Page 32 of The Bourne Ultimatum (Jason Bourne 3)
âThatâs a little tough, David,â said St. Jacques, misunderstanding the sharp glance Bourne leveled at him. âIâm sorry, but it is. Weâre deflecting most of the local inquiries with an ersatz story about a massive propane-gas leak, but not too many people are buying it. Of course, to the world outside, an earthquake down here wouldnât rate six lines buried in the last pages of the want ads, but rumors are flying around the Leewards.â
âYou said local inquiries ⦠what about that world outside? Has there been anything from it?â
âThere will be but not about here, not about Tranquility. Montserrat, yes, and the news will get a column in the London Times and maybe an inch in the New York and Washington papers, but I donât think itâll touch us.â
âStop being so cryptic.â
âWeâll talk later.â
âSay whatever you like, John,â broke in the doctor. âIâm just about finished, so Iâm not paying much attention, and even if I heard you, Iâm entitled to.â
âIâll make it brief,â said St. Jacques, walking to the right of the chair. âThe Crown governor,â he continued. âYou were right, at least I have to assume you were right.â
âWhy?â
âThe news came in while you were getting cleaned up. The CGâs boat was found smashed on one of the nastier reefs off Antigua, halfway to Barbuda. There was no sign of survivors. Plymouth assumes it was one of those whipsaw squalls that can come out of south Nevis, but itâs hard to swallow. Not a squall necessarily, but the circumstances.â
âWhich were?â
âHis usual two crewmen werenât with him. He dismissed them at the yacht club, saying he wanted to take the boat out by himself, yet he told Henry he was going out for the running big fishââ
âWhich means he wouldâve had to have a crew,â interrupted the Canadian physician. âOh, sorry.â
âYes, he wouldâve,â agreed the owner of Tranquility Inn. âYou canât fish the big fellas and skipper a boat at the same timeâat least the CG couldnât. He was afraid to take his eyes off the charts.â
âBut he could read them, couldnât he?â asked Jason. âThe charts?â
âAs a navigator, he was no Captain Bligh sailing by the Pacific stars, but he was good enough to stay out of trouble.â
âHe was told to go out alone,â said Bourne. âOrdered to rendezvous with a boat in waters that called for him to really keep his eyes on the charts.â Jason suddenly realized that the doctorâs nimble fingers were no longer touching his neck; instead, there was the constricting bandage and the physician was standing beside him looking down. âHow are we doing?â asked Bourne, looking up, an appreciative smile creasing his lips.
âWeâre done,â said the Canadian.
âWell ⦠then I think weâd better meet later, for a drink, all right?â
âGood heavens, youâre just getting to the good part.â
âItâs not good, Doctor, itâs not good at all, and Iâd be a very ungrateful patientâwhich Iâm notâif I even unwittingly let you hear things I donât think you should hear.â
The elderly Canadian locked his eyes with Jasonâs. âYou mean that, donât you? In spite of everything thatâs happened, you really donât want to involve me any further. And youâre not playing melodramatic games, secrecy for secrecyâs sakeâan old dodge for inferior doctors, incidentallyâbut youâre really concerned, arenât you?â
âI guess I am.â
âConsidering whatâs happened to you, and I donât just mean these past few hours, which Iâve been a part of, but what the scars on your body tell me youâve been through before, itâs rather remarkable that you can be concerned for anyone but yourself. Youâre a strange man, Mr. Webb. At times you even sound like two different people.â
âIâm not strange, Doctor,â said Jason Bourne, momentarily closing his eyes, his lids briefly tight. âI donât want to be strange or different or anything exotic at all. I want to be as normal and ordinary as the next fellow, no games at all. Iâm just a teacher, and thatâs all I want to be. But in the present circumstances, I have to do things my way.â
âWhich means I leave for my own benefit?â
âYes, it does.â
âAnd if I ever learn all the facts, Iâll realize that your instructions were very educational.â
âI hope so.â
âIâll bet youâre one hell of a teacher, Mr. Webb.â
