Page 7 of The Bourne Initiative (Jason Bourne 14)
âGo with the flow.â
Morgana frowned. âGo withâ¦?â For a moment her alarm showed on her face. âChaos.â
Soraya inclined her head. âIn a manner of speaking, yes.â Her large, luminous eyes would not let Morgana go. âThe brief is still of interest to you.â
It didnât seem to be a question, nevertheless, Morgana answered. âIt is.â
âSaying good-bye to your very ordered life.â
âIâm feeling claustrophobic. In a manner of speaking.â
âAlso frustrated, I imagine.â
Morgana blinked. âI beg your pardon?â
âThe bit of code General MacQuerrie sent you.â
Morgana opened her mouth to ask how Soraya knew about the piece of the cyber weapon but thought better of it. That she knew, reinforced Morganaâs decision.
âFrustration, too. Yes.â
Soraya favored her with a smile. âThen itâs settled.â
âOkay, butâ¦go with the flow.â She shook her head. âI donât get it.â
âNot at this point, at any rate,â Soraya said. âBut, trust me, to tell you more would be a mistake.â
âAll right.â It wasnât all right, but what else could she say. âI do trust you.â
âOr else you wouldnât be here.â Another slight pause. âEvents will be moving quickly now. No matter. Do whatever you have decided to do. Do not alter a thing.â
âI understand.â Morgana cleared her throat again. âIs that all?â
âJustââ
âGo with the flow.â Morgana smiled now. âGot it.â
As she made to leave, Soraya said, âOne more thing.â
Morgana raised her eyebrows. âYes?â
âItâs highly likely that at some point youâll think Iâve thrown you to the dogs.â
âBut you havenât.â
âFurther along, youâll be able to judge for yourself.â
There was a distinct note of finality in the comment. The interview was over.
â
Ten minutes later, Morgana showed her credentials to security. She might not be government, but there were enough occasions when she was required to be at HQ that Mac had had a Dreadnaught clearance created for her. No one inside NSA had ever heard of Meme LLC, and that was just the way both she and Mac wanted it. NSA was PURINT, pure intelligence, meaning surveillance was done from the remove of satellites, wires, remote chatter interceptors. No one in the field. Whereas the CIA dealt in HUMINTâhuman intelligenceâagents in the field reporting back to their controls. Mac believed in PURINT; otherwise he wouldnât have been in NSA. But he also believed in enforcement and interdiction intervention, hence his creation of Dreadnaught neatly hidden inside NSA. She was waved through, directed to park the car in Macâs designated section of the lot.
Morgana was stopped at another security post just inside the front doors. Then she was required to put her handbag through an X-ray and to pass through a metal detector. Even after that she was patted down by a muscular, grim-faced woman who seemed to be channeling a prison guard.
When the womanâs hand rose to her crotch, Morgana said, âTry itâ with such ferocity the woman froze. âGo on,â Morgana said. The woman shrugged, backed off, turning away as if she had more important things to do than fondle Morgana.
The vast lobby was deliberately intimidatingâhigh-ceilinged, hard-walled, and filled with people on missions far more important than yours, whatever that might be. Morgana laughed to herself as she crossed to the bank of elevators.
Yet another security checkpoint reared its ugly head as soon as she stepped off at the fifteenth floor. Passing through without difficulty, she went down the thickly carpeted corridor, passing doors with only inscrutable designations in a number-letter code. Like an aircraft carrier, you had to know your way around the place in order not to get hopelessly lost.
Righteous fury was a deadly thing, she knew this. It was more likely to defeat you than to bring you victory. Nevertheless, it was righteous fury that had brought her from her station at Meme LLC to Dreadnaughtâs doorâdesignated NCN-113, for who knew what arcane reason.
