Page 34 of The Bourne Enigma (Jason Bourne 13)
âAnyone sitting here?â
He looked up to see a very beautiful woman standing beside him.
âNo one but me.â
She sat down next to him, close, but not too close. She wore a loose-fitting ankle-length midnight-blue dress, which she tucked under her as she drew her knees up. She was barefoot, which meant she was staying at his hotel or the behemoth next to it.
âMay I ask you a question?â
He turned his head toward her.
âDo you think what Iâm wearing is appropriate?â She laughed self-deprecatingly. âFor the beach, I mean. I decided to come here at the last minute.â She shrugged her shapely shoulders. âFight with my boyfriend. Only now I donât think I want him to be my boyfriendâor any kind of friend.â She sighed. âAnyway, like I said, last minute.â That self-deprecating laugh again. âI forgot to pack a bathing suit, and the lobby boutique was closed. Is this dress as bad as I think it is?â
He said nothing. He really didnât want company at the moment, especially someone as attractive and lonely as this woman. But far away, in the darkened recesses of his mind, a bell was tolling.
âWorse, huh?â She picked her head up, stared vacantly out to sea. âServes me right.â
He knew she wanted him to ask, For what? Any response would be part of a game he didnât want to play.
She gave him a rueful smile. âServes me right for coming over here and disturbing your peaceful solitude. What an idiot I am. Sorry.â
Rising, she brushed sand off her the back of her dress, momentarily revealing the contours of her buttocks and the backs of her thighs. âHave a good night.â She shook her head angrily. âWow, that sounded lame.â
She walked away from him down the beach, carefully putting one foot in front of the other, as if unsure of her footing. Without warning, she collapsed and didnât get up.
â
âIâm fine,â she said, pushing him away as he crouched down beside her.
Her dress was rucked up, her legs were out from under her, the right one, with its ugly jagged scar running up the outside of her calf, exposed to the knee. She couldnât help seeing where he looked, but instead of pulling her dress down, she let it be.
âI was studying to be a ballet dancer,â she said, âbut thenââ Her arm waved over the scar.
âWhat happened?â Bourne said.
âHe speaks!â She smiled shyly, like a little girl. She couldnât have been more than twenty-four or twenty-five. âWould you like to see the whole thing?â Without waiting for a reply, she drew the dress up her long, glorious legs until the fabric was bunched around her hips. The scar went that far.
âThis couldnât have been the result of an accident,â Bourne said.
âWhat makes you say that?â
âIt was made in stages, over a period of time.â
She stared at him. One moment her large eyes were midnight-blue, the next they were pure blackâa trick, he was sure, of the indirect lights from the hotel restaurant terraces. All at once, she jumped up, her magnificent legs vanishing beneath her dress. He rose with her. They stood side by side, not quite touching, gazing out over the sea.
âHave you ever wanted to sail in darkness, on a night like this?â
âI have done.â
âOf course you have.â
A corner of her mouth twitched up. A dusting of freckles arced across the bridge of her nose. He hadnât noticed them before, but then he hadnât really been looking.
âSo tell me how you knewâabout the scar, I mean.â
âIâve seen one very much like it.â
âReally?â
âReally.â
âWhere?â
âOn a woman.â
âNo, I mean where in the world.â
âIn Somalia.â
There was still the ghost of a smile on her lips. âWhat? Pirates, I suppose.â
âPirates, slave traders, terrorists, call them what you will. She was a girl, actually. She looked twelve or thirteen, but with children who have been so abused itâs difficult to tell their real age.â
When she turned to him her smile had vanished. Her eyes were on him, and they were very still. âAnd you saw this girl? With the same scar as mine?â
âThe wound at her hip was dark and swollen. It hadnât completely closed over yet. There were droplets of blood around the edges.â
A certain vibration had sprung up between them, a quivering in the air, as of a swarm of soundless insects.
