Page 24 of The Bourne Imperative (Jason Bourne 10)
Feeling only with his fingertips, he found the metal ring, painted the same color as the hull. If you didnât know it was there, you would never have seen it. But the Recursive was, first and foremost, a smugglerâs boat; it contained all manner of tricks and traps. This particular one ran along the starboard side just above the waterline. It was meant for plastic bags of china white or heroin, but it could, in an emergency, accommodate a man. The trouble was that it wasnât entirely watertight, not, at least, with the Aztecâs weight in it. This was why he had been reluctant to consider it. Being able to hold your breath for over nine minutes was one thing, but being trapped in a coffin-sized space while it slowly filled with seawater was quite another.
Still, entombment was the only chance Don Tulio had now, and he took it. Twisting the ring, he opened the hatch from the top and swung himself into the space. Water splashed in with him, filling the bottom. Quickly now, he closed the door and turned the ring into the locked position from the inside so it could not be seen.
Then, his heart beating fast, he began to pray to a god he had long since abandoned, except in name.
Forty minutes after he reached the ER, Peter was allowed to sit up while he was hydrated with fluids via an IV. He called Hendricks, waking him up.
âWhere the hell have you been?â the secretary said grumpily.
When Peter told him that he had infiltrated Core Energy, that its CEO had verbally implicated himself, that Dick Richards was secretly working for Tom Brick, and that he had followed leads to the thirty million aboard the Recursive, Hendricks sounded mollified. But only for a moment.
âI hate it when both my directors are out of circulation.â
Instantly, Peter was on the alert. âWhat are you talking about?â
âSorayaâs in the hospital,â the secretary said. âShe collapsed and had to have an emergency procedure.â
In his extreme agitation, Peter nearly tore out his IV. âHow is she?â
âStable, from the last update I got. Deliaâs with her. Sheâs barely left Sorayaâs side.â
âWhere is she?â
âSame hospital youâre in, but you donât sound as if youâre in any shapeââ
âIâm fine,â Peter snapped, a bit too aggressively. Even he realized that, albeit belatedly. âSorry, sir, this whole business at the marina has got me on edge.â
âRight. Keep me wired into that. The moment you ID the man who attacked you, I want to know, got it?â
âYessir.â
There was another pause. âAs for Richards, do you want to pick him up or let him run?â
Peter considered this question, among thoughts of Soraya. âGive me a day or two to see what heâs up to. Now that Iâve flown Brickâs coop, I want to see whatâs going to happen.â
âI wish we knew who he was bringing back for you to kill.â
âMe, too, boss. But it might have been no one. Brick is into playing games with your head. I had had enough of that, and there was this key lead to run down.â
âI hear you. But as of this moment we have to treat Richards as a threat.â
âAbsolutely, boss. But if we can use him to gain solid evidence of what Brick is really up to, I donât want to miss the chance.â
âFine.â Hendricks sounded reluctant. âBut any backup you needââ
âIâll call ASAP.â
âDo that. And, for the time being, Iâm ordering you up protection.â
âThatâs precisely what you wonât do, sir. With all due respect, I canât do my job with a shadow. Iâm not a desk jockey. I can handle myself.â
Silence on the other end of the line.
âSir?â
âPeter, for Godâs sake, take better care of yourself,â Hendricks said before he disconnected.
You have two choices,â the mortician said, âsleep on the floor or in one of these coffins.â
âNice silk,â Rebeka said, sliding her hand along the rim of a coffin.
The mortician grinned. âSoft as a cloud, too.â He was a pale, thin man with a sunken chest, a pencil mustache, and the bee-stung, ruddy lips of a woman. His hands looked as delicate as porcelain. He had lacquered nails. He told them his name was Diego de la Rivera.
âYour choice,â he said. âEither way, Iâll notify you when itâs time.â
âYouâre sure Maceo Encarnaciónâs people will call you,â Bourne said.
