Page 9 of The Bourne Enigma (Jason Bourne 13)
Something came over Irinaâs face, but it was so enigmatic Bourne couldnât tell precisely what it was.
âReally?â she said. The word was a placeholder, used when an idea or emotion wasnât allowed free rein.
âScoutâs honor.â Ivan turned to Bourne. âIsnât that what you Americans say?â
âSome of us,â Bourne allowed.
âNot you, I would think.â
Irina seemed to be mocking him, but as gently as a mother rocks a baby. Her face was devoid of cruelty or scorn. Could she be flirting? Bourne wondered. What could Dimitri Maslovâs death mean to her? Obviously, they had had some kind of relationship, since Ivan referred to him only by his given name. In any event, she did not appear to have been broken up by his sudden, violent demise. She must have hated him, Bourne thought. Was that enmity merely an echo of her krýshaâs feelings, or was it caused by her own encounter with Maslov? Another mystery that required solving.
However, with Irina here it was time to get to the heart of his business with Volkin. âI need a list of names, Ivanâpoliticians who had a reason, the will, and the wherewithal to plan Borisâs assassination.â But it wasnât any of them, an insistent voice inside him whispered. It was Sara.
Ivan grunted. âBoris had a long, productive life, which, in Russia, means he had many enemies. Most of them, however, were so afraid of him they would never make a move against him.â
âThis person,â Bourne said, âis a homicidal psychotic as well as a religious fanatic.â
This produced a deep laugh. âA religious fanatic? In Russia? You must be joking, Jason.â
âI am perfectly serious, Ivan. And, in this instance, our working definition of religious fanatic is a broad one. Our man might just as well be someone who harbors a deep grudge against organized religion as a closet Christian.â
âPsychotics are a dime a dozen in politics, never more so in Russia.â Ivan tapped a forefinger against his lower lip. âGive me a couple of hours to consider and draw up a list, for all the good it will do you.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âYouâre looking in the wrong direction. I have it on good authority that Boris wasnât killed by a Russianâpolitician or otherwise.â
There was no denying Ivan Volkinâs authority, Bourne knew.
âIt seems likely that Boris was murdered by Ivan Borz.â
âBorz?â
âYou know him?â
âIâve tracked Ivan Borz from West Pak to Singapore. Iâve killed two men claiming to be him; neither of them were.â
âThis is unsurprising.â Ivan crossed one leg over the other. âLet me explain. Boris was most recently in Cairo. He was running a top secret opâsecret even, I think, from the Sovereign or the first minister.â
âBorz?â
Ivan nodded. âBoris had sworn to get the sonuvabitch. No one else has been able to get close to him, let alone know what he actually looks like. Heâs got false Borzes all over, as you yourself discovered. But Boris got a lead he was certain was legitimate. That Borz is a Chechen and has set up an HQ in Cairo.â
âA Chechen?â Bourne said. âThat sounds unlikely.â
âPrecisely why Boris thought the lead was genuine.â He spread his hands. âAnd I mean, really, who would look for him in Cairo? The place is a stinking zoo, not to mention hot as Hades.â
âDo you have any evidence that Borz himself was in Moscow tonight?â
âWell, if he was, heâs gone now, thatâs almost a certainty.â Ivan grunted. âIn any event, Iâve got my antennae up, but I have to tell you that a svóloch like him is not on my compatriotsâ radar screen. They donât deal with Chechens, they donât hire Chechens. They shoot Chechens on sight.â
13
In the dead of night Andrei Avilov awoke in an oversize, luxe room decorated with a definite feminine eye. Outside the curtained window, spotlights lit a thick forest of conical fir trees. It took him a moment to realize he was in the private clinic funded by the Sovereign, overseen by Timur Savasin himself. It was no wonder the décor was frilly enough to give Avilov the willies: the clinic usually housed the discarded mistresses of both the Sovereign and Savasin, the first-class plastic surgery a parting gift, supposed to lessen the blow of rejection for a young woman. The turnover, Avilov thought idly, must be remarkable, to keep three full-time surgeons on staff.
