Robert Ludlum - Aquatain Progression.txt
Page 88
right front door. Converse watched him from behind
the thick corner pillar as the wounded German
stood on the pavement, looking up into the
shadows.
"Konig?"he asked softly, questioning. "Konig,
was ist?" He started up the steps, his left hand
awkwardly, tentatively, going inside his jacket.
Joel spun around the pillar and rushed down the
old stair case. Grabbing the wounded man by the
sling, he jammed the pistol into the foot soldier's
throat; he turned him around and rushed him back
to the car, then crashed his head against the roof as
he crouched and thrust the weapon through the
open front window.
The astonished driver was quicker than the foot
soldier; he was already yanking his gun out of an
unseen holster. He fired wildly, shattering the
windshield. Converse fired back blowing the man's
head half out of the window.
Take the bodies into the jungle! Don't leave them
here near the compound! Every second counts, every
minute!
Joel sprang up and pulled the wounded German
away from the car as he opened the front door.
"You're going to help me, you good Christian!" he
whispered, remembering the whining supplication of
a killer in a freight car. "You do as I tell you or
you'll join your friends. Capisce, or is it verstehen?
Whatever the hell it is, you do as I say, do you
understand me? I'm a panicked man, mister on the
edge, and I'll argue that position in front of the
Supreme Court! . . . What the hell am I saying? I've
got the gun and I've killed again it gets easier
when you don't want to be killed yourself. Afovel
That lousy son of Gestapo on the porch! Bring him
down here! In the backl"
Perhaps a minute later, Joel would never know
the time the wounded man was behind the wheel
driving with diflficulty, the two corpses in the
backseat. A tableau of horror Converse thought he
would vomit. Fighting back the nausea, he watched
every landmark in the countryside as he directed the
driver to take this turn and that pilotage indeli
THE QQUITAINE PROGRESSION 567
left and sped down the country road as Hermione
Geyner slammed the door shut on the porch.
There was nothing any longer without risk,
thought Joel, as he crawled out of the foliage, but
the risk for him now was one he faced with a degree
of confidence. Aquitaine had used up Frau Geyner;
there was nothing more it could learn from her. To
return to a madwoman held a greater risk for them.
Envelope in hand, he walked across the ugly drive,
up the creaking steps, and across the sagging porch
to the door. He knocked, and ten seconds later a
screeching Hermione Geyner opened it. He then did
something so totally unpredictable so completely out
of character, he did not believe it himself as he
followed through with the sudden impulse.
He punched the old woman squarely in the
center of her lower jaw. It was the beginning of the
longest eight hours of his life.
The bewildered security police from the
MGM-Grand Hotel reluctantly refused Valerie's
offer of a gratuity, especially as she had raised it
from $50 to $100, thinking that the economy of Las
Vegas was somewhat different from New York's and
certainly Cape Ann's. They had driven around the
streets of the old and the new city for nearly
forty-five minutes, until both men, both professionals
in their work, assured her that no one was following
their car. And they would put a special patrol on the
ninth floor in an attempt to catch the man who had
harassed her, who had attempted to gain entrance to
the room. They were, of course, naturally chagrined
that she took a room across the boulevard at Caesars
Palace.
Val tipped the bellman, took her small overnight
bag from him, and closed the door. She ran to the
phone on the table by the bed.
"I half to go to the toilet!" shouted Hermione
Geyner, holding an fee pack under her chin.
"Again?" asked Converse, his eyes barely open,
sitting across from the old woman, the envelope and
the gun in his lap.
"You make me nervous. You struck me."
"You did the same and a hell of a lot more to me
last night," said Joel, getting up from the chair and
shoving the gun under his belt, the envelope in his
hand.
"I vill see you hanging from a rope! Betrayer! How
many
568 ROBERT LUDIUM
hours now? You think our operatives in the
Untergrund will not miss me?"
"I think they're probably feeding pigeons in the
park cooing along with the best of them. Go on, I'll
follow."
The telephone rang. Converse grabbed the old
woman by the back of her neck and propelled her
to the antique desk and the phone. "Just as we
practiced," he whispered, holding her firmly. "Do it!"
'Baja?" said Hermione Geyner into the
telephone, Joel's ear next to hers.
"Tame! Ich bin 's, Valerie!"