âDoctor Webb,â interjected John St. Jacques spontaneously, as if the clarification were mandatory. âMy brother-in-lawâs a doctor, too. Like my sister, heâs got a Ph. D.; he speaks a couple of Oriental languages and is a full professor. Places like Harvard, McGill and Yale have been after him for years, but he wonât budgeââ
âWill you please be quiet,â said Bourne, close to laughing, albeit kindly, at his wifeâs brother. âMy entrepreneurial young friend is impressed with any alphabet after a name despite the fact that left to my own resources I couldnât afford one of these villas for more than a couple of days.â
âThatâs a crock.â
âI said my own resources.â
âYouâve got a point.â
âIâve got a rich wife.⦠Forgive us, Doctor, itâs an old family argument.â
âNot only a good teacher,â the physician repeated, âbut under the grim exterior I suspect a very engaging one.â The Canadian walked to the door; he turned and added, âIâll take you up on that drink later, Iâd really like that.â
âThanks,â said Jason. âThanks for everything.â The doctor nodded and left, closing the door firmly behind him. Bourne turned to his brother-in-law. âHeâs a good friend, Johnny.â
âActually, heâs a cold fish but a hell of a doctor. Thatâs the most human Iâve ever seen him.⦠So you figure the Jackal had the Crown governor meet him somewhere off the Antigua coast, got the CGâs information, killed him, and fed him to the sharks.â
âConveniently foundering the boat in reef waters,â completed Jason. âPerhaps opening the throttle and setting a short high-speed course into the shoals. A tragedy at sea and a link to Carlos vanishesâthatâs vital to him.â
âThatâs also something I have trouble with,â said St. Jacques. âI didnât go into it, but the section of reef north of Falmouth where he bought it is called Devilâs Mouth, and itâs not the kind of place thatâs advertised. Charters just stay away from it, and no one boasts about the number of lives and boats itâs claimed.â
âSo?â
âSo assuming the Jackal told the CG where to rendezvous, someplace obviously close to Devilâs Mouth, how the hell did the Jackal know about it?â
âYour two commandos didnât tell you?â
âTell me what? I sent them right over to Henry to give him a full report while we took care of you. There wasnât time to sit down and talk and I figured every moment counted.â
âThen Henry knows by now; heâs probably in shock. Heâs lost two drug boats in two days, and only one is likely to be paid for, and he still doesnât know about his boss, the so honorable Crown governor, lackey of the Jackal who made fools of the Foreign Office by passing off a small-time Paris hit man as a venerable hero of France. The wires will be burning all night between Government House and Whitehall.â
âAnother drug boat? What are you trying to tell me? What does Henry know nowâwhat could my guards tell him?â
âYour question a minute ago was how did the Jackal know about the reef off the coast of Antigua called Devilâs Mouth.â
âTake my word for it, Doctor Webb, I remember the question. How could he?â
âBecause he had a third man here, thatâs what your Royal Commandos have told Henry by now. A blond-haired son of a bitch who heads up Montserratâs drug patrols.â
âHim? Rickman? The one-man British Ku Klux Klan? By-the-Rules-Rickman, scourge of anybody whoâs afraid to yell back at him? Holy Christ, Henry wonât believe it!â
âWhy not? You just described a likely disciple of
Carlos.â
âI suppose I did, but it seems so unlikely. Heâs the original sanctimonious deacon. Prayer meetings before work in the morning, calling on God to aid him in his battle against Satan, no alcohol, no womenââ
âSavonarola?â
âIâd say that fitsâfrom what I remember reading for history courses.â
âThen Iâd say heâs prime meat for the Jackal. And Henry will believe it when his lead boat doesnât come back to Plymouth and the bodies of the crew float up on shore or simply donât show up for the prayer meetings.â
âThatâs how Carlos got away?â
âYes.â Bourne nodded and gestured at the couch several feet in front of him, the space between taken up by a glass-topped coffee table. âSit down, Johnny. We have to talk.â
âWhat have we been doing?â
âNot about what has happened, Bro, but about whatâs going to happen.â
âWhatâs going to happen?â asked St. Jacques, lowering himself on the couch.
