Page 35 of The Bourne Imperative (Jason Bourne 10)
âYour father moves in a circle of light in his legitimate business dealings as CEO of SteelTrap. He moves in a circle of shadow with his illegitimate dealings with the cream of the drug lords and arms dealers.â
His fingertips caressed her bare shoulders beneath the slithery robe.
âBut I know a different Maceo Encarnación, the one who moves in darkness, the one who makes plans like a master chess player, the one who brings disparate elements together, often without their knowledge or consent, the one who is invaluable to me.â
Maricruz, breathing softly and evenly, lowered her head into the crook of his neck. âThere is no end to his cleverness, to his ruthlessness, to his ability to use anyone and everyone when it suits his purpose.â
Ouyang smiled. âYour father and I have no illusions about our relationship. We use each other. Itâs symbiotic. We accomplish so much more that way.â
âAnd Colonel Ben David?â
âA means to an end.â
âYou will make a lifelong enemy.â
Ouyang smiled as his hand encircled her breast. âThis is not an issue. He wonât survive.â
She drew back with a tiny indrawn breath. âBen David is a colonel in the Mossad. Do you really think you can get an assassin close enough to him?â
âI have already done my part,â Ouyang said, drawing her back to him. âYour father has arranged everything else.â
He smiled. âIt will be Jason Bourne who terminates Colonel Ben David with extreme prejudice.â
Sam Anderson was in a foul mood when he got off the phone with Secretary Hendricks. He felt that he had let Peter down. He was angry at himself for not being able to be in two places at once, for not delegating, for not ordering one of his subordinates to keep an eye on Dick Richards.
As he climbed into his car along with an agent named James, he cursed the evil gods that raged over Treadstone. The organization had been ill-fated ever since it had first come into existence. Sometimes, as now, it seemed to him that the current Treadstone staff was paying for the missteps and sins of its founders. There was no other interpretation of both co-directors being down at the same time.
As he raced through the Washington traffic, he nodded to James. âDo it now.â
James dialed a number on his mobile, then put the call on speakerphone. When a female voice, smoothly efficient as a robotâs, answered, he asked for Tom Brick.
âMay I ask who is calling?â the female voice asked.
James turned to Anderson, who nodded.
âHerb Davidoff, editor in chief of Politics As Usual.â
âJust a moment, please.â
There was a pause during which Anderson slewed the car around a lumbering truck. Half on the sidewalk, he hit the horn, scattering nearby pedestrians.
Take it easy, boss, James mouthed at him.
âMr. Davidoff?â The female voice had returned.
âHere.â
âIâm afraid Mr. Brick is currently unavailable.â
âPlease tell him that I need a quote from him for a front-page story,â James hurried over her. âTime is of the essence.â
âIâm afraid I canât, Mr. Davidoff. Iâll switch you to his voicemail. I assure you Mr. Brick accesses it several times a day.â
âThanks very much,â James said, terminating the connection. He glanced at Anderson. âThe house in Virginia?â He meant the house to which Peter had been taken by Tom Brick.
âDeploy our best COVSIC,â Anderson said as he put his foot to the accelerator. He meant a covert forensic team. James nodded and got on it.
Just then a call came in to Andersonâs mobile.
âHandle it yourself,â he barked. He was in no mood for office decisions.
âSir, itâs Michaelson. Iâm three blocks south of Founders Park in Virginia. The police just fished a body out of the Potomac. Itâs Dick Richards.â
âFuck, fuck, fuck,â Anderson said, even as he put the car into a controlled skid, making a sharp U-turn, and accelerated away.
Tell me why Colonel Ben David is at the nexus of the troikaâs plan,â Don Fernando said.
âIt started with SILEX.â Bourne shifted on the larger of the apartmentâs two sofas. âThe methodology draws on the extraordinary purity of laser light to selectively agitate uraniumâs enriched form. The needed isotope is identified, culled, and extracted. If it works, the process is a game-changer. Enriched uranium for nuclear power plants could be manufactured in a fraction of the time and at a fraction of the cost it now takes.
