The Bourne Deception - By Robert Ludlum & Eric van Lustbader Page 0,38

abruptly, he startled Firth. He grabbed Firth’s wrist with a horribly fierce grip. “Who’s the patient you’ve had here for the last three months?”

“What patient?”

Bowles clicked his tongue against the roof of his mouth. “Hey, Doc, I didn’t come here for my health.” He grinned. “You’ve got a patient stashed away here and I want to know about him.”

“Why? What do you care?”

The New Zealander jerked even harder on Firth’s wrist, pulling the doctor closer to him. “You operate here without interference, but all good things come to an end.” His voice lowered significantly. “Now listen up, you idiot. You’re wanted for negligent homicide by the Perth police.”

“I was drunk,” Firth whispered. “I didn’t know what I was doing.”

“You operated on a patient while under the influence, Doc, and he died. That’s it in a nutshell.” He shook Firth violently. “Isn’t it?”

The doctor closed his eyes and whispered, “Yes.”

“So?”

“I have nothing to tell you.”

Bowles moved to slide off the table. “Then off we go to the cops, bud. Your life is toast.”

Firth, trying to squirm away, said, “I don’t know anything.”

“Never gave you a name, did he?”

“Adam,” Firth said. “Adam Stone.”

“That’s what he said? Adam Stone.”

Firth nodded. “I confirmed it when I saw his passport.”

Bowles dug in a pocket, produced a cell phone. “Doc, here’s all you have to do in order to stay out of jail for life.” He held out the cell. “Get me a picture of this Adam Stone. A good, clear one of his face.”

Firth licked his lips. His mouth was so dry he could scarcely speak. “And if I do this you’ll leave me alone?”

Bowles winked. “Bank on it, Doc.”

Firth took the cell with a hollow feeling in his chest. What else was he to do? He had no expertise with these kinds of people. He tried to comfort himself with the knowledge that at least he hadn’t divulged Jason Bourne’s real name, but that gesture would become meaningless the moment he gave this man Bourne’s photo.

Bowles jumped off the table, but he still hadn’t let go of Firth’s wrist. “Don’t get any stupid ideas, Doc. You tell anyone about our little arrangement and sure as I’m standing here someone will put a bullet in the back of your head, follow?”

Firth nodded mechanically. A numbness had spread through him, rooting him to the spot.

Bowles let him go at last. “Glad you could make room for me, Doc,” he said in a louder voice for anyone who might be around. “Tomorrow, same time. You’ll have the test results by then, isn’t that right?”

8

NAGORNO-KARABAKH was in the west of Azerbaijan, a hotly contested area of the country ever since Joseph Stalin tried to ethnically cleanse this part of the former Soviet Union of Armenians. The advantage for Arkadin of staging a strike force in Azerbaijan was that it bordered on the northwestern edge of Iran. The advantage of choosing this particular area was threefold: It was rugged terrain, identical to that of Iran; it was sparsely populated; and the people here knew him because he’d made more than a dozen runs for Dimitri Maslov and then Semion Icoupov, trading semi-automatic rifles, grenades, rocket launchers, and so forth to the Armenian tribal leaders who were waging a continuous guerrilla war against the Azerbaijani regime, just as they had against the Soviets until the fall of the Soviet empire. In exchange, Arkadin received packets of brownish morphine bricks of exceedingly high quality, which he transported overland to the port city of Baku, where they were loaded onto a merchant ship that would take them due north across the Caspian Sea to Russia.

All in all, Nagorno-Karabakh was as secure a place as Arkadin could possibly find. He and his men would be left alone, and the tribesmen would protect him with their lives. Without the weapons provided by him and the people he worked for they would have been beaten into the dry red dirt of their homeland, exterminated like vermin. Armenians had settled here, between the Kura and Araxes rivers, during Roman times and had remained here ever since. Arkadin understood their fierce homeland pride, which was why he’d decided that Nagorno-Karabakh was the place to commence trading. It was a politically savvy move as well. Since the weapons sold to the Armenian tribesmen helped destabilize the country and thus gave it a rude shove back toward Moscow’s orbit, the Kremlin was all too happy to turn a blind eye to the trades.

Now his strike force was going to

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