Page 19 of The Bourne Ultimatum (Jason Bourne 3)
âYouâll have to start from the beginning again; my headâs shredded. The telephone number in New York, the license platesââ
âThe body, Alex! Flannagan and the generalâs wife! Theyâre on their way; that was the deal and youâve got to cover it.â
âJust like that? Swayne kills himself and the two people on the premises who can answer questions, we say Ciao to them and let them get away? Thatâs only slightly more lunatic than what youâve told me!â
âWe donât have time for negotiating gamesâand besides, he canât answer any more questions. They were on different levels.â
âOh, boy, thatâs really clear.â
âDo it. Let them go. We may need them both later.â
Conklin sighed, his indecision apparent. âAre you sure? Itâs very complicated.â
âDo it! For Christâs sake, Alex, I donât give a goddamn about complications or violations or all the manipulations you can dream up! I want Carlos! Weâre building a net and we can pull him inâI can pull him in!â
âAll right, all right. Thereâs a doctor in Falls Church that weâve used before in special operations. Iâll get hold of him, heâll know what to do.â
âGood,â said Bourne, his mind racing. âNow put me on tape. Iâll give you everything Flannagan gave me. Hurry up, Iâve got a lot to do.â
âYouâre on tape, Delta One.â
Reading from the list he had written down in Flannaganâs cabin, Jason spoke rapidly, enunciating clearly so that there would be no confusion on the tape. There were the names of seven frequent and acknowledged guests at the generalâs dinner parties, none guaranteed as to accuracy or spelling but with broad-brush descriptions; then came the license plates, all from the far more serious twice-monthly meetings. Next to last were the telephone numbers of Swayneâs lawyer, all of the estateâs guards, the dog kennels and the Pentagon extension for assigned vehicles; finally there was the unlisted telephone in New York, no name here, only a machine that took messages. âThatâs got to be a priority one, Alex.â
âWeâll break it,â said Conklin, inserting himself on the tape. âIâll call the kennels and talk Pentagoneseâthe generalâs being flown to a hush-factor post and we pay double for getting the animals out first thing in the morning. Open the gates, incidentally.⦠The licenses are no problem and Iâll have Casset run the names through the computers behind DeSoleâs back.â
âWhat about Swayne? Weâve got to keep the suicide quiet for a while.â
âHow long?â
âHow the hell do I know?â replied Jason, exasperated. âUntil we find out who they all are and I can reach themâor you can reach themâand together we can start the wave of panic rolling. Thatâs when we plant the Carlos solution.â
âWords,â said Conklin, his tone not flattering. âYou could be talking about days, maybe a week or even longer.â
âThen thatâs what Iâm talking about.â
âThen weâd better damn well bring in Peter Hollandââ
âNo, not yet. We donât know what heâd do and Iâm not giving him the chance to get in my way.â
âYouâve got to trust someone besides me, Jason. I can fool the doctor perhaps for twenty-four or forty-eight hoursâperhapsâbut I doubt much longer than that. Heâll want higher authorization. And donât forget, Iâve got Casset breathing down my neck over DeSoleââ
âGive me two days, get me two days!â
âWhile tracking down all this information and stalling Charlie, and lying through my teeth to Peter, telling them that weâre making progress running down the Jackalâs possible couriers at the Mayflower hotelâwe think ⦠Of course, weâre doing nothing of the sort because weâre up to our credentials in some off-the-wall, twenty-year-old Saigon conspiracy involving who knows what, damned if we know, except that the who is terribly impressive. Without going into statusesâor is it stataeâweâre now told they have their own private cemetery on the grounds of the general officer in charge of Pentagon procurements, who just happened to blow his head off, a minor incident weâre sitting on.⦠Jesus, Delta, back up! The missiles are colliding!â
Though he was standing in front of Swayneâs desk, the generalâs corpse in the chair beside him, Bourne managed a tentative, slow smile. âThatâs what weâre counting on, isnât it? Itâs a scenario that could have been written by our beloved Saint Alex himself.â
âIâm only along for the ride, Iâm not steeringââ
âWhat about the doctor?â interrupted Jason. âYouâve been out of operation for almost five years. How do you know heâs still in business?â
âI run into him now and then; weâre both museum mavens. A couple of months ago at the Corcoran Gallery he complained that he wasnât given much to do these days.â
