Page 33 of The Bourne Objective (Jason Bourne 8)
It was 3 AM. He knew what was coming, which was why he had chosen not to run. A runner makes an excellent target as he leaves his own territory. He stumblesâand he dies. Essai did not intend to stumble. Instead he had prepared his bedroom for the inevitable, and he was willingâcontent evenâto remain in place until the enemy showed his face.
He heard the sound first. A tiny scratching, as if of mice, from the living room, in the direction of the front door. The sound very quickly ceased, but he knew the enemy must have picked the lock on his door, because someone was in the apartment. Still, he did not move. There was no reason to move. He cast his gaze on the bed, where a lump under the covers revealed to his enemyâs eyes the presence of a sleeping body.
The quality of the darkness changed, deepening, becoming thicker, dense with the pulse of another human being. Essaiâs focus narrowed even more. His enemy, now in the kill zone, bent over the bed.
Essai felt the motion as a stirring of the air as his enemy drew out a dagger and plunged it into the figure sleeping in the bed. At once the plastic skin punctured, spraying the would-be killer with a geyser of battery acid with which Essai had filled the inflatable sex toy.
His enemy reacted in predictable fashion by falling backward, limbs pinwheeling. On the floor he tried and failed to wipe the acid off his face, neck, and chest. This action only served to smear the acid over more of his face, neck, and chest. He gasped, but because the acid was eating his lips and tongue he could not get out any words or even a scream. A nightmare scenario for him, Essai thought, as he rose from the chair at last.
Kneeling over the enemyâthe man Severus Domna had sent to kill him for his disloyaltyâhe smiled the smile of the just, the righteous in Allahâs beneficent eyes, and putting a forefinger against his lips he whispered, âShhhhh,â so low that only he and his enemy could hear.
Then he took up the assassinâs dagger and picked his way to the doorway into the hall. Pressing himself against the wall, he waited, emptying his mind of expectation. Into this divine emptiness came the most probable route the second man would take. He knew there was a second man, just as he knew his assassin would not use a pistol to kill him, because these were the two major methods of operation Severus Domna employed: stealth and backup. Methods he himself had used in going after Jason Bourne and the ring.
A diagonal shadow falling across the width of the hall bore out his thesis. Now he knew where the second assassin was, or rather had been, because he was on the move. His compatriot had had enough time to effect the kill, and now he was closing the gap between them to determine if anything was amiss.
Something certainly was amiss, a fact confirmed to him as the dagger, thrown with great accuracy by Essai, penetrated his chest between two ribs and pierced his heart. He fell heavily, like a wildebeest taken down by a lion. Essai approached him, knelt, and determined there was no pulse, no life left. Then he returned to his bedroom, where the first assassin was writhing on the floor with ever-more-uncoordinated movements.
Snapping on a lamp, he studied the manâs face. He did not recognize him, but then he didnât expect to. Severus Domna would not have sent anyone he could identify on sight. Squatting down beside the man, he said, âMy friend, I pity you. I pity you because I have chosen not to end your life and therefore your suffering. Instead, I will leave you as you are.â
Pulling out a cell phone burner, he dialed a local number.
âYes?â Benjamin El-Arian said.
âDelivery for you to pick up,â Essai said.
âYou must be mistaken. I didnât order anything.â
Essai put the cell to the assassinâs mouth, and he made sounds like a cow in distress.
âWho is this?â
Something had changed in El-Arianâs voice, a febrile element that Essai, the cell to his ear again, was able to catch.
âI estimate you have thirty minutes before your assassin dies. His life is in your hands.â
Essai closed the cell and, standing, ground it to bits beneath his heel.
