Robert Ludlum – The Sigma Protocol

“O.K.,” he said. “Have a good trip.”

Sully went back to scrutinizing the check-in line. A blond-haired woman

with swarthy skin caught his eye. The suspect could have dyed her hair;

the other specifics matched. He drifted toward her.

“Could I see your passport, madame,” he said.

The woman looked at him blankly.

“Votre passe port s’il vous plait, madame.”

“Bien stir. Vous me croyez etre anglaise? Je suis italienne, mais tous

mes amis pen sent que je suis allemande ou anglaise ou n’importe quoi.”

According to her passport, she resided in Milan, and Sully thought it

unlikely that an American could speak French with such an egregious

Italian accent.

No one else on line just then looked terribly promising. A dot-head

with two bawling children was ahead of the blond Italian. As far as

Sully was concerned, her kind couldn’t leave the country fast enough.

Chicken vindaloo was going to end up being the national dish at the rate

the goddamn dot-heads were immigrating. The Muslims were worse, of

course, but the dot-heads with their unpronounceable names were pretty

awful. Last year, when he’d dislocated his arm, the Indian doctor at

the clinic had flatly refused to give him a real painkiller. Like maybe

he was supposed to do some fakir-style mind control. If his arm wasn’t

half out of its socket, he would have punched the guy.

Sully glanced at the woman’s passport without interest and waved her and

her sniveling brood through. The dot-head whore even smelled like

saffron.

A young Russian with acne. Last name was German, so probably a Jew.

Mafiya? Not his problem just now.

An honest-to-goodness Frenchman and his wife, off to a vacation.

Another goddamn dot-head in a said. Gayatri was the name, and then

something unpronounceable. Curry cut.

None of the other men fit the profile: too old, too fat, too young, too

short.

Too bad. Maybe it wasn’t going to be his lucky day after all.

Anna settled into her coach-class seat, adjusting her said and mentally

repeating her name: Gayatri Chandragupta. It wouldn’t do to stumble

over it if anyone were to ask. She was wearing her long black hair

straight back, and when she’d caught a glimpse of her reflection in a

window, she hardly recognized herself.

CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR.

Buenos Aires

Anna looked anxiously through the plate glass of the American Express

office at sedate, tree-lined Plaza Libertador General San Martin. The

park, once a bull ring, once a slave market, was now dominated by the

great bronze statue of General Jose de San Martin astride his horse. The

sun blazed fiercely. Inside it was air-conditioned, ice-cold, and

quiet.

“Senorita Acampo?”

She turned to see a slender man in a close-fitting blue blazer, stylish

heavy black-framed glasses. “I am very sorry, senorita, but we cannot

locate this package.”

“I don’t understand.” She switched to Spanish so there would be no

mistake: “Esta registrado que lo recibio?”

“We received it, yes, madam, but it cannot be found.”

Maddening, but this at least was progress. The last employee had

adamantly denied a package had ever been received in her name.

“Are you saying it’s lost?”

A quick reflexive shrug like a nervous tic. “Our computers show it was

sent from Washington, D.C.” and received here yesterday, but after

that, I cannot say. If you’ll fill out this form, we’ll begin a search

throughout our system. If it’s not located, you’re entitled to full

replacement value.”

Damn it! It seemed unlikely to her that the envelope had been lost.

More likely it had been stolen. But by whom? And why? Who knew what

was inside? Who knew to look? Had Denneen given her up? She could

scarcely credit it. Possibly his phone was tapped, unknown to him. In

truth, there were too many potential explanations, and none of them

changed the basic fact: if it had been stolen, whoever had done it now

knew who she was–and why she was here.

The office of Interpol Argentina is located within the headquarters of

the Policia Federal Argentina on Suipacha. Interpol’s man in Buenos

Aires was Miguel Antonio Peralta, the Jefe Secaon Operaaones. A plaque

on his door read subcomisario departamento interpol. He was a round

shouldered, bulky man with a large, round head. Strands of black hair

matted across the top of his pate advertised his baldness instead of

disguising it.

