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    Robert Ludlum - The Parcifal Mosaic.txt


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      THE PARSIFAL MOSAIC

      BY

      ROBERT LUDLUM

      Bantam Books by Robert Ludlum

      Ask your book seller for the books you have missed

      THE AQUITAINE PROGRESSION

      THE BOURNE IDENTITY

      THE CHANCELLOR MANUSCRIPT

      THE HOLCROFT COVENANT

      THE MATARESE CIRCLE

      THE OSTERMAN WEEKEND

      THE PARSIFAL MOSAIC

      THE ROAD TO GANDOLFO

      THE SCARLATTI INHERITANCE

      BANTAM BOOKS

      TORONTO- NEWYORK - LA)NDON -SYDNEY* AUCKLANI)

      A Bantam Book / published by arrangement with

      the Author

      PRINTING HISTORY

      Random House edition fublished March 1982

      A Selection of iterary Guild

      Bantam Export edition / April 1982

      Bantam edition / March 1983

      12 printings through June 1985

      All rights reserved.

      Copyright 0 1982 by Robert Ludlum.

      Cover art copyright (D 1983 by Mara McAlfee.

      This book may not be reproduced in whole or In part, AY

      mimeograph or any other Means, without permission.

      For information address: Bantam Books, Inc.

      ISBN Oj553-25270-4

      Published simultaneously in the United States and Canada

      Bantam Books are published by Bantam Books, Inc. Its trade.

      mark, consisting of the words "Bantam Books" and the por

      trayal of a rooster, Is Registered in U.S. Patent and Trademark

      Office and in other countries. Marco Registrada. Bantam

      Books, Inc., 666 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10103.

      PRUfM IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERIC&

      H21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13

      For Dolores and Charles Ryducha, two of the finest people I have ever

      knownfrom a grateful brother Na zdrowiel

      THE

      PARSIFAL

      MOSAIC

      BOOK

      - ONE,

      1

      The cold rays of the moon streaked down from the night sky and bounced off

      the rolling surf ' which burst into suspen ed sprays of white where isolated

      waves crashed into the rocks of the shoreline. The stretch of beach between

      the towering boulders of the Costa Brava was the execution ground. It had to

      be. May God damn this goddamned world-it had to bel

      He could see her now. And hear her through the sounds of the sea and the

      breaking surf. She was running wildly, screaming hysterically: "Pro boha

      iiv6hol ProN Co to d6WI Pfestafil ProN ProN

      Her blond hair was caught in the moonlight, her racing silhouette given

      substance by the beam of a powerful flashlight fifty yards behind her. She

      fell; the gap closed and a staccato burst of gunfire abruptly, insolently

      split the night air, bullets exploding the sand and the wild grass all

      around her. She would be dead in a matter of seconds.

      His love would be gone.

      They were high on the hill overlooking the Moldau, the boats on the -river

      plowing the waters north and south, their wakes furrows. The curling sinoke

      from the factories below diffused in the bright afternoon sky, obscuring the

      mountains in the distance, and Michael watched, wondering # the

      8

      4RoBERT LUDLUM

      winds above Prague would come along and blow th.6 smoke away so the

      mountains could be seen again. His head was on Jenna's lap, his long legs

      stretched out, touching the wicker basket she had packed with sandwiches and

      iced wine. She sat on the grass, her back against the smooth bark of a birch

      tree, she stroked his hair, her fingers circling his face, gently outlining

      his lips and cheekbones.

      'Mikhail, my darling, I was thinking. Those tweed jackets

      and dark trousers you wear, and that very proper English which must come

      from your very proper university, will never remove the Havlibek from

      Havelock."

      "I don't think they were meant to. One~'s a uniform of sods, and the other

      you kind of learn in self-defense." He smiled, touching her hand. "Besides,

      that university was a long time ago."

      "So much was a long time ago, wasWt it? Right down there."

      "It happened."

      'You were there, my poor darling."

      'It's history. I survived.'

      "Many did not."

      The blond woman rose, spinning in the sand, pulling at the wild grass,

      plunging to her right, for several seconds eluding the beam of light. She

      beaded toward the dirt road above the beach, staying in darkness, crouching,

      lunging, using the cover of night and the patches of tall grass to conceal

      her body.

      It would not do her any good, thought the tall man in the black sweater at

      his post between two trees above the road, above the terrible violence that

      was taking place below, above the panicked woman who would be dead in

      moments. He bad looked down at her once before, not so very long ago. She

      had not been panicked then; she had been magnificent.

