Page 30 of The Bourne Initiative (Jason Bourne 14)
âIâm the one in the field, Soraya,â she said now. âI think Iâm betterââ
âStop right there. Morgana, listen to me. I threw you to the lions, itâs true. But this was a special circumstance. I had no one else.â
âThanks very much!â
âYou misunderstand. I had full confidence in you and what youâre capable of. But the truth is you lack training. I canât allow you to remain in the field.â
âAs you know Iâm an ace at all firearms. What you donât know is that my fatherââ
âA former SEAL. Iâve read his jacket. He was quite a fine one, brilliant, really.â
Now Morgana loved Soraya even more. âYes. He trained me himself.â Another bit of silence. She could almost hear Soraya thinking, recalculating, recalibrating the conversation. âPlus, really, when you think about it, my job at Meme LLC was to solve puzzlesâthe most difficult puzzles, I might add, puzzles that stumped others in my area of expertise. I find that the field is no different; itâs a matter of solving puzzles.â
âNo, itâs very different, Morgana. In the field youâre constantly in harmâs way.â
âI find I like that.â This time the silence was tense and brittle. She was about to say, Iâm staying, no matter what you say, but she felt the wrongness of it. Her mouth could lead her down a bad path with a bad ending. Instead, she said: âBut Iâll come home.â Hearing her fatherâs voice in one ear, she waited a beat before adding, âIf thatâs what you think is best.â
Silence. Then: âYouâre a very clever girl.â
âThank you.â
âI took a lot of chances with your brief. What if your friend Françoise didnât come through with her promise? I would have pulled you out of custody. You were never in any real danger as long as you were here in D.C.â
âBut once I came here, to Kalmar, I was in the real lionsâ den.â Now was the time, she thought, to push it. âWhat you must understand is that Iâve become one of them nowâa lion. Like my father.â
âI appreciate the confidence youâve gained, but I fear youâre overreaching. Youâll be going up against Gora Maslov, a hardened grupperovka boss. Heâll eat you for breakfast.â
âI donât think so,â Morgana said, a thrill down her spine: she had won. âI have a way in.â
âAnd what might that be?â
âThe point is both FranâAlyosha and Rozin were deeply interested in the Bourne Initiative, the code for which, I should add, Iâve not been able to crack. And now I donât think I or anyone outside the Russian team that General Karpov hand-picked to design it will.â
âThatâs of no importance now,â Soraya said. âThe Bourne Initiative is nothing more than noise, Russian disinformation.â
âWhat? It most certainly is not. The Initiative is real. Iâve been working on fragments of it andââ
âGetting nowhere, right?â
âYes, butââ
âAll meant for us to chase our tails like idiots. I got this directly from Marshall Fulmer, the new national security advisor, and he ought to know.â
âI donât know where heâs getting his intel from, Soraya, but Iâm telling you itâs bogus.â
âAn intercept of the Russian Unit 309. Iâve seen the pages, Morgana. Theyâre authentic.â
âTheyâre authentic, all right. Authentic disinformation,â Morgana said forcefully. âI know those code fragments are real beyond any shadow of a doubt. Do you know how? I found a legitimate zero-day trigger embedded in every one of the fragments I pulled out of the dark net. Thatâs the only thing I was able to decode, but itâs vital.â
Another silence on the line, longer this time, the tension ratcheted up a couple of notches. âIâm listening. Continue.â
âIâm damn good at my job. Donât you think Iâd be able to spot fake code, no matter how well put together? No, the Bourne Initiative is real, and itâs a ticking time bomb with an unknown target.â
âOkay. Letâs say youâre right. I canât go to the higher-ups and tell them that based on what youâve said. Fulmer will swat me down like a gnat. I just got this position; until I prove myself Iâve got to watch my pâs and qâs. I canât rock the boat.â
âThen donât tell anyone. Weâll act together.â
âThe two of us wonât be enough.â
âWorking alone is essential in this instance.â
âSo youâve said. You sound like the one person I believe can help us without physically interfering with whatever you have in mind with Gora. And he knows Gora. Though he knew his father even better. In fact, he was involved with General Karpov in killing Dimitri Maslov.â