Which reminded him that the left side of his face felt like weasels had ripped his flesh.Not so far off the mark, he thought wryly. Dimly, he recalled his hurried consult with the plastic surgeon. At first, he had balked because she was a woman, even when he saw himself reflected in her canny eyes. He was in no mood for another female, but heâd had no choice. Orders from Timur Savasin himself. Now, hours later, he wished he had a mirror.
âNot to worry,â Dr. Nova had said, âI can save the original look of your left eye. If you had been taken to any hospital inside the Ring Road youâd have a permanent droop in that eye and it would water continually. Youâd have to keep blotting it, especially outside in the wind.â
If she expected him to be grateful she was sorely mistaken. Heâd been as sour as an unripe cherry.
âCheer up, Andrei,â sheâd said with what seemed to him a metallic smile, âyouâll come through this encounter relatively unscathed.â
He resented her calling him by his name instead of formally by his rank. âIâll be scarred?â
âIn the beginning.â She shrugged. âThen, who knows? It will depend on how elastic your skin and muscles are.â That sharp-edged smile again. âYou can always tell the women you meet itâs a dueling scar. That should get them tumbling into bed.â
Quits with lying down and feeling woozy in the anestheticâs aftermath, he levered himself up, froze as he felt an immediate throbbing, as if a fistful of pinballs was ricocheting around the inside of his skull. Black spots appeared in his vision, and he blinked them away with grim determination. He drank some water, held ice chips in his mouth, letting the frost soothe away the pain.
âI imagine youâre wanting a mirror.â He turned at the sound of her voice. Dr. Nova. She had entered the room without him being aware of itâanother symptom.
âDidnât I tell you I only wanted a local?â
âI didnât hear that,â she said drily. She came and stood by the side of the bed. She seemed entirely unafraid of him. He didnât like that at all.
âNow I need to flush whatever you gave me out of my system.â
She was dark-haired, raven-eyed, with an aggressive nose and jaw that helped form the illusion of her being taller than she actually was. âWhat are you going to do, Andrei? Report me to Daddy?â
Her laughter made him grind his teeth, which, considering his condition, was a mistake. He tried not to wince, missed by a mile.
Her mouth was wide, her lips like ripe fruit. âFace it, Andrei. Youâre human, after all.â
Thatâs not what that bitch Svetlana Novachenko said, he thought darkly.
âYou donât think much of women, do you, Andrei.â That laugh again, so mocking, so knowingâalmost like a manâs. âThatâs all right. Iâm used to men like you.â
Now she sounded downright contemptuous, and he felt a kind of panic to be trapped under her thumb.
âIâm getting out of here,â he said, swinging his legs over the side of the bed.
âYouâll do nothing of the kind.â Her hand on his shoulder was firm, strong, incontestable. âYouâre under my care now, Andrei. Orders from on high.â
He knew what that meant. Savasin must have received a report about the incident in the hotel room, no doubt drawn up with all requisite venom by Colonel Korsolov or one of his damned minions. Avilov cursed the day he had ever been in the same room with Svetlana Novachenko. Was this Boris Karpov reaching out from the grave? He dismissed the thought almost as soon as it bubbled up, was furious with himself that it had ever occurred to him.
âTime to change your bandage,â Dr. Nova said. âIâll just be a mom
ent.â
She crossed to the bathroom, closed the door behind her. The room was like a ticking clock or a body laid out on an operating table, turned inside out, its beating heart exposed. He looked over to the door, which, he saw, she had not fully closed. He moved from the position into which she had pushed him, edging down the bed. A gap between the edge of the door and its jamb revealed her to him, as if he were watching an X-rated movie. She had her skirt rucked up around her hips. One gleaming leg was exposed. Her thigh gleamed, substantial, hard-muscled, ending in the deep-shadowed dell of unfulfilled promise.