      He folded the curtain back slowly, carefully in the dark office, his back

      pressed against the wall, his face inching toward the window. He could see

      her below, crossing the floodlit courtyard, the tattoo of her high heels

      against the cobblestones echoing martially up between the surrounding

      buildings. The guards were recessed in shadows--outlines of sullen mario-

      THE PARSIFAL MOSAIC5

      nettes in their Soviet-style uniforms. Heads turned, signifying

      appreciative glances directed at the figure striding confi-

      ='y to7h ;dstttiron gate in the center of the iron fence

      ngcompound that was the core of Prague's

      secret police. The thoughts behind the glances were clear:

      this was no mere secretary working overtime, this was a pnv

      ileged kurva who took dictation on a commissar`8 couch till all

      hours of the night.

      But others, too, were watching-from other darkened windows. One break in

      her confident stride, one instant of hesitation, and a phone would be

      picked up and orders of detention issued to the gate. Embarrassments, of

      course, were to be avoided where commissars were concerned, but not if

      there appeared to be substance behind suspicions. Everything was

      appearance.

      There was no break, no hesitation. She was carrying it ofiF

      . carrying it outl They had done itt Suddenly he felt a folt Of pain in his

      chest, he knew what it was. Fear. Pure, raw, sickening fear. He was

      remembering-memories within memories. As he watched her his mind went back

      to a city In rubble, to the terrible sounds of mass execution. Lidice. And

      a child-one of many children-scurrying through the billowIng gray smoke of

      burning debris, carrying messages and pockets full of plastic explosives.

      One break, one hesitation, then ... history.

      She reached the gate. An obsequious guard was permitted to leer. She was

      magnificent. God, he loved hert

      She had reached the shoulder of the road, legs and arms working furiously,

      digging into the s
    and and the dirt, clawing for survival. With no wild grass

      to conceal her, she would be seen; the beam of light would find her, and the

      end would come quickly.

      He watched, suspending emotion, erasing pain, a human litmus accepting

      impressions without comment. He had toprofessionally. He had learned the

      truth, the stretch of beach on the Costa Brava w confirmation of her guilt,

      proof of her crimes. The hysterical woman below was a killer, an agent for

      the infamous Voennaya Kontra Razvedka, the savage branch Qf the Soviet KGB

      that spawned terrorism everywhere. That was the truth; it was undeniable.

      He had seen it all, talked with Washington from Madrid. The rendezvous

      6ROBERT LUDLUM

      that night had been ordered by Moscow, the purpose being the delivery by VKR

      Field Officer Jenna Karas of a schedule of assassinations to a faction of

      the Baader-Meinhof at an isolated beach called Montebello, north of the town

      of Blanes. That was the truth.

      It did not set him free. Instead, it bound him to another truth, an

      obligation of his profession. Those who betrayed the living and brokered

      death had to die. No matter who, no matter ... Michael Havelock had made

      the decision, and it was irrevocable. He had set the last phase of the trap

      himself, for the death of the woman who briefly bad given him more

      happiness than tiny other person on earth. His love was a killer; to permit

      her to live would mean the killing of hundreds, perhaps thousands.

      What Moscow did not know was that Langley had broken the VKR codes. He

      himself had sent the last transmission to a boat a half-mfle off the Costa

      Brava shoreline. KGB confirmation. Officer contact compromised by U.S.

      Intelligence. Schedules false. Eliminate. The codes were among the most

      unbreakable; they would guarantee elimination.

      . She was rising now. Her slender body rose above the shoulder of sand and

      dirt. It was going to happen! The woman about to die was his love: they had

      held each other and there had been quiet talk of a lifetime together, of

      children, of peace and the splendid comfort of being one-together. Once he

      had believed it all, but it was not to be.

      They were in bed, her head on his chest, her soft blond hair falling across

      her face. He brushed it aside, lifting up the strands that concealed her

      eyes, and laughed.

      You~re hiding," he said.

      "It seem we're always hiding," she replied, smiling sadly. 'Except when we

      wish to he seen by people who should see us. We do nothing that we simply

      want to. Everything is calculated, Mikhail. Regimented. We live in a

      movable prison."

      "It hasret been that long, and it won't last forever."

      'I suppose not. One day they'll find they doret need us, don!t want us any

      longer, perhaps. Will they let us go, do you thinkP Or will we disappear?*

      "Washington's not Prague. Or Moscow. We'll walk out of our movable prison,

      me with a gold watch, you with some kind of sileW decoration with your

      papers "

      THE PARSIFAL MOSAIC7

      "Are you sure? We know a great deal. Too much, perhaps."

      Our protection lies in what we do know. What I know. They'll always wonder:

      Did he unite it down somewhereP Take care, watch him, be good to him ...

      les not unusual, really. We'll walk out."

      'Always protection," she said, tracing his eyebrows. "You never forget, do

      youP The early days, the terrible days."

      'History. Irue forgottm'

      ~What will we do?"

      'Live. I love you."

      Do you think we'll have children? Watch them going off to school, hold

      them, scold them. Go to hockey-ball games."

      "Footballor baseball . Not hockey-ball. Yes, I hope 80 .

      'What will you do, Mikhail?"