âThe problem,â Bourne went on, âis that SILEX would also make weapons-grade uranium easily available. Yellow-cake to nuclear warheads in a matter of days.â
âBut it doesnât work,â Don Fernando said.
Bourne nodded. âGE bought the rights to SILEX in 2006, but it has yet to perfect the process.â
He turned, staring out the window at the slow river traffic. He seemed always to be looking at people going about their peaceful daily lives while the world hurtled toward the precipice of war.
âSILEX was just the beginning. Three years ago, the Israelis set up an underground research facility in northwest Lebanon, just outside a small town known as Dahr El Ahmar. The facility was guarded by a small, select unit of Mossad agents under the command of Colonel Ben David.â
He turned back to Don Fernando. âIt was to Dahr El Ahmar that Rebeka guided me after we were both wounded in a firefight in Damascus six weeks ago. It was the closest safe haven, at least for her. She was feverish, very badly wounded. I imagine she wasnât thinking clearly. Bringing me to Dahr El Ahmar was a breach of security.
âColonel Ben David tried to have me killed. I managed to escape in the helo we flew in on, but as I left I caught a glimpse of the bunkered facility. Rebeka told me the rest. The Israeli scientists had a breakthrough. Their version of SILEX works.â
There was a deepening silence, into which, after a time, Don Fernando cleared his throat. âSo let me get this straight. Colonel Ben David has agreed to sell this process to Maceo Encarnación?â
âTo the Chinese,â Bourne said. âMy guess is Maceo Encarnación is a peripheral figure in all thisâmaybe heâs the broker, the one who put Colonel Ben David together with the Chinese.â
âThat could very well be.â Don Fernando tapped his teeth ruminatively with his forefinger. âAfter all, SteelTrap employs a good number of Israeli technicians. It sells its proprietary Internet security to the Israeli government, among many other huge clients.â
He shook his head. âWhat I donât understand is why Colonel Ben David would betray his country.â
âThirty million. Dangle enough money in front of a man like that, a military man, a disgruntled officer whoâs probably never made more than fifty thousand dollars a year, and the crystal ball clears.â
âHow did you come by that figure? Did you pull it out of the air?â
âSo to speak,â Bourne said, waggling his mobile.
Don Fernando made a whistling sound. âEven for Christien and me thatâs a trainload of money. I can only imagine that it would be irresistible to Ben David.â
He sat down heavily on the smaller sofa. âThe problem is weâre trapped here in my apartment. Nicodemo could take me down with a sniper rifle the minute I walk out my door.â
âHe wonât,â Bourne said. âNicodemo comes from a tradition of hands-on killing. Itâs a matter of honor. Killing you at a distance wonât satisfy him. He wants to take your head off.â
âCold comfort,â Don Fernando grunted.
âNevertheless, it works to our advantage.â Bourne, staring out the window again, lifted his view across the river to the Right Bank. âI need to bring Nicodemo into my territory.â
In the far distance, he could just make out the sugar-white dome of Sacre Coeur, atop Montmartre. âTell me, Don Fernando, when was the last time you went to the Moulin Rouge?â
Peter and Soraya looked at each other after Secretary Hendricks left his room. âWhy did you do that?â Peter said.
Soraya smiled and came and sat on the edge of his bed. âYouâre welcome.â
âSeriously?â he said.
She nodded. âI donât want to leave.â
âBecause of me.â
She shrugged. âIs that so terrible a reason?â
He studied her a moment, then took a drink of water from a plastic cup. He seemed to be debating something internally. âI have to ask myselfâ¦Soraya, youâve been lying to me.â
âWithholding some information. Thatâs not the same thing.â
âIf we canât trust each other, whatâs the point of either of us staying together?â
âOh, Peter.â She leaned over and kissed his cheek. âI trust you with my life. Itâs just thatâ¦â Her eyes cut away for a moment. âI didnât want anyone to know about my pregnancy. I figured it would jeopardize my position.â
âYou thought Iâd betray you to Hendricks?â
âNo, Iâ¦To be honest, Peter, I donât know what I thought.â She touched the bandaged side of her head. âObviously, I wasnât thinking clearly.â
He took her hand in his, and they sat like that, wordless, full of emotion, for some time. Outside, in the corridor, orderlies wheeled gurneys, nurses hurried by, doctorsâ names were called. All of that seemed part of another world that had nothing to do with them.
