Page 9 of The Bourne Initiative (Jason Bourne 14)
Volodarsky swallowed hard. âQuite clear, sir.â
âNow, shall I ask my question again?â
âNo, sir. We havenât as yet acquired the specific whereabouts of the target.â
The old man, as stubborn as his dog, reminded Savasin of his father, a manâa veteran of the warâwhom Savasin had revered all his life. Heâd never had enough time with his father, and every moment of their time together was of immense importance to him. When Savasin had finally laid him to rest, he had not spoken for ten days. He had gone away to the Kamchatka Peninsula, where his father had sometimesânot often enough!âtaken him to fish. The glittering ice and softly falling snow seemed like paradise to the young Savasin, and later, after his father was dead, heâd think of those times as if encased in a snow globe, a world sealed off, that only he and his father inhabited. He went there in his mind when his duties became too overbearing or the exigencies of his life went against the grain.
âAlecks Petrovich, I told you not to lie.â
âBut, sir, I havenâtââ
âReally?â He sighed. âAlecks, we grew up together, didnât we?â
âYes.â
âWe attended the same classes, university and all that.â
Volodarsky nodded.
âWe break bread together every Friday evening, do we not?â
âWe do.â
âAnd get roaring drunk on the best vodka.â His voice turned icy. âThen please tell me why you havenât found Jason Bourne. He was the late, unlamented General Karpovâs closest friend, though under what circumstances that came about fairly boggles the mind. Though I have learned not to put anything past him.â
âNo, indeed. Weâre all learning that.â
A knock on the door deterred the first minister from doling out further verbal torture. But that was okay, for this was only the warmup to the main event. His mouth began to salivate, anticipating Malachev entering. Seeing Volodarsky still there, Malachev would no doubt blanch.
Malachev and Volodarsky did not like each other. It was still unclear to Savasin which one feared the other most. The relationship between the two was heavily reminiscent of the one Savasin had with Konstantin. Not for the first time it occurred to Savasin that he had deliberately set these two together in an attempt to get the better of Konstantin.
âIgor Ivanovich,â he said as he turned around, but the sight of the tall, elegant man standing where Malachev should have been stopped him in his tracks. âKonstantin Ludmirovich,â he said.
A thin smile curved the otherâs lips. âClose your mouth, brother. Youâre apt to swallow the flies on this floor.â Konstantin Ludmirovich Savasin glanced around the office with obvious distaste. He sniffed, his delicate nostrils dilating alarmingly. âYou really ought to have a cleaning crew in here more than once a month.â
Savasin ground his teeth in fury but did not rise to the bait. Instead, he said with a maximum amount of sarcasm, âWhat brings you into the lionâs den?â
âIs that what this is? Oh, well.â He shrugged. âFor one thing, itâs my day for slumming.â His laugh was like fingernails on a chalkboard. âFor another, youâve summoned a high-ranking FSB officer for what appears to be a dressing down.â
âIf thatâs what it is,â the first minister said, âthen you can be sure itâs well deserved.â
âCan I?â Konstantin circled his brother. âCan I, really?â He shook his head. âThe fact of the matter is that Alecks Petrovich knows nothing about the Nym.â
Volodarsky swallowed. âThe what?â
The new head of FSBâs smile was as sharp as a razor blade. âYou see, brother, he doesnât even know what weâre talking about.â
Savasin lost it for a moment. âColonel Karpovâs boat, you idiot,â he shouted at Volodarsky.
âThatâs an FSB officer youâre yelling at. One you yourself appointed, brother.â
âFirst Minister to you, Konstantin, as well as to everyone else. I can yell at anyone, even you.â
Konstantin shrugged, shook out a cigarette, lit it, took a good, long inhale. The hiss of indolently expelled smoke grated on Savasinâs nerves. Konstantin was handsome in an odd, saturnine way. His long face dominated by large, liquid eyes that, like their motherâs, were set too close together. He had her skin, as well: pale, almost translucent.
