Page 17 of The Bourne Imperative (Jason Bourne 10)
âCome in,â she said. âPlease.â
So, old thing.â Brick took a bite out of a colossal olive, sucked the pimiento between his lips like a second tongue, and chomped down, grinding it to orange paste. âI have a bit of work for you. Ready to have a go?â
âSure,â Peter said, ânowâs as good a time as any.â
âThatâs the lad.â
His heart rate spiked. He had no idea what Brick was going to ask of him, but it wasnât going to be good. In for a penny, in for a pound. And continuing that thought, Thereâs a damn good reason clichés were born.
The two men sat in the kitchen of Brickâs Virginia safe house. Between them were several plates of foodârounds of Italian salami and mortadella, crumbles of pecorino cheese, a deep-green glass container of olive oil, handfuls of crusty bread, a dish of olives, and four oversized bottles of dark Belgian beer, two of them empty. Dick Richards had left an hour ago with Bogs, who was taking him back to within three blocks of the Treadstone headquarters.
Wiping his lips, Brick rose and crossed to a drawer, rummaged around in it until he found what he wanted, then returned and sat across from Peter.
âSo,â Peter said, âwhere dâyou want me to go?â
âNowhere.â
âWhat?â
âYouâre staying right here.â Brick slid a small packet across the table.
âWhatâs this?â
âDouble-edged shaving blades.â
Peter picked up the packet and opened it. Sure enough, he discovered four double-edged blades. Plucking one up carefully, he said, âI canât remember when I last saw one of these.â
âYeah,â Brick said, âtheyâre from the last century.â
Peter laughed.
âNo joke, mate. Those thereâll take off your finger if you look at them wrong. Specially honed, they are.â
Peter dropped the blade back on top of the others. âI donât understand.â
âEasy-peasy, old thing. You stay here. You wait. Bogsâll be bringing someone here. Heâll make the intros, you chat the mark up, all niceânâlarky-like. Wait for Bogsâs signal, thenâ¦â He tilted his head toward the box of blades.
âWhat?â Peter felt the gorge rise into his throat. âYou mean you want me to kill this person with one of these blades?â
âUse all four of âem, if thatâs your cuppa.â
Peter swallowed. âI donât thinkââ
Brickâs torso shot forward, his hand imprisoning Peterâs right wrist in an iron grip. âI donât give a fuck what you think. Just get it done.â
âJesus.â Peter fought down the panic that threatened to undo him. Think fast, he berated himself. âWeâre isolated here. Wouldnât a gun be simpler?â
âAny shite-arse off the street can pop a bloke at close range.â He made a gun of his free hand, pushed the end of his finger-barrel into Peterâs temple. Then, in a dizzying shift, he broke out into a grin, letting go. âI want to see what youâre made of, old thing. See what lurks beneath, see if I can trust you to go on to biggerânâbetter.â He rose. âYou wanted to work for me. This is the path you chose. Your chance to grab the gold ring.â He winked, his grin evaporating. âDonât make a fucking hash of it, yeah?â
The one society Soraya did belong to was a weekly poker game at the mayorâs townhouse. But that, too, was something that bound her and Delia together: both women were naturally shy, but fiercely competitive, especially when it came to poker. Being ushered into the high-stakes game was one of Deliaâs great joys, and the incident that cemented her friendship with Soraya. It was at these intimate sessions, sitting around a green baize table with the elite of Washington politics, that Delia came to know Soraya best, and to sort out her feelings toward her. Gradually, the sexual charge resolved itself into the warm glow of a deep and abiding friendship. She realized that she was attracted to Soraya, but not as a lover. She soon discovered an acute relief that Soraya was neither gay nor bi. No possibility of complications to get in the way of their friendship. As for her friend, Soraya accepted Delia for who she was. For the first time in her life, Delia felt no hesitation, no shame, no obstinacy in revealing herself to another human being. She never felt judged, and in return she opened her heart and her mind to Soraya.