âWho are we talking about?â
âJason Bourne.â
Morgana looked around, as if they had just now entered top-secret territory. The interior of the plane was still and serene, no one in her vicinity to overhear her end of the conversation. She returned her attention to Soraya half a world away. âI donât understand.â
âRemember a few years back when Bourne was accused of trying to assassinate the former president, and it turned out heâd saved him instead?â
âSure.â
âThat was because of meâSonya and I, who were being held captive.â
Morgana gave a gasp. âWhen your husband was killed.â
A small hesitation. âYes.â
âIâm so sorry, Soraya. All over again so sorry.â
âThank you. But to get back to Bourne, he and I go way back. We were in the field together.â
âSo youâre former colleagues.â
âMore than that. Letâs just say I know him more than well.â
âHuh!â
Soraya laughed, dry and rough as sand. âWell put.â
âIâve been wanting to speak with him ever since Mac sent me the first fragment of Initiative code. If anyone knows about the Initiative itâs got to be Bourne.â Morganaâs excitement was ramping up. âYou know how to get in touch with him?â
âNo, but I know someone who does. A man right here in D.C. by the name of Deron.â
âDo you have Deronâs number? Iâll call him the moment we hang up.â
âDeron wonât talk to you, let alone tell you how to get in touch with Bourne,â Soraya said. âNo, Deron knows me. Iâll call him.â
âIâll sit tight, then.â
âBack to the Initiative itself. You donât know what itâs meant to do?â
âNo.â
âDo you know when the zero-day trigger is set for?â
âYes. Forty hours from now.â Morgana took a breath. âAnother reason why I need to stay here.â
âBourne may not know this. He needs to.â
âYes.â
âNow tell me what you have in mind.â Sorayaâs voice was sharp and clear, which told Morgana a great deal about her. Unlike the other mandarins who ran various clandestine services whom she had met or had to deal with, Soraya was flexible. As a former field agent, she knew that you were sometimes required, or forced, to pivot on a dime in order to react to or take advantage of the changing situation in the field.
Morgana had had all night to think about a plan and Natalie to talk it over with. She knew she couldnât get to Gora Maslov on her own. âMaslov must be involved in the Bourne Initiative. Thatâs why Alyosha went to see him. Why else would he be here in this Swedish backwater at the same time as Alyosha and Nikolay, with them presumably helping me break the code? And if Iâm right and they are all in it together, then he is our chance to get to the Initiative before its inner clock detonates.â
Silence on the line, just the hollowness, the faint arrhythmic clicking of the security programs that shielded their conversation from electronic spying.
âAll of this tracks,â Soraya said. âThe bits of mysterious code youâve pulled off the dark web could be enticementsâcoming attractions, you might say. In that event, the Bourne Initiative is going to be auctioned off to the highest bidder, imminently.â
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??And I believe Gora will be one of the bidders. Now you can see why physical backup is the last thing I need. The more of our people here, the better the chance of Gora becoming suspicious.â
âLord, what have I unleashed in you?â
âThe law of unintended consequences, thatâs what,â Morgana said. âAnd itâs not your doing. Sooner or later I think this was bound to happen.â
âI think itâs my good luck, then.â The sound of what might be Soraya shuffling papers. âYouâll need some form of backup, Morgana.â
âIâve got you. Youâre all I need.â
Soraya laughed. âYouâre really a piece of work.â
âItâs the only way I know how to be now. And for better or for worse, I have you to thank for that.â
Soraya sighed. âHold on.â Several moments passed with only the hollowness and the electronic clicking. When she returned, she said, âGive me three hours. Iâll have a secured Bluetooth earwig and a pair of earrings couriered to you from our Stockholm office.â
âEarrings?â
Soraya laughed again. âThe transmitter for the earwig is in one of them. Donât lose it.â
âThere are a couple of other things I need, stat.â
âName them.â Morgana did. âYouâll have them.â Then Sorayaâs tone altered. âAnd Morgana?â
âYes?â
âI wonât forget this.â
âIs that good or bad?â Morgana asked, but Soraya Moore had already disconnected.
