Page 14 of The Bourne Sanction (Jason Bourne 6)
Three women came in, chatting animatedly. The manager greeted them like old friends, showed them to a round table near the window, where they settled in.
âFirst, we have an immediate time frame, that is to say within a week, ten days at the outside. However, we have almost nothing on the target, except from the intercepts we know itâs large and complex, so weâre thinking a building. Again, because of our Muslim expertise we believe it will be a structure of both economic and symbolic importance.â
âBut no specific location?â
âEast Coast, most probably New York.â
âNothingâs crossed my desk, which means none of our sister agencies has a clue about this intel.â
âThatâs what Iâm telling you,â Soraya said. âThis is ours alone. Typhonâs. This is why we were created.â
âYou havenât yet told me why I shouldnât inform Homeland Security and mobilize CI.â
âBecause the source of this intel is entirely new. Do you seriously think HS or NSA would take our intel at its face value? Theyâd need corroborationâand A, they wouldnât get it from their own sources, and, B, their mucking about in the bush would jeopardize the inroads weâve made.â
âYouâre right about that,â Hart said. âTheyâre about as subtle as an elephant in Manhattan.â
Soraya hunched forward. âThe point is the group planning the attack is unknown to us. That means we donât know their motivation, their mind-set, their methodology.â
Two men came in, one after the other. They were dressed as civilians, but their military bearing gave them away. They were seated at separate tables on opposite sides of the restaurant.
âNSA,â Hart said.
Soraya frowned. âWhy would NSA be shadowing us?â
âIâll tell you in a minute. Letâs continue with whatâs most immediately pressing. You mean weâre dealing with a complete unknown, an unaffiliated terrorist organization that is capable of planning a large-scale attack? That sounds far-fetched.â
âImagine how itâll sound to your directorate heads. Plus, our operatives have determined that keeping our information secret is the only way to get more intel. The moment this group catches wind of our mobilizing theyâll postpone the operation for another time.â
âAssuming the current time frame is correct, could they abort or postpone at this late stage?â
âWe couldnât, thatâs for sure.â Soraya gave her a sardonic smile. âBut terrorist networks have no infrastructure or bureaucracy to slow them down, so who knows? Part of the difficulty in locating them and taking them down is their infinite flexibility. This superior methodology is what Martin wanted for Typhon. Thatâs my mandate.â
The waiter took their half-eaten salads away. A moment later, their main courses arrived. Hart asked for another bottle of mineral water. Her mouth was dry. Now she had NSA on one side, an off-the-grid terrorist organization about to carry out an attack on a large East Coast building on the other. Scylla and Charybdis. Either one could wreck her career at CI before it even began. She couldnât allow that to happen. She wouldnât.
âExcuse me a moment,â she said, getting up.
Soraya scanned the restaurant, but kept at least one of the agents in her peripheral vision. She saw him tense when the DCI went off to the ladiesâ room. He had risen and was making his way toward the rear when Hart returned. He reversed course, sat back down.
When the DCI had settled herself in her chair she looked Soraya in the eye. âSince you decided to deliver this intel here instead of the office I assume you have a specific idea as to how to proceed.â
âListen,â Soraya said, âwe have a red-hot situation, and we donât have enough intel to mobilize, let alone act. We have less than a week to find out everything on this terrorist organization based God only knows where with who knows how many members.
