Page 5 of The Bourne Initiative (Jason Bourne 14)
Fulmer inclined his head. âAnd you?â
Françoise shuddered visibly. âIâm a go-between.â
âTo interface with anyone.â
âI go where the money is.â
Fulmer pursed his lips. âYou see, thatâs the difference between us. I go where the power is.â He regarded her from under hooded eyes. âDo you really believe your road is higher than mine?â
She turned away, her eyes searching past the customers coming and going. A young woman entered pushing her baby in a pram; three men in suits, all staring into the faces of their mobiles, sauntered slowly out. Beyond, the agglomerated sounds of the mall, echoing as if they were underwater, filtered into the café between the shouts of those at the bar. The flat-screen was showing a football match between Real Madrid and Manchester United.
Since it seemed clear Françoise had chosen not to answer, Fulmer opted to push on. âBack to ourâto Keyre.â
Françoise swung her head back toward him. âEverythingâs on schedule. But there are new players in the field. Circumstances have dictated a higher price.â
His eyes narrowed. âHow much higher?â
âDouble.â
âThatâs nosebleed territory.â
It was her turn to shrug. âI donât set the price, I just report it.â
âTell him I agree. But thatâs the limit. Tell him heâs hit the ceiling. Iâm done negotiating.â
âDonât worry. Iâll make him see your point of view.â
âThatâs what Iâm paying you for.â He pushed the coffee cup away. âNow I have another job for you.â
âIâm full up.â
Fulmer extracted a small leather-bound notepad from his breast pocket, wrote a figure down with a Mont Blanc pen. Tearing off the sheet, he pushed it across the table to her. âHalf of that is already in your Gibraltar bank. All thatâs required is a phone call from me to have it transferred to your account.â
Françoise crumpled up the paper, stuck it in a plastic ashtray, burned it. âPretty sure of yourself, arenât you.â
âI make it a point to know the people I hire.â
âBien,â she said softly. âWhatâs the assignment?â
âI want you to find out where Justin Farreng is getting his recent leaks.â
Françoise sat stock-still. After a long, agonizing moment, she regained her ability to think clearly. âIâm a go-between, not a detective.â
âFrom where I sit, knowing what youâve accomplished for me, thereâs scarcely any difference.â
âStillâ¦â
He shrugged again. âIf you donât want the money, Iâll findââ
âI didnât say that.â Her fingertips turned the ashtray around and around.
âToo much money to leave on the table. So much this could be your last score. You could get out of the game, lie on a beach in Bali or Phuket. Attract the muscled surfer boys. Sleep to your heartâs content.â
She licked her lips. âWhy do you want to knowâ¦Farrengâs source?â Good God, she had almost said âJustin.â
âLeakAGE has always been a pain in our asses,â Fulmer said. âBut as of late Farreng has been spilling open some unpleasant business regarding Reade and Dunlop.â
âThe law firm in Panama.â She regarded him carefully. âAre you a client?â
He shook his head. âBut one of my shell companies uses another Panamanian firm.â
âName?â When he hesitated, she said, âI canât help you if I donât know their name.â
âMusgrave-Stephens.â
âHave you had any indication that Musgrave-Stephens has been hacked?â
âNo, but Iâm figuring itâs just a matter of time.â
âThen get your shell company out.â
âGetting the company out is a snap. But then where to?â
âI suggest Fellingham, Bodeys.â
âNever heard of them.â
âThatâs the point, isnât it,â Françoise said with a sly smile. âThey take very few clients; theyâre extremely exacting, conservative to a fault.â
âSounds like just the ticket.â
She produced a gold-edged card with raised lettering in a flowing script, handed it to him. âTell them youâre a client of mine.â
âIs there anything you canât do for me, Françoise?â
âI seriously doubt it.â
He laughed, putting the card away.
