Page 13 of The Bourne Enigma (Jason Bourne 13)
They had been at it for over four hours when Korsolov pulled Pankin away. They went down the hallway eerily lit by overhead fluorescents, buzzing like angry flies. Korsolov bought them coffee out of one of the vending machines and they drank, leaning against a wall on which was a poster exhorting those within range to take their next vacation in the paradise of Crimea. A bright yellow sun shone down on azure water and a buff-colored beach. A gaily striped umbrella completed the fantasy.
âCaptain,â Korsolov said, âdo you know what a field promotion is?â
âOf course, Colonel.â
Korsolov smirked, dug in his pocket, extracting a pair of shiny objects which he pinned on the epaulets of Pankinâs tunic, after first removing his captainâs insignia. He dropped them into Pankinâs cupped palm. âKeep these as a souvenir. Give âem to your firstborn son, so heâll join the FSB like his father.â
âSir?â
âIn recognition of your help in the matter of identifying the perpetrator of General Boris Illyich Karpovâs heinous murder, and to celebrate my imminent promotion to general, you have been promoted to colonel. In addition, you are now my adjutant. Youâll report to me and to no one else.â
âSir, I donât know what to say.â
Before Korsolov could respond, one of his men hurried up. âSir, I think we have something. Onlyâ¦â
âOnly what?â
âWellâ¦â His man pulled out a digital copy of a photo taken off one of the CCTV cameras in Sheremetyevo. The time stamp was two days ago at 20:08 hours. A female face, half hidden by the head of a passing man, was circled in red grease pencil.
âWho am I looking at?â Korsolov said.
âMaybe no one,â his man said. âMaybe a ghost.â
Korsolov handed the photo to Pankin. âThis face mean anything to you, Colonel?â
Pankin, who during the long night had made it his business to refamiliarize himself with all Mossad personnel in the FSB records directorate, said, âIt does. But like this man, Iâm a bit puzzled.â
Korsolov was rapidly losing patience. âAnd why is that?â
âWell, hard as it may be to believe, this member of Kidon was knifed to death some three years ago in Mexico City.â
âDo we have proof of that, Colonel? I mean incontrovertible proof.â
âWhen it comes to Mossad we are rarely able to dig up incontrovertible proof.â
Korsolovâs forefinger stabbed out, tapping the red bullâs-eye drawn on the surveillance photo. âAnd yet here is incontrovertible proof that she is still alive.â He eyed Pankin, the messenger all but forgotten. âGeneral Karpovâs exterminator. Whatâs her name?â
âSheâs had many over the years, legend on top of legend. By all accounts, she wasâexcuse me, isâKidonâs best agent.â Pankin cleared his throat. âWe know her only by her code name: Rebeka.â
PART TWO
Life? Itâs simple: manipulation through ideological doctrine.
âIvan Borz
21
Sara Yadin, known by her code name Rebeka, returned to Israel as Jenny Parker, an Australian national, a historical researcher at the University at Perth, the legend impeccably fabricated by Mossadâs Scrivener Directorate.
Jerusalem was under war skies, a seemingly endless occurrence these days. The bleak grayness of Moscow was replaced by a riot of deep, life-affirming earth tones, the spikes and thorns of Russian were replaced by a molten torrent of Hebrew and Arabic, warming her from the inside out. She walked out into the heat, colliding with the scalding sunlight on her face and bare arms, which she nevertheless welcomed as an old and trusted friend.
She took a taxi from the airport, had it drop her off in front of an anonymous, blank-faced office building that housed law firms, import-exporters, and the like. She took an elevator up to the third floor, where a discreet sign announced GOLD JEWELRY. Pushing through the door, she went straight to the glass-topped counter, bought a Star of David identical to the one she had lost and a thin gold chain that was close enough. She paid in cash, fixed the clasp at the nape of her neck, and walked out, feeling the familiar weight of the star against her chest, but plagued by a vague unease nevertheless.
She walked a mile in a circuitous route to make certain she wasnât being followed, then entered the executive offices of Mossad and surrendered herself to the usual scrutiny by the security team whose members she knew by their given names.
