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Authors: Robert Ludlum

BOOK: The Gemini Contenders
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“Let me drive for a while.”

“We’re nearly there,
signore
. You don’t know this road; I do. We’ll enter Alba from the east, on the Canelli highway. There may be soldiers at the municipal limits. Remember what you’re to say.”

“As little as possible, I think.”

The truck entered the light traffic on the Via Canelli and maintained a steady speed with the other vehicles. As the driver had predicted, there were two soldiers at the municipal line.

For any of a dozen reasons, the truck was signaled to stop. They pulled off the road onto the shoulder of sand and waited. A sergeant approached the driver’s window, a private stood laconically outside Fontini-Cristi’s.

“Where are are you from?” asked the sergeant.

“A farm south of Baveno,” the
partigiano
said.

“You’ve come a long way for such a small delivery. I count five goats.”

“Breeding stock. They’re better animals than they look. Ten thousand
lire
for the males; eight for the females.”

The sergeant raised his eyebrows. He did not smile as he spoke. “You don’t look like
you’re
worth that,
paisan
. Your identification.”

The partisan reached into his rear pocket and pulled out a worn billfold. He withdrew the state card and handed it to the soldier.

“This says you’re from Varallo.”

“I come from Varallo. I work in Baveno.”

“South
of Baveno,” corrected the soldier coldly.
“You,”
said the sergeant, addressing Vittorio. “Your identification.”

Fontini-Cristi put his hand into his jacket, bypassing the handle of his pistol, and removed the card. He handed it to the driver, who gave it to the soldier.

“You were in Africa?”

“Yes, sergeant,” replied Vittorio bluntly.

“What corps?”

Fontini-Cristi was silent. He had no answer. His mind raced, trying to recall from the news a number, or a name. “The Seventh,” he said.

“I see.” The sergeant returned the card; Vittorio exhaled. But the relief was short-lived. The soldier reached for the handle of the door, yanked it downward and pulled the door open swiftly. “Get out! Both of you!”

“What? Why?” objected the partisan in a loud whine. “We have to make our delivery by nightfall! There’s barely time!”

“Get
out.”
The sergeant had removed his army revolver from the black leather holster and was pointing it at both men. He barked his orders across the hood to the private. “Pull him out! Cover him!”

Vittorio looked at the driver. The partisan’s eyes told him to do as he was told. But to stay alert, be ready to move; the man’s eyes told him that also.

Out of the truck on the shoulder of sand, the sergeant commanded both men to walk toward the guardhouse that stood next to a telephone pole. A telephone wire sagged down from a junction box and was attached to the roof of the small enclosure; the door was narrow, and open.

On the Via Canelli the twilight traffic was heavier now; or it seemed heavier to Fontini-Cristi. There were mostly cars, with a scattering of trucks, not unlike the farm trucks they were driving. A number of drivers slowed perceptibly at the sight of the two soldiers, their weapons drawn, marching the two civilians to the guardhouse. Then the drivers speeded up, anxious to be away.

“You have no right to stop us!” cried the partisan. “We’ve done nothing illegal. It’s no crime to earn a living!”

“It’s a crime to give false information,
paisan.”

“We gave no false information! We are workers from Baveno, and, by the Mother of God, that’s the truth!”

“Be careful,” said the soldier sarcastically. “We’ll add sacrilege to the charges. Get inside!”

The roadside guardhouse seemed even smaller than it appeared from the Via Canelli. The depth was no more than five feet, the length perhaps six. There was barely enough room for the four of them. And the look in the partisan’s eyes told Vittorio that the close quarters was an advantage.

“Search them,” ordered the sergeant.

The private placed his rifle on the floor, barrel up. The partisan driver then did a strange thing. He pulled his arms across his chest, protectively over his coat, as though it were a conscious act of defiance. Yet the man was not armed; he had made that clear to Fontini-Cristi.

“You’ll steal!” he said, louder than was necessary, his words vibrating in the wooden shack. “Soldiers steal!”

“We’re not concerned with your
lire, paisan
. There are more impressive vehicles on the highway. Take your hands from your coat.”

“Even in Rome reasons are given!
Il Duce
, himself, says the workers are not to be treated so! I march with the fascist guards; my rider served in Africa!”