âI have another suggestion.â
âFire away.â
âYou want to be the presidential nominee in the next election, yes? I want to be sure youâre not derailed.â
âAnd how would that work, exactly?â
âDirt, Mr. Fulmer. Have you brought the dirt?â
He grinned. âAs we discussed.â Slapping his briefcase on the table, he opened it, felt around for the hidden compartment, took out a thumb drive and held it up for her to see.
âAnd where are you getting the material from?â
âThe deep, dark web.â Fulmer laughed shortly. âThatâs strictly need-to-know.â He twirled the thumb drive between his fingers. âWhat I want, what you need to tell me, is how you intend to use this.â
Without hesitation, Françoise plucked the miniature drive from his fingertips. âI will have Farrengâs source feed LeakAGE this material detrimental to your enemies. In no time, youâll be sitting pretty as the obvious next presidential candidate.â
There was something greedy about Fulmerâs smile. He made the call transferring her fee into her account, exorbitant as usual, but worth every penny.
âNous avons toujours fait comprendre mutuellement,â he said, murdering both the grammar and the pronunciation, as was his wont. We always did understand each other.
â
Françoiseâs loathing for Marshall Fulmer knew no bounds. On the other hand, she was determined to take as much of his money as she could lay her hands on. This conflictâemotion on one side, practicality on the otherâwas not unknown to her. Still, she needed to consider each episode as it arose. The conflict was uppermost in her mind as she made her way out of the Baronen Köpcenter and onto the docks.
It was a fine day. The sun shone brightly down on her, small puffy clouds floated by. Boats, skiffs, and ships drifted past. She might have been in a scene from a cartoon or a childrenâs book. However, the life she was living was strictly X-rated. She went to the rail overlooking the harbor, leaned on it with her elbows. One of the clouds looked like a lamb, which reminded her to make a dinner reservation for tonight at Aifur Song, a new buzzy restaurant. Even Kalmar hadnât been left out of the latest culinary wave sweeping around the world.
Perhaps twenty minutes later, a young man with dark hair and even darker eyes came and stood near her. He held an expensive Hasselblad with which he was taking what appeared to be professional photos of the harbor. Despite his age, he already had the spidery red cheeks of the inveterate vodka drinker. He was known to Françoise. His name was Nikolay Ivanovich Rozin. Back home in Moscow, a city she had not seen in ten years, she knew him as Niki. Here, outside the Federation, he was Larry London, a freelance photographer for Global Photographics.
âTime,â Larry London said as he clicked away on his Hasselblad.
âI donât like to be kept waiting.â
âHe knows that.â
Without uttering another word or waiting for a reply he knew wouldnât come, he strode away, ostensibly to find another perspective on the harbor and its inhabitants.
Françoise waited for more time than she should have, then turned, went through a waist-high metal gate that led down to the marina itself. She felt the wooden slats shifting slightly beneath her feet as she made the transition from dry land to water.
The boat was at anchor three-quarters of the way down the dock, on her left. It was blue-and-white, a motored sailboat with the name Carbon Neutral painted across its stern. It had beautiful linesâsleek and trimâa pleasure boat rather than one made for fishing.
; No one welcomed her as she stepped aboard. The deck was clear, but as she neared the cabin she heard music. As she closed on the hatch, which was pinned open, she heard Edith Piaf singing and made a face.
âYouâve dated yourself, Iâm afraid,â she said as she descended into the cabin.
âI thought the French music was a fine touch.â
âIâm more a Mylène Farmer fan.â
He grunted, waved her to an upholstered bench that would turn into a bunk this evening.
âBourne,â he said. âHave you found him?â
âHeâs on the Aegean.â
âThe Aegean Sea is a very big body of water.â
âNot for everyone. The Americans blew up General Karpovâs boat.â
He raised his eyebrows, thick as hedgerows, expressive as his late fatherâs. âDid they now? Which Americans?â
Françoise laughed shortly. âDreadnaught.â
He laughed with her. âAnd Bourne was on board?â
âNo idea.â
âThose Americans.â He shook his head. His hair, dictated by the latest fashion, was thick and shiny along the top, shaved close to his scalp on either side. âCanât count on them being the least bit useful. Bad as the British, these days, and thatâs saying something.â
âTurn off that awful caterwauling, if you please.â Françoise crossed her long legs. âSomething more appropriate.â
The man hit a button, then spun the wheel on his iPod mini and the Junkie XL soundtrack to Mad Max: Fury Road pounded forth from the surround sound speakers.