Above her head was the motto, âWhere there is no guidance, a nation falls, but in an abundance of counselors there is safety,â Proverbs 11:14, inscribed in Hebrew into the midnight-blue marble.
The Caesarea division was on the eighth floor of the nine-story building. Another security search was mandatory before she was allowed entry. The Kidon offices were in the rear, a series of windowless rooms, protected from electronic surveillance, monitored around the clock in three shifts of two men and two women each.
She was met by Mossadâs director, who welcomed her back with a brief nod and a curt âWell done.â He led her along the corridor and through a door that could be opened only by highly restricted iris ID. Beyond was a narrow spiral of steel treads, which they ascended. It gave out onto a tiny landing that was between floors eight and nine. Through another locked door was a suite of rooms the polar opposite of the Kidon offices. In fact, the space, with its modern leather furniture, plush beige carpet, and tasteful but innocuous prints on the walls, looked more like an expensive suite in a five-star hotel.
The Director turned and, as soon as the door to the suite closed behind Sara, grabbed her in a bear hug and kissed her on both cheeks.
âWell done.â His voice was warm and affectionate. âWell done, Sara!â
âThank you, Father.â
Eli Yadin released her, and he and his daughter took a step back to assess one another. âYour mission went well,â he said.
âIt was flawless,â she replied.
A shadow crossed his face. âNot entirely.â
âWhat do you mean? My target is dead.â
âOf course he is. Thereâs no doubt of that. None whatsoever. Had you not terminated Yasha he would have given Belovâand, eventually, Svetlana Novachenkoââ
âSvetlana Karpova.â
Eli Yadin regarded his daughter for a moment. âThe late General Karpov was not a friend of Israelâs. Sara.â
âHe helped Bourneâand, indirectly, meâin Damascus. Have you forgotten?â
âI forget nothing, daughter. But our mission had been, through Belov, to secretly help Ukraine break away from Russian influence. Now, because of Yashaâs treachery, that plan is as dead as he is.â
âI will not debate Boris with you,â she said tightly. âYou implied a problem.â
Nodding his shaggy head, he guided her to one of the sofas, poured coffee from a pot on a nearby sideboard, brought the cups over and sat down beside her. âYou were made at Sheremetyevo airport.â He handed her the coffee, which she accepted but did not drink.
Unconsciously, she fingered the gold star, as if to make sure it was still there. âWho?â
There was a discreet knock on the door, the Director, frowning, said, âCome,â and Dov Liron, head of the Caesarea unit, Saraâs boss, came in. She rose, shook his hand, then kissed him on both cheeks.
He hoisted a manila folder. âYou asked for this as soon asââ
Eli lifted a hand to still him. âJust leave it on the desk, Dov. Thank you.â
Liron complied and left without a backward glance. The Director discouraged curiosity inside Mossad headquarters.
âWell, thatâs the odd part,â Eli said, returning to her question. âAt first, it seemed as if the interest came from our Chinese enemies. They like to keep tabs on us as best they can.â He shrugged. âThough we always manage to be at least one step ahead of them.â
He sipped his coffee. âDrink, drink, darling. The breach isnât anything we canât deal with.â
Sara eyed him, took a sip, but didnât taste it.
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âNo, it wasnât the Chinese who spotted you; it was an old enemy of ours that has tapped the Chinese faucet. They must have found some piece of evidence of our presence.â
He leaned over, took up three cubes of sugar. âHere. I forgot.â He dropped them in her coffee, watched her sip again with no little pleasure. âNo, it was the Russians who made you.â He sat forward, elbows on knees. âBottom line, I want you away from here. We have to assume the FSB has traced your flight back here.â
âAway from Jerusalem? Where?â
Her father shrugged. âI donât know. The Maldives, maybe. You could use some rest and relaxation. The scuba diving is fantastic, and I know youâve been dying to see the reefs. Nowâs your time.â
Before she could reply, his mobile buzzed and he lifted a finger as he answered it, listening for some minutes, then saying, âAll right.â He disconnected, and rose. âExcuse me a moment, darling. I have a small fire to put out. I wonât be a moment.â
When she was alone, Sara stared into her coffee. She didnât want to go to the Maldives, even if it was to scuba dive. She did not want to go on vacation; she did not need rest and relaxation. After what happened, the suggestion of a vacation smacked of failure. Her mission in Moscow had been difficultânot technically, though it had involved more than one target, which was unusual enough without the other circumstances involved. It had somehow taken a toll on her emotionally. This was so odd it caused her no small degree of concern. One of the basic elements of Kidon training was to kill quickly, silently, efficiently, and dispassionately. Otherwise, your survivalâyour basic humanityâwas at risk. Involuntarily she shivered, as if the ice that had crept into her bones in Moscow had not yet left her. It was like waking from a dream that, unaccountably, seemed just as real with your eyes open.
