Page 29 of The Bourne Objective (Jason Bourne 8)
âMummy!â Scarlett leapt out of Bourneâs arms. âMummy, wake up!â
Bourne, noting the edge of terror in Scarlettâs voice, bent over Chrissie. Her pulse was good, her breathing even.
âSheâs okay, Scarlett.â He pinched Chrissieâs cheeks and her eyelids fluttered, then opened. She looked up into his face.
âScarlett.â
âSheâs right here, Chrissie.â
âCoven?â
âAdam flew through the window like Batman,â Scarlett said, proud of her new knowledge.
Chrissie frowned, noticing Bourneâs shirt. âAll that blood.â
Scarlett gripped her motherâs hand tightly. âItâs fake, Mum.â
âEverythingâs fine now,â Bourne said. âNo, donât move yet.â He scooped the glass off her as best he could. âAll right, unbutton your blouse.â But her fingers trembled too badly for her to grip the buttons properly.
âMy arms are killing me,â she said softly. She turned her head and smiled into her daughterâs face. âThank God youâre safe, sugarplum.â
Scarlett burst into fresh tears. Chrissie looked up at Bourne as he undid her buttons, shrugged her out of the blouse so that the last of the glass shards fell harmlessly on either side of her.
Then he lifted her up. When heâd swung her away from the bed, he put her down. As they stepped over Covenâs lifeless body, Chrissie shuddered. They stopped in the room she had been using to get sweaters for her and Scarlett, who, in a kind of delayed reaction, was leaking tears as she knelt to put on her sweater, which was yellow with a pattern of pink bunnies eating ice-cream cones. Halfway down the stairs she began to whimper.
Chrissie put an arm around her. âItâs all right, sugarplum. Everythingâs all right, Mum has you now,â she whispered over and over.
When they reached the ground floor, she said to Bourne, âCoven tied my father up, heâs here somewhere.â
Bourne found him, bound and gagged, in one of the kitchen closets. He was unconscious, either from the blow that caused the bruised swelling on his left temple or from the lack of oxygen. Bourne laid him on the kitchen floor and untied him. It was dark with the power still off.
âMy God, is he dead?â Chrissie said as she and Scarlett ran in.
âNo. His pulse is strong.â He took his finger away from the carotid and began to free him from his bonds.
Chrissie, her courage disintegrating at the sight of her father so helplessly incapacitated, began to soundlessly weep, but this caused Scarlett to sob, so she bit her lip, holding back more tears. She ran cold water in the sink, soaked a dishcloth, and filled up a glass. Crouching down beside her daughter, she placed the folded towel against Bourneâs cheek, which had started to swell and discolor.
Her father was thin, in the manner of many older people. His face was time-ravaged and somewhat lopsided, so that Bourne guessed heâd had a stroke not so long ago. Bourne shook him gently, and his eyelids fluttered open, his tongue ran around his dry lips.
âCan you sit him up?â Chrissie asked. âIâll get some water into him.â
Supporting her fatherâs back, Bourne sat him up slowly and carefully.
âDad, Dad?â
âWhere is that sonovabitch who hit me?â
âHeâs dead,â Bourne said.
âCome on, Dad, drink some water.â Chrissie was observing her father closely, fearful that at any moment he would pass out again. âItâll make you feel better.â
But the old man paid her no mind. Instead he was staring intently at Bourne. He licked his lips again and accepted the glass his daughter held for him. His knobby Adamâs apple bobbed spastically as he drank. He choked.
âEasy, Dad. Easy.â
His hand fluttered up, and she took the rim of the glass away from his mouth. Then his forefinger unfurled, pointing at Bourne.
âI know you.â His voice was like sandpaper over metal.
Bourne said, âI donât think so.â
âNo, no. You came into the Centre when I ran it. That was years ago, of course, when the Centre was in Old Boysâ School in George Street. But Iâll never forget it because I had to call an ex-colleague by the name of Basil Bayswater, a first-class wanker if ever there was one. He made a killing in the market and retired to Whitney. Spent all his time playing an ancient form of chess or something. Disgraceful waste of time.
