Seven minutes after Carlos arrived at his office, Lieutenant Rios entered with a slim file, which he placed in his boss’s hand.
“According to our forensics, the bomb was sophisticated, C-4—a professional job, for certain, and nothing like the cartels would cook up.”
“Not even Los Zetas?”
“It’s nothing we’ve ever seen before from them.”
A worm of dread crawled through Carlos’s belly. “A foreign import,” he said.
“That’s the only logical conclusion,” Rios said, nodding. “Which fits with the hit we got on the fingerprint. Our own files had nothing, but we struck gold through the American database.”
“Excellent.”
Outside, the streets and rooftops had been scrubbed clean by the night’s storm. The sky was a clear, piercing blue, the city’s perpetual haze being kept at bay at least until the sun rose high enough to raise the temperature and resurrect the smog.
“It wasn’t easy,” Rios continued. “Initially, we came up against increasingly higher-level security clearances.”
“But you got through.”
“Our friends at the CIA eventually provided access,” Rios said. “They seemed keen on helping once I told them the circumstances that led to the inquiry.”
Carlos opened the folder, which contained a single sheet of computer printout, including a grainy head shot taken with a surveillance telephoto lens.
“Bourne,” he said. “The bomb was made and set by Jason Bourne.”
No wonder it was sophisticated, Carlos thought.
“He seems to terrify them,” Rios continued. “They want him dead.”
“So do I.” Carlos handed the folder back to his lieutenant. “Get this photo out to everyone—all branches of the police and military. I want it in the hands of all airport, train and bus station, taxi depot, and rental car personnel within the hour. Find this fucker, Lieutenant. And when you do, shoot to kill.”
When Lieutenant Rios left his boss’s office, he went down the hall, called to Sergeant Rivera. When he poked his head out of his cubicle, Rios handed him the photo of Bourne. “See that this is distributed to everyone—and I mean everyone.” He detailed the order as Carlos had recited to him. “The boss wants this in their hands within the hour.”
“Right on it, sir.”
Rios watched Rivera hustle off, then he went into the stairwell, trotting down the stairs to the lobby. Outside, he crossed the street, went into a vest-pocket park. The only inhabitants around this early were a couple of vagrants, whom he kicked out, and a flock of pigeons, which followed him around, believing he was about to feed them.
Taking out a burner mobile—he bought a new one three times a week—he pressed a SPEED DIAL button and waited for the familiar voice to answer.
“News?”
“Big news. Jason Bourne’s fingerprint was found inside a bomb he affixed to Carlos’s SUV last night.”
“I don’t believe it,” Felipe Matamoros said. “Bourne wouldn’t be that careless.”
Rios was curious as to why Matamoros wasn’t surprised that Bourne was in Mexico City, but he stifled his curiosity, which was a dangerous thing when dealing with Matamoros. “Still,” he said, “this is the evidence we have. The boss has us handing out his photo to everyone—”
“How the hell did you get a photo of him?”
“CIA.”
“Of course. The CIA has wanted him dead for years. Now they’re letting Carlos do their wet work for them.”
Rios looked around furtively, always on guard during his short phone sessions with the man paying him a small fortune to inform on Carlos. “Any instructions?”
“Just keep me informed on your progress with Bourne.”
Maricruz worried her lower lip. “I want to trust you, but I don’t think I can.”
“Then you are in trouble.”
Her expression told Bourne she was.
“I would help you if you asked.”
She eyed him skeptically. “Why? I’m only a patient, one of many—”
“But Angél isn’t,” Bourne said.
That seemed to give her pause.
“She needs an advocate here,” Bourne went on. “She’s formed an attachment to you, true enough. But you’re a foreigner now; there’s only so much you can do on Mexican soil.”
Maricruz drew the girl to her, wrapped her arms around her. “I can’t let anything happen to her. I won’t.”
“Who understands that better than me?”
She studied him long and hard.
“What is it?”
“I’m trying to figure out what your angle might be.”
He laughed. “I live in a different world than you, Maricruz. I calculate rates of survival, not angles.”
Maricruz put her head alongside Angél’s. “What d’you think, guapa?” she whispered in the girl’s ear.
Angél grinned at Bourne. He grinned back. Silently, they spoke to each other.
Maricruz lifted her head, nodded in a kind of surrender. “The beating I received,” she said slowly, almost painfully, “was deliberate.”
“Of course it was deliberate. This man in San Luis Potosí was a pro. He knew what he was doing.”
She offered him a bleak smile. “I’m afraid I ordered it done.”
Bourne wasn’t easily surprised, but this revelation rocked him. “Why would you have such a terrible thing done to yourself?”
“To gain someone’s trust—someone who had reason to be suspicious of me.”
Bourne stood up. “I think you should stop before you say something you’ll regret.”
“Javvy, you said I could trust you.”
“Of course you can trust me, Maricruz. I’d not reveal a word of our conversations, but it seems to me we’re heading in a direction I don’t feel comfortable—”
“Javvy, sit down.” She gestured. “Please.”
Bourne remained standing. She needed more incentive to keep coming toward him. “Back to the subject at hand, perhaps you’re wise not to be more specific about the source of your beating.”
“You don’t really believe that,” she said.
“I’m going to go now.”
As he turned to leave, she said with some force, “It’s Carlos I need to get close to.”
He turned back. “Why are you telling me this?”
“I don’t know.”
He regarded her critically. “I think you do. By confessing you’re making me complicit.”
“Yes.”
“That’s what you wanted all along.”
She hesitated a moment. “It would seem so, yes.”
“Why?”
She had thought about this ever since waking with the sense, if not the form, of her dream hanging ripely in her mind. “Do you want the truth?”
“Always.”
“Because you seem fearless,” she said. “Because as I said, I need help.”
“Help with what?”
“Not what,” Maricruz said. “Who.”
“Carlos.”
“Yes,” she said. “Carlos.”
“Maricruz, since you’ve opened us up to sedition, why did you return to Mexico?”
“I needed to speak with Felipe Matamoros and Raul Giron.”
“Drug business. How do you know I won’t report you to the Federales?”
She smiled sweetly. “What would you tell them?”
“What, indeed?” He laughed, and in that laugh was the certain knowledge that he had won her over.
She likes winning, Bourne thought. No, she loves it. She lives for it. And therein lay the weakness embedded in her strength.
“What do you know about Carlos Danda Carlos?”
Bourne shrugged. “Only what I read in the papers. He’s a hero, according to el presidente.”
“El presidente appointed Carlos. What else is he going to say?”
“Political expediency, okay.”
“That’s all?”
“There’s more?”
“Under the guise of ridding Mexico of the cartels, Carlos benefits from their profits,” Maricruz said.
“You have proof of this?”
“When I met with Matamoros and Giron in San Luis Potosí a few days ago, Carlos was with Giron. In fact, it was he, not Giron, who acted as the Sinaloa mouthpiece.”
“I read that Giron and his lieutenants have been found executed in San Luis Potosí,” Bourne said. “But I don’t believe everything I read in the papers.”
“This story’s true,” Maricruz said. “I was there. Los Zetas had had enough of their double dealing.”
“But they didn’t touch Carlos.”
“Carlos was clever enough to fly back here to the capital during the night,” she said ruefully.
“Fled the scene.”
Maricruz nodded in accord. “Like the coward he is.”
“And then you had Matamoros’s people beat you up,” Bourne said.
“I am a Trojan horse.”
“And now what?”
“Now,” Maricruz said, “you help me kill Carlos Danda Carlos.”