Page 21 of The Bourne Ultimatum (Jason Bourne 3)
He didnât, concluded Alex as the outer limits of his imagination explored an old territoryâBe skeptical of the apparent. The celebrated attorney was no more part of Carlos than he was of Medusa. He was the aberration, the flaw in the lens, an otherwise honorable man with a single weakness that had been uncovered by two disparate parties both with extraordinary resources. It was common knowledge that the Jackal could reach into the Sûreté and Interpol, and it took no clairvoyance to assume that Medusa could penetrate the armyâs G-2. It was the only possible explanation, for Gates had been too controversial, too powerful for too long to function as spectacularly as he did in the courts if his vulnerability was easily uncovered. No, it would take predators like the Jackal and the men of Medusa to bore deep enough to dredge up a secret so devastating as to turn Randolph Gates into a valuable pawn. Clearly, Carlos had gotten to him first.
Conklin reflected on a truth that was forever reconfirmed: the world of global corrupters was in reality a small multilayered neighborhood, geometric in design, the irregular avenues of corruption leading into one another. How could it be otherwise? The residents of those lethal streets had services to offer, their clients were a specific breedâthe desperate dregs of humanity. Extort, compromise, kill. The Jackal and the men of Medusa belonged to the same fraternal order. The Brotherhood of I Must Have Mine.
Breakthrough. But it was a breakthrough Jason Bourne could handleânot David Webbâand Webb was still too much a part of Bourne. Especially since both parts of the same man were over a thousand miles away from Montserrat, the coordinates of death determined by Carlos. Montserrat?⦠Johnny St. Jacques! The âlittle brotherâ who had proved himself in a backwater town in the northern regions of Canada, proved himself beyond the knowledge and the understanding of his family, especially his beloved sister. A man who could kill in angerâwho had killed in furyâand who would kill again if the sister he adored and her children were under the Jackalâs gun. David believed in himâJason Bourne believed in him, which was far more to the point.
Alex looked over at the telephone console, then quickly got out of the chair. He rushed to the desk, sat down, and touched the buttons that rewound the current tape, adjusting it to the spot where he wanted to pick it up. He went forward and back until he heard Gatesâs panicked voice.
â⦠Good Christ, I paid fifteen thousandââ
No, not there, thought Conklin. Later.
â⦠I can show you the bank withdrawalsââ
Later!
â⦠I hired a former judge who has contactsââ
Thatâs it. A judge.
â⦠They flew to the island of Montserratââ
Alex opened the drawer where he kept a sheet of paper with each number he had called during the past two days on the assumption that he might need specific ones quickly. He saw the number in the Caribbean for Tranquility Inn, picked up the phone and dialed. After more rings than seemed necessary, a voice thick with sleep answered.
âTranquilityââ
âThis is an emergency,â broke in Conklin. âItâs urgent that I speak with John St. Jacques. Quickly, please.â
âIâm sorry, sir, Mr. St. Jacques isnât here.â
âIâve got to find him. I repeat, itâs urgent. Where is he?â
âOn the big islandââ
âMontserrat?â
âYesââ
âWhere?⦠My nameâs Conklin. He wants to talk to meâhe has to talk to me. Please!â
âA big wind came up from Basse-Terre and all flights are canceled until morning.â
âA what?â
âA tropical depressionââ
âOh, a storm.â
âWe prefer a TD, sir. Mr. St. Jacques left a telephone number in Plymouth.â
âWhatâs your name?â interrupted Alex suddenly. The clerk replied Pritchard and Conklin continued: âIâm going to ask you a very delicate question, Mr. Pritchard. Itâs important that you have the right answer, but if itâs the wrong one you must do as I tell you. Mr. St. Jacques will confirm everything I say when I reach him; however, I canât waste time now. Do you understand me?â
âWhat is your question?â asked the clerk with dignity. âIâm not a child, mon.â
âIâm sorry, I didnât mean toââ
âThe question, Mr. Conklin. Youâre in a hurry.â
âYes, of course.⦠Mr. St. Jacquesâs sister and her children, are they in a safe place? Did Mr. St. Jacques take certain precautions?â
âSuch as armed guards about the villa and our usual men down on the beach?â said the clerk. âThe answer is yes.â
âItâs the right answer.â Alex took a deep breath, his breathing still erratic. âNow, whatâs the number where I can reach Mr. St. Jacques?â
The clerk gave it to Conklin, then added, âMany phones are out, sir. It might be well if you left a number here. The wind is still strong, but Mr. Saint Jay will no doubt come over with the first light if he can.â
âCertainly.â Alex rattled off the number of the sterile telephone in the Vienna apartment and had the man in Montserrat repeat it. âThatâs it,â said Conklin. âIâll try Plymouth now.â
âThe spelling of your name, please. It is C-o-n-c-hââ
âC-o-n-k,â broke in Alex, snapping off the line and instantly dialing the number in the town of Plymouth, the capital of Montserrat. Once again a startled, drowsy voice answered; it was a barely coherent greeting. âWhoâs this?â asked Conklin impatiently.