Savasin glared at Volodarsky. âYouâre of no use. You donât even know what your men are doing. Get the fuck out of my office.â
Volodarsky glanced at Konstantin, but the other wasnât about to meet his eye.
âDonât look at him. Heâll be of no help to you, take my word,â Savasin said shortly. âJust get out.â
When the two brothers were alone, Konstantin said matter-of-factly, âThe Americans blew up Karpovâs boat.â
Savasin stared at him as if he had grown another head. âAre you sure?â
When Konstantin delivered a withering look, he went on, âDo you have any hard evidence?â
âThe Americans are smart enough not to leave anything behind that could be traced back to them. Let the Sovereign make propaganda hay; heâs good at that. As for us, pursuing that line will only lead us down a path that never ends. Which is precisely what the Americans want.â
âNevertheless, the boatâa part of the Federationâhas been destroyed by a foreign power.â
Konstantin glanced around again, and, with the grace of a dancer, stepped to one of the upholstered chairs in the office, inspected it vigilantly before seating himself. He glanced down, admiring the perfect creases of his imported trousers as he did so. âOh, come off it, Timur. You donât give a shit about that. Itâs the boat itself that has your knickers in a twist.â He looked up at his brother, a sardonic look in his eye. âI know you coveted it.â
âThe Sovereign promised it to me.â
âOops.â
Konstantin continued to draw in tobacco and let it out in aromatic clouds when his lungs had become saturated with nicotine.
âYouâll kill yourself with that filthy habit,â Savasin observed.
âDonât you wish.â
Konstantin tapped ash into a crystal ashtray thick enough to crack a skull open with one blowâat least that was Savasinâs thought in the moment.
âWas Jason Bourne on the Nym when it left Istanbul? Or was it heading to a rendezvous with him?â
Konstantin shrugged.
âBourne was Karpovâs closest friend. Thereâs a good chance he left the boat to him.â
Konstantin lifted a bit of tobacco off the tip of his tongue. âWhat do I care.â
âI donât believe you.â
âThatâs certainly your prerogative, First Minister.â
Konstantin had the ability to completely exasperate him, just like when they were kids. The fact was, Savasin loved and hated his brother. He also feared him, always had. Perched on the corner of his desk, he folded his arms across his chest, regarded his brother from beneath heavy-lidded eyes.
âAs long as weâre talking prerogatives, I donât like Volodarsky.â Konstantin plucked a bit of lint off the supple fabric that covered his kneecap. âVolodarsky is your appointment.â
âYes.â
âThatâs what you get for elevating old friends. He doesnât know his zipper from his shoulder boards. I mean, face facts, he canât even find Jason Bourne. But I have. He was on General Karpovâs boat.â
âWhat?â
âNo, no, no.â He waited a beat and, picking his way light as you please through Savasinâs glare, added, âYou should ask why, Timur. Why didnât your man know that?â
Savasin was still trying to recover from the news that the Nym would never be his. Maintaining an iron façade, he said, âAnd you maintain you have no interest in Jason Bourne.â
âMy dear Timur Ludmirovich, youâre the one who hated Karpov with aâhow to put it best?âa maniacal, near-religious fervor. I can only suppose that you feel the same way toward his best friend.â He shrugged. âAs for me, I couldnâ
t care less whether Bourne lives or dies.â His eyes glittered with mischief. âHe hasnât gotten under my skin.â
He ground out the butt of his cigarette and rose. âNow, if weâre clear on the matterâ¦â
A knock sounded on the door.
âItâs like the Kazansky railway station in here today,â Konstantin observed with one raised eyebrow.
âCome!â Savasin said, somewhat louder than was necessary.
Malachev advanced into the office, but he was brought up short by the presence of the elder Savasin. After a momentâs contemplation during which Savasin could virtually see the cogs in his head spinning dizzily, he soldiered on, one eye on Konstantin as if at any moment the head of FSB would take a bite out of his thigh like a rabid animal.