âNo listening device yet devised can hear us through this,â Gora Maslov said. He had taken over from his late father, Dimitri, as head of the Kazanskaya grupperovka, the Russian mafia family that ruled Moscow. In Dimitriâs day, the Kazanskaya had majored in drug-running and black market cars. These days, under Goraâs rule, the family trafficked in the final frontier territories dominated by stolen cyber weapons, virtual currency, organ harvesting, and humans.
âWell,â Gora said, âit seems that being away from Mother Russia continues to agree with you.â
She laughed, her white teeth showing briefly. âIâve been off to see the world.â
âAnd how is the world treating you?â
âLike an empress.â
âImpressive.â He grinned. âWhat would the Sovereign think?â
Françoise rose, fetched herself a drink from the built-in across the cabin, since it was clear that Gora wasnât going to do it. âYou know, I think he would approve.â She splashed vodka over ice cubes she grabbed from the half-size fridge. âI mean, heâs also off to see the world, isnât he?â
She took a long swallow, went and stood before him. Then, without any warning, she slapped him across the face.
âWhat the fuck?â A red mark blossomed on his cheek, but he seemed unperturbed.
âKeeping me waiting.â
âBusiness.â
âBullshit.â
âYou take everything too personally.â
She shook her head. âIâm disappointed. For someone whoâs ostensibly part of the new wave, you can be disconcertingly old-fashioned.â
âI take after my father.â He watched her with glittering gimlet eyes.
She almost hit him again, but knew hot anger wasnât the answer. âYouâve been watching too many American gangster films.â She took a sip of the chilled liquor. âScarface is your favorite, if memory serves.â
âThatâs right,â he said tightly. âKeep at it.â
âOr is it Wall Street?â
He stood up abruptly, and she saw the bulk of him, the gym rat physique, the violence that sheathed his muscles just under his skin.
âOne day youâll push me too far.â
She looked up at him from beneath long lashes. âThat will be a very bad day for you, Gora.â
His face went tight. âIs that a threat?â
âItâs a promise.â
His hands curled into fists. She knew he longed to incite her, which was why she stayed where she was, calmly sipping her vodka. To use the terms of one of his obsessions, he often reminded her of Sonny Corleone: quick to temper, a beat-down never far from his mind. Also, his Neanderthal Rat Pack attitude toward womenâmeant to be used, fucked, then thrown onto the scrap heap. But not before he delivered a good thrashing or three.
Sheâd witnessed that happen over and over again with all his girlfriends, even one-night stands, observing at a remove. The last few years, when she had been away from everything Russian, she had received her intel on him through third parties. His behavior kept repeating without letup; Gora was incapable of change. He was who he wasâbut then that was true of so many people it might as well be part of the human condition.
âBrother, sit yourself down,â she said in Russian.
âDonât call me brother, Alyosha.â
âMy mistake, Gora.â Having wound him up as revenge for keeping her waiting, it was up to her to get him to throttle back, to defuse the situation. Heâd never be able to do it on his own.
As he sat, she poured some Coke over ice, handed him the cooling glass. As he drank, she placed her hand on his meaty shoulder. âThereâs room for both of us,â she said softly and felt the muscles beneath her fingers lose their tension.
