Read The Bourne Identity Online
Authors: Robert Ludlum
Tags: #Fiction - Espionage, #Thriller, #Espionage, #Intrigue
A minute later the man was strapped to the sagging mattress, gagged by a torn sheet wrapped around his face. He would remain where he was for hours, and in hours Jason would be out of Zurich, compliments of a perspiring fat man.
He had slept in his clothes. There was nothing to gather up or carry except his topcoat. He put it on, and tested his leg, somewhat after the fact, he reflected. In the heat of the past few minutes he had been unaware of the pain; it was there, as the limp was there, but neither immobilized him. The shoulder was not in as good shape. A slow paralysis was spreading; he had to get to a doctor. His head ... he did not want to think about his head.
He walked out into the dimly lit hallway, pulled the door closed, and stood motionless, listening. There was a burst of laughter from above; he pressed his back against the wall, gun poised. The laughter trailed
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off; it was a drunk's laughter--incoherent, pointless.
He limped to the staircase, held on to the railing, and started down. He was on the third floor of the four-story building, having insisted on the highest room when the phrase
high ground
had come to him instinctively.
Why had it come to him? What did it mean in terms of renting a filthy room for a
single night? Sanctuary?
Stop it!
He reached the second floor landing, creaks in the wooden staircase accompanying each step. If the manager came out of his flat below to satisfy his curiosity, it would be the last thing he satisfied for several hours.
A noise. A scratch. Soft fabric moving briefly across an abrasive surface. Cloth against wood. Someone was concealed in the short stretch of hallway between the end of one staircase and the beginning of another. Without breaking the rhythm of his walk, he peered into the shadows; there were three recessed doorways in the right wall, identical to the floor above. In one of them ... He took a step closer. Not the first; it was empty. And it would not be the last, the bordering wall forming a cul-de-sac, no room to move. It had to be the second, yes, the second doorway. From it a man could rush forward, to his left or right, or throwing a shoulder into an unsuspecting victim, send his target over the railing, plunging down the staircase.
Bourne angled to his right, shifting the gun to his left hand and reaching into his belt for the weapon with a silencer. Two feet from the recessed door, he heaved the automatic in his left hand into the shadows as he pivoted against the wall.
"Was ist? ..."
An arm appeared; Jason fired once, blowing the hand apart.
"Ahh!"
The figure lurched out in shock, incapable of aiming his weapon. Bourne fired again, hitting the man in the thigh; he collapsed on the floor, writhing, cringing. Jason took a step forward and knelt, his knee pressing into the man's chest, his gun at the man's head. He spoke in a whisper.
"Is there anyone else down there?"
"Nein!"
said the man, wincing in pain. "
Zwei
... two of us only. We were paid."
"By whom?"
"You know."
"A man named Carlos?"
"I will not answer that. Kill me first."
"How did you know I was here?"
"Chernak."
"He's dead."
"Now. Not yesterday. Word reached Zurich: you were alive. We checked everyone ... everywhere.
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Chernak knew."
Bourne gambled. "You're lying!" He pushed the gun into the man's throat. "I never told Chernak about the Steppdeckstrasse."
The man winced again, his neck arched. "Perhaps you did not have to. The Nazi pig had informers everywhere. Why should the Steppdeckstrasse be any different? He could describe you. Who else could?"
"A man at the Drei Alpenhauser."
"We never heard of any such man."
"Who's 'we?' "
The man swallowed, his lips stretched in pain. "Businessmen ... only businessmen."
"And your service is killing."
"You're a strange one to talk. But,
nein
. You were to be taken, not killed."
"Where?"
"We would be told by radio. Car frequency."
"Terrific," said Jason flatly. "You're not only second-rate, you're accommodating. Where's your car?"
"Outside."
"Give me the keys." The radio would identify it.
The man tried to resist; he pushed Bourne's knee away and started to roll into the wall.
"Nein!"
