Page 10 of The Bourne Ultimatum (Jason Bourne 3)
The old man again looked at his watch, for everything now was timing; that was the way of the monseigneurâthat was the way of the Jackal. Again two minutes passed and the aged courier got unsteadily up from his pew, sidestepped into the aisle, genuflected as best his body would permit, and made his way, step by imperfect step, to the second confessional booth on the left. He pulled back the curtain and went inside.
âAngelus Domini,â he whispered, kneeling and repeating the words he had spoken several hundred times over the past fifteen years.
âAngelus Domini, child of God,â replied the unseen figure behind the black latticework. The blessing was accompanied by a low rattling cough. âAre your days comfortable?â
âMade more so by an unknown friend ⦠my friend.â
âWhat does the doctor say about your woman?â
âHe says to me what he does not say to her, thanks be for the mercy of Christ. It appears that against the odds I will outlive her. The wasting sickness is spreading.â
âMy sympathies. How long does she have?â
âA month, no more than two. Soon she will be confined to her bed.⦠Soon the contract between us will be void.â
âWhy is that?â
âYou will have no further obligations to me, and I accept that. Youâve been good to us and Iâve saved a little and my wants are few. Frankly, knowing whatâs facing me, Iâm feeling terribly tiredââ
âYou insufferable ingrate!â whispered the voice behind the confessional screen. âAfter all Iâve done, all Iâve promised you!â
âI beg your pardon?â
âWould you die for me?â
âOf course, thatâs our contract.â
âThen, conversely, you will live for me!â
âIf thatâs what you want, naturally I will. I simply wanted you to know that soon I would no longer be a burden to you. I am easily replaced.â
âDo not presume, never with me!â The anger erupted in a hollow cough, a cough that seemed to confirm the rumor that had spread through the dark streets of Paris. The Jackal himself was ill, perhaps deathly ill.
âYou are our life, our respect. Why should I do that?â
âYou just did.⦠Nevertheless, I have an assignment for you that will ease your womanâs departure for both of you. You will have a holiday in a lovely part of the world, the two of you together. You will pick up the papers and the money at the usual place.â
âWhere are we going, if I may ask?â
âTo the Caribbean island of Montserrat. Your instructions will be delivered to you there at the Blackburne Airport. Follow them precisely.â
âOf course.⦠Again, if I may ask, what is my objective?â
âTo find and befriend a mother and two children.â
âThen what?â
âKill them.â
Brendan Prefontaine, former federal judge of the first circuit court of Massachusetts, walked out of the Boston Five Bank on School Street with fifteen thousand dollars in his pocket. It was a heady experience for a man who had lived an impecunious existence for the past thirty years. Since his release from prison he rarely had more than fifty dollars on his person. This was a very special day.
Yet it was more than very special. It was also very disturbing because he had never thought for an instant that Randolph Gates would pay him a sum anywhere near the amount he had demanded. Gates had made an enormous error because by acceding to the demand he had revealed the gravity of his endeavors. He had crossed over from ruthless, albeit nonfatal, greed into something potentially quite lethal. Prefontaine had no idea who the woman and the children were or what their relationship was to Lord Randolph of Gates, but whoever they were and whatever it was, Dandy Randy meant them no good.
An irreproachable Zeus-like figure in the legal world did not pay a disbarred, discredited, deniable alcoholic âscumâ like one Brendan Patrick Pierre Prefontaine an outrageous sum of money because his soul was with the archangels of heaven. Rather, that soul was with the disciples of Lucifer. And since this was obviously the case, it might be profitable for the scum to pursue a little knowledge, for as the bromide declared, a little knowledge is a dangerous thingâfrequently more so in the eyes of the beholder than in the one possessing scant tidbits of information, so slanted as to appear many times more. Fifteen thousand today might well become fifty thousand tomorrow ifâif a scum flew to the island of Montserrat and began asking questions.
Besides, thought the judge, the Irish in him chuckling, the French sector in minor rebellion, he had not had a vacation in years. Good Christ, it was enough keeping body and soul together; who thought of an unenforced suspension of the hustle?