As he watched, she rose slightly, wiping herself, and his eyes were transfixed by the erotic boundary of curling hair, black as a moonless night. Her legs were spread as she hunched down, her pelvis canted slightly forward. Had she been aware he was watching he would have sworn she was offering herself to him. But that invitation was merely a product of his fevered thoughts.
Then she was finished, the toilet flushed, the water ran. When she emerged he was precisely where he had been when she had left.
She came over to the bed. âReady?â
Her hands rose, pink and fresh from her thorough scrubbing.
âThis might hurt, but only a little.â
He felt a tremor begin along the insides of his thighs, traveling inward and outward at the same time.
She bent over him. Involuntarily, his nostrils flared: she smelled of gardenias and musk. âIs that perfume youâre wearing?â Hyperaware of his lengthening penis, he was having trouble breathing normally.
âI donât wear perfume.â
He closed his eyes, his senses swirling with the scent of her. He drew his knees up.
âStay still, please.â
He was as hard as a rock. âCouldnât a nurse do this?â he asked as he felt her cool fingers, and then the surgical scissors on his skin.
âI like to admire my own work,â she said, her mocking laugh reduced to an impertinent smile. âAn impulse you can surely understand, Andrei.â
Stung, his eyes flew open. âIâd prefer you call me by my rank.â
âIâd have preferred not to work on you, Andrei, but we all have our crosses to bear.â Having peeled the last layer off, she stood back. âThere.â
âHow does it look?â
Only afterward, when he was alone again, did it occur to him how much like a child he had sounded. And then he couldnât get Dr. Nova out of his mind. Or any part of his body.
14
No,â Irina said when they returned to her mansion, âdonât turn on the lights.â
âAre you worried that the FSB has staked out the property?â Bourne asked.
She shook her head. âYou took care of that. Itâs justâ¦â
He stood close to her, felt rather than saw her shrug.
âSometimes I prefer being in the dark.â
Perfect, Bourne thought. My normal state of being.
She moved, and he saw the glitter in her eyes. The illumination from the security lights, striped through the curtains, limned her in profile like an old-fashioned cameo. He thought she might take his arm then, but she didnât. Instead, she headed for the marble-and-gilt staircase.
âTime for sleep,â she said, and he didnât contradict her.
But an hour or so later, when she was safely tucked in bed, Bourne crept out of his room barefoot, down the curved, baronial stairs, along the hallways until he reached the room that had been her fatherâs study. It smelled of old cigar smoke, leather book bindings, and carpet fibers.
â
On the floor above him, Irina was on the phone with Aleksandr.
âHeâs here with me now,â she said softly into her mobile.
âWhat about the coin?â
âPatience, my love.â
âPatience is not my strong suit.â
She gave a low, seductive chuckle. âExcept in the most important area.â She lay back against the pillows, one hand behind her head. âNot to worry. This is a man who cannot be hurried. He is suspicious of everything. I need to move slowly and with exceptional caution. As we have discussed, gaining his trust wonât be a simple thing.â
âIf you move too slowly,â her brother said, âweâll never find out the secret of that coin.â
âWithout Bourne we would never find out. And I have a couple of tricks up my sleeve for when the time is right. Heâll come around, youâll see.â
âAnd when will I see you? Iâm dying forââ
âNot now, my love.â She rose off the bed. She had not changed out of her clothes. âItâs time for me to see what there is to see.â
âKeep me apprised.â
âAlways.â
âWherever you go,â Aleksandr said, âmy love is with you.â
â
Closing the heavy wooden door behind him, Bourne crossed the Isfahan carpet to the oversize burlwood desk, where with a small squeak he sat in the old-fashioned swivel chair and switched on the task light. Rummaging through the drawers he found a magnifying glass, set it on the leather-framed baize blotter, drew out from his pocket the Star of David. Perhaps he was mistaken. Perhaps the point wasnât damaged. Perhaps this wasnât Saraâs star. Setting it on a clean sheet of notepaper, he held it under the light, peering at it in its small puddle through the magnifying glass.