Then he addressed the assassin for the last time: âYou will tell Benjamin El-Arian what happened here, and then he will deal with you as he sees fit. Tell him that the same fate awaits anyone he sends after me. Thatâs all you need to do now. His timeâand yoursâis over.â
Moira, standing on the starboard side of the yacht, watched the exchange of infrared signals through the night glasses the captain had handed her moments before. She could see the cigarette boat lying to as the yacht came up on it. Moving her field of vision slightly, she saw two figures in the cigarette besides the signaler. A man and a woman. The man was almost certainly Arkadin, but who was the woman and why would he have someone else on board? Berengária had told her Arkadin came out to meet her boats with just a mate, an old Mexican named El Heraldo.
The captain continued to keep the yachtâs engines idling as it slid through the black waves on its own momentum. Now Moira could make out Arkadinâs face, and beside him wasâSoraya Moore!
She almost dropped the night glasses overboard. What the hell? she thought. For every plan there was a wrench that could jam up the works. Here was hers.
The quiet lapping of the water was all she heard as the cigarette came up alongside the yacht. A crewman tossed down a rope ladder; another manned the winch. Meanwhile two other crewmen were busy hauling up the cargo from belowdecks. Berengária had explained the routine in detail. A crate was loaded into the net to be winched down to the cigarette so Arkadin could inspect the contents.
As this was happening, Moira leaned over the rail, peering down at the people in the cigarette. Soraya saw her first, her mouth forming an O of silent surprise.
What the hell? she mouthed up to Moira, who had to laugh. Theyâd both had the same reaction on seeing each other.
Then Arkadin caught sight of her. Frowning, he climbed the ladder. The moment he swung aboard the yacht he drew out a Glock 9mm and aimed it at her midsection.
âWho the hell are you?â he said. âAnd what are you doing on board my boat?â
âItâs not your boat, it belongs to Berengária,â Moira said in Spanish.
Arkadinâs eyes narrowed. âAnd do you belong to Berengária also?â
âI belong to no one,â Moira said, âbut I am looking out for Berengáriaâs interests.â She had thought about the possible answers to his questions during the entire trip up the coast of Mexico. What it boiled down to was this: Arkadin was a man first, a homicidal criminal second.
âJust like a woman to send a woman,â Arkadin said, as disdainful as Roberto Corellos.
âBerengária is convinced you no longer trust her.â
âThis is true.â
âPerhaps she no longer trusts you.â
Arkadin gave her a dark look but said nothing.
âThis is a poor state of affairs,â Moira acknowledged. âAnd no way to run a business.â
âAnd how does the woman who does not own you suggest we proceed?â
âFor a start, you might lower the Glock,â Moira observed.
By this time Soraya had made her way up the ladder and now appeared, swinging her legs over the yachtâs brass railing. She seemed to size up the situation immediately, looking from Moira to Arkadin and back again.
âFuck you,â Arkadin said. âAnd fuck Berengária for sending you.â
âIf she had sent a man, the chances are good the two of you would have killed each other.â
âI would have killed him, certainly,â Arkadin said.
âSo sending a man would not have been the smart thing to do.â
Arkadin snorted. âFuck, weâre not in the kitchen.â He shook his head in disbelief. âYouâre not even armed.â
âTherefore, you wonât shoot me,â Moira said. âTherefore, you will be willing to listen when I talk, when I negotiate, when I propose a way to go forward without suspicion on either side.â
Arkadin watched her as a hawk watches a sparrow. Perhaps he no longer considered her
a threat, or possibly what she said had gotten through to him. In any event, he lowered the Glock and tucked it away at the small of his back.
Moira looked pointedly at Soraya. âBut I wonât talk or negotiate or propose anything with someone unfamiliar. Berengária told me about you and your boatman, El Heraldo, but now I see this woman here. I donât like surprises.â
âThat makes two of us.â Arkadin jerked his head in Sorayaâs direction. âA new partner, on probation. She doesnât work out, I put a hole in the back of her head.â
âJust like that.â
Arkadin walked to where Soraya stood and, cocking his thumb and forefinger as if they were a gun, he pressed its muzzle to the base of her skull. âBoom!â Then he turned and, smiling in the most charming manner, said, âSo speak your mind.â
âThere are too many partners,â Moira said bluntly.
