Page 27 of The Bourne Betrayal (Jason Bourne 5)
Fadi considered a moment. âAll right. Call your brother. Have him fetch Katya Veintrop and bring her to Miran Shah, where we will meet him. I think once Dr. Veintrop gets a look at what we can do to his wife, heâll become compliant again.â
Abbud ibn Aziz looked pointedly at his watch. âThe last flight took off hours ago. The next one isnât scheduled until this evening.â
Fadi sat rigid, his gaze unmoving. Once again, his consciousness had removed itself, Abbud ibn Aziz knew, back to the time when his father had been shot. His guilt over the incident was enormous. Many times, Abbud ibn Aziz had tried to counsel his leader and friend to keep his mind and energies in the present. But the incident had been complicated with the deep pain of betrayal, of murder. Fadiâs mother had never forgiven him for the death of her only daughter. Abbud ibn Azizâs mother would never have placed such a terrible burden on him. But then she was Islamic; Fadiâs mother was Christian, and this made all the difference. He himself had met Sarah ibn Ashef innumerable times, but heâd never given her a second thought until that night in Odessa. Fadi, on the other hand, was half English; who could fathom what he thought or felt about his sister, or why?
Abbud ibn Aziz felt the muscles of his abdomen tighten. He licked his lips and began the speech heâd been practicing.
âFadi, this plan of Karim al-Jamilâs has begun to worry me.â Fadi still said nothing; his gaze never wavered. Had he even heard Abbud ibn Azizâs words? Abbud ibn Aziz had to assume so. He continued: âFirst, the secretiveness. I ask you questions, you refuse to answer. I try to check security, but I am obstructed by you and your brother. Second, there is the extreme danger of it. If we are thwarted, the entire Dujja network will be threatened, the major source of our funding exposed.â
âWhy bring this up now?â Fadi had not moved, had not removed his gaze from the past. He sounded like a ghost, making Abbud ibn Aziz shudder.
âIt has been in my mind from the start. But now, I have discovered the identity of the woman Karim al-Jamil is seeing.â
âHis mistress,â Fadi said. âWhat of it?â
âYour father took an infidel as a mistress, Fadi. She became his wife.â
Fadiâs head swung around. His dark eyes were like those of a mongoose that has set its sights on a cobra. âYou go too far, Abbud ibn Aziz. You speak now of my mother.â
Abbud ibn Aziz had no choice but to shudder again. âI speak of Islam and of Christianity. Fadi, my friend, we live with the Christian occupation of our countries, the threat to our way of life. This is the battle we have vowed to fight, and to win. It is our cultural identity, our very essence that hangs in the balance.
âNow Karim al-Jamil sleeps with an infidel, plants his seed in her, confides in herâwho knows? If this were to become known among our people, they would rise up in anger, they would demand her death.â
Fadiâs face darkened. âIs this a threat I hear from your lips?â
âHow could you think that? I would never say a word.â
Fadi rose, his feet planted wide against the rocking of the sailboat, and looked down at his second. âYet you sneak around, spying on my brother. Now you speak to me of this, you hold it over my head.â
âMy friend, I seek only to protect you from the influence of the infidel. I know, though the others do not, that this plan was conceived by Karim al-Jamil. Your brother consorts with the enemy. I know, because you yourself placed me in the enemy citadel. I know how many distractions and corruptions Western culture provides. The stink of them turned my stomach. But there are others for whom that may not be so.â
âMy brother?â
âIt may be so, Fadi. For myself, I cannot say, since there is an impenetrable wall between him and me.â
Fadi shook his fists. âAh, now the truth comes out. You resent being kept in the dark, even though this is my brotherâs wish.â Leaning over, he landed a stinging blow to his secondâs face. âI know what this is about. You want to be elevated above the others. You crave knowledge, Abbud ibn Aziz, because knowledge is power, and more power is what youâre after.â
Abbud ibn Aziz, quaking inside, did not move, did not dare raise a hand to his inflamed cheek. He knew only too well that Fadi was quite capable of kicking him overboard, leaving him to drown without an ounce of remorse. Still, he had embarked on a course. If he failed to see it through, he would never forgive himself.
