Ludlum, Robert – The Janson Directive

seemed to Janson, like an open manacle—or one that was closing. Necessity had

drawn him here all the same. He had no intention of signaling his movements to

anyone with a professional interest in them.

For the past couple of hours, he had considered and rejected a dozen other ways

of leaving the country. Watchers would surely be swarming in and around the

Athens airport by now; quite likely agents would soon be mobilized at the major

airports at Thessaloniki and elsewhere. In any case, traveling on his own

passport was out of the question: given the involvement of the embassy, the

chances were too great that a U.S. advisory had been issued to international

points of embarkation and arrival. But when he made his way to the one local he

knew who specialized in forging official documents—a man who owned a stationery

shop near Omonia—he found surveillance agents in position: a visit would have

compromised either his contact or him. Hence his recourse to those whose

livelihoods taught them the formalities of international transit—and when the

formalities might be overlooked.

Janson wore a suit, which make him an incongruous sight in the Perigaili Bar,

but his tie hung unknotted around his collar, and he looked adrift, almost

despondent. He stepped forward with a weaving gait. Decide on a part and then

dress for it. He was a prosperous businessman in dire straits. If the air of

desperation didn’t achieve the intended results, two minutes in the rest room

and a square-shouldered shift in demeanor could erase that impression entirely.

He took the stool next to the sailor and gave him a sidewise glance. He was

solidly built, with the kind of soft, fleshy build that spoke of a large

appetite but often hid considerable muscular strength. Did he speak English?

“Goddamn Albanian whore,” Janson muttered under his breath, just loud enough to

be heard. Imprecations directed at ethnic minorities—especially Gypsies and

Albanians—were, he knew, a reliable conversation-starter in Greece, where the

ancient notion of purity of bloodlines still ruled.

The sailor turned to him and grunted. His bloodshot eyes were wary, however.

What was a man dressed like him doing in a such a dive?

“She took everything,” Janson went on. “She cleaned me out.” He signaled for a

drink.

“A shqiptar whore stole your cash?” The sailor’s expression was devoid of

sympathy, but amused. It was a start.

“Cash is about the only thing I’ve got left. You want to hear this?” He saw the

insignia on the sailor’s uniform: u.c.s. united container services. Janson

called to the bartender. “Get my friend here a beer.”

“Why not some Metaxa?” the sailor said, testing his luck.

“That’s a plan—Metaxa!” he called out. “A double! For both of us.” Something

about the sailor suggested a man who knew the docks and waterfronts of the

Aegean, and the unsavory enterprises that took root there.

Two glasses of Metaxa arrived, the colorless variety, flavored with anise.

Janson asked for a glass of water on the side. With a disapproving scowl, the

bartender slid an amber-colored glass toward him, with a few inches of lukewarm

tap water. A bar didn’t stay in business by filling its customers’ bellies with

water, unless you counted the water with which it topped off its bottles of

liquor.

Janson began to tell his companion a tale of wandering into an ouzeri while

waiting for the Minoan Lines ferry at the Zea Marina. “I’d just gotten out of a

five-hour meeting, you see. We’d wrapped up a deal that had been dragging on for

months—that’s why they sent me here personally, you see. The local reps, you

can’t trust them. You never know who they’re really working for.”

“And what does your company do, if you don’t mind my asking?”

Janson’s eyes darted around, settling on the glazed ceramic ashtray. “Ceramics,”

he said. “High-fired nonconductive ceramic struts for electrical appliances.” He

laughed. “You’re sorry you asked, huh? Well, it’s a filthy job, but somebody’s

got to do it.”

“And the whore—” prompted the sailor, gulping the brandy like water.

“So I’m totally stressed—you know ‘stressed’?—and this girl, she’s all over me,

and I’m thinking, what the hell. You know, I’m talking about release, right? And

she leads me to some shithole, a few doors down, I don’t even know where, and …

“And you wake up and she’s robbed you blind.”

