Robert Ludlum – The Sigma Protocol

are as brief as the winking of a firefly on a summer night, and he would

not feel sorry for himself.

He thought of his father, wherever he’d vanished to, and regretted only

that he’d never know the entire truth about the man.

Out of the darkness came a sudden voice. The older man.

“Now you answer some questions. What the hell you want with Josef

Strasser?”

So they wanted to talk after all.

These goons were protecting Strasser.

He waited for Anna to speak first, and when she didn’t, he said, “I’m an

attorney. An American lawyer. I’m probating an estate that means I’m

trying to get him some money that’s been left to him.”

Something cracked hard against the side of his head.

“I want the truth, not your bullshit!”

“I’m telling you the truth.” Ben’s voice was shaky. “Leave this woman

out of it she’s just my girlfriend. She’s got nothing to do with it. I

dragged her along, she’d never been to Buenos Aires ”

“Shut up!” one of them bellowed. Something slammed into his right

kidney, and he tumbled to the ground, his face inside the burlap flat

against the dirt. The pain was so acute he could not even groan. Then

came a blinding pain as something cracked into the side of his face,

perhaps a foot, and he smelled and tasted blood. Everything was

bleached out.

He screamed, “Stop! What do you want? I’ll tell you what you want!”

He hunched forward, brought his hands around to protect his face,

gasping from the unfathomable pain, and he felt blood seeping from his

mouth. He braced himself for the next blow, but for a moment nothing

happened.

Then came the voice of the older one, quiet and matter-of-fact, as if

making a reasonable point in a pleasant conversation. “The woman is not

‘just’ your girlfriend. She is Agent Anna Navarro, and she is on the

payroll of the United States Justice Department. This we know. You, we

want to know about.”

“I’m helping her,” he managed to get out, cringing, and it came, a swift

blow to the other side of his head. A lightning bolt of pain pierced

his eyes. The pain was so great now, so constant and overwhelming, that

he thought he could not possibly survive it.

Then a pause, a momentary intermission in the torture session, and there

was silence, the men seemingly waiting for him to speak again.

But Ben’s mind was sluggish. Who where were these men from? The man

called Jtirgen Lenz? Sigma itself? Their methods seemed too homespun

for that. The Kamaradenwerk? That was more plausible. What answer

would satisfy them, end the beatings, forestall the execution?

Anna spoke. His ears were plugged, probably with blood, and he could

barely hear what she said. “If you’re protecting Strasser,” she said in

a voice that was surprisingly steady, “you’ll want to know what I’m

doing here. I’ve come to Buenos Aires to warn him not to seek his

extradition.”

One of the men laughed, but she kept speaking. Her voice seemed so far

away. “Do you know that a number of Strasser’s comrades have been

murdered in the last few weeks?”

There was no response. “We have information that Strasser is about to

be killed. The U.S. Justice Department has no interest in trying to

seize him, or we’d have done it long ago. Whatever terrible things he’s

done, he’s not wanted for war crimes. I’m trying to keep him from being

murdered, so I can talk to him.”

“Liar!” one of the men screamed. There was a thud, and Anna cried out.

“Stop!” she shouted, her voice cracking. “There are ways you can check

that I’m telling you the truth! We need to get to Strasser to warn him!

If you kill us, you’ll be harming dim!”

“Anna!” Ben yelled. He needed to connect with her. “Anna, you O.K.?

Just tell me you’re O.K.”

His throat felt as if it were going to burst. The exertion of yelling

made his head throb excruciatingly.

Silence. Then her muffled voice: “I’m O.K.”

It was the last thing he heard before everything vanished.

CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN.

Ben awoke in a bed in a large, unfamiliar room with high ceilings, and

tall windows that looked out over a city street he didn’t recognize.

Evening, traffic noise, twinkling lights.

A lanky woman with dark brown hair and brown eyes, in a T-shirt and

black Lycra bicycle shorts, languidly curled in a chair, watching him.

Anna.

His head throbbed.

In a sedate voice, she said, “Hey.”