âFadi, if I show you a fistful of sand, what do you see?â
âYou ask me riddles now?â
âI see the world. I see the hand of Allah,â Abbud ibn Aziz hurried on. âThis is the tribal Arab in me. I was born and raised in the desert. The pure and magnificent desert. You and Karim al-Jamil were born and raised in a Western metropolis. Yes, you must know your enemy in order to defeat him, as you have rightly told me. But Fadi, answer me this: What happens when you begin to identify with the enemy? Isnât it possible that you become the enemy?â
Fadi rocked from side to side on the balls of his feet. He was close to erupting entirely. âYou dare implyââ
âI imply nothing, Fadi. Believe me. This is a matter of trustâof faith. If you do not trust me, if you do not have faith in me, turn me out now. I will go without another word. But we have known each other all our lives. I owe everything to you. As you strive to protect Karim al-Jamil, my wish is to protect you from all dangers, both within and without Dujja.â
âThen your obsession has made you mad.â
âThat possibility exists, certainly.â Abbud ibn Aziz sat as he had before, without cowering or wincing, which would surely induce Fadi to kick him into the water. âI say only that Karim al-Jamilâs self-imposed isolation has made him a force unto himself. You cannot argue with the point. Perhaps this is solely to your advantage, as you both believe. But I submit that the relationship has a serious drawback. You feed off each other. There is no intermediary, no third party to provide balance.â
Abbud ibn Aziz risked gaining his feet, slowly and carefully. âNow I give you a case in point. I beg you to ask yourself: Are your motives and Karim al-Jamilâs motives pure? You know the answer: They are not. They have been clouded, corrupted by your obsession with revenge. I say to you that you and Karim al-Jamil must forget Jason Bourne, forget what your father has become. He was a great man, no question. But his day is gone; yours has dawned. This is the way of life. To stand in its path is pure arrogance; you risk getting plowed under.
âThe future must be your focus, not the past. You must think of your people now. You are our father, our protector, our savior. Without you, we are dust in the wind, we are nothing. You are our shining star. But only if your motives are once again pure.â
For a long time, then, no sound issued from either of them. For his part, Abbud ibn Aziz felt as if an enormous weight had been lifted off his shoulders. He believed in his argument, every word of it. If this was to be the end of him, so be it. He would die knowing that he had fulfilled his duty to his leader and his friend.
Fadi, however, was no longer glaring at him, no longer aware of the sea or the lights of Odessa twinkling in the darkness. His gaze had turned inward again, his essence fleeing down into the depths, where, Abbud ibn Aziz suspectedâno, hoped with all his mightânot even Karim al-Jamil was allowed entry.
With all of CIâs computers down, all hell had broken loose within its headquarters complex. Every available member of the Signals and Codes Directorate had been ordered to tackle the problem of the computer virus. A third of them had taken Sentinelâthe CI firewallâoffline in order to run a series of level-three diagnostics. The rest of the agents were using hunt-and-destroy software to stalk through every vein and artery of the CI intranet. This software, designed by DARPA for CI, used an advanced heuristic algorithm, which meant that it was a problem-solving code. It changed, continually adapting depending on which form of virus it encountered.
The premises were in full lockdown modeâno one in or out. In the soundproof oval conference room across from the Old Man?
??s suite of offices, nine men sat around a burnished burlwood table. At each seat was a computer terminal, sunk into the tabletop, plus bottles of chilled water. The man to the DCIâs immediate left, the director of the Signals and Codes Directorate, was being continually updated on the progress of his feverish legions. These updates appeared on his own terminal, were cleaned upâmade intelligible to the nongeeks in the roomâand bloomed on one of half a dozen flat-panel screens affixed to the matte-black felt-clad walls.
âNothing leaks outside these walls,â the DCI said. Today he was feeling all of his sixty-eight years. âWhatâs happened here today remains here.â History pressed down on him with the weight of Atlasâs burden. One of these days, he knew, it was going to break his back. But not today. Not today, dammit!