This gave Arkadin pause. âFor myself,â he said at length, âI donât care for partners in the least.â He shrugged. âUnfortunately, theyâre a part of doing business. But if Berengária wants outâ¦â
âWe were thinking more of Corellos.â
âSheâs his lover.â
âThis is business,â Moira said. âWhat she did with Corellos was to keep the peace between them.â Now she shrugged. âWhat better weapon does she have?â
Arkadin seemed to look at her in a new light. âCorellos is very powerful.â
âCorellos is in prison.â
âI doubt for much longer.â
âWhich is why,â Moira said, âwe hit him now.â
âHit him?â
âKill, terminate, murder, call it what you like.â
Arkadin paused a moment, then burst out laughing. âWhere in the world did Berengária find you?â
Moira, glancing at Soraya, took a not-so-wild guess, thinking: Pretty much the same place you found your new partner.
Why would she do that?â Professor Atherton had his head in his hands. âWhy would Tracy tell anyone that she had a brother?â
âEspecially when that put her in Arkadinâs debt,â Chrissie added.
âShe did more than mention her brother,â Bourne said. âShe concocted an elaborate lie about him being alive and in debt over his head. Itâs as if she wanted Arkadin to have something on her.â
Chrissie shook her head. âBut that doesnât make sense.â
It did, Bourne thought, if she had been sent to get close to Arkadin. To report on his deals and his whereabouts, for example. He was not, however, about to speculate with these people.
âThat question can wait,â he said. âAfter the shots in the woods, we need to get out of here.â He turned to Professor Atherton. âI can carry Marks, can you maneuver on your own?â
The old man nodded curtly.
Chrissie gestured. âIâll help you, Dad.â
âSee to your daughter,â he said gruffly. âI can take care of myself.â
Chrissie packed up the first-aid kit. She carried it out the front door, holding Scarlettâs hand. Bourne picked Marks up, sliding him up onto his shoulder.
âLetâs go,â he said, herding the professor outside.
Chrissie took him around to his car, which was parked out back. Bourne packed Marks into the rental, which was miraculously unscathed. Chrissie pulled her fatherâs car around, and Scarlett clambered in.
Bourne approached her.
âWhat happens now?â she asked.
âYou go back to your life.â
âMy life.â Her laugh was uneasy. âMy lifeâand my familyâs lifeâwill never be the same.â
âMaybe thatâs a good thing.â
She nodded.
âIn any case, Iâm sorry.â
âDonât be.â She smiled wanly. âFor a moment, I was Tracy, and now I know that I never wanted to be like her, I just thought I did.â She put a hand on his arm, briefly. âIt was good she met you. You made her happy.â
âFor a night or two.â
âMore than many get in a lifetime.â Her hand dropped away. âTrace chose her life, it didnât choose her.â
Bourne nodded. Turning away, he peered into her car. When he tapped on the glass, Scarlett opened the window. He placed something in her hand and closed her fingers around it.
âThis is just between us,â Bourne said. âDonât look at it until youâre home and alone.â
She nodded solemnly.
âLetâs go,â Chrissie said, not looking at Bourne.
Scarlett raised her window. She said something Bourne couldnât hear. He put his hand flat against the window. On the other side, Scarlett pressed her hand over his.
Marks had left the key in the ignition and now Bourne started it up.
A combination of the noise and vibration as Bourne came out of the driveway and turned onto the road woke Marks from his stupor.
âWhere the hell am I?â he mumbled thickly.
âOn your way to London.â
Marks nodded in the manner of a drunk who is struggling to reacquaint himself with how the world works. âFuck, my leg hurts.â
âYou were shot, you lost some blood, but youâll be fine.â
âRight.â Then something in his face changed and a shudder passed through him as if the memories of recent events had resurfaced. He turned to Bourne. âListen, Iâm sorry. Iâve acted like a shit.â
Bourne said nothing as he continued to drive.
