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Robert Ludlum - The Parcifal Mosaic.txt

Page 40

by The Parcifal Mosaic [lit]


  scholar, a statesman, the creator of Utopia ... and a burner of here-

  tics--they conveniently forget that, don't they? 'Condemn the

  non-believers; they don't see what I see, and rm-inviolate.' ... Coddamn

  it, if I bad my way, I'd do what fat Henry did with Thomas More. I'd cut

  off Matthias's head, and instead of London Bridge, I'd jam it on top of the

  Washington Monument as a reminder. Heretics, too, are citizens of the

  republic and so, holy man, there can be no heresyl Goddamn him!"

  "YOU know what would happen, don~t you, Mr. President?"

  "Yes, Mr. Ambassador, I do. The people would look up at that bleeding neck

  at that ever-benign face-no doubt with those tortoiseshell glasses still

  intact-and in their infinite wisdom theyd say he was right, had been right

  all along. CitIzens-heretics included-would canonize him, and that's the

  lousy irony."

  "He could still do it, I think," Brooks mused. "He could walk out and the

  cries would start again. Theyd offer him the crown and he'd refuse and

  theyd persist-until it became Inevitable. Another irony. Hail not Caesar

  but Anthony-a coronation. A constitutional amendment would be rammed

  THE PARsrrAL MosAic309

  through the House and the Senate and President Matthias would sit in the

  Oval Office. As incredible as it might seem, he could probably still do it.

  Even now."

  "Maybe we should let him," said Berquist softly, bitterly. 'Maybe the

  people-in their infinite wisdom-are right, after all. Maybe he's been right

  all along. Sometimes I doet know anymore. Perhaps he really does see things

  others don't see. Even now."

  The aristocratic statesman and the plainspoken general left the underground

  room. The four would meet again at noon the next day, each arriving

  separately at the South Portico entrance, away from the inquisitive eyes of

  the VV7hite House press corps. If, in the morning, there were any startling

  developments in Bradford's research at State, the time would be moved up,

  the Presidenes calendar erased. The mole took all precedence. He could lead

  them to a madman the President and his advisers called Parsifal.

  "I commend you, Mr. Undersecretary," said Berquist, lowering his voice in

  an amateur's imitation of the ambassador's fluid and graceful speech. It

  was an imitation with only a brace of rancor; respect was also there. "He's

  the last of the originals, isn't he?"

  "Yes, sir. There aren~t many left, and none that I know of

  who care that much. Taxes and the great democratization

  have removed them-or alienated them. They feel uncomfort

  able, and I think it's the countrys loss." A

  "Don't be sepulchral, Emory, it doesn't suit you. We need him; the power

  brokers on the Hill are still in awe of him. If there ever was an answer to

  Matthias, ies Addison Brooks. The Mayflower and Plymouth Rock, New Yorles

  Four Hundred and fortunes built on the backs of immigrantsleading to the

  guilt feelings of the inheritors. Benevolent liberals who weep at the sight

  of swollen black bellies in the Mississippi Delta. But for Chrises sake,

  donI take away the CI-Ateau dYquem."

  "Yes, Mr. President."

  "You mean 'No, Mr. President! Vs in your eyes, Emory, it's always in the

  eyes. Don't mistake me, I admire old elegant-ass, respect what's in that

  head of his. just as I think Tightrope Halyar&s one of the few military

  relies whove actually read the Constitution and understand what civilian

  an-

  310 RoBERT LuoLum

  thority really means. It's not that wars too important to leave to the

  generals; that's horseshit. Wed both be rotten pincering up the Rhine. It's

  the ending of wars, the aftermath. The generals are reluctant to accept the

  first and have no concept of the second. Halyards different, and the

  Pentagon knows it. The joint Chiefs listen to him because he's better than

  they are. We need him, too."

  "I agree."

  "That's what this office is all about. Need. Not likes or dislikes, only

  need. If I ever get back to Mountain Iron, Minnesota, alive and in one

  piece, I can think about whether I like someone or not. But I can't do that

  now. It's only what I need. And what I need right now is to stop Parsifal,

  stop what hes done, what he did to Anthony Matthias." The President paused,

  then continued, "I meant what I said-he said. I do commend you. It was a

  bell of a job."

  "Thank you, sir."

  "Especially what you didr~t say. Havelock. Where is he?"

  "Almost certainly in Paris; it's where Jenna Karas was heading. Between

  pages this afternoon I placed a number of calls to people I know in the

  Assembly, the Senate, several ministries, the Quai d'Orsay, and our own

  embassy. I applied pressure, hinting that my orders came from the White

  House, but without mentioning you by name."

  "You could have."

  "Not yet, Mr. President. Perhaps never, but certainly not now.

  "Then we understand each other," said Berquist

  "Yes, sir. Necessity."

  "Halyard might have understood; he's a practical soldier. Brooks wouldn't;

  underneath that diplomatic exterior he's a thorough moralist."

  "That was my assessment, why I didn't clarify Havelocks status."

