The Paris Option by Robert Ludlum

As Smith closed the door, the general demanded, “What’s going to happen with this new technology that’s supposed to be out there somewhere, Colonel? Are we looking for a result on the order of a nuclear bomb, or is it more like a peashooter? Or maybe nothing at all? What are they planning?” Small as he was, his voice was six feet tall and should have belonged to a heavyweight. It was as rough as redwood bark and hoarse, probably from a youth spent bellowing orders over gunfire.

“That’s what I’m here to find out, sir.”

“You have a gut hunch?”

“I’ve been in Paris just a few hours. A would-be assassin has threatened me and Dr. Martin Zellerbach, who worked with Dr. Chambord, with an automatic weapon.”

“I heard about that,” the general admitted.

“I’ve also been tailed by someone who knows their job. Plus, of course, there’s the incident at Diego Garcia. I’d say it’s definitely not nothing.”

The general turned. “That’s all? No theories? No educated guesses? You’re the scientist. An M.D. to boot. What should I be worrying about? Armageddon in the hands of sweet damn all, or just a schoolboy’s bloody-nose and our vaunted American ego bruised?”

Smith gave a dry smile. “Science and medicine don’t teach us to theorize or make wild guesses in front of generals, sir.”

The general brayed a laugh. “No, I suppose not.”

General Carlos Henze, U.S. Army, was the Supreme Allied Commander of Europe (SACEUR) for NATO’s combined forces. As wiry as a coiled spring, Henze wore his graying hair short, which, of course, was expected in the military. But it was not the boot-camp buzz affected by marine generals and other stiff-necks to show they were plain, no-nonsense soldiers who slogged through the muck like any other hero. Instead, his hair grew down to an inch above the collar of his immaculately tailored, charcoal-brown, two-piece suit, which he wore with the easy familiarity of the CEO of a Fortune 500 corporation. He was the new breed of general, integrated and fully prepared for the twenty-first century.

The general gave a crisp nod. “All right, Colonel. What say I tell you what I know, okay? Have a seat. That couch will do.”

Smith sat on the ornate velvet couch from the time of Napoleon III, while the general returned to his window and bucolic view, his back again to Smith, who found himself wondering if this was Henze’s way of focusing a roomful of division and regimental commanders on the matter at hand. It was a good trick. Smith thought he might try using it in one of the meetings with his notoriously disorganized fellow research scientists.

The general said, “So we’ve maybe got some kind of new machine that can access and control all the world’s electronic software and hardware, including any country’s codes, encryptions, electronic keys for launching missiles, command structures, and instructions. That about sum up what the gizmo will be able to do, assuming it exists?”

“For military purposes, yes,” Smith agreed.

“Which is all that concerns me and, right now, you. History can handle the rest.” His back still facing Smith, the general raised his gaze to the steely clouds that hid the May sky, as if wondering whether the sun would ever shine again. “Every sign is that the man who built it is dead, and his records are ash. No one claims responsibility for the bomb that killed him, which is unusual among terrorists but not unheard of.” This time Henze simply stopped speaking, an almost imperceptible stiffening of his back and shoulders indicating he expected a response, either yes or no.

Smith repressed a sigh. “Yes, sir, except that we can add the probable assassin, affiliation unknown, who attempted to kill Dr. Zellerbach in the hospital this morning.”

“Right.” Now Henze turned. He stalked to a brocade chair, dropped into it, and glared at Smith as only a general could. “Okay, I’ve got some information for you, too. The president said I was to extend all help, and keep mum about you, and I’m not in the habit of ignoring orders. So this is what my people and the CIA have found out: The night of the explosion, a black van was seen parked behind the Pasteur annex on the rue des Volontaires. Just minutes before the explosion, it left the area. You know Chambord had a research assistant?”

“Yes. Last I heard, the French authorities were looking for him. He’s been found?”

“Dead. Suicide. He killed himself last night in a miserable little hotel outside Bordeaux. He’d been vacationing in a village on the coast, painting the fishermen, of all fool things. According to one of the kid’s Paris friends, Chambord had told him he was working too hard, take a vacation, and that’s his idea of fun. These French. So what was he doing in a fleabag on the wrong side of the Garonne?”

“They’re sure it was suicide?”

“So they say. The CIA tells me the owner of the fleabag remembers the assistant was carrying a briefcase when he checked in. He noticed, because it’s more luggage than most of his so-called guests have. You know what I meanit’s that kind of ‘hotel.’ The deal was that the assistant was alone, no girlfriend, no boyfriend. And if he did have a briefcase, it’s missing now.”

“You figure the bombers hit again, made the murder look like a suicide, and then took the briefcase and whatever was in it.”

Henze jumped up, paced, and marched back to his favorite post at the window. “Thinking about it is, the president tells me, your job. But I will say the CIA is of the opinion the suicide has a rank odor, even though the Sreteacute; seems satisfied.”

Smith pondered. “The research assistant would’ve known Chambord’s progress, but that alone wouldn’t necessarily have been enough reason to kill him. After Chambord’s death, and the rumors of success, we’d have to act as if Chambord built a working molecular machine anyway. So I’d say there had to be more reason. Most likely, the briefcase, as you suspect. The assistant’s noteshellip;maybe Chambord’s own noteshellip;something inside that they considered dangerous or critical.”

“Yeah,” Henze growled, and turned to give Smith a baleful stare. “So, because Diego Garcia happened, it looks like the bombers have the data for whatever Chambord created, which you think’s an honest-to-God working molecular supercomputer”

“A prototype,” Smith corrected.

“What does that mean?”

“It’s probably bulky, not easily portable. Glass and tubes and connections. Not yet the sleek commercial models we’ll see in the future.”

The general frowned. “The important question is, will it do the job?”

“With a competent operator, it sure looks like it.”

“Then what’s the difference? They have this damn thing, and we have bubkes. Now, ain’t that a kick in the eye.”

“Yessir. In fact, I’d say that was a serious mule kick.”

Henze nodded soberly. “So get it out of my eye, Colonel.”

“I’ll do my best, General.”

“Do better. I’m going to have my Deputy Commander at NATO that’s General La Porte to youget in touch. He’s a Frenchman. Their military is naturally concerned. Since this is their country, the White House wants to keep them feeling happy, but not give them any more than we absolutely have to, understand? La Porte has already been sniffing around about you and Dr. Zellerbach. I get the impression he senses he’s being left out of the loop everywherethat’s the French again. I told him you’re here as a friend of Dr. Zellerbach, but I can see he’s skeptical. He’s heard about that little fracas at the Pompidou Hospital, so be prepared for a bunch of personal questions, but stick to your story.” Henze crossed to the door, opened it, and held out his hand. “Keep in touch. Whatever you need, call. Sergeant Matthias over there will walk you out.”

Smith shook the iron hand. Out in the corridor, the short, stocky sergeant was not happy to leave his post. He opened his mouth to argue with the generala career master sergeant, for surebut caught his boss’s eye and thought better of it.

Without a word, he escorted Smith down the stairs and past the concierge, who was smoking a Gitane behind her counter. As Smith passed, he spotted the butt of a 9mm pistol in the waistband of her skirt. Someone was taking no chances with the security around General Carlos Henze, U.S.A.

The sergeant stopped at the door, watching until Smith walked safely across the courtyard, through the archway that led to the street, and on out to the sidewalk. Smith paused beside a tree and gazed all around at the thick traffic, the few pedestrianshellip;and his heart seemed to stop. He whirled.

He had caught a glimpse of a face in the backseat of a taxi as it turned from the street to the courtyard. Chilled, Smith counted to five and slipped back around to where he could get a view of the pension’s entrance through bushes.

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