âI was sent out to find you.â
âI figured that out.â
Marks rubbed his eyes with his knuckles in an effort to clear his head of the last cobwebs. âI work for Treadstone now.â
Bourne pulled the car over to the side of the road. âSince when has Treadstone re-formed?â
âSince Willard found a backer.â
âAnd who might that be?â
âOliver Liss.â
Bourne had to laugh. âPoor Willard. Out of the frying pan.â
âThatâs it exactly.â Marksâs tone was mournful. âThe whole thingâs a total fuckup.â
âAnd youâre part of the fuckup.â
Marks sighed. âActually, Iâm hoping to be part of the solution.â
âReally? And how would that work?â
âLiss wants something you haveâa ring.â
Everyone wants the Dominion ring, Bourne thought, but he remained silent.
âI was supposed to get it from you.â
âIâd be curious to know how you were going to do that.â
âTo be honest, I donât have a clue,â Marks said, âand Iâm no longer interested in that.â
Bourne was silent.
Marks nodded. âYou have a right to be skeptical. But Iâm telling you the truth. Willard called just before I arrived at the house. He told me the mission had changed, that I was now to get you to Tineghir.â
âIn southeast Morocco.â
âOuarzazate, to be precise. Apparently, Arkadin is being brought there, too.â
Bourne was silent for so long Marks felt compelled to say, âWhat are you thinking?â
âThat Oliver Liss is no longer calling the shots at Treadstone.â
âWhat makes you say that?â
âLiss would no more order you to get me to Ouarzazate than he would open a vein.â He looked at Marks. âNo, Peter, somethingâs changed radically.â
âI felt that myself, but what?â Marks took out his PDA and went on a number of government news sites. âJesus,â he said at last, âLiss was taken into custody by the Department of Justice pending an investigation into his role in illegal Black River dealings.â He looked up. âBut he was cleared of those charges weeks ago.â
âI told you somethingâs radically changed,â Bourne said. âWillard is taking orders from another source.â
âIt has to be someone very high up the food chain to get the investigation reopened.â
Bourne nodded. âAnd now youâre as much in the dark as I am. It looks like your boss sold you down the river without even a secondâs
thought.â
âFrankly, this comes as no surprise.â Marks rubbed his leg. His pain-filled exhale was a whistle of protest.
âThereâs a doctor in London whoâll be discreet about the gunshot wound.â Bourne put the car in gear and, checking for traffic, pulled out onto the road. âJust so you know, Diego led me into a trap. There were enemies waiting for me at the club.â
âDid Moreno have to kill him?â
âWeâll never know now,â Bourne said. âBut Ottavio saved my life back there. He didnât deserve to be shot down like a dog.â
âWhich brings me to who the hell was firing at us.â
Bourne told him about Severus Domna and Jalal Essai without going into detail about Holly.
âI was attacked in London. I pulled an odd gold ring off the forefinger of my assailantâs right hand.â He fished around in his pockets. âShit, I seem to have lost it.â
âScarlett found it. I gave it to her as a souvenir,â Bourne said. âEvery member of Severus Domna carries one.â
âSo this is all about an old Treadstone mission.â Marks seemed to consider the implications for a moment. âDo you know why Alex Conklin wanted the laptop?â
âNo idea,â Bourne said, though he thought he did know now. Was there anyone besides Soraya and Moira he could trust? Though he knew Soraya and Peter were good friends he still didnât know whether he could trust Marks.
Marks shifted uncomfortably. âThereâs something I need to tell you. Iâm afraid I roped Soraya into joining Treadstone.â
Bourne knew that Typhon could not run successfully without her, so he assumed that Danziger was systematically dismantling the old CI and remaking it in the image of Bud Hallidayâs beloved NSA. Not that it was any of his concern. He hated and distrusted all espionage agencies. But he knew the good work that Typhon had accomplished under its original director, and later under Soraya. âWhat is Willard having her do?â