Page 5 of The Bourne Ultimatum (Jason Bourne 3)
âAnd you, David? What about you?â
âFrankly, I thought Iâd head to Washington and stay with you. If the Jackalâs coming for me after all these years, I want to be in on what weâre doing about it. I might even be able to help.⦠Iâll arrive by noon.â
âNo, David. Not today and not here. Go with Marie and the children. Get out of the country. Stay with your family and Johnny St. Jacques on the island.â
âI canât do that, Alex, and if you were me you couldnât, either. My familyâs not going to be freeâreally freeâuntil Carlos is out of our lives.â
âItâs not Carlos,â said Conklin, interrupting.
âWhat? Yesterday you told meââ
âForget what I told you, I was wrong. This is out of Hong Kong, out of Macao.â
âThat doesnât make sense, Alex! Hong Kongâs finished, Macaoâs finished. Theyâre dead and forgotten and thereâs no one alive with a reason to come after me.â
âThere is somewhere. A great taipan, âthe greatest taipan in Hong Kong,â according to the most recent and most recently dead source.â
âTheyâre gone. That whole house of Kuomintang cards collapsed. Thereâs no one left!â
âI repeat, there is somewhere.â
David Webb was briefly silent; then Jason Bourne spoke, his voice cold. âTell me everything youâve learned, every detail. Something happened tonight. What was it?â
âAll right, every detail,â said Conklin. The retired intelligence officer described the controlled surveillance engineered by the Central Intelligence Agency. He explained how he and Morris Panov spotted the old men who followed them, picking each up in sequence as they made their separate ways to the Smithsonian, none showing himself in the light until the confrontation on a deserted path on the Smithsonian grounds, where the messenger spoke of Macao and Hong Kong and a great taipan. Finally, Conklin described the shattering gunfire that silenced the two aged Orientals. âItâs out of Hong Kong, David. The reference to Macao confirms it. It was your impostorâs base camp.â
Again there was silence on the line, only Jason Bourneâs steady breathing audible. âYouâre wrong, Alex,â he said at last, his voice pensive, floating. âItâs the Jackalâby way of Hong Kong and Macao, but itâs still the Jackal.â
âDavid, now youâre not making sense. Carlos hasnât anything to do with taipans or Hong Kong or messages from Macao. Those old men were Chinese, not French or Italian or German or whatever. This is out of Asia, not Europe.â
âThe old men, theyâre the only ones he trusts,â continued David Webb, his voice still low and cold, the voice of Jason Bourne. â The old men of Paris,â thatâs what they were called. They were his network, his couriers throughout Europe. Who suspects decrepit old men, whether theyâre beggars or whether theyâre just holding on to the last remnants of mobility? Who would think of interrogating them, much less putting them on a rack. And even then theyâd stay silent. Their deals were madeâare madeâand they move with impunity. For Carlos.â
For a moment, hearing the strange, hollow voice of his friend, the frightened Conklin stared at the dashboard, unsure of what to say. âDavid, I donât understand you. I know youâre upsetâweâre all upsetâbut please be clearer.â
âWhat?⦠Oh, Iâm sorry, Alex, I was going back. To put it simply, Carlos scoured Paris looking for old men who were either dying or knew they hadnât long to live because of their age, all with police records and with little or nothing to show for their lives, their crimes. Most of us forget that these old men have loved ones and children, legitimate or not, that they care for. The Jackal would find them and swear to provide for the people his about-to-die couriers left behind if they swore the rest of their lives to him. In their places, with nothing to leave those who survive us but suspicion and poverty, which of us would do otherwise?â
âThey believed him?â
âThey had good reason toâthey still have. Scores of bank checks are delivered monthly from multiple unlisted Swiss accounts to inheritors from the Mediterranean to the Baltic. Thereâs no way to trace those payments, but the people receiving them know who makes them possible and why.⦠Forget your buried file, Alex. Carlos dug around Hong Kong, thatâs where his penetration was made, where he found you and Mo.â
âThen weâll do some penetrating ourselves. Weâll infiltrate every Oriental neighborhood, every Chinese bookie joint and restaurant, in every city within a fifty-mile radius of D.C.â
âDonât do anything until I get there. You donât know what to look for, I do.⦠Itâs kind of remarkable, really. The Jackal doesnât know that thereâs still a great deal I canât remember, but he just assumed that Iâd forgotten about the old men of Paris.â
âMaybe he didnât, David. Maybe heâs counting on the fact that youâd remember. Maybe this whole charade is a prelude to the real trap heâs setting for you.â
âThen he made another mistake.â
âOh?â
âIâm better than that. Jason Bourneâs better than that.â
4
David Webb walked through the National Airport terminal and out the automatic doors onto the crowded platform. He studied the signs and proceeded across the walkway leading to the Short-Term Parking area. According to plan, he was to go to the farthest aisle on the right, turn left, and continue down the row of parked cars until he saw a metallic gray 1986 Pontiac LeMans with an ornamental crucifix suspended from the rear-view mirror. A man would be in the driverâs seat wearing a white cap, the window lowered. Webb was to approach him and say, âThe flight was very smooth.â If the man removed his cap and started the engine, David was to climb in the backseat. Nothing more would be said.