So Brendan Patrick Pierre Prefontaine hailed a taxi, which he had not done sober for at least ten years, and directed the skeptical driver to take him to Louisâs menâs store at Faneuil Hall.
âYou got the scratch, old man?â
âMore than enough to get you a haircut and cure the acne on your pubescent face, young fellow. Drive on, Ben Hur. Iâm in a hurry.â
The clothes were off the racks, but they were expensive racks, and after he had shown a roll of hundred-dollar bills, the purple-lipped clerk was extremely cooperative. A midsized suitcase of burnished leather soon held casual apparel, and Prefontaine discarded his worn-out suit, shirt and shoes for a new outfit. Within the hour he looked not unlike a man he had known years ago: the Honorable Brendan P. Prefontaine. (He had always dropped the second P., for Pierre, for obvious reasons.)
Another taxi took him to his rooming house in Jamaica Plains, where he picked up a few essentials, including his passport, which he always kept active for rapid exitsâpreferable to prison wallsâand then delivered him to Logan Airport, this driver having no concern regarding his ability to pay the fare. Clothes, of course, never made the man, thought Brendan, but they certainly helped to convince dubious underlings. At Loganâs information desk he was told that three airlines out of Boston serviced the island of Montserrat. He asked which counter was the nearest and then bought a ticket for the next available flight. Brendan Patrick Pierre Prefontaine naturally flew first class.
The Air France steward rolled the wheelchair slowly, gently through the ramp and onto the 747 jet in Parisâs Orly Airport. The frail woman in the chair was elderly and overly made-up with an imbalance of rouge; she wore an outsized feather hat made of Australian cockatoo. She might have been a caricature except for the large eyes beneath the bangs of gray hair imperfectly dyed redâeyes alive and knowing and filled with humor. It was as if she were saying to all who observed her, Forget it, mes amis, he likes me this way and thatâs all I care about. I donât give a pile of merde about you or your opinions. The he referred to the old man walking cautiously beside her, every now and then touching her shoulder, lovingly as well as perhaps for balance, but in the touch there was a volume of poetry that was theirs alone. Closer inspection revealed a sporadic welling of tears in his eyes that he promptly wiped away so she could not see them.
âIl est ici, mon capitaine,â announced the steward to the senior pilot, who greeted his two preboarding passengers at the aircraftâs entrance. The captain reached for the womanâs left hand and touched his lips to it, then stood erect and solemnly saluted the balding gray-haired old man with the small Légion dâhonneur medal in his lapel.
âIt is an honor, monsieur,â said the captain. âThis aircraft is my command, but you are my commander.â They shook hands and the pilot continued. âIf thereâs anything the crew and I can do to make the flight most comfortable for you, donât hesitate to ask, monsieur.â
âYouâre very kind.â
âWe are all beholdenâall of us, all of France.â
âIt was nothing, reallyââ
âTo be singled out by Le Grand Charles himself as a true hero of the Résistance is hardly nothing. Age cannot dull such glory.â The captain snapped his fingers, addressing three stewardesses in the still-empty first-class cabin. âQuickly, mesdemoiselles! Make ev
erything perfect for a brave warrior of France and his lady.â
So the killer with many aliases was escorted to the wide bulkhead on the left, where his woman was gently transferred from the wheelchair to the seat on the aisle; his was next to the window. Their trays were set up and a chilled bottle of Cristal was brought in their honor and for their enjoyment. The captain raised the first glass and toasted the couple; he returned to the flight deck as the old woman winked at her man, the wink wicked and filled with laughter. In moments, the passengers began boarding the plane, a number of whom glancing appreciatively at the elderly âman and wifeâ in the front row. For the rumors had spread in the Air France lounge. A great hero ⦠Le Grand Charles himself ⦠In the Alps he held off six hundred Bocheâor was it a thousand?
