Page 51 of The Bourne Ultimatum (Jason Bourne 3)
They raced south out of Paris in the nondescript Peugeot, taking the Barbizon highway to Villeneuve-St.-Georges. Marie sat close to her husband, their bodies touching, her hand clutching his arm. She was, however, sickeningly aware that the warmth she intended was not returned in equal measure. Only a part of the intense man behind the wheel was her David; the rest of him was Jason Bourne and he was now in command.
âFor Godâs sake, talk to me!â she cried.
âIâm thinking.⦠Why did you come to Paris?â
âGood Christ!â exploded Marie. âTo find you, to help you!â
âIâm sure you thought it was right.⦠It wasnât, you know.â
âThat voice again,â protested Marie. âThat goddamned disembodied tone of voice! Who the hell do you think you are to make that judgment? God? To put it bluntlyâno, not bluntly, but brutallyâthere are things you have trouble remembering, my darling.â
âNot about Paris,â objected Jason. âI remember everything about Paris. Everything.â
âYour friend Bernardine didnât think so! He told me you never would have chosen the Meurice if you did.â
âWhat?â Bourne briefly, harshly glanced at his wife.
âThink. Why did you chooseâand you did chooseâthe Meurice?â
âI donât know ⦠Iâm not sure. Itâs a hotel; the name just came to me.â
âThink. What happened years ago at the Meuriceâright outside the Meurice?â
âIâI know something happened.⦠You?â
âYes, my love, me. I stayed there under a false name and you came to meet me, and we walked to the newsstand on the corner, where in one horrible moment we both knew my life could never be the same againâwith you or without you.â
âOh, Jesus, I forgot! The newspapersâyour photograph on all the front pages. You were the Canadian government officialââ
âThe escaped Canadian economist,â broke in Marie, âhunted by the authorities all over Europe for multiple killings in Zurich in tandem with the theft of millions from Swiss banks! Those kinds of headlines never leave a person, do they? They can be refuted, proved to be totally false, yet still there is that lingering doubt. âWhere thereâs smoke there must be fire,â I believe is the bromide. My own colleagues in Ottawa ⦠dear, dear friends Iâd worked with for years ⦠were afraid to talk to me!â
âWait a minute!â shouted Bourne, his eyes again flashing at Davidâs wife. âThey were falseâit was a Treadstone ploy to pull me inâyou were the one who understood it, I didnât!â
âOf course I did, because you were so stretched you couldnât see it. It didnât matter to me then because Iâd made up my mind, my very precise analytical mind, a mind Iâd match against yours any day of the week, my sweet scholar.â
âWhat?â
âWatch the road! You missed the turn, just the way you missed the one to our cabin only days agoâor was it years ago?â
âWhat the hell are you talking about?â
âThat small inn we stayed at outside the Barbizon. You politely asked them to please light the fire in the dining roomâwe were the only people there. It was the third time I saw through the mask of Jason Bourne to someone else, someone I was falling deeply in love with.â
âDonât do this to me.â
âI have to, David. If only for myself now. I have to know youâre there.â
Silence. A U-turn on the grand-route and the driver pressed the accelerator to the floor. âIâm here,â whispered the husband, lifting his right arm and pulling his wife to him. âI donât know for how long, but Iâm here.â
âHurry, my darling.â
âI will. I just want to hold you in my arms.â
âAnd I want to call the children.â
âNow I know Iâm here.â
28
âYouâll tell us everything we want to know voluntarily or weâll send you up into a chemical orbit your hacks never dreamed of with Dr. Panov,â said Peter Holland, director of the Central Intelligence Agency, his quiet monotone as hard and as smooth as polished granite. âFurthermore, I should elaborate on the extremes to which Iâm perfectly willing to go because Iâm from the old school, paisan. I donât give a shit for rules that favor garbage. You play cipher with me, Iâll deep-six you still breathing a hundred miles off Hatteras in a torpedo casing. Am I clear?â
The capo subordinato, thick plaster casts around his left arm and right leg, lay on the bed in Langleyâs deserted infirmary room, deserted since the DCI ordered the medical staff to get out of hearing range for their own good. The mafiosoâs naturally puffed face was additionally enlarged by swellings around both eyes as well as his generous lips, the result of his head having smashed into the dashboard when Mo Panov sent the car into a Maryland oak. He looked up at Holland, his heavy-lidded gaze traveling over to Alexander Conklin seated in a chair, the ever-present cane gripped in anxious hands.
