Page 36 of The Bourne Ultimatum (Jason Bourne 3)
âYou were ⦠what?â Gates was barely audible, his thin voice tremulous.
âYes. Odd, isnât it? I imagine that when this man in Paris tried to reach you here in Boston, someone told him your imperial presence was out or away and thatâs how the mix-up began. Two brilliant legal minds, both with an elusive connection to a woman and her two children, and Paris thought I was you.â
âWhat happened?â
âCalm down, Randy. At the moment he probably thinks youâre dead.â
âWhat?â
âHe tried to have me killedâyou killed. For transgression.â
âOh, my God!â
âAnd when he finds out youâre very much alive and eating well in Boston, he wonât permit a second attempt to fail.â
âJesus Christ â¦!â
âThere may be a way out, Dandy Boy, which is why you must come and see me. Incidentally, Iâm in the same suite at the Ritz that you were in when I came to see you. Three-C; just take the elevator. Be here in thirty minutes, and remember, I have little patience with clients who abuse schedules, for Iâm a very busy man. By the way, my fee is twenty thousand dollars an hour or any part thereof, so bring money, Randy. Lots of it. In cash.â
* * *
He was ready, thought Bourne, studying himself in the mirror, satisfied with what he saw. He had spent the last three hours getting ready for his drive to Argenteuil, to a restaurant named Le Coeur du Soldat, the message center for a âblackbird,â for Carlos the Jackal. The Chameleon had dressed for the environment he was about to enter; the clothes were simple, the body and the face less so. The first required a trip to the secondhand stores and pawn shops in Montmartre, where he found faded trousers and a surplus French army shirt, and an equally faded small combat ribbon that denoted a wounded veteran. The second, somewhat more complex, demanded hair coloring, a dayâs growth of beard, and another constricting bandage, this bound around his right knee so tight he could not forget the limp he had quickly perfected. His hair and eyebrows were now a dull redâdirty, unkempt red, which fit his new surroundings, a cheap hotel in Montparnasse whose front desk wanted as little contact as possible with its clientele.
His neck was more an irritant now than an impediment; either he was adjusting to the stiff, restricted movement or the healing process was doing its mysterious work. And that restricted movement was not a liability where his current appearance was concerned; in truth, it was an asset. An embittered wounded veteran, a discarded son of France, would be hard pressed to forget his dual immobility. Jason shoved Bernardineâs automatic into his trousers pocket, checked his money, his car keys, and his scabbarded hunting knife, the latter purchased at a sporting goods store and strapped inside his shirt, and limped to the door of the small, filthy, depressing room. Next stop, the Capucines and a nondescript Peugeot in an underground garage. He was ready.
Out on the street, he knew he had to walk a number of blocks before he found a taxi station; cabs were not the fashion in this section of Montparnasse.⦠Neither was the commotion around a newspaper kiosk at the second corner. People were shouting, many waving their arms, clutching papers in their fists, anger and consternation in their voices. Instinctively, he quickened his pace, reached the stand, threw down his coins and grabbed a newspaper.
The breath went out of him as he tried to suppress the shock waves that swept through him. Teagarten killed! The assassin, Jason Bourne! Jason Bourne! Madness, insanity! What had happened? Was it a resurrection of Hong Kong and Macao? Was he losing what was left of his mind? Was he in some nightmare so real he had entered its dimensions, the horror of demented sleep, the fantasy of conjured, improvised terror turned into reality? He broke away from the crowd, reeled across the pavement, and leaned against the stone wall of a building, gasping for air, his neck now in pain, trying desperately to find a reasonable train of thought. Alex! A telephone!
âWhat happened?â he screamed into the mouthpiece to Vienna, Virginia.
