Page 23 of The Bourne Ultimatum (Jason Bourne 3)
âBreakthrough,â said John St. Jacques, staring at Prefontaine. âIâm sorry, Judge, we donât need you.â
âWhat?â Marie sat forward in her chair. âPlease, Bro, we need all the help we can get!â
âNot in this case. We know who hired him.â
âWe do?â
âConklin knows; he called it a âbreakthrough.â He told me that the man who traced you and the children here used a judge to find you.â The brother nodded across the table at the Bostonian. âHim. Itâs why I smashed up a hundred-thousand-dollar boat to get back over here. Conklin knows who his client is.â
Prefontaine again glanced at the old Frenchman. âNow is the time for âQuelle tristesse,â Sir Hero. Iâm left with nothing. My persistence brought me only a sore throat and a burned scalp.â
âNot necessarily,â interrupted Marie. âYouâre the attorney, so I shouldnât have to tell you. Corroboration is cooperation. We may want you to tell everything you know to certain people in Washington.â
âCorroboration can be obtained with a subpoena, my dear. Under oath in a courtroom, take my personal as well as my professional word for it.â
âWe wonât be going to court. Ever.â
âOh?⦠I see.â
âYou couldnât possibly, Judge, not at this juncture. However, if you agree to help us youâll be well paid.⦠A moment ago you said that you had strong reasons for wanting to help, reasons that had to be secondary to your own well-beingââ
âAre you by any chance a lawyer, my dear?â
âNo, an economist.â
âHoly Mary, thatâs worse.⦠About my reasons?â
âDo they concern your client, the man who hired you to trace us?â
âThey do. His august personaâas in Caesar Augustusâshould be trashed. Slippery intellectuality aside, heâs a whore. He had promise once, more than I let him know, but he let it all go by the boards in a flamboyant quest for his own personal grail.â
âWhat the hellâs he talking about, Mare?â
âA man with a great deal of influence or power, neither of which he should have, I think. Our convicted felon here has come to grips with personal morality.â
âIs that an economist speaking?â asked Prefontaine, once more absently touching the blistered flesh of his neck. âAn economist reflecting on her last inaccurate projection that caused inappropriate buying or selling on the stock exchanges, resulting in losses many could afford and many more could not?â
âMy voice was never that important, but Iâll grant you itâs the reflection of a great many others whose projections were, because they never risked, they only theorized. Itâs a safe position.⦠Yours isnât, Judge. You may need the protection we can provide. Whatâs your answer?â
âJesus, Mary and Joseph, youâre a cold oneââ
âI have to be,â said Marie, her eyes leveled on the man from Boston. âI want you with us, but I wonât beg, Iâll simply leave you with nothing and you can go back to the streets in Boston.â
âAre you sure youâre not a lawyerâor perhaps a lord high executioner?â
âTake your choice. Just give me your answer.â
âWill somebody tell me what the hell is going on here!â yelled John St. Jacques.
