Page 31 of The Bourne Ultimatum (Jason Bourne 3)
The information was at first ⦠well, merely a name ⦠a rather common name. His name is Webb, the caller had said. Thank you, he had replied. A sketchy description was given, one fitting several million men, so he had thanked the informer again and hung up the phone. But then, in the recesses of his analystâs mind, by profession and training a warehouse for both essential and incidental data, an alarm went off. Webb, Webb ⦠amnesia? A clinic in Virginia years ago. A man more dead than alive had been flown down from a hospital in New York, the medical file so maximum classified it could not even be shown to the Oval Office. Yet interrogation specialists talk in dark corners, as often to relieve frustration as to impress a listener, and he had heard about a recalcitrant, unmanageable patient, an amnesiac they called âDaveyâ and sometimes just a short, sharp, hostile âWebb,â formerly a member of Saigonâs infamous Medusa, and a man they suspected of feigning his loss of memory.⦠Loss of memory? Alex Conklin had told them that the Medusan they had trained to go out in deep cover for Carlos the Jackal, an agent provocateur they called Jason Bourne, had lost his memory. Lost his memory and nearly lost his life because his controls disbelieved the story of amnesia! That was the man they called âDaveyâ ⦠David. David Webb was Conklinâs Jason Bourne! How could it be otherwise?
David Webb! And he had been at Norman Swayneâs house the night the Agency was told that poor cuckolded Swayne had taken his own life, a suicide that had not been reported in the papers for reasons DeSole could not possibly understand! David Webb. The old Medusa. Jason Bourne. Conklin. Why?
The headlights of an approaching limousine shot through the darkness at the far end of the parking lot, swerving in a semicircle toward the CIA analyst, causing him to shut his eyesâthe refracted light through his thick lenses was painful. He had to make the sequence of his revelations clear to these men. They were his means to a life he and his wife had dreamed ofâmoney. Not bureaucratic less-than-money, but real money. Education at the best universities for their grandchildren, not the state colleges and the begged-for scholarships that came with the government salary of a bureaucratâa bureaucrat so much better than those around him it was pitiful. DeSole the Mute Mole, they called him, but would not pay him for his expertise, the very expertise that prohibited him from going into the private sector, surrounding him with so many legal restrictions that it was pointless to apply. Someday Washington would learn; that day would not come in his lifetime, so six grandchildren had made the decision for him. The empathetic new Medusa had beckoned with generosity, and in his bitterness he had come running.
He rationalized that it was no more an unethical decision on his part than those made every year by scores of Pentagon personnel who walked out of Arlington and into the corporate arms of their old friends the defense contractors. As an army colonel once said to him, âItâs work now and get paid later,â and God knew that one Steven DeSole worked like hell for his country, but his country hardly reciprocated in kind. He hated the name Medusa, though, and rarely if ever used it because it was a symbol from another time, ominous and misleading. The great oil companies and railroads sprang from the chicanery and the venality of the robber barons, but they were not now what they were then. Medusa may have been born in the corruption of a war-ravaged Saigon, its early funding may have been a result of it, but that Medusa no longer existed; it had been replaced by a dozen different names and companies.
âWeâre not pure, Mr. DeSole, no American-controlled international conglomerate is,â said his recruiter, âand itâs true that we seek what some might call unfair economic advantage based on privileged information. Secrets, if you like. You see, we have to because our competitors throughout Europe and the Far East consistently have it. The difference between them and us is that their governments support their effortsâours doesnât.⦠Trade, Mr. DeSole, trade and profits. Theyâre the healthiest pursuits on earth. Chrysler may not like Toyota, but the astute Mr. Iacocca does not call for an air strike against Tokyo. At least not yet. He finds ways to join forces with the Japanese.â
Yes, mused DeSole as the limousine came to a stop ten feet away from him. What he did for the âcorporation,â which he preferred to call it, as opposed to what he did for the Company, might even be considered benevolent. Profits, after all, were more desirable than bombs ⦠and his grandchildren would go to the finest schools and universities in the country. Two men got out of the limousine and approached him.