"You haven't got a choice." Jason brought the handle of the pistol down on the man's skull. The Swiss collapsed.
Bourne found the keys--there were three in a leather case--took the man's gun and put it into his pocket. It was a smaller weapon than the one he held in his hand and had no silencer, lending a degree of credence to the claim that he was to be taken, not killed. The blond man upstairs had been acting as the point, and therefore needed the protection of a silenced gunshot should wounding be required. But an unmuffled report could lead to complications; the Swiss on the second floor was a backup, his weapon to be used as a visible threat.
Then why was he on the second floor? Why hadn't he followed his colleague? On the staircase?
Something was odd, but there was no accounting for tactics, nor the time to consider them. There was a car outside on the street and he had the keys for it.
Nothing could be disregarded
. The third gun.
He got up painfully and found the revolver he had taken from the Frenchman in the elevator at the Gemeinschaft Bank. He pulled up his left trouser leg and inserted the gun under the elasticized fabric of
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his sock. It was secure.
He paused to get his breath and his balance, then crossed to the staircase, aware that the pain in his left shoulder was suddenly more acute, the paralysis spreading more rapidly. Messages from brain to limb were less clear. He hoped to God he could drive.
He reached the fifth step and abruptly stopped, listening as he had listened barely a minute ago for sounds of concealment. There was nothing; the wounded man may have been tactically deficient, but he had told the truth. Jason hurried down the staircase. He would drive out of Zurich--somehow--and find a doctor--somewhere.
He spotted the car easily. It was different from the other shabby automobiles on the street. An outsized, well-kept sedan, and he could see the bulge of an antenna base riveted into the trunk. He walked to the driver's side and ran his hand around the panel and left front fender; there was no alarm device. He unlocked the door, then opened it, holding his breath in case he was wrong about the alarm; he was not. He climbed in behind the wheel, adjusting his position until he was as comfortable as he could be, grateful that the car had an automatic shift. The large weapon in his belt inhibited him. He placed it on the seat beside him, then reached for the ignition, assuming the key that had unlocked the door was the proper one.
It was not. He tried the one next to it, but it, too, would not fit. For the trunk, he assumed. It was the third key.
Or was it? He kept stabbing at the opening. The key would not enter; he tried the second again; it was blocked. Then the first. None of the keys would fit into the ignition! Or were the messages from brain to limb to fingers too garbled, his coordination too inadequate! Goddamn it! Try again!
A powerful light came from his left, burning his eyes, blinding him. He grabbed for the gun, but a second beam shot out from the right; the door was yanked open and a heavy flashlight crashed down on his hand, another hand taking the weapon from the seat.
"Get out!" The order came from his left, the barrel of a gun pressed into his neck. He climbed out, a thousand coruscating circles of white in his eyes. As vision slowly came back to him, the first thing he saw was the outline of two circles. Gold circles; the spectacles of the killer who had hunted him throughout the night. The man spoke.
"They say in the laws of physics that every action has an equal and opposite reaction. The behavior of certain men under certain conditions is similarly predictable. For a man like you one sets up a gauntlet, each combatant told what to say if he falls. If he does not fall, you are taken. If he does, you are misled, lulled into a false sense of progress."
"It's a high degree of risk," said Jason. "For those in the gauntlet."
"They're paid well. And there's something else--no guarantee, of course, but it's there. The enigmatic Bourne does not kill indiscriminately. Not out of compassion, naturally, but for a far more practical reason. Men remember when they've been spared; he infiltrates the armies of others. Refined guerrilla tactics applied to a sophisticated battleground. I commend you."
"You're a horse's ass." It was all Jason could think to say. "But both your men are alive, if that's what
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you want to know."
Another figure came into view, led from the shadows of the building by a short, stocky man. It was the woman; it was Marie St. Jacques.
"That's him," she said softly, her look unwavering.
