Page 13 of The Bourne Ultimatum (Jason Bourne 3)
âThe hell I wasnât. No uniform ever made a soldier and it sure didnât with me.â
âWhat about a couple of generals, one in Brussels, the other at the Pentagon?â
âThey were career men; they stayed in. I wasnât and I didnât.â
âWe have to expect leaks, rumors,â said Bourne almost aimlessly, his eyes now wandering. âBut we canât permit the slightest hint of military orientation.â
âYou mean like in junta style?â
âNever,â replied Bourne, once more staring at Armbruster. âThat kind of thing creates whirlwindsââ
âForget it!â whispered the chairman of the Federal Trade Commission, angrily interrupting. âThe Sixth Fleet, as you call him, calls the shots only here and only because itâs convenient. Heâs a blood-and-guts admiral with a whiz-bang record and a lot of clout where we want it, but thatâs in Washington, not anywhere else!â
âI know that and you know it,â said Jason emphatically, the emphasis covering his bewilderment, âbut someone whoâs been in a protection program for over fifteen years is putting together his own scenario and that comes out of SaigonâCommand Saigon.â
âIt may have come out of Saigon but it sure as hell didnât stay there. The soldier boys couldnât run with it, we all know that.⦠But I see what you mean. You tie in Pentagon brass with anything like us, the freaks are in the streets and the bleeding-heart fairies in Congress have a field day. Suddenly a dozen subcommittees are in session.â
âWhich we canât tolerate,â added Bourne.
âAgreed,â said Armbruster. âAre we any closer to learning the name of the bastard whoâs putting this scenario together?â
âCloser, not close. Heâs been in contact with Langley but on what level we donât know.â
âLangley? For Christâs sake, weâve got someone over there. He can squelch it and find out who the son of a bitch is!â
âDeSole?â offered the Cobra simply.
âThatâs right.â Armbruster leaned forward. âThere is very little you donât know. That connectionâs very quiet. What does DeSole say?â
âNothing, we canât touch him,â replied Jason, suddenly, frantically reaching for a credible answer. He had been David Webb too long! Conklin was right; he wasnât thinking fast enough. Then the words came ⦠part of the truth, a dangerous part, but credible, and he could not lose credibility. âHe thinks heâs being watched and weâre to stay away from him, no contact whatsoever until he says otherwise.â
âWhat happened?â The chairman gripped his glass, his eyes rigid, bulging.
âSomeone in the cellars learned that Teagarten in Brussels has an access fax code directly to DeSole bypassing routine confidential traffic.â
âStupid goddamned soldier boys!â spat out Armbruster. âGive âem gold braid and they prance around like debutantes and want every new toy in town!⦠Faxes, access codes! Jesus, he probably punched the wrong numbers and got the NAACP.â
âDeSole says heâs building a cover and can handle it, but itâs no time for him to go around asking questions, especially in this area. Heâll check quietly on everything he can, and if he learns something heâll reach us, but weâre not to reach him.â
âWouldnât you know itâd be a lousy soldier boy who puts us out on a limb? If it wasnât for that jackass with his access code, we wouldnât have a problem. Everything would be taken care of.â
âBut he does exist, and the problemâthe crisisâwonât go away,â said Bourne flatly. âI repeat, we have to cover ourselves. Some of us will have to leaveâdisappear at least for a while. For the good of all of us.â
The chairman of the Federal Trade Commission leaned back in the booth, his expression pensively disagreeable. âYeah, well let me tell you something, Simon, or whatever your name is. Youâre checking out the wrong people. Weâre businessmen, some of us rich enough or egotistical enough or for other reasons willing to work for government pay, but first weâre businessmen with investments all over the place. Weâre also appointed, not elected, and that means nobody expects full financial disclosures. Do you see what Iâm driving at?â
âIâm not sure,â said Jason, instantly concerned that he was losing control, losing the threat. Iâve been away too long ⦠and Albert Armbruster was not a fool. He was given to first-level panic, but the second level was colder, far more analytical. âWhat are you driving at?â
âGet rid of our soldier boys. Buy them villas or a couple of Caribbean islands and put them out of reach. Give âem their own little courts and let âem play kings; thatâs what theyâre all about anyway.â
âOperate without them?â asked Bourne, trying to conceal his astonishment.