âAnd?â
âAnd then,â Bourne said, âI disappeared her.â
â
First Minister Timur Savasin, lounging in the shadows of his hotel room terrace, watched the couple stand with their backs to him as they gazed out to sea. They seemed close as lovers. He felt no jealousy seeing the Angelmaker with Jason Bourne, only a keen anticipation. It seemed to him now that tomorrow was the culmination of a fated life. He was overcome with the sensation, not of déjà vu but of the opposite: that he was meant to be here now, at this very moment, on the shore of Cyprus, watching the creature of his design and Bourne, close enough to have sex or to kill each other. She had taken only the briefest glance at the photo of Bourne, but that was all she needed. She had a knack for taking in entire subjects in the blink of an eye and never forgetting them. Keeping an image from a photo in her head was childâs play. Now here they were together. However she had handled the first contact, she had succeeded. He would have been stunned if she had failed.
A frisson of presentiment passed through him then, like a chill ribbon invading a tropical oceanâs warm current. With startling clarity, he recalled the Angelmaker telling him that death was in their room with them. Idiotic as that had sounded to him then, he thought he felt deathâs presence now, as, like him, it watched, godlike from above, its two principal objects of affection.
Time to make some calls. Digging out his mobile, he dialed the first of two local numbers.
â
âAnd this girl, this refugee from Somali pirates,â the Angelmaker said, âwhere is she now?â
Bourneâs gaze remained fixed on the lights at sea. âWouldnât it be strange if she were standing here beside me?â
âI donât believe in coincidences,â she said dismissively.
âNeither,â Bourne said, âdo I.â
She looked at him again with that curious sideways glance. âWhat are you implying?â When he remained silent, she said, âDo you know how many complex factors would have to align in order for me to be that girl?â
âA thousand angels dancing on the head of a pin.â Into the silence that now arose between them, he said, âYou recognized me, Mala. I have no doubt about that. The question is, why are you here at the same time as me?â
âIâm not that girl anymore.â
âNo one is the same.â
âYou are.â Her dress swirled around her ankles like a sail. âAnd for the record, I was a good deal older than I looked.â
âThatâs disturbing.â He shifted in the sand. âYouâve learned a great deal in the interim.â
âI am wiser as well as older.â
âMala,â he said, âwhen are we going to stop playing this game?â
âWhy stop something thatâs so pleasurable?â
He saw the wisp of a smile play across her lips. Then it was gone. âThereâs only one reason why youâre here now,â he said. âYouâre working for the Russians.â
âI work for myself.â
âA very specific Russian.â
âWho could that be?â
âTomorrow is zero hour,â he said.
âZero hour? That means nothing to me.â
âYou know.â
âBut I donât.â
Bourne knew there were many ways to lie; there was only one way to express true ignorance. âTomorrowâin nineteen hours, to be exactâthe Sovereign is going to order his troops into Ukraine for a full-on invasion.â
âYouâre hal
lucinating.â
âHeâs been arming ISIS, fueling their advance as a distraction for the Western powers.â
âHow could he do that?â she said. âEven the Sovereign couldnât come up with such a plan. Besides, the committee that runs Bank Rossiya wouldnâtââ
âBut he did,â Bourne said. So she wasnât working for the Sovereign. Who then? First Minister Timur Savasin. âHe bypassed even his inner circle at Bank Rossiya. The money is in a secret account at the Omega and Gulf Bank, which he owns.â He turned his head, studying her profile. She was already a beautiful girl when he had come upon her in the Somali camp. But, as a young woman, how she had flowered open.
âYouâre making this up. The Western powers would never allow such a thing.â
âThe EU derives eighty percent of its natural gas from Russia. Itâs getting on toward winter. What do you think will happen when the Sovereign turns off the tap, leaving millions of people shivering in the dark?â
She crossed her arms over her chest.
âIn Somalia, after I liberated you, after I shot dead the creature who had marked you over and over as his possession, his slave, his chattel, do you remember what you said to me? How you survived those long months?â
Nothing from her. Nothing at all.