"Oh, my God. ..." Bourne shook his head in disbelief. "How was it done, Doctor?" he asked her, raising his voice. "Was someone watching my room at the Carillon? Was the elevator timed, the others shut down? You're very convincing. And I thought you were going to crash into a police car."
"As it turned out," she replied, "it wasn't necessary. These are the police."
Jason looked at the killer in front of him; the man was adjusting his gold spectacles. "I commend you,"
he said.
"A minor talent," answered the killer. "The conditions were right. You provided them."
"What happens now? The man inside said I was to be taken, not killed."
"You forget. He was told what to say." The Swiss paused. "So this is what you look like. Many of us have wondered during the past two or three years. How much speculation there's been! How many contradictions! He's tall, you know; no, he's of medium height. He's blond; no, he has dark black hair. Very light blue eyes, of course; no, quite clearly they are brown. His features are sharp; no, they're really quite ordinary, can't pick him out in a crowd. But nothing was ordinary. It was all extraordinary."
Your features have been softened, the character submerged. Change your hair, you change your
face ... Certain types of contact lenses are designed to alter the color of the eyes. ... Wear glasses,
you're a different man.. Visas, passports ... switched at will.
The design was there. Everything fit. Not all the answers, but more of the truth than he wanted to hear.
"I'd like to get this over with," said Marie St. Jacques, stepping forward. "I'll sign whatever I have to sign--at your office, I imagine. But then I really must get back to the hotel. I don't have to tell you what I've been through tonight."
The Swiss glanced at her through his gold-rimmed glasses. The stocky man who had led her out of the shadows took her arm. She stared at both men, then down at the hand that held her. Then at Bourne. Her breathing stopped, a terrible realization becoming clear. Her eyes grew wide.
"Let her go," said Jason. "She's on her way back to Canada. You'll never see her again."
"Be practical, Bourne. She's seen
us
. We two are professionals; there are rules." The man flicked his gun up under Jason's chin, the barrel pressed once more into Bourne's throat. He ran his left hand about his victim's clothes, felt the weapon in Jason's pocket and took it out. "I thought as much," he said, and turned to the stocky man. "Take her in the other car. The Limmat."
Bourne froze. Marie St. Jacques was to be killed, her body thrown into the Limmat River.
"Wait a minute!" Jason stepped forward; the gun was jammed into his neck, forcing him back into the
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hood of the car. "You're being stupid! She works for the Canadian government. They'll be all over Zurich."
"Why should that concern you? You won't be here."
"Because it's a waste!" cried Bourne. "We're professionals, remember?"
"You bore me." The killer turned to the stocky man.
"Geh! Schnell. Guisan Quai!"
"Scream your goddamn head off!" shouted Jason. "Start yelling! Don't stop!"
She tried, the scream cut short by a paralyzing blow to her throat. She fell to the pavement as her would-be executioner dragged her toward a small nondescript black sedan.
"That was stupid," said the killer, peering through his gold-rimmed spectacles into Bourne's face. "You only hasten the inevitable. On the other hand, it will be simpler now. I can free a man to tend to our wounded. Everything's so military, isn't it? It really is a battlefield." He turned to the man with the flashlight "Signal Johann to go inside. We'll come back for them."
The flashlight was switched on and off twice. A fourth man, who had opened the door of the small sedan for the condemned woman, nodded. Marie St. Jacques was thrown into the rear seat, the door slammed shut. The man named Johann started for the concrete steps, nodding now at the executioner. Jason felt sick as the engine of the small sedan was gunned and the car bolted away from the curb into the Steppdeckstrasse, the twisted chrome bumper disappearing into the shadows of the street. Inside that car was a woman he had never seen in his life ... before three hours ago. And he had killed her. "You don't lack for soldiers," he said.
"If there were a hundred men I could trust, I'd pay them willingly. As they say, your reputation precedes you."
"Suppose
I
paid you. You were at the bank; you know I've got funds."
"Probably millions, but I wouldn't touch a franc note."
"Why? Are you afraid?"