âYou said it and I agree. Any hint of big brass and weâre in big trouble. It goes under the heading of âmilitary industrial complex,â which freely translated means military-industrial collusion.â Again Armbruster leaned forward over the table. âWe donât need them anymore! Get rid of them.â
âThere could be very loud objectionsââ
âNo way. Weâve got âem by their brass balls!â
âIâll have to think about it.â
âThereâs nothing to think about. In six months weâll have the controls we need in Europe.â
Jason Bourne stared at the chairman of the Federal Trade Commission. What controls? he thought to himself. For what reason? Why?
âIâll drive you home,â he said.
âI talked to Marie,â said Conklin from the Agency garden apartment in Virginia. âSheâs at the inn, not at your house.â
âHow come?â asked Jason at a gas-station pay phone on the outskirts of Manassas.
âShe wasnât too clear.⦠I think it was lunchtime or nap timeâone of those times when mothers are never clear. I could hear your kids in the background. They were loud, pal.â
âWhat did she say, Alex?â
âIt seems your brother-in-law wanted it that way. She didnât elaborate, and other than sounding like one harried mommy, she was the perfectly normal Marie I know and loveâwhich means she only wanted to hear about you.â
âWhich means you told her I was perfectly fine, didnât you?â
âHell, yes. I said you were holed up under guard going over a lot of computer printouts, sort of a variation on the truth.â
âJohnny must have had his talk with her. She told him whatâs happened, so he moved them all to his exclusive bunker.â
âHis what?â
âYou never saw Tranquility Inn, or did you? Frankly, I canât remember whether you did or not.â
âPanov and I saw only the plans and the site; that was four years ago. We havenât been back since, at least I havenât. Nobodyâs asked me.â
âIâll let that pass because youâve had a standing invitation since we got the place.⦠Anyway, you know itâs on the beach and the only way to get there except by water is up a dirt road so filled with rocks no normal car could make it twice. Everything is flown in by plane or brought over by boat. Almost nothing from the town.â
âAnd the beach is patrolled,â interrupted Conklin. âJohnny isnât taking any chances.â
âItâs why I sent them down there. Iâll call her later.â
âWhat about now?â said Alex. âWhat about Armbruster?â
âLetâs put it this way,â replied Bourne, his eyes drifting up to the white plastic shell of the pay phone. âWhat does it mean when a man who has a hundred million dollars in Zurich tells me that Medusaâpoint of origin Command Saigon, emphasis on âcommand,â which is hardly civilianâshould get rid of the military because Snake Lady doesnât need them any longer?â
âI donât believe it,â said the retired intelligence officer in a quiet, doubting voice. âHe didnât.â
âOh, yes, he did. He even called them soldier boys, and he wasnât memorializing them in song. He verbally dismissed the admirals and the generals as gold-braided debutantes who wanted every new toy in town.â
r /> âCertain senators on the Armed Services Committee would agree with that assessment,â concurred Alex.
âThereâs more. When I reminded him that Snake Lady came out of SaigonâCommand Saigonâhe was very clear. He said it may have, but it sure as hell didnât stay there becauseâand this is a direct quoteââThe soldier boys couldnât run with it.â â
âThatâs a provocative statement. Did he tell you why they couldnât run with it?â
âNo, and I didnât ask. I was supposed to know the answer.â
âI wish you did. I like less and less the sound of what Iâm hearing; itâs big and itâs ugly.⦠How did the hundred million come up?â
âI told him Medusa might get him a villa someplace out of the country where he couldnât be reached if we thought it was necessary. He wasnât too interested and said if he wanted one, heâd buy it himself. He had a hundred million, American, in Zurichâa fact I think I was also expected to know.â
âThat was all? Just a simple little one hundred million?â
âNot entirely. He told me that like everybody else he gets a monthly telexâin codeâfrom the banks in Zurich listing his deposits. Obviously, theyâve been growing.â
âBig, ugly and growing,â added Conklin. âAnything else? Not that I particularly want to hear it, Iâm frightened enough.â
âTwo more items and youâd better have some fear in reserve.⦠Armbruster said that along with the deposit telexes he gets a listing of the companies theyâre gaining control of.â
âWhat companies? What was he talking about?⦠Good God.â
âIf I had asked, my wife and children might have to attend a private memorial service, no casket in evidence because I wouldnât be there.â
âYouâve got more to tell me. Tell me.â
âOur illustrious chairman of the Federal Trade Commission said that the ubiquitous âweâ could get rid of the military because in six months âweâ would have all the controls we needed in Europe.⦠Alex, what controls? What are we dealing with?â
There was silence on the unbroken line, and Jason Bourne did not interrupt. David Webb wanted to shout in defiance and confusion, but there was no point; he was a nonperson. Finally, Conklin spoke.
