Page 12 of The Bourne Imperative (Jason Bourne 10)
Without another word, Peter led him out of the clubhouse and around the side of the pro shop, passing through the labyrinth of high boxwood to where Florin Popa lay.
Brick stopped dead in his tracks. âWhat the fuck?â
âDead as a doornail,â Peter observed pitilessly as Brick bent over Popaâs corpse. âMr. Brick, youâre clearly under threat. I think it would be prudent for us to get out of here.â
Brick, one hand on Popaâs shoulder, looked up at him. âBugger off, mate. Iâm not going anywhere with you.â
Peter nodded solemnly. âOkay, then. Iâll leave you to muddle through on your own.â
As he began to make his way back through the boxwood, Brick called out.
âWait a sec. Who the bloody hell are you and who do you work for?â
Bourne reached into the fire, grabbed a burning log, and hurled it at the intruder. The firebrand hissed and flickered, one end of it bursting into sparking fury when it struck the intruderâs shoulder. He half-spun, flung up one arm to bat the burning log away. Thus engaged, he was poorly prepared for Bourneâs hurtled body. Behind him, Bourne could hear a mad scramble as Rebeka dragged Rowland out of harmâs way.
The intruder chopped down on Bourneâs back, arching him backward, hauled him off, and delivered a blow to his solar plexus. He grabbed Bourne by the collar and threw him against the wall. Bourne ripped a print off the wall, smashing it as the intruder bull-rushed him. The glass shattered. Bourne, grasping a long, slender piece, and ignoring the cut in his palm as he grasped it, struck downward.
He had aimed for the intruderâs neck, but missed, the point of the glass shard burying itself, instead, in the intruderâs back. The momentum of the bull rush took both men down to the floor. Seemingly ignoring the glass shard, the intruder flicked out a knife, stabbing down with it. Bourne rolled away, and the knife point buried itself in a narrow gap between the ancient floorboards. Instead of wasting time trying to pry it free, the intruder simply let it go, freeing another weapon.
Rebeka recognized Ilan Halevy immediately. The moment Bourne engaged the Babylonian, she busied herself dragging Weaving back around the corner into the shadows of the kitchen cupboards.
With a whispered, âFor the love of God, stay put,â she drew a pair of scaling knives out of their wooden holder, slipped one into her waistband and hefted the other as she reappeared around the corner, just in time to see the Babylonian, a shard of glass protruding from his bloodstained back, stab brutally down with a folding dagger.
She moved swiftly and silently, the scaling knife held in front of her. It had a wicked-looking gut-hook on its top edge. If she could bury it deep enough and then jerk back on the hilt, she could do the Babylonian some serious damage.
Both his strength and his stamina were legendary. She knew he hardly felt the glass shard in his back, wouldnât feel the scaling knife, either, unless she was lucky enough to hit a vital organ, or skillful enough to bury the gut-hook in his viscera and then pull backward. The resulting gush of blood would give even him pause.
But despite her stealth, he sensed her attack, and at the last instant, turned his body sideways to her, in the process absorbing two heavy blows from Bourne. His left hand whipped out, his fingers like tentacles as they clasped her, twisting viciously, grinding the bones in her wrist against one another. The breath went out of her as flashes of light exploded behind her eyes. In that instant, the Babylonian wrenched the scaling knife from her and slashed it at her. Heâd meant to open her throat from side to side, but her reflexes saved her from the lethal blow. The blade slit open her sweater and shirt, opening a horizontal bright-red bloom across her chest, just above her breasts. She gasped and fell backward.
When Harry Rowlandâfor he was absolutely certain now that was his nameâheard the grunts, thumps, and hard exhalations of hand-to-hand combat, something clicked inside his brain. Completely ignoring Rebekaâs order, he slithered around the corner of the kitchen. In an instant, his measured, professional gaze took in the chaotic situation. Something peeled away. He felt as if, after having been cast adrift in a hazy dreamworld since awakening in the clinic in Stockholm, everything now had become sharp and clear.
