swore then, and I’m swearing now, that I won’t let anything or anyone damage that

legacy.” She took a breath. “So whatever it takes.”

Gold returned her stare without flinching. “Do you know what you’re asking?”

“Yes, I believe I do.”

At last, he said, “All right, Veronica, it’s your call. Whatever it takes.”

Feeling invigorated and invulnerable after his workout, Rodney Feir met General

Kendall in the champagne room, reserved for those VIPs who had consummated the

evening’s pleasures and wanted to linger, with or without their girls. Of course time spent in there was far more expensive with the girls than without.

The champagne room was decorated like a Middle Eastern pasha’s den. The two men

lazed on voluminous pillows while being served the bubbly of their choice. This was

where Feir planned to hand over the intel on Typhon’s field agents. But first he wanted to

luxuriate in the pure pleasure provided in the back rooms of The Glass Slipper. After all,

the moment he set foot outside, the real world would come crashing in on him with all its

annoyances, petty humiliations, drudgery, and the piquancy of fear that preceded every

move he made to advance LaValle’s position vis-а-vis CI.

Kendall, his cell phone at his right hand, sat rather stiffly, as befitted a military man.

Feir thought he must be slightly uncomfortable in such lush surroundings. The men

chatted for a time, sipping their champagne, exchanging theories about steroids and

baseball, about the chances of the Redskins making the play-offs next year, the gyrations

of the stock market, anything but politics.

After a time, when the bottle of champagne was nearly exhausted, Kendall looked at

his watch. “What d’you have for me?”

This was the moment Feir had been keenly anticipating. He couldn’t wait to see the

look on the general’s face when he caught a glimpse of the intel. Reaching into the

pocket in the lining of his coat, he brought out the packet. A low-tech hard copy was the

safest way to smuggle data out of the CI building, since security systems were in place to

monitor the comings and goings of any device with a hard drive large enough to hold

substantial data files.

A smile broke out across Feir’s face. “The whole enchilada. Every last detail on the

Typhon agents across the globe.” He held up the packet. “Now let’s talk about what I get

in return.”

“What do you want?” Kendall said without much enthusiasm. “A higher grade? More

control?”

“I want respect,” Feir said. “I want LaValle to respect me the way you do.”

A curious smile curled the general’s lips. “I can’t speak for Luther, but I’ll see what I

can do.”

As he leaned forward to take the intel, Feir was wondering why he was so solemn-no,

worse than solemn, he was downright glum. Feir was on the point of asking him about it

when a tall, elegant black woman began snapping a series of photos.

“What the hell?” he said, through the blinding string of flashes.

When his vision cleared, he saw Soraya Moore standing beside them. She had the

packet of intel in her hand.

“This isn’t a good night for you, Rodney.” She picked up the general’s cell phone,

thumbed it on, and there was the conversation between the general and Feir recorded and

regurgitated so everyone could hear his treachery for themselves. “No, I would have to

say that all things considered it’s the end of the line.”

I’m not afraid to die,” Devra said, “if that’s what you’re worried about.”

“I’m not worried,” Arkadin said. “What makes you think I’m worried?”

She bit into the chocolate ice cream he’d bought her. “You’ve got that deep vertical

indentation between your eyes.”

She wanted ice cream even though it was the middle of winter. Maybe it was the

chocolate she wanted, he thought. Not that it mattered; pleasing her in little ways was

strangely satisfying-as if in pleasing her he was also pleasing himself, although that

seemed like an impossibility to him.

“I’m not worried,” he said. “I’m thoroughly pissed off.”

“Because your boss told you to stay away from Bourne.”

“I’m not going to stay away from Bourne.”

“You’ll piss off your boss.”

“There comes a time,” Arkadin said, walking faster.

They were in the center of Munich; he wanted to be in a central location when Icoupov

told him where he was meeting Bourne in order to get there as quickly as possible.

“I’m not afraid to die,” Devra repeated, “the only thing is, though, what do you do

when you no longer have memories?”

Arkadin shot her a look. “What?”

“When you look at a dead person what do you see?” She took another bite of ice cream

between her teeth, leaving little indentations in what was left of the scoop. “Nothing,

right? Not a damn thing. Life has flown the coop, and with it all the memories that have

been built up over the years.” She looked at him. “At that moment, you cease to be

human, so what are you?”

“Who gives a shit?” Arkadin said. “It’ll be a fucking relief to be without memories.”

Soraya presented herself at the NSA safe house just before 10 AM, so that by the time

she cleared the various levels of security, she was being ushered into the Library

precisely on time.

“Breakfast, madam?” Willard asked as he escorted her across the plush carpet.

“I believe I will, today,” she said. “A fines herbes omelet would be nice. Do you have

a baguette?”

“We do, indeed, madam.”

“Fine.” She shifted the evidence damning General Kendall from one hand to the other.

“And a pot of Ceylon tea, Willard. Thank you.”

She walked the rest of the way to where Luther LaValle sat, drinking his morning cup

of coffee. He stared out the window, casting a jaundiced eye on the early spring. It was so warm the fireplace held only cold, white ash.

He did not turn when she sat down. She placed the evidence file on her lap, then said

without preamble, “I’ve come to take Tyrone home.”

LaValle ignored her. “There’s nothing on your Black Legion; there’s no unusual

terrorist activities inside the US. We’ve come up blank.”

“Did you hear what I said? I’ve come for Tyrone.”

“That’s not going to happen,” LaValle said.

Soraya brought out Kendall’s cell phone, played back the conversation he’d had with

Rodney Feir in the champagne room of The Glass Slipper.

“Every last detail on the Typhon agents across the globe,” came Feir’s voice. “Now

let’s talk about what I get in return.”

General Kendall: “What do you want? A higher grade? More control?”

Feir: “I want respect. I want LaValle to respect me the way you do.”

“Who cares?” LaValle’s head swung around. His eyes were dark and glassy. “That’s

Feir’s problem, not mine.”

“Maybe so.” Soraya slid the file across the table toward him. “However, this is very

much your problem.”

LaValle stared at her for a moment. His eyes were now full of venom. Without

lowering his gaze, he reached out, flipped open the file. There he saw photo after photo

of General Kendall, naked as sin, caught in the midst of having intercourse with a young

black woman.

“How is that going to look for the career officer and devout Christian family man when

the story comes out?”

Willard arrived with her breakfast, snapping down a starched white tablecloth, setting

the china and silverware in a precise pattern in front of her. When he was finished, he

turned to LaValle. “Anything for you, sir?”

LaValle shooed him away with a curt flick of his hand. For a time, he did nothing more

than leaf through the photos again. Then he took out a cell phone, placed it on the table,