â
âI am to use Dima Orlovâs name with you, Mr. Bourne.â
Bourne sat forward. âWhy?â
âHe and I are working together.â
The Angelmaker laughed. âDima Orlov working with the first minister?â She shook her head. âI donât think so.â
âIâm not here as first minister,â Savasin said. âI did not seek out Dima as first minister, but as the brother of Konstantin, who has plans to capture you, Mr. Bourne. Capture you, torture you, then kill you.â
âMany have tried,â Bourne said.
âKonstantin is a snake. Heâs ruthless and devious. He lives to create diabolical traps. I beg you not to underestimate him.â
âMore people have died underestimating their enemy than I care to count.â Bourne waved the Strizh back and forth. âI wouldnât concern myself with that.â
âBut I do, Mr. Bourne. Very much so. Your safety, your knowledge is critical, Dima believes, to finding the codes for the Initiative, for keeping them out of the hands of maniacs like Konstantin.â
âOf course my help is critical,â Bourne said. âAccording to General MacQuerrie, Dima Orlov is the one who stole the Initiative right after Boris was murdered.â
âWhat? But thatâs impossible.â
âWhy?â Bourne said. âWhy is it impossible, Timur?â
âKatya said that he and General Karpov were good friends.â
âMaybe thatâs true,â Bourne said, âbut the Angelmaker here knows that Borisâs death set the two remaining partners against each other. You see, Boris was the peacemaker. Both Dima and MacQuerrie trusted him, but it seems they didnât trust each other. Now only Dima is left, and Dima has the Initiative.â
âThen why did he rope me in?â Savasin shook his head. âWhat does he need me for?â
âDid he contact you, Timur?â
âNo. I went to him.â
âWhy would you do that?â Bourne asked.
âBecause my brotherâ¦â Savasinâs voice trailed off as his thoughts transferred onto another track.
âKonstantin, yes. Dima needs you as protection against the threat your brother presents to him. Konstantin is a threat to you; thatâs how he roped you in.â
âAnd you,â Savasin said. âWhy did he send me to find you?â
âFriends close,â Bourne said. âEnemies closer.â
Bourne lowered the pistol, set it down between him and Mala. He gestured. âTake a pew, Timur. Itâs true confession time.â
â
And so for the first time in his life, including when he was a little boy, Timur Savasin sat down and spoke honestly. He could not remember when he had learned to lie about everythingâthe moment, or time, was too distant for him to dredge up. But he knew the habit was formed as a response to Konstantin, a kind of protection from the malefic entity his parents had given life to.
And in talking honestly he experienced an enormous sense of relief, as of a terrible weight being lifted from his shoulders, as if his brother had consigned him to the role of Atlas, the weight of the world crushing him every waking moment, from which he had finally freed himself.
âThe ironic thing,â he said, after he had recounted his meeting with Dima and Katya in great detail, âis after having spent so many years hating and fearing Boris Karpov, I now feel as if Iâm moving into his orbit. Konstantin covets General Karpovâs position and power, and I know I must do everything in my power to stop him. Karpov was a humanist, Dima and Katya have opened my eyes to that. And now I am eager for the opportunity to understand his friendship with you, Mr. Bourne. Perhaps that is the one good thing that will come out of the dire straits we all find ourselves in, sparked by General Karpovâs cyber Initiative, which has come to be known by both the Americans and us as the Bourne Initiative.