âI have confirmed that Jason Bourne was on Karpovâs boat when it left Istanbul.â
Savasin gave his older brother a savage glare. âAnd was he on it when the Americans blew it up?â
Malachev spread his hands. âUnfortunately, First Minister, I donâtââ
âHe doesnât know.â Konstantin broke in. âNo one here knows.â His scimitar smile seemed to extend from ear to ear. âExcept me, of course.â
Savasin felt a headache coming on. He dismissed Malachev with a curt wave of his hand. When the brothers were alone again, he said, âWell, what are you waiting for?â
âIâm waiting, little brother, for you to meet my price.â
Savasin felt his blood pressure threatening to go through the roof. Still, he held himself in check, replied evenly, âAnd what would that be?â
âI want you to fire Volodarsky.â
Relief was just a word away. âDone. Heâs proved eminently incompetent.â
âJettisoning your childhood pal. Just like that.â Konstantin sniffed. âWell, I suppose that says something about you.â
âIâll be more judicious when I appointââ
âOh, no. I want my own man heading up Special Forces. As head of FSB itâs my right.â
He should have known firing Volodarsky was only the beginning. âAs first minister, I can veto any appointment you make.â
âYou could,â Konstantin said. âBut then you wouldnât find out about the disposition of Jason Bourne. Is he dead? Alive? And if still alive, where is he?â
Savasin felt as if he were standing at a waterline, the sand washing out from under his feet. âYou said you didnât knowââ
âI said I donât care. I donât. But you do.â Konstantin flipped another cigarette into his mouth, lit it with his oversize steel lighter. âI am aware of how much you need to know, little brother,â he added in a rush of smoke. âSoâ¦â He shrugged.
Savasin continued to struggle for equilibrium. Maybe this wouldnât be so bad, he told himself. After all, Volodarsky was clearly the wrong choice to head up spetsnaz. Konstantin was frighteningly intelligent. It was entirely possible that Konstantinâs pick would be a good one. In that frame of mind, he said, âWhoâs your man?â The instant he said it, he knew he had capitulated. He realized his mistake. Whoever his brother had in mind would be his man through and through, which would, by definition, make him Savasinâs enemy. Konstantin was also frighteningly clever.
âNikolay Ivanovich Rozin.â
âWhat?â Savasin raised his eyebrows. âRozin is a field agent.â
âUndercover. Yes, heâs perhaps the best field agent we have.â
âHuh. Heâs also something of a loose cannon, so maybe taking him out of the field is a wise choice.â
âWho said anything about taking him out of the field?â
The disorientation returned. Damn Konstantin to hell. âThen how will heâ?â
âI mean to break the mold, little brother. I want him in the field.â He sniffed. âIn my opinion, the spetsnaz officials have gotten too complacent, too comfortable milling around Dzerzhinsky Square. That requires a revolution, or donât you agree?â
The damnable fact was that Savasin did agree. Konstantin was dead on in his assessment of Special Forces. It was a problem Savasin himself had been meaning to address. Konstantin had beaten him to it. Nothing new there, he thought bitterly.
âAs it happens, I do agree.â He bit off each word as if they came from a bar of soap. He nodded. âAll right. Elevate Rozin and letâs see where that leads.â He lifted a hand. âBut know that heâs on a short leash. If he steps out of lineââ
âIâm the wrong person to threaten,â Konstantin said. âHave you forgotten so soon?â
Savasin was so angry he almost lacerated his tongue. âI forget nothing,â he said thickly.
âBetter.â Konstantin regarded the glowing tip of his cigarette. âAs it happens, your Bourne boarded the Nym even before it put in to Istanbul.â His eyes flicked up to engage his brotherâs. âBy all rights, he should have been on the boat when the Americans blew it up.â
âI thought you had no interest in Bourne.â
âInsofar as you do, I have a great deal of interest.â
âYou wanted to deny me the satisfaction of taking his life.â
âCorrect.â
âBut the American team missed him. So heâs still alive. Where?â
âIn the eastern Aegean. The island of Skyros, to be exact. We have picked up a coded distress call.â
Savasinâs brows drew together. âCoded?â
Konstantin offered an unsavory chuckle. âLeave it to General Karpov. Itâs his signal.â He beamed. âAs it happens thereâs a spetsnaz team ready and waiting in Istanbul. Itâs only a short flight toââ
âI want control of the spetsnaz team,â Savasin said, shaking off this latest specter of their shared past.
