and pushed it toward her.

“Call Bourne,” he said.

Soraya froze with a forkful of omelet halfway to her mouth. “I beg your pardon?”

“I know he’s in Munich, our substation there picked him up on their CCTV monitoring

of the airport. I have men in place to take him into custody. All that’s needed now is for

you to set the trap.”

She laughed as she set down her fork. “You’re dreaming, LaValle. I have you, not the

other way around. If these photos become public, your right-hand man will be ruined

both professionally and personally. You and I both know you’re not going to allow that to

happen.”

LaValle gathered up the photos, slid them back into the envelope. Then he took out a

pen, wrote a name and address on the front of the envelope. When Willard glided over at

his beckoning, LaValle said, “Please have these scanned and sent electronically to The

Drudge Report. Then have a courier deliver them to The Washington Post as soon as

possible.”

“Very good, sir.” Willard tucked the envelope under his arm, vanished into another

part of the Library.

Then LaValle took out his cell phone, dialed a local number. “Gus, this is Luther

LaValle. Fine, fine. How’s Ginnie? Good, give her my love. The kids, as well… Listen,

Gus, I have a situation here. Evidence has come to light regarding General Kendall, that’s

right, he’s been the target of an internal investigation for some months now. Effective

immediately, he’s been terminated from my command, from the NSA in toto. Well,

you’ll see, I’m having the photos messengered over to you even as we speak. Of course

it’s an exclusive, Gus. Frankly, I’m shocked, truly shocked. You will be, too, when you

see these photos… I’ll have an official statement over to you within forty minutes. Yes,

of course. No need to thank me, Gus, I always think of you first.”

Soraya watched this performance with a sick feeling in the pit of her stomach that grew

from an icy ball into an iceberg of disbelief.

“How could you?” she said when LaValle finished his call. “Kendall’s your second in

command, your friend. You and he go to church together with your families every

Sunday.”

“I have no permanent friends or allies; I only have permanent interests,” LaValle said

flatly. “You’ll be a damn sight better director when you learn that.”

She then drew out another set of photos, this one showing Feir handing a packet to

General Kendall. “That packet,” she said, “details the number and locations of Typhon

field personnel.”

LaValle’s disdainful expression didn’t change. “What’s that to me?”

For the second time, Soraya struggled to hide her astonishment. “That’s your second in

command taking possession of classified CI intel.”

“On that score you should see to your own people.”

“Are you denying that you gave General Kendall orders to cultivate Rodney Feir as a

mole?”

“Yes, I am.”

Soraya was almost breathless. “I don’t believe you.”

LaValle produced an icy smile. “I doesn’t matter what you believe, Director. Only the

facts matter.” He flicked the photo away with his fingernail. “Whatever General Kendall

did, he did on his own. I have no knowledge of it.”

Soraya was wondering how everything could have gone so wrong, when, once again,

LaValle pushed the phone across the table.

“Now call Bourne.”

She felt as if there were a steel band around her chest; the blood was singing in her

ears. Now what? she said to herself. Dear God, what can I do?

She heard someone with her voice say, “What should I tell him?”

LaValle produced a slip of paper with a time and an address on it. “He needs to go

here, at this time. Tell him that you’re in Munich, that you have information vital to the

Black Legion’s attack, that he has to see it for himself.”

Soraya’s hand was so slick with sweat, she wiped it on her napkin. “He’ll be

suspicious if I don’t call him on my own phone. In fact, he might not answer if I don’t,

because he won’t know it’s me.”

LaValle nodded, but when she produced her phone, he said, “I’m going to listen to

every word you say. If you try to warn him I promise your friend Tyrone will never leave

this building alive. Clear?”

She nodded, but did nothing.

Observing her like a frog split open on a dissecting table, LaValle said, “I know you

don’t want to do this, Director. I know how badly you don’t want to do this. But you will

call Bourne and you will set the trap for me, because I’m stronger than you are. By that I

mean my will. I get what I want, Director, at any cost, but not you-you care too much to

have a long career in intelligence work. You’re doomed and you know it.”

Soraya had stopped listening to him after the first few words. Acutely aware that she

had vowed to take control of the situation, to somehow turn disaster into victory, she was

furiously marshaling her forces. One step at a time, she told herself now. I have to clear

my mind of Tyrone, of the failed ploy with Kendall, of my own guilt. I have to think of this call now; how am I going to make the call and keep Jason from being captured?

It seemed an impossible task, but that kind of thinking was defeatist, totally unhelpful.

Still-what was she to do?

“After your call,” LaValle said, “you’ll stay here, under constant surveillance, until

after Bourne is taken into custody.”

Uncomfortably aware of his avid eyes on her, she flipped open her phone, and called

Jason.

When she heard his voice, she said, “Hi, it’s me, Soraya.”

Bourne was standing in Egon Kirsch’s apartment, staring down at the street when his

cell phone rang. He saw Soraya’s number come up on the screen, answered the call, and

heard her say, “Hi, it’s me, Soraya.”

“Where are you?”

“Actually, I’m in Munich.”

He perched on the arm of an upholstered chair. “Actually? In Munich?”

“That’s what I said.”

He frowned, hearing echoes in his head from far away. “I’m surprised.”

“Not as much as I am. You came up on the CI surveillance grid at the airport.”

“There was no help for it.”

“I’m sure not. Anyway, I’m not over here on official CI business. We’ve been

continuing to monitor the Black Legion communications, and at last we got a

breakthrough.”

He stood up. “What is it?”

“The phone’s too insecure,” she said. “We should meet.” She told him the place and

the time.

Glancing at his watch, he said, “That’s a little over an hour from now.”

“Right as rain. I can make it. Can you?”

“I think I can manage,” he said. “See you.”

He disconnected, went over to the window, leaned on the sash, replaying the

conversation word by word in his mind.

He felt the jolt of a dislocation, as if he had moved outside his body, experiencing

something that had happened to someone else. His mind, recording a seismic shift in its

neurons, was struggling with a memory. Bourne knew he’d had this conversation before,

but for the life of him he couldn’t remember where or when, or what significance it might

have for him now.

He would have continued on with his fruitless search had not the downstairs bell rang.

Turning from the window, he went across the living room, pressed the button that

released the outer door’s lock. The time had finally come when he and Arkadin would

meet face-to-face-the assassin of legend, who specialized in killing killers, who had

slipped in and out of a Russian high-security prison without anyone being the wiser, who

had managed to eliminate Pyotr and his entire network.

There was a knock on the door. He kept away from the spy hole, kept away from the