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She checked her watch, saw she needed to give Bourne another ninety seconds. As she

approached the intersection near the bank, she used the time to pick a likely target. A

shiny Zil limousine, not a speck of snow on its hood or roof, was heading slowly toward

the intersection at right angles to her.

At the appointed time she accelerated forward. The bombila’s tires, which she and

Bourne had checked when they’d returned to Lorraine’s, were nearly bald, their treads

worn down to a nub. Gala braked much too hard and the Zhig shrieked as the brakes

locked, the old tires skidding along the icy street until its grille struck the front fender of the Zil limo.

All traffic came to a screeching halt, horns blared, pedestrians detoured from their

appointed rounds, drawn by the spectacle. Within thirty seconds three police cruisers had

converged on the site of the accident.

As the chaos mounted, Bourne slipped through the revolving door into the ornate lobby

of the Moskva Bank. He immediately crossed the marble floor, passing under one of the

three huge gilt chandeliers that hung from the vaulted ceiling high above. The effect of

the room was to diminish human size, and the experience was not unlike visiting a dead

relative in his marble niche.

There was a low banquette two-thirds of the way across the vast room, behind which

sat a row of drones, their heads bent over their work. Before approaching, Bourne

checked everyone inside the bank for suspicious behavior. He produced Popov’s

passport, then wrote down the number of the safe-deposit box on a small pad kept for that

specific purpose.

The woman glanced at him, took his passport and the slip of paper, which she ripped

off the pad. Locking her drawer, she told Bourne to wait. He watched her walk over to

the rank of supervisors and managers, who sat in rows behind identical wooden desks,

and present Bourne’s documentation. The manager checked the number against his

master list of safe-deposit boxes, then he checked the passport. He hesitated, then reached for the phone, but when he noticed Bourne staring at him, he returned to receiver to its

cradle. He said something to the woman clerk, then rose and came over to where Bourne

stood.

“Mr. Popov.” He handed back the passport. “Vasily Legev, at your service.” He was an

oily Muscovite who continually scrubbed his palms together as if his hands had been

somewhere he’d rather not reveal. His smile seemed as genuine as a three-dollar bill.

Opening a door in the banquette, he ushered Bourne through. “It will be my pleasure to

escort you to our vault.”

He led Bourne to the rear of the room. A discreet door opened onto a hushed carpeted

corridor with a row of square columns on either side. Bad reproductions of famous

landscape paintings hung on the walls. Bourne could hear the muted sounds of phones

ringing, computer operators inputting information or writing letters. The vault was

directly ahead, its massive door open; to the left a set of marble stairs swept upward.

Vasily Legev showed Bourne through the circular opening and into the vault. The

hinges of the door looked to be two feet long and as thick around as Bourne’s biceps.

Inside was a rectangular room filled floor-to-ceiling with metal boxes, only the fronts of

which could be seen.

They went over to Bourne’s box number. There were two locks, two keyholes. Vasily

Legev inserted his key in the left-hand lock, Bourne inserted his into the right-hand lock.

The two men turned their keys at the same time, and the box was free to be pulled out of

its niche. Vasily Legev brought the box to one of a number of small viewing rooms. He

set it down on a ledge, nodded to Bourne, then left, pulling the privacy curtain behind

him.

Bourne didn’t bother sitting. Opening the box, he discovered a great deal of money in

American dollars, euros, Swiss francs, and a number of other currencies. He pocketed ten

thousand Swiss francs, along with some dollars and euros, before he closed the box,



pulled aside the curtain, and emerged into the vault proper.

Vasily Legev was nowhere to be seen, but two plainclothes cops had placed

themselves between Bourne and the doorway to the vault. One of them aimed a Makarov

handgun at him.

The other, smirking, said, “You will come with us now, gospadin Popov.”

Arkadin, hands in his pockets, strolled down the crescent beach, past a happily barking

dog whose owner had let it off the leash. A young woman pulled her auburn hair off her

face and smiled at him as they passed each other.

When he was fairly near Heinrich, Arkadin kicked off his shoes, peeled off his socks,

and, rolling up his trousers, picked his way down to the surf line, where the sand turned

dark and crusty. He moved at an angle, so that as he ventured into the surf he was within

earshot of the courier.

Sensing someone near him, Heinrich turned and, shading his eyes from the sun,

nodded at Arkadin before turning away.

Under the pretext of stumbling as the surf rolled in, Arkadin edged closer. “I’m

surprised that someone besides me likes the winter surf.”

Heinrich seemed not to hear him, continued his contemplation of the horizon.

“I keep wondering what it is that feels so good about the water rushing over my feet

and pulling back out.”

After a moment, Heinrich glanced at him. “If you don’t mind, I’m trying to meditate.”

“Meditate on this,” Arkadin said, sticking a knife very carefully in his side.

Heinrich’s eyes opened wide. He staggered, but Arkadin was there to catch him. They

sat down together in the surf, like old friends communing with nature.

Heinrich’s mouth made gasping sounds. They reminded Arkadin of a fish hauled out of

the water.

“What… what?”

Arkadin cradled him with one hand as he searched beneath his poplin jacket with the

other. Just as he thought, Heinrich had the package on him, not trusting it to be out of his sight for an instant. He held it in his palm for a moment. It was in a rolled cardboard

cylinder. So small for something with that much power.

“A lot of people have died for this,” Arkadin said.

“Many more will die before it’s over,” Heinrich managed to get out. “Who are you?”

“I’m your death,” Arkadin said. Plunging the knife in again, he turned it between

Heinrich’s ribs.

“Ah, ah, ah,” Heinrich whispered as his lungs filled with his own blood. His breathing

turned shallow, then erratic. Then it ceased altogether.

Arkadin continued to shelter him with a comradely arm. When Heinrich, nothing more

than deadweight now, slumped against him, Arkadin held him up as the surf crashed and

ebbed around them.

Arkadin stared out at the horizon, as Heinrich had done, certain that beyond the

demarcation was nothing save a black abyss, endless and unknowable.

Bourne went willingly with the two plainclothes policemen out of the vault. As they

stepped into the corridor, Bourne slammed the edge of his hand down on the cop’s wrist,

causing the Makarov to drop and slide along the floor. Whirling, Bourne kicked the other

cop, who was flung back against the edge of a square column. Bourne grabbed hold of

the arm of the first cop. Lifting it, he slammed his elbow into the cop’s rib cage, then

smashed his hand into the back of his neck. With both cops down, Bourne hurried along

the corridor, but another man came sprinting toward him, blocking the way to the front of

the bank, a man who fit Yakov’s description of Harris Low.

Reversing course, Bourne leapt up the marble staircase, taking the steps three at a time.