Book Read Free

Robert Ludlum - The Parcifal Mosaic.txt

Page 28

by The Parcifal Mosaic [lit]


  was swept for intercepts daily; only he answered it. After five rings the

  caller was to hang up, dial the regular telephone number and leave his name

  and whatever message he cared to, aware that confldentiahty was far less

  secure. Perhaps there was a simple ex-

  212 Ro33jmT LjaDLUM

  planatbn, an offhand request by Matthias for a friend to the ringing phone

  to pick it up.

  "Secretary of State Matthias, please?" said Havelock.

  'Wh4Ys calling?*

  "The faet that I used this number relieves me of the need to answer that.

  The Secretary, if you please. This is an emergency atW confidential.*

  gift. Matthias is in conference at the moment and has asked that all calls

  be held. If you7d give me your name-.!*

  'Goddawn it, yodre not listeningl This is an emergencyl"

  Ile has one, too, sfr~'

  "You break into that conference and say the following words to him Kt*an

  ... and boufe. Have you got that? just two wordsl Krajan and boufe. Do it

  nowl Because if you don't, hell have your head and your job when I talk to

  himl Do W"

  'Kfufars," said the male voice hesitantly. *BoaFe."

  The line w silent, the silence interrupted once by the low undercurrent of

  men td&g in the distance. The waiting was agony, and Michael could hear the

  echoes of his o

  breathing Finally the voice came back

  'Tm afraid you!ll have to be clearer, sir

  "Whatr

  V yot?d gIve me the details of the emergency and a tele. phone number where

  you can be reached-2'

  "Did you give him the message? Ile wordol Did you say themr

  'The Secretary is extremely busy and requests that you clarify the nature

  of your call."

  *r-oddamn It, did you my them?"

  rm repeating what the Secretary said, sk. He cauN be disturbed now, but if

  youll outline the details and leave a number, someone will be In contact

  with you.'

  'SomeotseP What the hell is this? Who are you? Whaes your name?'

  There was a pause. "Smith," mid the vok&

  'Your namet I want your namel"

  "I just gave ft to You.,

  "You get Matthias on this phone-I"

  There was a click, the line went dead.

  Havelock "red at the kstrument in his hand, then closed

  THE PARwAL MosAic 213

  his eyes. His mentor, his krafan, his phmk had cut him off. What had

  happened?

  He had to find out., It made no sense, no sense at alll There was another

  number in the Blue Ridge Mountains, the home of a man Matthias saw

  frequently when he was in the Shenandoah, an older man whose love of chess

  and fine old wine took Anton!s mind off his monumental pressures. Michael

  had met Leon ZeliensId a number of times, and was always struck by the

  camaraderie between the two academics; he was happy for Matthias that such

  a person existed whose roots, though not in Prague, were not so far away,

  in Warsaw.

  Zeliensid had been a highly regarded professor of European history brought

  over to America years ago from the University of Warsaw to teach and

  lecture at Berkeley. Anton had met Leon during one of his early forays into

  the campus lecture chvWt; additional funds were always wel come to

  Matthias. A friendship had developed-mostly by way of the mails and over

  chess-and upon retirement and the death of Zeftens]Xs wife, Anton had

  persuaded the elderly scholar to come to the Shenandoah.

  The Antibes operator took far longer with the second call, but finally

  Havelock heard the old man~s voice,

  Good eveningr

  "Lem? h that you, Leonr

  wwho is twsr

  'Ies. Michael Havelock. Do you remember me, LeonP"

  "MikhaiV Do I rememberl No, of course not, and I never touch Idelbasa,

  either, you young baraniel How are you? Are you visiting our valley? You

  sound so far away~"

  "rin very far away, Leon. rm also very concerned

  Havelock explained his concern; he was unable to reach their beloved mutual

  friend, and was old Zeliensld planning to see Anton while Matthias was in

  the Shenandoah?

  "If h6 here, Mikhail, I do not know it. Anton, of course, is a busy man.

  Sometimes I think the busiest man in this world . . . but he doesn!t find

  time for me these days. I leave messages at the lodge, but rm afraid he

  ignores them. Naturally, I understand. He moves with great figures ... he

  is a great figure, and I am hardly one of them.*

  "rm sorry to hear that ... that he hasnt been in touch~"

  "Oh, men call me to express his regrets, saying that he

  214 ROBERT LuDLurm

  rarely comes out to our valley these days, but I tell you, our chess games

  suffer. Incidentally, I must settle for another mutual friend of ours,

  Mikhail. He was out here frequently several months ago. That fine journalist

  Raymond Alexander. Alexander the Great I call him, but as a player he's a

  far better writer.-

  "Raymond Alexander?" said Havelock, barely listening. "Give him my best.

  And thank you, Leon." Havelock replaced the phone and looked over at

  Salanne. "He hasn't time for us anymore," he said, bewildered.