âCome down and stay cold,â said Conklin in a low monotone. âListen to me. I want to know exactly where you are. Bernardine will pick you up and get you out. Heâll make the arrangements and put you on the Concorde to New York.â
âWait a minuteâwait a minute!⦠The Jackal did this, didnât he?â
âFrom what weâre told, it was a contract from a crazy jihad faction out of Beirut. Theyâre claiming it was their kill. The actual executioner is unimportant. That may be true and it may not. At first I didnât buy it, not after DeSole and Armbruster, but the numbers add up. Teagarten was forever sounding off about sending NATO forces into Lebanon and leveling every suspected Palestinian enclave. Heâs been threatened before; itâs just that the Medusa connection is too damned coincidental for me. But to answer your question, of course it was the Jackal.â
âSo he laid it on me, Carlos laid it on me!â
âHeâs an ingenious fucker, Iâll say that for him. You come after him and he uses a contract that freezes you in Paris.â
âThen we turn it around!â
âWhat the hell are you talking about? You get out!â
âNo way. While he thinks Iâm running, hiding, evadingâIâm walking right into his nest.â
âYouâre nuts! You get out while we can still get you out!â
âNo, I stay in. Number one, he figures I have to in order to reach him, but, as you say, heâs locked me in ice. He thinks that after all these years Iâll panic in my fashion and make stupid movesâGod knows I made enough on Tranquilityâbut so stupid here that his army of old men will find me by looking in the right places and knowing what to look for. Christ, heâs good! Shake the bastard up so heâll make a mistake. I know him, Alex. I know the way he thinks and Iâll outthink him. Iâll stay on course, no prolonged safe cave for me.â
âCave? What cave?â
âA figure of speech, forget it. I was in place before the news of Teagarten. Iâm okay.â
âYouâre not okay, youâre a fruitcake! Get out!â
âSorry, Saint Alex, this is exactly where I want to be. Iâm going after the Jackal.â
âWell, maybe I can move you off that place youâre clinging to. I spoke to Marie a couple of hours ago. Guess what, you aging Neanderthal? Sheâs flying to Paris. To find you.â
âShe canât!â
âThatâs what I said, but she wasnât in a listening mode. She said she knew all the places you and she used when you were running from us thirteen years ago. That youâd use them again.â
âI have. Several. But she mustnât!â
âTell her, not me.â
âWhatâs the Tranquility number? Iâve been afraid to call herâto be honest, Iâve tried like hell to put her and the kids out of my mind.â
âThatâs the most reasonable statement youâve made. Here it is.â Conklin recited the 809 area code number, and the instant he had done so, Bourne slammed down the phone.
Frantically, Jason went through the agonizing process of relaying destination and credit card numbers, accompanied by the beeps and stutters of an overseas call to the Caribbean, and, finally, after subduing some idiot at the front desk of Tranquility Inn, got through to his brother-in-law.
âGet Marie for me!â he ordered.
âDavid?â
âYes ⦠David. Get Marie.â
âI canât. Sheâs gone. She left an hour ago.â
âWhere to?â
âShe wouldnât tell me. She chartered a plane out of Blackburne, but she wouldnât tell me what international island she was going to. Thereâs only Antigua or Martinique around here, but she could have flown to Sint Maarten or Puerto Rico. Sheâs on her way to Paris.â
âCouldnât you have stopped her?â
âChrist, I tried, David. Goddamn it, I tried!â
âDid you ever think about locking her up?â
âMarie?â
âI see what you mean.⦠She canât get here until tomorrow morning at the earliest.â
âHave you he
ard the news?â cried St. Jacques. âGeneral Teagarten was killed and they say it was Jasonââ
âOh, shut up,â said Bourne, replacing the phone and leaving the booth, walking down the street to collect what thoughts he could generate.