“Hey,” he said. “I’m alive.” The nightmarish scene began to come back

to him, but he couldn’t remember when he lost consciousness.

She smiled. “How1 re you feeling?”

He thought about this for a moment. “Sort of like the guy who falls

from the top of a skyscraper, and someone sticks his head out of a tenth

floor window and asks how he’s doing, and the guy says, Well, so far I’m

fine.”

Anna chuckled.

“I have kind of a low-grade headache.” He turned his head from side to

side, felt the pain sear and sparkle behind his eyeballs. “Maybe not so

low-grade.”

“Well, you got bashed up pretty bad. For a while I thought you might

have a concussion, but I guess not. Not from what I can tell.” She

paused. “They kicked me around a little, but they seemed to be focusing

on you.”

“Real gentlemen.” He thought a moment, still disoriented. “How’d I get

back here?”

“I guess they got tired of beating on you, or maybe they got scared when

you passed out. At any rate, they brought us back to town, dropped us

off somewhere in La Boca.”

The only light in the room came from a lamp beside the bed where he lay.

He became aware of bandages, on his forehead and side. “Who did this?”

“What do you mean who were they? Or who bandaged you up?”

“Who fixed me up?”

“Moi,” she said, bowing her head modestly. “Medical supplies courtesy

the Sphinx, mostly peroxide and Betadine.”

“Thank you.” His thinking was muzzy and slow. “So who were those

guys?”

“Well, we’re alive,” she said, “so I’m guessing they’re local muscle.

Pistoleros, they’re called, guns for hire.”

“But the police car…”

“The Argentine police are famous for corruption. A lot of them

moonlight as pistol eros But I don’t think they were connected with

Sigma. Kamaradenwerk, or something along those lines thugs who look out

for the old Germans. The local network could have been alerted lots of

ways. My Interpol friend I gave him a fake name, but he might have seen

an ID photo. Maybe it was the stolen package at American Express. Maybe

it was my investigator guy, Machado. Maybe your pistol-packin’ priest.

But enough questions. I want you to take it easy.”

He tried to sit up, felt a pain in his side, lay back down. Now he

remembered being kicked in the stomach, the groin, the kidneys.

His eyelids kept drooping, the room going in and out of focus, and soon

he succumbed to sleep.

When he awoke again, it was still night, and the room was mostly dark.

The only light came from the street, but it was enough to see the shape

in bed next to him. He could smell her faint perfume. He thought, Now

she’s willing to share a bed.

The next time he awoke, the room was bright. It hurt his eyes to look

around. He heard the sound of water running in the bathroom, and

struggled to sit up.

Anna emerged in a cloud of steam, wrapped in a bath towel.

“He’s awake,” she said. “How’s it feel?”

“A little better.”

“Good. You want me to order some coffee from room service?”

“They have room service here?”

“Yeah, you’re feeling better,” she said with a laugh. “The old sense of

humor’s starting to come back.”

“I’m hungry.”

“Understandable. We didn’t have a chance to eat dinner last night.” She

turned back toward the bathroom.

He was in a clean T-shirt and boxer shorts. “Who changed my clothes?”

“Me.”

“My shorts, too?”

“Mm-hmm. You were soaked in blood.”

Well, well, he thought, amused. Our first moment of intimacy and I

slept through it.

She began brushing her teeth and reemerged a few minutes later, makeup

applied, wearing a white T-shirt and violet gym shorts.

“What do you think happened?” he asked. His head was beginning to

clear. “You think your call to that private detective, what’s-his-name,

was intercepted?”

“Possibly.”

“From now on we use my digital phone only. Let’s assume even the

Sphinx’s switchboard is tapped.”

She placed two pillows behind him. She wore no perfume now but smelled

pleasantly of soap and shampoo. “Mind if I use it now to call our last

hotel? My friend in Washington thinks I’m staying there, and might be

trying to reach me.” She tossed him a copy of the International Herald

Tribune. “You take it easy. Read, sleep, whatever.”

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