Unsettled, she rose, wandered around the suite, until she found herself at her fatherâs desk. There, as if spotlighted, was the manila folder Dov had left, so urgent he had instructions to come at once to the Directorâs inner sanctum.
Sara reached out, touched it with the tip of her forefinger. Then she turned it around to face her, flipped it open. She had just enough time to see the words: âMission Mounted,â âIvan Borz,â and âCairoâ before she heard the scrape of the door. Hastily, she flipped the file shut, moved away from the desk. When her father entered, she was watching the city through one of the castle-like slits between the vertical blinds hanging in front of the layers of bulletproof glass.
âSo,â Eli said, âIâve made arrangements for your flight to the Maldives.â
âThatâs what was so important?â Sara did not turn around.
âOf course not. But while I wasââ
âIâm not going to the Maldives,â Sara said.
âOh? All right. Where do you want to go?â
She turned around to look him in the eye when she said, âCairo.â
âCairo? Youâre joking, yes?â
âNo, Abba.â She folded her arms across her breasts. âIâm not.â
Eli took a step toward her. âBut, Sara, you canât be serious.â He stopped abruptly, turned toward his desk, where the folder lay slightly askew. He turned back to her. âSara, no. The operation has already begun.â
âWithout me.â
The Director snorted. âOf course without you.â He spread his hands. âYou were on assignment.â
âAnd now that assignment is over.â
âAnd you need rest.â
âWhat I need, Abba, is to leave Jerusalem. You said it yourself.â
âDonât use my words against me, daughter!â
Saraâs heart beat faster. Her father only called her âdaughterâ when he was very angry with her. Still, it was not in her nature to back down. âJust the facts, Abba. Just the facts.â
The edge of his hand cut through the air like a knife. âYouâre not going anywhere near Cairo, and thatâs final.â
Her eyes flared. âYou know you canât stop me.â
âSara, Sara, Sara.â Eli shook his head. âI only have your best interests in mind. Your body may be healed from your near-death experience in Mexico City, but your mindââ
âMy mind is as clear as a bell. I can see for miles.â
He put a hand on her shoulder. âWhere is this defiance coming from?â
âYou know very well,â she said.
Eli closed his eyes for a moment. âIvan Borz.â
âYou cannot deny me this, Abba.â She placed a hand atop his on her shoulder. It was a very Roman gesture, one legionnaire to another. âThis of all things on earth and in hell.â
Enrobed in silence, father and daughter bowed their heads and prayed together.
â
A pack of wolves, thatâs what Iâve raised, Ivan Borz thought. With the grace and all-knowing guidance of Allah. The Wahhabis are the perfect foils. They were born to be raised as wolves, all they needed was a voice coming to them from out of the wilderness. And this they found. Allah brought them to me, first in ones and twos and then, as word spread, in handfuls, in entire villages, in an ever-widening gyre.
Borz sat cross-legged, as was his wont, on an ancient Egyptian rug, faded and frayed, of oxblood camelhair and Chinese silk, which was set, per his instructions, in the precise center of the mosqueâs central prayer room. Around him were arrayed his acolytes, his fearless warriors, his cannon fodder, male and female alike, some as young as seven or eight, in concentric circles. Like the planets of the solar system, he thought, around the sun whose heat will warm them forever, even when they are among the angels. Which, for some of them, would be very soon.