Peter Holland, director of the Central Intelligence Agency, rose to his feet behind his desk and roared at the crippled man seated in front of him. âDo nothing? Have you lost your fucking senses?â
âDid you lose yours when you issued that statement about a joint British-American operation in Hong Kong?â
âIt was the goddamned truth!â
âThere are truths, and then again there are other truths, such as denying the truth when it doesnât serve the service.â
âShit! Fairy politicians!â
âIâd hardly say that, Genghis Khan. Iâve heard of such men going to the wall, accepting execution rather than betraying the current truth they had to live by.⦠Youâre off base, Peter.â
Exasperated, Holland sank back into his chair. âMaybe I really donât belong here.â
âMaybe you donât, but give yourself a little more time. Maybe youâll become as dirty as the rest of us; it could happen, you know.â
The director leaned back, arching his head over the chair; he spoke in a broken cadence. âI was dirtier than any of you in the field, Alex. I still wake up at night seeing the faces of young men staring at me as I ripped a knife up their chests, taking their lives away, somehow knowing that they had no idea why they were there.â
âIt was either you or them. They would have put a bullet in your head if they could have.â
âYes, I suppose so.â The DCI shot forward, his eyes locked with Conklinâs. âBut thatâs not what weâre talking about, is it?â
âYou might say itâs a variation on the theme.â
âCut the horseshit.â
âItâs a musicianâs term. I like music.â
âThen get to the main symphonic line, Alex. I like music, too.â
âAll right. Bourneâs disappeared. He told me that he thinks heâs found a caveâhis word, not mineâwhere heâs convinced he can track the Jackal. He didnât say where it is, and God knows when heâll call me again.â
âI sent our man at the embassy over to the Pont-Royal, asking for Simon. What they told you is true. Simon checked in, went out, and never came back. Where is he?â
âStaying out of sight. Bernardine had an idea, but it blew up in his face. He thought he could quietly close in on Bourne by circulating the license number of the rental car, but it wasnât picked up at the garage and we both agree it wonât be. He doesnât trust anybody now, not even me, and considering his history, he has every right not to.â
Hollandâs eyes were cold and angry. âYouâre not lying to me, are you, Conklin?â
âWhy would I lie at a time like this, about a friend like this?â
âThatâs not an answer, itâs a question.â
âThen no, Iâm not lying. I donât know where he is.â And, in truth, Alex did not.
âSo your idea is to do nothing.â
âThereâs nothing we can do. Sooner or later heâll call me.â
âHave you any idea what a Senate investigating committee will say a couple of weeks or months down the road when all this explodes, and it will explode? We covertly send a man known to be âJason Bourneâ over to Paris, which is as close to Brussels as New York is to Chicagoââ
âCloser, I think.â
âThanks, I need that.⦠The illustrious commander of NATO is assassinated with said âJason Bourneâ taking credit for the kill, and we donât say a goddamned thing to anybody! Jesus, Iâll be cleaning latrines on a tugboat!â
âBut he didnât kill him.â
âYou know that and I know that, but speaking of his history, thereâs a little matter of mental illness thatâll come out the minute our clinical records are subpoenaed.â
âItâs called amnesia; it has nothing to do with violence.â
âHell, no, itâs worse. He canât remember what he did.â
Conklin gripped his cane, his wandering eyes intense. âI donât give a goddamn what everything appears to be, thereâs a gap. Every instinct I have tells me Teagartenâs assassination is tied to Medusa. Somehow, somewhere, the wires crossed; a message was intercepted and a hell of a diversion was put in a game plan.â
âI believe I speak and understand English as well as you do,â said Holland, âbut right now I canât follow you.â
âThereâs nothing to follow, no arithmetic, no line of progression. I simply donât know.⦠But Medusaâs there.â
âWith your testimony, I can pull in Burton on the Joint Chiefs, and certainly Atkinson in London.â
âNo, leave them alone. Watch them, but donât sink their dinghies, Admiral. Like Swayneâs âretreat,â the bees will flock to the honey sooner or later.â
âThen what are you suggesting?â
âWhat I said when I came in here. Do nothing; itâs the waiting game.â Alex suddenly slammed his cane against the table. âSon of a bitch, itâs Medusa. It has to be!â
The hairless old man with a wrinkled face struggled to his feet in a pew of the Church of the Blessed Sacrament in Neuilly-sur-Seine on the outskirts of Paris. Step by difficult step he made his painful way to the second confessional booth on the left. He pulled back the black curtain and knelt in front of the black latticework covered with black cloth, his legs in agony.