Nothing more was said, not between Webb and the driver. However, the latter reached under the dashboard, removed a microphone and spoke quietly but clearly. âOur cargoâs on board. Please commence rotating vehicle cover.â
David thought that the exotic procedures bordered on the laughable, but since Alex Conklin had traced him to the Rockwell jetâs departure area at Logan Airport, and, further, had reached him on Director Peter Hollandâs private override telephone, he assumed the two of them knew what they were doing. It crossed Webbâs mind that it had something to do with Mo Panovâs call to him nine hours ago. It was all but confirmed when Holland himself got on the phone insisting that he drive down to Hartford and take a commercial flight out of Bradley to Washington, adding enigmatically that he wanted no further telephone communication or private or government aircraft involved.
This particular government-oriented car, however, wasted no time getting out of National Airport. It seemed as if in only minutes they were rushing through the countryside and, only minimally less rapidly, through the suburbs of Virginia. They swung up to the private gate of an expensive garden apartment complex, the sign reading VIENNA VILLAS, after the township in which it was located. The guard obviously recognized the driver and waved him through as the heavy bar across the entrance was raised. It was only then that the driver spoke directly to Webb.
âThis place has five separate sections over as many acres, sir. Four of them are legitimate condominiums with regular owners, but the fifth, the one farthest from the gate, is an Agency proprietary with its own road and security. You couldnât be healthier, sir.â
âI didnât feel particularly sick.â
âYou wonât be. Youâre DCI cargo and your health is very important to him.â
âThatâs nice to know, but how do you know?â
âIâm part of the team, sir.â
âIn that case, whatâs your name?â
The driver was silent for a moment, and when he answered, David had the uneasy feeling that he was being propelled back in time, to a time he knew he was reentering. âWe donât have names, sir. You donât and I donât.â
Medusa.
âI understand,â said Webb.
âHere we are.â The driver swung the car around a circular drive and stop
ped in front of a two-story Colonial structure that looked as though the fluted white pillars might have been made of Carrara marble. âExcuse me, sir, I just noticed. You donât have any luggage.â
âNo, I donât,â said David, opening the door.
âHow do you like my temporary digs?â asked Alex, waving his hand around the tastefully appointed apartment.