âChange that tonight.â
âIâll try. What are you going to do?â
âDelicately pull apart everything in this room.â
âGloves?â
âSurgical, of course.â
âDonât touch the body.â
âOnly the pocketsâvery delicately.⦠Swayneâs wife is coming down the stairs. Iâll call you back when theyâre gone. Get hold of that doctor!â
Ivan Jax, M. D. by way of Yale Medical School, surgical training and residency at Massachusetts General, College of Surgeons by appointment, Jamaican by birth, and erstwhile âconsultantâ to the Central Intelligence Agency courtesy of a fellow black man with the improbable name of Cactus, drove through the gates of General Swayneâs estate in Manassas, Virginia. There were times, thought Ivan, when he wished he had never met old Cactus and this was one of them, but tonight not-withstanding, he never regretted that Cactus had come into his life. Thanks to the old manâs âmagic papers,â Jax had gotten his brother and sister out of Jamaica during the repressive Manley years when established professionals were all but prohibited from emigrating and certainly not with personal funds.
Cactus, however, using complex mock-ups of government permits had sprung both young adults out of the country along with bank transfers honored in Lisbon. All the aged forger requested were stolen blank copies of various official documents, including import/export bills of lading, the two peopleâs passports, separate photographs and copies of several signatures belonging to certain men in positions of authorityâeasily obtainable through the hundreds of bureaucratic edicts published in the government-controlled press. Ivanâs brother was currently a wealthy barrister in London and his sister a research fellow at Cambridge.
Yes, he owed Cactus, thought Dr. Jax as he swung his station wagon around the curve to the front of the house, and when the old man had asked him to âconsultâ with a few âfriends over in Langleyâ seven years ago, he had obliged. Some consultation! Still, there were further perks forthcoming in Ivanâs silent association with the intelligence agency. When his island home threw out Manley, and Seaga came to power, among the first of the âappropriatedâ properties to be returned to their rightful owners were the Jax familyâs holdings in Montego Bay and Port Antonio. That had been Alex Conklinâs doing, but without Cactus there would have been no Conklin, not in Ivanâs circle of friends.⦠But why did Alex have to call tonight? Tonight was his twelfth wedding anniversary, and he had sent the kids on an overnight with the neighborsâ children so that he and his wife could be alone, alone with grilled Jamaicâ ribs on the patioâprepared by the only one who knew how, namely, Chef Ivanâa lot of good dark Overton rum, and some highly erotic skinny-dipping in the pool. Damn Alex! Double damn the son-of-a-bitch bachelor who could only respond to the event of a wedding anniversary by saying, âWhat the hell? You made the year, so whatâs a day count? Get your jollies tomorrow, I need you tonight.â
So he had lied to his wife, the former head nurse at Mass. General. He told her that a patientâs life was in the balanceâit was, but it had already tipped the wrong way. She had replied that perhaps her next husband would be more considerate of her life, but her sad smile and he
r understanding eyes denied her words. She knew death. Hurry, my darling!
Jax turned off the engine, grabbed his medical bag and got out of the car. He walked around the hood as the front door opened and a tall man in what appeared to be dark skintight clothing stood silhouetted in the frame. âIâm your doctor,â said Ivan, walking up the steps. âOur mutual friend didnât give me your name, but I guess Iâm not supposed to have it.â
âI guess not,â agreed Bourne, extending a hand in a surgical glove as Jax approached.
âAnd I guess weâre both right,â said Jax, shaking hands with the stranger. âThe mitt youâre wearing is pretty familiar to me.â
âOur mutual friend didnât tell me you were black.â
âIs that a problem for you?â
âGood Christ, no. I like our friend even more. It probably never occurred to him to say anything.â
âI think weâll get along. Letâs go, no-name.â
Bourne stood ten feet to the right of the desk as Jax swiftly, expertly tended to the corpse, mercifully wrapping the head in gauze. Without explaining, he had cut away sections of the generalâs clothing, examining those parts of the body beneath the fabric. Finally, he carefully rolled the hooded body off the chair and onto the floor. âAre you finished in here?â he asked, looking over at Jason.