Without further conscious thought, he scrambled to his feet, ran to the fireplace, and snatched up the fire tongs. Deftly avoiding Rebeka, he stepped to where Bourne and the intruder grappled in lethal hand-to-hand combat. He regarded the two of them, one after the other. Everything seemed to move in slow motion except his mind, which, having flickered to life, was now racing at a fever pitch. Memories were surfacing, flashing like schools of silvery fish lifted from the depths. They came in rapid succession, but now in their proper order. So many things unknown he now understood, like a thick curtain being pulled back, revealing, layer by layer, his life before being shot. Not everything was thereâthe tapestry still had holes, missing pieces, curious dead ends that puzzled him, fish slipping through his fingers, returning to the unfathomable deep. Some thoughts still didnât make sense, but certain imperatives did, and these drove him to decisive, galvanic action.
Lifting the fire tongs over his head, Harry Rowland brought them whistling down toward the top of Bourneâs skull.
Book Two
9
We live in a world where information is constantly flowing, through servers, networks, intranets, the Internet.â
Charles Thorne, typing notes on his iPad 3 as an app recorded every word Maceo Encarnación uttered, nodded.
âWe are fast becoming a cloud-culture,â Encarnación continued. âEach hour of each day the amount of information grows exponentially, and all of this expanding tsunami of informationâall of itâ?exists in some form or other that can be read and understood by outsidersâby overhearing, bugging, or hacking.â
Thorne, sitting with Encarnación in the offices of Politics As Usual, felt his mobile buzz against his thigh as it lay in his pocket. He ignored it, nodding encouragingly at Encarnación. It had taken him months of complex negotiations with a succession of underlings to get Encarnación, the president and CEO of SteelTrap, to agree to be interviewed. SteelTrap, the worldâs largest Internet security firm, was an anomaly in the world of businessâso large, so influential, so successful, yet privately held, therefore beholden to no one. Its internal structure was entirely opaque.
In the end, Thorne had lucked out. Encarnación, on his way from Paris to Mexico City, where part of his vast staff maintained one of his palatial residences, had agreed to the interview while his private jet was being refueled. He had insisted that no photos be taken of him. This hardly surprised Thorne since, as part of his research for the interview, he had discovered a curious fact: there were no photos of Encarnación anywhere online. He was a bear of a man, curious-looking owing to the fact that he was entirely hairless. Thorne found himself wondering if this was a deliberate deforestation or the result of a congenital condition. Another curious thing that he typed into his iPad: Encarnación had not once looked directly at him. His eyes were restless things, like caroming marbles, in constant motion.
âThese days,â Encarnación said, âno scrap of information, no matter how small or well hidden, is safe. All of it can be, and is, hacked. This is an indisputable fact. Every hour of every day, encrypted sites behind so-called firewalls are hacked. The latest and most devastating form of terrorism. To counteract these cybercrimes is something of a divine calling. This is my business. This is what I do.â He paused to absorb everything in the office with his colorless eyes. He held his sunglasses between his thumb and forefinger, as if ready to don them at a momentâs notice. âIn the Internet age, this is how fortunes are made.â
Thorneâs mobile buzzed again. Ignoring it, he said, âTell me, Mr. Encarnación, how you first became interested in Internet security.â
Encarnación produced a thin smile that Thorne found horribly disquieting. âI lost everything, all the money I had made trading in equities online. My account was hacked, my hard-earned money stolen.â
That mysterious smile again, signifying an apocalypse, as if Thorne were looking into the face of a large, hungry carnivore. âIt vanished into the colossal void of Russia.â
âAh, I see.â
âNo,â Encarnación said, âyou donât.â He rocked his sunglasses back and forth. âI fought my desire to go to the place that swallowed my money, to find the person or people who had stolen what was mine, because I knew that if I went to Russia it would eat me alive.â
Thorne pursed his lips as his mobile vibrated insistently for the third time. âWhat precisely do you mean?â
âI mean that if I had gone to Russia then, ignorant as I was, I would never have returned.â
Thorne could not help a small chuckle. âThat sounds a tad, oh, I donât know, melodramatic.â
âYes,â Encarnación replied. âYes, it does.â The smile returned, insistent as the buzzing of Thorneâs mobile. âAnd yet, it is the absolute truth. Have you been to Moscow, Mr. Thorne?â
Thorne did not want this to turn into an interrogation. âI have.â
âDone business there?â
âUh, no. But Iâve heardââ
âYouâve heard.â Encarnación threw his words back into his face. âIf you havenât been to Moscow, havenât engaged in business there, you have no idea.â He shook his completely bald head, which Thorne could not now help thinking of as a skull. âMoney, corruption, rotten politics, coercion. This is Moscow.â
âI suppose you could say that about almost any big city.â
Encarnaciónâs gaze made Thorne feel small and, worse, weak. âMoscow is different. Special. This is why. Having money is not nearly enough. These people with whom you are forced to do business want more from you. Do you know what that something is, Mr. Thorne? They want to be able to shine in the eyes of the president. They curry his favor so badly, so absolutely, that if negotiations do not go the way they want, they will not hesitate to have you shot in the back of the head, or, if their need to be amused is such, to have you poisoned with plutonium long after you have left the ratâs nest of Moscow behind.â
âPlutonium poisoning christ almighty!â Thorne wrote on his iPad.