âWhatâs this Webb look like?â asked Albert Armbruster, chairman of the Federal Trade Commission, as they walked along the edge of the parking lot.
âI only have a description from the gardener, who was hiding behind a fence thirty feet away.â
âWhat did he tell you?â The unidentified associate of the chairman, a short stocky man with penetrating dark eyes and dark eyebrows beneath dark hair, looked at DeSole. âBe precise,â he added.
âNow, just a minute,â protested the analyst defensively but firmly. âIâm precise in everything I say, and, frankly, whoever you are, I donât like the tone of your voice one bit.â
âHeâs upset,â said Armbruster, as if his associate was dismissible. âHeâs a spaghetti head from New York and doesnât trust anybody.â
âWhoâs to trust in New Yawk?â asked the short, dark man, laughing and poking his elbow into the wide girth of Albert Armbruster. âYou WASPs are the worst, you got the banks, amico!â
âLetâs keep it that way and out of the courts.⦠The description, please?â The chairman looked at DeSole.
âItâs incomplete, but there is a long-ago tie-in with Medusa that Iâll describeâprecisely.â
âGo ahead, pal,â said the man from New York.
âHeâs rather largeâtall, that isâand in his late forties or early fifties andââ
âHas he got some gray around his temples?â asked Armbruster, interrupting.
âWell, yes, I think the gardener said something to that effectâgraying, or gray in his hair, or something like that. Itâs obviously why he judged him to be in his forties or fifties.â
âItâs Simon,â said Armbruster, looking at the New Yorker.
âWho?â DeSole stopped, as the other two stopped and looked at him.
âHe called himself Simon, and he knew all about you, Mr. CIA,â said the chairman. âAbout you and Brussels and our whole thing.â
âWhat are you talking about?â
âFor starters, your goddamn fax machine exclusively between you and that fruitcake in Brussels.â
âItâs a buried, dedicated line! Itâs locked up!â
âSomeone found the key, Mr. Precision,â said the New Yorker, not smiling.
âOh, my God, thatâs terrible! What should I do?â
âMake up a story between you and Teagarten, but do it from public phones,â continued the mafioso. âOne of you will come up with something.â
âYou know about ⦠Brussels?â
âThereâs very little I donât know.â
âThat son of a bitch conned me into thinking he was one of us and he had me by the balls!â said Armbruster angrily, continuing to walk along the edge of the parking lot, the other two joining him, DeSole hesitantly, apprehensively. âHe seemed to know everything, but when I think back, he only brought up bits and piecesâdamned big bits and pieces like Burton and you and Brusselsâand I, like a fucking idiot, filled in a hell of a lot more. Shit!â
âNow, just wait a minute!â cried the CIA analyst, once again forcing the others to stop. âI donât understandâIâm a strategist, and I donât understand. What was David WebbâJason Bourne, if he is Jason Bourneâdoing at Swayneâs place the other night?â
âWho the hell is Jason Bourne?â roared the chairman of the Federal Trade Commission.
âHeâs the tie-in with Saigonâs Medusa that I just mentioned. Thirteen years ago the Agency gave him the name Jason Bourne, the original Bourne a dead man by then, and sent him out in deep cover on a Four Zero assignmentâa termination with e
xtreme prejudice, if you likeââ
âA hit, if you want to speak English, paisan.â
âYes, yes, thatâs what it was.⦠But things went wrong; he had a loss of memory and the operation collapsed. It collapsed, but he survived.â
âHoly Christ, what a bunch of zucchinis!â
âWhat can you tell us about this Webb ⦠or Bourneâthis Simon or the âCobraâ? Jesus, heâs a walking vaudeville act!â
âApparently thatâs what he did before. He assumed different names, different appearances, different personalities. He was trained to do that when he was sent out to challenge the assassin called the Jackalâto draw him out and kill him.â
âThe Jackal?â asked the astonished capo supremo of the Cosa Nostra. âLike in the movie?â
âNo, not the movie or the book, you idiotââ
âHey, easy, amico.â
âOh, shut up.⦠Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, otherwise known as Carlos the Jackal, is a living person, a professional killer the international authorities have been hunting for over a quarter of a century. Outside of scores of confirmed hits, many think he was the puff of smoke on the grassy knoll in Dallas, the true killer of John Kennedy.â
âYouâre shittinâ me.â
âI can assure you, I am not shitting you. The word we got at the Agency at the highest secure levels was that after all these years Carlos had tracked down the only man alive who could identify him, Jason Bourneâor, as Iâm firmly convinced, David Webb.â
âThat word had to come from somebody!â exploded Albert Armbruster. âWho was it?â
âOh, yes. Everythingâs so sudden, so bewildering.⦠Heâs a retired field agent with a crippled leg, a man named Conklin, Alexander Conklin. He and a psychiatristâPanov, Morris Panovâare close friends of Webb ⦠or Jason Bourne.â
âWhere are they?â asked the capo supremo grimly.