âMore than that,â de la Rivera said, âIâm sure Maceo Encarnación himself will call me.â
âHowâs that?â
De la Riveraâs lips twitched. âIâm married to his sister.â
This made Bourne uneasy. âIsnât blood thicker than water here?â
De la Riveraâs lips curled fully into a sneer. âMaceo Encarnación is not my blood. The man is made of money, but still he treats his sister like shit.â He spat onto the floor. âAnd me? He likes giving me business; he thinks it demeans me. âAll youâre interested in is my money,â he tells me, when what I want is for him to treat us like people. But, what? He doesnât even invite us to his home. So thereâs no blood here, not for me, not for my wife. He can go fuck himself for all I care.â He waved his hand. âSo whatever chaos you cause when youâre inside, Iâll fucking applaud.â
He went out then without another word, cutting the overhead lights as he left. The lamp on his desk was left burning as, it seemed, it always was, even when he wasnât there. All that remained was the deep, steady humming of the massive refrigeration units in the basement, rising through the concrete floor in spectral sound.
âDo you want to lie down?â Rebeka looked from Bourne, whose expression made her laugh, to the open coffin. âNeither do I.â
Bourne opened the detailed map of the city el Enterrador had given him, and, by the dim lamplight, began to study it. âAre we clear on what we need to do,â he said, âonce we get in?â
âRowland first, then Maceo Encarnación.â
Bourne shook his head. âRowland first, then we get out.â
âWhat about Encarnación?â
Bourne glanced up. He could see the lamp reflected in her eyes, a corona of light surrounding her pupils. âListen, Iâve been thinking,â he said softly. âIâm beginning to suspect that Jihad bis saifââ
âItâs hiding in plain sight.â
âReally?â
She nodded. âItâs part of Encarnaciónâs empire. It must be.â
He returned to studying the map of the labyrinthine city. âWhy do you say that?â
âWe arrived here, drove throughâ¦I listened to what Constanza Camargo said, and I knew.â
âYouâre wrong,â Bourne said. âJihad bis saif is a ghost. It doesnât exist.â
âBut what about what I overheard in Dahr El Ahmar?â
âDahr El Ahmar. Thatâs the key, isnât it?â Bourne looked up again. âIt was Colonel Ben David you overheard. You say he thought you were still unconscious, right?â
She nodded.
âWhat if he knew you were listening?â
She stared at him.
âThink this through, Rebeka. Ben David knew you brought me into Dahr El Ahmar, a top secret Mossad camp in a foreign country, harboring even more top secret research on a procedure parallel to SILEX, the separation of isotopes by laser excitation, in order to quickly and efficiently enrich nuclear material to weapons grade.
âNow, all of a sudden, he doesnât know whether to trust you. So he sets a trap. He discusses Jihad bis saif within your hearing. Come on, why would he do that when youâre within earshot? Would he really take the chance that you were unconscious? The hell he would. No, he talked about Jihad bis saif to see what you would do. And what did you do? You cut and ran. No wonder he sent the Babylonian after you.â
Rebeka shook her head. âNo. It canât be.â
âBut you know it is,â Bourne pressed her. âWe know Ben David better than most people. I think weâve both seen him at his worst.â
âThen what about Rowlan
d?â
âHe was sent by Maceo Encarnación,â Bourne said. âEncarnación is the one who wants me dead. You saw how his copter came after me in Stockholm.â
He could see her taking deep breaths, gathering herself. When she turned back to him, her eyes were glistening and a tiny tremor went through her like an arrow. âI thought I was so smart.â
âForget it. We all make mistakes.â
âThere was no one inside Mossad I could trust, and in the end Ben David betrayed me.â
âI imagine he sees the betrayal from a different perspective.â
She took another slow breath. âWhat really happened between you and him? Before, I mean.â
Bourne regarded her for a long time. She became acutely aware of the open coffins, pale silk linings spectral islets in the semi-darkness. They didnât look soft and comforting at all.
âIn the twilight of Mubarakâs reign in Egypt, his government lost control over the Sinai,â Bourne said. âBut Iâm sure you already know this.â
She nodded.