âNothing has been compromised.â This from the director of S&C, scanning the raw data scrolling across his terminal. âThis virus, it appears, did not come from outside. The diagnostics on Sentinel have been completed. The firewall was doing its job, just as it was programmed to do. It was not breached. I say again, it was not breached.â
âThen what the hell happened?â the DCI barked. He was already thanking his lucky stars that the defense secretary would never know anything about this unmitigated disaster.
The S&C director lifted his shining, bald head. âAs far as we can determine at this stage, we were attacked from inside.â
âInside?â Karim al-Jamil said, incredulously. He was sitting at the Old Manâs right hand. âAre you saying we have a traitor inside CI?â
âIt would seem that way,â said Rob Batt, the chief of operations, most influential of the Sevenâas the directors were known internally.
âRob, I want you all over this angle ASAP,â the Old Man said. âConfirm it, or assure us weâre clean.â
âI can handle that,â Karim said, and immediately regretted it.
Rob Battâs snakelike gaze was turned in his direction. âDonât you have enough on your plate as it is, Martin?â he said softly.
The DCI cleared his throat. âMartin, I need you to concentrate all your resources on stopping Dujja.â The last thing he needed now, he thought sourly, was an interdirectorate turf war. He turned to the director of S&C. âI need an ETA for the computers to be restored.â
âCould be a day or more.â
âUnacceptable,â the Old Man snapped. âI need a solution so weâll be up and running within two hours.â
The S&C director scratched his bald dome. âWell, we could switch to the backup net. But that would entail distributing new access codes to everyone in the buildââ
âDo it!â The DCI said sharply. He slapped the table with the flat of his hand. âAll right, gentlemen. We all know what we have to do. Letâs get this shit off our shoes before it starts to stink!â
Bourne, slipping in and out of consciousness, was revisited by the events from his past that had been haunting him ever since Marieâs death.
⦠He is in Odessa, running. It is night; a chill mineral wind coming in off the Black Sea skids him along the cobbled street. She is in his armsâthe young woman leaking blood at a terrific rate. He sees the gunshot wound, knows she is going to die. Even as this thought comes to him, her eyes open. They are pale, the pupils dilated in pain. She is trying to see him in the darkness at the end of her life.
He can do nothing, nothing but carry her from the square where she was gunned down. Her mouth moves. She cannot project her voice. His ear is bloodied as he presses it to her open mouth.
Her voice, fragile as glass, reverberates against his eardrum, but what he hears is the sound of the sea rushing in, pulling back. Breath fails her. All that remains is the unsteady beat of his shoes against the cobblesâ¦
He falters, falls. He crawls until his back is against a slimy brick wall. He cannot relinquish his hold on the woman. Who is she? He stares down at her, trying to concentrate. If he can bring her back to life, he can ask her who she is. I could have saved her, he thinks in despair.
And now, in a flash, it is Marie heâs holding in his arms. The blood is gone, but life has not returned. Marie is dead. I could have saved her, he thinks in despairâ¦
He woke, crying for his lost love, for his lost life. âI should have saved you!â And all at once he knew why the fragment of his past returned at the moment of Marieâs death.
Guilt was crippling him. Guilt at not being there to save Marie. Then it must follow that heâd had a chance to save the bloody woman, and didnât.
Martin, a word.â
Karim al-Jamil turned to see Rob Batt watching him. The director of operations had not risen like everyone else in the conference room. Now only he and Karim remained in the darkened space.
Karim regarded him with a deliberately neutral expression. âAs you said, Rob, I have a great deal on my plate.â
Batt had hands like meat cleavers. The palms were unnaturally dark, as if they had been permanently stained by blood. He spread them, normally a conciliatory gestureâbut now there was something distinctly menacing in the display of raw animal power, as if he were a silverback gorilla preparing to charge.
âIndulge me. This wonât take but a minute.â
Karim went back, sat down at the table across from him. Batt was one of those people for whom an office environment was almost intolerable. He wore his suit as if it had bristles on the inside. His leathery, deeply scored, sun-crisped face could have come from either skiing in Gstaad or taking lives in the Afghani mountains. Karim found all this interesting, as he had spent so much time in fine tailor shops being fitted in fine Western clothes that a Savile Row suit felt as natural to him as a burnoose.