  14

  He had reached Paris by eight o'clock in the morning, made contact with

  Gravet by nine and, by a quarter past eleven, was walking south amid the

  crowds in the Boulevard St. Cermain. The fastidious art critic and broker of

  secrets would approach him somewhere between the Rue de Pontoise and the

  Qual St. Bernard. Gravet needed the two hours to seek out as many sources as

  possible relative to the information Havelock needed. Michael, on the other

  hand, used the time to move slowly, to rest-leaning upright against walls,

  never sitting-and to improve his immediate wardrobe.

  There had been no time for Salanne!s wife to buy him clothes in the

  morning, no thought but to get to Paris as quickly as he could, for every

  moment lost widened the distance between Jenna and himself. She had never

  been to Paris except with him, and there were only so many options open to

  her; he had to be there when she narrowed them down.

  The doctor had driven for three and a half ham at very high speed to

  Avignon, where there had been a one o'clock produce train bound for Paris.

  Michael had caught it, dressed in what could be salvaged from his own

  clothes, in addition to a sweater and an ill-fitting gabardine topcoat fur-

  nished by Salanne. Now he looked at his reflection In a storefront window;

  the jacket, trousers, open shirt and bat he had

  215

  216 RoBLrRT LunLum

  purchased off the rack in the Raspail forty-flve minutes ago suited his

  purpose. They were loose and nondescript. A man weazing such clothes would

  not be singled out, and the brim of the soft bat fell just law enough over

  his forehead to cast a shadow across his face.

  Beyond the window was a narrow pillar of clear glass, part of the

  merchandise display, a mirror. He was drawn to it, to the face in the

  shadow of the hat brim. His face. It was haggard, with black circles under

  the eyes and the stubble of a dark beard. He had not thought of shaving

  even when he had been shopping in the Raspail. There bad been m
irrors in

  the store, but be had looked only at the clothes while concentrating his

  thoughts on the Paris he and Jerma Karas bad known together: one or two

  embassy contacts; several colleagues-in-cover, as they were; a few French

  friends-government mainly, whose trdnIst&es brought them into his orbit,

  and three or four acquaintances they had made at late-night caf6s having

  nothing whatsoever to do with the world in which he, made his living.

  Now in the St. Germain the ashen face he saw reminded him of how tired and

  racked with pain he was, how much he Just wanted to lie down and let his

  strength come back to him. As Salanne bad said, he needed rest badly. He

  had tried to sleep on the train from Avignon, but the frequent stops at

  rural depots that were farmers' points of delivery had jolted him awake

  whenever he dozed. And when awake, his head had throbbed, his mind filled

  with a profound sense of loss, confusion, and anger. The one man on earth

  to whom he had given his trust and love, the giant who had replaced his

  father and had shaped his life, bad cut him loose and he had no idea why.

  Throughout the years, during the most harrowing and isolated times, be was

  somehow never alone because the presence of Anton Matthias was always with

  him. Anton was the spur that drove him to be better than he was, his

  protection against the memories of the early terrible days, because his

  phtel bad given them meaning, perspective. Certainly no justification, but

  a reason for doing what he was doing, for spending his life in an abnormal

  world until something inside him told him he could join the normal one. He

  had fought against the gtms of Lidice and the arbiters of gulag termination

  in whatever form be had found them.

  TIOse guns will always be with you, my pffteli. I wish to

  THE pARWAL Mosmc 217

  Almighty God you could walk away from them, but I doWt think you can, So do

  what lessens the pain, what gives you purpose, what removes the guilt of

  having survived. Absolution is not here among the books and argumentative

  theoremclans, you have no patience with their conceptualism. You have to see

  practical results.... One day you will be free, your anger spent, and you

  will return. I hope I am alive to witness it. I intend to be.

  He had come so close to being free, his angers reduced to an abstract sense

  of futility, his return to a normal world within his grasp and

  understanding. It had happened twice. Once with the woman 6 loved, who had

  given another breadth of meaning to his life . . . and then without her,

  loving neither her nor the memory of her, believing the hes of liars,

  betraying his innermost feelings-and her. Oh, God!

  And now the one man who could fulfill the prophecy he had made year.; ago

  to his krafanu, his student, his son, had thrown him out of his life. The

  giant was a mortal, after all. And now his enemy.

  "Mon Dieu, you look like a graduate of Auschwitzl" whispered the tall

  Frenchman m the velvet-collared overcoat and gleaming black shoes standing

  several feet to the right of Havelock in front of the window. -What

  happened to you?

  . No, don1 tell mel Not here.*

  "Where?"

  "On the Qual Bernard, past the university, is a small park, a playground

  for children maffly," continued Gravet, admiring his own figure in the

  glass. "If the benches are occupied, find a place by the fence and IT join

  you. On your way, purchase a bag of sweets and try to look like a father,

  not a sexual devfant."

  'Manks for the confidence. Did you bring me anythhlg?-

  "Lees say you are heavily in my debt. Far more than your impecunious

  appearance would suggest you could pay."

  "About her?'

  dTm still working on that. On her."

  ~Ilen what?"

  "The Quai Bernard," said Gravet, adjusting his scarlet tfe and tilting his

  gray homburg as he regarded his reflection in the window. He turned with

  the grace of a ballet master and walked away.