âYour sister,â answered Prefontaine, his gentle gaze on Marie, âhas enlisted a recruit. Sheâs made the options clear, which every attorney understands, and the inevitability of her logic, in addition to her lovely face, crowned by that dark red hair, makes my decision also inevitable.â
âWhat â¦?â
âHeâs opted for our side, Johnny. Forget it.â
âWhat do we need him for?â
âWithout a courtroom a dozen different reasons, young man,â answered the judge. âIn certain situations, volunteerism is not the best road to take unless one is thoroughly protected beyond the courts.â
âIs that right, Sis?â
âItâs not wrong, Bro, but itâs up to Jasonâdamn itâDavid!â
âNo, Mare,â said John St. Jacques, his eyes boring into his sisterâs. âItâs up to Jason.â
âAre these names I should be aware of?â asked Prefontaine. âThe name âJason Bourneâ was sprayed on the wall of your villa.â
âMy instructions, Cousin,â said the false yet not so false hero of France. âIt was necessary.â
âI donât understand ⦠any more than I understood the other name, the âJackal,â or âCarlos,â which you both rather brutally questioned me about when I wasnât sure whether I was dead or alive. I thought the âJackalâ was fiction.â
The old man called Jean Pierre Fontaine looked at Marie; she nodded. âCarlos the Jackal is a legend, but he is not fiction. Heâs a professional killer now in his sixties, rumored to be ill, but still possessed with a terrible hatred. Heâs a man of many faces, many sides, some loved by those who have reasons to love him, others detested by those who consider him the essence of evilâand depending on the view, all have their reasons for being correct. I am an example of one who has experienced both viewpoints, but then my world is hardly yours, as you rightly suggested, St. Thomas of Aquinas.â
âMerci bien.â
âBut the hatred that obsesses Carlos grows like a cancer in his aging brain. One man drew him out; one man tricked him, usurped his kills, taking credit for the Jackalâs work, kill after kill, driving Carlos mad when he was trying to correct the record, trying to maintain his supremacy as the ultimate assassin. That same man was responsible for the death of his loverâbut one far more than a lover, the woman who was his keel, his beloved since childhood in Venezuela, his colleague in all things. That single man, one of hundreds, perhaps thousands sent out by governments everywhere, was the only one who ever saw his faceâas the Jackal. The man who did all this was a product of American intelligence, a strange man who lived a deadly lie every day of his life for three years. And Carlos will not rest until that man is punished ⦠and killed. The man is Jason Bourne.â
Squinting, stunned by the Frenchmanâs story, Prefontaine leaned forward over the table. âWho is Jason Bourne?â he asked.
âMy husband, David Webb,â replied Marie.
âOh, my God,â whispered the judge. âMay I have a drink, please?â
John St. Jacques called out. âRonald!â
âYes, boss-mow!â cried from within the guard whose strong hands had held his employerâs shoulders an hour ago in Villa Twenty.
âBring us some whisky and brandy, please. The bar should be stocked.â
âCominâ, sir.â
The orange sun in the east suddenly took fire, its rays penetrating what was left of the sea mists of dawn. The silence around the table was broken by the soft, heavily accented words of the old Frenchman. âI am not used to such service,â he said, looking aimlessly beyond the railing of the balcony at the progressively bright waters of the Caribbean. âWhen something is asked for, I always think the task should be mine.â
âNot anymore,â said Marie quietly, then after a beat, adding, â⦠Jean Pierre.â
âI suppose one could live with that name.â¦â
âWhy not here?â
âQuâest-ce que vous dites, madame?â
âThink about it. Paris might not be any less dangerous for you than the streets of Boston for our judge.â
The judge in question was lost in his own aimless reverie as several bottles, glasses and a bucket of ice were brought to the table. With no hesitation, Prefontaine reached out and poured himself an extravagant drink from the bottle nearest him. âI must ask a question or two,â he said emphatically. âIs that proper?â
âGo ahead,â replied Marie. âIâm not sure I can or will an swer you, but try me.â
âThe gunshots, the spray paint on the wallâmy âcousinâ here says the red paint and the words were by his instructionsââ
âThey were, mon ami. The loud firing of the guns as well.â
âWhy?â
âEverything
must be as it is expected to be. The gunshots were an additional element to draw attention to the event that was to take place.â
âWhy?â
âA lesson we learned in the Résistanceânot that I was ever a âJean Pierre Fontaine,â but I did my small part. It was called an accentuation, a positive statement making clear that the underground was responsible for the action. Everyone in the vicinity knew it.â
âWhy here?â
âThe Jackalâs nurse is dead. There is no one to tell him that his instructions have been carried out.â
âGallic logic. Incomprehensible.â
âFrench common sense. Incontestable.â
âWhy?â
âCarlos will be here by noon tomorrow.â
âOh, dear God!â
The telephone rang inside the villa. John St. Jacques lurched out of his chair only to be blocked by his sister, who threw her arm in front of his face and then raced through the doors into the living room. She picked up the phone.
