their second chances.
What Batt didn’t know about was the Slipper’s back room, so he was puzzled when,
after a full circuit of the space, plus an expedition to the men’s room, he could find no
trace of either Feir or the general.
Fearing that they’d slipped out the back, he returned to the parking lot, only to find
their cars where they’d left them. Back in the Slipper, he took another trip through the
crowd, figuring he must have missed them somehow. Still, there was no sign, but as he
neared the rear of the space he spotted someone talking to a muscled black man the
approximate size of a refrigerator. After a small bout of jawing, Mr. Muscle opened a
door Batt hadn’t noticed before, and the man slipped through. Guessing this was where
Feir and Kendall must have gone, Batt edged his way toward Mr. Muscle and the door.
It was then that he saw Soraya walk through the front door.
Bourne almost stripped the car’s gears trying to outrun the police car on their tail.
“Take it easy,” Petra said, “or you’ll tear my poor car apart.”
He wished he’d taken a longer look at the map of the city. A street blocked off with
wooden sawhorses flashed by on their left. The paving had been torn up, leaving the
heavily pitted and cracked underlayer, the worst parts of which were in the process of
being excavated.
“Hold on tight,” Bourne said as he reversed, then turned into the street and drove the
car through the sawhorses, cracking one and scattering the others. The car hit the
underlayer, jounced down the street at what seemed a reckless speed. It felt as if the
vehicle were being machine-gunned by a pile driver. Bourne’s teeth rattled in his head,
and Petra struggled to keep from crying out.
Behind them, the police car was having even more difficulty keeping to a straight path.
It jerked back and forth to avoid the deepest of the holes gouged in the roadbed. Putting
on another burst of speed, Bourne was able to lengthen the distance between them. But
then he glanced ahead. A cement truck was parked crosswise at the other end of the
street. If they kept going there was no way to avoid crashing into it.
Bourne kept the speed on as the cement truck loomed larger and larger. The police car
was coming up fast behind them.
“What are you doing?” Petra screamed. “Are you out of your fucking mind?”
At that moment, Bourne threw the car into neutral, stepped on the brake. He
immediately changed into reverse, took his foot off the brake, and pressed the gas pedal
to the floor. The car shuddered, its engine screaming. Then the transmission locked into
place, and the car flew backward. The police car came on, its driver frozen in shock.
Bourne swerved around it as the vehicle raced forward into the side of the cement truck.
Bourne wasn’t even looking. He was busy steering the car back down the street in
reverse. Blasting past the shattered sawhorses, he turned, braked, put the car into first,
and drove off.
What the hell are you doing here?” Noah said. “You should be on your way to
Damascus.”
“I’m due to take off in four hours.” Moira put her hands in her pockets so he wouldn’t
see that they were curled into fists. “You haven’t answered my question.”
Noah sighed. “It doesn’t make any difference.”
Her laugh had a bitter taste to it. “Why am I not surprised?”
“Because,” Noah said, “you’ve been with Black River long enough to know how we
operate.”
They were walking down Kaufingerstrasse in the center of Munich, a heavily
trafficked area just off the Marienplatz. Turning in at the sign for the Augustiner
Bierkeller, they entered a long, dim cathedral-like space that smelled powerfully of beer
and boiled wurst. The hubbub of noise was just right for masking a private conversation.
Crossing the red flagstone floor, they chose a table in one of the rooms, sat on wooden
benches. The person closest to them was an old man sucking on a pipe while he leisurely
read the paper.
Moira and Noah both ordered a Hefeweizen, a wheat beer still clouded with unfiltered
yeast, from a waitress dressed in the regional Dirndlkleid, a long, wide skirt and low-cut
blouse. She had an apron around her waist, along with a decorative purse.
“Noah,” Moira said when the beers had been served, “I don’t hold any illusions about
why we do what we do, but how do you expect me to ignore this intel I got right from the
source?”
Noah took a long draw of his Hefeweizen, fastidiously wiped his lips before
answering. Then he began to tick off points on his fingers. “First, this man Hauser told
you that the flaw in the software is virtually undetectable. Second, what he told you isn’t verifiable. He might simply be a disgruntled employee trying to get revenge on Kaller
Steelworks. Have you considered that possibility?”
“We could run our own tests on the software.”
“No time. There’s less than two days before the LNG tanker is scheduled to dock at the
terminal.” He continued ticking off points. “Third, we couldn’t do anything without
alerting NextGen, who would then turn around and confront Kaller Steelworks, which
would put us in the middle of a nasty situation. And, fourth and finally, what part of the
sentence We’ve officially notified NextGen that we’ve withdrawn from the project do you
not understand?”
Moira sat back for a moment and took a deep breath. “This is solid intel, Noah. It could
lead to the situation we were most worried about: a terrorist attack. How can you-”
“You’ve already taken several steps over the line, Moira,” Noah said sharply. “Get
your tail on that plane and your head into your new assignment, or you’re through at
Black River.”
It’s better for the moment that we don’t meet,” Icoupov said.
Arkadin was seething, barely holding down his rage, and only then because Devra,
canny witch that she was, dug her fingernails into the palm of his hand. She understood
him; no questions, no probing, no trying to pick over his past like a vulture.
“What about the plans?” He and Devra were sitting in a miserable, smoke-filled bar, in
a run-down part of the city.
“I’ll pick them up from you now.” Icoupov’s voice sounded thin and far away over the
cell phone, even though there could be only a mile or two separating them. “I’m
following Bourne. I’m going after him myself.”
Arkadin didn’t want to hear it. “I thought that was my job.”
“Your job is essentially over. You have the plans and you’ve terminated Pyotr’s
network.”
“All except Egon Kirsch.”
“Kirsch has already been disposed of,” Icoupov said.
“I’m the one who terminates the targets. I’ll give you the plans and then take care of
Bourne.”
“I told you, Leonid Danilovich, I don’t want Bourne terminated.”
Arkadin made an anguished animal sound under his breath. But Bourne has to be
terminated, he thought. Devra dug her claws deeper into his flesh, so that he could smell
the sweet, coppery scent of his own blood. And I have to do it. He murdered Mischa.
“Are you listening to me?” Icoupov said sharply.
Arkadin stirred within his web of rage. “Yes, sir, always. However, I must insist that
you tell me where you’ll be when you accost Bourne. This is security, for your own
safety. I won’t stand helplessly by while something unforseen happens to you.”
“Agreed,” Icoupov said after a moment’s hesitation. “At the moment, he’s on the
move, so I have time to get the plans from you.” He gave Arkadin an address. “I’ll be
there in fifteen minutes.”
“It’ll take me a bit longer,” Arkadin said.