âIâm leaving.â
âNo!â cried the younger man, shooting to his feet as if propelled by a bolt of electricity. âYou canât!â
âI have to. He knows our names, where we live. Everything.â
âWhere are you going?â
âParis.â
âGoddamn it, no! You canât do that to Marie! Or to the kids, for Christâs sake. I wonât let you!â
âYou canât stop me.â
âFor Godâs sake, David, listen to me! If Washingtonâs too cheap or doesnât give a shit, believe me, Ottawaâs cut from better stock. My sister worked for the government and our government doesnât kiss people off because itâs inconvenient or too expensive. I know peopleâlike Scotty, the Doc and others. A few words from them and youâll be put in a fortress in Calgary. No one could touch you!â
âYou think my government wouldnât do the same? Let me tell you something, Bro, there are people in Washington whoâve put their lives on the line to keep Marie and the children and me alive. Selflessly, without any reward for themselves or the government. If I wanted a safe house where no one could touch us, Iâd probably get an estate in Virginia, with horses and servants and a full platoon of armed soldiers protecting us around the clock.â
âThen thatâs the answer. Take it!â
âTo what end, Johnny? To live in our own personal prison? The kids not allowed to go over to friendsâ houses, guards with them if they go to school and not tutored by themselves, no overnights, no pillow fightsâno neighbors? Marie and I staring at each other, glancing over at the searchlights outside the windows, hearing the footsteps of the guards, the occasional cough or sneeze, or, heaven forbid, the crack of a rifle bolt because a rabbit disturbed a garden? Thatâs not living, thatâs imprisonment. Your sister and I couldnât handle it.â
âNeither could I, not the way you describe it. But what can Paris solve?â
âI can find him. I can take him.â
âHeâs got the manpower over there.â
âIâve got Jason Bourne,â said David Webb.
âI donât buy that crap!â
âNeither do I, but it seems to work.⦠Iâm calling in your debt to me, Johnny. Cover for me. Tell Marie Iâm fine, not hurt at all, and that Iâve got a lead on the Jackal that only old Fontaine could have providedâwhich is the truth, actually. A café in Argenteuil called Le Coeur du Soldat. Tell her Iâm bringing in Alex Conklin and all the help Washington can provide.â
âBut youâre not, are you?â
âNo. The Jackal would hear about it; heâs got ears up and down the Quai dâOrsay. Soloâs the only way.â
âDonât you think sheâll know that?â
âSheâll suspect it, but she canât be certain. Iâll have Alex call her, confirming that heâs in touch with all the heavy covert firepower in Paris. But first it comes from you.â
âWhy the lie?â
âYou shouldnât have to ask that, Bro. Iâve put her through enough.â
âAll right, Iâll tell her, but she wonât believe me. Sheâll see right through me, she always has. Since I was a kid, those big brown eyes would look into mine, most of the time pissed off, but not like our brothersâ, notâoh, I donât knowânot with that disgust in their faces because the âkidâ was a screwup. Can you understand that?â
âItâs called caring. Sheâs always cared for youâeven when you were a screwup.â
âYeah, Mareâs okay.â
âSomewhat more than that, I think. Call her in a couple of hours and bring them back here. Itâs the safest place they can be.â
âWhat about you? How are you going to get to Paris? The connections out of Antigua and Martinique are lousy, sometimes booked days in advance.â
âI canât use those airlines anyway. Iâve got to get in secretly under a shroud. Somehow, a man in Washington will have to figure it out. Somehow. Heâs got to.â
Alexander Conklin limped out of the small kitchen in the CIAâs Vienna apartment, his face and hair soaking wet. In the old days, before the old days fell into a distillery vat, he would calmly leave the officeâwherever it wasâwhen things got too heavy too fast and indulge himself in an unwavering ritual. He would seek out the best steak houseâagain, wherever he wasâhave two dry martinis and a thick rare slab of meat with the greasiest potatoes on the menu. The combination of the solitude, the limited intake of alcohol, the blood-rare hunk of beef and, in particular, the grease-laden potatoes, had such a calming effect on him that all the rushing, conflicting complexities of the hectic day sorted themselves out and reason prevailed. He would return to his officeâwhether a smart flat in Londonâs Belgravia Square or the back rooms of a whorehouse in Katmanduâwith multiple solutions. It was how he got the sobriquet of Saint Alex of Conklin. He had once mentioned this gastronomical phenomenon to Mo Panov, who had a succinct reply: âIf your crazy head doesnât kill you, your stomach will.â