âThis isnât the time or place for the usual protocols. Theyâre not going to avail us anything.â She glanced down at her fish as if it were the last thing she wanted to put in her mouth. When her gaze rose again, she said, âWe need Jason Bourne to find this terrorist group. Weâll take care of the rest.â
Hart looked at her as if she were out of her mind. âOut of the question.â
âGiven the urgency of the mission,â Soraya said, âheâs the only one who has a chance of finding them and stopping them.â
âI wouldnât last a day in the job once it got out that I was using Jason Bourne.â
âOn the other hand,â Soraya said, âif you donât follow through on this intel, if this group executes their attack, youâll be out of CI before you can catch your breath.â
Hart sat back, produced a short laugh. âYou really are a piece of work. You want me to authorize the use of a rogue agentâa man whoâs unstable at best, who many powerful people in this organization feel is dangerous to CI in particularâfor a mission that could have dire consequences for this country, for the continuation of CI as you and I know it?â
A jolt of anxiety ran down Sorayaâs spine. âWait a minute, back that up. What do you mean the continuation of CI as we know it?â
Hart glanced from one of the NSA agents to the other. Then she expelled a deep breath and told Soraya everything that had happened from the moment sheâd been summoned into the Oval Office to meet with the president and had found herself confronting Luther LaValle and General Kendall.
âAfter I managed to prevail with the president, LaValle accosted me outside for a chat,â Hart concluded. âHe told me that if I didnât play nice with him heâd come after me with everything he has. He wants to take over CI, Soraya, wants it as part of his ever-enlarging intelligence services domain. But it isnât just LaValle weâre fighting, itâs his boss, the secretary of defense. The plan is Bud Hallidayâs through and through. Black River had some dealings with him when I was there, none of them pleasant. If he succeeds in bringing CI into the Pentagon fold, you can be sure the military will come in, ruin everything with their usual war-like mentality.â
âThen thereâs even more reason to let me bring Jason in for this.â Sorayaâs voice had taken on added urgency. âHeâll get the job done where a company of agents canât. Believe me, Iâve worked with him in the field twice. Whateverâs said about him within CI is totally false. Sure, lifers like Rob Batt hate his guts, why wouldnât they? Bourneâs got a freedom they wish they had. Plus, heâs got abilities they never dreamed of.â
âSoraya, itâs been implied in several evaluations that you once had an affair with Bourne. Please tell me the truthâI need to know if youâre being swayed by anything other than what you think will be best for the country and for CI.â
Soraya knew this was coming and was prepared. âI thought Martin had laid that office scuttlebutt to rest. Thereâs absolutely no truth to it. We became friends when I was chief of station in Odessa. That was a long time ago; he doesnât remember. When he came back last year to rescue Martin he had no idea who I was.â
âLast year you were in the field with him again.â
âWe work well together. Thatâs all,â Soraya said firmly.
Hart was still clandestinely watching the NSA agents. âEven if I thought what you were proposing would work, heâd never consent. From everything Iâve read and heard since coming to CI, he hates the organization.â
âTrue enough,â Soraya said. âBut once he understands the nature of the threat I think I can convince him to sign on one more time.â
Hart shook her head. âI donât know. Even talking to him is a damn huge gamble, one Iâm not sure Iâm willing to take.â
âDirector, if you donât seize this opportunity, youâll never be able to. Itâll be too late.â
Still, Hart was unsure which direction to take: the tried and true or the unorthodox. No, she thought, not unorthodox, insane.
âI think this place has outlived its usefulness,â she said abruptly. She signaled the waiter. âSoraya, I believe you have to powder your nose. And while you??
?re there, please call the Metro DC Police. Use the pay phone; itâs in working order, I checked. Tell Metro that there are two armed men at this restaurant. Then come right back to the table and be ready to move quickly.â
Soraya gave her a small conspiratorial smile, then rose, threading her way back to the ladiesâ room. The waiter approached the table, frowning.
âIs there something wrong with the brook trout, maâam?â
âItâs fine,â Hart said.
As the waiter gathered up the plates Hart took out five twenty-dollar bills, slipped them in his pocket. âYou see that man over there, the one with the wide face and football playerâs shoulders?â
âYes, maâam.â
âHow about you trip when you get to his table.â
âIf I do that,â the waiter said, âIâm liable to dump these brook trouts in his lap.â
âPrecisely,â Hart said with a winning smile.