  "It remains what it was at Col. des Moulinets. If be exposed Costa Brava,

  it would panic Parsifal more quickly than anything we might do in the State

  Department. Havelock was at the center-from the beginning.-

  "I understand, sir."

  Berquises eyes strayed to the blank white screen at the far end of the

  room. "In World War Two, Churchill had to make a decision that tore him

  apart. The German code

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  machine Enigma had been broken by Allied intelligence, a feat that meant

  that military strategies issued from Berlin could be intercepted and

  hundreds of thousands-ultimately perhaps millions-of fives could be saved.

  Word came that a massive air strike had been called against Coventry. It was

  a single transmission, coded through Enigma. But acknowledging it,

  evacuating the city or even mounting sudden, abnormal defenses, would have

  revealed that the riddle of Enigma had been solved.... Coventry had to be

  bombed half out of existence so the secret could be kept. The secret of

  Costa Brava cannot be exposed for the same reason-millions of lives are in

  the balance.... Find Havelock, Mr. Undersecretary. Find him and have him

  killed. Reinstate the order for his execution."

  19

  Havelock knew he bad been spotted: a newspaper wag abruptly lowered as he

  walked between the roped stanchions of Air France~s disembarkation lounge at

  Kennedy into the corridor that led to immigration. He had been pre-cleared

  on diplomatic status, the papers Broussac bad provided guaranteeing a rapid

  eidt through U.S. customs, and because of this accommodation he understood

  that he had to destroy those papers as quickly as possible. He carried his

  small suitcaseofficially lock-taped and stamped Diplonzatique in Paris-and

  once through the corridor he would be admitted through the heavy metal doors

  that led into the terminal by simply showing his United Nations credentials<
br />
  and declaring that he had no other luggage. A dead-file name would be

  checked against a dead-file name on the manifest, and he would be free to

  search or be killed in the United States of America. It was all so simple.

  However, for R6gine Broussaos protection-and ultimately his own-he had to

  get rid of the false papers that made all this possible. Too, he had to

  find out who had lowered the newspaper. The gray-faced man bad risen slowly

  from his seat, folding the newspaper under his arm, and started for the

  outer, crowded hallway that paralleled the inner corTidor that led to

  questionable freedom. Who was that man?

  If he could not find out, it was entirely possible that he

  312

  Trm PmwFAL MosAic 313

  would be killed before he could search, before he reached a halfway broker

  named Jacob Handelman. And that was not acceptable.

  The uniformed immigration officer was astute, polite. He asked the proper

  questions while looking Havelock directly in the eyes.

  "You have no luggage, sir?"

  "Non, monsieur. Only the one piece here."

  "Men you don't expect to be on First Avenue very long?"

  "A day, forty-eight hours," replied Michael with a Gallic shrug. "Une

  conf&ence."

  "I'm sure your government has made arrangements for transportation into the

  city. Wouldn~t you care to wait for the rest of your party?'

  The official was very good, thought Havelock. "Forgive me, monsieur, you

  force me to be candid." Michael smiled awkwardly, as though his dignity had

  been somewhat compromised. "There is a lady waiting for me; we see each

  other so seldom. Perhaps it is noted on your information, I was posted

  at-First Avenue for several months last year. Haste, mon ami, haste is on

  my mind."

  Slowly the official returned the smile as he checked off the name and

  reached for a button. "Have a good day, sir," he said.

  "Many thanks," said Havelock, walking rapidly through the parting steel

  checkpoint. Vivent W amours des gentilhomme8 frangais, he thought.

  The gray-faced man was standing by a short row of telephones, each

  occupied; he was second in line behind the third. The newspaper, which bad

  been folded under the arm, was instantly removed and snapped open. He had

  not been able to make his call, and under the circumstances that was the

  best sight Michael could hope to see.

  He started walking in the man's direction, passing him quickly and looking

  straight ahead. He took his first left into an intersecting wide corridor

  crowded with streams of departing passengers heading for their gates. He

  swung right into a narrower hallway, this one with far fewer people and the

  majority of these in the uniforms of the various airlines.

  Left again, the corridor longer, still narrow, even fewer people, mostly

  men in white overalls and in shirt sleeves; he had intered some kind of

  freight complex, the office section.

  314 ROBERT LUDLUM

  There were no passengers, no business suits, no briefcases or carry-on bags.

  There were no public telephones. The walls were stark, broken up by widely

  spaced glass doors. The nearest phones were far behind, around the comer in

  the first, main hallway. Out of sight.

  He found the m&s room; it said, AIRPORT EMPLOYEES ONLY. Michael pushed the

  door open and walked inside. It was a large tiled room, two air vents

  whining on the far wall, no windows. A row of toilet stalls was on the

  left, sinks and urinals on the right. A man in overalls with the words

  E=elsior Airline Caterers was positioned in front of the fourth urinal; a

  flush came from one of the stalls. Havelock went to a sink, placing his

  suitcase under it.

