Page 10 of The Bourne Objective (Jason Bourne 8)
Tracyâs flat was on the third floor, up flights of narrow, very steep stairs, the treads of which creaked beneath his weight now and again. He found it all the way in the rear and he recalled her saying, âThereâs a mews out back with a flowering pear tree that a pair of house martins nest in come spring.â He imagined the house martins would be nesting there right about now. It was a bittersweet thought.
The door opened a crack as he was warily approaching. The figure that revealed itself was backlit and for a moment he stood stock-still, his heart racing, because he was quite certain he was looking at Tracy. Tall, willowy, blond hair.
âYes? May I help you?â
Her eyes broke the spell; they were brown, not blue, and they werenât as large as Tracyâs. He felt himself breathe again. âMy name is Adam Stone. I was a friend of Tracyâs.â
âOh, yes, Trace told me about you.â She did not offer her hand. Her expression was carefully neutral. âIâm Chrissie Lincoln, Tracyâs sister.â
Still, she did not move out of the doorway. âShe met you on a flight to Madrid.â
âActually, the flight was from Madrid to Seville.â
âThatâs right.â Chrissie watched him warily. âTrace traveled so much, it was a good thing she liked flying.â
Bourne could see that he was being tested. âShe hated flying. She got sick on the flight five minutes after she introduced herself.â He waited for her to say something, then: âMay I come in? Iâd like to speak to you about Tracy.â
âI suppose.â She stood back, almost reluctantly.
He walked in and she closed the door behind him. Tracy had been right, the flat was tiny, but as beautiful as she had been. Furniture in butter yellows and deep oranges, crisp cream curtains framed each window, throw pillows here and there in polka dots, animal prints, and stripes added bright bits of color. He walked across the living room and into her bedroom.
âAre you looking for something in particular, Mr. Stone?â
âCall me Adam.â Somehow he knew there would be French doors out onto the back, and there was the pear tree in the mews. âIâm looking for the house martins.â
âI beg your pardon?â Her voice was pitched a bit higher, thinner, and her speech was more rapid than her sisterâs had been.
âTracy said that come spring a pair of house martins nested in that pear tree.â
She was at his shoulder. Her hair smelled of lemon. She wore an inexpensive cotton manâs shirt with the sleeves rolled up, revealing sun-browned arms, jeans, not the fashionable low-riding ones, but sturdy Leviâs with the cuffs rolled up, cheap flats, scuffed and worn at the heels, and was in a light sweat as if she had been cleaning or rooting around for some time. She wore no jewelry, not even a wedding band. And yet her last name was Lincoln, not Atherton.
âDo you see a sign of them?â she asked in a brittle voice.
âNo,â he said, turning away.
She frowned momentarily and remained silent for a long time.
âChrissie?â
When she didnât answer he went and got her a glass of cold water from the kitchen. She took it without comment and drank it slowly and methodically, as if it were medicine.
When she put the glass down, she said to him, âIâm afraid this was a mistake letting you in. Iâd prefer if you left.â
Bourne nodded. Heâd seen the flat; he didnât know what heâd expected to find, maybe it was nothing at all, save the scent of her, lingering long after she had left. The night they had shared in Khartoum was far more intimate than if they had made love, an act that despite its name could seem impersonal, even detached. The revelation that came later, that Tracy had been working for Leonid Arkadin, had come like a cold slap across the face. But in the weeks after her death heâd been haunted by the notion that something was wrong with that equation. Not that he doubted sheâd been in Arkadinâs employ, but deep down he couldnât escape the notion that the story wasnât that simple. It was altogether possible that heâd come here looking for some form of proof, a confirmation of his suspicion.
They had moved back to the front door now, and now Chrissie opened it for him. As he was about to step out, she said, âMr. Stoneââ
âAdam.â
She tried to smile and failed, her face seemed tight and pained. âDo you know what happened in Khartoum?â
Bourne hesitated. He stared out into the hallway, but what he was seeing was Tracyâs face, spattered with blood, as he cradled it in his lap.