Now, having pulled up a chair, Delia sat beside her friendâs bed and took her hand. Sorayaâs eyes fluttered open. Her lids were blue, bruised-looking. In fact, she had the dazed look of someone who had just received a thorough thrashing.
âHello, Raya.â
âDeelââ
Tubes ran in and out of both arms. There was still a drain poking through the bandages on the side of her head. Hideous thing, Delia thought, trying to avert her gaze without being conspicuous about it. She failed.
âI guess you shouldnât show me a mirror.â Soraya tried for a smile and just missed. It looked lopsided, grotesque, and for a breathless moment Delia was terrified that the operation had done something to the nerves on that side of her face. Then, as Soraya started to talk more, she realized it was merely fatigue combined with the remnants of the anaesthesia.
âHow dâyou feel, Raya?â
âBad as I look. Maybe worse.â
Now it was Deliaâs turn to smile. âItâs fine now. Everythingâs fine.â
âHendricks told me the babyâs okay.â
Delia nodded. âThatâs right. No problems.â
Soraya sighed, visibly relaxing. âWhen can I get out of here, did the doctors say?â
Delia laughed. âWhy? You itching to get back to work already?â
âI have a job to do.â
Delia bent over her. âRight now your job is to get betterâfor yourself and for the baby.â She took her friendâs hand. âListen, Raya, I did somethingâ¦something you warned me not to do. But under the circumstances, I thoughtâ¦I told Charles about the baby.â
Soraya, overwhelmed with guilt, closed her eyes. But she knew she had to continue on down this path, step by ugly step.
âIâm sorry, Raya. Truly. But I was so afraid for you. I thought he had a right to know.â
âItâs your basic decency, Deel,â Soraya said. âI wasnât thinking clearly. I should have known.â In fact, she had known. She had been banking on Deliaâs basic decency.
âWhereâs Charlie now?â
âHeâs been here for a while,â her friend said. âIâm kind of surprised heâs stayed so long.â
âDoes his wife know heâs here?â
Delia made a face. âAnn Ring is up on the Hill, engulfed day and night in her senatorial legislative package on next yearâs Homeland Security procurements and expenditures.â
âHow dâyou know that?â
âI read Politico. They donât like her, either.â
âWho does, except her constituents? And, of course, The Beltway Journal.â
âNow youâre going to say you canât understand why he married her.â
Sorayaâs lips curled in the semblance of a smile. âShe married him. She was like an unstoppable force. He couldnât say no.â
âAny adult can say no and mean it, Raya.â
âBut not Charlie. He was bedazzled.â
âSenator Ring has that effect on a lot of conservative Republicans. She could do a spread in Playboy.â
âIf only,â Soraya said. âThen weâd all be rid of her.â
âI donât know. I have a feeling sheâd be able to somehow spin it to her advantage.â
Soraya laughed and squeezed her friendâs hand. âWhat would I do without you, Deel?â
Delia squeezed back. âHeaven only knows.â
âListen, Deel. I want to see Charlie.â
Deliaâs face clouded over. âRaya, do you think thatâs such a good idea?â
âItâs important. Iââ
All at once, her eyes opened wide, and she gasped. Her hand turned into a claw and her torso arched off the bed. The monitors to which she was hooked up started to go crazy. Delia started screaming
, and Thorne pushed open the door, his face white and drawn.
âWhat is it?â He looked from her to Soraya. âWhatâs happened?â
Delia could hear the soft slap of running rubber-soled shoes, voices raised in alarm, and she shouted, âHelp! She needs help! Now!â
Bourne and Rebeka silently entered the apartment she had rented on Sankt Eriksgatan in Kungsholmen. It was on the third floor, a block and a half from the water. Christien was waiting for them downstairs in the Volvo, along with a bodyguard-messenger from his office he had picked up on a prearranged street corner in Gamla Stan.
The pair went stealthily through all the rooms, checking the shallow closets, even under the bed, and behind the shower curtain. When they had assured themselves that the apartment was secure, Rebeka knelt down on the tile floor of the bathroom.