"Val!" shouted Converse, pushing the old woman
away. "It's me! I'm not sure the phone's clean; she
was set up, I was set up! Quickly! Tell Sam I was
wrong I think I was wrongl The countdown could
be assassinations all over the goddamned place!"
"He knew that!" shouted Valerie in reply. "He's
dead Joel! He's dead! They killed him!"
"Oh, Christ! There's no time, Val, no time! The
phone!"
"Meet me!" screamed the ex-Mrs. Converse.
"Where? Tell me where?"
The pause was less than several seconds, an
eternity for both. "Where it began, my darling!"
cried Valerie. "Where it began but not where it
began.... The clouds, darling! The patch and the
clouds!"
Where it began. Geneva. But not Geneva. Clouds,
a patch. A patch!
"Yes, I know!"
"Tomorrow! The next day! I'll be there!"
"I have to get out of here.... Val ... I love you so
muchl So much!"
''The clouds, my darling my only darling oh,
God, stay
Joel ripped the telephone out of the wall as
Hermione Geyner came rushing at him, swinging a
heavy brass-handled poker from the fireplace. The
iron hook glanced off his cheek; he grabbed her
arm and shouted, "I haven't got time for you, you
crazy bitch! My client doesn't have time!" He spun
her around and pushed her forward, picking up the
envelope from the table. "You were on your way to
the bathroom, remember?"
In the hall Converse saw what he had hoped he
would
THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION 565
bly imprinted on the mind for the flight back without
a radio or a map or a means to obtain either. They
reached what looked like a series of rocky pastures
at the base of a mountain, and Converse tol
d the
Cerman to get off the road. They clambered over
several hundred yards until there was a sharp decline
that ended at a dense row of trees. He ordered the
driver out.
He had given the last guard a chance. He was a kid
in a mismatched uniform; his eyes were intense but his
face raised questions. How much was felt, how much
indoctrinated? He had given the boy the child a
simple exam, and a believer had failed the examination.
"Listen to me," said Joel. "You told me on the
train that you were hired but that you didn't want to
kill anybody. You were just unemployed and needed
a job, is that right?"
"Yes! I kill no one! I only watched, followed!"
"All right. I'll put the gun away and I'm going to
walk out of here. You go wherever you want to go,
okay?"
"Ich verstehe! Yes, of course!"
Converse shoved the weapon in his belt and
turned, his fingers still gripping the handle as he
started up the slope. A scratch! The crunching sound
of rocks displaced by moving feet! He pivoted,
dropping to his knees as the German lunged.
He fired once at the body above him. The foot
soldier screamed as he arced in the air and rolled
down the hill. A believer had failed the examination.
Joel walked up the incline with the envelope
addressed to Nathan Simon and across the rocky
field to the road. He knew the landmarks; the pilot
in him would make no mistakes. He knew what he
had to do.
He was concealed far back in the bushes on the
edge of Hermione Geyner's property, thirty yards
from the decaying house, twenty from the U-shaped
drive,~which was filled with ruts and bordered by
brown overgrown grass, dead from the heat and lack
of water. He had to stay awake, for if it was going to
happen, it would happen soon. Human nature could
take only so much anxiety; he had played upon the
truism too often as a lawyer. Answers had to be
given to anxious men panicked men. The sun was
up, the birds foraging in the early light, myriad
noises replacing the stillness of the night. But the
house was silent, the large casement windows,
through which only hours ago the voices of
demented old women had helped muffle gunshots,
were closed, many of the panes
566 ROBERT IUDIUM
cracked. And through all the madness, the insanity
of violent events, he still wore the clerical collar,
still had his priestly passport and the letter of
pilgrimage. The next few hours would tell him
whether or not they were of any value.
The roar of an engine came first and then the
sight of a black Mercedes swerving off the country
road into the drive. It sped up to the porch, jolting
to a stop; two men climbed out and the driver raced
around the trunk to join his companion. They stood
for a moment looking up at the porch and the
windows of the house, then turned and scanned the
grounds, walking over to Hermione Geyner's car
and peering inside. The driver nodded and reached
under his jacket to pull out a gun; they went back to
the steps, taking them rapidly, heading across the
porch to the door. Finding no bell, the man without
a gun in his hand knocked harshly, repeatedly,
finally pounding with a closed fist while twisting the
knob to no avail.