Now, at the threshold, she paused not only to slow her heart rate down but to give equal consideration to rational thought. âCollect your thoughts,â her father used to tell her when she was a kid and would get flummoxed at school. âPut âem all in a basket, then rummage around in there until you pick out the best one.â Damn, if it didnât always work. But then everything her father taught her was of use to her later on as an adult. He was a twice-decorated former Navy SEAL. Everything he knew about guns, about knives, about hand-to-hand combat he taught her as furiously, as completely as if she were a boy. âI love that you take to your training like a fledgling to the air,â he said to her one balmy spring evening. And so did she. What would he think of her now? she wondered. Would he be proud of her or disappointed that she hadnât taken the steps necessary to become a field agent? Sheâd never know; heâd died ten years ago in a fiery multiple-vehicle accident on the New Jersey Turnpike. Her mother lasted six weeks without him before something inside herâpossibly her will to liveâfailed. Morgana was an orphan; nothing between her and the grave.
With the image of her father as teacher vivid in her mindâs eye, she collected her thoughts and drew out the best one, knowing that striding into Dreadnaught half-cockedâor, the way she had been feeling, fully cockedâwas definitely not the way to get what she wanted.
And then another voice entered her consciousness: Events will be moving quickly now.
Taking a deep breath and letting it out slowly, she turned the knob, pushed the door open, and found herself inside Dreadnaught.
Not that it looked much different than what she imagined any other office inside NSA would be like: there were programmers, analysts, many, many computer terminals, the massed whirr of small fans, like moths fluttering against a windowpane, and the hot, metallic smell of electronics firing away at full throttle.
No one spokeâall communication in this place was made through emails, IMs, textsâeven in this day and age when, as Morgana knew better than most, all electronic communication was among the most insecure. NSA personnel maintained absolute faith in the imperviousness of their firewalls and anti-malware software. It was naïve, even childish, in Morganaâs view, but that was what came of investing yourself in quasi-religious beliefs. It was their hubris; she had no doubt it would be their downfall.
Heads popped up when she appeared. Nerds these guys might be, but they werenât neuteredânot yet, anyway. A young man rose from his workstation to intercept her. He was blond, blue-eyed, square-jawed, and as magnetic as a movie star of the fifties, a time of pink flesh and innocence. She imagined the smell of the corn husks he must have been born into. He didnât disappoint her.
âLieutenant Francis Goode. How may I help you, maâam?â he inquired in that flat Midwestern accent she knew well.
Flashing him her creds, she said, âI have an appointment with Mac.â
âWho?â
âAh.â Thatâs right; he wouldnât know. âYour boss, Arthur MacQuerrie.â The blank face remained, affording her a moment of amusement before she pitched herself into the fray. âThe general.â
His eyes narrowed, which made him look like a kid. âAnd what would your business be with General MacQuerrie?â
âIâm afraid thatâs above your pay grade, Lieutenant. What are you, a GS seven?â She saw that she had struck pay dirt. âFar, far above.â
He scowled, which made him seem more handsome. But she could see that he was also intimidated. âAbove your pay gradeâ was a trigger phrase that never failed to strike fear into the hearts of GS eights and below.
And then she thought, Why am I pissing on this guy? Heâs been nothing but polite to me. So she smiled until his scowl melted like ice in sunlight. âMy apologies, Lieutenant Goode, but need-to-know is need-to-know. I should have phrased it another way.â
He grinned hugely.
âNo problem, maâam.â
She matched the wattage of his smile, making it more than a veneer. âCall me Morgana.â
âI donât think I can, maâam.â
She ducked her head. She could be coquettish as well as the next dollâprobably a whole lot better. She regarded Goode from under sooty lashes; men liked that. âNot even between us?â
âWell, I supposeâ¦â He gave her a goofy grin, as if it were a present.
âWhat is it, Lieutenant?â
âMay I ask you a question?â And he hastily added, âItâs not about your appointment with General MacQuerrie.â
âOf course.â She nodded. âFire away.â
âDo you really call the general âMacâ?â
She caused her laugh to be high and fluty, like a teenagerâs. âYes, Lieutenant, I do.â She raised a finger in mock warning. âBut thatâs only between you and me. If I go before a Senate subcommittee I deny all knowledge of the nickname.â
They chuckled together. He was on her side now.
