The Bourne Ultimatum

Home > Thriller > The Bourne Ultimatum > Page 12
The Bourne Ultimatum Page 12

by Robert Ludlum


  Which was why to his astonishment and alarm he heard the absolutely adorable black female immigration clerk say to him after hanging up a telephone, “Would you be so kind, sir, as to come with me, please?”

  Her lovely face, lilting voice and perfect smile did nothing to allay the former judge’s fears. Far too many extremely guilty criminals had such assets. “Is there something wrong with my passport, young lady?”

  “Not that I can see, sir.”

  “Then why the delay? Why not simply stamp it and allow me to proceed?”

  “Oh, it is stamped and entry is permitted, sir. There is no problem.”

  “Then why …?”

  “Please come with me, sir.”

  They approached a large glass-enclosed cubicle with a sign on the left window, the gold letters announcing the occupant: DEPUTY DIRECTOR OF IMMIGRATION SERVICES. The attractive clerk opened the door and, again smiling, gestured for the elderly visitor to go inside. Prefontaine did so, suddenly terrified that he would be searched, the money found, and all manner of charges leveled against him. He did not know which islands were involved in narcotics, but if this was one of them the thousands of dollars in his pockets would be instantly suspect. Explanations raced through his mind as the clerk crossed to the desk handing his passport to the short, heavyset deputy of immigration. The woman gave Brendan a last bright smile and went out the door, closing it behind her.

  “Mr. Brendan Patrick Pierre Prefontaine,” intoned the immigration official reading the passport.

  “Not that it matters,” said Brendan kindly but with summoned authority. “However, the ‘Mister’ is usually replaced with ‘Judge’—as I say, I don’t believe it’s relevant under the circumstances, or perhaps it is, I really don’t know. Did one of my law clerks make an error? If so, I’ll fly the whole group down to apologize.”

  “Oh, not at all, sir—Judge,” replied the uniformed wide-girthed black man with a distinct British accent as he rose from the chair and extended his hand over the desk. “Actually, it is I who may have made the error.”

  “Come now, Colonel, we all do occasionally.” Brendan gripped the official’s hand. “Then perhaps I may be on my way? There’s someone here I must meet.”

  “That’s what he said!”

  Brendan released the hand. “I beg your pardon?”

  “I may have to beg yours.… The confidentiality, of course.”

  “The what? Could we get to the point, please?”

  “I realize that privacy,” continued the official, pronouncing the word as privvissy, “is of utmost importance—that’s been explained to us—but whenever we can be of assistance, we try to oblige the Crown.”

  “Extremely commendable, Brigadier, but I’m afraid I don’t understand.”

  The official needlessly lowered his voice. “A great man arrived here this morning, are you aware of that?”

  “I’m sure many men of stature come to your beautiful island. It was highly recommended to me, in fact.”

  “Ah, yes, the privvissy!”

  “Yes, of course, the privvissy,” agreed the ex-convict judge, wondering if the official had both his oars in the water. “Could you be clearer?”

  “Well, he said he was to meet someone, an associate he had to consult with, but after the very private reception line—no press, of course—he was taken directly to the charter that flew him to the out island, and obviously never met the person he was to confidentially meet. Now, am I clearer?”

  “Like Boston harbor in a squall, General.”

  “Very good. I understand. Privvissy. … So all our personnel are alerted to the fact that the great man’s friend might be seeking him here at the airport—confidentially, of course.”

  “Of course.” Not even a paddle, thought Brendan.

  “Then I considered another possibility,” said the official in minor triumph. “Suppose the great man’s friend was also flying to our island for a rendezvous with the great man?”

  “Brilliant.”

  “Not without logic. Then it struck me to obtain the passenger manifests of all the incoming flights, concentrating, of course, on those in first class, which would be proper for the great man’s associate.”

  “Clairvoyance,” mumbled the once and former judge. “And you selected me?”

  “The name, my good man! Pierre Prefontaine!”