âPlease. I know Iâve been less than hospitable. IâIâm not thinking straight, you see.â She stood back for him to reenter.
Bourne turned back one hand on the partially open door. âHer death was an accident.â
Chrissie looked at him fearfully, expectantly. âYou know this?â
âI was there.â
He saw the blood leave her face. She was staring at him fixedly, as if she couldnât look away, as if with a terrible clarity she saw an accident about to happen.
âWill you tell me how she died?â
âI donât think you want to hear the details.â
âYes,â she said. âI do. IâI need to know. She was my only sibling.â She shut the door and locked it and went over to an armchair, but she did not sit down. Rather, she stood behind it, staring into the middle distance. âIâve been in a kind of personal hell since I got the news. A sisterâs death, itâsâwell, itâs not like any other death. IâI canât explain it.â
Bourne watched her as she stood, her fingers dug into the high, arched back of the chair.
âShe was struck by shards of glass, one went through her. She bled out in minutes; there was nothing anyone could do.â
âPoor Trace.â She was gripping the chair back so hard, her knuckles had turned white. âI begged her not to go, just as I begged her not to take that cursed assignment.â
âWhat assignment?â
âThat bloody Goya.â
âWhy did she tell you about the Goya?â
âIt wasnât the painting, but the assignment. She said it was going to be her last. She wanted me to know that. Because she knew I disapproved of what she did, I suppose.â
She shuddered. âEvil thing, that Black Painting.â
âYou say that as if it were alive.â
She turned back to him. âIn a sense it was, because it was connected with that man.â
âArkadin.â
âShe never told me his name. From what I could gather he gave her extremely dangerous assignments, but he paid her so well she accepted them all, at least thatâs what she told me.â
âYou didnât believe her?â
âOh, I believed her, all right, when we were young we made a pact never to lie to each other.â Her hair was a shade darker than her sisterâs, and thicker, lush even, and her face was a bit less angular, softer, more open. It was also more careworn. She moved more quickly than Tracy, or perhaps it was that she moved in nervous bursts as if set off by a series of tiny interior explosions. âThe problem arose when we grew up. Iâm positive there were a great many things about her private life she refused to share.â
âYou didnât push it.â
âSecrecy was her choice,â she said defensively. âI honored her wishes.â
He followed her back into the bedroom. She stood looking around as if dazed, as if sheâd lost her sister and now inexplicably couldnât find her. Light slanting in through the window was splintered in lozenges and rectangles by the pear tree. It was mellow, toned, like the surface of a sepia print. She moved into one of those luminous geometric shapes now.
Her arms wound around her waist as if she were trying to hold in her emotions. âBut of one thing Iâm quite certain. That manâs a monster, sheâd never have worked for him voluntarily. Iâm sure he must have had something on her.â
An echo of his own suspicions. Maybe she had something to tell him after all. âCan you think of what it might be?â
âI already told you, Trace was the
most secretive person on earth.â
âSo there was nothing, no odd response to your questions, nothing of that nature.â
âNo.â Chrissie drew the word out into two syllables. âI mean there was one thing, but, well, itâs kind of ridiculous.â
âRidiculous? How so?â
âI remember one time we were together and, for once, there didnât seem to be anything to talk about after Iâd exhausted the news about me. I was bored with all that, anyway, it was old news to me. I guess I got a bit frustrated, because I said, laughing, you know, something about was she hiding someone up her sleeve.â
Bourne cocked his head. âAnd?â
âWell, I mean she didnât think it was funny, did she? She didnât laugh, thatâs for sure. Iâd meant a boyfriend or a husband but she said, quite fiercely, that I was the only family she had.â
âYou donât thinkââ