âDima and Katya believe that you are the key to retrieving the codes. They are convinced that Karpov must have left some clue for you that will lead you to it, because itâs clear to me that none of the original three partners, two of whom are dead, know what happened to it.â
âIf, as MacQuerrie believed, Dima hijacked the Initiative, then there is somethingâsome key elementâmissing from it, and they think I have it,â Bourne said.
âDo you?â
âNo,â Bourne said. âBoris left me his boat, which was sunk by the Americans. Thatâs it.â
âWell, thatâs disappointing.â
âWhen it comes to Boris, people have gotten everything wrong. He would never have created a cyber weapon aimed at the United States. Knowing Boris as I did, I never believed that bit of fiction. What was his aim, then? MacQuerrie said that the code was meant to freeze the security systems of the largest international banks, allowing the three of them access to all the banksâ accounts. MacQuerrie believed they were on the cusp of pulling off an electronic theft of unprecedented proportions.â
Savasinâs eyes narrowed. âI am no novice in reading between the lines, Mr. Bourne. There is something about General MacQuerrieâs explanation that doesnât ring true to you.â
âNot exactly,â Bourne replied. âMy sense is this. Boris loved money as much as the next person, more maybe. But he wasnât about to steal from anyone and everyone; that simply went against his grain. So what then? First, I believe Boris was getting ready to leave Russia. He had just gotten married; he had no other family left alive. When he left Russia on his honeymoon, he couldnât be pressured to return. He and his wife werenât coming back.
âSo if we accept this scenario, which I do, where was Boris going to get his drop-dead money? He was well off, but not an oligarch by any means; he was unbribable. No, the cyber Initiative was meant to allow him to pick and choose, to take from the terrorist leaders and criminals who were housing their money in those banks whose coffers would be open to him. That plan is Boris Karpov to a T.â
âThen he was murdered.â
âWhich set off a power struggle between the two remaining partners,â the Angelmaker said.
âDuring which someone made off with the codes,â Bourne continued. âHe or she has them and now means to auction them off to the highest bidder, someone who doesnât have Borisâs sense of morality.â
Savasin raked his fingers through his hair. âTheyâve created a very deep pit, indeed.â
âAdd another âvery,ââ Bourne said. âMacQuerrie told me that while Boris meant the codes to freeze banksâ security software, the Initiative could be directed at the deepest secrets of a sovereign nation.â
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âLike the United States.â
âOr the Russian Federation.â
âThe stars are aligning.â Savasin smiled. âYou see, Mr. Bourne, you and I are moving toward the kind of détente you shared with General Karpov for many years.â
Mala grunted in clear derision.
âI think itâs safe to say,â Bourne said, âthat weâre nowhere close to a détente, Timur.â
Savasin nodded, keeping his expression neutral. âAs you wish. But now I must tell you something, and from what youâve told me the truth of it is unclear. Dima said that there is a timer set into the Initiative.â
âA timer?â
âYes. A zero-day trigger, he called it.â
Both Bourne and Mala knew what a zero-day trigger was.
âDid he tell you when the exploit will activate?â
Savasin shook his head. âHe claimed not to know. But he also said that the day was close. Very close.â
Mala looked from Bourne to Savasin and back again. âThere are two things Dima can do with the Initiative if he can retrieve the codes. He can use it for himself, or he can set up an international auction. Can you imagine how much such a cyber weapon would fetch on the clandestine network that terrorist leaders, demagogues, and heads of state of evil intent inhabit?â Her gaze returned to Savasin. âThat group would include your Sovereign, First Minister, you know that, right?â
âIt would also include my brother,â Savasin replied. âHeâs doing everything in his power to get his hands on the Initiative.â Savasin leaned forward, elbows on knees. âTo do so, I guarantee that heâs going to cross any and all lines he feels he needs to. Sooner or later, Konstantin always gets what he wants.â
37
Iâm only doing this for the money.â Natalie, the young woman Morgana had spoken to after she had debarked from Goraâs boat, swept her blond hair behind her ear. âI have a toddler. She was at my auntâs the night you slept over.â