their location in his mind, then turned around.
As if startled by the big man with heavily pocked cheeks and new hair plugs, he
retreated up against the edge of the table.
“Who the hell’re you? This is a private discussion.” Arkadin spoke more to distract
Filya from his left hand moving behind him along the tabletop.
“Devra is mine.” Filya brandished the long, cruel blade of the handmade switchblade.
“No one talks to her without my permission.”
Arkadin smiled thinly. “I wasn’t talking to her so much as threatening her.”
The idea was to antagonize Filya to the point that he’d do something precipitous and,
therefore, stupid, and Arkadin succeeded admirably. With a growl, Filya rushed him,
knife blade extended, tilted slightly upward.
With only one shot at a surprise maneuver, Arkadin had to make the most of it. The
fingers of his left hand had gripped the scissors. They were small, which was just as well; he had no intention of again killing someone who might provide useful information. He
lifted them, calculating their weight. Then as he brought the scissors around the side of
his body, he flicked his wrist, a deceptively small gesture that was nevertheless all power.
Released from his grip, the scissors flew through the air, embedding in the soft spot just
below Filya’s sternum.
Filya’s eyes opened wide as his headlong rush faltered two paces from Arkadin, then
he resumed his advance, brandishing the knife. Arkadin ducked away from the sweeping
arc of the blade. He grappled with Filya, wanting only to wear him out, let the wound in
his chest sap his strength, but Filya wasn’t having any. Being stabbed had only enraged
him. With superhuman strength he broke Arkadin’s grip on the wrist that held the
switchblade, swung it from a low point upward, breaking through Arkadin’s defense. The
point of the blade blurred toward Arkadin’s face. Too late to stop the attack, Arkadin
reacted instinctively, managing to deflect the stab at the last instant, so that the point
drove through Filya’s own throat.
An arcing veil of blood caused Devra to scream. As she stumbled backward, Arkadin
reached for her. Clamping one hand over her mouth, he shook his head. Her ashen cheeks
and forehead were spattered with blood. Arkadin supported Filya in the crook of one arm.
The man was dying. Arkadin had never meant this to happen. First Shumenko, now Filya.
If he had believed in such things, he would have said that the assignment was cursed.
“Filya!” He slapped the man, whose eyes had turned glassy. Blood leaked out of the
side of Filya’s slack mouth. “The package. Where is it?”
For a moment, Filya’s eyes focused on him. When Arkadin repeated his question a
curious smile took Filya down into death. Arkadin held him for a moment more before
propping him up against a wall.
As he returned his attention to Devra he saw a rat glowering from a corner, and his
gorge rose. It took all his willpower not to abandon the girl to go after it, rip it limb from limb.
“Now,” he said, “it’s just you and me.”
Making certain he wasn’t being followed, Rob Batt pulled into the parking lot adjacent
to the Tysons Corner Baptist Church. He sat waiting in his car. From time to time, he
checked his watch.
Under the late DCI, he had been chief of operations, the most influential of CI’s seven
directorate heads. He was of the Beltway old school with connections that ran directly
back to Yale’s legendary Skull & Bones Club, of which he’d been an officer during his
college days. Just how many Skull & Bones men had been recruited into America’s
clandestine services was one of those secrets its keepers would kill to protect. Suffice it to say it was many, and Batt was one of them. It was particularly galling for him to play
second fiddle to an outsider-and a female, at that. The Old Man would never have
tolerated such an outrage, but the Old Man was gone, murdered in his own home
reportedly by his traitorous assistant, Anne Held. Though Batt-and others of his brethren-
had his doubts about that.
What a difference three months made. Had the Old Man still been alive he’d never
have considered even consenting to this meet. Batt was a loyal man, but his loyalty, he
realized, extended to the man who had reached out to him in grad school, recruited him to
CI. Those were the old days, though. The new order was in place, and it wasn’t fair. He
hadn’t been part of the problem caused by Martin Lindros and Jason Bourne-he’d been
part of the solution. He’d even been suspicious of the man who’d turned out to be an
impostor. He would have exposed him had Bourne not interfered. That coup, Batt knew,
would have scored him the inside track with the Old Man.
But with the Old Man gone, his lobbying for the directorship had been to no avail.
Instead, the president had opted for Veronica Hart. God alone knew why. It was such a
colossal mistake; she’d just run CI into the ground. A woman wasn’t constructed to make
the kinds of decisions necessary to captain the CI ship. The priorities and ways of
approaching problems were different with women. The hounds of the NSA were circling
CI, and he couldn’t bear watching this woman turn them all, the entire company, into
carrion for the feast. At least Batt could join the people who would inevitably take over
when Hart fucked up. Even so, it pained him to be here, to embark upon this unknown
sea.
At 10:30 AM the doors to the church swung open, the parishioners came down the
stairs, stood in the wan sunshine, turning their heads up like sunflowers at dawn. The
ministers appeared, walking side by side with Luther LaValle. LaValle was accompanied
by his wife and teenage son. The two men stood chatting while the family grouped
loosely around. LaValle’s wife seemed interested in the conversation, but the son was
busy ogling a girl more or less his age who was prancing down the stairs. She was a
beauty, Batt had to admit. Then, with a start, he realized that she was one of General
Kendall’s three daughters, because here Kendall was with his arm around his stubby
wife. How the two of them could have produced a trio of such handsome girls was
anyone’s guess. Even Darwin couldn’t have figured it out, Batt thought.
The two families-the LaValles and the Kendalls-gathered in a loose huddle as if they
were a football team. Then the kids went their own ways, some in cars, others on bicycles
because the church wasn’t far from their homes. The two wives chastely kissed their
husbands, piled into a Cadillac Escalade, and took off.
That left the two men, who stood for a moment in front of the church before coming
around to the parking lot. Not a word had been exchanged between them. Batt heard a
heavyweight engine cough to life.
A long black armored limousine came cruising down the aisle like a sleek shark. It
stopped briefly while LaValle and Kendall climbed inside. Its engine, idling, sent small
puffs of exhaust into the cool, crisp air. Batt counted to thirty and, as he’d been
instructed, got out of his car. As he did so, the rear door of the limo popped open.
Ducking his head, he climbed into the dim, plush interior. The door closed behind him.
“Gentlemen,” he said, folding himself onto the bench seat opposite them. The two men
sat side by side in the limo’s backseat: Luther LaValle, the Pentagon’s intel czar, and his second, General Richard P. Kendall.
“So kind of you to join us,” LaValle said.
Kindness had nothing to do with it, Batt thought. A convergence of objectives did.