âIâve swept it clean, Doctor, if thatâs what you mean.â
âIt usually is.⦠I want this room sealed. No oneâs to enter it after we leave until our mutual friend gives the word.â
âI certainly canât guarantee that,â said Bourne.
âThen heâll have to.â
âWhy?â
âYour general didnât commit suicide, no-name. He was murdered.â
12
âThe woman,â said Alex Conklin over the line. âFrom everything you told me it had to be Swayneâs wife. Jesus!â
âIt doesnât change anything, but it looks that way,â agreed Bourne halfheartedly. âShe had reason enough to do it, God knowsâstill, if she did, she didnât tell Flannagan, and that doesnât make sense.â
âNo, it doesnât.â¦â Conklin paused, then spoke quickly. âLet me talk to Ivan.â
âIvan? Your doctor? His name is Ivan?â
âSo?â
âNothing. Heâs outside ⦠âpacking the merchandiseâ was the way he put it.â
âIn his wagon?â
âThatâs right. We carried the bodyââ
âWhat makes him so sure it wasnât suicide?â broke in Alex.
âSwayne was drugged. He said heâd call you later and explain. He wants to get out of here and no oneâs to come into this room after we leaveâafter I leaveâuntil you give the word for the police. Heâll tell you that, too.â
âChrist, it must be a mess in there.â
âItâs not pretty. What do you want me to do?â
âPull the curtains, if there are any; check the windows and, if possible, lock the door. If thereâs no way to lock it, look around forââ
âI found a set of keys in Swayneâs pocket,â interrupted Jason. âI checked; one of them fits.â
âGood. When you leave, wipe the door down clean. Find some furniture polish or a dusting spray.â
âThatâs not going to keep out anyone who wants to get in.â
âNo, but if someone does, we might pick up a print.â
âYouâre reachingââ
âI certainly am,â concurred the former intelligence officer. âIâve also got to figure out a way to seal up the whole place without using anybody from Langley, and, not incidentally, keep the Pentagon at bay just in case someone among those twenty-odd thousand people wants to reach Swayne, and that includes his office and probably a couple of hundred buyers and sellers a day in procurements.⦠Christ, itâs impossible!â
âItâs perfect,â contradicted Bourne as Dr. Ivan Jax suddenly appeared in the doorway. âOur little game of destabilization will start right here on the âfarm.â Do you have Cactusâs number?â
âNot with me. I think itâs probably in a shoebox at home.â
âCall Mo Panov, heâs got it. Then reach Cactus and tell him to get to a pay phone and call me here.â
âWhat the hell have you got in mind? I hear that old manâs name, I get nervous.â
âYou told me I had to find someone else to trust besides you. I just did. Reach him, Alex.â Jason hung up the telephone. âIâm sorry, Doctor ⦠or maybe under the circumstances I can use your name. Hello, Ivan.â
âHello, no-name, which is the way Iâd like to keep it on my end. Especially when I just heard you say another name.â
âAlex?⦠No, of course it wasnât Alex, not our mutual friend.â Bourne laughed quietly, knowingly, as he walked away from the desk. âIt was Cactus, wasnât it?â
âI just came in to ask you if you wanted me to close the gates,â said Jax, bypassing the question.
âWould you be offended if I told you that I didnât think of him until I saw you just now?â
âCertain associations are fairly obvious. The gates, please?â
âDo you owe Cactus as much as I do, Doctor?â Jason held his place, looking at the Jamaican.