âToo neat and too clean for a cantankerous old bachelor,â replied David. âAnd since when did you go in for floral curtains with pink and yellow daisies?â
âWaitâll you see the wallpaper in my bedroom. Itâs got baby roses.â
âIâm not sure I care to.â
âYour room has hyacinths.⦠Of course, I wouldnât know a hyacinth if it jumped up and choked me, but thatâs what the maid said.â
âThe maid?â
âLate forties and black and built like a sumo wrestler. She also carries two popguns under her skirt and, rumor has it, several straight razors.â
âSome maid.â
âSome high-powered patrol. She doesnât let a bar of soap or a roll of toilet paper in here that doesnât come from Langley. You know, sheâs a pay-grade ten and some of these clowns leave her tips.â
âDo they need any waiters?â
âThatâs good. Our scholar, Webb the waiter.â
âJason Bourneâs been one.â
Conklin paused, then spoke seriously. âLetâs get to him,â he said, limping to an armchair. âBy the way, youâve had a rough day and itâs not even noon, so if you want a drink thereâs a full bar behind those puce shutters next to the window.⦠Donât look at me like that, our black Brunhilde said they were puce.â
Webb laughed; it was a low, genuine laugh as he looked at his friend. âIt doesnât bother you a bit, does it, Alex?â
âHell, no, you know that. Have you ever hid any liquor from-me when I visited you and Marie?â
âThere was never any stressââ
âStress is irrelevant,â Conklin broke in. âI made a decision because there was only one other one to make. Have a drink, David. We have to talk and I want you calm. I look at your eyes and they tell me youâre on fire.â
âYou once told me that itâs always in the eyes,â said Webb, opening the purplish shutters and reaching for a bottle. âYou can still see it, canât you?â
âI told you it was behind the eyes. Never accept the first level.⦠How are Marie and the children? I assume they got off all right.â
âI went over the flight plan ad nauseam with the pilot and knew they were all right when he finally told me to get off his case or fly the run myself.â Webb poured a drink and walked back to the chair opposite the retired agent. âWhere are we, Alex?â he asked, sitting down.
âRight where we were last night. Nothingâs moved and nothingâs changed, except that Mo refuses to leave his patients. He was picked up this morning at his apartment, which is now as secure as Fort Knox, and driven to his office under guard. Heâll be brought here later this afternoon with four changes of vehicles, all made in underground parking lots.â
âThen itâs open protection, no oneâs hiding any longer?â
âThatâd be pointless. We sprung a trap at the Smithsonian and our men were very obvious.â
âItâs why it might work, isnât it? The unexpected? Backups behind a protection unit told to make mistakes.â
âThe unexpected works, David, not the dumb.â Conklin quickly shook his head. âI take that back. Bourne could turn the dumbs into smarts, but not an officially mounted surveillance detail. There are too many complications.â
âI donât understand.â
âAs good as those men are, theyâre primarily concerned with guarding lives, maybe saving them; they also have to coordinate with each other and make reports. Theyâre career people, not one-shot, prepaid lowlife with an assassinâs knife at their throats if they screw up.â
âThat sounds so melodramatic,â said Webb softly, leaning back in the chair and drinking. âI guess I did operate like that, didnât I?â
âIt was more image than reality, but it was real to the people you used.â
âThen Iâll find those people again, use them again.â David shot forward, gripping his glass in both hands. âHeâs forcing me out, Alex! The Jackalâs calling my cards and I have to show.â
âOh, shut up,â said Conklin irritably. âNow youâre the one whoâs being melodramatic. You sound like a grade-Z Western. You show yourself, Marieâs a widow and the kids have no father. Thatâs reality, David.â
âYouâre wrong.â Webb shook his head, staring at his glass. âHeâs coming after me, so I have to go after him; heâs trying to pull me out, so I have to pull him out first. Itâs the only way it can happen, the only way weâll get him out of our lives. In the final analysis itâs Carlos against Bourne. Weâre back where we were thirteen years ago. âAlpha, Bravo, Cain, Delta ⦠Cain is for Carlos and Delta is for Cain.â â
âThat was a crazy Paris code thirteen years ago!â interrupted Alex sharply. âMedusaâs Delta and his mighty challenge to the Jackal. But this isnât Paris and itâs thirteen years later!â
âAnd in five more years itâll be eighteen; five years after that, twenty-three. What the hell do you want me to do? Live with the specter of that son of a bitch over my family, frightened every time my wife or my children leave the house, living in fear for the rest of my life?⦠No, you shut up, field man! You know better than that. The analysts can come up with a dozen strategies and weâll use bits and pieces of maybe six and be grateful, but when it gets down to the mud, itâs between the Jackal and me.⦠And Iâve got the advantage. Iâve got you on my side.â