      "Teach, I suppose. At a college somewhere. rve a couple of starched degrees

      that say rm qualified. Well be happy, I know that. Fm counting on it."

      ~What will you teach?"

      He looked at her, touching her face, then his eyes wan dered up to the

      shabby ceiling in the -run-down hotel room.

      History," he said. And then he reached for her, taking her in his arms.

      The beam of light swung across the darkness. It caught her, a bird on fire,

      trying to rise, trapped by the light that was her darkness. The gunshots

      followed-terrorists' gunfire for a terrorist. The woman arched backward, the

      first bullets penetrating the base of her spine, her blond hair cascading

      behind her. Three shots then came separately, with finality-a marksmaes eye

      delivering a marksman's score; they entered the back of her neck'and her

      skull, propelling her forward over the mound of dirt and sand, her fingers

      clawing the earth, her blood-streaked face mercifully concealed. A final

      spasm,and all movement stopped.

      His love was dead-for some part of love was a part of whatever they were.

      He had done what he had to do, just as she bad done the same. Each was

      right, each wrong, ultimately so terribly wrong. He closed his eyes,

      feeling the unwanted dampness.

      Why did it have to be? We are fools. Worse, we are stu- 8 RoBLmT LuDLUM

      pid. We do not talk; we die. So men with fluld tongues and facile minds can

      tell us what is right and wrong-geopolitically, you understand, which means

      that whatever they say is beyond our puerile understanding.

      What will you do, MikhailP

      Teach, I suppose. At a college somewhere

      What will you teach?

      History ...

      It was all history now. Remembrances of things too painful. Let it be cold

      history, as the early days were history. They cannot be a part of me any

      longer. She cannot be a part of me, it she ever was, even in her pretense.

      Yet I will keep a promise, not to her but to myself. I am finished. I will

      disappear into another lite, a new lite. I will go somewhere, teach

      somewhere. Illuminate the lessons of futility.

      He heard the voices and opened his eyes. Below, the killers of the

      Baader-Meinhof had reached the condemned woman, sprawled out in death,

      clutching the ground that was her execution place-geopolitically

      preordained. Had she really been so magnificent a liar? Yes, she had been,

      for he had seen the truth. Even in her eyes he had seen it.

      The two executioners bent down to grab the corpse and drag it away-her once

      graceful body to be consigned to fire or chained for the deep. He would not

      interfere; the evidence had to be felt, touched, reflected upon later when

      the trap was revealed, another lesson taught. Futility-geopolitically

      required.

      A gust of wind suddenly whipped across the open beach-, the killers braced

      themselves, their feet slipping in the sand. The man on the left raised his

      right hand in an unsuccessful attempt to keep the visored fishing cap on

      his head; it blew away, rolling toward the dune that was the shoulder of

      the road. He released his hold on the corpse and ran after it Havelock

      watched as the man came closer. There was something about him- About the

      face? No, it was the hair, seen clearly in the moonlight. It was wavy and

      dark, but not completely dark; there was a streak of white above his

      forehead, a sudden intrusion that was startling. He had seen that he
    ad of

      hair, seen that face somewhere before. But where? There were so many

      memories. Files analyzed, photographs

      THE PARsiFAL MosAic9

      studied-contracts, sources, enemies. Where was this man from? KGB? The

      dreaded Voennaya? A splinter faction paid by Moscow when not drawing

      contingency funds from a CIA station chief in Usbon?

      It did not matter. The deadly puppets and the vulnerable pawns no longer

      concerned Michael Havelock-or Mikhail Havlf&-k, for that matter. He would

      route a cable to Washington through the embassy in Madrid in the morning.

      He was finished, he had nothing more to give. Whatever his superiors wanted

      in the way of debriefing he would permit. Even going to a clinic; he simply

      did not care. But they would have no more of his life.

      That was history. It had ended on an isolated beach called Montebello on

      the Costa Brava.

      2

      Time was the true narcotic for pain. Either the pain disappeared when it ran

      its course or a person learned to live with it. Havelock understood this '

      knowing that at this moment in time something of both was applicable. The

      pain had not disappeared but there was less of it; there were periods when

      the memories were dulled, the sear tissue sensitive only when prodded. And

      traveling helped; be had forgotten what it was like to cope with the

      compleidties facing the tourist.

      "If youT note' sir, it's printed here on your ticket. 'Subject to, change

      without notice.'

      "Where?"

      "Down here."

      "I can't read it'

      "I can."

      "You've memorized it."

      "I'M familiar with it sir."

      And the imn-dgration lines. Followed by customs inspections. The

      Intolerable preceded by the impossible; men and women who countered their

      own boredom by slamming rubber stamps and savagely attacking defenseless

      zippers whose manufacturers believed in planned obsolescence.

      There was no question about it, he was spoiled. His previous life bad had

      its difficulties and its risks. but they had not included the perils that

      confronted the iWeier at every turn.

     


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