âI owe him so much that I could never think of compromising him in a situation like tonight. For Godâs sake, heâs an old man, and no matter what deviant conclusions Langley wants to come up with, tonight was murder, a particularly brutal killing. No, I wouldnât involve him.â
âYouâre not me. You see, I have to. Heâd never forgive me if I didnât.â
âYou donât think much of yourself, do you?â
âPlease close the gates, Doctor. Thereâs an alarm panel in the hallway I can activate when theyâre shut.â
Jax hesitated, as if unsure of what he wanted to say. âListen,â he began haltingly, âmost sane people have reasons for saying thingsâdoing things. My guess is youâre sane. Call Alex if you need meâif old Cactus needs me.â The doctor left, rushing out the door.
Bourne turned and glanced around the room. Since Flannagan and Rachel Swayne had left nearly three hours ago, he had searched every foot of the generalâs study, as well as the dead soldierâs separate bedroom on the second floor. He had placed the items he intended to take on the brass coffee table; he studied them now. There were three brown leather-bound covers, each equal in size, each holding inserted spiral-bound pages; they were a desk set. The first was an appointments calendar; the second, a personal telephone book in which the names and numbers were entered in ink; the last was an expense diary, barely touched. Along with these were eleven office messages of the telephone notepad variety, which Jason found in Swayneâs pockets, a golf-club scorecard and several memoranda written at the Pentagon. Finally, there was the generalâs wallet containing a profusion of impressive credentials and very little money. Bourne would turn everything over to Alex and hope further leads would be found, but as far as he could determine, he had turned up nothing startling, nothing dramatically relevant to the modern Medusa. And that bothered him; there had to be something. This was the old soldierâs home, his sanctum sanctorum inside that homeâsomething! He knew it, he felt it, but he could not find it. So he started again, not foot by foot now; instead, inch by inch.
Fourteen minutes later, as he was removing and turning over the photographs on the wall behind the desk, the wall to the right of the cushioned bay window that overlooked the lawn outside, he recalled Conklinâs words about checking the windows and the curtains so that no one could enter or observe the scene inside.
Christ, it must be a mess in there.
Itâs not very pleasant.
It wasnât. The panes of the central bay window frame were splattered with blood and membrane. And the ⦠the small brass latch? Not only was it free from its catch, the window itself was openâbarely open, but nevertheless it was open. Bourne knelt on the cushioned seat and looked closely at the shiny brass fixture and the surrounding panes of glass. There were smudges among the
rivulets of dried blood and tissue, coarse pressings on the stains that appeared to widen and thin them out into irregular shapes. Then below the sill he saw what kept the window from closing. The end of the left drape had been drawn out, a small piece of its tasseled fabric wedged beneath the lower window frame. Jason stepped back bewildered but not really surprised. This was what he had been looking for, the missing piece in the complex puzzle that was the death of Norman Swayne.
Someone had climbed out that window after the shot that blew the generalâs skull apart. Someone who could not risk being seen going through the front hall or out the front door. Someone who knew the house and the grounds ⦠and the dogs. A brutal killer from Medusa. Goddamn it!
Who? Who had been here? Flannagan ⦠Swayneâs wife! They would know, they had to know! Bourne lurched for the telephone on the desk; it began ringing before his hand touched it.
âAlex?â
âNo, Brâer Rabbit, itâs just an old friend, and I didnât realize we were so free with names.â
âWeâre not, we shouldnât be,â said Jason rapidly, imposing a control on himself he could barely exercise. âSomething happened a moment agoâI found something.â
âCalm down, boy. What can I do for you?â
âI need youâout here where I am. Are you free?â
âWell, letâs see.â Cactus chuckled as he spoke. âThere are several board meetings I should rightfully attend, and the White House wants me for a power breakfast.⦠When and where, Brâer Rabbit?â
âNot alone, old friend. I want three or four others with you. Is that possible?â
âI donât know. What did you have in mind?â
âThat fellow who drove me into town after I saw you. Are there any other like-minded citizens in the neighborhood?â
âMost are doinâ time, frankly, but I suppose I could dig around the refuse and pull up a few. What for?â
âGuard duty. Itâs pretty simple really. Youâll be on the phone and theyâll be behind locked gates telling people that itâs private property, that visitors arenât welcome. Especially a few honkies probably in limousines.â