Encarnación did not blink an eye. âI decided then and there to find a way to retrieve my money. The authorities were worse than useless; in those days, they had even less knowledge about hacking the Internet than they do now.â
Thorne felt as if he were in the presence of a reincarnated Baron Munchausen, the legendary teller of tall tales, except that he had the distinct impression that everything Encarnación was telling was the truth. âThen this is how SteelTrap came into being.â
âThatâs correct.â
âAnd that wasâ¦â
âSeven years ago.â
âDid you ever recover your money?â
Encarnaciónâs expression turned infernal. âWith interest.â
Thorne was about to ask for details when his mobile went off for the fourth time. He frowned, but at this point his curiosity overrode his annoyance. Excusing himself, he stepped out of the office as he pulled out his mobile. Four text messages from Delia Trane. He had met her several times. Heâd had dinner with her and Soraya twice, and heâd been grateful that she had agreed to be their cover for the evening.
Call me ASAP
His frown deepened. One text from her he could ignore, not four. Scrolling through his phonebook, he pressed in her number, put his mobile to his ear. She answered on the first ring.
âWhere are you?â
âWhere dâyou think I am?â His annoyance flared into renewed life. âDammit, Delia, Iâm in the middle ofââ
âSorayaâs in trouble.â
At the mention of her name, he looked around the corridor. People were striding by. Minions who knew nothing about the impending FBI investigation. He went into the empty conference room.
âCharles?â
She never called him Charlie, as Soraya did. He closed the door behind him. He was in darkness.
âWhat kind of trouble?â He had his own troubles to worry about. The last thing he needed wasâ
âSheâs in the hospital.â
His heart skipped a beat. âHospital?â he parroted stupidly. âWhy? Whatâs the matter?â
âShe was hurt in Paris. A concussion. Apparently, flying home made it worse.â
âWhat? Delia, for the love of Godâ!â
âShe has a subdural hematoma. Her brain is bleeding.â
Thorne felt the sudden need to sit down.
âCharles?â
âHowâ¦â His voicebox seemed to have shut down. He cleared his throat violently, swallowed convulsively. âHow bad is it?â
âBad enough that they needed to do an emergency procedure.â
âIs sheâ¦?â He couldnât say it.
âI donât know. Iâm at the Virginia Hospital Center in Arlington, but she isnât out of surgery yet.â
He found his thoughts drifting back to Maceo Encarnación, who even now was cooling his heels in his office, while Delia was further complicating his already overcomplicated life. He wanted to forgive her, but could not.