He drained the rest of the Coke and set the glass down, leaned his head back, and sighed. âThere are days,â he said, âwhen it doesnât seem so bad being away from home.â
âHome is lonely, Gora.â She sat down beside him, maintaining physical contact. Heâd never had that growing up. âI know you miss Dimitri.â
âIt was that shit Karpov who gunned father down. In a barber shop!â His eyes flashed. âLet me tell you, Alyosha, all debts will be paid.â
She shook her head. âKarpov is dead, Gora.â
âUntil his best friend, Jason Bourne, is dealt with, my debt to father will not be paid in full.â
Françoise had to laugh at that, but not to his face. âIs that what all your recent maneuvering is all about?â
âTo that end, maybe you could help me. It would mean returning to Moscow.â
She shook her head. âI like it out here. Iâm never coming home, Gora.â
âSo you think that wise?â
âWise?â She cocked her head to one side. âI canât say. Perhaps I no longer know what wise is. But I know I have to stay here.â
âWhy?â he asked. âHavenât you killed enough people yet?â
She snorted. âWhat is that, a joke?â
âIâve never killed anyone in my life.â
âNo, you just order other people to do it,â she said acidly.
âThereâs a difference.â
She looked at him as if he were insane. But what was she to say? There was no rational response to an irrational statement, so she returned to the previous topic. âThe guise of a go-between is perfect for me, Gora. Which is why Iâve no intention of returning.â
âYou disappoint me, Alyosha.â
She stood, preparatory to leaving. âWhat else is new?â Sheâd had enough of him.
6
The fog of death and destruction clamped them tight, kept them safe as Bourne and Mala, using the emergency oars clamped to the inside of the hull, rowed their way forward, away from the island of Skyros, toward the vessel holding the rest of the kill squad. The vessel had switched on its searchlight, which was aimed at the water. It was past time for âSmithâ to have surfaced and swum back to his boat.
Reaching the outer perimeter of their cover of smoke, they shipped their oars momentarily, hauled Smithâs corpse over the side, guided him toward the bow, then sent him off into the black water ahead of them. Then they rowed backward just enough that they were hidden again, but not so far that they couldnât see beyond the smoke field, which, in any event, was slowly but surely dissipating.
They could see âSmithâ floating faceup, moving away from them on the currents. Bourne had been sure to keep him faceup, after heâ
d filled his lungs with air to keep him floating long enough for his comrades to spot him. Without his tanks, regulator, mouthpiece, and mask, he would keep afloat even longer.
âWill they find him?â Mala asked as she crouched beside Bourne in the bow.
âWait for it.â He pointed to the spot where Smithâs bare feet, blue-white, veined as marble, drifted into the edge of the beam.
âThere!â
The shout rushed at them across the water, and the beam swung wildly across âSmith,â then past him, before swinging back, correcting. Bobbing in the low waves, he became a kind of metronome, his rhythm in tune with the sea.
The boat moved toward an intercept course. Beyond the searchlightâs beam, it was lit up like an airport runway. They counted five men, including the driver. The hull struck the corpse, whirling it away for a moment before it was brought back alongside with a long-handled gaff.
âChrist,â they heard someone say as âSmithâ was hauled on board. âWhat the hell happened to Stone?â
âCaught in the blast?â someone else opined.
âHis suit isnât shredded,â a third voice broke in. âAnd where the fuckâs his equipment?â
âGet ready,â Bourne said, handing Mala an oar, taking up the other one himself.
âItâs like he was stripped after he was killed,â the first voice said.
Bourne and Mala were already rowing backward when the searchlightâs beam extended outward, scanning the water between the vessel and the debris field. Reaching farther, the beam hit the smoke, reflecting backward as car headlights will in dense fog.
âThe smoke wonât keep us hidden for much longer,â Mala whispered.
âWith luck, it wonât have to.â
The searchlight beam kept reaching out, closer and closer toward them. But the closer it got, the more diffuse it became, the more the light was reflected back into the hit teamâs faces. The vessel began to inch forward.
âHere they come,â Mala whispered.
âWe hold our position.â
âBut theyâllââ
The vessel came on, slowly but surely. They were close enough to make out one man straining to scan the debris field with night-vision goggles. But again the smoke refracted the spotlightâs beam into his eyes. He was, in effect, blind.