What was the man doing?
thought Vittorio.
Why was he behaving so? It would only anger the soldiers
. “You try my patience, pig! We look for a man from Maggiore. Every road post looks for this man. You were stopped because the license on your truck is from the Maggiore district … Hold out your arms!”

“Baveno!
Not Maggiore! We are from
Baveno!
Where are the lies?”

The sergeant looked at Vittorio. “No soldier in Africa says he was with the Seventh Corps. It was disgraced.”

The army guard had barely finished when the partisan screamed his command.

“Now, signore!
Take the other!” The driver’s hand swept down, lashing at the revolver in the sergeant’s grip, only inches from his stomach. The suddenness of the action and the shattering roar of the partisan’s voice in the small enclosure had the effect of an unexpected collision. Vittorio had no time to watch; he could only hope his companion knew what he was doing. The private had lurched for his rifle, his left hand on the barrel, his right surging down to the stock. Fontini-Cristi threw his weight against the man, slamming him into the wall, both hands on the side of the soldier’s head, crashing the head into the hard, wooden surface. The private’s barracks cap fell off; blood matted instantly throughout the hairline and streaked down over the man’s head. He slumped to the floor.

Vittorio turned. The sergeant was wedged into the corner of the tiny guardhouse, the partisan over him, pistol-whipping him with his own weapon. The soldier’s face was a mass of torn flesh, the blood and ripped skin sickening.

“Quickly!”
cried the partisan as the sergeant fell. “Bring the truck to the front! Directly to the front; squeeze it between the road and the guardhouse. Keep the motor running.”

“Very well,” said Fontini-Cristi, confused by the brutality as well as the swift decisiveness of the last thirty seconds.

“And,
signore!”
shouted the partisan, as Vittorio had one foot out the door.

“Yes?”

“Your gun, please. Let me use it. These army issues are like thunder.”

Fontini-Cristi hesitated, then withdrew the weapon and handed it to the man. The partisan reached over to the crank-telephone on the wall and ripped it out.

Vittorio steered the truck to the front of the guardhouse, the left wheels by necessity on the hard surface of the highway; there was not sufficient room on the shoulder to pull completely off the road. He hoped the rear lights were sufficiently bright for the onrushing traffic—far heavier now—to see the obstruction and skirt it.

The partisan came out of the guardhouse and spoke through the window. “Race the motor,
signore
. As loud and as fast as you can.”

Fontini-Cristi did so. The partisan ran back to the guard house. Gripped in his right hand was Vittorio’s pistol.

The two shots were deep and sharp; muffled combustions that were sudden, terrible outbursts within the sounds of the rushing traffic and racing motor. Vittorio stared, his emotions a mixture of awe and fear and, inexplicably, sorrow. He had entered a world of violence he did not understand.

The partisan emerged from the guardhouse, pulling the narrow door shut behind him. He jumped into the truck, slammed the door panel, and nodded to Vittorio. Fontini-Cristi waited several moments for a break in the traffic, then let out the clutch. The old truck lurched forward.

“There is a garage on the Via Monte that will hide the truck, paint it, and alter the license plates. It’s less than a mile from the Piazza San Giorno. We’ll walk there from the garage. I’ll tell you where to turn.”

The partisan held out the pistol for Vittorio. “Thank you,” said Fontini-Cristi awkwardly, as he shoved the weapon into his jacket pocket. “You killed them?”

“Of course,” was the simple reply.

“I suppose you had to.”

“Naturally. You’ll be in England,
signore
. I, in Italy. I could be identified.”

“I see,” answered Vittorio, the hesitancy in his voice.

“I don’t mean disrespect, Signor Fontini-Cristi, but I don’t think you
do
see. You people at Campo di Fiori, it’s all new to you. It’s not new to us. We’ve been at war for twenty years; I, myself, for ten.”

“War?”

“Yes. Who do you think trains your
partigiani?”

“What do you mean?”

“I am a Communist,
signore
. The powerful, capitalist Fontini-Cristis are shown how to fight by Communists.”

The truck was rushing forward; Vittorio held the wheel firmly, astonished but strangely unmoved by his companion’s words.

“I didn’t know that,” he replied.