âYou told me that you became expert at deluding yourself. You convinced yourself that you were somewhere else, that you were someone else. âI would have gone insane.â Those were your exact words. That iron will was ingenious, admirable, but now it has worked against you. I was wrongâsome people donât change. What is different here than it was in Somalia? You have traded one master for another.â
He moved so that he was facing her, his back to the rolling sea and its mysterious winking lights neither of them could decipher. âMala,â he said, âRussia is going to war. Itâs going to invade Ukraine. You know the Sovereignâs stated claim on Eastern Europe. The populace of the West cares very little about what happens to Ukraineâthink of the dithering and nonresponse when Russia took over the Crimea. Most people in the West donât even know Estonia exists, let alone want to risk lives to save it. Unless the plan is stopped now, before it begins, how long after Russia absorbs Ukraine do you think it will take before the new Union of Soviet Socialist Republics invades Estonia?â
56
Sara rose from delta sleep chased by dreams that had latterly insinuated themselves into her sleep, as if her unconscious was preparing her to leave the delicious nothingness in which she floated.
âRebeka!â
Her eyes snapped open, she found herself looking up at Dov.
âAre you awake?â
âWhat dâyou think?â she said crossly, because her head was still muzzy.
âThe private jet belongs to Abdul Aziz, a businessman fromââ
âIstanbul,â she finished for him. That had snapped her to full consciousness.
âYou know him?â
âHeâs a friend of Bourneâs.â
âWell, I hope he doesnât end up like Bourneâs other friend, General Karpov.â
She sat up. âYou knew about that?â
âIt didnât make us happy.â
Her vertigo seemed to be gone. âDâyou have more?â
âGod, yes. A whole lot more. And very fast transport standing by for you.â
âIs it stocked with food?â
He laughed. âYes.â
She stood. âFill me in while we board. Suddenly, Iâm ravenous.â
â
âWhen do you want me to kill him?â the Angelmaker said when she returned to their room.
Timur Savasin had ordered room service: a pink saddle of lamb, grilled vegetables, halloumi cheese, and loukaniko sausage. Out of respect, he had ordered her a salad as well, something he detested.
She sat down opposite at the laden table in the sitting area of their suite and began to serve herself. âTonight would be good.â
âVery possibly.â
âIn his sleep. Moonlight stealing into the room. Very romantic. Iâd like that. All romance ends in death.â
âSo thatâs what you started?â he said neutrally. âA romance?â
âChrist, no.â She laughed, showing small white teeth. âI was using a figure of speech.â
âVery poetic.â
The hint of an electric current in his voice caused her to glance up, between transferring a spoonful of artichokes, carrots, and onions to her plate.
âFM, you arenât jealous, are you?â
âIâve no idea what youâre talking about.â
Smiling slyly, she speared a chunk of lamb on the tines of her fork. âIâll say this for you, FM, you do love your meat.â She popped the morsel in her mouth, chewed slowly and lasciviously, swallowed. âHuman and otherwise.â
Pushing back his chair, he crossed to the sideboard where the three bottles of premium-grade vodka he had ordered each stood in the center of its own sweating ice bucket. He poured himself a shot, downed it with a violent backward thrust of his head, sloshed in a triple. Turning around, he watched her eat with slow, methodical precision; heâd never seen her wolf her food.
She lifted a shapely arm. âCome. Sit. Eat your meats.â She speared a sausage. âTheyâre really rather wonderful.â
He took a sip or two of his vodka, strolled back across the room, and, moving his chair, sat down beside her. Taking up a fork, he began to eat from her plate.