âI think weâre dealing with something we canât handle,â he said softly, his words barely audible over the phone. âThis has to go upstairs, David. We canât keep it to ourselves.â
âGoddamn you, youâre not talking to David!â Bourne did not raise his voice in anger; he did not have to, its tone was enough. âThis isnât going anywhere unless or until I say it does and I may not ever say it. Understand me, field man, I donât owe anyone anything, especially not the movers and the shakers in this city. They moved and shook my wife and me too much for any concessions where our lives or the lives of our children are concerned! I intend to use everything I can learn for one purpose and one purpose only. Thatâs to draw out the Jackal and kill him so we can climb out of our personal hell and go on living.⦠I know now that this is the way to do it. Armbruster talked tough and he probably is tough, but underneath heâs frightened. Theyâre all frightenedâpanicked, as you put itâand you were right. Present them with the Jackal and heâs a solution they canât refuse. Present Carlos with a client as rich and as powerful as our current Medusa and itâs irresistible to himâheâs got the respect of the international big boys, not just the crud of the world, the fanatics of the left and right.⦠Donât stand in my way, donât, for Godâs sake!â
âThatâs a threat, isnât it?â
âStop it, Alex. I donât want to talk like that.â
âBut you just did. Itâs the reverse of Paris thirteen years ago, isnât it? Only now youâll kill me because Iâm the one who hasnât a memory, the memory of what we did to you and Marie.â
âThatâs my family out there!â cried David Webb, his voice tight, sweat forming on his hairline as his eyes filled with tears. âTheyâre a thousand miles away from me and in hiding. It canât be any other way because I wonât risk letting them be harmed!⦠Killed, Alex, because thatâs what the Jackal will do if he finds them. Itâs an island this week; where is it next? How many thousands of miles more? And after that, where will they goâwhere will we go? Knowing what we know now, we canât stopâheâs after me; that goddamned filthy psychopath is after me, and everything weâve learned about him tells us he wants a maximum kill. His ego demands it, and that kill includes my family!⦠No, field man, donât burden me with things I donât care aboutânot where they interfere with Marie and the kidsâIâm owed that much.â
âI hear you,â said Conklin. âI donât know whether Iâm hearing David or Jason Bourne, but I hear you. All right, no reverse Paris, but we have to move fast and Iâm talking to Bourne now. Whatâs next? Where are you?â
âI judge about six or seven miles from General Swayneâs house,â replied Jason, breathing deeply, the momentary anguish suppressed, the coldness returning. âDid you make the call?â
âTwo hours ago.â
âAm I still âCobraâ?â
âWhy not? Itâs a snake.â
âThatâs what I told Armbruster. He wasnât happy.â
âSwayne will be less so, but I sense something and I canât really explain it.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âIâm not sure, but I have an idea that heâs answerable to someone.â
âIn the Pentagon? Burton?â
âI suppose so, I just donât know. In his partial paralysis he reacted almost as if he was an onlooker, someone involved but not in the middle of the game. He slipped a couple of times and said things like âWeâll have to think about this,â and âWeâll have to confer.â Confer with whom? It was a one-on-one conversation with my usual warning that he wasnât to talk to anyone. His response was a lame editorial âwe,â meaning that the illustrious general was conferring with himself. I donât buy it.â
âNeither do I,â agreed Jason. âIâm going to change clothes. Theyâre in the car.â
âWhat?â
Bourne turned partially in the plastic shell of the pay phone and glanced around the gas station. He saw what he hoped for, a menâs room in the side of the building. âYou said that Swayne lives on a large farm west of Manassasââ
âCorrection,â interrupted Alex. âHe calls it a farm; his neighbors and the tax rolls call it a twenty-eight-acre estate. Not bad for a career soldier from a lower-middle-class family in Nebraska who married a hairdresser in Hawaii thirty years ago, and supposedly bought his manse ten years ago on the strength of a very sizable inheritance from an untraceable benefactor, an obscure wealthy uncle I couldnât find. Thatâs what made me curious. Swayne headed up the Quartermaster Corps in Saigon and supplied Medusa.⦠Whatâs his place got to do with your changing clothes?â
