"I don't know what happened in New York, but General Villiers left instructions that after his death what happened in Paris was to be made part of the public record. When he died and the truth was known, it was said that Carlos went mad with fury, killing several high-ranking military commanders simply because they were generals."
"It's all an old story," interrupted Bourne sharply. "This is now, thirteen years later. What happens now?"
"I don't know, monsieur. My choices are zero, aren't they? One or the other of you will kill me, I suppose."
"Maybe not. Help me take him and you're free of both of us. You can go back to the Mediterranean and live in peace. You won't even have to disappear-you merely return to wherever it is after a number of profitable years in Paris."
"Disappear?" asked Lavier, studying the haggard face of her captor. "As in the word 'vanish'?"
"No need for that. Carlos can't reach you because he'll be dead."
"Yes, I understand that part. It's the disappearance that interests me along with the 'profitable' years. Does this profit come from you?"
"Yes."
"I see. ... Is that what you offered Santos? A profitable disappearance?"
It was as if the words were hard flesh and had slapped him across the face. Jason looked at his prisoner. "So it was Santos, after all," he said softly. "The Lefebvre was a trap. Christ, he's good."
"He's dead, Le Coeur du Soldat cleaned out and closed down."
"What?" Stunned, Bourne again stared at the Lavier woman. "That was his reward for cornering me?"
"No, for betraying Carlos."
"I don't understand."
"The monseigneur has eyes everywhere, I'm sure that's no surprise to you. Santos, the total recluse, was observed sending several heavy boxes out with his main food supplier, and yester day morning he did not clip and water his precious garden, a summer ritual as predictable as the sun. A man was sent to the supplier's warehouse and opened the boxes-"
"Books," broke in Jason quietly.
"Placed in storage until further instructions," completed Dominique Lavier. "Santos's departure was to be swift and secret."
"And Carlos knew there was no one in Moscow giving out a telephone number."
"I beg your pardon?"
"Nothing. ... What kind of man was Santos?"
"I never knew him, never even saw him. I've only heard the downstairs rumors, which weren't many."
"I haven't time for many. What were they?"
"Apparently he was a very large man-"
"I know that," interrupted Jason impatiently. "And from the books we both know that he was well read, probably well educated, if his speech was indicative. Where did he come from and why did he work for the Jackal?"
"They say he was Cuban and fought in Fidel's revolution, that he was a deep thinker, as well as a law student with Castro, and once a great athlete. Then, of course, as in all revolutions, the internal strife sours the victories-at least that's what my old friends from the May Day barricades tell me."
"Translation, please?"
"Fidel was jealous of the leaders of certain cadres, especially Che Guevara and the man you knew as Santos. Where Castro was larger than life, those two were larger than he was, and Fidel could not tolerate the competition. Che was sent on a mission that ended his life, and trumped up counterrevolutionary charges were brought against Santos. He was within an hour of being executed when Carlos and his men broke into the prison and spirited him away."
"Spirited? Dressed as priests, no doubt."
"I have no doubts. The Church with all its medieval lunacies once held sway over Cuba."
"You sound bitter."
"I'm a woman, the Pontiff is not; he's merely medieval."
"Judgment decreed. ... So Santos joined forces with Carlos, two disillusioned Marxists in search of their personal cause-or maybe their own personal Hollywood."
"That's beyond me, monsieur, but if I vaguely understand you, the fantasy belongs to the brilliant Carlos; the bitter disillusion was Santos's fate. He owed his life to the Jackal, so why not give it? What was left for him? ... Until you came along."
"That's all I need. Thanks. I just wanted a few gaps filled in."
"Gaps?"
"Things I didn't know."
"What do we do now, Monsieur Bourne? Wasn't that your original question?"
"What do you want to do, Madame Lavier?"
"I know I don't want to die. And I am not Madame Lavier in the marital sense. The restrictions never appealed to me and the benefits seemed unnecessary. For years I was a high-priced call girl in Monte Carlo, Nice and Cap Ferrat until my looks and my body deserted me. Still, I once had friends from the old days, intermittent lovers who took care of me for old times' sake. Most are dead now, a pity, really."
"I thought you said you were enormously well paid for assuming your sister's identity."
"Oh, I was and to a degree I still am, for I'm still valuable. I move among the elite of Paris, where gossip abounds, and that's often helpful. I have a beautiful flat on the avenue Montaigne. Antiques, fine paintings, servants, charge accounts-everything a woman once in high fashion should be expected to have for the circles she still travels in: And money. Every month my bank receives eighty thousand francs from Geneva-somewhat more than enough for me to pay the bills. For, you see, I have to pay them, no one else can do so."
"So then you've got money."
"No, monsieur. I have a life-style, not money. That's the way of the Jackal. Except for the old men, he pays only for what he gets in terms of immediate service. If the money from Geneva does not arrive at my bank on the tenth of every month, I'd be thrown out in thirty days. But then if Carlos decided to get rid of me, there would be no need for Geneva. I'd be finished-as I am no doubt finished now. If I returned to my flat in the Montaigne this morning, I'd never come out ... as my sister never came out of that church in Neuilly-sur-Seine. At least not alive."
"You're convinced of that?"
"Of course. The stop where I chained the bicycle was made to receive instructions from one of the old men. The orders were precise and to be precisely followed. A woman I know would meet me in twenty minutes at a bakery in Saint-Germain where we were to exchange clothes. She was to proceed to the Magdalen mission and I was to meet a courier from Athens in a room at the Hôtel Trémoille."
"The Magdalen mission ... ? You mean those women on the bicycles were actually nuns?"
"Complete with vows of chastity and poverty, monsieur. I am a frequent visiting superior from the convent at Saint-Malo."
"And the woman at the bakery. Is she-?"
"She falls from grace now and then, but she's a perfectly splendid administrator."
"Jesus," mumbled Bourne.
"He's frequently on their lips. ... Do you see now the hopelessness of my position?"
"I'm not sure I do."
"Then I am forced to wonder if you really are the Chameleon. I was not at the bakery. The meeting with the Greek courier never took place. Where was I?"
"You were delayed. The bicycle chain broke; you got grazed by one of those trucks on the rue Lecourbe. Hell, you got mugged. What's the difference? You were delayed."
"How long has it been since you rendered me unconscious?"
Jason looked at his watch, now easily seen in the bright morning sunlight. "Something over an hour-plus, I think; perhaps an hour and a half. Considering how you were dressed, the taxi driver cruised around trying to find a place to park where we could help you to a bench on the path with as little scrutiny as possible. He was well paid for his assistance."
"An hour and a half?" asked Lavier pointedly.
"So?"
"So why didn't I call the bakery or the Hôtel Trémoille?"