âYou got no right, Mr. Big Shot,â said the capo gruffly. â âCause I got rights, you know what I mean?â
âSo did the doctor, and you violated themâJesus, did you violate them!â
âI donât gotta talk without my lawyer.â
âWhere the hell was Panovâs lawyer?â shouted Alex, thumping his cane on the floor.
âThatâs not the way the system works,â protested the patient, attempting to raise his eyebrows in indignation. âBesides, I was good to the doc. He took advantage of my goodness, sâhelp me God!â
âYouâre a cartoon,â said Holland. âYouâre a hot sketch but youâre not remotely amusing. There are no lawyers here, linguine, just the three of us, and a torpedo casing is very much in your future.â
âWhaddaya want from me?â cried the mafioso. âWhat do I know? I just do what Iâm told, like my older brother didâmay he rest in peaceâand my fatherâmay he also rest in peaceâand probably his father, which I donât know nothinâ about.â
âItâs like succeeding generations on welfare, isnât it?â observed Conklin. âThe parasites never get off the dole.â
âHey, thatâs my family youâre talkinâ aboutâwhatever the fuck youâre talkinâ about.â
âMy apologies to your heraldry,â added Alex.
âAnd itâs that family of yours weâre interested in, Augie,â broke in the DCI. âIt is Augie, isnât it? That was the name on one of the five driverâs licenses and we thought it seemed most authentic.â
âWell, youâre not so authentically bright, Mr. Big Shot!â spat out the immobilized patient through his painfully swollen lips. âI got none of them names.â
âWe have to call you something,â said Holland. âIf only to burn it into the casing down at Hatteras so that some scale-headed archaeologist several thousand years from now can give an identity to the teeth heâs measuring.â
âHow about Chauncy?â asked Conklin.
âToo ethnic,â replied Peter. âI like Asshole because thatâs what he is. Heâs going to be strapped into a tube and dropped over the continental shelf into six miles of seawater for crimes other people committed. I mean, thatâs being an asshole.â
âCut it out!â roared the asshole. âAwright, my nameâs Nicolo ⦠Nicholas Dellacroce, and for even giving you that you gotta get me protection! Like with Valachi, thatâs part of the deal.â
âIt is?â Holland frowned. âI donât remember mentioning it.â
âThen you donât get nuthinâ!â
âYouâre wrong, Nicky,â broke in Alex from across the small room. âWeâre going to get everything we want, the only drawback being that itâs a one-time shot. We wonât be able to cross-examine you, or bring you into a federal court, or even have you sign a deposition.â
âHuh?â
âYouâll come out a vegetable with a retried brain. Of course, I suppose itâs a blessing in a way. Youâll hardly know it when youâre packed into that shell casing in Hatteras.â
âHey, waddaya talkinâ?â
âSimple logic,â answered th
e former naval commando and present head of the Central Intelligence Agency. âAfter our medical team gets finished with you, you canât expect us to keep you around, can you? An autopsy would railroad us to a rock pile for thirty years and, frankly, I havenât got that kind of time.⦠Whatâll it be, Nicky? You want to talk to us or do you want a priest?â
âI gotta thinkââ
âLetâs go, Alex,â said Holland curtly, walking away from the bed toward the door. âIâll send for a priest. This poor son of a bitch is going to need all the comfort he can get.â
âItâs times like this,â added Conklin, planting his cane on the floor and rising, âwhen I seriously ponder manâs inhumanity to man. Then I rationalize. Itâs not brutality, for thatâs only a descriptive abstraction; itâs merely the custom of the trade weâre all in. Still, thereâs the individualâhis mind and his flesh and his all too sensitive nerve endings. Itâs the excruciating pain. Thank heavens Iâve always been in the background, out of reachâlike Nickyâs associates. They dine in elegant restaurants and he goes over in a tube beyond the continental shelf, six miles down in the sea, his body imploding into itself.â
âAwright, awright!â screamed Nicolo Dellacroce, twisting on the bed, his obese frame tangling the sheets. âAsk your fuckinâ questions, but you give me protection, capisce?â
âThat depends on the truthfulness of your answers,â said Holland, returning to the bed.