âThey have to relieve pressure in her brain, stop the bleeding,â Delia was saying now. âThe procedure is normally fairly straightforward, but in Sorayaâs case thereâs a complication.â
Christ, thereâs more? he thought. âWhatâ¦complication?â
âSheâs pregnant, Charles.â
Thorne started as if jolted by a surge of electricity. âWhat?â
âSheâs carrying your child.â
As Harry Rowland brought the fire tongs down toward the top of his head, Bourne raised an arm. His hand, grasping the fire tongs, redirected them down onto the intruderâs shoulder. Immediately, Bourne kicked out, connected with the intruderâs knee, then rolled away. Rowland struggled, refused to loosen his death grip on the fire tongs. Bourne connected with the point of his chin, snapping Rowlandâs head back, his teeth clacking together. But Rowland continued his grip on the impromptu weapon, and Bourne couldnât turn away. The intruderâs leg swept out, connecting with Bourneâs ankle, and he went down, pulling Rowland with him.
Rebeka figured she must have blacked out for a moment because when she roused herself, wiping blood off her face, she saw Bourne and Rowland tangled up with the Babylonian. Staggering to her feet, she ripped the tongs from Rowlandâs hand, grabbed him by the collar, and jerked him backward, away from the other two men.
âIdiot!â she spat. âWhat dâyou think youâre doing?â
He turned on her then and struck her soundly across the face. âYou have no fucking idea what youâve stepped into,â he said.
Recovering, she hit back, but he blocked her, and, at the same time, used the heel of his hand in three percussive blows that brought her to her knees.
âIt all comes down to this,â he said as he bent over her. âI remember everything now. Everything, do you understand?â
She tried to get to her feet, but he wouldnât let her. With his memory, he seemed to have regained all his strength and cunning. He was once again the man she had been with in that hot and sweaty hotel room in Lebanon, the man with whom she had been in a kind of competition, part cat-and-mouse, part shell game.
He twisted her wrist back painfully. âIn Dahr El Ahmar, you won. But here weâll have a different outcome.â
With Rowlandâs distracting weight lifted off him, Bourne returned his attention to the intruder, who, he had concluded, must be the Babylonian. And not a moment too soon. The Babylonian had wrapped a powerful arm around his neck, twisting viciously in an attempt to snap it. Bourne, turning his body in the direction of the twist, bought himself several seconds, enough time to drive his elbow sharply into the Babylonianâs kidney.
The Babylonian grunted, and Bourne, repeating the devastating blow, snaked free of the hold, brought a rough stone ashtray he snatched off a table down onto the back of the Babylonianâs head. Blood gushed, and the Babylonian fell onto his back.
The shard of glass half-buried there snapped off.
Bourne, thinking him finished, began to stand up. That was when the Babylonian arched up, slamming his forehead into Bourneâs. Dazed, Bourne went to his knees, and the Babylonian hauled him bodily toward the fire. The Babylonianâs strength was incredible, even though he was bleeding profusely, even though the kidney blows would have incapacitated anyone else.
Bourne felt the intense heat of the flames on the top of his head. The Babylonian meant to feed him into the fire. He was only inches away, sliding along the floor, ever closer. He tried several different strikes, all of which the Babylonian brushed away as ineffectual. Sparks flew before his eyes, and he knew he had no time left.
Reaching over his head, he grasped one of the burning logs, and, unmindful of the pain, jabbed the burning end into the Babylonianâs chest. Immediately, his clothes caught fire, the stench of charring material filling his nostrils.
Rolling away, Bourne was up and running. He saw Rebeka restraining Rowland in the kitchen. Pointing to the rear door, he ushered them through, out into the bitter nighttime cold, and into Rebekaâs boat. While Bourne scooped up handfuls of snow to soothe the blistered skin of his palms, she dragged Rowland on board, then started the engine. Bourne cast off the lines, and they raced off in a spray of icy black water, vanishing into the gathering gloom.
I donât work for anyone,â Peter said, lying smoothly. âAt least, not permanently.â
Brick stared at him. âYouâre freelance.â
âPrecisely.â
They were in Brickâs brand-new fire-red Audi A8. Peter was driving, taking the place of the late, unlamented Florin Popa. Brick had insisted on this arrangement so he could keep an eye on Peter, whom he still had little reason to trust. They had stopped at the pro shop so Peter could change back into his street clothes. He did this while Brick, leaning against the line of metal lockers, watched him like a pervert in a public restroom, even while he made a brief muffled call on his mobile.