âDavid?â
âItâs Alex,â said the breathless voice on the line. âChrist, Iâve had this goddamned thing on redial for three hours! Are you all right?â
âWeâre alive but we werenât supposed to be.â
âThe old men! The old men of Paris! Did Johnnyââ
âJohnny did, but theyâre on our side!â
âWho?â
âThe old menââ
âYouâre not making one damn bit of sense!â
âYes, I am! Weâre in control here. What about David?â
âI donât know! The telephone lines were cut. Everythingâs a mess! Iâve got the police heading out thereââ
âScrew the police, Alex!â screamed Marie. âGet the army, the marines, the lousy CIA! Weâre owed!â
âJason wonât allow that. I canât turn on him now.â
âWell, try this for size. The Jackal will be here tomorrow!â
âOh, Jesus! I have to get him a jet somewhere.â
âYou have to do something!â
âYou donât understand, Marie. The old Medusa surfacedââ
âYou tell that husband of mine that Medusaâs history! The Jackal isnât, and heâs flying in here tomorrow!â
âDavidâll be there, you know that.â
âYes, I do.⦠Because heâs Jason Bourne now.â
âBrâer Rabbit, this ainât thirteen years ago, and you just happen to be thirteen years older. Youâre not only gonna be useless, youâre gonna be a positive liability unless you get some rest, preferably sleep. Turn off the lights and grab some sack time in that big fancy couch in the living room. Iâll man the phones, which ainât gonna ring âcause nobodyâs callinâ at four oâclock in the morning.â
Cactusâs voice had faded as Jason wandered into the dark living room, his legs heavy, his lids falling over his eyes like lead weights. He dropped to the couch, swinging his legs slowly, with effort, one at a time, up on the cushions; he stared at the ceiling. Rest is a weapon, battles won and lost ⦠Philippe dâAnjou. Medusa. His inner screen went black and sleep came.
A screaming, pulsating siren erupted, deafening, incessant, echoing throughout the cavernous house like a sonic tornado. Bourne spastically whipped his body around and sprang off the couch, at first disoriented, unsure of where he was and for a terrible moment ⦠of who he was.
âCactus!â he roared, racing out of the ornate living room into the hallway. âCactus!â he shouted again, hearing his voice lost in the rapid, rhythmic crescendos of the siren-alarm. âWhere are you?â
Nothing. He ran to the door of the study, gripping the knob. It was locked! He stepped back and crashed his shoulder against it, once, twice, a third time with all the speed and strength he could summon. The door splintered, then gave way and Jason hammered his foot against the central panel until it collapsed; he went inside and what he found caused the killing machine that was the product of Medusa and beyond to stare in ice-cold fury. Cactus was sprawled over the desk, under the light of the single lamp, in the same chair that had held the murdered general, his blood forming a pool of red on the blotterâa corpse.⦠No, not a corpse! The right hand moved, Cactus was alive!
Bourne ran to the desk and gently raised the old manâs head, the shrill, deafening, all-encompassing alarm making communicationâif communication were possibleâimpossible. Cactus opened his dark eyes, his trembling right hand moving down the blotter, his forefinger curved and tapping the top of the desk.
âWhat is it?â yelled Jason. The hand kept moving back toward the edge of the blotter, the tapping more rapid. âBelow? Underneath?â With minusculeânearly imperceptibleâmotions of his head, Cactus nodded in the affirmative. âUnder the desk!â shouted Bourne, beginning to understand. He knelt down to the right of Cactus and felt under the thin top drawer, then to the sideâHe found it! A button. Again gently, he moved the heavy rolling chair inches to the left and centered his eyes on the button. Beneath it, in tiny white letters on a black plastic strip, was the answer.
Aux. Alarm
Jason pressed the button; instantly the shrieking pandemonium was cut off. The ensuing silence was nearly as deafening, the adjustment to it nearly as terrifying.