âHow much money have you stowed away?â Bourne said.
âI always establish a private vault in a secure location. Itâs not safe to carry so much on my person.â
Bourne, kneeling beside her, helped her carefully peel up two thin lines of grout, making certain they wouldnât crumble. This left an island tile, which she plucked up. Beneath lay a thick wad of billsâkrona, euros, American dollars.
Stuffing the wad into her pocket, she stood up. âCome on,â she said. âThis place gives me the creeps.â
They left the apartment, hurrying down the twilit stairs.
Ilan Halevy, code name the Babylonian, sat behind the wheel of the rental car he had parked in a strategic spot across the street and down the block from the entrance to the building in which Rebeka had rented her apartment. He had been waiting for hours, but for him those hours felt like minutes. It seemed as if he had been waiting for something to happen all his life. As a boy of ten, he had waited for his parents to divorce; as an adolescent of fourteen, he had waited for the bully he had put into the hospital to die; shortly afterward, he had found himself waiting for a train to take him out of the heartland of his country into the capital, the busiest, shiniest, most confusing place he could think of in which to get lost. He had killed again, but this time on his own terms. He chose wellâa wealthy American businessman, with whom he had struck up a conversation in the bar of the capitalâs poshest hotel. Now, with money in his pocket and an alternate identity, he shaved his beard, bought himself two sets of the best Western clothes from the Brioni boutique in the selfsame hotel, charging it to one of the businessmanâs credit cards. Before that moment, he had never before seen a credit card in the flesh, let alone handled one.
Soon after, he had slid quite naturally into Tel Avivâs criminal underbelly, making a name for himself quickly, ruthlessly, remorselessly. He supposed that was how he had come to the attention of Colonel Ben David. In any event, when Ben David had approached him, he was properly wary. But, in time, the two men established a relationship. Despite its undisputed closeness, no one would mistake it for friendship, especially the two principals.
Halevy sighed, longing for a shwarma whose delicious muttony grease he could dribble over a pile of Israeli couscous. He hated the Nordic countriesâSweden in particular. He hated their women, blond, blue-eyed, upholding the abhorrent Aryan ideal of the superman. There wasnât a Swedish runway model he didnât feel compelled to kick in her perfect, chiseled face. Give him a dark-skinned, dark-haired Amazon with Mediterranean features any day.
He was still enmeshed in these sour thoughts when he saw the late-model Volvo draw up to the building under his surveillance. Rebeka stepped out, crossing the pavement to the front door. He was about to emerge from his car when he saw Bourne striding after her.
Why the hell are they still together? he asked himself. Sheâs working with him? He ground his teeth in fury and sat back against the seat, forcing himself to wait. A familiar state for him, but sometimes, as now, it maintained its power to drive him crazy.
Along the E4 motorway, Christien turned off into a fast-food and gas lay-by. Since stopping off briefly at Rebekaâs apartment, they had been heading steadily north out of Gamla Stan, where Christien had picked them up. Bourne wondered where they were going.
Sovard, the bodyguard-messenger, handed a slim packet to his boss as soon as he had parked in a spot away from other cars.
âTwo tickets,â Christien said, handing the packet to Bourne.
Rebeka accepted hers with a certain reluctance. âWhere to?â
Fishing an iPad out of Sovardâs briefcase, Christien used the touch screen to access a video. âIn this instance, Swedenâs fetish for surveillance has served us well,â he observed.
The three of them watched a video that had obviously been quickly and roughly spliced together from several fixed CCTV cameras at various locations. In the beginning there was nothing of much interest: a swath of tarmac, overalled workers with ear-dampening headphones in small motorized carts heading back and forth. Arlanda airport.
Then, in a flurry of activity, a sudden backwash sent people scurrying. A moment later, the disguised SteelTrap copter descended into view, settling onto the ground. Almost immediately, the side door slid back and three men clambered down. One of them was clearly Harry Rowland. He hustled between the two men, moving left to right, vanishing out of camera range.