âNo, I donât,â Chrissie said emphatically. âThat wouldnât be like her at all. She didnât get on well with Mum and Dad, she was offended by everything about them. And they were deeply offended by her rebelliousness. I was the good daughter. I became a professor at Oxford, following in my fatherâs footsteps. But Trace⦠God only knows what they thought she was up to. Anyway, from the time she was thirteen or so they would fight like cats and dogs, until one day she stormed out of the house and never went back. No, I can tell you that she didnât want a family of her own.â
âAnd you find that sad.â
âNo,â Chrissie said, rather defiant. âI find it admirable.â
Well, at least we get to go after Bourne,â Marks said. âThatâs some consolation, heâs one half of the Treadstone equation, isnât he?â
âDonât be dense,â Willard snapped. âLiss didnât even bother to mention it as a peace offering because he knew Iâd laugh in his face. He knows Iâm the only person on earthâat least one under his controlâwho can get to Bourne without having his neck or back broken. No, he planned this out from the beginning, it was his whole reason for agreeing to back Treadstone in the first place, and I played right into his hand.â
âThatâs a pretty damn high price to pay for a ring,â Marks said. âIt must be very rare, costly, or important.â
âIâd like to have another look at that photo of the engraving,â Willard mused. âThatâs our best chance of finding out something about the ring, since Liss wonât tell us.â
They had been walking across the Mall, from the Washington Monument toward the Lincoln Memorial, hands in overcoat pockets, backs bowed against the wind, but at the last instant they had decided to make a detour to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. Along the way they had, each in his own way, checked for tags and tails. They didnât trust anyone, least of all Oliver Liss.
They stopped, and Willard stared at the wall, somber in its eternal shadows, sighed deeply, and closed his eyes. A small, secret smile crept across his lips with the stealth of a cat. âHe thinks heâs checkmated me, but Iâve got a queen he canât control.â
Marks shook his head. âI have no idea what youâre talking about.â
Willardâs eyes popped open. âSoraya Moore.â
Marks looked at him, alarmed. âOh, no.â
âI told you to try to recruit her and you did.â
A pair of vets in uniform, one pushing the other, who was in a wheelchair, came down the long, graceful ramp into the full majesty of the wall and stopped in front of the names. The vet in the wheelchair was without legs. He handed his friend a small bouquet and a miniature American flag on a wooden stand. His friend laid them at the foot of the wall where their compatriotsâ names were engraved for all time.
There was a glitter in Willardâs eyes as he turned away from the scene. âI have her first assignment: Find Leonid Arkadin.â
âYou said youâd lost him,â Marks pointed out. âWhere is she going to start looking?â
âThatâs her problem,â Willard said. âSheâs a smart girl, Iâve been following her career since she came to prominence at Typhon.â He smiled. âHave a little faith, Peter. Sheâs first-rate material, plus, sheâs got a built-in advantage over you or me. Sheâs a very good-looking femaleâhighly desirableâwhich means Arkadin will have her scent before she comes within a block of him.â
His brain was traveling at speed in its own peculiar orbit. âI want her with him, Peter. I want her attached to Arkadin, sheâs going to tell me what heâs doing and why heâs doing it.â
The two vetsâ heads were bowed, locked within their private memories as tourists and relatives of other fallen filed by, some touching names here and there. A Japanese tour leader, yellow pennant held high, gathered her photo-clicking flock to her.
Marks ran a hand through his hair. âYou canât expect meâWhat? Jesus, you want me to pimp her out?â
Willard looked like he was sucking on a lemon. âSince when did you become a Boy Scout? Not in CI, surely. The Old Man wouldâve had your heart for lunch.â
âSheâs a friend of mine, Fred. Longtime.â
âThere are no friends in this business, Peter, just the bitterly oppressed. I am Lissâs slave and you are mine and she is yours. Thatâs how it works.â
Marks looked as glum as Willard had at the end of their breakfast with Liss.
