The Paris Option by Robert Ludlum

Inside the door, Dalio noted with relief that the pissoir appeared empty. He bent over to check that all the stalls were, too. Satisfied, he locked himself inside the one he had been told to use, lowered his trousers, and sat. He waited.

Moments later, another man entered the next stall and spoke softly in French. “Marcel?”

“Oui.”

“Relax, old friend, you’ll be revealing no state secrets.”

“You know I wouldn’t do that anyway, Peter.”

“True,” Peter Howell acknowledged. “What did you discover?”

“Apparently” Dalio paused as a man entered the men’s room. As soon as the fellow washed his hands and left, Dalio continued, “The official word was that we had orders from NATO to demonstrate our drill for running dark to a committee of EU and NATO generals.”

“Which NATO generals?”

“One was our Deputy Supreme Commander, General Roland la Porte.”

“The others?”

“Didn’t recognize them,” the matre principal told him, “but by their uniforms, they were German, Spanish, English, and Italian.”

Two more men pushed into the facility, laughing raucously while holding a loud, half-drunken conversation. In the stalls, Peter and Marcel Dalio remained silent while they endured the stumbling, slurring inanity.

In Peter’s mind, he was gauging whether their behavior was real or an act for his and Marcel’s benefit.

When the pair left, having at last worked out who would attempt to seduce the redhead on the barstool next to them, Peter sighed. “Bloody boors. Very good, Marcel. You’ve given me the official line. What’s the unofficial?”

“Yes, I thought you might ask about that. A couple of the stewards told me the generals never went out on deck. They spent their whole time in a closed meeting below, and then they left the ship right after the meeting ended.”

Peter came alert. “How’d they get off the ship?”

“Helicopters.”

“They flew to the ship on their own choppers and left in them, too?”

Dalio nodded. Then he remembered Peter could not see him. So he said, “That’s what the stewards thought. I was below most of the cruise so didn’t see any of it.”

So that’s where General Moore was, Peter thought. But why? “Did any of the stewards know what the meeting was about?”

“Not that they mentioned.”

Peter stroked his nose. “See if you can find out, and if you do, contact me through this phone number.” Under the partition he slid a card on which he had written the phone number of an MI6 contact drop.

“All right,” Dalio agreed.

“Merci beaucoup,

Marcel. I owe you.” “I’ll remember that,” the matre principal said. “I hope I never have to collect.”

Peter left first, and then Dalio, who returned to his table to enjoy a second pot of demitasse coffee. He glanced idly around the entire restaurant once more. He saw no one he knew or anyone who looked suspicious. Peter himself, of course, was nowhere to be seen.

The Western Mediterranean, Aboard Missile Cruiser USS Saratoga

The combat information center of the AEGIS Weapons System cruiser was a dark, cluttered cave. It had the almost-odorless, highly filtered smell of all U.S. government locations where millions of taxpayer dollars in electronic equipment were at work. Randi sat behind a communications technician, watching mechanical hands sweep across luminous radar and sonar screens, while she listened to Max’s voice on the radio shout above the throb of the Seahawk helicopter’s rotors.

The chopper was patrolling along the Algerian coast, and Max had radioed to let her know he had found the boat on which Jon had stowed.

“It’s the same boat,” he bellowed.

“You’re sure?” Randi pursed her lips and considered the tiny blip on the radar screen relayed from the Seahawk.

“Definite.

I spent a lot of time studying it while Jon was swimming out to it and then after he boarded.” “Any sign of people? Of Jon?”

“No one and nothing,” Max’s voice shouted.

“It’s getting dark out there. How far away are you?”

“Over a mile, but I’m using binoculars, and I can see it clear. No raft or dinghy on the boat.”

“Where could they have gone?”

“There’s a big villa on a finger of land that juts out into the Mediterranean. About a half mile inland are a bunch of low buildings that could be barracks. Looks like there’s a parade ground, too. The whole thing’s pretty isolated. The main road turns off before it gets near the place, and then it passes far south.”

“You can’t see any people? Any activity?”

“Nothing.”

“Okay, come on back.” Randi mulled the information. At last, she turned to the young petty officer who had been assigned to help her. “I need to talk to the captain.”

She found Captain Lainson having coffee in his quarters with his executive officer, Commander Schroeder. They had been ordered to detach from their carrier group to shepherd what appeared to be a minor clandestine CIA mission, and this had put neither officer in a good mood. But they sat straighter and listened with obvious interest as Randi described her plans and needs.

“I think we can insert you and stand ready easily enough, Agent Russell,” Commander Schroeder assured her.

“This is cleared with Washington and NATO, I presume?” Captain Lainson questioned.

She said firmly, “Langley assures me it is.”

The captain nodded, his face noncommittal. “We’ll insert you, that’s fine. But I’ll have to go through the Pentagon for the rest.”

“Do it fast. We don’t know yet exactly what kind of disaster we’re facing, but it won’t be minor. If we don’t end the threat, the loss of just a carrier battle group could look like a victory.” Randi could see skepticism vie with uneasiness in the officers’ eyes. She left them to their work and returned to her makeshift quarters to change.

Chapter Twenty-six

Outside Algiers, Algeria

After a careful search, Jon found what looked like the bedroom wing of the sprawling villa, where there were actual doors on some of the rooms. The doors were carved, heavy wood, with solid brass fittings that looked as if they might date back to the days of the first Arab and Berber dynasties.

Jon stopped at a side corridor with magnificent mosaics that began their designs on the floor and wrapped completely up the walls and across the ceiling. Every square inch was covered with bits of perfectly placed semiprecious stones and glazed tiles, many with gold leaf. Whatever rooms were off this passage had been set off, secluded, and they must have belonged to someone important. Perhaps they still did.

He moved cautiously down the jewel-like hall. It was like being inside a long treasure box. At the end, he stopped. Here was the only door, and it was not only closed, it was locked from the outside by an antique sliding bolt that looked as sturdy as the day it had been forged. The door itself had filigreed fittings and was intricately carved, elegant, and massive. He pressed his ear to it. What he heard made his heart accelerate the clicks of a keyboard.

He slid open the bolt and turned the handle with slow, steady pressure until he felt rather than heard the door’s interior latch open. He pressed the door in a few inches until he could see a room furnished comfortably with Western overstuffed chairs, simple tables, a bed, and a desk. There was also an archway that opened onto a whitewashed corridor.

But the center of gravity, the heart of the room, the point where Jon’s gaze was riveted was the long, thin back of Emile Chambord, who was stooped over the desk, working at a keyboard that was connected to a strange, clumsy-looking apparatus. Jon recognized it instantly: The DNA computer.

He forgot where he was, the danger of it all. Transfixed by the science, he studied the machine: There was a glass tray, and inside lay a collection of silvery blue gel packs, which must contain the vital DNA polymers. Connected by ultrathin tubing, the gel packs were submerged in a foam-like jelly, which would prevent vibration and keep the readout stream stable. The tray appeared to be temperature controlled, which was also crucial since molecular interaction was highly temperature sensitive. There was a small digital readout for set-point adjustment.

Nearby, another machine with an open, glass face was linked to the gel packs by more of the thin tubing. Through the glass he could see a series of small pumps and glass canisters. That had to be the DNA synthesizerthe feeder station for the gel packs. Small lights blinked on its control panel.

Excited, Jon drank in the rest of Chambord’s miraculous creation. A “lid” sat on top of the tray, and at the interface between it and the packs of DNA was what appeared to be a thin plate of soft metal coated with a biofilmprobably another type of molecular polymer. He deduced it must be a sensor device, absorbing the DNA chemical energy, changing its conformation, and emitting light as a result.

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