âIâd be very truthful, Nicky,â observed Alex, limping back to the chair. âOne misstatement and you sleep with the fishesâI believe thatâs the customary phrase.â
âI donât need no coaching, I know where itâs at.â
âLetâs begin, Mr. Dellacroce,â said the CIA chief, taking a small tape recorder out of his pocket, checking the charge and placing it on the high white table by the patientâs bed. He drew up a chair and continued speaking, addressing his opening remarks to the thin silver recorder. âMy name is Admiral Peter Holland, currently director of the Central Intelligence Agency, voice confirmation to be verified if necessary. This is an interview with an informer weâll call John Smith, voice distortion to follow on interagency master tape, identification in the DCIâs classified files.⦠All right, Mr. Smith, weâre going to cut through the bullshit to the essential questions. Iâll generalize them as much as possible for your protection, but youâll know exactly what Iâm referring to and I expect specific answers.⦠Whom do you work for, Mr. Smith?â
âAtlas Coin Vending Machines, Long Island City,â replied Dellacroce, his words slurred and spoken gruffly.
âWho owns it?â
âI dunno who owns it. Most of us work from homeâsome fifteen, maybe twenty guys, you know what I mean? We service the machines and send in our reports.â
Holland glanced over at Conklin; both men smiled. With one answer the mafioso had placed himself within a large circle of potential informers. Nicolo was not new to the game. âWho signs your paychecks, Mr. Smith?â
âA Mr. Louis DeFazio, a very legitimate businessman, to dâbest of my knowledge. He gives us our assignments.â
âDo you know where he lives?â
âBrooklyn Heights. On the river, I think someone told me.â
âWhat was your destination when our personnel intercepted you?â
Dellacroce winced, briefly closing his swollen eyes before answering. âOne of those drunk-and-dope tanks somewhere south of Phillyâwhich you already know, Mr. Big Shot, âcause you found the map in the car.â
Holland angrily reached for the recorder, snapping it off. âYouâre on your way to Hatteras, you son of a bitch!â
âHey, you get your info your way, I give it mine, okay? There was a mapâthereâs always a mapâand each of us has to take those cockamamy back roads to the joint like we were driving the president or even a don superiore to an Appalachian meet.⦠You gimme that message pad and the pencil, Iâll give you the location right down to the brass plate on the stone gate.â The mafioso raised his uncased right arm and jabbed his index finger at the DCI. âItâll be accurate, Mr. Big Shot, because I donât wanna sleep with no fishes, capisce?â
âBut you wonât put it on tape,â said Holland, a disturbed inflection in his voice. âWhy not?â
âTape, shit! What did you call it? An interagency master bullshit? What do you think ⦠our people canât tap into this place? Hoo-hah! That fuckinâ doctor of yours could be one of us!â
âHeâs not, but weâre going to get to an army doctor who is.â Peter Holland picked up the message pad and pencil from the bedside table, handing both to Dellacroce. He did not bother to switch on the tape recorder. They were beyond props and into hardball.
In New York City, on 138th Street between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue, the hard core of Harlem, a large disheveled black man in his mid-thirties staggered up the sidewalk. He bounced off the chipped brick wall of a run-down apartment building and slumped down on the pavement, his legs extended, his unshaven face angled into the right collar of his torn army-surplus shirt.
