Page 45 of The Bourne Sanction (Jason Bourne 6)
When you didnât show for your scheduled flight, I had a hunch youâd show up here.â Noah stared at her, completely ignoring Bourne. âI wonât allow you on the plane, Moira. Youâre no longer a part of this.â
âShe still works for NextGen, doesnât she?â Bourne said.
âWho is this?â Noah said, keeping his eyes on her.
âMy name is Jason Bourne.â
A slow smile crept over Noahâs face. âMoira, you didnât introduce us.â He turned to Bourne, stuck out his hand. âNoah Petersen.â
Bourne shook his hand. âJason Bourne.â
Keeping the same sly smile on his face, Noah said, âDo you know she lied to you, that she tried to recruit you to NextGen under false pretenses?â
His eyes flicked toward Moira, but he was disappointed to see neither shock nor outrage on her face.
âWhy would she do that?â Bourne said.
âBecause,â Moira said, âlike Noah here, I work for Black River, the private security firm. We were hired by NextGen to oversee security on the LNG terminal.â
It was Noah who registered shock. âMoira, thatâs enough. Youâre in violation of your contract.â
âIt doesnât matter, Noah. I quit Black River half an hour ago. Iâve been made chief of security at NextGen, so in point of fact itâs you who isnât welcome aboard this flight.â
Noah stood rigid as stone, until Bourne took a step toward him. Then he backed away, descending the flight of rolling stairs. Halfway down, he turned to her. âPity, Moira. I once had faith in you.â
She shook her head. âThe pity is that Black River has no conscience.â
Noah looked at her for a moment then turned, clattered down the rest of the stairs, and stalked off across the tarmac without seeing the Mercedes or the police car behind it.
Because it would make the least noise, Arkadin decided on the Mosquito. Hand curled around the grips, he got out of the police car, stalked to the driverâs side of the Mercedes. It was the driverâwho doubtless doubled as a bodyguardâhe had to dispense with first. Keeping his Mosquito out of sight, he rapped on the driverâs window with a bare knuckle.
When the driver slid the glass down, Arkadin shoved the Mosquito in his face and pulled the trigger. The driverâs head snapped back so hard the cervical vertebrae cracked. Pulling open the door, Arkadin shoved the corpse aside and knelt on the seat, facing the two men in the backseat. He recognized Sever from an old photograph when Icoupov had showed him the face of his enemy. He said, âWrong time, wrong place,â and shot Sever in the chest.
As he slumped over, Arkadin turned his attention to Icoupov. âYou didnât think you could escape me, Father, did you?â
Icoupovâwho, between the sudden attack and the unendurable pain in his shoulder, was going into delayed shockâsaid, âWhy do you call me father? Your father died a long time ago, Leonid Danilovich.â
âNo,â Arkadin said, âhe sits here before me like a wounded bird.â
âA wounded bird, yes.â With great effort, Icoupov opened his greatcoat, the lining of which was sopping wet with his blood. âYour paramour shot me before I shot her in self-defense.â
âThis is not a court of law. What matters is that sheâs dead.â Arkadin shoved the muzzle of the Mosquito under Icoupovâs chin, and tilted upward. âAnd you, Father, are still alive.â
âI donât understand you.â Icoupov swallowed hard. âI never did.â
âWhat was I ever to you, except a means to an end? I killed when you ordered me to. Why? Why did I do that, can you tell me?â
Icoupov said nothing, not knowing what he could say to save himself from judgment day.
âI did it because I was trained to do it,â Arkadin said. âThatâs why you sent me to America, to Washington, not to cure me of my homicidal rages, as you said, but to harness them for your use.â
âWhat of it?â Icoupov finally found his voice. âOf what other use were you? When I found you, you were close to taking your own life. I saved you, you ungrateful shit.â
âYou saved me so you could condemn me to this life, which, if I am any judge, is no life at all. I see I never really escaped Nizhny Tagil. I never will.â
Icoupov smiled, believing heâd gotten the measure of his protégé. âYou donât want to kill me, Leonid Danilovich. Iâm your only friend. Without me youâre nothing.â
âNothing is what I always was,â Arkadin said as he pulled the trigger. âNow youâre nothing, too.â
Then he got out of the Mercedes, walked out on the tarmac to where the NextGen personnel were almost finished off-loading the crates. Without being seen, he climbed onto the hoist. There he hunkered down just beneath the operatorâs cab, and after the last crate had been stowed aboard, when the NextGen loaders were exiting the cargo hold via the interior stairwell, he leapt aboard the plane, scrambled behind a stack of crates, and sat down, patient as death, while the doors closed, locking him in.