âBut you.â His forefinger touched Bourneâs chest. âI never forget a face. Iâll be goddamned. Youâre Professor Webb. Thatâs it! David Webb!â
20
PETER MARKS RECEIVED the call from Bourne, brief and succinct, and with mixed feelings agreed to come to the address Bourne gave him. In a way, he was surprised that Bourne had called him back. On the other hand, Bourne didnât sound like himself, which caused Marks to wonder what sort of situation he was heading into. His relationship with Bourne was all one-way: through Soraya. He knew something of her history with Bourne, and heâd always wondered whether she had allowed her personal feelings to color her opinion of him.
The official CI line was, and had been for some time, that Bourneâs amnesia had made him unpredictable, and therefore dangerous. He was a rogue agent, loyal to no one and nothing, least of all CI. Though CI had been forced to use him in the past, it was always through deception or coercion, because there seemed no other way to control him. And not even those methods had proved to be a sure thing. Though Marks was personally aware of Bourneâs recent work bringing down Black River and stopping an incipient war with Iran, he knew next to nothing about the man. He was a complete enigma. It was futile to predict his responses in any given situation. And then there was the fact that many people who had tried to get close to him had died sudden and violent deaths. Happily, Soraya wasnât one of them, but Marks worried that it might be just a matter of time.
âBad news?â Don Fernando Hererra said.
âJust more of the same,â Marks said. âIâve a meeting to go to.â
They were seated in the living room of Diego Hererraâs home, surrounded by photos of him. Marks wondered whether being here was painful or comforting for the father.
âSeñor Hererra, before I go, is there anything more you can tell me about your godson? Do you know why he was at the Vesper Club last night, or why he might have stabbed Diego? What sort of relationship did they have?â
âNone, to answer your last question first.â
Hererra took out a cigarette and lit up but didnât seem interested in smoking it. His eyes roved the room, as if afraid to alight on any one thing for long. Marks suspected that he was nervous. About what?
Hererra contemplated Marks for some moments. The ash from his unsmoked cigarette toppled soundlessly to the carpet, where it lay between his feet. âDiego did not know of Ottavioâs existence, at least so far as his relationship to me was concerned.â
âThen why would Ottavio kill Diego?â
âHe wouldnât, therefore I refuse to believe that he did.â
Hererra told his driver to take Marks to the nearest rental-car office. He insisted that he and Marks exchange phone numbers. Those words of disbelief resounded in Marksâs head as he punched the address Bourne had given him into the GPS program on his PDA.
âI want to stay abreast of your investigation,â Hererra said. âYou promised me that you would find my sonâs killer. You should know that I take all promises made to me extremely seriously.â
Marks saw no reason to doubt him.
Fifteen minutes after he drove out of the rental-car lot, his PDA buzzed and he read a text message from Soraya. Within minutes Willard called him.
âProgress.â
âIâve made contact,â Marks said, meaning Bourne.
âYou know where he is?â A slight quickening of Willardâs voice.
âNot yet,â Marks lied. âBut I will soon.â
âGood, Iâm in time.â
âTime for what?â Marks asked.
âThe mission has changed somewhat. I need you to
facilitate a meeting between Bourne and Arkadin.â
Marks searched for hidden meaning in Willardâs voice. Something back home had changed. He hated being out of the loop and felt at an immediate disadvantage. âWhat about the ring?â
âAre you listening to me?â Willard snapped. âJust do as youâre ordered.â
Now Marks was certain that he was being denied access to a major development. He felt the old anger against the machinations of his superiors rising up in his throat like bile.
âHas Soraya Moore made contact?â Willard continued.
âYes. I just received the rearranged text message from her.â
âContact her,â Willard said. âCoordinate your efforts. You need to get the two men to the following place.â He gave Marks an address. âHow you do it is up to you, but I do have some information Arkadin should find interesting.â He told Marks what El-Arian had told him about the missing piece of information without which the file on the laptopâs hard drive was useless. âYou have seventy-two hours.â
âSeventy-twoâ?â But he was talking to dead air. The conversation was over.