  The small park was chilled by the winds off the Seine, but

  218 ROBLmT LuDLum

  they did not deter the nurses, nannies and young mothers from bringing their

  boisterous charges to the playground.

  * dren were everywhere--on the swings, jungle gyms, seesaws-it was bedlam.

  Fortunately for Michael's waning strength, there was a vacant bench against

  the far back wall, away from the more chaotic center of the riverside park.

  He sat down, absently picking tiny colored mints out of a white paper bag

  while looking at a particularly obno3dous child kicking a tricycle; he

  hoped that whoever might be observing him would think the youngster was

  his, reasoning that the small boy's real guardian would stay as far away as

  possible. The child stopped punishing the three wheels long enough to

  return his stare with an astonishing malevolence.

  The elegant Gravet walked through the red-striped entrance and levitated

  his way around the rim of the playground, nodding pleasantly, benignly to

  the screaming children in his path, an elder fall of kindness toward the

  young. It was quite a performance, thought Havelock, knowIng that the

  epicene critic loathed the surroundings. Finally he reached the bench and

  sat down, snapping a newspaper out in front of him.

  "Should you see a doctor?" asked the critic, his eyes on the paper.

  "I left one only hours ago," replied Michael, his lips by the edge of the

  white paper bag. "I'm all right, just tired."

  Tm relieved, but I suggest you clean yourself up, includIng a shave. The

  two of us in this particular park could bring on the gendamws. The opposite

  poles of an obscene spec. trum, would be the conclusion."

  "I donI feel like being funny, Gravet. What have you got?"

  The critic folded the paper, snapping it again, as he spoke. ~A

  contradiction, if my sources are accurate, and I have every reason to

  believe they are. A somewhat incredible contradiction, in fact.-

  I'Mat is it?"

  ~Ile KGB has no interest in you whatsoever. I could de. liver you, a

  willing, garrulous defector snapped from the jaws of imperialists, to their

  Paris headquarters-an importing firm on the Beaumarchais, but I suspect you

  know that-.and 1, wouldn't get a sou."

  THE PARmFAL MosAic 219

  'Why is that a contradiction? I said the same thing to you several weeks

  ago on the Pont Royal."

  "That isn't the contradiction.

  "What is?"

  "Someone else Is looking for you. He Hew in last night because he thinks

  yoere either in Paris now or on your way here. ne word is heM pay a fortune

  for your corpse. He's not KGB in the usual sense, but make no mistake about

  it, he's SovieL"

  "Not . . . in the usual sense?" asked Havelock, bewildered, yet sensing the

  approach of an ominous memory, a recent memory.

  "I braced him through a source in the Militaire Etranger. He's from a

  special branch of Soviet intelligence, an elite corps of---"

  "Voennaya Kontra Razvedka," Michael broke in harshlY.

  If the shortened form is VKR, thaes ft~-

  "it is."

  "He wants you. Hell pay dearly."

  "Maniacs."


  ~Mfkhail, I should tell you. He flew in from Barcelone

  "Costa Braval"

  *Don!t look at mel Move to the edge of the benchl*

  "Do you know what you just told mer

  "You~re upset. I must leave."

  Nol ... All right, all tightl- Havelock lifted the white paper bag to his

  face; both his hands were trembling and he could hardly breathe as the pain

  in his chest surged up to his temples. "You know what yoxeve got to deliver

  now, donI you? Yoteve got it, so give it to me."

  "You're in no condition."

  "rll be the judge of that. TeU mef*

  wi wonder if i should. Quite apart from the payment I may never see, theres

  a moral dilemma. You see, I like you, Mikhail. Yoxere a civilized man,

  perhaps even a good man, in a very unsavory business. You took yourself

  out; have I the right to put you back in?"

  "I on back inl"

  "I'he Costa Brava?"

  "Yesi"

  "Go to your embassy~"

  "I caWtI Don7t you understand that?"

  220 RoBERT LUDLUM

  Gravet broke his own sacrosanct rule: he lowered the newspaper and looked

  at HavelocL "My C.4 they coul(&47 he said quietly.

  "Just tell me."

  ~You leave me no choice.'

  ~Tell met Where is he?"

  The critic rose from the bench, folding the paper, as be spoke. "rhere's a

  run-down hotel on the Rue Etienne. La Couronne Nouvelle. He!s on the second

  floor, Room Twentythree. iesinthe front, he observes everyone who

  enters.-

  The bent-over figure of the tramp was like that of a derelict in any large

  city. His clothes were ragged but thick enough to ward off the cold in

  deserted alleyways at night, his shoes cast-off heavy-soled boots, the laces

  broken and tied in large, awkward knots. On his head was a wool knit cap set

  low on his brow; his eyes focused downward, avoiding the world in which he

  could not compete, and which in turn found his Presence unnerving. But over

  the tramp's shoulder was his soiled canvas satchel, the oily straps held in

  a firm grip, as if he were proclaiming the dignity of possession: 71ils is

  my all, what Is left of me, and it is mine. The man approaching La Couronne

  Nouvelle had no age; he measured time only by what he had lost. He stopped

  at a wire trash basket and dug through the contents with methodical

 

‹ Prev