âWho the hell is thisâare you?â replied an angry Englishman.
âIâm trying to reach John St. Jacques. Itâs an emergency, and I was given this number by the desk at Tranquility Inn.â
âGood Lord, their phones are intact â¦?â
âObviously. Please, is John there?â
âYes, yes, of course. Heâs across the hall, Iâll fetch him. Who shall I sayââ
â âAlexâ is good enough.â
âJust âAlexâ?â
âHurry, please!â Twenty seconds later the voice of John St. Jacques filled the line.
âConklin? Is that you?â
âListen to me. They know Marie and the children flew into Montserrat.â
âWe heard that someone was asking questions over at the airport about a woman and two kidsââ
âThen thatâs why you moved them from the house to the inn.â
âThatâs right.â
âWho was asking questions?â
âWe donât know. It was done by telephone.⦠I didnât want to leave them, even for a few hours, but I had a command appearance at Government House, and by the time that son-of-a-bitch Crown governor showed up, the storm hit.â
âI know. I talked to the desk and got this number.â
âThatâs one consolation; the phones are still working. In weather like this they usually donât, which is why we suck up to the Crown.â
âI understand youâve got guardsââ
âYouâre goddamned right!â cried St. Jacques. âThe trouble is I donât know what to look for except strangers in boats or on the beach, and if they donât stop and identify themselves satisfactorily, my orders are to shoot!â
âI may be able to helpââ
âGo ahead!â
âWe got a breakâdonât ask how; itâs from outer space but that doesnât matter, itâs real. The man who traced Marie to Montserrat used a judge who had contacts, presumably in the islands.â
âA judge?â exploded the owner of Tranquility Inn. âMy God, heâs there! Christ, heâs there! Iâll kill that scum bastardââ
âStop it, Johnny! Get hold of yourselfâwhoâs there?â
âA judge, and he insisted on using a different name! I didnât think anything about itâa couple of whack-a-doo old men with similar namesââ
âOld men?⦠Slow down, Johnny, this is important. What two old men?â
âThe one youâre talking about is from Bostonââ
âYes!â co
nfirmed Alex emphatically.
âThe other flew in from Parisââ
âParis? Jesus Christ! The old men of Paris!â
âWhat â¦?â
âThe Jackal! Carlos has his old men in place!â
âNow, you slow down, Alex,â said St. Jacques, his breathing audible. âNow you be clearer.â
âThereâs no time, Johnny. Carlos has an armyâhis armyâof old men whoâll die for him, kill for him. There wonât be any strangers on the beach, theyâre already there! Can you get back to the island?â
âSomehow, yes! Iâll call my people over there. Both those pieces of garbage will be thrown into the cisterns!â
âHurry, John!â
* * *
St. Jacques pressed down the small bar of the old telephone, released it, and heard the forever-pulsating dial tone. He spun the numbers for the inn on Tranquility Isle.