At the next intersection, Marks checked the GPS map on his PDA to make sure that he hadnât missed a turn while talking with Willard. The morning had started out sunny, but clouds had rolled in, turning everything to shades of gray. Now a light drizzle blurred the edges of even the sharpest angles on buildings and signs.
The light turned green and, as he left the intersection behind, he noticed a white Ford moving into his lane right behind him. He knew a tail when he saw one. Heâd seen the white Ford before, several vehicles behind him, though now and again heâd lost sight of it behind a large produce truck. The Ford was occupied by only the driver, who wore dark glasses. Stepping on the accelerator, he sent his rental car lurching forward as he ground the gearshift up from first to third more quickly than the transmission could easily handle. There was a moment between second and third when the car hesitated, and he was afraid heâd stripped the gears. Then it leapt forward so fast he almost slammed into the rear end of the truck in front of him. He swerved to the right-hand lane, accelerating further as the white Ford slid in behind him.
He was in a section of London dense with traffic, boutiques, and larger stores. A sign for an underground garage came up so fast he had to swerve into its entrance at the last possible instant. He scraped the front left fender on the concrete wall, then corrected and hurtled down the ramp into the neon-lit concrete cavern.
He pulled into a parking spot that was so tight, he had to roll down the window to slide out. By that time, he heard the squeal of tires and figured the white Ford was still hot on his trail. He saw the open stairwell next to the elevator, ducked into it just as a white car flashed by. The stairwell smelled of grease and urine. As he rushed up the stairs two and three at a time, he heard a car door slam and the fast slap of shoe soles against concrete, and then someone was running up the stairs behind him.
As he was about to whip around a corner, he came upon a homeless man, so drunk he had passed out. Bending over, Marks held his breath as he dragged the drunk up the stairs, placing him across the tread just around the corner. Retreating into shadow on the stairs above, Marks waited, breathing deeply and easily.
The sounds of pounding footsteps came closer, and Marks tensed himself into a half crouch. His tail raced around the corner and, as Marks had planned, didnât see the drunk until it was too late. As he stumbled, pitching forward, Marks leapt down the stairs, driving his knee into the top of the manâs head. The tail lurched backward, stumbling again over the drunk and sprawling onto his back.
Marks saw him pulling a Browning M1900 from beneath his jacket. Marks kicked it upward just before he fired a shot. The noise held and echoed so deafeningly in the confined space, the drunk opened his eyes and sat bolt upright. The man with the Browning grabbed the drunk by the collar and pressed the gunâs muzzle into the side of his head.
âYouâll come with me now.â He had a heavy accent, Middle Eastern perhaps. âOr I shoot his brains out.â He jerked the drunk so hard, spittle flew from his slack lips.
âOi, yer wanker!â the drunk shouted, completely confused. âPiss off!â
The gunman, as contemptuous as he was incensed, slammed the side of the drunkâs head with the barrel of the Browning. Marks launched himself across the gap. The heel of his hand made contact with the gunmanâs chin, shoved it hard upward, exposing his neck. While he wrestled with the gun hand, he drove his fist into the gunmanâs throat. The cartilage gave way and the gunman collapsed, gasping without getting oxygen into his system. His eyes were wide and rolling. He could only make animal gruntings, but soon enough even that ceased.
The drunk whirled with astonishing agility and kicked the gunman in the crotch. â âOw âbout that now, yer bleedinâ pisspot!â Then, muttering to himself, he stumbled down the stairs without a backward glance.
Quickly now Marks went through the gunmanâs pockets, but all he found was keys to the white Ford and a wad of money. No passport, no identification of any kind. He had dark skin, black curling hair, and a full beard. One thing for sure, Marks thought, heâs not CI. So who was he working for and why the hell was he following me? He wondered who could know he was here except for Willard and Oliver Liss.