As the enormous jet raced down the runway and with a thump lumbered off the ground into the air, the old âhero of Franceââwhose only heroics he could recall from the Résistance were based on theft, survival, insults to his woman, and staying out of whatever army or labor force that might draft himâreached into his pocket for his papers. The passport had his picture duly inserted, but that was the only item he recognized. The restâname, date and place of birth, occupationâall were unfamiliar, and the attached list of honors, well, they were formidable. Totally out of character, but in case anyone should ever refer to them, he had better restudy the âfactsâ so he could at least nod in self-effacing modesty. He had been assured that the individual originally possessing the name and the achievements had no living relatives and few friends, and had disappeared from his apartment in Marseilles supposedly on a world trip from which he presumably would not return.
The Jackalâs courier looked at the nameâhe must remember it and respond whenever it was spoken. It should not be difficult, for it was such a common name. And so he repeated it silently to himself over and over again.
Jean Pierre Fontaine, Jean Pierre Fontaine, Jean Pierre â¦
A sound! Sharp, abrasive. It was wrong, not normal, not part of a hotelâs routine noise of hollow drumming at night. Bourne grabbed the weapon by his pillow and rolled out of bed in his shorts, steadying himself by the wall. It came again! A single, loud knock on the bedroom door of the suite. He shook his head trying to remember.⦠Alex? Iâll knock once. Jason lurched half in sleep to the door, his ear against the wood.
âYes?â
âOpen this damn thing before somebody sees me!â came Conklinâs muffled voice from the corridor. Bourne did so and the retired field officer limped quickly into the room, treating his cane as if he loathed it. âBoy, are you out of training!â he exclaimed as he sat on the foot of the bed. âIâve been standing there tapping for at least a couple of minutes.â
âI didnât hear you.â
âDelta would have; Jason Bourne would have. David Webb didnât.â
âGive me another day and you wonât find David Webb.â
âTalk. I want you better than talk!â
âThen stop talking and tell me why youâre hereâat whatever time it is.â
âWhen last I looked I met Casset on the road at three-twenty. I had to gimp through a bunch of woods and climb over a goddamned fenceââ
âWhat?â
âYou heard me. A fence. Try it with your foot in cement.⦠You know, I once won the fifty-yard dash when I was in high school.â
âCut the digression. What happened?â
âOh, I hear Webb again.â
âWhat happened? And while youâre at it, who the hell is this Casset you keep talking about?â
âThe only man I trust in Virginia. He and Valentino.â
âWho?â
âTheyâre analysts, but theyâre straight.â
âWhat?â
âNever mind. Jesus, there are times when I wish I could get pissedââ
âAlex, why are you here?â
Conklin looked up from the bed as he angrily gripped his cane. âIâve got the books on our Philadelphians.â
âThatâs why? Who are they?â
âNo, thatâs not why. I mean itâs interesting, but itâs not why Iâm here.â
âThen why?â asked Jason, crossing to a chair next to a window and sitting down, frowning, perplexed. âMy erudite friend from Cambodia and beyond doesnât climb over fences with his foot in cement at three oâclock in the morning unless he thinks he has to.â
âI had to.â
âWhich tells me nothing. Please tell.â
âItâs DeSole.â
âWhatâs the soul?â
âNot âthe,â DeSole.â
âYouâve lost me.â
âHeâs the keeper of the keys at Langley. Nothing happens that he doesnât know about and nothing gets done in the area of research that he doesnât pass on.â
âIâm still lost.â
âWeâre in deep shit.â
âThat doesnât help me at all.â
âWebb again.â
âWould you rather I took a nerve out of your neck?â
âAll right, all right. Let me get my breath.â Conklin dropped his cane on the rug. âI didnât even trust the freight elevator. I stopped two floors below and walked up.â
âBecause weâre in deep shit?â
âYes.â
âWhy? Because of this DeSole?â
âCorrect, Mr. Bourne. Steven DeSole. The man who has his finger on every computer at Langley. The one person who can spin the disks and put your old virginal Aunt Grace in jail as a hooker if he wants her there.â
âWhatâs your point?â