  “My pious, departed mother would no doubt take offense at your omitting the ‘Brendan Patrick.’ Like the French, the Irish are quite sensitive in such matters.”

  “But it was the family. I understood that immediately!”

  “You did?”

  “Pierre Prefontaine!… Jean Pierre Fontaine. I am an expert on immigration procedures, having studied the methods in many countries. Your own name is a fascinating example, most honored Judge. Wave after wave of immigrants flocked to the United States, the melting pot of nations, races and languages. In the process names were altered, combined or simply misunderstood by armies of confused, overworked clerks. But roots frequently survived and thus it was for you. The family Fontaine became Prefontaine in America and the great man’s associate was in reality an esteemed member of the American branch!”

  “Positively awesome,” muttered Brendan, eyeing the official as if he expected several male nurses to barge into the room with restraining equipment. “But isn’t it possible that this is merely coincidence? Fontaine is a common name throughout France, but, as I understand it, the Prefontaines were distinctly centered around Alsace-Lorraine.”

  “Yes, of course,” said the deputy, again lowering his voice rather than conceivably winking. “Yet without any prior word whatsoever, the Quai d’Orsay in Paris calls, then the UK’s Foreign Office follows with instructions—a great man is soon to drop out of the sky. Acknowledge him, honor him, spirit him off to a remote resort known for its confidentiality—for that, too, is paramount. The great one is to have total privvissy.… Yet that same great warrior is anxious; he is to confidentially meet with an associate he does not find. Perhaps the great man has secrets—all great men do, you know.”

  Suddenly, the thousands of dollars in Prefontaine’s pockets felt very heavy. Washington’s Four Zero clearance in Boston, the Quai d’Orsay in Paris, the Foreign Office in London—Randolph Gates needlessly parting with an extraordinary amount of money out of sheer panic. There was a pattern of strange convergence, the strangest being the inclusion of a frightened, unscrupulous attorney named Gates. Was he an inclusion or an aberration? What did it all mean? “You are an extraordinary man,” said Brendan quickly, covering his thoughts with rapid words. “Your perceptions are nothing short of brilliant, but you do understand that confidentiality is paramount.”

  “I will hear no more, honored Judge!” exclaimed the deputy. “Except to add that your appraisal of my abilities might not be lost on my superiors.”

  “They will be made clear, I assure you.… Precisely where did my not too distant and distinguished cousin go?”

  “A small out island where the seaplanes must land on the water. Its name is Tranquility Isle and the resort is called Tranquility Inn.”

  “You will be personally thanked by those above you, be assured of that.”

  “And I shall personally clear you through customs.”

  Brendan Patrick Pierre Prefontaine, carrying his suitcase of burnished leather, walked out into the terminal of Blackburne Airport a bewildered man. Bewildered, hell, he was stunned! He could not decide whether to take the next flight back to Boston or to … his feet were apparently deciding for him. He found himself walking toward a counter beneath a large sea-blue sign with white lettering: INTER-ISLAND AIRWAYS. It couldn’t do any harm to inquire, he mused, then he would buy a ticket on the next plane to Boston.

  On the wall beyond the counter a list of nearby “Out Isles” was next to a larger column of the well-known Leeward and Windward Islands from St. Kitts and Nevis south to the Grenadines. Tranquility was sandwiched between Canada Cay and Turtle Rock. Two clerks
, both young, one black and one white, the former a young woman, the latter a blond-haired man in his early twenties, were talking quietly. The girl approached. “May I help you, sir?”

  “I’m not really sure,” replied Brendan hesitantly. “My schedule’s so unsettled, but it seems I have a friend on Tranquility Isle.”

  “At the inn, sir?”

  “Yes, apparently so. Does it take long to fly over there?”

  “If the weather’s clear, no more than fifteen minutes, but that would be an amphibious charter. I’m not sure one’s available until tomorrow morning.”