Bourne saw the German official coming and suspected there was something wrong: An Immigration officer had no business interrogating them now. Then he recognized the manâs face. He told Moira to get back inside the plane, then stood barring the door as the official mounted the stairs.
âI need to see everyoneâs passport,â the officer said as he approached Bourne.
âPassport checks have already been made, mein Herr.â
âNevertheless, another security scan must be made now.â The officer held out his hand. âYour passport, please. And then I will check the identity of everyone else aboard.â
âYou donât recognize me, mein Herr?â
âPlease.â The officer put his hand on the butt of his holstered Luger. âYou are obstructing official government business. Believe me, I will take you into custody unless you show me your passport and then move aside.â
âHereâs my passport, mein Herr.â Bourne opened it to the last page, pointed to a spot on the inside cover. âAnd here is where you placed an electronic tracking device.â
âWhat accusation is this? You have no proofââ
Bourne produced the broken bug. âI donât believe youâre here on official business. I think whoever instructed you to plant this on me is paying you to check these passports.â Bourne gripped the officerâs elbow. âLetâs stroll over to the commandant of Immigration and ask them if they sent you here.â
The officer drew himself up stiffly. âIâm not going anywhere with you. I have a job to do.â
âSo do I.â
As Bourne dragged him down the rolling stairs, the officer went for his gun.
Bourne dug his fingers into the nerve bundle just above the manâs elbow. âDraw it if you must,â Bourne said, âbut be prepared for the consequences.â
The officialâs frosty aloofness finally cracked, revealing the fear beneath. His round face was pallid and sweating.
âWhat do you want of me?â he said as they walked along the tarmac.
âTake me to your real employer.â
The officer had one last blast of bravado in him. âYou donât really think heâs here, do you?â
âAs a matter of fact I wasnât sure until you said that. Now I know he is.â Bourne shook the official. âNow take me to him.â
Defeated, the officer nodded bleakly. No doubt, he was contemplating his immediate future. At a quickened pace, he led Bourne around behind the 747. At that moment, the NextGen truck rumbled to life, heading away from the plane, back the way it had come. That was when Bourne saw the black Mercedes and a police car directly behind it.
âWhere did that police car come from?â The officer tore himself away from Bourne and broke into a run toward the parked cars.
Bourne, who saw the driverâs-side doors on both vehicles standing open, was at the officerâs heels. It was clear as they approached that no one was in the police car, but looking through the Mercedesâs door, they saw the driver, slumped over. It looked as if heâd been kicked to the passengerâs side of the seat./> Bourne pulled open the rear door, saw Icoupov with the top of his head blown off. Another man had fallen forward against the front seat rests. When Bourne pulled him gently backward, he saw that it was Dominic Specterâor Asher Severâand everything became clear to him. Beneath the public enmity, the two men were secret allies. This answered many questions, not the least of which was why everyone Bourne had spoken to about the Black Legion had a different opinion about who was a member and who wasnât.
Sever looked small and frail, old beyond his years. Heâd been shot in the chest with a .22. Bourne took his pulse, listened to his breathing. He was still alive.
âIâll call for an ambulance,â the officer said.
âDo what you have to do,â Bourne said as he scooped Sever up. âIâm taking this one with me.â
He left the Immigration officer to deal with the mess, crossing the tarmac and mounting the rolling stairs.
âLetâs get out of here,â he said as he laid Sever down across three seats.