Then he heard the whistle raised by foot police and knew he had to get out of there. Once more, he studied the dead man, wishing there was some identifier, like a tattoo orâ¦
Thatâs when he saw the gold ring on the third finger of his right hand and, stooping, worked it off. He hoped there might be a commemorative engraving on the inside.
There wasnât. There was something far more interesting.
Soraya saw Leonid Arkadin again in the lone marina restaurant. Or, rather, he must have been searching for her, because engrossed in her fiery shrimp and yellow rice she didnât see him enter. Her waiter brought her a drinkâa tequini, he saidâfrom the man at the bar. Soraya glanced up, and of course it was Arkadin. She looked into his eyes as she picked up the martini glass. She smiled. That was all the encouragement he needed.
âYouâre persistent, Iâll give you that,â she said when heâd sauntered over.
âIf I were your lover, I wouldnât let you eat dinner alone.â
âMy ex pool boy? I sent him packing.â
He laughed and gestured to the booth in which she sat. âMay I?â
âIâd prefer you didnât.â
He sat down anyway and put his drink on the table, as if marking out his territory. âIf you let me order, Iâll pay for your dinner.â
âI donât need you to pay for my dinner,â she said flatly.
âNeed has nothing to do with it.â He lifted his hand and the waiter glided over. âIâll have steak, bloody, and an order of tomatillos.â The waiter nodded and left.
Arkadin smiled, and Soraya was astonished at how genuine it seemed. There was a deep warmth to it that frightened her.
âMy name is Leonardo,â he said.
She snorted. âDonât be ridiculous. No one in Puerto Peñasco is named Leonardo.â
He seemed crestfallen, like a little boy caught with his hand in the cookie jar, and now she was beginning to make sense of his approach to women. She could see how magnetic he was, how compelling an impression he made, exuding the security of a powerful man with a softer core of vulnerability. What woman could resist that? She laughed silently to herself and felt better, as if at last she was standing on solid ground, in a place where she could confidently move forward with her assignment.
âYouâre right, of course,â Arkadin said. âItâs actually Leonard, just plain Leonard.â
âPenny.â She held out a hand, which he held briefly. âWhat are you doing in Puerto Peñasco, Leonard?â
âFishing, sport racing.â
âIn your cigarette.â
âYes.â
Soraya finished up her shrimp just as his steak and tomatillos arrived. The steak, bloody as ord
ered, was smothered in chilies. Arkadin dug in. He must have a cast-iron stomach, she thought.
âAnd you?â he said around bites.
âI came for the weather.â She pushed the tequini away from her.
âYou donât like it?â
âI donât drink alcohol.â
âAlcoholic?â
She laughed. âMuslim. Iâm Egyptian.â
âI apologize for sending you an inappropriate gift.â
âNo need.â She waved away his words. âYou couldnât have known.â Then she smiled. âBut youâre sweet.â
âHa! Sweet is one thing Iâm not.â
âNo?â She cocked her head. âWhat are you, then?â
He wiped the blood off his lips and sat back for a moment. âWell, to tell you the truth Iâm something of a hard-ass. My partners thought so, especially when I bought them out. So did my wife, for that matter.â
âSheâs also in the past?â
He nodded as he dug into his food again. âNearly a year now.â
âChildren?â
âAre you kidding?â
Arkadin certainly had a gift for spinning yarns, she thought appreciatively. âIâm not much of a nurturer, either,â she said, somewhat truthfully. âIâm entirely focused on my business.â
He asked her what that might be without looking up from his steak.
âImport-export,â she said. âTo and from North Africa.â
His head came up slowly, but very deliberately. She felt her heart beating against her rib cage. It was, she thought, like coaxing a shark onto the hook. She didnât want to make the slightest mistake now, and felt a little thrill pass through her. She was very close to the precipice, to the moment when her fictional self would fuse with her real self. This moment was why she chose to do what she did. It was why she hadnât walked away from Peter when heâd recruited her for the assignment, why she had set aside the demeaning aspect of what she was expected to do. None of that mattered. What mattered was standing a hairbreadth from the precipice. This precise moment was what she lived for, and Peter had known this long before she did.