âHold on a moment,â he said. âThe general has been in communications all day. Iâll let him know youâre here.â
Morgana nodded as he turned away. Luck was with her. Mac could have been at the Pentagon or Capitol Hill or anywhere else, but he was right here where she needed him to be. And now she knew why he hadnât answered any of her three calls.
It was only several minutes later that Goode returned and, with that innocent smile of his, ushered her back to Macâs inner sanctum. He was going to see her even without an appointmentâa sign of her worth to him, even though she had never been here before.
He was sitting at the far end of what looked like a football field, but that might have been an illusion caused by the eerie violet lighting that was part of the electronic security net that enclosed the space.
The lieutenant vanished as soon as Morgana stepped across the threshold, closing the door soundlessly behind him. Halfway to Macâs imposing desk, which surely wasnât government issue, was a conversation area, complete with matching leather sofas and easy chair and an inlaid glass-topped coffee table, also not government issue.
âMorgana,â Mac said, smiling and extending a warm, dry hand. âTo what do I owe this visit?â
Someone must have cleaned up the remnants of the meeting or else it had taken place elsewhere, as the conversation area was spotless enough to eat off of. Mac gestured for Morgana to sit, which she did on one of the sofas. The general chose the easy chair. He sat back, crossed one leg over the other, showing off the knife-edged crease down the center of each trouser leg.
âI tried calling you, butââ
He spread his hands. âI wasnât available.â And smiled. âBut I am now. Iâm all yours.â
âI appreciate that, Mac.â
âHow are you coming with the Bourne Initiative?â
âYou mean the Karpov Initiative.â
âThe generalâs dead, as weâve discussed,â he said flatly. âItâs Bourneâs now.â
She nodded. âRight. Of course.â She swallowed, appalled to discover her mouth was suddenly dry. It was one thing talking to Mac over their private line or having lunch with him at one out-of-the-Beltway venue or other, quite another to be sitting in his office in the middle of the NSA wasp nest. She didnât like it here; she didnât like it one bit. She felt as if she were about to break out in hives at any moment. She scratched at her forearm.
âThe fact is itâs Bourne Iâm here to talk to you about.â
He frowned. âI donât understand. How does Bourne concern you?â
âFirst, I want to know if you have even linked Bourne with Keyre.â
MacQuerrie grunted. âWe have, and itâs simple enough. He was spotted last year in Moscow with a female operative known only as the Angelmaker. Sheâs a deadly assassin.â
âAnd?â
âAnd, the Angelmaker was made a freak of nature by Keyre, then Bourne somehow got hold of her and put the finishing touches on her assassinâs tradecraft. Just in the last five years, sheâs been linked to the deaths of no fewer than eleven businessmen, politicians, and the like. A board member of a multinational in Munich, a diamond tycoon in Joburg, a warlord in one of those constantly fomenting African nations, a rising right-wing pol and his two mistresses in Paris, a reclusive cyber-billionaire in Manaus, in the fucking Amazon, no less. Then there was Palermo, where she took out twin brothers, one a Mafia don, the other his high-powered lawyerâthat was a doozy. And letâs not forget the murder aboard a billionaire bankerâs yacht off the beaches of Ibiza. How she pulled that off⦠Well, you get the idea. Sheâs a fucking menace and another reason Bourne needs to be eliminated.â He cocked his head. âIs there a second reason Bourne concerns you?â
Morgana ignored the hint of sarcasm in his question. âSo far we have been unable to crack the code you gave us.â
Macâs frown deepened. âThatâs not good news.â
âNo, itâs not.â Her forearm was itching again; she resolved to ignore it. âWhich is why I want to interrogate Bourne.â
The general blinked. âI beg your pardon.â
âItâs now the Bourne Initiative. You said it yourself, Mac. Heâs the only one who can give us access to theââ
âLet me stop you right there.â MacQuerrie held up a hand. âMorgana, youâre a terrifically talented software engineer. The cyber weapons youâve devised for me, the ones youâve managed to dismantle before they carried out their nefarious missions, are legion. Youâre at the top of your field. But that field is a narrow-beam affair, do you understand me?â He went straight on, not waiting for a reply; she would have to be an idiot not to understand him. âYour expertise in one field does not qualify you as expert in any other.â
âI understand that, Mac, butââ
âThis clandestine serviceâany clandestine serviceâis, by definition, highly compartmentalized. You understand why this must be.â
âOf course I do.â
âThen let me say you are not qualified to understand what Jason Bourne would or would not do. So allow me to enlighten you. A man like Bourneâif, in fact, we were ever able to capture him, which is highly problematicâwould never give us the secret to this cyber weapon. Even if we used the most extreme forms of persuasion, even if we waterboarded him forââ
âGood God, Mac.â She was shaken to her core. âI would never encourage anything like that!â
He smiled thinly. âOf course you wouldnât. And neither would I.â
âIâm relieved to hear that.â
He regarded her for a moment, as if he was in the process of reassessing her. âWhat you are asking is quite out of the question.â
He hadnât yet mentioned the termination order he had given. Could she no longer trust Mac? Had they become adversaries in a weird form of cold war? Only one way to find out.