These days, however, with postalcoholic vacuum and various other impediments, such as high cholesterol and dumb little triglycerides, whatever the hell they were, he had to come up with a different solution. It came about by accident. One morning during the Iran-contra hearings, which he found to be the finest hours of comedy on television, his set blew out. He was furious, so he turned on his portable radio, an instrument he had not used in months or perhaps years, as the television set had a built-in radio componentâalso inoperable at the timeâbut the portable radioâs batteries had long since melted into white slime. His artificial foot in pain, he walked to his kitchen telephone, knowing that a call to his television repairman, for whom he had done several favors, would bring the man running to his emergency. Unfortunately, the call only brought forth a hostile diatribe from the repairmanâs wife, who screamed that her husband, the âcustomerfucker,â had run off with a âhorny rich black bitch from Embassy Row!â (Zaire, as it later turned out in the Puerta Vallarta papers.) Conklin, in progressive apoplexy, had rushed to the kitchen sink, where his stress and blood pressure pills stood on the windowsill above the sink, and turned on the cold water. The faucet exploded, surging out of its recess into the ceiling as a powerful gush of water inundated his entire head. Caramba! The shock calmed him down, and he remembered that the Cable Network was scheduled to rebroadcast the hearings in full that evening. A happy man, he called the plumber and went out and bought a new television set.
So, since that morning, whenever his own furies or the state of the world disturbed himâthe world he knewâhe lowered his head in a kitchen sink and let the cold water pour over his head. He had done so this morning. This goddamned, fucked-up morning!
DeSole! Killed in an accident on a deserted country road in Maryland at 4:30 that morning. What the hell was Steven DeSole, a man whose driverâs license clearly stated that he was afflicted with night blindness, doing on a backcountry road outside Annapolis at 4:30 in the morning? And then Charlie Casset, a very angry Casset, calling him at six oâclock, yelling his usually c
ool head off, telling Alex he was going to put the commander of NATO on the goddamned spit and demand an explanation for the buried fax connection between the general and the dead chief of clandestine reports, who was not a victim of an accident but of murder! Furthermore, one retired field officer named Conklin had better damned well come clean with everything he knew about DeSole and Brussels and related matters, or all bets were off where said retired field agent and his elusive friend Jason Bourne were concerned. Noon at the latest! And then, Ivan Jax! The brilliant black doctor from Jamaica phoned, telling him he wanted to put Norman Swayneâs body back where he had found it because he did not want to be loused up by another Agency fiasco. But it was not Agency, cried Conklin to himself, unable to explain to Ivan Jax the real reason he had asked for his help. Medusa. And Jax could not simply drive the corpse back to Manassas because the police, on federal ordersâthe orders of one retired field agent using appropriated codes he was not entitled to useâhad sealed off General Norman Swayneâs estate without explanation.
âWhat do I do with the body?â Jax had yelled.
âKeep it cold for a while, Cactus would want it that way.â
âCactus? Iâve been with him at the hospital all night. Heâs going to be okay, but he doesnât know what the hell is going on any more than I do!â
âWe in the clandestine services canât always explain things,â Alex said, wincing as he spoke the ridiculous words. âIâll call you back.â
So he had gone into the kitchen and put his head under a spray of cold water. What else could go wrong? And naturally the telephone rang.
âDunkinâ Donuts,â said Conklin, the phone to his ear.
âGet me out of here,â said Jason Bourne, not a trace of David Webb in his voice. âTo Paris!â
âWhat happened?â
âHe got away, thatâs what happened, and I have to get to Paris under a cover, no immigration, no customs. Heâs got them all wired and I canât give him the chance to track me.⦠Alex, are you listening to me?â
âDeSole was killed last night, killed in an accident that was no accident at four oâclock in the morning. Medusaâs closing in.â