“It’s peculiar, isn’t it?” said the partisan. “No one ever asked.”

4
DECEMBER 30, 1939
ALBA, ITALY

The
espresso
bar was crowded, the tables full, the voices loud. Vittorio followed the partisan through the mass of gesturing hands and reluctantly parted bodies to the counter; they ordered coffee with Strega.

“Over there,” said the partisan, indicating a table in the corner with three laborers seated around it, their soiled clothes and stubbled faces testifying to their status. There was one empty chair.

“How do you know? I thought we were to meet two men, not three. And British. Besides, there’s not enough room; there’s only one chair.”

“Look at the heavyset man on the right. The identification is on the shoes. There are splotches of orange paint, not much but visible.
He’s
the Corsican. The other two are English. Go over and say ‘Our trip was uneventful’; that’s all. The man with the shoes will get up; take his seat.”

“What about you?”

“I’ll join you in a minute. I must talk with the
Corso.”

Vittorio did as he was told. The heavyset man with the drippings of paint on his shoes got up, heaving a sigh of discomfort; Fontini-Cristi sat down. The British across from him spoke. His Italian was grammatically proper but hesitant; he had learned the language but not the idiom.

“Our sincerest regrets. Absolutely dreadful. We’ll get you out.”

“Thank you. Would you prefer speaking English? I’m fluent.”

“Good,” said the second man. “We weren’t sure. We’ve had precious little time to read up on you. We were flown
out of Lakenheath this morning. The
Corsos
picked us up in Pietra Ligure.”

“Everything’s happened so fast,” said Vittorio. “The shock hasn’t worn off.”

“Don’t see how it could,” said the first man. “But we’re not clear yet You’ll have to keep your wits about you. Our orders are to make bloody sure we get you to London: not to come back without you, and that’s a fact.”

Vittorio looked alternately at both men. “May I ask you why? Please understand, I’m grateful, but your concern seems to me extraordinary. I’m not humble, but neither am I a fool. Why am I so important to the British?”

“Damned if we know,” replied the second agent. “But I can tell you, all hell broke loose last night.
All night
. We spent from midnight till four in the morning at the Air Ministry. All the radio dials in every operations room were beaming like mad. We’re working with the Corsicans, you know.”

“Yes, I was told.”

The partisan walked through the crowds to the table. He pulled out the empty chair and sat down, a glass of Strega in his hand. The conversation was continued in Italian.

“We had trouble on the Canelli road. A checkpoint. Two guards had to be taken out.”

“What’s the A-span?” asked the agent on Fontini-Cristi’s right. He was a slender man, somewhat more intense than his partner. He saw the puzzled expression on Vittorio’s face and clarified. “How long does he think we have before the alarm goes out?”

“Midnight. When the twelve o’clock shift arrives. No one bothers with unanswered telephones. The equipment breaks down all the time.”

“Well done,” said the agent across the table. He was rounder in the face than his fellow Englishman; he spoke more slowly, as if constantly choosing his words. “You’re a Bolshevik, I imagine.”

“I am,” replied the partisan, his hostility near the surface.

“No, no, please,” added the agent. “I like working with you chaps. You’re very thorough.”

“M.I.-
Sei
is polite.”

“By the way,” said the Britisher on Vittorio’s right, “I’m Apple; he’s Pear.”

“We know who you are,” said Pear to Fontini-Cristi.

“And my name’s not important,” said the partisan with a slight laugh. “I’ll not be going with you.”

“Let’s run through that, shall we?” Apple was anxious, but controlled to the point of being reserved. “The going. Also, London wants to set up firmer communications.”

“We knew London would.”

The three men fell into a professional conversation that Vittorio found extraordinary. They spoke of routes and codes and radio frequencies as though they were discussing prices on the stock exchange. They touched on the necessity of
taking-out, eliminating
various people in specific positions—not men, not human beings, but
factors
that had to be killed.

What kind of men were these three? “Apple,” “Pear,” a Bolshevik with no name, only a false identification card. Men who killed without anger, without remorse.

He thought of Campo di Fiori. Of blinding white flood-lights, and gunfire and death.
He
could kill now. Viciously, savagely—but he could not speak of death as these men spoke of it.

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