âOh, you couldnât reach either one, talk to either of them. Theyâre both under maximum security.â
âI didnât ask for the rules of engagement, paisan, I asked where they were.â
âWell, Conklinâs at a condominium in Vienna, a proprietary of ours no one could penetrate, and Panovâs apartment and office are both under round-the-clock surveillance.â
âYouâll give me the addresses, wonât you?â
âCertainly, but I guarantee they wonât talk to you.â
âOh, that would be a pity. Weâre just looking for a guy with a dozen names, asking questions, offering assistance.â
âThey wonât buy it.â
âMaybe I can sell it.â
âGoddamn it, why?â spouted Armbruster, then immediately lowered his voice. âWhy was this Webb or Bourne or whoever the hell he is at Swayneâs?â
âItâs a gap I canât fill,â said DeSole.
âA what?â
âThatâs an Agency term for no answer.â
âNo wonder the countryâs up shitâs creek.â
âThatâs not trueââ
âNow you shut up!â ordered the man from New York, reaching into his pocket and pulling out a small notepad and a ballpoint pen. âWrite out the addresses of this retired spook and the yid shrink. Now!â
âItâs difficult to see,â said DeSole, writing, angling the small pad of paper toward the neon lights of the closed gas station. âThere. The apartment number may be wrong but itâs close, and Panovâs name will be on the mailbox. But I tell you again, he wonât talk to you.â
âThen weâll just have to apologize for interrupting him.â
âYes, you probably will. I gather heâs very dedicated where his patients are concerned.â
âOh? Like that telephone line into your fax machine.â
âNo, no, thatâs a technical term. Number Three wire, to be precise.â
âAnd youâre always precise, arenât you, paisan?â
âAnd youâre very irritatingââ
âWeâve got to go,â broke in Armbruster, watching the New Yorker take back the pad and the ballpoint pen. âStay calm, Steven,â he added, obviously suppressing his anger and heading back to the limousine. âRemember, thereâs nothing we canât handle. When you talk to Jimmy T in Brussels, see if you two can come up with a reasonable explanation, okay? If not, donât worry, weâll figure it out upstairs.â
âOf course, Mr. Armbruster. But if I may ask? Is my account in Bern ready for immediate releaseâin case ⦠well, you understand ⦠in caseââ
âOf course it is, Steven. All you have to do is fly over and write out the numbers of your account in your own handwriting. Thatâs your signature, the one on file, remember?â
âYes, yes, I do.â
âIt must be over two million by now.â
âThank you. Thank you ⦠sir.â
âYouâve earned it, Steven. Good night.â
The two men settled back in the rear seat of the limousine, but there was no lack of tension. Armbruster glanced at the mafioso as the chauffeur, beyond the glass partition, turned on the ignition. âWhereâs the other car?â
The Italian switched on the reading light and looked at his watch. âBy now heâs parked less than a mile down the road from the gas station. Heâll pick up DeSole on his way back and stay with him until the circumstances are right.â
âYour man knows exactly what to do?â
âCome on, a virgin heâs not. Heâs got a searchlight mounted on that car so powerful it can be seen in Miami. He comes alongside, switches it on high, and wiggles the handle. Your two-million-dollar flunky is blinded and out of business, and weâre only charging a quarter of that amount for the job. Itâs your day, Alby.â
The chairman of the Federal Trade Commission sat back in the shadows of the left rear seat and stared out the window at the dark, rushing images beyond the smoked glass. âYou know,â he said quietly, âif anyone had ever told me twenty years ago that Iâd be sitting in this car with someone like you, saying what Iâm saying, I wouldâve told him it was impossible.â