âThatâs where Ben David and I first met. A contingent of IDF was in there policing the local bedouin caravans, which were smuggling drugs, arms, and human slaves from Eritrea into Israel. Ben David was there with five of his Mossad agents, investigating a rumor that Mubarak or someone highly placed inside his government was behind the shipments, greasing the wheels with the bedouin chieftains. I was in the midst of my own investigation that peripherally involved the IDF. Suffice it to say that our goals clashed.â
âHe wouldnât have liked that.â
âHe didnât,â Bourne said. âIn typical Ben David fashion, he concocted a story about me and sold it to the IDF commander. As a result, the IDF went after me.â
âWhich accomplished the dual goal of getting you and the IDF off his back, giving him a free field to pursue his own objective without interference. Clever.â
âNot clever enough,â Bourne said. âI evaded the IDF by impersonating an arms dealer and joining one of the bedouin caravans. When Ben David and his unit attacked them, there I was.â
Rebeka indicated that they should sit on the floor. âWhat happened?â she said, when they were settled.
âBen David got the surprise of his life. According to the caravan leader, the shipments originated in Pakistan, Syria, and Russia, not with the Egyptian government.â
âYou believed him?â
Bourne nodded. âHe had no reason to lie. As far as he was concerned, I was there to supervise one of my own shipments. He received his payments from Russian arms dealers, like the one I was impersonating, and from terrorist cells with connections to the Colombian and Mexican cartels.â
His eyes glittered. âBen Davidâs intel was either incorrect or deliberate disinformation. Either way, he was wasting his and the Mossadâs time in the Sinai. Trouble was, Ben David refused to believe me. He ordered me executed, and I almost was.â
âBut you escaped.â
âWith the help of my newfound bedouin friends. Ben David was infuriated, vowing to hunt me down and kill me.â
âThatâs the end of the story?â
âUntil it picked up again when we flew into Dahr El Ahmar.â
âShit, I wish I had known.â
âWhat would you have done differently?â Bourne said. âYou needed immediate medical assistance. The Mossad camp was the closest safe haven.â
âI would have warned you.â
Bourne grunted. âSeeing Ben David again was warning enough.â
âHe took off half a mountaintop trying to bring you down,â she said. âBut then again, you scarred him for life.â
âHe got what he deserved.â
Her eyes studied the shadowed contours of his face. âHeâll never forgive you.â
âI donât want his forgiveness.â
âHeâll never stop hunting you.â
Bourne gave the hint of a smile. âHe isnât the first. He wonât be the last.â
âIt must beâ¦â She seemed to lose her voice, or her nerve.
âIt must be what?â
âA difficult life youâve chosen.â
âI think,â he said softly, âit chose me. Iâm an accidental passenger.â
She shook her head. âYouâre an agent of change.â
âMaybe just the center of a balancing act.â
âThatâs enoughâ¦more than enough, maybe, for one man.â
They sat silently then, their eyes locked, thinking their own thoughts, until they heard a sharp scrape. The overhead lights flickered on, revealing Diego de la Rivera.
âThe callâs come in,â he said. âItâs time.â
19
Youâre insane.â Martha Christiana stared up at Don Fernando. âYouâre telling me weâre alone on the plane?â
âYes.â
âThe pilot and navigator have parachuted out.â
âThree minutes ago. Itâs on autopilot.â
âAnd you plan to crash the planeââ
âCrash it, yes.â He slipped off a thick engraved gold ring with a pigeon-blood cabochon ruby in its center. âThe recovery team will find this. It is unique. It will be identified as mine.â
Martha, breathless, still had trouble believing this crazy plan. âBut theyâll find no body remains.â
âOh yes, they will.â
She followed him to the rear of the plane, where, when she saw stacked up three body bags, she recoiled. She stared at him. âThis is a joke, right?â
âUnzip the bags.â
He said this with such utter calmness that she felt a chill run down her spine. This was a side of him he had not revealed until now. Brushing past him, she leaned over the top body bag and, with a convulsive gesture, unzipped it. She found herself staring into the blank white face of a corpse.