âI want to help you,â Soraya said at length.
âI donât need help.â
But that was an instinctive, knee-jerk response, and they both knew it. That shared knowledge seemed to break the newly formed ice, to return them to the time when they were closer than siblings, when they shared everything.
Soraya leaned closer and spoke to him in low, intimate tones while he listened intently as she outlined the top-secret mission Hendricks had given her. âListen, Peter,â she concluded, âCharles is dead, itâs over now, but this liaison with him was strictly Hendricksâs idea. He came to me with it, said it was a matter of national security, and I felt that Iâ¦wellâ¦that I couldnât refuse him.â
âHe shouldnât have asked that of you.â
âIâve been through that with him. He knows he crossed the line.â
âAnd yet he did it,â Peter said, âand heâll do it again. You know it and I know it.â
âProbably.â
âWhat will you tell him the next time?â
She touched her belly. âI have my child to think of now. Things will be different.â
âYou think so?â
Her gaze drifted from him to the middle distance. âYouâre right. I canât know.â
He squeezed her hand. âNone of us canâeverâno matter the circumstances.â
A small smile wreathed her lips. âTrue enough.â Leaning over again, she hugged him. âIâm so sorry, Peter.â
âDonât be. Everything happens for a reason.â
She drew back, watching him. âDo you really believe that?â
He laughed without much humor. âNo, but saying it helps keep my spirits up.â
She looked at him steadily. âItâs going to be a long haul, no matter what happens with your legs.â
âI know that.â
âIâll be here.â
âI know that, too.â He sighed. âTheyâll order a psych eval to determine whether Iâm fit for duty.â
âSo what? Theyâve already ordered one for me. Weâre fit for duty, Peter. End of story.â
Once more, they sat in companionable silence. Once, a tear overran Peterâs eye and slid down his cheek. âDamn it to hell,â he said, and Soraya squeezed his hand again.
âTell me something,â he said. âTell me something positive.â
âLetâs start with Jason Bourne,â she said, âand how he needs our help.â
26
La Goulue had been the first of the Moulin Rougeâs famed Cancan Queens. Each night she entered the famed theater via the well-hidden and almost unknown entrée des artistes, a tiny staircase that led to heaven from the grubby back alleys of Montmartre. The well-worn staircase, trod upon by generations of the Moulinâs dancers and cabaret artists for over a century, had in years past been supplanted by a newer backstage entrance. Don Fernando, however, knew not only of its existence, but the fact that it was still a useful way to gain access to the halcyon environs of the Moulin Rouge, when all other methods failed, or when one of the Doriss Girls of his acquaintance wanted to sneak him in for some backstage shenanigans between shows.
He called his current Doriss Girl, Cerise, who, he assured Bourne, was absolutely reliable.
Just after 8 PM, they exited Don Fernandoâs building on the Quai de Bourbon. A driver and car from Don Fernandoâs favored service were waiting.
âTell the driver youâve changed your mind,â Bourne said.
When Don Fernando dismissed the car and driver, he and Bourne crossed the nearby bridge to the Right Bank without incident.
âI donât see him,â Don Fernando said.
âYou wonât,â Bourne assured him. âBut there was a better than even chance he had suborned someone inside the car company you frequent.â
The thing to avoid was crowds, so they headed for the taxi tête de station near the Hôtel de Ville and climbed into the waiting cab. Don Fernando gave the driver the address of the Moulin Rouge, and the Mercedes nosed out into traffic.
âYou seem very sure of yourself, Jason,â Don Fernando said as he settled back into the seat.