âWe are sorry,â said the recorded voice. âDue to weather conditions the lines are down to the area you are calling. Government is working very hard to restore communications. Please try your call later. Have a good day.â
John St. Jacques slammed the phone down with such force that he broke it in two. âA boat!â he screamed. âGet me a drug boat!â
âYouâre crazy,â objected the aide to the Crown governor across the room. âIn these swells?â
âA sea streak, Henry!â said the devoted brother, reaching into his belt and slowly pulling out an automatic. âOr Iâll be forced to do something I donât even want to think about, but Iâll get a boat.â
âI simply canât believe this, chap.â
âNeither can I, Henry.⦠I mean it, though.â
Jean Pierre Fontaineâs nurse sat at her dressing table in front of the mirror and adjusted her tightly knotted blond hair under the black rain hat. She looked at her watch, recalling every word of the most unusual telephone call she had received several hours ago from Argenteuil in France, from the great man who made all things possible.
âThere is an American attorney who calls himself a judge staying near you.â
âI know of no such person, monseigneur.â
âHe is there, nevertheless. Our hero rightfully complains of his presence, and a call to his home in the city of Boston confirms that it is he.â
âHis presence here is not desirable, then?â
âHis presence there is abominable to me. He pretends to be in my debtâan enormous debt, an event that could destroy himâyet his actions tell me that heâs ungrateful, that he intends to cancel his debt by betraying me, and by betraying me he betrays you.â
âHeâs dead.â
âExactly. In the past heâs been valuable to me, but the past is over. Find him, kill him. Make his death appear to be a tragic accident.⦠Finally, since we will not speak until you are back on Martinique, are preparations complete for your last act on my behalf?â
âThey are, monseigneur. The two syringes were prepared by the surgeon at the hospital in Fort-de-France. He sends you his devotion.â
âHe should. Heâs alive, as opposed to several dozen of his patients.â
âThey know nothing of his other life in Martinique.â
âIâm aware of that.⦠Administer the doses in forty-eight hours, when the chaos has begun to subside. Knowing that the hero was my inventionâwhich Iâll make sure they knowâwill put a chameleon to shame.â
âAll will be done. Youâll be here soon?â
âIn time for the shock waves. Iâm leaving within the hour and will reach Antigua before itâs noon in Montserrat tomorrow. All things being on schedule, Iâll arrive in time to observe the exquisite anguish of Jason Bourne before I leave my signature, a bullet in his throat. The Americans will then know who has won. Adieu.â
The nurse, like an ecstatic suppliant, arched her neck in front of the mirror remembering the mystical words of her omniscient lord. It was nearly time, she thought, opening the dresser drawer and picking out a diamond-clustered wire garrote from among her necklaces, a gift from her mentor. It would be so simple. She had easily learned who the judge was and where he was stayingâthe old, painfully thin man three villas away. Everything now was precision, the âtragic accidentâ merely a prelude to the horror that would take place at Villa Twenty in less than an hour. For all of Tranquilityâs villas had kerosene lamps in the event of electricity loss and generator malfunction. A panicked old man with loose bowels, or in plain fear, living through such a storm as they were experiencing, might well attempt to light a lamp for additional comfort. How tragic that his upper body would fall into the flowing spilled kerosene, his neck scorched into black tissue, the neck that had been garroted. Do it, insisted the echoing voices of her imagination. You must obey. Without Carlos you would have been a headless corpse in Algeria.
She would do itâshe would do it now.
The harsh downpour of the rain on the roof and the windows, and the whistling, roaring wind outside were interrupted by a blinding streak of lightning followed by a deafening crack of thunder.
âJean Pierre Fontaineâ wept silently as he knelt beside the bed, his face inches from his womanâs, his tears falling on the cold flesh of her arm. She was dead, and the note by her white rigid hand said it all: Maintenant nous deux sommes libres, mon amour.
They were both free. She from the terrible pain, he from the price demanded by the monseigneur, a price he had not described to her, but one she knew was too horrible to pay. He had known for months that his woman had ready access to pills that would end her life quickly if her living became unendurable; he had frequently, at times frantically, searched for them but he had never found them. Now he knew why as he stared at the small tin of her favorite pastilles, the harmless droplets of licorice she had popped laughingly into her mouth for years.