âThree men,â Don Fernando said. âThe pilot, the navigator, and me. That is the way it will be reported.â
She whirled on him. âAnd youâll just what? Disappear from running Aguardiente Bancorp?â
âItâs a leap of faith,â he said, turning away. âCome now. Our time has run out.â He broke out a pair of parachutes and handed one to her. âOr do you want to die in the crash?â
âI canât believe this is happening.â
âBut it is.â He shrugged into his harness, tightening the bands across his chest. As if noticing her hesitation for the first time, he frowned. âAre you having second thoughts?â
âI donât understandâ¦â
âThen kill me now and have done with it. Youâre running out of time. Fulfill Maceo Encarnaciónâs commission. I doubt I can stop you.â
Her frown deepened. âHe said you wanted to take everything away from him.â
âHow much do you know about his empire?â
She shook her head.
âWell then, there is no reason for his comment to affect you.â
She thought about her meeting with Maceo Encarnación at the Place de la Concorde, encircled by constant traffic, the shouts and laughter of unknowing tourists. In the shadow of the guillotine and the Reign of Terror. âBut it did.â
âAnd soâ¦â He spread his hands wide. When she didnât answer, he stepped toward her, taking the parachute out of her hands and manipulating the straps over her shoulders. But when he began to cinch the wide strap across her waist, she gripped him.
âWait.â
Their eyes met.
âLast chance, Martha,â he said. âYou must decide now. Stay with Maceo Encarnación or take the first step into that new beginning you spoke about in Gibraltar.â
He removed her hands and cinched the waist strap tight. âIt seems to me that your past has been defined by following a series of men.â He led her to the door, put his hand on the huge metal bar that would unlock it. âContinue or change, Martha. Your choice is as simple as that.â
âYou call this a simple choice?â
âCall it what you will, itâs yours to make.â His voice softened. âNo one can hel
p you with this decision, Martha. I wouldnât even try.â
She took a breath. She thought about the lighthouse, her fatherâs grave, her mother lost in a world where Martha was still a child, still a part of her life. She stared into Don Fernandoâs eyes, wanting to read something there, but he was true to his word: he wasnât going to try to influence her. And all at once, she realized that he was the first man in her life who hadnât sought to manipulate her.
She nodded then and replaced his hand on the doorâs locking bar. âLet me,â she said.
He laughed and kissed her on both cheeks with great affection. âBest I show you something first.â
âYou said we were out of time.â
He guided her back up the aisle to the front of the plane, opened the door to the cockpit, and showed her the pilot and navigator alive and well in their seats.
âBetter strap in, boss,â the pilot said. âWeâll be landing in five minutes.â
Charles Thorne turned, restless in bed. The truth of the matter was he hated and feared Li Wan, yet the two men were bound together by the stream of secrets they passed back and forth as if through a delicate membrane. They were conduits; they needed each other. Thorne turned again, trying and failing to get comfortable.
Worse, by far, was that he envied Li Wan. He had been in love with Natasha Illion, the Israeli supermodel, Liâs inamorata. And he could swear that Li knew. Each time they were together, Li presented Natasha as if she were bathed in a follow spot, or so it seemed to him. And Natasha, perhaps being in on Liâs little running joke, always wore the most provocative designer outfitsânecklines down to her navel or mesh tops through which Thorne stole clandestine peeks at her small but perfect breasts, the nipples like cherry buds. Thorne moaned, imagining his mouth enclosing them.
He was certain that Li, and possibly Natasha as well, were laughing at him on their nights out, as if he were an animal they constantly taunted through the bars of his cage.
The light of the bedside clock penetrated his eyelids. Barely an hour since he had returned from his 4 AM rendezvous with Li at the restaurant in Chinatown. The General Tsoâs chicken lay in his stomach like a ball of wax, unmoving and indigestible.