Guttural shouts came from inside as the door
swung back, revealing an angry Frau Geyner dressed
in a tattered bathrobe. Her voice was that of a
shrewish teacher lambasting two students for
cheating when in fact they had not. Each time one
of the men tried to speak her voice became even
more shrill. Cowed, the man with the gun put it
away, but his companion suddenly grabbed Valerie's
aunt by the shoulders and spoke harshly, directly,
forcing her to listen.
Hermione Geyner did listen, but when she
replied her answers were equally harsh and
delivered with authority. She pointed down at the
overgrown drive and described what she had
apparently witnessed in the dark, early-morning
hours what she herself had accomplished. The men
looked at each other, their eyes questioning and
afraid, but not questioning what the old woman had
told them, only what she could not tell them. They
raced across the porch and down the steps to their
car. The driver started the engine with a vengeance
so pronounced the ignition mechanism flew into a
high-pitched, grinding scream. The Mercedes
plunged forward, skirting past Frau Geyner's car,
and in a sudden attempt to avoid a hole in the
overgrown pavement, the driver swung to his left,
then to his right, skidding on the surface, the tires
sliding on the crawling vine weeds until the side of
the car careened into the disintegrating stone gate.
Roars of abuse from both men filled the morning
air as the Mercedes straightened itself out and raced
through the exit. It swung
THE AQUlTAINE PROGRESSION 569
tee in the red lacquered bowl on the wall table, the
old *Roman had dropped them there last night the
keys to her car. The bathroom door pulled out it
was the solution. Once she was inside, Joel dragged
over a heavy chair from against the wall and jammed
the thick rim under the knob, kicking the legs in
place, wedging them into the floor. She heard the
commotion and tried to open the door; it held. The
harder she pressed, the more firmly the legs became
embedded.
"We convene again tonight!" she roared. "We will
send out our best people! The best!"
"God help Eisenhower when you meet," muttered
Converse, inwardly relieved. If Aquitaine did not
have the phone covered, the old woman would be
found in a few hours. The envelope under his arm,
he took the keys from the lacquered bowl and pulled
the gun from his belt. He ran to the front door and
opened it cautiously. There was no one, nothing only
Hermione Geyner's car parked on the weed-ridden
drive. He went outside and pulled the door shut,
leaving it unlocked, and raced down the steps to the
automobile. He started the engine; there was half a
tank of gas, enough to get him far away from
Osnabruck before refilling. Until he could get a map,
he would go by the sun heading south.
Valerie made arrangements at the travel office in
Caesars Palace, paying cash and using her mother's
maiden name, perhaps hoping some of that
resourceful woman's wartime expertise might find its
way to the daughter. There was a 6:00 P.M. Air
France flight to Paris from Los Angeles. She would
be on it, the hour's trip to LAX made on a chartered
plane to which she would be chauffeured, thus
avoiding the terminal at McCarran Airport. Such
courtesies were always available,
usually for
celebrities and casino winners. There was no basic
problem with a false name on the Air France
passenger manifest at worst, only embarrassment,
in her case easily explained: her former husband,
now a stranger, was an infamous man, a hunted man;
she preferred anonymity. She would not legally be
required to produce her passport until she arrived at
immigration in Paris, and once through, she could
travel anywhere she wished, under any name she
gave, for she would not be leaving the borders of
France. It was why she had thought of Chamonix.
She sat in the chair, looking out the window,
thinking of those days in Chamonix. She had flown
over with Joel to Ge
570 ROBERT LUDLUM
neva,where he had three days of conferences with
the promise of five days off to go skiing at Mont
Blanc, a bonus from John Brooks, the brilliant
international negotiator of Talbot, Brooks and
Simon, who flatly refused to give up some reunion
dinner for what he termed "lizard-shit meetings
between idiots our boy can do it. He'll charm their
asses off while emptying their corporate pockets." It
was the first time Joel really knew that he was on his
way, yet oddly enough he was almost as excited
about the skiing. They both enjoyed it so much. To-
gether. Perhaps because they were both good.
ButJoel had not enjoyed the skiing at Chamonix
that trip. On the second day he had taken a terrible
fall and sprained his ankle. The swelling was
enormous, the pain as acute in his head as in his
foot. She had knighted him "Sir Grump", he
demanded his Herald Tribune in the morning,
childishly refusing to have his breakfast before the