âWhat happened to him?â Moira said with a gasp. âIs he alive or dead?â
Bourne knelt beside his old mentor. âHeâs still breathing.â As he began to rip off the professorâs shirt, he said to Moira. âGet us moving, okay? We need to get out of here now.â
Moira nodded. As she went up the aisle, she spoke to one of the flight attendants, who ran for the first-aid kit. The door to the cockpit was still open, and she gave the order for takeoff to the captain and the co-pilot.
Within five minutes the rolling stairs had been removed and the 747 was taxiing to the head of the runway. A moment later the control tower cleared it for takeoff. The brakes were let out, the engines revved up, and, with increasing velocity, the jet hurtled down the runway. Then it lifted off, its wheel retracted, flaps were adjusted, and it soared into a sky filled with the crimson and gold of the setting sun.
Forty-Three
IS HE DEAD?â Sever stared up at Bourne, who was cleaning his chest wound.
âYou mean Semion?â
âYes. Semion. Is he dead?â
âIcoupov and the driver, both.â
Bourne held Sever down while the alcohol burned off everything that could cause the wound to suppurate. No organs had been struck, but the injury must be extremely painful.
Bourne applied an antiseptic cream from a tube in the first-aid kit. âWho shot you?â
âArkadin.â Tears of pain rolled down Severâs cheeks. âFor some reason, heâs gone completely insane. Maybe he was always insane. I thought so anyway. Allah, that hurts!â He took several shallow breaths before he went on. âHe came out of nowhere. The driver said, âA police car has pulled up behind us.â The next thing I know heâs rolling down the window and a gun is fired point-blank in his face. Neither Semion nor I had time to think. There was Arkadin inside the car. He shot me, but Iâm certain it was Semion heâd come for.â
Intuiting what must have happened in Kirschâs apartment, Bourne said, âIcoupov killed his woman, Devra.â
Sever squeezed his eyes shut. He was having trouble breathing normally. âSo what? Arkadin never cared what happened to his women.â
âHe cared about this one,â Bourne said, applying a bandage.
Sever stared up at Bourne with an expression of disbelief. âThe odd thing was, I think I heard him call Semion âFather.â Semion didnât understand.â
âAnd now he never will.â
âStop your fussing; let me die, dammit!â Sever said crossly. âIt doesnât matter now whether I live or die.â
Bourne finished up.
âWhatâs done is done. Fate has been sealed; thereâs nothing you or anyone else can do to change it.â
Bourne sat on a seat opposite Sever. He was aware of Moira standing to one side, watching and listening. The professorâs betrayal only went to prove that you were never safe when you let personal feelings into your life.
âJason.â Severâs voice was weaker. âI never meant to deceive you.â
âYes, you did, Professor, thatâs all you know how to do.â
âI came to look upon you as a son.â
âLike Icoupov looked upon Arkadin.â
With an effort, Sever shook his head. âArkadin is insane. Perhaps they both were, perhaps their shared insanity is what drew them together.â
Bourne sat forward. âLet me ask you a question, Professor. Do you think youâre sane?â
âOf course Iâm sane.â
Severâs eyes held steady on Bourneâs, a challenge still, at this late stage.
For a moment, Bourne did nothing, then he rose and, together with Moira, walked forward toward the cockpit.
âItâs a long flight,â she said softly, âand you need your rest.â
âWe both do.â
They sat next to each other, silent for a long time. Occasionally, they heard Sever utter a soft moan. Otherwise, the drone of the engines conspired to lull them to sleep.
It was freezing in the baggage hold, but Arkadin didnât mind. The Nizhny Tagil winters had been brutal. It was during one of those winters that Mischa Tarkanian had found him, hiding out from the remnants of Stas Kuzinâs regime. Mischa, hard as a knife blade, had the heart of a poet. He told stories that were beautiful enough to be poems. Arkadin had been enchanted, if such a word could be ascribed to him. Mischaâs talent for storytelling had the power to take Arkadin far away from Nizhny Tagil, and when Mischa smuggled him out past the inner ring of smokestacks, past the outer ring of high-security prisons, his stories took Arkadin to places beyond Moscow, to lands beyond Russia. The stories gave Arkadin his first inkling of the world at large.