He steepled his fingers, stitched the ghost of a smile onto his face. âWhat can I do for you, Rob?â
âFrankly, Iâm a little concerned.â Batt apparently did not care to beat around the bush, but perhaps conversation wasnât his forte.
Karim, his heart beating fast, kept his tone polite. âIn what way?â
âWell, youâve had a helluva difficult time. To be honest, I felt strongly that you should take a few weeks offârelax, be evaluated by other doctors.â
âShrinks, you mean.â
Batt went on as if the other hadnât responded. âI was overruled by the DCI. He said your work was too valuableâespecially in this crisis.â His lips pulled back in what in someone else might have been a smile.
âBut then, just now, you wanted in on my investigation into whoever the hell it was set the virus loose on us.â Those snakelike eyes, black as volcanic soil, ran over Karim as if he were mentally frisking the DDCI. âYouâve never poached on my territory before. In fact, we made a pact never to poach.â
Karim said nothing. What if the statement was a trap? What if Lindros and Batt had never made such a pact?
âIâd like to know why youâve reneged,â Batt said. âIâd like to know why, in your current state, youâd want to take on even more work.â His voice had dropped in volume and, at the same time, had slowed like cooling honey. If he were an animal, heâd be circling Karim now, waiting for a moment to his advantage.
âApologies, Rob. I just wanted to help, thatâs all. There was noââ
Battâs head lunged forward so sharply that Karim had to keep himself in check, lest he recoil.
âSee, Iâm concerned about you, Martin.â Battâs lips, already thin, were compressed into bloodless lines. âBut unlike our peerless leader, who loves you like a son, who forgives you anything, my concern is more like that of an older brother for his younger sibling.â
Batt spread his enormous clublike hands on the table between them. âYou lived with the enemy, Martin. The enemy tried to fuck you up. I know it and you know it. You know how I know it? Do you?â
âIâm sure my test resultsââ
âFuck the test results,â Batt said shortly. âTest results are for academics, which you and I most certainly are not. Those boys are still debating the results; theyâll be in that hole till hell fr
eezes over. To boot, weâve been forced to take the opinion of Jason Bourne, a man who is at best unstable, at worst a menace to CI protocol and discipline. But heâs the one person who knows you best. Ironic, no?â He cocked his head. âWhy the hell do you maintain your relationship with him?â
âTake a look at his file,â Karim said. âBourne is more valuable to meâto usâthan a handful of your Ways and Means agents.â Me singing Jason Bourneâs praises, now thatâs irony, he thought.
Batt would not be deterred. âSee, itâs your behavior Iâm worried about, Martin. In some ways itâs fineâjust as it always was. But in other, smaller, more subtle waysâ¦â He shook his head. âWell, letâs just say it doesnât track. God knows you were always a reclusive sonovabitch. âToo good for the rest of us,â the other directorate chiefs said. Not me. I had you pegged. Youâre an idea tank; you have no need for the idle chitchat that passes for friendship in these hallways.â
Karim wondered whether the time had comeâa possibility he had, of course, factored into his planâwhen one of Lindrosâs colleagues would become suspicious. But heâd calculated that the probability of this was lowâhis time at CI was a matter of days, no more. And as Batt himself had said, Lindros had always been something of a loner. Despite the odds, here he was on the precipice of having to decide how to neutralize a directorate chief.
âIf youâve noticed anything erratic in my behavior, Iâm quite certain itâs due to the stress of the current situation. One thing Iâm a master of is compartmentalizing my life. I assure you that the past isnât an issue.â
There was silence for a moment. Karim had the impression of a very dangerous beast passing him by, so close he could smell its rank musk.
Batt nodded. âThen weâre done here, Martin.â He rose, extended his hand. âIâm glad we had this little heart-to-heart.â
As Karim walked out, he was grateful that he had planted convincing evidence as to the identity of the âtraitor.â Otherwise Battâs teeth would be sinking into the back of his neck.