âHereâs the table leg.â She tapped it with a forefinger. âWhy donât you piss on that, too?â
He grunted. âNo worries there. Iâve already marked my territory.â He chomped down on a sausage. âMany times.â He chewed slowly, thoughtfully. âSo youâve bonded yourself to him.â
âIâve bonded him to me.â
âBy giving him your confidence.â
âThe foundation of all con games. Thatâs right.â
âAnd he bought itâyour confidence.â
âI believe so.â
âThis is not just any mark. This is Jason Bourne.â
âI know who he is, FM,â she said levelly. âWhat eludes me is your intense antipathy toward him.â
âHe and Boris Karpov were close friends. I donât need any more incentive.â
âBut you do have more.â
He set down his fork, wiped his lips with a napkin. âI believe we shall continue this conversation in the bedroom.â
âI havenât even started on my salad yet,â she pointed out. âShall I take it with?â
â
He was like an animal, ripping off her clothes, growling in the back of his throat. The Angelmaker had seen him like this once before, with one of his mistresses. He had insisted she watch, from a shadowed corner where she was to remain absolutely still. At the end of the session, Savasinâs victim, as she became in the Angelmakerâs mind, had emerged spattered with bite marks, roundels already turning from oxblood to black-and-blue. As she had stumbled out, half insensate, the First Minister had called the Angelmaker to his bed for the first time, which was when she saw the blood on the sheets.
Now, as his hands and mouth roamed over her body, the Angelmaker felt the well of time open up, felt herself falling into it, down and down, until she was back in the Somalian pirate encampment. Her body was crisscrossed, swirled, circled, triangled with wounds, turning with time into scars, remnants of unthinkable rituals, which her captor called art, and which, for decades after, she held on to as desperately as a drowning woman clutches a dead body in order to keep afloat.
It was in the Somali encampment, at the hands of her captor, a Yibir, one of a clan of Somali magi so ancient they predated the coming of Islam, that she had been desensitized to sex without pain. She had been trained, he had trained herâshe knew all thisâbut somehow the circuits in her brain had been rewired, and now her body responded only to the stimuli the Somali had laid out for her. There was, therefore, a ghastly agony inside her, an itch that could never be scratched. Never be assuaged. Except by pai
n. Bourne was right. Even after time and distance, she was still the Somaliâs prisoner, with no hope for escape.
Breaking away, she rolled off the bed.
âWhere are you going?â he asked as she walked away.
57
Bourne lay atop the bed in his darkened hotel room. Moonlight, sliced into cool bars by the wide, wooden jalousies, stretched across the tile floor like mercury. And like mercury, the moonlight had turned poisonous since his encounter with Mala on the beach outside his sliders. Winter was coming. Even here, a certain chill had invaded the Mediterranean night. He tried to turn his mind off, but the coming events of tomorrow kept returning to vex him. Only hours to go, and still he had no answer as to how to get into the Sovereignâs account at the Omega + Gulf Bank. He knew Boris must have included it in his cipher, but after racking his brains for hours on end he remained at a loss to discover where it was. He had deciphered the entire rebusâall four groups of Sumerian glyphs.
All at once, he sat up, drenched in cold sweat. Had there been a fifth group, written in invisible ink? It was an old-school trick, but one Boris might very well have used. If so, Bourne was screwed, having destroyed the scrap of paper in order to keep it from falling into the wrong hands. If so, if the information he needed wasnât somewhere embedded in the four groupings of glyphs stored in his memory then, by tomorrow evening, the entire world would be at war.
Unless First Minister Savasin possessed the account code. In which case, there was still a chance, though a slim one. But slim was better than none.
Bourne was about to lie down again, to sink himself, if not into sleep, then into deep meditation, when he picked up a corruption of one of the bars of moonlight, as of a shadow crossing in front of it on his polished concrete balcony.
Bourne lay very still, slowing his breathing until the rise and fall of his chest was barely discernible. The shadow was there, moving so slowly as to be almost imperceptible. Arranging the pillows to resemble a body under the sheets, he slipped off the edge of the bed farthest away from the sliders, crept to the end, keeping his head and shoulders low enough that that bed blocked his progress from view.