âOh, thatâs what we like about you class-act characters. You look down your noses and drip your snot on us until you need us. Then all of a sudden weâre âassociates.â Live and be well, Alby, weâre eliminating another problem for you. Go back to your big federal commission and decide which companies are clean and which arenâtâdecisions not necessarily based on soap, right?â
âShut up!â roared Armbruster, pounding his hand on the armrest. âThis Simonâthis Webb! Whereâs he coming from? Whatâs he on our case for? Whatâs he want?â
âSomething to do with that Jackal character maybe.â
âThat doesnât make sense. We donât have anything to do with the Jackal.â
âWhy should you?â asked the mafioso, grinning. âYou got us, right?â
âItâs a very loose association and donât you forget it.⦠WebbâSimon, goddamn it, whoever he is, weâve got to find him! With what he already knew, plus what I told him, heâs a fucking menace!â
âHeâs a real major item, isnât he?â
âA major item,â agreed the chairman, again staring out the window, his right fist clenched, the fingers of his left hand drumming furiously on the armrest.
âYou want to negotiate?â
âWhat?â snapped Armbruster, turning and looking at the calm Sicilian face of his companion.
âYou heard me, only I used the wrong word and I apologize for that. Iâll give you a nonnegotiable figure and you can either accept it or reject it.â
âA ⦠contract? On SimonâWebb?â
âNo,â replied the mafioso, slowly shaking his head. âOn a character named Jason Bourne. Itâs cleaner to kill someone whoâs already dead, isnât it?⦠Since we just saved you one and a half mill, the price of the contract is five.â
âFive million?â
âThe cost of eliminating problems in the category of major items is high. Menaces are even higher. Five million, Alby, half on acceptance within the usual twenty-four hours.â
r /> âThatâs outrageous!â
âThen turn me down. You come back, itâs seven-fifty; and if you come back again, itâs double that. Fifteen million.â
âWhat guarantee do we have that you can even find him? You heard DeSole. Heâs Four Zero, which means heâs out of reach, buried.â
âOh, weâll dig him up just so we can replant him.â
âHow? Two and a half million is a lot to pay on your word. How?â
Again smiling, the Mafia supremo reached into his pocket and pulled out the small notebook Steven DeSole had returned to him. âClose friends are the best sources, Alby. Ask the sleazes who write all those gossip books. I got two addresses.â
âYou wonât get near them.â
âHey, come on. You think youâre dealing with old Chicago and the animals? With Mad Dog Capone and Nitti, the nervous finger. We got sophisticated people on the payroll these days. Geniuses. Scientists, electronics whiz kidsâdoctors. By the time we get finished with the spook and the yid, they wonât know what happened. But weâll have Jason Bourne, the character who doesnât exist because heâs already dead.â
Albert Armbruster nodded once and turned to the window in silence.
âIâll close up for six months, change the name, then start a promotional campaign in the magazines before reopening,â said John St. Jacques, standing by the window as the doctor worked on his brother-in-law.
âThereâs no one left?â asked Bourne, wincing as he sat in a chair dressed in a bathrobe, the last suture on his neck being pincered.
âSure, there is. Seven crazy Canadian couples, including my old buddy, whoâs needlepointing your throat at the moment. Would you believe they wanted to start up a brigade, Renfrews of the Mounties, after the evil people.â
âThat was Scottyâs idea,â interrupted the doctor softly, concentrating on the wound. âCount me out. Iâm too old.â
âSoâs he but he doesnât know it. Then he wanted to advertise a reward to the tune of a hundred thousand for information leading to the et cetera! I finally convinced him that the less said the better.â
âNothing said is the best,â added Jason. âThatâs the way itâs got to be.â