His wood-veneered office was jammed with tributes to Interpol’s work.

Plaques and commemorative plates from grateful police forces around the

world crowded the walls, along with crucifixes and diplomas and images

of saints and a framed apostolic benediction on his family from the Pope

himself. An antique silver-framed sepia photograph of his policeman

father was almost as prominent.

Peralta’s lizard eyes were sleepy behind his perfectly round

tortoiseshell glasses. A holstered pistol sat atop his gleaming bare

desk, the leather holster old but lovingly cared for. He was genial and

flawlessly courteous. “You know we are always eager to help in the

cause of justice,” he said.

“And as my assistant explained, we at CBS find ourselves in a rather

competitive situation right now,” Anna said. “The people at Dateline

are apparently on the verge of locating and exposing this man. If they

reach him first, so be it. But I didn’t get where I am today by being a

pushover. I’m working with an Argentine field producer who thinks we

can get the story, with a little assistance from you.”

“In Argentina, football–soccer, I think you say–is our national sport.

I gather network TV plays that role in the States.”

“You could say that.” Anna rewarded him with a wide smile, and crossed

her legs. “And I’m not at all putting down my colleagues at Dateline.

But we both know what sort of story they’ll do, because it’ll be the

same old tune. Argentina as a backward country that harbors these bad,

bad people. They’ll do something very exploitative, very cheap. We’re

not like that. What we have in mind is much more sophisticated and I

think much more accurate. We want to capture the new Argentina. A

place where people like yourself have been seeing that justice is done.

A place with modern law enforcement, yet respect for democracy”–she

wiggled a hand vaguely–“and like that.” Another wide smile. “And

certainly your efforts would be handsomely compensated with a

consultant’s fee. So, Mr. Peralta. Can we work together?”

Peralta’s smile was thin. “Certainly if you have proof that Josef

Strasser is living in Buenos Aires, you must only to tell me. Produce

the evidence.” He jabbed the air with a silver Cross pen to emphasize

how simple it all was. “That is all.”

“Mr. Peralta. Someone is going to do this story, whether it’s my team

or the competition.” Anna’s smile faded. “The only question is how the

story will be done. Whether it’s a story of one of your successes, or

one of your failures. Come on, you must have a file of leads on

Strasser some sort of indication that he’s here,” Anna said. “I mean,

you don’t doubt he’s living in Buenos Aires, do you?”

Peralta leaned back in his chair, which squeaked. “Ms. Reyes,” he

said, his tone that of a man with a delicious piece of gossip to impart,

“a few years ago my office received a credible tip from a woman living

in Belgrano, one of our wealthiest suburbs. She had seen Alois Brunner,

the SS Hauptsturmfuhrer, on the street, coming out of a neighboring

house. Immediately we have a round-the-clock surveillance on this man’s

house. Indeed she was correct, the old man’s face matched our file

photos of Brunner. We moved in on the gentleman. Indignant, he produced

his old German passport, you know, imprinted with the eagles of the

Third Reich and a big J, for (ew. The man’s name was Katz.” Peralta

came forward in his chair until he was upright again. “So how do you

apologize to a man like this, who had been in the camps?”

“Yes,” Anna agreed equably, “that must have been terribly embarrassing.

But our intelligence on Strasser is solid. Dateline is filming their

second-unit footage background shots even as we speak. They must be

very confident.”

“Dateline, 60 Minutes, 20/20 I am familiar with these investigative

programs. If you people were so very sure Josef Strasser was, as you

Americans like to say, alive and living in Argentina, you would have

found him long ago, no?” His lizard eyes were fixed on her.

She could not tell him the truth that her interest was not in his Nazi

past, but in what he may have been involved in when he parted company

with his Fuhrer, and joined forces with the invisible architects of the

postwar era. “Then where would you suggest I begin looking?”

“Impossible to answer! If we knew there was a war criminal living here,

we would arrest him. But I must tell you, there are no more.” He

dropped his pen onto his desk definitively.

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