âBut it could mean my job.â
âDonât worry.â Hart took out her ID, showed it to him. âIâll square things with your boss.â
The waiter nodded, turned away. Soraya reappeared, made her way to the table. Hart threw some bills onto their table but didnât stand up until the waiter bumped into a busboy. He staggered, the plates tipped. As the NSA shadow leapt up, Hart rose. Together she and Soraya walked to the door. The NSA shadow was berating the waiter, who was brushing him down with several napkins; everyone was looking, gesticulating. A couple of people closest to the accident were shouting their versions of what happened. Amid the escalating chaos, the second NSA shadow had gotten up to come to his compatriotâs aid, but when he saw his target heading toward him he changed his mind.
Hart and Soraya had reached the door, were stepping out into the street. The second NSA shadow began to follow them, but a pair of burly Metro cops burst into the restaurant detaining him. âHey! What about them!â he shouted at the two women.
Two more patrol cars screeched to a halt, cops raced out. Hart and Soraya already had their IDs out. The cops checked them.
âWeâre late for a meeting,â Hart said briskly and authoritatively. âNational security.â
The phrase was like open sesame. The cops waved them on.
âSweet,â Soraya said, impressed.
Hart nodded her head in acknowledgment, but her expression was grim. Winning such a small skirmish meant nothing to her, save a bit of immediate gratification. It was the war she had her gaze set on.
When they were several blocks away and had determined that they were clean of LaValleâs tags, Soraya said, âAt least let me set up a meet with Bourne so we can pick his brain.â
âI very much doubt this will work.â
âJason trusts me. Heâll do the right thing,â Soraya said with absolute conviction. âHe always does.â
Hart considered for some time. Scylla and Charybdis still loomed large in her thought process. Death by water or fire, which was it to be? But even now she didnât regret taking the directorâs position. If there was anything she was up for at this stage in her life it was a challenge. She couldnât imagine a bigger one than this.
âAs you no doubt know,â she said, âBourne wants to see the files on the conversations between Lindros and Moira Trevor.â She paused in order to judge Sorayaâs reaction to the woman Bourne was now linked with. âI agreed.â There wasnât even a tremor in Sorayaâs face. âIâm meeting him this evening at five,â she said slowly, as if still chewing the idea over. Then, all at once, she nodded decisively. âJoin me. Weâll hear his take on your intel then.â
Eleven
SPLENDIDLY DONE,â Specter said to Bourne. âI canât tell you how impressed I am with how you handled the situations at the zoo and at the hospital.â
âMikhail Tarkanian is dead,â Bourne said. âI never meant that to happen.â
âNevertheless it did.â Specterâs black eye wasnât quite as swollen, but it was beginning to turn lurid colors. âOnce again Iâm deeply in your debt, my dear Jason. Tarkanian was quite clearly the traitor. If not for you, he would have been the instigator of my torture and eventual death. Youâll pardon me if I donât grieve for him.â
The professor clapped Bourne on the back as the two men walked down to the weeping willow on Specterâs property. Out of the corner of his eye, Bourne could see several young men, armed with assault rifles, flanking them. Following the events of today, Bourne didnât begrudge the professor his armed guards. In fact, they made him feel better about leaving Specterâs side.
Under the nebula of delicate yellow branches the two men gazed out at the pond, its surface as perfectly flat as if it were a sheet of steel. A brace of skittish grackles lifted up from the willow, cawing angrily. Their feathers gleamed in brief rainbow hues as they banked away from the swiftly lowering sun.
âHow well do you know Moscow?â Specter asked. Bourne had told him what Tarkanian had said, and theyâd agreed that Bourne should start there in his search for Pyotrâs killer.
