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Arkadin frowned, giving him the canny, feral appearance of a wolf. “What did he

mean?”

“I’m not sure.” He turned, walking down the deck toward the crew members who had

cleared the space for the copter to land. “What we’re looking for,” he said as Arkadin fell into step beside him, “is a tattoo specific to the Black Legion.”

“The wheel of horses with the death’s head center.” Arkadin nodded. “I’ve seen it.”

“It’s on the inside of the elbow.”

“We could kill them all.” Arkadin laughed. “But I guess that would offend something

inside you.”

One by one, the two men examined the arms of the eight crewmen on deck, but found

no tattoo. By the time they reached the wheelhouse, the tanker was within two miles of

the terminal. It was barely moving. Four tugboats had hove to and were waiting at the

one-mile limit to tow the tanker the rest of the way in.

The captain was a swarthy individual with a face that looked like it had been deeply

etched by acid rather than the wind and the sun. “As I was telling Ms. Trevor, there are

seven more crewmen, mostly involved in engine room duties. Then there’s my first mate

here, the communications officer, and the ship’s doctor, he’s in sick bay, tending to a

crewman who fell ill two days out of Algeria. Oh, yes, and the cook.”

Bourne and Arkadin glanced at each other. The radioman seemed the logical choice,

but when the captain summoned him he, too, was without the Black Legion tattoo. So

were the captain and his first mate.

“The engine room,” Bourne said.

At his captain’s orders, the first mate led them out onto the deck, then down the

starboard companionway into the bowels of the ship, reaching the enormous engine room

at last. Five men were hard at work, their faces and arms filthy with a coating of grease

and grime. As the first mate instructed them, they held out their arms, but as Bourne

reached the third in line, the fourth man looked at them beneath half-closed lids before he bolted.

Bourne went after him while Arkadin circled, snaking through the oily city of grinding

machinery. He eluded Bourne once but then, rounding a corner, Bourne spotted him near

the line of gigantic Hyundai diesel engines, specifically designed to power the world’s

fleet of LNG tankers. He was trying to furtively shove a small box between the structural

struts of the engine, but Arkadin, coming up behind him, grabbed for his wrist. The

crewman jerked away, brought the box back toward him, and was about to thumb a

button on it when Bourne kicked it out of his hand. The box went flying, and Arkadin

dived after it.

“Careful,” the crewman said as Bourne grabbed hold of him. He ignored Bourne, was

staring at the box Arkadin brought back to them. “You hold the whole world in your

hand.”

Meanwhile Bourne pushed up his shirtsleeve. The man’s arm was smeared with grease,

deliberately so, it seemed, because when Bourne took a rag and wiped it off, the Black

Legion tattoo appeared on the inside of his left elbow.

The man seemed totally unconcerned. His entire being was focused on the box that

Arkadin was holding. “That will blow up everything,” he said, and made a lunge toward

it. Bourne jerked him back with a stranglehold.

“Let’s get him back up to the captain,” Bourne said to the first mate. That’s when he

saw the box up close. He took it out of Arkadin’s hand.

“Careful!” the crewman cried. “One slight jar and you’ll set it off.”

But Bourne wasn’t so sure. The crewman was being too vocal with his warnings.

Wouldn’t he want the ship to blow now that it had been boarded by Sever’s enemies?

When he turned the box over, he saw that the seam between the bottom and the side was

ragged.

“What are you doing? Are you crazy?” The crewman was so agitated that Arkadin

slapped him on the side of the head in order to silence him.

Inserting his fingernail into the seam, Bourne pried the box apart. There was nothing

inside. It was a dummy.

Moira found it impossible to stay in one place. Her nerves were stretched to the

breaking point. The tanker was on the verge of meeting up with the tugboats; they were

only a mile from shore. If the tanks went, the devastation to both human life and the

country’s economy would be catastrophic. She felt useless, a third wheel hanging around

while the two men did their hunting.

Exiting the wheelhouse, she went belowdecks, looking for the engine room. Smelling

food, she poked her head into the galley. A large Algerian was sitting at the stainless-

steel mess table, reading a two-week-old Arabic newspaper.

He looked up, gesturing at the paper. “It gets old the fifteenth time through, but when

you’re at sea what can you do?”

His burly arms were bare to the shoulders. They bore tattoos of a star, a crescent, and a

cross, but not the Black Legion’s insignia. Following the directions he gave her, she

found the infirmary three decks below. Inside, a slim Muslim was sitting at a small desk

built into one of the bulkheads. In the opposite bulkhead were two berths, one of them

filled with the patient who had fallen ill. The doctor murmured a traditional Muslim

greeting as he turned away from his laptop computer to face her. He frowned deeply

when he saw the crossbow in her hands.

“Is that really necessary,” he said, “or even wise?”

“I’d like to speak with your patient,” Moira said, ignoring him.

“I’m afraid that’s impossible.” The doctor smiled that smile only doctors can. “He’s

been sedated.”

“What’s wrong with him?”

The doctor gestured at the laptop. “I’m still trying to find out. He’s been subject to

seizures, but so far I can’t find the pathology.”

“We’re near Long Beach, you’ll get help then,” she said. “I just need to see the insides

of his elbows.”

The doctor’s eyebrows rose. “I beg your pardon?”

“I need to see whether he’s got a tattoo.”

“They all have tattoos, these sailors.” The doctor shrugged. “But go ahead. You won’t

disturb him.”

Moira approached the lower berth, bending over to pull the thin blanket back from the

patient’s arm. As she did so, the doctor stepped forward and struck her a blow on the

back of her head. She fell forward and cracked her jaw on the metal frame of the bunk.

The pain pulled her rudely back from a precipice of blackness, and, groaning, she

managed to roll over. The copper-sweet taste of blood was in her mouth and she fought

against wave after wave of dizziness. Dimly she saw the doctor bent over his laptop, his

fingers racing over the keys, and she felt a ball of ice form in her belly.

He’s going to kill us all. With this thought reverberating in her head, she grabbed the

crossbow off the floor where she’d dropped it. She barely had time to aim, but she was

close enough not to have to be accurate. She breathed a prayer as she let fly.

The doctor arched up as the bolt pierced his spine. He staggered backward, toward

where Moira sat, braced against the berth frame. His arms extended, his fingers clawing

for the keyboard, and Moira rose, swung the crossbow into the back of his head. His

blood spattered like rain over her face and hands, the desk, and the laptop’s keyboard.

Bourne found her on the floor of the infirmary, cradling the computer in her lap. When

he came in, she looked up at him and said, “I don’t know what he did. I’m afraid to shut

it off.”

“Are you all right?”

She nodded. “The ship’s doctor was Sever’s man.”

“So I see,” he said as he stepped over the corpse. “I didn’t believe him when he told