Jump-cut to another camera in another area of the airport. Three men were seen hustling across the tarmac. Though the view was from farther away, it was clear from their gait that these were the same three men from the SteelTrap copter. A long-range private jet was waiting for them. An immigration official checked their passports, stamped them, and nodded them up the mobile stairs.
Another jump-cut, this time a different angle on the same scene, closer up, probably through a telephoto lens, judging by the jittery images. One by one, the men bent down, disappearing into the belly of the jet.
A final jump-cut to the jet rolling down the runway, gathering speed. When it lifted off out of the frame, Christien stopped the video and stowed the iPad.
âThe pilot was required to file a flight plan with the tower at Arlanda. The plane is headed to Mexico City via Barcelona.â Christien smiled. âIt so happens that Maceo Encarnación, the president of SteelTrap, has his main residence in Mexico City.â
âNice work,â Bourne acknowledged.
Christien nodded. âYour AeroMexico flight will be following virtually the same route as the SteelTrap jet, but theyâll have a two-hour head start. Jason, I know you have a passport. Rebeka?â
âDonât leave home without it,â she said with a wry smile.
He nodded. âGood. Weâre set then.â
Putting the Volvo in gear, he rolled out of the lay-by, back onto the E4, heading for the Arlanda airport.
Sovard was on his way back from security, to which he had accompanied Christienâs VIP guests when a man asked him for the time. The moment he glanced at his watch, he felt an immense pain at the nape of his neck. As he pitched forward, the man caught him under the arms and half-dragged him into an airline lost-luggage office. It was currently unlighted and unmanned, beyond its hours of operation. In his current semi-paralyzed state, Sovard had no idea how he had gotten into the locked office. In any event, he was set down against a pile of suitcases, duffel bags, and backpacks. His equilibrium shot, he teetered. As he did so, he caught a glimpse of the livid scars on the manâs neck. When he tried to right himself, the man delivered a massive blow to both ears that caused Sovardâs eyes to roll up in their sockets. He felt sick, incapable of stringing two thoughts together, let alone trying to figure a way out of his imprisonment.
âI have little time.â The man touched Sovard on a nerve bundle behind his right ear, and a firework of pain exploded in Sovardâs brain. âWhere are they going?â
Sovard stared up at him blankly. A sliver of drool escaped the corner of his mouth, discolored his shirt. It was pinkish with his own blood.
âI will only ask you one more time.â Again, the Babylonian used only one finger, this time stopping the flow of blood through Sovardâs car
otid artery, then released it. âYou have ten seconds to answer my question. After that, I will bring you to the point of unconsciousness, over and over until you beg me to kill you. Frankly, Iâd like that, but Iâm thinking altruistically, Iâm thinking of you.â
He repeated the procedure twice more before Sovard lifted a trembling hand. Heâd had enough. The Babylonian leaned forward. Sovard opened his mouth and spoke two words.
Eighty minutes later, Bourne and Rebeka were settling into their first-class seats, accepting hot towels and flutes of champagne from the flight attendant.
âFeel nostalgic?â Bourne said, his gaze following the attendant back down the aisle.
Rebeka laughed. âNot at all. My life as a flight attendant seems like a lifetime ago.â
Bourne stared out the window as the crew made its last-minute preparations, then they strapped themselves in. The massive engines revved as the jet taxied toward the head of the runway. Over the intercom the captain announced that the plane was number two for takeoff.
âJason,â she said softly, âwhat are you thinking?â
It was the first time she had called him anything but Bourne. That made him turn toward her. There was a softnessâalmost a vulnerabilityâin her eyes he hadnât seen before.
âNothing.â
She watched him for a moment. âDo you ever ask yourself whether itâs time to get out?â
âGet out of what?â
âDonât do that. You know. The great game.â
âAnd do what?â
âFind an island in the sun, kick back, drink a beer, eat fresh-caught fish, make love, sleep.â
The plane slowed, turning onto the runway, strings of yellow lights running away in front of it.
âAnd then?â
âThen,â she said, âdo it all over again the next day.â
âYouâre joking.â