  “Sure, there is, babe,” interrupted the young man with small gold wings pinned crookedly on his white shirt. “I’m running over some supplies to Johnny St. Jay pretty soon,” he added, stepping forward.

  “He’s not scheduled for today.”

  “As of an hour ago he is. Pronto.”

  At that instant and with those words, Prefontaine’s eyes fell in astonishment on two stacks of cartons moving slowly down Inter-Island’s luggage carousel toward the exterior loading area. Even if he had the time to debate with himself, he knew his decision was made.

  “I’d like to purchase a ticket on that flight, if I may,” he said, watching the boxes of Gerber’s Assorted Baby Foods and Pampers Medium Diapers disappear into the hold.

  He had found the unknown woman with the small male child and the infant.

  8

  Routine secondhand inquiries at the Federal Trade Commission confirmed the fact that its chairman, Albert Armbruster, did, indeed, have ulcers as well as high blood pressure and under doctor’s orders left the office and returned home whenever discomfort struck him. Which was why Alex Conklin telephoned him after a generally overindulgent lunch—also established—with an “update” of the Snake Lady crisis. As with Alex’s initial call, catching Armbruster in the shower, he anonymously told the shaken chairman that someone would be in touch with him later in the day—either at the office or at home. The contact would identify himself simply as Cobra. (“Use all the banal trigger words you can come up with” was the gospel according to St. Conklin.) In the meantime, Armbruster was instructed to talk to no one. “Those are orders from the Sixth Fleet.”

  “Oh, Christ!”

  Thus Albert Armbruster called for his chariot and was driven home in discomfort. Further nausea was in store for the chairman, however, as Jason Bourne was waiting for him.

  “Good afternoon, Mr. Armbruster,” said the stranger pleasantly as the chairman struggled out of the limousine, the door held open by the chauffeur.

  “Yes, what?” Armbruster’s response was immediate, unsure.

  “I merely said ‘Good afternoon.’ My name’s Simon. We met at the White House reception for the Joint Chiefs several years ago—”

  “I wasn’t there,” broke in the chairman emphatically.

  “Oh?” The stranger arched his brows, his voice still pleasant but obviously questioning.

  “Mr. Armbruster?” The chauffeur had closed the door and now turned courteously to the chairman. “Will you be needing—”

  “No, no,” said Armbruster, again interrupting. “You’re relieved—I won’t need you anymore today … tonight.”

  “Same time tomorrow morning, sir?”

  “Yes, tomorrow—unless you’re told otherwise. I’m not a well man; check with the office.”

  “Yes, sir.” The chauffeur tipped his visored cap and climbed back into the front seat.

  “I’m sorry to hear that,” said the stranger, holding his place as the limousine’s engine was started and the automobile rolled away.

  “What?… Oh, you. I was never at the White House for that damned reception!”

  “Perhaps I was mistaken—”

  “Yes, well, nice to see you again,” said Armbruster anxiously, impatiently, hurrying to the steps that led up to his Georgetown house.

  “Then again, I’m quite sure Admiral Burton introduced us—”

  “What?” The chairman spun around. “What did you just say?”

  “This is a waste of time,” continued Jason Bourne, the pleasantness gone from his voice and his face. “I’m Cobra.”

  “Oh, Jesus!… I’m not a well man.” Armbruster repeated the statement in a hoarse whisper, snapping his head up to look at the front of his house, to the windows and the door.

  “You’ll be far worse unless we talk,” added Jason, following the chairman’s eyes. “Shall it be up there? In your house?”

  “No!” cried Armbruster. “She yaps all the time and wants to know everything about everybody, then blabs all over town exaggerating everything.”

  “I assume you’re talking about your wife.”

  “All of ’em! They don’t know when to keep their traps shut.”

  “It sounds like they’re starved for conversation.”

  “What …?”

  “Never mind. I’ve got a car down the block. Are you up to a drive?”

  “I damn well better be. We’ll stop at the drugstore down the street. They’ve got my prescription on file.… Who the hell are you?”