  The man at the urinal stepped back and zipped up his overalls; he glanced

  at Michael, his eyes biking in an expensive dark suit purchased that

  morning in Paris. Then, as if to say, AU right, Mr. Executive, I'll wash my

  hands, he ambled to the nearest sink and turned on the water.

  A second man emerged from a stall; he pulled his belt taut and started for

  the door, swearing under his breath, the plastic I.D. tag pinned to his

  shirt indicating he was a harried supervisor.

  The man in overalls ripped a paper towel out of a stainless-steel machine,

  cursorily wiped his hands and threw the brown paper into a receptacle. He

  opened the door and stepped out. As the door swung back Havelock ran to

  catch it, holding it open no more than an inch, and peered outside.

  The unknown surveillance was fifty-odd feet up the oorridor, casually

  leaning against the wall next to an office door, reading the folded

  newspaper. He looked at his watch, then glanced at the frosted glass panel;

  be was the image of a visitor waiting for a friend to come out and join him

  for a late lunch or drinks, or a drive to a motel near the airport. There

  was nothing menacing about him, but in that control Michael knew there was

  menace, professionalism.

  Still, two could have control, two could wait, be professionaL The

  advantage belonged to the one behind a door; he knew what was inside. The

  one outside did not, and could not afford to move away-to a telephone,

  perhaps-because once he was out of sight the quarry could escape.

  Wait. Keep the control. And get rid of the false papers

  TnE PARsi7AL MosAic315

  that could lead the pursuers to 116gine Broussac and a halfway man named

  Jacob Handelman. A dead-Me name on an aircraft's manifest was meaningless,

  inserted by mindless computers that could not say who punched the keys, but

  the papers could be traced to their origin. Havelock tore the documents into

  shreds, which he flushed down a toilet. With a penknife he sliced the ribbed

  Diplm~ue tape, which guaranteed the absence of official inspection, and

  opened his suitcase in a stall at the end of the row. He removed the

  short-barreled Llama automatic from beneath his folded clothes, and a

  passport case containing his own very authentic papers. Presented properly,

  the papers were essentially harmless. The objective, however, was not to

  have to present them at all, and they were rarely required in the streets of

  his adopted country, one of the benefits for which he was profoundly

  thankful

  Between the time he destroyed the mocked-up papers and inserted his

  passport case and weapon in their proper places, the employees' meds room

  had two more visitors. They came in together-an Air France pilot and his

  first officer, to judge from their conversation; Michael remained in the

  stall. They argued, urinated, swore at preflight red tape, and wondered how

  much their Havana Monte Cristos would bring at the bar of VAuberge au Coin,

  a restaurant apparently in midtown Manhattan. They continued talking about

  their profits on the way out.

  Havelock took off the jacket of his suit, rolled it up, and waited in the

  stall. He held the door open no more than a quarter of an inch and looked

  at his watch. He had been inside the lavatory nearly fifteen minutes. It

  would happen soon, he thought.

  It did. The white metal door swung slowly back and Havelock saw part of a

  shoulder first, then the edge
of a folded newspaper. The unknown

  surveillance was professional: no folded jacket or coat concealed a gun-no

  draped cloth that could be grabbed and twisted, to be used against the

  holder-just a loose newspaper that could be easily discarded and the weapon

  fired cleanly.

  The man whipped around the door, his back against the metal panel, his eyes

  scanning the walls, the vents, the row of stalls. Satisfied, he bent his

  knees, lowering himself, but apparently not for the purpose of checking the

  open spaces

  316 ROBERT LUDLUM

  under the doors of the first several stalls. His eyes darted back and forth.

  His body was turned away from Michael. What was he doing?

  And then he did it, and the image of another professional on the bridge at

  Col des Moulinets came to Michael, a blond professional in the uniform of

  an Italian guard. But the killer "Riect' had come prepared, knowing what

  his landscape was, knowing there was a gatehouse door to be jammed. This

  gray-faced professional had improvised, the test of onsite ingenuity. He

  had broken off a piece of wood, a small strip of cheap industrial

  molding-found in a dozen places in any airport corridor-and was now wedging

  it under the door. He stood up, placed his foot against the strip, and

  pulled on the metal knob. The door was jammed; they were alone. The man

  turned.

  Peering from inside the stall, Havelock studied him. The menace was not at

  first glance in the mares physical equipment. He was perhaps in his

  mid-fifties, with thinning hair above a flat gray face with thick eyebrows

  and high cheekbones. He was no more than five feet, eight inches, and his

  shoulders were narrow, compact. But then, Michael saw the left hand-the

  right was concealed beneath the newspaper; it was huge, a peasant's

  powerful hand, formed by years of working with heavy objects and equipment.

  The man started down the row of stalls, the sides of each about two inches

  above the tiled floor, which made it necessary for him to be within three

  feet of a front panel to ascertafn whether it was occupied. Wearing shoes

  with thick rubber soles, he moved in total silence. Suddenly he spun his

  right hand in a circle, flipping off the newspaper. Havelock stared at the

 

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