there could be only a mile or two separating them. "I'm following Bourne. I'm going after him myself."
Arkadin didn't want to hear it. "I thought that was my job."
"Your job is essentially over. You have the plans and you've terminated Pyotr's network."
"All except Egon Kirsch."
"Kirsch has already been disposed of," Icoupov said.
"I'm the one who terminates the targets. I'll give you the plans and then take care of Bourne."
"I told you, Leonid Danilovich, I don't want Bourne terminated."
Arkadin made an anguished animal sound under his breath. But Bourne has to be terminated, he thought. Devra dug her claws deeper into his flesh, so that he could smell the sweet, coppery scent of his own blood. And I have to do it. He murdered Mischa.
"Are you listening to me?" Icoupov said sharply.
Arkadin stirred within his web of rage. "Yes, sir, always. However, I must insist that you tell me where you'll be when you accost Bourne. This is security, for your own safety. I won't stand helplessly by while something unforseen happens to you."
"Agreed," Icoupov said after a moment's hesitation. "At the moment, he's on the move, so I have time to get the plans from you." He gave Arkadin an address. "I'll be there in fifteen minutes."
"It'll take me a bit longer," Arkadin said.
"Within the half hour then. The moment I know where I'll be intercepting Bourne, you'll know. Does that satisfy you, Leonid Danilovich?"
"Completely."
Arkadin folded away his phone, disentangled himself from Devra, and went up to the bar. "A double Oban on rocks."
The bartender, a huge man with tattooed arms, squinted at him. "What's an Oban?"
"It's a single-malt scotch, you moron."
The bartender, polishing an old-fashioned glass, grunted. "What does this look like, the prince's palace? We don't have single-malt anything."
Arkadin reached over, snatched the glass out of the bartender's hands, and smashed it bottom-first into his nose. Then, as blood started to gush, he hauled the dazed man over the bar top and proceeded to beat him to a pulp.
I can't go back to Munich," Petra said. "Not for a while, anyway. That's what he told me."
"Why would you jeopardize your job to kill someone?" Bourne said.
"Please!" She glanced at him. "A hamster couldn't live on what they paid me in that shithole."
She was behind the wheel, driving on the autobahn. They had already passed the outskirts of the city. Bourne didn't mind; he needed to stay out of Munich himself until the furor over Egon Kirsch's death died down. The authorities would find someone else's ID on Kirsch, and though Bourne had no doubt they'd eventually find out his real identity, he hoped by that time to have retrieved the plans from Arkadin and be flying back to Washington. In the meantime the police would be searching for him as a witness to the murders of both Kirsch and Jens.
"Sooner or later," Bourne said, "you're going to have to tell me who hired you."
Petra said nothing, but her hands trembled on the wheel, an aftermath of their harrowing chase.
"Where are we going?" Bourne said. He wanted to keep her engaged in conversation. He felt that she needed to connect with him on some personal level in order to open up. He had to get her to tell him who had ordered her to kill Egon Kirsch. That might answer the question of whether he was connected to the man who'd gunned down Jens.
"Home," she said. "A place I never wanted to go back to."
"Why is that?"
"I was born in Munich because my mother traveled there to give birth to me, but I'm from Dachau." She meant the town, of course, after which the adjacent Nazi concentration camp had been named. "No parent wants Dachau to appear on their child's birth certificate, so when their time comes the women check into a Munich hospital." Hardly surprising: Almost two hundred thousand people were exterminated during the camp's life, the longest of the war, since it was the first built, becoming the prototype for all the other KZ camps.
The town itself, situated along the Amper River, lay some twelve miles northwest of Munich. It was unexpectedly bucolic, with its narrow cobbled streets, old-fashioned street lamps, and quiet tree-lined lanes.
When Bourne observed that most of the people they passed looked contented enough, Petra laughed unpleasantly. "They go around in a permanent fog, hating that their little town has such a murderous burden to carry."
She drove through the center of Dachau, then turned north until they reached what once had been the village