âAl-?amdu lillah,â Ivan Borz said. All Praise and Thanks to God. âTerrorism is victory. They are one and the same. Terrorism is what unites us under the banner of Allah. Terrorism is what makes us strong.â His black eyes picked out acolytes here and there, poured his intensity, his fervor, into them as one pours boiling water from a pot. âThe infidel has money, comfort, indolence, perversions beyond measure. The infidel wishes to impose his countless perversions on us. He has come to our shores, like tar washing up on the margins of our land, befouling us and our sacred way of life, our path to Allah, to Ar-Rahman the Beneficent, to Al-Quddus the Purifier. He has come armed with weapons and lies.
âAnd that, my family, is why we are gathered here today, at this time, in Cairo, the beating heart of Islam. To be purified in Allahâs grace and holy spirit.â Islam has many hearts, he thought. Cairo is but one of them. These people need to believe in their relevance, they need to know that their lives matter, that they can, in death, make a difference, because their lives are a misery of poverty and hopelessness. They need to believe in victory. In that belief lies strengthâand power. Their belief is a vital part of my victory.
âWe have been marginalized by the infidel, pushed into the shadows, run up into the mountains that so terrify and confound our enemies. The infidel needs us to feel helpless. The infidel feeds on our hopelessness. Our poverty strengthens him, our bitterness emboldens him as he seeks to grind us under his decadent Gucci shoe.
âNevertheless, we are not helpless. Allah, the All-Seeing, the All-Knowing, Ar-?im the Exceedingly Merciful, has provided for us. He has armed us with a weapon so powerful that we will find victory, my family. Terrorism is what Allah has given us. Terrorism is all we have to fight the infidel, to fight him as he seeks to destroy us. But terrorism is all we need. Terrorism does what no other weapon on earth can do. Terrorism plunges a dagger into the minds of the infidel. Terrorism strikes fear in the rich, the indolent, the perverted. He cannot sleep for fear of us. He cannot feel happiness because of us. He drugs himself up because of us. He does not know when or where we will strike next. He fears for the future.â
Ivan Borz moved a five-sided box to a place between his knees. The box was made of a dark metal with a rime of frost at its angles. It was icy to the touch, kept cold by the packs of blue gel lining the inside. Ivan Borz lifted the boxâs heavy lid, and eve
ry pair of eyes was riveted to the movement of his hands. Setting the lid down, he reached into the box and lifted high the severed head, holding it by a fistful of dark greasy hair. The hair hadnât been washed in months. Neither had the body to which it belonged.
âAn American journalist, captured, interrogated, turned to Islam, martyred in the name of Allah the merciful. His sacrifice is your rallying cry.â His legs unfolded like that of a praying mantis as he rose to his full height. He lifted the head higher so even those in the back rows could see clearly.
âWitness now how the infidel will be defeated. Terrorism will defeat the infidel. This I promise you.â
22
Night had overtaken the cauldron of the day when Bourne arrived in Cairo. The heat was like an oven with the door open instead of closed: stifling yet tolerable. He was almost killed twice in the maelstrom of the city traffic, once when the taxi he was in was nearly broadsided by a truck, another when it overtook and cut off a bus with barely an inch between the vehicles. The taxi left a tail of diesel particulates behind it. It belched more noises than a dyspeptic stomach. The interior stank of falafel grease and stale sweat.
Ah, Cairo! Bourne thought as he vigorously cranked down the window. How do you miss a city and at the same time wish you had never been here?
But then that was Cairo, a seething chaos of contradictions, where ten million vehicles and one stoplight made for a dark and exhilarating passage.
He checked into the nearly deserted El Gezirah Hotel, washed up, changed, then called for a taxi. It took him crosstown in a dizzying, zigzag pattern in order to beat the insane traffic, letting him off at Midan Kit Kat. From there, he walked down to the Nile, through the charcoaled meat and stew scents of the evening. An uneasiness compressed the reddish atmosphere of the city, like a bow drawn too tight from which a launched bolt would at any moment cause devastation.
On the near bank wooden gangplanks led individually to a line of one- and two-story houseboats, some painted, others simply of beaten boards, all weather furrowed and weary. Many of them had once been gaily painted, serving as nightclubs and casinos, but that time was long past. Though remnants of their former glory were everywhere to be seen, in bits of signage, boards of painted gilt and silver, they were dulled now as if viewed in sepia photos.