Conklin swallowed while blinking. âThatâs very flattering, David, maybe too flattering. Iâm better in my own element, a couple of thousand miles away from Washington. It was always a little stifling for me here.â
âIt wasnât when you saw me off on that plane to Hong Kong five years ago. Youâd put together half the equation by then.â
âThat was easier. It was a down-and-dirty D.C. operation that had the smell of rotten halibut, so rotten it offended my nostrils. This is different; this is Carlos.â
âThatâs my point, Alex. It is Carlos, not a voice over the telephone neither of us knew. Weâre dealing with a known quantity, someone predictableââ
âPredictable?â broke in Conklin, frowning. âThatâs also crazy. In what way?â
âHeâs the hunter. Heâll follow a scent.â
âHeâll examine it first with a very experienced nose, then check the spoors under a microscope.â
âThen weâll have to be authentic, wonât we?â
âI prefer foolproof. What did you have in mind?â
âIn the gospel according to Saint Alex, itâs written that in order to bait a trap one has to use a large part of the truth, even a dangerous amount.â
âThat chapter and verse referred to a targetâs microscope. I think I just mentioned it. Whatâs the relevance here?â
âMedusa,â said Webb quietly. âI want to use Medusa.â
âNow youâre out of your mind,â responded Conklin, no louder than David, âThat name is as off-limits as you areâletâs be honest, a hell of a lot more so.â
âThere were rumors, Alex, stories all over Southeast Asia that floated up the China Sea to Kowloon and Hong Kong, where most of those bastards ran with their money. Medusa wasnât exactly the secret evil you seem to think it was.â
âRumors, yes, and stories, of course,â interrupted the retired intelligence officer. âWhich of those animals didnât put a gun or a knife to the heads of a dozen or two dozen or two hundred marks during their so-called âtoursâ? Ninety percent were killers and thieves, the original death squads. Peter Holland said that when he was a SEAL in the northern operations he never met a member of that outfit he didnât want to waste.â
âAnd without them, instead of fifty-eight thousand casualties, there could well ha
ve been sixty-plus. Give the animals their due, Alex. They knew every inch of the territories, every square foot of jungle in the triangle. Theyâweâsent back more functional intelligence than all the units sent out by Saigon put together.â
âMy point, David, is that there can never be any connection between Medusa and the United States government. Our involvement was never logged, much less acknowledged; the name itself was concealed as much as possible. Thereâs no statute of limitations on war crimes, and Medusa was officially determined to be a private organization, a collection of violent misfits who wanted the corrupt Southeast Asia back the way they knew it and used it. If it was ever established that Washington was behind Medusa, the reputation of some very important people in the White House and the State Department would be ruined. Theyâre global power brokers now, but twenty years ago they were hotheaded junior staffers in Command Saigon.⦠We can live with questionable tactics in time of war, but not with being accomplices in the slaughter of noncombatants and the diversion of funds totaling millions, both unknowingly paid for by the taxpayers. Itâs like those still-sealed archives that detail how so many of our fat-cat financiers bankrolled the Nazis. Some things we never want out of their black holes, and Medusaâs one of them.â
Webb again leaned back in the chairânow, however, taut, his eyes steady on his old friend, who was once briefly his deadly enemy. âIf what memory I have left serves me, Bourne was identified as having come out of Medusa.â
âIt was an entirely believable explanation and a perfect cover,â agreed Conklin, returning Davidâs gaze. âWe went back to Tarn Quan and âdiscoveredâ that Bourne was a paranoid Tasmanian adventurer who disappeared in the jungles of North Vietnam. Nowhere in that very creative dossier was there the slightest clue of a Washington connection.â
âBut thatâs all a lie, isnât it, Alex? There was and is a Washington connection, and the Jackal knows it now. He knew it when he found you and Mo Panov in Hong Kongâfound your names in the ruins of that sterile house on Victoria Peak where Jason Bourne was supposedly blown away. He confirmed it last night when his messengers approached you at the Smithsonian andâyour wordsââour men were very obvious.â He knew finally that everything heâs believed for thirteen years is true. The member of Medusa who was called Delta was Jason Bourne, and Jason Bourne was a creation of American intelligenceâand heâs still alive. Alive and in hiding and protected by his government.â