âAngelus domini, child of God,â said the voice from behind the screen. âAre you well?â
âFar better for your generosity, monseigneur.â
âThat pleases me, but I must be pleased more than that, as you know.⦠What happened in Anderlecht? What does my beloved and well-endowed army tell me? Who has presumed?â
âWe have dispersed and worked for the past eight hours, monseigneur. As near as we can determine, two men flew over from the United Statesâit is assumed so, for they spoke only American Englishâand took a room in a pension de famille across the street from the restaurant. They left the premises within minutes after the assault.â
âA frequency-detonated explosive!â
âApparently, monseigneur. We have learned nothing else.â
âBut why? Why?â
âWe cannot see into menâs minds, monseigneur.â
Across the Atlantic Ocean, in an opulent apartment in Brooklyn Heights with the lights of the East River and the Brooklyn Bridge seductively pulsating beyond the windows, a capo supremo lounged in an overstuffed couch, a glass of Perrier in his hand. He spoke to his friend sitting across from him in an armchair, drinking a gin and tonic. The young man was slender, dark-haired and striking.
âYou know, Frankie, Iâm not just bright, Iâm brilliant, you know what I mean? I pick up on nuancesâthatâs hints of what could be important and what couldnâtâand I got a hell of sense. I hear a spook paisan talk about things and I put four and four together and instead of eight, I get twelve. Bingo! Itâs the answer. Thereâs this cat who calls himself âBourne,â a creep who makes like heâs a major hit man but who isnâtâheâs a lousy esca, bait to pull in someone else, but heâs the hot cannoli we want, see? Then the Jew shrink, being very under the weather, spits out everything I need. This cannoliâs got only half a head, a testa balzana; a lot of the time he donât know who he is, or maybe what he does, right?â
âThatâs right, Lou.â
âAnd there this Bourne is in Paris, France, a couple of blocks away from a real big impediment, a fancy general the quiet boys across the river want taken out, like the two fatsoes already planted. Capisce?â
âI capisco, Lou,â said the clean-cut young man from the chair. âYouâre real intelligent.â
âYou donât know what the fuck Iâm talking about, you zabaglione. I could be talking to myself, so why not?⦠So I get my twelve and I figure letâs slam the loaded dice right into the felt, see?â
âI see, Lou.â
?
??We got to eliminate this asshole general because heâs the impediment to the fancy crowd who needs us, right?â
âRight on, Lou. An impedâan impedââ
âDonât bother, zabaglione. So I say to myself, letâs blow him away and say the hot cannoli did it, got it?â
âOh, yeah, Lou. Youâre real intelligent.â
âSo we get rid of the impediment and put the cannoli, this Jason Bourne, whoâs not all there, in everybodyâs gun sights, right? If we donât get him, and this Jackal donât get him, the federals will, right?â
âHey, thatâs terrific, Lou. I gotta say it, I really respect you.â
âForget respect, bello ragazzo. The rules are different in this house. Come on over and make good love to me.â
The young man got up from the chair and walked over to the couch.
Marie sat in the back of the plane drinking coffee from a plastic cup, trying desperately to recall every placeâevery hiding and resting placeâshe and David had used thirteen years ago. There were the rock-bottom cafés in Montparnasse, the cheap hotels as well; and a motelâwhere was it?âten miles outside of Paris, and an inn with a balcony in Argenteuil where DavidâJasonâfirst told her he loved her but could not stay with her because he loved herâthe goddamned ass! And there was the Sacré-Coeur, far up on the steps where JasonâDavidâmet the man in a dark alley who gave them the information they neededâwhat was it, who was he?
âMesdames et messieurs,â came the voice over the flight deckâs loudspeaker. âJe suis votre capitaine. Bienvenu.â The pilot continued first in French, then he and his crew repeated the information in English, German, Italian and, finally with a female interpreter, in Japanese. âWe anticipate a very smooth flight to Marseilles. Our estimated flight time is seven hours and fourteen minutes, landing on or before schedule at six oâclock in the morning, Paris time. Enjoy.â
The moonlight outside bathed the ocean below as Marie St. Jacques Webb looked out the window. She had flown to San Juan, Puerto Rico, and taken the night flight to Marseilles, where French immigration was at best a mass of confusion and at worst intentionally lax. At least that was the way it was thirteen years ago, a time she was reentering. She would then take a domestic flight to Paris and she would find him. As she had done thirteen years ago, she would find him. She had to! As it had been thirteen years ago, if she did not, the man she loved was a dead man.