âHow were you hit?â asked Bourne. âHow long ago?⦠If you can talk, just whisper, no energy at all, do you understand?â
âOh, Brâer, youâre too much,â whispered Cactus, in pain. âI was a black cabdriver in Washington, man. Iâve been here before. It ainât fatal, boy, I gotta slug in the upper chest.â
âIâll get a doctor right awayâour friend Ivan, incidentallyâbut if you can, tell me what happened while I move you to the floor and look at the damage.â Jason slowly, carefully lowered the old man off the chair and onto the throw rug beneath the bay window. He tore off Cactusâs shirt; the bullet had gone through the flesh of the left shoulder. With short, swift movements Bourne ripped the shirt into strips and tightly wrapped a primitive bandage around his friendâs chest and between the underarm and the shoulder. âItâs not much,â said Jason, âbut itâll hold you for a while. Go on.â
âHeâs out there, Brâer!â Cactus coughed weakly, lying back on the floor. âHeâs got a big mother âfifty-seven magnum with a silencer; he pinned me through the window, then smashed it and climbed inside.⦠Heâhe â¦â
âEasy! Donât talk, never mindââ
âI gotta. The brothers out there, they ainât got no hardware. Heâll pick âem off!⦠I played deep dead and he was in a hurryâoh, was he in a hurry! Look over there, will ya?â Jason swung his head in the direction of Cactusâs gesture. A dozen or so books had been yanked out of a shelf on the side wall and strewn on the floor. The old man continued, his voice growing weaker. âHe went over to the bookcase like in a panic, until he found what he wanted ⦠then to the door, that âfifty-seven ready for bear, if you follow me.⦠I figured it was you he was after, that heâd seen you through the window go out to the other room, and I tell ya, I was workinâ my right knee like a runninâ muskrat âcause I found that alarm button an hour ago and knew I had to stop himââ
âEasy!â
âI gotta tell you ⦠I couldnât move my hands âcause heâd see me, but my knee hit that sucker and the siren damn near blew me out of the chair.⦠The honky bastard fell apart. He slammed the door, locked it, and beat his way out of here back through the window.â Cactusâs neck arched back, the pain and the exhaustion overtaking him. âHeâs out there, Brâer Rabbitââ
âThatâs enough!â ordered Bourne as he cautiously reached up, snapping off the desk lamp, leaving the dim light from the hallway through the shattered door as the only illumination. âIâm calling Alex; he can send the doctorââ
Suddenly, from somewhere outside, there was a high-pitched scream, a roar of shock and anguish Jason knew only too well. So did Cactus, who whispered, his eyes shut tight: âHe got one. That fucker got one of the brothers!â
âIâm reaching Conklin,â said Jaso
n, pulling the phone off of the desk. âThen Iâll go out and get him.⦠Oh, Christ! The lineâs outâitâs been cut!â
âThat honky knows his way around here.â
âSo do I, Cactus. Stay as quiet as you can. Iâll be back for youââ
There was another scream, this lower, more abrupt, an expulsion of breath more than a roar.
âMay sweet Jesus forgive me,â muttered the old black man painfully, meaning the words. âThereâs only one brother leftââ
âIf anyone should ask forgiveness, itâs me,â cried Bourne, his voice guttural, half choking. âGoddamn it! I swear to you, Cactus, I never thought, never even considered, that anything like this would happen.â
â âCourse you didnât. I know you from back to the old days, Brâer, and I never heard of you asking anyone to risk anything for you.⦠Itâs always been the other way around.â
âIâm going to pull you over,â interrupted Jason, tugging on the rug, maneuvering Cactus to the right side of the desk, the old manâs left hand close enough to reach the auxiliary alarm. âIf you hear anything or see anything or feel anything, turn on the siren.â
âWhere are you going? I mean how?â
âAnother room. Another window.â
Bourne crept across the floor to the mutilated door, lurched through it and ran into the living room. At the far end was a pair of French doors that led to an outside patio; he recalled seeing white wrought-iron lawn furniture on the south end of the house when he was with the guards. He twisted the knob and slipped outside, pulling the automatic from his belt, shutting the right door, and crouching, making his way to the shrubbery at the edge of the grass. He had to move quickly. Not only was there a third life in the balance, a third unrelated, unwarranted death, but a killer who could be his shortcut to the crimes of the new Medusa, and those crimes were his bait for the Jackal! A diversion, a magnet, a trap ⦠the flaresâpart of the equipment he had brought with him to Manassas. The two emergency âcandlesâ were in his left rear pocket, each six inches long and bright enough to be seen for miles; ignited together yet spaced apart they would light up Swayneâs property like two searchlights. One in the south drive, the other by the kennels, possibly waking the drugged dogs, bewildering them, infuriating themâDo it! Hurry.