âYou will give her her assignment before we leave for the airportââ Willard glanced at his watch. ââwhich gives you less than six hours to prep for London and do the deed.â His smile was all teeth. âMore than enough time for a clever fellow like you, wouldnât you say?â
7
TIME FOR ME to go,â Bourne said. âWe should both get some sleep.â
âI donât want to go to sleep,â Chrissie said and, with a bleak smile, sang, âBad dreams in the night.â She cocked her head inquiringly. âKate Bush. Do you know her songs?â
âThatâs from âWuthering Heights,â isnât it?â
âYes, my daughter, Scarlett, is a big fan. Not much Kate Bush up at Oxford, I can tell you.â
It was after midnight. He had ventured out to an Indian restaurant, bought their dinner, and had taken it back to Tracyâs flat, where, after swallowing a couple of desultory bites, Chrissie watched him eat. Considering the violent events earlier, outside the bank, it was best if he didnât venture too far afield, even back to his hotel.
Watching her sitting across from him on the sofa, he recalled another fragment of the conversation heâd had with Tracy in Khartoum the night before she died:
âIn your mind you can be anyone, do anything. Everything is malleable, whereas in the real world, effecting changeâany changeâis so bloody difficult, the effort is wearying.â
âYou could adopt an entirely new identity,â he had replied, âone where effecting change is less difficult because now you re-create your own history.â
She had nodded. âYes, but that has its own pitfalls. No family, no friendsâunless, of course, you donât mind being absolutely isolated.â
âThe night before she died,â he said now, âshe told me something that led me to believe that in another time, another place she would have enjoyed having her own family.â
For a moment it seemed as if all the air had gone out of her. âWell, thatâs bloody irony for you.â Then, recovering somewhat, she went on, âYou know, the funny thing isâwell, itâs bloody tragic, when I think about it nowâI sometimes envied her. She wasnât tied down, had never married, she could go where she pleased, when she pleased, and she did. She was like a skyrocket, in that way, because of how she loved to walk on the wild side. It was as if danger wasâI donât knowâan aphrodisiac, or maybe it was more like the feeling people get when they ride a roller coaster, that sense of going so fast theyâre almost, but not quite, out of control.â She gave a bitter little laugh. âThe last time I rode a roller coaster I got sick to my stomach.â
Part of him genuinely felt for her, but another part, the professional part, the Bourne identity, in other words, was seeking a way to worm his w
ay farther in, a probe to see if there was anything else Chrissie could tell him about Tracy and her mysterious relationship with Leonid Arkadin. He saw her only as a means to an end, a stepping-stone, not a human being. He hated himself for feeling that way, and yet his dispassion was part of what made him successful. This was who he was, or at least what Treadstone had made of him. In any event, for good or for ill, he was damaged, trained, highly skilled. Just like Arkadin. And yet there was a gulf between themâan abyss so vast, Bourne could not see its bottom or even guess at its depth. He and Arkadin faced each other across this divide, invisible perhaps to anyone but themselves, searching for ways to destroy each other without destroying themselves in the process. There were times when he wondered whether that would be possible, whether to rid the world of one, both had to go.
âYou know what I wish?â She turned to him. âRemember that film Superman, not a great film, admittedly, but anyway, Lois Lane dies and Superman is so grief-stricken that he launches himself into the air. He flies around the earth, faster and faster, faster than the speed of sound, faster than the speed of light, so fast that he reverses time to the moment just before Lois will be killed, and he saves her.â Her eyes had settled on his face, but it was something else she was seeing. âI wish I were Superman.â
âYouâd turn back time and save Tracy.â
âIf I could. But unlike what the screenwriters allowed Superman to do in the film, if I couldnât, well, at least⦠at least Iâd understand what the bloody hell to do with this grief.â She tried to take a deep breath but succeeded only in choking on her tears. âI feel weighed down, as if I have an anchor tied to my back, or Tracyâs body, cold and stiff and⦠never moving ever again.â
âThat feeling will pass,â Bourne said.
âYes, I suppose it will, but what if I donât want it to?â