âI know.â
Mac shook his head. âKnow what, precisely?â
âThat you sent a team to kill Bourneââ
âWhat?â
âThat the team blew up the boat he was on, only he wasnât on it.â
âMorgana, I donâtââ
âBottom line, Bourne is still alive. I want him.â
Color had rushed into Macâs face. âYou donât know what youâre talking about.â
âI need him, Mac. We need him if weâre to crack the Bourne Initiative, as you call it.â
âMorgana, I donât understand. I did not order anyone to blow up a ship anywhere in the world.â
Her eyes narrowed. âAre you saying that you have not put out a termination order on Jason Bourne?â
He spread his hands. âWhy is a cyber jockey like you talking about termination orders?â
âYou didnât answer my question, Mac.â
The general sighed. âThis is eyes-only intel, soâ¦â He made a pained face as if he had a sweet in his mouth that had an unexpected sour core. âIt was a Russian team that blew up the boat. General Karpovâs
boat. Out of sheer bloody-mindedness, I shouldnât wonder. Nothing whatsoever to do with Bourne.â He seemed to swallow the sour taste. âNow. Stick to your patch of the woods, Morgana. Thatâs my advice to you.â
âYou made Bourne my patch of the woods when you gave me my marching orders for this cyber weapon.â
âThen you misunderstood me.â He shrugged. âThese things are bound to happen from time to time.â
He said this in such a condescending tone that she sat perfectly erect, as if coming to attention while seated. Her entire body tensed like a pulled bow string. She took a beat to reset. âYou gave me the impression that this cyber weaponâthe so-called Bourne Initiativeâis your highest priority.â
He nodded. âAnd so it remains.â
âThen you canât tie one arm behind my back. You have to give me all the tools I need toââ
âI have to? I donât have to do anything.â The thunderclouds arrived with frightening swiftness. âHave you forgotten to whom youâre speaking? Not to be overly melodramatic, but, dammit, I set you up in your job, I made sure you got every damned piece of equipment you asked for, even your Italian coffee thingy.â
âEspresso maker,â she corrected foolishly.
He glared at her. âI can take it all away, including your fucking espresso maker.â
âAnd who will that hurt the most, General? Me or our country?â
âMorgana, Morgana, Morgana.â He shook his head, his expression now mournful. âItâs clear to me now that you have risen too far, too fast. Youâve reached the sun; your wings have melted. I gave you freedom. You mistook that freedom for power. You have no power, not now, not ever. Do I make myself clear?â
âCrystal clear, General.â
He rose, turned his back on her, returned to his seat behind his desk, picked up his phone and began to dial. âGet this done, Morgana,â he said, putting the receiver to his ear. âOr Iâll find someone else who will.â
Her tongue seemed stuck to the roof of her mouth. Her hands were shaking, her knees felt like Jell-O, and her heart was on fire.
There is no one else, she wanted to tell him. But of course, this wasnât true. There was no one else he knew ofâbut that wasnât the same thing.