Western history itself!

It was their attitude, their perspective, that stayed with me, far more

than any actual words that were uttered. For these were professional

managers who had no time for useless emotion or irrational sentiments.

They believed in the development of productivity, in the promulgation of

order, in the rational concentration of capital They believed, in plain

English, that history the very destiny of the human race~ was simply too

important to repose in the hands of the masses. The upheavals of two

world wars had taught them that. History had to be managed. Decisions

had to be made by dispassionate professionals. And the chaos threatened

by communism the turmoil, the redistribution of wealth it augured, made

their project a matter of genuine and immediate urgency. It was a

present danger to be averted, not some Utopian scheme.

They assured each other of the need to create a planet where the true

spirit of enterprise would ever be safe from the envy and avarice of the

masses. After all, was a world purulent with communism and fascism a

world any of us wished to bequeath to our children? Modern capital

showed us the way but the future of the industrial state had to be

protected, sheltered from the storms. That was the vision. And though

the origins of this vision lay in the global depression that preceded

the war, the vision became infinitely more compelling in the wake of the

destruction wreaked by the war itself.

I said little that day, not because I was by nature taciturn, but

because I was quite literally speechless. I was a pygmy among giants. I

was a peasant supping with emperors. I was beside myself, and all the

while it was the most I could do to maintain a look of dispassion, in

emulation of my great mentor. Those were the first hours I spent in the

company of Sigma, and my life would never be the same again. The daily

fodder of the newspapers– a labor strike here, a party assembly there,

an assassination somewhere else–was no longer a record of random

events. Behind these events could now be discerned a pattern–the

complex and intricate machinations of a complex and intricate machine.

To be sure, the founders, the principals, profited immensely. Their

corporations, in every instance, thrived, while so many others, not

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