Konstantin shrugged. âHave at it, little brother. Iâve got what I came for.â
10
Night was descending into the shoals of a glimmering dawn.
âI donât like this,â Mala said.
âYou donât like anything.â
The sea was ahead of them. The closer they came to it, the higher they ascended, until they were above the treetops down below. The harsh salt wind lashed what foliage remained into dwarfs, limbs painfully twisted as if from long torture.
âTheyâre gaining on us,â Mala whispered.
âI know.â
âWe ought to increase our speed.â
âAnd risk exposing ourselves to their night goggles?â He shook his head.
âBut at this rate, theyâre bound to catch up to us before we make the coast.â
âMaybe. Maybe not.â
She gave him a sharp, sideways look. âWhat dâyou have up your sleeve?â
âIt may not work,â he said. âI donât want to give you false hope.â
Her eyes flashed. âThatâs what you gave me when you took us out of Somalia.â
He couldnât argue with her there.
He led her off the rough track they had been following, and they began climbing the cliff face, clawing for foot- and handholds. The problem of always keeping large enough rocks between them and the kill team added an extra degree of difficulty.
After setting the last of the traps, using the fishing lines and hooks, they reached a declivity in a massive rock formation, in the lee of the wind coming in off the sea. They were approximately halfway up the cliff wall on the other side of which was the Aegean and the boats, theirs and the kill teamâs.
She let out a small puff of air. âI particularly donât like this sitting here, waiting for the Americans to catch up with us.â
âThis crew isnât CIA.â
âNo? Who, then?â
âThey mentioned MacQuerrie.â
âYes, I heard.â
âGeneral MacQuerrie is in charge of his own piece of turf within the American clandestine services. His group is known as Dreadnaught. His people do a lot of very dirty wet work.â
âIsnât all wet work, by definition, dirty?â
âMaybe. But Dreadnaughtâs is pitch-black filthy.â
âA
ll the more reason why you should want to get up close and personal. Tooth and claw.â She gave him a particularly piercing look. âDonât you have a personal stake in killing them?â
âDo you?â he said.
âYeah, they blew up your friendâs boat thinking you were on it. Instead, they killed the captain and crew. Now theyâre hunting both of us.â
âThey donât know you exist.â
She grunted. âThatâs what this is all about, isnât it? Youâre testing me. See if Iâll abandon you to your fate?â She shook her head. âOur fates became entwined the moment you entered Keyreâs camp. The momentââ
âDonât say it, Mala. Iâm warning you.â
âSomeone should have warned your friend.â
The most terrible thing about being with her was that it was like looking into a mirrorâsomewhat distorted, but nevertheless the fact remained that they were both killers. Her unbridled bloodlust, the fierce joy in killing she had learned at Keyreâs knee conjured up the spirits of all the people he had killed, no matter the reason. Each life you took diminished you, of this he was certain. Would there, then, come a time when there would be nothing left of him to keep alive? She also engendered in him this nihilism, these black questions that ate at him, not at the edge of darkness, but during the interstices of life in the shadows, the moments of idleness, few though they might be.
âJason, I need you to know that things are different now with Keyre. These days, he runs a business, everything online: expenditures, profits, transfers to and from accounts held by a mareâs nest of shell companies in Switzerland, Gibraltar, Caymans, Bermuda, Iceland, Lichtenstein, who knows where else? Domiciles donât matter, except on paperâand even paper doesnât exist anymore. Itâs all in cyberspace, all in ironclad clouds.â She took a breath. âYou wouldnât recognize the place.â
âNo pools of blood? No heads on spikes, shriveling in the sun? No incantations over guts pulled from the living?â
She said nothing.