“Exactly!” Janson signaled the bartender to bring another round of drinks. “I

must have passed out or something, and she went through my pockets. Lucky for me

she didn’t find my cash belt. Guess that would have meant turning me over, and

she was afraid I’d wake up. But she took my passport, my credit cards …”

Janson grabbed at his ring finger, holding it close to the sailor’s face,

drunkenly demonstrating the final indignity of having a wedding band removed. He

breathed hard, a senior sales exec revisiting a nightmare.

“Why not tell the astynomia? The harbor police here in Piraeus know the whores.”

Janson covered his face. “I can’t. I can’t risk it. I file a report, it could be

my ass. Same reason I don’t dare go to the embassy. My company is very

conservative. I can’t chance them finding out—we’ve got reps all over. I know I

don’t look it, but I’ve got a reputation to protect. And my wife—oh Jesus!”

Suddenly his eyes brimmed with tears. “She can’t know, ever!”

“So you’re a big man,” the sailor said, his gaze taking the stranger’s measure.

“And a bigger idiot. What was I thinking?” He drained his glass of Metaxa,

filling his cheeks with the sweetened liquor, then swiveled his stool around,

agitated, and raised the amber water glass to his lips. Only a trained observer

would have noticed that, though Janson’s water glass had not been refilled, its

level magically kept rising.

“The big head wasn’t thinking,” the seaman said sagely. “The little head was

thinking.”

“If I could just get to our regional headquarters in Izmir, I could take care of

everything.”

The seaman drew back with a jerk. “You are a Turk?”

“Turkish? God, no.” Janson wrinkled his nose with disgust. “How could you think

that? Are you?”

The seaman spat on the floor in response.

In Piraeus, at least, the old enmities still simmered. “Look, we’re an

international company. I’m a Canadian citizen, as it happens, but our clients

are everywhere. I’m not going to the police, and I can’t risk turning up at the

embassy. The thing could destroy me—you Greeks, you’re worldly, you understand

about human nature, but the people I work with aren’t like that. Thing is, if I

could just get to Izmir, I could make this whole nightmare disappear. I’ll do

the breaststroke to get there if I have to.” He slammed down the thick-bottomed

glass on the banged-up zinc bar. Then he waved a fifty-thousand-drachma note at

the bartender, signaling for another round.

The bartender looked at the note and shook his head. “Ehete mipos pio psila?” A

smaller-denomination bill was required.

Janson peered at the note like a drunk with blurred vision. The note was the

equivalent of over a hundred U.S. dollars. “Oh, sorry,” he said, putting it away

and handing the bartender four thousand-drachma notes.

As Janson intended, the error was not lost on his companion, whose interest in

his plight suddenly became livelier.

“A long way to swim,” the seaman said with a mirthless chuckle. “Perhaps there

is another way.”

Janson looked at him imploringly. “You think?”

“Special transport,” the man said. “Not comfortable. Not cheap.”

“You get me to Izmir, I’ll pay you twenty-five hundred dollars—U.S., not

Canadian.”

The sailor looked at Janson appraisingly. “Others will have to cooperate.”

“That’s twenty-five hundred just for you, for arranging it. If there are other

expenses, I’ll cover them, too.”

“You wait here,” the sailor said, a flush of greed sobering him slightly. “I

make a phone call.”

Janson drummed his fingers on the bar as he waited; if his drunkenness was

feigned, his display of agitation required little acting. After a few long

minutes, the seaman returned.

“I speak to a captain I know. He says if you come aboard with drugs, he will

throw you into the Aegean without a life jacket.”

“Absolutely not!” Janson said, aghast. “No drugs!”

“So the Albanian whore took those, too?” the man returned wryly.

“What?” Janson’s tone rose in indignation, a humorless businessman whose dignity

had been insulted. “What are you saying?”

“I joke with you,” the seaman said, mindful of his fee. “But I promised the

captain I’d give you the warning.” He paused. “It’s a containerized cargo ship.

U.C.S.-licensed, like mine. And it leaves at four in the morning. Gets in at

berth number six port of Izmir, four hours later, OK? What happens at Izmir is

on you—you don’t tell anyone how you got there.” He made a neck-slicing gesture.

“Very important. Also very important: you pay him a thousand dollars at Pier

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