âWith the looks Iâm getting,â he said quietly into the miniaturized microphone under the cloth, âyouâd think Iâd invaded the high colonic white shopping district of Palm Springs.â
âYouâre doing beautifully,â came the metallic voice over the tiny speaker sewn into the back of the agentâs collar. âWeâve got the place covered; weâll give you plenty of notice. That answering machineâs so jammed itâs sending out whistling smoke.â
âHow did you two lily boys get into that trap over there?â
âVery early this morning, so early no one noticed what we looked like.â
âI canât wait to watch you get out; itâs a needle condo if I ever saw one. Speaking of which, which we are in a way, are the cops on this beat alerted? Iâd hate like hell to get hauled in after growing this bristle on my face. It itches like crazy and my new wife of three weeks doesnât dig it.â
âYou should have stayed with the first one, buddy.â
âFunny little white boy. She didnât like the hours or the geography. Like in being away for weeks at a time playing games in Zimbabwe. Answer me, please?â
âThe blue coats have your description and the scenario. Youâre part of a federal bust, so theyâll leave you alone.⦠Hold it! Conversationâs over. This has to be our man; heâs got a telephone satchel strapped to his belt.⦠It is. Heâs heading for the doorway. Itâs all yours, Emperor Jones.â
âFunny little white boy.⦠Iâve got him and I can tell you now heâs a soft chocolate mousse. Heâs scared shitless to go into this palace.â
âWhich means heâs legitimate,â said the metallic voice in the collar. âThatâs good.â
âThatâs bad, junior,â countered the black agent instantly. âIf youâre right, he doesnât know anything, and the layers between him and the source will be as thick as Southern molasses.â
âOh? Then how do you read it?â
âOn-scene tech. I have to see the numbers when he programs them into his troubleshooter.â
âWhat the hell does that mean?â
âHe may be legit, but heâs also been frightened and not by the premises.â
âWhat does that mean?â
âItâs all over his face, man. He could enter in false numbers if he thinks heâs being followed or watched.â
âYouâve lost me, buddy.â
âHe has to duplicate the digits that correspond to the remote so the beeps can be relayedââ
âForget it,â said the voice from the back of the collar. âThat high-tech Iâm not. Besides, we got a man down at that company, Reco-something-or-other, now. Heâs waiting for you.â
âThen Iâve got work to do. Out, but keep me monitored.â The agent rose from the pavement and unsteadily made his way into the dilapidated building. The telephone repairman had reached the second floor, where he turned right in the narrow, filthy corridor; he had obviously been there before, as there was no hesitation, no checkin
g the barely legible numbers on the doors. Things were going to be a little easier, considered the CIA man, grateful because his assignment was beyond the purview of the Agency. Purview, shit, it was illegal.
The agent took the steps three at a time, his soft double-soled rubber shoes reducing the noise to the inevitable creaks of an old staircase. His back against the wall, he peered around the corner of the trash-filled hallway and watched the repairman insert three separate keys into three vertical locks, turning each in succession and entering the last door on the left. Things, reconsidered the agent, might not be so easy after all. The instant the man closed the door, he ran silently down the corridor and stood motionless, listening. Not wonderful, but not the worst, he thought as he heard the sound of only one lock being latched; the repairman was in a hurry. He placed his ear against the peeling paint of the door and held his breath, no echo from his lungs disturbing his hearing. Thirty seconds later he turned his head, exhaled, then took a deep breath and went back to the door. Although muffled, he heard the words clearly enough to piece together the meaning.
âCentral, this is Mike up on a Hundred Thirty-eighth Street, section twelve, machine sixteen. Is there another unit in this building, which I wouldnât believe if you said there was.â The following silence lasted perhaps twenty additional seconds. â⦠We donât, huh? Well, we got a frequency interference and it donât make no sense to me.⦠The what? Cable TV? Ainât no one in this neighborhood got the bread for that.⦠Oh, I gotcha, brother. Area cable. The drug boys live high, donât they? Their addresses may be shit, but inside them homes they got theyselves a pile of fancy crap.⦠So clear the line and reroute it. Iâll stay here until I get a clean signal, okay, brother?â
The agent again turned away from the door and again breathed, now in relief. He could leave without a confrontation; he had all he needed. One Hundred Thirty-eighth Street, section twelve, machine sixteen, and they knew the firm that installed the equipment. The Reco-Metropolitan Company, Sheridan Square, New York. The lily-whites could handle it from there. He walked back to the questionable staircase and lifted the collar of his army-surplus shirt. âIn case I get run over by a truck, hereâs the input. Are you reading me?â