âBe thankful, mon cher, they might be caviar or those expensive drugs the rich indulge in!â They were not caviar but they were drugs, lethal drugs.
Footsteps. The nurse! She had come out of her room, but she could not see his woman! Fontaine pushed himself up from the bed, wiped his eyes as best he could, and hurried to the door. He opened it, stunned by the sight of the woman; she stood directly in front of him, her arm raised, the knuckles of her hand arcing forward to knock.
âMonsieur!⦠You startled me.â
âI believe we startled each other.â Jean Pierre slipped out, rapidly closing the door behind him. âRegine is finally asleep,â he whispered, bringing his forefinger to his lips. âThis terrible storm has kept her up most of the night.â
âBut it is sent from heaven for usâfor youâisnât it? There are times when I think the monseigneur can order such things.â
âThen I doubt they come from heaven. Itâs not the source of his influence.â
âTo business,â interrupted the nurse, not amused and walking away from the door. âAre you prepared?â
âI will be in a matter of minutes,â replied Fontaine, heading for the table where his killing equipment lay in the locked drawer. He reached into his pocket and took out the key. âDo you want to go over the procedure?â he asked, turning. âFor my benefit, of course. At this age, details are often blurred.â
âYes, I do, because there is a slight change.â
âOh?â The old Frenchman arched his brows. âAlso at my age sudden changes are not welcome.â
âItâs only a question of timing, no more than a quarter of an hour, perhaps much less.â
âAn eternity in this business,â said Fontaine as yet another streak of lightning, separated only milliseconds from its crash of thunder, interrupted the pounding rain on the windows and the roof. âItâs dangerous enough to be outside; that bolt was too near for safety.â
âIf you believe that, think how the guards feel.â
âThe âslight change,â please? Also an explanation.â
âIâll give you no explanation except to say that it is an order from Argenteuil and you were responsible.â
âThe judge
?â
âDraw your own conclusions.â
âThen he was not sent toââ
âIâll say no more. The change is as follows. Rather than running up the path from here to the guards at Villa Twenty and demanding emergency assistance for your ill wife, I will say I was returning from the front desk where I was complaining about the telephone and saw a fire in Villa Fourteen, three away from ours. Thereâll no doubt be a great deal of confusion, what with the storm and everyone yelling and calling for help. That will be your signal. Use the confusion; get through and take out whoever remains at the womanâs villaâmake sure your silencer is secure. Then go inside and do the work you have sworn to do.â
âSo I wait for the fire, for the guards and for you to return to Number Eleven.â
âExactly. Stay on the porch with the door closed, of course.â
âOf course.â
âIt may take me five minutes or perhaps even twenty, but stay there.â
âNaturally.⦠May I ask, madameâor perhaps mademoiselle, although I see no evidenceââ
âWhat is it?â
âIt will take you five or twenty minutes to do what?â
âYouâre a fool, old man. What must be done.â
âOf course.â
The nurse pulled her raincoat around her, looped the belt and walked to the front door of the villa. âGet your equipment together and be out here in three minutes,â she commanded.
âOf course.â The door swung back with the wind as the woman opened it; she went outside into the torrential rain, pulling it shut behind her. Astonished and confused, the old Frenchman stood motionless, trying to make sense out of the inexplicable. Things were happening too fast for him, blurred in the agony of his womanâs death. There was no time to mourn, no time to feel.⦠Only think and think quickly. Revelation came hard upon revelation, leaving unanswered questions that had to be answered so the whole could be understoodâso that Montserrat itself made sense!
The nurse was more than a conduit for instructions from Argenteuil; the angel of mercy was herself an angel of death, a killer in her own right. So why was he sent thousands of miles to do the work another could do just as well and without the elaborate charade of his auspicious arrival? An old hero of France, indeed ⦠it was all so unnecessary. And speaking of age, there was anotherâanother old man who was no killer at all. Perhaps, thought the false Jean Pierre Fontaine, he had made a terrible mistake. Perhaps, instead of coming to kill him, the other âold manâ had come to warn him!