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runways were de-iced. He cleared Customs and Immigration and was met by a small, cat-

like individual wrapped in a white down coat. Lev Baronov, Professor Specter’s contact.

“No luggage, I see,” Baronov said in heavily accented English. He was as wiry and

hyperactive as a Jack Russell terrier as he elbowed and barked at the small army of gypsy

cab drivers vying for a fare. They were a sad-faced lot, plucked from the minorities in the Caucasus, Asians and the like whose ethnicity prevented them from getting a decent job

with decent pay in Moscow. “We’ll take care of that on the way in to town. You’ll need

proper clothes for Moscow’s winter. It’s a balmy minus two Celsius today.”

“That would be most helpful,” Bourne replied in perfect Russian.

Baronov’s bushy eyebrows rose in surprise. “You speak like a native, gospadin

Bourne.”

“I had excellent instructors,” Bourne said laconically.

Amid the bustle of the flight terminal, he was studying the flow of passengers, noting

those who lingered at a newsagent or outside the duty-free shop, those who didn’t move

at all. Ever since he emerged into the terminal he’d had the unshakable feeling that he

was being watched. Of course there were CCTV cameras all over, but the particular

prickling of his scalp that had developed over the years of fieldwork was unerring.

Someone had him under surveillance. This fact was both alarming and reassuring-that

he’d already picked up a tag meant someone knew he was scheduled to arrive in

Moscow. NSA could have sca

picked up his name from Lufthansa; there’d been no time to take himself off the list. He

looked only in short touristic glances because he had no desire to alert his shadow that he was on to him.

“I’m being followed,” Bourne said as he sat in Baronov’s wheezing Zil. They were on

the M10 motorway.

“No problem,” Baronov said, as if he was used to being tailed all the time. He didn’t

even ask who was following Bourne. Bourne thought of the professor’s pledge that

Baronov wouldn’t get in his way.

Bourne paged through the packet Baronov had given him, which included new ID, a

key, and the box number to get money out of the safe-deposit vault in the Moskva Bank.

“I need a plan of the bank building,” Bourne said.

“No problem.” Baronov exited the M10. Bourne was now Fyodor Ilianovich Popov, a

midlevel functionary of GazProm, the gargantuan state-run energy conglomerate.

“How well will this ID hold up?” Bourne asked.

“Not to worry.” Baronov gri

how to protect you, Fyodor Ilianovich Popov.”

Anthony Prowess had come a long way to keep the ancient Zil in sight and he wasn’t

about to lose it, no matter what evasive maneuvers the driver took. He’d been waiting at

Sheremetyevo for Bourne to come through Immigration. General Kendall had sent a

recent surveillance photo of Bourne to his cell. The photo was grainy and two-

dimensional because of the long telephoto lens used, but it was a close-up; there was no

mistaking Bourne when he arrived.

For Prowess, the next few minutes were crucial. He had no illusions that he could

remain u

his subject was still unself-conscious, he needed to drink in every tic and habit, no matter how minuscule or seemingly irrelevant. He knew from bitter experience that these small

insights would prove invaluable as the surveillance ground on, especially when it came

time to engage the subject and terminate him.

Prowess was no stranger to Moscow. He’d been born here to a British diplomat and his

cultural attachй wife. Not until Prowess was fifteen did he understand that his mother’s

job was a cover. She was, in fact, a spy for MI6, Her Majesty’s Secret Service. Four years

later Prowess’s mother was compromised, and MI6 spirited them out of the country.

Because his mother was now a wanted woman, the Prowesses were sent to America, to



begin a new life with a new family name. The danger had been ground so deeply into

Prowess that he’d actually forgotten what they were once called. He was now simply

Anthony Prowess.

As soon as he’d built up qualified academic credits, he applied to the NSA. From the

moment he’d discovered that his mother was a spy, that was all he’d wanted to do. No

amount of pleading from his parents could dissuade him. Because of his ease with foreign

languages and his knowledge of other cultures, the NSA sent him abroad, first to the

Horn of Africa to train, then to Afghanistan, where he liaised with the local tribes

fighting the Taliban in rough mountain terrain. He was a hard man, no stranger to

hardship, or to death. He knew more ways to kill a human being than there were days in

the year. Compared with what he’d been through in the past nineteen months, this

assignment was going to be a piece of cake.

Seventeen

BOURNE AND BARONOV sped down Volokolamskoye Highway. Crocus City was

an enormous high-end mall. Built in 2002, it was a seemingly endless array of glittering

boutiques, restaurants, car showrooms, and marble fountains. It was also an excellent

place to lose a tail.

While Bourne shopped for suitable clothes, Baronov was busy on his cell phone. There

was no point in going to the trouble of losing the tail inside the maze of the mall only to have him pick them up again when they returned to the Zil. Baronov was calling a

colleague to come to Crocus City. They’d take his car, and he’d drive the Zil into

Moscow.

Bourne paid for his purchases and changed into them. Baronov took him to the Franck

Muller Cafй inside the mall, where they had coffee and sandwiches.

“Tell me about Pyotr’s last girlfriend,” Bourne said.

“Gala Nematova?” Baronov shrugged. “Not much to tell, really. She’s just another one

of those pretty girls one sees around all the latest Moscow nightclubs. These women are a

ruble a dozen.”

“Where would I find her?”

Baronov shrugged. “She’ll go where the oligarchs cluster. Really, your guess is as

good as mine.” He laughed good-naturedly. “For myself, I’m too old for places like that,

but I’ll be glad to take you on a round-robin tonight.”

“All I need is for you to lend me a car.”

“Suit yourself, miya droog.”

A few moments later, Baronov went to the men’s room, where he’d agreed to make the

switch of car keys with his friend. When he returned he handed Bourne a folded piece of

paper on which was the plan for the Moskva Bank building.

They went out a different direction from the way they’d come in, which led them to a

parking lot on the other side of the mall. They got into a vintage black Volga four-door

sedan that, to Bourne’s relief, started up immediately.

“You see? No problem.” Baronov laughed jovially. “What would you do without me,

gospadin Bourne?”

The Frunzenskaya embankment was located southwest of Moscow’s i

Ring. Mikhail Tarkanian had said that he could see the pedestrian bridge to Gorky Park

from his living room window. He hadn’t lied. His apartment was in a building not far

from Khlastekov, a restaurant serving excellent Russian food, according to Baronov.

With its two-story, square-columned portico and decorative concrete balconies, the

building itself was a prime example of the Stalinist Empire style that raped and beat into

submission a more pastoral and romantic architectural past.