âHeâs the connection to Brussels, to Teagarten at NATO. Casset learned down in the cellars that heâs the only connectionâthey even have an access code bypassing everyone else.â
âWhat does it mean?â
âCasset doesnât know, but heâs goddamned angry.â
âHow much did you tell him?â
âThe minimum. That I was working on some possibles and Teagartenâs name came up in an odd wayâmost likely a diversion or used by someone trying to impress someone elseâbut I wanted to know who he talked to at the Agency, frankly figuring it was Peter Holland. I asked Charlie to play it out in the dark.â
âWhich I assume means confidentially.â
âTen times that. Casset is the sharpest knife in Langley. I didnât have to say any more than I did; he got the message. Now heâs also got a problem he didnât have yesterday.â
âWhatâs he going to do?â
âI asked him not to do anything for a couple of days and thatâs what he gave me. Forty-eight hours, to be precise, and then heâs going to confront DeSole.â
âHe canât do that,â said Bourne firmly. âWhatever these people are hiding we can use it to pull out the Jackal. Use them to pull him out as others like them used me thirteen years ago.â
Conklin stared first down at the floor, then up at Jason Bourne. âIt comes down to the almighty ego, doesnât it?â he said. âThe bigger the ego the bigger the fearââ
âThe bigger the bait, the bigger the fish,â completed Jason, interrupting. âA long time back you told me that Carlosâs âspineâ was as big as his head, which had to be swollen all out of proportion for him to be in the business heâs in. That was true then and itâs true now. If we can get any one of these high government profiles to send a message to himânamely, to come after me, kill meâheâll jump at it. Do you know why?â
âI just told you. Ego.â
âSure, thatâs part of it, but thereâs something else. Itâs the respect thatâs eluded Carlos for more than twenty years, starting with Moscow cutting him loose and telling him to get lost. Heâs made millions, but his clients have mainly been the crud of the earth. For all the fear heâs engendered he still remains a punk psychopath. No legends have been built around him, only contempt, and at this stage itâs got to be driving him close to the edge. The fact that heâs coming after me to settle a thirteen-year-old score supports what Iâm saying.⦠Iâm vital
to himâhis killing me is vitalâbecause I was the product of our covert operations. Thatâs who he wants to show up, show that heâs better than all of us put together.â
âIt could also be because he still thinks you can identify him.â
âI thought that at first, too, but after thirteen years and nothing from meâwell, I had to think again.â
âSo you moved into Mo Panovâs territory and came up with a psychiatric profile.â
âItâs a free country.â
âCompared with most, yes, but whereâs all this leading us?â
âBecause I know Iâm right.â
âThatâs hardly an answer.â
âNothing can be false or faked,â insisted Bourne, leaning forward in the armchair, his elbows on his bare knees, his hands clasped. âCarlos would find the contrivance; itâs the first thing heâll look for. Our Medusans have to be genuine and genuinely panicked.â
âTheyâre both, I told you that.â
âTo the point where theyâd actually consider making contact with someone like the Jackal.â
âThat I donât knowââ
âThat weâll never know,â broke in Jason, âuntil we learn what theyâre hiding.â
âBut if we start the disks spinning at Langley, DeSole will find out. And, if heâs part of whatever the hell it is, heâll alert the others.â
âThen thereâll be no research at Langley. Iâve got enough to go on anyway, just get me addresses and private telephone numbers. You can do that, canât you?â
âCertainly, thatâs low-level. What are you going to do?â
Bourne smiled and spoke quietly, even gently. âHow about storming their houses or sticking needles in their asses between the appetizers and the entrées?â
âNow I hear Jason Bourne.â
âSo be it.â
7
Marie St. Jacques Webb greeted the Caribbean morning by stretching in bed and looking over at the crib several feet away. Alison was deep in sleep, which she had not been four or five hours ago. The little dear had been a basket case then, so much so that Marieâs brother Johnny had knocked on the door, walked cowardly inside, and asked if he could do anything, which he profoundly trusted he could not.