At once, his heart sank. There was the damageâthe same damage heâd seen on the star the last time he and Sara were in Jerusalem. Quickly tucking the star away, he drew out the Roman coin.
âWe have urgent matters to discuss,â Boris had whispered in his ear when they had met in the ballroom. Had he already had intimations of his death? Was that why heâd had the coin prepared, just in case he couldnât tell Bourne in person what was so urgent?
Bourne peered at it through the lens, turning it this way and that. It took him some moments but at length he saw it, and moved the coin on end, closer to the lens. There it was: a hairline juncture running all the way around the coinâs edge. It was a fake, then, but a damn fine one. And what had Boris secreted inside it?
He was just thinking of trying to open the coin when the door swung open and Irina floated through.
âI couldnât sleep, either.â
The task lamp lit the lower half of her, leaving her in shadow from the waist up. She had not turned on any of the lights on her way downstairs to find him. Not that it mattered. Sometime previous a troubled dawn had stumbled past the heavy drapes, and now spilled across the floor like mercury.
âMay I ask what youâre doing?â she said, as she rounded the desk and came to stand over his left arm.
He lifted the coin. âItâs genuine. A Dupondiusâthatâs a measure of its worthâfrom sometime after twenty-five BCE.â
âVery old, then.â
âYes.â
âAs you said.â
He watched her as she plucked the coin from his fingers, rolled it around. âAgain, why did the general send it to you?â
âI still have no clue.â
She threw him a hard look. âHow is that possible?â
Bourne sighed. âI told you that I had to take Borisâs word that we were old friends. Remember?â
She nodded. âI do.â
âYears ago, I was shot in Marseilles. I was pitched into the Med, lost consciousness. I would have died if fishermen hadnât pulled me out, if their doctor hadnât nursed me back to life. One thing he couldnât do was give me back my memory. Everything from before I was shot is lost to me, including, Iâm thinking, what this means.â
He took the coin back from her. It was too precious for her to keep long, especially with the magnifier around. He put both the coin and the magnifier away, switched off the task lamp.
Sunlight shimmered through the gap in the drapes. A new day, a new mystery.
15
Why didnât you ask Ivan about the coin?â Irina asked now in the ghostly, dawn-lit study.
âHow do you know I didnât?â When she didnât reply, Bourne said, ?
??I was waiting to see if you would ask him. Why didnât you?â
âI think you can work that out for yourself.â
âWhy didnât you want him to know about its existence?â
She sighed. âBecause then heâd take it away from me, just like heâs taken everything away from me.â She looked hard at Bourne. âHe thinks heâs doing me a favor, making things easier.â The tip of her forefinger made tight circles on the desktop. âI donât want that kind of helpâfrom him or from anyone.â
âMeaning me,â Bourne said, rising.
Her eyes held steady on him. âWhen I ask for help thatâs another matter entirely.â
He nodded. âFair enough.â
She made a disdainful face. âWhoever said âAllâs fair in love and warâ never read Tolstoy.â
âOr any other Russian novelist, for that matter.â
She gave him a wry smile. âTrue. We Russians arenât ones for happy endings. So few of us ever had one. You canât fill your belly on hope.â
It was odd, Bourne thought, hearing these proletariat sentiments from a scion of a wealthy father. But heâd already figured out that Irina wasnât like any other member of her family. Defiantly so, if he was any judge of character. What had happened to her along the way to make her so filled with rage, so fiercely independent?
Irina watched him with a curious expression. âWhat are you thinking?â
âIâm interested in Ivanâs theory of who killed Karpov.â
âIvanâs evidence is circumstantial. Until we determine that Borz is in Moscowâor was up until last nightâwe canât be sure of anything.â
âBut itâs a theory that makes perfect sense,â Bourne said. âGeneral Karpov had made Borz a target. If he discovered something vital about him, it figures Borz would want him dead.â
âNow that the general has been murdered you should be more interested in the mystery of the coin, but youâre not. Why?â
âI already told you.â
âMeaning?â
âBorz,â Bourne said. âHeâs the real reason I came to Moscow. To find him.â