âWell enough. Iâve been there several times.â
âStill and all, Iâll have a friend, Lev Baronov, meet you at Sheremetyevo. Whatever you require, heâll provide. Including weapons.â
âI work alone,â Bourne said. âI donât want or need a partner.â
Specter nodded understandingly. âLev will be there for support only, I promise he wonât be a hindrance.â
The professor paused a moment. âWhat worries me, Jason, is your relationship with Ms. Trevor.â Turning so that he faced away from the house, he spoke more softly. âI have no intention of prying into your personal life, but if youâre going overseasââ
âWe both are. Sheâs off to Munich this evening,â Bourne said. âI appreciate your concern, but sheâs as tough a woman as Iâve come across. She can take care of herself.â
Specter nodded, clearly relieved. âAll right, then. Thereâs just the matter of the information on Icoupov.â He drew out a packet. âIn here are your plane tickets to Moscow, along with the documentation youâll need. Thereâs money waiting for you. Lev has the details as to which bank, the account number attached to the safe-deposit box, and a false identity. The account has been established in that name, not in yours.â
âThis took some planning.â
âI had it done last night, in the hope that youâd agree to go,â Specter said. âAll that remains is for us to take a picture of you for the passport.â
âAnd if Iâd said no?â
âSomeone else had already volunteered.â Specter smiled. âBut I had faith, Jason. And my faith was rewarded.â
They turned back and were heading for the house when the professor paused.
âOne more thing,â he said. âThe situation in Moscow vis-Ã -vis the grupperovkaâthe criminal familiesâis at one of its periodic boiling points. The Kazanskaya and the Azeri are vying for sole control of the drug trade. The stakes are extraordinarily highâin the billions of dollars. So donât get in their way. If there is any contact with you, I beg you not to engage them. Instead, turn the other cheek. Itâs the only way to survive there.â
âIâll remember that,â Bourne said, just as one of Specterâs men came hurrying out of the back of the house.
âA woman, Moira Trevor, is here to see Mr. Bourne,â he said in German-inflected Turkish.
Specter turned to Bourne, his eyebrows raised in either surprise or concern, if not both.
âI had no other choice,â Bourne said. âI need to see her before she leaves, and after what happened today I wasnât about to leave you until the last moment.â
Specterâs face cleared. âI appreciate that, Jason. Indeed, I do.â His hand swept up and away. âGo see your lady friend, and then weâll make our last preparations.â
Iâm on my way to the airport,â Moira said when Bourne met her in the hallway. âThe plane takes off in two hours.â She gave him all the pertinent information.
âIâm on another flight,â he said. âI have some work to
do for the professor.â
A flicker of disappointment crossed her face before vanishing in a smile. âYou have to do what you think is best for you.â
Bourne heard the slight distance in her voice, as if a glass partition had come down between them. âIâm out of the university. You were right about that.â
âAnother bit of good news.â
âMoira, I donât want my decision to cause any problems between us.â
âThat could never happen, Jason, I promise you.â She kissed him on the cheek. âI have some interviews lined up when I get to Munich, security people Iâve been able to contact through back channelsâtwo Germans, an Israeli, and a German Muslim, who may be the most promising of the lot.â
As two of Specterâs young men came through the door, Bourne took Moira into one of the two sitting rooms. A shipâs brass clock on the marble mantel chimed the change in watch.
âQuite a grand palace for the head of a university.â
âThe professor comes from money,â Bourne lied. âBut heâs private about it.â
âMy lips are sealed,â Moira said. âBy the way, whereâs he sending you?â
âMoscow. Some friends of his have gotten into a bit of trouble.â
âThe Russian mob?â
âSomething like that.â
Best that she believe the simplest explanation, Bourne thought. He watched the play of lamplight reveal her expression. He was certainly no stranger to duplicity, but his heart constricted at the thought that Moira might be playing him as she was suspected of playing Martin. Several times today he had considered bypassing the meet with the new DCI, but he had to admit to himself that seeing the questioned communication between her and Martin had become important to him. Once he saw the evidence heâd know how to proceed with Moira. He owed it to Martin to discover the truth about his relationship with her. Besides, it was no use fooling himself: He now had a personal stake in the situation. His newly revealed feelings for her complicated matters for everyone, not the least himself. Why was there a price to pay for every pleasure? he wondered bitterly. But now he stood committed; there was no turning back, either from Moscow or from discovering who Moira really was.