âIt never pays to be sure of anything,â Bourne replied, âapart from putting one foot in front of the other in the dark.â
Don Fernando nodded as he stared at the back of the driverâs head. âI never asked you about the female Mossad agent.â
âRebeka,â Bourne said. âShe and I were both after the same man, Semid Abdul-Qahhar, the head of the Mosque in Munich and one of the seminal players in the Muslim Brotherhood. We joined forces, we helped each other. She was a good personâsomeone trying to do the right thing, even though it might very well have cost her her position at Mossad.â
Don Fernando nodded absently. âThereâs always a price to pay for doing the right thing,â he mused, âthe only question is, how heavy is the price?â He rubbed his knuckles against the side of his face. âThereâs also a price for not being able to do the right thing.â He sighed. âThatâs the nature of life, I suppose.â
âOur life, especially.â
Their discussion was interrupted when they were rear-ended by the car behind them. It was at a slow speed and didnât amount to much; nevertheless, their driver threw the Mercedes into park and got out and started an altercation with the driver of the other car.
âGet out!â Bourne said suddenly. He pushed against Don Fernando. âGet out now!â
Bourne pulled on the door handle, but the central lock had been engaged from the driverâs console. The driver who had hit them handed the taxi driver a small packet.
Bourne launched himself over the front seatbacks, but at that moment a figure ducked into the Mercedes and pointed a Sig-Sauer at him, forcing him to return to the backseat.
âNo escape now,â Nicodemo said, as he slid behind the wheel.
He nodded, and the taxi driver returned to the car. Keeping the Sig trained on them, Nicodemo disengaged the central lock. The driver wrenched open the rear door and bound Bourneâs wrists behind his back with a length of plastic zip cord, then did the same to Don Fernando.
âTake them to the trunk,â Nicodemo said.
âYou came into us too hard,â the driver said. âThe lockâs bashed in and the trunk wonât open.â
âOkay. Get out of here,â Nicodemo said.
The driver slammed the rear door shut, and went back to the car Nicodemo had been driving.
Nicodemo, behind the wheel of the Mercedes, grinned at them. âNow the real darkness comes, Jason.â
Bourne said nothing. He was testing the tensile strength of the zip cord. He wouldnât be able to snap it without outs
ide help.
Placing the Sig on the bench seat beside him, Nicodemo turned away from them to face front. âMuch better to have tame animals,â he said, watching them in the rearview mirror as he put the Mercedes in gear and pulled out into the nighttime street, âthan wild ones to the slaughter.â
A funny thing happened to me on the way to your office, Mr. Brick,â Anderson said. âFunny, odd, that is.â
âAnd what would that be, Agent Anderson?â
âI just came from looking at a body fished out of the Potomac River. Hadnât been there long, a couple of hours max.â
Tom Brick, sitting at ease behind his large, masculine desk in his massive office that took up an entire corner of the top floor of Core Energy, spread his hands. âYeah? So?â
âKnifed twice in the side.â
âWhatâs it got to do with me?â
ââWhatâs it got to do with me?â the man says.â Anderson, with James at his side, stood in the approximate center of the office. Having shown his government ID to the phalanx of secretaries, assistants, and assorted flunkies, they had been ushered into Brickâs office where, it appeared, he was having a meeting with a suit seated on a sofa facing the desk. Brick did not invite the newcomers to sit. Anderson checked the expression on the professionally scrubbed face of the suit before he returned his gaze to Brick.
âIâm curious, Mr. Brick, as to why you havenât asked the victimâs name.â
Brick stared at him with dead-fish eyes. âHis name is of no interest to me.â
âYou said his, but I said a body.â
Brick snorted. âDonât play NCIS with me, Anderson.â
âIâll tell you anyway, because you know him. His name is Dick Richards.â
Brick sat for a moment, unmoving. Then he rose and gestured to the man with whom he had been talking when Anderson and James had entered.
âPerhaps itâs time you met Bill Pelham.â
âAs in Pelham, Noble and Gunn?â
Brick couldnât contain a smile. âThatâs right.â
Pelham, Noble and Gunn was in the top tier of Washington law firms. It counted among its clients many presidents, former presidents, and senators, not to mention the head of the FBI, as well as the mayor and the police commissioner of DC. Its juice was potent; it flowed directly from the hallowed Beltway source.