  “I told you,” answered Bourne. “Cobra. It’s a snake.”

  “Oh, Jesus!” whispered Albert Armbruster.

  The pharmacist complied rapidly, and Jason quickly drove to a neighborhood bar he had chosen an hour before should one be necessary. It was dark and full of shadows, the booths deep, the banquettes high, isolating those meeting one another from curious glances. The ambience was important, for it was vital that he stare into the eyes of the chairman when he asked questions, his own eyes ice-cold, demanding … threatening. Delta was back, Cain had returned; Jason Bourne was in full command, David Webb forgotten.

  “We have to cover ourselves,” said the Cobra quietly after their drinks arrived. “In terms of damage control that means we have to know how much harm each of us could do under the Amytals.”

  “What the hell does that mean?” asked Armbruster, swallowing most of his gin and tonic while wincing and holding his stomach.

  “Drugs, chemicals, truth serums.”

  “What?”

  “This isn’t your normal ball game,” said Bourne, remembering Conklin’s words. “We’ve got to cover all of the bases because there aren’t any constitutional rights in this series.”

  “So who are you?” The chairman of the Federal Trade Commission belched and brought his glass briefly to his lips, his hand trembling. “Some kind of one-man hit team? John Doe knows something, so he’s shot in an alley?”

  “Don’t be ridiculous. Anything like that would be totally counterproductive. It would only fuel those trying to find us, leave a trail—”

  “Then what are you talking about?”

  “Saving our lives, which includes our reputations and our life-styles.”

  “You’re one cold prick. How do we do that?”

  “Let’s take your case, shall we?… You’re not a well man by your own admission. You could resign under doctor’s orders and we take care of you—Medusa takes care of you.” Jason’s imagination floated, making quick sharp forays into reality and fantasy, swiftly searching for the words that might be found in the gospel according to St. Alex. “You’re known to be a wealthy man, so a villa might be purchased in your name, or perhaps a Caribbean island, where you’d be completely secure. No one can reach you; no one can talk to you unless you agree, which would mean predetermined interviews, harmless and even favorable results guaranteed. Such things are not impossible.”

  “Pretty sterile existence in my opinion,” said Armbruster. “Me and the yapper all by ourselves? I’d kill her.”

  “Not at all,” went on the Cobra. “There’d be constant distractions. Guests of your choosing could be flown to wherever you are. Other women also—either of your choice or selected by those who respect your tastes. Life goes on much as before, some inconveniences, some pleasant surprises. The point is that you’d be protected, inaccessible and therefore we’re also protected, the rest of us.… But,
as I say, that option is merely hypothetical at this juncture. In my case, frankly, it’s a necessity because there’s little I don’t know. I leave in a matter of days. Until then I’m determining who goes and who stays.… How much do you know, Mr. Armbruster?”

  “I’m not involved with the day-to-day operations, naturally. I deal with the big picture. Like the others, I get a monthly coded telex from the banks in Zurich listing the deposits and the companies we’re gaining control of—that’s about it.”

  “So far you don’t get a villa.”

  “I’ll be damned if I want one, and if I do I’ll buy it myself. I’ve got close to a hundred million, American, in Zurich.”

  Bourne controlled his astonishment and simply stared at the chairman. “I wouldn’t repeat that,” he said.

  “Who am I going to tell? The yapper?”

  “How many of the others do you know personally?” asked the Cobra.

  “Practically none of the staff, but then they don’t know me, either. Hell, they don’t know anybody.… And while we’re on the subject, take you, for instance. I’ve never heard of you. I figure you work for the board and I was told to expect you, but I don’t know you.”

  “I was hired on a very special basis. My background’s deep-cover security.”

  “Like I said, I figured—”

  “What about the Sixth Fleet?” interrupted Bourne, moving away from the subject of himself.

  “I see him now and then but I don’t think we’ve exchanged a dozen words. He’s military; I’m civilian—very civilian.”

  “You weren’t once. Where it all began.”

 

‹ Prev