âI want to look around. Iâll get there while itâs light to see what itâs like from the road, then when itâs dark Iâll pay him a surprise visit.â
âThatâll be effective, but why the looking around?â
âI like farms. Theyâre so spread out and extended and I canât imagine why a professional soldier who knows that he can be transferred anywhere in the world at a momentâs notice would saddle himself with such a large investment.â
âThe same as my reasoning except I was concerned about the how, not the why. Your approach may be more interesting.â
âWeâll see.â
âBe careful. He may have alarms and dogs, things like that.â
âIâm prepared,â said Jason Bourne. âI did some shopping after I left Georgetown.â
The summer sun was low in the western sky as he slowed down the rental car and lowered the visor to keep from being blinded by the yellow globe of fire. Soon it would drop behind the Shenandoah mountains, twilight descending, prelude to darkness. And it was the darkness that Jason Bourne craved; it was his friend and ally, the blackness in which he moved swiftly, with sure feet and alert hands and arms that
served as sensors against all the impediments of nature. The jungles had welcomed him in the past, knowing that although he was an intruder he respected them and used them as a part of him. He did not fear the jungles, he embraced them, for they protected him and allowed him passage to accomplish whatever his objective was; he was at one with the junglesâas he would have to be with the dense woods that flanked the estate of General Norman Swayne.
The main house was set back no less than the distance of two football fields from the country road. A stockade fence separated the entrance on the right from the exit on the left, both with iron gates, fronting a deep drive that was basically an elongated U-turn. Immediately bordering each opening was a profusion of tall trees and shrubbery that was in itself a natural extension of the stockade fence both left and right. All that was missing were guardhouses at each point of entry and exit.
His mind floated back to China, to Beijing and the wild bird sanctuary where he had trapped a killer posing as Jason Bourne. There had been a guardhouse then and a series of armed patrols in the dense forest ⦠and a madman, a butcher who controlled an army of killers, foremost among them the false Jason Bourne. He had penetrated that deadly sanctuary, crippled a small fleet of trucks and automobiles by plunging the blade of his knife into every tire, then proceeded to take out each patrol in the Jing Shan forest until he found the torch-lit clearing that held a swaggering maniac and his brigade of fanatics. Could he do it all today? wondered Bourne as he drove slowly past Swayneâs property for the third time, his eyes absorbing everything he could see. Five years later, thirteen years after Paris? He tried to evaluate the reality. He was not the younger man that he had been in Paris, nor the more mature man in Hong Kong, Macao and Beijing; he was now fifty and he felt it, every year of it. He would not dwell on it. There was too much else to think about, and the twenty-eight acres of General Norman Swayneâs property were not the forest primeval of the Jing Shan sanctuary.
However, as he had done on the primitive outskirts of Beijing, he drove the car off the country road deep into a mass of tall grass and foliage. He climbed out and proceeded to cover the vehicle with bent and broken branches. The rapidly descending darkness would complete the camouflage, and with the darkness he would go to work. He had changed his clothes in the menâs room at the gas station: black trousers below a black long-sleeved, skintight pullover; and black thick-soled sneakers with heavy tread. These were his working apparel. The items he spread on the ground were his equipment, the shopping he had done after leaving Georgetown. They included a long-bladed hunting knife whose scabbard he threaded into his belt; a dual-chambered CO2 pistol, encased in a nylon shoulder holster, that silently shot immobilizing darts into attacking animals, such as pit bulls; two flares designed to assist stranded drivers in broken-down cars to attract or deter other motorists; a pair of small Zeiss Ikon 8 Ã 10 binoculars attached to his trousers by a Velcro strip; a penlight; raw-hide laces; and finally, pocket-sized wire cutters in case there was a metal fence. Along with the automatic supplied by the Central Intelligence Agency, the gear was either lashed to his belt or concealed in his clothing. The darkness came and Jason Bourne walked into the woods.