As he sat now, his back against a crate, knees drawn up to his chest in order to conserve warmth, he had good cause to think of Mischa. Icoupov had paid for killing Devra, now Bourne must pay for killing Mischa. But not just yet, Arkadin brooded, though his blood called out for revenge. If he killed Bourne now, Icoupovâs plan would succeed, and he couldnât allow that, otherwise his revenge against him would be incomplete.
Arkadin put his head back against the edge of the crate and closed his eyes. Revenge had become like one of Mischaâs poems, its meaning flowering open to surround him with a kind of ethereal beauty, the only form of beauty that registered on him, the only beauty that lasted. It was the glimpse of that promised beauty, the very prospect of it, that allowed him to sit patiently, curled between crates, waiting for his moment of revenge, his moment of inestimable beauty.
Bourne dreamed of the hell known as Nizhny Tagil as if heâd been born there, and when he awoke he knew Arkadin was near. Opening his eyes, he saw Moira staring at him.
âWhat do you feel about the professor?â she said, by which he suspected she meant, What do you feel about me?
âI think the years of obsession have driven him insane. I donât think he knows good from evil, right from wrong.â
âIs that why you didnât ask him why he embarked on this path to destruction?â
âIn a way,â Bourne said. âWhatever his answer would have been it wouldnât have made sense to us.â
âFanatics never make sense,â she said. âThatâs why theyâre so difficult to counteract. A rational response, which is always our choice, is rarely effective.â She cocked her head. âHe betrayed you, Jason. He nurtured your belief in him, and played on it.â
âIf you climb on a scorpionâs back youâve got to expect to get stung.â
âDonât you have a desire for revenge?â
âMaybe I should smother him in his sleep, or shoot him to death as Arkadin did to Semion Icoupov. Do you really expect that to make me feel better? Iâll exact my revenge by stopping the Black Legionâs attack.â
âYou sound so rational.â
âI donât feel rational, Moira.â
She took his meaning, and blood rushed to her cheeks. âI may have lied to you, Jason, but I didnât betray you. I could never do that.â She engaged his eyes. âThere were so many times in the last week wh
en I ached to tell you, but I had a duty to Black River.â
âDuty is something I understand, Moira.â
âUnderstanding is one thing, but will you forgive me?â
He put out his hand. âYou arenât a scorpion,â he said. âItâs not in your nature.â
She took his hand in hers, brought it up to her mouth, and pressed it to her cheek.
At that moment they heard Sever cry out, and they rose, went down the aisle to where he lay curled on his side like a small child afraid of the dark. Bourne knelt down, drew Sever gently onto his back to keep pressure off the wound.
The professor stared at Bourne, then, as Moira spoke to him, at her.
âWhy did you do it?â Moira said. âWhy attack the country youâd adopted as your own?â
Sever could not catch his breath. He swallowed convulsively. âYouâd never understand.â
âWhy donât you try me?â
Sever closed his eyes, as if to better visualize each word as it emerged from his mouth. âThe Muslim sect I belong to, that Semion belonged to, is very oldâancient even. It had its beginnings in North Africa.â He paused, already out of breath. âOur sect is very strict, we believe in a fundamentalism so devout it cannot be conveyed to infidels by any means. But I can tell you this: We cannot live in the modern world because the modern world violates every one of our laws. Therefore, it must be destroyed.
âNeverthelessâ¦â He licked his lips, and Bourne poured out some water, lifted his head, and allowed him to drink his fill. When he was finished, he continued. âI should never have tried to use you, Jason. Over the years there have been many disagreements between Semion and myselfâthis was the latest, the one that broke the proverbial camelâs back. He said youâd be trouble, and he was right. I thought I could manufacture a reality, that I could use you to convince the American security agencies we were going to attack New York City.â He emitted a dry, little laugh. âI lost sight of the central tenet of life, that reality canât be controlled, itâs too random, too chaotic. So you see it was I who was on a foolâs errand, Jason, not you.â