The Bourne Objective Page 0,146

his position as field commander.

No plan, however, had presented itself. It meant nothing to him that his mind, torn apart by the agony of his wounds, was scarcely able to put two coherent thoughts together. His only thought was of revenge against Arkadin, and to get for Maslov what he wanted most: that accursed laptop. Oserov didn't know why his boss wanted it, and he didn't care. His lot was to do or die, that's how it had been ever since he had joined the Kazanskaya and that was how it would remain.

But life was strange. For Oserov salvation came from an unexpected quarter. A call came through. So sunk in black thoughts was he that at first he refused to take it. Then his assistant told him that it had come in on a scrambled cell line, and he knew who it must be. Still, he resisted, thinking that at the moment he had neither the interest nor the patience for anything Yasha Dakaev had to report.

Oserov's assistant poked his head in the door, which he had strict orders never to do.

"What?" Oserov barked.

"He says it's urgent," his assistant told him, and quickly withdrew.

"Goddammit," Oserov muttered, and picked up the phone. "Yasha, this better be fucking good."

"It is." Dakaev's voice sounded flat and faraway, but then he was always having to find out-of-the-way nooks and crannies in the FSB-2's offices to make his calls. "I have a line on Arkadin's movements."

"At last!" Oserov sat up straight. He heart seemed to pump at full speed again.

"According to the report that just came across my desk, he's on his way to Morocco," Dakaev said. "Ouarzazate, a village in the High Atlas Mountains called Tineghir, to be precise."

"What the fuck is he going to do in Buttfuck, Morocco?"

"That I don't know," Dakaev said. "But our intel says he's on his way."

This is my chance, Oserov thought, jumping up. If I don't take it, I might as well eat my Tokarev. For the first time since that last night in Bangalore, he felt galvanized. His failure had paralyzed him, he had been gnawing at himself from the inside out. He'd become disoriented with shame and rage.

He called his assistant in and gave him the particulars.

"Get me the fuck out of here," he ordered. "Book me on the first flight out of Moscow that's heading in the right direction."

"Does Maslov know you're off again?"

"Does your wife know that your mistress's name is Ivana Istvanskaya?"

His assistant beat a hasty retreat.

He turned away and started formulating a plan. Now that he'd been given a second chance, he vowed he would make the most of it.

Bourne raised his hands. At the same time, he kicked Professor Giles in the small of the back. As Giles, arms flailing, stumbled toward the three gunmen, Bourne whirled, took a long stride toward the open window, and dived through it.

He hit the ground running at full speed, but soon enough, as the adjoining university building loomed up, he was required to slow his pace to match that of Oxford's denizens. Pulling off his black overcoat, he stuffed it in a trash bin. He looked for and found a knot of adults, professors most likely, walking from one building to the next, and slipped into their midst.

Moments later he saw the two Severus Domna gunmen as they raced from the Centre. They immediately split up in a military-like formation.

One of the men came toward him, but he hadn't yet seen Bourne, who eeled his way to the opposite side of the knot. The professors were debating the merits of the right-wing German philosophers and, inevitably, the effect Nietzsche had on the Nazis, Hitler in particular.

Unless he had a chance to get to Professor Giles alone, which he doubted, Bourne had no desire for another physical encounter with Severus Domna. The organization was like a Hydra: Lop off one head and two took its place.

The gunman, who had hidden his weapon beneath his overcoat, approached the knot of professors, oblivious as they were locked in their philosophical ivory tower. Bourne presented the gunman with his anonymous back. The gunman would be looking for a man in a black overcoat. Bourne was happy to take any edge he could.

The knot of professors trotted up the steps and, in elegant fashion, poured into the university building. Bourne, debating the finer points of Old German with a white-haired professor, stepped across the threshold.

The gunman reacted as he glimpsed Bourne's reflection in the glass pane of the

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